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TELEsatelit - TELE-satellite International Magazine

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■<br />

TV Technician Wang Yinchung set up the receivers and cable<br />

modulators in the elevator control room. He keeps an eye on reception<br />

quality with the test TVs.<br />

144 <strong>TELE</strong>-<strong>satellite</strong> — Global Digital TV <strong>Magazine</strong> — 12-01/2011 — www.<strong>TELE</strong>-<strong>satellite</strong>.com<br />

■<br />

TV technician Wang Yinchung on the roof of<br />

one of the apartment buildings in Mandarine<br />

City. The large 3.2-meter dish that Wang<br />

Yinchung is standing next to receives the<br />

Japanese channels on BSAT at 110° east. To<br />

the right is a 1.8-meter dish for the reception of<br />

Skylife on KOREASAT 3. To the left is a 1.8-meter<br />

offset antenna pointed at ASIASAT at 105° east.<br />

Two smaller 1.5-meter offset antennas are used<br />

for reception of KOREASAT 5 at 113° east and for<br />

the vertical polarization of KOREASAT 3 at 116°<br />

east. A one-meter antenna is pointed to AGILA<br />

2 at 146° east and a 1.5-meter prime focus dish<br />

all the way to the left is aligned to INTELSAT 8<br />

at 166° west where channels like BBC World and<br />

NHK World can be found.<br />

■<br />

Wang Yinchung has quite a view<br />

of the Mandarine City apartment<br />

complex from the roof of one of<br />

the buildings where all the <strong>satellite</strong><br />

antennas are installed. The complex<br />

even comes with its own swimming<br />

pool!

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