yes it would work easy, the dishes arnt that hard to get to tune, you get faster the more you use it, i still have a small dish which has served well, but ive just changed to a sky dish now. with a sky box
It will work fine as long as you realise it's not a Sky or Freesat receiver. So you will have to tune and sort channels if you want then in any sort of order.
I bought the Aldi portable kit a few months ago. Everyone says its easy to set up but I've still not managed to get anything out of it despite following the instructions and numerous instructions offered on forums. Its now sat in my dining room gathering dust.
Going to have one more try before I go away next and if I still have no luck its going on ebay!
Sarah42G, I also have one of these, the reason you can't get it to work is that the instructions supplied with it are wrong.
The first thing you need is a pole which can be clamped to your jockey wheel or a purpose made stand.
The second thing you need is a compass with the Astra satellite marked on it or one you can set the dish so that it's facing 143.9 degrees (south-easterly). These are cheap but work O.K.; Satellite Finder
Once your dish is pointing in the right direction (get it as close as you can), rotate the L.N.B. (the bit on the end of the dish arm) clockwise about 13 degrees (looking at it from the front).
Now here's where the instructions are wrong. The book says tilt the dish upwards by 15 degrees, this is the setting for a circular dish but yours is elliptical so the dish needs to be almost vertical.
Now connect up the T.V. with the satellite finder connected between the L.N.B. and follow the instructions. Just adjust the knob until you only have one or two L.E.D.'s lit. Move the dish very slowly until more L.E.D.'s light up. When they all light up, turn the knob back down and repeat. You may end up on the wrong satellite, don't worry, just move the dish towards the one you're looking for.
Finally follow the instructions for setting up the receiver and you should be O.K. Every time you do it you'll get quicker, the last time I used it I set it up straight away.
''Now here's where the instructions are wrong. The book says tilt the dish upwards by 15 degrees, this is the setting for a circular dish but yours is elliptical so the dish needs to be almost vertical.''
I think you'll find that the inclination being quoted in the instructions is for somewhere in Germany..........the further North you go the the lower the dish has to point and conversely, the further South you go the inclination is higher (due to the curvature of the earth) until eventually, when you reach the equator, the dish would point straight up (prime focus dishes) as all the broadcast Satellites are in geostationary orbit over the Equator (the Clark Belt).
It makes no difference if the dish is round or eliptical as they are all just sections of a perfect porabola........the dishes with a single arm at the bottom of the dish is called an offset dish which is set to deflect the signal downward to focus on the LNB.......dishes with 3 arms and the LNB at the centre are called a prime focus dishes.
I bought one several years ago have had no problemswit it ,youll find the dish needs to be about 10 degrees off vertical and I set it up as near as possible and fine tune while looking through the 'van window , good luck and many happy hours viewing
Jocko2, your comment;
"It makes no difference if the dish is round or eliptical as they are all just sections of a perfect porabola"
"the dishes with a single arm at the bottom of the dish is called an offset dish which is set to deflect the signal downward to focus on the LNB...."
If you look at a circular dish, it's designed to bounce the signal back to the centrally mounted L.N.B. equally from all sides of the dish.
If you look at an elliptical dish from above it looks perfectly circular and is designed to bounce the signal downwards to the L.N.B.so the dish doesn't need to be angled upwards quite so much.
It was dishpointer.com (recommended by Tevion)which recommended setting the dish at 22degrees elevation.
when i got mine i had bother setting up,so i tried setting up at home using my home dish as a guide,after a few minutes i had a signal.tried a few more times and got signal quicker each try.i dont have any problems when i go away ,unless there are large trees in the way.as they say practice makes perfect.