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View Full Version : Thai students make a killing on improvised satellite dishes



Olongoer
01-20-2010, 07:58 PM
Satellite dishes made by students sell like hot cakes
Sun, Jan 17, 2010
The Nation/Asia News Network


Wisit Suesat, a sixth-grade teacher at the Nong Kong Kaew public school in Nong Bua Rahew district, who "discovered" this technique, said it was difficult for teachers and technical staff to adjust existing equipment and the direction of large satellite dishes when the signal was weak or lost.

It regularly cost the school Bt2,900 (S$110) to get someone to fine-tune the reception.

The teacher formed a team of five of his students to try utilising various materials such as dishes and found that aluminium pot and pan covers could substitute nicely for metal reflectors, after one year of trial and error.

Relying mainly on aluminium kitchen utensils donated by villagers, they start by hammering the materials into a parabolic shape, then assemble a stand from steel. The dish and stand are then attached to a receiver that can catch all KU band news and entertainment channels available in Thailand, besides free educational channels.

Each set costs Bt500-Bt2,500.

"The selling point of our satellite-receiver kit is its compact size, with a diameter of no more than 35 centimetres, besides the low price. They now sell like hot cakes," Wisit said.

Anucha Kulsiri, one of the students, said he would make his living making satellite-receiver kits when he grew up.

"It's not hard for me to make one now. You just lift the dish 35 degrees up and turn its direction to the southwest," he said.

Kittisak Theschaiyaphum, another team member, explained the "simple" steps in making the antennas.

"Pick a lid of a proper size. Remove the handle. Pound it into the right shape. Spray-paint it and drill holes that will be used for screws to attach it to a stand," he said.

Prasong Phornsophin, a |senior education officer, said he was expanding this home-made satellite-receiver-kit project to more than 300 schools, to |provide them with an extra source of income.

NuRsInGaIde
01-20-2010, 11:54 PM
How ingenious! I guess that should teach all these satellite dish manufacturers not to overcharge us!

checkered
01-21-2010, 01:55 PM
I agree, it is amazing how these students are able to create a dish that works just as good as a satellite dish!

PedroChatter
01-21-2010, 04:56 PM
I would think that the students' version is much better, as the article pointed out, the small size is one big plus factor.

eMo
01-22-2010, 05:54 AM
I'd love to see this! Imagine a satellite dish made out of aluminum pots!

amber
01-22-2010, 10:17 AM
Me too, sadly the news article did not carry photos. I would have loved to have seen just what they did.

awkwardsilence
01-22-2010, 11:51 PM
Sounds simple enough though:


"Pick a lid of a proper size. Remove the handle. Pound it into the right shape. Spray-paint it and drill holes that will be used for screws to attach it to a stand," he said.

TheGENERAL
01-25-2010, 05:01 AM
That will show all those greedy satellite dish manufacturers and the people who install them.

belligerent
04-25-2010, 12:11 AM
I am sure that this dish is not anywhere as powerful as the ones available here. But you have to consider the implication of this development: one if a group of students are able to replicate and get a working satellite dish, then it seems to me that other interested groups will be able to do it also.

cockroach
04-25-2010, 12:28 AM
Yes. Come to think of it, it's not really the price benefit, but the fact that these students are able to do it.

Can you imagine what they will be capable of when they get older??? And this effort and success may be replicated by other students.

rosaasor
04-25-2010, 02:13 PM
That is the beauty of exposing the younger set to technology!

vanreek
04-26-2010, 06:44 AM
Well, that, and innovation. I don't think that they will prove to be as resourceful as they are now if they have not been limited.

amber
04-26-2010, 07:55 PM
I think that resourcefulness should be taught in school. Instead of having kits, the students should be told to find materials for a science project on their own.

eMo
04-26-2010, 09:25 PM
You really think we're babying students here?

Topher
04-26-2010, 11:21 PM
No so much as babying them, but we don't leave room for critical thinking and for them to develop their innoativeness and resourcefulness.