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{
    "url": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/email/33ABFCC45GZE67NJP5NKNXHHEYOFCFVR/",
    "mailinglist": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/",
    "message_id": "[email protected]",
    "message_id_hash": "33ABFCC45GZE67NJP5NKNXHHEYOFCFVR",
    "thread": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/thread/33ABFCC45GZE67NJP5NKNXHHEYOFCFVR/",
    "sender": {
        "address": "w9gb (a) icloud.com",
        "mailman_id": "b156075684ac4750b888b2dd14137a40",
        "emails": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/sender/b156075684ac4750b888b2dd14137a40/emails/"
    },
    "sender_name": "Gregory Beat",
    "subject": "Re: [amsat-bb] Dimensions of AO-13",
    "date": "2017-06-04T15:31:39Z",
    "parent": null,
    "children": [],
    "votes": {
        "likes": 0,
        "dislikes": 0,
        "status": "neutral"
    },
    "content": "Philip -\n\nThe Phase 3 satellites: AO-10 and AO-13 used the same \"space frame\".\nAs noted, historical web sites note physical size as: 600 x 40 x 200 mm\n\nAn identical Phase 3 \"ground-spare\" spaceframe, was in Germany with AMSAT-DL.\nIF you look closely, at the photos, and use \"rough measures\" from image ---\nthe stated size is incorrect (NOT a centimeter/millimeter transposition/mislabeling)\nhttps://amsat-uk.org/tag/p3e/\n\nI do not know if this spaceframe was ever shipped to Virginia Tech for AMSAT P3E,\nas noted in this 2015 AMSAT-UK announcement.\nhttps://www.p3e-satellite.org/en_EN/mission.html\n\ngreg, w9gb\nAMSAT-UK, AMSAT-NA\n===\nI'm displaying a picture of AO-13 (my first sat QSO was on that bird) to\ncontrast it with a picture of the the cubesats of today\n\nThe only dimensions I'm finding for AO-13 are 600 x 40 x 200 mm...this\nseems awfully small for a 92 Kg (plus another 30Kg for fuel) weight. (23.6\ninches x 1.6 inches x 7.8 inches).\n\nWere these dimensions actually in centimeters. and not millimeters?\n\nThanks\nPhilip N4HF\n==end==",
    "attachments": []
}