I just downloaded updated keps, Where can I find what the? [-], [+] and [P] stand for?
Thanks
Fred
________________________________________________________________________
Email and AIM finally together. You've gotta check out free AOL Mail! - http://mail.aol.com
Congrats to the team, and good luck in wrapping up the negotiations.
Can you give us an idea of the altitude of these prospective sats, and also
the rough time frame you're talking about?
73,
Tony, N2U
Chris:
In no particular order:
ISS
ANDE/NO-61
PCSAT/NO-44
RS-22
AO-27
SO-50
AO-51
HSH
--
_______________________________
John Marranca, Jr
PBX Technician/Shop Steward CWA Local 1122
BN Systems, Inc
Orchard Park, NY
(716)972-2006
Bob N4HY wrote:
Thanks to the efforts of Lee McLamb, EVP AMSAT, we discovered a new
opportunity to get our communications packages and antennas on board
Intelsat launches.
Wayne W9AE replies:
Is this for a "piggyback" communication package attached to a larger
satellite, or a secondary payload that deploys separately?
Wayne Estes W9AE
Oakland, Oregon, USA, CN83ik
Thanks to the efforts of Lee McLamb, EVP AMSAT, we discovered a new
opportunity to get our communications packages and antennas on board
Intelsat launches. Rick Hambly and the AMSAT executive team have been
negotiating nearly nonstop with Intelsat. They have released us to go
put the entire project together, design/funding/etc. and to publicize
the opportunity. The engineering team has been restructured to take
maximum advantage of this opportunity and to see that it serves radio
amateurs world wide.
More will follow from Rick and others and we return to our transparent
mode now that we have been allowed, for the first time, to speak openly
about the opportunity and have them confirm to those making inquiries
that we are working with them to build a mission.
Bob
N4HY
--
AMSAT Director and VP Engineering. Member: ARRL, AMSAT-DL,
TAPR, Packrats, NJQRP, QRP ARCI, QCWA, FRC. ARRL SDR WG Chair
“An optimist may see a light where there is none, but why
must the pessimist always run to blow it out?” Descartes
FREE FREE FREE
I have a roll of RG62A/U cable (1000 ft), 2 pieces of Andrews heliax hard 1/2, about 100 ft long, also some shorter pieces, also about a dozen fittings, FREE Bud K3nmf chrlsp(a)verizon.net
During the 5 hour drive back from the AMSAT symposium in Western
PA I was bored and scanning to find something to do on my mobile
rig. After a long time, finally found a very weak QSO on 145.62
just east of New Stanton.
As signals got stronger, it sounded more like pirates... Like a
work crew working on some maintenance prject. This was fun. A
bunch of pirates on ham radio in an unused portion of the band.
I was running APRS and GPS and was getting excited about turning
this into a short DF mission (using signal strength alone).. I
was getting a clearly increasing signal..
Then I thought. Hummh... I've heard that sound before...
Sounds like scuba divers. You can hear them breathing..
Duh. Was space station crew out on an EVA! I was hearing a
re-broadcast of the ISS audio, complements of a local club in
western PA.
Which gets me to the topic of this post.
It pays to advertise! If something is going on in HAM radio,
put out a LIVE APRS beacon on-air. Let people see it. (APRS is
supposed to be the single clearing house of where to look for
this kind of local information live in real time)...
A simple once-every-10-minute local-direct APRS beacon will
inform everyone live in the vicinity of that transmission that
it is on the air now... Live... This is needed whether they are
strangers passing through, or locals on their way to get bread
who forgot that today was ISS audio day.
Live advertising of real-time happenings on APRS is a service
for all of ham radio. APRS was never intended as an end in
itself. It was supposed to be the catch-all information resource
for the local area. A mobile seeing one of these beacons can
now be alterted and participate in the event... In the new
Kenwood D710, he can even QSY with the press of one button if
the beacon
also contains the frequency.
APRS is TWO-WAY. Everything in ham radio should be advertised
LIVE local direct on APRS for the benefit of local mobiles.
Here is how I would advertise Space Station Audio on APRS.
1) Give it the object NAME of "ISSrtx-xx"
2) Give it an approximate position
3) Include the local RE-TX frequency in the comment
This APRS object will flash on the front panel of the mobile D7,
D700 or HAMHUD as ISSrtx... and not just some other callsign.
The position information causes the radio to display the
direction, and distance to the transmitter for the benefit of
the mobile. The frequency info shows him where to tune. And if
the freq is in the right format, then the new Kenwood can
auto-tune to it. You can put this object in ANY local TNC as a
BEACON TEXT. Here is how:
BT ;ISSrtx-xx*111111zDDMM.hhN/DDDMM.hhWE 145.620MHz Space
Station audio.
UNPROTO APRS (direct)
BEACON 5 minutes
Notice I added "xx" (I'd use "wP" in this case for Western PA)
to fill out the 9 byte object name field so that when this is
picked up by the global APRS system, then this object will be
unique from any other similar site. To see if your particular
choice is already in use, just check FINDU.COM:
http://map.findu.com/ISS*
And you will see everyone else's ISS object choices, so you can
choose two unique "xx" characters for your system too.
Hook this TNC and a spare 144.39 Transmitter to the Iss
Re-transmitter via the TNC extermal carrier detect line. This
way, it is all automatic. If this system is re-transmitting
space station audio, then the "ISSrtx-xx" advertising beacon
will be on the air too!
Since this stuff is quite rare, I might even suggest that this
automatied beacon go out once every 5 minutes, so that locals
out for a short trip won't miss it. Remember, it is a local
simplex direct packet from a high location that can hear all
local users, so therefore it will avoid any collisions and not
impact local channel load.
Many of us can only find time to play HAM radio while mobile.
So, please advertise. Let us know what is happening live in
your area. There certainly are enough old TNC's out there doing
nothing else that could be put into such use.....
Oh, and if you need a BEACON in a pinch, you can use your D7 or
D700 to generate the object. An example is arriving at the
parking lot of yoru local ham club meeting and only then
remembering that you should have put a live object on the air.
Here's how to do an object from your D7 or D700:
http://www.ew.usna.edu/~bruninga/d700-objects.txt
Please do NOT beacon any such object farther than it can be
used. This is important, because out of area packets are:
1) QRM to everyone beyond its useful range
2) Double the channel load if digipeated
3) Colision sources since the source TX cannot hear the clear
channel
Also, when you hold a local on-air AMSAT net. Please send out
an object alerting all mobiles that a net is in progress and the
frequency. You might round up some new members...
That object could be "AMSAT-net". Hard to miss when it shows up
on your mobile's front panel..
Thanks
Bob, WB4APR
Hello
I'm looking for a friend for a kit unit number D3000235. This is supposed to make the FT726R a full duplex radio.
--
73 Bob W7LRD
AMSAT member 28498
Seattle
Ah,
so here would be the window of opportunity for AMSAT-EU to start
similar negotiations with Arianespace...
How about interlinking capability between the two geo-birds ;-)
Michael, OH2AUE
--
"Life is too short for Sudoku"