This is indeed a strange situation.
But in my mind a "QSO" did not happen.
I don't know.
This is making my Brain Hurt.
Cross bird doesn't fit. Cross bird I would say were if the output from one bird went into another and got relayed.
Again My brain is hurting here.
WB9L is intentionally working AO-51, which is thousands of km away from and pretty much opposite AO-16, which N3TL is intentionally working. Indeed, both satellites have the same FM/VHF uplink. WB9L copies N3TL on AO-51 at 435.300 +/-, in FM. N3TL copies WB9L on AO-16 at 437.026 +/-, in SSB. It seemed clear to me that a complete contact between these two stations occurred across both satellites.
I'm open to any suggestions regarding a term more accurate than cross-satellite for such contacts.
73 to all,
Tim - N3TL AMSAT Member No. 36820 Athens, Ga. - EM84ha
-------------- Original message from Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF nigel@ngunn.net: --------------
Jeffrey Koehler wrote: > Wouldn't it have to be, for true cross-satellite operation to occur, the downlink of one satellite to be on the uplink of another?
Yes
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