You are right. My bad. I am only talking about the existing VHF and UHF birds. It will be great if we get back to some higher birds. Both altitude and frequency. bob WB4APR
On Sat, Mar 6, 2021 at 10:48 PM Timothy Tapio timothytapio1@gmail.com wrote:
Bob...
Are you saying don't plan for the future with the Golf series? I think to get enough gain on a C and an X band link, I may need to be a bit more accurate....I don't think a dish has that large of lobe to set it at 22 degrees and call it good...am I wrong?
Tim K4SHF
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On Sat, Mar 6, 2021 at 10:39 PM Robert Bruninga bruninga@usna.edu wrote:
In my opinion, you dont need elevation for any existing AMSAT nor do you need an OSCAR array since we have no HEO birds and LEO's are so close, there is 6 to 10 dB right there. And with nmodest beams, the beamwidth is wider than the inaccuracy in the rotator. My design simply used the 1 RPM rotatino of the motor to keep track of position and after each pass, or on edmand, it woiuld drive CW (or CCW) into the stops, zero the counter and then consider that zero and count from there. Tilt the beams up modestly to 15 degrees and you have plenty of gain. When the LEO satellite is above that it is 6 to 10 dB closer and plenty strong enough. And when it is below 15 degrees it is far away on the horizon and still totally within the main beam of the modest beam. Bob, WB4APR
On Sat, Mar 6, 2021 at 9:36 PM Greg D ko6th.greg@gmail.com wrote:
Some rotors use a microswitch feedback system, where there is a momentary "click" every few degrees.? It's pretty easy to build a system that counts clicks and controls a set of relays based on it.? I did this 20 years ago with a Basic Stamp-II.? Should be fairly trivial to port to an Arduino, especially since you wouldn't have to deal with a 360 degree coordinate system in a system that was limited to mostly 8 bit math due to a lack of variable space.? That was fun...? See http://home.wavecable.com/~ko6th/ at the top of the page.? (Yeah, the site desperately needs an update...? The current software version is 1.4.)
The rotors I used had a resolution of 6 degrees for Azimuth, and 10 degrees for Elevation, which is well within the beamwidth of the antennas.?
Greg? KO6TH
Russ Ramirez wrote:
Tim, I had some success with this with an Alliance Tenna rotor a few years ago, but the older (Arduino Mega based) K3NG rotator controller would "hunt" in terms of Elevation because these old rotors generally do not have position feedback in the form of a potentiometer the way the Yaesu rotors do. The G-5500(DC) setup is hard to beat.?
Good luck!? Russ K0WFS
On Sat, Mar 6, 2021 at 6:18 PM Timothy Tapio timothytapio1@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone have a simple interface for a low budget TV rotor (RCA) to allow SatPC32 to control azimuth? I do have intentions of obtaining a GS-5500 but that is a few months down the road....meanwhile I have an Alaskan Arrow still in box that I want to use until I can get the sat antenna pack from Amsat....
Any Raspberry Pi or Arduino interfaces? It's beyond my level to try to program something myself.
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