That is an interesting idea and something I was wondering about, although I don't think that SO41 had a long lifespan, so it might have been built to different standards.

73 John AF5CC

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---- On Mon, 22 Jul 2024 11:35:14 -0500 Ignacio Granados Vega <ti3ies@gmail.com> wrote ---

https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/saudisat-1.htm

Maybe they put a little more research and money into the development and construction, I think that was reflected in a different quality in their circuits, which has caused their life to be prolonged.

73 TI3IES

El lun, 22 jul 2024 a las 10:01, JOHN GEIGER via AMSAT-BB (<amsat-bb@amsat.org>) escribió:

SO-50 will be 22 years old in December and seems to be still be going strong, in sunlight and in eclipse.  No other satellite launched since then has lived near that long.  So what is SO-50s key to long life?  Is it how the satellite was built?  Something in its operation, like lower power on transmit?  Its orbital setup?  

Any ideas why it has lived so much longer than the recent crop of AMSATS?

73 John AF5CC 

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Ignacio Granados Vega - TI3IES


Cartago, Costa Rica
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