This is very sad news. I met Mark in person in 2002 or so on one of my many trips to Bar Harbor Maine. We became acquainted by sending text messages via MIR then ISS. Marks love of the MIR/ISS packet network was very profound. Last time I had dinner with Mark while passing through Ellsworth on my way to work on the Bucks Harbor ARSR4 radar he gave me an 8x10 picture of him with the race car he was involved in. I just went out in the garage and found it and plan on framing it and hanging it in my shack. Mark will be missed on the ISS.....
73 Jeff kb2m
-----Original Message----- From: amsat-bb-bounces@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-bounces@amsat.org] On Behalf Of Pete Norris Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2011 13:31 PM To: amsat-bb@amsat.org Cc: kb5mu@amsat.org Subject: [amsat-bb] MARK AUSTIN KB1GRV
Hi all:I received this from Phil, N1EP. I thought there would be a number of you that might like to know.Pete, K1HZU
Hello Folks,
If you have not heard already, local (Franklin/Ellsworth) ham Mark Austin, KB1GVR, became a silent key on August 8. Graveside services will be this Thursday, Aug 18, at 11AM at Woodbine cemetery in Ellsworth.
Mark was very prolific in space communications. In 2002, he told me that he was listening to his scanner, I think in 1997, and heard Russian voices coming over the speaker about every hour and 36 minutes. He discovered the voices were from cosmonauts on board the Mir Space Station. He then started recording their SSTV broadcasts and then went out and bought his first computer so he could see the pictures he had previously recorded from the Soviet slow scan TV transmissions. That inspired him to earn his ham ticket so he could talk to the cosmonauts. And talk, he did. Since then, Mark has become well known aboard the space shuttles and International Space Station by many astronauts and cosmonauts.
Not only has Mark talked to them on voice mode, but became extremely proficient at using the space station and satellites to communicate digitally. He even discovered a new way of using one particular satellite to extend communication capability.
Mark had the opportunity to meet some of the spacemen he had befriended on-the-air when he made visits to Mission Control in Houston and to Kennedy Space Center, where he also was thrilled to watch a shuttle launch.
His enthusiasm with space communications inspired many hams to give it a try, including myself. His advice was spot on so that I twice successfully made voice contacts to the space station. I also had fun with Oscar-14 with Mark's tips. If you operated an APRS station in Maine, you would recognize the KB1GVR call sign, as Mark was also an avid APRS fan.
Mark's other pastimes included racing and flying with his brother in his plane where his same determination brought him lots of success, rewards, and joy. The walls of Marks home were decorated with the many ham radio and racing certificates and awards he had earned and his vast collection of space communications QSL cards is amazing, as many EAWA members can attest to as Mark has brought them in for display in the past.
Mark was only 50 years old, but in his too-short life, he accomplished a lot. As N1DP said on last night's Washington County ARES Net, Godspeed Mark. We will miss you.
73, Phil Duggan, N1EP
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