Alan Cresswell wrote:
Hi Drew,
Well the southern hemisphere is a big place and I can assure you there is no operation in eclipse from VK/ZL. I monitor almost all evening passes here which occur shortly after the eclipse and on a number of occasions I have noted that the transponder was on at my AOS. It also tends to drop out shortly after AOS so given the length of the timer this would indicate a turn on somewhat south of ZL. This would also correspond to the time AO-51 comes out of eclipse. My first guess would be that sometimes the transponder is triggered as it comes out of eclipse as there are no stations south of ZL to trigger it. There is also continual switching between the normal and reduced power levels during the evening passes. I presume this indicates a marginal condition so perhaps usage down this way should be limited for a time after eclipse as well to give the batteries time to recover.
Alan ZL2BX
I'm looking at a Whole Orbit Data file right now from 6/12 that indicates use at 2116Z and 1758Z, over Australia and New Zealand, in eclipse. Other files show similar patterns. I'm sure however that we will have the exact same problems, and worse, over the northern hemisphere during our winter eclipses! It may also be that the PL decoder is occasionally decoding falsely, which would mean a longer sample time might help.
The software does not increase power after eclipse until a set voltage is reached. I think the solution will be to lower the intermediate power step to zero, as the low one is, and then there will be no use possible during eclipse, but also with occasional periodic dropouts during poor attitudes during the rest of the orbit. Regardless, my comment was not meant as a slight to anyone, and was merely based on observation of the WOD. We can see pretty much everything that happens in 30s intervals.
Thanks for the observations.
73, Drew KO4MA