I have realized the past few days that our AMSAT group has some really smart Hams! Thanks very much for the information. I have a few more questions. As I said before I would like to have more than a five minute QSO. I am not much of a contester, more a rag chewer. But I am afraid, if I understand most of you correctly, that is probably not going to happen in my life time? I reference K0JM's comments it's not so much the money but the regulatory environment that will stop this. I don't see this getting any easier in the next year, five years, or ten years. Does anybody else see anything different? And throwing in N8FGV's comments about the timing of the launch seems like a long shot as well. I spent a ton of money prior to AO-40 getting equipment ready to go in high hopes of having an AO-13 length run with so much more to do! I was terribly excited about this bird only to have it vanish before my eyes before I really got started. My last question is would a GOLF type satellite have the same obstacles as a Phase IV bird? If so I am probably going to have a-lot of satellite ham gear for sale real soon. Again thanks for your input. WA5QAP (licensed in 1966)
---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: [AMSAT-BB] Re: Phase IV satellite
From: "Daniel Schultz" n8fgv@usa.net
Date: Fri, August 12, 2022 6:57 pm
To: "AMSAT-BB" amsat-bb@amsat.org
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hosting our payload on a commercial GEO satellite would likely cost more than
$10 million if the commercial satellite owner is to be fully compensated for
the engineering modifications to their satellite and potential loss of
transponder revenue from diverting satellite resources to a non-productive
payload over a 15 year design lifetime. Offering a tax break will probably not
make up this difference. You might have better luck seeking hosting on a
government owned satellite such as the Air Force mission that was discussed by
AMSAT a few years ago, but eventually fell through. This is where carefully
cultivated personal relationships can come in, if you have any such friends in
high places. OSCAR-1 got its launch approved back in 1961 because of a few
highly placed hams in the Pentagon, so keep up with your networking and maybe
it can happen.
Some orbits are inherently unstable, for example 63 degree Molniya orbits will
reliably decay in a few years. The Late, Great OSCAR-13 provides a prime
example of this. Their orbital lifetime is heavily sensitive to the time of
launch, if AO-13 was launched a few hours earlier it would still be up there,
a few hours later it would have reentered a couple of years after launch. This
is easy to model in GMAT.
As a secondary payload, we don't get to choose the launch time, our only hope
would be to use thrusters to make slight post-launch adjustments so the
satellite reenters not too early (as AO-13 did) and not too late. I have been
trying to figure out how to do this but have not had any results so far. If we
have a dedicated launch all to ourselves we can choose a launch time that
meets our requirements.
The NASA Cubesat that was recently grounded was aiming for a GTO launch, which
has been mentioned as a possible target for an AMSAT mission because we could
possibly get one cheap. Analysis of NORAD tracking data shows a lot of spent
rocket bodies that have been in GTO for decades, so this might not be the best
choice for a mission that needs a guaranteed reentry date.
Another possibility would be to place the satellite directly into the GEO
graveyard orbit and let it slowly drift around the Earth. There are plenty of
other HEO or Cislunar orbits that are not sensitive to orbital debris
requirements and may not be commercially attractive but would work OK for our
needs.
So yes, if we had $10 million in our bank account we could buy our way out of
a lot of problems that only affect poor people who are lacking options.
73, Dan N8FGV
------ Original Message ------
Received: Fri, 12 Aug 2022 12:28:55 PM EDT
From: Paul Andrews w2hro.fn20@gmail.com
Subject: [AMSAT-BB] Re: Phase IV satellite
Yes! Find a commercial GEOsat with room to support an amateur payload.
Leverage commercial economics for launch and platform reliability. The
commercial operator can donate (tax break) the value of the ham (STEM)
capability. Maybe ham bands at 10 GHz and above. Simple bent pipe.
------ Original Message ------
Received: Fri, 12 Aug 2022 11:28:21 AM EDT
From: "Mark Johns, K0JM" k0jm.mark@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [AMSAT-BB] Re: Phase IV satellite
The launch costs, while significant, are beside the point. The biggest
issue with HEO satellites are the regulatory challenges. AMSAT and
international partners could build and get ready for launch such a
satellite within a few years, just as they did with AO-10, AO-13, and
AO-40. But they would not get a license to put it into orbit in the
current regulatory environment. The technical and financial challenges
can be met, but the licensing requirements are killing us.
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