I've been trying to come up with an easy GO-32 pass-time predictor for the mobile. This morning I got it! The Ground track of GO-32 repeats every 10 days!
So All you need on your dash board is this strip of paper.
Day1 Day2 Day3 Day4 Day5 Day6 Day7 Day8 Day9 Day1 ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 0930 0910 1025 1005 0940 0920 1040 1015 0950 0930 1050 1055 2050 2030 2005 2125 2100 2040 2015 2135 2110 2050 2210 2145 2155
For example, today is Day3 in Wash DC.
If you print these in fixed font, it will show you the pass times for any day and time zone and location, as long as you know what day sequence to be on in your area. And we can have GO-32 send down a table-of-days in its bulletins! So if you ever hear GO32 once, then you will have all you need for tracking for the next few months or so for your area!
Initially, I assumed this table would be only for Washington DC (77 deg Longitude) and 40 deg latitude where I calculated it. But it should also apply anywhere at this longitude north or south and be off by less than 5 minutes or so.
Then I thought we would need a different one for every 5 degrees of longitude... But then realized that just as the pattern repeats every 10 days in time, it also repeats incrementally in longitude! Since the longitude increment of GO-32 is about 26 degrees, that means these multiples of 26 degrees from Washington DC will have the same pattern on the same day as we do. And that every 2.6 degrees in between will have an additional day offset from ours.
Wow, it can't get any simpler than that for mobiles to know when to use their rigs on GO-32 when traveling in wilderness areas. A similar table could be predicted for ECHO (AO-51) maybe.
ELEVATION ANGLE: To keep the chart simple, I did not include max elevations, but that can be added in the final version. It is also easy to infer. The days with double passes are near 30 degrees each (barely detectible by the mobile) The days midway between these lowest peak passes are the highest elevations (75 or more degrees). And you can interpolate inbetween these.
UPLINKS! The above table gives you only the BEST pass of the day for your location (passes above 30 degrees). This is the pass where you can expecet to receive the GO32 downlink on your mobile whip antenna. HOWEVER, every day, there is a pass exactly 100 minutes before and after each of those passes too. So now you have 6 chances a day to report your position in the wilderness and 2 chances a day to receive any APRS message traffic.
Happy wilderness traveling! (Oh, and of course, make sure there is someone in your footprint that is SATgating your data into the APRS system so that your position and status and any emails get delivered.)...
Bob, WB4APR