Mark Vandewettering wrote:
Elevation was less than 20 degrees here for the western pass, but I wandered outside with my little VX3R and my Comet antenna, and sure enough, it was banging away. I don't have any telemetry decoders (no windows boxes anymore) but I did record some audio which you can download from my blog: http://brainwagon.org/?p=2737
Hi Mark, Thanks for posting the recording!
I downloaded your recording and ran it through my DSP soundcard UO-11 demodulator. Most of the data in your recording looks like this, although other sections are quite noisy.
UOSAT-2 0711024074656 000000010001020002030003040004050005060006070007080008090009 100001110000120003130002140005150004160007170006180009190008 20000221000322000023000124000625000726000427000528000A29000B 30000331000232000133000034000735000636000537000438000B39000A 40000441000542000643000744000045000146000247000348000C49000D 50000551000452000753000654000155000056000357000258000D59000C 60800E615FC1620004633305644402651E0C662AC467000168000E69000F
All of the columns of zeros are telemetry channels that have failed. This agrees with what Clive has previously reported.
Earlier Clive reported:
The current status of the satellite, is that all the analogue telemetry channels, 0 to 59 are zero, ie they have failed. The status channels 60 to 67 are still working. The real time clock is showing a large accumulated error [...]
Last month the clock was about 74 days slow, but it is now about 81 days off.
In the past UO-11 also used to send stored ASCII bulletins as well, but I think that capability of the satellite ended when the spacecraft computer turned off. Anyone know for sure?
73, Douglas KA2UPW/5