Drew,
The 1921 UTC pass over the continental USA, a pass that went virtually over my head here in central Arizona, sounded like a normal AO-91 pass. I turned the satellite when the satellite was up a couple of degrees from the horizon after my AOS time, and it was transmitting for the rest of the pass here in Arizona. I was using my TH-D72 HT & Elk. I didn't have my SDR receiver going, but it looks like stations across the continental USA picked up telemetry. I posted my MP3 recording from the pass in my Dropbox space http://dropbox.wd9ewk.net/ - look in the "Satellite_Audio-2019" folder, and then find the file "20190430-1921UTC-AO91-DM43bl.mp3".
Next pass here is very shallow around 2100 UTC. If I have a break, I'll give it a try.
73!
Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK http://www.wd9ewk.net/ Twitter: @WD9EWK or http://twitter.com/WD9EWK
On Tue, Apr 30, 2019 at 4:18 PM Andrew Glasbrenner via AMSAT-BB < [email protected]> wrote:
I cycled the power to the IHU and it popped right back the way it should be. Should be fine now, but reports for the next day or two will be appreciated.
73, Drew KO4MA AMSAT VP Operations