Maybe I am a little confused about what constitutes AO-7 being "in sunlight" but I work it at 10.00 to 11.00pm in darkness and it works fine!
Since AO-7's batteries have long ago given up the ghost, the electronics only run when there is sufficient power developed by the panels. If the footprint of the satellite touches the illuminated area on the ground, the satellite is illuminated also. Right now for both AO-7 and AO-51, that illumination is continuous, but very soon both will return to an eclipse every orbit. For AO-7, this means a reset of the 24 hour timer every orbit, and Mode B seems to be the most likely mode upon power up and reillumination. Until then the timer is more or less changing modes every 24 hours between A and B.
The pattern is easy to see on http://oscar.dcarr.org/ .
Hope this helps clear things up some for the newer folks.
73, Drew KO4MA AMSAT-NA VP Ops