Good luck Burns!
I hate it when things that have worked for a long time stop working, though that is life.
73, John Brier KG4AKV
On Sat, Oct 20, 2018, 14:14 Burns Fisher burns@fisher.cc wrote:
A couple days ago work G0ABI via AO-91 based on a sched we had made. Suddenly the elevation in my rotor did not work! So I moved it by hand, called and called...I did not hear myself. Later Peter sent me a recording--he had heard me just fine so my Rx was screwed up
Today, I found the rotor problem (a cable). I had hoped it would be the same problem with the Rx (like a hungry mouse) but no, apparently not. So I tried 91 again today. Wait, why is the downlink band so quiet? First, something had happened to my database in MacDoppler and it was all hosed. It had the AO-91 as a V/u satellite and the wrong freq anyway. Fixed that in time. Still very quiet on the band. Took my HT to probe around a bit. Some strong carrier on 145.965. I went outside and suddenly heard a voice. Aha! Someone using the satellite band! Oh, wait, that is AO-91 booming in on my HT with rubber ducky at about 5 degrees above the horizon! That was actually pretty cool! (I was probably hearing contacts with SparkFest!)
Still trying to find the source of the 145.965 (besides AO-91 of course). It is clearly inside my house--I even know which breaker. But so far not the obvious things (power supply, network switch, computer, UPS, etc). I'll keep looking.
But it just goes to show that when a bunch of things happen at once, it is not ALWAYS due to the same root cause.
73,
Burns WB1FJ _______________________________________________ Sent via AMSAT-BB@amsat.org. AMSAT-NA makes this open forum available to all interested persons worldwide without requiring membership. Opinions expressed are solely those of the author, and do not reflect the official views of AMSAT-NA. Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program! Subscription settings: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb