Hi Sean.
Yes, it will be on for daytime passes which are all South to North It will turn on in the Southern hemisphere and then stay on until it gets to between 55 and 60 degrees North. Because EO-79 is sun synchronous, it should repeat reliably each day.
For passes over NA it will be on as it approaches from the south and will switch off somewhere over Northern Canada
Having switched off, the satellite has around 9-10 minutes to add some charge to the battery before passing into the next eclipse
73
David G0MRF
Hi all- A very basic question. If I understand correctly, EO79 will be QRV 27 minutes after being in sunlight, for a 25-minute period. What is the best way to determine if EO79 will be audible when it passes overhead? Should I simply aim for daytime passes?
Sean Kutzko Amateur Radio KX9X
Thanks, David; most helpful! Sean Kutzko Amateur Radio KX9X
From: David G0MRF via AMSAT-BB amsat-bb@amsat.org To: amsat-bb@amsat.org Sent: Saturday, November 12, 2016 7:02 PM Subject: [amsat-bb] Re Tracking EO-79
Hi Sean.
Yes, it will be on for daytime passes which are all South to North It will turn on in the Southern hemisphere and then stay on until it gets to between 55 and 60 degrees North. Because EO-79 is sun synchronous, it should repeat reliably each day.
For passes over NA it will be on as it approaches from the south and will switch off somewhere over Northern Canada
Having switched off, the satellite has around 9-10 minutes to add some charge to the battery before passing into the next eclipse
73
David G0MRF
Hi all- A very basic question. If I understand correctly, EO79 will be QRV 27 minutes after being in sunlight, for a 25-minute period. What is the best way to determine if EO79 will be audible when it passes overhead? Should I simply aim for daytime passes?
Sean Kutzko Amateur Radio KX9X
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participants (2)
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David G0MRF
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Sean K.