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The World of Ham Radio CD-ROM
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:45:57 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!bcm.tmc.edu!news.tamu.edu!news
From: jdl5945@tam2000.tamu.edu (John Lusher)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Are you interested in Space Exploration?
Date: 1 Dec 1995 04:18:24 GMT
Organization: Space Now
Lines: 64
Message-ID: <49lvmg$hf9@news.tamu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp13-14.rns.tamu.edu
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.92.6+
************************************************************
* ATTENTION: Are you truly intrested in the exploration *
* of space? Do you find yourself wondering *
* how to get off of this planet in a logical *
* and realistic manner? Then this message is *
* for you! *
************************************************************
On Tuesday, December 5th, 1995, at 5:30 pm CST (11:30 pm GMT), Space Now will
hold an organisational IRC session on channel #spacenow. A brief description
of Space Now follows. See you in IRCspace!
- Space Now -
Q: What the heck is Space Now?
A: We are a small group of students at Texas A&M University
deeply interested in the exploration of space. We have a life goal
to explore space, by whatever means neccessary. So, we're looking
for other people who are just as devoted to space exploration.
What we're initially interested in doing is setting up a planning
group to talk about the many problems that must be overcome to
explore space, on any scale. We eventually plan to start a
private corportion to actually explore space.
Q: How can *I* get involved, then?
A: At the moment, we're especially looking for interested
people in the Bryan/College Station area, to facilitate regular
meetings. However, this by no means precludes your participation
if you are not from this area. All are invited and welcomed at
our upcoming IRC session; it is during this that we plan to
consolidate our core group. In addition, keep watching this news
group for notices as further developments occur. We plan big
things.
Q: What can I do *now*?
A: For starters, spread the word! Feel free to distribute
this article among people who may be interested (in unedited form
only, please). Drop in on our IRC session; besides developing
a network among interested people, we'd very much like to find
people in the Bryan/College Station area and anyone with the time
and resources to help establish and administrate a quality web page.
Any other ways in which you can generate exitement can only help
our cause.
Also, keep an open mind! Explore *any* promising ideas
related to space travel, so that when our first big conference
occurs (tentatively in the first half of 1996) you can contribute
to a meaningful dialogue. We plan to acheive our goals by whatever
means neccessary, and this is your opportunity to get in on the
ground floor.
Q: Who do I contact?
Presently, we are limiting our contact availiability
in order to avoid growing too fast and tripping up on our own
feet. More specific data shall follow as our group grows, but
the best means of contact at the moment is via our upcoming
IRC session. Further bulletins will be posted to this newsgroup
as they become availiable.
Thanks for reading this far! Once again, please meet with us on channel
#spacenow in IRCspace at 5:30 pm CST on December fifth. See you then!
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:45:58 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!hookup!news.duke.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.ysu.edu!yfn.ysu.edu!au156
From: au156@yfn.ysu.edu (Hank Riley)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Colorado Balloon Launch Delay to December 9
Date: 1 Dec 1995 07:40:11 GMT
Organization: Youngstown State/Youngstown Free-Net
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <49mbgr$800@news.ysu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: yfn2.ysu.edu
There has been a one week launch delay because of a technical glitch
involving the complex payload.
The date has been changed from Dec. 2 to 9, with a scrub date
of Dec. 10.
One more complete bulletin will be issued next week noting a
minor frequency change on one telemetry channel.
-----------------------------------------------------------
EOSS-25: CENTRAL COLORADO REPEATER/ATV BALLOON LAUNCH
Region: Central Colorado
Date/Time: December 9 / 8:00 AM MST, 15:00 UTC
Scrub Date: December 10
Location: Colorado Springs, US AIr Force Academy
HF Net: 7.235 Mhz SSB
For additional launch data and general Edge of Space Sciences (EOSS)
information:
http://www.usa.net/~rickvg/eoss.htm
maintained by Rick von Glahn
rickvg@usa.net
-----------------------------------------------------------
posted by Hank Riley, N1LTV
Please email news of upcoming balloon launches and post-flight
reports for distribution on the Net.
h1riley@umassd.edu
au156@yfn.ysu.edu
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:45:59 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!howland.reston.ans.net!torn!news.bc.net!lancelot.dowco.com!ppp49.dowco.com!user
From: ve7zvz@dowco.com (Scott Leaf)
Subject: Where to get NASA two-line keps
Sender: news@dowco.com
Message-ID: <ve7zvz-0112950116250001@ppp49.dowco.com>
Date: Fri, 1 Dec 1995 09:16:43 GMT
References: <49jm2d$58n@nnrp2.news.primenet.com>
Nntp-Posting-Host: ppp49.dowco.com
Organization: Mountain DX Club VA7SM
Lines: 18
In article <49jm2d$58n@nnrp2.news.primenet.com>, "K. Hatch"
<khatch@primenet.com> wrote:
-> Does anyone know the latest phone number for the Celestial BBS run by
-> Dr. TS Kelso. The latest number I have is 205.409.9280 which doesn't
-> seem to work anymore. I used to use his BBS to download NASA two-line
-> orbital elements sets. Any suggestions where else on the net they might
-> be found?
The Nasa 2 Line set is uploaded to this newsgroup weekly further you can
obtain it on demand at: http://www.amsat.org/amsat/keps/menu.html
--
Scott Leaf VE7ZVZ CN89
ve7zvz@dowco.com
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
Mountain DX Club VA7SM - "To boldy VHF where no ham has VHFed before"
Coquitlam Radio Club VE7SCC - "The Satellite Seniors"
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:46:00 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cheatum.frontiernet.net!Empire.Net!news.net99.net!news.corpcomm.net!news.uoregon.edu!news.jsums.edu!despina.neptune.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!demon!mceurope.demon.co.uk
From: graham@mceurope.demon.co.uk (Graham Chaloner)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Dove-17 Status?
Date: Fri, 01 Dec 1995 13:43:07 GMT
Organization: Music Choice Europe
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <817825414.14780@mceurope.demon.co.uk>
References: <wday-2711950029430001@fw5.dfw.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mceurope.demon.co.uk
X-NNTP-Posting-Host: mceurope.demon.co.uk
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
wday@dfw.net (Wayne Day) wrote:
>Is Dove-17 still on the air (AX.25 1200 baud packet on 145.825)? I've just
>started looking at the channel, again, and haven't received a single
>packet from the satellite in two days of listening.
>73 Wayne KF5ZC
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Wayne Day KF5ZC Fort Worth,Texas,USA |
> CompuServe: 76703,376 Internet: 76703.376@CompuServe.Com | ,__o
> or Internet: wday@dfw.net |--\_<,
> Member: Bicycle Mobile Hams of America (*)/'(*)
> For info on BMHA or the BIKEHAM mailing list: Finger KF5ZC@dfw.net
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have also listened for Dove during the last two days - 145.825
appears to be very quiet !
73 Graham G8DMR
Engineering Support Manager
Music Choice Europe
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:46:03 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.kreonet.re.kr!news.dacom.co.kr!newsfeed.internetmci.com!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!csn!nntp-xfer-2.csn.net!yuma!purdue!haven.umd.edu!hecate.umd.edu!mojo.eng.umd.edu!volt.isr.umd.edu!not-for-mail
From: tedwards@Glue.umd.edu (Thomas Grant Edwards)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.misc,sci.space.shuttle
Subject: SPARTAN PACKET RADIO EXPERIMENT (SPRE) in January!!
Date: 1 Dec 1995 14:36:02 -0500
Organization: Project Glue, University of Maryland, College Park
Lines: 181
Message-ID: <49nlf2$375@volt.isr.umd.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: volt.isr.umd.edu
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.space:5849 rec.radio.amateur.misc:94992 sci.space.shuttle:38148
SPARTAN PACKET RADIO EXPERIMENT (SPRE)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
General Information (long)
By: Ken McCaughey (N3FZX)
File: spre02pr.txt
Date: 29-Nov-95
The Spartan Packet Radio Experiment (SPRE) is an Amateur Radio (HAM radio)
communications experiment. The primary mission is to test satellite
tracking using amateur packet radio and a Global Positioning System (GPS).
SPRE was developed and built by the University of Maryland Amateur Radio
Association (UMARA) with assistance from NASA, volunteer engineers, and
volunteer software professionals.
SPRE is one of four experiments on NASA's Spartan/OAST-Flyer spacecraft.
The Spartan spacecraft is scheduled for launch on January 11, 1996 aboard
the space shuttle Endeavour as part of mission STS-72. The spacecraft is
a cube shaped, battery powered, retrievable satellite. Spartan will be
deployed by the shuttle's robot arm and likewise retrieved after
approximately 48 hours of free flight.
Mission Objectives:
* Promote amateur radio and amateur satellite communications.
* Test GPS and packet radio based tracking system using a Low Earth
Orbit (LEO) satellite.
* Provide an educational tool to inspire elementary and high school
students to pursue science and engineering.
* Provide a unique hands-on educational opportunity for college students.
SPRE is designed to relay ground station positions and transmit telemetry
containing the GPS location of the spacecraft and housekeeping data. The
GPS data is generated by another Spartan experiment.
Special software called APRtrak (tm) will be used at SPRE ground stations
to plot the positions of stations and objects world-wide using SPRE
transmissions. APRtrak uses full color maps and graphics with the
capability to display detail maps of selected geographic regions. Amateur
radio ground stations can transmit their locations to SPRE, and if heard,
SPRE will relay GPS information back to Earth. All ground stations within
range of SPRE will see the relayed stations plotted at the on the map at
the correct geographic location. The APRtrak software will also decode
and display SPRE housekeeping telemetry including temperatures, voltages,
and system status. This software is freely available on the Internet for
installation on IBM compatible computers.
This technology has many applications in the amateur radio as well as the
commercial worlds. Low cost Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites could be
used to track storms, weather balloons, boats at sea, trucks, etc.
Satellites could collect the location data from ground targets and
download it to ground control stations. If the SPRE mission is
successful, this capability may be incorporated into future amateur
spacecraft, thus supporting the amateur's effort for technological
improvement.
The operational aspects of SPRE will include amateur radio operators
throughout the world. Elementary and High Schools are encouraged to
enlist the aid of local amateur radio operators to set up ground stations
and participate in the SPRE experiment. SPRE can be used as an
educational tool in many classes including math, science, and geography.
SPRE can still be used as an educational tool even if a school is not in
session during a fly-over. A simple amateur packet radio station can be
configured to listen to the SPRE telemetry and record the data for later
study.
Amateurs and schools who participate are encouraged to send the data they
collect to the SPRE Project to help to piece together a composite picture
of the mission. The final results will be made available to participating
schools and the amateur radio community.
SPRE will use a ground control network, SPREnet, consisting of specially
equipped amateur radio stations to distribute data via the Internet.
These control stations will monitor the health and activity of SPRE.
In addition to the amateur radio experiment, the SPRE system will forward
to Earth a sampling of real-time telemetry for two of OAST Flyer's
experiments: REFLEX and GADACS. Spartan is equipped with on-board
recorders to capture data from each of the experiments. Traditionally, an
experimenter must wait several weeks to receive the mission data. SPRE
provides a low cost, innovative solution giving experimenters the
opportunity view a small sample of data during the mission while advancing
amateur radio satellite technology.
The sample REFLEX data from the mass spectrometer will be used by the
experimenters to provide feedback on how well their experiment is
performing. SPRE will be providing GPS location and time information from
the GADACS experiment. This information will provide some insight on the
health of the GADACS GPS receivers as well as indicate the current
location of the Spartan satellite. Using the APRtrak software described
above, amateur radio stations and schools will be able to observe the
track of the satellite as it passes overhead.
Data is transmitted on a downlink frequency of 145.55 MHz. The is the
same frequency used by the MIR space station and the Shuttle Amateur Radio
EXperiment (SAREX). The data format is completely printable ASCII
characters and therefore is fully compatible with all amateur packet radio
equipment in common use today.
All of the hardware and software has been designed and constructed by
students and volunteers. This low cost project has provided a great
hands-on opportunity to gain experience in space communications. So far,
several students have earned college credit for their work on SPRE. It
has also helped some graduating students secure employment in the
aerospace industry.
Information Summary
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mission: STS-72, Space Shuttle Endeavour (OV-105)
Launch: January 11, 1996 at 09:18 UTC (60 minute launch window)
Orbit: 28.45 Degrees
SPRE Deployment: 3 days 2 hours mission elapsed time
SPRE mission: Approximately 46 hours
Operating Mode: FM, AFSK 1200 baud packet radio
Frequencies: 145.550 MHz Simplex
Landing: January 20, 1996 at 04:54 UTC at KSC
WWW Home Page: http://w3eax.umd.edu
Anon. FTP site: w3eax.umd.edu /pub/spre directory
Ground Stations:
* Any amateur radio station or school with packet radio capability
* ARPtrak Software (available on the Internet)
- Runs on an IBM compatible PC
- Displays SPRE telemetry
- Unattended data collection capability
- Can replay satellite passes
* Simple packet radio station setup
- Licensed Amateur Radio Operator
- Terminal Node Controller (TNC)
- VHF Radio (amplifier recommended if transmitting to SPRE)
- VHF Antenna (beam recommended if transmitting to SPRE)
- PC Compatible Computer
- APRtrak Software Package4
- Satellite Tracking Software (Recommended)
To Participate:
Schools wishing to participate should contact the SPRE Project for more
information and the APRtrak software. Send electronic mail (e-mail) to
Ken McCaughey at kenneth@w3eax.umd.edu. Or send a self addressed stamped
envelop and a 3.5 inch high density floppy disk to:
Attn: SPRE Project
Century Computing Inc.
8101 Sandy Spring Road
Laurel, MD 20707
For information on local amateur radio clubs, operators, and volunteer
instructors please contact Peter Budnik from the Amateur Radio Relay
League (ARRL). Send mail or e-mail to:
Peter Budnik
ARRL
225 Main Street
Newington, CT 06111
e-mail: pbudnik@arrl.org
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:46:13 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.clark.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.kreonet.re.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!news.ysu.edu!news.cps.udayton.edu!news.engr.udayton.edu!blackbird.afit.af.mil!dolphin!tkelso
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE715)
Date: 1 Dec 95 23:07:09 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 750
Message-ID: <tkelso.817859229@dolphin>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial BBS, (334) 409-9280, and are updated daily (when
possible). Documentation and tracking software are also available on this
system. The Celestial BBS may be accessed 24 hours/day at speeds up to
28,800 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity.
Element sets (also updated daily) and some documentation and software are
available via anonymous ftp from archive.afit.af.mil (129.92.1.66) in the
directory pub/space.
As a service to the satellite user community, the most current of these
elements are uploaded weekly to sci.space.news and rec.radio.amateur.space.
This week's elements are provided below.
- Current Two-Line Element Sets #715 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 95331.90328313 .00000376 00000-0 43294-3 0 1556
2 00424 80.4494 123.3442 0021375 193.8626 166.1904 13.67857873654684
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 95331.64723805 .00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 9475
2 02608 14.6386 354.9668 0007539 70.6286 289.4414 1.00393173 22834
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 95332.54566516 -.00000123 00000-0 10000-3 0 4233
2 03029 14.8970 1.9507 0009736 264.5556 251.4621 1.00272951102747
Cosmos 398
1 04966U 71016A 95334.88501580 .01003038 11506-4 20702-3 0 1403
2 04966 51.3725 131.0942 0160145 348.7289 11.0148 16.04903716850812
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 95332.90096183 -.00000142 00000-0 -11436-5 0 9319
2 07646 49.8296 223.0186 0205650 285.5935 72.2329 13.82189719 51123
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 95332.85412777 .00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 1533
2 08820 109.8506 317.0325 0044435 172.1406 187.9872 6.38664326200975
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 95326.32466543 .00000107 00000-0 10000-3 0 499
2 09852 12.9642 35.3161 0004640 109.6347 250.3684 1.00005805 15567
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 95334.59451688 .00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 6081
2 10061 12.0670 39.4169 0013308 132.7396 295.7172 1.00280024 12445
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 95335.26550870 -.00000216 00000-0 10000-3 0 1988
2 10637 35.4666 86.3233 1342530 51.5395 354.4709 1.00284568 17947
GPS BI-01
1 10684U 78020A 95330.32534109 -.00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 4066
2 10684 64.9031 29.9144 0060545 163.6331 196.6221 1.98069433115373
GPS BI-02
1 10893U 78047A 95331.95060582 -.00000028 00000-0 10000-3 0 1990
2 10893 63.2671 267.4680 0225573 14.2856 346.3641 2.01627411128733
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 95334.27242712 -.00000032 00000-0 10000-3 0 5730
2 10953 11.0521 42.2211 0007149 149.2543 215.0490 1.00380460 17057
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 95332.43050522 -.00000025 00000-0 36355-4 0 4462
2 10967 107.9974 117.3053 0002040 236.0980 123.9968 14.38071778912440
GPS BI-03
1 11054U 78093A 95333.98040334 -.00000056 00000-0 10000-3 0 3666
2 11054 62.9522 266.0593 0045309 180.7592 179.2341 1.93505243124784
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 95334.63237340 -.00000049 00000-0 -63338-5 0 5476
2 11080 98.9730 201.2578 0009218 139.9496 220.2315 13.83700373863573
GPS BI-04
1 11141U 78112A 95332.14881047 -.00000068 00000-0 10000-3 0 161
2 11141 64.9112 31.9527 0049322 27.9657 332.3706 1.92894820 13984
GPS BI-05
1 11690U 80011A 95332.42357244 -.00000067 00000-0 10000-3 0 9572
2 11690 65.2617 31.3874 0151301 192.7320 166.9872 2.00568993130158
GPS BI-06
1 11783U 80032A 95328.90409064 -.00000004 00000-0 10000-3 0 1139
2 11783 62.3908 260.5498 0221954 29.4021 331.8396 2.03456654114650
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 95334.18475814 -.00000227 00000-0 10000-3 0 8951
2 12472 7.8277 52.2778 0005914 52.1685 307.7659 1.00218582 11091
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 95333.85909412 .00000007 00000-0 -92703-5 0 4530
2 13301 82.9285 280.6663 0029221 71.8848 288.5479 13.68069904669984
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 95334.14011495 .00000673 00000-0 15906-3 0 8054
2 13367 98.1007 25.8029 0008039 45.7240 314.4615 14.57169920711383
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 95335.06357118 .00000007 00000-0 21377-4 0 9010
2 13736 98.6223 161.6305 0007749 250.1279 109.9065 14.25764776572695
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 95335.07316167 -.00000173 00000-0 -89321-4 0 1550
2 13777 98.9667 159.8086 0012025 284.5345 75.4485 13.99235318325524
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 95332.48110760 .00000026 00000-0 11543-4 0 5490
2 13916 82.9444 340.2323 0038391 356.8156 3.2753 13.74331766636037
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 95331.64728263 .00000084 00000-0 00000+0 0 5027
2 13969 8.6511 45.6585 0004515 184.6896 289.2640 1.00274633 19356
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 95332.20717084 -.00000223 00000-0 10000-3 0 4668
2 14050 6.6487 55.5772 0002637 31.6815 328.1905 1.00313997104170
OSCAR 10
1 14129U 83058B 95334.82392991 -.00000421 00000-0 10000-3 0 3916
2 14129 26.4097 235.9909 5978339 330.6728 6.2527 2.05883476 65766
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 95335.20670502 .00017005 00000-0 37797-2 0 3905
2 14780 98.3577 27.6988 0003193 149.4818 210.1979 14.57050289624958
UoSat 2
1 14781U 84021B 95333.52600334 .00000139 00000-0 31355-4 0 8445
2 14781 97.7872 328.3594 0012323 18.4947 341.6706 14.69403619628186
GPS BI-09
1 15039U 84059A 95334.04635408 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 3777
2 15039 64.5768 26.2579 0082037 18.9920 341.3693 1.92302271 83586
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 95332.19191519 .00000043 00000-0 29898-4 0 7506
2 15055 82.9579 34.9204 0026859 180.8996 179.2110 13.73629048573257
GPS BI-10
1 15271U 84097A 95332.07087584 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 816
2 15271 62.0852 260.9030 0158552 355.7876 4.0962 2.00606440 81213
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 95334.43046395 .00000197 00000-0 20359-4 0 4354
2 15331 82.5316 300.1635 0018177 247.2887 112.6408 14.84696839603335
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 95334.77228389 .00000075 00000-0 63295-4 0 4937
2 15427 98.9790 34.3233 0015177 154.7161 205.4753 14.13746257465457
GPS BI-11
1 16129U 85093A 95335.20876409 -.00000078 00000-0 10000-3 0 6903
2 16129 65.2470 29.6021 0155572 85.6432 276.1899 1.89368049 18153
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95334.57834998 .00005030 00000-0 71908-4 0 3419
2 16609 51.6442 44.2047 0002777 24.2838 335.8286 15.58178293458895
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 95334.95839785 .00000090 00000-0 62356-4 0 8757
2 16613 98.6354 42.4541 0001199 94.4635 265.6677 14.20078670192034
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 95332.14017119 .00000225 00000-0 24274-4 0 3507
2 16881 82.5191 0.1100 0017668 286.6162 73.3110 14.83684868503888
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 95333.87079536 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 462
2 16908 50.0102 252.8600 0011320 222.9090 137.0861 12.44413269 91460
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 95334.85517001 .00000022 00000-0 27688-4 0 4114
2 16969 98.5151 332.7486 0012186 214.4695 145.5696 14.24965755378219
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 95334.81952100 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 3537
2 17527 98.9688 35.8987 0019701 158.8727 201.3262 14.00393104447082
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 95334.33315885 .00000078 00000-0 10000-3 0 6568
2 17561 2.6633 71.0103 0000561 244.8273 97.5188 1.00272456 15298
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 4520
2 17845 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578493092
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 95334.75093993 -.00000018 00000-0 13197-4 0 2322
2 18123 98.7741 163.2782 0015002 101.6637 258.6222 14.15424969336288
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95334.42867017 .00000008 00000-0 -74313-5 0 1415
2 18129 82.9228 296.1799 0012294 357.8853 2.2247 13.72359250422770
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 95335.01346169 .00000039 00000-0 21406-4 0 4421
2 18312 82.5561 150.0628 0013964 61.0746 299.1812 13.84066908418621
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 95334.68768113 .00000051 00000-0 32173-4 0 7897
2 18820 82.5426 205.7962 0017197 122.6628 237.6184 13.84747923395917
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 95334.09694552 -.00000004 00000-0 16637-4 0 1272
2 18822 98.3919 170.5942 0005315 227.6447 132.4282 14.23173443406112
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 95334.62158305 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 354
2 19163 65.1866 92.5694 0007664 155.2964 204.7532 2.13102423 57984
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 95331.39338798 .00000028 00000-0 10000-3 0 4423
2 19165 65.1702 92.6380 0001035 293.6938 66.2856 2.13102176 58539
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 95326.93750000 -.00000072 00000-0 10000-3 0 2211
2 19215 2.8170 68.2720 0004390 129.8040 124.6270 0.96952553 15162
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95333.94907252 -.00000076 00000-0 12582-3 0 1168
2 19216 57.4286 150.0054 7352866 25.0548 357.3560 2.09728659 25643
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 95331.42635161 .00000197 00000-0 21559-4 0 500
2 19274 82.5128 101.3804 0021876 71.3851 288.9734 14.82415658399339
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 95331.24331969 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 4407
2 19336 82.5374 310.0342 0018561 24.8441 335.3562 13.16975109352762
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 95330.95324594 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 3347
2 19503 65.6504 331.5776 0006356 161.4266 198.6181 2.13101800 56016
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 95334.77193369 .00000035 00000-0 43768-4 0 3030
2 19531 99.1953 342.6172 0012543 80.5332 279.7261 14.13073536270284
TDRS 2
1 19548U 88091B 95332.67741287 -.00000195 00000-0 10000-3 0 1618
2 19548 2.1064 73.2194 0009290 157.1405 165.7339 1.00265259 13504
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 95334.27610862 .00000002 00000-0 10000-3 0 5503
2 19749 65.1386 92.1176 0004336 262.9000 97.0387 2.13101541 53596
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 95329.63873749 .00000026 00000-0 10000-3 0 4587
2 19750 65.1514 92.3404 0008336 218.7129 141.2116 2.13101912 53518
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 95334.71536628 .00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 1508
2 19802 55.2375 118.5598 0026145 173.7620 186.2704 2.00560244 49712
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 95333.09221907 .00010736 00000-0 59703-3 0 6125
2 19822 75.1098 240.2000 3760365 257.5976 58.7806 7.88907258150805
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 95333.79268783 .00000051 00000-0 32623-4 0 4400
2 19851 82.5189 80.8682 0013746 172.2928 187.8449 13.84400163341103
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 95334.73905468 -.00000085 00000-0 10000-3 0 1637
2 19876 1.5765 71.8312 0018767 275.6634 92.6305 0.97109242 4688
TDRS 3
1 19883U 89021B 95333.06696759 -.00000275 00000-0 10000-3 0 1418
2 19883 0.0801 67.1018 0003716 218.2750 125.1802 1.00266825197102
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 95331.06448987 -.00000045 00000-0 10000-3 0 1458
2 20061 54.3327 294.7755 0151477 217.3027 141.6239 2.00562919 47383
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 95334.80708509 .00000047 00000-0 34036-4 0 5985
2 20103 82.9593 255.7005 0036094 249.0699 110.6588 13.73860415221304
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 95334.39188595 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 1672
2 20185 55.0735 119.1342 0016605 327.7960 32.1112 2.00560978 46025
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 95329.69278451 -.00000369 00000-0 10000-3 0 2734
2 20217 1.3586 75.6241 0001006 317.7365 39.8790 1.00258193 23360
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 95332.27265683 .00000148 00000-0 36834-4 0 4577
2 20261 82.5946 39.6889 1242873 140.7602 229.0609 12.47304007280733
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 95333.93260377 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 1584
2 20302 53.3171 234.5855 0013992 148.2799 211.8566 2.00560873 44812
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 95335.16308709 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 4469
2 20305 82.5451 262.1653 0008688 69.1304 291.0683 13.04414351192259
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 95332.47921018 -.00000049 00000-0 -31783-5 0 1698
2 20322 98.9546 346.0220 0008206 239.1562 120.8806 14.03449962308630
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 4462
2 20335 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578342105
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 95330.45345258 -.00000036 00000-0 10000-3 0 9962
2 20361 55.8672 61.3436 0084885 129.0006 231.7788 2.00562833 34227
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 95333.52275444 -.00000142 00000-0 10000-3 0 2524
2 20391 3.4577 64.7927 0002749 143.9192 31.1086 1.00265799 21987
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 95335.23007916 .00000169 00000-0 10000-3 0 38
2 20436 98.7180 47.0556 0001574 91.3732 268.7566 14.20031279303600
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95334.27344694 .00000018 00000-0 23699-4 0 1436
2 20437 98.5603 55.9068 0012001 68.9087 291.3375 14.29904773305480
UO-15
1 20438U 90005C 95333.20100918 .00000012 00000-0 21780-4 0 9394
2 20438 98.5553 53.1226 0010978 76.3837 283.8570 14.29219651305216
PACSAT
1 20439U 90005D 95331.71990876 -.00000014 00000-0 11411-4 0 9415
2 20439 98.5725 55.2941 0012229 76.8287 283.4264 14.29958971305132
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95331.27244791 .00000035 00000-0 30537-4 0 9418
2 20440 98.5744 55.3899 0012429 77.2885 282.9683 14.30101054305097
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95333.77682714 .00000036 00000-0 30665-4 0 9465
2 20441 98.5737 57.8135 0012923 69.8599 290.3973 14.30071786305451
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95331.19907277 .00000021 00000-0 24814-4 0 9401
2 20442 98.5757 55.6921 0013253 77.7828 282.4838 14.30176314205109
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 95330.84974201 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 1010
2 20452 54.0318 175.0457 0060063 84.7495 275.9983 2.00556282 42736
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 95332.24361870 .00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 8652
2 20478 99.1318 39.0763 0002157 43.6812 316.4495 13.94864619216407
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 95332.66458293 .00000024 00000-0 13026-3 0 9418
2 20479 99.0593 30.7659 0539768 220.5347 135.4356 12.83337644272054
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95333.69773208 -.00000001 00000-0 75094-4 0 8385
2 20480 99.0603 31.4363 0540165 218.6430 137.4828 12.83232508272174
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 95335.19100617 -.00000704 00000-0 -12649-2 0 1909
2 20491 99.0691 91.4221 0470549 40.3843 323.1238 13.02962487275943
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 95332.89124487 .00001739 00000-0 58177-4 0 6002
2 20496 43.1033 272.0041 0009530 195.8676 164.1881 15.35130685322881
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 95334.66902958 -.00000000 00000-0 -16247-4 0 5971
2 20508 82.9543 30.3659 0044018 199.3064 160.6425 13.73501287188506
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 95333.65862245 .00000212 00000-0 25850-4 0 4597
2 20510 82.5235 52.1209 0016946 255.5132 104.4209 14.78551331310049
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 95333.24740776 -.00000059 00000-0 10000-3 0 1260
2 20533 54.6896 295.3642 0042547 107.2546 253.2068 2.00573476 41556
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 95334.28566366 .00006786 00000-0 13133-3 0 8688
2 20546 94.1259 238.5856 0065732 58.1205 302.6442 15.45406374314110
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95333.03910789 .00000337 00000-0 18140-4 0 7410
2 20580 28.4696 71.4582 0005007 229.1085 130.9035 14.90978459108532
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 95332.56688252 .00000135 00000-0 20198-4 0 1429
2 20608 89.9296 175.1174 0108216 41.6240 319.3158 14.64880998296770
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 95335.11371835 -.00000032 00000-0 10000-3 0 2476
2 20619 65.2462 330.7720 0025612 206.7726 153.1262 2.13102501 43061
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 95330.07055409 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 2483
2 20620 65.2467 330.9281 0007146 46.4229 313.6586 2.13102527 42992
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 95328.26053628 -.00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 8393
2 20621 65.2722 331.0571 0011157 197.2384 162.7468 2.13101860 42952
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 2386
2 20635 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578312936
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 95333.53661715 .00000139 00000-0 27911-4 0 5126
2 20638 52.9900 122.5976 0011091 230.8061 129.1937 15.07308164302057
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 95334.53544933 .00000042 00000-0 23980-4 0 9404
2 20670 82.5444 146.4465 0017317 93.1335 267.1801 13.84150578274120
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 95330.90343434 .00000038 00000-0 18800-3 0 1894
2 20712 18.1272 333.2989 7189769 225.6482 46.6285 2.35644007 38326
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 95335.06695404 .00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 9724
2 20724 54.8833 116.6623 0123441 177.0504 183.0098 2.00565276 37453
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 95334.53911451 .00000038 00000-0 53662-4 0 6675
2 20788 98.8088 341.8987 0014400 339.8894 20.1699 14.01351233268131
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 95334.32446835 .00000015 00000-0 26094-6 0 9511
2 20826 82.5240 83.3708 0013878 5.9546 354.1831 13.83618576261200
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 95334.61868437 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 9803
2 20830 55.8183 59.1539 0067511 100.6976 260.0693 2.00558376 38087
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 95329.53666348 .00000045 00000-0 10000-3 0 9417
2 20959 55.0751 118.9012 0103300 231.0791 127.9918 2.00568518 36575
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 95334.77070261 .00000140 00000-0 65306-4 0 4304
2 20978 98.6240 42.2916 0080070 39.1030 321.5899 14.32603501161169
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 95332.50857588 .00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 8139
2 21006 65.1189 91.5176 0058393 187.2254 172.6831 2.13102682 38719
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 95329.41343587 .00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 9388
2 21007 65.1244 91.7008 0035515 180.3585 179.6268 2.13101083 38636
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 95333.52925886 .00000010 00000-0 00000+0 0 1565
2 21008 65.1076 91.5043 0008826 263.6786 96.2115 2.13098819 38716
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95332.88668515 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 6546
2 21087 82.9368 110.6934 0036569 47.8595 312.5658 13.74562165242353
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95334.08346749 .00000040 00000-0 26178-4 0 8487
2 21089 82.9216 337.7450 0031094 70.4885 289.9622 13.74062950241550
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 95329.64603545 -.00000007 00000-0 10000-3 0 1214
2 21140 0.1357 43.4074 0001940 212.4272 41.0354 1.00279989 19554
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 95334.85464533 .00000035 00000-0 21156-4 0 2881
2 21152 82.9219 293.4222 0041656 175.1225 185.0345 13.73526241136384
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 95332.05824330 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 4607
2 21216 65.0005 330.4911 0006149 193.4259 166.5788 2.13102788 36219
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 95333.53559197 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 8655
2 21217 64.9872 330.4329 0011606 222.5730 137.3567 2.13101764 36231
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 95331.30055147 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 3416
2 21218 64.9862 330.4864 0013708 313.9444 45.9604 2.13102663 36197
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 95331.84223856 .00001831 00000-0 34035-4 0 3165
2 21225 28.4616 155.3050 0003078 86.5656 273.5294 15.43368410138632
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 95331.52889829 .00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 8500
2 21232 82.5406 156.0710 0012652 312.7347 47.2671 13.16470285220873
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 95334.81342932 .00000098 00000-0 62843-4 0 7313
2 21263 98.5753 354.5032 0013330 130.7073 229.5280 14.22579274136119
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 95331.47714601 .00000188 00000-0 23721-4 0 1498
2 21397 82.5230 327.7447 0022481 342.4448 17.5987 14.76431003241456
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 95334.29736867 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-6 0 9157
2 21552 56.1102 56.9103 0067760 243.8901 115.4301 2.00554479 32263
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 95333.68974860 -.00000363 00000-0 -11846-3 0 2232
2 21574 98.5484 45.6277 0001474 89.3089 270.8264 14.32241937228741
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95335.19008077 .00000047 00000-0 30282-4 0 6483
2 21575 98.3789 42.2356 0007846 133.8370 226.3460 14.37002402229489
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 95334.71951515 .00000023 00000-0 22238-4 0 7437
2 21576 98.3757 39.9862 0003888 138.2165 221.9319 14.36412924229312
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 95335.19226942 .00000006 00000-0 16689-4 0 6422
2 21577 98.3761 41.0059 0006572 136.2253 223.9454 14.36502028229417
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 95332.19928147 .00000267 00000-0 10031-3 0 8421
2 21578 98.4014 44.6112 0004945 137.9451 222.2114 14.39103239229283
TDRS 4
1 21639U 91054B 95331.00000000 .00000076 00000-0 00000+0 0 9690
2 21639 0.0139 300.6849 0002161 304.7970 5.6160 1.00271184109851
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 95330.88739956 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 8488
2 21655 82.5488 104.0522 0012917 323.9685 36.0567 13.16842300205918
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 95333.07678504 -.00000052 00000-0 16554-4 0 7216
2 21701 56.9855 195.9074 0005338 102.4431 257.7202 14.96459655230251
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 95334.76394743 .00000038 00000-0 43419-4 0 812
2 21798 98.9569 346.8545 0013818 72.9743 287.2942 14.13931508106740
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 95334.32789959 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 538
2 21853 65.0537 91.1335 0007370 184.9577 175.0088 2.13102300 29863
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 95333.20870403 .00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 2163
2 21854 65.0643 91.1649 0015055 20.6393 339.4260 2.13104134 29822
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 95334.21254629 .00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 2119
2 21855 65.0626 91.1452 0008357 198.4619 161.4975 2.13102069 29830
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 95333.22856758 .00000991 00000-0 87426-4 0 7200
2 21867 97.7052 48.1881 0001816 104.1550 255.9874 14.98645093107768
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 95333.75791502 -.00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 7255
2 21890 53.8623 234.9072 0054764 184.7505 175.2439 2.00565420 27624
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 95331.47359105 -.00000073 00000-0 10000-3 0 7130
2 21930 55.7131 356.7234 0034952 179.1073 180.9370 2.00560902 26505
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 95332.54258557 .00000876 00000-0 30688-4 0 5025
2 21987 28.4312 98.5305 0009394 7.0424 353.0243 15.19552268192973
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 95333.02103380 .00000229 00000-0 17427-4 0 6770
2 22012 81.6694 331.6859 0119860 108.6541 252.7744 14.91516671185240
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 95332.01123397 .00000052 00000-0 00000+0 0 6117
2 22014 54.8272 176.6684 0088444 319.1834 40.2169 2.00563582 18354
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 95334.58089054 -.00000032 00000-0 00000+0 0 1199
2 22056 64.8310 330.4814 0007235 272.4077 87.5334 2.13103177 25932
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 95333.93810106 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 1084
2 22057 64.8394 330.5251 0008743 305.1606 54.7773 2.13102410 25895
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 95333.40859443 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 639
2 22058 64.8359 330.5495 0010300 259.9192 99.9845 2.13103169 25933
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 95333.87764363 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 9246
2 22076 66.0422 268.7242 0007867 265.6476 94.3631 12.80931126154463
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95332.87809283 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5387
2 22077 66.0781 250.9457 0002386 354.6154 5.4835 12.86293005154918
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 95331.21473678 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5357
2 22078 66.0811 253.1518 0004241 13.3262 346.7861 12.86577831154784
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 95333.96880159 -.00000042 00000-0 10000-3 0 6613
2 22108 54.0969 235.7058 0114443 154.7649 205.8591 2.00555105 23571
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 95334.22531131 .00000057 00000-0 63693-4 0 5657
2 22161 62.9879 28.0480 0824021 1.0638 359.1909 13.21860924151999
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 95331.54420766 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 4496
2 22195 52.6383 119.7212 0137765 348.1159 11.6169 6.47294395 73150
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 95331.65934371 .00000049 00000-0 10000-3 0 6271
2 22231 54.6527 177.8180 0025144 287.3460 72.4354 2.00558842 22103
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 95333.80138156 .00000067 00000-0 10000-3 0 6603
2 22275 54.6313 175.2495 0023206 258.3424 101.4669 2.00571468 21559
TDRS 5
1 22314U 93003B 95334.62972426 -.00000286 00000-0 10000-3 0 5895
2 22314 2.2274 70.9233 0002576 215.7869 323.0663 1.00278117 10587
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 95334.86630237 -.00000073 00000-0 10000-3 0 6381
2 22446 54.3467 295.4732 0085417 355.6988 4.1793 2.00568645 20563
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 95334.32953124 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 7521
2 22512 65.0636 90.9890 0009029 188.6082 171.3668 2.13102032 21434
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 95332.39136607 .00000020 00000-0 00000+0 0 8397
2 22513 65.0647 91.0613 0008313 190.5014 169.4732 2.13102433 21585
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 95332.68486456 .00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 8331
2 22514 65.0910 91.0448 0011482 184.9092 175.0726 2.13102360 21595
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 95335.21233476 .00001382 00000-0 91534-4 0 4545
2 22521 31.1053 253.5107 0056276 353.9364 6.0592 15.02610580152513
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 95334.38643352 -.00000200 00000-0 00000+0 0 4733
2 22563 25.6869 291.7914 0009405 285.4461 101.8176 0.99250175 14116
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 95332.01784055 -.00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 4835
2 22581 55.2391 356.1916 0058266 34.7467 325.6652 2.00567641 19565
ARSENE
1 22654U 93031B 95329.41880734 -.00000100 00000-0 10000-3 0 3415
2 22654 2.9717 78.2469 2885825 225.4824 107.7921 1.42201851 8681
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 95335.14717563 -.00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 5610
2 22657 55.1526 355.8322 0073961 214.2803 145.2740 2.00557387 14951
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 95332.89430905 .00000051 00000-0 17276-4 0 4486
2 22698 89.5369 281.9039 0088912 262.3567 96.7511 14.21359265125836
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 95333.61334490 -.00000042 00000-0 10000-3 0 4752
2 22700 54.2618 236.5221 0044106 350.1222 9.8349 2.00569304 17729
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 95334.86489463 -.00000043 00000-0 11495-5 0 9423
2 22739 99.0156 284.0620 0010805 66.5873 293.6439 14.10948957 18942
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 95334.70273952 -.00000072 00000-0 10000-3 0 5458
2 22779 54.4719 295.5052 0019701 254.3756 105.3964 2.00556181 16505
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 95330.98624211 .00000037 00000-0 20272-4 0 4448
2 22782 82.5463 148.1811 0021698 184.0871 176.0117 13.83042954113041
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 95334.79633619 -.00000077 00000-0 00000+0 0 5795
2 22787 4.3468 325.7376 0003709 248.1180 213.9315 1.00269378 6836
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 95333.72076750 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 4907
2 22823 98.7224 45.6238 0000685 70.1378 289.9872 14.20033925112787
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 95331.69478589 -.00000044 00000-0 -85060-7 0 4322
2 22824 98.6033 45.2644 0007179 99.8900 260.3084 14.27103068113058
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95332.72749168 .00000006 00000-0 20059-4 0 4355
2 22825 98.6049 46.7128 0009315 97.0368 263.1874 14.27679862113240
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95331.75795796 -.00000003 00000-0 16432-4 0 4343
2 22826 98.6054 45.8854 0009820 100.3802 259.8487 14.27787624113119
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 95331.20387954 .00000032 00000-0 30320-4 0 4957
2 22827 98.6025 45.2610 0009964 88.2808 271.9504 14.27916471113042
ITAMSAT
1 22828U 93061F 95334.72921387 .00000033 00000-0 30595-4 0 4137
2 22828 98.6009 48.8550 0010974 77.5568 282.6844 14.28121297 81645
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95331.16995524 .00000018 00000-0 24915-4 0 4263
2 22829 98.6009 45.3943 0010838 87.5158 272.7271 14.28101689113057
KO-25
1 22830U 93061H 95332.21116386 -.00000012 00000-0 12424-4 0 4451
2 22830 98.4985 37.7289 0012577 64.1343 296.1131 14.28101944113203
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 95334.25108910 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 3567
2 22877 55.5416 57.1412 0020696 308.9344 50.9026 2.00565805 15388
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 95335.14526620 -.00000089 00000-0 10000-3 0 3849
2 22912 0.4743 280.7662 0002307 343.1371 207.9779 1.00274185 5869
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 95331.55965970 .00005148 00000-0 36302-3 0 4025
2 22920 28.4709 23.4990 0004019 124.0921 236.0051 15.02801256108890
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 95334.22721401 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2147
2 22969 82.5614 41.5884 0016207 21.9815 338.2028 13.16733109 88734
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 95331.74596076 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2051
2 22970 82.5577 43.2556 0017339 24.7123 335.4816 13.16826428 88415
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 95332.33953301 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 2861
2 23027 55.0829 358.0338 0066363 201.5997 158.1599 2.00566764 12650
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 95333.23222331 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 2849
2 23043 64.7173 330.9125 0006733 208.7944 151.1837 2.13102451 12725
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 95334.52259958 -.00000032 00000-0 00000+0 0 2558
2 23044 64.7056 330.8619 0031218 207.0391 152.8285 2.13102931 12758
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 95332.35287462 -.00000031 00000-0 00000+0 0 2637
2 23045 64.7004 330.9606 0009708 29.5397 330.5342 2.13102499 12704
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 95333.65575916 -.00000256 00000-0 00000+0 0 4308
2 23051 0.3638 85.0459 0004296 150.7483 352.5397 1.00254849 13352
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 95334.55120150 .00005960 00000-0 99908-4 0 2614
2 23101 97.0878 165.4877 0011864 347.9118 12.1853 15.52132907 88314
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 95334.17241507 .00003861 00000-0 92866-3 0 2315
2 23125 7.5778 323.0700 7258736 255.8388 20.3444 2.31559027 11486
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 95331.20000000 .00005834 00000-0 13272-2 0 1974
2 23126 7.4510 324.4890 7259919 253.0280 88.2940 2.31348983 11458
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 95335.19011131 .00000051 00000-0 37272-4 0 1490
2 23179 82.9463 24.0920 0036163 322.2592 37.6022 13.75674709 69438
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 95332.95993033 .00000009 00000-0 00000+0 0 2217
2 23203 64.7696 210.8791 0007479 142.0491 218.0808 2.13101866 10114
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 95332.25534876 .00000011 00000-0 00000+0 0 2300
2 23204 64.7646 210.9271 0015385 350.8080 9.2332 2.13102005 10097
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 95333.07663030 .00000009 00000-0 00000+0 0 2157
2 23205 64.7658 210.8935 0001387 327.2066 32.8600 2.13102446 10118
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 95334.70354192 .00000094 00000-0 74503-4 0 5805
2 23233 98.8551 31.1053 0013255 30.0260 330.1666 14.12659286 64662
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 95332.82680792 .00000169 00000-0 22237-4 0 1128
2 23317 82.5430 244.2461 0027580 18.3910 341.8291 14.73978688 60877
ELEKTRO
1 23327U 94069A 95331.86368508 -.00000108 00000-0 00000+0 0 1036
2 23327 0.4262 257.7860 0002514 221.1624 334.3104 1.00272173 3978
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 95334.07016923 .00000081 00000-0 21660-4 0 3970
2 23342 97.9950 30.5825 0001038 80.4942 279.6368 14.69793214 57411
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 95331.51213176 .00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 1747
2 23396 65.0059 91.1590 0031072 189.9685 169.9557 2.13102493 7929
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 95331.69719778 .00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 1802
2 23397 64.9851 91.1648 0011477 318.1253 49.0116 2.13102399 7920
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 95334.38690538 -.00000002 00000-0 00000+0 0 1924
2 23398 64.9773 91.0534 0002286 260.0631 99.9004 2.13101870 7990
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 95333.45324434 -.00000282 00000-0 00000+0 0 2087
2 23426 1.8479 271.2593 0001769 338.0998 76.6128 1.00280252 3496
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95334.44853270 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 958
2 23439 64.8133 346.0986 0166428 233.7809 124.7629 11.27523720 38263
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 95334.82169360 .00000104 00000-0 81956-4 0 4126
2 23455 98.9212 276.1601 0010402 82.4413 277.7951 14.11551653 47320
ODERACS II A
1 23471U 95004C 95335.24104189 .00064903 12966-4 15955-3 0 2518
2 23471 51.6424 339.6533 0011038 34.4218 325.7455 15.96194784 47723
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 95333.40847342 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 1232
2 23511 64.7326 331.1739 0007732 225.9578 133.9984 2.13102945 5690
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 95333.05697101 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 1331
2 23512 64.7192 331.1914 0007314 304.8982 55.0523 2.13102086 5687
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 95333.35008612 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 1439
2 23513 64.7230 331.2045 0015048 207.2381 152.7040 2.13102514 5695
SFU
1 23521U 95011A 95333.44543767 .00003423 00000-0 10037-3 0 1248
2 23521 28.4501 26.8322 0013104 288.7461 71.1631 15.31840029 39265
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 95330.39785894 -.00000289 00000-0 10000-3 0 763
2 23522 0.6451 310.1156 0001422 121.9726 275.9628 1.00277031 2402
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 95334.85283383 -.00000001 00000-0 22940-4 0 3100
2 23533 98.8364 334.9535 0006340 264.5497 95.4960 14.12713622 35480
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 95333.27544625 .00000224 00000-0 80598-4 0 679
2 23547 69.9801 276.2821 0010321 111.4861 248.7361 14.45451769 34636
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 95334.85847912 .00020373 00000-0 55238-3 0 1571
2 23549 143.3672 96.9232 0241009 265.4699 91.8657 15.11228908 36157
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 95333.60343602 .00003067 00000-0 41889-4 0 791
2 23558 51.6527 44.4549 0006724 182.2433 177.8554 15.61028503558661
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 95333.22271031 .00000042 00000-0 31597-4 0 1418
2 23560 98.5532 45.1851 0000993 95.3364 264.7935 14.32245378 31802
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 1979
2 23579 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578 30416
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 95334.56077640 -.00000189 00000-0 00000+0 0 976
2 23581 0.2099 269.8139 0004069 352.4053 278.6584 1.00266945 1925
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 95333.25152504 .00000108 00000-0 29694-4 0 1202
2 23605 98.1038 267.0359 0001191 76.9455 283.1881 14.63853736 21153
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 95335.20782954 .00000018 00000-0 11761-4 0 933
2 23606 98.0837 269.3599 0007576 87.2231 272.9840 14.66910787 21548
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 95334.22761876 .00000210 00000-0 45978-4 0 442
2 23607 98.0868 268.4549 0009905 94.1905 266.0431 14.67181581 21308
TDRS 6
1 23613U 95035B 95333.52642218 .00000121 00000-0 00000+0 0 961
2 23613 0.2603 85.0074 0004093 185.6754 197.0438 1.00287155 1376
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 95334.07308902 .00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 714
2 23620 64.8302 210.6832 0018248 164.1690 195.9637 2.13102825 2747
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 95334.24966463 .00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 796
2 23621 64.8367 210.6808 0017094 174.7952 185.2899 2.13101926 2741
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 95333.36968133 .00000010 00000-0 00000+0 0 756
2 23622 64.8348 210.7074 0036727 163.2148 196.9829 2.13102399 2726
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 95328.45778960 -.00001651 00000-0 00000+0 0 191
2 23632 68.3490 253.2810 9033793 317.8920 314.9500 0.26356000 300
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 95334.47843205 -.00000037 00000-0 -89815-5 0 364
2 23657 82.5341 24.3802 0027690 341.5711 18.4522 14.73434688 13423
Soyuz TM-22
1 23665U 95047A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 890
2 23665 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578 13851
Progress M-29
1 23678U 95053A 95335.15554773 .00009872 00000-0 13468-3 0 532
2 23678 51.6444 41.3140 0003274 17.6700 342.3479 15.58186578 8332
Cosmos 2322
1 23704U 95058A 95332.45890477 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-4 0 122
2 23704 71.0176 333.3429 0002990 358.2112 1.8999 14.12562710 3906
1995058B
1 23705U 95058B 95333.20605549 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 158
2 23705 71.0108 331.6233 0010616 40.6110 319.5795 14.14146681 4013
1995058C
1 23706U 95058C 95331.23995913 .00000264 00000-0 29284-3 0 99
2 23706 71.0020 339.2929 0201837 33.4510 327.9155 13.71670273 3624
1995058D
1 23707U 95058D 95334.48142706 -.00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 101
2 23707 71.0114 333.0536 0205330 51.3871 310.5420 13.70144835 4067
1995058E
1 23708U 95058E 95334.17436225 -.00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 123
2 23708 71.0710 334.0032 0187186 30.9250 330.2726 13.74266819 4074
1995058F
1 23709U 95058F 95332.25327612 -.00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 107
2 23709 71.0421 337.8197 0200134 59.8258 302.2500 13.72045983 3763
Radarsat
1 23710U 95059A 95335.20310016 -.00065762 00000-0 -25561-1 0 583
2 23710 98.5852 339.7291 0002635 109.5462 250.5957 14.30324397 3809
SURFSAT
1 23711U 95059B 95333.87401668 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 175
2 23711 100.6372 337.9857 0368775 181.5785 178.4187 13.12211780 3317
ISO
1 23715U 95062A 95332.66666667 -.00000417 00000-0 10000-3 0 78
2 23715 5.1716 308.8998 8241910 116.2430 186.6197 1.00212926 110
1995063A
1 23717U 95063A 95333.15156108 -.00000029 00000-0 00000+0 0 96
2 23717 0.1194 346.2029 0017666 28.1130 182.0450 0.99978779 10
1995063B
1 23718U 95063B 95325.02726286 .22072120 12879-4 98252-4 0 191
2 23718 51.6145 262.6890 0001889 15.4163 70.3187 16.56114990 563
1995063C
1 23719U 95063C 95322.26697917 .13379302 12353-4 11943-2 0 46
2 23719 51.6095 278.2213 0005927 87.8436 272.7159 16.38218014 89
1995063D
1 23720U 95063D 95324.59054499 -.00000191 00000-0 00000+0 0 21
2 23720 0.2253 300.6155 0035334 42.6204 17.6302 1.00158199 30
1995063E
1 23721U 95063E 95334.86634766 .00002403 00000-0 75988-3 0 123
2 23721 47.4073 278.0505 7287818 3.4600 359.4898 2.27086925 268
1995063F
1 23722U 95063F 95334.88961857 .00000500 00000-0 53017-3 0 79
2 23722 47.4525 278.1028 7268125 3.4279 359.6127 2.26662973 319
1995064A
1 23723U 95064A 95334.05634113 .00004278 00000-0 74984-3 0 52
2 23723 25.5901 243.0332 7249181 180.3753 178.5234 2.33380857 40
1995064B
1 23724U 95064B 95335.12297975 .01286570 -81150-5 46771-3 0 101
2 23724 28.0090 223.6331 0064306 169.0992 191.1104 16.18058848 437
1995064C
1 23725U 95064C 95334.48261841 .00052617 00000-0 70052-2 0 45
2 23725 25.5763 242.8628 7252364 180.6919 176.6984 2.33414080 33
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From Unknown Sun Dec 03 12:46:14 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!brighton.openmarket.com!decwrl!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK067 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 2 Dec 1995 16:41:38 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk067.1995@ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10470 rec.radio.amateur.space:5852
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK067
ARLK067 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK92
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 67 ARLK067
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 2, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK067
ARLK067 Keplerian data
Thanks to NASA, AMSAT and WA5QGD for the following Keplerian data.
Decode 2-line elsets with the following key:
1 AAAAAU 00 0 0 BBBBB.BBBBBBBB .CCCCCCCC 00000-0 00000-0 0 DDDZ
2 AAAAA EEE.EEEE FFF.FFFF GGGGGGG HHH.HHHH III.IIII JJ.JJJJJJJJKKKKKZ
KEY: A-CATALOGNUM B-EPOCHTIME C-DECAY D-ELSETNUM E-INCLINATION F-RAAN
G-ECCENTRICITY H-ARGPERIGEE I-MNANOM J-MNMOTION K-ORBITNUM Z-CHECKSUM
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95332.20533790 .00005198 00000-0 74157-4 0 3406
2 16609 51.6444 56.1070 0002778 18.1033 342.0041 15.58155462458527
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 95330.93855044 -.00000269 00000-0 10000-3 0 03940
2 14129 26.4114 236.6069 5978423 329.6318 6.5100 2.05883401065687
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95332.02270337 .00000029 00000-0 15340-4 0 1395
2 18129 82.9226 297.9584 0012445 4.1650 355.9609 13.72359427422444
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 95332.02789287 .00000147 00000-0 32651-4 0 08678
2 14781 97.7873 326.9309 0012487 22.7042 337.4712 14.69403123627965
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95332.04456993 .00000030 00000-0 15661-4 0 08602
2 21089 82.9220 339.2582 0031050 75.9088 284.5519 13.74062766241275
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95332.51865445 -.00000312 00000-0 22059-3 0 1148
2 19216 57.4214 150.2463 7355086 24.7321 357.3808 2.09732319 25612
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95332.17420654 .00000023 00000-0 25800-4 0 01559
2 20437 98.5604 53.8430 0011961 75.0043 285.2462 14.29904614305186
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95332.14248834 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01048
2 23439 64.8133 349.8273 0166378 234.2444 124.2896 11.27523812038003
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 95332.20971263 -.00000007 00000-0 13993-4 0 09430
2 20439 98.5726 55.7767 0012218 75.4706 284.7835 14.29959055305203
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95332.11202895 .00000006 00000-0 19297-4 0 09453
2 20440 98.5742 56.2164 0012437 75.4620 284.7932 14.30100894305218
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95332.16759773 .00000033 00000-0 29498-4 0 09590
2 20441 98.5736 56.2281 0012903 74.7644 285.4962 14.30071559305225
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95332.17853174 .00000033 00000-0 29454-4 0 09482
2 20442 98.5756 56.6569 0013284 75.2471 285.0182 14.30176566205243
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95332.13834035 .00000026 00000-0 13641-3 0 08508
2 20480 99.0608 30.1701 0540073 222.1796 133.6538 12.83232559271973
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95331.86760697 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 06716
2 21087 82.9371 111.4489 0036543 50.3315 310.1055 13.74562130242214
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95332.12637829 .00000051 00000-0 31535-4 0 06551
2 21575 98.3793 39.2539 0007575 142.6551 217.5164 14.37001846229047
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95332.17833763 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 05649
2 22077 66.0780 252.4106 0002301 355.2264 4.8726 12.86292964154826
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 95332.13692170 -.00000015 00000-0 11633-4 0 04206
2 22828 98.6011 46.3022 0010827 83.6706 276.5708 14.28120591081270
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95332.10834962 -.00000009 00000-0 13912-4 0 04359
2 22826 98.6055 46.2306 0009850 99.3844 260.8442 14.27787579113160
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95332.16682296 .00000001 00000-0 18099-4 0 04526
2 22825 98.6051 46.1614 0009241 97.9865 262.2370 14.27679743113166
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95332.15083511 .00000069 00000-0 45141-4 0 04335
2 22829 98.6008 46.3602 0010893 84.1951 276.0470 14.28102316113195
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Tuesday,
December 5, 1995, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:34 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!siemens!news.ecn.bgu.edu!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!usenet
From: Carl Gregory <cgregory@uiuc.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: (no subject)
Date: 7 Dec 1995 23:52:30 GMT
Organization: Univ. of Illinois / Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Lab
Lines: 83
Message-ID: <4a7unu$6ej@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: magnet.beckman.uiuc.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.12(Macintosh; I; PPC)
X-URL: news:rec.radio.amateur.space
The latest version of WinOrbit (2.8) is now available on
ftp.seds.org, and ftp.amsat.org, and soon on oak.oakland.edu.
See below for detailed locations. A description of changes,
and an overview of the program, are also given below:
New Features in version 2.8
-------------------------
* Second satellite can now be displayed on each map.
* Mutual visibility prediction tables can now be printed for
pre-selected DX stations.
* Doppler and RF link calculations now displayed for uplink,
downlink, beacon, or transponder delta frequency.
* "AutoRun" feature added to schedule other programs for a
pass.
* Help displayed by F1 is now more "context-sensitive".
Some bugs were fixed, too.
Program Overview
----------------
WinOrbit is a program for computing artificial Earth-satellite
position and visibility, with the Amateur Radio satellite
operator in mind. It was written for the Microsoft Windows 3.1
operating system. WinOrbit is free (not shareware). The
latest version is 2.8.
The principal feature of the program is a series of tracking
windows, one per satellite, which display the current position of
the satellite and the observer on a simple world map, together
with information such as footprint, past ground track, bearing
(azimuth), distance, and elevation above the observer's horizon.
Sun position and terminator, user-selected DX locations and a
second satellite may also be displayed.
Additional features include:
* Simultaneous tracking of up to 20 satellites.
* Sun/Moon tracking built in.
* Real-time, pseudo-real-time, and manual calculation modes.
* "View from space" map presentation showing what a particular
satellite sees.
* Selectable tracking detail, including doppler shift, free-
space path loss, satellite and observer antenna pattern
effects, for a single satellite.
* Display sun position for eclipse determination, and other
observers for mutual visibility.
* "Show DX" for all stations within the satellite footprint, and
"what's up" for all satellites visible at observer QTH.
* 4 different orbital calculation algorithms (selectable).
* Tracking data (Keplerian element sets) read directly from
standard, off-the-air bulletins in two different formats (up
to 500 satellites). No pre-processing is needed, just
grab a bulletin file, headers and all. Reads AMSAT, NASA
or vector formats.
* Propagation of pre-launch keps and other element updates.
* Utility functions for modifying and comparing published element
sets, including post-launch updating of pre-launch elements,
and saving composite data files compiled from various
sources.
* Observer (QTH) data (latitude, longitude) may be imported from
a simple text database (up to 1000 locations). Entry by
grid-square or mouse-on-map is possible.
* Flexible entry of latitude, longitude, date and time.
* Printing of tables of tracking data (Ephemerides) in several
formats. Printing does not interrupt tracking. Output
may be directed to disk file or printer.
* Timeline and mutual visibility printouts.
* On-line help, including glossary and direct lookup of text
information about all Amateur satellites from the map
windows. All hamsats since Oscar I included.
* Standard Windows interface for all functions - no commands to
memorize. Both mouse and keyboard can be used for most
functions.
* DDE server interface to tracking-antenna hardware controllers.
This program is available via internet, by anonymous ftp from:
ftp.amsat.org /amsat/software/windows/tracking/winorb28.zip
oak.oakland.edu /pub3/hamradio/pc/satellite/winorb28.zip
ftp.seds.org /pub/software/pc/sat/winorb28.zip
The file VBRUN300.DLL is required (you may already have it - if not,
you can get it as described in the WinOrbit documentation).
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:35 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!info.ucla.edu!library.ucla.edu!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: fred@moneyworld.COM (Fred Stirling)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: (none)
Date: 5 Dec 95 15:25:51 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91.951205072221.1477I-100000@ns1.moneyworld.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
From: Fred Sterling
To: Fellow Net Traveler
RE: The Learning Machine Takes You Beyond Virtual Reality
http://Zygon.com
Amazing!! If you have a moment check out a new web site
http://Zygon.com. They have an incredible new multi-media
technology that uses a special digital headset that forces your
mind to learn. It blew my mind!!! Kinda felt like I was dreaming,
while learning foreign languages, and programming my subconscious
for success. And you can even read books with your eyes closed.
Pretty awesome. The company offers a free 30 day trial.
Check it out!!!
Fred Sterling
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:36 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.kei.com!news.ssd.intel.com!ornews.intel.com!ornews.intel.com!not-for-mail
From: rrm@ornews.intel.com (Robert Miller)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: 2m FM and RS-15 ???
Date: 4 Dec 1995 12:40:06 -0800
Organization: Intel Corporation
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <49vmb6$bnl@ornews.intel.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ornews.intel.com
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #8 (NOV)
Has anyone used a FM 2m rig to access the satellites ?
I am curious if this is OK to do. I would like to get onto this
bird but lack a ssb station.
Any thoughts or considerations ??
Thanks
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:37 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.Edu.TW!news.cc.nctu.edu.tw!serv.HiNet.net!news.uoregon.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!van-bc!news.rmii.com!nexus.interealm.com!usenet
From: "George J. Molnar" <gmolnar@nexus.interealm.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 2m FM and RS-15 ???
Date: Mon, 04 Dec 1995 18:16:42 -0700
Organization: ICG/MagNET (303) 745-9205
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <30C39D7A.36F6@nexus.interealm.com>
References: <49vmb6$bnl@ornews.intel.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp208.interealm.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0b3 (Win95; I)
To: Robert Miller <rrm@ornews.intel.com>
Robert Miller wrote:
>
> Has anyone used a FM 2m rig to access the satellites ?
>
> I am curious if this is OK to do. I would like to get onto this
> bird but lack a ssb station.
>
> Any thoughts or considerations ??While you could TECHNICALLY do it just fine, it is considered poor
practice since FM puts an inordinate drain on the spacecraft's power
systems. This stresses the batteries (reducing lifetime) and reduces
available power for other users (unfriendly).
You may be able to modify your rig to operate cw, after a fashion.
That's a better solution than running any other mode.
Good luck & 73,
--
George J. Molnar
Highlands Ranch, Colorado
Packet: KF2T@N0QCU.#NECO.CO.USA.NOAM
http://www.interealm.com/p/gmolnar/index.html
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:38 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!worldlinx.com!news.worldlinx.com!news
From: sylvestre <sylvestre@pandore.qc.ca>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 2m FM and RS-15 ???
Date: 6 Dec 1995 01:02:13 GMT
Organization: Intermonde Internet
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <4a2q2l$2u3@news.worldlinx.com>
References: <49vmb6$bnl@ornews.intel.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 204.101.194.19
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2N (Windows; I; 16bit)
To: rrm@ornews.intel.com
FM'ing on 2.meter uplink frequency for RS-10
Will make you CW on downlink frequency.
It work ok
73 VE2VB @amsat.org
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:39 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!EU.net!Portugal.EU.net!news.rccn.net!news.ist.utl.pt!alfa.ist.utl.pt!l42398
From: l42398@alfa.ist.utl.pt (LUIS JOSE LEAL MARTINS)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: 9600 pacsats
Date: 7 Dec 1995 09:04:19 GMT
Organization: Instituto Superior Tecnico
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <4a6amj$j0f@ci.ist.utl.pt>
NNTP-Posting-Host: alfa.ist.utl.pt
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
I'm interested in operate 9600 bauds sateletites, I've read a lot about it
but still don't understand what kindTNC / modem i need, will it be AFSK
or FSK ?????
Does the radio can be an FM onlyor those "small" rigs can't do it because
they can't "follow" the requeny and avoid the doppler efect.
yours,
--
_____________________________________________________
| Luis Jose Leal Martins | IST Lisbon - Portugal |
| e-mail l42398@alfa.ist.utl.pt |
-----------------------------------------------------
| |
| |
-----------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:40 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: 9600 pacsats
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DJ7sHx.LpL@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <4a6amj$j0f@ci.ist.utl.pt>
Date: Thu, 7 Dec 1995 11:41:57 GMT
Lines: 30
In <4a6amj$j0f@ci.ist.utl.pt> l42398@alfa.ist.utl.pt (LUIS JOSE LEAL MARTINS) writes:
>I'm interested in operate 9600 bauds sateletites, I've read a lot about it
>but still don't understand what kindTNC / modem i need, will it be AFSK
>or FSK ?????
You need a G3RUH or compatible modem. It is FSK.
>Does the radio can be an FM onlyor those "small" rigs can't do it because
>they can't "follow" the requeny and avoid the doppler efect.
Yes, you need doppler tracking on the downlink.
I used an Yaesu FT-712R with good results, it has 5 KHz steps which is the
absolute maximum you can use. At certain moments in time the receive
performance may be less because the frequency is just between two steps.
The FT-712R has CAT so it can be controlled by the tracking software.
For the uplink you don't need tracking, but a normal FM transceiver will
usually not work. (this is the usual problem with G3RUH modems)
You need something that can make true FM down to about 10 Hz, and this
normally only works with crystal-controlled or all-mode transceivers.
I used an Yaesu FT-290R with a linear amp. An FT-212R gave very
bad results.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:41 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news00.sunet.se!sunic!mn6.swip.net!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!dish.news.pipex.net!pipex!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!gatech!news.fsu.edu!freenet3.scri.fsu.edu!freenet3.scri.fsu.edu!not-for-mail
From: bmm1@freenet3.scri.fsu.edu (Bruce M. Marshall)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Amsat mailing list
Date: 2 Dec 1995 14:40:13 -0500
Organization: Tallahassee Free-Net
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <49qa2t$2dq@freenet3.scri.fsu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: freenet3.scri.fsu.edu
I used to be on an Amsat mailing list. It had excelent content but I
didn't always have time to keep up with it so I unsubscribed. Is this
mailing list archived anywhere so that I can go back and read it as
time permits?
Thanks Bruce N4USH
--
Bruce M. Marshall bmm1@freenet.fsu.edu voice 615 481 0990 fax 615 481 8039
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:42 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!Portugal.EU.net!news.rccn.net!news.ist.utl.pt!alfa.ist.utl.pt!l42398
From: l42398@alfa.ist.utl.pt (LUIS JOSE LEAL MARTINS)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AMSAT mailing list ??
Date: 7 Dec 1995 09:12:59 GMT
Organization: Instituto Superior Tecnico
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <4a6b6r$h6g@ci.ist.utl.pt>
NNTP-Posting-Host: alfa.ist.utl.pt
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
Can any one say where can I get it ??????
Thanks in advance.
yours,
--
_____________________________________________________
| Luis Jose Leal Martins | IST Lisbon - Portugal |
| e-mail l42398@alfa.ist.utl.pt |
-----------------------------------------------------
| |
| |
-----------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:43 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!hermes.is.co.za!news.pix.za!usenet
From: Danie Brynard <danie.brynard@pixie.co.za>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AO-10 transponder noise
Date: 3 Dec 1995 21:16:46 GMT
Organization: PiX - Proxima information X-change
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <49t43u$smi@hawk.pix.za>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net-1.pta.pix.za
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 16bit)
This morning I thought I could hear the transponder noise from
AO-10 as it was flying over at a mere 5000 km. I use a linear pol.
yagi and the noise was coming and going at a rate of abt 0.5Hz.
When I listened outside the transponder BW I did not here anything.
Any other people who would like to comment on this effect ? What
is the phase noise contribution of AO-10 on the mode B transponder
and what is the average noise power coming from the 2m downlink ?
May be it is very high and that's why I could hear it with my
non-optimal antennas:-)
danie zs6awk
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:44 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsat!engineer.mrg.uswest.com!news.uoregon.edu!news.emf.net!gatech!newsjunkie.ans.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!bcm.tmc.edu!news.tamu.edu!news.mty.itesm.mx!academ03.mty.itesm.mx!fjorozco
From: XE2MXU/N5UHB <fjorozco@academ03.mty.itesm.mx>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: APRS/APRT with Mir??
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 1995 16:20:51 -0600
Organization: ITESM Campus Monterrey
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <Pine.A32.3.91.951206161808.33303B-100000@academ03.mty.itesm.mx>
NNTP-Posting-Host: academ03.mty.itesm.mx
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:12983 rec.radio.amateur.space:5886
Hi, I wonder if there is anyone out there who uses Mir to relay his APRS
position reports....
I want to participate on the SPRE experiment this January, and I think
using Mir as a digipeater could help us learn more about APRtrak so we
really know what we're doing when SPRE flies....
Any comments??
There is a Mir pass over my location today at about 0350Z, and I'll give
it a try then....
73 de Luis XE2MXU/N5UHB in Monterrey, Mexico
___
Life's Improved Golden Rule: "Whoever's got the gold and the NUKES makes
the rules!"
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:46 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!newsfeed.internetmci.com!info.ucla.edu!library.ucla.edu!galaxy.ucr.edu!proton.llumc.edu!news.cerf.net!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK068 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 5 Dec 1995 16:15:11 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 91
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk068.1995@ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10485 rec.radio.amateur.space:5867
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK068
ARLK068 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK93
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 68 ARLK068
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 5, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK068
ARLK068 Keplerian data
Thanks to NASA, AMSAT and WA5QGD for the following Keplerian data.
Decode 2-line elsets with the following key:
1 AAAAAU 00 0 0 BBBBB.BBBBBBBB .CCCCCCCC 00000-0 00000-0 0 DDDZ
2 AAAAA EEE.EEEE FFF.FFFF GGGGGGG HHH.HHHH III.IIII JJ.JJJJJJJJKKKKKZ
KEY: A-CATALOGNUM B-EPOCHTIME C-DECAY D-ELSETNUM E-INCLINATION F-RAAN
G-ECCENTRICITY H-ARGPERIGEE I-MNANOM J-MNMOTION K-ORBITNUM Z-CHECKSUM
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95338.55467747 .00002569 00000-0 39921-4 0 3474
2 16609 51.6454 24.2676 0003633 24.0167 336.0997 15.58207718459516
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95337.72486774 .00000513 00000-0 35603-4 0 07589
2 20580 28.4699 41.3414 0005457 287.5848 72.4150 14.90982368109239
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 95334.82392991 -.00000421 00000-0 10000-3 0 3916
2 14129 26.4097 235.9909 5978339 330.6728 6.2527 2.05883476 65766
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95338.00116472 .00000038 00000-0 25169-4 0 01545
2 18129 82.9225 293.5380 0011780 348.5456 11.5426 13.72359643423262
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 95338.02033074 .00000144 00000-0 32147-4 0 8453
2 14781 97.7875 332.6460 0012074 4.4494 355.6816 14.69405315628849
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95338.45253129 .00000019 00000-0 37461-5 0 8496
2 21089 82.9189 334.5016 0030887 59.8368 300.5842 13.74062876242156
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95337.76354442 .00000418 00000-0 10673-3 0 01178
2 19216 57.4263 149.2609 7354544 25.3447 357.2988 2.09723790025723
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95338.19202650 .00000021 00000-0 24862-4 0 01668
2 20437 98.5600 59.7583 0012083 58.5837 301.6528 14.29905390306043
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95338.08498671 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01133
2 23439 64.8121 340.2166 0166496 233.1688 125.3861 11.27523586038670
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 95338.15732916 .00000004 00000-0 18314-4 0 09595
2 20439 98.5722 61.6317 0012325 60.2580 299.9827 14.29959855306058
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95338.12902060 .00000017 00000-0 23256-4 0 09509
2 20440 98.5738 62.1431 0012438 58.5649 301.6734 14.30101807306079
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95338.11474924 -.00000037 00000-0 23991-5 0 09658
2 20441 98.5737 62.0864 0012987 59.1050 301.1384 14.30071440306075
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95338.19520604 .00000040 00000-0 32399-4 0 09591
2 20442 98.5753 62.5845 0013322 58.7100 301.5375 14.30177451206109
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95338.14201689 -.00000002 00000-0 70384-4 0 08680
2 20480 99.0599 35.0488 0540228 208.5780 148.4689 12.83232598272741
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95337.83649173 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 06668
2 21087 82.9365 107.0288 0036506 34.5765 325.7754 13.74562359243039
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95338.11452237 .00000072 00000-0 38562-4 0 06600
2 21575 98.3785 45.0812 0007780 124.7641 235.4277 14.37003285229904
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95338.16513212 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 05468
2 22077 66.0785 239.8769 0003453 353.7791 6.3174 12.86293338155597
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 95338.16224838 .00000042 00000-0 34240-4 0 04306
2 22828 98.6006 52.2351 0011091 68.2528 291.9828 14.28121882082134
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95338.13508251 .00000037 00000-0 32749-4 0 04446
2 22826 98.6045 52.1631 0010027 82.3069 277.9249 14.27788837114023
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95338.12392811 .00000028 00000-0 28891-4 0 04394
2 22825 98.6044 52.0250 0009487 81.9165 278.3103 14.27680728114010
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95338.10617851 .00000099 00000-0 57331-4 0 04423
2 22829 98.5998 52.2227 0010817 68.6261 291.6084 14.28103645114043
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 9, 1995, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:47 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!news.compulink.co.uk!cix.compulink.co.uk!usenet
From: oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk ("Stephen Walters")
Subject: Chinese Satellite to re-enter earths atmosphere
Message-ID: <DJ34oE.FpH@cix.compulink.co.uk>
Organization: Compulink Information eXchange
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 1995 23:17:02 GMT
X-News-Software: Ameol
Lines: 10
Chinese Satellite to re-enter earths atmosphere.
Does anyone know when this 1000Kg Satellite is going to re-enter the
Earths atmosphere. I Don't know the Satellite's name or function except
that it's BIG. Is there any telemetry? Is it nuclear powered? Is this
another COSMOS 954 or Skylab.
Steve G7VFY.
ODDJOB@cix.compulink.co.uk
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:48 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.heurikon.com!uwvax!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!nntp.coast.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!csn!nntp-xfer-2.csn.net!yuma!lamar.ColoState.EDU!not-for-mail
From: galen@lamar.ColoState.EDU (Watts)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Chinese Satellite to re-enter earths atmosphere
Date: 5 Dec 1995 09:51:05 -0700
Organization: Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4a1t9p$meg@lamar.ColoState.EDU>
References: <DJ34oE.FpH@cix.compulink.co.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: lamar.acns.colostate.edu
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
Stephen Walters (oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk) wrote:
: Does anyone know when this 1000Kg Satellite is going to re-enter the
: Earths atmosphere. I Don't know the Satellite's name or function except
: that it's BIG. Is there any telemetry? Is it nuclear powered? Is this
: another COSMOS 954 or Skylab.
I heard (on the news) that it's as big as a VW Bug and designed to
survive re-entry! The same news story either didn't say when or started
by saying when, before I was paying attention.
Galen, KF0YJ
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:49 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!gatech2!pirates!cssun.mathcs.emory.edu!swrinde!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: Gary_Rogers@DGC.ceo.dg.COM
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: FM on the Satellites
Date: 7 Dec 95 18:04:38 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 51
Message-ID: <9512071800.AK00035@rtp41.rtp.dg.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
CEO document contents:
On 6 Dec 1995 at 01:02:13 GMT, sylvestre <sylvestre@pandore.qc.ca>
wrote:
>FM'ing on 2.meter uplink frequency for RS-10
>Will make you CW on downlink frequency.
>It work ok
>
>73 VE2VB @amsat.org
And on Wed, 6 Dec 1995, at 10:16:31 -0600 Gary Watts <gwatts@qni.com>
responded:
>The ones I heard doing it sounded pretty bad..
>They would chirp when first keyed up..
>Sure it works but a pain to listen to
>
>Gary Watts de N0OXV
>Kansas City Mo
>81 GL1100I
To which I must add: I agree with Gary whole-heartedly! Please do
not use an FM transmitter to access any satellites unless they are
for that mode. Even though the user may not intend it, there is
audio intelligence impressed on the carrier and a huge chunk of the
passband becomes unusable for the rest of us. Anyone who absolutely
must try working the satellites this way, please devise a way to key
the PTT without activating the microphone element. Also be aware that
many radios that use PLL's have a slow lock-up time, and these are
the reason we often get the "chirps" of which Gary spoke.
While we're on the subject of FM on the amateur satellites, I want
to hear from anyone who has monitored the Spanish speaking stations
that take out the upper half of RS-10's downlink with their FM trans-
missions. I notice it mostly on the passes around 2200 UTC, +/- a few
hours. I'd like to know if these are hams, or folks just using ham
rigs. Speculation has it that business or criminal types are using
the ham bands in Central/South America because they are more easily
obtained and cheaper than regular commercial radios. (By the way,
this is a good example of what havoc an FM radio can generate on a
SSB/CW oriented satellite.)
Thanks es 73 from Apex, NC,
Gary WA4YMZ AMSAT 16961
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:50 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsjunkie.ans.net!news.agt.net!news
From: smason@agt.net (Steve Mason)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.noncomm,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio
Subject: Re: Hams please read ....
Date: 4 Dec 1995 23:36:07 GMT
Organization: AGT Ltd.
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <4a00l7$5r5@news.agt.net>
References: <492ab0$jfm@alterdial.UU.NET> <znr817238843k@Digex>
NNTP-Posting-Host: clgrpt01-port-18.agt.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.6
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:17456 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:12933 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:22035 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:11854 rec.radio.amateur.misc:95082 rec.radio.amateur.policy:32112 rec.radio.amateur.space:5857 rec.radio.cb:24784 rec.radio.noncomm:5033 rec.radio.scanner:41464
In article <znr817238843k@Digex>, croaker@access.digex.net≡ says...
>Internet lore: the term was derived from the Monty Python skit, were 'spam'
>was said/sung numerous times. It was a really funny skit, too.
Bloody Vikings!!
I guess Nye Vikings to get back on topic...
Steve
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:51 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.uoregon.edu!cuhknntp!hpg30a.csc.cuhk.hk!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!sislnews.csc.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: How To Use a Kill file in 3 easy steps
Date: 7 Dec 1995 23:22:07 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <4a7suv$6t5@superb.csc.ti.com>
References: <497kd4$nk2@superb.csc.ti.com> <4993q0$a3n@news.texas.net> <49accu$m2c@superb.csc.ti.com> <49d3jg$vl7@cisu2.jsc.nasa.gov> <49iva8$981@cdn_news.telecom.com.au> <49r5lu$oqn@homer.alpha.net> <ve7zvz-0512952153260001@ppp34.dowco.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kend.sc.ti.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.6
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38416 rec.radio.amateur.space:5890
In article <ve7zvz-0512952153260001@ppp34.dowco.com>, ve7zvz@dowco.com says...
>
>
>
>And now a special recap for those wishing to learn how to use a kill file:
>
>1) Get a news viewer program that supports the ability to kill threads, etc.
>
>2) Read instructions on how to use it.
>
>3) Use it
>
> Hope this has been of use to you.
>
>--
>Scott Leaf VE7ZVZ CN89os
>ve7zvz@dowco.com
>Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
>Mountain DX Club VA7SM - "To boldy VHF where no ham has VHFed before"
>Coquitlam Radio Club VE7SCC - "The Satellite Seniors"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NOT!
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:53 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.kreonet.re.kr!usenet.seri.re.kr!usenet.hana.nm.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!news.cac.psu.edu!news.math.psu.edu!chi-news.cic.net!news.uiowa.edu!uunet!in1.uu.net!spstimes.sps.mot.com!newsdist.sps.mot.com!newsgate.sps.mot.com!usenet
From: hawk@sps.mot.com (George Hawkins)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: keps ftp site?
Date: 7 Dec 1995 16:58:18 GMT
Organization: Motorola
Lines: 28
Message-ID: <4a76fa$bvr@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
Reply-To: hawk@sps.mot.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: hawk.sps.mot.com
can anyone tell me what happened to kep ftp:
anonymous@archive.afit.af.mil
any other sites???
Thanks in advance
regards
George Hawkins
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
GEORGE HAWKINS KKK KK IIIIIIII 5555555 XXX XXX
K K II 55 X X
K K II 55555 X X MOBILE DXCC-175
K K K II 55 X 160 <> 10
K K II 5 X X SEE YOU ON
K K II 55 X X BANDS FROM
KKK KK IIIIIIII 555555 XXX XXX MY TRUCK!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
George Hawkins Internet: hawk@dsp.sps.mot.com
Principal Staff Engineer UUCP: cs.utexas.edu!oakhill!dsp!hawk
Motorola DSP Tactical Applications
6501 William Cannon Drive West Phone (512) 891-4543
Austin Texas 78735-8598 FAX (512) 891-2947
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:54 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.uoregon.edu!news.dacom.co.kr!news.kreonet.re.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!nntp.coast.net!chi-news.cic.net!news.uiowa.edu!uunet!in1.uu.net!spstimes.sps.mot.com!newsdist.sps.mot.com!newsgate.sps.mot.com!usenet
From: hawk@sps.mot.com (George Hawkins)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: keps ftp site?
Date: 7 Dec 1995 17:01:02 GMT
Organization: Motorola
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <4a76ke$bvr@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
References: <4a76fa$bvr@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
Reply-To: hawk@sps.mot.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: hawk.sps.mot.com
never mind! it's working again!
george KI5X
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:54 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!malgudi.oar.net!multiverse!library.erc.clarkson.edu!ub!dsinc!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!swrinde!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.zynet.com!tesuque.cs.sandia.gov!ferrari.mst6.lanl.gov!newshost.lanl.gov!usenet
From: Gerald Schmitt <kc5egg@eule.lanl.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: KO-23 Dead now?
Date: 5 Dec 1995 03:20:32 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <4a0dq0$8pk@newshost.lanl.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: transitory28.lanl.gov
This evening I got a great big nothing on the KO-23 downlink
has anyone else been having any trouble with it. Just what we needed
with KO-25 already kaput is another one down. Looking for info.
73 de Jerry
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:55 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.zynet.com!tesuque.cs.sandia.gov!ferrari.mst6.lanl.gov!newshost.lanl.gov!usenet
From: kc5egg@eule.lanl.gov
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: KO-23 Dead now?
Date: Tue, 05 Dec 95 09:54:48 MST
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <4a1un1$jef@newshost.lanl.gov>
References: <4a0dq0$8pk@newshost.lanl.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ggspc.lanl.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: NEWTNews & Chameleon -- TCP/IP for MS Windows from NetManage
The next pass all was as it should be could not find
a fault in the station. Oh well gald it was a false alarm.
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:56 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cheatum.frontiernet.net!Empire.Net!delta.misha.net!news2.acs.oakland.edu!vtc.tacom.army.mil!agis!ns2.mainstreet.net!news.jersey.net!homer.alpha.net!uwm.edu!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!news.ksu.ksu.edu!not-for-mail
From: lver@ksu.ksu.edu (Lloyd Paul Verhage)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mass Purchase of Garmin GPS Boards
Date: 7 Dec 1995 08:31:01 -0600
Organization: Kansas State University
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <4a6tr5$j4u@cbs.ksu.ksu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: cbs.ksu.ksu.edu
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #2 (NOV)
I've set up a listserv to administor a purchase of Garmin GPS
boards. We can buy the same boards they use in their handhelds
for as little as $120.
If you're interested, you can subscribe for more info.
Note, this doesn't commit you to anything.
send email to
maiser@humec.ksu.edu
in the body of the letter write
sub gps your@email.address
You'll be sent all the current info we have. If you have any
further questions (after you've read the info), let me know.
I'll send Garmin a fax with our other questions.
I hope to place the order within a week.
Lloyd Verhage
KD4STH
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:57 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cheatum.frontiernet.net!Empire.Net!delta.misha.net!news2.acs.oakland.edu!jobone!lynx.unm.edu!umn.edu!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: lwjames@ix.netcom.com (Lawrence James)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New version of MacGPS available
Date: 4 Dec 1995 18:51:05 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <49vfup$ka1@ixnews7.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ix-den7-12.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Mon Dec 04 10:51:05 AM PST 1995
The new version of MacGPS, freeware for transferring data between a
Macintosh and a Garmin GPS receiver, is available now on the infomac
mirror sites such as
ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/sci/larrys-mac-gps-0.4b5.hqx
Larry James
KG0GB
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:58 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.kei.com!news.ssd.intel.com!ornews.intel.com!news
From: George La Belle <george_labelle@ccm.hf.intel.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Oscar sat. schedules?
Date: 5 Dec 1995 19:52:45 GMT
Organization: Intel
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <4a27ud$cn1@ornews.intel.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: glabelle.intel.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Windows; I; 16bit)
I've been away for a while. Where can I get the mode schedules for
the amateur satellites these days? I got the keps already.
TNX
George
WB6YZZ
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:50:59 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!noc.netcom.net!news3.noc.netcom.net!ix.netcom.com!howland.reston.ans.net!Germany.EU.net!news.maz.net!news.omnilink.net!usenet
From: Michael Hoehn <Michael.Hoehn@frankfurt.netsurf.de>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: SAT freq's
Date: 3 Dec 1995 21:49:34 GMT
Organization: Omnilink --- your link to the Net
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <49t61e$bbl@gazette.omnilink.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: deck-35.frankfurt.netsurf.de
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Macintosh; I; 68K)
X-URL: news:rec.radio.amateur.space
Hi !
I search all freq's of weather satellites (like OKEAN, NOAA etc.) and
information of the status !
Who can help me ?
Bye mike
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:00 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!mv!barney.gvi.net!news.netrail.net!imci2!newsfeed.internetmci.com!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!lade.news.pipex.net!pipex!bbc!news
From: John Boyer <john.boyer@rd.bbc.co.uk>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: SAT freq's
Date: 4 Dec 1995 15:59:07 GMT
Organization: BBC
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <49v5sb$sjh@bbcnews.rd.bbc.co.uk>
References: <49t61e$bbl@gazette.omnilink.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 132.185.130.79
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 16bit)
The APT Freqs are as follows.
Noaa 12& Noaa 14 137.5MHz
Okean 1-7( or 4) & Sich-1 137.4MHz
Meteor 3-5 & Meteor 2-21 137.85MHz
Ther are some SHF freqs for the Noaas, but I can't remember them off the
top of my head.
--
Regards John B
internet: john.boyer@rd.bbc.co.uk
packet: g6sed@g6sed.ampr.org (44.131.244.84)
home page: http://www.bbc.co.uk/john_wxpics/index.html
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:01 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!Germany.EU.net!news.dfn.de!news.belwue.de!news.uni-stuttgart.de!moritz
From: moritz@ipers1.e-technik.uni-stuttgart.de ()
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: SAT freq's
Date: 5 Dec 1995 11:01:30 GMT
Organization: Comp.Center (RUS), U of Stuttgart, FRG
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4a18qa$2fcu@info4.rus.uni-stuttgart.de>
References: <49t61e$bbl@gazette.omnilink.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ipers1.e-technik.uni-stuttgart.de
>I search all freq's of weather satellites (like OKEAN, NOAA etc.) and
>information of the status !
In the Packet radio you can find information on the satellites,
usually in the borad "WXSAT" or something like that.
73, Moritz DL5UH
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:02 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!sislnews.csc.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: SUNSAT launch in January?
Date: 5 Dec 1995 14:53:06 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <4a1mci$6m@superb.csc.ti.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kend.sc.ti.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.6
Does anyone have the particulars re: SUNSAT? Launch date, transponder freqs
or band edges, etc.? Is this project still on?
Ken K5MBV mbv@ti.com
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:02 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!col.hp.com!news.dtc.hp.com!hpscit.sc.hp.com!hpuerci.atl.hp.com!news
From: Rolf Mathison <rmathiso@popd.ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Two Line Elements
Date: Wed, 06 Dec 1995 08:58:10 -0800
Organization: Hewlett-Packard
Lines: 8
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <30C5CBA2.F58@popd.ix.netcom.com>
References: <49jm2d$58n@nnrp2.news.primenet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: rlmathison4415.esr.hp.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0b2a (Windows; I; 16bit)
Try Dallas Remote Imaging Group
ftp://ftp.drig.com
http://www.drig.com
telnet://bbs.drig.com
Regards,
Rolf
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:04 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: ando1@ix.netcom.com (Johnny B. Goode )
Newsgroups: sci.engr.chem,sci.chem,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.med.radiology
Subject: VARIAN MICROWAVE AMPS and related items FOR SALE or trade
Date: 6 Dec 1995 05:56:37 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <4a3bal$isv@ixnews8.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: atl-ga10-15.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Tue Dec 05 9:56:37 PM PST 1995
Xref: news.epix.net sci.engr.chem:11593 sci.chem:55474 rec.radio.amateur.space:5873 sci.med.radiology:4191
FOR SALE- OR TRADE::
Varian VZX6983G5GLM 8-12.4 ghz 53db gain 200watt Xband amp (new)
$16,000.
Varian VZM6993051505 12-18ghz 53db gain 200watt KU band amp
(new)$13,000.
Varian VZX6981KADEH 8-12.4ghz 40db gain 20 watt Xband amp(1007
hrs.)$7,500.
L&R Communications low noise amp local controle & monitor
Scientific Atlanta Antenna Motor Controler Mod.# 8841A
Arbiter Systems Satelite Controled clock mod.#1026B
LAMDA LFS-44-48
Digital H7100A
Scientific Atlanta 3267260 mod.#4663R
" " Digital Processing Unit mod.#7325
" " Signal Source mod.#2180
" "Power Amp 3080 Pedestal
Datum Digital Clock
Texas Instruments XDS/22 Illuminator
12 Schlumberger Test Fixture Kit cases
Canoga Perkins fiber optics Bus Interface
Aerotech 1000 D.C. Permanent Magnet Servo Motor
560sq.ft. S.C.I.F.(secure compartemented information facility)3
rooms,all electronic filters,etc...
Frequency West mod.MO-109XB-17 serial 320 1435omhz
Midwest Microwave mod1044 Step Athenuator D.C. 8.0ghz
Dishes,300' wave guid,and alot more 770-726-5548-dig.pager
Ready to make Package deal !!! 770-992-0516-hm.#
From Unknown Fri Dec 08 19:51:06 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!siemens!news.ecn.bgu.edu!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!usenet
From: Carl Gregory <cgregory@uiuc.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: WinOrbit 2.8 available
Date: 8 Dec 1995 00:02:02 GMT
Organization: Univ. of Illinois / Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Lab
Lines: 86
Message-ID: <4a7v9q$6ej@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: magnet.beckman.uiuc.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.12(Macintosh; I; PPC)
X-URL: news:rec.radio.amateur.space#4a7unu$6ej@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu
[Reposted due to my omission of a title the first time. ]
The latest version of WinOrbit (2.8) is now available on
ftp.seds.org, and ftp.amsat.org, and soon on oak.oakland.edu.
See below for detailed locations. A description of changes,
and an overview of the program, are also given below:
New Features in version 2.8
-------------------------
* Second satellite can now be displayed on each map.
* Mutual visibility prediction tables can now be printed for
pre-selected DX stations.
* Doppler and RF link calculations now displayed for uplink,
downlink, beacon, or transponder delta frequency.
* "AutoRun" feature added to schedule other programs for a
pass.
* Help displayed by F1 is now more "context-sensitive".
Some bugs were fixed, too.
Program Overview
----------------
WinOrbit is a program for computing artificial Earth-satellite
position and visibility, with the Amateur Radio satellite
operator in mind. It was written for the Microsoft Windows 3.1
operating system. WinOrbit is free (not shareware). The
latest version is 2.8.
The principal feature of the program is a series of tracking
windows, one per satellite, which display the current position of
the satellite and the observer on a simple world map, together
with information such as footprint, past ground track, bearing
(azimuth), distance, and elevation above the observer's horizon.
Sun position and terminator, user-selected DX locations and a
second satellite may also be displayed.
Additional features include:
* Simultaneous tracking of up to 20 satellites.
* Sun/Moon tracking built in.
* Real-time, pseudo-real-time, and manual calculation modes.
* "View from space" map presentation showing what a particular
satellite sees.
* Selectable tracking detail, including doppler shift, free-
space path loss, satellite and observer antenna pattern
effects, for a single satellite.
* Display sun position for eclipse determination, and other
observers for mutual visibility.
* "Show DX" for all stations within the satellite footprint, and
"what's up" for all satellites visible at observer QTH.
* 4 different orbital calculation algorithms (selectable).
* Tracking data (Keplerian element sets) read directly from
standard, off-the-air bulletins in two different formats (up
to 500 satellites). No pre-processing is needed, just
grab a bulletin file, headers and all. Reads AMSAT, NASA
or vector formats.
* Propagation of pre-launch keps and other element updates.
* Utility functions for modifying and comparing published element
sets, including post-launch updating of pre-launch elements,
and saving composite data files compiled from various
sources.
* Observer (QTH) data (latitude, longitude) may be imported from
a simple text database (up to 1000 locations). Entry by
grid-square or mouse-on-map is possible.
* Flexible entry of latitude, longitude, date and time.
* Printing of tables of tracking data (Ephemerides) in several
formats. Printing does not interrupt tracking. Output
may be directed to disk file or printer.
* Timeline and mutual visibility printouts.
* On-line help, including glossary and direct lookup of text
information about all Amateur satellites from the map
windows. All hamsats since Oscar I included.
* Standard Windows interface for all functions - no commands to
memorize. Both mouse and keyboard can be used for most
functions.
* DDE server interface to tracking-antenna hardware controllers.
This program is available via internet, by anonymous ftp from:
ftp.amsat.org /amsat/software/windows/tracking/winorb28.zip
oak.oakland.edu /pub3/hamradio/pc/satellite/winorb28.zip
ftp.seds.org /pub/software/pc/sat/winorb28.zip
The file VBRUN300.DLL is required (you may already have it - if not,
you can get it as described in the WinOrbit documentation).
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:14 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!rain.fr!jussieu.fr!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!decwrl!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK070 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 12 Dec 1995 10:51:09 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk070.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10511 rec.radio.amateur.space:5915
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK070
ARLK070 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK95
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 70 ARLK070
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 12, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK070
ARLK070 Keplerian data
Thanks to NASA, AMSAT and WA5QGD for the following Keplerian data.
Decode 2-line elsets with the following key:
1 AAAAAU 00 0 0 BBBBB.BBBBBBBB .CCCCCCCC 00000-0 00000-0 0 DDDZ
2 AAAAA EEE.EEEE FFF.FFFF GGGGGGG HHH.HHHH III.IIII JJ.JJJJJJJJKKKKKZ
KEY: A-CATALOGNUM B-EPOCHTIME C-DECAY D-ELSETNUM E-INCLINATION F-RAAN
G-ECCENTRICITY H-ARGPERIGEE I-MNANOM J-MNMOTION K-ORBITNUM Z-CHECKSUM
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95345.28942709 .00000911 00000-0 18898-4 0 3602
2 16609 51.6447 350.4978 0006124 89.4677 270.7022 15.57457538560563
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95345.15514052 .00000434 00000-0 27740-4 0 07659
2 20580 28.4705 353.5864 0006604 4.4166 355.6472 14.90986765110340
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 95345.02339911 .00000125 00000-0 10000-3 0 3924
2 14129 26.4191 234.3810 5978194 333.4008 5.7191 2.05880064 65970
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95344.85452345 .00000030 00000-0 16453-4 0 01635
2 18129 82.9229 288.4719 0011385 329.8544 30.1962 13.72359834424205
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 95344.96610037 .00000113 00000-0 26842-4 0 08656
2 14781 97.7872 339.2689 0011621 342.2245 17.8562 14.69407611629865
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95345.00612182 .00000040 00000-0 26593-4 0 08670
2 21089 82.9179 329.6369 0030788 42.0359 318.3150 13.74063351243053
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95344.91551918 -.00000179 00000-0 55921-4 0 01227
2 19216 57.4278 147.8917 7356474 25.9833 357.1283 2.09728739025875
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95345.04953644 .00000044 00000-0 33908-4 0 01538
2 20437 98.5598 66.4995 0012076 39.7445 320.4626 14.29906248307029
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 95345.15451917 .00000012 00000-0 21602-4 0 09506
2 20439 98.5721 68.5208 0012319 40.4131 319.7965 14.29960763307052
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95345.12551736 .00000005 00000-0 18948-4 0 09483
2 20440 98.5735 69.0336 0012426 39.5607 320.6478 14.30102485307076
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95345.11139108 .00000032 00000-0 29048-4 0 09582
2 20441 98.5734 68.9773 0013036 39.4799 320.7323 14.30072817307073
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95345.12137231 .00000028 00000-0 27700-4 0 09497
2 20442 98.5750 69.4078 0013298 39.5530 320.6633 14.30178143207093
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95345.15935397 -.00000041 00000-0 -19032-4 0 08552
2 20480 99.0590 40.7505 0540568 192.6876 166.0141 12.83232111273641
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95344.82444884 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 06645
2 21087 82.9359 101.8538 0036312 15.5819 344.6445 13.74562605243992
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95345.14710632 .00000033 00000-0 25614-4 0 06574
2 21575 98.3778 51.9255 0008204 104.3361 255.8738 14.37003841230917
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95345.08493293 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 05610
2 22077 66.0788 225.3910 0003289 351.2601 8.8359 12.86293354156487
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 95345.16843805 .00000007 00000-0 20467-4 0 04234
2 22828 98.5960 59.1299 0011225 49.3062 310.9089 14.28122460083136
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95345.14290647 .00000043 00000-0 35094-4 0 04399
2 22826 98.6039 59.0622 0010196 64.1986 296.0245 14.27789629115024
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95345.06219838 .00000000 00000-0 17842-4 0 04510
2 22825 98.6038 58.8542 0009595 63.5829 296.6341 14.27681254115006
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95345.18252245 .00000035 00000-0 31597-4 0 04337
2 22829 98.5999 59.1913 0011073 49.9691 310.2460 14.28104045115059
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 16, 1995, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:15 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!brighton.openmarket.com!decwrl!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLS026 OSCAR 17 link fails
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 12 Dec 1995 16:41:18 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 30
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arls026.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10513 rec.radio.amateur.space:5918
SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS026
ARLS026 OSCAR 17 link fails
ZCZC AS06
QST de W1AW
Space Bulletin 026 ARLS026
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 12, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB SPACE ARL ARLS026
ARLS026 OSCAR 17 link fails
The DOVE-OSCAR 17 satellite 2-meter downlink failed December 3, and
the AMSAT control team is not sure why. While it's not clear if the
problem resulted from a computer crash aboard the spacecraft, the
control team plans to try reloading the software to see if that
fixes it. The satellite's S-band transmitter is on, and the
permanent onboard backup software is working.
Jim White, WD0E, of AMSAT says reloading DOVE is a complex process
that could take from two weeks to a month if all goes well and there
are no hardware problems. White says reloading requires a lot of
operational skill and some unique equipment configurations, plus
more than one command station.
DOVE-OSCAR 17 is used for educational and research purposes.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:16 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.Edu.TW!news.cc.nctu.edu.tw!serv.HiNet.net!news.uoregon.edu!inquo!vyzynz!news1.cris.com!newshost.comco.com!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!info-server.bbn.com!news
From: Chris Jones <clj@bbn.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Chinese Satellite to re-enter earths atmosphere
Date: 08 Dec 1995 09:29:46 -0500
Organization: BBN Systems and Technologies Division
Lines: 26
Sender: clj@unicorn.bbn.com
Message-ID: <rpfpwdzaasl.fsf@unicorn.bbn.com>
References: <DJ34oE.FpH@cix.compulink.co.uk> <4a1t9p$meg@lamar.ColoState.EDU>
<4a735c$jgk@news3.cts.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: unicorn.bbn.com
In-reply-to: wallnerw@crash.cts.com's message of 7 Dec 1995 16:01:48 GMT
X-Newsreader: Gnus v5.0.12
In article <4a735c$jgk@news3.cts.com> wallnerw@crash.cts.com (Bill Wallner) writes:
You can get the TLEs from Dr. Kelso's site. Listed as fsw-1. I am
tracking it with STSPLUS and man is it eccentric. 500+ nm at highest decl.
around 100 at south end. The NORAD number is 22870 I think.
Kelso's site is at <ftp://archive.afit.af.mil/pub/space/>
I don't think it is due to deorbit for a few weeks yet. I saw reference
to it's expected demise but, can't remember when. The latest TLE Epoch
is 95338 and changes every 3 days.
"By April 1" is what I recall. Likely closer to that date than the present
time.
I do not know much about orbital mechanics but, assume the high risk
areas for the 85 pound, shielded, core would be in the Southern latitudes
where perihelion occurs.
Not really, because by the time reentry occurs, the orbit will have
circularized. What's happening now is that at perigee, it's apogee is being
lowered due to the slowing effect of the atmosphere at that altitude. At
apogee, there's much less of a slowing effect, so its perigee isn't noticeably
dipping.
--
Chris Jones clj@bbn.com
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:18 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news1.rad.net.id!news
From: dreynold@rad.net.id (DaveCom)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FM on the Satellites
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 11:53:55 GMT
Lines: 55
Message-ID: <4aeidd$p5g@news1.rad.net.id>
References: <9512071800.AK00035@rtp41.rtp.dg.com> <DJ9quz.oDE@pe1chl.ampr.org> <4adege$1nm0@stealth.mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dyn158.dialin.rad.net.id
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
I have seen identical downlink problems in my overseas travel.
Dowlink interference by unlicensed commercial and non-ham
non-commercial operators in the ham 2M FM band. It's worse in S.
America due to equipment availability from Miami (in particular). Read
on...
I feel the problem is due to two factors:
1. Regulatory and enforcement in foreign countries... this is obvious.
2. Pricing policy of radio manufacturers... In S. America in
particular (elsewhere i'm sure it's the same). A person can buy and
hand-carry/ship a HAM transceiver at lower cost than a commercial
version. Almost always, the HAM version has more features (channels).
Until radio Marketing policy brings HAM prices in-line with commercial
prices; this situation will exist. However, radio manufacturers claim
the radios for commercial use are more expensive due to REGULATORY
(FCC) compliance. A potent argument...
Dave, WB4ONA
Jakarta
wave@mindspring.com (Pieter Ibelings) wrote:
>In article <DJ9quz.oDE@pe1chl.ampr.org>, rob@pe1chl.ampr.org says...
>>I think the explanation at that time was they were taxi drivers
>>in Spanish cities, and the authorities were not doing anything about it.
>>
>The stations you are hearing are probably unlicensed commercial users
>using the frequencies around 145.8. On a recent trip to the northern coast
>of Colombia I was trying to make a contact on a0-21 and listening to the
>downlink frequency. I then got into an argument with an unidentified
>station that uses this channel for his business. I told him that this was
>a satellite downlink and that he was causing interference. He then said
>that he has heard foreign language on this frequency, but never agreed to
>qsy. This is a very big problem. I scanned the 2 meter band while in
>Colombia and Venezuela and every single channel is in use during the
>day ,99% from unlicenced operators. The sad story is that nothing can be
>done. These countries have so many problems that enforcing the ham bands
>is not in their high priority list. Sending letters to the ministry of
>comunications of Colombia for example is a bad idea. A few years ago it
>was discovered that the driver of one of the commisioners would use some
>of the correspondence to clean the windshield of his car after a trip to
>the post office.
>73's
>AC4OP
>HK1ZAB
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:19 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DJH37C.59K@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net>
Date: Tue, 12 Dec 1995 12:11:36 GMT
Lines: 16
In <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> Cyberpunk@zephyrbbs.win.net (Scott Baldwin) writes:
> A friend of mine told me that he used his Dual band mobile to make
>use of a new Sat that's in orbit, and actually had a QSO. Can someone
>please send me information, such as uplink/downlink, PL encode/decode,
>and address for information and contributions? Email to this account
>would be appreciated. Tnx es 73!
The satellite that had this transponder (OSCAR 21) is no longer functional.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:20 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!news.itg.ti.com!usenet
From: Rusty Haddock <rusty@ti.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Date: 12 Dec 1995 16:22:49 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments Software Division
Lines: 30
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <4aka8p$629@dsk92.itg.ti.com>
References: <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> <DJH37C.59K@pe1chl.ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: iefm770.itg.ti.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 32bit)
rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen) wrote:
>In <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> Cyberpunk@zephyrbbs.win.net (Scott Baldwin) writes:
>
>> A friend of mine told me that he used his Dual band mobile to make
>>use of a new Sat that's in orbit, and actually had a QSO. Can someone
>>please send me information, such as uplink/downlink, PL encode/decode,
>>and address for information and contributions? Email to this account
>>would be appreciated. Tnx es 73!
>
>The satellite that had this transponder (OSCAR 21) is no longer functional.
>
>Rob
Hmmmm.... could we possibly mean Oscar 27 on the commerical bird, Eyesat ??? That was
2-m up/440 down on weekends when it was in the sun over N.America and AO-27 was operating
as a crossband repeater (145.850/436.800/no PL). AO-27, which went up around the beginning
of 1993(?), was put together by the folks at AMRAD (in Mclean, VA) and was to be used for
modulation experiments among, I've sure, for other things. Programs could and have been
uploaded to its CPU on the fly. The 2m/440 repeater mode was one of the applications.
Does anyone know its status these days?
-Rusty-
--
Rusty Haddock, KD4WLZ Internet: rusty@ti.com ___
Texas Instruments MSG ID: MWH2 |\/ o\ O
POB 869305 MS 8515 Phone: (214) 575-6838 | ( -< o O
Plano, Texas 75086 Fax: (214) 575-4351 |/\_V_/
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:21 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.texas.net!imci2!news.internetMCI.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.zynet.com!tesuque.cs.sandia.gov!ferrari.mst6.lanl.gov!newshost.lanl.gov!usenet
From: Jim Devenport <jdevenport@lanl.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Date: 12 Dec 1995 21:01:57 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <4akqk5$i7n@newshost.lanl.gov>
References: <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> <DJH37C.59K@pe1chl.ampr.org> <4aka8p$629@dsk92.itg.ti.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: jdport.lanl.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 32bit)
To: rusty@ti.com
Nope, there were at least these 2 sats that for a time provided
FM transponding: Oscar-21 and Oscar-27.
I have read of some "hitting" the old AO-21 system using a dual
band HT but I was NEVER able to hear myself or get a response
through it even when running 25 watts on UHF.
I was able to hear myself and complete a QSO via the Oscar-27
bird however by going through a 2 meter high power remote base
for the 2 meter uplink and listening with a scanner (IC-R7000)
to the UHF downlink.... the first and only time I tried!!
(about a year ago).
--
*********** Jim Devenport WB5AOX **************
* PO Box 445, McIntosh NM 87032 *
* http://nis-www.lanl.gov/~jdport/ *
***********************************************
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:22 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!sislnews.csc.ti.com!usenet
From: durham@lobby.ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Date: 13 Dec 1995 04:43:13 GMT
Organization: sc.ti.com
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4alll1$b3e@superb.csc.ti.com>
References: <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> <DJH37C.59K@pe1chl.ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pppsb12.itg.ti.com
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.91.6
>Does anyone know its status these days?
>
> -Rusty-
>--
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rusty, AO-27 is alive and well. It is on during daylight hours 7 days
a week now. Look for it after 11 AM and around 12:30 PM. Better yet use
a tracking program with recent KEPS for the pass prediction.
I have worked several HTs who were using their rubber ducky antennas.
There is too much competition for the frequency now for this to work
very often. The high power stations tend to hog it.
Ken Durham K5MBV mbv@ti.com
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:23 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!chi-news.cic.net!news.suba.com!qni.com!gwatts
From: Gary Watts <gwatts@qni.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 10:13:08 -0600
Organization: Suba Communications
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951213100438.1286B-100000@qni.com>
References: <1316@zephyrbbs.win.net> <DJH37C.59K@pe1chl.ampr.org> <4aka8p$629@dsk92.itg.ti.com> <4akqk5$i7n@newshost.lanl.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: qni.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
In-Reply-To: <4akqk5$i7n@newshost.lanl.gov>
Jim,
Yep operation on AO-21 got to be a big joke.
One channel.. MANY HAM's trying to access the bird at the same time.
A lot of the oscar class stations would get on that bird and
make it UNUSABLE for the other lower power stations
Talk about a pile up..
I never did hear any usefull exchange of information
just calls and locations.
I dont miss that bird at all
RS-10 <- This one is a lot more fun
Gary Watts de N0OXV
Kansas City Mo
81 GL1100I
On 12 Dec 1995, Jim Devenport wrote:
>
> Nope, there were at least these 2 sats that for a time provided
> FM transponding: Oscar-21 and Oscar-27.
> I have read of some "hitting" the old AO-21 system using a dual
> band HT but I was NEVER able to hear myself or get a response
> through it even when running 25 watts on UHF.
> I was able to hear myself and complete a QSO via the Oscar-27
> bird however by going through a 2 meter high power remote base
> for the 2 meter uplink and listening with a scanner (IC-R7000)
> to the UHF downlink.... the first and only time I tried!!
> (about a year ago).
> --
> *********** Jim Devenport WB5AOX **************
> * PO Box 445, McIntosh NM 87032 *
> * http://nis-www.lanl.gov/~jdport/ *
> ***********************************************
>
>
>
>
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:24 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet
From: paulm@ultranet.com (Paul M)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: FOR SALE: Kenpro KR-5400 Az-El Rotor
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 16:43:45 GMT
Organization: UltraNet Communications, Inc.
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4af2oi$35p@caesar.ultra.net>
Reply-To: paulm@ultranet.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: docutech.ultranet.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
FOR SALE: Kenpro KR-5400 Azimuth-Elevation rotor system $150
The control box and rotors are very similar to the Yaesu G-5400
system. Why am I selling this for such a miniscule price? The
controller is not working. If you are good at troubleshooting
electronics and want to get onto the amateur satellites, this could be
your winter project. Elevation rotor is only 18 months old. Azimuth
rotor is older. You'll also need to add some fresh hardware to the
rotor brackets (nuts and bolts).
UPS ground shipping included in price.
Email only to paulm@ultranet.com
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:25 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!geraldo.cc.utexas.edu!slip-43-12.ots.utexas.edu!user
From: kharker@cs.utexas.edu (Kenneth E. Harker)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.swap,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.equipment
Subject: INFO WANTED: Ten Tec 2510
Date: 13 Dec 1995 06:32:40 GMT
Organization: The University of Texas at Austin
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <kharker-1312950033470001@slip-43-12.ots.utexas.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip-43-12.ots.utexas.edu
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.swap:52902 rec.radio.amateur.space:5922 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:22441
I'm looking for any information anyone might have about price or
availability anywhere concerning a rather old model of Ten Tec radio. I
read a 1985 magazine review about the Ten Tec 2510, which was a
combination 440MHz SSB/CW transmitter and 2m->10m SSB/CW transverter
intended for OSCAR communications.
I called Ten Tec today, and the gentleman I spoke with did not recognize
the model. If anyone knows where I might find more information on this
radio or if anyone has one they may be interested in selling, I would
appreciate an e-mail.
Thanks in advance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Kenneth E. Harker kharker@cs.utexas.edu
University of Texas at Austin
Department of the Computer Sciences Amateur call: N1PVB
Taylor Hall TAY 2.124
Austin, TX 78712-1188 USA http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/kharker/
---------------------------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:26 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.us.world.net!ns2.mainstreet.net!bug.rahul.net!a2i!infoseek.com!uunet!in2.uu.net!agis.ag.net!usenet
From: mouse@ag.net (Jim Laughlan)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: keps ftp site?
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 03:29:56 GMT
Organization: Access Global Information Services
Lines: 34
Message-ID: <4ag8vi$s8c@agis.ag.net>
References: <4a76fa$bvr@newsgate.sps.mot.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp2.ag.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
hawk@sps.mot.com (George Hawkins) wrote:
>can anyone tell me what happened to kep ftp:
>anonymous@archive.afit.af.mil
>any other sites???
>Thanks in advance
>regards
>George Hawkins
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
>GEORGE HAWKINS KKK KK IIIIIIII 5555555 XXX XXX
> K K II 55 X X
> K K II 55555 X X MOBILE DXCC-175
> K K K II 55 X 160 <> 10
> K K II 5 X X SEE YOU ON
> K K II 55 X X BANDS FROM
> KKK KK IIIIIIII 555555 XXX XXX MY TRUCK!
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
>George Hawkins Internet: hawk@dsp.sps.mot.com
>Principal Staff Engineer UUCP: cs.utexas.edu!oakhill!dsp!hawk
>Motorola DSP Tactical Applications
>6501 William Cannon Drive West Phone (512) 891-4543
>Austin Texas 78735-8598 FAX (512) 891-2947
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Another site is SEDS.LPL.ARIZONA.EDU
Jim
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:27 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.mcn.net!blpm01-195
From: vfiscus@mcn.net (Vince Fiscus, KB7ADL)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Matching Funds Available
Date: Tue, 12 Dec 95 02:21:18 GMT
Organization: Montana Communications Network
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <4aiov9$m2q@news.mcn.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: blpm01-195.mcn.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
Hi,
Matching funds are available for donations to the Amsat Phase 3D
project made from now to the end of 1995. Donations are tax deductable.
Send donations or requests for info to:
Amsat-na
850 Sligo Ave.
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Thanks & 73 from KB7ADL
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:28 1995
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From: randyk@emf.net (Randy Kielich)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Mir QSL info!
Date: 10 Dec 1995 09:15:19 GMT
Organization: emf.net -- Quality Internet Access. (510) 704-2929 (Voice)
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4ae8f7$ct7@emf.emf.net>
References: <NEWTNews.818473322.31330.Gothmog@riq2820.RIQ.QC.CA>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 205.149.0.20
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
mcaron@riq.qc.ca wrote:
: I'd like to know how to be able to get a QSL card from MIR.
Just send a QSL to Dave and a 'business' sized SASE envelope and
everything else will be just fine. You don't need a number for a QSL.
_Randy N6WDV
p.s. All email to your account has been bouncing, might want to check into
it....73's
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:29 1995
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From: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NASA ATS Satellite
Date: 9 Dec 1995 02:08:44 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 10
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4abcls$dgi@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
References: <4a1un1$jef@newshost.lanl.gov>
Reply-To: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
A few years ago I spent a lot of time monitoring this satellite on
135.575, 135.600, 135.625 MHz. I am now getting my antenna's back up and
listened again for a short while and heard a lot of European land mobile
noise and IM coming up through the 149 MHz uplink.
Can any one tell me if this satellite is still in use and by whom? Is the
interference a new phenomenon? What are the sources being heard on the
uplink?
Rhyolite95
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:30 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!hookup!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!nwnews.wa.com!nwfocus.wa.com!golden.ncw.net!usenet
From: cliff@televar.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NAVSPASUR and PAVE PAWS DEEP SPACE RADARS
Date: 10 Dec 1995 04:37:30 GMT
Organization: North Central Washington Network
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4ado6a$eth@golden.ncw.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: netuser22.ncw.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Windows; I; 16bit)
I can not find a listing other than a reference to PAVE PAWS Deep
Space Radar in "Spectrum Guide" OF PAVE PAWS being located somewhere
between 420 and 450 MHZ. Does anyone know what frequency it is located
on? Also I'm assuming it is a pulsed radar, is that correct?
Second question is NAVSPASUR Space Fence Radar. I understand from the
listings that it is at 216.983MHZ. Does it operate 24hrs. a day? If so
what am I looking for, pulsed radar again. If so how fast in comparison
to the old russian woodpecker radar? Any help would be appreciated as
specific's other than, "its there", are somewhat hard to come by from the
Navy.
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:31 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!thomsona
From: thomsona@netcom.com (Allen Thomson)
Subject: Re: NAVSPASUR and PAVE PAWS DEEP SPACE RADARS
Message-ID: <thomsonaDJDz6M.Do2@netcom.com>
Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
References: <4ado6a$eth@golden.ncw.net> <mdf.818592490@vigard.mef.org>
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 19:51:58 GMT
Lines: 26
Sender: thomsona@netcom22.netcom.com
In article <mdf.818592490@vigard.mef.org> mdf@lglobal.com writes:
>cliff@televar.com writes:
>
>>Second question is NAVSPASUR Space Fence Radar.
>
>the NAVSPASUR fence is a CW radar. an antenna array projects a thin
>fan of RF (216.983MHz is correct) straight up, the "fence"
>oriented east-west. multiple receiving sites listen for the echos as
>satellites pass through the fence. interferometers for 3D DF (az/el), doppler
>gives range rate. while an orbit can probably be completely determined
>from on one fence crossing (since both position and velocity can be measured),
>it's most likely going to be a poor one -- but thats that differential
>correction is for.
> Longtitude Latitude
> ---------- --------
> Jordan Lake, AL -86.264 32.659
> Kickapoo Lake, TX -98.7637 33.558
> Gila River, AZ -112.03 33.11
Kickapoo is the big one, and is most often used by people with amateur
equipment.
One thing that has always puzzled me is why no other country has
built a system like NAVSPASUR; it's 1950s technology, cheap to build
and operate, and gives good results.
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:32 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
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From: mdf@vigard.mef.org (Matthew Francey)
Subject: Re: NAVSPASUR and PAVE PAWS DEEP SPACE RADARS
Reply-To: mdf@lglobal.com
Sender: usenet@vigard.mef.org (USENET News Administration)
Organization: The International Bank of Intermod
Message-ID: <mdf.818592490@vigard.mef.org>
References: <4ado6a$eth@golden.ncw.net>
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: asgard.mef.org
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 10:48:10 GMT
Lines: 37
cliff@televar.com writes:
>Second question is NAVSPASUR Space Fence Radar.
the NAVSPASUR fence is a CW radar. an antenna array projects a thin
fan of RF (216.983MHz is correct) straight up, the "fence"
oriented east-west. multiple receiving sites listen for the echos as
satellites pass through the fence. interferometers for 3D DF (az/el), doppler
gives range rate. while an orbit can probably be completely determined
from on one fence crossing (since both position and velocity can be measured),
it's most likely going to be a poor one -- but thats that differential
correction is for.
the nice thing about this system is that if you are close enough to the
transmitters, you too can join in the fun. a SSB/CW receiver/transverter,
gain antenna are the minimum. use a satellite tracking program to get
estimates for a crossing time, aim antenna and listen. measurements of
actual crossing time vs. predicted can be used to correct element sets.
here is a list of transmitting sites that is at least 3 years old:
Longtitude Latitude
---------- --------
Jordan Lake, AL -86.264 32.659
Kickapoo Lake, TX -98.7637 33.558
Gila River, AZ -112.03 33.11
[notice how they are spread in longitude; a typical LEO object will
cross the combined fence over 2-3 successive orbits, assuming its inclination
exceeds 33 degrees or so].
other references:
"Observing Earth Satellites", Desmond King-Hele, chapter 8.
"Radar Handbook", Merrill Skolnik, chapter 32.
--
Matthew Francey | VE3RQX | NAD27: N43o34.210' W079o34.572' +0093m
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:33 1995
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From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format
Date: 8 Dec 95 23:29:39 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 68
Message-ID: <tkelso.818465379@dolphin>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, Format, NORAD
As a service to the satellite user community, the following description of the
NORAD two-line orbital element set format is uploaded to sci.space.news and
rec.radio.amateur.space on a monthly basis. The most current orbital elements
from the NORAD two-line element sets are carried on the Celestial BBS, (334)
409-9280, and are updated daily (when possible). Documentation and tracking
software are also available on this system. The Celestial BBS may be accessed
24 hours/day at speeds up to 28,800 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no
parity. In addition, element sets (updated daily) and some documentation
and software are also available via anonymous ftp from archive.afit.af.mil
(129.92.1.66) in the directory pub/space.
==============================================================================
Data for each satellite consists of three lines in the following format:
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
1 NNNNNU NNNNNAAA NNNNN.NNNNNNNN +.NNNNNNNN +NNNNN-N +NNNNN-N N NNNNN
2 NNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NNNNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NN.NNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Line 0 is a twenty-two-character name (this change is being made to be
consistent with the name length in the NORAD SATCAT).
Lines 1 and 2 are the standard Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format identical
to that used by NORAD and NASA. The format description is:
Line 1
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
10-11 International Designator (Last two digits of launch year)
12-14 International Designator (Launch number of the year)
15-17 International Designator (Piece of launch)
19-20 Epoch Year (Last two digits of year)
21-32 Epoch (Julian Day and fractional portion of the day)
34-43 First Time Derivative of the Mean Motion
or Ballistic Coefficient (Depending on ephemeris type)
45-52 Second Time Derivative of Mean Motion (decimal point assumed;
blank if N/A)
54-61 BSTAR drag term if GP4 general perturbation theory was used.
Otherwise, radiation pressure coefficient. (Decimal point assumed)
63-63 Ephemeris type
65-68 Element number
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
(Letters, blanks, periods, plus signs = 0; minus signs = 1)
Line 2
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
09-16 Inclination [Degrees]
18-25 Right Ascension of the Ascending Node [Degrees]
27-33 Eccentricity (decimal point assumed)
35-42 Argument of Perigee [Degrees]
44-51 Mean Anomaly [Degrees]
53-63 Mean Motion [Revs per day]
64-68 Revolution number at epoch [Revs]
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
All other columns are blank or fixed.
Example:
NOAA 6
1 11416U 86 50.28438588 0.00000140 67960-4 0 5293
2 11416 98.5105 69.3305 0012788 63.2828 296.9658 14.24899292346978
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:43 1995
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From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE719)
Date: 8 Dec 95 23:31:00 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 741
Message-ID: <tkelso.818465460@dolphin>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial BBS, (334) 409-9280, and are updated daily (when
possible). Documentation and tracking software are also available on this
system. The Celestial BBS may be accessed 24 hours/day at speeds up to
28,800 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity.
Element sets (also updated daily) and some documentation and software are
available via anonymous ftp from archive.afit.af.mil (129.92.1.66) in the
directory pub/space.
As a service to the satellite user community, the most current of these
elements are uploaded weekly to sci.space.news and rec.radio.amateur.space.
This week's elements are provided below.
- Current Two-Line Element Sets #719 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 95339.87613624 .00000050 00000-0 48814-4 0 1577
2 00424 80.4538 115.4721 0021982 172.2624 187.8863 13.67857235655775
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 95331.64723805 .00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 9475
2 02608 14.6386 354.9668 0007539 70.6286 289.4414 1.00393173 22834
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 95340.56313925 -.00000114 00000-0 10000-3 0 4261
2 03029 14.8979 1.8693 0010071 265.5466 264.7437 1.00272893102822
Cosmos 398
1 04966U 71016A 95342.31174141 .02175073 12192-4 13586-3 0 1649
2 04966 51.3605 90.3664 0085051 18.5150 341.9069 16.27007458852012
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 95341.79410843 -.00000110 00000-0 25241-4 0 9333
2 07646 49.8299 187.9251 0205736 315.0035 43.4347 13.82190324 52352
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 95341.46664957 .00000007 00000-0 10000-3 0 1557
2 08820 109.8541 319.9799 0044377 170.2484 189.8899 6.38664534201523
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 95338.32315732 .00000100 00000-0 10000-3 0 522
2 09852 12.9832 35.1836 0004163 119.0595 240.9319 1.00010789 15685
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 95340.42346951 .00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 6118
2 10061 12.0793 39.3437 0013357 133.0743 239.7942 1.00281863 12504
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 95339.21725646 -.00000232 00000-0 10000-3 0 2004
2 10637 35.4718 86.2577 1342853 51.6459 341.0984 1.00283593 17983
GPS BI-01
1 10684U 78020A 95340.42287452 -.00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 4072
2 10684 64.9036 29.6128 0056630 166.2273 193.9970 1.98069316115574
GPS BI-02
1 10893U 78047A 95331.95060582 -.00000028 00000-0 10000-3 0 1990
2 10893 63.2671 267.4680 0225573 14.2856 346.3641 2.01627411128733
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 95337.38885041 -.00000036 00000-0 10000-3 0 5760
2 10953 11.0569 42.1852 0007169 149.6083 260.9286 1.00381017 17088
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 95341.40388539 .00000022 00000-0 51860-4 0 4487
2 10967 107.9977 135.8720 0002022 242.2597 117.8377 14.38074286913738
GPS BI-03
1 11054U 78093A 95337.08108525 -.00000069 00000-0 10000-3 0 3673
2 11054 62.9571 265.9624 0045678 181.0110 178.9822 1.93505260124846
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 95338.68168238 -.00000050 00000-0 -77744-5 0 5483
2 11080 98.9724 205.1224 0009245 129.5506 230.6465 13.83700282864137
GPS BI-04
1 11141U 78112A 95332.14881047 -.00000068 00000-0 10000-3 0 161
2 11141 64.9112 31.9527 0049322 27.9657 332.3706 1.92894820 13984
GPS BI-05
1 11690U 80011A 95339.40366306 -.00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9603
2 11690 65.2372 31.1993 0151591 192.9314 166.7429 2.00569079130299
GPS BI-06
1 11783U 80032A 95336.76814230 -.00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 1153
2 11783 62.3785 260.2900 0222675 29.4907 331.7420 2.03456547114818
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 95338.17583042 -.00000218 00000-0 10000-3 0 8979
2 12472 7.8357 52.2297 0005638 52.7401 307.1662 1.00217483 11133
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 95342.19665278 .00000008 00000-0 -81469-5 0 4556
2 13301 82.9299 274.5530 0029161 50.2170 310.1545 13.68070123671126
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 95340.80081964 .00000032 00000-0 17048-4 0 8084
2 13367 98.1038 32.2852 0007823 28.3545 331.8078 14.57166898712353
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 95342.01116057 .00000007 00000-0 21373-4 0 9069
2 13736 98.6238 168.4668 0007767 228.9878 131.0632 14.25765351573682
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 95341.50877290 -.00000036 00000-0 53341-5 0 1612
2 13777 98.9654 166.1062 0011714 263.6905 96.2946 13.99235569326420
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 95340.48947467 .00000037 00000-0 23656-4 0 5514
2 13916 82.9434 334.3059 0037660 334.5954 25.3350 13.74331916637130
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 95339.33799038 .00000090 00000-0 00000+0 0 5071
2 13969 8.6684 45.5868 0003758 199.9848 170.3264 1.00277043 19433
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 95336.19443939 -.00000223 00000-0 10000-3 0 4676
2 14050 6.6559 55.5374 0002084 25.5040 334.3389 1.00313063104210
OSCAR 10
1 14129U 83058B 95334.82392991 -.00000421 00000-0 10000-3 0 3916
2 14129 26.4097 235.9909 5978339 330.6728 6.2527 2.05883476 65766
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 95341.52472777 .00000050 00000-0 21483-4 0 4035
2 14780 98.3616 34.0388 0002894 142.5623 217.5784 14.57031369625878
UoSat 2
1 14781U 84021B 95338.02033074 .00000144 00000-0 32147-4 0 8453
2 14781 97.7875 332.6460 0012074 4.4494 355.6816 14.69405315628849
GPS BI-09
1 15039U 84059A 95334.04635408 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 3777
2 15039 64.5768 26.2579 0082037 18.9920 341.3693 1.92302271 83586
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 95340.64147954 .00000005 00000-0 -10645-4 0 7520
2 15055 82.9561 28.6890 0028154 157.2235 203.0175 13.73629217574417
GPS BI-10
1 15271U 84097A 95341.54209115 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 845
2 15271 62.0654 260.5884 0158341 355.8085 4.1089 2.00607143 81408
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 95338.87856622 .00000321 00000-0 35034-4 0 4364
2 15331 82.5313 295.9953 0018308 231.2153 128.7435 14.84699608603998
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 95341.77885820 .00000066 00000-0 58649-4 0 5000
2 15427 98.9746 41.3521 0015333 134.5986 225.6438 14.13747295466448
GPS BI-11
1 16129U 85093A 95342.07374680 -.00000045 00000-0 10000-3 0 6926
2 16129 65.2518 29.4206 0156265 85.9675 275.8918 1.89368018 18289
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95341.31242010 .00000093 00000-0 77856-5 0 3500
2 16609 51.6472 10.4386 0003805 29.1457 330.9757 15.58212010459945
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 95341.22919587 .00000090 00000-0 62356-4 0 8776
2 16613 98.6334 48.5688 0001084 87.1476 272.9825 14.20080132192926
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 95341.04242596 .00000200 00000-0 21360-4 0 3523
2 16881 82.5185 351.7657 0017270 253.8024 106.1292 14.83688196505207
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 95342.14308620 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 483
2 16908 50.0105 227.4277 0011173 244.6633 115.3045 12.44413376 92497
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 95341.94710409 .00000037 00000-0 33978-4 0 4181
2 16969 98.5152 339.6289 0012431 192.7887 167.2979 14.24966717379227
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 95341.17834040 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 3569
2 17527 98.9693 42.1352 0018214 141.1305 219.1189 14.00398932447977
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 95340.39381131 .00000088 00000-0 10000-3 0 6659
2 17561 2.6752 70.9399 0000569 244.6064 125.6416 1.00274514 15361
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 4597
2 17845 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350494130
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 95341.53715293 .00000012 00000-0 28276-4 0 2394
2 18123 98.7740 169.9551 0015187 83.3977 276.8926 14.15425897437096
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95341.35493558 .00000047 00000-0 34764-4 0 1473
2 18129 82.9228 291.0591 0011549 339.5387 20.5301 13.72359881423725
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 95339.49553455 .00000039 00000-0 21326-4 0 4437
2 18312 82.5558 146.5074 0013926 49.3375 310.8998 13.84067136419246
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 95342.13005796 .00000045 00000-0 26788-4 0 7952
2 18820 82.5430 199.8786 0017749 103.2168 257.0972 13.84748162396947
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 95342.04148155 -.00000014 00000-0 12264-4 0 1339
2 18822 98.3914 178.1667 0005461 201.5148 158.5798 14.23173890407248
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 95338.37562034 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 368
2 19163 65.1784 92.4362 0007490 156.0660 203.9476 2.13102446 58066
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 95341.24785289 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 4446
2 19165 65.1727 92.3054 0001273 299.9501 60.0216 2.13102148 58744
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 95337.32908560 -.00000160 00000-0 10000-3 0 2221
2 19215 2.8667 68.8263 0008641 103.8472 176.8628 0.96946443 15263
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95341.57796336 -.00000176 00000-0 95765-4 0 1194
2 19216 57.4229 148.5182 7356438 25.6218 357.2004 2.09729621 25803
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 95340.26870717 .00000265 00000-0 30013-4 0 523
2 19274 82.5129 93.1049 0021776 44.7046 315.5924 14.82419786400649
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 95339.90406949 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 4421
2 19336 82.5377 303.9041 0018167 6.1431 353.9907 13.16975276353907
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 95341.27701363 -.00000053 00000-0 10000-3 0 3366
2 19503 65.6449 331.2265 0006509 157.7317 202.2978 2.13101761 56235
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 95341.92341479 .00000056 00000-0 54979-4 0 3109
2 19531 99.1948 349.9587 0012641 61.7649 298.4799 14.13074551271293
TDRS 2
1 19548U 88091B 95341.72951977 -.00000180 00000-0 10000-3 0 1639
2 19548 2.1138 73.2118 0009818 160.1636 190.1623 1.00263893 13597
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 95336.62240902 -.00000027 00000-0 10000-3 0 5517
2 19749 65.1381 92.0378 0004788 265.6086 94.3111 2.13101500 53645
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 95338.55470565 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 4603
2 19750 65.1521 92.0331 0007759 230.8115 129.0950 2.13101751 53702
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 95339.70121350 -.00000002 00000-0 10000-3 0 1538
2 19802 55.2623 118.3818 0026463 170.0738 190.0909 2.00564886 49811
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 95342.09335710 .00008057 00000-0 45526-3 0 6168
2 19822 75.1029 235.0172 3758648 250.8412 65.4805 7.89078711151510
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 95342.24877109 .00000061 00000-0 40875-4 0 4429
2 19851 82.5194 74.1278 0014385 148.1219 212.0815 13.84401069342274
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 95334.73905468 -.00000085 00000-0 10000-3 0 1637
2 19876 1.5765 71.8312 0018767 275.6634 92.6305 0.97109242 4688
TDRS 3
1 19883U 89021B 95339.07004622 -.00000265 00000-0 10000-3 0 1427
2 19883 0.0795 68.2377 0004925 219.1297 130.0961 1.00264967197165
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 95341.03611745 -.00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 1509
2 20061 54.3256 294.3666 0151260 217.2113 141.7191 2.00562836 47584
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 95341.87147566 .00000003 00000-0 -13017-4 0 6047
2 20103 82.9595 250.4904 0036357 228.4089 131.3951 13.73860248222277
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 95339.37770496 .00000000 00000-0 10000-3 0 1711
2 20185 55.0846 118.9450 0015477 325.4485 34.4288 2.00560574 46120
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 95338.71975919 -.00000364 00000-0 10000-3 0 2746
2 20217 1.3882 75.5564 0001310 70.7228 306.0286 1.00279872 23465
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 95341.17705699 .00000112 00000-0 24566-4 0 4594
2 20261 82.5937 34.0017 1243060 120.5285 252.4433 12.47305326281840
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 95340.91264398 .00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 1616
2 20302 53.3135 234.2936 0013230 162.5782 197.5260 2.00561193 44957
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 95339.30506115 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 4493
2 20305 82.5512 259.3113 0008508 67.4359 292.7660 13.04409085192798
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 95340.03616667 .00000352 00000-0 25287-3 0 1718
2 20322 98.9535 353.4567 0008255 217.9517 142.1063 14.03457129309695
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 4529
2 20335 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350343142
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 95341.42228481 -.00000059 00000-0 10000-3 0 9997
2 20361 55.8704 60.9043 0088424 131.1148 229.7120 2.00563268 34440
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 95340.24359226 -.00000134 00000-0 10000-3 0 2545
2 20391 3.4691 64.7440 0002627 145.3742 295.6517 1.00264853 22051
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 95342.20569745 .00000169 00000-0 10000-3 0 69
2 20436 98.7181 53.9270 0001241 57.0578 303.0717 14.20031949304592
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95338.75182328 .00000019 00000-0 24335-4 0 1447
2 20437 98.5599 60.3081 0012079 57.2782 302.9559 14.29905459306124
UO-15
1 20438U 90005C 95341.74200581 -.00000007 00000-0 14418-4 0 9417
2 20438 98.5549 61.5042 0011022 54.7447 305.4761 14.29220218306437
PACSAT
1 20439U 90005D 95340.18651493 .00000011 00000-0 21035-4 0 9436
2 20439 98.5723 63.6299 0012289 54.6922 305.5410 14.29960104306349
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95340.08804031 .00000023 00000-0 25650-4 0 9435
2 20440 98.5736 64.0722 0012456 53.0221 307.2098 14.30102130306353
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95338.18471617 -.00000033 00000-0 40301-5 0 9471
2 20441 98.5737 62.1554 0012979 58.8854 301.3605 14.30071483306087
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95339.73435492 .00000011 00000-0 20885-4 0 9429
2 20442 98.5752 64.1004 0013316 54.5959 305.6457 14.30177406206322
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 95339.82445735 .00000074 00000-0 10000-3 0 1039
2 20452 54.0253 174.6785 0060346 85.0725 275.6728 2.00556007 42916
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 95339.20149535 .00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 8680
2 20478 99.1310 45.9708 0000954 54.6141 305.5109 13.94862945217372
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 95341.70836717 -.00000053 00000-0 -44149-4 0 9431
2 20479 99.0585 38.1164 0540092 200.0439 157.8698 12.83337303273213
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95342.19647405 -.00000045 00000-0 -26940-4 0 8407
2 20480 99.0595 38.3434 0540300 199.4004 158.5798 12.83232066273263
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 95341.18012002 -.00000278 00000-0 -46094-3 0 1925
2 20491 99.0679 96.4638 0470706 26.3923 336.0380 13.02961163276722
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 95341.80497085 .00001586 00000-0 53752-4 0 6026
2 20496 43.1036 221.1571 0010564 252.3322 107.6392 15.35163115324259
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 95341.66243293 .00000155 00000-0 14882-3 0 6038
2 20508 82.9548 25.2078 0044524 179.6396 180.4795 13.73502812189461
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 95342.18571676 .00000232 00000-0 28584-4 0 4612
2 20510 82.5243 44.2027 0016952 224.1809 135.8029 14.78554855311300
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 95341.22392147 -.00000073 00000-0 10000-3 0 1303
2 20533 54.6799 295.0395 0039763 132.3912 228.0712 2.00575463 41714
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 95338.23548560 .00007242 00000-0 14001-3 0 8697
2 20546 94.1252 240.8336 0065261 43.3133 317.3223 15.45464378314720
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95339.26447442 .00000472 00000-0 31563-4 0 7438
2 20580 28.4701 31.4448 0005672 303.2182 56.7859 14.90983079109462
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 95341.03723792 .00000146 00000-0 22409-4 0 1441
2 20608 89.9284 175.0415 0107434 12.5107 347.8736 14.64883396298016
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 95340.27556016 -.00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 2491
2 20619 65.2451 330.5937 0025938 207.4445 152.4227 2.13102483 43178
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 95339.92501187 -.00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 2504
2 20620 65.2446 330.5909 0007092 43.6213 316.4459 2.13102532 43205
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 95339.99206739 -.00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 8413
2 20621 65.2696 330.6564 0011192 197.5701 162.3996 2.13101860 43205
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 2443
2 20635 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350313973
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 95338.77482257 .00000280 00000-0 37175-4 0 5141
2 20638 52.9903 99.0129 0010351 250.0945 109.8930 15.07311936302847
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 95338.87267966 .00000026 00000-0 96783-5 0 9418
2 20670 82.5442 143.0004 0017379 83.3617 276.9523 13.84150623274728
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 95341.07776509 .00000173 00000-0 24574-3 0 1915
2 20712 18.1196 329.2004 7188856 233.2440 37.6831 2.35647999 38565
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 95337.55981416 .00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 9731
2 20724 54.8857 116.5603 0123788 177.0560 182.9894 2.00565031 37509
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 95342.03599880 .00000149 00000-0 12688-3 0 6739
2 20788 98.8090 349.1333 0014098 318.0360 41.9725 14.01354624269184
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 95338.80798352 .00000066 00000-0 46177-4 0 9521
2 20826 82.5237 79.8030 0013821 353.8236 6.2749 13.83619565261823
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 95338.10884087 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 9820
2 20830 55.7954 58.9944 0064654 99.2326 261.5174 2.00558748 38157
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 95340.50513908 -.00000003 00000-0 10000-3 0 9460
2 20959 55.0950 118.4725 0103242 230.3126 128.7365 2.00567989 36791
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 95341.82477908 .00000048 00000-0 32822-4 0 4378
2 20978 98.6237 49.3081 0080021 18.3775 342.0267 14.32604611162179
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 95341.42449918 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 8159
2 21006 65.1174 91.2130 0058417 186.9365 172.9716 2.13102677 38906
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 95335.51384314 -.00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 9403
2 21007 65.1252 91.4956 0035548 179.0665 180.9240 2.13101105 38768
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 95340.09898689 -.00000033 00000-0 00000+0 0 1617
2 21008 65.1043 91.2763 0009161 262.2273 97.6567 2.13099168 38854
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95339.87464602 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 6565
2 21087 82.9363 105.5192 0036455 29.1678 331.1503 13.74562475243313
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95338.45253129 .00000019 00000-0 37461-5 0 8496
2 21089 82.9189 334.5016 0030887 59.8368 300.5842 13.74062876242156
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 95337.94073924 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 1234
2 21140 0.1476 49.9642 0002119 200.9173 160.5106 1.00281283 19641
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 95341.92076665 -.00000000 00000-0 -16922-4 0 2948
2 21152 82.9224 288.1871 0042280 155.4658 204.8520 13.73526165137354
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 95341.91267331 -.00000053 00000-0 10000-3 0 4621
2 21216 64.9973 330.1508 0006246 193.0763 166.9129 2.13102797 36420
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 95341.04374102 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 8672
2 21217 64.9940 330.2018 0007726 239.3776 120.5063 2.13101986 36392
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 95341.15499630 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 3438
2 21218 64.9831 330.1461 0013137 313.9125 45.9920 2.13102677 36405
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 95340.05411389 .00002755 00000-0 53976-4 0 3181
2 21225 28.4591 98.0673 0003080 170.0431 190.0225 15.43407722139909
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 95339.88897942 .00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 8524
2 21232 82.5417 150.1625 0012078 288.2652 71.7160 13.16470226221975
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 95341.63590238 .00000076 00000-0 53172-4 0 7383
2 21263 98.5700 1.1350 0013731 111.6006 248.6634 14.22580688137081
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 95340.42307901 .00000298 00000-0 39553-4 0 1519
2 21397 82.5223 319.4589 0021575 312.5618 47.3772 14.76435514242773
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 95341.27784617 -.00000061 00000-0 10000-6 0 9186
2 21552 56.1138 56.6489 0068833 244.2856 115.0343 2.00554381 32402
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 95338.78956163 -.00000031 00000-0 47406-5 0 2250
2 21574 98.5489 50.6570 0001274 86.2283 273.9046 14.32243966229475
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95339.22859580 .00000038 00000-0 27279-4 0 6497
2 21575 98.3785 46.1655 0007876 121.3999 238.7953 14.37003161230065
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 95339.17763417 .00000018 00000-0 20601-4 0 7441
2 21576 98.3752 44.3194 0004125 125.5759 234.5816 14.36413521229954
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 95339.71976663 .00000015 00000-0 19499-4 0 6439
2 21577 98.3756 45.4073 0006777 123.1327 237.0509 14.36502630230068
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 95340.75120473 .00000287 00000-0 10655-3 0 8444
2 21578 98.4005 52.9854 0005436 114.8314 245.3439 14.39109070230519
TDRS 4
1 21639U 91054B 95340.51212718 .00000088 00000-0 00000+0 0 9713
2 21639 0.0157 299.7760 0002484 305.9395 199.1412 1.00274430109950
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 95339.39707289 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 8500
2 21655 82.5539 98.0466 0012713 302.8087 57.1802 13.16842551207039
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 95341.56067987 .00000033 00000-0 23989-4 0 7236
2 21701 56.9842 161.9109 0005347 102.5389 257.6234 14.96463872231523
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 95341.91111643 .00000071 00000-0 60830-4 0 883
2 21798 98.9563 354.0119 0013801 54.4019 305.8424 14.13933196107754
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 95338.55124774 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 547
2 21853 65.0554 90.9906 0007382 185.8008 174.1674 2.13102279 29951
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 95340.71679029 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 2201
2 21854 65.0644 90.9131 0014977 18.5739 341.4656 2.13103888 29982
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 95341.25145549 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 2151
2 21855 65.0687 90.8968 0008553 198.8480 161.1094 2.13101972 29980
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 95341.24070522 .00001662 00000-0 14323-3 0 7232
2 21867 97.7070 56.1050 0002514 90.4261 269.7253 14.98673847108962
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 95341.23685584 .00000011 00000-0 10000-3 0 7313
2 21890 53.8544 234.6136 0058875 180.9227 179.1616 2.00559483 27778
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 95339.94958357 -.00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 7158
2 21930 55.7140 356.3797 0034594 181.2276 178.8187 2.00561512 26674
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 95341.21196754 .00001124 00000-0 42017-4 0 5047
2 21987 28.4314 40.2614 0009898 103.9271 256.2423 15.19569351194299
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 95341.47394060 .00000489 00000-0 40030-4 0 6791
2 22012 81.6690 322.7590 0120047 81.4049 280.0742 14.91523766186504
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 95341.48439018 .00000064 00000-0 00000+0 0 6188
2 22014 54.8278 176.2501 0096952 329.6605 29.8331 2.00562469 18547
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 95341.15048550 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 1236
2 22056 64.8229 330.2572 0007258 270.8822 89.0411 2.13103286 26075
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 95340.50772191 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 1107
2 22057 64.8397 330.2952 0008693 304.8871 55.0399 2.13102491 26031
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 95341.38601989 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 665
2 22058 64.8301 330.2749 0011856 270.0735 89.8116 2.13103127 26106
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 95338.17181778 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 9258
2 22076 66.0428 259.8021 0007529 267.7546 92.2605 12.80931270155011
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95341.19740468 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5404
2 22077 66.0785 233.5291 0003048 351.6763 8.4204 12.86293211155984
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 95339.76540790 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5377
2 22078 66.0797 235.2381 0004586 6.7061 353.4014 12.86577925155882
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 95341.94630679 .00000012 00000-0 10000-3 0 6650
2 22108 54.1021 235.3640 0114003 156.2257 204.3915 2.00555561 23736
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 95340.50424867 -.00000314 00000-0 -73878-4 0 5678
2 22161 62.9910 12.1369 0824807 1.5960 358.7402 13.21859044152827
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 95339.73064705 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 4515
2 22195 52.6416 114.5493 0137549 351.7643 8.0669 6.47294068 73689
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 95341.68779914 .00000063 00000-0 10000-3 0 6316
2 22231 54.5559 177.3288 0023792 98.6869 302.4311 2.00556183 22301
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 95340.78104375 .00000068 00000-0 10000-3 0 6649
2 22275 54.6292 174.9716 0031489 251.6038 108.1784 2.00571482 21699
TDRS 5
1 22314U 93003B 95334.62972426 -.00000286 00000-0 10000-3 0 5895
2 22314 2.2274 70.9233 0002576 215.7869 323.0663 1.00278117 10587
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 95338.85490770 -.00000087 00000-0 10000-3 0 6408
2 22446 54.3381 295.3114 0085811 356.1590 3.7562 2.00568371 20648
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 95337.61434080 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 7531
2 22512 65.0637 90.8782 0009352 190.1860 169.7709 2.13102005 21500
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 95341.30729086 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 8425
2 22513 65.0752 90.7602 0007890 191.3878 168.5698 2.13101701 21771
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 95341.13152446 -.00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 8362
2 22514 65.0979 90.7544 0011735 185.6586 174.3157 2.13102690 21776
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 95339.39742867 .00001424 00000-0 94577-4 0 4555
2 22521 31.1053 226.8393 0056279 35.5554 324.8730 15.02622329153149
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 95336.95101119 -.00000136 00000-0 00000+0 0 4758
2 22563 25.6834 291.7485 0009593 286.6828 296.9467 0.99249126 14134
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 95339.99501867 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 4850
2 22581 55.2336 355.8675 0058421 34.3930 326.0272 2.00567381 19728
ARSENE
1 22654U 93031B 95329.41880734 -.00000100 00000-0 10000-3 0 3415
2 22654 2.9717 78.2469 2885825 225.4824 107.7921 1.42201851 8681
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 95342.12753309 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 5659
2 22657 55.1799 355.5777 0071957 210.3970 149.2162 2.00558096 15095
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 95341.48314541 .00000074 00000-0 27100-4 0 4503
2 22698 89.5375 281.4549 0088895 233.5890 125.7099 14.21360088127058
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 95337.10329322 -.00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 4760
2 22700 54.2601 236.3797 0044051 350.1723 9.7994 2.00569479 17797
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 95341.38892945 .00000007 00000-0 29027-4 0 9474
2 22739 99.0168 290.6103 0010712 49.7515 310.4579 14.10950337 19867
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 95339.68869082 -.00000084 00000-0 10000-3 0 5470
2 22779 54.4594 295.3041 0019694 255.4572 104.3149 2.00556671 16600
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 95339.95704804 .00000035 00000-0 18714-4 0 4469
2 22782 82.5462 141.0706 0022561 158.6764 201.5339 13.83043225114282
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 95341.81449235 -.00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 5863
2 22787 4.3487 325.8458 0004231 268.8553 206.4483 1.00269870 6901
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 95342.24648432 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 4928
2 22823 98.7223 54.0275 0000624 65.5605 294.5645 14.20035086113999
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 95341.15989405 -.00000042 00000-0 49141-6 0 4346
2 22824 98.6047 54.5752 0007181 72.4434 287.7532 14.27103072114404
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95341.69818925 .00000001 00000-0 18005-4 0 4374
2 22825 98.6041 55.5429 0009568 72.6611 287.5612 14.27680890114529
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95340.23743068 .00000004 00000-0 19364-4 0 4360
2 22826 98.6045 54.2333 0010090 77.1533 283.0771 14.27788755114323
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 95340.17309060 .00000049 00000-0 37223-4 0 4974
2 22827 98.6017 54.0909 0010259 64.9782 295.2463 14.27917927114325
ITAMSAT
1 22828U 93061F 95339.21317742 .00000011 00000-0 21837-4 0 4146
2 22828 98.6005 53.2693 0011115 65.8459 294.3870 14.28121747 82286
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95340.20806499 -.00000017 00000-0 10511-4 0 4289
2 22829 98.5998 54.2922 0010841 63.6908 296.5385 14.28102855114340
KO-25
1 22830U 93061H 95341.17922372 -.00000037 00000-0 23870-5 0 4473
2 22830 98.4975 46.4529 0012424 40.2884 319.9218 14.28102179114484
JIANBING-93 P/L(1)
1 22870U 93063H 95342.26218177 .00259353 83221-5 16535-3 0 3352
2 22870 56.4555 67.9112 0588318 243.5889 110.3592 14.98577484 3505
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 95341.23118004 -.00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 3585
2 22877 55.5362 56.8565 0030462 298.7499 61.0049 2.00565681 15528
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 95341.08718299 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 3852
2 22912 0.4733 281.2255 0003001 343.4870 192.1712 1.00274279 5924
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 95340.25927352 .00006558 00000-0 46446-3 0 4053
2 22920 28.4667 326.5399 0003668 196.6937 163.3532 15.02905436110203
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 95338.25444455 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2156
2 22969 82.5604 38.7454 0016275 12.2147 347.9358 13.16733269 89269
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 95340.17975055 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2078
2 22970 82.5581 37.3041 0016749 5.9096 354.2202 13.16826759 89525
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 95341.31382609 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 2898
2 23027 55.0836 357.6733 0067363 201.3591 158.4090 2.00567046 12834
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 95341.20962542 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 2892
2 23043 64.7125 330.6363 0006526 211.2023 148.7650 2.13102533 12894
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 95342.03071185 -.00000054 00000-0 00000+0 0 2573
2 23044 64.7034 330.6024 0030872 206.9586 152.8847 2.13102979 12915
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 95340.33028891 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 2663
2 23045 64.6971 330.6776 0010151 27.1659 332.8992 2.13102515 12873
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 95338.48241473 -.00000249 00000-0 00000+0 0 4326
2 23051 0.3559 82.0537 0002749 165.1152 283.5518 1.00281938 13405
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 95341.51377732 .00005331 00000-0 89285-4 0 2639
2 23101 97.0877 172.3591 0011404 322.0465 37.9950 15.52215006 89396
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 95335.46751672 .00003371 00000-0 83485-3 0 2321
2 23125 7.6720 322.2386 7258529 257.2115 19.9555 2.31567334 11510
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 95340.19163975 .00005222 00000-0 10040-2 0 2009
2 23126 7.5767 320.7419 7262213 260.4936 18.4325 2.31444005 11667
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 95339.19039471 .00000025 00000-0 10169-4 0 1500
2 23179 82.9465 21.1278 0035916 311.0808 48.7243 13.75674609 69982
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 95339.99885848 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 2237
2 23203 64.7713 210.6450 0007490 139.7290 220.4224 2.13101981 10260
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 95340.70203864 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 2332
2 23204 64.7711 210.6408 0015002 351.0723 8.9956 2.13102414 10274
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 95341.05409482 .00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 2199
2 23205 64.7682 210.6255 0001405 2.0141 358.0816 2.13102370 10287
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 95341.71549311 .00000096 00000-0 75506-4 0 5876
2 23233 98.8547 38.0356 0013027 10.6850 349.4588 14.12661298 65657
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 95341.17664068 .00000263 00000-0 36423-4 0 1143
2 23317 82.5439 236.5692 0026951 352.0948 7.9841 14.73983145 62109
ELEKTRO
1 23327U 94069A 95338.69588485 -.00000097 00000-0 00000+0 0 1051
2 23327 0.4176 257.2860 0002040 126.7454 15.5115 1.00271033 4045
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 95341.76294391 -.00000047 00000-0 19000-6 0 4129
2 23342 97.9950 38.1180 0001177 86.8295 273.3044 14.69796511 58544
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 95340.42805735 -.00000031 00000-0 00000+0 0 1776
2 23396 65.0082 90.8509 0030891 189.8498 170.0733 2.13102549 8113
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 95340.60370754 -.00000030 00000-0 00000+0 0 1842
2 23397 64.9913 90.8639 0011298 317.4026 42.5041 2.13102461 8113
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 95340.95654283 -.00000027 00000-0 00000+0 0 1995
2 23398 64.9907 90.8273 0002735 257.4712 102.4775 2.13102141 8139
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 95342.01077556 -.00000267 00000-0 00000+0 0 2149
2 23426 1.8428 271.2156 0002212 336.1832 287.9603 1.00277937 3575
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95339.06062084 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 967
2 23439 64.8126 338.6400 0166517 233.0068 125.5516 11.27523592 38780
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 95341.83914241 .00000044 00000-0 48721-4 0 4194
2 23455 98.9219 283.1365 0010551 65.3610 294.8659 14.11553238 48312
ODERACS II A
1 23471U 95004C 95342.00041938 .00058533 12701-4 13731-3 0 2566
2 23471 51.6471 303.7751 0011029 66.1019 294.1152 15.97148149 48808
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 95339.97809223 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 1255
2 23511 64.7255 330.9438 0007827 227.3427 132.6017 2.13102787 5831
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 95340.09587352 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 1358
2 23512 64.7191 330.9514 0007346 303.7554 56.1816 2.13101906 5831
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 95340.85822778 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 1471
2 23513 64.7258 330.9379 0013994 209.9924 149.9378 2.13102894 5852
SFU
1 23521U 95011A 95341.39349892 .00003506 00000-0 11160-3 0 1277
2 23521 28.4570 332.2331 0007959 83.6072 327.8155 15.29408662 40484
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 95332.72575514 -.00000292 00000-0 10000-3 0 773
2 23522 0.6432 308.2454 0001342 129.6160 30.5793 1.00276956 2434
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 95342.21865464 .00000012 00000-0 30129-4 0 3171
2 23533 98.8359 342.2177 0006264 239.7780 120.2772 14.12715021 36521
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 95341.85639107 .00000206 00000-0 75393-4 0 691
2 23547 69.9794 256.3704 0010165 97.5643 262.6640 14.45456057 35871
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 95341.79538825 .00015628 00000-0 41727-3 0 1601
2 23549 143.3662 138.9420 0240077 322.8716 35.5613 15.11473217 37203
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 95342.24562724 .00002941 00000-0 40329-4 0 810
2 23558 51.6531 0.9281 0006047 213.7887 146.2719 15.61093747560014
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 95341.53609655 .00000063 00000-0 39591-4 0 1435
2 23560 98.5523 53.3799 0000971 74.1838 285.9457 14.32247224 32998
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 2037
2 23579 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350 31453
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 95338.60166800 -.00000180 00000-0 00000+0 0 1008
2 23581 0.2018 269.4499 0004213 354.5215 295.5236 1.00266086 1967
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 95339.26663804 .00000176 00000-0 42734-4 0 1226
2 23605 98.1044 272.9519 0001346 74.8216 285.3135 14.63856559 22037
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 95341.89253280 .00000112 00000-0 28562-4 0 954
2 23606 98.0847 275.9522 0008078 70.9503 289.2582 14.66912995 22523
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 95338.25133934 .00000237 00000-0 50740-4 0 450
2 23607 98.0869 272.4217 0010010 83.3363 276.8980 14.67184123 21890
TDRS 6
1 23613U 95035B 95339.37225016 .00000132 00000-0 00000+0 0 976
2 23613 0.2736 84.7682 0003426 168.8518 164.2204 1.00262569 1430
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 95342.05050148 .00000061 00000-0 00000+0 0 743
2 23620 64.8328 210.4141 0018386 163.6505 196.5055 2.13102971 2910
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 95341.28858406 .00000064 00000-0 00000+0 0 823
2 23621 64.8359 210.4454 0017438 173.1942 186.9074 2.13101942 2898
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 95339.93933186 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 778
2 23622 64.8356 210.4873 0036925 163.1013 197.1158 2.13102492 2866
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 95344.15089960 -.00001137 00000-0 00000+0 0 213
2 23632 68.3200 253.1460 8957180 318.2860 2.0640 0.26327600 349
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 95338.55302754 .00000095 00000-0 11209-4 0 370
2 23657 82.5338 20.6297 0027572 328.4141 31.5421 14.73436056 14028
Soyuz TM-22
1 23665U 95047A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 957
2 23665 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350 14898
Progress M-29
1 23678U 95053A 95341.82545960 .00016206 00000-0 21641-3 0 598
2 23678 51.6446 7.8653 0003737 46.2845 313.6821 15.58223350 9379
ISO
1 23715U 95062A 95340.09106202 -.00000354 00000-0 10000-3 0 90
2 23715 5.0309 308.2223 8219954 117.5165 344.4748 1.00193908 196
Gals-2
1 23717U 95063A 95341.80767282 -.00000048 00000-0 00000+0 0 134
2 23717 0.1803 346.4622 0004093 357.7424 94.1484 1.00259363 200
1995063B
1 23718U 95063B 95325.02726286 .22072120 12879-4 98252-4 0 191
2 23718 51.6145 262.6890 0001889 15.4163 70.3187 16.56114990 563
1995063C
1 23719U 95063C 95322.26697917 .13379302 12353-4 11943-2 0 46
2 23719 51.6095 278.2213 0005927 87.8436 272.7159 16.38218014 89
1995063D
1 23720U 95063D 95337.56727542 -.00000150 00000-0 00000+0 0 45
2 23720 0.2050 294.6206 0036959 54.9428 10.3601 1.00155502 163
1995063E
1 23721U 95063E 95341.91132533 .00002770 00000-0 90062-3 0 174
2 23721 47.3758 276.0840 7288758 5.3612 359.3302 2.27127783 420
1995063F
1 23722U 95063F 95338.85990654 .00000562 00000-0 59534-3 0 97
2 23722 47.4406 277.0111 7269436 4.4584 359.3575 2.26669912 408
Asiasat 2
1 23723U 95064A 95340.45165786 -.00000388 00000-0 00000+0 0 152
2 23723 0.4442 271.3416 0234766 270.7666 147.9701 1.01180979 116
1995064B
1 23724U 95064B 95339.11007546 .10941083 -86892-5 31967-3 0 316
2 23724 28.0014 192.0730 0015911 229.6647 130.4466 16.44059292 1085
1995064C
1 23725U 95064C 95341.74080432 .00008068 00000-0 10401-2 0 118
2 23725 25.5635 239.9982 7252492 185.5421 156.3127 2.33498545 206
1995067A
1 23730U 95067A 95341.21493660 -.00000165 00000-0 00000+0 0 11
2 23730 6.9876 240.9785 7288216 178.2317 187.9836 2.28530723 05
1995067B
1 23731U 95067B 95341.21440415 -.00000165 00000-0 00000+0 0 12
2 23731 6.9850 241.0952 7288616 178.1123 188.5049 2.28486390 07
1995067C
1 23732U 95067C 95341.22477632 -.00000180 00000-0 00000+0 0 12
2 23732 6.8178 241.8948 7350325 177.7042 190.4199 2.18286303 04
1995067D
1 23733U 95067D 95341.21235778 -.00000166 00000-0 00000+0 0 19
2 23733 6.9828 240.7636 7291015 178.4873 186.8753 2.27987166 00
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:45 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.texas.net!news1.best.com!pravda.aa.msen.com!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Oberg - answerman! (was Re: STS-73 Sees UFO)
Date: 12 Dec 1995 23:06:51 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 2
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4aljgr$qan@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
References: <479l71$15pi@news.doit.wisc.edu>
Reply-To: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38614 alt.paranet.ufo:46977 rec.radio.amateur.space:5917
Its the Northern lights Dudes and Dudettes! White Wiggly Wobbly and Wacky.
No drugs required to see 'em. Look like a flourescent lamp burning out.
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:46 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.dpc.net!news.heurikon.com!news.ahc.ameritech.com!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!chi-news.cic.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
From: Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: OSCAR 21 ... ?
Date: 9 Dec 1995 23:41:02 GMT
Organization: NASA Spacelink Teacher Resource Center-a service to educators
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951209173808.25881C-100000@spacelink>
References: <4acjr1$678@news.worldlinx.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: glue9600@spacelink
In-Reply-To: <4acjr1$678@news.worldlinx.com>
X-Disclaimer: Message author is solely responsible for message content.
On 9 Dec 1995, sylvestre wrote:
> Is anyone knows what happened with Oscar 21
> I operated it last year, it was working great.
> I am a satellite operator, I am also a member of Amsat but
> I just don't know what really hapened to that satellite.
>
> Thank you for your help !
>
> Benoit
> ve2vb@amsat.org
>
>
The satellite it was piggybacked on was also it's source of power. When
the screwed up Russian Army and the group which commissioned the
satellite disagreed on the operational costs, the Army simply shut the
sucker off. Boom. No technical satellite, no ham satellite!
> >
----------
Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:47 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.mathworks.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!cs.umd.edu!mojo.eng.umd.edu!volt.isr.umd.edu!not-for-mail
From: tedwards@Glue.umd.edu (Thomas Grant Edwards)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.space.shuttle
Subject: Pictures of spacecraft carrying Packet Radio Experiment now Online
Date: 13 Dec 1995 13:38:03 -0500
Organization: Project Glue, University of Maryland, College Park
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <4an6ib$3ln@volt.isr.umd.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: volt.isr.umd.edu
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13079 rec.radio.amateur.space:5929 sci.space.shuttle:38644
Pictures of the Spartan 206 OAST-FLYER spacecraft which will carry the
Spartan Packet Radio Experiment (SPRE) in early Jan. 1996 are now online at:
http://sspp.gsfc.nasa.gov/sp206.html
SPRE is a 2m packet "easysat" which will be a test of the usefulness of
real-time downlinks of space-based GPS positions as well as using APRS (tm)
systems to digipeat terrestrial locations through LEO spacecraft.
The Spartan 206 spacecraft is a free-flier which is deployed from the
Space Shuttle payload bay during mission STS-72, and left on its own for about
46 hours. After that time, the Shuttle picks up the Spartan and returns
it to earth.
For more information on SPRE, go to WWW URL:
http://w3eax.umd.edu/spre.html
-Thomas
N3HAU
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:48 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!psgrain!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!news.compulink.co.uk!cix.compulink.co.uk!usenet
From: oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk ("Stephen Walters")
Subject: radio h/w for sale
Message-ID: <DJEBCM.84C@cix.compulink.co.uk>
Organization: Skills Unlimited
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 00:14:45 GMT
Lines: 20
Drake R8e hf all mode receiver, 700ukp
Datong active antenna, ad370, outdoor model (only used indoors!) 50ukp.
Microwave modules 2m transverter (use your hf multimode on 2m) 90ukp
Yaesu Ft101 100watt (Adjustable to qrp levels) base station 300ukp ono
TS120v 100watt HF mobile (Adjustable to qrp levels) mobile 300ukp ono
Telereader 685 Rtty/ascii/Morse Tx/Rx terminal with integral screen and
keyboard 150ukp.
Looking to buy VHF/UHF base station...so need money and space...
Tel 0956-544202.
oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk/ G7VFY
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:54 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.nic.surfnet.nl!sun4nl!EU.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!news.compuserve.com!news.production.compuserve.com!news
From: Chris Steyaert <72650.3513@CompuServe.COM>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Radio Meteor Obs Bull Nov 1995 Leonids, alpha Monoc
Date: 10 Dec 1995 10:53:40 GMT
Organization: VVS
Lines: 492
Message-ID: <4aee7k$q9t$1@mhadf.production.compuserve.com>
Radio Meteor Observation Bulletin No. 28 Dec 1995
1. FORWARD SCATTER METEOR OBSERVATIONS
Observer: Maurice De Meyere
Location: Deurle, Belgium (3 37' E, 51 00' N)
Frequency: 66.51 MHz
Transmitter locations (all stations of more than 10 kW):
66.35 MHz, Klaipeda, Lithuania 12 kW, 05h00-22h00
66.41 Siedlce Poland 39 04h57(Sun05h57)-02h00(Sat03h00)
66.47 Viesintos Lithuania 12 05h00-22h00
66.50 Sofia Bulgaria 10 24hrs
66.56 Poznan Poland 56 04h57(Sun05h57)-02h00(Sat03h00)
66.62 Budapest Hungary 100 24hrs
66.68 Valmiera Latvia 20 06h00-22h00
(The transmitters mentioned in RMOB9510 and RMOB9509 are wrong, error
by the undersigned. Thanks to Ton Schoenmaker for bringing this to our
attention).
Antenna: crossed Yagi, 4 elements, astronomical azimuth 270 o (= East),
elevation 27 o
Antenna amplifier: 25 dB max level 90 dBmuV
Receiver: commercial, Progresson 447A, TESLA, Bratislava
The receiver was calibrated with a Marconi TF2008 signal
generator. Sensitivity: 5 muV (modulation frequency
1000 Hz, frequency sweep 38 kHz) at (S+N)/N = 20 dB
Observing method: automated setup, 150 samples/second, 8 bit resolution.
[Time and details of all individual meteor reflections are stored
on file in the University of Ghent format (Prometeos), and are
available for further analysis. Reduction software for DOS and
Windows available].
November 1995
Raw counts of reflections with a duration of at least 0.027 s
during one hour interval starting at UT:
Nov | UT
1995 | 20h 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1- 2 | 48 48 72 63 65 81 84 79 81 69 110 104
2- 3 | 38 56 59 62 68 73 85 90 94 96 93 82
3- 4 | 37 40 81 65 75 81 75 83 94 83 88 71
4- 5 | 18 33 59 54 54 59 75 49 77 77 87 76
5- 6 | 37 43 53 50 56 57 72 53 79 80 99 51
6- 7 | 32 62 60 63 47 51 74 73 73 72 69 64
7- 8 | 41 45 57 76 94 85 76 76 59 75 84 60
8- 9 | 49 56 58 49 61 88 57 79 51 61 102 60
9-10 | 40 44 51 46 64 77 72 67 89 102 69 69
10-11 | 36 47 48 54 68 74 57 72 59 59 104 51
11-12 | 43 47 61 79 71 58 70 68 76 58 78 60
12-13 | 42 56 77 78 76 65 94 69 64 80 78 85
13-14 | 41 62 73 68 65 80 78 87 57 64 72 72
14-15 | 41 45 65 68 85 71 83 90 83 101 71 92 52
15-16 | 55 52 69 92 76 93 95 97 97 89 109 212 114 172
16-17 | 42 59 83 73 96 93 116 140 154 156 132 177 179 154
17-18 | 34 40 69 70 161 100 198* 169* 283* 305* 247* 188
18-19 | 28 53 61 59 71 81 68 115 102 69 85 124 50 49
19-20 | 48 53 62 68 73 77 79 94 67 88 97 86
20-21 | 30 58 65 67 74 76 80 78 97 75 105 72
21-22 | 47 41 44 79 53 232& 75 86 67 61 61 64
22-23 | 31 69 62 51 67 67 72 105 61 82 79 72
23-24 | 47 74 60 82 68 69 78 66 62 73 61 42
24-25 | 31 42 67 58 62 70 63 80 49 61 51 64
25-26 | 37 53 49 57 64 75 60 56 65 60 85 51
26-27 | 44 48 68 64 74 73 83 84 76 79 94 46
27-28 | 36 51 69 70 79 89 83 93 76 84 104 95
28-29 | 37 60 65 72 77 70 82 113 96 68 95 85
29-30 | 68 65 61 73 76 67 72 73 65 82 67 81
30-01 | - - - - - - - - - - - -
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1995 | 20h 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
Nov | UT
Notes:
. * good Leonid activity during early Nov 18.
The Leonid radiant rises at 22h30m, and sets at 14h UT.
Best forward scatter conditions for this setup between 7h and 8h UT.
Compare with last years's results in RMOB9411.
Radio-amateur results:
Pista (YU7EW, Hungary) reports "very-very strong and long reflections but
no adequate activity" on the morning of Nov 18.
John (PE1OGF@PI8ZAA.#NBO.NLD.EU, Netherlands) writes: "This year LEONIDS
was a GOOD shower much better than activity I heard on RANDOM
frequencies. So NEXT year don't think LEONIDS is a POOR shower it's
really a good one with long and strong reflections over long distances.
... this shower had a sharp maximum which was somewhere between 01-07 UTC
on 18/11/95".
. & alpha Monocerotids
Meteor reflections during 5 minute interval starting at UT:
1995 | Number Number
Nov 22 | >= 0.027 s >= 1.00 s
-------------------------------------
0h40 | 4 1
0h45 | 7 0
0h50 | 5 1
0h55 | 6 0
1h00 | 8 1
1h05 | 13 2
1h10 | 17 4
1h15 | 28 7
1h20 | 39 13
1h25 | 34 9
1h30 | 26 11
1h35 | 30 8
1h40 | 11 4
1h45 | 7 0
1h50 | 10 1
1h55 | 10 1
2h00 | 7 1
2h05 | 4 1
Maurice De Meyere / Chris Steyaert
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Werfried Kuneth
Location: Villach, Austria (46 37' N, 13 53' E)
Frequency: 59.250 MHz, SSB mode
Transmitter location: 150 kW TV video carrier from Bucaresti, distance
950 km, east. Sometimes other TV video carriers are selected.
Antenna: dipole with reflector, direction east.
Frequency 1: 59.250 MHz, SSB mode, 150 kW TV video carrier
in Bucaresti, distance 950 km, east.
Beginning on Nov. 26:
Frequency 2: 48.246 Mhz, SSB mode, 100 kW TV video carrier
Location Germany, distance 550 km, northwest.
Dipole used alternating with frequency 1.
Receivers: Several, incl. homemade converter. AGC is enabled. No preamplifiers.
Observing method: the audio signal is fed into a real time FFT display
(FFTDSP program from AF9Y) on the PC where 640 channels of 2Hz width
are recorded and stored continuously. Every meteor reflection produces
a distinct whistle, which is recorded easily by the real time FFT
program.
From the saved .GIF files, reflections of at least 15 seconds are taken
to get the one hour intervals count starting at UT:
November 1995
1995 | Time (UT)
Nov | 21h 22h 23h|04h 05h 06h 07h 08h 09h 10h 11h 12h 13h 14h 15h 16h 17h
------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------
1 | - - - | 7 4 8 7 3 9 7 2 2 5 >3 - - -
1- 2 | >1 3 3 | 4 8 4 6 3 4 5 6 2 3 >1 1 - -
2- 3 | - 1d 4 | 8 9 10! 11 3 4 4 5 3 2 1 4 5 -
3- 4 | - - 2 | 4 7 7 5 4 - - - - 2 2 - - -
4- 5 | - - - | - 3 8 8 6 - - - - - - - - -
5- 6 | 2 2 4 | - 6 11 8 4 5 5 4 4 1 6 >1 - -
6- 7 | >1 7 7 | - 9 6 6 9 7 7 3 - - - - - -
7- 8 | >3 2 2 | 3 8 9 11 4 9 6 5 3 3 4 1 3 -
8- 9 | >4 4 4 | 8 7 11 6 9 13! 17! 6 4 6 3 4 - -
9-10 | - 3 >3 | 7 4 6 4 3 4 2 3 1 2 3 1 3 1
10-11 | - 3 2 | - 5 6 7 1 3 3 4 5 2 2 1 4 1
11-12 | - 4 5 | - 6 6 2 6 4 3 5 5! 4! 5! 4 5 -
12-13 | 1 3 2 | 4 7 4 7 8 4 5 5 1 0 0 1 - -
13-14 | 2d 3d 3 | 3d 7d 7d 9 4 7 4 6 3 2 2 1 1 -
14-15 | - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
15-16 | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
16-17 | - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
17-18 | 3! 9! 6 |16! 17! 27! 21! 13! 12 7 4 3 5
18-19 | 4 2 2 |>3 6 7 2d 3d 4d 4 6 4 - - - - -
19-20 | 2 2 >3 | - 6 4 8 2 2 4 - - - - - - -
20-21 | 4 3 3 | 7 2 4 7 4 9d 2d 2d 3 3 3d 4d - -
21-22 | >2 4d 2d| 5d 5 4 6 6 7! 2d 3d 2 5 3 2 2 -
22-23 | >1 2 3 | 3d 4 6 4 4 7 5y 4 4 3 1 - - -
23-24 | - 3 4 | 3d 2 7 12! 7! 3 11 4 0 3 3 1 1 1
24-25 | - 1 1d| - 3 4! 4! - - - - - - 2 1 3 4
25-26 | 4 0 5 | 1d 3 3 5 7 - >3 5 1 3 - - - -
26-27 | 0 2 4 | 0 5 3 1 2y 5 2 2 1 3 1 0 0 -
27-28 | 1 1 1 | 4 2 2 5 2d 5 4 5 3 3 0 1 0 1
28-29 | 2 1 1 | 1 4 4 0 5y 3 - - - - - - - 1
29-30 | 0 2 2 | 2 3y 3y 4 3 2 4 2 2 3 1 3 1
------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------
Nov | 21h 22h 23h|04h 05h 06h 07h 08h 09h 10h 11h 12h 13h 14h 15h 16h 17h
1995 |
Codes used:
- no data available
| Transitters closed. So I didn't get the Alpha Monocerodits peak on Nov. 21.
d outstanding number of very short reflections, which would otherwise
not be included in the report.
! means that most of the reflections indicated here are in the range of
one minute or longer!!! (This is not usual and happens only at a showers
peak).
y means: strange appearance of the ionized trail. E.g. split trail
> available data don't cover the whole hour.
. for reference: a 15+ s duration count of 18 is about 40% of the 1995
radio Perseids peak.
. Local time conversion: one hour ahead of UT (06h00 UT is 07h00 local).
Anybody who wants to take a look at the Perseids, Orionids, or Leonids peak
is invited to take a look at the radio meteor spectrum .GIF files which are
available via anonymous ftp at:
karanet.uni-klu.ac.at/pub/forum/star-trek/meteor
---------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: James W. Riggs, Gr.
Location: West Point, CA (38o22'36" N, 120o33'03" W)
Frequency: 55.240 MHz , probably Salt Lake City and others
Receiver: Japan Radio NRD 525 with optional converter 34 to 60 MHz.
Antenna: 5 element Yagi
Observing method: Automated system with Apple Computer recording to disk pulse
and tone of beat frequency with reflection.
Data of individual reflections and hourly counts are available.
Aug Sep Oct
1 4339 6603
2 4656 3402 6247
3 7000 3599 6400
4 5875 4551 6467
5 5172 5332 6805
6 4469 6117 6552
7 7300 6512 6484
8 6755 7706 6366
9 6721 7042 6298
10 6264 6424 6318
11 7077 6163 6416
12 7466 6535 6620
13 7314 5232 6684
14 7077 5265 6569
15 6027 6416 6061
16 6163 6907 6789
17 8550 7348 6721
18 8297 5942 6704
19 7246 6653 5282
20 5909 4571 5525
21 5587 5722 5708
22 6695 5705 6010
23 6763 5688 6044
24 6848 5878 5909
25 7227 6061 5130
26 7424 6061 5773
27 5000 6264 5790
28 4119 6366 5536
29 3746 7076 5628
30 3000 6891 5333
31 4019 5665
Jim Riggs / via J. Van Wassenhove
---------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Ton Schoenmaker
Location: Roden, Netherlands (6 degr 26' E, 53 degr 08' N)
Frequency: 66.89 MHz
Transmitter location: Krakow, Poland, 120 kW, distance 980 km
Antenna: Horizontal Yagi, 5 elements, geographical azimuth 110
degrees (ESE), elevation 15 degrees
Receiver: Homemade convertor 65-67 MHz to 28-30 MHz + Barlow-Wadley
0-30 MHz receiver; total sensitivity 0.3 uV for 20 dB S/N
with a bandwidth of 3 kHz
Observing method: Brown strip chart recorder, 18 inch/hour + occasional
listening.
Leonids and Alpha-Monocerotids 1995
Dead time corrected counts of reflections during one hour intervals
starting at:
| UT
Nov 1995 | 20h 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
---------+---------------------------------------------------------
16/17 | 249 276 422 434 420 330 345 381 320 354 349 435
17/18 | 327 360 316 349 329 436 421 402 361 347 323 305
|
21/22 | 274 256 673 249 258
---------+---------------------------------------------------------
Nov 1995 | 20h 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
More details of Alpha-Monocerotids with the number of dead time
corrected counts during five minute intervals starting at:
00h 01h 02h
Nov 1995 | 45 50 55 00 05 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 00 05 10 15
---------+------------------------------------------------------------
21/22 | 32 21 20 30 39 54 75 87 78 108 72 47 30 28 25 26 22 19 17
Because of the large number of reflections, the recorder paper is difficult
to read during 1h15m - 1h40m. If I had been awake, I should have increased
the speed of the paper! Although corrected for dead time caused by long
echoes, the counts during that period are probably underestimated.
Graphically the maximum was determined as 1995 November 22.060, with an
uncertainty of 0.002 days. This corresponds with a solar longitude of
239.32 degrees (2000).
------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul Vauterin announces the availability of the summarized forward scatter
observations of the Astronomical Observatory, University of Ghent, at URL:
http://allserv.rug.ac.be/~pdegroot/meteor/mto_obs.html
It covers all of their observations from August 1994 up to now.
The results are presented in an original graphical way.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Ilkka Yrjola
Location: Finland (26 35' E, 60 54' N)
Frequency: 87.360 MHz
Receiver: narrow band FM, detected signal level >-122dBm.
Antenna: 2 element Yagi with 4dBd gain to SW.
Antenna Azimuth: 45 o
Computer: T-1000SE
Data sampling system: threshold crossing detection is fed in binary
form (1 bit) from the receiver to the computer.
Computer logs total hourly elapsed reflection time, number of
threshold crossings for the hour, the longest time the signal was
continuously above detection level for the hour.
Data stored in the Compact MS-Soft format. Software for viewing available
from FTP.FUNET.FI pub/ham/vhf-work/mssoft42.zip
Leonids 1995
Counts in one hour intervals starting at:
UT |16 Nov 17 Nov 18 Nov 19 Nov 20 Nov 1995
-------------------------------------------------
0h | 229 378 554* 301 304
1 | 239 363 779* 314
2 | 271 386 1021* 510
3 | 329 471 703* 393
4 | 274 455 684* 345
5 | 257 641* 710* 389
6 | 324 654* 907* 407
7 | 258 348 1177* 340
8 | 228 622* 561* 314
9 | 231 297 630* 299
10 | 236 274 471 217
11 | 173 301 522 218
12 | 134 234 263 280
13 | 127 212 237 190
14 | 149 171 207 185
15 | 131 196 177 195
16 | 153 169 179 170
17 | 164 202 250 231
18 | 194 243 248 280
19 | 208 264 250 277
20 | 225 333 259 296
21 | 265 296 276 336
22 | 315 475* 415 328
23 | 336 568* 318 368
-------------------------------------------------
UT |16 Nov 17 Nov 18 Nov 19 Nov 20 Nov 1995
* strong Leonid activity during the morning hours of Nov 18 (and to
a less extent on Nov 17). The Leonid radiant rises at 19h30m, and sets
at 13h30. Compare with last year's results in RMOB9411.
Ilkka Yrlola / via M. De Meyere
---------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: W.T. Zanstra
Location: Appingedam, Netherlands (6 degr 51' E, 53 degr 19' N)
Frequency: 72.11 MHz
Transmitter location: Wroclaw, Poland, 135 kW, distance 735 km
(16 degr 43' E, 50 degr 52' N)
Antenna: Yagi, 5 elements, geographical azimuth 110 degr (ESE),
elevation 25 degrees
Receiver: Bearcat UBC 177 XLT Scanning Radio, sensitivity 0.3 uV
Observing method: listening
Dead time corrected counts of reflections during one hour intervals
starting at:
| November 1995
UT | 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
---+--------------------------------------------------------------------
00 | 99 73 44 113 86
01 | 86 66 60 203* 78
02 | 56 95 61 59 71
03 | 81 92 85 86 87
04 | 85 100 107 88 67 73
05 | 81 97 108 105 62 88
06 | 79 74 97 91 98 76
07 | 84 59 66 77 86 102
08 | 81 85 74 62 71 54
09 | 65 61 73 57 69 77
|
22 | 82 84 85 86
23 | 94 75 60 95
---+--------------------------------------------------------------------
UT | 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
| November 1995
* the alpha Monocerotids activity !
W. Zanstra / via Ton Schoenmaker
2. ABOUT THE RMOB
The RMOB is an independent initiative of some workers in the field of radio
meteor scatter observations and data reduction. It started in August 1993
in order to spread rapidly the Perseid results via E-mail. Since then, it
has appeared monthly, and has gradually been expanded.
Typically it contains: summaries of recent observations, first results of
stream activity by radio methods, relations between radio and optical
meteors, references to other publications in the field of meteor astronomy
and radio scatter techniques, announcements of meetings, short questions and
answers, non-commercial (second hand) sale of radio equipment, available
software.
Contributors are mentioned, and interested persons are asked to contact them
directly.
RMOB can be copied freely in unabridged and unmodified form. Extracts should
indicate the source (Radio Meteor Obs Bulletin, month and year).
If you want to subscribe (or unsubscribe) to the E-mail distribution list,
please send a message to C. Steyaert.
Those not having access to E-mail can obtain a printed copy free of charge
from J. Van Wassenhove (current or back-issues).
3. CONTRIBUTORS / USEFUL ADDRESSES
Thomas Ashcraft
Radio Fireball Observatory
Santa Fe, New Mexico
E-mail: 72632.1427@compuserve.com
Maurice De Meyere
Hullekensstraat 24, B 9831 Deurle, Belgium
tel: +32 (9) 282 35 26
Call: ON4NU, packet: ON4NU@ON4OB
E-mail: via Chris Steyaert
Werfried Kuneth
Villach, Austria
Call: OE8FNK
E-mail: 100021.514@compuserve.com
James W. Riggs, Gr.
759 Sourdough Rd., West Point, CA 95255, USA
tel: +1 209-293-4252
Ton Schoenmaker
Meester Homanstraat 8, 9301 HP Roden, Netherlands
tel: +31 (0)50 5013382
Call: PA0EFA
E-mail: tonsch@ksw.rug.nl
Chris Steyaert, VVS
Kruisven 66, B 2400 Mol, Belgium
tel: +32 (14) 31 51 04
E-mail: steyaert@vvs.innet.be
Compuserve: 72650,3513
Jeroen Van Wassenhove, VVS
's Gravenstraat 66, B 9810 Nazareth, Belgium
tel: +32 (9) 385 61 09
E-mail: 100101.734@compuserve.com
Paul Vauterin, University of Ghent, Astronomical Observatory
E-mail: paul@izar.rug.ac.be
Ilkka Yrjola
Jukolantie 16
SF 45700 Kuusankoski, Finland
tel: +358 (951)402 2797
Call: OH51Y
E-mail: ILKKA.YRJOLA@915000.KY.KYMMENE.MEMONET.mailnet.fi
W.T. Zanstra
Spijkerlaan 13
9903 BB Appingedam
Netherlands
tel: +31-(0)596-625617
--
Christian Steyaert (RMOB9511) 9 Dec 1995
--
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:55 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!Germany.EU.net!news.maz.net!news.isys.net!usenet
From: sglinde1@isys.net (Freddi Warnke)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Satellit-Tracking STSPLUS
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 16:10:21 GMT
Organization: iSYS Informationssystem Hamburg
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net>
Reply-To: sglinde1@isys.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: glinde1.isys.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/16.141
Hallo Satellite-Tracking-Fan's,
I bought the Satellite-Tracking-Programm STSORBITPLUS version Sept.95
Now the programm needs for the purpose of "feeding" the
2-Line-element or Kepler Dates for example : TLEnnn.TXT or
N2L-nnn.TXT .
Where can I get these dates from INTERNET ??
Can somebody give me the http or ftp adresses ??
Thanks for response.
Greetings Freddi
Wo kann man sich diese Daten aus dem INTERNET holen.
Erbitte http oder ftp Adresse.
Besten Dank fⁿr die Hilfe.
m.f.g. Freddi
+------------------------------------------------------+
Friedhelm Warnke Postfach 1344 21505 GLINDE
Tel.:+49 40 710 63 83 Mobil: 0161/8307508
E-Mail:sglinde1@isys.net
+------------------------------------------------------+
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:56 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!winternet.com!mmbbs!1-282-2006-0!jeff.root
From: Jeff.Root@f2006.n282.z1.fidonet.org (Jeff Root)
Date: 11 Dec 95 11:39:58
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Sts-73 sees ufo
Message-ID: <027_9512111400@mmbbs.com>
X-FTN-To: Parise@gelato.gsfc.nas
Organization: Magical Mystery
Lines: 8
Thanks, Ron!
You answered the questions I was going to (probably rhetorically)
ask the guy who posted that message -- particularly "Was Cady
anywhere near a window at the time?"
-- Jeff, in Minneapolis
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:57 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.mathworks.com!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!demon!mail2news.demon.co.uk!maxw.demon.co.uk
From: Max White <max@maxw.demon.co.uk>
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 95 20:54:55 GMT
Organization: Kettering Group
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <818715295snz@maxw.demon.co.uk>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
Reply-To: max@maxw.demon.co.uk
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38575 alt.paranet.ufo:46876 rec.radio.amateur.space:5910
In article <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov "Ron Parise" writes:
snip
>
> I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
> couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>
> Ron Parise
> STS-35,67
>
Good on yer Ron. Trouble is, you'll probably be targeted by those Zeta
Rectangular thingies next time you are up.
--
Favourite breakfast - A roll in bed with honey.
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:58 1995
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!malgudi.oar.net!rclnews.eng.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!shore!news3.near.net!inmet!news
From: rich kolker <rkolker@hous.inmet.com>
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: debbie.hous.inmet.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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To: parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov
Sender: news@inmet.camb.inmet.com (USENET news)
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
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parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron Parise) wrote:
>
>I have several comments regarding this thread.
>
>1. I can't believe I am responding to this nonsense but I can't stand
> it anymore!
>
>
>I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
>couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>
Ron,
Good try, but if you've been following this stuff at all, you know logic
won't help.
They'll just say you're part of the conspiracy.
++rich
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:45:59 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!utcsri!madrox!emc
Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.space.shuttle
From: emc@madrox (Eric Manshun Choi)
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: madrox.utias.utoronto.ca
Message-ID: <1995Dec12.104638.18075@jarvis.cs.toronto.edu>
Organization: Institute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <818715295snz@maxw.demon.co.uk>
Date: 12 Dec 95 15:46:38 GMT
Lines: 24
Xref: news.epix.net alt.paranet.ufo:46934 rec.radio.amateur.space:5916 sci.space.shuttle:38600
In article <818715295snz@maxw.demon.co.uk>,
Max White <max@maxw.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>In article <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
> parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov "Ron Parise" writes:
>> I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
>> couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>>
>> Ron Parise
>> STS-35,67
>
>Good on yer Ron. Trouble is, you'll probably be targeted by those Zeta
>Rectangular thingies next time you are up.
Actually, he'll probably be targeted first on Earth by the Zeta
Rectuli thingies little trained minions, the Men In Black(tm).
"The truth is out there...", and it's good to see Ron standing up for it!
--
Eric M. Choi | "Make no little plans; they have no
University of Toronto | magic to stir men's blood."
Institute for Aerospace Studies |
emc@sdr.utias.utoronto.ca | - Daniel Burnham
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:01 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 13 Dec 1995 05:50:34 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 70
Message-ID: <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: bal-md3-05.ix.netcom.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38623 alt.paranet.ufo:47002 rec.radio.amateur.space:5921
In <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron
Parise) writes:
>
>In article <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>,
sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch) says:
>> Under careful examination of the tape, prior to the UFO statement by
>>Cady Coleman, the verbal exchange between Huntsville and Cady is
>>business and professional. Huntsville then informs the shuttle that
the
>>switch to TVC-2 has been made. About 10 seconds later at 0604:40
(GMT),
>>Cady Coleman replies: "We have an Unidentified Flying Object". It is
in
>>a more serious tone than her words prior. There is no detectable
>>kidding around as Captain Oberg suggest.
>
>I have several comments regarding this thread.
>
>1. I can't believe I am responding to this nonsense but I can't stand
> it anymore!
>
>> The more reasonable scenario of what happened is this: After Cady
says
>>the words, "We have an Unidentified Flying Object", about 10 seconds
>
>2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms
that).
> b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
> c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the
module.
> d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
>
>>later, a status screen pops up and on it is a listing of statuses
among
>>which is a TVC block. It is obvious that the UFO words should never
>
>3. TVC-1 and TVC-2 are the two TeleVision Cameras in the module. The
> switch from TVC-1 to TVC-2 was an informational message to Cady so
> she would know which way to look so that the downlink video would
> not be of her back.
>
>>have gotten out. The TVC-2 block should have occurred before the UFO
>>words and then nobody would have been the wiser. Perhaps in Cady's
>
>4. The TVC's are video only! They have no effect on voice
communications!
>
>>excitement of seeing the UFO, she blurted out the UFO words in the
>>clear forgetting to press the TVC block button.
>
>5. What the heck is a TVC block button!!! Where did that come from!
>
>
>I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
>couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>
>Ron Parise
>STS-35,67
Well Ronald, since Cady was in the space lab working, during the
space lab missions as you know, the A/G-2 (Air-to-ground 2 channel) is
utilized, her conversation was carried on the A/G-2 channel. During
spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
what I have been told. According to the audio people there at NASA,
during the STS-73 mission, most of the time they carried A/G-2 on NASA
TV.
Donald
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:02 1995
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From: dlopez@sailsun (Dean Lopez)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Followup-To: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 13 Dec 1995 14:28:34 GMT
Organization: NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX, USA
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <4amnui$lko@pendragon.jsc.nasa.gov>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
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Donald Ratsch (sts48@ix.netcom.com) wrote:
> >2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms
> that).
> > b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
> > c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the
> module.
> > d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
> Well Ronald, since Cady was in the space lab working, during the
> space lab missions as you know, the A/G-2 (Air-to-ground 2 channel) is
> utilized, her conversation was carried on the A/G-2 channel. During
> spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
> reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^
> what I have been told. According to the audio people there at NASA,
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> during the STS-73 mission, most of the time they carried A/G-2 on NASA
> TV.
You were told by who? Name your source so we can all get a good laugh.
You've just been told by someone who knows that there are NO windows in
the SpaceLab module, so give it a rest already.
--
+--------------------------------------+------------------------------+
| Dean Lopez | |
| SAIL DPS Engineer | dlopez@sailsun.jsc.nasa.gov |
| Rockwell Space Operations Co. | |
| JSC Shuttle Avionics Integration Lab | |
+--------------------------------------+------------------------------+
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:03 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news1.digital.com!pa.dec.com!nntpd.lkg.dec.com!skylab.enet.dec.com!fisher
From: fisher@skylab.enet.dec.com (Burns Fisher)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 13 Dec 1995 13:34:02 GMT
Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
Lines: 22
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <4amkoa$7t6@nntpd.lkg.dec.com>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
Reply-To: fisher@skylab.enet.dec.com (Burns Fisher)
NNTP-Posting-Host: skylab.zko.dec.com
X-Newsreader: mxrn 6.18-30
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38640 alt.paranet.ufo:47048 rec.radio.amateur.space:5927
In article <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>, parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron
Parise) writes:
|>
|>I have several comments regarding this thread.
|>
|>1. I can't believe I am responding to this nonsense but I can't stand
|> it anymore!
|>
|>
<lots of helpful comments snipped out>
|>
|>Ron Parise
|>STS-35,67
|>
Thanks for bringing some reason to newsgroup, Ron. I'm glad I saw your response
before this thread too hit my bulging kill file.
Burns
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:04 1995
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!dadams
From: dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams)
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Message-ID: <dadamsDJJ2DG.IvJ@netcom.com>
Organization: Aurora Information Systems
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 13:48:52 GMT
Lines: 75
Sender: dadams@netcom23.netcom.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38641 alt.paranet.ufo:47049 rec.radio.amateur.space:5928
Donald Ratsch <sts48@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>In <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron
>Parise) writes:
>>I have several comments regarding this thread.
Thanks Ron!
>>1. I can't believe I am responding to this nonsense but I can't stand
>> it anymore!
Yea, tell me about it... :)
>>2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms that).
>> b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
>> c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the module.
>> d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
>>
>>3. TVC-1 and TVC-2 are the two TeleVision Cameras in the module. The
>> switch from TVC-1 to TVC-2 was an informational message to Cady so
>> she would know which way to look so that the downlink video would
>> not be of her back.
Its also common courtesy to inform astronauts where and when the
video cameras are on, since after all their images are being beamed
live to all of North America.
>>>have gotten out. The TVC-2 block should have occurred before the UFO
>>>words and then nobody would have been the wiser. Perhaps in Cady's
>>
>>4. The TVC's are video only! They have no effect on voice
>communications!
There is also no "TVC-2 block", that was strictly a product of
the imagination and ignorance of the UFO storymaker involved.
>>>excitement of seeing the UFO, she blurted out the UFO words in the
>>>clear forgetting to press the TVC block button.
>>
>>5. What the heck is a TVC block button!!! Where did that come from!
See above. :)
>>I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
>>couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>>
>>Ron Parise
>>STS-35,67
I think the feeling is pretty mutual around here.
> Well Ronald, since Cady was in the space lab working, during the
>space lab missions as you know, the A/G-2 (Air-to-ground 2 channel) is
>utilized, her conversation was carried on the A/G-2 channel.
What does that have to do with anything?
>During spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2
> is reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are.
No, the windows are on the Flight Deck. You seem to be remarkably
uninformed about the Space Shuttle, but I suppose that explains how
you can be perpetuating these ridiculous stories.
> This is what I have been told.
Obviously you were told wrong, and apparently you have not seen
fit to do even the most superficial of research into this matter.
> According to the audio people there at NASA, during the STS-73
> mission, most of the time they carried A/G-2 on NASA TV.
Again, what does that have to do with anything Ron said,
or any of the "nonsense" in your previous post??
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:05 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DJF6yt.2np@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu>
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 11:37:40 GMT
Lines: 18
In <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu> jrybak@mesa5.Mesa.Colorado.EDU (James P. Rybak) writes:
>I want to get a rig for working mode A on RS-10 and RS-15 but I also want to
>I wan
>be able to work mode B on the AMSAT Phase 3-D when it goes up. What 2m/70cm
>rigs are recommended? My inclination is to get an ICOM 820-H. Can I do
>better?
I think the focus of 3-D operation will be 70cm/23cm. It provides more
bandwidth and usually less QRM.
13cm would also be used more often.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Wed Dec 13 15:46:06 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.uoregon.edu!chi-news.cic.net!usc!math.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu!mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu!not-for-mail
From: jrybak@mesa5.Mesa.Colorado.EDU (James P. Rybak)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
Date: 10 Dec 1995 19:40:17 -0700
Organization: Mesa State College
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 198.233.35.99
I want to get a rig for working mode A on RS-10 and RS-15 but I also want to
I wan
be able to work mode B on the AMSAT Phase 3-D when it goes up. What 2m/70cm
rigs are recommended? My inclination is to get an ICOM 820-H. Can I do
better?
Thanks.
Jim Rybak W0KSD
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:03 1995
Path: news.epix.net!usenet
From: amsoft@epix.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.misc
Subject: !! Hit High Tech WWW Site !!
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 95 20:28:46 PDT
Organization: epix.net
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <NEWTNews.819001755.12097.amsoft@486dx4_120>
NNTP-Posting-Host: lwbyppp126.epix.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: NEWTNews & Chameleon -- TCP/IP for MS Windows from NetManage
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.space:5947 rec.radio.amateur.policy:32185 rec.radio.amateur.misc:95586
Covering Amateur Radio, Electronics, Engineering, Space, Scanners
Shortwave, and many more interesting Technical Areas. Includes
0ver 400 WWW links, and a link to our September 95 CD-ROM archive
with over 23,000 files online. Very HOT High Tech WWW Site
http://hamster.business.uwo.ca/~amsoft/
Surf The High Tech World from here today!
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:04 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!rain.fr!jussieu.fr!univ-lyon1.fr!in2p3.fr!swidir.switch.ch!swsbe6.switch.ch!scsing.switch.ch!news.belwue.de!news
From: nobody@fh-offenburg.de (hwielage)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Funkamateu und internet
Date: 15 Dec 1995 14:24:14 GMT
Organization: FH Offenburg/Germany
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <4as0ee$san@news.belwue.de>
References: <4ac74q$1uk@news.belwue.de>
NNTP-Posting-Host: nwc81.rz.fh-offenburg.de
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.5
In article <4ac74q$1uk@news.belwue.de>, nobody@fh-offenburg.de says...
>
>Gibt es eine m÷glichkeit via 2 meter oder 70 cm ins internet zu kommen??
meinen Dank fⁿr jede Antwort
H.Wielage
>
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:05 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!braintree!news.concourse.com!ragnarok.oar.net!malgudi.oar.net!caen!spool.mu.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: help with KPC9612 and PB/PG
Date: 15 Dec 1995 08:02:36 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 36
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4arrlc$ibo@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
Reply-To: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Greetings! I am having some difficulty getting my KPC9612 TNC/modem to
work
correctly with PB/PG. The main problem is the TNC transmits on 1200 baud
when
in KISS mode from PB. I talked to Kantronics and they suggested a fix.
The one
problem is I live in Ghana, West Africa, but am currently visiting the
U.S. for a few
weeks so I cannot check their suggestion out. Because I am so isolated in
Ghana,
it may take months for me to get further information if the Kantronics
suggestion
does not work. Therefore, I want to get the settings that others use when
working
with the KPC9612 and PB/PG. This may save me months of headaches.
On a related note, I just ordered WISP from AMSAT. If possible can
someone who
uses WISP and the KPC9612 send me their configuration files. It sounds
like
WISP is much nicer to use than PB/PG so I hope to upgrade, but do not want
to
run into the same problem I did with PB/PG once I return to the bush.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Station
Yaesu FT736R, G5400B
KPC9612 TNC/Modem
Ambra 486/25 subnotebook computer running OS/2-WARP, DOS 6, WINDOZE3.1
SATTRAK IV TRAKBOX
KLM 2m and 70 cm circ polarized antennas
Douglas Stockman, 9G5DS, N2ZYE
respond to cutronej@alice.union.edu
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:06 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!malgudi.oar.net!caen!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Help with PB/PG and OS/2 WARP
Date: 15 Dec 1995 08:05:02 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 11
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4arrpu$icd@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
Reply-To: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Greetings! I am having difficulty getting PB/PG to work with OS/2 WARP
when inside
a DOS screen. Whenever PB starts receiving satellite data from the 9600
birds, the
system crashes. Does anyone have a fix?
Thanks in advance.
Douglas Stockman, 9G5DS, N2ZYE
respond to cutronej@alice.union.edu
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:07 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsserver.pixel.kodak.com!frankensun.altair.com!nntp.coast.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Help! Need SATGATE to internet gateway!
Date: 15 Dec 1995 08:04:17 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 19
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4arroh$ic7@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
Reply-To: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Greetings! I live in a rural village in Ghana, West Africa. The nearest
mail box or
telephone are a good two hours journey away when it is not raining. I am
setting
up a station to work the 9600 birds with the main intent being to pass
personal
messages to family and friends in the U.S. None of the people I want to
contact
are hams. Most of them have access to the internet though. Therefore, I
am
looking for a gateway between a SATGATE and the internet. If no SATGATE
currently serves as a gateway to the internet, does anyone know of a
terrestrial
packet station that is near a SATGATE that is an internet gateway? Any
and all
help is greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Douglas Stockman, 9G5DS, N2ZYE
respond to cutronej@alice.union.edu
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:08 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: bholmes265@aol.com (BHolmes265)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: long delayed echo
Date: 13 Dec 1995 23:44:44 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 3
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4aoa3s$n6@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
Reply-To: bholmes265@aol.com (BHolmes265)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
I am looking for information and experiences with long delayed echos in
radio communications. Appreciate any pointers or personal experiences.
Mine occurred in 1970. tks
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:09 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!news-feed.mci.newscorp.com!imci2!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!torn!news.unb.ca!nbt.nbnet.nb.ca!news
From: btaylor@mailserv.nbnet.nb.ca (Brent Taylor)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: long delayed echo
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 1995 15:02:19 GMT
Organization: NB*Net
Lines: 48
Message-ID: <4apeb6$nsm@darwin.nbnet.nb.ca>
References: <4aoa3s$n6@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: btaylor.nbnet.nb.ca
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
bholmes265@aol.com (BHolmes265) wrote:
>I am looking for information and experiences with long delayed echos in
>radio communications. Appreciate any pointers or personal experiences.
>Mine occurred in 1970. tks
I have two experiences, one observed only and one in which I
transmitted. The first was in March of 1985 (I'm not sure of the
exact day but I could probably dig out an old log book and find out).
It happened on 80 meters, in the DX window, around 3795. It was about
0700 GMT and a W6, a ZL and an EI were all working one another at the
same time! I could hear a delayed echo both on the W6 and the EI. I
could not on the ZL (this is perfectly normal, being practically the
same distances to me in VE1 on both paths anyway). If I'm not
mitsaken the W6 heard his own LDE, but I'm not sure about the others.
I was using a G5RV dipole and a Yeasu FRG-7700 receiver.
The other experience was on 40, where early one evening I could hear
my own CW signal. It must have been since 1989 because that's when I
got my new radio with full QSK. (the relays in the old FT-101E were
just not fast enough!). I may have logged that one too. I recall
that I tried it after overhearing hearing others talking about it
earlier that evening. (I usually don't operate full QSK so I must
have been prompted by something external, else I would never have
heard it independantly).
For that reception I would have been using a Sultronix Sloper (coiled
for 80, 40 and 20 - full length for 160 - vertically polaried - top
fed against the tower ground ballast) and a Kenwood TS-680s (a 140
modified for 6).
The first reception (1985) was definitely within a few days of Spring
Equinox. I'm quite sure the 1989 one was also around an equinox,
likely Spring too because of lower noise levels.
I hope this helps!
73,
Brent S.D. Taylor - VE1JH | Central Park 1965-1971
Doaktown on the Miramichi | Meadowbrook 1971-1973
New Brunswick, Canada | Lachine High 1973-1975
Grid Square FN66WN | Looking for exiles...
r.a.s.n./ NASCAR / MWDX / 6M VUCC #5481
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:10 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!news.compulink.co.uk!cix.compulink.co.uk!usenet
From: oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk ("Stephen Walters")
Subject: Maplin diy GPS kit....
Message-ID: <DJL5Iq.JJr@cix.compulink.co.uk>
Organization: Skills Unlimited
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 1995 16:52:02 GMT
Lines: 15
Maplin DIY GPS kit....
Besides positional info, what else to these Navstar sats send, that a
mere mortal can decode...
and....what else can I do with it, that I can't do with a hand held GPS
with a RS232 i/f. After all, 400+ukp is alot of money, handheld GPS's are
available from 179ukp inc vat.
regards
Steve
oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk/ G7VFY
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:10 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.zeitgeist.net!news.greatbasin.net!usenet
From: nc7k@vhf.reno.nv.us (Tim Marek)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Need Skeds for Sat WAS
Date: 16 Dec 1995 21:53:15 GMT
Organization: Great Basin Internet Services, Reno, NV
Lines: 16
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <4avf4b$kfh@news.greatbasin.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: vhf.reno.nv.us
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.92.6+
Hello from Reno Nevada de Tim - NC7K...
Recently I became QRV on AO10 and AO13 chasing Grids,
States, and countries. After 1 month I'm having trouble
finding the last states for Sat WAS. Is anyone QRV from,
MT, ND, SD, NE, CO, WY, KS, OK, AR, IA, MN, AL, SC,
NC, NH. RI, and ME ?
If so I'd like to set up some skeds and get it done.
Thanks and Happy Holidays from DM09ep...
Tim - NC7K... sk
----
NC7K@VHF.RENO.NV.US
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:11 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!idir.net!idts1lw19.idir.net!user
From: medcalf@idir.net (gloria medcalf)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.packet,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.swap
Subject: New Ham Web Site with Information Content
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 1995 21:19:58 -0600
Organization: Internet Direct Communications - Lawrence, Ks - (913) 841-2220
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <medcalf-1412952119580001@idts1lw19.idir.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: idts1lw19.idir.net
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:17706 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13130 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:22573 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:12143 rec.radio.amateur.misc:95599 rec.radio.amateur.policy:32189 rec.radio.amateur.space:5950
A new ham radio related web site is on-line. It contains Articles
and Radio-TNC Wiring Diagrams.
URL: http://www.idir.net/~medcalf/ztx/
Current Articles
Desense: Some Possible Solutions
TOR Modes: Hearing the Difference (includes sound files)
Getting Information from a Weathernode
I plan to add an article approximately once a month. These articles may
be reprinted in amateur radio club newsletters provided that credit is
given to the author.
73 gloria ka5ztx medcalf@idir.net
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:12 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newshub.cts.com!news1.crl.com!nntp.crl.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: rredx1@aol.com (RRED X1)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Oberg - answerman! (was Re: STS-73 Sees UFO)
Date: 14 Dec 1995 02:26:45 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 3
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4aojjl$2dt@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
References: <4aljgr$qan@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
Reply-To: rredx1@aol.com (RRED X1)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38693 alt.paranet.ufo:47155 rec.radio.amateur.space:5940
probably right about the sts-73 thing.
Do you know anything about the Whitman AFB happening on Dec 11 9:15PM?
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:13 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!hermes.is.co.za!news.pix.za!usenet
From: Danie Brynard <danie.brynard@pixie.co.za>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: re orientation of AO-13
Date: 17 Dec 1995 11:25:38 GMT
Organization: PiX - Proxima information X-change
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <4b0uni$jsj@hawk.pix.za>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net-13.pta.pix.za
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 16bit)
Is it possible to know what the antenna orientation of AO-13 is ?
Will some PC program give one this info ?
Danie zs6awk
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:14 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!pop.gnn.com!BKille
From: BKille@gnn.com (Bruce Kille)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellit-Tracking STSPLUS
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 20:19:59
Organization: Megaweb
Lines: 43
Message-ID: <4anu3p$e0s@news-e1a.megaweb.com>
References: <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: @www-12-199.gnn.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
X-GNN-NewsServer-Posting-Date: 14 Dec 1995 01:19:53 GMT
X-Mailer: GNNmessenger 1.2
In article <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net> Freddi Warnke wrote:
>ng-Fan's,
>
>I bought the Satellite-Tracking-Programm STSORBITPLUS version
Sept.95
>Now the programm needs for the purpose of "feeding" the
>2-Line-element or Kepler Dates for example : TLEnnn.TXT or
>N2L-nnn.TXT .
>Where can I get these dates from INTERNET ??
>Can somebody give me the http or ftp adresses ??
>
>Thanks for response.
>
>Greetings Freddi
>
>
>Wo kann man sich diese Daten aus dem INTERNET holen.
>Erbitte http oder ftp Adresse.
>Besten Dank fⁿr die Hilfe.
>
>m.f.g. Freddi
>
>+------------------------------------------------------+
> Friedhelm Warnke Postfach 1344 21505 GLINDE
> Tel.:+49 40 710 63 83 Mobil: 0161/8307508
> E-Mail:sglinde1@isys.net
>+------------------------------------------------------+
One of my favorite sites is the NASA Spacelink. It can be reached
via WWW, gopher, FTP, or Telnet using the following address:
spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
You need to download the Kep files and edit out everyting except
the object name and its two lines of element numbers and save it
as a file with and extention of ".txt" and save it in the same
directory as the STS program. Then start it and hit F2 to read
the new TLE data and select whatever object you want to view.
Spacelink is a good site especially during space shuttle missions
to get current Kep's. I hope this information is useful to you.
Bruce.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:15 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news-feed.mci.newscorp.com!usenet
From: ROBERT BOWES <bowesro@mci.newscorp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellit-Tracking STSPLUS
Date: 17 Dec 1995 18:22:01 GMT
Organization: MCI/News Corp.
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <4b1n49$aio@klein.delphi.com>
References: <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net>
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The quickest, most up-to-date source I know for the 2-line "xxx.tle"
files is ftp.afit.af.mil/pub/space
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:16 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!gryphon.phoenix.net!phoenix.phoenix.net!mjensen
From: mjensen@phoenix.net (Mike Jensen)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Followup-To: sci.space.shuttle,rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 14 Dec 1995 02:15:48 GMT
Organization: Gnosis Industries
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Message-ID: <4ao1ck$b86@gryphon.phoenix.net>
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38657 rec.radio.amateur.space:5930
Donald Ratsch (sts48@ix.netcom.com) wrote:
: Well Ronald, since Cady was in the space lab working, during the
: space lab missions as you know, the A/G-2 (Air-to-ground 2 channel) is
: utilized, her conversation was carried on the A/G-2 channel. During
: spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
: reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
: what I have been told. According to the audio people there at NASA,
: during the STS-73 mission, most of the time they carried A/G-2 on NASA
: TV.
Spacelab can (optional carry one (as in 1) single window, a small
one in the aft end looking out towards the tail. I do not know if
73 had this window installed or not. The windows (multiple) are
in the orbiter itself. Six forward, two up, two back. Most of the
photos taken on Shuttle missions are from these 10 windows since they
are relatively large. (The Spacelab window seems much smaller to me.)
A/G-2 is indeed usually choosen as the "science" comm channel, while
A/G-1 is used for "orbiter" communications (eg communications between
Mission Control and shuttle crews regarding orbiter systems and functions).
I don't beleive though that Cady "saw a UFO" and somehow "slipped" this
out over the non-secret comm channels. There are no secret comm channels,
and knowing a fair amount about Shuttle flights, I know that most of
the time, the science types have their noses buried in their experiments.
She probably was making a joke, either about something floating
in the module, or maybe something cool happening in one of the
fluid chambers (unidentified floating object?).
: Donald
Mike
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Logic is a systematic method of coming to the wrong conclusion with
confidence. -- Manly's Maxiam
Don't be so open minded your brains fall out.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:17 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.clark.net!jobrien-ppp.clark.net!user
From: kcowing@reston.com (Keith Cowing)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 18:20:39 -0500
Organization: Reston Communications
Lines: 32
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In article <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>, sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald
Ratsch) wrote:
> In <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron
> Parise) writes:
> >2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms
> that).
> > b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
> > c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the
> module.
> > d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
> During spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
> reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are.
What does it take to convince you UFO types that what you "hear" or
"think" isn't the truth!!!!.... Ignore those Zeta Reticulan chips in your
heads!
An astronaut, who has ACTUALLY FLOWN several Space Shuttle missions
including a Spacelab mission, has just told you that there are no windows
in the Spacelab module. And YOU know better.
I have personally been in several Spacelab ground trainers (STS-40/SLS-1
and STS-58/SLS-2) at JSC and can confirm to you that there weren't any in
there either. Nada, zip, zilch.... When STS-1 had a problem with one of
the payload bay doors closing, the crew had to use cameras looking out of
the aft flight deck to see out.
Anyone else out there care to chime in ... (not that this is really worth
anyone's time to debunk).
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:19 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!news.mathworks.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.ghgcorp.com!usenet
From: "Roger W. Mitchell" <rmitchell@ghgcorp.com>
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 14 Dec 1995 05:27:36 GMT
Organization: GHG Corporation
Lines: 65
Message-ID: <4aock8$jg7@pan.ghgcorp.com>
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38673 alt.paranet.ufo:47113 rec.radio.amateur.space:5932
I may be the source of Don's post. Here is the e-mail I sent to
him. You be the judge of how this was meant to be taken.
>> begin insertion (oh baby) <<
Donald,
I noted on the sci.space.shuttle group tonight that you
didn't wait for a response but posted instead. Mr. Parise
responded to that post. In all probability, his analysis is
correct.
I have not been able to get in touch with Cady yet, however I
confirmed that she was in the Spacelab module at the time. As
Ron pointed out, there are no windows in Spacelab.
Also, her conversation was carried on the Air-to-ground 2 (we
call it A/G-2) channel. Folks who were up on the flight deck of
the orbiter would have been talking on A/G-1 (the orbiter systems
channel - during spacelab missions A/G-2 is reserved for the
Spacelab). That is where the windows are. The audio folks tell
me that during the 73 mission, most of the time we carried A/G-2
on Nasa TV. Also, it is not uncommom (just watch and listen to
NASA TV or the loops like I've done for a few years) for silence
to last for a long time. On orbit, as here on earth - too much
talking means the work isn't getting done.
TVC-2 is a reference to Television Camera 2 (located in the
aft end of the Spacelab unless moved - which is usually isn't).
The TVC block display you saw references the display block - that
is, the block of systems which are displayed on a computer screen
at a given time - not a block of the signal.
In all likelyhood, Cady was referring to errant floating
material in SL, or to a crewmember who had joined her in the
Spacelab. It is not uncommon for crewmembers to "raze" fellow
crewmates with comments such as "UFO". After all, they are
flying, so to speak.
It'd been nice if you had waited for an answer offline first
- in order to avoid blowing a minor A/G conversation into a "UFO"
debate on the newsgroups. It really doesn't look good for honest
people such as yourself who are probably working hard to find
evidence of an exteraterrestrial presence to quote such trivial
incidents. In fact, it hurts credibility.
But, hey, you got Ron to respond . . . .
Roger
-----------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------
Ad Astra
Roger W. Mitchell
(home) rmitchell@ghgcorp.com
(work) roger.w.mitchell1@jsc.nasa.gov
>> end insertion (oh, baby - MORE) <<
Hope this factoid helps you understand where Don got his data.
Roger
(sig above)
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:20 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!braintree!news.concourse.com!ragnarok.oar.net!malgudi.oar.net!rclnews.eng.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!demon!peer-news.britain.eu.net!newsfeed.ed.ac.uk!news
From: Neil Ferguson <N.G.Ferguson@ug.ee.ed.ac.uk>
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 14 Dec 1995 01:14:40 GMT
Organization: Department of Electrical Engineering, The University of Edinburgh.
Lines: 53
Message-ID: <4antq0$a1h@scotsman.ed.ac.uk>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov>
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38682 alt.paranet.ufo:47118 rec.radio.amateur.space:5935
parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron Parise) wrote:
>In article <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>, sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch) says:
<blah>
>I have several comments regarding this thread.
>
>1. I can't believe I am responding to this nonsense but I can't stand
> it anymore!
Nor can most of the rest of us...
>
>> The more reasonable scenario of what happened is this: After Cady says
>>the words, "We have an Unidentified Flying Object", about 10 seconds
>
>2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms that).
> b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
I love it when these people get shot down in flames! I just love it!
> c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the module.
> d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
You hope. I suspect some of them won't quite see it that way... :-)
< UFO blah and stuff not relevant to my comments cut out>
>
>I apologize for falling into the trap of these UFO posters but I just
>couldn't stand it anymore!!!!!!!
>
>Ron Parise
>STS-35,67
A real, live astronaut! I'm honestly impressed! However, what's the
bet that a certain person's mailbox is going to be _stuffed_ with a load
of direct-sent email from all those indignant UFO nuts? You know, the
"...you're just a part of the conspiracy of lies...", etc., etc. rubbish.
Ah, well. We can always hope they'll be sensible for once. And not
bother.
I suspect that when we encounter UFOs (notice that I _don't_ reject
the possibility - it's just that I'm waiting for the real ones) we'll
know all about it...
--
Neil Ferguson N.G.Ferguson@sms.ed.ac.uk
Electronic Engineering 2 at Edinburgh University in Scotland
It wasn't me!
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:21 1995
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!dadams
From: dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams)
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Message-ID: <dadamsDJKo4I.F4p@netcom.com>
Followup-To: alt.paranet.ufo
Organization: Aurora Information Systems
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <kcowing-1312951820390001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net> <4aoj71$l3v@cloner3.netcom.com>
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 1995 10:36:18 GMT
Lines: 27
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Donald Ratsch <sts48@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>In <kcowing-1312951820390001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net> kcowing@reston.com
>(Keith Cowing) writes:
>>What does it take to convince you UFO types that what you "hear" or
>>"think" isn't the truth!!!!.... Ignore those Zeta Reticulan chips in
>>your heads!
>>
> WOW! I feel like I was running for the touchdown and six 300 lb. NASA
>guys pummeled me into the ground. Ok for now you guys have me convinced
>that there were no windows where Cady was at in the lab when the UFO
>words were said. But as Columbo would say "there are a few loose ends
>yet".
Not for us Earth residents at least...
>I noticed that when the UFO words were said simultaneously to the
>status screen. There then lapsed 21 seconds and then the scene showed
>Cady in the lab doing her work. The question arises, where were the
>other six astronauts? Were some of them on the flight deck where there
>ARE windows. Did they see the UFO and relayed this information to Cady
>who broadcast it over the air? Or maybe that voice wasn't Cady at all.
Oh brother. I guess there is just NO end to your wild imagination
and inability to settle for reality. You are just wasting people's
time, since you're obviously not going to listen to reason.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:23 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 14 Dec 1995 07:20:01 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 65
Message-ID: <4aoj71$l3v@cloner3.netcom.com>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <kcowing-1312951820390001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net>
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In <kcowing-1312951820390001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net> kcowing@reston.com
(Keith Cowing) writes:
>
>In article <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>,
sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald
>Ratsch) wrote:
>
>> In <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> parise@gelato.gsfc.nasa.gov (Ron
>> Parise) writes:
>
>> >2. a. Cady was in the spacelab module (reference to TVC-2 confirms
>> that).
>> > b. There are **NO WINDOWS** in the spacelab module.
>> > c. Therefore, the UFO she saw (standard crew banter) was in the
>> module.
>> > d. Anybody should be able to follow that line of logic!
>
>> During spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently)
A/G-2 is
>> reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are.
>
>What does it take to convince you UFO types that what you "hear" or
>"think" isn't the truth!!!!.... Ignore those Zeta Reticulan chips in
your
>heads!
>
>An astronaut, who has ACTUALLY FLOWN several Space Shuttle missions
>including a Spacelab mission, has just told you that there are no
windows
>in the Spacelab module. And YOU know better.
>
>I have personally been in several Spacelab ground trainers
(STS-40/SLS-1
>and STS-58/SLS-2) at JSC and can confirm to you that there weren't any
in
>there either. Nada, zip, zilch.... When STS-1 had a problem with one
of
>the payload bay doors closing, the crew had to use cameras looking out
of
>the aft flight deck to see out.
>
>Anyone else out there care to chime in ... (not that this is really
worth
>anyone's time to debunk).
WOW! I feel like I was running for the touchdown and six 300 lb. NASA
guys pummeled me into the ground. Ok for now you guys have me convinced
that there were no windows where Cady was at in the lab when the UFO
words were said. But as Columbo would say "there are a few loose ends
yet". I noticed that when the UFO words were said simultaneously to the
status screen. There then lapsed 21 seconds and then the scene showed
Cady in the lab doing her work. The question arises, where were the
other six astronauts? Were some of them on the flight deck where there
ARE windows. Did they see the UFO and relayed this information to Cady
who broadcast it over the air? Or maybe that voice wasn't Cady at all.
Maybe the Payload Commander, Kathryn Thornton broadcast those words?
Was she on the flight deck seeing the UFO through the window? A good
voice print analysis would settle that question. I remember in 1989 I
recorded on a GSFC Ham radio band the words of what we thought was an
astronaut saying the words, "We still have the alien spacecraft under
observance" The tape of that voice was taken to a lab and compared to
the voices of the astronauts on that mission and it did not match
leading us to conclude that a ham broadcast a hoax on that frequency
(147.450mh). So an analysis could tell us if the voice was Cady's or
Kathy's.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:24 1995
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From: kcowing@reston.com (Keith Cowing)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 23:24:03 -0500
Organization: Reston Communications
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <kcowing-1312952324030001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ao1ck$b86@gryphon.phoenix.net>
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In article <4ao1ck$b86@gryphon.phoenix.net>, mjensen@phoenix.net (Mike
Jensen) wrote:
> Donald Ratsch (sts48@ix.netcom.com) wrote:
>
> Spacelab can (optional carry one (as in 1) single window, a small
> one in the aft end looking out towards the tail. I do not know if
> 73 had this window installed or not. The windows (multiple) are
> in the orbiter itself. Six forward, two up, two back. Most of the
> photos taken on Shuttle missions are from these 10 windows since they
> are relatively large. (The Spacelab window seems much smaller to me.)
Don:
Yes, you are right, I forgot. Mea culpa. Also, early Spacelab missions
had an optical window - in fact (correct me space hardware trivia buffs) I
do believe that NASA "borrowed" an optically-pure window that had been
sitting in the Skylab flight spare at the National Air and Space Museum
for use in - was it SL-1? There is a small air lock in the "roof" of
Spacelab which can take one of these windows - I think.
These windows are only installed when there is a need for them i.e. to
look out. Each flight risks scarring, etc so they don't just leave them
installed. I do not recall seeing any of the windows in the aft cone of
SLS-1 or SLS-2. There was gear stowed there as I recall.
To you UFO I-wanna-be-abductees:
When an astronaut tells you something like this, try and accept it as
fact. There were no Spacelab windows installed on the mission in
question. Period. Find another dead horse to beat (or cow to
mutillate).
Hey - its winter up here - dry air and all that - try running around the
house with your ET slippers on and scuff your feet on the carpet. Maybe
a static discharge will fry that Zeta Reticulan behavior mod chip in your
brainstem. Hey I watch X-files too and know all the tricks!
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:25 1995
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From: jamesoberg@aol.com (JamesOberg)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 14 Dec 1995 10:58:09 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 7
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
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Reply-To: jamesoberg@aol.com (JamesOberg)
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Ratsch: <<During
spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
what I have been told. >>
Oh, no! Secret radio channels, and now SECRET windows!! What won't the
ufonuts think of next!
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:26 1995
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From: kcowing@reston.com (Keith Cowing)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Thu, 14 Dec 1995 18:28:06 -0500
Organization: Reston Communications
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <kcowing-1412951828060001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net>
References: <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4aphih$erf@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
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In article <4aphih$erf@newsbf02.news.aol.com>, jamesoberg@aol.com
(JamesOberg) wrote:
> Oh, no! Secret radio channels, and now SECRET windows!! What won't the
> ufonuts think of next!
SECRET STS missions (STS-shh!) which flew and NO ONE knew about ....
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:27 1995
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From: mjhines@ix.netcom.com(Mark Hines)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 15 Dec 1995 06:29:59 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4aock8$jg7@pan.ghgcorp.com>
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In <4aphih$erf@newsbf02.news.aol.com> jamesoberg@aol.com (JamesOberg)
writes:
>
>Oh, no! Secret radio channels, and now SECRET windows!! What won't the
>ufonuts think of next!
Is the big, retarded goof seriously trying to say that astronauts do
not have secure radio channels they go to for classified
communications?
According to medical doctors, mental retardation is concomitant with
the giant syndrome in Caucasians. Isn't Oberg 6' 8"?
Mark Hines
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:28 1995
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From: sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 15 Dec 1995 06:01:56 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <4ar30k$k3c@ixnews5.ix.netcom.com>
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In <4aphih$erf@newsbf02.news.aol.com> jamesoberg@aol.com (JamesOberg)
writes:
>
>Ratsch: <<During
>spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
>reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
>what I have been told. >>
>
>Oh, no! Secret radio channels, and now SECRET windows!! What won't the
>ufonuts think of next!
Ok Big Jim, lets talk windows. I suggested on the last thread that
since no one else could be seen in the lab except Cady after the UFO
statement, that there was the possibility that Kathy Thornton could
have been on the flight deck looking at the UFO through the windows at
the flight deck and transmitted those words. Are you now saying that
there are no windows on the flight deck? Everybody else says there are
and if they are, then Kathy could have been the one who made the UFO
statement. Even Cady in the lab wouldn't need a window to see the UFO,
she could have utilized the cameras much like the STS-1 utilized the
cameras to see out when they had the problem with one of the payload
bay doors closing.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:29 1995
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From: gksmiley@aol.com (GK Smiley)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 15 Dec 1995 08:18:06 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
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Hines-End says: <<Is the big, retarded goof seriously trying to say that
astronauts do not have secure radio channels they go to for classified
communications?>>
He doesn't have to say that. Anyone who knows anything about space
technology on te shuttle knows that (i.e., there are no secret channels on
the shuttle -- classified communications take place over existing channels
with a voice scrambler). It's only reality-deprived ufonuts like Hines who
have to fantasize non-existent systems to provide apparent support for
non-existent events.
Would Mr. Hines plase provide us with ANY evidence that even hints at the
existence of these "secret channels", please?
And by the way, how about ANY evidence that George Leonard was ever a NASA
scientist, which Hines indicated he thought was true a few posts ago but
now is afraid to acknowledge his stupid error...???
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:31 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!paperboy.ids.net!pslip016.ksc-fl.ids.net!kc4yer
From: Philip Chien <kc4yer@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 16 Dec 1995 05:51:48 GMT
Organization: Earth News
Lines: 81
Distribution: world
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> Donald Ratsch (sts48@ix.netcom.com) wrote:
>
> Spacelab can (optional carry one (as in 1) single window, a small
> one in the aft end looking out towards the tail. I do not know if
> 73 had this window installed or not. The windows (multiple) are
> in the orbiter itself. Six forward, two up, two back. Most of the
> photos taken on Shuttle missions are from these 10 windows since they
> are relatively large. (The Spacelab window seems much smaller to me.)
In article <kcowing-1312952324030001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net> Keith Cowing,
kcowing@reston.com writes:
>Don:
>
>Yes, you are right, I forgot. Mea culpa. Also, early Spacelab missions
>had an optical window - in fact (correct me space hardware trivia buffs)
I
>do believe that NASA "borrowed" an optically-pure window that had been
>sitting in the Skylab flight spare at the National Air and Space Museum
>for use in - was it SL-1? There is a small air lock in the "roof" of
>Spacelab which can take one of these windows - I think.
>
>These windows are only installed when there is a need for them i.e. to
>look out. Each flight risks scarring, etc so they don't just leave them
>installed. I do not recall seeing any of the windows in the aft cone of
>SLS-1 or SLS-2. There was gear stowed there as I recall.
Why am I foolish enough to keep this thread running?
For the STS-9 Spacelab 1 and STS-51-B Spacelab 3 missions the optical
window was carried in the Spacelab long modle in the overhead window for
the scientific airlock. In both cases it was carried to support the Very
Wide Field Camera experiment. And yes, it was a backup from the Skylab
program.
Some Spacelab long module missions have a small window in the aft cone.
You can see the window quite clearly in the IMAX film "Destiny in Space"
where Bill Readdy calls Canadian payload specialist Roberta "Bobby"
Bondar over to the window as they pass over Canada during the STS-42
IML-1 mission. For the SLS-1 mission (STS-40) Jim Bagian was actually in
the module while the shuttle's cargo bay doors were closed, to watch the
door closing to make sure it didn't snag on the shuttle's insulating
blankets (a spacewalk was briefly discussed to tuck in the blankets but
deemed unnecessary).
The STS-73 United States Microgravity Laboratory-2 (USML-2) mission in
question as far as I know did not have the observation window in the aft
end cone installed, and certainly did not have the optical window
installed.
Check out the onboard JSC photo STS073-105-011 which shows Cady Coleman
in the Spacelab module working on the glovebox experiment - the aft end
cone is directly behind her. Or the photo STS73-103-019 which shows a
wider view of the module with Cady and Fred Leslie in the module with the
end cone in the background.
Like I said before - when this thread was young. I've spent a little
time with Cady and she's got a good sense of humor. And I know her voice
and Kathy Thornton's voice well nough to tell them apart. While it's
certainly not absolutely 100% completely impossible that Cady saw a
flying saucer, called it a UFO, and is part of this great conspirary to
keep everything secret (although for the life of me I haven't the
faintest idea what she'd gain by being part of that conspirary) it's much
more reasonable to believe that she was just making a simple little joke.
Like later in the mission when commander Ken Bowersox was asked whether
or not he had ever seen a space alien in space and he replied - on the
voice to ground loop - that the only space alien he'd ever seen in space
was fellow astronaut Story Musgrave.
(of course if Story really is a space alien then Ken and I just ruined
his cover. Sorry 'bout that Story).
Philip Chien, Earth News - space writer and consultant PCHIEN@IDS.NET
__ __^__ __________
| \ +---/ \---+ (=========
|____\___________ +---\_____/---+ //
>____)| | \__ \ \______//___
>/ |________| \ [ _____\
>|____________________\ \_______/
Roger, go at throttle up CHR$(32) the final frontier
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:32 1995
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From: kcowing@reston.com (Keith Cowing)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 1995 19:16:24 -0500
Organization: Reston Communications
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <kcowing-1512951916240001@jobrien-ppp.clark.net>
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4aock8$jg7@pan.ghgcorp.com> <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com> <dadamsDJMLKr.5to@netcom.com>
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In article <dadamsDJMLKr.5to@netcom.com>, dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams) wrote:
> Mark Hines <mjhines@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> >Is the big, retarded goof seriously trying to say that astronauts do
> >not have secure radio channels they go to for classified
> >communications?
>
> Except for in the past during the handful of DoD
> missions, they have no "classified communications".
>
> It seems that you're seriously trying to say that you
> are totally ignorant about Shuttle communications.
Hmm... you learn something everyday. I thought for certain that the
University of Las Vegas would require Mark Hines to take several semesters
of encrypted communications, security procedure, and radio operations in
order to qualify for a Master's Degree in English Literature ....
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:33 1995
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!dadams
From: dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams)
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Message-ID: <dadamsDJoJI4.A93@netcom.com>
Followup-To: alt.paranet.ufo
Organization: Aurora Information Systems
References: <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com> <4arsie$ihi@newsbf02.news.aol.com> <4as4m0$eki@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 1995 12:46:52 GMT
Lines: 39
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Donald Ratsch <sts48@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> Sure there is a secret channel Smiley. What about after the STS-48
>footage was bagged by me and all the controversy that followed it and
By "controversy", you mean the ridiculous nonsense where certain
Shuttle-ignorant members the UFO lunatic fringe started inventing
wild stories about the ice particles being hit by an RCS plume.
>after that in 1992 the Transponder 5 on Satellite F2R was encrypted for
>downlinking secure and private communications.
Some time after that.
> The SUPPOSED reason for the encryption was to carry private medical
> information from the astronauts.
More accurately, the reason was so they could have private
medical video conferences with their doctors on the ground.
>But they could transmit UFO information as well and nobody
>would be the wiser. Any comments?
Yea, you're nuts! :> Everything you are saying is ridiculous.
NASA is using a *commercial* video encoder, the same type used
by ABC for example. That provides just enough security to
protect the modesty of any astronaut who may need to show
some part of their body to a doctor on the ground...
But when you start inventing wild stories about hiding "top secret
UFO space alien video", it (not surprisingly) becomes ludicrous.
Besdies, if the government ever wanted to send video of that sort,
first of all they would use the best military encryption systems
the NSA had to offer, and second they would not uplink it for all
to see on a commercial broadcast satellite.
As usual, your fantasies have no foundation in logic or reality,
and have everything to do with your complete ignorance of the
subject matter involved.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:34 1995
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From: kcowing@reston.com (Keith Cowing)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 1995 21:20:45 -0500
Organization: Reston Communications
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In article <4as4m0$eki@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>, sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald
Ratsch) wrote:
> Sure there is a secret channel Smiley. What about after the STS-48
> footage was bagged by me and all the controversy that followed it and
> after that in 1992 the Transponder 5 on Satellite F2R was encrypted for
> downlinking secure and private communications. The SUPPOSED reason for
> the encryption was to carry private medical information from the
> astronauts.
You're right: I give up. NASA was doing a joint medical mission with the
Zeta Reticulans. They were so embarassed that they didn't want anyone to
know. So they encrypted everything and disguised it as commercial TV
signal and beemed it back viaTransponder 5 on Satellite F2R to YOUR CABLE
SYSTEM. Your ZR chip decoded it as being as an Oprah show on abductee
amputees who are absentee fathers. Sorry. Guess you weren't watching
that day.
>But they could transmit UFO information as well and nobody
> would be the wiser.
I don't think we'd be "wiser"
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:35 1995
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
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From: dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams)
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Message-ID: <dadamsDJMLKr.5to@netcom.com>
Organization: Aurora Information Systems
References: <4abnn7$6v1@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4ahfue$95h@post.gsfc.nasa.gov> <4aock8$jg7@pan.ghgcorp.com> <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com>
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 1995 11:36:27 GMT
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Mark Hines <mjhines@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>Is the big, retarded goof seriously trying to say that astronauts do
>not have secure radio channels they go to for classified
>communications?
Except for in the past during the handful of DoD
missions, they have no "classified communications".
It seems that you're seriously trying to say that you
are totally ignorant about Shuttle communications.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:36 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: sts48@ix.netcom.com(Donald Ratsch)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 15 Dec 1995 15:36:32 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 35
Message-ID: <4as4m0$eki@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
References: <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com> <4arsie$ihi@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
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In <4arsie$ihi@newsbf02.news.aol.com> gksmiley@aol.com (GK Smiley)
writes:
>
>Hines-End says: <<Is the big, retarded goof seriously trying to say
that
>astronauts do not have secure radio channels they go to for classified
>communications?>>
>
>He doesn't have to say that. Anyone who knows anything about space
>technology on te shuttle knows that (i.e., there are no secret
channels on
>the shuttle -- classified communications take place over existing
channels
>with a voice scrambler). It's only reality-deprived ufonuts like Hines
who
>have to fantasize non-existent systems to provide apparent support for
>non-existent events.
>
>Would Mr. Hines plase provide us with ANY evidence that even hints at
the
>existence of these "secret channels", please?
>
>And by the way, how about ANY evidence that George Leonard was ever a
NASA
>scientist, which Hines indicated he thought was true a few posts ago
but
>now is afraid to acknowledge his stupid error...???
Sure there is a secret channel Smiley. What about after the STS-48
footage was bagged by me and all the controversy that followed it and
after that in 1992 the Transponder 5 on Satellite F2R was encrypted for
downlinking secure and private communications. The SUPPOSED reason for
the encryption was to carry private medical information from the
astronauts. But they could transmit UFO information as well and nobody
would be the wiser. Any comments?
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:37 1995
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From: lver@ksu.ksu.edu (Lloyd Paul Verhage)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 15 Dec 1995 12:12:04 -0600
Organization: Kansas State University
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Message-ID: <4asdpk$7k5@cbs.ksu.ksu.edu>
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>Ratsch: <<During
>spacelab missions (of which Cady was working diligently) A/G-2 is
>reserved for the Spacelab and that is where the windows are. This is
>what I have been told. >>
No windows in the Spacelab.
Thank you for playing and try again sometime.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:38 1995
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From: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Suggestions for preamp and AO-10/AO-13
Date: 15 Dec 1995 08:03:29 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 17
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
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Reply-To: stockmand@aol.com (Stockmand)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Greetings! I need some suggestions regarding a preamp and working AO-10
and
AO-13. Does anyone know of an affordable preamp I can use that will allow
automatic passthrough during transmit? I am mainly interested in my
station being
able to work the 9600 birds, but SSB on AO-10 and AO-13 is fun, so if it
is not too
difficult to get a preamp into my current setup and it does not upset my
digital work,
I will add a preamp. I have one 2m antenna and one 70cm antenna. Is it
possible to
just add a preamp without adding another antenna and another coax cable?
Can
someone suggest a specific model of preamp? Thanks in advance.
Douglas Stockman, 9G5DS, N2ZYE
respond to cutronej@alice.union.edu
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:39 1995
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From: charlie@smart.net (Charles M. Clark)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Super Space Site
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 1995 15:35:41 GMT
Organization: Smartnet Internet Services [via news]
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <4auses$3ai@news.smart.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: bunky.smart.net
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If you are interested in either space information and or weather
information, you have to look into Mike Robinson page on the Web.
It contains everything you ever wanted to know about either subject.
Mike has had years of experience developing these subject and now
devotes much of his time to developing and maintaining this page
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:40 1995
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From: charlie@smart.net (Charles M. Clark)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Super Space Site
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 1995 15:41:58 GMT
Organization: Smartnet Internet Services [via news]
Lines: 13
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References: <4auses$3ai@news.smart.net>
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charlie@smart.net (Charles M. Clark) wrote:
> If you are interested in either space information and or weather
>information, you have to look into Mike Robinson page on the Web.
> It contains everything you ever wanted to know about either subject.
> Mike has had years of experience developing these subject and now
>devotes much of his time to developing and maintaining this page
Try http://www.airtime.co.uk/users/homebase/homebase.htm
I think you will need this. SORRY. OOPS.
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:40 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: electrophi@aol.com (Electrophi)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Uplink/Downlinks of Sats Pse
Date: 14 Dec 1995 06:43:01 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 14
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4ap2k5$5t9@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
Anyone out there give me info on the uplink/downlink freqs of the various
birds flying, I am familiar with trakin programs and have figured that
much out.
I saw a message on here about a person trying to use his ht and a scanner
to work the satellites and it worked, just wondered if it would be
possible for me
to do the same thing here at the apt.
any replys welcome Thanks in advance
Phillip
Ka8pog@Wb8zpn.#semi.mi.usa.noam
electrophi@aol.net or ka8pog@44.102.1.95 or
ka8pog@44.102.50.254
address's address's
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:41 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!uwm.edu!chi-news.cic.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!realtime.net!news.mindspring.com!usenet
From: pieter.ibelings@sciatl.com (Pieter Ibelings)
Newsgroups: sci.engr.chem,sci.chem,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.med.radiology
Subject: Re: VARIAN MICROWAVE AMPS and related items FOR SALE or trade
Date: 14 Dec 1995 21:10:06 GMT
Organization: Scientific Atlanta
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <4aq3re$l2g@firehose.mindspring.com>
References: <4a3bal$isv@ixnews8.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: wave.mindspring.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.engr.chem:11749 sci.chem:56001 rec.radio.amateur.space:5943 sci.med.radiology:4255
In article <4a3bal$isv@ixnews8.ix.netcom.com>, ando1@ix.netcom.com says...
=FOR SALE- OR TRADE::
=Varian VZX6983G5GLM 8-12.4 ghz 53db gain 200watt Xband amp (new)
=$16,000.
=Varian VZM6993051505 12-18ghz 53db gain 200watt KU band amp
=(new)$13,000.
=Varian VZX6981KADEH 8-12.4ghz 40db gain 20 watt Xband amp(1007
At those prices you might be better of advertising on
rec.radio.commercial.space. We are used to paying $100 or less for
used TWTA's.
73's
AC4OP
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:42 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!chi-news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!news00.sunet.se!sunic!news99.sunet.se!newsfeed.tip.net!peroni.ita.tip.net!maggiore.dsnet.it!usenet
From: info@mopa.global.it (Roberto Manderioli)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Where to get .wav sample files......
Date: Wed, 13 Dec 1995 06:14:32 GMT
Organization: DSnet - Internet Provider - Bologna Italy
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <4akr5o$927@maggiore.dsnet.it>
Reply-To: info@mopa.global.it
NNTP-Posting-Host: mopa.global.it
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent v0.55
Hello all,
I'm looking for any sample audio file concerning satellite amateur
radio contacts.
Those might convince myself on setting up a satellite amateur radio
station.
Thank you very much anyway
Roberto Manderioli ( IK4JQW )
info@mopa.global.it
From Unknown Sun Dec 17 15:32:43 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!hookup!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!spool.mu.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: "Bernard A. Poskus and Cheryl A. Blehm-Poskus" <hamdan@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
Date: 14 Dec 1995 05:34:34 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <4aod1a$jqf@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
References: <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ix-den6-10.ix.netcom.com
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To: jrybak@mesa5.Mesa.Colorado.EDU
Jim: There is a product review of the 820 in the March '95 QST. The
reviewer said that its satellite functions appeared to have been added as
an "afterthought". The rig did poorly when used with a TNC to compensate
for doppler shift when accessing the 1200 baud birds. It doesn't appear
to have any capability to add any extra bands to it.
I have used a Yaesu FT-736R for the analog satellites (RS-10, RS-15
and FO-20 - I can only get the low earth orbit satellites cuz of my
limited antenna system), and for the 1200 baud digital satellites (AO-16
and LO-19). I have been quite pleased with its performance, and have
heard the same from many other satellite ops. QST gave it a very good
review (May 1990). Finally, it is at least competitively priced with the
820, and may even be cheaper.
By the way, I used to live in Grand Junction (lived about a block
from the college for about 6 months). I miss the area sometimes!
73's de Bernie, KF0QS. Denver, Colorado
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:36 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Need Skeds for Sat WAS
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DJqJ5K.4AJ@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <4avf4b$kfh@news.greatbasin.net>
Date: Sun, 17 Dec 1995 14:34:32 GMT
Lines: 19
In <4avf4b$kfh@news.greatbasin.net> nc7k@vhf.reno.nv.us (Tim Marek) writes:
>Hello from Reno Nevada de Tim - NC7K...
>Recently I became QRV on AO10 and AO13 chasing Grids,
>States, and countries. After 1 month I'm having trouble
>finding the last states for Sat WAS. Is anyone QRV from,
>MT, ND, SD, NE, CO, WY, KS, OK, AR, IA, MN, AL, SC,
>NC, NH. RI, and ME ?
Hey, it's *supposed* to be difficult, isn't it?
When you can collect it in a month's time, what fun would it be?
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:37 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Junkosphere
Date: 17 Dec 1995 15:30:10 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 9
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4b1uki$k1h@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
References: <4960hv$n6c@nuhou.aloha.net>
Reply-To: rhyolite95@aol.com (Rhyolite95)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Is ATS-3 still alive?? I have tapes from a few years ago of members of the
Bahai religion using the sat for roundtable discussions. I also monitored
quite a few telephone calls from McMurdo (South Pole). As I have recently
moved to a new QTH my antenna system is not what it was. I just put up a
cushcraft AOP-1 and pointed to about where i thought ATS-3 was and
listened in the 135.550-135.650 MHz passband. What I heard sounded like a
lot of european land mobile traffic complete with multitone preambles.
What is going on with the bird is it stable? Is anyone using it?? Please
reply rhyolite95@aol.com
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:38 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!ionews.ionet.net!usenet
From: Hank Blackstock <wa5jrh@ionet.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: re orientation of AO-13
Date: 17 Dec 1995 19:08:55 GMT
Organization: IONet
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4b1ps7$8mp@ionews.ionet.net>
References: <4b0uni$jsj@hawk.pix.za>
NNTP-Posting-Host: osip112.ionet.net
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To: danie.brynard@pixie.co.za
Danie Brynard <danie.brynard@pixie.co.za> wrote:
>Is it possible to know what the antenna orientation of AO-13 is ?
>Will some PC program give one this info ?
>
>Danie zs6awk
>
>
Instatrack does..73 Hank WA5JRH
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:39 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!usc!newshub.cts.com!crash!wallnerw
From: wallnerw@crash.cts.com (Bill Wallner)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellit-Tracking STSPLUS
Date: 17 Dec 1995 22:30:43 GMT
Organization: CTS Network Services (CTSNET), San Diego, CA
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <4b25mj$hnt@news3.cts.com>
References: <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net> <4anu3p$e0s@news-e1a.megaweb.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: crash-i2.cts.com
Bruce Kille (BKille@gnn.com) wrote:
: In article <30cefa10.1134146@news.isys.net> Freddi Warnke wrote:
: One of my favorite sites is the NASA Spacelink. It can be reached
: via WWW, gopher, FTP, or Telnet using the following address:
: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Also, Dr. T.S. Kelso's archive by WWW <ftp://archive.afit.af.mil/pub/space/>
Bill
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:39 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!nntp.crl.com!jpotts
From: jpotts@crl.com (John Potts)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Shuttle tracking program
Date: 18 Dec 1995 16:43:43 GMT
Organization: CRL Dialup Internet Access (415) 705-6060 [Login: guest]
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <4b45nv$p0n@nntp.crl.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: crl5.crl.com
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
I am looking for a good program that I could use to track the shuttle
when in orbit and the mir space station. Please list were the program
can be found with your recommendations.
John Potts, kb6wgl
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:41 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!uwm.edu!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!usenet
From: Carl Gregory <cgregory@uiuc.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: re orientation of AO-13
Date: 18 Dec 1995 17:16:21 GMT
Organization: Univ. of Illinois / Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Lab
Lines: 120
Message-ID: <4b47l5$c9u@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
References: <4b0uni$jsj@hawk.pix.za> <4b1ps7$8mp@ionews.ionet.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: magnet.beckman.uiuc.edu
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To: wa5jrh@ionet.net
X-URL: news:4b1ps7$8mp@ionews.ionet.net
>Danie Brynard <danie.brynard@pixie.co.za> wrote:
>>Is it possible to know what the antenna orientation of AO-13 is ?
>>Will some PC program give one this info ?
So does WinOrbit, and many others. However, you must know the present
attitude of the satellite, which is occasionally published here and
elsewhere in the newsgroups. Herewith a repost of the last bulletin:
o
SB AMSAT @ WW $RUH951201
AO-13 Schedules 1996
Attitude Schedule
-----------------
The planned attitude schedule for Oscar 13 during 1996 is:
Date [Mon] Alon/Alat Weeks
--------------------------------
1996 Jan 01 220/0 13
1996 Apr 01 180/0 10
1996 Jun 10 220/0 t.b.a.
--------------------------------
The session beginning 1996 June 10 will also last for about 3 months.
After
that, 1996 September, perigee height will be 170 km and re-entry effects
will
already be noticeable. This will be an interesting time, and the
command team
welcomes suggestions which we could implement to make use of this unique
opportunity to observe an amateur spacecraft at re-entry.
Full details of re-entry, around 1996 Dec 05-19, can be found in:
- Proceedings of the 12th annual Amsat Space Symposium, Orlando,
Florida,
USA, 1994. 4 pages.
- Oscar News (UK) 1994 Oct No. 109 p 16-20
- Jamsat Newsletter (JA) No. 166, 1995 March 25. p1-4
- Amsat-DL Journal (D), Jg. 22, No. 1, Mar/May 1995.
- Amsat OZ Journal (OZ) No. 37, 1995 May
- The Amsat Journal (USA) Vol 18 No.3, May/June 1995.
The article and regularly updated program listing is available via the
Internet
by anonymous FTP:
Site: ftp.amsat.org
File: /amsat/articles/g3ruh/a114.zip (Article)
File: /amsat/satinfo/ao13/decaykep.zip (Decay keplerian elements)
Mode Schedule
-------------
M QST ** AO-13 TRANSPONDER SCHEDULE ** 1995 Dec 02 - 1996 Jan 01
Mode-B : MA 0 to MA 70 |
Mode-BS : MA 70 to MA 110 | Omnis : MA 230 to MA 25
Mode-S : MA 110 to MA 112 |<- S beacon only
Mode-S : MA 112 to MA 135 |<- S transponder; B trsp. is OFF
Mode-S : MA 135 to MA 140 |<- S beacon only
Mode-BS : MA 140 to MA 180 | Alon/Alat 182/0
Mode-B : MA 180 to MA 256 | Move to attitude 220/0, Jan 01
Please note that the higher powered engineering beacon 145.985 MHz is
ON for
two periods: MA 0 - 20 and MA 100-110.
Provisional Schedule
--------------------
N QST *** AO-13 TRANSPONDER SCHEDULE *** 1996 Jan 01 - Apr 01
Mode-B : MA 0 to MA 140 | *** P R O V I S I O N A L
Mode-BS : MA 140 to MA 240 |
Mode-B : MA 240 to MA 256 | Alon/Alat 220/0
Omnis : MA 250 to MA 140 | Move to attitude 180/0, Apr 01
If In Doubt Invent It Department (IID^2)
----------------------------------------
Continuous up-to-date information about AO-13 operations is always
available on
the beacons, 145.812 MHz or 2400.664 MHz, in CW at 0 & 30 minutes past
the
hour, RTTY at 15 & 45 minutes past the hour and 400 bps PSK otherwise.
These
bulletins are also posted to Internet, ANS, Packet, PacSats etc, and
many
international newsletters.
A 400 bps PSK decoder is available from G3RUH and several DSP products;
display
software P3TLM, WINSAT, P3C.EXE (MS-DOS); !TLM13 (RiscOS) etc from Amsat
groups.
Internet users wanting the latest AO-13 information should always check:
ftp://ftp.amsat.org/amsat/satinfo/ao13/
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/
Telemetry is archived at:
ftp://ftp.amsat.org/amsat/satinfo/ao13/telemetry/
The active command stations are listed below, and constructive feedback
about operations is always welcome.
Peter DB2OS @ DB0FC.#NDS.DEU.EU
James G3RUH @ GB7DDX.#22.GBR.EU
Graham VK5AGR
They may also be reached via Internet (callsign@amsat.org) and KO-23.
Please remember to state clearly a return address.
Notes prepared on behalf of, and in cooperation with the above by:
James Miller G3RUH @ GB7DDX.#22.GBR.EU 1995 Dec 01 [Fri] 1521 utc
<end>
/EX
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:42 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!oleane!jussieu.fr!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!chi-news.cic.net!newsjunkie.ans.net!news-m01.ny.us.ibm.net!usenet
From: gsharp@ibm.net (Gerald Sharp)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Native OS/2 Sat Tracking Program
Date: 19 Dec 1995 00:02:48 GMT
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <4b4vf8$1ooo@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip85-66.co.us.ibm.net
X-Newsreader: NeoLogic News for OS/2 [version: 4.1 UNREGISTERED 16 days remaining]
Several months ago someone posted a note indicating they
were going to develope a native OS/2 satellite tracking
program. Anyone know if this project ever got off the
ground? If so, anyone know the current status? Thanks...
Gerald R. Sharp KD0GS
gsharp@ibm.net
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:43 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.dpc.net!news.heurikon.com!uwvax!uwm.edu!chi-news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!usc!news.cerf.net!news.titan.com!news.tcst.com!news.onramp.net!usenet
From: Bob Winingham <kc5ejk@onramp.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Shuttle tracking program
Date: 19 Dec 1995 07:01:50 GMT
Organization: On-Ramp; Individual Internet Connections; Dallas/Ft Worth/Houston, TX USA
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4b5o0u$oqo@news.onramp.net>
References: <4b45nv$p0n@nntp.crl.com>
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To: jpotts@crl.com
X-URL: news:4b45nv$p0n@nntp.crl.com
I use OrbitTrack 2.1.5 on my Mac.
Check out AMSAT.ORG for PC/MAC tracker programs.
73
kc5ejk@onramp.net
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:44 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!aimnet.com!netserv.com!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLS027 Mir seasons greetings
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 19 Dec 1995 16:41:19 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 31
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arls027.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10564 rec.radio.amateur.space:5980
SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS027
ARLS027 Mir seasons greetings
ZCZC AS07
QST de W1AW
Space Bulletin 027 ARLS027
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 19, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB SPACE ARL ARLS027
ARLS027 Mir seasons greetings
German astronaut Thomas Reiter, DF4TR/DP0MIR, will send seasons
greetings to all hams and swls from aboard the Mir space station.
Reiter will remain aboard Mir until February 1996. Reiter will
record messages using a digital voice recorder constructed by Thomas
Kieselbach, DL2MDE. The device can store up to eight minutes of
messages.
Reiter also will transmit live from DP0MIR as time permits. The
main transmission frequency is 145.800 MHz.
Because of some missing parts, including a diplexer for the
dual-band antenna, 70-centimeter activity from Mir has been delayed.
These parts and a 9600-baud TNC are on their way to Mir now.
Frequencies to be used are 437.925 MHz for voice and 437.975 MHz for
packet, simplex mode.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:45 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!alpha.sky.net!winternet.com!news.interlog.com!polaris.net!nntp.cntfl.com!news.internetMCI.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!interramp.com!usenet
From: Keith Stein <us011192@pop3.interramp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Uplink/Downlinks of Sats Pse
Date: 19 Dec 1995 16:49:49 GMT
Organization: Satellite Times magazine
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <4b6qfd$706@usenet4.interramp.com>
References: <4ap2k5$5t9@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip58.herndon2.va.interramp.com
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To: electrophi@aol.com
You should get a subscription to Satellite Times magazine from Grove
Enterprises (704) 837-9200. This magazine has all the frequencies you
would ever want in the satellite hobby. Here are some sample
downlinks:
135.575 Applied Technology Satellite (ATS)
268.450 FLTSATCOM
145.826 UoSat 11
435.025 UoSat 11
145.825 Dove
145.550 Mir
145.800 Mir (recorded Christmas message)
137.500 NOAA 12
137.620 NOAA 14
137.850 METEOR 3-5
137.400 SICH-1
--
Keith Stein
Community, Air & Space Report Editor:
http://www.newspace.com/publications/casr/home.html
Satellite Times magazine Editoral Staff Member
http://www.grove.net/hmpgst.html
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:46 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!EU.net!peer-news.britain.eu.net!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!interramp.com!usenet
From: Keith Stein <us011192@pop3.interramp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Uplink/Downlinks of Sats Pse
Date: 19 Dec 1995 16:50:14 GMT
Organization: Satellite Times magazine
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <4b6qg6$706@usenet4.interramp.com>
References: <4ap2k5$5t9@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip58.herndon2.va.interramp.com
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To: electrophi@aol.com
You should get a subscription to Satellite Times magazine from Grove
Enterprises (704) 837-9200. This magazine has all the frequencies you
would ever want in the satellite hobby. Here are some sample
downlinks:
135.575 Applied Technology Satellite (ATS)
268.450 FLTSATCOM
145.826 UoSat 11
435.025 UoSat 11
145.825 Dove
145.550 Mir
145.800 Mir (recorded Christmas message)
137.500 NOAA 12
137.620 NOAA 14
137.850 METEOR 3-5
137.400 SICH-1
--
Keith Stein
Community, Air & Space Report Editor:
http://www.newspace.com/publications/casr/home.html
Satellite Times magazine Editoral Staff Member
http://www.grove.net/hmpgst.html
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:47 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!nuclear.microserve.net!imci2!news.internetMCI.com!darwin.sura.net!spool.mu.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!interramp.com!usenet
From: Keith Stein <us011192@pop3.interramp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Uplink/Downlinks of Sats Pse
Date: 19 Dec 1995 16:56:42 GMT
Organization: Satellite Times magazine
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <4b6qsa$7dl@usenet4.interramp.com>
References: <4ap2k5$5t9@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip58.herndon2.va.interramp.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
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To: electrophi@aol.com
You should get a subscription to Satellite Times magazine. They have all
the frequencies you would ever want for the satellite hobby. Give Grove
Enterprises a call at (704) 837-9200 to see about getting a subscription.
I'll see about getting a small sample list together for you.
--
Keith Stein
Community, Air & Space Report Editor:
http://www.newspace.com/publications/casr/home.html
Satellite Times magazine Editoral Staff Member
http://www.grove.net/hmpgst.html
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:47 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.texas.net!imci2!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: kirkekirk@aol.com (Kirkekirk)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: WAS on RS 12
Date: 19 Dec 1995 21:44:46 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 5
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
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Reply-To: kirkekirk@aol.com (Kirkekirk)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
Is it possible to work all states on rs 12 from Ohio.
Kirk
AA4YZ
Canton, oh
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:49 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.onramp.net!news.mind.net!news.uoregon.edu!news.u.washington.edu!uw-beaver!nntp.cs.ubc.ca!news.cyberstore.ca!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!sislnews.csc.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: re orientation of AO-13
Date: 19 Dec 1995 21:51:19 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <4b7c4n$ar@superb.csc.ti.com>
References: <4b0uni$jsj@hawk.pix.za>
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In article <4b0uni$jsj@hawk.pix.za>, danie.brynard@pixie.co.za says...
>
>Is it possible to know what the antenna orientation of AO-13 is ?
>Will some PC program give one this info ?
>
>Danie zs6awk
>
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Danie, in addition to the programs and schedules mentioned above, all
you need to do is enter the alat and alon for the current date into the
tracking program. Instantrack will then tell you the pointing angle of
the sat antenna during the pass.
Enjoy,
Ken K5MBV mbv@ti.com
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:49 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.kreonet.re.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!newstf01.news.aol.com!newsbf02.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: pleadian@aol.com (Pleadian)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 19 Dec 1995 22:34:10 -0500
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 6
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Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38838 alt.paranet.ufo:47559 rec.radio.amateur.space:5978
Does anyone have the full stoey and the dates of this event ?
Thank you,
Michael S. Collins
MUFON/Orlando
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:50 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
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From: greg@core.rose.hp.com (Greg Dolkas)
Subject: Re: FM Voice Sat?
Sender: news@icon.rose.hp.com (News Administrator)
Message-ID: <DJv3J7.26v@icon.rose.hp.com>
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 01:45:07 GMT
References: <4alll1$b3e@superb.csc.ti.com>
Organization: HP - Information Networks Division
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1.8 PL6]
Lines: 21
Ken Durham (durham@lobby.ti.com) wrote:
: >Does anyone know its status these days?
: >
: > -Rusty-
: >--
: >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
: Rusty, AO-27 is alive and well. It is on during daylight hours 7 days
: a week now. Look for it after 11 AM and around 12:30 PM. Better yet use
: a tracking program with recent KEPS for the pass prediction.
:
:
Well, I tried listening for it this past weekend, and didn't hear anything.
Two passes each day, around lunch time.
I've worked the bird before, so I know my rig's up to it. Is it *always*
enabled on daylight passes? What happened?
Thanks,
Greg KO6TH
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:51 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!usc!chi-news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!oleane!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!tube.news.pipex.net!pipex!dish.news.pipex.net!pipex!lade.news.pipex.net!pipex!news.be.innet.net!INbe.net!usenet
From: Hilde Hofkens <hhofkens@imagic.be>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Belgian World Service : Radio Vlaanderen Internationaal on-line
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 10:34:12 +0100
Organization: iM@Gic
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <30D7D894.7DE3@imagic.be>
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Finally the day has come : the new Website of Radio Vlaanderen
Internationaal, BRTN's world service, is on line since December 1. The
old Website was refurnished and contains a wealth of information on RVI,
its 50th anniversary, programmes, reception, International Listener's
Club and much more. RVI also puts you on the way to a series of
interesting Websites.
Information on our Website is available in six languages : Dutch,
French, German, Enlish, Spanish and Arabic.
Shortly you will be able to read the RVI news on our Website, or listen
to it via Real Audio.
It is worth your while to call on
http://www.brtn.be/rvi/
For more information
rvi@brtn.be
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:52 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.kreonet.re.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!venus.sun.com!news2me.EBay.Sun.COM!centralnews1.Central.Sun.COM!newsworthy.West.Sun.COM!news70.West.Sun.COM!myers
From: myers@West.Sun.COM (Dana Myers)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 20 Dec 1995 15:45:50 GMT
Organization: SunSoft South, Los Angeles, CA
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <4b9b3e$gfu@abyss.West.Sun.COM>
References: <4ar4l7$p94@ixnews2.ix.netcom.com> <4arsie$ihi@newsbf02.news.aol.com> <4as4m0$eki@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: sunspot.west.sun.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.space.shuttle:38870 alt.paranet.ufo:47619 rec.radio.amateur.space:5988
In article <4as4m0$eki@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>,
Donald Ratsch <sts48@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>
> Sure there is a secret channel Smiley. What about after the STS-48
>footage was bagged by me and all the controversy that followed it and
>after that in 1992 the Transponder 5 on Satellite F2R was encrypted for
>downlinking secure and private communications. The SUPPOSED reason for
>the encryption was to carry private medical information from the
>astronauts. But they could transmit UFO information as well and nobody
>would be the wiser. Any comments?
"But they could transmit UFO information as well"....
Sure. They could transmit digitized images of my butt, too, and this
is probably more likely than UFO information.
--
* Dana H. Myers KK6JQ, DoD#: j | Views expressed here are *
* (310) 348-6043 | mine and do not necessarily *
* Dana.Myers@West.Sun.Com | reflect those of my employer *
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:53 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!peer-news.britain.eu.net!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!interramp.com!usenet
From: Keith Stein <us011192@interramp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Shuttle tracking program
Date: 20 Dec 1995 16:18:14 GMT
Organization: PSI Public Usenet Link
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <4b9d06$6ct@usenet1.interramp.com>
References: <4b45nv$p0n@nntp.crl.com>
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To: jpotts@crl.com
Well I don't where they are on the Internet, but you should look for
Traksat or STSORBIT. I use them and they are very good.
--
Keith Stein
Community, Air & Space Report Editor:
http://www.newspace.com/publications/casr/home.html
Satellite Times magazine Editoral Staff Member
http://www.grove.net/hmpgst.html
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:54 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!news.kreonet.re.kr!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!psinntp!interramp.com!usenet
From: Keith Stein <us011192@interramp.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Info?: NASA ATS-3 Satellite
Date: 20 Dec 1995 16:25:35 GMT
Organization: PSI Public Usenet Link
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <4b9ddv$6ct@usenet1.interramp.com>
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To: rickcrider@aol.com
Rick,
ATS-3 is in geostationary orbit at 106.5 degrees west longitude. It is
still used by several different agencies. You can find its downlink
transmissions between 135.555-135.650 MHz. I recently received the
following intercept from the ATS-3 satellite:
135.575 MHz ATS-3 transmitting voice communications between South Pole
and Florida, 0100-0300 UTC, NFM. Individuals were talking about a "sun
rise party" at the pole. First time they have seen the sun since winter
set in.
--
Keith Stein
Community, Air & Space Report Editor:
http://www.newspace.com/publications/casr/home.html
Satellite Times magazine Editoral Staff Member
http://www.grove.net/hmpgst.html
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:55 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!online!wb3ffv!usenet
From: jgrimes@mail.bcpl.lib.md.us (John Grimes)
Subject: [Q] Does anyone know the P3D transponder bandwidth(s) ?
Sender: usenet@abs.net
Message-ID: <DJwAGw.84G@abs.net>
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 17:12:56 GMT
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Lines: 12
Greetings:
I would like to know the tranponder bandwidth for P3D. I spoke with
Frank Baurer and Pat Kilroy at the Goddard ARC banquet, they weren't
sure but Pat thought it was 44 Khz. minimun. I checked the AMSAT web
site and I could not find the info there. So if anyone out here has
the info, I would sure appreciate your posting it. Thanks in advance.
73, de John, kd3wy
jgrimes@mail.bcpl.lib.md.us
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:56 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!eskimo!news
From: tgliang@eskimo.com (Thomas Liang)
Subject: Re: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: tia1.eskimo.com
Message-ID: <DJwGHv.5HK@eskimo.com>
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References: <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu> <4aod1a$jqf@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 19:22:43 GMT
Lines: 28
In article <4aod1a$jqf@cloner2.ix.netcom.com>, hamdan@ix.netcom.com says...
>
>Jim: There is a product review of the 820 in the March '95 QST. The
>reviewer said that its satellite functions appeared to have been added as
>an "afterthought". The rig did poorly when used with a TNC to compensate
>for doppler shift when accessing the 1200 baud birds. It doesn't appear
>to have any capability to add any extra bands to it.
> I have used a Yaesu FT-736R for the analog satellites (RS-10, RS-15
>and FO-20 - I can only get the low earth orbit satellites cuz of my
>limited antenna system), and for the 1200 baud digital satellites (AO-16
>and LO-19). I have been quite pleased with its performance, and have
>heard the same from many other satellite ops. QST gave it a very good
>review (May 1990). Finally, it is at least competitively priced with the
>820, and may even be cheaper.
> By the way, I used to live in Grand Junction (lived about a block
>from the college for about 6 months). I miss the area sometimes!
> 73's de Bernie, KF0QS. Denver, Colorado
>
Hi Bernie! I am a regular on the 9600 satellites. I use a YAESU FT-736R, an
AEA DSP-1232 TNC, and I get excellent. But I need to say more. The FT-736R
came without receiving and transmitting 9600 baud capability. So I send it
to the YAESU factory, and they converted it for free. Maybe it was free
because it was under warranty. To continue, I have a YAESU G-5400B rotator
and a Gateway 4DX2-66V computer and WISP (software for tracking
communicating with the birds). I have it set up so that it tracks
automatically without my attention. So typically, it activates itself as
much as eight times for one bird in one 24-hour period. 73 de Tom
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:57 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!news.kreonet.re.kr!news.dacom.co.kr!newsfeed.internetmci.com!swrinde!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!thomsona
From: thomsona@netcom.com (Allen Thomson)
Subject: Forward scattering from satellites
Message-ID: <thomsonaDJwxsF.E5K@netcom.com>
Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 1995 01:36:15 GMT
Lines: 8
Sender: thomsona@netcom6.netcom.com
This is a slightly weird question, but I don't know of a better newsgroup
in which to ask it:
Has anyone ever detected fluctuations in the signal from a geosynchronous
(or Molniya) communications/TV satellite due to forward scattering off of
satellites in low orbit passing close to the transmitter-receiver line of
sight?
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:58 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!opal.CyberGate.COM!news
From: videodog@cybergate.com (Joe Thor)
Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space,alt.paranet.ufo,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: STS-73 SEES UFO
Date: 21 Dec 1995 05:08:05 GMT
Organization: Cybergate Information Services
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <4baq3l$j5k@opal.CyberGate.COM>
References: <4alpja$kel@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <4b807i$vk@newsbf02.news.aol.com> <dadamsDJvxIG.1Jr@netcom.com>
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In article <dadamsDJvxIG.1Jr@netcom.com>, dadams@netcom.com (Dean Adams) says:
>
>
>Pleadian <pleadian@aol.com> wrote:
>>Does anyone have the full stoey and the dates of this event ?
>>Michael S. Collins
>>MUFON/Orlando
>
>Nope, since there was no "event"... unless you count a
>few members of the UFO lunatic fringe letting their wild
>imaginations run amok over a joke.
>
Was it ever determined where the ufo transmission originated? (There
a chance it came from the flight deck where the windows are.)
Joe
(the flight deck where the windows are or the
From Unknown Thu Dec 21 20:21:58 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!freenet.columbus.oh.us!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!cleveland.Freenet.Edu!fx514
From: fx514@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (David M. Swan)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Wanted: low cost UHF FM receiver
Date: 21 Dec 1995 22:30:33 GMT
Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland OH (USA)
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <4bcn69$deg@madeline.INS.CWRU.Edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kanga.ins.cwru.edu
I'm looking for a UHF FM receiver. I'm fairly new to
the hobby and want to try working AO-27. I have the
gear for the uplink, but need something for the downlink.
If you have an old receiver or scanner that you could
part with for low cost, please e-mail me at:
davidms@decus.ca
Thanks!
73 de VE1DMS (David)
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:12 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.ssd.intel.com!ornews.intel.com!news
From: George La Belle <george_labelle@ccm.hf.intel.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: 9600 baud with TS-790A
Date: 26 Dec 1995 18:26:57 GMT
Organization: Intel
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <4bpeph$45c@ornews.intel.com>
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Anybody had luck running 9600baud on the TS-790A? What is required
to get it working?
Thanks,
George WB6YZZ
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:13 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!mv!barney.gvi.net!news.netrail.net!imci2!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!agate!news.ossi.com!ipac.net!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK072 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 19 Dec 1995 17:52:09 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk072.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10581 rec.radio.amateur.space:5999
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK072
ARLK072 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK97
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 72 ARLK072
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 19, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK072
ARLK072 Keplerian data
Thanks to NASA, AMSAT and WA5QGD for the following Keplerian data.
Decode 2-line elsets with the following key:
1 AAAAAU 00 0 0 BBBBB.BBBBBBBB .CCCCCCCC 00000-0 00000-0 0 DDDZ
2 AAAAA EEE.EEEE FFF.FFFF GGGGGGG HHH.HHHH III.IIII JJ.JJJJJJJJKKKKKZ
KEY: A-CATALOGNUM B-EPOCHTIME C-DECAY D-ELSETNUM E-INCLINATION F-RAAN
G-ECCENTRICITY H-ARGPERIGEE I-MNANOM J-MNMOTION K-ORBITNUM Z-CHECKSUM
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95352.41156457 .00002002 00000-0 33394-4 0 3669
2 16609 51.6455 314.8213 0006664 113.3581 246.8114 15.57512530561671
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95352.11682405 .00000342 00000-0 18633-4 0 07706
2 20580 28.4708 308.8452 0006777 67.6427 292.4860 14.90988790111385
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 95350.85159304 -.00000222 00000-0 10000-3 0 3948
2 14129 26.4373 233.4638 5977317 334.9617 5.3514 2.05883000 66090
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95352.14533100 .00000053 00000-0 41501-4 0 01586
2 18129 82.9232 283.0824 0010907 308.8577 51.1600 13.72360172425209
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 95351.97995727 .00000135 00000-0 30603-4 0 08550
2 14781 97.7872 345.9577 0011140 318.7837 41.2549 14.69409865630890
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95351.99661259 .00000046 00000-0 33218-4 0 08616
2 21089 82.9188 324.4512 0030558 23.2892 336.9638 13.74063638244016
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95351.59091375 .00000186 00000-0 61627-4 0 01244
2 19216 57.4228 146.6079 7358608 26.5501 357.0844 2.09726805026017
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95352.18693920 .00000007 00000-0 19396-4 0 01500
2 20437 98.5592 73.5141 0011975 20.2723 339.8938 14.29906793308044
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 95352.15170404 .00000022 00000-0 25483-4 0 09640
2 20439 98.5717 75.4088 0012176 21.4146 338.7560 14.29961564308059
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95352.12200776 .00000013 00000-0 21934-4 0 09631
2 20440 98.5732 75.9242 0012341 20.5109 339.6548 14.30103309308073
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95352.17799443 -.00000001 00000-0 16400-4 0 09574
2 20441 98.5730 75.9354 0013027 19.9645 340.2044 14.30073350308087
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95352.11749251 .00000006 00000-0 19221-4 0 09625
2 20442 98.5739 76.2972 0013134 19.7833 340.3852 14.30178941308094
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95352.17671600 -.00000040 00000-0 -19624-4 0 08507
2 20480 99.0578 46.4503 0540840 176.8048 183.6739 12.83232190274541
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95351.81240307 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 06657
2 21087 82.9367 96.6835 0036103 356.9773 3.1158 13.74562708244950
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95352.17968183 .00000005 00000-0 16015-4 0 06722
2 21575 98.3760 58.7657 0008481 86.8126 273.4032 14.37004795231923
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95352.08248148 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 05558
2 22077 66.0798 210.7428 0004463 348.6208 11.4708 12.86293886157386
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 95352.17462001 .00000116 00000-0 64097-4 0 04360
2 22828 98.5953 66.0261 0011198 30.7875 329.3948 14.28124068084134
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95352.15072521 -.00000031 00000-0 50907-5 0 04509
2 22826 98.6033 65.9604 0010181 45.8730 314.3289 14.27789751116020
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95352.14062923 .00000019 00000-0 25524-4 0 04503
2 22825 98.6029 65.8204 0009648 45.1334 315.0630 14.27682235116014
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95352.11873532 .00000036 00000-0 32011-4 0 04474
2 22829 98.5976 66.0186 0010915 32.3240 327.8663 14.28104827116040
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 23, 1995, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:14 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!brighton.openmarket.com!decwrl!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK073 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 26 Dec 1995 17:08:11 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk073.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10601 rec.radio.amateur.space:6019
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK073
ARLK073 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK98
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 73 ARLK073
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 26, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK073
ARLK073 Keplerian data
Thanks to NASA, AMSAT and WA5QGD for the following Keplerian data.
Decode 2-line elsets with the following key:
1 AAAAAU 00 0 0 BBBBB.BBBBBBBB .CCCCCCCC 00000-0 00000-0 0 DDDZ
2 AAAAA EEE.EEEE FFF.FFFF GGGGGGG HHH.HHHH III.IIII JJ.JJJJJJJJKKKKKZ
KEY: A-CATALOGNUM B-EPOCHTIME C-DECAY D-ELSETNUM E-INCLINATION F-RAAN
G-ECCENTRICITY H-ARGPERIGEE I-MNANOM J-MNMOTION K-ORBITNUM Z-CHECKSUM
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95355.17052551 .00003586 00000-0 54425-4 0 03986
2 16609 51.6452 300.9946 0006344 123.1295 237.0306 15.57533889562107
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 95350.85159304 -.00000222 00000-0 10000-3 0 3948
2 14129 26.4373 233.4638 5977317 334.9617 5.3514 2.05883000 66090
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95355.20747046 .00000043 00000-0 30514-4 0 1516
2 18129 82.9234 280.8191 0010582 299.1994 60.8105 13.72360264425622
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 95355.92950294 .00000152 00000-0 33576-4 0 8493
2 14781 97.7874 349.7246 0011000 305.5324 54.4867 14.69411492631470
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95354.98213245 .00000060 00000-0 48045-4 0 8537
2 21089 82.9191 322.2366 0030400 15.3063 344.9003 13.74063994244426
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95354.45165701 -.00000373 00000-0 68706-4 0 1230
2 19216 57.4246 146.0656 7360315 26.7547 357.0078 2.09731727 26076
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95355.19584280 .00000005 00000-0 18772-4 0 01675
2 20437 98.5593 76.4723 0011924 11.9187 348.2274 14.29907000308474
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95355.02553892 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01111
2 23439 64.8173 312.8232 0165954 230.4319 128.1845 11.27524006040589
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 95355.16049224 -.00000011 00000-0 12440-4 0 09579
2 20439 98.5717 78.3708 0012080 13.2875 346.8623 14.29961552308486
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95355.13049764 .00000036 00000-0 30658-4 0 09541
2 20440 98.5736 78.8888 0012419 11.7107 348.4374 14.30103790308508
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95355.18654751 -.00000012 00000-0 12232-4 0 9515
2 20441 98.5730 78.8988 0012826 12.2600 347.8895 14.30073338308516
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95355.12582317 -.00000023 00000-0 79962-5 0 09570
2 20442 98.5736 79.2599 0012957 12.1658 347.9805 14.30178863308525
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95355.13960277 -.00000061 00000-0 -68619-4 0 8430
2 20480 99.0573 48.8572 0541178 170.0902 191.1404 12.83231996274926
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95354.79684349 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 06644
2 21087 82.9380 94.4799 0036339 348.5783 11.4544 13.74562630245360
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95355.17374652 .00000003 00000-0 15277-4 0 06656
2 21575 98.3757 61.6789 0008535 79.6267 280.5883 14.37005097232351
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95355.03700169 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 05451
2 22077 66.0793 204.5565 0004259 348.0840 12.0077 12.86293852157764
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 95355.11721637 .00000006 00000-0 19736-4 0 04302
2 22828 98.5960 68.9242 0011102 23.0579 337.1096 14.28123523084555
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95355.16408438 .00000020 00000-0 25600-4 0 04466
2 22826 98.6029 68.9264 0010392 35.9576 324.2294 14.27790576116452
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95355.15421815 -.00000021 00000-0 90794-5 0 04434
2 22825 98.6028 68.7869 0009551 37.8027 322.3824 14.27682026116443
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95355.13143148 -.00000014 00000-0 11719-4 0 04426
2 22829 98.5976 68.9846 0010755 24.9744 335.1956 14.28104652116472
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 30, 1995, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:15 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!cs.utexas.edu!usc!chi-news.cic.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!dnaco.net!root
From: millerj@dnaco.net (Johnny Miller)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Best antennas for rs-15 ???/Rs-10 gives up.!!
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 1995 09:34:59 GMT
Organization: The Dayton Network Access Company (DNACo)
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <4bgig1$kn5@sisko.dnaco.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: @uhura-2.dnaco.net
Does any one have any comments or ideas on the best Tx and Rx antennas
for use with on Rs-15. Also we have noticed that Rs10 will stop Tx
about half way through a pass. It acts just like some one turned it
OFF. Please any ideas.
TIA
Mr. Satellite
RS-10/11/RS-15
N8RTW
Johnny Miller
millerj@dnaco.net
Middletown, Ohio area 442.425(+)B.A.E.R.S Machine
Dayton, Ohio area 145.490(-) = Drake Machine
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:16 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news-e1a.megaweb.com!pop.gnn.com!BKille
From: BKille@gnn.com (Bruce Kille)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best antennas for rs-15 ???/Rs-10 gives up.!!
Date: Sat, 23 Dec 1995 16:02:26
Organization: Megaweb
Lines: 41
Message-ID: <4bhqon$jue@news-e1a.megaweb.com>
References: <4bgig1$kn5@sisko.dnaco.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: @www-13-135.gnn.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
X-GNN-NewsServer-Posting-Date: 23 Dec 1995 21:02:15 GMT
X-Mailer: GNNmessenger 1.2
In article <4bgig1$kn5@sisko.dnaco.net> Johnny Miller wrote:
>Date: Sat, 23 Dec 1995 09:34:59 GMT
>From: millerj@dnaco.net (Johnny Miller)
>Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
>Subject: Best antennas for rs-15 ???/Rs-10 gives up.!!
>
>Does any one have any comments or ideas on the best Tx and Rx
>antennas
>for use with on Rs-15. Also we have noticed that Rs10 will stop Tx
>about half way through a pass. It acts just like some one turned
>it
>OFF. Please any ideas.
>TIA
>
>
>Mr. Satellite
>RS-10/11/RS-15
>N8RTW
>Johnny Miller
>millerj@dnaco.net
>Middletown, Ohio area 442.425(+)B.A.E.R.S Machine
>Dayton, Ohio area 145.490(-) = Drake Machine
>
Of course the best setup would be some sort of AZ/EL array...but
not many of us have that, especally for an HF downlink. I have
worked RS-10, RS-15, MIR, and several Shuttle missions using an
eleven element beam for 2meters and a two element beam for HF,
both mounted on the same mast and up only 25 ft. My point being
that it can be done with a modist station. I have noticed many
times on both the sats and shuttle that the apparent orentation
of their antennas makes a BIG difference and I have lost them
after only half the pass many times. So, if you can use beam
antennas and have access to a sat. tracking program, that is the
best way to go...but I have heard the RS birds on my dipole ok.
Just stay with it and keep trying...good luck OM.
73, Bruce WA4JAV
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:17 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net (Thomas Randall)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: connecting to MIR
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 95 12:24:03 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 36
Message-ID: <4bopif$g1m@over.mhv.net>
References: <4bnr3e$8j5@natasha.rmii.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port102.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
In article <4bnr3e$8j5@natasha.rmii.com>,
toml@rmii.com (Tom Levendusky Jr.) wrote:
>Who do you connect to when connecting to the MIR? Is it R╪MIR or
>R╪MIR-1? How do you know that you are connected? Just your computer
>saying that you are connected or do you get a conformation from MIR?
>One last question, who do you send the QSL card to?
>Thanks
>73 Tom N╪MWY
>
When you connect to R0MIR (via packet) your connecting to the keyboard
for a live QSO. After 2100utc no one is at the radio station. You'll get a
hello type message. When you connect to R0MIR-1 your connected to the
PBBS. The PBBS can only accept 1 connect at a time. The keyboard can
accept 7 at a time. You'll know when you connect to either port. Just
watch you screen.In the U.S. there's a NEW Mir QSL card manager:
N6JLH
Dave Larsen
P.O.Box 1501
Pine Grove, Calif. 95665
The cosmonauts DO use voice mode but not that often. Tom Reiter's call
is DP0MIR. Listen BEFORE you call in either mode to see what mode they are
in first!
Good Luck!
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and they are not that of MHV.NET!
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:18 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!nntp.news.primenet.com!news.primenet.com!news.primenet.com!not-for-mail
From: kc7gnm@primenet.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: EQUIPMENT ON MIR...
Date: 23 Dec 1995 14:06:09 -0700
Organization: Primenet Services for the Internet
Lines: 15
Sender: root@primenet.com
Message-ID: <4bhr02$qsu@nntp3.news.primenet.com>
References: <4beodm$qsf@sloth.swcp.com>
Reply-To: kc7gnm@primenet.com
X-Posted-By: ip157.fhu.primenet.com
X-Newsreader: IBM NewsReader/2 v1.2.5
In <4beodm$qsf@sloth.swcp.com>, n5zgt@swcp.com (Brian Mileshosky) writes:
>Hello Everybody,
> Just curious as to what kind of Amateur Radio equipment Mir has. I
>connected a couple times yesterday on packet. Also, has anybody heard
>Mir on its voice freq? What are the uplink and downlink freqs it is
>using?
Don't know what type of equipment either. I just connected to r0mir-1 about
10 min ago. I have read that the two voice freqs of 145.800 and 145.200 are
simplex.
73 de KC7GNM
Greg
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:19 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.zeitgeist.net!bdt.com!miwok!well!pacbell.com!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: sfylaqc@scfn.THpl.lib.fl.US (richard smith)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Ham-Space Digest V95 #369
Date: 26 Dec 95 05:15:39 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 2
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91.951226001515.14151X-100000@scfn>
References: <199512251230.EAA05564@mail.ucsd.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
unsubscribe
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:20 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.compuserve.com!news.production.compuserve.com!news
From: Brian Webb <102670.1206@CompuServe.COM>
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amsat,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.shortwave
Subject: MFJ-1270C WEFAX Reception
Date: 24 Dec 1995 00:49:59 GMT
Organization: Umbra Research
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4bi83n$jaj$2@mhadg.production.compuserve.com>
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13318 rec.radio.amateur.misc:95963 rec.radio.amateur.space:6009 rec.radio.shortwave:67804
I just purchased an MFJ-1270C TNC. It has HF weather FAX
capability, but the user manual says virtually nothing about how
to use this feature. Does anybody know how to command the unit
for WEFAX reception and the tuning offset to use with my HF
receiver?
73s
Brian Webb, KD6NRP
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:21 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!braintree!news.concourse.com!ragnarok.oar.net!malgudi.oar.net!caen!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.dfw.net!fw58.dfw.net!user
From: wday@dfw.net (Wayne Day)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR Christmas Greetings audio files
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 1995 22:43:45 -0600
Organization: The Day Organization
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <wday-2612952243450001@fw58.dfw.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 198.175.15.157
Two files containing a 1:08 recording of German astronaut Thomas Reiter,
DF4TR/DP0MIR, and his Christmas greetings from the Russian MIR spacecraft,
have been uploaded to CompuServe's HamNet Forum, and AMSAT's ftp site.
The two files are available in AIFF-C format (approx .5 meg in size) or
WAV format (approx 1.6 megabytes of data) [note: the differences is the
3:1 compression of the AIFF-C format!].
On CompuServe, the files are MIR.AIF and MIR.WAV and are located in
Library 5 of HamNet, the satellite library.
On ftp.amsat.org, we'll have to see where Paul, KB5MU, puts the files.
The recording is a 22.3 kHz sample rate, with fairly good quality,
recorded at KF5ZC's north Texas QTH on 25 Dec 95 at 0540 UTC on 145.800.
It was the only pass that I heard the prerecorded greetings.
73 & Merry Christmas
Wayne KF5ZC
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wayne Day KF5ZC Fort Worth,Texas,USA kf5zc@amsat.org |
CompuServe: 76703,376 76703.376@CompuServe.Com | ,__o
wday@dfw.net |--\_<,
Member: Bicycle Mobile Hams of America (*)/'(*)
For info on BMHA or the BIKEHAM mailing list: Finger KF5ZC@dfw.net
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:22 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.kei.com!nntp.coast.net!news.net99.net!news.localnet.com!usenet
From: "Peter C. McNulty" <wa1sov@localnet.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.packet,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,re
Subject: Re: New Ham Web Site with Information Content
Date: 25 Dec 1995 16:53:54 GMT
Organization: LocalNet Corporation
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <4bmkv2$6d5@prometheus.localnet.com>
References: <medcalf-1412952119580001@idts1lw19.idir.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp11.conn.localnet.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Macintosh; I; 68K)
X-URL: news:medcalf-1412952119580001@idts1lw19.idir.net
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:18015 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13336 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:23055 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:12367 rec.radio.amateur.misc:96046 rec.radio.amateur.policy:32335 rec.radio.amateur.space:6015
Also see WEB Site at for interesting Ham Radio
Links.URL:http://www.localnet.com/~wa1sov/
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:23 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.accessone.com!news
From: vbook@vbook.com (Ed Mitchell)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.packet,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,re
Subject: Re: New Ham Web Site with Information Content
Date: 27 Dec 1995 22:27:56 GMT
Organization: Virtual Publishing Co.
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <4bsh9c$ft9@news.accessone.com>
References: <medcalf-1412952119580001@idts1lw19.idir.net> <4bmkv2$6d5@prometheus.localnet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: vbook.accessone.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.5
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:18067 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13357 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:23128 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:12399 rec.radio.amateur.misc:96136 rec.radio.amateur.policy:32348 rec.radio.amateur.space:6028
In article <4bmkv2$6d5@prometheus.localnet.com>, wa1sov@localnet.com says...
>
>Also see WEB Site at for interesting Ham Radio
>Links.URL:http://www.localnet.com/~wa1sov/
>
>
Check out Ham Radio Online at
http://www.accessone.com/~vbook/hronline.htm
Newsletters, Feature Stories, Real-time solar and radio propagation conditions
,
real-time disaster communications news (world wide earthquake, volcanic and
severe weather reports). In short, real content, not just pointers to
hyperspace.
73, Ed, KF7VY
------------------------
personal email to vbook@vbook.com
Visit Ham Radio Online, it's free, at
http://www.accessone.com/~vbook/hronline.htm
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:24 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.compuserve.com!news.production.compuserve.com!news
From: Brian Webb <102670.1206@CompuServe.COM>
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amsat,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Packet Satellite Baud Rates
Date: 24 Dec 1995 00:44:21 GMT
Organization: Umbra Research
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <4bi7p5$jaj$1@mhadg.production.compuserve.com>
I just purchased the stock version of the MFJ1270C TNC-2 Packet
Controller. The maximum data rate is 1200 baud. Can I work any of
the amateur radio packet satellites with only 1200 baud and 6
Watts using FM narrow mode?
If yes, which satellites and how do I work them?
73s
Brian Webb, KD6NRP
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:25 1995
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amsat,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!peer-news.britain.eu.net!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Packet Satellite Baud Rates
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DK3GFF.IC5@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <4bi7p5$jaj$1@mhadg.production.compuserve.com>
Date: Sun, 24 Dec 1995 14:04:27 GMT
Lines: 19
In <4bi7p5$jaj$1@mhadg.production.compuserve.com> Brian Webb <102670.1206@Comp
uServe.COM> writes:
>I just purchased the stock version of the MFJ1270C TNC-2 Packet
>Controller. The maximum data rate is 1200 baud. Can I work any of
>the amateur radio packet satellites with only 1200 baud and 6
>Watts using FM narrow mode?
No. The packet satellites that you can "work" use either 1200 bps PSK
(for which you need an SSB transceiver) or 9600 bps FSK.
The exception is Dove, which transmits 1200 bps AFSK telemetry on 145.825.
However, that is receive-only and gets boring pretty quickly...
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:26 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!ionews.ionet.net!usenet
From: Hank Blackstock <wa5jrh@ionet.net>
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amsat,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Packet Satellite Baud Rates
Date: 25 Dec 1995 04:31:54 GMT
Organization: IONet
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4bl9fq$ocu@ionews.ionet.net>
References: <4bi7p5$jaj$1@mhadg.production.compuserve.com> <DK3GFF.IC5@pe1chl.ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: osip05.ionet.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2N (Windows; I; 32bit)
To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen) wrote:
>
>The exception is Dove, which transmits 1200 bps AFSK telemetry on 145.825.
There is also the space station MIR and some of the shuttle
missions that utilize 1200 bps AFSK packet.
&3 Hank WA5JRH
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:27 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!europa.chnt.gtegsc.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!decwrl!pagesat.net!sloth.swcp.com!usenet
From: n5zgt@swcp.com (Brian Mileshosky)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: PacSats --- HOW?
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 15:44:29 GMT
Organization: Southwest Cyberport
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <4ben92$qsf@sloth.swcp.com>
Reply-To: n5zgt@swcp.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp1.swcp.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent v0.55
Hello Everybody,
I was wondering what it takes to get on some of the packet
satellites. I do not have much satellite equipment, but I'm really
interested in it all.
Are there any satellites that use 2 meter FM up and 440 FM down (Or
vice-versa)? All other info would be greatly appreciated!
Merry Christmas!
Best of 73,
Brian, N5ZGT...
________________________________________________________________________
Boy Scouts of America Amateur Radio
J.A.S.M. - Troop 41 Call: N5ZGT
Albuquerque, NM Packet: N5ZGT @ KC5IZT.ALBQ.NM.USA.NA
Great Southwest Council Internet: n5zgt@swcp.com
O.A. Lodge 66
________________________________________________________________________
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:28 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!newsfeed.internetmci.com!chi-news.cic.net!usc!news.cerf.net!nntp-server.caltech.edu!news.ridgecrest.ca.us!not-for-mail
From: caseycct@ridgecrest.ca.us (caseycct)
Subject: Re: PacSats --- HOW?
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: owens
Message-ID: <DK0IBy.6xn@ridgecrest.ca.us>
Lines: 20
Sender: usenet@ridgecrest.ca.us (Ridgenet Usenet admin)
Organization: RidgeNet - SLIP/PPP Internet, Ridgecrest, CA. (619) 371-3501
References: <4ben92$qsf@sloth.swcp.com>
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 23:52:46 GMT
Brian Mileshosky (n5zgt@swcp.com) wrote:
> Hello Everybody,
> I was wondering what it takes to get on some of the packet
> satellites. I do not have much satellite equipment, but I'm really
> interested in it all.
> Are there any satellites that use 2 meter FM up and 440 FM down (Or
> vice-versa)? All other info would be greatly appreciated!
> Merry Christmas!
> Best of 73,
> Brian, N5ZGT...
see
www.amsat.org
--
Erik van Bronkhorst
CW/KotGT DoD#4342585443 AMA#438054
caseycct@owens.ridgecrest.ca.us
ftp://www.ridgecrest.ca.us/pub/users/caseycct/erik.html
kc6uut@wa6ybn.#soca.ca.usa.na
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:29 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!winternet.com!guitar.sound.net!news
From: Chuck Freeman <cfreeman@sound.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Satellite Decoding
Date: 23 Dec 1995 13:55:05 GMT
Organization: Sound Advice Limited's Internet Access for KC
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <4bh1np$dsj@guitar.sound.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: max3-43.sound.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 16bit)
I am using a A&A Engineering satellite decoder for the low orbiting sat's whil
e
running Dr. Taggarts 'WSHFAX' program on my PC. Does anyone know if the any ve
rsion
of the JVFAX programs can be used with this interface. The interface is decode
d thru
the parallel printer port. I am aware that the JVFAX ver 7.0 has a parallel op
tion
but according to waht I have found out the pins of the parallel interface that
are
being used are used (status lines) are not the same ones that the JVFAX softwa
re
monitors (data lines).
Any help would be appreciated!!!
73's
WD0ASJ
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:30 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!lamarck.sura.net!news.uky.edu!news
From: Tfugate@pop.uky.edu (Terry Fugate)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellite Decoding
Date: 23 Dec 1995 15:47:35 GMT
Organization: IT
Lines: 52
Message-ID: <4bh8an$aek@service2.uky.edu>
References: <4bh1np$dsj@guitar.sound.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 128.163.120.82
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.92.6
In article <4bh1np$dsj@guitar.sound.net>, Chuck Freeman <cfreeman@sound.net> s
ays:
>
>I am using a A&A Engineering satellite decoder for the low orbiting sat's whi
le
>running Dr. Taggarts 'WSHFAX' program on my PC. Does anyone know if the any v
ersion
>of the JVFAX programs can be used with this interface. The interface is decod
ed thru
>the parallel printer port. I am aware that the JVFAX ver 7.0 has a parallel o
ption
>but according to waht I have found out the pins of the parallel interface tha
t are
>being used are used (status lines) are not the same ones that the JVFAX softw
are
>monitors (data lines).
>
>Any help would be appreciated!!!
>
>73's
>
>WD0ASJ
>
>
Yes. The A&A wefax board will work with JVFAX 7.0. I was never able to
get it to work the way the JVFAX suggested. I used the 5 input(status)
line to the printer port. I do not have the data wiht me and this
university will be shut down for the next week.(we get back on jan2)
The only problem wiht using the status inputs is that you must invert
one of them, the highest binary number. I will send you the full scoop
on the 2nd but if you are in a hurry(and who isn't?) just pull your spec
sheet out for the printer port, make a cable to bring out the 5 status
lines, (and a ground). I used 5 spst mini toggle swithes and 5 1 k pull
up resistors(to a +5v source). Wire up each lead to the pull up and wire
the switchs so that you can force that input lo. Run jvfax and
look at the "tune indicator"(after setting up jvfax to look at the right
printer address you want the input not the output). As you open and
close switches you will see the "inidcator" move. It took me about
30 minutes to map out what lead did what. It took another night of
thinking to realize that on line is inverted inside the printer card.
I use on section of a ttl ls hex inverter to drive that line. I also
had to bypass the A&A output ic and drive the port (and the single
inverter) wiht the direct out put of the ADC.
This will give you 32 shades of grey.(2^5=32). I have found a "real IBM"
printer card and think I have figuered out how to get a full 8Bits of
input. IF this works I will post the results here, and Email the
directions to you. I have a sams photofact diagram of the "IBM" card.
You could also use basic and write a program to look at the printer
input port and note the numbers returned as the program loops and
you change the switches.
I sure wish that I had ssen this yesterday, as I would have been able
to bring in the data that you need. Hang in their, if I could decipher
this, anyone can. Just don't give up. 73 ran an artical several years
ago that used the printer port for i/o control. You might try to
scrounge that artical up, it gives all three common printer port
addresses and shows how the ouput and input ports can be written to and
read.
Good Luck. I hope this has not rambled to much and that you find the
information usefull.
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:31 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!lamarck.sura.net!news.uky.edu!news
From: Tfugate@pop.uky.edu (Terry Fugate)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellite Decoding
Date: 24 Dec 1995 15:02:26 GMT
Organization: IT
Lines: 52
Message-ID: <4bjq22$f0i@service2.uky.edu>
References: <4bh1np$dsj@guitar.sound.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 128.163.120.82
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.92.6
In article <4bh1np$dsj@guitar.sound.net>, Chuck Freeman <cfreeman@sound.net> s
ays:
>
>I am using a A&A Engineering satellite decoder for the low orbiting sat's whi
le
>running Dr. Taggarts 'WSHFAX' program on my PC. Does anyone know if the any v
ersion
>of the JVFAX programs can be used with this interface. The interface is decod
ed thru
>the parallel printer port. I am aware that the JVFAX ver 7.0 has a parallel o
ption
>but according to waht I have found out the pins of the parallel interface tha
t are
>being used are used (status lines) are not the same ones that the JVFAX softw
are
>monitors (data lines).
>
>Any help would be appreciated!!!
>
>73's
>
>WD0ASJ
>
Well here I am back at work 8 days early(wrapping presents for the Famimly
and I know they can not find me here....
Ok there are 3 main (semi-standard) printer addresses..
LPT1/2 LPT1 LPT2/3
DATA BYTE 378(888)3BC(956)278(632)
STATUS 379(889)3BD(957)279(633)
OUTPUT 37A(890)3B3(958)27A(634)
FIRST IS HEX IN()DECIMAL
printer connector
11=b7(inverted)
10=b6
12=b5
13=b4
15=b3
b=bit number ,b3 is the lowest(lsb) and b7 is the highest(msb)
bits 0,1,2 are locked hi internaly(thats why I needed a real IBM card,
I am going to cut traces etc)
I also have a problem in that the adc0804(adc) does not always get
reset on power up. I added a switch to pull pin 1 to +5v.
feed the output of the adc to the printer port..
adc 18>15
17>13
16>12
15>10
16>inverter>11
go to configuration and set to 5bits parallel port,my port (lpt1)is
3bd(957), you may hve to try all three status ports.
Good luck and I hope this helps.
Merry Christmas and a happy new year.
If this doesn't work go wiht the simple 74q comparator and use the
exar 2206(?) vco to drive it. Works fairly well, check out his diagrams
if this last part doesn't make any sense.
later
Terry
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:32 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!quagga.ru.ac.za!ucthpx!iafrica.com!ticsa.com!cstatd.cstat.co.za!usenet
From: Sean McDonald <seanmcd@iaccess.za>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Sound Blaster 16 as a DSP unit ?
Date: 27 Dec 1995 20:29:35 GMT
Organization: Internet Africa
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4bsabf$cal@grovel.iafrica.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slipper119246.iafrica.com
Hi. Does anyone have any information / programmes on the use
of the Creative Labs Sound Blaster 16 as a DSP unit, similar
to the MFJ-784 ?
I would appreciate any information / programmes info related
to this. Information of DSP ?
Thanks, 73s
Sean McDonald, ZS5TM
email:seanmcd@iaccess.za
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:33 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net (Thomas Randall)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: SSTV from MIR?
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 95 12:26:02 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <4bopm6$g1m@over.mhv.net>
References: <4bmtlu$4t4@ionews.ionet.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port102.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
In article <4bmtlu$4t4@ionews.ionet.net>,
Hank Blackstock <wa5jrh@ionet.net> wrote:
>I read somewhere that Mir had been transmitting some SSTV. Can
>anyone advise if this is still true and which frequency and
>schedule if available.
>
>Thanks es 73, Hank
>
Mir WILL be doing SSTV in the near future. Not right now though.
More equipment will be on it's way soon for 70cm packet too.
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and they are not that of MHV.NET!
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:34 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!news.sprintlink.net!ionews.ionet.net!usenet
From: Hank Blackstock <wa5jrh@ionet.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: SSTV from MIR?
Date: 25 Dec 1995 19:22:38 GMT
Organization: IONet
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <4bmtlu$4t4@ionews.ionet.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: osip85.ionet.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
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X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2N (Windows; I; 32bit)
I read somewhere that Mir had been transmitting some SSTV. Can
anyone advise if this is still true and which frequency and
schedule if available.
Thanks es 73, Hank
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:35 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.voicenet.com!netnews.upenn.edu!Lehigh.EDU!Lehigh.EDU!not-for-mail
From: c002@Lehigh.EDU
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: SSTV from MIR?
Date: 25 Dec 1995 15:03:48 -0500
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <4bn034$r21@ns4-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ns4-1.cc.lehigh.edu
In article <4bmtlu$4t4@ionews.ionet.net>, Hank Blackstock <wa5jrh@ionet.net> w
ri
tes:
>I read somewhere that Mir had been transmitting some SSTV. Can
>anyone advise if this is still true and which frequency and
>schedule if available.
>
>Thanks es 73, Hank
I hope its on, 2m fm!! :)
if anydoes have info, please send it this way too!!!
DAvid
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
| David Roseman | c002@lehigh.edu OUTTA ORDER!
| | Saucon Valley Sen. HS | |
| SysOp of NODE 3 BBS | The Flying HAm - BBS | |
| Running OBV/2 Software | Technomage - BBS | |
| | N3SQE/1 - HAm V |
| | N3SQE@Nxxxx.FNxxxx.PA.USA.NA - Packet |
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:36 1995
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!online!wb3ffv!news.scn.org!scn.org!bd703
From: bd703@scn.org (SCN User)
Subject: STS-74 heard/worked lists
Message-ID: <DK86wz.75x@scn.org>
Sender: news@scn.org
Reply-To: bd703@scn.org (SCN User)
Organization: Seattle Community Network
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 1995 03:26:58 GMT
Lines: 10
Does anyone have the heard/worked lists for STS-74?
Kerwin, N7JGW
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#
bd703@scn.org # History is a thing of the past.
#
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:36 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.internetMCI.com!news-admin
From: bsmith@msn.com (Bob Smith)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TM455 for sat work???
Date: 26 Dec 1995 18:49:19 GMT
Organization: InternetMCI
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4bpg3f$hus@news.internetmci.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: usr1-dialup15.atlanta.mci.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.5
Have a chance to pick up a Kenwood TM455 for a song. Any opinions on this rig
for SAT work. Need to get the 430 side covered.
Thanks in advance for any info.
--
Bob Smith, Atlanta, GA
n3ftu@amsat.org
TAPR 5412 ARRL
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:38 1995
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: ando1@ix.netcom.com(Johnny B. Goode )
Newsgroups: misc.forsale,rec.radio.swap,sci.electronics,sci.engr.manufacturing,sci.med.radiology,sci.engr.chem,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.space,rec.radio.amateur.equipment
Subject: VARIAN MICROWAVE AMPS and related gear MUST SELL or TRADE
Date: 24 Dec 1995 22:44:13 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <4bkl3t$hh7@ixnews3.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: atl-ga6-11.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Sun Dec 24 2:44:13 PM PST 1995
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.swap:53818 sci.electronics:163494 sci.engr.manufacturing:9349 sci.med.radiology:4342 sci.engr.chem:11896 rec.radio.amateur.space:6013 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:23033
FOR SALE- OR TRADE::
Varian VZX6983G5GLM 8-12.4 ghz 53db gain 200watt Xband amp (new)
$16,000.
Varian VZM6993051505 12-18ghz 53db gain 200watt KU band amp
(new)$13,000.
Varian VZX6981KADEH 8-12.4ghz 40db gain 20 watt Xband amp(1007
hrs.)$7,500.
L&R Communications low noise amp local controle & monitor
Scientific Atlanta Antenna Motor Controler Mod.# 8841A
Arbiter Systems Satelite Controled clock mod.#1026B
LAMDA LFS-44-48
Digital H7100A
Scientific Atlanta 3267260 mod.#4663R
" " Digital Processing Unit mod.#7325
" " Signal Source mod.#2180
" "Power Amp 3080 Pedestal
Datum Digital Clock
Texas Instruments XDS/22 Illuminator
12 Schlumberger Test Fixture Kit cases
Canoga Perkins fiber optics Bus Interface
Aerotech 1000 D.C. Permanent Magnet Servo Motor
560sq.ft. S.C.I.F.(secure compartemented information facility)3
rooms,all electronic filters,etc...
Frequency West mod.MO-109XB-17 serial 320 1435omhz
Midwest Microwave mod1044 Step Athenuator D.C. 8.0ghz
Dishes,300' wave guid,and alot more 770-726-5548-dig.pager
Ready to make Package deal !!! 770-279-9507-hm.# after Dec. 29th
Must move,any interesting trades???
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:38 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.oz.net!news.wwa.com!cline.com!jburnett
From: jburnett@cline.com (John A. Burnett)
Newsgroups: sci.electronics,sci.engr.manufacturing,sci.med.radiology,sci.engr.chem,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.space
Subject: Re: VARIAN MICROWAVE AMPS and related gear MUST SELL or TRADE
Date: 27 Dec 1995 02:45:40 GMT
Organization: Centerline Equipment Corporation
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4bqc0k$ph8@kirin.wwa.com>
References: <4bkl3t$hh7@ixnews3.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: redbrick.cline.com
Xref: news.epix.net sci.electronics:163699 sci.engr.manufacturing:9365 sci.med.radiology:4360 sci.engr.chem:11912 rec.radio.amateur.space:6025
In article <4bkl3t$hh7@ixnews3.ix.netcom.com>,
Johnny B. Goode <ando1@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>
> FOR SALE- OR TRADE::
>Varian VZX6983G5GLM 8-12.4 ghz 53db gain 200watt Xband amp (new)
>$16,000.
snip.............................
Dear Mr. Goode,
You're advertising in newsgroups that were not set up for
advertising.
John Burnett
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:40 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!howland.reston.ans.net!nntp.crl.com!decwrl!amd!netcomsv!uu4news.netcom.com!netcomsv!uu3news.netcom.com!ix.netcom.com!netnews
From: "Bernard A. Poskus and Cheryl A. Blehm-Poskus" <hamdan@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
Date: 22 Dec 1995 05:53:10 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <4bdh46$qn5@ixnews6.ix.netcom.com>
References: <4ag5mh$lgs@mesa5.mesa.colorado.edu> <4aod1a$jqf@cloner2.ix.netcom.com> <DJwGHv.5HK@eskimo.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ix-den8-16.ix.netcom.com
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X-NETCOM-Date: Thu Dec 21 9:53:10 PM PST 1995
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 16bit)
To: mail.eskimo.com
Tom: Glad to hear that you've had good luck with the FT-736R as well.
It is true that the Yaesu does not come automatically ready for 9600 baud
operation. However, I understand that the necessary modifications are
not too difficult, and the 736 does a FB job on all other satellite
functions.
Sorry that you won't see me on the 9600 baud birds for a while. At
least not till I get some yagis (and that won't happen for a while).
Take care and 73's de Bernie, KF0QS AO-16, LO-19
From Unknown Wed Dec 27 18:15:40 1995
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!news.sandia.gov!tesuque.cs.sandia.gov!ferrari.mst6.lanl.gov!newshost.lanl.gov!usenet
From: kc5egg@eule.lanl.gov
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Which Rig for 2m and 70 cm?
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 95 13:38:13 MST
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4bf5la$q2o@newshost.lanl.gov>
References: <4bdh46$qn5@ixnews6.ix.netcom.com>
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X-Newsreader: NEWTNews & Chameleon -- TCP/IP for MS Windows from NetManage
Bernie,
All the 9600 baud birds are LEOs and don't need a lot of signal.
Many people use rather simple antenna systems for 9600 with reasonable
success. I am currently setting up a mobile demo station with two egg
beater turnstiles and a pre-amp on the 440 side. I expect to be able
to get most passes over 20 degrees with this setup. Another project
in the hopper is to use a mobile radio scanning over a very short
frequency range as a receiver. This should take care of the doppler
without a computer. You don't need a multi kilobuck station that just
makes it easier.
73 Happy Holidays Jerry
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:38 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!van-bc!news.rmii.com!usenet
From: toml@rmii.com (Tom Levendusky Jr.)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: connecting to MIR
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 1995 04:45:47 GMT
Organization: Rocky Mountain Internet Inc.
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <4bnr3e$8j5@natasha.rmii.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip364.rmii.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Who do you connect to when connecting to the MIR? Is it R╪MIR or
R╪MIR-1? How do you know that you are connected? Just your computer
saying that you are connected or do you get a conformation from MIR?
One last question, who do you send the QSL card to?
Thanks
73 Tom N╪MWY
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:38 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!agate!library.ucla.edu!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: sfylaqc@scfn.THpl.lib.fl.US (richard smith)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Ham-Space Digest V95 #368
Date: 26 Dec 95 05:00:19 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91.951225235959.14151D-100000@scfn>
References: <199512241230.EAA16760@mail.ucsd.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
unsubscribe
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:39 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.kei.com!nntp.coast.net!news00.sunet.se!sunic!news99.sunet.se!newsfeed.tip.net!peroni.ita.tip.net!news-server.italia.com!maggiore.dsnet.it!usenet
From: info@mopa.global.it (Roberto Manderioli)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: IC-820H suitable for satellite ?
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 1995 03:12:04 GMT
Organization: DSnet - Internet Provider - Bologna Italy
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <4bpds3$j4i@maggiore.dsnet.it>
Reply-To: info@mopa.global.it
NNTP-Posting-Host: mopa.global.it
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent v0.55
Hello everybody
I read semewhere that ICOM IC-820H is not so good for satellite
traffic.....(I mean SSB communications via OSCAR-13).
Is it true ? I hope not as I'm going to buy one!
Thank you in advance
IK4JQW Roberto Manderioli
info@mopa.global.it
FERRARA - ITALY
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:40 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!news.sprintlink.net!worldlinx.com!news.worldlinx.com!news
From: jcorby@headwaters.com (John Corby)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Xmas on Mir
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 1995 14:43:27 GMT
Organization: WorldLinx Telecommunications Inc.
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <4brlt2$238@news.worldlinx.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: remote_126.headwaters.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
The following recorded message was received from Mir on Christmas Eve:
"Hello you people on Earth, this is not Santa Claus yet, this is the
Russian space station Mir calling - crew 20.
As you all on Earth, we are celebrating Christmas Eve today here in
Earth orbit, and we wish you all a Merry Christmas and a peaceful and
happy new year, and I will hand you over now to Yuri who will also
direct some words to you:
------------------Message in Russian------------------
All the best to you once again, Merry Christmas, Frolische
Weihnachten, 73 and bye-bye."
This message was recorded by German cosmonaut Thomas Reiter and was
heard every four minutes during passes over my QTH (near Toronto,
Canada) on 145.800 MHz.
---------------------------------
John Corby
Toronto, Canada
Moderator, HearSat-L mailing list.
jcorby@headwaters.com
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:41 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!news.sprintlink.net!worldlinx.com!news.worldlinx.com!news
From: jcorby@headwaters.com (John Corby)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Packet/Mir
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 1995 14:43:34 GMT
Organization: WorldLinx Telecommunications Inc.
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4brlt8$238@news.worldlinx.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: remote_126.headwaters.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
For those of us whose interests lie in merely receiving signals from
space, can anybody monitoring this newsgroup explain how to hear the
difference between packet traffic uplinking to ROMIR, and packet
traffic downlinking from ROMIR?
By "hear", I literally mean listening to the signal over the
receiver's speaker.
----------------------------------
John Corby
Toronto, Canada
Moderator, HearSat-L mailing list
jcorby@headwaters.com
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:42 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!lamarck.sura.net!news.uky.edu!news
From: Tfugate@pop.uky.edu (Terry Fugate)
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amsat,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.shortwave
Subject: Re: MFJ-1270C WEFAX Reception
Date: 27 Dec 1995 18:19:48 GMT
Organization: IT
Lines: 39
Message-ID: <4bs2o4$h20@service2.uky.edu>
References: <4bi83n$jaj$2@mhadg.production.compuserve.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 128.163.120.82
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.92.6
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:13391 rec.radio.amateur.misc:96233 rec.radio.amateur.space:6043 rec.radio.shortwave:68100
In article <4bi83n$jaj$2@mhadg.production.compuserve.com>, Brian Webb <102670.
1206@CompuServe.COM> says:
>
>I just purchased an MFJ-1270C TNC. It has HF weather FAX
>capability, but the user manual says virtually nothing about how
>to use this feature. Does anybody know how to command the unit
>for WEFAX reception and the tuning offset to use with my HF
>receiver?
>
>73s
>
>Brian Webb, KD6NRP
If the MFJ1270c is anything like the MFJ1278, the wefax reception is
pathetic. Black and white with NO resolution. Check out you
disk that came with the tnc. In the 1278 the command is something
like mode fax NNNN where NNN is the type of fax. I don't have my manual
here(at work)but I will look up the exact command and what program
I had to use.
A much better approach is to download JVFAX 7.0 from either the ARRL,
Amsat, of(I think) the oakland ftp sites. It is near freeware, Works
GREAT and uses a simple uA741 powered by, and "talking" to a Asynch/comm
port. Costs less than $5.oo us if you buy everything new. It is really
the best way to go. Hamcom is another good(though not as gooda as JVFAX
in my opinion). If you have a "real" or 100% compatable Sound blaster,
you could try WXMAN2. It does a good job just by feeding the sb card
with audio.
8080KHz is the best place to start. Nam is on every night as of a couple
of weeks ago. I guess they will keep on the air even if the Feds can't
get their budget togather.
None of the above programs can receive NOAA wx sat fax with out some work.
JVFAX has a diagram for a WX sat am to fm fax converter. It uses an exar
2201?(check out the diagram), and while it is best to build a "real" am
fax demod, you can get impressive results by feeding the output of the
exar to any of the above programs.
Good luck
Email me if you have any questions, I won't be back on unitl jan 2, 1996.
(unless I end up in here for something else)
WEFAX is great fun, do not get discouraged by any intitial hassels. Hang
in there. It will be worth it.
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:43 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!torn!govonca3!pepperb
From: pepperb@gov.on.ca (Brien Pepperdine)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Receive antenna preamp designs
Date: 27 Dec 1995 20:56:04 GMT
Organization: Government of Ontario
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <4bsbt4$4ai@govonca3.gov.on.ca>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 192.75.156.245
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #12 (NOV)
I am curious as to if anyone has any sources for some good antenna preamp
designs (as might be in some old backissues of QST, CQ or HamRadio, or
73; as I have a reference library available with most of those). We are
interested getting a bit of nice signal amplification on the receiving
antenna for RS12 reception (hence 29.408 region). Not all that keen on
too intense antenna designs at this point, but if you have modest ideas
we are interested. I have not at all even looked at the ARRL handbook,
antenna book or anything at all, so I should do so.
But one member of our club is a bit further ahead than I and asked me to
see if I could get an idea what he could do to preamp his receive antenna.
Otherwise, thanks for ideas and directions. I see a lot of stuff at the
AMSAT and some other web pages - very helpful indeed.
Thanks
Brien
Toronto
for the Durham Region QRP Club (space interested sub-set)
pepperb@gov.on.ca
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:44 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!news.sprintlink.net!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net (Thomas Randall)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Packet/Mir
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 95 21:23:14 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <4bsdhn$c3b@over.mhv.net>
References: <4brlt8$238@news.worldlinx.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port132.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
In article <4brlt8$238@news.worldlinx.com>,
jcorby@headwaters.com (John Corby) wrote:
>For those of us whose interests lie in merely receiving signals from
>space, can anybody monitoring this newsgroup explain how to hear the
>difference between packet traffic uplinking to ROMIR, and packet
>traffic downlinking from ROMIR?
>
>By "hear", I literally mean listening to the signal over the
>receiver's speaker.
>
>----------------------------------
>John Corby
>Toronto, Canada
>Moderator, HearSat-L mailing list
>jcorby@headwaters.com
>
You cannot tell the difference in packet signals via speaker audio.
Both sound the same. Sorry. Thanks to N6JLH I finally got my Mir QSL card!
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and they are not that of MHV.NET!
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:45 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.iadfw.net!usenet
From: Wesley <wesley29@server.iadfw.net>
Newsgroups: sci.electronics,sci.engr.manufacturing,sci.med.radiology,sci.engr.chem,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.space
Subject: Re: VARIAN MICROWAVE AMPS and related gear MUST SELL or TRADE
Date: Wed, 27 Dec 1995 21:31:11 -0800
Organization: customer of Internet America
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <30E22B9F.5110@server.iadfw.net>
References: <4bkl3t$hh7@ixnews3.ix.netcom.com> <4bqc0k$ph8@kirin.wwa.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dal20-25.ppp.iadfw.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0b2a (Windows; I; 16bit)
To: "John A. Burnett" <jburnett@cline.com>
Xref: news.epix.net sci.electronics:163816 sci.engr.manufacturing:9378 sci.med.radiology:4367 sci.engr.chem:11918 rec.radio.amateur.space:6030
Funny I did not see a notice posted when I entered. Did some die and
appoint you King? Or do you view your life as the protector of small
news groups?
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:47 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!nntp1.jpl.nasa.gov!netline-fddi.jpl.nasa.gov!kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov!baalke
From: baalke@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov (Ron Baalke)
Newsgroups: sci.astro,alt.sci.planetary,sci.astro.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mars Relay Flight Test - Public May Participate!
Date: 28 Dec 1995 00:56 UT
Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Lines: 35
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <28DEC199500564811@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
Xref: news.epix.net sci.astro:110359 alt.sci.planetary:8850 sci.astro.amateur:23660 rec.radio.amateur.space:6031
MGS MARS RELAY FLIGHT TEST
The Public May Participate!
(Preliminary Information - 12/14/95)
With the launch of Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) in November of 1996, NASA with
begin a decade long exploration of the Red Planet. With the program managed by
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), NASA plans to launch two spacecraft to
Mars every alignment opportunity (approximately every two years). These
missions will include a combination of orbiters and landers to explore Mars in
a comprehensive and systematic way. To provide data communication capabilities
between several of the landed systems to be placed on the surface of Mars and
the spacecraft in orbit, many of the orbiters will carry UHF radio relays.
MGS will carry such a relay, called the Mars Relay. The Mars Relay will provid
e
communication support, at first, between several Russian small lander stations
on the surface of Mars and the orbiting Mars Global Surveyor. Then future
missions planned for launch in 1998 and beyond will also be able to exploit
this relay on MGS for surface data return.
During the Mars Global Surveyor Mission, JPL plans to perform a near-Earth
test of the Mars Relay. Sometime around 20 to 30 days after launch of MGS in
November of 1996, JPL will initiate a test of the Relay employing UHF
communication equipment on the Earth. Because the Relay operates at frequencie
s
in the 70 cm band, an opportunity exists for student and amateur participation
in the near-Earth test of the Mars Relay. Using 70 cm antennas, individuals
will be able to listen for a 1.3-watt beacon operating from the spacecraft on
437.1 MHz at a distance of 8 million kilometers (20 times the distance to the
Moon) - the ultimate DX!
Stay tuned to the Mars Global Surveyor Home Page for further details on how to
participate in the test:
http://mgs-www.jpl.nasa.gov/
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:48 1996
Path: news.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!news3.digex.net!usenet
From: domonkos@access.digex.net (domonkos)
Newsgroups: sci.astro,alt.sci.planetary,sci.astro.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Mars Relay Flight Test - Public May Participate!
Date: 28 Dec 1995 01:44:18 GMT
Organization: Express Access Online Communications, USA
Lines: 4
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <4bsspi$2ud@news4.digex.net>
References: <28DEC199500564811@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: access5.digex.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.2
Xref: news.epix.net sci.astro:110532 alt.sci.planetary:8873 sci.astro.amateur:23812 rec.radio.amateur.space:6051
Will this be a modulated beacon or CW? Thanks.
Andy N3LCW
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:48 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!sparky.midwest.net!usenet
From: gayle@ldd.net (Gayle Albert)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Hubble Downlink
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 1995 07:31:11 GMT
Organization: Midwest Internet
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4bth46$m1e@sparky.midwest.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dial4-27.midwest.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Greetings:
Is it possible to receive and 'decode' data from the HST?
Any info would be appreciated.
Marty Albert (Amatuer Radio Station KC6UFM)
PO Box 717
Fredericktown, MO 63645
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:49 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.telalink.net!SANDH.COM
From: c.jefferson@SANDH.COM (C Jefferson)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TM733 for Satelites Will it work??
Date: 28 Dec 95 11:20:13
Organization: Telalink Corporation, Nashville, TN, USA
Lines: 32
Message-ID: <001D2AEE012A77EC@SANDH.COM>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ng.sandh.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT
Path: news.telalink.net!SANDH.COM
From: c.jefferson@SANDH.COM (C Jefferson)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TM733 for Satelites Will it work??
Date: 28 Dec 95 11:20:13
Organization: Telalink Corporation, Nashville, TN, USA
Lines:
Message-ID: <001D1848012A77EC@SANDH.COM>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ng.sandh.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8BIT
Path: news.telalink.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.ne
t!mr.net!news.mr.net!wavefront.com!usenet
From: C Jefferson <cjeffers@204.248.112.2>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TM733 for Satelites Will it work??
Date: 28 Dec 1995 17:20:13 GMT
Organization: WaveFront Communications, Inc.
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4bujkd$f98@wavefront.wavefront.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: lumts-1-28.luminet.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 16bit)
Will a Kenwood TM733A work for amatuer satelites. Also is a KPC-3 TNC
good for any satellite work? Thank you very much Jim KB0THN
cjeffers@luminet.net of kb0thn@amsat.org
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:51 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Packet/Mir
Reply-To: pe1chl@wab-tis.rabobank.nl
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DKAuA2.2r9@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <4brlt8$238@news.worldlinx.com>
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 1995 13:46:50 GMT
Lines: 25
In <4brlt8$238@news.worldlinx.com> jcorby@headwaters.com (John Corby) writes:
>For those of us whose interests lie in merely receiving signals from
>space, can anybody monitoring this newsgroup explain how to hear the
>difference between packet traffic uplinking to ROMIR, and packet
>traffic downlinking from ROMIR?
>By "hear", I literally mean listening to the signal over the
>receiver's speaker.
Maybe when you listen on an SSB receiver... the MIR frequency is decreasing
continuously because of doppler, and the fixed stations will remain fixed
in frequency or will tune higher when they know about doppler. That will
probably occur in discrete steps.
So, you can hear the difference by listening to the carrier in SSB.
Of course, it is easy to see the differnce on a TNC or other packet
decoder...
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen rob@knoware.nl | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:51 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.kei.com!nntp.coast.net!torn!news.unb.ca!upei.ca!usenet
From: seeler@upei.ca (David C. Seeler)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Fabrication of a Ground Plane and the Egg Beater
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 1995 18:53:29 GMT
Organization: University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PEI Canada
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <30e2e6df.591005@137.149.3.1>
Reply-To: Seeler@upei.ca
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip60.slip.upei.ca
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/16.141
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:18090 rec.radio.amateur.space:6039
Hi - I was wondering if anyone has fabricated a groundplane for the
440 MHz eggbeater? I would be interested in knowing more about the
specifics in order to improve upon the operations at my QTH.
ThanKs in advance and Season's greetings!
Internet: Seeler@upei.ca
Regards,
David Seeler, VY2DCS
Charlottetown, PEI
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:52 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
From: Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR frequencies?
Date: 28 Dec 1995 19:47:29 GMT
Organization: NASA Spacelink Teacher Resource Center-a service to educators
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951228134640.22784D-100000@spacelink>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: glue9600@spacelink
X-Disclaimer: Message author is solely responsible for message content.
Is MIR currently using 145.550 simplex or 145.800 simplex, or both?
----------
Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:53 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.monad.net!news.cyberportal.net !usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir Xmas russian part
Date: 28 Dec 1995 22:04:20 GMT
Organization: CyberPort, LLC of Claremont NH
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <4bv494$74q@news.cyberportal.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dhend.cyberportal.net
X-Newsreader: SPRY News 3.03 (SPRY, Inc.)
This is the 30 seconds of Russian..
"Dear people of the Earth, the crew of the MIR orbital station greets you and
sends you the best Christmas wishes. Let the teachings of Christ be always
present in our life. Our best wishes of health, love and happiness to you.
Peace to you and your families."
Courtesy, Victor Marchenko, Graduate Student Darmouth College Hanover, N>H>
e-mail=dhend@cyberportal.net
packet= N1PPP @ WA1WOK.FN43FE.NH.USA.NOAM zip 03743
phone 1-603-542-2493 1-603-542-6917
Sex is the most fun you can have without logging on.
Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie!"...until you can find a rock.
Be wary of strong drink.
It can make you shoot at tax collectors and miss.
-Lazarus Long
I still miss my ex-wife, but my aim is getting better....
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:54 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!decwrl!pagesat.net!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLS028 DOVE OSCAR 17 Fails Again
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 29 Dec 1995 21:32:00 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 26
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arls028.1995@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news.epix.net rec.radio.info:10608 rec.radio.amateur.space:6045
SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS028
ARLS028 DOVE OSCAR 17 Fails Again
ZCZC AS08
QST de W1AW
Space Bulletin 028 ARLS028
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 30, 1995
To all radio amateurs
SB SPACE ARL ARLS028
ARLS028 DOVE OSCAR 17 Fails Again
The DOVE OSCAR 17 satellite has failed again after a brief time back
on 2 meters broadcasting a holiday greeting. The latest failure
occurred December 29 at 0500Z as the AMSAT DOVE team continued to
reload the spacecraft's software in the wake of a failure December 3.
Jim White, WD0E, of the AMSAT DOVE team says the latest crash
suggests a hardware problem aboard the spacecraft. The team had hoped
that reloading the satellite's software would fix the problem.
DOVE-OSCAR 17 is used for educational and research purposes.
NNNN
/EX
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:55 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!EU.net!Belgium.EU.net!ping.be!news
From: Geert Pirens <Geert.Pirens@ping.be>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellite Tracking Hardware
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 1995 01:48:15 -0800
Organization: PING Belgium
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <30E50ADF.5566@ping.be>
References: <4c18sh$39f@superb.csc.ti.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup09.hasselt.eunet.be
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0b3 (Win16; I)
To: Ken Durham <mbv@ti.com>
Ken Durham wrote:
>
> be a must have feature for me, however the doppler shift shown by Instantrac
k
> is always way off the actual doppler shift indicated by my FT736.
> Any ideas welcomed. Oh Yeah... I don't want to make cables if they are
> available with these systems. The ads don't say.
> Can you send me some information and technical information about
automatick antenna tracking hard & software ?
Plaese let me now.
Bye
Geert Pirens
73, ONL2057
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:56 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!EU.net!Belgium.EU.net!ping.be!news
From: Geert Pirens <Geert.Pirens@ping.be>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Antenna Tracking System Hardware wanted,
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 1995 01:51:28 -0800
Organization: PING Belgium
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <30E50BA0.28BA@ping.be>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup09.hasselt.eunet.be
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0b3 (Win16; I)
Hello All,
I want to buy me a decent antenna Tracking hardware or If someone have
it for make it myself ? (hpmebrew).
I am looking for a schematic of a Kansas City Tracker, or compatible.
If aneyone have some kind of schematic or PCB layout ?
Or if you have better stuff than this? plaese send me more information.
I like to send commands via my computer to the antenna rotors.
The program I use is INSTANT TRACK v1.0b.
Who is so kind to help me with this ? I wil pay if needed!
PLAESE contact me!! by sending e-mail, or fido mail.
Greetings
Geert Pirens
E-Mail Geert.Pirens@ping.be
or Geert.Pirens@p9.f115.n292.z2.fidonet.org
Fidonet Geert Pirens / 2:292/115.9
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:11:57 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format
Date: 30 Dec 1995 08:52:10 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 68
Message-ID: <4c2ujq$jai@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: owl.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, Format, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
As a service to the satellite user community, the following description of the
NORAD two-line orbital element set format is uploaded to sci.space.news and
rec.radio.amateur.space on a monthly basis. The most current orbital elements
from the NORAD two-line element sets are carried on the Celestial BBS, (334)
409-9280, and are updated daily (when possible). Documentation and tracking
software are also available on this system. The Celestial BBS may be accessed
24 hours/day at speeds up to 28,800 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no
parity. In addition, element sets (updated daily) and some documentation
and software are also available via anonymous ftp from archive.afit.af.mil
(129.92.1.66) in the directory pub/space.
==============================================================================
Data for each satellite consists of three lines in the following format:
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
1 NNNNNU NNNNNAAA NNNNN.NNNNNNNN +.NNNNNNNN +NNNNN-N +NNNNN-N N NNNNN
2 NNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NNNNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NN.NNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Line 0 is a twenty-two-character name (this change is being made to be
consistent with the name length in the NORAD SATCAT).
Lines 1 and 2 are the standard Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format identical
to that used by NORAD and NASA. The format description is:
Line 1
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
10-11 International Designator (Last two digits of launch year)
12-14 International Designator (Launch number of the year)
15-17 International Designator (Piece of launch)
19-20 Epoch Year (Last two digits of year)
21-32 Epoch (Julian Day and fractional portion of the day)
34-43 First Time Derivative of the Mean Motion
or Ballistic Coefficient (Depending on ephemeris type)
45-52 Second Time Derivative of Mean Motion (decimal point assumed;
blank if N/A)
54-61 BSTAR drag term if GP4 general perturbation theory was used.
Otherwise, radiation pressure coefficient. (Decimal point assumed)
63-63 Ephemeris type
65-68 Element number
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
(Letters, blanks, periods, plus signs = 0; minus signs = 1)
Line 2
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
09-16 Inclination [Degrees]
18-25 Right Ascension of the Ascending Node [Degrees]
27-33 Eccentricity (decimal point assumed)
35-42 Argument of Perigee [Degrees]
44-51 Mean Anomaly [Degrees]
53-63 Mean Motion [Revs per day]
64-68 Revolution number at epoch [Revs]
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
All other columns are blank or fixed.
Example:
NOAA 6
1 11416U 86 50.28438588 0.00000140 67960-4 0 5293
2 11416 98.5105 69.3305 0012788 63.2828 296.9658 14.24899292346978
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:12:06 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE728)
Date: 30 Dec 1995 08:53:32 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 750
Message-ID: <4c2umc$jas@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: owl.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial BBS, (334) 409-9280, and are updated daily (when
possible). Documentation and tracking software are also available on this
system. The Celestial BBS may be accessed 24 hours/day at speeds up to
28,800 bps using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity.
Element sets (also updated daily) and some documentation and software are
available via anonymous ftp from archive.afit.af.mil (129.92.1.66) in the
directory pub/space.
As a service to the satellite user community, the most current of these
elements are uploaded weekly to sci.space.news and rec.radio.amateur.space.
This week's elements are provided below.
- Current Two-Line Element Sets #728 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 95348.36100255 .00000018 00000-0 10305-4 0 1592
2 00424 80.4544 107.1010 0022426 149.3518 210.8930 13.67857482656937
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 95349.57563549 -.00000027 00000-0 10000-3 0 9505
2 02608 14.6379 354.7816 0012166 77.8951 282.2507 1.00398102 23011
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 95363.08047799 -.00000122 00000-0 10000-3 0 4333
2 03029 14.8895 1.6509 0010472 268.1049 110.8216 1.00272491103050
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 95345.91535286 -.00000078 00000-0 50884-4 0 9345
2 07646 49.8295 171.6654 0205563 328.6282 30.2482 13.82190784 52924
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 95363.07625750 .00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 1602
2 08820 109.8527 327.3824 0044311 165.7799 194.3967 6.38664393202908
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 95353.32048303 .00000066 00000-0 10000-3 0 549
2 09852 13.0034 35.0079 0004103 121.1590 238.8691 1.00017150 15837
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 95354.54082948 .00000068 00000-0 00000+0 0 6192
2 10061 12.1037 39.1880 0013574 133.6180 296.1899 1.00286918 12647
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 95362.16347859 -.00000243 00000-0 10000-3 0 2091
2 10637 35.5100 85.8908 1344709 52.2925 344.7292 1.00278787 18217
GPS BI-01
1 10684U 78020A 95347.99602640 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 4091
2 10684 64.9215 29.4050 0060849 162.2974 197.9876 1.98069402115728
GPS BI-02
1 10893U 78047A 95349.80536076 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 2048
2 10893 63.2513 266.9025 0227217 14.7453 345.9281 2.01627134129097
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 95362.24889222 -.00000105 00000-0 10000-3 0 5877
2 10953 11.0975 41.9070 0009060 141.1431 253.7085 1.00384104 17339
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 95362.06348310 -.00000022 00000-0 37297-4 0 4530
2 10967 107.9994 178.6222 0002381 248.2145 111.8741 14.38077937916707
GPS BI-03
1 11054U 78093A 95362.92015361 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 3731
2 11054 62.9402 265.2027 0045607 180.8393 179.2043 1.93505252125347
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 95361.60366114 -.00000032 00000-0 90174-5 0 5531
2 11080 98.9696 226.9926 0009805 70.8770 289.3443 13.83699504867301
GPS BI-04
1 11141U 78112A 95354.44089685 -.00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 188
2 11141 64.9203 31.3364 0048852 27.5441 332.8116 1.92894753 14416
GPS BI-05
1 11690U 80011A 95362.33832120 -.00000056 00000-0 10000-3 0 9709
2 11690 65.2632 30.5038 0151981 193.4959 166.1531 2.00570082130750
GPS BI-06
1 11783U 80032A 95344.63225715 -.00000008 00000-0 10000-3 0 1163
2 11783 62.3716 260.0334 0223035 29.4477 331.8253 2.03456394114976
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 95349.15186700 -.00000192 00000-0 10000-3 0 8992
2 12472 7.8520 52.1413 0005366 52.0489 307.9110 1.00214869 11244
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 95363.18679141 .00000039 00000-0 28416-4 0 4603
2 13301 82.9310 259.1653 0028184 354.6514 5.4333 13.68070866673992
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 95363.18626890 .00000073 00000-0 25967-4 0 8289
2 13367 98.1010 54.0639 0006113 326.1120 33.9687 14.57164436715633
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 95363.06445090 -.00000016 00000-0 11449-4 0 9175
2 13736 98.6253 189.1831 0008555 163.0181 197.1286 14.25766945676685
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 95363.03221977 .00000272 00000-0 21693-3 0 1826
2 13777 98.9636 187.1615 0011948 204.9050 155.1520 13.99250422329437
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 95349.00746913 .00000039 00000-0 25915-4 0 5538
2 13916 82.9427 328.0024 0037045 310.4188 49.3735 13.74332390638303
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 95354.42227675 .00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 5122
2 13969 8.6843 45.4022 0003236 243.6602 176.8083 1.00425209 19582
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 95354.13795721 -.00000225 00000-0 10000-3 0 4705
2 14050 6.6880 55.3600 0001960 16.3894 343.4753 1.00308669104395
OSCAR 10
1 14129U 83058B 95345.99476340 .00000071 00000-0 10000-3 0 3939
2 14129 26.4153 234.2339 5978432 333.6570 5.6309 2.05880346 65999
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 95353.74854335 -.00000007 00000-0 87509-5 0 4075
2 14780 98.3590 46.3007 0003110 112.1510 248.0015 14.57033014627656
UoSat 2
1 14781U 84021B 95351.02661777 .00000126 00000-0 29085-4 0 8485
2 14781 97.7874 345.0490 0011270 322.2802 37.7611 14.69409470630750
GPS BI-09
1 15039U 84059A 95353.28699668 -.00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 3806
2 15039 64.5832 25.7185 0082163 18.6350 341.7374 1.92302258 83955
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 95361.54683129 .00000057 00000-0 44361-4 0 7574
2 15055 82.9542 13.2673 0028983 100.3645 260.0780 13.73630803577285
GPS BI-10
1 15271U 84097A 95362.47841435 -.00000036 00000-0 10000-3 0 901
2 15271 62.0549 259.8976 0158363 356.2544 3.6895 2.00607180 81829
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 95347.84215874 .00000189 00000-0 19440-4 0 4386
2 15331 82.5321 287.5979 0018784 199.4575 160.5913 14.84702150605324
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 95363.08160859 .00000041 00000-0 45292-4 0 5278
2 15427 98.9696 62.7216 0015845 77.9345 282.3606 14.13751346569451
GPS BI-11
1 16129U 85093A 95346.29834469 -.00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 6939
2 16129 65.2531 29.3090 0156528 85.9239 275.9358 1.89368015 18367
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 95363.31886022 .00003052 00000-0 47214-4 0 3738
2 16609 51.6450 260.1718 0006351 151.1474 208.9815 15.57595592563378
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 95353.84124113 .00000090 00000-0 62356-4 0 8815
2 16613 98.6302 60.8676 0000854 50.3924 309.7325 14.20082440194716
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 95354.46322853 .00000188 00000-0 19845-4 0 3551
2 16881 82.5172 339.1832 0018052 204.5902 155.4455 14.83692880507198
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 95362.86397716 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 534
2 16908 50.0087 163.7232 0011092 296.7871 63.1828 12.44413690 95076
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 95363.01223182 .00000005 00000-0 20339-4 0 4452
2 16969 98.5142 0.0626 0013534 130.1161 230.1206 14.24968893482221
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 95362.18366540 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 3670
2 17527 98.9688 62.7395 0019197 85.2875 275.0483 14.00418393450917
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 95361.33259443 .00000074 00000-0 10000-3 0 6943
2 17561 2.7116 70.7911 0001286 313.4651 55.9971 1.00282054 15570
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 95362.09984089 .00001623 00000-0 28267-4 0 4801
2 17845 51.6439 266.2845 0006295 145.9674 214.1723 15.57585003497296
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 95361.89575017 .00000014 00000-0 29308-4 0 2651
2 18123 98.7724 189.9832 0015019 28.8290 331.3711 14.15428132440120
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 95351.19752666 .00000030 00000-0 16299-4 0 1503
2 18129 82.9234 283.7836 0010898 311.6235 48.3987 13.72359854425079
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 95361.83358391 .00000007 00000-0 -66485-5 0 4489
2 18312 82.5556 128.7919 0012876 352.2119 7.8843 13.84068044422334
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 95353.54650578 .00000025 00000-0 84407-5 0 8056
2 18820 82.5426 190.7973 0018119 73.3767 286.9380 13.84748621398524
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 95354.55587779 .00000015 00000-0 24794-4 0 1439
2 18822 98.3905 190.0942 0006079 163.0262 197.1120 14.23175089409020
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 95353.39195057 -.00000012 00000-0 10000-3 0 390
2 19163 65.1804 91.9340 0007623 157.3404 202.6961 2.13102459 58381
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 95345.47123390 .00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 4454
2 19165 65.1738 92.1628 0001236 299.8842 60.1081 2.13102123 58831
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 95347.86981809 -.00000071 00000-0 10000-3 0 2241
2 19215 2.8853 68.7620 0004663 132.0920 227.5750 0.96948337 15374
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 95361.60374044 .00000317 00000-0 96668-4 0 1265
2 19216 57.4021 144.6284 7365626 27.0750 356.8955 2.09725527 26216
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 95361.66575296 .00000303 00000-0 34818-4 0 579
2 19274 82.5137 73.0831 0019738 338.3760 21.6626 14.82428108403818
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 95351.22382624 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 4456
2 19336 82.5422 295.8816 0018419 338.1488 21.8847 13.16975372355393
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 95345.96965858 -.00000028 00000-0 10000-3 0 3370
2 19503 65.6433 331.0691 0006205 156.5289 203.5111 2.13101764 56334
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 95361.89088008 -.00000007 00000-0 21142-4 0 3331
2 19531 99.1929 10.4550 0012262 8.0946 352.0420 14.13076444374111
TDRS 2
1 19548U 88091B 95361.68706792 -.00000193 00000-0 10000-3 0 1688
2 19548 2.2029 72.7880 0007690 168.9156 186.0603 1.00272381 13792
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 95349.29251333 .00000006 00000-0 10000-3 0 5543
2 19749 65.1407 91.6036 0004862 256.6913 103.2631 2.13101512 53912
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 95344.18587717 .00000005 00000-0 10000-3 0 4612
2 19750 65.1532 91.8449 0007194 233.9091 126.0291 2.13101773 53823
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 95350.66988416 .00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 1587
2 19802 55.2547 117.9535 0024352 181.0856 178.8813 2.00561411 50030
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 95362.11925677 .00007628 00000-0 42514-3 0 6303
2 19822 75.0983 223.4554 3757766 235.7824 82.8760 7.89373625153092
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 95350.70484561 .00000097 00000-0 73001-4 0 4443
2 19851 82.5195 67.3862 0015057 125.1992 235.0584 13.84402400343446
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 95347.06923474 -.00000120 00000-0 10000-3 0 1667
2 19876 1.6011 71.6716 0018697 275.4221 83.6595 0.97110381 4802
TDRS 3
1 19883U 89021B 95347.06222685 -.00000254 00000-0 10000-3 0 1446
2 19883 0.0578 63.2572 0003942 223.0686 136.3519 1.00269845197247
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 95353.99925896 -.00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 1572
2 20061 54.3125 293.8448 0148634 216.0095 142.9398 2.00563522 47842
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 95361.89940894 .00000049 00000-0 36077-4 0 6259
2 20103 82.9605 235.7243 0037342 171.4281 188.7523 13.73861684325020
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 95349.34943877 .00000049 00000-0 10000-3 0 1739
2 20185 55.0310 118.4863 0016345 331.3329 28.6896 2.00562242 46323
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 95353.61380588 -.00000356 00000-0 10000-3 0 2790
2 20217 1.4226 75.3875 0000950 52.7253 300.9092 1.00271552 23609
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 95362.11282886 .00000137 00000-0 32519-4 0 4649
2 20261 82.5915 20.6330 1243151 72.9309 300.3952 12.47308157284457
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 95343.90417015 .00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 1625
2 20302 53.3128 234.1685 0013169 165.7144 194.4339 2.00561324 45014
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 95362.16220793 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 4656
2 20305 82.5564 243.5264 0006744 26.5819 333.5649 13.04430540295777
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 95351.08641453 -.00000089 00000-0 -28759-4 0 1746
2 20322 98.9511 4.3308 0008598 182.7272 177.3844 14.03457094311243
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 95362.09984089 .00001623 00000-0 28267-4 0 4709
2 20335 51.6439 266.2845 0006295 145.9674 214.1723 15.57585003346309
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 95344.41378629 -.00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 16
2 20361 55.8762 60.7913 0084430 129.2668 231.5208 2.00562976 34506
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 95354.57991448 -.00000130 00000-0 10000-3 0 2685
2 20391 3.5030 64.6151 0001174 210.1282 6.1704 1.00277184 22192
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 95354.53632264 .00000169 00000-0 10000-3 0 100
2 20436 98.7187 66.0784 0001020 74.3342 285.7946 14.20033702306343
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 95347.21874792 .00000016 00000-0 22877-4 0 1469
2 20437 98.5595 68.6309 0012104 33.9049 326.2903 14.29906302307334
UO-15
1 20438U 90005C 95350.77305246 -.00000006 00000-0 14738-4 0 9430
2 20438 98.5547 70.3672 0011031 29.7949 330.3859 14.29220842307722
PACSAT
1 20439U 90005D 95361.73784052 -.00000007 00000-0 14124-4 0 9480
2 20439 98.5711 84.8442 0011755 354.8552 5.2502 14.29962206309425
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 95344.14600830 -.00000000 00000-0 16812-4 0 9444
2 20440 98.5735 68.0686 0012436 42.1825 318.0312 14.30102357306936
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 95350.77866747 .00000006 00000-0 19243-4 0 9505
2 20441 98.5731 74.5577 0013073 23.8663 336.3124 14.30073281307880
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 95348.26962646 .00000053 00000-0 37446-4 0 9442
2 20442 98.5752 72.5105 0013365 30.1580 330.0364 14.30178770207540
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 95352.78784694 .00000113 00000-0 10000-3 0 1099
2 20452 54.0294 174.1410 0061874 85.3834 275.3699 2.00557701 43177
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 95354.55183982 .00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 8735
2 20478 99.1310 61.1549 0000961 59.5798 300.5441 13.94864356219515
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 95346.15232355 -.00000059 00000-0 -61010-4 0 9446
2 20479 99.0577 41.7271 0540199 189.9731 169.0287 12.83337427273789
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 95350.69527278 -.00000079 00000-0 -10699-3 0 8428
2 20480 99.0577 45.2460 0540912 180.1508 179.9509 12.83231926274356
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 95353.31176639 .00000824 00000-0 16192-2 0 1986
2 20491 99.0670 106.6766 0469968 358.0811 1.8541 13.02980484278307
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 95348.11606560 .00000752 00000-0 29870-4 0 6047
2 20496 43.1041 185.1591 0011504 290.6356 69.3253 15.35176826325224
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 95361.91414863 .00000044 00000-0 29985-4 0 6264
2 20508 82.9517 10.2616 0045576 124.0474 236.5027 13.73502593292246
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 95350.64512743 .00000189 00000-0 22711-4 0 4631
2 20510 82.5239 36.3434 0017623 193.5290 166.5452 14.78557327312554
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 95361.16605718 -.00000067 00000-0 10000-3 0 1458
2 20533 54.6742 294.2287 0038041 117.5173 242.8691 2.00574125 42114
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 95343.73910509 .00005036 00000-0 97510-4 0 8713
2 20546 94.1262 243.9689 0064578 22.6485 337.7571 15.45528284315579
HST
1 20580U 90037B 95349.37231716 .00000429 00000-0 27274-4 0 7465
2 20580 28.4707 326.4837 0006936 43.0864 317.0276 14.90988410110975
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 95354.01597441 .00000139 00000-0 21385-4 0 1470
2 20608 89.9274 174.9263 0105419 327.3353 32.1368 14.64886156299917
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 95353.88412563 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 2529
2 20619 65.2415 330.1272 0026074 208.2771 151.5854 2.13102472 43465
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 95354.00282639 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 2547
2 20620 65.2387 330.1120 0007362 43.0083 317.0517 2.13102521 43502
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 95353.60066721 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 8447
2 20621 65.2577 330.1809 0012640 196.3136 163.6489 2.13101814 43499
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 95362.09984089 .00001623 00000-0 28267-4 0 2623
2 20635 51.6439 266.2845 0006295 145.9674 214.1723 15.57585003317131
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 95347.26201206 .00000178 00000-0 30461-4 0 5167
2 20638 52.9913 60.8000 0010399 277.2052 82.7730 15.07317713304123
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 95347.47484685 .00000033 00000-0 15992-4 0 9435
2 20670 82.5451 136.1688 0017444 60.3656 299.9235 13.84151211275911
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 95361.85704239 .00000018 00000-0 14575-3 0 1989
2 20712 18.0996 320.8677 7185405 248.6525 25.3862 2.35651389 39057
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 95349.52561041 .00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 9768
2 20724 54.8889 116.0819 0124398 177.2296 182.8303 2.00565337 37743
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 95354.45936726 .00000274 00000-0 20955-3 0 6827
2 20788 98.8091 1.1223 0013745 280.1151 79.8466 14.01362286270922
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 95347.26881148 .00000069 00000-0 49470-4 0 9541
2 20826 82.5254 73.0729 0013356 330.4268 29.6128 13.83620348262992
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 95354.06383400 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 9861
2 20830 55.8367 58.3720 0065411 99.0594 261.7309 2.00559605 38479
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 95354.46500891 .00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 9497
2 20959 55.0979 117.9108 0103186 231.0021 128.0342 2.00568120 37078
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 95361.86946336 .00000098 00000-0 50723-4 0 4601
2 20978 98.6179 69.2330 0078799 319.4722 40.0610 14.32610697265046
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 95361.60268933 -.00000024 00000-0 10000-3 0 8205
2 21006 65.1270 90.5325 0058419 187.1261 172.8151 2.13102662 39335
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 95353.34585633 -.00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 9431
2 21007 65.1317 90.8921 0035333 178.5188 181.4955 2.13101096 39142
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 95361.68534653 -.00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 1692
2 21008 65.1252 90.5554 0010019 266.5196 93.3959 2.13098947 39315
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 95354.21451354 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 6605
2 21087 82.9381 94.9114 0036327 350.1498 9.8919 13.74562596245285
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 95346.46247481 .00000029 00000-0 14751-4 0 8510
2 21089 82.9187 328.5575 0030788 38.1089 322.2236 13.74063304243254
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 95346.93963524 .00000013 00000-0 10000-3 0 1262
2 21140 0.1654 52.0996 0002569 205.8356 162.2638 1.00283013 19734
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 95361.88069424 .00000018 00000-0 21921-5 0 3157
2 21152 82.9258 273.4037 0043248 100.8306 259.7716 13.73527308240093
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 95361.15230340 -.00000045 00000-0 10000-3 0 4664
2 21216 64.9913 329.4868 0006600 187.2102 172.7633 2.13102736 36833
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 95353.71384075 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 8717
2 21217 64.9854 329.7354 0011561 228.3751 131.5273 2.13101757 36666
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 95354.29430341 -.00000034 00000-0 10000-3 0 3472
2 21218 64.9783 329.6943 0007850 325.1341 34.8141 2.13102479 36681
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 95343.67503675 .00002027 00000-0 38196-4 0 3192
2 21225 28.4604 72.8391 0002942 211.8682 148.1689 15.43420008140462
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 95348.47706735 .00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 8540
2 21232 82.5410 144.0892 0012195 267.9219 92.0510 13.16470343223101
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 95361.89223993 .00000094 00000-0 60980-4 0 7626
2 21263 98.5686 20.8329 0013853 56.3366 303.9132 14.22586474239964
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 95361.83908208 .00000159 00000-0 19539-4 0 1567
2 21397 82.5231 299.6286 0020524 237.0347 122.8913 14.76439849245930
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 95346.26390871 -.00000045 00000-0 10000-6 0 9198
2 21552 56.1150 56.4443 0068791 244.4964 114.8396 2.00554445 32506
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 95349.19875445 .00000182 00000-0 83834-4 0 2283
2 21574 98.5480 60.9177 0001128 62.6409 297.4889 14.32249473230960
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 95343.68488714 .00000010 00000-0 17583-4 0 6508
2 21575 98.3777 50.5014 0008250 109.5060 250.7021 14.37003389230701
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 95343.70540808 .00000046 00000-0 30377-4 0 7455
2 21576 98.3747 48.7202 0004408 113.6943 246.4706 14.36414516230602
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 95344.17760830 .00000010 00000-0 17907-4 0 6440
2 21577 98.3751 49.7405 0006962 109.9707 250.2222 14.36503084230703
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 95353.75284991 .00000239 00000-0 91144-4 0 8477
2 21578 98.3993 65.7152 0005786 81.1394 279.0448 14.39116171232380
TDRS 4
1 21639U 91054B 95354.43598275 .00000090 00000-0 00000+0 0 9795
2 21639 0.0536 119.2531 0002193 143.2850 168.6338 1.00268698110105
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 95348.36262716 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 8520
2 21655 82.5521 91.7112 0012255 279.5996 80.3735 13.16842735208216
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 95354.45349712 -.00000033 00000-0 18213-4 0 7265
2 21701 56.9834 110.2449 0005256 111.3400 248.8182 14.96467555233459
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 95361.93728960 .00000088 00000-0 69961-4 0 1123
2 21798 98.9526 14.0605 0013235 0.8701 359.2495 14.13937620210583
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 95348.40575191 .00000008 00000-0 10000-3 0 562
2 21853 65.0593 90.6532 0007322 186.7810 173.2214 2.13102264 30160
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 95344.47085112 .00000006 00000-0 10000-3 0 2217
2 21854 65.0616 90.7845 0014749 18.8585 341.1978 2.13104050 30067
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 95347.35185712 .00000012 00000-0 00000+0 0 2183
2 21855 65.0622 90.6906 0008566 199.9147 160.0634 2.13102204 30119
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 95361.73852465 .00000207 00000-0 22104-4 0 7435
2 21867 97.7017 76.3503 0001380 47.9667 312.1673 14.98653213212035
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 95354.19962642 .00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 7390
2 21890 53.8546 234.0799 0058359 187.9093 172.0873 2.00563240 28037
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 95353.91001256 -.00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7198
2 21930 55.7162 355.8271 0032881 180.9892 179.0384 2.00561628 26957
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 95354.21584629 .00000928 00000-0 32991-4 0 5077
2 21987 28.4336 312.8626 0009791 239.1205 120.8427 15.19585410196279
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 95354.42147193 .00000454 00000-0 37117-4 0 6821
2 22012 81.6704 309.0888 0119796 39.6202 321.3668 14.91534257188430
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 95361.92617433 .00000077 00000-0 00000+0 0 6328
2 22014 54.8391 175.4440 0092976 328.0742 31.3676 2.00562154 18959
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 95361.79787515 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1342
2 22056 64.8282 329.5478 0006811 273.5574 86.3631 2.13102228 26516
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 95354.11624706 -.00000033 00000-0 00000+0 0 1157
2 22057 64.8339 329.8260 0009151 309.3744 50.5466 2.13102777 26326
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 95362.03334972 -.00000047 00000-0 10000-3 0 723
2 22058 64.8234 329.5562 0011511 264.7122 95.1537 2.13103135 26547
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 95351.13241609 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 9282
2 22076 66.0410 232.8817 0007389 269.2235 90.7933 12.80931202156677
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 95345.70693721 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5415
2 22077 66.0788 224.0887 0003290 350.8424 9.2536 12.86293389156565
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 95361.76394579 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5420
2 22078 66.0791 189.1573 0005734 355.9070 4.1891 12.86578465158719
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 95352.91541948 .00000047 00000-0 10000-3 0 6691
2 22108 54.0969 234.9169 0113194 156.6346 203.9776 2.00555837 23950
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 95348.52311959 .00000131 00000-0 90658-4 0 5697
2 22161 62.9903 351.8147 0824928 2.2587 358.1802 13.21864219153888
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 95353.47768400 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 4548
2 22195 52.6468 105.8634 0137741 357.6662 2.3251 6.47294048 74577
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 95348.61152663 .00000101 00000-0 10000-3 0 6337
2 22231 54.5929 177.0767 0010988 286.4035 73.5062 2.00557245 22440
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 95361.71970347 .00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 6722
2 22275 54.6302 174.1315 0038899 254.1370 105.1713 2.00571446 22114
TDRS 5
1 22314U 93003B 95354.51125579 -.00000273 00000-0 10000-3 0 5968
2 22314 2.2673 70.7244 0003141 211.0443 305.3163 1.00272777 10782
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 95354.31063098 -.00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 6452
2 22446 54.3304 294.6739 0086115 356.6412 3.3417 2.00567599 20954
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 95349.34589647 .00000003 00000-0 10000-3 0 7558
2 22512 65.0721 90.4785 0009455 191.3439 168.6468 2.13102006 21750
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 95347.40770124 .00000011 00000-0 00000+0 0 8472
2 22513 65.0663 90.5684 0007960 194.6838 165.3094 2.13102845 21900
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 95353.33229004 -.00000014 00000-0 00000+0 0 8405
2 22514 65.0970 90.3406 0011804 187.7958 172.1910 2.13102546 22036
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 95354.54293520 .00001073 00000-0 69382-4 0 4596
2 22521 31.1041 130.3055 0056015 185.8361 174.1628 15.02647070155428
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 95349.42277165 .00000086 00000-0 00000+0 0 4774
2 22563 25.6661 291.5631 0009347 282.8716 77.0484 0.99248688 14267
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 95346.97499866 -.00000057 00000-0 10000-3 0 4872
2 22581 55.2216 355.5821 0058681 34.5667 325.8444 2.00567484 19869
ARSENE
1 22654U 93031B 95350.51041156 -.00000085 00000-0 10000-3 0 3431
2 22654 2.9391 77.8590 2884820 226.6956 105.0867 1.42203090 8982
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 95354.09388889 -.00000047 00000-0 10000-3 0 5754
2 22657 55.2045 355.1195 0074807 215.5012 144.0301 2.00556980 15336
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 95354.22565941 .00000057 00000-0 19473-4 0 4539
2 22698 89.5391 280.7934 0089805 191.1355 168.7852 14.21360826128867
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 95353.05732305 .00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 4808
2 22700 54.2581 235.7270 0043396 352.2417 7.7770 2.00570037 18116
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 95354.36607530 -.00000031 00000-0 76964-5 0 9572
2 22739 99.0189 303.6367 0009159 15.5049 344.6358 14.10951191121691
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 95353.15069877 -.00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5544
2 22779 54.4239 294.7509 0019391 258.0933 101.6895 2.00558034 16874
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 95348.85550487 .00000025 00000-0 91024-5 0 4481
2 22782 82.5478 134.0199 0022828 133.6911 226.6146 13.83043413115510
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 95349.82190703 -.00000052 00000-0 00000+0 0 5947
2 22787 4.3378 325.9999 0003949 279.4683 206.1927 1.00270763 6989
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 95348.72884291 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 4944
2 22823 98.7198 60.4130 0000605 78.3216 281.8028 14.20035830114914
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 95345.22638358 -.00000040 00000-0 15559-5 0 4350
2 22824 98.6049 58.5760 0007342 61.5263 298.6654 14.27103104114982
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 95346.18353378 .00000030 00000-0 30002-4 0 4383
2 22825 98.6038 59.9585 0009633 59.6074 300.6050 14.27681636115160
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 95353.69244389 .00000012 00000-0 22664-4 0 4395
2 22826 98.6030 67.4775 0010339 40.3972 319.7971 14.27790320116241
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 95348.72185919 .00000028 00000-0 28739-4 0 4999
2 22827 98.6007 62.5051 0010179 43.8773 316.3210 14.27918948115547
ITAMSAT
1 22828U 93061F 95343.69713855 .00000029 00000-0 29034-4 0 4155
2 22828 98.5959 57.6818 0011272 52.6820 307.5375 14.28122501 82927
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 95348.75572366 .00000032 00000-0 30552-4 0 4306
2 22829 98.5968 62.7070 0011036 40.7777 319.4228 14.28104400115566
KO-25
1 22830U 93061H 95354.14086422 -.00000064 00000-0 -85953-5 0 4506
2 22830 98.4957 59.0579 0011845 4.5658 355.5632 14.28102333116331
JIANBING-93 P/L(1)
1 22870U 93063H 95354.24549651 .00236670 84297-5 14935-3 0 3529
2 22870 56.4563 18.5059 0563002 267.5238 86.1260 15.04517529105308
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 95354.19414032 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 3634
2 22877 55.5391 56.3268 0037774 295.5118 64.1539 2.00566108 15782
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 95354.50689236 -.00000074 00000-0 10000-3 0 3904
2 22912 0.4423 282.6240 0003225 352.7275 345.9951 1.00275031 6054
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 95353.87220092 .00004399 00000-0 30669-3 0 4110
2 22920 28.4707 237.3999 0003201 352.3320 7.7280 15.03016881112259
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 95351.17197901 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2186
2 22969 82.5577 29.6287 0015654 341.1854 18.8680 13.16733376 90960
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 95348.53756162 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2094
2 22970 82.5584 31.4079 0016233 345.4600 14.6060 13.16826902 90627
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 95353.27943641 -.00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 2978
2 23027 55.0832 357.1931 0066657 200.7034 159.0600 2.00569451 13078
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 95347.30998027 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 2913
2 23043 64.7142 330.4282 0006978 201.4850 158.5023 2.13103257 13024
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 95349.53885595 -.00000016 00000-0 00000+0 0 2605
2 23044 64.7059 330.3461 0030367 207.8110 152.0378 2.13103405 13070
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 95354.40805204 -.00000035 00000-0 00000+0 0 2743
2 23045 64.6904 330.1944 0010020 25.9091 334.1435 2.13102704 13173
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 95353.92547160 -.00000244 00000-0 00000+0 0 4408
2 23051 0.4099 84.3154 0002622 178.2226 83.6095 1.00280446 13550
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 95343.51223956 .00003963 00000-0 66745-4 0 2645
2 23101 97.0879 174.3311 0011197 314.6088 45.4217 15.52228090 89709
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 95353.16159430 .00002455 00000-0 62838-3 0 2413
2 23125 7.5595 315.3134 7255172 271.4393 14.5935 2.31682494 11923
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 95349.26045286 .00000760 00000-0 21710-3 0 2065
2 23126 7.5959 317.0099 7261409 267.9654 15.6616 2.31503065 11875
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 95343.62707437 .00000030 00000-0 16164-4 0 1515
2 23179 82.9464 17.8397 0035622 298.3690 61.3877 13.75674794 70593
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 95354.54591250 .00000108 00000-0 00000+0 0 2288
2 23203 64.7776 210.1485 0007616 135.1937 224.9588 2.13102250 10576
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 95351.02574587 .00000095 00000-0 00000+0 0 2367
2 23204 64.7648 210.2988 0015052 352.3999 7.6645 2.13102251 10490
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 95349.50072917 .00000079 00000-0 00000+0 0 2225
2 23205 64.7665 210.3363 0001546 358.5845 1.5097 2.13102791 10469
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 95353.89784665 .00000116 00000-0 86140-4 0 6017
2 23233 98.8550 50.0769 0012602 335.7060 24.3508 14.12665240 67378
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 95353.66742633 .00000055 00000-0 49958-5 0 1175
2 23317 82.5447 225.0830 0025490 310.9198 48.9773 14.73985442 63946
ELEKTRO
1 23327U 94069A 95353.79934057 -.00000090 00000-0 00000+0 0 1096
2 23327 0.3880 255.8310 0001293 164.7510 31.1495 1.00272718 4196
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 95353.67650878 .00000084 00000-0 22175-4 0 4202
2 23342 97.9933 49.7854 0001174 101.2768 258.8563 14.69799994 60292
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 95353.09807382 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 1841
2 23396 65.0094 90.4341 0031029 191.1155 168.8188 2.13102784 8385
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 95354.21227083 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 1919
2 23397 65.0036 90.3976 0012233 317.5926 42.3204 2.13102304 8407
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 95354.09585610 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 2044
2 23398 64.9905 90.3818 0003125 266.5092 93.4603 2.13102200 8419
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 95354.48678632 -.00000265 00000-0 00000+0 0 2200
2 23426 1.8193 271.1364 0002411 341.3299 106.6473 1.00272183 3705
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 95343.49531988 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 974
2 23439 64.8140 331.4678 0166515 232.2365 126.3383 11.27523690 39289
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 95353.81839947 .00000070 00000-0 62936-4 0 4333
2 23455 98.9222 295.0476 0010560 33.6686 326.5167 14.11556310 50002
ODERACS II A
1 23471U 95004C 95353.75768889 .00063507 13017-4 13594-3 0 2645
2 23471 51.6410 241.2379 0010024 110.6309 249.5729 15.98726433 50686
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 95354.52509721 -.00000035 00000-0 00000+0 0 1307
2 23511 64.7245 330.4406 0007437 231.2022 128.7336 2.13103439 6142
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 95349.48107231 -.00000016 00000-0 00000+0 0 1407
2 23512 64.7140 330.6278 0008402 309.8033 50.1217 2.13102111 6033
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 95348.83562347 -.00000017 00000-0 00000+0 0 1501
2 23513 64.7256 330.6590 0013811 209.8657 150.0690 2.13103254 6023
SFU
1 23521U 95011A 95347.25693678 .00002458 00000-0 75882-4 0 1291
2 23521 28.4559 292.2353 0008139 145.7238 214.3878 15.29432284 41384
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 95353.46036169 -.00000271 00000-0 10000-3 0 840
2 23522 0.6059 310.1977 0000855 82.7396 0.6525 1.00271147 2640
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 95353.97562961 .00000063 00000-0 57672-4 0 3327
2 23533 98.8356 353.8132 0006494 202.3445 157.7446 14.12717178 38188
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 95346.14685468 .00000160 00000-0 62487-4 0 700
2 23547 69.9799 246.4169 0010097 89.0020 271.2260 14.45457719 36499
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 95348.86388680 .00010059 00000-0 26144-3 0 1641
2 23549 143.3655 181.7760 0238773 22.0243 339.0581 15.11605434 38274
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 95348.39100719 .00002302 00000-0 32858-4 0 835
2 23558 51.6505 329.9819 0005579 237.0629 122.9830 15.61126127560977
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 95354.25067662 .00000015 00000-0 21635-4 0 1475
2 23560 98.5503 65.9127 0000843 60.6495 299.4775 14.32248360 34815
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 95354.20810813 .00010056 00000-0 14038-3 0 2146
2 23579 51.6448 305.8225 0006399 119.1410 241.0482 15.57531378 33388
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 95353.87448245 -.00000051 00000-0 00000+0 0 1074
2 23581 0.1667 271.9377 0011977 181.6025 205.4942 1.00009784 2114
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 95348.56270634 .00000095 00000-0 27149-4 0 1250
2 23605 98.1050 282.0966 0001393 69.5759 290.5592 14.63859086 23390
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 95354.17053600 .00000055 00000-0 18501-4 0 995
2 23606 98.0873 288.0636 0008067 38.0250 322.1523 14.66915286 24323
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 95346.84434817 .00000251 00000-0 53147-4 0 470
2 23607 98.0884 280.9005 0009975 59.6125 300.6066 14.67188899 23152
TDRS 6
1 23613U 95035B 95354.42037060 .00000137 00000-0 00000+0 0 1032
2 23613 0.3046 84.0632 0002713 157.1266 208.7698 1.00275023 1588
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 95345.33530748 .00000052 00000-0 00000+0 0 757
2 23620 64.8336 210.3040 0018274 162.6778 197.4737 2.13102927 2988
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 95353.95857760 .00000110 00000-0 00000+0 0 868
2 23621 64.8409 210.0146 0017622 173.9592 186.1543 2.13102333 3161
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 95351.20154691 .00000097 00000-0 00000+0 0 817
2 23622 64.8292 210.1136 0036766 162.3371 197.8739 2.13102418 3103
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 95348.15089960 -.00001191 00000-0 00000+0 0 228
2 23632 68.2070 253.2340 8948563 318.2430 21.6880 0.26356400 353
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 95351.18426273 .00000127 00000-0 16176-4 0 405
2 23657 82.5325 9.0012 0026566 286.7175 73.1113 14.73440418 15887
Soyuz TM-22
1 23665U 95047A 95354.20810813 .00010056 00000-0 14038-3 0 1067
2 23665 51.6448 305.8225 0006399 119.1410 241.0482 15.57531378 16824
Progress M-29
1 23678U 95053A 95353.63073565 .00000240 00000-0 10000-4 0 709
2 23678 51.6447 308.7174 0006487 106.1658 254.2399 15.57257433561836
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 95353.53480380 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 806
2 23710 98.5777 357.7871 0001062 80.3183 279.8119 14.29976076 6428
1995067A
1 23730U 95067A 95351.67517763 .00039257 00000-0 62299-2 0 40
2 23730 6.9522 236.4969 7286486 187.0099 150.1447 2.28781363 243
1995067B
1 23731U 95067B 95353.52570602 -.00000254 00000-0 00000+0 0 87
2 23731 0.1546 268.1661 0011906 217.8628 243.3818 1.00336009 141
1995067C
1 23732U 95067C 95345.28709180 -.00000113 00000-0 00000+0 0 25
2 23732 6.8016 240.2951 7350648 180.8584 142.4403 2.18269142 92
1995067D
1 23733U 95067D 95349.06334745 .00030753 00000-0 51908-2 0 81
2 23733 6.9643 237.9068 7286966 184.5044 160.0384 2.28594318 186
1995068A
1 23734U 95068A 95354.36670451 .00000109 00000-0 10000-3 0 91
2 23734 64.8364 209.9160 0005111 193.5355 166.4984 2.13130912 132
1995068B
1 23735U 95068B 95354.36708650 .00000109 00000-0 10000-4 0 131
2 23735 64.8251 209.9333 0004841 214.7186 145.3573 2.13115134 136
1995068B
1 23736U 95068B 95349.36604390 .00000078 00000-0 00000+0 0 29
2 23736 64.8586 210.0602 0005948 205.5700 277.6749 2.13119384 11
1995068D
1 23737U 95068D 95348.94371692 .11793098 78787-5 10221-3 0 68
2 23737 64.8168 207.7143 0007255 256.5960 238.9392 16.51600890 117
1995068E
1 23738U 95068E 95348.55609337 .59377249 81617-5 21656-3 0 42
2 23738 64.7999 209.2089 0008852 357.2814 2.8330 16.57875961 36
1995068F
1 23739U 95068F 95352.48510548 .00000107 00000-0 10000-4 0 63
2 23739 64.8326 209.9903 0009035 258.5111 101.4780 2.13374180 85
1995068G
1 23740U 95068G 95348.60000000 .00000032 00000-0 00000+0 0 17
2 23740 64.8690 210.0580 5811747 297.3930 95.0500 4.23954300 24
1995069A
1 23741U 95069A 95350.97392924 -.00019761 24967-6 -15424-2 0 71
2 23741 26.9016 272.3386 7301358 178.6937 185.8735 2.28230978 55
1995069B
1 23742U 95069B 95353.82402826 .00035005 13196-5 24158-2 0 30
2 23742 26.9543 270.2055 7211821 181.5191 173.6904 2.39874582 129
Progress M-30
1 23744U 95070A 95354.65608425 .00078341 13837-4 15241-3 0 113
2 23744 51.6428 303.5524 0050716 131.0990 229.4864 15.97800376 339
1995070B
1 23745U 95070B 95354.80247787 .04817474 12384-4 37767-3 0 138
2 23745 51.6408 302.3246 0004997 88.5238 271.6359 16.39340807 363
1995071A
1 23748U 95071A 95354.80123264 .00005794 00000-0 10000-3 0 66
2 23748 65.0203 133.5618 0006496 233.0437 127.0114 15.52064873 126
1995071C
1 23750U 95071C 95354.40085137 .43548823 87146-5 41247-3 0 49
2 23750 65.0056 134.7662 0128187 56.1759 305.6754 16.30497756 64
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:12:08 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net (Thomas Randall)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR frequencies?
Date: Sat, 30 Dec 95 22:54:03 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <4c4fut$bei@over.mhv.net>
References: <Pine.SOL.3.91.951228134640.22784D-100000@spacelink>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port113.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
In article <Pine.SOL.3.91.951228134640.22784D-100000@spacelink>,
Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov> wrote:
>Is MIR currently using 145.550 simplex or 145.800 simplex, or both?
>----------
>Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mir uses both but mainly 145.550. They were broadcasting a pre-recorded
greetings message yesterday. Listen in to both, you never know which
they'll use but they run mainly packet on 145.550. No packet yesterday,
just the message.
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and they are not that of MHV.NET!
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:12:08 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.av.qnet.com!ibbs!js
From: js@ibbs.av.org (Jeff Stillinger)
Subject: STS-72 When?
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
Organization: Coffee Radio Difference Committee
Message-ID: <DKH1F1.7B3@ibbs.av.org>
Date: Sun, 31 Dec 1995 22:06:37 GMT
Lines: 18
I signed up on a mailing list out of San Diego, CA. The elements are very
good and up to date. Needless to say, I am impressed. However, the set
sent before a launch has no launch date. :-) So when is STS-72 going to
launch?
Oh, BTW. What happend to NASA Select? The only thing that has been on is
"NASA WASH" with a color pattern. Did even NASA get laid off? If so what
about the people that are military that happen to be assigned to NASA duty?
I ask since there has been no lack of work for me. We have continued as
normal. Humm..
--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jeff Stillinger - KB6IBB js@ibbs.av.org
PSC Box 3429 js@red-eft.la.ca.us
Edwards AFB, CA 93524 +1 805 258 7303 8N1
Flight Test Center, crashing aircraft so you don't have too.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Unknown Mon Jan 01 01:12:09 1996
Path: news.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news.monad.net!news.cyberportal.net !usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir Happy New Year!!!
Date: 31 Dec 1995 22:37:38 GMT
Organization: CyberPort, LLC of Claremont NH
Lines: 31
Message-ID: <4c73bi$pll@news.cyberportal.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dhend.cyberportal.net
X-Newsreader: SPRY News 3.03 (SPRY, Inc.)
this message was heard from Mir 12/31/95 during the afternoon, on 145.550
Happy New Year!!!!
Roma-zero-MIR Roma-zero-MIR
Mir Space Station
Russian Mir Space Station
Wishing you a Happy New Year!
This is Crew Number 20 of Space Station Mir here working.
Yuri Gidzenko Board commander,Board Engineer Thomas Reiter, and myself
Sergei Avdeyev Board Engineer #1.
We wish you hello and A Very Happy Next Year!!!
This is Mir Space Station.
e-mail=dhend@cyberportal.net
packet= N1PPP @ WA1WOK.FN43FE.NH.USA.NOAM zip 03743
phone 1-603-542-2493 1-603-542-6917
Sex is the most fun you can have without logging on.
Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie!"...until you can find a rock.
Be wary of strong drink.
It can make you shoot at tax collectors and miss.
-Lazarus Long
I still miss my ex-wife, but my aim is getting better....