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The World of Ham Radio CD-ROM
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Aug 05 11:39:03 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!holonet!colossus.holonet.net!agate!info.ucla.edu!nnrp.info.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!news.sgi.com!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!nntp-xfer-1.csn.net!csn!nntp-xfer-2.csn.net!symbios.com!southwind.net!usenet
From: Ken Bessler <kg0wx@southwind.net>
Newsgroups: rec.ham-radio.swap,alt.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,fidonet.ham,rec.ham-radio,rec.ham-radio.packet,rec.ham-radio.swap,slac.rec.ham_radio,su.org.ham-radio,swb.lists.linux.hams,rec.radio.swap,tnn.radio.amateur,uwarwick.societies.amateur-radio
Subject: Re: homepage revised
Date: Thu, 01 Aug 1996 00:28:24 -0500
Organization: Design Services Company
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <32004078.7905@southwind.net>
References: <31FFFC41.3F54@pactitle.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ict05.southwind.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win95; I)
To: Dave Booth <booth@pactitle.com>
Xref: news2.epix.net alt.radio.scanner:32458 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23476 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16629 rec.radio.amateur.dx:161 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31447 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16306 rec.radio.amateur.misc:105668 rec.radio.amateur.policy:35734 rec.radio.amateur.space:7369 fidonet.ham:8 slac.rec.ham_radio:63 su.org.ham-radio:294 swb.lists.linux.hams:14 rec.radio.swap:70935 tnn.radio.amateur:68 uwarwick.societies.amateur-radio:27
Dave Booth wrote:
>
> I just revised my homepage if you want to check it out.
> new stuff!
> --
> Dave Booth
> kc6wfs
I am always ready to surf....However I do need a URL....:-)
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Aug 05 11:39:04 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!new-news.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-chi-8.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-chi-13.sprintlink.net!news.megalink.net!imci4!newsfeed.internetmci.com!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!usc!newshub.cts.com!news15.crl.com!nntp.crl.com!usenet
From: Dave Booth <booth@pactitle.com>
Newsgroups: rec.ham-radio.packet,alt.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,fidonet.ham,rec.ham-radio,rec.ham-radio.packet,rec.ham-radio.swap,slac.rec.ham_radio,su.org.ham-radio,swb.lists.linux.hams,rec.radio.swap,tnn.radio.amateur,uwarwick.societies.amateur-radio
Subject: Revised Homepage URL
Date: Thu, 01 Aug 1996 10:20:54 -0700
Organization: KC6WFS
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <3200E776.41C6@pactitle.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 165.113.223.131
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0b5a (X11; U; IRIX 5.3 IP19)
Xref: news2.epix.net alt.radio.scanner:32465 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23479 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16630 rec.radio.amateur.dx:162 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31463 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16315 rec.radio.amateur.misc:105682 rec.radio.amateur.policy:35745 rec.radio.amateur.space:7371 fidonet.ham:9 slac.rec.ham_radio:64 su.org.ham-radio:295 swb.lists.linux.hams:15 rec.radio.swap:70961 tnn.radio.amateur:69 uwarwick.societies.amateur-radio:28
Sorry for not having the url in there....
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/5860
Enjoy!!!!!
dave booth kc6wfs
booth@pactitle.com
kc6wfs@aol.com
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Aug 05 11:39:05 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.cyberenet.net!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!chi-news.cic.net!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Stand-Alone vs Internal Card Satellite Tracking Hardware
Date: 1 Aug 1996 18:54:20 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <4tqugs$f4f@tilde.csc.ti.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kend.sc.ti.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
Does anyone know of a comprehensive comparison of types
and brands of external box and PC card tracking hardware? If
so,please point me to it. I like the SaTrack IV box, but
also like the Logsat software which works with the Kansas
City Tracker PC card, so anything that would guide me to the best
system would help. There are probably some other programs and
hardware that should be considered, but information is hard to
find. Magazine reviews of equipment aren't much help since they
all seem to be written by the manufacturer's marketing department!
Ken K5MBV
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Aug 05 11:39:06 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-6.sprintlink.net!news.inc.net!news.sol.net!spool.mu.edu!news.sgi.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news-out.microserve.net!news-in.microserve.net!news.paonline.com!usenet
From: dcopeland@gxl.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Satellite Tracking Program
Date: Fri, 02 Aug 1996 17:05:37 GMT
Organization: Pennsylvania Online [Usenet News Server for Hire]
Lines: 51
Message-ID: <3201efa0.0@news3.paonline.com>
References: <psgeorge-1607961616500001@cmh-p141.infinet.com> <31fd8a74.0@news3.paonline.com> <4to3cu$a43@freenet-news.carleton.ca>
NNTP-Posting-Host: news3.paonline.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
ae517@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Russ Renaud) wrote:
> (dcopeland@gxl.com) writes:
>> psgeorge@infinet.com (Paul S. George) wrote:
>>
>>>--
>>>Paul S. George n8xqv (psgeorge@infinet.com)
>>
>> I would stay away from NOVA. When it comes time for an update they
>> will change the name and you must pay full price!
>> Try LOGSAT PRO. It is a great program and has free updates on the net.
>> Just want to keep others from making the NOVA mistake like I did!
>>
>> dcopeland
>This is untrue! Registered users of Nova can get free upgrades
>via the Internet at URL http://www.webcom.com/~w9ip/
This is not quite true. You will get minor bug fixes for free but when
there is new features to NOVA they simply change the name and you will
be charged for it again.
I first purchased the product when it was called REAL TRACK and
thought it was a good product. I called Mike and and asked about the
chance for a Windows version. He told me a new version would be out
and I would not want Windows. At Dayton last year I let him talk me
into this new version with a new name ( so he could charge again) even
though I wanted a Windows product. Now he has a Windows version of
the same product. I asked him about an upgrade price for current
users. He told me none would be offered! When I returned from Dayton I
boxed all his stuff up and returned it to him and told him I did not
want to support him or his product. In the letter I told him I was not
asking for a free lunch, just a reduced price for current users who
want to upgrade.
He responded by email and told me there would be no upgrade price.
Everyone will have to pay full price.
I then called LOGSAT PRO and asked them how they would handle this
problem. They said it would have been a free upgrade!!!
So you see this is not just a flam post, I gave them a chance to make
it right and they refused.
So stay away from NOVA !!!!!!!!!!!
dcopeland@woodtech.com
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Aug 05 11:39:07 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-ana-24.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!lily.redrose.net!NewsWatcher!user
From: CSanders@RedRose.net (Curt Sanders)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Website updated
Date: 3 Aug 1996 18:24:52 GMT
Organization: a Digital Internet AlphaServer Site
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <CSanders-0308961420260001@205.246.83.177>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 205.246.83.177
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.misc:105728 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23498 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16638 rec.radio.amateur.dx:169 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16321 rec.radio.amateur.space:7373
New and improved Web site! www.QTH.com/N3TLJ *Curt's Cyber Corner*
* faster loading home page
* aminated GIF
* for Ham Radio operators -- new URL form for updating/adding new sites
also with 262 selected new Ham Radio links added since mid-June 96.
Come visit! Netscape or Internet Explorer recommended to appreciate the site.
From amsoft@epix.net Sun Aug 11 05:46:19 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-22.sprintlink.net!nntp04.primenet.com!news.shkoo.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.fibr.net!imci2!news.internetMCI.com!pull-feed.internetmci.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!prairienet.org!w9sz
From: w9sz@prairienet.org (Zack Widup)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: GPS data
Date: 5 Aug 1996 18:21:45 GMT
Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4u5e3p$jbm@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
Reply-To: w9sz@prairienet.org (Zack Widup)
NNTP-Posting-Host: firefly.prairienet.org
Does anyone know where to find data on the GPS system (such as accuracy,
basics on how it works, etc)?
Is there a WWW site somewhere that has this information?
Please respond directly to me. Thanks.
73, Zack W9SZ
--
"You can't be optimistic with a misty optic" - Rex Luscus
From amsoft@epix.net Sun Aug 11 05:46:20 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-200.sprintlink.net!psgrain!iafrica.com!pipex-sa.net!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!news.be.innet.net!INbe.net!news.nl.innet.net!INnl.net!hunter.premier.net!news.cais.net!usenet.seri.re.kr!news.dacom.co.kr!news.kreonet.re.kr!EU.net!enews.sgi.com!decwrl!nntp.crl.com!usenet
From: Dave Booth <booth@pactitle.com>
Newsgroups: va.general,uk.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.packet,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,nc.general
Subject: Re: Updated Ham Pages
Date: Tue, 06 Aug 1996 11:28:44 -0700
Organization: KC6WFS
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <32078EDC.446B@pactitle.com>
References: <NEWTNews.838857286.5968.wa4pgm@wa4pgm.moonstar.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 165.113.223.131
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (X11; I; IRIX 5.3 IP19)
Xref: news2.epix.net va.general:10022 uk.radio.amateur:15102 rec.radio.amateur.space:7375 rec.radio.amateur.misc:105762 rec.radio.amateur.dx:177 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23519 nc.general:3264
wa4pgm@moonstar.com wrote:
>
> I just uploaded my newest pages. Due to the length of just
> the single page I have split the page up. Check it out,
> and many thanks for the comments. Anyone like to add anything ?
> Comments direct please.
> 73 Kyle
>
> http://www.moonstar.com/~wa4pgm/
I'll go check it out!
kc6wfs
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/5860
--
Dave Booth
From amsoft@epix.net Sun Aug 11 05:46:22 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!new-news.sprintlink.net!news.infi.net!newsfeed.direct.ca!op.net!hunter.premier.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.conterra.com!usenet
From: JB <starman@conterra.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Discovery of Early Martian Life
Date: Tue, 06 Aug 1996 17:47:50 -0500
Organization: Conterra Communications
Lines: 73
Message-ID: <3207CB96.74AD@conterra.com>
Reply-To: starman@conterra.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp12.conterra.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (Macintosh; I; 68K)
Subject:
NASA Briefing Wednesday on Discovery of Early Martian Life
Date:
Tue, 6 Aug 1996 16:30:18 -0400
From:
NASANews@luna.osf.hq.nasa.gov (NASA HQ Public Affairs Office)
To:
press-release-nasa@venus.hq.nasa.gov
Donald Savage
Headquarters, Washington, DC August 6, 1996
(Phone: 202/358-1727)
James Hartsfield
Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX
(Phone: 713/483-5111)
David F. Salisbury
Stanford University, CA
(Phone: 415/723-2558)
NOTE TO EDITORS: N96-53
NASA BRIEFING WEDNESDAY ON DISCOVERY OF POSSIBLE EARLY MARTIAN LIFE
A team of NASA and Stanford scientists will discuss
its findings showing strong circumstantial evidence of
possible early Martian life, including microfossil remains
found in a Martian meteorite, at a news conference scheduled
for 1:00 p.m. EDT, August 7, at NASA Headquarters, 300 E. St.
SW, Washington, DC. The team's findings will be published in
the August 16 issue of Science magazine.
Panelists will be:
- Dr. Wesley Huntress, Jr., NASA Assoc. Administrator for Space
Science,
Washington, DC
- Dr. David McKay, principal author, NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC),
Houston, TX
- Dr. Everett Gibson, NASA JSC, Houston, TX
- Dr. Richard N. Zare, Professor of Chemistry, Stanford University, CA
- Kathy Thomas-Keprta, Lockheed-Martin, JSC, Houston, TX
- Dr. William Schopf, Professor, Department of Earth and Space
Sciences,
Univ. of California, Los Angeles
The briefing will be carried live on NASA TV with two-
way question-and-answer capability for reporters covering the
event from participating NASA centers. Audio of the
broadcast will be available on voice circuit at the Kennedy
Space Center by calling 407/867-1260.
NASA Television is broadcast on Spacenet 2,
transponder 5, channel 9, C-Band, located at 69 degrees West
longitude, with horizontal polarization. Frequency will be
on 3880.0 megahertz, with audio on 6.8 megahertz.
- end -
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new
discoveries, is not "Eureka!" (I found it!) but "That's funny ..."
-- Isaac Asimov
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
starman@conterra.com
starman@scsu.scsu.edu
brow3600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
http://www.conterra.com/starman/sbp.html
From amsoft@epix.net Sun Aug 11 05:46:23 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!chi-news.cic.net!newspump.sol.net!spool.mu.edu!news.sgi.com!enews.sgi.com!EU.net!sun4nl!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Radiation testing of micros ?
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV)
Reply-To: pe1chl@amsat.org
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DvrFEH.Izq@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <DAC.96Aug5091845@maya.arc.nasa.gov>
Date: Wed, 7 Aug 1996 08:54:17 GMT
Lines: 16
In <DAC.96Aug5091845@maya.arc.nasa.gov> dac@maya.arc.nasa.gov (Dan Christian)
writes:
>Has anyone done any radiation testing of micro-controllers or
>micro-processors? I'm interested in both total dose and single event
>upset numbers. I'm specifically interested in the space environment,
>so reliability data from ham satellites would be useful too.
The people at the UoSAT unit, University of Surrey, Guildford (UK) have
done work in this area.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Sun Aug 11 05:46:23 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.icsc.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.net66.com!jolt.pagesat.net!pagesat.net!jump.net!imci4!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.cyberhighway.net!news
From: rb@cyberhighway.net (John Jordan)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Please Post Sharware Version of "Instatracker" =)
Date: Wed, 07 Aug 1996 20:54:44 GMT
Organization: CyberHighway Internet Services
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <4uavpm$ugs@host-3.cyberhighway.net>
References: <4u80bt$4rg@news.dialnet.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: salempm2-9.cyberhighway.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/32.126
kb0nza@mail.dialnet.net (Brad Cunningham) wrote:
>
>
> Would someone please post the sharware version of "InstaTracker"
>satalite tracking program here. Or, zip it down and stick it in me
>E-Mail? Thanx.
>
> Brad Cunningham KB0NZA
> Springfield Mo.
>
> kb0nza@mail.dialnet.net
>
Shareware of IT? I don't think there ever was one.. A couple years
back the program found it's way onto a shareware CD ROM, the author of
InstantTrack ( Franklin Antonio) sued the CD ROM people for this
mistake.. It's possible that I am wrong that there is no SW of IT,
but I doubt it.
73's
John KB7VZL
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:20 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!tezcat.com!imci5!imci4!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sgi.com!news.cs.indiana.edu!purdue!mozo.cc.purdue.edu!news
From: Mark <kb9khm@expert.cc.purdue.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Antennas for MIR
Date: Sun, 11 Aug 1996 20:59:39 -0500
Organization: Purdue University
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <320E900B.30BD@expert.cc.purdue.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: expert.cc.purdue.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (Win95; I)
I seem to have a LOT of fading while listening to the new 70cm repeater
on MIR with my horz. polorized beam. I was wondering if any one had
any oppinions on what type of antenna system would work best with the
new repeater. I'm curious about trying circularly polarized antennas
(don't have any right now, but I'd build one if that was the way to
go) and wondered "if circular polorization is the way to go . . . should
it be right hand or left hand?"
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!
Mark <KB9KHM>
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:22 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news-res.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!hunter.premier.net!news.cais.net!nntp04.primenet.com!news.shkoo.com!nntp.primenet.com!winternet.com!mr.net!news.sgi.com!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!howland.erols.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.ac.net!news1.erols.com!newsmaster@erols.com
From: Jake Brodsky <frussle@erols.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: interferometers?
Date: Mon, 12 Aug 1996 12:07:57 -0700
Organization: Wheeeeee!
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <320F810D.2B5E@erols.com>
References: <4uejn7$g80@bubba.NMSU.Edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dam-as2s59.erols.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win16; I)
Interfermetrics only work well if you can accurately determine your
position, relative to the other station down to a reasonably small
fraction of the wavelength you're using. They also only work well
if you have a very accurate frequency standard. This, however, is
something you can achieve with GPS. As for the latter, I have no
idea how radio astronomers do it.
73,
Jake Brodsky, mailto:frussle@erols.com
PP-ASEL-IA, Cessna Cardinal N30946, Based @ MD24
Amateur Radio Station AB3A
"Beware of the massive impossible!"
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:22 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!terra.net!nntp.telebit.com!uunet!in3.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.radio.org!news
From: "Mary Ellen Powers" <mpowers@ne1h.radio.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.swap
Subject: FS: Kantronics DataEngine and complete 96/1200 baud packet setup
Date: 13 Aug 1996 02:24:41 GMT
Organization: TAC, The Atlanta Connection and Radio.Org
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <01bb88bf$0a4a6780$b4c41cce@hurricane.ne1h.radio.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: hurricane.ne1h.radio.org
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1132
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16693 rec.radio.amateur.space:7386 rec.radio.swap:71363
All,
I have the following for sale. All is complete and working.
1) Kantronics DataEngine
2) Tekk KS-900 UHF data radio on 441.000
3) Tekk KS-960 UHF data radio on 441.000
4) Alinco 1200T 1200 baud data radio (synth'd)
5) Pacomm TNC-2 (can't remember model number w/DCD)
All cables, power supplies, etc. Tuned, tweeked (for deviation) and ready
to go!
Looking to sell as a complete set and I would like to get around 700.00 for
the set. Please email any offers to ne1h@ne1h.radio.org
Thanks,
Alan Adamson
ne1h@ne1h.radio.org
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:24 1996
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From: "James Van Houten" <jdvh@jdvh.com>
Newsgroups: rec.ham-radio,rec.ham-radio.packet,rec.ham-radio.swap,rec.radio,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec
Subject: New Ham Radio Discussion Area on the Web!
Date: 13 Aug 1996 04:32:42 GMT
Organization: J. D. Van Houten & Associates
Lines: 18
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Hello All,
Will keep it short and to the point. There is a new resource for Ham radio
topics. It is on the web. Come on over and visit
http://www.coronetsec.com/hamradio. All hamradio topics welcome. Hope to
see you there soon.
Jim
KA3TTU
ps. Don't forget to tell all of your non-newsgroup readin' friends!! :-)
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------
James Van Houten http://www.coronetsec.com/hamradio
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:24 1996
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From: Craig Nicholson <craign@newnorth.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Sat Rigs
Date: Tue, 13 Aug 1996 07:45:43 -0500
Organization: Rhinelander Telephone Co
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Is there a satellite capable radio out there that tracks doppler and
compensates for it automatically?
--
Craig Nicholson
KW9R
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:25 1996
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From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR Repeater
Date: 13 Aug 1996 17:59:55 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <4uqfqr$eb6@tilde.csc.ti.com>
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Forgot to mention: I tried 5 and 10KHZ offsets for Doppler with no
luck..
Ken K5MBV>
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:26 1996
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From: Bob Winingham <kc5ejk@onramp.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR Repeater
Date: 14 Aug 1996 04:29:34 GMT
Organization: OnRamp Technologies; ISP; Dallas/Ft Worth/Houston, TX USA
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <4urkne$56m@news.onramp.net>
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To: mbv@ti.com
X-URL: news:4uqfqr$eb6@tilde.csc.ti.com
>Forgot to mention: I tried 5 and 10KHZ offsets for Doppler with no luck..
When you were receiving at 10Kkhz offset did you xmit at 10Knz
the other direction from the center freq.
Also I have read you need 50 watts with a 7 element ant.
I have 50 Watts with a 3 element and can't seem to make it.
73
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:27 1996
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From: Mike <Mike@miti.demon.co.uk>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: SET TIME IN HOMEPLANET:HELP PLEASE
Date: Wed, 14 Aug 1996 07:23:16 +0100
Organization: None
Lines: 15
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <w3SgxDAUDXEyEwFX@miti.demon.co.uk>
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Hi,
I am using Homeplanet with Windows 95. I have not been able to
find a way of setting the time to UTC. I have used the command in
Autoexec as suggested in the help file but it still reverts to Pacific
Standard Time.
Any help would be appreciated
*********************************************************
***
mike@miti.demon.co.uk
OR
mike_fallon@mon.bbc.co.uk
Buckinghamshire, UK.
From amsoft@epix.net Fri Aug 16 15:33:28 1996
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From: jrayol@internext.COM.BR (jrayol@internext.com.br)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Oscar 27
Date: 15 Aug 96 01:06:17 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <01BB8A82.45F227E0@Jrayol.internext.com.br>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mail.ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
Hello Friends.
Today I work for the first time Oscar 27 (14 aug = 15:01~15:08 utc). I have
a good return of my own signal on 70 cm band. But, there were a lot of spanish
speaking stations around the same frequency interfering.
My coordinates is:
FI96XU - UTC -4
Manaus, Am Brasil
73's de PP8KWA
Jefferson R. Frederico.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:23 1996
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From: "William Karl" <wkarl@magnum.wpe.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Please Post Sharware Version of "Instatracker" =)
Date: 13 Aug 1996 18:18:24 GMT
Organization: W.Pierce Electronnics, Oneonta, NY
Lines: 31
Message-ID: <01bb8943$a69ad640$55066fcf@wkarl>
References: <4u80bt$4rg@news.dialnet.net> <4ub3eh$i3k@handel.seattleu.edu> <01bb854c$b3225140$4576ffcc@wkarl> <4uk3un$mh5@handel.seattleu.edu>
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--
William Karl <wkarl@magnum.wpe.com>
Cooperstown, NY
"Often wrong, but never in doubt"
Peter A. Klein <pklein@news.seattleu.edu> wrote in article
<4uk3un$mh5@handel.seattleu.edu>...
> I said:
> >> While InstantTrack is not the newest or most feature-laden tracking
> >> program out there, it is still about the fastest and most convenient
to
> >> operate real-time. I and many other people still use it for most of
our
> >> day-to-day operations. And at about $50 for AMSAT members, $70 for
> >> non-members, it's a good deal.
>
> In article <01bb854c$b3225140$4576ffcc@wkarl>,
> William Karl <wkarl@magnum.wpe.com> wrote:
>
> >IT is a great program with the most beautiful graphics, but it doesn't
like
> >Windows 95 because of the way Windows 95 manages the time display.
> >So if you use Windows 95 you may be disappointed.
My apologies to the group and to all the Instant Track loyalists. I did not
have the proper SET TZ+ statement in my autoexec.bat. Thanks to the several
of you who helped me with this. Check my signature for the real reason.
Bill, W2BY
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:24 1996
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From: Dave Booth <booth@pactitle.com>
Newsgroups: rec.ham-radio,rec.ham-radio.packet,rec.ham-radio.swap,rec.radio,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec
Subject: Re: New Ham Radio Discussion Area on the Web!
Date: Fri, 16 Aug 1996 19:10:24 -0700
Organization: KC6WFS
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32152A10.41C6@pactitle.com>
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To: James Van Houten <jdvh@jdvh.com>
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23640 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16707 rec.radio.amateur.dx:205 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16425 rec.radio.amateur.misc:105963 rec.radio.amateur.policy:35916 rec.radio.amateur.space:7388
James Van Houten wrote:
>
> Hello All,
>
> Will keep it short and to the point. There is a new resource for Ham radio
> topics. It is on the web. Come on over and visit
> http://www.coronetsec.com/hamradio All hamradio topics welcome. Hope to
> see you there soon.
>
> Jim
> KA3TTU
>
> ps. Don't forget to tell all of your non-newsgroup readin' friends!! :-)
> --
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ----------
> James Van Houten http://www.coronetsec.com/hamradio
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ----------
I'll have to go and check it out!
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/5860
--
Dave Booth
kc6wfs dmo4rk
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:25 1996
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From: "Ralph Wallio, W0RPK" <wallio@dsmnet.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: JAS-II Launched and Heard in Iowa
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 1996 10:57:35 -0700
Organization: Middle River Valley Radio Observatory
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <3216080F.12E0@dsmnet.com>
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Info from numerous sources indicates a successful launch of JAS-II.
CW telemetry was heard this morning in Iowa on 435.795MHz (+/- doppler)
with a TCA (Time of Closest Approach) of 1610Z. Please post observation
data and elements when they are available. 73, Ralph
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:26 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
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From: gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
Subject: Re: MIR Repeater
Message-ID: <1996Aug18.144504.15350@ke4zv.atl.ga.us>
Reply-To: gary@ke4zv.atl.ga.us (Gary Coffman)
Organization: Destructive Testing Systems
References: <4ush5i$3afh@ns4-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU> <4v1kh9$20m@news.onramp.net> <32166DAC.554A@wco.com> <cgreenha.444.32171D36@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 14:45:04 GMT
Lines: 16
In article <cgreenha.444.32171D36@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu> cgreenha@magnus.a
cs.ohio-state.edu (Christopher K. Greenhalgh) writes:
>
>"CTCSS" and "PL" (private line) are both the same. "Private Line" was a name
>that GE (I think) gave to its commercial radios when they first put CTCSS in
>them, and the term spilled over into the ham community.
PL is Motorola's trademark. GE calls it CG, Channel Guard. But they're
both CTCSS just the same.
Gary
--
Gary Coffman KE4ZV | You make it, | Due to provider problems
Destructive Testing Systems | we break it. | with previous uucp address
es
534 Shannon Way | Guaranteed! | Email to ke4zv@radio.org
Lawrenceville, GA 30244 | |
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:27 1996
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From: mbv@flash.net (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR pass Aug 18 1650 CDT Dallas
Date: 18 Aug 1996 22:13:40 GMT
Organization: Flash-Net Internet Service Provider, 888-FLASHNET
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <4v84ik$t8@excelsior.flash.net>
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Just finished turning off the FT470 after listening on the
beacon and the repeater downlink frequencys. There wasn't a signal
on either one. Does anyone know what kind of schedule to expect?
Could there be some kind of power rationing involved? Operating
a repeater shouldn't disturb the crew since the speaker could be
turned off.
A few days ago, the repeater signal was very strong and I could
hear a number of contacts being made. My 141.3 tone wasn't working
at that time and so I couldn't make a contact with the talkie.
Does anyone have the straight scoop on MIR SAFEX schedule and
system requirements? The 40 el RHCP beam gets a good signal and
should put up enough from 5W to work if there isn't a high noise
level or tight squelch on the MIR receiver.
Ken K5MBV
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:28 1996
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From: "Bernard A. Poskus and Cheryl A. Blehm-Poskus" <hamdan@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ORBITAL ELEMENTS FOR JAS-2
Date: 18 Aug 1996 23:49:36 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4v8a6g$4gl@dfw-ixnews5.ix.netcom.com>
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X-NETCOM-Date: Sun Aug 18 6:49:36 PM CDT 1996
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 16bit)
August 18, 1996, 23:49UTC
Hello and thanks for reading this message. Does anyone have an orbital
element set for JAS-2? I've seen where several stateside hams have
already heard its beacon. If anyone has the elements, I would appreciate
it if they could either e-mail me (hamdan@ix.netcom.com), or post them to
this newsgroup.
See you on the birds! 73's de Bernie, KF0QS
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:29 1996
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From: kmec@aol.com (Kmec)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: interferometers?
Date: 20 Aug 1996 00:25:29 -0400
Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364)
Lines: 13
Sender: root@newsbf02.news.aol.com
Message-ID: <4vbenp$jas@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
References: <4uejn7$g80@bubba.NMSU.Edu>
Reply-To: kmec@aol.com (Kmec)
NNTP-Posting-Host: newsbf02.mail.aol.com
In answer to your question about interferometer systems made out of old
sat equipment/dishes. Been done and works for radio astronomy. Excellent
material on topic available from Jeff Lichtman, Radio Astronomy Supplies
190 Jade Cove Drive, Roswell, GA 30075, (404)-992-4959. Good books by W.
Lonc and Bob Sickels.
I am a member of SARA (Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers). Jeff
Lichtman helped found this group years ago. Many have done neat stuff.
Why re-invent the wheel. Have fun.
73's
Jeff Kruth, WA3ZKR
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:30 1996
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From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK059 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 20 Aug 1996 17:55:46 -0400
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: mtracy@arrl.org
Message-ID: <$arlk059.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.info:11651 rec.radio.amateur.space:7395
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK059
ARLK059 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK59
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 59 ARLK059
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT August 20, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK059
ARLK059 Keplerian data
Thanks to Con, W5BWF, 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 96233.56187951 .00029736 00000-0 34090-3 0 6318
2 16609 51.6486 159.7781 0010943 80.8907 279.3320 15.61768593599966
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96233.06484831 .00000158 00000-0 10000-3 0 04485
2 14129 26.0004 193.7297 6030338 41.8453 351.0662 2.05879692071185
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96233.13661153 .00000044 00000-0 32254-4 0 2524
2 18129 82.9259 101.2803 0011906 345.5801 14.5013 13.72368434458941
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96233.00415971 .00000073 00000-0 20185-4 0 09165
2 14781 97.8040 220.9015 0010713 248.0358 111.9710 14.69472590667020
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96231.80925366 .00000036 00000-0 22075-4 0 09143
2 21089 82.9250 142.9129 0031133 58.5941 301.8252 13.74072422277637
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 96228.19615732 .00017325 90928-6 17749-2 0 02560
2 19216 57.1593 98.1130 7439855 47.7970 354.9981 2.10811720031081
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96232.09618537 -.00000021 00000-0 84599-5 0 02088
2 20437 98.5426 313.9292 0011778 21.5453 338.6203 14.29928135343048
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96231.62772974 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01643
2 23439 64.8177 282.1073 0159171 188.1101 171.7243 11.27528383067821
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96231.77172761 -.00000008 00000-0 13741-4 0 00070
2 20439 98.5572 315.9437 0011807 23.2572 336.9143 14.29981601343017
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96233.25700259 -.00000005 00000-0 14830-4 0 39
2 20440 98.5570 318.0722 0012017 18.2377 341.9231 14.30123816343257
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96231.77894694 -.00000011 00000-0 12454-4 0 00107
2 20441 98.5595 316.5539 0012662 20.2987 339.8697 14.30093055343040
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96231.76998627 .00000021 00000-0 24865-4 0 00107
2 20442 98.5612 317.0657 0013162 20.0787 340.0910 14.30202688343068
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96232.06871135 -.00000025 00000-0 20835-4 0 09079
2 20480 99.0234 244.9603 0540684 342.0722 16.1943 12.83234314305955
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96232.11887227 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07412
2 21087 82.9395 275.1289 0037030 32.4516 327.8905 13.74570748278652
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96232.13358624 .00000017 00000-0 19830-4 0 07215
2 21575 98.3466 296.6327 0008590 75.5162 284.6981 14.37032956267105
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96233.55119319 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5994
2 22077 66.0843 54.7008 0014564 281.3846 78.5535 12.86297592189083
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96232.10863001 -.00000033 00000-0 40058-5 0 04772
2 22828 98.5742 306.7555 0011247 33.6070 326.5824 14.28148536119096
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96232.07231540 .00000022 00000-0 26449-4 0 04968
2 22826 98.5782 306.6577 0010183 47.4758 312.7283 14.27810546150979
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96232.15086663 -.00000046 00000-0 -12346-5 0 04960
2 22825 98.5774 306.5526 0009602 46.8768 313.3165 14.27701424150970
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 96231.70572829 -.00000011 00000-0 12960-4 0 05017
2 22829 98.5744 306.4227 0010968 36.5023 323.6896 14.28130156150957
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
August 24, 1996, at 2230z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Aug 21 13:30:32 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news-res.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: 2M lowcost aerial for receiving only
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV)
Reply-To: pe1chl@amsat.org
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <DwHH5x.GGH@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <01bb8aa2$ed5c3a00$35490acb@quicky.vicnet.net.au>
Date: Wed, 21 Aug 1996 10:29:56 GMT
Lines: 18
In <01bb8aa2$ed5c3a00$35490acb@quicky.vicnet.net.au> "Darin Quick" <quicky@vic
net.net.au> writes:
>I'm interested in the Telemerity from the Oscar series of satellites and
>was courious if there was any aerials that were cheep to make that didnt
>require constant moving to chase the satellite.
The constant moving is not done for the fun of it, it is done to allow
an antenna with some gain to be used. This results in a better signal/noise
ratio, which you need.
Antennas with gain always have directivity, i.e. they work best in a
single direction. Antennas that work in all directions have no gain,
and the signal will be too weak to copy.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:21 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.clark.net!mr.net!visi.com!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.cais.net!tezcat!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!news.thepoint.net!news1!PAT
From: mai@iquest.net (Patrick Croft)
Subject: Balloon Flight!
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: ind-009-237-123.iquest.net
Message-ID: <4vfq61$34o_018@news.iquest.net>
Sender: news@iquest.net (News Admin)
Organization: IQuest Network Services
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4
Date: Wed, 21 Aug 1996 21:05:12 GMT
Lines: 42
IT'S ANOTHER WINDTRAX
AMATEUR RADIO BALLOON FLIGHT!
All are welcome to participate and join in the fun!
We expect this to be another successful ATV, Repeater,
and GPS/packet flight of approximately 2-3 hours duration,
and the pre-flight and post-flight nets will extend the fun.
Join us!
DATE: August 24, 1996
TIME: 1200-1300 UTC (0700-0800 Indiana time) Wx dependent
LAUNCH SITE: Purdue University Airport, Lafayette, IN.
Prelaunch Freq's: HF check-in @ 3.869-3.871MHz
2 meter locals 147.135/R (W9YB)
Nets will begin at 1130 UTC
Flight Package's:
Crossband repeater provided by W9DUU, Paul
2m rcvr to 6m & 70cm xmtrs, with voice ID
Using half-wave antennas and 100mW.
GPS/Packet system provided by WB9QPG, Dave
Garmin GPS rcvr, controlled by MIM packet & downlinked to 145.79MHz xmtr, lith
um powered.
1/4 wave antenna, 100mW output.
ATV package by KT9V, Terry
Contains two B&W CCD camera's & a WB8ELK color
video graphics card. Downlinked on Wyman ATV xmtr via 1/4 wave antenna. Lithu
m powered, the
cameras are aimed horz. and vert, with controlled switching.
Flight Freq's:
Crossband Repeater Dwn 52.525 & 444.85MHz
(50mW & 100mW) Up 144.3MHz
GPS/Packet: Dwn 145.79MHz @ 1200 Baud,(VP) 100mW out
ATV: Dwn 439.25MHz (VP) 1.5 watts output
Balloon Type: Kaymont 1200 Gr.
Parachute: Custom made by KB9BSV, Barb, is 5' in diameter
We welcome your email notes regarding your reception!
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:22 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!munnari.OZ.AU!news.uwa.edu.au!newsman.murdoch.edu.au!usenet
From: Eddie Speed <espeed@carmen.murdoch.edu.au>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Cloning cellular
Date: Thu, 22 Aug 1996 01:20:47 -0700
Organization: Murdoch Uinversity
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <321C185F.1864@carmen.murdoch.edu.au>
References: <4vdul7$ke1@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: carmen.murdoch.edu.au
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; I)
Your AMPS phone will send the ESN and Mobile Ph no on
the reverse Forward control channel (FCC)of the local cell
site(around 825MHz), the signal can be recieved and decoded if the
monitoring radio is in range.
Most people are changing over to GSM digital phones over here
this fixes the hacker problem.
Eddie vk6ked
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:23 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!news.uk0.vbc.net!news.netkonect.net!vulcan.baynet.co.uk!news
From: clarence@baynet.co.uk
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: fones
Date: Thu, 22 Aug 1996 17:45:33 GMT
Organization: Baynet Internet Services
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <4vh6tm$7br@vulcan.baynet.co.uk>
Reply-To: clarence@baynet.co.uk
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp1.baynet.co.uk
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
taking offers on the following
today i have
200 bt amber
340 motorola tac/flips/no-flip
250 p100
250 nec p3
150 panasonic f1
1000 alcatel hb100/200 hands free kits new+boxed
1000 bt amber hands free kits new+boxed
500 nec p100 hands free kits new+boxed
old bt ivory,s/ batteries/chargers
second hand bt pagers
note phones do not have batteries or chargers
--
matt
--
matt
email or tel 0973 664224
clarence@baynet.co.uk
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:24 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!oleane!jussieu.fr!math.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!news.cse.psu.edu!news.cc.swarthmore.edu!netnews.upenn.edu!Lehigh.EDU!Lehigh.EDU!not-for-mail
From: c002@Lehigh.EDU
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: lower loss at 150ft rg-11 or 9913?
Date: 22 Aug 1996 20:22:48 -0400
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <4vitko$1hfu@ns1-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ns1-1.cc.lehigh.edu
Yes, as the title said..."rg-11 or 9913"
i need to run 150ft of cable, but here is my question:
which has less loss for a 150ft run...
at 3.7-4.2 GHz with 9913
or .95 - 1.45GHz with rg-11 <or rg-6??>
thanks
DAvid
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
| David Roseman | c002@lehigh.edu |
| | The Flying HAm - BBS |
| Utopia Telecommunications | Technomage - BBS |
| 610.838.2989 | N3SQE/1 - HAm |
| (Parttime system) | |
|-----My AWESOME home page :) http://www.lehigh.edu/~c002/c002.html-----|
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:27 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!jussieu.fr!oleane!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!tube.news.pipex.net!pipex!soap.news.pipex.net!pipex!Thomas.generics.co.uk!usenet
From: Phil Wakely <pwakely@scigen.co.uk>
Newsgroups: rec.antiques.radio+phono,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.shortwave,rec.radio.swap,rec.video.satellite.dbs,rec.video.satellite.europe,rec.video.satellite.misc,rec.video.satellite.tvro
Subject: Re: SAMS Needs Your Electronics URLs
Date: 23 Aug 1996 12:05:57 GMT
Organization: Scientific Generics Ltd.
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <4vk6r5$h44@Thomas.generics.co.uk>
References: <4varvc$d4_042@ns.idirect.com> <4vcg3p$6a7@shore.shore.net> <321a927c.1695915@206.13.95.227> <321d178c.1107574@news.blarg.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pgw_pc.generics.co.uk
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.22 (Windows; I; 16bit)
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.antiques.radio+phono:21547 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23757 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16750 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31838 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16495 rec.radio.amateur.misc:106081 rec.radio.amateur.space:7404 rec.radio.cb:30273 rec.radio.scanner:55432 rec.radio.shortwave:77978 rec.radio.swap:71700 rec.video.satellite.dbs:33326 rec.video.satellite.europe:7170 rec.video.satellite.misc:5491 rec.video.satellite.tvro:31147
future@blarg.net (Tim Gerchmez) wrote:
>On Wed, 21 Aug 1996 04:46:16 GMT, jafo@cheetah.net (Gregg) wrote:
>
>
>>>Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, lbh ernyyl bhtug gb trg bhg zber
>>
>>Url! Jung xvaq bs n penpx vf gung? :-D
>
>Urururur.. V gubhtug EBG13 jnf bhg bs qngr.. guvf vf gur svefg gvzr
>V'ir frra vg hfrq va dhvgr n juvyr ;)
>
Jung vf/jnf EBG13 ??
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:29 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!cssun.mathcs.emory.edu!nntp.msstate.edu!willis.cis.uab.edu!maze.dpo.uab.edu!info.uah.edu!news.msfc.nasa.gov!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in3.uu.net!brighton.openmarket.com!decwrl!pagesat.net!news.hi.net!anjo!amcleod
Distribution: world
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
From: amcleod@anjo.com (Angus John Mcleod)
X-Mailer: NetXpress 1.53
Date: Sat, 24 Aug 1996 06:47:37 -0640
Organization: The ANJO BBS
Subject: Beat the pile-ups>>Cyberscheds now Available @ sarrio.com
Message-ID: <414.181.39@anjo.com>
Lines: 23
RE: Beat the pile-ups>>Cyberscheds now Available @ sarrio.com
BY: Raymond Sarrio to ALL on Wed Aug 21 1996 15:14:54
> This is a new use of the WWW that can benefit ham radio operators
> throughout the world.
>
> You can now schedule contacts with hams all over the world simply and
> easily by using the WWW and e-mail.I have set aside a section of my web
> site for hams to post their request for over-the-air schedules. Included
> in the posting is a place to list the posters specific ham radio contact
> needs (countries, zones,IOTA, grid squares, LEO's ect...). The postings
> will also include an e-mail link that will allow hams that read the posts,
> to easily request an over-the-air schedule.
>
> How Can Cyberscheds work for me?
It can't. Pre-arranged contacts are not good towards any sort of award or
certificate, so this particular piece of cyber-technology won't be much use to
anyone. Of course, you could use it anyway, and just cheat...
-=-=-=-= The ANJO BBS, Barbados =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
amcleod@anjo.com <Angus John Mcleod>
Synchronet BBS for OS/2 v2.30 Beta and NetXpress for Synchronet v1.53
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:29 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-atl-21.sprintlink.net!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!agate!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!netnews.worldnet.att.net!ix.netcom.com!news
From: KD1YV <jimkd1yv@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Western Connecticut Hamfest 15-Sep Newtown CT
Date: Sat, 24 Aug 1996 10:34:02 -0300
Organization: Hamily
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <321F04CA.43B1@ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dby-ct3-03.ix.netcom.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (Win16; I)
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.misc:106080 rec.radio.amateur.space:7401
THE WESTERN CONNECTICUT HAMFEST
Sponsored by the Candlewood Amateur Radio Association
Sunday, Sept. 15, 1996 0900-1400
Edmond Town Hall Route 6, Newtown, CT
Tables inside Tailgating outside
ARRL Sanctioned Handicapped Access
Door Prizes Ample Parking
Gourmet Fare Rain or shine
Talk-in 147.12/.72 PL 141.3
General admission $4.00 at the door (what a deal!)
Tailgating $6.00, inside table reservations $10.00 each, (both
include 1 admission), mail to:
Candlewood Amateur Radio Association, PO BOX 3441, Danbury CT 06813
For more info, phone (203) 790 7041 or (203) 438 6782.
Hope to see you all there.
73 de KD1YV
Jim
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:35 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!cssun.mathcs.emory.edu!gatech!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.asu.edu!ennfs.eas.asu.edu!cs.utexas.edu!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in3.uu.net!isocor!usenet
From: "John B. Stephensen" <john.stephensen@isocor.com>
Subject: Re: lower loss at 150ft rg-11 or 9913?
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Sender: usenet@isocor.com (Erik Forsberg)
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Organization: ISOCOR
Message-ID: <321F5BA0.448F@isocor.com>
References: <4vitko$1hfu@ns1-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0b7 (WinNT; I)
Mime-Version: 1.0
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: jbs.isocor.com
Date: Sat, 24 Aug 1996 19:44:32 GMT
Lines: 31
c002@Lehigh.EDU wrote:
>
> Yes, as the title said..."rg-11 or 9913"
> i need to run 150ft of cable, but here is my question:
> which has less loss for a 150ft run...
> at 3.7-4.2 GHz with 9913
> or .95 - 1.45GHz with rg-11 <or rg-6??>
>
> thanks
>
> DAvid
> |-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
> | David Roseman | c002@lehigh.edu |
> | | The Flying HAm - BBS |
> | Utopia Telecommunications | Technomage - BBS |
> | 610.838.2989 | N3SQE/1 - HAm |
> | (Parttime system) | |
> |-----My AWESOME home page :) http://www.lehigh.edu/~c002/c002.html-----|
Both will have lower loss at 0.95-1.45 GHz. You need to use a coaxial
cable with the correct characteristic impedance. R-11 and RG-6 are 75
ohn cables and 9913 is a 50 ohm cable. The impedance should match your
equipment. Times LMR-400 is an even better cable than Belden 9913 and is
about the same price. The 9913 uses air dielectric. The center conductor
can corrode quite easily and can be displaced when the cable is bent.
Either increases attenuation. LMR-400 uses a very low loss foam
dielectric than protects the center conductor. It is also much lighter
as it uses copper plated aluminum.
73,
John, KD6OZH
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:36 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!news.bb.net!news.blarg.net!news
From: future@blarg.net (Tim Gerchmez)
Newsgroups: rec.antiques.radio+phono,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.shortwave,rec.radio.swap,rec.video.satellite.dbs,rec.video.satellite.europe,rec.video.satellite.misc,rec.video.satellite.tvro
Subject: Re: SAMS Needs Your Electronics URLs
Date: Sun, 25 Aug 1996 01:01:48 GMT
Organization: Blarg! Online Services - 206/441-9109
Lines: 28
Message-ID: <321fa55b.3452629@news.blarg.net>
References: <4varvc$d4_042@ns.idirect.com> <4vcg3p$6a7@shore.shore.net> <321a927c.1695915@206.13.95.227> <321d178c.1107574@news.blarg.net> <4vk6r5$h44@Thomas.generics.co.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup25.blarg.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99e/16.227
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.antiques.radio+phono:21596 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23800 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16763 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31872 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16514 rec.radio.amateur.misc:106125 rec.radio.amateur.space:7406 rec.radio.cb:30313 rec.radio.scanner:55511 rec.radio.shortwave:78030 rec.radio.swap:71796 rec.video.satellite.dbs:33414 rec.video.satellite.europe:7182 rec.video.satellite.misc:5501 rec.video.satellite.tvro:31177
On 23 Aug 1996 12:05:57 GMT, Phil Wakely <pwakely@scigen.co.uk> wrote:
>future@blarg.net (Tim Gerchmez) wrote:
>>On Wed, 21 Aug 1996 04:46:16 GMT, jafo@cheetah.net (Gregg) wrote:
>>
>>
>>>>Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, lbh ernyyl bhtug gb trg bhg zber
>>>
>>>Url! Jung xvaq bs n penpx vf gung? :-D
>>
>>Urururur.. V gubhtug EBG13 jnf bhg bs qngr.. guvf vf gur svefg gvzr
>>V'ir frra vg hfrq va dhvgr n juvyr ;)
>>
>
>Jung vf/jnf EBG13 ??
>
Tvira gung lbh rapbqrq gur nobir, lbh onfvpnyyl nyernql xabj jung vg
vf. Vg'f n fvzcyr Hfrarg rapbqvat zrgubq (sbetbg jurer vg bevtvangrq,
fbzrbar ryfr pbhyq cebonoyl gryy lbh). V unqa'g rire frra vg hfrq
orsber hagvy guvf guernq fgnegrq. Zl arjfernqre (Ntrag .99S) vapyhqrf
n EBG13 rapbqre/qrpbqre, fb V'z abg qbvat guvf ol unaq ;)
--
Check out my home page at http://www.blarg.net/~future/index.html
I'm a volunteer at the Win95 Help Site. Drop by if you need help with Win95.
http://www.isisnet.com/terrymo/index.html
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:37 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.cais.net!news2.cais.com!news
From: n3tuk@idsonline.com (Luis Velis)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: wx satellites frqs?
Date: Sun, 25 Aug 1996 04:39:00 GMT
Organization: Posted via CAIS Internet <info@cais.com>
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <4volfs$mcm@news2.cais.com>
Reply-To: n3tuk@idsonline.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: va76.idsonline.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Hi Folks
Can someone tell me some wx satellites freqs so i can monitor their
trasmissions..
luis
Luis A Velis
Hamradio operator
n3tuk@idsonline.com
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:38 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!hunter.premier.net!news-res.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news-stock.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-11.sprintlink.net!news
From: derryb@mail.misslink.net (Benjamin K. Derry)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Sat Tracker Idea
Date: Sun, 25 Aug 1996 23:44:53 GMT
Organization: Missing Link Communications
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <4vql97$5is@matilda.misslink.net>
Reply-To: derryb@misslink.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm1-8.misslink.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Hi I have this idea about a client/server system where by there would
be a sat tracker client and a server element database. The client
would access the element database through the internet using TCP/IP.
So that the client element database would always be up-to-date. All of
the tracking calculations would be up to the client. The server would
only handle DB requests.
My 2 cents worth,
Benjamin K. Derry
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:40 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news1.inlink.com!news.dra.com!news.starnet.net!spool.mu.edu!howland.erols.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!news.sgi.com!mr.net!news.mr.net!News.CP.Duluth.MN.US!news
From: jwchrist@cp.duluth.mn.us (Jim Christensen)
Newsgroups: rec.antiques.radio+phono,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.cb,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.shortwave,rec.radio.swap,rec.video.satellite.dbs,rec.video.satellite.europe,rec.video.satellite.misc,rec.video.satellite.tvro
Subject: Re: SAMS Needs Your Electronics URLs
Date: 26 Aug 1996 04:13:51 GMT
Organization: Organization For the Salvation of our Frequencies
Lines: 36
Message-ID: <4vr89v$m3o@poplar.computerpro.com>
References: <4varvc$d4_042@ns.idirect.com> <4vcg3p$6a7@shore.shore.net> <321a927c.1695915@206.13.95.227> <321d178c.1107574@news.blarg.net> <4vk6r5$h44@Thomas.generics.co.uk> <321fa55b.3452629@news.blarg.net> <kharker-2508961147130001@slip-9-2.ots.utexas.edu> <4vqfae$2ar@shore.shore.net> <4vqiur$clr@dfw-ixnews9.ix.netcom.com>
Reply-To: jwchrist@computerpro.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: pmi0.cp.duluth.mn.us
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Xref: news2.epix.net rec.antiques.radio+phono:21611 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23808 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16765 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31884 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16518 rec.radio.amateur.misc:106137 rec.radio.amateur.space:7409 rec.radio.cb:30321 rec.radio.scanner:55525 rec.radio.shortwave:78039 rec.radio.swap:71823 rec.video.satellite.dbs:33430 rec.video.satellite.europe:7184 rec.video.satellite.misc:5503 rec.video.satellite.tvro:31185
In article <4vqiur$clr@dfw-ixnews9.ix.netcom.com>, jeffa@ix.netcom.co says...
>
>In <4vqfae$2ar@shore.shore.net> pip@shore.net (GeorgeS) writes:
>>
>>In article <kharker-2508961147130001@slip-9-2.ots.utexas.edu>,
>>kharker@cs.utexas.edu says...
>>
>>>Nf gb jurer vg bevtvangrq, vg'f n irel fvzcyr Pnrfne pvcure gung'f
>orra nebhaq n ybat juvyr (fvapr ng yrnfg gur qnlf bs Whyvhf Pnrfne) -
>lbh whfg fuvsg rirel yrggre 13 fcnprf va gur nycunorg (jenccvat nebhaq
>nf arprffnel.) V'z abg pregnva jung "EBG" zrnaf be jurer vg pnzr sebz,
>>>gubhtu.
>>>
>>
>>My guess is ROT13 is short for ROTATE 13. If you imagine the alphabet
>on a wheel, you would cipher the text by rotating the wheel 13 spaces
>>
>
>By goom, you're right! I did it the hard way - I noticed Ken Harker
>had capitalized a V in the middle of one of his sentences. I assumed
>this was "I" (what other single letter do we capitalize?) and
>translated (rotated) the alphabet accordingly. Everything fell out
>nicely from there.
>
>After deciphering "If you can read this, you really ought to get out
>more," I decided the effort greatly outweighed the rewards!
>
>- Jeff (wrss)
Gurer vf nabgure ernyyl rnfl jnl gb qrpvcure guvf. Vs lbh ner hfvat Jvaivz nf
n
arjf ernqre, nyy lbh unir gb qb vf uvg PGEY. E naq vg punatrf gur grkg evtug
orsber lbhe irel ryes.
Jim
>
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:42 1996
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From: alamo@wazoo.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Space Center/International Space Hall of Fame
Date: Mon, 26 Aug 96 04:30:47 GMT
Organization: New Mexico Internet Access
Lines: 48
Message-ID: <4vr9ba$jbd@hume.nmia.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup8.pm2.wazoo.com
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
August 22, 1996 Media contact:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Jack Moore
1-800-545-4021 (505) 437-2840
SPACE CENTER LAUNCHES INTO CYBERSPACE
ALAMOGORDO, N.M. - The Space Center in Alamogordo, a division of the
New Mexico Office of Cultural Affairs, now has an extensive presence
in cyberspace. There are now two World Wide Web sites from which to
access information about the International Space Hall of Fame, the
Clyde W. Tombaugh Omnimax Theater and Planetarium, the John P. Stapp
Air and Space Park, and the many other elements that make up New
Mexico's internationally-recognized space museum.
One web site was the result of a lot of hard work by members of the
Alamogordo Consortium, who designed the pages, and Wazoo Computers.
Wazoo Computers of Alamogordo is providing the free home for the web
pages.
The pages offer text and photographs that tell the story of the
history of space research in New Mexico, what's showing at the
Tombaugh Theater, hours of operation, admission prices and special
events. The site can be found on the InterNet at the following web
address: http://www.wazoo.com/~alamo/space/index.html. Sign the guest
book while you're there.
The second site came as the result of cooperation between the Space
Center and New Mexico State University-Alamogordo. The web pages were
designed by Space Center Program Manager Bob Wood, who also is a
computer science and electronics instructor at NMSU-A. It was the
first time Wood had ever attempted such a project. He worked into the
wee small hours of many mornings crafting the web pages and then
loading them into NMSU-A's server.
The NMSU-A site also details much of the history of space in New
Mexico (the Land of Enchantment is the birthplace of America's space
program) as well as information about International Space Hall of
Fame inductees, the Governor's Space Center Commission, and links to
other space-related World Wide Web sites. The NMSU-A site can be
accessed at: http://abcc.nmsu.edu/~bwood/.
If you have access to the WWW, you'll want to visit both sites.
They're quite informative.
-30-
-- End --
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:43 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!usenet
From: Walter Girardi <narda@sunrise.it>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: INFO FOR IC820H
Date: Mon, 26 Aug 1996 08:26:19 +0200
Organization: Centro Servizi Interbusiness
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <3221438B.7D65@sunrise.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-c01.sunrise.it
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 [it] (Win95; I)
Hello,
I have the IC 820 and i would like to work pacsat with it.
I know that there is a mod. to make in the sub band for recivin the
signal.
Can anubody help me?
Thanks for Kindly
73
Walter
- narda@sunrise.it -
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:43 1996
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From: cin02cic@lepus.celepar.BR (Marcelo)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: (no subject)
Date: 26 Aug 96 15:38:46 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <3221C506.5EB4@lepus.celepar.br>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mail.ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
add ham-space
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:44 1996
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From: bjp@cle.ab.com (Brian J. Pennebaker)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Visual MIR siteing
Date: 26 Aug 1996 16:34:45 GMT
Organization: Allen-Bradley Company, Inc.
Lines: 10
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <4vsjn5$87p@news1.cle.ab.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: kittiwake.cle.ab.com
Keywords: HI All,
I have question regarding MIR. I live in Cleveland and the last
couple of nights I was able to see MIR go by. About a minute later
behind MIR was another object on the same path. I checked my tracking
program and nothing was apparent to me to be another satellite. Could
anyone tell me what it could be?
73,
Brian
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:46 1996
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From: ccart@erols.com (CHRISTOPHER CARTWRIGHT)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: lower loss at 150ft rg-11 or 9913?
Date: 26 Aug 1996 16:52:32 GMT
Organization: Erol's Internet
Lines: 28
Message-ID: <4vskog$f0d@news7.erols.com>
References: <4vitko$1hfu@ns1-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
NNTP-Posting-Host: shell1.erols.com
X-Newsreader: TIN [UNIX 1.3 BETA-950824-16colors PL0]
c002@Lehigh.EDU wrote:
: Yes, as the title said..."rg-11 or 9913"
: i need to run 150ft of cable, but here is my question:
: which has less loss for a 150ft run...
: at 3.7-4.2 GHz with 9913
: or .95 - 1.45GHz with rg-11 <or rg-6??>
Well, aside from the impedance/freq differences, the chart on the wall says:
(length adjusted)
4.0 GHz w/9913 ~16db loss
1.2 GHz w/RG11 ~12db loss
db/100' loss:
1GHz 3GHz 5GHz
RG6A 9.8 23.0 32.0
RG11 7.8 16.5 26.5
9913 4.5 N/A 13.0
LDF5-50 1.4 2.5 3.5 (preamp is cheaper :)
Sounds like you need a downconverter and pre-amp before you stuff it through
150' of coax. And don't forget to add connector loss in there too.
-- Christopher Cartwright, Tech. Engineer | ...our chief weapons are fear,
-- Voice 301.295.0809 N3XRV | fear and surprise, and nice
-- Mail dsc3cjc@imc220.med.navy.mil | red uniforms, oh damn!!
-- ccart@erols.com | -- Monty Python
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:52 1996
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From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE859)
Date: 26 Aug 1996 23:14:42 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 796
Message-ID: <4vtb52$rh9@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: eel.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 *NEW* Celestial WWW,
http://www.grove.net/~tkelso/
and are updated daily (when possible). Documentation and tracking software are
also available on this system.
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 #859 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96238.56305780 .00000028 00000-0 22244-4 0 2231
2 00424 80.4560 215.2826 0021449 215.7072 144.2639 13.67873983691825
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96237.64817237 -.00000257 00000-0 10000-3 0 9781
2 02608 14.6102 352.1044 0008861 95.3625 264.7889 1.00311244 25551
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96238.26637545 -.00000124 00000-0 10000-3 0 5343
2 03029 14.9160 359.0506 0008751 263.4098 61.9489 1.00273451105453
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96239.17514373 -.00000152 00000-0 -53506-5 0 9934
2 07646 49.8284 232.5319 0206166 101.7120 260.6980 13.82191170 88648
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96237.19118152 .00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 2194
2 08820 109.8499 49.3039 0043835 113.1975 247.3304 6.38664070218170
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96192.28972393 -.00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 729
2 09852 13.2741 32.6575 0004146 118.9539 241.0227 1.00020582 17872
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96238.45971181 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 7200
2 10061 12.4620 36.2921 0010239 126.1884 162.7489 1.00285587 15136
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96237.54001102 -.00000261 00000-0 10000-3 0 2712
2 10637 35.8944 82.0417 1374324 58.7670 335.2396 1.00219743 20629
GPS BI-01
1 10684U 78020A 96234.42414885 -.00000014 00000-0 10000-3 0 4676
2 10684 65.0356 21.9814 0062123 160.1693 200.0844 1.98069613120702
GPS BI-02
1 10893U 78047A 96230.30726442 .00000047 00000-0 10000-3 0 2645
2 10893 63.1346 259.0280 0229957 15.1348 345.6620 2.01627399134045
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96237.34182759 -.00000141 00000-0 10000-3 0 6962
2 10953 11.4532 39.2212 0002124 81.8004 233.4848 1.00269113 19730
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96237.25353935 -.00000081 00000-0 17651-4 0 5103
2 10967 107.9891 315.5863 0002485 256.5600 103.5265 14.38118025951239
GPS BI-03
1 11054U 78093A 96231.50455592 .00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 4228
2 11054 62.8159 258.2928 0047359 181.3643 178.6976 1.93505300129860
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96237.17686079 -.00000038 00000-0 35022-5 0 6090
2 11080 98.9349 96.0820 0009291 140.3139 219.8697 13.83690219900576
GPS BI-04
1 11141U 78112A 96238.28240518 -.00000027 00000-0 10000-3 0 619
2 11141 65.0211 24.3952 0050250 29.7783 330.5012 1.92894686 19218
GPS BI-05
1 11690U 80011A 96238.64915611 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 561
2 11690 65.3434 23.2761 0144385 190.4064 169.3019 2.00574044135592
GPS BI-06
1 11783U 80032A 96238.16311187 .00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1637
2 11783 62.2949 251.3409 0232267 32.2129 329.4371 2.03452510120238
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96235.60159215 .00000080 00000-0 10000-3 0 9455
2 12472 8.2963 49.4931 0007906 46.9051 313.2953 1.00242963 13763
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96236.53835534 .00000054 00000-0 45689-4 0 5230
2 13301 82.9314 84.4253 0029034 55.4177 304.9712 13.68076549706581
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96239.20620227 -.00000023 00000-0 46482-5 0 9882
2 13367 98.0662 287.9726 0006195 290.0777 69.9743 14.57181890750731
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96235.89376136 .00000025 00000-0 28780-4 0 670
2 13736 98.6246 63.2049 0008097 188.4862 171.6185 14.25797453710578
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96239.07910788 .00000051 00000-0 65018-4 0 4129
2 13777 98.9660 63.0923 0011666 261.9758 98.0083 13.99251527363145
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96236.19802918 .00000064 00000-0 51704-4 0 6143
2 13916 82.9458 141.4863 0037730 327.9380 31.9481 13.74343181672946
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96236.33388567 -.00000304 00000-0 10000-3 0 6221
2 13969 9.0722 43.0381 0001863 97.2676 262.5593 1.00259875 22052
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96231.21631122 -.00000223 00000-0 10000-3 0 5342
2 14050 7.1195 52.9931 0004851 23.6015 244.5636 1.00234578106815
OSCAR 10
1 14129U 83058B 96238.89296850 .00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 4503
2 14129 25.9885 192.7666 6032591 43.4713 350.6635 2.05881051 71300
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96239.19688185 .00005616 00000-0 12569-2 0 5304
2 14780 98.3237 296.9957 0003806 77.3382 282.8241 14.57068185664152
UoSat 2
1 14781U 84021B 96235.93215093 .00000071 00000-0 19849-4 0 9075
2 14781 97.8044 223.7013 0010706 237.4822 122.5352 14.69473310667451
GPS BI-09
1 15039U 84059A 96234.77482561 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 4327
2 15039 64.6630 18.8096 0083344 19.8748 340.4520 1.92302342 88691
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96235.31823099 .00000018 00000-0 31606-5 0 8142
2 15055 82.9550 197.1603 0027495 153.9495 206.3052 13.73638081610068
GPS BI-10
1 15271U 84097A 96236.30538267 .00000092 00000-0 10000-3 0 1889
2 15271 62.1682 252.1554 0101743 157.4229 202.9985 1.92617831 961
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96235.83722608 .00000120 00000-0 11197-4 0 4971
2 15331 82.5313 50.5857 0021505 85.1494 275.2174 14.84776173642863
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96239.07385761 -.00000198 00000-0 36019-5 0 2115
2 15354 56.9961 98.9918 0005655 58.9627 301.1962 14.94972004647298
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96238.77686146 .00000062 00000-0 56427-4 0 8175
2 15427 98.9446 303.7271 0015760 113.8655 246.4168 14.13799907603462
GPS BI-11
1 16129U 85093A 96233.71826788 -.00000014 00000-0 10000-3 0 7374
2 16129 65.3438 22.6250 0158260 84.1565 277.6475 1.89368437 23145
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96238.95635628 .00003666 00000-0 47491-4 0 6409
2 16609 51.6488 132.5770 0011020 97.1343 12.9199 15.61784692600806
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96237.56607137 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 9789
2 16613 98.8263 305.4810 0001940 66.2917 293.8464 14.19982518230011
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96237.70835204 .00000080 00000-0 66559-5 0 4128
2 16881 82.5193 106.5379 0020664 107.4574 252.8900 14.83755619544009
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96237.19822204 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1101
2 16908 50.0098 147.9116 0011135 185.4229 174.6488 12.44414871124875
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96238.71359454 -.00000002 00000-0 17265-4 0 7492
2 16969 98.5263 233.7978 0013299 146.3963 213.8061 14.24999517516500
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96238.17325229 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4504
2 17527 98.9396 298.6298 0019040 137.8515 222.4125 14.00420243484640
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96237.27720104 -.00000175 00000-0 10000-3 0 235
2 17561 3.1956 69.0168 0005779 331.4481 297.6524 1.00267979 17989
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 7261
2 17845 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600628
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96238.51090857 -.00000009 00000-0 17700-4 0 5671
2 18123 98.7702 67.6686 0015290 57.3840 302.8810 14.15450454474306
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96236.70908326 .00000029 00000-0 15400-4 0 2556
2 18129 82.9259 98.6400 0011582 335.8608 24.1966 13.72368586459437
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96235.68332436 .00000046 00000-0 27912-4 0 5030
2 18312 82.5561 299.3401 0013862 38.2070 322.0070 13.84083236455378
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96238.40657731 .00000025 00000-0 88994-5 0 251
2 18820 82.5409 352.0338 0018197 90.8933 269.4312 13.84759978433100
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96239.06805258 -.00000007 00000-0 15004-4 0 3295
2 18822 98.3823 67.7951 0006151 150.6065 209.5461 14.23198227444511
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96235.69224895 .00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 1048
2 19163 65.2676 83.6082 0003989 152.6394 207.4182 2.13103523 63654
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96237.62632846 .00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 5115
2 19165 65.2618 83.4914 0002213 9.1109 350.9691 2.13102132 64311
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96234.54599934 -.00000064 00000-0 10000-3 0 2732
2 19215 3.3990 67.4436 0003056 97.3181 263.0020 0.96947158 17816
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 96238.62104917 .00018570 25337-5 15077-2 0 2585
2 19216 57.1545 95.9509 7440029 48.7083 355.0112 2.11258218 31305
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96238.97822428 .00000244 00000-0 27430-4 0 1138
2 19274 82.5125 206.2590 0017909 255.5308 104.3916 14.82510038439716
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96236.77800001 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5050
2 19336 82.5412 118.6080 0018222 65.5118 294.7902 13.16978824388372
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96237.18720446 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 3989
2 19503 65.5548 322.4214 0005945 159.4540 200.6207 2.13101759 61791
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96238.76418450 -.00000035 00000-0 61163-5 0 6320
2 19531 99.1858 258.6875 0012893 47.7331 312.4934 14.13100718408273
TDRS 2
1 19548U 88091B 96235.83914265 -.00000199 00000-0 10000-3 0 2274
2 19548 2.6204 71.5439 0005539 123.1606 163.7588 1.00266729 16191
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96233.00132129 .00000015 00000-0 10000-3 0 6154
2 19749 65.2435 83.2067 0006020 250.8656 109.1490 2.13101564 59217
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96234.93335103 .00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 5233
2 19750 65.2501 83.2118 0006255 240.3467 119.6694 2.13101805 59270
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96237.94617729 -.00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 2739
2 19802 55.3640 107.8996 0029061 150.3151 209.9426 2.00550985 55094
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96238.87252884 .00006973 00000-0 34787-3 0 7689
2 19822 75.0655 83.4747 3743167 53.6122 335.5064 7.93086433172217
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96237.50623653 .00000014 00000-0 -10004-5 0 5012
2 19851 82.5185 226.5962 0014904 138.1724 222.0578 13.84415244378281
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96232.29949956 -.00000146 00000-0 10000-3 0 2084
2 19876 2.1164 71.2092 0018173 289.3949 70.7586 0.97110860 7239
TDRS 3
1 19883U 89021B 96239.16632523 -.00000289 00000-0 00000+0 0 2493
2 19883 0.0345 125.3117 0004834 79.8871 148.3155 1.00267251 27293
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96238.28956190 .00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 2569
2 20061 54.1565 283.5510 0161384 220.6399 138.2203 2.00562419 52842
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96238.76231927 .00000065 00000-0 53328-4 0 8796
2 20103 82.9558 57.3639 0036230 218.9898 140.8645 13.73869438358238
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96233.15671718 -.00000008 00000-0 10000-3 0 3078
2 20185 55.1522 108.5379 0030006 346.3709 13.9731 2.00683833 51319
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96239.22055272 -.00000389 00000-0 10000-3 0 4439
2 20217 1.9321 74.7185 0001213 201.1372 258.2343 1.00261792 26121
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96237.10049272 .00000032 00000-0 87076-5 0 5228
2 20261 82.5916 227.3376 1240338 247.2208 99.3348 12.47344942314374
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96237.16490679 .00000059 00000-0 10000-3 0 2717
2 20302 53.2292 223.3865 0035084 187.4509 172.5069 2.00567245 50191
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96238.08360570 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 6290
2 20305 82.5450 76.9544 0006875 128.0059 232.1683 13.04418302327184
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96234.11103886 .00000287 00000-0 21102-3 0 2376
2 20322 98.9425 248.2668 0008339 213.5040 146.5600 14.03459185346030
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 6720
2 20335 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600626
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96238.67514866 -.00000011 00000-0 10000-3 0 1108
2 20361 56.0586 50.5190 0088970 134.5855 226.1883 2.00565503 39702
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96237.07212168 -.00000152 00000-0 00000+0 0 4070
2 20391 3.9846 62.9849 0004362 83.2626 195.8253 1.00269055 24677
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96236.57014050 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 1097
2 20436 98.6935 309.0750 0001489 96.3027 263.8320 14.20044813341403
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96235.31496443 .00000004 00000-0 18416-4 0 2057
2 20437 98.5424 317.0873 0011551 12.3006 347.8442 14.29928624343508
UO-15
1 20438U 90005C 96239.27125173 -.00000019 00000-0 96467-5 0 10
2 20438 98.5342 318.7813 0010727 6.2966 353.8347 14.29235607343931
PACSAT
1 20439U 90005D 96239.25860614 .00000017 00000-0 23572-4 0 41
2 20439 98.5563 323.2997 0011509 1.5449 358.5764 14.29982516344084
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96237.73469262 -.00000026 00000-0 66418-5 0 46
2 20440 98.5563 322.4735 0012082 4.9578 355.1723 14.30123894343898
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96235.27721686 -.00000018 00000-0 97449-5 0 88
2 20441 98.5588 319.9917 0012371 11.5471 348.5991 14.30093189343544
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96238.76598840 .00000030 00000-0 28292-4 0 48
2 20442 98.5605 323.9462 0012834 0.4702 359.6490 14.30203355344066
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96235.07926891 .00000007 00000-0 10000-3 0 2070
2 20452 54.0476 164.0680 0060611 89.2212 271.4776 2.00574264 48134
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96238.25176298 .00000088 00000-0 10000-3 0 9688
2 20478 99.1209 306.8807 0006749 52.8212 307.3564 13.93965903254176
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96237.56204390 -.00000050 00000-0 -33435-4 0 36
2 20479 99.0235 249.6249 0540601 329.0581 27.9665 12.83343206306671
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96235.03129025 -.00000071 00000-0 -81038-4 0 9000
2 20480 99.0238 247.3602 0540711 335.3540 22.2542 12.83233938306336
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96235.25376283 -.00000515 00000-0 -91024-3 0 2692
2 20491 99.0777 314.7442 0470367 139.7310 223.9652 13.02986651310467
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96237.25884943 .00000655 00000-0 26603-4 0 6798
2 20496 43.1010 174.7378 0009055 138.0667 222.0884 15.35807967364290
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96238.84006412 .00000057 00000-0 44793-4 0 8807
2 20508 82.9548 191.7941 0044425 169.9831 190.2221 13.73511249325453
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96238.20284090 .00000077 00000-0 73300-5 0 5212
2 20510 82.5254 161.6924 0020561 89.7444 270.6125 14.78620496349876
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96231.49686769 -.00000006 00000-0 00000+0 0 2499
2 20533 54.5119 284.5931 0051148 75.6022 285.0563 2.00570750 46839
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96236.88027970 .00004807 00000-0 86433-4 0 9585
2 20546 94.1114 30.8967 0060864 102.2387 258.5694 15.47867995355473
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96236.58992664 .00000288 00000-0 13242-4 0 8363
2 20580 28.4672 145.2827 0006247 156.9286 203.1582 14.91084690148658
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96236.36206527 .00000113 00000-0 16544-4 0 2058
2 20608 89.9293 172.8154 0104751 179.8768 180.2493 14.64935808336120
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96237.59219171 -.00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 3205
2 20619 65.1690 321.6197 0025593 204.5878 155.3424 2.13102737 48769
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96238.18017404 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 3048
2 20620 65.1524 321.5843 0008518 63.4387 296.7013 2.13102724 48815
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96239.18629697 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 9148
2 20621 65.1691 321.6154 0009529 195.2647 164.7616 2.13102325 48835
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 4644
2 20635 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600629
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96235.80484985 -.00000193 00000-0 61922-5 0 5863
2 20638 52.9909 359.0527 0010241 334.5751 25.4732 15.07440434342365
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96239.24123282 .00000011 00000-0 -31399-5 0 601
2 20670 82.5454 292.2296 0017406 59.3505 300.9367 13.84127935311435
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96239.09187563 .00000569 00000-0 50714-3 0 3196
2 20712 17.5621 222.4813 7192512 70.9758 350.0520 2.35760347 44764
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96237.80172546 -.00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 978
2 20724 54.9945 105.9027 0126896 186.0290 174.1440 2.00563622 42828
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96239.20819224 -.00000029 00000-0 88136-5 0 28
2 20788 98.8118 242.2726 0016049 305.7915 54.1692 14.01403569305904
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96235.36922655 -.00000027 00000-0 -37953-4 0 122
2 20826 82.5239 231.6579 0013400 341.4869 18.5803 13.83634382297997
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96237.85669907 -.00000010 00000-0 00000+0 0 739
2 20830 55.9906 48.5007 0068839 95.4309 265.3946 2.00566300 43461
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96235.76223606 -.00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 486
2 20959 55.1693 108.0456 0110921 235.1676 123.8607 2.00560731 42012
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96238.79867616 .00000077 00000-0 43361-4 0 7385
2 20978 98.5936 309.3442 0078850 325.7495 33.8617 14.32672072299682
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96237.80202346 .00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 8764
2 21006 65.2178 82.3814 0056040 190.6386 169.3373 2.13102744 44479
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96235.64739284 .00000078 00000-0 10000-3 0 124
2 21007 65.2230 82.5478 0032056 180.0465 179.9899 2.13102490 44411
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96237.88911865 .00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 2698
2 21008 65.2157 82.4053 0008780 272.5743 87.4099 2.13098840 44453
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96237.50538918 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7342
2 21087 82.9392 271.1418 0036791 17.8724 342.3716 13.74570905279399
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96239.23660760 .00000072 00000-0 60682-4 0 9137
2 21089 82.9245 137.4056 0031072 38.1845 322.1504 13.74072675278657
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96238.85571609 -.00000031 00000-0 00000+0 0 2518
2 21140 0.6820 77.2548 0002844 79.6780 125.2723 1.00268323 22308
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96238.80209835 .00000045 00000-0 31704-4 0 5684
2 21152 82.9217 94.2375 0041888 146.8031 213.5766 13.73536279273305
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96236.41272186 -.00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 5283
2 21216 64.8943 321.1724 0007750 190.0350 170.0021 2.13103437 41959
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96235.54574455 -.00000058 00000-0 10000-3 0 9330
2 21217 64.9274 321.2168 0013869 223.9002 136.0260 2.13101214 41924
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96236.59434442 -.00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 4086
2 21218 64.8561 321.1343 0008328 326.8902 33.0903 2.13102572 41998
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96235.94605114 .00001387 00000-0 23652-4 0 3812
2 21225 28.4599 78.9192 0002683 244.0637 115.9689 15.44219940180267
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96238.76341507 .00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 9151
2 21232 82.5385 323.5989 0013920 352.5312 7.5598 13.16472146256695
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96238.76720349 .00000081 00000-0 55026-4 0 571
2 21263 98.5557 255.8758 0014164 72.4090 287.8632 14.22650559274359
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96235.66302650 .00000036 00000-0 19104-5 0 2113
2 21397 82.5242 78.5234 0022162 174.1793 185.9679 14.76495346281174
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96238.52902362 -.00000015 00000-0 10000-6 0 101
2 21552 56.2677 46.3031 0072506 247.4717 111.7902 2.00561360 37665
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96238.90926964 .00000021 00000-0 24046-4 0 3219
2 21574 98.5523 311.9687 0001252 88.5010 271.6318 14.32244267267424
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96238.19122802 .00000005 00000-0 15907-4 0 7100
2 21575 98.3458 302.5056 0008548 61.1342 299.0699 14.37033471267970
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96238.17838319 .00000051 00000-0 31724-4 0 8057
2 21576 98.3420 300.3504 0004835 70.5638 289.6068 14.36449303267857
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96237.24274354 -.00000042 00000-0 -28763-7 0 7040
2 21577 98.3409 300.0485 0007385 66.0535 294.1422 14.36524010267752
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96235.77317044 .00000168 00000-0 68127-4 0 9056
2 21578 98.3758 307.1867 0006009 65.2452 294.9359 14.39229029267913
TDRS 4
1 21639U 91054B 96239.00000000 .00000061 00000-0 00000+0 0 817
2 21639 0.0344 122.7106 0007184 66.7449 330.7796 1.00274832 18561
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96237.20879408 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9120
2 21655 82.5560 272.4215 0014020 4.7608 355.3646 13.16848311241625
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96238.21849002 -.00000175 00000-0 57933-5 0 7853
2 21701 56.9852 193.3341 0005366 101.9005 258.2632 14.96533013270695
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96238.59188837 .00000057 00000-0 53868-4 0 4096
2 21798 98.9443 255.9425 0013736 35.0587 325.1484 14.13988691244733
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96238.21404635 .00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 1157
2 21853 65.1631 82.0277 0006736 203.6830 156.3708 2.13102325 35594
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96237.09230687 .00000036 00000-0 00000+0 0 3293
2 21854 65.1695 82.0558 0016496 22.1734 337.9787 2.13104667 35559
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96237.16033585 .00000036 00000-0 00000+0 0 3234
2 21855 65.1657 82.0571 0007427 195.8973 164.1615 2.13102195 35543
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96238.23824638 .00001179 00000-0 10301-3 0 9521
2 21867 97.6823 314.5277 0002242 82.2659 277.8819 14.98673704248209
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96238.98801000 .00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 8400
2 21890 53.7752 223.7616 0043525 228.6618 130.9250 2.00570958 33046
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96234.15673139 -.00000064 00000-0 10000-3 0 7831
2 21930 55.6964 346.0414 0026996 189.2631 170.9661 2.00636524 31873
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96236.92091396 .00000593 00000-0 17557-4 0 5652
2 21987 28.4299 87.5472 0009672 79.5036 280.6638 15.19862709233997
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96236.54913669 .00000125 00000-0 88064-5 0 7401
2 22012 81.6696 48.1385 0117098 312.1802 46.9511 14.91705693225276
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96237.24263851 -.00000011 00000-0 00000+0 0 7574
2 22014 54.8500 165.8653 0095174 328.6149 30.8126 2.00573766 23771
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96237.52733014 -.00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 2457
2 22056 64.7438 321.1626 0005323 265.5788 94.4094 2.13103460 31648
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96237.35469376 -.00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 2142
2 22057 64.7513 321.2023 0007043 313.4745 46.5184 2.13102798 31610
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96238.70186560 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 1291
2 22058 64.7423 321.1526 0009063 281.7777 78.1531 2.13102909 31693
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96235.81922111 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 9867
2 22076 66.0419 74.2734 0007647 262.2951 97.7193 12.80930983188650
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96237.82746027 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6003
2 22077 66.0831 45.7466 0014746 280.9716 78.9641 12.86297695189638
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96235.87143129 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 5976
2 22078 66.0857 48.2750 0016408 279.0387 80.8773 12.86582222189474
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96237.20771254 .00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 7756
2 22108 54.0048 224.7071 0120780 163.0738 197.4207 2.00566146 28959
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96235.65811840 -.00000143 00000-0 -80213-5 0 6414
2 22161 62.9807 72.4346 0846392 23.5533 340.1956 13.21908681187211
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96236.69625881 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5202
2 22195 52.6708 309.0007 0138060 106.2668 255.2801 6.47293968 90641
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96238.88438821 -.00000021 00000-0 00000+0 0 7752
2 22231 54.6782 166.9149 0024905 277.5272 82.1682 2.00573595 27565
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96238.01343258 -.00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 7841
2 22275 54.6296 164.4612 0040031 255.2619 104.2762 2.00584854 26954
TDRS 5
1 22314U 93003B 96235.37109181 -.00000291 00000-0 10000-3 0 6547
2 22314 0.0196 38.1923 0002519 68.3029 311.0397 1.00268846 13240
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96239.10649799 .00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 7677
2 22446 54.1607 284.3655 0093182 1.5030 358.6176 2.00548807 25960
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96236.80825643 .00000034 00000-0 10000-3 0 8177
2 22512 65.1896 81.9343 0008839 183.9701 176.1051 2.13102127 27159
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96239.09271771 .00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 9635
2 22513 65.1762 81.8629 0006684 182.0897 177.9916 2.13102746 27370
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96238.44810520 .00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 9556
2 22514 65.1971 81.8844 0010573 181.0053 179.0772 2.13102081 27361
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96235.09348965 .00000627 00000-0 37629-4 0 5177
2 22521 31.1030 4.8600 0056208 100.9829 259.7092 15.02994069192393
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96239.00000000 -.00000007 00000-0 00000+0 0 5235
2 22563 25.1922 287.5299 0009785 255.2518 350.8703 0.99252507 12749
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96234.26046166 -.00000065 00000-0 10000-3 0 5748
2 22581 55.1961 345.4025 0066621 41.0343 319.4927 2.00555168 24920
ARSENE
1 22654U 93031B 96237.93132367 -.00000135 00000-0 10000-3 0 3747
2 22654 3.2995 71.3857 2867077 243.1731 85.0554 1.42203737 12579
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96238.38145815 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 6943
2 22657 55.2335 345.1099 0077149 204.5415 155.1070 2.00568499 20337
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96235.62408926 .00000065 00000-0 22265-4 0 5129
2 22698 89.5383 267.9429 0093392 108.8415 252.2932 14.21377738163869
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96238.84563693 .00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 5831
2 22700 54.1760 225.4846 0050877 358.6298 1.3534 2.00559554 23146
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96238.90861455 .00000052 00000-0 54033-4 0 1387
2 22739 99.0490 194.6321 0010443 32.1028 328.0770 14.10970254156888
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96238.92958760 .00000014 00000-0 10000-3 0 6460
2 22779 54.3285 284.4330 0016783 266.2439 93.6486 2.00578551 21908
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96238.72540679 .00000036 00000-0 19306-4 0 5078
2 22782 82.5485 292.0318 0023084 139.7129 220.5746 13.83058899150746
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96233.69866983 -.00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 6688
2 22787 4.0447 327.4884 0001810 180.0628 144.4100 1.00271785 9473
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96238.23163875 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 5803
2 22823 98.6955 310.7992 0001115 77.0706 283.0595 14.20041788151034
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96235.78413634 -.00000042 00000-0 45568-6 0 4949
2 22824 98.5767 309.4725 0007242 39.7902 320.3795 14.27105304151437
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96236.21565405 -.00000080 00000-0 -14913-4 0 4966
2 22825 98.5774 310.5435 0009573 35.3500 324.8309 14.27701209151551
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96235.71632974 -.00000030 00000-0 55717-5 0 4947
2 22826 98.5779 310.2353 0010085 39.2284 320.9628 14.27810244151499
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96236.74896707 .00000014 00000-0 23324-4 0 5566
2 22827 98.5721 311.1449 0010368 22.1669 337.9959 14.27946581151652
ITAMSAT
1 22828U 93061F 96235.75177783 .00000047 00000-0 36149-4 0 4736
2 22828 98.5736 310.3317 0011247 22.8472 337.3207 14.28149636119617
PO-28
1 22829U 93061G 96237.24058396 .00000012 00000-0 22219-4 0 4882
2 22829 98.5747 311.8582 0010890 21.2117 338.9510 14.28130860151745
KO-25
1 22830U 93061H 96238.70457672 -.00000035 00000-0 29464-5 0 5074
2 22830 98.4618 301.2789 0011808 351.3210 8.7764 14.28112710151956
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96238.48407399 -.00000017 00000-0 10000-3 0 4598
2 22877 55.7158 46.3925 0034629 320.5477 39.2342 2.00571497 20785
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96239.15225116 -.00000107 00000-0 00000+0 0 5332
2 22912 0.1433 35.6460 0001435 149.6443 194.1509 1.00273649 8567
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96237.88915673 .00003304 00000-0 21453-3 0 5004
2 22920 28.4667 43.6579 0003477 131.4400 228.6511 15.05123838149788
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96236.54410703 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2784
2 22969 82.5563 212.9630 0017169 67.5036 292.7921 13.16737819123917
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96236.47562493 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2692
2 22970 82.5552 212.9006 0017657 67.9681 292.3312 13.16827856123917
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96237.56800432 -.00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 3978
2 23027 55.0698 347.0955 0067249 202.5226 157.2045 2.00559255 18072
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96236.17908726 -.00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 3926
2 23043 64.6221 321.5643 0006971 190.3645 169.6721 2.13103160 18435
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96237.46933333 -.00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 3617
2 23044 64.6200 321.5118 0030973 204.1423 155.7642 2.13103251 18469
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96238.11601137 -.00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 3691
2 23045 64.6085 321.4975 0010256 33.1973 326.9194 2.13102481 18472
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96238.42157863 -.00000270 00000-0 10000-3 0 5688
2 23051 0.1614 92.6697 0005375 70.0689 247.5603 1.00264557 16064
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96238.56381081 .00003914 00000-0 60796-4 0 3443
2 23101 97.0801 71.2802 0012572 66.0863 294.1709 15.54473236130073
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96227.37960765 -.00287343 00000-0 -57434-1 0 3180
2 23125 7.0095 213.0380 7253561 111.7768 336.6144 2.32352653 17470
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96227.03166328 .00012725 00000-0 48595-2 0 2813
2 23126 7.0026 213.4102 7238600 110.4279 336.4150 2.32661555 17492
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96235.37231680 .00000022 00000-0 72083-5 0 2133
2 23179 82.9456 187.5384 0035682 301.3306 58.4362 13.75683421105895
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96235.90708359 .00000069 00000-0 00000+0 0 3329
2 23203 64.7680 201.8765 0006448 161.3326 198.6847 2.13102102 15827
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96236.14069196 .00000067 00000-0 00000+0 0 3481
2 23204 64.7563 201.8931 0014995 341.3512 18.5877 2.13102391 15829
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96237.43102466 .00000051 00000-0 00000+0 0 3284
2 23205 64.7596 201.8437 0003253 284.0663 75.8934 2.13103039 15855
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96238.77199192 .00000104 00000-0 79704-4 0 8974
2 23233 98.8216 296.5095 0012666 348.5936 11.4945 14.12729967102650
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96238.41129901 .00000082 00000-0 90211-5 0 1772
2 23317 82.5447 355.3420 0024685 213.9565 146.0064 14.74035032100737
ELEKTRO
1 23327U 94069A 96236.81567156 -.00000114 00000-0 00000+0 0 1897
2 23327 0.1846 132.2371 0002999 331.1433 238.5850 1.00273079 6673
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96237.90316032 -.00000061 00000-0 -21739-5 0 5597
2 23342 97.9602 293.3067 0001679 87.6224 272.5174 14.69855580 96904
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96237.74420662 .00000039 00000-0 10000-4 0 3055
2 23396 65.1086 81.9505 0029564 188.5265 171.5030 2.13102555 13702
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96236.04330886 .00000029 00000-0 00000+0 0 2935
2 23397 65.1024 82.0197 0011522 321.7745 38.2231 2.13102225 13664
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96237.80407138 .00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 3185
2 23398 65.0896 81.9370 0001858 289.9052 70.1590 2.13102182 13710
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96237.02294206 -.00000289 00000-0 00000+0 0 3793
2 23426 1.3152 266.8850 0001726 266.0726 262.7432 1.00283221 6181
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96239.16669064 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1577
2 23439 64.8169 269.9162 0159633 186.8191 173.0559 11.27528359 68673
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96238.81866341 .00000109 00000-0 84675-4 0 7200
2 23455 98.9506 184.1014 0010753 47.2259 312.9823 14.11606291 85273
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96238.23191607 -.00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 2225
2 23511 64.6393 321.7630 0007398 217.1461 142.8553 2.13103798 11448
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96236.47433422 -.00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 2371
2 23512 64.6310 321.8313 0005327 309.5746 50.4302 2.13101883 11404
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96237.23547660 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-4 0 2474
2 23513 64.6383 321.8198 0014523 202.3931 157.5946 2.13103264 11420
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96237.60597051 -.00000299 00000-0 10000-3 0 1504
2 23522 0.3978 3.9265 0000381 156.1840 171.5174 1.00269896 5131
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96238.48927910 -.00000004 00000-0 21598-4 0 6423
2 23533 98.8407 240.0658 0006072 214.8135 145.2639 14.12749873 73419
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96237.47125659 .00000025 00000-0 24172-4 0 1581
2 23545 69.9726 11.7226 0011184 90.8381 269.4031 14.45382904 73525
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96235.36005715 -.00000004 00000-0 15992-4 0 1845
2 23546 69.9794 16.7435 0010672 84.8172 275.4180 14.45352948 73224
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96238.84107191 .00000137 00000-0 55733-4 0 1307
2 23547 69.9806 8.4247 0010953 82.0934 278.1439 14.45571029 73732
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96238.57352527 .00009254 00000-0 21953-3 0 3032
2 23549 143.3638 291.4218 0222047 2.8408 357.3600 15.16574915 76864
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96237.14714209 .00001863 00000-0 26409-4 0 1513
2 23558 51.6474 130.4344 0006890 116.2437 243.9268 15.62538422600635
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96237.25456248 -.00000019 00000-0 90000-5 0 2680
2 23560 98.5499 310.3396 0000161 272.1863 87.8528 14.32250071 70318
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 4249
2 23579 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600629
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96238.56552478 .00000063 00000-0 10000-3 0 2367
2 23581 0.2683 268.5127 0001034 302.1650 192.1677 1.00276869 4620
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96238.72942980 .00000027 00000-0 14190-4 0 2985
2 23605 98.1232 173.4457 0001685 65.7197 294.4187 14.63828866 60732
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96238.60350995 .00000084 00000-0 23447-4 0 2058
2 23606 98.1050 174.6012 0007448 338.0570 22.0315 14.67272771 60892
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96237.25064051 .00000067 00000-0 20690-4 0 1129
2 23607 98.1057 173.1086 0006640 342.2187 17.8784 14.66956495 60713
TDRS 6
1 23613U 95035B 96237.54642410 .00000081 00000-0 00000+0 0 2070
2 23613 0.8214 82.6723 0002130 120.3376 155.7144 1.00278128 4064
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96236.55003158 .00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 1742
2 23620 64.8242 201.7197 0018302 173.3413 186.6756 2.13103021 8442
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96236.25820323 .00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 1777
2 23621 64.8331 201.7314 0018348 184.0517 175.9265 2.13102319 8431
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96238.19340348 .00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 1804
2 23622 64.8246 201.6679 0036836 168.0311 192.0423 2.13102410 8478
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96233.90175950 .00000375 00000-0 00000+0 0 750
2 23632 69.1980 250.4370 8143426 322.6550 38.6190 0.26353500 1027
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96238.19371610 .00000090 00000-0 10407-4 0 1035
2 23657 82.5349 137.0537 0026979 182.1142 177.9957 14.73489115 52997
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96239.10031572 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1775
2 23710 98.5772 244.7934 0001210 58.9545 301.1736 14.29968456 42232
Glonass 77
1 23734U 95068A 96238.78046454 .00000032 00000-0 00000+0 0 1584
2 23734 64.8248 201.5666 0019524 319.9450 39.8864 2.13102131 5457
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96236.17051616 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 1512
2 23735 64.8242 201.6408 0008104 222.5499 137.3829 2.13125356 5393
Glonass 79
1 23736U 95068C 96237.13792094 .00000054 00000-0 00000+0 0 1272
2 23736 64.8136 201.6249 0008227 208.5275 151.4172 2.13102168 5418
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96236.13966573 .00000479 00000-0 11113-4 0 807
2 23757 22.9880 315.9876 0013794 140.5440 219.6048 14.97679588 35514
1996010D
1 23797U 96010D 96234.35242076 .99999999 10378-4 13647-2 0 3270
2 23797 47.7747 196.4758 0684182 80.1127 84.9850 15.00429044 5552
Soyuz TM-23
1 23798U 96011A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 1606
2 23798 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600622
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96236.36448120 .00000104 00000-0 00000+0 0 465
2 23802 86.1915 25.3555 6549388 283.3426 15.7555 1.36678098 2472
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96238.95900096 .00003475 00000-0 54473-2 0 963
2 23824 47.6728 233.9236 7287037 44.4487 354.8375 2.21901640 4169
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96239.19854934 -.00000080 00000-0 00000+0 0 715
2 23833 54.7012 345.2037 0057773 132.8891 227.6149 2.00564587 3084
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 1133
2 23848 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600628
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96238.47312450 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 794
2 23851 99.3825 219.1990 0006935 320.3507 39.7141 13.97623577 17172
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96238.55262968 .00000361 00000-0 90850-5 0 490
2 23868 97.1213 67.7874 0010885 284.6465 75.3580 15.46208364 15539
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96236.26286206 .00001164 00000-0 55291-4 0 338
2 23940 97.4312 140.8956 0014104 102.7915 257.4896 15.21147116 7821
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96238.11798267 .00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 295
2 23953 55.0487 105.5238 0024271 7.7641 352.3866 2.00572872 857
Progress M-32
1 24071U 96043A 96238.93831350 .00000334 00000-0 10000-4 0 330
2 24071 51.6498 132.6912 0012282 96.5032 263.7704 15.61480841 3946
1996043B
1 24072U 96043B 96216.39484756 .26807532 12838-4 14270-3 0 163
2 24072 51.6265 245.3338 0003417 296.2379 63.8165 16.54813509 420
ITALSAT F2
1 24208U 96044A 96229.84906834 -.00000218 00000-0 00000+0 0 159
2 24208 0.1678 256.0521 0105549 47.1501 28.5181 1.01846012 90
TELECOM 2D
1 24209U 96044B 96237.06993220 .00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 121
2 24209 0.4231 273.2611 0002995 169.2527 277.5247 1.00347469 343
1996044C
1 24210U 96044C 96223.93772132 -.00000394 00000-0 10000-4 0 47
2 24210 5.4294 117.8507 7294336 179.2896 182.7981 2.28186586 35
1996044D
1 24211U 96044D 96235.72604973 .00029517 00000-0 48362-2 0 143
2 24211 5.5181 112.7161 7288810 189.2604 139.2582 2.28438161 303
1996045A
1 24273U 96045A 96238.58219716 .00014342 00000-0 82230-1 0 226
2 24273 62.8438 247.0847 7423235 280.2428 10.8506 2.00639571 211
1996045B
1 24274U 96045B 96239.20743457 .00360134 78959-5 43472-3 0 224
2 24274 62.8042 205.5834 0152545 132.6399 228.7768 15.88943759 1791
1996045C
1 24275U 96045C 96238.42094197 .01222513 80594-5 58985-3 0 185
2 24275 62.8076 208.3069 0150398 125.2385 236.2951 15.99948746 1675
1996045D
1 24276U 96045D 96235.09869164 .00001337 00000-0 10000-3 0 37
2 24276 62.8049 247.5823 7459654 280.1323 9.5815 1.96694918 148
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96238.90557367 -.00052892 00000-0 -23094-1 0 221
2 24277 98.6200 314.7740 0014690 160.4262 199.7483 14.24175418 1263
JAS 2
1 24278U 96046B 96236.85678606 -.00000038 00000-0 00000+0 0 71
2 24278 98.5750 312.0051 0350856 236.1056 120.6257 13.52624959 921
1996046C
1 24279U 96046C 96238.74613071 -.00000037 00000-0 00000+0 0 87
2 24279 98.7542 313.6207 0300101 221.8963 135.8742 13.46328060 1193
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96237.78507444 .00005941 00000-0 73173-4 0 173
2 24280 51.6483 138.4861 0011104 92.4151 267.8223 15.61778465600629
1996047B
1 24281U 96047B 96234.52902945 .24767605 12666-4 25953-3 0 320
2 24281 51.6202 153.3934 0002903 126.7041 233.9304 16.50538701 659
Zhongxing 7
1 24282U 96048A 96238.80146168 .00017333 00000-0 44799-3 0 126
2 24282 27.2671 113.7989 5640422 189.3180 152.6252 4.68455037 359
1996048B
1 24283U 96048B 96238.83440606 .00024421 00000-0 80666-3 0 134
2 24283 27.2590 113.8073 5647658 189.3504 152.6723 4.66369737 355
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96237.14938213 .00000593 00000-0 55914-4 0 50
2 24285 82.9996 177.0456 2207792 156.9633 214.8164 10.81682092 304
1996049B
1 24286U 96049B 96239.18591042 .00003849 00000-0 36359-3 0 128
2 24286 82.9894 176.1040 2214065 153.4480 219.9334 10.81395909 510
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:54 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-5.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!new-news.sprintlink.net!nntp.coast.net!nntp.primenet.com!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!rusaerog.pr.mcs.net!user
From: rusaerog@mcs.net (Dennis Newkirk)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Visual MIR siteing
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 27 Aug 1996 01:18:35 GMT
Organization: Russian Aerospace Guide
Lines: 17
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <rusaerog-260896201531@rusaerog.pr.mcs.net>
References: <4vsjn5$87p@news1.cle.ab.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: rusaerog.pr.mcs.net
In article <4vsjn5$87p@news1.cle.ab.com>, bjp@cle.ab.com (Brian J.
Pennebaker) wrote:
> I have question regarding MIR. I live in Cleveland and the last
> couple of nights I was able to see MIR go by. About a minute later
> behind MIR was another object on the same path. I checked my tracking
> program and nothing was apparent to me to be another satellite. Could
> anyone tell me what it could be?
Its the Progress M-32 that was docked a couple weeks ago. It was removed to
make way for the Soyuz with the Mir-22 crew. The Progress is parked and
will be
redocked after the Mir-21 crew leaves.
---------------------------------+-------------------------
Dennis Newkirk | http://www.mcs.net/~rusaerog/
Editor - Russian Aerospace Guide | email: rusaerog@mcs.net
---------------------------------+-------------------------
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:55 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!ratty.wolfe.net!news.aa.net!news.alt.net!news1.alt.net!news.exodus.net!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.asu.edu!ennfs.eas.asu.edu!cs.utexas.edu!howland.erols.net!netcom.com!weaver
From: Tovar <tvr@alive.com>
Subject: 'modes.dat' for 'SatTrack'
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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Date: Tue, 27 Aug 1996 01:42:58 GMT
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Can someone suggest where/how i can get a current version of 'modes.dat'
(which contains frequencies and modes of operation), including, for
example, JAS-2? It seems like a real waste to get the whole SatTrack
package just to get that one file. Or, did i miss something and there's
some easy way of getting that?
-- KD6PAG
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:56 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!newsreader.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!demos!news.stealth.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.erols.net!agate!usenet
From: Manfred Bester <manfred>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 'modes.dat' for 'SatTrack'
Date: 27 Aug 1996 18:15:16 GMT
Organization: University of California, Berkeley
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <4vvdvl$huj@agate.berkeley.edu>
References: <322252A2.167E@alive.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: isi11.ssl.berkeley.edu
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> Can someone suggest where/how i can get a current version of 'modes.dat'
> (which contains frequencies and modes of operation), including, for
> example, JAS-2? It seems like a real waste to get the whole SatTrack
> package just to get that one file. Or, did i miss something and there's
> some easy way of getting that?
>
> -- KD6PAG
It seems the best solution would be to place up-to-date resource files
on the SatTrack web page. We'll make a 'User Resources' entry and provide
some updated resource files there. Just give us a day...
The new SatTrack web page can be found at:
http://www.bester.com/sattrack.html
This page contains the latest patches for version 3.1 and a description
of our new product SatTrack V4.0.
-Manfred Bester
====================================================================
Manfred Bester http://www.bester.com
Bester Tracking Systems mbester@bester.com
P.O. Box 9948 (510) 849-9922
Berkeley, CA 94709
====================================================================
From amsoft@epix.net Tue Aug 27 15:53:58 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!nntp04.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!mr.net!news.sgi.com!enews.sgi.com!news.uoregon.edu!waikato!canterbury.ac.nz!usenet
From: w.bell@psyc.canterbury.ac.nz
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Mir image
Date: 22 Aug 1996 22:47:27 GMT
Organization: Psychology, University of Canterbury
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <4vio1v$86g@cantuc.canterbury.ac.nz>
References: <4vb8to$fgg@news.bu.ac.th>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 132.181.218.17
Mime-Version: 1.0
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.2
In article <4vb8to$fgg@news.bu.ac.th>,
a37s0112@orchid.au.ac.th says...
>
>hi all my friends,
> Any body know how can I get mir images
from which web site?
>I need image file of mir station for my
article.Someone can
>help me?
> thank you
> HS2JFW ,
Joe
>
Hello Joe,
I have seen a very clear colour image of MIR
station on front cover of QST. ARRL at New
Conneticut, USA may assist you. Another
source is your Thailand Amateur radio
Headquaters. Sawadeeka, 73 From ZL3AO
Christchurch, New Zealand.
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:52 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!uwm.edu!news.cse.psu.edu!news.cc.swarthmore.edu!netnews.upenn.edu!Lehigh.EDU!Lehigh.EDU!not-for-mail
From: c002@Lehigh.EDU
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: lower loss at 150ft rg-11 or 9913?
Date: 26 Aug 1996 13:36:58 -0400
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <4vsnbq$23v7@ns2-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ns2-1.cc.lehigh.edu
>> Yes, as the title said..."rg-11 or 9913"
>> i need to run 150ft of cable, but here is my question:
>> which has less loss for a 150ft run...
>> at 3.7-4.2 GHz with 9913
>> or .95 - 1.45GHz with rg-11 <or rg-6??>
the question is... i have a choise to run 150 of a coax cable
i know that rg-6/11 are 75's and 9913 is 50
but WHICH has a lower loss at the freq. provided?
3-4ghz on 9913 or .9-1.5ghz on rg-6 or rg-11
this is for a sat.TV down converter. the feed connects directly to the down
converter with an 50ohm N, and from the downconv. to the TV it is an F
but depending on which cable has the lowest loss will deside on if the
downconv. is staying on the feed, or attached directly to the TV
>Both will have lower loss at 0.95-1.45 GHz. You need to use a coaxial
>cable with the correct characteristic impedance. R-11 and RG-6 are 75
>ohn cables and 9913 is a 50 ohm cable. The impedance should match your
DAvid
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
| David Roseman | c002@lehigh.edu |
| | The Flying HAm - BBS |
| Utopia Telecommunications | Technomage - BBS |
| 610.838.2989 | N3SQE/1 - HAm |
| (Parttime system) | |
|-----My AWESOME home page :) http://www.lehigh.edu/~c002/c002.html-----|
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:53 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!qualcuno.nettuno.it!sirio.cineca.it!galileo.polito.it!usenet
From: Paolo Tealdi <s76511@athena.polito.it>
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.space,rec.radio.amateur.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.shortwave,rec.radio.amateur.swap
Subject: Portable VHF mark ALINCO model DJ180E
Date: Tue, 27 Aug 1996 10:32:14 +0200
Organization: Politecnico di Torino (Italy)
Lines: 19
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CC: s80660@athena.polito.it, s76511@athena.polito.it
Xref: news2.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:23874 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:16796 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:31941 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:16549 rec.radio.amateur.misc:106203 rec.radio.amateur.space:7428
A friend of mine is a radio amateur and he has got this transceiver
radio:
RTX mark ALINCO
ELECTRONICS INC. JAPAN
Portable VHF
model DJ180E
He has got two questions about this radio:
1) How can he modify his radio to extend the band from 144/146 MHz to
130/170 MHz?
2) Can he receive the "manual for use" of this radio? (A photocopy of
the manual is acceptable too!)
For details, please conctact me through my personal e-mail address.
Thank you very much!
Paolo Tealdi - Italy
E-mail: s76511@athena.polito.it
WWW: http://www.polito.it/~s76511/index.html
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:54 1996
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From: p000655b@pbfreenet.seflin.lib.fl.us (Richard Bascom)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: problems with satellites
Date: 27 Aug 1996 12:43:38 GMT
Organization: SEFLIN Free-Net - Palm Beach
Lines: 9
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I have a problem with, AO-10 AMD AO-13, They are very week.
Does anyone have this same problem?
THANKS Richard Bascom.
--
Richard Bascom
p000655b@pbfreenet.seflin.lib.fl.us
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:55 1996
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From: c002@Lehigh.EDU
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: lower loss at 150ft rg-11 or 9913?
Date: 27 Aug 1996 19:58:36 -0400
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <50023c$1l0f@ns5-1.CC.Lehigh.EDU>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ns5-1.cc.lehigh.edu
>: Yes, as the title said..."rg-11 or 9913"
>: i need to run 150ft of cable, but here is my question:
>: which has less loss for a 150ft run...
>: at 3.7-4.2 GHz with 9913
>: or .95 - 1.45GHz with rg-11 <or rg-6??>
>
>Well, aside from the impedance/freq differences, the chart on the wall says:
>(length adjusted)
>
>4.0 GHz w/9913 ~16db loss
>1.2 GHz w/RG11 ~12db loss
THANK YOU!!!!!!!! finally someone has answered my question!!
was it that hard to understand ppl?!
gezz
DAvid
thanks again
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------|
| David Roseman | c002@lehigh.edu |
| | The Flying HAm - BBS |
| Utopia Telecommunications | Technomage - BBS |
| 610.838.2989 | N3SQE/1 - HAm |
| (Parttime system) | |
|-----My AWESOME home page :) http://www.lehigh.edu/~c002/c002.html-----|
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:55 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!tandem!pacbell.com!pb2esac!jaminge
From: jaminge@pb2esac.esac.pacbell.com (John Minger)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: I WOULD LIKE TO BE A MANAGER
Date: 27 Aug 1996 20:39:53 GMT
Organization: Pacific Bell, ESAC
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <4vvmep$avv@gw.PacBell.COM>
References: <32223BAD.416C@facil.umass.edu>
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In article <32223BAD.416C@facil.umass.edu>, <naglieri@facil.umass.edu> wrote:
>Hello,
>
>My name is Tony Naglieri my call is N1NYD qth Ware, Ma. home telephone is
>413-967-7426. I would like to help out some ham by beening a manager.
>
Yeah, Tony, I've had days like that. I always figured I
ought to wait til I got a manager who was a little shrimp
of a guy before I decided to "been" one of them.
Heck, just file a grievance. It'll drive him nuts!
-John
AC6VV
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:56 1996
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From: sfylaqc@scfn.THpl.lib.fl.US (richard smith)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Ham-Space Digest V96 #261
Date: 28 Aug 96 01:25:55 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 2
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.93.960827212542.23530J-100000@scfn>
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Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
unsubscribe
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:58 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!news1.inlink.com!news.dra.com!news.id.net!news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!nntp.primenet.com!newspump.sol.net!spool.mu.edu!munnari.OZ.AU!metro!metro!news.nsw.CSIRO.AU!hesse
From: lindley@syd.dit.csiro.au (CSIRO-DIT)
Subject: "New" Amateur Satellite Project
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: hesse.syd.dit.csiro.au
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To: world
Sender: news@news.nsw.CSIRO.AU
Organization: CSIRO
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #3
Date: Thu, 29 Aug 1996 03:05:42 GMT
Lines: 42
The Australian Space Research Institute (a non-profit
space R&D group in Australia) is currently working on
a microsatellite project.
This project has been going for several years at a
pretty slow rate of progress, primarily due to lack
of funding opportunities here in Australia. Despite that,
some progress has been made in developing the overall
system design, with detailed studies completed, and some
fabrication completed on the spacecraft structure. Most
of this work has been done as university student projects.
Due to a significant change in the local situation, with
healthier possibilities for contributions and grants, we
are considering ramping up this development effort.
We have previously discussed the possibility of acquiring
the AMSAT-NA microsat plans, but could not obtain sufficient
funding to purchase them from AMSAT-NA (ie. $US15 000).
Does anyone know of any additional sources of this kind
of detailed technical information? We can continue to
do this alone, but it would be nice to have the opportunity
to discover pitfalls before we attempt to build something
(and especially before we attempt to launch it!).
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
regards, Craig Lindley
----------------------------------------------------------
Craig A. Lindley
Research Leader, Knowledge-base Technology and
Artificial Intelligence
CSIRO Division of Information Technology
Locked Bag 17
North Ryde NSW 2113 Australia
Ph: +61-2-325-3150
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:56:59 1996
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From: rs93463@midnet.com (Stephen Reader)
Reply-To: rs93463@midnet.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Distribution: world
Subject: Radio Astronomy
Date: 29 Aug 1996 07:55:07 GMT
Message-ID: <398000094.72528923@midnet.com>
Organization: MidNet, Coventry UK
Lines: 10
Hi uk.radio.amateur!
Help required, does anybody have a current
contact address for "BARAS" British Amateur Radio Astonomy Society. And can
anybody help with info and advice on setting up a radio telescope to
monitor solar emisionns. Any info , help or advice will be much apreciated.
73 de Steve.
Stephen Reader RNARS 0951. RS93463
--- OffRoad 1.9e registered to Stephen Reader
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:57:00 1996
Path: news2.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.cyberhighway.net!news
From: rb@cyberhighway.net (John Jordan)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Visual MIR siteing
Date: Thu, 29 Aug 1996 08:40:40 GMT
Organization: CyberHighway Internet Services
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <503ko9$9h5@host-3.cyberhighway.net>
References: <4vsjn5$87p@news1.cle.ab.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ts1-11.sle.cyberhighway.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/32.126
bjp@cle.ab.com (Brian J. Pennebaker) wrote:
> I have question regarding MIR. I live in Cleveland and the last
> couple of nights I was able to see MIR go by. About a minute later
> behind MIR was another object on the same path. I checked my tracking
> program and nothing was apparent to me to be another satellite. Could
> anyone tell me what it could be?
>
>73,
>
>Brian
>
Hi Brian,
Thats great that you were able to watch the MIR pass over, looks neet
huh? A couple years ago while I was driving my semi in the mountains
near Sisters Oregon, remembering that a visible pass of the space
shuttle was that morning, I pulled the semi over to the side of the
road, fired up the 2m and called for W5RRR, I was shocked to see AND
hear the shuttle coming over the horizon, I had about a minute qso
with the shuttle before they moved onto another station. They said
that I was (to their knowledge) the only "semi mobile" to make a
contact on that mission! It was truely kewl to see them go over my
head while I was talking to a crew member at the same time. I'll
cherrish that morning in my memory for a long time.
Anyway, to answer your question, SAC is currently tracking tens of
thousands of space "things".. From the smallest of lost bolts, to
highly top-secret sat's. It is very likely that you were observing
one of these "unlisted" sat's.
Take care and 73's
John KB7VZL
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:57:01 1996
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From: rs93463@midnet.com (Stephen Reader)
Reply-To: rs93463@midnet.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Distribution: world
Subject: Radio Astronomy
Date: 30 Aug 1996 07:58:54 GMT
Message-ID: <398000094.77725659@midnet.com>
Organization: MidNet, Coventry UK
Lines: 11
Hi uk.radio.amateur!
Help required, does anybody have a current
contact address for "BARAS" British Amateur Radio Astonomy Society. And can
anybody help with info and advice on setting up a radio telescope to
monitor solar emisionns. Any info , help or advice will be much apreciated.
73 de Steve.
Stephen Reader RNARS 0951. RS93463
--- OffRoad 1.9e registered to Stephen Reader
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:57:02 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news2.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!jussieu.fr!univ-lyon1.fr!in2p3.fr!swidir.switch.ch!swsbe6.switch.ch!surfnet.nl!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: Pacsat Software for Linux/X ?
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV)
Reply-To: pe1chl@amsat.org
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <Dx0rKn.LDI@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <3226FC32.1896C9DE@iquest.net>
Date: Sat, 31 Aug 1996 20:29:10 GMT
Lines: 19
In <3226FC32.1896C9DE@iquest.net> Jeff Davis <n9avg@iquest.net> writes:
>Hello all!
>I have been using WiSP for the pacsats for quite sometime.
>Now that I have given up windoze and become a Linuz zealot are there any
>Linux/X-windows sat tracking/communication packages available?
Tracking: SatTrack. http://www.primenet.com/~bester/sattrack.html
Communication: there is a program for X but I can't remember the location.
Look in the Hamradio HOWTO.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | BBS: +31-302870036 (2300-0730 local) |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Mon Sep 02 06:57:03 1996
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From: rosco@ior.com (John KD7AAT)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Visual MIR siteing
Date: Sat, 31 Aug 1996 22:40:35 GMT
Organization: Ralphs Place
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <50af14$8ek@express.ior.com>
References: <4vsjn5$87p@news1.cle.ab.com> <503ko9$9h5@host-3.cyberhighway.net>
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rb@cyberhighway.net (John Jordan) wrote:
>Anyway, to answer your question, SAC is currently tracking tens of
>thousands of space "things".. From the smallest of lost bolts, to
>highly top-secret sat's. It is very likely that you were observing
>one of these "unlisted" sat's.
Sorry, but should surly think that if it was something large enough
to see, and something that was that close to the MIR that it would be
listed. As was said before, it was M-32. A well "Listed" sat....
Rosco