home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
World of Ham Radio 1997
/
WOHR97_AmSoft_(1997-02-01).iso
/
usenets
/
1996_12
/
_space.txt
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1997-02-01
|
597KB
|
13,180 lines
The World of Ham Radio CD-ROM
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:36:57 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.campus.mci.net!news.telis.org!usenet
From: Reed Christiansen <radiohead@telis.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: A good SAT MODEM??
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 18:08:08 -0800
Organization: TELIS
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <32A62E88.6187@telis.org>
Reply-To: radiohead@telis.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: s21-pm01-sntam-t.telis.org
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win95; I)
Hi,
I have been working satellites for while now and love doing it. Up to
now I have just worked the voice modes because I don't have a modem. I
am looking in to getting set up for digital work and am wondering where
to start. I know there are allot of satellites out there with digital
capabilities. Does that mean I need to buy a handfull of modems to be
able to work them or are there modems that will work more than one type
of modulation. If anyone has had success with with a particular brand
or has any information that might help someone who is just "getting in"
to digital satellite comunications i would apreciate hearing from you.
Thanks!
73's Reed Kc6vzz
radiohead.telis@mail.telis.org
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:36:57 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!204.71.1.48!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!dish.news.pipex.net!pipex!dircon!midnet!c.shaw
From: c.shaw@midnet.com (Colin Shaw)
Reply-To: c.shaw@midnet.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Distribution: world
Subject: Amlog 3
Date: 04 Dec 1996 09:56:05 GMT
Message-ID: <65502.57759284@midnet.com>
Organization: MidNet, Coventry UK
Lines: 8
Zentek, the authors of the Amlog 3 logging program, now
have a small web site at:
http://www.midnet.com/midnet/zentek/
There is a screen shot and details of Amlog 3 plus details
about getting a demo copy for 1 pound (UK).
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:36:59 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-4.sprintlink.net!news.mcn.net!blpm01-192
From: fiscus@mcn.net (Vince Fiscus, KB7ADL)
Newsgroups: alt.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.scanner,sci.space.policy,sci.space.shuttle
Subject: Re: Amsat Phase 3D scheduled to be launched April 1997.
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 96 20:02:34 GMT
Organization: Montana Communications Network
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <584ld7$nqh@news.mcn.net>
References: <58001s$7le@news.mcn.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: blpm01-192.mcn.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #3
Xref: news1.epix.net alt.radio.scanner:42598 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119616 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43829 rec.radio.amateur.space:9009 rec.radio.scanner:72284 sci.space.policy:58647 sci.space.shuttle:51884
You can be a part of this history making event by becoming a member of the
Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation(Amsat).
For more information about Amsat and Phase 3D
Write:
AMSAT-NA
850 Sligo Ave.
Silver Spring, MD. 20910-4703
or
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/AmsatHome.html
73 de KB7ADL
1997 Countdown to Phase 3D !
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:00 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: fsperber@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AMSAT-OSCAR 13 Burned Up On Re-Entry
Date: 8 Dec 1996 06:46:29 GMT
Organization: AOL Bertelsmann Online GmbH & Co. KG http://www.germany.aol.com
Lines: 52
Message-ID: <19961208064600.BAA04778@ladder01.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
AMSAT-Deutschland e.V. (Germany)
Press-Release
Telecommunications Satellite AMSAT-OSCAR 13 Burned Up On Re-Entry
On December 5th, 1996, the international telecommunications satellite
AMSAT OSCAR-13 burned up upon re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. AMSAT
OSCAR-13 was successfully launched on June 15th, 1988, into a highly
elliptical orbit on board the first test flight of the new European ARIANE
4 rocket. Over the years, AMSAT OSCAR-13 has enabled direct radio contacts
among the world-wide community of nearly 2 million radio amateurs.
AMSAT OSCAR-13 had been constructed within four years by an international
project group under the leadership of Dr. Karl Meinzer of AMSAT-Germany.
AMSAT (Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation) is a world-wide alliance of
approximately 6000 scientists, engineers, technicians and radio amateurs
who voluntarily build and operate scientific and communications
satellites.
During its operational period, AMSAT OSCAR-13 was monitored and controlled
by a group of ground stations in Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia,
New Zealand and the United States of America.
Upon its re-entry, AMSAT OSCAR-13 has had a lifespan of over eight years.
Originally the mission had been conceived to last only seven years.
Overheating of the satellite due to air friction in the upper atmosphere
resulted in the destruction of the solar panels on November 24th and the
consequent interruption of all radio links. Prior to this event, the
on-board monitoring system had transmitted much data relating to the
satellite's behavior in the upper atmosphere to ground stations for
evaluation.
The decay of the orbit was caused by the gravitational attraction of the
Sun and the Moon. The elliptical orbit was stretched so that the satellite
gradually approached the Earth which lies at one of the two focal points
of
the ellipse. This phenomenon motivated AMSAT to develop new analytical and
computational methods to allow long term predictions for future satellites
on similar, highly elliptical orbits.
The orbit of the next satellite, AMSAT Phase 3-D, has been calculated
using
these new methods and will therefore be more stable over the long term.
AMSAT Phase 3-D is scheduled to be launched into space during the first
half of 1997 as apparently the only satellite payload for the second test
flight of the new ARIANE 5 launcher.
(AMSAT-DL Journal Editors)
For more information see:
http://www.amsat.org
ftp://ftp.amsat.org/amsat/satinfo/ao13
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:01 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: fsperber@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AO-13 Burned Up On Re-Entry
Date: 7 Dec 1996 07:26:52 GMT
Organization: AOL Bertelsmann Online GmbH & Co. KG http://www.germany.aol.com
Lines: 52
Message-ID: <19961207072600.CAA10212@ladder01.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
AMSAT-Deutschland e.V. (Germany)
Press-Release
Telecommunications Satellite AMSAT-OSCAR 13 Burned Up On Re-Entry
On December 5th, 1996, the international telecommunications satellite
AMSAT OSCAR-13 burned up upon re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. AMSAT
OSCAR-13 was successfully launched on June 15th, 1988, into a highly
elliptical orbit on board the first test flight of the new European ARIANE
4 rocket. Over the years, AMSAT OSCAR-13 has enabled direct radio contacts
among the world-wide community of nearly 2 million radio amateurs.
AMSAT OSCAR-13 had been constructed within four years by an international
project group under the leadership of Dr. Karl Meinzer of AMSAT-Germany.
AMSAT (Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation) is a world-wide alliance of
approximately 6000 scientists, engineers, technicians and radio amateurs
who voluntarily build and operate scientific and communications
satellites.
During its operational period, AMSAT OSCAR-13 was monitored and controlled
by a group of ground stations in Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia,
New Zealand and the United States of America.
Upon its re-entry, AMSAT OSCAR-13 has had a lifespan of over eight years.
Originally the mission had been conceived to last only seven years.
Overheating of the satellite due to air friction in the upper atmosphere
resulted in the destruction of the solar panels on November 24th and the
consequent interruption of all radio links. Prior to this event, the
on-board monitoring system had transmitted much data relating to the
satellite's behavior in the upper atmosphere to ground stations for
evaluation.
The decay of the orbit was caused by the gravitational attraction of the
Sun and the Moon. The elliptical orbit was stretched so that the satellite
gradually approached the Earth which lies at one of the two focal points
of
the ellipse. This phenomenon motivated AMSAT to develop new analytical and
computational methods to allow long term predictions for future satellites
on similar, highly elliptical orbits.
The orbit of the next satellite, AMSAT Phase 3-D, has been calculated
using
these new methods and will therefore be more stable over the long term.
AMSAT Phase 3-D is scheduled to be launched into space during the first
half of 1997 as apparently the only satellite payload for the second test
flight of the new ARIANE 5 launcher.
(AMSAT-DL Journal Editor)
For more information see:
http://www.amsat.org
ftp://ftp.amsat.org/amsat/satinfo/ao13
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:02 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK090 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 7 Dec 1996 17:19:19 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 91
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk090.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12382 rec.radio.amateur.space:9043
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK090
ARLK090 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK90
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 90 ARLK090
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 7, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK090
ARLK090 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
STS-80
1 24660U 96065A 96341.33039352 .00000726 00000-0 27426-5 0 593
2 24660 28.4683 68.5999 0022256 98.8817 301.5184 15.69476679 2593
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96340.45662415 .00000015 00000-0 -23021-7 0 03075
2 18129 82.9279 21.9431 0013021 43.3816 316.8377 13.72372068473662
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96341.06630549 .00000107 00000-0 25878-4 0 09501
2 14781 97.8137 324.2820 0010774 263.1509 96.8469 14.69504855682896
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96341.76333624 .00000020 00000-0 44304-5 0 9390
2 21089 82.9219 61.3627 0030330 111.0389 249.4015 13.74074888292738
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 96340.36293920 .64194205 34729-4 46505-3 0 3848
2 19216 56.9100 66.0967 1385719 63.2476 313.9974 13.38919575 33595
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96341.18453856 .00000049 00000-0 35863-4 0 02460
2 20437 98.5341 60.8954 0012022 56.9672 303.2665 14.29941469358631
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96340.80958899 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 02030
2 23439 64.8120 105.5416 0155269 168.5231 191.9297 11.27529350080135
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96340.78609949 .00000029 00000-0 28163-4 0 00420
2 20439 98.5518 63.0420 0012141 59.2863 300.9528 14.29992146358597
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96341.07115897 .00000029 00000-0 28108-4 0 00451
2 20440 98.5547 64.0572 0012339 57.6647 302.5729 14.30134562358662
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96340.78484834 .00000012 00000-0 21555-4 0 00472
2 20441 98.5538 63.6956 0012739 59.4227 300.8220 14.30102983358627
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96341.18722617 .00000040 00000-0 32132-4 0 00421
2 20442 98.5564 64.6633 0013195 56.3247 303.9195 14.30214724358706
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96340.98938601 -.00000057 00000-0 -63832-4 0 09498
2 20480 99.0226 333.1523 0541104 95.0868 271.2192 12.83235189319925
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96341.08693025 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07713
2 21087 82.9419 194.4831 0036964 85.3660 275.1716 13.74575043293629
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96341.17070750 .00000021 00000-0 21347-4 0 07504
2 21575 98.3317 42.2599 0008291 107.7584 252.4510 14.37047479282766
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96341.07983251 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 06491
2 22077 66.0783 189.5614 0015295 258.5889 101.3411 12.86298938202912
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96341.19262451 .00000054 00000-0 38967-4 0 05143
2 22828 98.5631 53.7801 0011148 69.1789 291.0601 14.28161771134662
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96341.18223832 .00000005 00000-0 19463-4 0 05326
2 22826 98.5680 53.7007 0009901 83.7900 276.4407 14.27820494166549
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96341.12895030 .00000001 00000-0 17706-4 0 05317
2 22825 98.5671 53.4461 0009391 83.6199 276.6046 14.27711356166526
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96341.15412561 .00000020 00000-0 58659-4 0 00604
2 24278 98.5688 42.4565 0351517 326.3857 31.5408 13.52627812015027
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96341.86493042 .00001916 00000-0 26978-4 0 8524
2 16609 51.6541 333.4984 0013484 113.1353 247.1070 15.62565442616999
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Tuesday,
December 10, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:04 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK091 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 10 Dec 1996 17:52:26 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk091.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12389 rec.radio.amateur.space:9073
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK091
ARLK091 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK91
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 91 ARLK091
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 10, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK091
ARLK091 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96344.17490209 .00000040 00000-0 27009-4 0 02947
2 18129 82.9271 19.1939 0012947 34.0597 326.1382 13.72372337474171
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96344.06232207 .00000103 00000-0 25166-4 0 09464
2 14781 97.8139 327.1498 0010696 252.1926 107.8103 14.69505769683338
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96344.16630608 .00000042 00000-0 28175-4 0 09525
2 21089 82.9217 59.5796 0030597 104.8866 255.5685 13.74075181293062
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96343.70356319 -.00000005 00000-0 14724-4 0 02350
2 20437 98.5346 63.3658 0011992 49.7991 310.4241 14.29941208358994
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96343.82516983 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01948
2 23439 64.8109 100.6622 0155825 168.0302 192.4391 11.27529304080476
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96344.14467737 .00000052 00000-0 36747-4 0 00389
2 20439 98.5512 66.3391 0012061 49.2629 310.9647 14.29992861359075
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96344.14954946 -.00000007 00000-0 14111-4 0 00409
2 20440 98.5544 67.0818 0012302 49.1455 311.0794 14.30134604359102
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96344.14316595 .00000010 00000-0 20510-4 0 00438
2 20441 98.5534 66.9947 0012735 49.9468 310.2836 14.30103298359108
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96343.84568634 .00000029 00000-0 27881-4 0 00357
2 20442 98.5563 67.2766 0013180 49.0927 311.1392 14.30215023359084
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96344.03006671 .00000012 00000-0 89775-4 0 09427
2 20480 99.0221 335.6129 0541039 88.1817 278.1135 12.83235949320315
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96344.07135119 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07967
2 21087 82.9422 192.2765 0037095 77.9257 282.6051 13.74575093294036
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96344.16468641 .00000022 00000-0 21564-4 0 07430
2 21575 98.3316 45.1586 0008317 99.0216 261.1907 14.37047924283197
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96344.03434124 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 06401
2 22077 66.0784 183.3751 0015165 257.2909 102.6414 12.86299040203296
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96344.13514461 .00000008 00000-0 20598-4 0 05073
2 22828 98.5630 56.6651 0011165 61.3303 298.8999 14.28161762135083
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96344.12546181 -.00000011 00000-0 13125-4 0 05268
2 22826 98.5678 56.5862 0009981 75.6505 284.5784 14.27820595166961
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96344.14248063 -.00000015 00000-0 11284-4 0 05287
2 22825 98.5669 56.4001 0009503 76.0316 284.1924 14.27711448166956
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96344.18678766 -.00000039 00000-0 -55296-6 0 00575
2 24278 98.5687 45.0851 0351367 318.5262 38.9687 13.52627319015436
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96343.95862514 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 00626
2 24305 82.9227 135.1459 0031347 17.0445 343.1753 13.73088653012950
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96345.31845887 .00002050 00000-0 28429-4 0 8620
2 16609 51.6525 316.0698 0013417 124.0920 236.1310 15.62583222617539
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 14, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:05 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.rio.com!news
From: "FUman" <kg7fu@rio.com>
Newsgroups: 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
Subject: Re: ARRL lawyer to sue member
Date: 2 Dec 1996 07:21:47 GMT
Organization: kg7fu
Lines: 52
Message-ID: <01bbe021$c538d7c0$988260ce@surf.rio.com>
References: <01bb739f.8e9f00c0$7f8260ce@surf.rio.com> <57ac8a$1hd@anomaly.ideamation.com> <329a34d2.1706618@news.syspac.com> <32a1b458.7226315@news.uark.edu> <57qr02$qm@anomaly.ideamation.com> <32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca>
NNTP-Posting-Host: p52.t0.rio.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32298 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20456 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1469 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:43467 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:21647 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119385 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43742 rec.radio.amateur.space:8977
Jim Hutchings <jim.hutchings@sk.sympatico.ca> wrote in article =
<32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca>...
> second, I have been in the unfortunate position where a qualified =
capable=20
> lawyer was required. To my great relief, we won our case and I vowed =
to=20
> never again tell another lawyer joke...I no longer get the humor
> Jim Hutchings VE5HM
Gee, good for you Jim! How much did he charge you?
Don't you ever wonder about the screwball laws being written everyday
to restrict and regulate our laws? Do you think they're written by
Joe Concerned Citizen?
How about the financial impact lawyers have on our everyday lives?
Every time they win some humongous settlement in some pea brained
case it ends up costing the taxpayers and consumers.
Ever look up justice in the dictionary? How about all those crooks and
murders that get off every year due to some "technicality"? Ever hear
of the case of the divorce where the mom was suicidal and mentally
unable to cope without anti-psychotic medication and the father was
"normal"...mom got custody.
The responses you see here are direct reflections of our own experiences
and disdain for lawyers. When one threatedned to sue me, I posted it
so the world could see what they are really like.
Sorry you don't agree that the world would be a safer and cheaper place
without them.
de kg7fu
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:06 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!198.161.84.3!scanner.worldgate.com!rover.ucs.ualberta.ca!mongol.sasknet.sk.ca!news@mongol.sasknet.sk.ca
From: Jim Hutchings <jim.hutchings@sk.sympatico.ca>
Newsgroups: 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
Subject: Re: ARRL lawyer to sue member
Date: Mon, 02 Dec 1996 19:39:38 -0800
Organization: SaskNet News Distribution
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <32A3A0FA.50CB@sk.sympatico.ca>
References: <01bb739f.8e9f00c0$7f8260ce@surf.rio.com> <57ac8a$1hd@anomaly.ideamation.com> <329a34d2.1706618@news.syspac.com> <32a1b458.7226315@news.uark.edu> <57qr02$qm@anomaly.ideamation.com> <32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca> <01bbe021$c538d7c0$988260ce@surf.rio.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: alf18.sk.sympatico.ca
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02E-SYMPA (Win95; I; 16bit)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32326 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20470 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1472 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:43528 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:21671 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119492 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43780 rec.radio.amateur.space:8989
>
> Sorry you don't agree that the world would be a safer and cheaper place
> without them.
>
> de kg7fu
>
> The anti-gun control groups have a snappy slogan that basically says,
"guns don't cause crime any more than flys cause garbage". Without
debating the validity of that particular statement, I think that it's
unfair to blame lawyers for the state of our society. I'm not suggesting
that I agree with the strange things that go on in the "legal system"
(anyone collecting oxymorons??).
On the positive side of this topic, you might note that the Feds have now
decreed that aircraft manufacturers will only be liable for 18 years
after their product has been sold instead of eternity. Common sense does
prevail eventually.
Another point to consider is that many of these unbelievable judgements
have been rendered by juries!! Has the point been reached where we can
no longer trust the juries??
Our society has serious problems and sleazy lawyers are a symptom, not
the problem itself.
Honest, hardworking lawyers do exist and are a valuable commodity when
someone decides to rain on your parade. And yes, they're not
necessarily cheap, but most will try to keep costs down when they know
you're not well-off.
73 de Jim Hutchings VE5HM
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:08 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!admaix.sunydutchess.edu!news.acsu.buffalo.edu!dsinc!spool.mu.edu!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!paperboy.ids.net!anomaly.ideamation.com!anomaly.ideamation.com!not-for-mail
From: kd1hz@anomaly.ideamation.com (Michael P. Deignan)
Newsgroups: 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
Subject: Re: ARRL lawyer to sue member
Date: 3 Dec 1996 13:37:31 -0500
Organization: The Ace Tomato Company
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <581s1b$1fg@anomaly.ideamation.com>
References: <01bb739f.8e9f00c0$7f8260ce@surf.rio.com> <32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca> <01bbe021$c538d7c0$988260ce@surf.rio.com> <32A3A0FA.50CB@sk.sympatico.ca>
NNTP-Posting-Host: anomaly.ideamation.com
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32346 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20483 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1478 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:43555 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:21682 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119537 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43794 rec.radio.amateur.space:8998
In article <32A3A0FA.50CB@sk.sympatico.ca>,
Jim Hutchings <jim.hutchings@sk.sympatico.ca> wrote:
>> The anti-gun control groups have a snappy slogan that basically says,
>"guns don't cause crime any more than flys cause garbage". Without
>debating the validity of that particular statement, I think that it's
>unfair to blame lawyers for the state of our society.
You are, to some degree, correct.
The proliferation of lawsuits really isn't the fault of the Trial
Lawyers Association. In a sense, they are merely providing a service
to accomodate a demand for legal services in our country.
It is the desire to "get rich quick" (and sueing someone seems to
be a way of doing that with little to no risk if you can get a
lawyer to take your case on a percentage basis, which most will)
that the American people have today [inherently lazy bastards
they are -- the Japanese were right -- they want to lay around
with the good life, no work, have everything paid for them by
someone else -- basically an extension of the welfare-state
mentality that permeates this country today].
MD
--
--
-- "Guns don't kill people. I kill people." -- T-shirt slogan
--
-- If you don't like my opinions, that's just too damn bad.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!199.74.141.7!news.callamer.com!news.alt.net!newspost1.alt.net!usenet
From: Roy Keeley <rkeeley@dibbs.net>
Newsgroups: 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
Subject: Re: ARRL lawyer to sue member
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 11:14:10 -0600
Organization: Railway Express, Inc.
Lines: 50
Message-ID: <32A45FE2.3E97@dibbs.net>
References: <01bb739f.8e9f00c0$7f8260ce@surf.rio.com> <57ac8a$1hd@anomaly.ideamation.com> <329a34d2.1706618@news.syspac.com> <32a1b458.7226315@news.uark.edu> <57qr02$qm@anomaly.ideamation.com> <32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win95; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32363 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20493 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1486 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:43579 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:21703 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119576 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43810 rec.radio.amateur.space:9003
Jim Hutchings wrote:
>
> Anthony S. Pelliccio wrote:
> >
> > In article <32a1b458.7226315@news.uark.edu>, <bs02@engr.uark.edu> wrote:
> > >There are only 3 laywer jokes...
> > >
> > >all the rest are true stories!
> >
> > I can pretty much believe that. After reading those it makes me wish
> > I had a daughter so I could forbid her to marry a lawyer. :)
> >
> > >>Why is it that when you tell a 'joke' about an Irishman it is called
> > >>tasteless; when you tell a joke about a black it is called racist, and
> > >>when you tell a joke about a lawyer it is called funny?
> >
> > Even though you didn't post this, I missed the original response so here
> > goes:
> >
> > The reason it's funny is because by and large most lawyers are lower
> > than slime.
> >
> > Tony
>
> first of all, I doubt that this is a reasonable place to be posting this
> stuff.
> second, I have been in the unfortunate position where a qualified capable
> lawyer was required. To my great relief, we won our case and I vowed to
> never again tell another lawyer joke...I no longer get the humor
> Jim Hutchings VE5HM
I too once needed a lawyer, and he came thru for me. I think the problem
is the
bottom half of the class. This lower 50% has contemp for the law, and
they are
who the lawyer joke are for. Basically, it is the Judges who have my
contemp, but
then they are lawyers also. And if you say, "What about the judge in my
case, where
I won", I will just say, at one point, the Judge fell asleep, and I won
in spite of him, mainly because of the strength of my lawyer.
--
73's
Roy KC4IMC
rkeeley@dibbs.net
rkeeley@MAF.mobile.al.us
kc4imc@maf.wa4wbi.ampr.org
Snail Mail = 10675 Salt Aire Rd, E., Theodore, AL 36582, USA
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:10 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!spool.mu.edu!howland.erols.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.pbi.net!news.dp.beckman.com!inet.dp.beckman.com!newsmaster
Newsgroups: 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
Subject: Re: ARRL lawyer to sue member
Message-ID: <32A5DABB.15B0@ccgate.dp.beckman.com>
From: Don Labriola <dplabriola@ccgate.dp.beckman.com>
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 12:10:35 -0800
Reply-To: dplabriola@ccgate.dp.beckman.com
References: <01bb739f.8e9f00c0$7f8260ce@surf.rio.com>
<57ac8a$1hd@anomaly.ideamation.com> <329a34d2.1706618@news.syspac.com>
<32a1b458.7226315@news.uark.edu> <57qr02$qm@anomaly.ideamation.com>
<32A25874.1582@sk.sympatico.ca> <01bbe021$c538d7c0$988260ce@surf.rio.com>
Distribution: world
Organization: DDC, Beckman Instruments, Inc.
NNTP-Posting-Host: 134.217.101.126
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win16; I)
Lines: 16
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32376 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20502 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1490 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:43595 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:21715 rec.radio.amateur.misc:119610 rec.radio.amateur.policy:43824 rec.radio.amateur.space:9006
FUman wrote:
...
> Don't you ever wonder about the screwball laws being written everyday
> to restrict and regulate our laws? Do you think they're written by
> Joe Concerned Citizen?
>
I personally think that the best thing we could do was to give congress,
(etc.) 5 years to re-touch all of the laws to make them understandable
by the average product of our school system. It would be their choice as
to modifying the laws or improving the education system! ;o)
If it has been so poorly written that only a lawyer can read it, and two
lawyers come to different opinions of what it means, then it should not
be binding! (Think what that would do the the tax structure).
$.02 from W6QS -- Don
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:11 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!ionews.ionet.net!usenet
From: "Scotty" <druid@ionet.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Ashley's Space World WEB Page
Date: 4 Dec 1996 22:50:10 GMT
Organization: ioNET
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <01bbe235$8f56e000$3e4381d0@scotty>
NNTP-Posting-Host: lsip52.ionet.net
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Ashley's Space World WEB Page is now up and running with many links for
those interested in the space field. Coming soon will be actual
communications that Ashley has made via Ham Radio with members of the Mir
Space Station. Point your WEB Browser to:
http://www.sirinet.net/~acagle
Enjoy yourself, fill out the questionnaire or send Ashley some email.
Scotty
KC5HSO
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:12 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-9.sprintlink.net!news.ultranet.com!homer.alpha.net!news
From: scott <acepilot@mwt.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Dish Positioning Formula
Date: Sun, 01 Dec 1996 17:17:29 -0800
Organization: Aero Head Aviation
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32A22E28.624C@mwt.net>
References: <32A145B0.12BF@worldnet.att.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp21.westby.mwt.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win16; U)
To: mewalla@worldnet.att.net
Michael Wallace wrote:
>
> I'm trying to find the formula used in calculating the
> azimuth and elevation for an antenna given a geostationary
> satellite's longitude.
>
> Typically, you must input your own antenna lat/long and
> possibly elevation as well.
>
> If you know it, I'd sure like to see it please.
>
> Thankx!
>
> Michael Wallace
> N3LFH
>
> mewalla@worldnet.att.net
The ARRL book "The Satellite Experimenter's Handbook" has a graph on page
6-13 that shows how to compute AZ/EL for geosynchronous sats. The book I
refer to is 2nd edition, 2nd printing, copyright 1990.
--
Gotta FLY or gonna Die !
Ask me about my
Aeronca Super Chief !
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:13 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!mr.net!newshub.tc.umn.edu!spool.mu.edu!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!news.hn.netlink.co.nz!auckland.ac.nz!ccu1.auckland.ac.nz!rodda
From: rodda@ccu1.auckland.ac.nz (Mitchell Rodda)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Dish Positioning Formula
Date: 3 Dec 1996 19:47:41 GMT
Organization: University of Auckland
Lines: 63
Message-ID: <58204t$o34@scream.auckland.ac.nz>
References: <32A145B0.12BF@worldnet.att.net> <32A22E28.624C@mwt.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ccu1.auckland.ac.nz
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
scott <acepilot@mwt.net> writes:
>Michael Wallace wrote:
>>
>> I'm trying to find the formula used in calculating the
>> azimuth and elevation for an antenna given a geostationary
>> satellite's longitude.
>>
>> Typically, you must input your own antenna lat/long and
>> possibly elevation as well.
>>
>> If you know it, I'd sure like to see it please.
>>
>> Thankx!
>>
>> Michael Wallace
>> N3LFH
>>
>> mewalla@worldnet.att.net
>The ARRL book "The Satellite Experimenter's Handbook" has a graph on page
>6-13 that shows how to compute AZ/EL for geosynchronous sats. The book I
>refer to is 2nd edition, 2nd printing, copyright 1990.
>--
>Gotta FLY or gonna Die !
> Ask me about my
> Aeronca Super Chief !
.... if you really want a formula:
If A=latitude of earth station (+ve for north, -ve for south of
equator)
B = longitude east of the earth station minus the longitude east of
the satellite
m = 6.61 (the radius of the geostat. satellites orbit divided by
the equatorial radius of earth.
s = square root of (1-sqr[cos(A)*cos(B)])
where sqr = square of
t = [m*cos(A)*cos(B)]-1
then Elevation angle = inverse tangent[t/(m*s)] degrees
and if you're in the northern hemisphere,
azimuth angle = 180+inverse tangent[tan(B)/sin(A)] degrees
if you're south of the equator, forget the 180 term in the azimuth.
Note that the eqn for elevation gives the geometric value. Taking into
account atmospheric refraction, you get:
True elevation = ( EL + sqr.root[ sqr[EL] + 4.132] )/2 degrees
where EL = the geometric elevation found using the first
elevation formula above.
Taken from pg.411-412, Satellite to Ground Radiowave Propagation by
J. Allnutt.
Hope this helps,
Mitchell.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:14 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!ais.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.campus.mci.net!news.telis.org!s06-pm04-ontro-t.telis.org!user
From: wb6siv@telis.org (wb6siv)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: DX and Satellite Cyberscheds available at http://www.sarrio
Date: Sat, 07 Dec 1996 22:53:13 -0800
Organization: Raymond Sarrio Co.
Lines: 50
Message-ID: <wb6siv-0712962253130001@s06-pm04-ontro-t.telis.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: s06-pm04-ontro-t.telis.org
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 http://www.sarrio.com for hams to post their request for over-the-air
schedules. Included in each posting is a place to list the posters
specific ham radio contact needs (countries, zones,IOTA, grid squares
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?
Do you need a certain state to complete a WAS award? Are you just a few
countries away from a DXCC? Are you a QRP operator looking to make
contacts with hams all over the world? Are you a DX station that has grown
tired of the stateside pile-ups on 20 meters? Or are you going mobile into
a hard to work county?
In all the above examples you could have prearranged cyberscheds with
those hams that you want to work. If band conditions are poor just e-mail
the hams you could not work and set up a new schedule.
Cyberscheds are a simple way to have the internet work to the benefit of
hams all over the world.
All posting will stay on-line for 6 months, or until the posting is asked
to be deleted. Below is an example of one cyberpost visit the cyberpost
page and view them all. Below is an example of one of the postings:
Station: BV/N0IAT
Name: Joe Fitter
QTH: Taipei, TAIWAN Republic of China
Bands: 40/20/17/15/10
Mode: CW (occasional SSB, but not much)
Comments: Looking for South America, Central America, and Carribean QSO's.
I QRV from a
neighbors shack (local law), so operating times are limited to station
availability. QSL via my CBA --
I DO NOT accept IRC's or Greenbacks, just please send me your QSL card and
a route for returning
the favor.
Post Date: Sept. 6, 1996
--
The Raymond Sarrio Co. a full feature Ham Radio Storefront and web site develo
per. Located at http://www.sarrio.com.
In association with Brillar Enterprises http://win-win.com/brillar provider of
discount CD-Roms!
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:16 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.mindspring.com!mindspring!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.pbi.net!news.pacbell.net!usenet
From: kb7ub@dxer.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: DXER.COM Ham Radio Resource Site
Date: Thu, 05 Dec 1996 05:45:09 GMT
Organization: A customer of Pacific Bell Internet Services
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <32a6614f.3866179@news.pacbell.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-206-170-220-48.anhm01.pacbell.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Stop by and check out - http://www.dxer.com
A new amateur radio website, with a on line BBS,
links to DX Clubs, Contest Clubs, On line Magazines,
Packet Clusters, 6 meter links, Maritime, Scanners,
Radio Mods, VHF/HF Packet Cluster and more.
DXER.COM offers unique e-mail and webspace for personal
pages and more..
CHECK IT OUT
"http://www.dxer.com"
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:17 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!hunter.premier.net!hammer.uoregon.edu!arclight.uoregon.edu!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.webspan.net!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Mon, 02 Dec 96 21:41:31 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port120.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>, rmander@mbox.4net.it wrot
e:
>Hello all !
>I wonder what is the likelyhood for a satellite to be hit by a metheor
>or another celestial body.
>That is the fact that mostly worries me when I think of spending money
>to prepare a P3D station.... :-)
>73 de IK4JQW, Roberto
I think we have to worry more about all the space junk floating around in
orbit alot more than meteors. But then again it depends how high or low of an
orbit P3D will be. It's orbit will be pretty high I understand, I'll have to
check on it though..
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:18 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!arclight.uoregon.edu!enews.sgi.com!news.corp.sgi.com!inn
From: Jim <nospam@on.the.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Mon, 02 Dec 1996 17:11:12 -0800
Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
Lines: 50
Message-ID: <32A37E30.446B@on.the.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: chico.corp.sgi.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02S (X11; I; IRIX 6.2 IP22)
trandall@mhv.net wrote:
>
> In article <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>, rmander@mbox.4net.it wr
ote:
> >Hello all !
> >I wonder what is the likelyhood for a satellite to be hit by a metheor
> >or another celestial body.
> >That is the fact that mostly worries me when I think of spending money
> >to prepare a P3D station.... :-)
> >73 de IK4JQW, Roberto
>
> I think we have to worry more about all the space junk floating around in
> orbit alot more than meteors. But then again it depends how high or low of a
n
> orbit P3D will be. It's orbit will be pretty high I understand, I'll have to
> check on it though..
>
> Tom
>
>
> Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
> trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
> Member: AAVSO Solar Division
>
> Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
For my two cents.
In the U.S. I think we need to worry more about congress-critters simply
mandating the FCC auction off the spectrum used for P3D especially the
2.4 GHz bands. Or even worldwide the ITU reallocating spectrum to
something else, more than worrying about collisions with whatever in
space.
I recently saw what was described (here) as the first verified collison
with damage to a satellite. Pretty low odds it seems to me.
There is a lot of stuff up there, but WAY more empty space.
Jim
--
My from line is not machine readable my real e-mail address is:
jimf@corp.sgi.com Do not hit reply to send back to me.
*Sending unsolicited e-mails to my address that are not of a*
*previously established personal nature nor directly related*
*to my business will be considered a request of my proof reading*
*services. My rates are $50 per word and punctuation. Sending*
*to my address is considered acceptance of these terms.*
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:19 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!hunter.premier.net!feed1.news.erols.com!phase2.worldnet.att.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!165.87.194.248!news-m01.ny.us.ibm.net!news-s01.ca.us.ibm.net!default
From: drx1001@ibm.net (tim)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 96 03:28:33 GMT
Organization: fudpuckers
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <5806pv$77a$1@news-s01.ca.us.ibm.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip166-72-196-141.fl.us.ibm.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
I saw somthing about a metheor shower that happens every 50 years or so.It sai
d that it will return in nov 97
and nov98.I'll try to find the mag.
Tim KF4FCO-EM70 Spamless Ham REPLY WITH CARE
I'AM PC HANDICAPED AND I TYPE WITH TWO FINGERS
AND I SUFFER FROM LAP TOP FEVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:*********************************************]
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:20 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-ana-7.sprintlink.net!usenet.logical.net!news
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 06:10:30 GMT
Organization:
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup040.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
trandall@mhv.net wrote:
>In article <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>, rmander@mbox.4net.it wro
te:
>>Hello all !
>>I wonder what is the likelyhood for a satellite to be hit by a metheor
>>or another celestial body.
>>That is the fact that mostly worries me when I think of spending money
>>to prepare a P3D station.... :-)
>>73 de IK4JQW, Roberto
>
> I think we have to worry more about all the space junk floating around in
>orbit alot more than meteors. But then again it depends how high or low of an
>orbit P3D will be. It's orbit will be pretty high I understand, I'll have to
>check on it though..
>
>Tom
I don't know the odds of a meteor hitting a satellite, (pretty low I
would guess.) but NORAD has the orbits of EVERYTHING going around the
Earth plotted and documented. This information will be taken into
account when Phase 3-D's orbit is set up.
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:21 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in2.uu.net!151.99.250.2!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!usenet
From: rmander@wonderland.linux.it (Roberto)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 18:57:23 GMT
Organization: Centro Servizi Interbusiness
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: fe-d-03.4net.it
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
orion@capital.net wrote:
>I don't know the odds of a meteor hitting a satellite, (pretty low I
>would guess.) but NORAD has the orbits of EVERYTHING going around the
>Earth plotted and documented. This information will be taken into
>account when Phase 3-D's orbit is set up.
>--
>73,
>Butch N2YMJ
How about the russian space junk ? How small pieces of junk are they
able to monitor ? I'm thinking of a lost small bolt that could bring
severe damages to P3D !!
73 IK4JQW , Rob
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:22 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!coopnews.coop.net!super.zippo.com!zdc!arclight.uoregon.edu!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!EU.net!usenet2.news.uk.psi.net!uknet!usenet1.news.uk.psi.net!uknet!dispatch.news.demon.net!demon!stimpy.news.demon.net!demon!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 11:28:06 GMT
Organization: PE1CHL
Lines: 32
Message-ID: <E1vzuv.E7D@pe1chl.ampr.org>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net> <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
Reply-To: pe1chl@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: pe1chl.demon.nl
X-NNTP-Posting-Host: pe1chl.demon.nl
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV)
In <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> rmander@wonderland.linux.it (Robe
rto) writes:
>How about the russian space junk ? How small pieces of junk are they
>able to monitor ? I'm thinking of a lost small bolt that could bring
>severe damages to P3D !!
You are probably over-estimating the density of lost small bolts in space.
(maybe after reading articles in the local newspaper?)
My guess is that there is much, much more chance for P3D to fail because
of an internal defect or a launch failure, than that it would be hit
by random space debris.
(remember that oscar 10 was probably hit by a part of the launcher. that
does not count as random debris. they are now more careful not to blast
the top space into any of the separated payloads when they burn down the
remaining fuel. something is learned every time)
When you are afraid "your invenstment in equipment" would become worthless
"because of a reason you can't control", you should probably not engage
in amateur satellite experiments. Maybe you should get out of amateur
radio completely. There is always a chance that the band your costly
transceiver operates in, is lost because some other use is deemed more
useful by your government.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | WWWhome: http://www.pe1chl.demon.nl/ |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:23 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.texas.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!news.idt.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!151.99.250.2!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!usenet
From: rmander@wonderland.linux.it (Roberto)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 20:47:19 GMT
Organization: Centro Servizi Interbusiness
Lines: 48
Message-ID: <584o8k$63j@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net> <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <E1vzuv.E7D@pe1chl.ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: fe-d-04.4net.it
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen) wrote:
>When you are afraid "your invenstment in equipment" would become worthless
>"because of a reason you can't control", you should probably not engage
>in amateur satellite experiments. Maybe you should get out of amateur
>radio completely. There is always a chance that the band your costly
>transceiver operates in, is lost because some other use is deemed more
>useful by your government.
You're mostly right, Rob .But indeed, I don't want to get out of
amateur radio.I only have to get used to be a satellite amateur radio
not because of the cost of the new setup but just because:
- I live in a condominium and fought *a lot* to put a three elements
beam
- The roof is not so good so I had a very bad time in planning
everything and actually put everything up.
Now, I absolutely can not put up also a satellite system without
removing the existing HF beam because of the limited room up there so
my great fear is to find myself in a nightmare situation in case of a
P3D failure.The accessibility of the roof is bad, a 3el beam is heavy
, I should call some friends of mine to help and more, I must pass
through my neighbor's penthouse to go to the roof ...
With a satellite system it should be easier for me to access antennas,
make modification by myself , etc.
Also let me say that it'll be very unlikely that any government will
take all the HF bands, at least much less likely than a satellite
damage !
73 , IK4JQW
Rob
>Rob
>--
>+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
>| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | WWWhome: http://www.pe1chl.demon.nl/ |
>| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
>+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:24 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!newsfeed.orst.edu!osshe.edu!internet.oit.edu!oconneld
From: Dan O'Connell <oconneld@OIT.EDU>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 15:10:41 -0800
Organization: Oregon State System of Higher Education
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.95.961204150917.26390C-100000@internet.oit.edu>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net> <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <E1vzuv.E7D@pe1chl.ampr.org> <584o8k$63j@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: internet.oit.osshe.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
In-Reply-To: <584o8k$63j@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
> - I live in a condominium and fought *a lot* to put a three elements
> beam
> - The roof is not so good so I had a very bad time in planning
> everything and actually put everything up.
>
> Now, I absolutely can not put up also a satellite system without
> removing the existing HF beam because of the limited room up there so
> my great fear is to find myself in a nightmare situation in case of a
I have used indoor antennas for satellites since the RS5/6/7/8 days up
through AO-13. try it! Dan WA7TDZ
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:26 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-2.sprintlink.net!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Thu, 05 Dec 96 03:18:46 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 34
Message-ID: <585f0f$ru3@news.mhv.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port115.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net>, orion@capital.net wrote:
>trandall@mhv.net wrote:
>>
>> I think we have to worry more about all the space junk floating around in
>>orbit alot more than meteors. But then again it depends how high or low of a
n
>>orbit P3D will be. It's orbit will be pretty high I understand, I'll have to
>>check on it though..
>>
>>Tom
>
>I don't know the odds of a meteor hitting a satellite, (pretty low I
>would guess.) but NORAD has the orbits of EVERYTHING going around the
>Earth plotted and documented. This information will be taken into
>account when Phase 3-D's orbit is set up.
>--
>73,
>Butch N2YMJ
Good point however I think they can only track objects starting at a
certain size, I thought I heard softball sized and larger. Anything smaller is
not seen. This is a real problem as evident by the shuttle years ago getting
hit by a paint speck putting a 1/4" gouge in a window. I wonder how many hits
Mir has taken all these years?
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:27 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in1.uu.net!204.253.208.40!insync!news.azstarnet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-ana-7.sprintlink.net!usenet.logical.net!news
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Thu, 05 Dec 1996 05:35:35 GMT
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <32a65ed2.52477476@news.capital.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net> <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <E1vzuv.E7D@pe1chl.ampr.org> <584o8k$63j@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <Pine.OSF.3.95.961204150917.26390C-100000@internet.oit.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup037.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Dan O'Connell <oconneld@OIT.EDU> wrote:
> I have used indoor antennas for satellites since the RS5/6/7/8 days up
>through AO-13. try it! Dan WA7TDZ
>
Can you go into details of your antennas, Dan? Sounds interesting.
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:28 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!dciteleport.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!usenet.logical.net!news
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: Sat, 07 Dec 1996 06:07:36 GMT
Organization:
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <32a9091c.55466673@news.capital.net>
References: <57vdie$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it> <57vifp$2lq@news.mhv.net> <32a3c306.53668979@news.capital.net> <581teg$2tp@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup055.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
rmander@wonderland.linux.it (Roberto) wrote:
>orion@capital.net wrote:
>
>>I don't know the odds of a meteor hitting a satellite, (pretty low I
>>would guess.) but NORAD has the orbits of EVERYTHING going around the
>>Earth plotted and documented. This information will be taken into
>>account when Phase 3-D's orbit is set up.
>>--
>>73,
>>Butch N2YMJ
>
>How about the russian space junk ? How small pieces of junk are they
>able to monitor ? I'm thinking of a lost small bolt that could bring
>severe damages to P3D !!
>
>73 IK4JQW , Rob
>
Have you ever heard of an OSCAR satellite being hit by something?
There is VERY little chance of this happening.
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:29 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!portc02.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: dj1km@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Date: 9 Dec 1996 11:28:01 GMT
Organization: AOL Bertelsmann Online GmbH & Co. KG http://www.germany.aol.com
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <19961209112700.GAA09325@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <32a9091c.55466673@news.capital.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
Im Artikel <32a9091c.55466673@news.capital.net>, orion@capital.net
schreibt:
>Re: Likelyhood for a sat to be hit by a metheor
Hi,
I just came across an article which exactly describes what you suspect.
Look at:
http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/CSER/UOSAT/press/cerisepr1.html
73
Reinhard in Hannover
DJ1KM
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:30 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!arclight.uoregon.edu!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!netcom.com!news3.noc.netcom.net!noc.netcom.net!qcktrn.com!usenet
From: George Zafiropoulos <georgez@quickturn.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Looking for equipment selection advice Yaesu vs Icom vs Kenwood for satellite
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 16:01:23 -0800
Organization: Quickturn Design Systems, Inc.
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <32ADF9D3.71C@quickturn.com>
Reply-To: georgez@quickturn.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: proxy.quickturn.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; U)
Hi,
I am interested in getting a new radio for P3D. The 736 seems to be the
historical favorite but there are new radios from Kenwood and Icom. Has
anyone compared the features or performance? Do the Kenwood or Icom
radios have the same special satellite oriented features that the Yaesu
736 has? If you were going to buy one which one would you choose and
why?
I am planning to operate on 1.2 GHz in addition to 2 and 440.
I would also be interested to know what you would recommend for 2.3 GHz.
Thanks very much for you advice in advance.
George Zafiropoulos KJ6VU
georgez@quickturn.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:31 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir back on packet
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 21:08:59 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <32acbeb6.1184399@news.cyberportal.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar1-async-14.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
Hi just a quick note-- the Two meter antenna was broken on the first
EVA and they did a second EVA today and did a makeshift repair which
will work, but the signal will not be as strong or as steady as
before.. but it will work for the time being, they will fix the coax
and on the next planned EVA make the proper repair.. I have no idea
when that will be.. 73 DAVE N1PPP
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:32 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!news.he.net!news.dra.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir Message #1
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 21:46:36 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32add9f0.4430609@news.cyberportal.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar1-async-14.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
Here is something I just downloaded from the PMS
Logged on to R0MIR's Personal Message System
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
r 1
Stat : PR
Posted : 12/09/96 22:41
To : ALL
From : R0MIR
@ BBS :
xID :
Subject: HELLO
We finished our second space walk.
After the first one we had a problem with our antenna.
Tonight we repaired it and now it's Ok.
We back your pardon for such an occasion.
73 de Mir crew
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
73 DAVE N1PPP
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:32 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.smart.net!news
From: "Charles M. Clark" <charlie@smarty.smart.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NASA TV Links
Date: Mon, 09 Dec 1996 21:11:03 +0000
Organization: Smartnet Internet Services [via news]
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>
Reply-To: charlie@smarty.smart.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: a3p64dyn.smart.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; U)
Can anyone give me the low down on what is required in order to receive
live NASA TV. I don't know much about this, but would like to learn. I
would like to be able to receive NASA live TV during the shuttle
flights. What would I need in order to do this?
Reply: charlie@smarty.smart.net
Thanks in advance for any help.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:34 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.mindspring.com!uunet!in1.uu.net!199.3.65.3!news.indy.net!darwin
From: darwin@indy.net (Darwin Teague)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 96 12:10:12 GMT
Organization: IndyNet - Indys Internet Gateway
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <58jjk3$nkh@news.indy.net>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 199.3.70.171
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #3
In article <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>,
"Charles M. Clark" <charlie@smarty.smart.net> wrote:
>Can anyone give me the low down on what is required in order to receive
>live NASA TV. I don't know much about this, but would like to learn. I
>would like to be able to receive NASA live TV during the shuttle
>flights. What would I need in order to do this?
>Reply: charlie@smarty.smart.net
>Thanks in advance for any help.
You would need a c band satellite dish and receiver. I would think a 7 foot
would be about the minimum to get great video. you might be able to get by
with a 6 foot if you live near the center of the U.S.
The satellite is over to the east - 69 degrees west or so.
The good news is that you can scrounge together a system pretty cheaply. Lots
of people have old ones they aren't using anymore. You'd need a few bags of
cement and a pole, some cable to run into the house. If you only want it for
the one channel, this would be really easy and cheap to do.
I think it's going to move to a stronger satellite in the central arc sometime
fairly soon. The good news is the signal would be stronger. The bad news is
that the new satellite would have others sats nearby, meaning the smaller your
dish the greater the crosstalk. If you live on the west coast, it may be kind
of low on the horizon in it's present location. Let me know where you live and
I'll see if I can give you the particulars. Email me....
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:35 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-6.sprintlink.net!nntp.primenet.com!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!spacelink!glue9600
From: Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: 11 Dec 1996 01:32:12 GMT
Organization: NASA Spacelink Teacher Resource Center-a service to educators
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.961210193117.21646B-100000@spacelink>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: glue9600@spacelink
In-Reply-To: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>
X-Disclaimer: Message author is solely responsible for message content.
I receive live NASA video and have rebroadcast the audio in the past.
All that is required is a BUD (Big Ugly Dish) for C-band tvro, and point
it at satellite S-2, transponder 09.
----------
Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:36 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!news.voicenet.com!doyl114-pri.voicenet.com!user
From: wkrantz@voicenet.com (William E. Krantz, Jr.)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 23:17:31 -0500
Organization: Voicenet - Internet Access - (215)674-9290
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <wkrantz-1012962317320001@doyl114-pri.voicenet.com>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net> <Pine.SOL.3.91.961210193117.21646B-100000@spacelink>
NNTP-Posting-Host: doyl114-pri.voicenet.com
In article <Pine.SOL.3.91.961210193117.21646B-100000@spacelink>, Richard
David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov> wrote:
> I receive live NASA video and have rebroadcast the audio in the past.
> All that is required is a BUD (Big Ugly Dish) for C-band tvro, and point
> it at satellite S-2, transponder 09.
>
>
>
> ----------
> Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
What's the chance of getting DirecTV or USSB to carry NASA Select if we
all wrote or called? Anyone have any inside info on these DSS providers?
Bill Krantz
wkrantz@voicenet.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:43 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!tank.news.pipex.net!pipex!feed1.news.innet.be!INbe.net!news.nl.innet.net!INnl.net!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!cs.utexas.edu!newshost.convex.com!newsgate.duke.edu!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE907)
Date: 3 Dec 1996 00:09:37 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 769
Message-ID: <57vr41$9g@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial 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 #907 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96330.87101021 .00000056 00000-0 55695-4 0 2451
2 00424 80.4626 124.2146 0023225 340.0991 19.9250 13.67881256704440
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96330.36489924 -.00000181 00000-0 10000-3 0 9890
2 02608 14.5792 351.0997 0007742 104.0277 256.0277 1.00293435 26487
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96333.27050190 -.00000117 00000-0 10000-3 0 5808
2 03029 14.9149 358.0187 0012139 267.0019 154.5403 1.00272949106415
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96330.85259054 -.00000131 00000-0 10910-4 0 144
2 07646 49.8298 230.7538 0205858 44.4808 317.2411 13.82191832101323
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96331.14591985 -.00000003 00000-0 00000+0 0 2410
2 08820 109.8524 81.4992 0043451 93.4966 267.0584 6.38664612224176
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96330.27175720 .00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 853
2 09852 13.4258 31.0767 0006458 147.0890 212.8991 1.00001745 19252
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96332.21166640 .00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 7666
2 10061 12.5835 35.2291 0012377 131.3742 158.7183 1.00270890 16071
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96335.60475520 -.00000081 00000-0 10000-3 0 3213
2 10637 35.7282 80.8956 1338751 62.2154 38.5657 1.00056047 21606
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96334.29211441 -.00000114 00000-0 10000-3 0 7483
2 10953 11.5880 38.1466 0003208 188.4602 203.5047 1.00265055 20718
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96329.55770428 .00000036 00000-0 56457-4 0 5328
2 10967 107.9993 146.5801 0001967 250.2225 109.8704 14.38135495964505
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96329.66082487 -.00000077 00000-0 -32208-4 0 6297
2 11080 98.9196 183.9102 0008377 256.6746 103.3475 13.83689594913360
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96325.36290174 .00000091 00000-0 10000-3 0 9663
2 12472 8.4416 48.6104 0007282 84.9884 274.9911 1.00279171 14662
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96330.66463070 -.00000011 00000-0 -30758-4 0 5451
2 13301 82.9332 15.4054 0027775 151.8683 208.3988 13.68078246719455
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96330.18889347 .00000057 00000-0 22354-4 0 238
2 13367 98.0534 16.0418 0007690 7.2164 352.9137 14.57193016763983
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96336.52557468 .00000049 00000-0 39002-4 0 1295
2 13736 98.6232 162.2176 0007911 262.3824 97.6458 14.25814200724911
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96337.11317500 -.00000177 00000-0 -91938-4 0 5072
2 13777 98.9681 159.0683 0013747 353.7647 6.3342 13.99266479376850
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96330.18668956 .00000049 00000-0 35201-4 0 6371
2 13916 82.9430 71.9598 0039441 63.5182 297.0033 13.74348867685850
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96337.20853869 -.00000287 00000-0 00000+0 0 6732
2 13969 9.2226 42.0428 0004209 192.5203 222.7640 1.00262455 23078
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96333.21756965 -.00000117 00000-0 10000-3 0 5788
2 14050 7.2928 52.1250 0000843 133.6712 218.6569 1.00217393107835
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96337.19176692 -.00000007 00000-0 86972-5 0 5726
2 14780 98.3117 34.8261 0002747 109.2188 250.9308 14.57059464678423
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96330.92069273 .00000202 00000-0 41892-4 0 9302
2 14781 97.8125 314.5714 0011052 297.1496 62.8581 14.69502305681401
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96330.88459466 .00000051 00000-0 38810-4 0 8378
2 15055 82.9546 126.6967 0026212 252.1847 107.6454 13.73642044623182
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96329.57832564 .00000287 00000-0 30824-4 0 5196
2 15331 82.5326 322.7548 0021176 132.7462 227.5541 14.84809576656773
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96330.81735327 -.00000226 00000-0 11416-5 0 2369
2 15354 56.9942 92.3147 0008870 127.3303 232.8537 14.94995514661018
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96336.72283470 .00000124 00000-0 89134-4 0 9410
2 15427 98.9305 41.5852 0014463 195.7275 164.3444 14.13821465617302
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96337.19620760 .00003296 00000-0 42097-4 0 8459
2 16609 51.6527 357.0610 0013608 95.9232 264.3317 15.62542251616260
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96337.20028466 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 100
2 16613 98.8196 44.7828 0001737 107.5676 252.5679 14.19991948244150
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96332.66063868 .00000281 00000-0 30874-4 0 4345
2 16881 82.5199 17.5356 0019590 151.6378 208.5908 14.83781562558085
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96329.87996656 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1336
2 16908 50.0104 222.9647 0011610 62.1549 298.0460 12.44415513136418
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96336.87429208 .00000030 00000-0 30968-4 0 8736
2 16969 98.5320 329.2110 0011946 223.1640 136.8603 14.25012170530487
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96331.19437311 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4865
2 17527 98.9245 29.5078 0017385 233.7186 126.2372 14.00455715497663
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96333.19509552 -.00000159 00000-0 10000-3 0 1621
2 17561 3.3839 68.2366 0004144 283.2418 51.0968 1.00280717 18947
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 8329
2 17845 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132550361
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96336.55546814 .00000030 00000-0 37640-4 0 7033
2 18123 98.7654 164.0877 0014539 133.4041 226.8346 14.15459943488171
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96330.24958124 .00000060 00000-0 49231-4 0 2869
2 18129 82.9263 29.4872 0013292 68.0038 292.2526 13.72371862472266
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96332.76958372 .00000047 00000-0 28420-4 0 5249
2 18312 82.5571 222.3260 0013391 116.5955 243.6578 13.84087982468802
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96336.16787917 .00000040 00000-0 22274-4 0 1114
2 18820 82.5395 274.2563 0015914 172.6669 187.4729 13.84765197446631
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96337.14231296 .00000012 00000-0 23527-4 0 4046
2 18822 98.3801 161.1860 0005412 233.0620 127.0061 14.23208449458464
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96336.58312486 -.00000010 00000-0 10000-3 0 1377
2 19163 65.3383 80.1995 0009174 133.3904 226.6950 2.13102507 65806
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96334.76314041 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5457
2 19165 65.2979 80.2132 0003119 356.4284 3.5581 2.13102186 66383
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96330.46923690 -.00000126 00000-0 10000-3 0 2919
2 19215 3.5878 66.8695 0006007 130.1897 229.5049 0.96948389 18740
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 96337.31939743 .54004640 13463-4 70327-2 0 3627
2 19216 56.9849 71.1997 4621340 60.3171 340.2112 6.56003097 33324
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96330.50010476 .00000269 00000-0 30540-4 0 1348
2 19274 82.5133 120.6025 0019097 318.5489 41.4274 14.82543673453273
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96332.27402825 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5290
2 19336 82.5390 51.0234 0016376 184.7149 175.3821 13.16979559400942
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96331.03974284 -.00000052 00000-0 10000-3 0 4263
2 19503 65.5293 319.2613 0007146 135.3917 224.6782 2.13101623 63797
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96336.90009827 .00000043 00000-0 48100-4 0 7615
2 19531 99.1725 359.2951 0012528 126.2184 234.0148 14.13113063422137
TDRS 3
1 19548U 88091B 96337.24102495 -.00000178 00000-0 10000-3 0 2576
2 19548 2.8276 71.0160 0006501 171.9661 359.9778 1.00263514 17213
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96329.66919529 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 6384
2 19749 65.2745 79.9439 0006848 250.3273 109.5835 2.13101474 61270
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96333.47813981 -.00000014 00000-0 10000-3 0 5429
2 19750 65.2902 79.8886 0007680 240.5043 119.4083 2.13101726 61379
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96336.66893088 .00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 3274
2 19802 55.4262 103.9553 0026253 146.5656 213.6318 2.00557860 57079
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96337.14007275 .00011981 00000-0 59355-3 0 8203
2 19822 75.0925 26.1763 3734956 339.2579 8.9255 7.94724293180018
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96331.89497968 .00000026 00000-0 10020-4 0 5230
2 19851 82.5189 151.3499 0012959 240.3961 119.5912 13.84421007391340
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96328.06341098 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 2274
2 19876 2.3137 71.1071 0016290 280.2311 79.1070 0.97110801 8167
TDRS 4
1 19883U 89021B 96334.64231481 -.00000264 00000-0 00000+0 0 2819
2 19883 0.2091 89.8649 0007156 151.7442 17.4610 1.00269743200766
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96337.00835460 -.00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 3225
2 20061 54.0900 279.4677 0163804 222.5409 136.2530 2.00562613 54821
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96336.78890616 .00000046 00000-0 33385-4 0 9895
2 20103 82.9537 345.0708 0037166 309.4330 50.3540 13.73871728371694
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96336.23679974 .00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 3605
2 20185 55.1113 104.3077 0116838 313.6825 45.3267 2.00804552 53383
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96335.74001370 -.00000362 00000-0 10000-3 0 5008
2 20217 2.1245 74.2380 0001601 250.6592 131.1658 1.00259116 27097
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96332.55530291 .00000203 00000-0 55809-4 0 5452
2 20261 82.5949 166.3940 1242535 30.1933 336.5152 12.47367439326271
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96336.87771605 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 3478
2 20302 53.2032 219.2077 0040567 194.4989 166.2013 2.00567724 52197
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96337.18238147 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7038
2 20305 82.5565 8.4458 0005321 266.7112 93.3411 13.04435733340100
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96330.49750721 -.00000297 00000-0 -16173-3 0 2612
2 20322 98.9386 342.9980 0008594 314.1542 45.8917 14.03457949359552
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 7585
2 20335 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132399371
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96336.39632978 -.00000071 00000-0 10000-3 0 1466
2 20361 56.0840 46.6672 0093112 139.3216 221.4365 2.00565228 41669
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96330.55946063 -.00000140 00000-0 00000+0 0 4612
2 20391 4.1622 62.3930 0004332 152.8034 34.6627 1.00268485 25616
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96337.18851919 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1562
2 20436 98.7493 48.4200 0000924 119.7930 240.3339 14.20014611355681
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96331.24837999 .00000010 00000-0 20767-4 0 2274
2 20437 98.5362 51.1597 0011940 84.5290 275.7229 14.29939350357219
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96332.73950035 .00000030 00000-0 28584-4 0 251
2 20439 98.5513 55.1365 0012141 81.3997 278.8563 14.29991197357446
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96332.25576265 .00000008 00000-0 19824-4 0 262
2 20440 98.5550 55.3934 0012370 82.7275 277.5314 14.30133194357404
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96330.22013232 .00000006 00000-0 19024-4 0 291
2 20441 98.5541 53.3133 0012817 89.3639 270.9022 14.30101697357111
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96329.85377738 .00000031 00000-0 28576-4 0 259
2 20442 98.5565 53.5199 0012987 87.3890 272.8775 14.30213329357085
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96334.79635375 .00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 2472
2 20452 54.0439 160.0227 0095702 86.6669 273.9513 2.00551686 50134
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96337.23188890 .00000076 00000-0 90447-4 0 49
2 20478 99.1128 44.5311 0005608 142.6959 217.4590 13.93969357267969
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96331.03753371 -.00000007 00000-0 48538-4 0 256
2 20479 99.0225 325.3273 0540806 117.0048 248.7318 12.83346248318668
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96331.00957348 -.00000019 00000-0 20128-4 0 9229
2 20480 99.0231 325.0746 0541216 117.7141 247.9936 12.83235340318641
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96331.23315552 .00000280 00000-0 60017-3 0 2964
2 20491 99.0661 35.5542 0469400 275.1029 79.6668 13.03003993322967
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96329.53564537 .00001546 00000-0 51113-4 0 7060
2 20496 43.1031 7.7542 0011293 9.9188 350.1891 15.36114759378480
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96336.89201246 .00000010 00000-0 -45767-5 0 9885
2 20508 82.9446 119.4703 0043028 260.9105 98.7183 13.73514855338917
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96329.89785202 .00000175 00000-0 20630-4 0 5428
2 20510 82.5227 76.4940 0019374 146.9476 213.2952 14.78644748363422
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96336.17614392 -.00000046 00000-0 00000+0 0 2891
2 20533 54.4556 280.2967 0047991 78.1163 282.4314 2.00568698 48936
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96335.81856397 .00008058 00000-0 13813-3 0 9999
2 20546 94.1269 87.4451 0058733 79.6409 281.1455 15.49271993370781
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96330.89951535 .00000508 00000-0 34946-4 0 8868
2 20580 28.4701 259.0073 0006156 67.9779 292.1462 14.91133732162748
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96331.10400328 .00000206 00000-0 32938-4 0 2273
2 20608 89.9270 172.0151 0103580 209.2172 150.3225 14.64958337349992
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96335.19830791 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 3465
2 20619 65.1207 318.2823 0024409 210.0875 149.7716 2.13102466 50847
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96331.09379865 -.00000053 00000-0 10000-3 0 3297
2 20620 65.1105 318.3935 0008809 58.2230 301.9306 2.13102325 50799
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96331.16118638 -.00000053 00000-0 10000-3 0 9415
2 20621 65.1267 318.4513 0012711 196.5565 163.4019 2.13102527 50792
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 5500
2 20635 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132370205
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96336.24819830 .00000255 00000-0 35331-4 0 6148
2 20638 52.9912 266.6709 0010485 272.2461 87.7331 15.07507378357510
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96336.75820208 .00000095 00000-0 71720-4 0 1453
2 20670 82.5466 214.7731 0015945 139.7534 220.4809 13.84130955324923
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96336.99587672 .00000117 00000-0 14570-3 0 3669
2 20712 17.6136 181.5226 7177135 145.1166 295.5200 2.35808414 47074
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96336.51946331 .00000017 00000-0 00000+0 0 1446
2 20724 55.0489 101.9358 0130905 186.5595 173.2619 2.00564190 44804
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96337.02258794 -.00000032 00000-0 69607-5 0 1900
2 20788 98.8079 336.7341 0015885 38.7723 321.4579 14.01371721319609
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96330.10051867 .00000035 00000-0 18571-4 0 344
2 20826 82.5257 156.2927 0014763 67.5201 292.7518 13.83640703311096
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96336.07565210 -.00000073 00000-0 00000+0 0 1241
2 20830 56.0321 44.5945 0065442 93.3314 267.4472 2.00567746 45432
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96336.47754110 .00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 1038
2 20959 55.2372 104.0381 0110949 235.5776 123.3856 2.00556889 44039
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96336.78291988 .00000110 00000-0 54361-4 0 8657
2 20978 98.5811 46.4057 0079949 36.1132 324.5411 14.32700308313713
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96334.46940732 -.00000011 00000-0 10000-3 0 9021
2 21006 65.2747 79.1122 0055899 186.9878 172.9251 2.13102686 46531
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96329.49984630 -.00000042 00000-0 10000-3 0 388
2 21007 65.2733 79.3695 0033465 177.6065 182.3928 2.13101169 46412
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96331.27337359 -.00000031 00000-0 00000+0 0 3047
2 21008 65.2556 79.2493 0008935 269.3554 90.5328 2.13098711 46442
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96337.15622613 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7654
2 21087 82.9425 197.3937 0036889 96.1521 264.3833 13.74574690293084
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96330.25819242 .00000034 00000-0 19663-4 0 9357
2 21089 82.9207 69.8909 0029452 142.3422 217.9800 13.74075000291153
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96334.51132029 -.00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 3040
2 21140 0.8882 78.7640 0002062 120.7701 53.0061 1.00267041 23265
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96336.85221382 .00000058 00000-0 46315-4 0 6756
2 21152 82.9216 21.6002 0040612 236.2145 123.5140 13.73540292286769
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96332.14131765 -.00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5559
2 21216 64.8612 317.8573 0012969 190.8568 169.1129 2.13103252 43992
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96335.02912482 -.00000032 00000-0 10000-3 0 9668
2 21217 64.8596 317.7693 0008660 218.5897 141.3516 2.13101782 44047
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96335.13881432 -.00000031 00000-0 10000-3 0 4362
2 21218 64.8493 317.7314 0007530 293.5044 66.4165 2.13102522 44057
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96331.19298270 .00002343 00000-0 43206-4 0 4065
2 21225 28.4598 134.2258 0002332 247.7295 112.3004 15.44591688195008
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96331.33216141 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9378
2 21232 82.5365 258.1409 0014283 112.2439 248.0195 13.16473663268870
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96336.87848752 .00000092 00000-0 59823-4 0 1810
2 21263 98.5492 351.1116 0013089 143.1460 217.0628 14.22673630288302
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96330.13277465 .00000266 00000-0 34835-4 0 2354
2 21397 82.5250 351.0464 0020906 229.3759 130.5601 14.76524837295114
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96330.27103005 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-6 0 492
2 21552 56.3148 42.6963 0074766 248.8596 110.3792 2.00554813 39504
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96337.20262985 .00000054 00000-0 36058-4 0 3782
2 21574 98.5420 48.8263 0001253 76.1883 283.9440 14.32255995281493
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96332.25838982 .00000002 00000-0 15005-4 0 7325
2 21575 98.3333 33.6346 0008280 133.4684 226.7169 14.37045633281485
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96330.19407595 .00000059 00000-0 34431-4 0 8269
2 21576 98.3290 29.3622 0003871 142.0537 218.0914 14.36462695281067
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96332.17916118 .00000040 00000-0 27893-4 0 7269
2 21577 98.3278 31.9010 0006931 136.4563 223.7169 14.36533480281381
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96330.25201609 .00000292 00000-0 10792-3 0 9270
2 21578 98.3650 39.3909 0005285 133.9146 226.2478 14.39276984281506
TDRS 5
1 21639U 91054B 96335.60629385 .00000087 00000-0 10000-3 0 1244
2 21639 0.0039 344.7579 0003527 236.2612 252.7462 1.00269814 19530
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96332.71435010 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9354
2 21655 82.5538 204.9629 0013714 116.4122 243.8406 13.16849593254194
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96329.86628674 -.00000079 00000-0 14143-4 0 8067
2 21701 56.9854 186.0347 0005519 104.4127 255.7519 14.96553586284413
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96336.66643308 .00000095 00000-0 73696-4 0 5366
2 21798 98.9374 354.0168 0013457 111.7538 248.5064 14.14007779258590
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96330.18893668 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-4 0 1377
2 21853 65.2047 78.9161 0006867 202.2685 157.6907 2.13102293 37557
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96334.22806440 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 3805
2 21854 65.2088 78.7642 0014957 20.0743 339.9933 2.13104465 37620
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96336.17422761 -.00000012 00000-0 00000+0 0 3632
2 21855 65.2176 78.7057 0007860 202.2424 157.7366 2.13102323 37654
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96337.38807912 .00001143 00000-0 10000-3 0 183
2 21867 97.6760 52.1777 0001904 70.1503 289.9717 14.98655300263050
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96334.71342052 -.00000003 00000-0 00000+0 0 9048
2 21890 53.7288 219.7978 0044978 202.1804 157.7841 2.00563899 34964
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96331.38492241 -.00000082 00000-0 10000-3 0 8186
2 21930 55.6731 342.1515 0022430 191.2921 168.6901 2.00553038 33824
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96329.76578786 .00000885 00000-0 30677-4 0 5876
2 21987 28.4326 183.1811 0009008 13.4535 346.6262 15.19990260248134
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96329.91959941 .00000579 00000-0 47912-4 0 7621
2 22012 81.6695 309.5221 0118567 7.2096 353.0804 14.91788328239196
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96333.96383334 .00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 7990
2 22014 54.8635 162.0012 0100528 335.8817 23.7055 2.00567562 25715
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96330.44028919 -.00000054 00000-0 00000+0 0 2863
2 22056 64.6993 317.9349 0006784 266.2906 93.6257 2.13103071 33620
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96333.55275031 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 2585
2 22057 64.7095 317.8463 0009196 309.7988 50.1192 2.13102720 33664
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96328.33034894 -.00000045 00000-0 10000-3 0 1582
2 22058 64.7097 318.0348 0009066 273.6697 86.2346 2.13102618 33605
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96330.29108990 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 81
2 22076 66.0371 238.0458 0007439 266.7163 93.3001 12.80931074200751
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96328.79529423 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6212
2 22077 66.0776 215.2796 0015170 260.3820 99.5485 12.86298578201334
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96329.77301116 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6196
2 22078 66.0783 211.5641 0016673 256.6663 103.2491 12.86583913201557
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96334.92654930 -.00000004 00000-0 10000-3 0 8257
2 22108 53.9716 220.7121 0122623 162.4411 198.2578 2.00570871 30919
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96332.71285497 .00000116 00000-0 75034-4 0 6683
2 22161 62.9820 186.1630 0854676 31.6180 333.3348 13.21930221200048
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96331.53464809 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5437
2 22195 52.6581 249.0438 0137384 147.6697 213.2369 6.47293915 96786
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96331.61860251 .00000046 00000-0 00000+0 0 8323
2 22231 54.6950 163.2406 0017652 166.7793 193.3109 2.00564353 29424
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96331.23625132 .00000048 00000-0 00000+0 0 8295
2 22275 54.6388 160.7191 0052255 254.1279 105.2894 2.00588653 28824
TDRS 6
1 22314U 93003B 96331.20938647 -.00000284 00000-0 10000-3 0 6747
2 22314 0.1142 106.0217 0002651 191.2480 156.5492 1.00269336 14207
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96334.82907487 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 8193
2 22446 54.0964 280.4046 0094878 5.1951 354.9392 2.00574327 27889
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96334.41436302 -.00000012 00000-0 10000-3 0 8440
2 22512 65.2204 78.6292 0009058 186.2568 173.7544 2.13102164 29210
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96335.76011360 -.00000011 00000-0 00000+0 0 23
2 22513 65.2210 78.5942 0007608 193.6114 166.3820 2.13102525 29437
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96336.52356786 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 03
2 22514 65.2423 78.5635 0011275 186.4253 173.5710 2.13101878 29452
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96330.78690052 .00000801 00000-0 49491-4 0 5394
2 22521 31.1020 114.5355 0056269 330.5718 29.1699 15.03183537206808
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96329.99326765 .00000054 00000-0 00000+0 0 5390
2 22563 25.0209 286.0751 0010142 264.5112 95.3334 0.99250010 17670
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96330.98570847 -.00000082 00000-0 10000-3 0 6078
2 22581 55.1641 341.4795 0066900 37.2804 323.2121 2.00574569 26864
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96336.10208736 -.00000067 00000-0 00000+0 0 7826
2 22657 55.1985 341.1638 0082486 234.2290 125.0294 2.00564546 22293
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96331.36654460 .00000075 00000-0 27160-4 0 5347
2 22698 89.5450 262.9404 0091218 156.4417 204.1227 14.21384515177463
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96336.56808578 -.00000005 00000-0 10000-3 0 6170
2 22700 54.1538 221.4890 0054938 4.5638 355.6322 2.00562747 25107
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96336.90935480 .00000025 00000-0 39026-4 0 2090
2 22739 99.0644 293.4493 0010747 112.5714 247.6588 14.10978316170706
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96336.65320247 -.00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 6820
2 22779 54.2569 280.4084 0015167 279.8560 79.9865 2.00551953 23866
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96330.16824062 .00000054 00000-0 35689-4 0 5263
2 22782 82.5490 219.5496 0020679 248.9885 110.9067 13.83064155163386
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96332.78381955 -.00000064 00000-0 00000+0 0 6951
2 22787 4.0269 327.4308 0005497 270.1219 182.9681 1.00273559 10472
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96337.26828627 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 6327
2 22823 98.7389 48.5490 0015775 274.5997 85.3376 14.16972543165085
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96329.80408692 -.00000050 00000-0 -28837-5 0 5157
2 22824 98.5652 41.6101 0006798 116.5914 243.5962 14.27106157164843
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96330.19613552 -.00000012 00000-0 12602-4 0 5176
2 22825 98.5685 42.7304 0009068 114.7590 245.4544 14.27709785164966
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96330.25025748 -.00000002 00000-0 16707-4 0 5155
2 22826 98.5692 42.9822 0009301 114.1357 246.0795 14.27819191164987
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96332.25481055 .00000019 00000-0 24906-4 0 5781
2 22827 98.5660 44.8356 0009798 96.4029 263.8267 14.27957988165286
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96332.22493664 .00000006 00000-0 19651-4 0 4953
2 22828 98.5640 44.9865 0010844 94.6909 265.5507 14.28160173133387
POSAT
1 22829U 93061G 96330.21192202 .00000018 00000-0 24777-4 0 5099
2 22829 98.5665 43.0858 0010733 102.5948 257.6432 14.28141580165011
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96330.72022862 -.00000076 00000-0 10000-3 0 5143
2 22877 55.7510 42.7186 0044029 299.9620 59.6428 2.00563334 22638
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96335.09544771 -.00000080 00000-0 00000+0 0 5872
2 22912 0.3053 65.9407 0003591 157.1427 230.7314 1.00271215 9520
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96335.59230248 .00008159 00000-0 53006-3 0 5517
2 22920 28.4549 121.1267 0003625 96.9472 263.1565 15.06278570164529
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96337.07260133 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3044
2 22969 82.5566 142.0513 0014539 176.2991 183.8241 13.16739713137149
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96330.00713963 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2911
2 22970 82.5581 146.9214 0015732 190.5689 169.5108 13.16828267136222
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96335.28982811 -.00000073 00000-0 10000-3 0 4528
2 23027 55.0517 343.1279 0084725 202.9068 156.7609 2.00566064 20039
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96337.06961567 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 4377
2 23043 64.5812 318.0371 0006839 210.2320 149.7355 2.13102894 20588
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96330.85168668 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 4016
2 23044 64.5805 318.2515 0031903 207.0747 152.7683 2.13103005 20459
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96332.43724043 -.00000050 00000-0 00000+0 0 4013
2 23045 64.5662 318.1954 0010360 24.9909 335.0574 2.13102326 20480
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96336.10224829 -.00000248 00000-0 10000-3 0 6203
2 23051 0.3676 87.0178 0004050 160.2114 144.7935 1.00280781 17042
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96336.11866860 .00006711 00000-0 98934-4 0 3809
2 23101 97.0748 167.8157 0012394 63.3313 296.9198 15.55635433145236
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96336.63586184 -.00002324 00000-0 -91644-3 0 3625
2 23125 6.9893 165.8753 7231861 204.1903 89.1546 2.32906147 20023
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96334.95871629 .00012955 00000-0 51553-2 0 3218
2 23126 7.0816 165.9016 7233674 203.5475 90.6584 2.33114876 20025
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96332.25152530 .00000055 00000-0 40541-4 0 2368
2 23179 82.9454 115.7517 0037725 29.3699 330.9571 13.75687686119214
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96330.22843958 .00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 3633
2 23203 64.7606 198.7101 0007506 139.0788 221.0732 2.13102137 17838
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96332.33901003 .00000046 00000-0 00000+0 0 3848
2 23204 64.7477 198.6675 0014902 352.9239 7.1481 2.13102372 17874
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96331.28286187 .00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 3683
2 23205 64.7545 198.6933 0001119 355.9165 4.1787 2.13102682 17853
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96336.72134388 .00000112 00000-0 83851-4 0 221
2 23233 98.8053 32.8745 0013484 66.2284 294.0298 14.12756978116489
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96337.11172470 .00000195 00000-0 26229-4 0 2029
2 23317 82.5414 264.5286 0024311 256.3127 103.5383 14.74059788115274
ELEKTRO
1 23327U 94069A 96331.38075231 -.00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 2266
2 23327 0.3537 102.8636 0000996 128.5549 47.5803 1.00272885 7626
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96336.20249820 .00000115 00000-0 27210-4 0 6172
2 23342 97.9459 29.0960 0001420 86.2710 273.8659 14.69881659111343
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96335.81939992 -.00000011 00000-0 00000+0 0 3520
2 23396 65.1585 78.6272 0029921 190.8529 169.1033 2.13102864 15796
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96333.18021180 -.00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 3325
2 23397 65.1429 78.7227 0011603 315.8060 44.1048 2.13101784 15734
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96332.12542029 -.00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 3495
2 23398 65.1329 78.7306 0003060 265.0799 94.8787 2.13101798 15721
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96333.75350850 -.00000274 00000-0 00000+0 0 4333
2 23426 1.0894 265.0043 0002101 351.7088 177.6833 1.00275634 7153
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96331.40806878 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1786
2 23439 64.8122 120.7450 0155892 170.1062 190.2990 11.27529303 79078
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96336.84579779 .00000054 00000-0 54320-4 0 8460
2 23455 98.9654 281.9679 0009904 123.8040 236.4074 14.11628663 99107
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96333.49100267 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 2652
2 23511 64.6072 318.4341 0007953 231.1550 128.7722 2.13103317 13479
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96334.54993756 -.00000036 00000-0 00000+0 0 2733
2 23512 64.5900 318.4018 0007577 305.4208 54.5080 2.13101499 13491
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96336.71819797 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 2925
2 23513 64.5970 318.3438 0014269 210.7736 149.1374 2.13103805 13540
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96330.59255678 -.00000289 00000-0 10000-3 0 1769
2 23522 0.4492 20.6119 0001289 161.2657 236.1582 1.00274723 6078
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96336.86248762 -.00000013 00000-0 16974-4 0 7710
2 23533 98.8432 337.2009 0006800 307.6162 52.4396 14.12764139 87300
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96329.99600491 .00000178 00000-0 67542-4 0 1804
2 23545 69.9727 156.9911 0014435 309.6531 50.3331 14.45439144 86892
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96329.61516035 .00000352 00000-0 11687-3 0 2144
2 23546 69.9777 158.0509 0014557 304.1955 55.7798 14.45442506 86846
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96332.59951597 .00000151 00000-0 59578-4 0 1522
2 23547 69.9783 150.8257 0014519 300.3223 59.6469 14.45617096 87283
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96336.10232535 .00009090 00000-0 20751-3 0 3837
2 23549 143.3653 168.3025 0210252 107.8599 254.5191 15.19405023 91711
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96336.44720872 .00003605 00000-0 44276-4 0 1821
2 23558 51.6508 348.9514 0006504 130.9416 229.2133 15.63290696616162
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96335.82740962 -.00000031 00000-0 46224-5 0 3056
2 23560 98.5423 47.4727 0001353 106.4234 253.7100 14.32252730 84427
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 5116
2 23579 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132 87682
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96336.90464493 .00000094 00000-0 10000-3 0 2851
2 23581 0.0570 267.9799 0003858 3.2272 350.0815 1.00267181 5601
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96336.20321702 .00000151 00000-0 37898-4 0 3642
2 23605 98.1358 269.6131 0001680 65.2512 294.8865 14.63826340 74994
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96337.21133482 .00000298 00000-0 61340-4 0 2348
2 23606 98.1182 272.2119 0008561 22.1979 337.9596 14.67319163 75355
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96330.21901994 .00000101 00000-0 26671-4 0 1343
2 23607 98.1156 265.0911 0007242 39.3329 320.8419 14.66979872 74342
TDRS 7
1 23613U 95035B 96335.72351264 .00000101 00000-0 00000+0 0 2616
2 23613 1.0262 81.8264 0003071 158.9271 278.2323 1.00275851 5057
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96333.68658832 .00000037 00000-0 00000+0 0 2102
2 23620 64.8140 198.4710 0018193 166.1483 194.0121 2.13103149 10518
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96334.33359478 .00000034 00000-0 00000+0 0 2231
2 23621 64.8283 198.4498 0018053 175.1791 184.9226 2.13102203 10522
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96332.98387172 .00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 2253
2 23622 64.8171 198.4984 0036772 163.6031 196.5966 2.13102407 10498
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96332.64998010 -.00001304 00000-0 00000+0 0 902
2 23632 71.8650 247.8110 7847500 325.8920 39.8590 0.26377900 1287
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96329.73261172 .00000129 00000-0 16412-4 0 1256
2 23657 82.5332 52.7891 0026101 247.9664 111.8775 14.73509833 66474
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96335.10060865 .00000142 00000-0 72025-4 0 2128
2 23710 98.5792 339.4335 0001370 75.0602 285.0667 14.29977532 55953
Glonass 79
1 23734U 95068A 96335.44816712 .00000035 00000-0 00000+0 0 2020
2 23734 64.8209 198.3329 0017412 326.4613 33.5251 2.13103454 7510
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96330.01247475 .00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 1913
2 23735 64.8150 198.5024 0006347 205.7142 154.3507 2.13125079 7390
Glonass 77
1 23736U 95068C 96332.82312677 .00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 1704
2 23736 64.8064 198.4232 0007328 191.2482 135.1241 2.13101929 7447
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96332.54020910 .00000713 00000-0 30438-4 0 1022
2 23757 22.9804 19.7846 0013962 214.4554 145.5037 14.97732812 49981
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96332.33312370 .00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 752
2 23802 86.3016 24.3009 6533747 278.0936 17.6724 1.36265423 3786
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96333.07139343 .00209150 00000-0 42229-1 0 1437
2 23824 47.4962 208.1204 7261336 68.3565 352.9083 2.31342183 6273
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96335.92273041 -.00000069 00000-0 00000+0 0 1186
2 23833 54.6543 341.2274 0026033 142.0390 218.2057 2.00565144 5023
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 1997
2 23848 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132 34773
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96336.48266097 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1385
2 23851 99.3900 319.3757 0010578 25.7271 334.4377 13.97516475 30867
SAX
1 23857U 96027A 96322.56037394 .00001109 00000-0 34473-4 0 423
2 23857 3.9509 77.6529 0014212 49.8268 310.2993 14.91655404 30083
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96332.89800386 .00002332 00000-0 48447-4 0 858
2 23868 97.1189 160.5186 0010030 308.6015 51.4353 15.46644609 30119
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96329.26567624 .00002882 00000-0 13063-3 0 605
2 23940 97.4320 232.7264 0013477 136.5603 223.6695 15.21579988 21974
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96336.33604672 .00000016 00000-0 00000+0 0 830
2 23953 55.0899 101.5861 0018813 333.0647 26.8217 2.00563569 2823
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96336.19185773 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1131
2 24277 98.6178 50.7299 0001376 56.1001 304.0311 14.27642902 15112
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96328.72767464 .00000002 00000-0 38803-4 0 381
2 24278 98.5695 31.6872 0351594 358.5730 1.4374 13.52626520 13344
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 1039
2 24280 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132 16673
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96336.95963425 .00001093 00000-0 10950-3 0 418
2 24285 82.9843 130.7328 2207630 341.0866 11.9238 10.81620670 11095
Microsat
1 24291U 96050A 96336.63790040 .00040547 62598-5 26747-3 0 797
2 24291 62.7943 65.4897 0616068 121.2291 245.0664 14.66314896 13802
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96336.89028135 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 466
2 24305 82.9288 140.3814 0030866 34.9128 325.4018 13.73087950 11989
GPS BIIA-27
1 24320U 96056A 96333.70702017 -.00000048 00000-0 00000+0 0 448
2 24320 54.6833 281.8100 0055114 139.8798 220.4368 2.00568282 1439
1996059C
1 24644U 96059C 96309.34412794 .30092023 75539-5 40968-2 0 16
2 24644 62.8803 27.5661 0238849 94.8971 267.9365 15.88259486 35
SAC-B/HETE
1 24645U 96061A 96331.91373374 .00000457 00000-0 30145-4 0 244
2 24645 37.9773 350.8790 0046985 118.1526 242.4000 15.14775616 3375
1996062B
1 24649U 96062B 96336.32720738 .00190634 -17588-5 70929-3 0 334
2 24649 25.3166 36.1072 2525026 40.2076 335.9467 10.55655900 2465
1996062D
1 24651U 96062D 96336.23259795 .00198087 -17652-5 69828-3 0 357
2 24651 25.3075 36.4334 2527020 39.6496 336.3919 10.55624076 2541
Arabsat 2B
1 24652U 96063A 96325.31372041 .00010406 00000-0 31079-2 0 61
2 24652 3.9925 208.1383 7284808 182.9551 165.5729 2.27503266 145
Measat 2
1 24653U 96063B 96335.82213714 -.00000215 00000-0 00000+0 0 212
2 24653 0.0232 261.6192 0002441 78.9452 173.4516 1.00275849 230
1996063C
1 24654U 96063C 96334.82933675 .00000053 00000-0 34949-3 0 141
2 24654 3.8632 204.5401 7278149 190.3154 136.4242 2.22875213 387
1996063D
1 24655U 96063D 96332.75221977 .00011374 00000-0 43872-2 0 105
2 24655 3.9386 204.6567 7278096 189.3756 140.3269 2.27680996 319
Mars-96
1 24656U 96064A 96323.01130778 .13328068 12842-4 45328-4 0 133
2 24656 51.4998 11.2010 0005797 231.1092 129.2833 16.58057739 180
STS 80
1 24660U 96065A 96337.33333333 .00000839 00000-0 32806-5 0 474
2 24660 28.4672 97.6293 0008640 48.7001 17.5812 15.72199943 1963
ORFEUS-SPAS II
1 24661U 96065B 96336.31250000 .00000872 00000-0 35107-5 0 240
2 24661 28.4682 105.0579 0008932 38.2515 357.3865 15.72267705 1802
WSF
1 24662U 96065C 96329.37500000 .00000942 00000-0 40526-5 0 33
2 24662 28.4694 155.5303 0008299 312.1539 335.4340 15.72084958 718
Progress M-33
1 24663U 96066A 96337.13224325 .00008360 00000-0 97427-4 0 168
2 24663 51.6519 357.3859 0013662 95.0348 265.1714 15.62546132 1919
1996066B
1 24664U 96066B 96327.41277526 .58399191 12743-4 19260-3 0 190
2 24664 51.6425 45.7297 0017318 127.1554 233.1175 16.57786928 401
Hot Bird 2
1 24665U 96067A 96327.75000000 .00002618 73664-6 10000-3 0 62
2 24665 23.8873 196.7180 7311335 179.2354 352.6087 2.28438038 23
1996067B
1 24666U 96067B 96334.44525599 .00075191 -24710-6 17051-2 0 137
2 24666 23.8859 192.8974 7292216 184.8161 159.0209 2.31284077 177
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:48 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!cs.utexas.edu!newshost.convex.com!newsgate.duke.edu!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE912)
Date: 10 Dec 1996 00:04:15 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 757
Message-ID: <58i9dv$l3a@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial 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 #912 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96338.91682839 .00000050 00000-0 48956-4 0 2507
2 00424 80.4630 116.2753 0022995 319.1220 40.8200 13.67881887705545
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96330.36489924 -.00000181 00000-0 10000-3 0 9890
2 02608 14.5792 351.0997 0007742 104.0277 256.0277 1.00293435 26487
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96344.18843400 -.00000107 00000-0 10000-3 0 5870
2 03029 14.9157 357.9074 0010751 249.0678 153.8636 1.00273190106527
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96342.78238266 -.00000146 00000-0 -59908-6 0 184
2 07646 49.8300 183.6732 0206284 83.8301 278.6060 13.82192091102978
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96343.82981144 -.00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 2472
2 08820 109.8525 85.8469 0043384 90.5532 270.0041 6.38664548224985
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96343.27079014 .00000111 00000-0 10000-3 0 907
2 09852 13.4400 30.9317 0006386 146.9783 213.0419 1.00006436 19383
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96343.38272865 .00000057 00000-0 10000-3 0 7736
2 10061 12.5977 35.1030 0012387 131.3391 231.4933 1.00274627 16196
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96343.38078274 -.00000032 00000-0 10000-3 0 3252
2 10637 35.7411 80.7735 1340343 62.4540 319.4179 1.00056574 21688
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96343.29221228 -.00000104 00000-0 10000-3 0 7521
2 10953 11.5997 38.0507 0003540 190.9485 209.7876 1.00265084 20808
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96342.21726447 -.00000048 00000-0 28777-4 0 5360
2 10967 107.9994 172.7772 0001831 245.1921 114.9029 14.38137300966326
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96342.53194911 -.00000068 00000-0 -24349-4 0 6336
2 11080 98.9207 196.1243 0008287 219.7949 140.2601 13.83689335915142
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96341.31715955 .00000108 00000-0 10000-3 0 9721
2 12472 8.4667 48.4528 0007060 86.6975 273.2844 1.00285628 14821
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96342.51270776 .00000053 00000-0 44185-4 0 5494
2 13301 82.9324 6.7172 0028404 119.8675 240.5308 13.68079517721072
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96342.54872967 .00000040 00000-0 18700-4 0 277
2 13367 98.0531 27.9938 0006949 330.1598 29.9204 14.57195418765787
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96343.89397666 .00000003 00000-0 19458-4 0 1355
2 13736 98.6232 169.4663 0007901 239.0505 120.9897 14.25814352725968
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96344.12068658 -.00000259 00000-0 -14864-3 0 5149
2 13777 98.9681 165.9292 0013363 334.3567 25.6931 13.99262964377834
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96342.27190526 .00000047 00000-0 33637-4 0 6411
2 13916 82.9462 63.0261 0039199 31.1850 329.1614 13.74349587687514
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96344.21367698 -.00000284 00000-0 00000+0 0 6806
2 13969 9.2411 41.9930 0003679 215.5292 208.2885 1.00260139 23149
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96343.31530345 -.00000092 00000-0 10000-3 0 5852
2 14050 7.3196 52.0290 0008054 88.6623 306.9964 1.00217213107941
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96340.21332687 .00000087 00000-0 29673-4 0 5733
2 14780 98.3109 37.8381 0003004 102.5740 257.5794 14.57060946678864
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96342.01958317 .00000139 00000-0 31257-4 0 9348
2 14781 97.8137 325.1947 0010758 260.0070 99.9921 14.69505446683038
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96342.46620379 .00000033 00000-0 18784-4 0 8411
2 15055 82.9545 118.1535 0026352 218.2047 141.7240 13.73642037624778
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96342.04553480 .00000235 00000-0 24702-4 0 5236
2 15331 82.5319 311.0682 0021947 94.1637 266.2074 14.84814569658621
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96342.38547713 .00000000 00000-0 21676-4 0 2406
2 15354 56.9992 46.0889 0008211 137.2111 222.9548 14.95000865662748
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96343.79981284 .00000080 00000-0 65648-4 0 9508
2 15427 98.9292 48.6490 0014897 175.3403 184.7906 14.13822630618306
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96344.10333470 .00001475 00000-0 22155-4 0 8581
2 16609 51.6538 322.2018 0013453 120.4562 239.7766 15.62574493617343
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96343.54191271 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 121
2 16613 98.8185 51.0989 0001924 98.1563 261.9833 14.19991797245053
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96342.57388467 .00000152 00000-0 15360-4 0 4385
2 16881 82.5201 8.2454 0020586 120.3024 240.0233 14.83784834559553
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96342.56948845 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1378
2 16908 50.0092 183.9535 0011474 94.9804 265.2340 12.44415652137992
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96343.82556591 .00000003 00000-0 19398-4 0 8807
2 16969 98.5312 335.9690 0012242 200.3092 159.7604 14.25012512531478
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96341.19665454 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4902
2 17527 98.9220 39.2731 0017703 206.1629 153.8636 14.00453240499066
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96344.19299600 -.00000147 00000-0 10000-3 0 1787
2 17561 3.4066 68.1870 0001163 286.6866 58.1591 1.00279775 19056
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 8377
2 17845 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589551450
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96343.69496279 .00000020 00000-0 32515-4 0 7131
2 18123 98.7640 171.1057 0014841 114.4428 245.8296 14.15460659489182
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96341.98767983 .00000015 00000-0 -23021-7 0 2901
2 18129 82.9279 20.8118 0013021 39.1330 321.0763 13.72372068473876
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96342.60108684 .00000077 00000-0 55261-4 0 5286
2 18312 82.5570 214.5290 0013535 89.7258 270.5454 13.84089130470165
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96343.89918966 .00000036 00000-0 18285-4 0 1181
2 18820 82.5402 268.1065 0016527 150.4901 209.7195 13.84765583447706
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96343.53996750 .00000035 00000-0 33600-4 0 4092
2 18822 98.3800 167.2777 0005553 212.6524 147.4313 14.23209335459371
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96342.21424145 -.00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 1394
2 19163 65.3403 80.0102 0009176 134.0328 226.0490 2.13102498 65923
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96340.39429230 -.00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 5487
2 19165 65.3004 80.0242 0003352 8.7514 351.2672 2.13102264 66500
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96341.81525328 -.00000034 00000-0 10000-3 0 2969
2 19215 3.6100 66.8050 0006013 130.5628 229.1530 0.96946923 18852
AO-13
1 19216U 88051B 96340.36293920 .64194205 34729-4 46505-3 0 3848
2 19216 56.9100 66.0967 1385719 63.2476 313.9974 13.38919575 33595
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96342.44638214 .00000188 00000-0 20452-4 0 1385
2 19274 82.5131 109.4171 0018290 277.0299 82.8833 14.82547991455044
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96342.22629473 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5331
2 19336 82.5394 43.9814 0016938 159.4028 200.7782 13.16979888402259
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96340.89426952 -.00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 4317
2 19503 65.5212 318.9279 0006330 137.0269 223.0446 2.13101621 64008
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96343.83897571 -.00000036 00000-0 54801-5 0 7716
2 19531 99.1722 6.4043 0012615 108.8044 251.4497 14.13113076423118
TDRS 3
1 19548U 88091B 96341.72369035 -.00000169 00000-0 10000-3 0 2580
2 19548 2.8347 71.0162 0006501 174.4175 175.5610 1.00262680 17256
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96341.40078063 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 6434
2 19749 65.2788 79.5477 0006860 251.4526 108.4814 2.13101470 61521
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96342.39411960 -.00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 5485
2 19750 65.2915 79.5911 0008252 234.9662 124.9633 2.13101754 61563
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96339.66057005 .00000019 00000-0 00000+0 0 3285
2 19802 55.4155 103.8428 0025712 139.2304 220.9231 2.00556672 57130
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96343.43169535 .00009740 00000-0 48880-3 0 8256
2 19822 75.0966 22.5052 3733550 334.4813 11.0448 7.94868679180512
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96342.51912668 .00000041 00000-0 23371-4 0 5274
2 19851 82.5188 142.8775 0013222 207.1347 152.9120 13.84421593392819
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96342.47988708 -.00000126 00000-0 10000-3 0 2352
2 19876 2.3421 71.2217 0016879 279.3131 79.9193 0.97110844 8305
TDRS 4
1 19883U 89021B 96343.50887731 -.00000251 00000-0 00000+0 0 2859
2 19883 0.2243 88.9136 0005834 153.9867 336.8855 1.00269023200852
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96341.99398744 -.00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 3245
2 20061 54.0868 279.2590 0165905 222.9315 135.7702 2.00562689 54929
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96343.70755338 .00000027 00000-0 13518-4 0 9969
2 20103 82.9516 339.9640 0037024 290.0711 69.6461 13.73871706372646
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96344.20436195 .00000005 00000-0 10000-3 0 3688
2 20185 55.0504 103.9580 0166670 306.0542 52.3880 2.00807077 53543
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96337.70682601 -.00000358 00000-0 10000-3 0 5014
2 20217 2.1261 74.2804 0001640 253.2651 118.4152 1.00258080 27113
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96342.58038105 .00000137 00000-0 37090-4 0 5495
2 20261 82.5890 159.9854 1242356 7.4048 354.3625 12.47368977327523
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96338.87131869 .00000015 00000-0 10000-3 0 3511
2 20302 53.2005 219.1373 0024702 188.4976 171.5393 2.00569319 52234
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96340.63392826 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7059
2 20305 82.5590 6.0668 0005205 248.9483 111.1082 13.04437564340555
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96343.11616867 -.00000033 00000-0 67879-5 0 2659
2 20322 98.9342 355.3911 0008400 276.8633 83.1579 14.03457287361329
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 7634
2 20335 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589400462
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96343.37640379 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 1503
2 20361 56.0900 46.3942 0094064 139.7262 221.0242 2.00565048 41801
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96341.60008494 -.00000123 00000-0 00000+0 0 4719
2 20391 4.1734 62.3991 0004444 157.3583 55.4733 1.00268286 25720
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96341.97989446 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1606
2 20436 98.7490 53.1564 0001091 114.2627 245.8663 14.20015493356368
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96342.79391519 -.00000008 00000-0 13645-4 0 2319
2 20437 98.5346 62.4741 0011991 52.4572 307.7672 14.29941124358862
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96342.25547733 .00000014 00000-0 22239-4 0 293
2 20439 98.5518 64.4849 0012150 55.9176 304.3157 14.29992224358804
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96342.26053678 .00000034 00000-0 29789-4 0 307
2 20440 98.5547 65.2265 0012347 54.2410 305.9916 14.30134768358836
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96342.25411242 .00000007 00000-0 19479-4 0 330
2 20441 98.5538 65.1395 0012786 55.3902 304.8484 14.30103067358831
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96342.30657788 .00000030 00000-0 28279-4 0 293
2 20442 98.5564 65.7637 0013183 53.3873 306.8514 14.30214804358864
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96340.78034554 .00000107 00000-0 10000-3 0 2487
2 20452 54.0450 159.7789 0089620 87.0051 274.2241 2.00551801 50251
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96341.25138401 -.00000115 00000-0 -53416-4 0 51
2 20478 99.1135 48.4954 0005813 132.4456 227.7196 13.93967748268521
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96343.90097677 -.00000207 00000-0 -40021-3 0 302
2 20479 99.0227 335.7411 0540949 87.8714 278.4209 12.83345833320314
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96342.54871200 -.00000010 00000-0 41145-4 0 9269
2 20480 99.0224 334.4142 0541075 91.5399 274.7721 12.83235639320121
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96340.21694066 -.00000204 00000-0 -31515-3 0 3007
2 20491 99.0618 43.1131 0469411 254.0061 100.8873 13.02999374324134
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96342.21490180 .00001079 00000-0 38098-4 0 7105
2 20496 43.1030 295.3245 0009498 96.5983 263.5954 15.36158471380437
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96343.81247735 .00000043 00000-0 29736-4 0 9958
2 20508 82.9455 114.3643 0042767 241.1406 118.5463 13.73515609339863
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96342.55234978 .00000134 00000-0 15082-4 0 5469
2 20510 82.5250 64.7402 0020407 107.2746 253.0696 14.78648154365299
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96343.15602082 -.00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 2926
2 20533 54.4477 280.0123 0048409 77.9996 282.5546 2.00569707 49072
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96343.24633817 .00004229 00000-0 72574-4 0 26
2 20546 94.1267 91.6993 0058576 51.6977 308.9467 15.49354715371935
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96341.74255506 .00000379 00000-0 22216-4 0 8974
2 20580 28.4680 189.2988 0006331 177.6019 182.4574 14.91139141164369
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96342.57966507 .00000108 00000-0 15596-4 0 2319
2 20608 89.9265 171.9119 0105309 168.5183 191.8459 14.64960840351677
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96342.23722151 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 3477
2 20619 65.1178 318.0407 0024488 210.1081 149.7568 2.13102466 50998
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96343.29441243 -.00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 3356
2 20620 65.1061 317.9764 0008069 50.8313 309.2278 2.13102465 51057
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96339.13861834 -.00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 9456
2 20621 65.1238 318.1772 0012921 196.8449 163.1199 2.13102528 50967
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 5558
2 20635 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589371293
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96340.88903306 -.00000063 00000-0 14681-4 0 6159
2 20638 52.9919 245.7695 0010406 289.2298 70.7564 15.07509827358217
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96344.13161037 .00000023 00000-0 75384-5 0 1511
2 20670 82.5468 208.9182 0016471 119.6163 240.6641 13.84130860325946
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96343.76782544 .00000134 00000-0 16413-3 0 3709
2 20712 17.6126 178.7287 7176115 150.3194 284.3172 2.35810343 47230
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96343.49951143 .00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 1485
2 20724 55.0519 101.6535 0135560 185.8670 173.9490 2.00564456 44944
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96343.23420604 .00000020 00000-0 41443-4 0 1959
2 20788 98.8090 342.7273 0015709 19.1320 341.0427 14.01372729320470
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96342.53847499 .00000013 00000-0 -13959-5 0 385
2 20826 82.5255 146.3953 0014585 35.5064 324.7062 13.83640971312815
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96341.06137836 -.00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 1261
2 20830 56.0351 44.3985 0065421 93.5489 267.2505 2.00568047 45530
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96341.46343858 .00000012 00000-0 10000-3 0 1070
2 20959 55.2382 103.8399 0110939 236.4106 122.4944 2.00556850 44139
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96343.83652330 .00000047 00000-0 32256-4 0 8730
2 20978 98.5803 53.3867 0079674 15.4023 344.9558 14.32701434314725
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96343.38533206 -.00000019 00000-0 10000-3 0 9079
2 21006 65.2726 78.8203 0057188 186.0433 173.9000 2.13102799 46724
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96342.16997667 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 446
2 21007 65.2820 78.9429 0033414 177.5077 182.5196 2.13101180 46686
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96340.18949246 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 3097
2 21008 65.2593 78.9475 0008868 271.8921 88.0144 2.13098711 46639
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96344.07135119 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7675
2 21087 82.9422 192.2765 0037095 77.9257 282.6051 13.74575093294036
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96341.76333624 .00000020 00000-0 44304-5 0 9390
2 21089 82.9219 61.3627 0030330 111.0389 249.4015 13.74074888292738
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96343.03251970 .00000005 00000-0 00000+0 0 3062
2 21140 0.9018 78.7810 0002080 132.1043 237.6149 1.00269467 23353
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96343.84540820 .00000074 00000-0 63476-4 0 6827
2 21152 82.9195 16.4200 0040731 216.3290 143.5106 13.73540779287720
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96341.52649556 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 5616
2 21216 64.8585 317.5345 0012501 196.6423 163.3157 2.13103218 44193
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96335.02912482 -.00000032 00000-0 10000-3 0 9668
2 21217 64.8596 317.7693 0008660 218.5897 141.3516 2.13101782 44047
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96343.11624376 -.00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 4384
2 21218 64.8449 317.4556 0007818 301.7159 58.2094 2.13102526 44224
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96343.53326241 .00001861 00000-0 33128-4 0 4118
2 21225 28.4588 48.0634 0002219 46.5498 313.5281 15.44643136196910
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96342.20024358 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9418
2 21232 82.5377 250.4596 0014738 87.5517 272.7282 13.16473682270304
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96343.84117231 .00000070 00000-0 50099-4 0 1896
2 21263 98.5478 357.8637 0013484 123.7381 236.5086 14.22675090289297
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96342.53435624 .00000191 00000-0 24010-4 0 2399
2 21397 82.5239 339.5595 0021570 186.6562 173.4367 14.76529823296949
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96343.23483361 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-6 0 574
2 21552 56.3213 42.1851 0074542 250.3453 108.9045 2.00553817 39765
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96343.97905431 .00000054 00000-0 36058-4 0 3851
2 21574 98.5535 55.5051 0001189 87.7604 272.3729 14.32243612282460
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96342.70251051 .00000036 00000-0 26447-4 0 7365
2 21575 98.3317 43.7434 0008253 102.9890 257.2218 14.37047855282985
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96342.17485953 .00000045 00000-0 29863-4 0 8307
2 21576 98.3282 40.9454 0004383 108.6475 251.5174 14.36464758282780
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96342.69666330 -.00000013 00000-0 10038-4 0 7304
2 21577 98.3270 42.0683 0007263 107.8296 252.3685 14.36534191282894
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96342.20936870 .00000264 00000-0 98910-4 0 9316
2 21578 98.3641 51.0532 0005982 102.5007 257.6849 14.39283254283220
TDRS 5
1 21639U 91054B 96343.56158649 .00000098 00000-0 10000-3 0 1251
2 21639 0.0092 11.2634 0005199 210.7011 243.5474 1.00272815 19619
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96342.13573429 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9392
2 21655 82.5541 198.3118 0014058 94.3664 265.9064 13.16849891255438
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96342.22394758 -.00000053 00000-0 16412-4 0 8103
2 21701 56.9840 136.5067 0005193 106.5960 253.5643 14.96556555286261
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96343.74246940 .00000092 00000-0 72052-4 0 5445
2 21798 98.9362 1.0868 0013597 93.1719 267.1011 14.14009003259594
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96343.79752481 -.00000018 00000-0 10000-4 0 1406
2 21853 65.2107 78.4543 0006755 204.6276 155.3525 2.13102278 37847
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96343.14391049 -.00000020 00000-0 00000+0 0 3842
2 21854 65.2162 78.4637 0015082 18.6153 341.4487 2.13104646 37816
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96343.68239432 -.00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 3666
2 21855 65.2171 78.4527 0008322 204.1041 155.8700 2.13102306 37818
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96344.19843050 .00153484 00000-0 12490-1 0 340
2 21867 97.6766 58.8807 0001279 75.8575 284.2787 14.98735672264078
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96343.68762680 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 9102
2 21890 53.7399 219.4487 0060329 199.3035 160.5704 2.00562402 35140
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96342.35417186 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 8264
2 21930 55.6710 341.7114 0023951 193.5634 166.4208 2.00554344 34048
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96342.56909359 .00000791 00000-0 26388-4 0 5918
2 21987 28.4333 97.0684 0010198 155.6053 204.5023 15.20009123250084
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96342.39521246 .00000664 00000-0 55513-4 0 7666
2 22012 81.6703 296.3442 0117349 326.5501 32.8339 14.91803671241051
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96342.43948168 .00000110 00000-0 00000+0 0 8045
2 22014 54.8624 161.6598 0101891 337.0933 22.4870 2.00567961 25886
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96343.11023911 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 2933
2 22056 64.6937 317.4860 0006706 268.7019 91.2222 2.13103610 33891
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96342.46868224 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 2641
2 22057 64.7062 317.5425 0009274 310.3436 49.5806 2.13102816 33857
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96341.00034041 -.00000019 00000-0 10000-3 0 1643
2 22058 64.7036 317.5932 0008152 275.1717 84.7372 2.13102640 33872
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96342.54901036 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 129
2 22076 66.0347 212.5844 0007333 268.0564 91.9612 12.80930770202322
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96342.55708665 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6253
2 22077 66.0783 186.4681 0015260 258.0302 101.9007 12.86299011203101
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96342.52122493 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6238
2 22078 66.0778 184.8581 0016724 255.1959 104.7203 12.86584190203192
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96341.90602310 .00000049 00000-0 10000-3 0 8289
2 22108 53.9743 220.4245 0120054 163.3639 197.1191 2.00571155 31052
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96343.53020038 -.00000157 00000-0 -11294-4 0 6734
2 22161 62.9791 158.7029 0855827 32.5230 332.5643 13.21932233201479
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96342.19236514 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5475
2 22195 52.6545 242.3107 0137462 152.3770 208.4174 6.47293847 97478
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96341.59015128 .00000111 00000-0 00000+0 0 8374
2 22231 54.6923 162.8367 0017101 175.0258 185.0390 2.00563748 29622
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96341.70523721 .00000110 00000-0 00000+0 0 8356
2 22275 54.6363 160.3092 0052482 251.6297 107.8409 2.00588158 29031
TDRS 6
1 22314U 93003B 96331.20938647 -.00000284 00000-0 10000-3 0 6747
2 22314 0.1142 106.0217 0002651 191.2480 156.5492 1.00269336 14207
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96343.30448521 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 8242
2 22446 54.0916 280.0497 0096419 6.8216 353.2857 2.00573780 28057
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96343.33031571 -.00000020 00000-0 10000-3 0 8483
2 22512 65.2287 78.3297 0008637 179.7286 180.2818 2.13102179 29403
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96341.39121855 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 46
2 22513 65.2232 78.4061 0007738 195.2353 164.7505 2.13102648 29550
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96342.62394805 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 38
2 22514 65.2458 78.3592 0011368 187.8260 172.1644 2.13102169 29585
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96342.47405264 .00000733 00000-0 44854-4 0 5439
2 22521 31.1028 39.9931 0055629 86.3935 274.3063 15.03201234208561
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96337.04584315 -.00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 5438
2 22563 25.0078 285.9617 0010148 264.9217 94.9657 0.99252643 17744
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96341.95387478 -.00000043 00000-0 10000-3 0 6148
2 22581 55.1594 341.0325 0065082 41.1949 319.3259 2.00574343 27083
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96343.08215385 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 7856
2 22657 55.1942 340.8785 0083184 232.5930 126.6694 2.00564702 22434
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96342.84163693 .00000041 00000-0 11767-4 0 5388
2 22698 89.5457 262.3493 0092702 119.2530 241.7972 14.21385075179091
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96342.55095854 .00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 6196
2 22700 54.1525 221.2450 0054984 4.7486 355.3947 2.00562791 25229
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96343.43326166 .00000069 00000-0 63990-4 0 2142
2 22739 99.0655 300.0344 0010678 94.9390 265.3001 14.10979032171629
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96341.63922959 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 6853
2 22779 54.2526 280.2028 0014846 279.7745 80.0630 2.00552886 23962
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96342.68375381 .00000065 00000-0 46182-4 0 5305
2 22782 82.5496 209.6343 0020842 211.3165 148.6746 13.83065345165117
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96338.28645816 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 6963
2 22787 4.0232 327.4706 0006655 245.0202 34.4624 1.00273933 10524
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96343.27034680 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 6345
2 22823 98.7379 54.4424 0016203 257.7837 102.1523 14.16974652165939
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96342.77477126 -.00000038 00000-0 19414-5 0 5208
2 22824 98.5666 54.3142 0006934 79.0073 281.1885 14.27106363166691
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96342.74083840 .00000012 00000-0 22344-4 0 5219
2 22825 98.5670 55.0264 0009435 79.0582 281.1660 14.27711602166750
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96342.72392684 .00000002 00000-0 18353-4 0 5198
2 22826 98.5680 55.2124 0009949 79.4943 280.7360 14.27820602166768
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96342.27481502 .00000035 00000-0 31557-4 0 5824
2 22827 98.5650 54.6592 0010182 68.5167 291.7094 14.27959701166710
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96342.73394407 .00000041 00000-0 33895-4 0 4994
2 22828 98.5631 55.2915 0011165 64.5736 295.6591 14.28161937134881
POSAT
1 22829U 93061G 96342.75283402 .00000008 00000-0 20442-4 0 5133
2 22829 98.5652 55.3837 0010938 69.0819 291.1533 14.28143249166808
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96343.18483997 -.00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 5214
2 22877 55.7574 42.2218 0044935 300.3713 59.2407 2.00563111 22888
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96335.09544771 -.00000080 00000-0 00000+0 0 5872
2 22912 0.3053 65.9407 0003591 157.1427 230.7314 1.00271215 9520
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96344.07302234 .00004729 00000-0 30171-3 0 5567
2 22920 28.4714 65.3207 0002772 181.3467 178.7095 15.06370398165803
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96341.55573472 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3056
2 22969 82.5575 138.8886 0014756 164.9436 195.2135 13.16740100137730
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96341.86005603 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2956
2 22970 82.5581 138.5566 0016031 160.8493 199.3248 13.16828715137781
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96341.27261441 -.00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 4576
2 23027 55.0491 342.8905 0083503 203.8795 155.7223 2.00566837 20154
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96344.10846988 -.00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 4406
2 23043 64.5802 317.7902 0006447 210.3692 149.5915 2.13103191 20739
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96343.05238297 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 4104
2 23044 64.5739 317.8211 0030985 207.7027 152.1274 2.13103157 20717
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96341.82243206 -.00000021 00000-0 00000+0 0 4088
2 23045 64.5640 317.8684 0010448 25.0851 334.9731 2.13102717 20686
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96344.10352641 -.00000240 00000-0 10000-3 0 6242
2 23051 0.3821 87.8202 0004059 160.0153 152.7739 1.00278666 17129
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96343.58018444 .00003804 00000-0 56554-4 0 3830
2 23101 97.0749 175.2020 0011950 39.9797 320.2336 15.55710744146393
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96340.91805143 .00000691 00000-0 30668-3 0 3633
2 23125 7.1193 163.1177 7232205 208.7778 79.9647 2.32936182 20125
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96334.95871629 .00012955 00000-0 51553-2 0 3218
2 23126 7.0816 165.9016 7233674 203.5475 90.6584 2.33114876 20025
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96342.21576263 .00000045 00000-0 30777-4 0 2402
2 23179 82.9452 108.3659 0036950 2.2483 357.8833 13.75687748120587
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96341.49067080 .00000101 00000-0 00000+0 0 3710
2 23203 64.7583 198.3374 0007595 137.9440 222.2053 2.13102136 18075
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96342.19344866 .00000107 00000-0 00000+0 0 3917
2 23204 64.7506 198.3392 0014853 353.7808 6.2922 2.13102553 18081
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96343.01430273 .00000111 00000-0 00000+0 0 3766
2 23205 64.7530 198.3017 0001062 357.4412 2.6509 2.13102871 18100
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96343.80364452 .00000020 00000-0 33974-4 0 314
2 23233 98.8050 39.8364 0013315 47.3579 312.8710 14.12758141117483
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96341.18461389 .00000167 00000-0 21948-4 0 2034
2 23317 82.5421 260.7835 0024212 241.9577 117.9186 14.74060724115877
ELEKTRO (GOMS)
1 23327U 94069A 96339.93105324 -.00000090 00000-0 00000+0 0 2310
2 23327 0.4007 101.3981 0001103 97.8386 286.2925 1.00272162 7719
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96341.92068768 .00000089 00000-0 22794-4 0 6236
2 23342 97.9450 34.6631 0001687 85.8188 274.3225 14.69883048112182
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96343.32753949 -.00000020 00000-0 00000+0 0 3554
2 23396 65.1624 78.3716 0030104 191.3540 168.5883 2.13102659 15950
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96343.50394864 -.00000019 00000-0 00000+0 0 3381
2 23397 65.1459 78.3707 0011824 314.9544 44.9643 2.13102307 15953
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96343.38770202 -.00000020 00000-0 00000+0 0 3575
2 23398 65.1382 78.3501 0003126 269.1970 90.7776 2.13102048 15960
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96343.38498182 -.00000259 00000-0 00000+0 0 4405
2 23426 1.0812 264.4451 0002910 7.4712 39.3890 1.00272686 7258
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96342.76084784 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1826
2 23439 64.8119 102.3857 0155370 168.1618 192.3024 11.27529351 80353
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96343.86286321 .00000058 00000-0 56531-4 0 8558
2 23455 98.9658 288.9783 0010171 104.4612 255.7689 14.11630582100092
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96343.81464167 -.00000025 00000-0 00000+0 0 2717
2 23511 64.5977 318.0755 0007687 230.7716 129.1588 2.13103912 13690
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96342.99664518 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2772
2 23512 64.5872 318.1064 0007568 307.4486 52.4857 2.13101696 13675
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96343.28782152 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 2952
2 23513 64.5911 318.1113 0014268 211.0525 148.8650 2.13103225 13686
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96343.37576044 -.00000271 00000-0 10000-3 0 1820
2 23522 0.4653 22.4740 0000725 177.8165 152.2827 1.00269521 6191
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96343.73228303 .00000000 00000-0 23813-4 0 7808
2 23533 98.8434 343.9836 0006654 287.0758 72.9681 14.12765159 88277
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96342.52149710 .00000064 00000-0 35220-4 0 1846
2 23545 69.9713 127.9118 0015422 295.8233 64.1307 14.45445254 88703
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96342.48659438 .00000419 00000-0 13574-3 0 2184
2 23546 69.9769 128.1818 0015069 288.9012 71.0481 14.45457543 88704
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96342.49414545 .00000165 00000-0 63744-4 0 1568
2 23547 69.9780 127.8604 0015169 287.2501 72.6968 14.45621195 88717
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96343.39591692 .00007775 00000-0 17419-3 0 3888
2 23549 143.3640 213.0178 0210383 169.8878 190.6096 15.19511777 92828
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96343.35100199 .00002088 00000-0 28066-4 0 1848
2 23558 51.6511 314.0645 0007467 159.1497 200.9831 15.63332890617240
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96341.76550243 -.00000031 00000-0 46224-5 0 3080
2 23560 98.5502 53.3263 0001062 81.7305 278.3582 14.32244164 85270
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 5164
2 23579 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589 88771
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96343.24908935 .00000102 00000-0 10000-3 0 2894
2 23581 0.0469 266.8320 0003754 5.3474 119.2942 1.00269688 5675
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96343.79060147 .00000111 00000-0 30285-4 0 3680
2 23605 98.1367 277.1053 0001644 61.8259 298.3108 14.63828615 76102
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96341.23467522 .00000251 00000-0 53150-4 0 2350
2 23606 98.1185 276.1982 0008393 10.3412 349.7962 14.67321183 75941
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96342.36003732 .00000081 00000-0 23154-4 0 1389
2 23607 98.1172 277.1137 0007100 4.5091 355.6176 14.66982667 76127
TDRS 7
1 23613U 95035B 96343.31638484 .00000113 00000-0 00000+0 0 2659
2 23613 1.0424 81.8027 0002986 162.8561 135.3957 1.00278856 5126
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96344.01025446 .00000113 00000-0 00000+0 0 2183
2 23620 64.8182 198.1279 0018436 163.3912 196.7621 2.13103243 10730
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96341.37249044 .00000100 00000-0 00000+0 0 2278
2 23621 64.8282 198.2162 0018036 174.6037 185.5071 2.13102445 10674
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96342.83832906 .00000111 00000-0 00000+0 0 2324
2 23622 64.8154 198.1715 0036808 163.1207 197.0967 2.13102594 10706
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96343.64998010 -.00000937 00000-0 00000+0 0 950
2 23632 71.8250 247.8130 7821681 326.2050 2.5070 0.26367200 1312
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96342.22745032 .00000199 00000-0 27114-4 0 1299
2 23657 82.5333 41.2882 0026601 205.4231 154.5668 14.73515356 68319
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96341.53794419 .00000142 00000-0 72025-4 0 2143
2 23710 98.5787 345.7761 0001281 51.7495 308.3799 14.29980179 56870
Glonass 79
1 23734U 95068A 96341.54853430 .00000102 00000-0 00000+0 0 2065
2 23734 64.8199 198.1269 0017406 327.4335 32.5445 2.13102418 7641
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96344.08875088 .00000113 00000-0 00000+0 0 1983
2 23735 64.8232 198.0302 0006088 202.1249 157.9445 2.13125245 7694
Glonass 77
1 23736U 95068C 96343.66001986 .00000113 00000-0 00000+0 0 1783
2 23736 64.8089 198.0624 0007268 187.7549 172.3272 2.13102337 7689
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96342.20005451 .00000545 00000-0 16574-4 0 1061
2 23757 22.9812 314.0207 0013384 329.9826 29.9868 14.97737767 51438
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96343.34114527 .00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 836
2 23802 86.3142 24.1878 6538768 277.5141 17.8638 1.36264589 3933
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96339.51343231 .00212463 00000-0 43068-1 0 1461
2 23824 47.5071 206.0658 7239215 70.3322 350.2502 2.34094535 6422
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96343.40132437 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 1208
2 23833 54.6522 340.9262 0026670 141.9074 218.3141 2.00565376 5175
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 2047
2 23848 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589 35862
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96342.49661076 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1435
2 23851 99.4079 325.5368 0006849 36.5160 323.6410 13.97508456 31707
SAX
1 23857U 96027A 96343.48681186 .00001179 00000-0 41425-4 0 456
2 23857 3.9494 284.3100 0012499 354.1731 6.1064 14.91674524 33212
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96343.89663558 -.00001772 00000-0 -33802-4 0 913
2 23868 97.1215 171.3306 0008948 260.1794 99.8445 15.46663651 31818
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96343.79900611 .00001529 00000-0 70591-4 0 658
2 23940 97.4333 247.0811 0014692 89.6189 270.6732 15.21646466 24188
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96342.31899547 .00000004 00000-0 00000+0 0 851
2 23953 55.0926 101.3456 0018723 331.8569 27.9884 2.00562955 2944
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96343.97132003 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1199
2 24277 98.6170 58.3988 0001138 36.9838 323.1417 14.27645477 16225
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96342.18966757 .00000000 00000-0 38924-4 0 420
2 24278 98.5687 43.3539 0351499 323.7050 34.0691 13.52627717 15163
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 1087
2 24280 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589 17762
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96341.49117564 .00000852 00000-0 85639-4 0 428
2 24285 82.9856 128.6258 2207409 333.1040 17.0415 10.81628069 11585
Microsat
1 24291U 96050A 96343.25168273 .00024780 61020-5 16979-3 0 842
2 24291 62.7957 44.1163 0613115 122.1036 244.1090 14.66815718 14773
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96343.95862514 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 503
2 24305 82.9227 135.1459 0031347 17.0445 343.1753 13.73088653 12950
GPS BIIA-27
1 24320U 96056A 96338.69282732 -.00000050 00000-0 00000+0 0 463
2 24320 54.6759 281.5893 0047017 95.4287 264.5984 2.00568884 1537
SAC-B/HETE
1 24645U 96061A 96342.59258286 .00000365 00000-0 25225-4 0 289
2 24645 37.9776 287.0852 0048051 204.6916 155.1561 15.14788006 4996
1996062B
1 24649U 96062B 96344.17033170 .00151647 -15018-5 55985-3 0 492
2 24649 25.3015 9.5980 2512357 85.4093 302.6040 10.58357451 3296
1996062D
1 24651U 96062D 96338.40835312 .00215603 -16507-5 79013-3 0 363
2 24651 25.3073 29.1167 2521067 52.2443 328.7168 10.56595893 2771
Arabsat 2B
1 24652U 96063A 96325.31372041 .00010406 00000-0 31079-2 0 61
2 24652 3.9925 208.1383 7284808 182.9551 165.5729 2.27503266 145
Measat 2
1 24653U 96063B 96343.34820753 -.00000206 00000-0 00000+0 0 237
2 24653 0.0209 235.0143 0002620 127.2284 348.5658 1.00271385 306
1996063C
1 24654U 96063C 96335.72321759 .00000069 00000-0 38597-3 0 156
2 24654 3.8610 204.1993 7278097 191.0055 133.6259 2.22875806 403
1996063D
1 24655U 96063D 96340.18760924 .00007989 00000-0 33339-2 0 172
2 24655 3.9214 201.4738 7276210 195.6670 116.1002 2.27795085 474
Progress M-33
1 24663U 96066A 96344.10334380 -.00006221 00000-0 -62037-4 0 217
2 24663 51.6524 322.2035 0013677 121.2946 238.9909 15.62567589 3009
1996066B
1 24664U 96066B 96327.41277526 .58399191 12743-4 19260-3 0 190
2 24664 51.6425 45.7297 0017318 127.1554 233.1175 16.57786928 401
Hot Bird 2
1 24665U 96067A 96327.75000000 .00002618 73664-6 10000-3 0 62
2 24665 23.8873 196.7180 7311335 179.2354 352.6087 2.28438038 23
1996067B
1 24666U 96067B 96342.60935228 .00090635 46573-6 17571-2 0 225
2 24666 23.8783 189.6608 7283001 190.4778 135.6232 2.32653376 360
1996068B
1 24668U 96068B 96344.20088294 .00235841 20107-5 58756-3 0 133
2 24668 36.4034 318.3593 1805587 46.2930 327.3794 12.12533823 597
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:49 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!uunet!in3.uu.net!199.60.19.15!news.island.net!wandw-10
From: kwalker@qb.island.net (Ken Walker)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 96 03:54:47 GMT
Organization: Island Internet Inc. - (604) 753-2383
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip18.qb.island.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
I have not followed the development of the packet capable amateur satellites
but I believe there are some in operation. As a sometimes off shore sailor
and a radio amateur, I am asked by fellow sailors whether they should get a
ham licence and how effective it would be. I tell them about 20m ssb, about
hf packet and amtor but I also go on about how low earth store and forward
packet satellites will be available one day. But maybe they are now?
The ideal packet system for offshore use would allow the offshore sailing ham
to prepare a packet message and the software would determine when a bird is
overhead and send up the message and pick up any waiting mail. Are these
birds ready to do this? Is there software that would do it? Am I right that
these can be worked with small omni antennas?
I think they require dual band operation? Which bands? Hopefully they are
bands that can be worked with readily available dual band mobile rigs?
I have thought about this from time to time but I am not up to date on what is
available. Anyone want to try to update me??
Thanks.
73 de Ken 10-Dec-96 19:21
VE7KGW@VE7KGW.#NVI.BC.CAN.NOAM
kwalker@qb.island.net
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:50 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!news.idt.net!feed1.news.erols.com!worldnet.att.net!newsadm
From: wb4mle@worldnet.att.net (Eddie Seymour)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: QSL rts UB5EIE,UL7CY,UL7PL,UM8MM
Date: Sun, 08 Dec 1996 17:16:17 GMT
Organization: State of Confusion
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <32aaf4cb.12698932@netnews2.worldnet.att.net>
Reply-To: wb4mle@worldnet.att.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.146.67.150
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.339
Unable to confirm the following on AO-13
UB5EIE/UO5 - Tried several to Box 32, Kriwoj Rog
UL7CY via UL7CC - Tried 3 times
UL7PL via ?
Ul7T/UM8MM via ES1RA - Oleg did not have Vlad's UL7 logs
Would like to confirm these AO-13 qso's if anyone can offer any
suggestions or routes.
Eddie Seymour, WB4MLE
E-Mail wb4mle@worldnet.att.net
Packet wb4mle@wb4mle.#cenal.al.usa.noam
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:55 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.nl.innet.net!INnl.net!feed1.news.innet.be!INbe.net!news.be.innet.net!INbe.net!vvs.innet.be!steyaert
From: steyaert@vvs.innet.be (Christian Steyaert)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Radio Meteor Obs. Bull. Nov 1996: Leonids!
Date: Sat, 7 Dec 1996 13:56:09 GMT
Organization: V.V.S.
Lines: 617
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <steyaert.90.32A97778@vvs.innet.be>
NNTP-Posting-Host: vvs.innet.be
Keywords: forward scatter, FM radio, meteors, Leonids
X-Newsreader: Trumpet for Windows [Version 1.0 Rev A]
Radio Meteor Observation Bulletin No. 40 December 1996
1. FORWARD SCATTER METEOR OBSERVATIONS
Observing method: listening
Observer: E.P.Bus
Location: near Salamanca, Spain (5 26' W, 41 12' N)
Frequency: 87.9 MHz
Transmitter Location: Lousa, Portugal, 50 kW, distance 268 km
Antenna: Yagi, 3 elements, Azimuth 242 o (=WSW), elevation 36 o
Receiver: Bearcat UBC 177XLT Scanning Radio, sensitivity: 0.5 microvolt
Observing method: Listening
Leonids 1996
Long duration reflections >1 sec during one hour intervals
starting at 4h UT:
1996 UT
Nov 17 4h 5h 6h 7h 8h
# Refl 23 13 16 35 23
The most favourable antenna geometry for detecting Leonids is around
4h 30m UT. Unfavourable antenna geometry between 6h45m and 9h15m UT.
After correction for Observability Function (after Hines) the Leonids
showed the strongest activity since 1993. A small maximum was monitored
around 4h45m UT (Solar Longitude 235.16 degrees) and a high maximum
around 7h25m UT (Solar Longitude 235.29 degrees), shortly after that
the Earth passed the node of the orbit of comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle
(235.255 degrees). Previous maxima were monitored at Solar Longitudes
235.82 degrees in 1994 and 235.32 degrees in 1995. (All longitudes for
Epoch 2000).
Peter Bus / via Ton Schoenmaker
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Maurice De Meyere
Location: Deurle, Belgium (3 37' E, 51 00' N)
Frequency: 66.51 MHz
Transmitter locations (all stations of more than 10 kW):
66.35 MHz, Klaipeda, Lithuania 12 kW, 05h00-22h00
66.41 Siedlce Poland 39 04h57(Sun05h57)-02h00(Sat03h00)
66.47 Viesintos Lithuania 12 05h00-22h00
66.50 Sofia Bulgaria 10 24hrs
66.56 Poznan Poland 56 04h57(Sun05h57)-02h00(Sat03h00)
66.62 Budapest Hungary 100 24hrs
66.68 Valmiera Latvia 20 06h00-22h00
Antenna: crossed Yagi, 4 elements, astronomical azimuth 270 o (= East),
elevation 27 o
Antenna amplifier: 25 dB max level 90 dBmuV
Receiver: commercial, Progresson 447A, TESLA (Bratislava)
The receiver was calibrated with a Marconi TF2008 signal
generator. Sensitivity: 5 muV (modulation frequency
1000 Hz, frequency sweep 38 kHz) at (S+N)/N = 20 dB
Observing method: automated setup, 150 samples/second, 8 bit resolution.
[Time and details of all individual meteor reflections are stored
on file in the University of Ghent format (Prometeos), and are
available for further analysis. Reduction software for DOS and
Windows available].
November 1996
Leonids
Raw counts of reflections with a duration of at least 0.027 s
during one hour interval starting at UT:
Nov | UT
1996 | 21h 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
------+----------------------------------------------------------------------
1- 2 | 31 29 41 47 53 35 63 42 46 89 87
2- 3 | 12 18 15 17 19 28 28 29 30 25 31
3- 4 | 18 22 23 30 38 48 51 44 36 54 26
4- 5 | 7 19 14 34 39 40 41 23 37 34 36
5- 6 | 15 13 19 28 30 38 32 25 27 41 48
6- 7 |
7- 8 | 8 19 18 26 23 29 25 20 43 48 23
8- 9 | 6 13 23 27 33 21 29 25 29 44 38
9-10 |
10-11 | 9 12 14 17 15 18 18 30 24 27 26
11-12 |
12-13 | 10 10 9 11 5 12 8 13 19 29 36
13-14 | 8 15 20 29 33 59 35 48 54 50 41
14-15 | 7 11 29 38 38 33 65 41 48 79 49
15-16 | 9 14 15 16 25 18 19 35 57 147 172 108 161 46
16-17 | 25 23 48 106* 233* 199* 316* 393* 333* 313* 394* 364* 248* 143
17-18 | 15 22 29 23 42 43 47 69 60 66 61 45 44 45
18-19 | 9 18 18 35 24 66 26 42 44 59 68
19-20 | 25 26 16 31 32 39 36 43 53 58 48
20-21 | 11 16 17 26 30 27 29 54 38 34 37
21-22 | 19 42 24 35 31 37 43 36 25 25 21
22-23 | 14 25 35 33 56 55 45 30 49 54 57
23-24 | 12 17 14 31 42 49 45 33 32 25 45
24-25 | 11 18 35 40 38 38 40 40 35 45 36
25-26 | 17 24 39 34 24 39 57 42 49 62 39
26-27 | 18 27 20 28 42 26 37 27 26 43 23
27-28 | 20 6 27 31 37 46 30 28 29 37 17
28-29 | 17 29 52 54 57 64 81 46 40 38 49
29-30 | 14 32 43 51 54 33 39 46 35 36 46
30-01 | 15 16 37 22 39 37 32 36 39 52 83
------+----------------------------------------------------------------------
1996 | 21h 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10
Nov | UT
Notes:
. local time = UT + 1 hour
* intense Leonid activity during the morning of Nov 17.
The Leonid radiant rises at 22h30m, and sets at 14h UT.
Best forward scatter conditions for this setup between 7h and 8h UT.
Peak activity on Nov 17, 4h UT.
. Radio-amateur comments:
Johan, PE1LAU, Netherlands: "Leonids were very nice this time"
(Nov 17, 7h-11h UT). I heard only few pings (=short reflections), it
were every time bursts from 10 to 80 s at least!
At one moment I thought it was like Es signal".
Lasse, KP02, Finland: "what fun I had on Sunday morning (=Nov 17)...
Great signals between 3h43 UT and 4h05 UT".
Steffen, DD0VF, Dresden: "long burst on Nov 17, 3h 06 UT, 123 seconds...
In the late morning of Nov 17th the longest burst was about 2 minutes
with 4 different stations".
Maurice De Meyere
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Werfried Kuneth
Location: near Villach, Austria (13 37' E, 46 45 ' N)
Antenna: 3 element Yagi
Receiver: AR-8000 at 48.25000 MHz, SSB mode
Narrow passband filter, no preamplifier.
Transmitter: 250 kW TV video carrier in Madrid (Spain),
distance 1550 km, southwest.
Observing method: automatic setup using FFTDSP42t software by AF9Y to
record the audio signal. 20 channels of 2 Hz width are used for
meteor identification.
More details see <http://www.net4you.co.at/user/kuneth/info.html>
This month I will report reflections duration (instead of reflection
time percentage).
Raw counts (minimum reflection duration of 0.5 seconds)
Nov | UT
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
-----+----------------------------------------------------------------
11 | 78 106 119 69 198 136 142 126 141 159 138 132 115 99 64
12 | 82 87 103 100 144 162 175 139 128 135 124 131 103 101 79 71
13 | 102 94 124 103 75 170 175 130 140 157 131 128 55 33
14 | 67 69 73 74 78 189 142 125 154 167 131 123 113 106 40
15 | 113
16 | 191 160 46 39 93 29
17 | 190 239 271 226 265 241 305 207 197 254 212 172 152 101 72
18 | 120 98 130 119 157 247 269 188 186 194 169 87 90 89 70
19 | 55 148 162 105 144 103 63 90 52 58 66 43
20 | 77 77 92 96 103 116 88
21 | 70 81 84 101 119 198 204 173 169 186 155 125 95 115 77 58
22 | 144 100 150 107 137 215 204 171 168 162 159 124 131 128 69
-----+----------------------------------------------------------------
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
Nov | UT
Raw counts (minumum reflection duration of 3 seconds)
Nov | UT
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | 21 22 23
-----+--------------------------------------------------------------
1 | 7 5. 8 5 1 8 0. 6 5 3 10 5 10 6 5. 2. | 2. 1 4
2 | 3 9 2 4 7 15 11 9 9 6 6. 7. | 2. 2.
3 | 5 4. 0. 7 2 2 2. 2 1. 3. | 1 4 2
4 | 5. 4 6 3 1. 7 11 6 4 7 6 4 1 2 4 1. 2.| 6 1 5
5 | 3 4 6 3 7 9 20 6 4 13 7 2 5 2 3 2 | 3 6 3
6 | 2 6 3 8 9 3 9 3 5 0 1 | 5. 7 6
7 | 8 4 3 3 7 6 7 6 12 5 4 2 3 3 3 5 0.| 1 4 2
8 | 7 5 4 4 3 7 5 7 7 1. 0. 3. 3. 2. 9 2 1 | 2 2 4
9 |10 7 5 2 2 7 16 3 4 7 5 5 5 1 2 4 2 | 2 0 3
10 | 8 13 7 10 11 14 10 3. 4 8 1 | 6 2
11 | 9 9 12 2.10 10 5 5 6 5 3 11 8 2 2 4.| 5 4 6
12 | 5 6 3 5 3 7 12 7 5 9 5 3 2 3 2 3 2 | 7
13 |11 4 9 4 0. 6 9 4 2 11 4 12 4. 3. | 4 8
14 | 1 6 6 9. 4 14 5 7 9 4 7 7 5 9 1. | 5 7 6
15 | 5 |
16 | 17 8 3. 4. 1 2. | 4 4 8
17 |23 41 46 40 54 42 62 43 52 43 23 15 10 3 4 | 4 8 10
18 | 8 14 9 8 25 23 19 15 6 13 5 3 6 5 3 4 | 6 3
19 | 5. 6 8 3 9 3 6 10 3 3 3 4 0.| 1 4 3
20 | 7 5 7 4 5 4 2 | 0. 5 5
21 | 5 5 7 2 7 7 2 6 3 8 8 7 5 1 0 3 3.| 7 7
22 |12 10 4 4 7 6 11 5 10 5 9 5 7 5 2. |
23 | 4 6 21 11 8 3. 6 9 13 10 | 2. 9
24 | 8 7 6 9 4. 5 16 9 5 8. 1. | 6 4 7
25 | 4 6 4 7 3 9 9 4 13 15 9 5 5 5 4. 1. 3.| 5 8
26 | 4 9 6 2 8 4 9 7 15 7 6 9 3 6 5 6 | 4 6 6
27 | 4 8 8 9 10 6 7 4 7 6 5 7 2 5 4 1 2.| 4 6 0
28 | 3. 1. 2 5 6 11 5 10 6 11 8 6 8 10 3 4 4 | 4 6 6
29 | 5 5 7 4 9 10 8 4 3 11 12 1. 5 5 2 | 10 18 10
30 |11 15 10 7 4 13 15 5. 5 4 7 8 10 2. 5.| 0 5 7
-----+--------------------------------------------------------------
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | 21 22 23
Nov | UT
Raw counts (minumum reflection duration of 10 seconds)
Nov | UT
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | 21 22 23
-----+--------------------------------------------------------------
11 | 2 0 0 0. 3 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0.| 1 0 0
12 | 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 4 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 | 0
13 | 2 1 2 1 0. 2 2 1 0 2 1 2 1. 0. | 1 3
14 | 0 1 1 2. 1 6 2 0 2 0 1 2 1 1 0. | 0 0 0
15 | 0 |
16 | 7 1 0. 1. 0 0. | 0 0 2
17 | 8 14 22 21 21 20 23 22 22 15 10 4 2 0 0 | 1 0 0
18 | 3 2 0 2 9 7 7 7 1 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 | 0 0
19 | 1. 1 2 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 0.| 0 0 0
20 | 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 | 0. 1 1
21 | 2 0 1 0 1 4 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.| 0 2
22 | 1 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0. |
------+---------------------------------------------------------------
1996 | 0h 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | 21 22 23
Nov | UT
The Leonids showed up very well on November 17, and best in the 10 seconds
(the longest) counts.
Notes:
. a dot (.) after the number stands for a lower observation period: 20-40 min
.
. blank value means either few or no data available, interference,
power failure or transmitter shutdown.
. local time conversion: 1 hours ahead of UT (07h00 UT is 08h00 local)
. lots of thunderstorms on Nov. 15 and 16.
Werfried Kuneth
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Kimio Maegawa
Transmitter: 50 W CW 53.7500 MHz
Transmitter antenna: 2 element Cross Yagi 4dBi, zenith
Transmitting Location: Sabae city (136 11' E, 35 56' N)
Receiver: IC726 500 Hz BW SSB, sensitivity -150 dBm sensit
Receiver antenna: 3el Yagi 7 dBi (70 deg, SE direction) height 10 m
Receiving Location: Ohno city (136 53' E, 36 00' N)
Data processing : Receiver output is fed into DX2-66 MHz PC and analyzed by
AF9Y's FFTDSP42 software.
Then stored every 4.22 min automaticaly with GIF format.
Play back GIF files and count echoes manually by the doppler
shift rejecting tropo signal or airplane echo.
Hourly echo counts
A: all echoes
L1: long echoes (T > 2.5 s)
L2: long echoes (T > 15 s)
13 Nov 14 Nov 15 Nov 16 Nov 17 Nov
UT | A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2
----+-------------------------------------------------------
00h | 52 0 0 54 3 0 89 5 2 77 1 2 80 8 12
01 | 66 1 0 46 1 0 78 2 1 86 3 0 73 2 6
02 | 46 3 0 30 2 0 53 3 0 67 3 1 69 5 3
03 | 35 3 0 22 1 0 50 3 0 55 2 0 49 1 1
04 | 58 4 0 38 0 0 38 0 0 47 2 0 36 0 0
05 | 40 1 0 31 2 0 32 1 1 46 2 0 44 0 0
06 | 19 0 0 30 0 0 32 2 0 33 1 0 26 2 0
07 | 19 0 0 30 2 0 32 2 0 22 1 0 26 1 1
08 | 26 1 0 45 6 0 18 0 0 16 2 0 17 0 0
09 | 31 1 0 28 3 0 26 2 0 @19 @0 @0 20 1 0
10 | 44 2 0 26 1 0 25 1 0 16 0 0 28 2 0
11 | 46 1 0 36 0 0 44 5 1 36 1 0 @31 @2 @0
12 | 68 1 0 51 1 0 52 2 0 51 2 0 - - -
13 | 76 4 1 57 5 1 69 8 0 41 2 0 111 7 1
14 | 69 2 0 62 2 0 82 9 0 77 1 0 76 3 0
15 | 78 2 1 80 3 0 63 4 0 82 2 0 99 5 0
16 | 93 4 0 70 2 1 106 10 1 94 11 1 121 7 3
17 | 95 5 0 78 12 1 89 7 1 104 6 6 122 11 5
18 | 117 5 0 110 11 0 110 13 1 130 10 6 147 7 5
19 | 110 9 0 96 5 1 110 2 2 118 18 6 125 14 7
20 | @118@11 0 @89 @9 0 @97 @5 0 @122@12 @9 105 6 7
21 | @109@14 1 106 7 1 111 12 1 132 13 13
22 | 91 6 0 99 12 3 100 8 0 82 9 11
23 | 85 2 1 97 6 0 93 2 1 95 10 12
----+-------------------------------------------------------
UT | A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2 A L1 L2
13 Nov 14 Nov 15 Nov 16 Nov 17 Nov
Notes:
. @ means less than 60min.
. local time = JST = UT + 9 hours
. additional information is available at
Home Page http://www.tcp-ip.or.jp/~kaze/rmd.htm
Anonymous FTP ftp:rasc5.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/pub/nakamura/hro
Graph: 96leo_km.gif, Images: leo96boh.lzh
Kimio Maegawa
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Ton Schoenmaker
Location: Roden, Netherlands (6 26' E, 53 08' N)
Frequency: 72.11 MHz
Transmitter location:
Wroclaw, Poland, 130 kW, distance 756 km
Antenna: Horizontal Yagi, 5 elements, geographical azimuth
105 degrees (ESE), elevation 15 degrees
Receiver: Homemade convertor 65-67 MHz to 28-30 MHz + Barlow-Wadley
0-30 MHz receiver; total sensitivity 0.3 uV for 20 dB S/N
with a bandwidth of 3 kHz
Observing method: Servogor strip-chart recorder, 120 or 600 mm/h
Leonids (yes!) and Alpha-Monocerotids (no!) in November
The numbers below give the hourly percentage of total meteor reflection
time during a few nights around the Leonids and the Alpha-Monocerotids.
Only reflections longer than 10 seconds were taken into account. A broad
maximum of Leonids was observed between 01h and 09h UT on 17 November 1996,
but also the observability function (Hines, Steyaert) was most favourable
during that period.
During the above-horizon-period of the radiant of the Alpha-Monocerotids
no activity was measured on 20/21 November.
| November 1996
UT | 10-11 15-16 16-17 17-18 20-21
----+-----------------------------------------
22h | 0.3 1.7 7.5
23 | 0.0 14.0 3.9 1.0
00 | 0.6 0.0 26.2 12.1 1.5
01 | 1.0 1.1 40.0 4.2 0.6
02 | 1.8 1.0 35.0 6.9 1.7
03 | 0.8 2.2 58.5 4.2 2.9
04 | 0.4 6.8 56.0 6.4 4.0
05 | 2.8 4.9 60.3 6.7 2.8
06 | 1.4 16.5 * 6.5 1.1
07 | 2.2 * * 7.2 1.4
08 | 21.8 45.8 2.9 3.3
09 | 9.6 33.9 2.5 1.1
10 | 16.3 4.7
11 | 14.6
----+-----------------------------------------
UT | 10/11 15/16 16/17 17/18 20/21
| November 1996
* problems with pen of recorder
Ton Schoenmaker
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Chikara Shimoda
Location: Asahi, Nagano, Japan (137 51' E, 36 07' N)
Frequency: 81.4 MHz
Transmitter Location: FM-Japan 81.3 MHz, 10 kW, distance 180 km
Antenna: 5 element Yagi directed to the Zenith.
Receiver: AM-FM Tuner (TRIO KT-1100)
Observing method: Meteor echoes output from center-tuning meter were
recorded on a pen-recorder chart.
Nov | UT
1996 | 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 | *(1) **(2)
-----+-------------------------------------------------+-----------
1 | 17 19 25 21 17 13 25 39 23 29 29 27 | 18.7 28.7
2 | 10 24 22 19 17 10 22 18 34 25 22 | 18.4 21.8
3 | 18 15 23 15 15 17 18 21 21 23 20 27 | 17.2 21.7
4 | 17 15 22 13 22 15 18 19 24 21 26 22 | 17.3 21.7
5 | 23 26 26 26 22 15 20 18 24 21 25 26 | 23.0 22.3
6 | 13 22 21 22 14 25 28 23 20 22 21 23 | 19.5 22.8
7 | 8 15 14 | 12.3
8 | 24 15 24 23 24 29 28 23 26 | 21.0 25.5
9 | 8 24 19 18 12 24 23 30 17 18 29 28 | 17.5 24.2
10 | 12 21 14 16 19 14 22 | 16.0 22.0
11 | 28 23 15 20 13 21 19 18 27 31 23 | 19.8 23.2
12 | 17 22 13 20 12 15 24 15 19 20 21 29 | 16.5 21.3
13 | 17 15 19 20 15 23 21 18 33 25 22 20 | 18.2 23.2
14 | 17 16 16 16 14 23 21 21 25 17 29 24 | 17.0 22.8
15 | 14 17 25 16 17 15 16 22 18 27 29 27 | 17.3 23.2
16 | 13 25 21 14 20 30 26 24 30 23 36 44 | 20.5 30.5
17 | 22 27 25 17 16 24 35 34 37 27 40 35 | 21.8 34.7
18 | 19 14 17 18 22 19 29 26 34 18 31 29 | 18.2 27.8
19 | 11 23 8 17 14 16 20 18 20 23 34 18 | 14.8 22.2
20 | 18 22 20 13 17 13 24 21 28 32 14 18 | 17.2 22.8
21 | 17 18 18 10 17 22 13 21 21 24 20 23 | 17.0 20.3
22 | 9 18 21 15 16 19 19 31 25 21 21 26 | 16.3 23.8
23 | 13 15 16 13 14 19 21 18 18 19 18 20 | 15.0 19.0
24 | 13 11 19 13 21 22 15 27 20 21 19 | 16.5 17.0
25 | 14 11 9 9 11 16 21 18 22 | 11.7 20.3
26 | 10 13 16 19 18 21 27 21 22 33 22 15 | 16.2 23.3
27 | 16 18 21 17 24 14 20 19 29 19 24 19 | 18.3 21.7
28 | 15 20 17 17 22 21 14 31 29 24 26 31 | 18.7 25.8
29 | 14 13 26 16 16 21 20 28 23 21 27 26 | 17.7 24.2
30 | 8 18 13 12 16 18 14 26 28 24 21 11 | 14.2 20.7
-----+-------------------------------------------------+-----------
1996 | 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 | *(1) **(2)
Nov | UT
* (1) average hourly rate between 11-17 UT
**(2) average hourly rate between 17-23 UT
- local time = JST = UT + 9 hours
Chikara Shimoda
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Kazuhiro Suzuki
HRO (Radio Meteor Observation using HAM)
Location: Toyokawa Meteor Observatory (137.32 deg E, 34.81 deg N)
Shiinoki, Toyokawa-city, Aichi, 442, JAPAN
Transmitter: JA9BOH 53.7500 MHz, CW 50 W
Antenna: Dipole (height 7 m, to zenith)
Receiver: IC-575 (ICOM) LSB BW 2.5 kHz
Transmitter location: Sabae (in Fukui pref.), about 150 km
north north-west from receiving station.
Method of echo sampling: After image procedure was done by PC with FFT
software, echoes(>10 dB(S/N)) were counted.
Total echo rates
Nov | UT
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 1
4
------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
31- 1 | 44 73 67 45 50 48 44 54 47 52 32 26 34 25 22 24 20 18 13@17 21 26 28 3
7
1- 2 | 34 46 46 38 32 33 51 44 48 34 33 36 30 20 18 16 16 15 16 19@21 26 30 3
3
2- 3 | 35 54 43 56 45 31 33 37 37 38 40 32 26 31 21 25 15 14 15 19 17 30 27 3
5
3- 4 | 40 46 43 44 34 48 30 32 33 42 37 29 26 22 18 20 16 15 16 22 25 39 34 4
9
4- 5 | 37 76 65 71 65 62 54 50 48 47 48 38 35 25 24 24 16 19 14@17 26 37 36 4
5
5- 6 | 59 68 66 54 54 63 51 50 66 54 54 36 37 26 24 28 19 14 21@29@27 35 31 2
6
6- 7 | 46 53 61 61 59 53 51 59 47 47 34 35 30 34 27 21 18 23 20 16@20 38 36 4
4
7- 8 | 45 57 58 64 47 51 56@60 49 55 37 44 35 33 30 19 25 21 19 21 24 41 33@3
4
8- 9 | 54 58 62 59 62 50 66 53 44 45 42 34 29 25@25 18 19 16 17 19 28 32 37 3
1
9-10 | 51 50 53 48 45 39 43 53 36 32 45 30 31 23@21@18 18 15 13 18 19 28 28 3
7
10-11 | 36 44 55 44 47 41 36 46 45 40 43 29 26 20 16 21 14 15 16@21@21 29 27 2
4
11-12 | 33 39 37 39 32 35 33 32 26 25 23 20 21 17 18 13 14 14 13@17@19 31 32 3
1
12-13 | 26 41 39 33 34 36 37 42 45 39 34 27 24 27 27 16 14 1 416@21@17 27 29 3
2
13-14 | 28 36 37 33 35 31 37 38 28 28 21 20 23 21 20 17 13 16 15@18 21 28 32 2
9
14-15 | 41 49 51 56 52 44 38 32 33 33 27 25 23 23 18 15 14 13 13@14 19 28 27 3
5
15-16 | 34 46 48 60 35 46 41 30 37 29 29 19 25 17 15 18 14 16 14 16@21 25 2
5
16-17 | 25 41 46 38 41 34 41 50 41 47 25 28 31 21 13 14 15 12 12@13@15 20 24 2
2
17-18 | 25 32 42 32 30 31 32 28 34 27 34 28 19 25 21 18 17 12 13@15@17 23 25 1
8
18-19 | 20 30 27 34 44 31 32 30 29 29 28 28 16 15 20 14 12 13 12@11@13 28 37 3
3
19-20 | 39 38 46 34 40 53 36 39 22 34 24 23 24 17 16 16 15 15 15@14@21 28 31 4
0
20-21 | 24 39 52 41 45 39 49 46 37 34 31 29 23 16 18 14 17 14 17 16@28 23 32 2
5
21-22 | 28 36 31 42 31 38 50 35 39 25 24 24 24 19 18 16 13 17 13 16@20 24 35 3
3
22-23 | 28 47 57 50 50 36 42 32 39 34 25 35 24 22 23 21 17 17 14@19@23 32 33 2
8
23-24 | 40 31 36 35 39 32 38 32 39 42 35 30 30 23 24 18 17 14 16@18@19 35 26 4
4
24-25 | 33 49 56 60 47 54 42 40 43 33 28 33 27 19 17 20 16 17 14@21@20 26 32 3
8
25-26 | 39 58 45 56 58 59 66 48 44 51 30 36 27 20 20 16 16 13 16@18@19 26 41 4
4
26-27 | 38 53 56 57 46 38 33 47 45 33 35 38 25 20 21 19 13 15 13@15 18 22 25 3
9
27-28 | 35 51 56 44 59 53 57 42 45 38 43 21 28 23 22 23 19 11 14@15@18 31 32 4
8
28-29 | 42 44 66 60 57 46 51 56 45 44 35 31 23 23 28 15 14 13 17 17@18 26 26 2
8
29-30 | 44 49 75 75 74 54 55 49 61 41 38 33 36 32 27 30 26 16 15@17 22 27 26 3
6
------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 1
4
Nov | UT
Hourly rate of long (> 20 s) echoes
Nov | UT
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 1
4
------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
6- 7 | 1 1
7- 8 | 1 1 1
8- 9 | 1 1 3 1
9-10 | 1 1 1 1
10-11 | 1 1
11-12 | 1 2 1
12-13 | 1 2 1
13-14 | 2 1
14-15 | 2 1 2 2 3 1 2 1
15-16 | 1 1 1 2 1 0 0 1 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
16-17 | 0 1 7 4 5 3 8 11 12 14 8 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
17-18 | 1 1 2 3 0 1 5 1 3 5 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
18-19 | 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
19-20 | 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
20-21 | 1 1 1 1
21-22 | 1 1 2 1
22-23 | 1 1 1
23-24 | 1 1
24-25 | 1 1
25-26 | 1 1 1
26-27 | 1 1
27-28 | 1 1 1 3 1
28-29 | 1 1 2 2 1
29-30 | 2 1 1 1
------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 1
4
Nov | UT
Dead time (in 0.1 minute) of observation due to persistant meteor echo
.
For example, 116 means 11.6 minutes.
All dead times observed zero for 04h - 14h UT.
Nov | UT
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03
------+-------------------------------------------
16-17 | 01 11 40 26 34 23 80 116 124 112 77 44 21
17-18 | 07 07 13 22 0 07 51 03 19 30 25 03 0
------+-------------------------------------------
1996 | 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 00 01 02 03
Nov | UT
Notes:
. local time = JST = UT + 9 hours.
@ means converted hourly rate.
Kazuhiro Suzuki
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Observer: Ilkka Yrjola
Location: Finland (26 35' E, 60 54' N)
Frequency: 87.360 MHz
Receiver: Salora SRP-22 modified, narrow band FM (B=15 kHz).
detected signal level >-122 dBm.
FM detection, no pulse noise rejection required.
Antenna: 2 element Yagi with 4 dBd gain to SW, azimuth: 45 o (SW)
Data sampling system: threshold triggering, sampling rate 64 ms.
Computer logs total hourly elapsed reflection time, number of
threshold crossings for the hour, the longest time the signal was
continuously above detection level for the hour.
Data stored in the Compact MS-Soft format. Software for viewing available
from FTP.FUNET.FI pub/ham/vhf-work/mssoft43.zip (new version!)
Counts in one hour intervals starting at:
| 1996
UT | 16 Nov 17 Nov 18 Nov 19 Nov
----+-----------------------------------
0 | 322 775* 347 282
1 | 359 1025* 376 306
2 | 321 1252* 496 311
3 | 342 1216* 387 302
4 | 348 1423* 415 282
5 | 503 1355* 362 323
6 | 383 1684* 283 331
7 | 325 1391* 381 361
8 | 455 1425* 279 245
9 | 411 677* 313 308
10 | 305 361 248 266
11 | 422 288 229 275
12 | 300 439 223 246
13 | 184 432 193 194
14 | 172 208 228 187
15 | 184 155 188 157
16 | 201 167 182 188
17 | 201 215 194 192
18 | 199 224 210 243
19 | 275 229 246 248
20 | 275 206 275 279
21 | 272 250 288 274
22 | 338 279 304 277
23 | 391* 329 279 295
----+-----------------------------------
UT | 16 Nov 17 Nov 18 Nov 19 Nov
| 1996
* very strong Leonid activity during the morning of Nov 17.
Ilkka Yrjola / via M. De Meyere
2. ABOUT THE RMOB
The RMOB is an independent initiative of some workers in the field of radio
meteor scatter observations and data reduction. It started in August 1993
in order to spread rapidly the Perseid results via E-mail. Since then, it
has appeared monthly, and it has gradually been expanded. In regularly
publishing summaries of observations, potential radio observers are kept
up to date of existing installations, possibilities and limitations of radio
meteor observations. In the long run, there should be sufficient observing
stations to cover the whole globe, allowing to detect stream outbursts which
may remain unnoticed visually.
RMOB contains typically: summaries of recent observations, equipment data,
first results of stream activity by radio methods, relations between radio
and optical meteors, references to other publications in the field of meteor
astronomy and radio scatter techniques, announcements of meetings, short
questions and answers, non-commercial (second hand) sale of radio equipment,
available software.
Contributors are mentioned, and interested persons are asked to contact them
directly.
RMOB can be copied freely in unabridged and unmodified form. Extracts should
indicate the source (Radio Meteor Obs Bulletin, month and year).
If you want to subscribe (or un-subscribe) to the E-mail distribution list,
please send a message to C. Steyaert.
Those not having access to E-mail can obtain a printed copy free of charge
from J. Van Wassenhove (current or back-issues).
3. CONTRIB
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:56 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!newsgate.duke.edu!agate!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-feed2.bbnplanet.com!sol.caps.maine.edu!default
From: baack@maine.edu (Jason Baack)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 96 13:22:35 GMT
Organization: University of Maine System
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: conan.umecut.maine.edu
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
Greetings all,
this post is a call for information. I am trying to setup a satellite station
for my grandfather, (a 78 YO ham..kb2wfn) and I figured that you all could
help me.
What equipment are you all using for up / downlink radios..
, antennas? The operating budget is around $600.00 but if your system cost
more than that feel free to tell me about it. I just wanted to get an idea of
what everyone was using.
73's Jason N1RWY
UP: Kenwood TR9130 8 watts 5/8 colinear // 3ele beam both @ 15 feet.
DN: Realistic HTX-100 dipole @ 17 feet
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:57 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.bc.net!torn!nott!cunews!freenet-news.carleton.ca!FreeNet.Carleton.CA!ae517
From: ae517@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Russ Renaud)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: 10 Dec 1996 18:25:23 GMT
Organization: The National Capital FreeNet
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <58k9uj$980@freenet-news.carleton.ca>
References: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu>
Reply-To: ae517@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Russ Renaud)
NNTP-Posting-Host: freenet2.carleton.ca
X-Given-Sender: ae517@freenet2.carleton.ca (Russ Renaud)
Jason Baack (baack@maine.edu) writes:
> Greetings all,
> this post is a call for information. I am trying to setup a satellite stati
on
> for my grandfather, (a 78 YO ham..kb2wfn) and I figured that you all could
> help me.
> What equipment are you all using for up / downlink radios..
> , antennas? The operating budget is around $600.00 but if your system cost
> more than that feel free to tell me about it. I just wanted to get an idea
of
> what everyone was using.
>
> 73's Jason N1RWY
>
> UP: Kenwood TR9130 8 watts 5/8 colinear // 3ele beam both @ 15 fee
t.
> DN: Realistic HTX-100 dipole @ 17 fee
t
>
I've used a IC251A with 10 watts into a Jpole, and a beat-up Undien 2510
fed with a 100 foot long dipole. No problem working ssb or CW on RS-10,
CW only on RS15.
When I added a Hamtronics downconverter for 70cm, I could work FO-20
quite often as well.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:58 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!hunter.premier.net!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!uwm.edu!rutgers!faatcrl.faa.gov!usenet
From: Jeff Griffin <griffinj@admin.tc.faa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: 11 Dec 1996 14:37:27 GMT
Organization: FAA Technical Center, Pomona, NJ
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <58mgv7$k41@faatcrl.faa.gov>
References: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 155.178.52.138
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 32bit)
For RS-10/11 ssb I,m using a Yaesu ft726r up with 15 to
160watts with a 7db gain 2m vertical. Dowm I'm using an Icom
706 with a homebrew 1/4 wave 10m wire vertical. RS-15 same
setup no contacts yet. Seems to be alot of fading in and out,
might need a cicular polarized antenna system ?
73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:58 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!news.idt.net!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!portc02.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: cathrynm@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Satellites for $2000?
Date: 8 Dec 1996 09:54:11 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <19961208095400.EAA07586@ladder01.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
For this year, I've allocated about $2000 to spend on ham radio stuff. I
think I'd like to get involved with ham satellites in some way, and am
wondering if there's any way to get in for the first $2000, and have stuff
that'll still be useful for me later if I decide to go for a more complete
station later. I can spend more later if I really get into this, but I
want to limit the damage for now.
Currently, I have a pretty average ham setup. An old IC730 HF transceiver
that still works a PK232 and an old 2 Meter FM radio that I use for
packet. I have no tower, but do have a house with a small yard, and can
get a tower up if I need to. I own many PC's of various speed, so I don't
need to spend any money for more computer stuff -- aside from ham radio
stuff.
I'm interested both in packet and voice, I think, and would prefer some
kind of setup where I could work both. So, what do you guys think?
What's the best way to do this that gives me the most operating time on
hamsats per dollar?
reply here or to cathrynm@aol.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:37:59 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!news.idt.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.mindspring.com!usenet
From: kb4qzh@pipeline.com (Fred Moeves)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Trackbox
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 02:43:47 GMT
Organization: MindSpring Enterprises, Inc.
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <58045d$b1l@camel4.mindspring.com>
Reply-To: kb4qzh@pipeline.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip178.cincinnati3.oh.interramp.com
X-Server-Date: 3 Dec 1996 02:43:57 GMT
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Hello All,
I am looking for some help with getting the mic click to work with the
Yaesu FT-726R and the Trakbox. I am using the AEA DSP-2232.
Thanks and 73 Fred KB4QZH
73 Fred KB4QZH
kb4qzh@pipeline.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:00 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!fpmbh.com!iag.net!newspump.sol.net!mindspring!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!news
From: "Mitch, W4OA" <w4oa@vibroplex.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Trackbox
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 19:53:06 -0600
Organization: The Vibroplex Co., Inc.
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <32A4D982.64E7135@vibroplex.com>
References: <58045d$b1l@camel4.mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc002051.concentric.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (X11; U; Linux 2.0.23 i586)
i have a trakbox for sale... email or call if interested...
mitch
--
Felton "Mitch" Mitchell, W4OA w4oa@vibroplex.com
The Vibroplex Co., Inc., 11 Midtown Park, E., Mobile, AL 36606-4141
800-840-8873 orders, 334-478-8873 info, 334-476-0465 FAX
Visit our web site at - http://www.vibroplex.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:01 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!howland.erols.net!news.nacamar.de!news.ecrc.de!news00.btx.dtag.de!not-for-mail
From: Guenter.Stautz@t-online.de (gs)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Trackbox
Date: 7 Dec 1996 22:49:14 GMT
Organization: Telekom Online Internet Gateway
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <58cs9a$caj@news01.btx.dtag.de>
References: <58045d$b1l@camel4.mindspring.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Sender: 081377394-0001@t-online.de (Guenter Stautz)
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Win16; I)
Fred Moeves wrote:
>
> Hello All,
> I am looking for some help with getting the mic click to work with the
> Yaesu FT-726R and the Trakbox. I am using the AEA DSP-2232.
> Thanks and 73 Fred KB4QZH
>
> 73 Fred KB4QZH
> kb4qzh@pipeline.com
Hi Fred,
I have a TrakBox, but do not yet use MicClick, because I've just
finished
work on that box. (and still have some problems with it-> no 1296.300Mhz
or so switching via CAT on my FT736R ! hi).
But _you_ need the discriminator voltage of your radio or modem
to let it happen(CN12 pin 4)( 0 Volt to 5 Volt and 2.5 in centered
position) ,and at least for the FT736R are pull-up resistors for the UP
and DOWN-lines required.
If this doesn't help, you know at least, that others are also deep in
Murphy's law results.
73 Guenter DK7KV
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:02 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
From: "Paul E. Traufler" <paul.traufler@pobox.tbe.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TRAKSAT 4.00
Date: 4 Dec 1996 20:03:32 GMT
Organization: TBE
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <01bbe21e$82424ce0$0d17a58c@spider.tbe.com.140.165.2.99>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 140.165.23.13
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
TRAKSAT 4.00 is in BETA test now. This version is a fully protected mode
with great new graphics and features. Take a look for your self!
Home Page
http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
Paul Traufler
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:03 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: TRAKSAT 4.00
Date: 6 Dec 1996 20:40:50 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <58a0ci$lqr@tilde.csc.ti.com>
References: <01bbe21e$82424ce0$0d17a58c@spider.tbe.com.140.165.2.99>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 172.24.176.243
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
. Take a look for your self!
>
>Home Page
>http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
>
>Paul Traufler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paul, could there be an error here? Netscape says URL doesn't exist.
Ken K5MBV
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:04 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!206.124.68.65!newsfeed.gte.net!usenet
From: Clyde Young <ceyoung@gte.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: TRAKSAT 4.00
Date: Sat, 07 Dec 1996 04:03:28 -0800
Organization: GTE Intelligent Network Services, GTE INS
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <32A95D10.4E15@gte.net>
References: <01bbe21e$82424ce0$0d17a58c@spider.tbe.com.140.165.2.99> <58a0ci$lqr@tilde.csc.ti.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dfw70186.gte.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01E-GTE (Win95; I; 16bit)
Ken Durham wrote:
>
> . Take a look for your self!
> >
> >Home Page
> >http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
> >
> >Paul Traufler
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Paul, could there be an error here? Netscape says URL doesn't exist.
> Ken K5MBV
What version of Netscape are you using 2.01E finds just fine.
KF5QU
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:04 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.idt.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in3.uu.net!206.149.24.18!excalibur.flash.net!not-for-mail
From: mbv@flash.net (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: TRAKSAT 4.00
Date: 8 Dec 1996 16:48:10 GMT
Organization: Flashnet Communications, http://www.flash.net
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <58erga$h7l$1@excalibur.flash.net>
References: <01bbe21e$82424ce0$0d17a58c@spider.tbe.com.140.165.2.99> <58a0ci$lqr@tilde.csc.ti.com> <32A95D10.4E15@gte.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ipm5-136.flash.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
In article <32A95D10.4E15@gte.net>, ceyoung@gte.net says...
>
>Ken Durham wrote:
>>
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>> Paul, could there be an error here? Netscape says URL doesn't exist.
>> Ken K5MBV
>
>
>What version of Netscape are you using 2.01E finds just fine.
>
>KF5QU
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sorry for any confusion, my Netscape 3.0 hiccupped or something, cause
it finds the page OK now. I tried about 3 times before posting. Later
it worked fine......nevermind.... :) BTW, *great* looking program.
Ken K5MBV
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:05 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!nntp.coast.net!howland.erols.net!swrinde!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: KC8DZH@aol.COM
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: unsub kc8dzh@aol.com ham-space
Date: 2 Dec 96 10:28:55 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <961202052854_1554020509@emout16.mail.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mail.ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
unsub kc8dzh@aol.com ham-space
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:06 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news1.bellglobal.com!freenet-news.carleton.ca!cunews!usenet
From: Keith MacDonald <kmacdona@chat.carleton.ca>
Newsgroups: alt.games.descent,comp.lang.java.programmer,comp.lang.javascript,comp.software.year-2000,gac.physics.astronomy,rec.aviation.aerobatics,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.biology,sci.physics
Subject: Re: VERY IMPORTANT!! PLEASE READ THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 20:59:03 -0500
Organization: Carleton University
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32A4DAE7.38C0@chat.carleton.ca>
References: <01bbdd81$59290200$c94d22cf@jaclen.connect.ab.ca> <jayfar-ya023480002811961944100001@netnews>
Reply-To: kmacdona@chat.carleton.ca
NNTP-Posting-Host: wabakimi.carleton.ca
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
NNTP-Posting-User: kmacdona
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win95; I)
To: Jay Farrell <jayfar@netaxs.com>
Xref: news1.epix.net alt.games.descent:59527 comp.lang.java.programmer:21519 comp.lang.javascript:21701 comp.software.year-2000:788 gac.physics.astronomy:130 rec.aviation.aerobatics:809 rec.radio.amateur.space:9014 sci.physics:229909
Jay Farrell wrote:
>
> In article <01bbdd81$59290200$c94d22cf@jaclen.connect.ab.ca>, "Intrepid"
> <chrisb@connect.ab.ca> wrote:
>
> | This is not a joke. Serious business, guys. Please read and take
> | some action.
> |
> | >>>>A group of NEO-NAZIS are trying to form a newsgroup on Usenet called
> | >>>>"rec.music.white-power", so that they can get their message of hate ou
t
> | >>>>to young people using the Internet. Newsgroups are public discussions
>
> It may as well be a joke. The vote *was* held _many months ago_ and the
> proposed newsgroup was defeated.
>
> Cheers,
> Jayfar
Jay, this gives me the oportunity to ask a question I've wanted an
answer to for a while. If an NG about racism was defeated, how were the
pedophilia & binaries.teen.sex(or whatever it's called) & like groups
allowed to come into being. My first thought was that they were
originally intended f/discussion, but then became overridden
w/pedophiles. This scenario, though, doesn't explain the binary NGs
that feature child/teen sex.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:07 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!news
From: order@commonwealth.net (Steve)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: web site
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 15:35:21 GMT
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Lines: 2
Message-ID: <5851s2$fv0@herald.concentric.net>
Reply-To: order@commonwealth.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc80625.concentric.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
http://www.commonwealth.net/rockets
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:08 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-6.sprintlink.net!southwind.net!symbios.com!csn!nntp-xfer-2.csn.net!csn!nntp-xfer-1.csn.net!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in2.uu.net!151.99.250.2!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!usenet
From: rmander@mbox.4net.it
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: What is the best cable ?
Date: Mon, 02 Dec 1996 20:14:16 GMT
Organization: Centro Servizi Interbusiness
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <57vdij$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: fe-d-04.4net.it
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Hello all,
I am thinking of buying some coaxial cable for a line 20 mt. long at
430 Mhz.I have the problem that the cable must go inside a tube to
reach the roof.At a certain point the tube makes an angle that so far
hasn't brought me problems with RG213 cable .I have seen that Marlow
50/20 has the same external dimension of RG213 but I also know that
the bending curve may be different.Is 50/20 really suitable for a line
like that and in case, will its bending curve allow me to fit it
properly into the tube that goes to the roof ?
Thanks in advance
73 IK4JQW, Rob
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!cs.utexas.edu!news.ti.com!usenet
From: mbv@ti.com (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: What is the best cable ?
Date: 6 Dec 1996 16:59:00 GMT
Organization: Texas Instruments
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <589jck$c2f@tilde.csc.ti.com>
References: <57vdij$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 172.24.176.243
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
In article <57vdij$84@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>, rmander@mbox.4net.it
says...
>
>Hello all,
>I am thinking of buying some coaxial cable for a line 20 mt. long at
>430 Mhz.I have the problem that the cable must go inside a tube to
>reach the roof.At a certain point the tube makes an angle that so far
>hasn't brought me problems with RG213 cable .I have seen that Marlow
>50/20 has the same external dimension of RG213 but I also know that
>the bending curve may be different.Is 50/20 really suitable for a line
>like that and in case, will its bending curve allow me to fit it
>properly into the tube that goes to the roof ?
>Thanks in advance
>73 IK4JQW, Rob
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bob, at this length and freq, you probably need to use
a coax that won't go thru the pipe. At least 1/2" Heliax
for 430MHZ and 20m. consider another route.
Ken K5MBV
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!portc02.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: phavorite@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: whats the best tracker
Date: 6 Dec 1996 15:32:30 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <19961206153200.KAA21833@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <329CBD9C.2ADB@telis.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
I use PC Track. Its DOS based but I like it. Download it anywhere.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:10 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!uwm.edu!rutgers!faatcrl.faa.gov!Jeff Griffin
From: nobody@nowhere
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Where is MIR?
Date: Sun, 08 Dec 96 00:56:03 GMT
Organization: FAA Technical Center, Pomona, NJ
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 155.178.253.64
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
Hello everyone. Does anyone know what happened to MIR ?
73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:11 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!southwind.net!symbios.com!csn!nntp-xfer-2.csn.net!csn!nntp-xfer-1.csn.net!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.wco.com!news
From: steve <kd6fyk@wco.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Where is MIR?
Date: Sun, 08 Dec 1996 16:14:47 -0800
Organization: redheads inc.
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <32AB59F7.6895@wco.com>
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: imbrium75.wco.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
nobody@nowhere wrote:
>
> Hello everyone. Does anyone know what happened to MIR ?
> 73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
>
jeff,i am still working mir uhf but havent heard vhf for 8 days.
i heard a rumor they are thinking of moving up a little from 145.800.
73 steve
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:12 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!thomsona
From: thomsona@netcom.com (Allen Thomson)
Subject: Re: Where is MIR?
Message-ID: <thomsonaE23w0E.86v@netcom.com>
Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
Date: Sun, 8 Dec 1996 17:45:50 GMT
Lines: 16
Sender: thomsona@netcom17.netcom.com
In article <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov> nobody@nowhere writes:
>Hello everyone. Does anyone know what happened to MIR ?
>73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
Sad to say, it's been abducted by the aliens in the giant spaceship
accompanying comet Hale-Bopp.
(Just kidding. It's still going around the world, somewhat
pointlessly, with two Russians and an American aboard. Check
ftp://kilroy.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/space/elements/molczan/new_molc.Z
for recent orbital elements if you want to look for yourself.)
BTW, it's Mir, a noun, not MIR, an acronym.
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:13 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!blackbush.xlink.net!fu-berlin.de!news-ber1.dfn.de!news-han1.dfn.de!news-koe1.dfn.de!news.ruhr-uni-bochum.de!news.uni-stuttgart.de!rpool5.rus.uni-stuttgart.de!lrt20892
From: Klaus Lutsch <lrt20892@rpool5.rus.uni-stuttgart.de>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Where is MIR?
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 1996 09:12:38 +0100
Organization: Comp.Center (RUS), U of Stuttgart, FRG
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <Pine.A32.3.94.961209091044.19668A-100000@rpool5.rus.uni-stuttgart.de>
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: rpool5.rus.uni-stuttgart.de
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
To: nobody@nowhere
In-Reply-To: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
On Sun, 8 Dec 1996 nobody@nowhere wrote:
> Hello everyone. Does anyone know what happened to MIR ?
> 73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
>
>
>
2m antenna was acidently damaged in the last EVA of Korzun ..
will take some time to find a repacement .. many planned schollcontacts
will suffer from that.
73's de Klaus, dl8ser
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:14 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-feed4.bbnplanet.com!udel-eecis!faatcrl.faa.gov!usenet
From: Jeff Griffin <griffinj@admin.tc.faa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Where is MIR?
Date: 9 Dec 1996 19:58:05 GMT
Organization: FAA Technical Center, Pomona, NJ
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <58hr0d$74a@faatcrl.faa.gov>
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 155.178.52.138
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 32bit)
Thanks for the replys guys. Lets hope they get a new antenna on
the next re-supply. I also know mir means peace in Russian. I
should know better then to make a typo in a newsgroup. Don't
you think we should flame Klass for his misspelling ? Let me
know its very important, as I didn't know this post also went
to rec.amateur.english.
73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:15 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.wco.com!news
From: steve <kd6fyk@wco.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Where is MIR? update
Date: Sun, 08 Dec 1996 16:25:18 -0800
Organization: redheads inc.
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <32AB5C6E.5D2@wco.com>
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov> <32AB59F7.6895@wco.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: imbrium75.wco.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
steve wrote:
>
> nobody@nowhere wrote:
> >
> > Hello everyone. Does anyone know what happened to MIR ?
> > 73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
> >
>
> jeff,i am still working mir uhf but havent heard vhf for 8 days.
>
> i heard a rumor they are thinking of moving up a little from 145.800.
>
> 73 steve
...- ...- ...-
just got a message from amsat bb. 2 meter antenna has been damaged.
73 steve
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:16 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!news.he.net!news.dra.com!feed1.news.erols.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in2.uu.net!192.107.41.5!iglou!news
From: Charlie Rubenstein <rubenc@iglou.com>
Subject: Re: Where is MIR? update
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: dp1-005.ppp.iglou.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
X-Nntp-Posting-User: [unauthenticated]
Message-ID: <32ACA6B4.F66@iglou.com>
Sender: news@iglou.com (News Administrator)
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Cc: news.iglou.com
Organization: IgLou Internet Services (1-800-436-4456)
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov> <32AB59F7.6895@wco.com> <32AB5C6E.5D2@wco.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 1996 23:54:28 GMT
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; I)
Lines: 8
> >
> > jeff,i am still working mir uhf but havent heard vhf for 8 days.
> >
> >
> > 73 steve
>
Could someone post the freqs in use VHF and UHF on Mir?
From amsoft@epix.net Wed Dec 11 20:38:16 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!news.sgi.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.mindspring.com!mindspring!uunet!in2.uu.net!208.195.156.10!news.walltech.com!hsnx.wco.com!news.wco.com!news
From: steve <kd6fyk@wco.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Where is MIR? update
Date: Tue, 10 Dec 1996 00:10:54 -0800
Organization: redheads inc.
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <32AD1B0E.27A6@wco.com>
References: <58dl5c$34o@faatcrl.faa.gov> <32AB59F7.6895@wco.com> <32AB5C6E.5D2@wco.com> <32ACA6B4.F66@iglou.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: venus59.wco.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
Charlie Rubenstein wrote:
>
> > >
> > > jeff,i am still working mir uhf but havent heard vhf for 8 days.
> > >
> > >
> > > 73 steve
> >
>
> Could someone post the freqs in use VHF and UHF on Mir?
charlie,437.950 down 435.750up 141.3 pl
145.200down 145.800up voice
145.800 packet simplex
73 steve
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:53 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!nntp.coast.net!harbinger.cc.monash.edu.au!news.cs.su.oz.au!metro!metro!news
From: ptitze@mail.usyd.edu.au (Paul Titze, VK2THN/HACK.AU.)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space,aus.radio.packet,rec.radio.amateur.misc
Subject: -= VK2THN HTTP URL update =-
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 1996 11:12:48 GMT
Organization: Sydney University
Lines: 20
Distribution: inet
Message-ID: <32b922ec.896372@news.usyd.edu.au>
Reply-To: ptitze@mail.usyd.edu.au
NNTP-Posting-Host: modem-a-201.mp.usyd.edu.au
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.space:9171 rec.radio.amateur.misc:121093
Citizens of the planet Earth,
As of the 1st of January 1997, my old HTTP URL will be invalid.
The new URL to my homepage, which is now effective is as follows:
http://www-personal.usyd.edu.au/~ptitze/vk2thn.htm
Please update your links.
Paul, VK2THN/HACK.AU.
Quote of the Day,
Picard: Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the
Starship Enterprise. Its continuing mission: to explore strange new
worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where
no one has gone before.
--"Encounter At Farpoint", Stardate 41456.8
http://www-personal.usyd.edu.au/~ptitze/sig.txt
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:54 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!ns.nwark.com!news
From: Murray Harris <mth2@nwark.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: 821H vs. Ft-736R
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 21:03:52 -0600
Organization: Interface Computer Center
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port40.nwark.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
If you were going to buy one of these rigs, which one would it be?
I would appreciate your comments and thoughts.
73, Murray
W5XH
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:54 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sgi.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!btnet!btnet-feed2!news.compulink.co.uk!cix.compulink.co.uk!usenet
From: oddjob@cix.compulink.co.uk ("Stephen Walters")
Subject: Re: 821H vs. Ft-736R
Message-ID: <E2EJ65.A3w@cix.compulink.co.uk>
Organization: Compulink Information eXchange
References: <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com>
Date: Sat, 14 Dec 1996 11:42:05 GMT
X-News-Software: Ameol32
Lines: 12
Go for the 821h, more power, better RX, smaller...I have a 736 and
would/am happily sell it to buy a 821h. Mine has a 6m module.. :¼)
The 820 and 821 have dual RX so you can rx on 70cm and tx on 2m or vica
versa...
I just wish the 821h had 23 cms too.
PS Tel 0956-544202
Steve G7VFY
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:56 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!204.137.200.41!news.cyberg8t.com!host13.cyberg8t.com!houghton
From: Bob Houghton <houghton@cyberg8t.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 821H vs. Ft-736R
Date: 14 Dec 1996 15:55:15 GMT
Organization: Cyberg8t Internet Services, Inc.
Lines: 11
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <58uil4$54$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>
References: <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: host13.cyberg8t.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Newsreader: Nuntius 2.0.4_68K
X-XXMessage-ID: <AED80CD37901F748@host13.cyberg8t.com>
X-XXDate: Sat, 14 Dec 1996 15:50:43 GMT
I have the same question. I am specifically interested in seeing any
reviews of the 821H. A few years ago, I almost bought an 820H then I read
James Miller's review that pointed out all the design problems with that
radio (for satellite use). The 821H is supposed to have addressed those
problems but I'd be hesitant until I've heard otherwise.
I've been waiting for Yaesu to come out with a next generation 736R (with
ports for 9600 baud and maybe discriminator output for doppler correction
while using FM) but I think I'll have to wait some more.
Bob
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:56 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!news
From: kc5egg@ix.netcom.com(Gerald Schmitt )
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 821H vs. Ft-736R
Date: 14 Dec 1996 18:00:26 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <58upvq$2r7@sjx-ixn4.ix.netcom.com>
References: <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: sfe-nm1-27.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Sat Dec 14 10:00:26 AM PST 1996
In <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com> Murray Harris <mth2@nwark.com> writes:
>
>If you were going to buy one of these rigs, which one would it be?
>I would appreciate your comments and thoughts.
>73, Murray
>W5XH
The FT-736 is the work horse of the satellite world. It is a bit dated
and needs a mod to do 9600 baud. The support both software and hardware
are the most extensive for availabe radio. The 736 will accept two
additional bands modules so when P3D goes up you can use the 1296
uplink without a transverter. Yaesu modified my 736 for 9600 without
charge. It is a larger rig than the 821 but for a base station offers
more. Drop me an email if I can help more.
73 Jerry
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:58 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.abraxis.com!postmaster@abraxis.com
From: alexevon@abraxis.com (Alex Evonosky)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: 821H vs. Ft-736R
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 03:58:52 GMT
Organization: News
Lines: 35
Message-ID: <32b37732.10531339@news.abraxis.com>
References: <32B21917.70D3@nwark.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: modec24.abraxis.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Murray Harris <mth2@nwark.com> wrote:
>If you were going to buy one of these rigs, which one would it be?
>I would appreciate your comments and thoughts.
>73, Murray
>W5XH
I used to have ICOM, but the Yaesu seems to be a little
better....(opinion, of course). I see the full duplex is much more
ease of use than the Icom, and has spots for 50mhz,1296mhz also!
Best 73,
de KB4LBX/Alex
---------
Alex F. Evonosky, KB4LBX OSCAR 10 Mode B,J,L
Alpharetta, Ga / EM74 Packet LAN 145.07MHz
WAS WAC ARRL AMSAT ATV 1.2GHz/421.25MHz
kb4lbx@amsat.org 160m-1.2GHz SSB/CW/Digital/SSTV
GRAPES 56kB Packet WAN
Active HF/VHF contester
DX4WIN Computer Logging System
W95SSTV SSTV software
______ __________ _____ ________ ________ ____ __
___ //_/___ __ )__ // /___ / ___ __ )__ |/ /
__ ,< __ __ |_ // /___ / __ __ |__ /
_ /| | _ /_/ / /__ __/_ /____ /_/ / _ |
/_/ |_| /_____/ /_/ /_____//_____/ /_/|_|
Supporting:
Yaesu rigs, Timewave DSP units, FORCE12 antennas
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:58 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!news.thenet.net!news.supernet.net!nntp.cntfl.com!usenet
From: Joe Leikhim <Jleikhim@nettally.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AG25 and AG35 preamps and linear amplifiers???
Date: Sat, 14 Dec 1996 01:22:21 -0500
Organization: CMDS News machine
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32B2479D.5970@nettally.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 199.44.114.26
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win95; U)
I have an ICOM IC970 with the AG25 and AG35 TR switched preamplifiers
that I am using for terrestrial and satellite work. I will need to add
some amplifiers in the near future in order to compensate for cable loss
to my new tower.
The AG series preamplifiers are spec'd at a maximum of 100W. Has anyone
had any experience running higher power through them without damage?
The TR switch uses a DC voltage via coax from the transceiver in the
receive mode to activate the bypass relay and to power the Gasfet. Which
commercially available 2m and 70cm amplifiers in the range of 10w-25w
input 100w-160w output, can be easily modified to allow DC to pass
through the amplifier in the receive mode? I prefer not to modify the
preamplifiers for external control.
Thanks
--
Joe Leikhim
Jleikhim@nettally.com
"tv dinner by the pool,
i'm so glad i finished school" -F.Zappa 1967
"The Revolution will NOT be televised" -Gil Scott Heron
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:39:59 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!homer.alpha.net!uwm.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news
From: Christine Hillebrand <chrishil@erols.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: AIRCOM cable inquiry
Date: Sun, 08 Dec 1996 07:44:16 -0500
Organization: Erol's Internet Services
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32AAB820.6141@erols.com>
References: <584o8m$63j@server-b.cs.interbusiness.it>
Reply-To: chrishil@erols.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: anp-as2s62.erols.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win95; U)
Roberto wrote:
>
> Hello all,
> I wonder if anyone out there has used the AIRCOM cable for satellite
> purposes.I was told that the condense could be a concern for this
> cable since the inside isolator is mostly air.
> 73 , IK4JQW
> Rob
Roberto,
I have been using AirComm cables to my antenna pointing system on top of
a 40 foot tower for the past 2 years.... I have 4 runs , 2 meter, 70 cm,
L Band and S Band... Here in Maryland it is quite hot and humid during
part of the year and very cold during other parts.... this year has been
the one with the most rain in recorded history for Maryland and also the
most snowfall... Although I operate on the digital satellites 24 hours a
day (full auto)... I have not had a single problem with the cable and
VSWR remains low. I used the Type N connectors that I bought from SSB
when I got the cable. They go on very easily. I did put coax seal at
all external connections, but I would suggest this regardless of the
type of cable used...
Hope this helps,
73
Art -- AA3GU
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:01 1996
From: francist@corexco.com (Francis Taillon)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Antenna help wanted
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 1996 22:41:29 GMT
Reply-To: francist@corexco.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-0302.infobahnos.com
Message-ID: <32b872bf.0@news.total.net>
Organization: TotalNet Inc.
Lines: 25
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.ecn.uoknor.edu!news.wildstar.net!newsfeed.direct.ca!news.insinc.net!news.total.net!ppp-0302.infobahnos.com
Hi!
I'm currently using a VHF satellite network (Orbcomm) in remote
monitoring application. My main problem is the size of the antenna
which make it too visible to vandalism and thieft. The antenna I
currently use is about 45 inch long and has 4 32 inch long radials.
I'm looking for a small/compact antenna that could be hidden easily.
Here are some specs:
Frequency range: 138-150 Mhz
Transmitter power: 5 watts
The gain can be unity or more
For some reason, in my application, the antenna need a ground plane
(work ok without it anywhere else!!). I might be able to find a way to
make it work without it so a built in ground plane is not important.
If anybody knows a manufacturer who has that kind of antenna, or a
place where i could find some information about antennas, please
E-mail me!
Thanks
Francis Taillon
francist@corexco.com
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:02 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!paladin.american.edu!02-newsfeed.univie.ac.at!news.ecrc.de!blackbush.xlink.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK092 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 14 Dec 1996 13:54:17 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 85
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk092.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12406 rec.radio.amateur.space:9138
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK092
ARLK092 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK92
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 92 ARLK092
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 14, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK092
ARLK092 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96347.16410688 .00000015 00000-0 34961-6 0 2918
2 18129 82.9267 16.9841 0012857 26.2998 333.8807 13.72372039474582
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96346.99024598 .00000140 00000-0 31510-4 0 09405
2 14781 97.8141 329.9527 0010624 241.8427 118.1704 14.69507043683762
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96347.22463108 .00000039 00000-0 25079-4 0 09463
2 21089 82.9219 57.3122 0030602 96.3425 264.1231 13.74075232293482
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96347.20220662 -.00000005 00000-0 14875-4 0 2324
2 20437 98.5347 66.7954 0011910 40.1294 320.0773 14.29941463359498
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96346.84075219 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1833
2 23439 64.8153 95.7869 0155559 167.5257 192.9570 11.27529321 80810
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96347.22337277 -.00000012 00000-0 12301-4 0 00350
2 20439 98.5506 69.3612 0012036 41.4351 318.7739 14.29992601359514
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96347.22793816 -.00000002 00000-0 15929-4 0 00333
2 20440 98.5544 70.1075 0012277 40.7806 319.4290 14.30134925359547
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96347.22162250 .00000017 00000-0 23269-4 0 00405
2 20441 98.5526 70.0178 0012743 41.0011 319.2127 14.30103687359549
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96347.20374124 .00000002 00000-0 17658-4 0 00330
2 20442 98.5548 70.5738 0013165 39.8760 320.3391 14.30215226359567
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96346.99276460 -.00000027 00000-0 42303-5 0 9276
2 20480 99.0219 338.0105 0541112 81.4774 284.7235 12.83235659320696
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96347.12856155 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7685
2 21087 82.9420 190.0148 0037113 69.9624 290.5532 13.74575190294451
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96347.22829242 .00000007 00000-0 16493-4 0 07403
2 21575 98.3308 48.1220 0008472 91.5881 268.6275 14.37048148283631
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96346.98884857 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 06308
2 22077 66.0787 177.1891 0015122 256.6543 103.2790 12.86299282203679
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96347.21778396 -.00000014 00000-0 11686-4 0 5003
2 22828 98.5630 59.6883 0011199 52.9501 307.2692 14.28161774135523
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96347.20883789 -.00000021 00000-0 90460-5 0 5201
2 22826 98.5677 59.6097 0010053 68.4097 291.8150 14.27820597167402
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96347.22609161 -.00000010 00000-0 13553-4 0 5229
2 22825 98.5667 59.4224 0009541 67.4006 292.8174 14.27711712167392
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96347.21945879 -.00000055 00000-0 -17111-4 0 00462
2 24278 98.5686 47.7135 0351411 310.6794 46.4285 13.52627128015843
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96348.83586713 .00003913 00000-0 48701-4 0 8736
2 16609 51.6550 298.3131 0013403 138.0507 222.1480 15.62621377618080
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Tuesday,
December 17, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:03 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK093 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 17 Dec 1996 16:00:00 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk093.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12420 rec.radio.amateur.space:9161
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK093
ARLK093 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK93
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 93 ARLK093
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 17, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK093
ARLK093 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96351.10110488 .00000030 00000-0 16262-4 0 02988
2 18129 82.9252 14.0731 0012707 16.5857 343.5713 13.72372450475125
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96351.07571970 .00000109 00000-0 26220-4 0 09396
2 14781 97.8146 333.8643 0010736 227.8283 132.2002 14.69507992684366
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96351.15675940 .00000061 00000-0 48210-4 0 09455
2 21089 82.9221 54.3975 0030628 85.8132 274.6528 13.74075558294021
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96351.26062985 .00000034 00000-0 29870-4 0 2330
2 20437 98.5346 70.7738 0011958 28.0841 332.0982 14.29942365360070
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96351.36413055 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1841
2 23439 64.8168 88.4734 0155211 166.6946 193.8139 11.27528945 81325
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96350.72189000 -.00000019 00000-0 96143-5 0 318
2 20439 98.5505 72.7974 0011993 31.6633 328.5276 14.29992661360015
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96351.00596101 -.00000042 00000-0 37846-6 0 00330
2 20440 98.5536 73.8176 0012440 30.3594 329.8306 14.30134919360088
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96350.78983261 -.00000011 00000-0 12375-4 0 358
2 20441 98.5527 73.5238 0012698 30.8668 329.3262 14.30103763360053
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96351.19142893 .00000023 00000-0 25591-4 0 00326
2 20442 98.5540 74.4933 0013568 27.5815 332.6089 14.30215827360133
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96351.04695389 -.00000067 00000-0 -85699-4 0 9283
2 20480 99.0224 341.2927 0541166 72.2650 293.6741 12.83235388321219
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96351.05925561 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07725
2 21087 82.9416 187.1063 0036925 59.6131 300.8666 13.74575463294993
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96351.19705165 .00000024 00000-0 22328-4 0 7381
2 21575 98.3300 51.9613 0008633 81.1076 279.1086 14.37048953284206
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96350.95410738 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 06280
2 22077 66.0788 168.8858 0015219 254.2559 105.6781 12.86299500204184
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96351.28126163 -.00000005 00000-0 15444-4 0 5011
2 22828 98.5628 63.6727 0011151 42.2435 317.9592 14.28162056136104
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96351.20320846 .00000020 00000-0 25722-4 0 05426
2 22826 98.5671 63.5248 0010082 57.7477 302.4666 14.27821408167978
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96351.15068603 .00000024 00000-0 27212-4 0 05441
2 22825 98.5663 63.2690 0009631 56.2968 303.9129 14.27712347167952
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96351.21372532 -.00000039 00000-0 -88126-6 0 00735
2 24278 98.5687 51.1754 0351144 300.3233 56.3606 13.52627155016384
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96350.88122848 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 00546
2 24305 82.9299 130.0470 0030020 358.2134 1.8905 13.73086325013905
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96351.45788768 .00004297 00000-0 52836-4 0 8800
2 16609 51.6529 285.0771 0013054 147.9679 212.2099 15.62647682618498
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
The next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday,
December 21, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:05 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK094 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 21 Dec 1996 13:37:17 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 85
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk094.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12433 rec.radio.amateur.space:9185
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK094
ARLK094 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK94
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 94 ARLK094
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 21, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK094
ARLK094 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96299.11613815 -.00000305 00000-0 10000-3 0 4631
2 14129 25.8792 182.5891 6052907 60.2572 346.3435 2.05882271 72548
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96355.11101058 .00000017 00000-0 21244-5 0 03002
2 18129 82.9251 11.1087 0012562 5.9821 354.1480 13.72372520475675
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96354.95691601 .00000181 00000-0 38345-4 0 09380
2 14781 97.8149 337.5801 0010722 214.4743 145.5744 14.69509888684933
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96355.16170271 .00000034 00000-0 19485-4 0 09459
2 21089 82.9224 51.4280 0030785 75.1274 285.3289 13.74075552294571
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96355.17910636 .00000016 00000-0 23101-4 0 02532
2 20437 98.5345 74.6146 0011719 18.2936 341.8667 14.29942740360633
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96355.17795816 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 02124
2 23439 64.8192 82.3077 0155814 165.9175 194.6164 11.27528664081752
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96355.19998775 .00000041 00000-0 32716-4 0 00332
2 20439 98.5502 77.1951 0012033 18.9004 341.2625 14.29993798360654
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96355.20376159 -.00000047 00000-0 -15275-5 0 332
2 20440 98.5484 77.9372 0013015 16.1085 344.0522 14.30135144360685
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96355.19761875 .00000020 00000-0 24375-4 0 366
2 20441 98.5526 77.8550 0012776 18.0970 342.0670 14.30104514360686
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96355.17911551 -.00000019 00000-0 94036-5 0 320
2 20442 98.5542 78.4157 0013657 17.1631 343.0013 14.30215742360709
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96355.49093092 .00000019 00000-0 10697-3 0 9290
2 20480 99.0220 344.8895 0541247 62.2054 303.2823 12.83236247321781
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96355.06273878 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07794
2 21087 82.9408 184.1425 0036769 48.8627 311.5692 13.74575624295548
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96355.58357352 .00000013 00000-0 18501-4 0 7396
2 21575 98.3292 56.2046 0008742 68.7534 291.4601 14.37049429284833
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96354.91936715 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6288
2 22077 66.0784 160.5828 0015271 253.4363 106.4979 12.86299592204693
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96355.20461664 .00000028 00000-0 28509-4 0 05228
2 22828 98.5621 67.5182 0011122 32.3631 327.8228 14.28162932136661
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96355.19757816 .00000004 00000-0 19187-4 0 05418
2 22826 98.5669 67.4412 0010198 46.5995 313.6025 14.27821755168542
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96355.14536052 .00000026 00000-0 28031-4 0 05400
2 22825 98.5665 67.1860 0009721 45.0627 315.1335 14.27712788168521
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96355.35595076 -.00000040 00000-0 -10581-5 0 454
2 24278 98.5673 54.7624 0351041 289.5984 66.7572 13.52627299 16949
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96355.42278607 .00005792 00000-0 68975-4 0 8900
2 16609 51.6549 265.0680 0013116 160.8621 199.2865 15.62703146619110
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
Due to the holiday, the next scheduled transmission of these data
will be Saturday, December 28, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:08 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLS017 Phase 3D delayed
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 18 Dec 1996 22:17:01 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 40
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arls017.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12422 rec.radio.amateur.space:9172
SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS017
ARLS017 Phase 3D delayed
ZCZC AS25
QST de W1AW
Space Bulletin 017 ARLS017
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 19, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB SPACE ARL ARLS017
ARLS017 Phase 3D delayed
The European Space Agency has announced a launch delay for Ariane
502, the rocket that is supposed to carry Phase 3D. AMSAT-NA
Executive Vice President Keith Baker, KB1SF, reports that the launch
has been pushed back to ''early July,'' but said a specific launch
date was not yet available. ESA said the change resulted from the
recent establishment of a ''detailed timetable'' that's required to
permit launch.
A brief ESA news release said: ''As each individual operation will
require very close analysis, the 502 campaign is scheduled to begin
on Wednesday 9 April 1997, the launch itself being planned for early
July.''
''We'll be ready,'' said Baker, adding that the new schedule will
give AMSAT ''a little more time to make things right.'' The Phase 3D
satellite itself is under assembly in Orlando, Florida. Baker said
there's still a lot of work to be done, but the project was on
schedule for an April launch. The new launch schedule means that the
Phase 3D satellite will not be operational until September or
October.
''Obviously we would like to have the satellite in orbit a lot
sooner,'' said Baker. ''But we don't want anything to be launched if
it's not ready.''
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!netnews.nwnet.net!news.ohsu.edu!ashleyb
From: ashleyb@ohsu.edu
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: 11 Dec 1996 21:24:30 GMT
Organization: Oregon Health Sciences University
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 137.53.10.2
Originator: ashleyb@sellwood
To The Group:
I'm in the process of setting up a satelite system. A few local guys
are having fun with RS-10. What I would like to do is to set up a nice
beginners station. I currently have a IC-275A with a GP-3 for the Up link
and two different HF xcvr's to set up the down link. My question is would
an HF vertical like the Ringo ranger AR-10 work or maybe an inverted V
dipole. I am reading the ARRL satelite handbook but I'd like to hear from
some people actually working the birds. Also should I get a pre-amp and if
so does anyone have any recommendations ie buy,build?? Thanks for your
help.
Brad WB7TSO
ashleyb@ohsu.edu
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:10 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in2.uu.net!199.0.65.182!news-in.tiac.net!posterchild!news@tiac.net
From: Keith Erskine <kerskine@fetchsoft.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 1996 21:55:45 -0500
Organization: Fetch Software, Inc.
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <32AF7431.4796@fetchsoft.com>
References: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>
Reply-To: kerskine@fetchsoft.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: astro.tiac.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
ashleyb@ohsu.edu wrote:
>My question is would
> an HF vertical like the Ringo ranger AR-10 work or maybe an inverted V
> dipole.
RS-10 has a very strong downlink for an amatuer satellite. I put up a
Ringo, but can honestly say that it didn't offer any better performance
than a simple dipole.
Try orienting the dipole for best north/south reception. Don't worry
about a pre-amp. I used a Radio Shack 10m rig to listen to my
downlinks.
73....KA1RHO
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:11 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!ais.net!noc.van.hookup.net!news.bctel.net!news@bctel.net
From: "Erik Skovgaard" <Erik_Skovgaard@bc.sympatico.ca>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: 12 Dec 1996 04:34:17 GMT
Organization: m/v Dorothy B, Vancouver
Lines: 35
Message-ID: <01bbe7e6$dc693f80$09d866cf@default>
References: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: vanc01m05-9.bctel.ca
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Brad,
I use a sloping dipole on 10 m to receive RS-10. It always has a very
strong signal here. I added a Hamtronics pre-amp recently and it does
boost the signal a few S units and also provides a bit of selectivity to
reject out-of-band signals.
For uplink I have used a 1/4 wave vertical and about 80 Watts. I only
tried CW since the amp was not linear, but I got very good reports.
RS-10 could use some activity, so go ahead. Hope to wrk u there.
73 de VE7MDL ....Erik.
(VE0MDL when operating maritime mobile)
ashleyb@ohsu.edu wrote in article <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>...
> To The Group:
>
>
> I'm in the process of setting up a satelite system. A few local guys
> are having fun with RS-10. What I would like to do is to set up a nice
> beginners station. I currently have a IC-275A with a GP-3 for the Up link
> and two different HF xcvr's to set up the down link. My question is would
> an HF vertical like the Ringo ranger AR-10 work or maybe an inverted V
> dipole. I am reading the ARRL satelite handbook but I'd like to hear from
> some people actually working the birds. Also should I get a pre-amp and
if
> so does anyone have any recommendations ie buy,build?? Thanks for your
> help.
>
> Brad WB7TSO
> ashleyb@ohsu.edu
>
>
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:11 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!niven.ksc.nasa.gov!usenet
From: "Roger E. Koss" <kossr@edl1.ksc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: 12 Dec 1996 16:47:52 GMT
Organization: I-NET Space Services
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <58pcvo$h7m@niven.ksc.nasa.gov>
References: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 163.205.78.66
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Windows; I; 16bit)
Brad:
I'm using a dipole cut for 10 meters, up only about 15 feet, and it
works just fine into a Uniden HR2600. For my uplink, I have a 5/8 wave
homebrew groundplane up 30', which I feed with 25 watts from a Yaesu
FT-290R Mk II. RS-10 has a very sensitive receiver and an excellent
transmitter. Much more than this would be overkill. Hope to work you on
the birds someday.
73 de Roger, KD4ITU
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:12 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!192.89.123.24!nntp.inet.fi!news.csc.fi!usenet
From: miksuora@sara.utu.fi (Mika Suoranta)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 17:12:35 GMT
Organization: Centre for Scientific Computing
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <58s2aj$iql@ankka.csc.fi>
References: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu> <58pcvo$h7m@niven.ksc.nasa.gov>
Reply-To: miksuora@utu.fi
NNTP-Posting-Host: mika.abo.fi
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
I've done fine with just a G5RV or groundplane for 28MHz downlonk. 1/4
vertical and 5 watts of power is plenty for RS-10 ;) However, as far
as I know, RS-10 has no stabilization system, and polarization QSB is
a problem with linear polarization antennas. I would recommend a cross
dipole for both up- and downlink.
73 Mike OH1NZQ
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:13 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!hammer.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!news.rio.com!news
From: "FUman" <kg7fu@rio.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: 18 Dec 1996 05:36:05 GMT
Organization: kg7fu
Lines: 34
Message-ID: <01bbeca4$b5296040$b68260ce@surf.rio.com>
References: <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: p82.t0.rio.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
ashleyb@ohsu.edu wrote in article <58n8qe$dvf@fremont.ohsu.edu>...
> To The Group:
>=20
>=20
> I'm in the process of setting up a satelite system. A few local guys
> are having fun with RS-10. What I would like to do is to set up a nice
> beginners station. I currently have a IC-275A with a GP-3 for the Up =
link
> and two different HF xcvr's to set up the down link. My question is =
would
> an HF vertical like the Ringo ranger AR-10 work or maybe an inverted V
> dipole. I am reading the ARRL satelite handbook but I'd like to hear =
from
> some people actually working the birds. Also should I get a pre-amp =
and if
> so does anyone have any recommendations ie buy,build?? Thanks for your
> help.
I use a turnstile for 10m in my apartment's attic/crawlspace. Cheap, =
easy,
cross-polarized and effective from horizon to horizon.
The 2m uplink is also a turnstile sitting above my radio desk! I use an =
Icom
706 for the uplink and a Uniden 2510 for the downlink.
cu on the ez-sats!
de kg7fu
Eugene, OR CN84
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:16 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!204.180.128.35!news.mindspring.com!mindspring!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.sgi.com!news-out.microserve.net!news-in.microserve.net!news.supernet.net!nntp.cntfl.com!usenet
From: wa4twa@versoft.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Cu-Seeme Video conferencing
Date: Fri, 06 Dec 1996 16:35:02 GMT
Organization: CMDS News machine
Lines: 18
Message-ID: <32a84b2c.12461577@nntp.cntfl.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 199.44.241.22
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Does anyone know of anyone using Video Conferencing on
computer/internet in conjunction with amateur redio? I have been in
contact with hundreds of people from around the world on Cu-Seeme and
have run into only one ham. Is there a freq. HF or VHF where hams may
hang out that use both modes..computer and radio. I believe this would
be a natural progression from Slow Scan. We now can SEE the people
we are in QSO with.
If you are interested in setting up a sched. and have Video
COnferencing capabilities or are just interested drop me an e-mail,
73's
Charlie
wa4twa@versoft.com
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:17 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!204.180.128.35!news.mindspring.com!mindspring!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!news
From: TAZ <Taz@bigfoot.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Decoding
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 08:56:18 -0700
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <32B41FA2.6168@bigfoot.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc00474.concentric.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win95; I)
I am interested in learning about signal decoding and possibly building
a decoder for cable TV. Is anyone aware of a good resource to learn
more about this subject?
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:19 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!newsgate.duke.edu!interpath!news.interpath.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-22.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!mr.net!news.idt.net!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!cpk-news-feed3.bbnplanet.com!es.dupont.com!topgun.es.dupont.com!usenet
From: Not Setup <Not.Setup@conoco.dupont.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Decoding Hubble Images
Date: Mon, 16 Dec 1996 22:09:41 -0600
Organization: Conoco, Inc.
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <32B61D05.4E65@conoco.dupont.com>
Reply-To: Not.Setup@conoco.dupont.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: pcrd8.po.dupont.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win16; I)
Is there a cheap method for decoding Hubble Telescope images?
Is there a kit to build?
What frequency and mode of transmission (WFM, NFM, Spread Spectrum)does
Hubble use?
Please reply to me in this group.
Thanks,
Hawkeye
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:19 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!128.196.139.12!news.Arizona.EDU!not-for-mail
From: Chris Lewicki <chrisl@gamma1.lpl.arizona.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Decoding Hubble Images
Date: 17 Dec 1996 19:09:38 GMT
Organization: The University of Arizona
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <596r5i$t08@news.ccit.arizona.edu>
References: <32B61D05.4E65@conoco.dupont.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: boynton.lpl.arizona.edu
Not Setup <Not.Setup@conoco.dupont.com> wrote:
: Is there a cheap method for decoding Hubble Telescope images?
Go to http://www.stsci.edu/
: Is there a kit to build?
Yes, but its probably illegal.
: What frequency and mode of transmission (WFM, NFM, Spread Spectrum)does
: Hubble use?
I'm pretty sure that HST images are encrypted in order to maintain data access
rights for the astronomers involved. Images are usually transmitted to TDRS
and then transmitted from there to Goddard or STSCI.
Short answer, you can't get HST imagery from HST yourself.
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Christopher A. Lewicki KC7NYV 520.621.4662 Maintainer of SEDS.LPL.Arizona.EDU
Chair, Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS-USA)
"Watch the stars, and from them learn." - Albert Einstein
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:21 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!206.229.87.25!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!ddi2.digital.net!max-roc2-94.digital.net!kc4yer
From: Philip Chien <kc4yer@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Decoding Hubble Images
Date: 20 Dec 1996 03:17:42 GMT
Organization: Earth News
Lines: 47
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <59d0gm$err@ddi2.digital.net>
References: <596r5i$t08@news.ccit.arizona.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.228.234.222
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Newsreader: Nuntius 2.0.4_68K
X-XXMessage-ID: <AEDF6F83B501EADE@max-roc2-94.digital.net>
X-XXDate: Thu, 19 Dec 1996 03:17:39 GMT
Not Setup <Not.Setup@conoco.dupont.com> wrote:
>: Is there a cheap method for decoding Hubble Telescope images?
Chris Lewicki, chrisl@gamma1.lpl.arizona.edu writes:
>Go to http://www.stsci.edu/
while this is a good method of obtaining the publicly released low
resolution images from the Wide Field/Planetary Camera and Faint Object
Camera, it does not include access for the actual much higher resolution
data, or data from the other instruments.
>: Is there a kit to build?
>
>Yes, but its probably illegal.
I do hope that was meant in jest. Bottom line is - in theory you *could*
build something which would receive signals directly from Hubble, but in
practice it's basically impossible (see later)
>: What frequency and mode of transmission (WFM, NFM, Spread Spectrum)does
>: Hubble use?
Hubble's transmits digital high rate data on S-Band frequencies allocated
for government communications. The high gain antennas are aimed UP (not
towards the ground) where they transmit the data up to one of NASA's
Tracking Data and Relay Satellites (TDRS). From TDRS the data goes to
the White Sands Ground Station Terminal in New Mexico, and then via a
domestic satellite link to the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
At Goddard all of the data is archived, and the spacecraft engineers
strip out their engineering and spacecraft maintenance data. The raw
science data is sent to the Space Telescope Science Institute via a
dediated line.
>I'm pretty sure that HST images are encrypted in order to maintain data acces
s
>rights for the astronomers involved.
Not really encrypted per say, but digitally encoded. And it is kept
proprietary for a period of one year from the time the observations are
collected. After that point the data is in the public domain and
theroetically available for anybody who wants to get access.
>Short answer, you can't get HST imagery from HST yourself.
Philip Chien, KC4YER
Earth News - space writer and consultant
note new E-mail address - pchien@digital.net
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:21 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!spacelink!glue9600
From: Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: DOVE for Windows?
Date: 14 Dec 1996 19:28:01 GMT
Organization: NASA Spacelink Teacher Resource Center-a service to educators
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.961214132719.5400E-100000@spacelink>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: glue9600@spacelink
X-Disclaimer: Message author is solely responsible for message content.
Would anyone be inclined to send me a copy of the DOVE telemetry
interpretation program for Windows?
Thanks.
Dick
----------
Richard David Glueck Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:23 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!199.232.240.5!news.ziplink.net!usenet
From: Mickey <mickey5a@ziplink.net>
Newsgroups: alt.games.descent,comp.lang.java.programmer,comp.lang.javascript,comp.software.year-2000,gac.physics.astronomy,rec.aviation.aerobatics,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.biology,sci.physics
Subject: Re: EVERYONE READ THIS, VERY IMPORTANT, PLEASE READ THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 09:49:15 -0600
Organization: ZipLink -- America's Hottest ISP
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <32B17AFB.3889@ziplink.net>
References: <01bbdd80$7aee2380$c94d22cf@jaclen.connect.ab.ca> <dschultz.4128.000F0428@ti.com> <frisch-1312960931070001@lisa.pu.informatik.th-darmstadt.de>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip10-max2-chi.ziplink.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01KIT (Win95; U)
Xref: news1.epix.net alt.games.descent:60293 comp.lang.java.programmer:23469 comp.lang.javascript:22669 comp.software.year-2000:920 gac.physics.astronomy:144 rec.aviation.aerobatics:849 rec.radio.amateur.space:9132 sci.physics:230951
Sorry, censorship is censorship. Take away someone else's rights and
there's no protection left for yours. There is a difference between
speech and action.
Meanwhile, driving the creeps underground makes it more difficult to
know who and where they are, and what they're planning to do.
Identifying your enemy is necessary for defending yourself against them.
Anyway, this has nothing to do with descent.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:25 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-fw-6.sprintlink.net!buffnet2.buffnet.net!usenet
From: "Bruce J. Howes KG2IC" <kg2ic@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: FS: AMSAT/TAPR DSP-93 Modem Fully Assembled
Date: Fri, 20 Dec 1996 13:40:16 -0400
Organization: AMSAT-NA
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <32BACF80.1171@amsat.org>
Reply-To: kg2ic@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: fppp49.buffnet.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win95; I)
I have a TAPR/AMSAT DSP-93 modem kit that has been professionally
assembled. I purchased it this summer from a fellow club member who was
overwhelmed with it. It has been assembled and verifed by me on the test
bench. I have all paperwork, manuals, box, cables that come with the
kit. Since I already have 2 AEA DSP2232s I do not need another TNC. I
did really enjoy building the kit however! If you are interested make a
resonable offer, or trade, and it's yours. I do not have a fixed price
in mind, but I do know what I did pay for the unit. Tnx for your time.
--
--
73,
Bruce KG2IC
=======================================================================
Bruce J. Howes KG2IC "The governmentÆs view of the economy
Grid FN03pa could be summed up in a few short phrases:
East Amherst, NY If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving,
AMSAT#30466 ARRL regulate it. And if it stops moving,
ARMY-MARS AAR2AJ subsidize it." -Ronald Reagan
=======================================================================
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:26 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!not-for-mail
From: Reddbox@cris.com (Johnathon Whale)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: FS: CB Service Manuals (Tram)
Date: 15 Dec 1996 03:43:32 GMT
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <58vs54$603@herald.concentric.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: viking.cris.com
X-Newsreader: TIN [UNIX 1.3 950824BETA PL0]
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20709 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:44357 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22059 rec.radio.amateur.misc:120712 rec.radio.amateur.policy:44213 rec.radio.amateur.space:9143
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Summary:
Keywords:
For Sale:
*RARE* Tram Factory Service Manuals (Gone out of business now) for Tram
Citizen Band Radios (CB SSB/AM)
These manuals include:
o Tune Up Procedures
o Schematics
o Photos of the PC Boards
o Alignment procedures
o Testing
The manuals are 10 to 20 pages long. In SUPERB condition!
No soiled, roughed, or dogeared pages. The booklet is stapled.
Model Price
XL $25
XL5 $30
DIAMOND 40 $40
DIAMOND 60 $50
D201 (Base unit) $10
Please respond via email to Punisher@m-net.arbornet.org or call my machine
at (203)458-9962 and leave a message or fax (since these groups tend to
get cluttered) Thank you.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:27 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.internetMCI.com!news-admin
From: "Bob Smith" <rsmith@internetmci.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: FT290/790 9600 Bd mods?
Date: 11 Dec 1996 15:49:35 GMT
Organization: InternetMCI
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <01bbe77b$1037b2e0$8fedbdcc@rsmith>
NNTP-Posting-Host: infolink-204.189.237.143.chicago.mci.net
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20642 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:44127 rec.radio.amateur.space:9083
Investigating getting a FT290 or 790 and was wondering if either of these
can be modified for 9600bd packet. If so can someone point me in the right
direction...
Thanks and 73
de Bob, N3FTU
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:28 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!Gamma.RU!srcc!demos!dnews-server
From: karen@ra3apw.ampr.demos.su (Karen Tadewosyan)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment
Subject: Re: FT290/790 9600 Bd mods?
Date: 12 Dec 1996 08:39:05 +0300
Organization: RA3APW
Lines: 49
Sender: news-server@news.demos.su
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <ADfqtSsyjN@ra3apw.ampr.demos.su>
Reply-To: karen@ra3apw.ampr.demos.su
NNTP-Posting-Host: root@news.demos.su
X-mailer: dMail [Demos Mail for Windows v1.12c Lite]
X-Return-Path: news.demos.su!kremvax.demos.su!ra3apw!ra3apw.ampr.demos.su!karen
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.space:9098 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20652 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:44165
Bob,
this is info about 9600 bps mods for FT290/790 from my acrhive.
I used it some time ago and it run well.
I hope it will be usefull for you.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
MODEM @WW de:DL6DBN 23.09.90 07:50 0 1568 Bytes
FT290/790RII mods. PSK/9k6
*** Bulletin-ID: 229008DB0SGL ***
900922/0911z DK0MWX, 900922/0714z DB0SGL
de DL6DBN @ DB0SGL
How to modify YAESU FT-290 RII and FT-790RII
for 1200 BpS PSK and 9600 BpS FSK
As you know, for 1200 BpS PSK/FM a direct injektion of the signal into the
FM-varicap is recommended and for 9600 BpS FSK necessary. For 9600 BpS you
will need the FM-discriminator output.
Due to SM-Technology the following modifications are not easy to manage.
FT-790RII in ()
The FM-discriminator output is at pin 9 of Q4001 (Q402) MC3357P. Use a
shielded cable to connect this pin with your 9k6-modem input. The IF-
bandwidth of CF01 (CF01) CFW455F seems to be to small for very good
results, so I recommend to exchange it with a CFW455D. With good RF-
strength and proper tuning the CFW455F can fit as well.
The more complicate modification is the injection point. Inject your TX-
signal below the main unit where R30124, C30120 and C30126 (R30117, C30117
and C30124) come together (all SMD). Is it necessary to say, use a shielded
cable? As long as no other AF from the tone unit or the microphon reaches
this point you must not cut any connections. But adjust your FM-deviation.
I made this changes in both radio sets and had already good contacts via
UoSAT-OSCAR 14. So good luck and success.
73 Frank, DL6DBN @ DB0SGL
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
73 de Karen Packet: RA3APW @ RA3APW.MSK.RUS.EU
Moscow, Russia Internet: sysop@ampr.demos.su
Phone: 474-62-83 AMPRNet: ra3apw@gw.ra3apw.ampr.org
Satellites: UO-22, KO-23, KO-25
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:29 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!uunet!in3.uu.net!205.137.48.144!news2.agis.net!agis!newsgod1.agis.net!agis!newspeer1.agis.net!agis!newshost.cyberramp.net!not-for-mail
From: John Fleenor <johnf@mailhost.cyberramp.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: HAM SITE
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 19:59:18 -0800
Organization: CyberRamp.net, Dallas, TX (214) 340-2020/(817) 226-2020 for info
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <32B22616.D58@mailhost.cyberramp.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dal-tsa1-p1-36.cyberramp.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
http:///www.cyberramp.net/~johnf
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:31 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!nntp.uio.no!funny.bahnhof.se!seunet!news2.swip.net!mn6.swip.net!plug.news.pipex.net!pipex!hole.news.pipex.net!pipex!bowl.news.pipex.net!pipex!dircon!midnet!c.shaw
From: c.shaw@midnet.com (Colin Shaw)
Reply-To: c.shaw@midnet.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Distribution: world
Subject: Re: Ham-Space Digest V96 #421
Date: 13 Dec 1996 17:19:30 GMT
Message-ID: <927072255.106046602@midnet.com>
Organization: MidNet, Coventry UK
Lines: 4
A 400k message in a newsgroup? Then loads of non delivery messages?
This group is getting expensive!!
Colin G8FRA
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:32 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!coopnews.coop.net!super.zippo.com!zdc!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.netset.com!ragnarok.oar.net!malgudi.oar.net!mcnet.marietta.edu!not-for-mail
From: bret Johnson <bret@baj.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Ham-Space Digest V96 #421
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 12:46:12 -0500
Organization: Marietta College
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <32B43964.6DDE@baj.com>
References: <2.2.32.19961212112957.006f9e90@mac.ul.ie>
NNTP-Posting-Host: [mcax2]slippp-12.marietta.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Where and how can I receive Ham-Space Digest?
Thanks
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:35 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!usc!ccnet.com!cathryn
From: cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com (cathryn)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: How Do I Start Out Cheap?
Date: 9 Dec 1996 10:07:13 GMT
Organization: CCnet Communications (510-988-7140 guest)
Lines: 29
Message-ID: <slrn5amsi8.3am.cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com>
References: <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.21.11.2
In article <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net>, Scott Babb wrote:
>I'm looking for advice.
>
>How do I start out cheap in satellite/EME communication? I'll take advice on
>anything: antennas, transverters, converters, LNA's, all-mode rigs, whatever.
>
>Thanks de wa1vht
I'm kind of on the same quest. At least to figure out where to spend the
first $2K. Which I don't think is really cheap by most people's standards,
but which is a little bit less than what it takes to walk into HRO and
just do the whole thing brand new. My impression is that the guys who
are pretty serious about this seem to have the 726 or 736 and the KLM/M2
antenna set. Personally, I put a lot of confidence in conventional
wisdom. So, to go this way, the game seems to become, how to scrounge up
this kind of system. (Of course with preaamps, amplifiers and all that.)
Personally, my thinking now on how to do this in gradual, stages
is to do the antenna side first. New. At least deal with
the tracking, feedline and preamp issues. While finding a used 2M SSB radio.
Maybe working RS-10 , Mir or something, and then trying to hear sats on
440 Mhz with converters. (Not sure if 440->28mHZ or 440->144Mhz is better?)
By then, I figure a few months will have passed, I'll be able to hear
what's going on, and either I'll be anxious to be rid of the whole thing
or I'll be lusting after a, probably used, 726/736. By then, I figure we'll
know whether P3d is going to be really cool, etc. Fingers crossed.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:37 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!199.0.65.182!news-in.tiac.net!posterchild!spock
From: sbabb@lpub.com (Scott Babb)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: How Do I Start Out Cheap?
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 96 19:25:21 GMT
Organization: Littlefield Publishing Group
Lines: 50
Message-ID: <58safb$8gi@news-central.tiac.net>
References: <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net> <slrn5amsi8.3am.cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: p8.ts2.nashu.nh.tiac.com
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
In article <slrn5amsi8.3am.cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com>, cathryn@jun
glevision.junglevision.com (cathryn) wrote:
>In article <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net>, Scott Babb wrote:
>>I'm looking for advice.
>>
>>How do I start out cheap in satellite/EME communication? I'll take advice o
n
>>anything: antennas, transverters, converters, LNA's, all-mode rigs, whatever
.
>>
>>Thanks de wa1vht
>
>I'm kind of on the same quest. At least to figure out where to spend the
>first $2K. Which I don't think is really cheap by most people's standards,
>but which is a little bit less than what it takes to walk into HRO and
>just do the whole thing brand new. My impression is that the guys who
>are pretty serious about this seem to have the 726 or 736 and the KLM/M2
>antenna set. Personally, I put a lot of confidence in conventional
>wisdom. So, to go this way, the game seems to become, how to scrounge up
>this kind of system. (Of course with preaamps, amplifiers and all that.)
>
>Personally, my thinking now on how to do this in gradual, stages
>is to do the antenna side first. New. At least deal with
>the tracking, feedline and preamp issues. While finding a used 2M SSB radio.
>Maybe working RS-10 , Mir or something, and then trying to hear sats on
>440 Mhz with converters. (Not sure if 440->28mHZ or 440->144Mhz is better?)
>
>By then, I figure a few months will have passed, I'll be able to hear
>what's going on, and either I'll be anxious to be rid of the whole thing
>or I'll be lusting after a, probably used, 726/736. By then, I figure we'll
>know whether P3d is going to be really cool, etc. Fingers crossed.
I haven't received much of a response from this group. What I'm trying to do
is counter people who tell me that Amateur Radio is too expensive in general
and also the hams who think that space communication is very expensive.
What I've been able to find out so far is that Hamtronics has xmit and recv
converters available in kit form. They also have LNA kits. Down East
Microwave has transverters, LNA's, antennas, etc. These are more expensive,
but still much less than an FT-736 (even without the extra band modules).
Once you get above 70cm with the DEM transverters, you need a 2m all-mode rig.
Their 6/2/70 transverters all work with HF rigs, but the 900Mhz-an-up ones
convert to 2 meters.
For gain-per-buck, it looks hard to beat a quad. They're also hard to beat
for ice loading and cumbersomeness (at lower freq's, anyway.) Lightning Bolt
has 2m and 70cm quads that are good for about 12 dBd and not too expensive.
Of course, you can work CW through RS-10 with your FM HT (no PL or audio) and
a 10 meter receiver. MIR and the Shuttle are also workable with relatively
little investment, other than a good antenna and an amplifier for your HT.
Anyone else have any suggestions?
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:40 1996
Message-ID: <32B16C26.37ED@continet.com>
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 14:45:58 +0000
From: Steven Jepsen <jepsen_st@continet.com>
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win95; I)
MIME-Version: 1.0
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: How Do I Start Out Cheap?
References: <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net> <slrn5amsi8.3am.cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.58.168.90
Lines: 32
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!r2d2.continet.com!206.58.168.90
In article <58aocb$n8g@news-central.tiac.net>, Scott Babb wrote:
>I'm looking for advice.
>
>How do I start out cheap in satellite/EME communication? I'll take advice o
n
>anything: antennas, transverters, converters, LNA's, all-mode rigs, whatever
.
>
>Thanks de wa1vht
I put together a cheap satellite station several years ago (I've since improve
d it).
It consisted of the following:
AZ-EL rotor system made of two Gemini TV antenna rotators purchased at
Home Depot.
435Mhz Uplink antenna (22 element cross yagi) made from the parts of T
wo
fringe area TV antennas.
2m Downlink antenna (11 element cross yagi) made from old cushcraft 11
element beams.
I designed them both using the YagiMax program.
Uplink radio (435mhz) made from a Ranger 3500 all mode 10 meter radio
driving a DownEast Microwave 435Mhz transverter Kit.
Downlink radio was an old Kenwood TS700A with a Pre-Amp.
I don't remember the cost of all this and I already had some of the
equipment. but I'd guess the value whole thing including feed line was
under a $1000. With careful scrounging, you could probably do even
better.
I was able to work all the analog birds with this equipment and I'm
still using the antenna system.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:41 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!152.163.170.17!newstf01.news.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: phavorite@aol.com (Phavorite)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: How Do I Start Out Cheap?
Date: 16 Dec 1996 03:04:37 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <19961216030400.WAA23842@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <58safb$8gi@news-central.tiac.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
buy used eqipment.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:42 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!199.86.32.8!skypoint.com!not-for-mail
From: jrc@skypoint.com (Jeff Comstock)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Is the Icom 821 ok ?
Date: 20 Dec 1996 19:25:18 -0600
Organization: SkyPoint Communications Inc.
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <59fe9u$em0@mirage.skypoint.com>
Reply-To: jrc@brainiac.mn.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: mirage.skypoint.net
Hi,
I would like to know how the Icom 821H works as a ground station,
especially if the plug and play 9600 bps stuff is true - does it need
surgery to operate at 9600 ? How are the other features for working
with satellites ?
--
Jeffrey Comstock
INET: jrc@brainiac.mn.org
WWW: http://www.skypoint.com/members/jrc/
CW: -. .-. ----- -..
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:42 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.monmouth.com!uunet!in1.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!blackbush.xlink.net!ka.sub.net!book7.ms.sub.org!raudi.ms.sub.org!Edgar
Date: 11 Dec 1996 23:39:00 +0100
From: Edgar@raudi.ms.sub.org (Edgar Neuhaeuser)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Message-ID: <6Mfv6HEk35B@raudi.ms.sub.org>
Subject: Keplerian Elements
X-Newsreader: CrossPoint v3.11 R/C19022
Organization: <PRIVATE SITE>
Lines: 18
Muenster, Mi 11.12.96, 23:36 Uhr
Hi,
I'm looking for some FTP- Sites where I can download the Keplerian
Elements for my PCT 3.1
TNX for help ;)))
Greetings
EDGAR
---
E-Mail: edgar@raudi.ms.sub.org | edgar@aigm.westfalen.de
FIDO: 2:2449/515.13 | GER: 21:487/537.13
FS-Fan: 81:300/1100.13
WWW : http://members.aol.com/eneuh/home/index.htm
>>Fileserver: fileserver@aigm.westfalen.de; Betreff:PSERVER:HELP<<
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:43 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in3.uu.net!206.139.48.251!news.injersey.com!not-for-mail
From: jrespler@injersey.com (Jay Respler)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Keplerian Elements
Date: 14 Dec 1996 07:21:06 GMT
Organization: Asbury Park Press, Inc.
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <58tkh2$cc7@news.injersey.com>
References: <6Mfv6HEk35B@raudi.ms.sub.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: nj5.injersey.com
X-Newsreader: TIN [UNIX 1.3 950824BETA PL0]
Edgar Neuhaeuser (Edgar@raudi.ms.sub.org) wrote:
> I'm looking for some FTP- Sites where I can download the Keplerian
> Elements for my PCT 3.1
Links to elements are at vsohp, below.
--
Jay Respler
--
Details of how to get on the Satellite Observer Mail List, satellite elements,
prediction programs and other satellite information, at the Visual Satellite
Observers Home Page: http://www.physics.ox.ac.uk/sat/vsohp/satintro.html
--
JRespler@InJersey.com
Satellite Tracker * Early Typewriter Collector
Freehold, New Jersey
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:45 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.uoregon.edu!news.rio.com!news
From: "FUman" <kg7fu@rio.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: KL7 on RS-10 or RS-15??
Date: 18 Dec 1996 05:36:06 GMT
Organization: kg7fu
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <01bbeca5$172e7460$b68260ce@surf.rio.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: p82.t0.rio.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
I'd like to make a sked for mode A cw or ssb with any station in
Alaska.
How about it?
de kg7fu
Eugene, OR CN84
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:46 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news
From: Art Jeyes <chrishil@erols.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: KO-23 status
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 16:17:35 -0500
Organization: Johns Hopkins University/APL
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <32BC53EF.667B@erols.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: anp-as2s22.erols.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01KIT (Win95; U)
KO-23 seemed to be having a problem that affected my receive perf. In
the past I routinely got about 90% ... then KO-23 dropped to about 50%
and about 3 days ago... my KO-23 perf dropped to 0%.... i now only copy
about 500 bytes per pass... other sats are fine... any one else having
this problem?
Thanks & 73
Art Jeyes -- AA3GU
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:47 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.lobo.net!news
From: Mark Fossum <n0nsv@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Logging Programs
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 13:00:22 -0600
Organization: Lobo Net
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <32B1A7C6.ADD@amsat.org>
Reply-To: n0nsv@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: 134.129.253.23
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Hello:
I'm looking for a good Windows based logging program that has provisions
for Satellite operations.
My intention is to automate some of the logging and QSL tasks that I'm
doing. I would like to have QSL stickers printed (inkjet printer),
address labels so that I can eliminate some of the handwork.
Rig control, packet operations are really secondary at this time since I
don't have access to the PacketCluster here in North Dakota. My current
Satellite rig is not computer interfaced.
Has anyone got any good suggestions for me?
Mark Fossum N0NSV
n0nsv@amsat.org
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:48 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: dj1km@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Logging Programs
Date: 15 Dec 1996 19:10:45 GMT
Organization: AOL Bertelsmann Online GmbH & Co. KG http://www.germany.aol.com
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <19961215191000.OAA09312@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <32b37691.10371128@news.abraxis.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
Hi,
it seems to me that Alex KB4LBC is the author of the mentioned WIN4DX
logging program? Question where and how to get it?
Reinhard, DJ1KM
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:48 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.mindspring.com!usenet
From: Steven Stark <steves68@mindspring.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 1996 13:03:17 -0500
Organization: MindSpring Enterprises
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <32B98365.60BC@mindspring.com>
Reply-To: steves68@mindspring.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: user-37kb9b9.dialup.mindspring.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Server-Date: 19 Dec 1996 18:03:12 GMT
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win95; I)
Where is Mir These days on Packet? I have tried 145.55 and 145.80 I
havn't seen any packets in the last Few days. This is the first I have
tried in a year or so, Has he moved??
--
X-Signature: AKA
Steve Stark (steves68@mindspring.com)
.
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:49 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!arclight.uoregon.edu!enews.sgi.com!ix.netcom.com!news.webspan.net!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 96 21:59:11 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet Connection
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <59cvfc$mqk$2@news.mhv.net>
References: <32B98365.60BC@mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port64.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <32B98365.60BC@mindspring.com>, steves68@mindspring.com wrote:
>Where is Mir These days on Packet? I have tried 145.55 and 145.80 I
>havn't seen any packets in the last Few days. This is the first I have
>tried in a year or so, Has he moved??
>--
>X-Signature: AKA
>
>Steve Stark (steves68@mindspring.com)
>..
Mir had antenna trouble which is now fixed. Packet is on 145.800 simplex
now.
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:50 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!cliffs.rs.itd.umich.edu!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!uunet!in3.uu.net!207.65.96.4!news.planetc.com!tuna.connectup.com!usenet
From: pokf4jrg@cheta.net (Burton Osteen)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 00:23:45 GMT
Organization: ConnectUp Internet Services, Inc.
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <32bb2d91.1815108@news2>
References: <32B98365.60BC@mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp6.cheta.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.339
On Thu, 19 Dec 1996 13:03:17 -0500, Steven Stark
<steves68@mindspring.com> wrote:
>>>Where is Mir These days on Packet? I have tried 145.55 and 145.80 I
>>>havn't seen any packets in the last Few days. This is the first I have
>>>tried in a year or so, Has he moved??
>>>--
>>>X-Signature: AKA
>>>
>>>Steve Stark (steves68@mindspring.com)
>>>.
On 145.800 I don't have packet but it's a good way to test my Sat
Tracking program.
Burton kf4jrg
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:51 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!enews.sgi.com!decwrl!purdue!mozo.cc.purdue.edu!news
From: Mark McGregor <kb9khm@expert.cc.purdue.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir greeting on their UHF repeater . . .
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 1996 14:25:06 -0500
Organization: Purdue University
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <32B84512.20DC@expert.cc.purdue.edu>
Reply-To: kb9khm@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 3.0 (Win95; I)
Did anyone else hear the greeting (Merry Christmas) from the Mir crew
over the UHF repeater last night? I'm assuming it was a recording,
but I'm not sure. Anyone else know? Also, I was supprised to
hear the downlink on 437.930 (give or take for doppler) instead of the
normal downlink frequency.
Mark <KB9KHM>
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:52 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!204.127.130.5!worldnet.att.net!ix.netcom.com!news.webspan.net!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Mir Message #1
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 96 21:39:26 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet connection
Lines: 39
Message-ID: <58n9mp$pm4@news.mhv.net>
References: <32add9f0.4430609@news.cyberportal.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port105.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <32add9f0.4430609@news.cyberportal.net>, dhend@cyberportal.net wrot
e:
>Here is something I just downloaded from the PMS
>
>Logged on to R0MIR's Personal Message System
>CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
>
>r 1
>Stat : PR
>
>Posted : 12/09/96 22:41
>To : ALL
>From : R0MIR
>@ BBS :
>xID :
>Subject: HELLO
>We finished our second space walk.
>After the first one we had a problem with our antenna.
>Tonight we repaired it and now it's Ok.
>We back your pardon for such an occasion.
>73 de Mir crew
>CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
>
>
>73 DAVE N1PPP
>dhend@cyberportal.net
>http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
Great news, thanks Dave and "nice job" to the crew!
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:53 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!nntp.coast.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mir's EVA
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 01:20:56 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 55
Message-ID: <32af5d5a.10499866@news.cyberportal.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar1-async-10.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
from Chris Van deBerg
MIRNEWS 10 DECEMBER 1996 (338)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2d Spacewalk (EVA) 22d Mainexpedition (ME) MIR:
This EVA took place on 9.12.1996 between 1352UTC (opening
hatch) and 2028UTC (closing hatch). So a duration of 6
hrs 36 mins. The EVA lasted longer for Korzun wished to
accomplish all what had to be done and there also was a
problem with something which bungled loose. Before
return they restored the connection of the radio-
amateurantenne for the 145 mc. Probably this antenne had
been disconnected by accident during the 1st EVA. They
connected the antenna again and while they were flying
over Chile and Brasil they asked John Blaha to listen
out on the 145.800 mc to check whether the antenne was
working or not. There was no traffic on that frequency
in that area and so they had to wait until they came in
range of European amateurs. I asked the English radio-
amateur Pat Gowen (G3IOR) to give calls on 145.800 mc as
soon as MIR would come in range (at abt. 1934UTC). So he
did and these signals could be heard by John Blaha while
MIR was flying over France. He reported this to the
still being on EVA Korzun and Kaleri and congratulated
them with their success. Korzun urged John not to
transmit, but to listen only. The cosmonauts fully
accomplished their tasks: installing the truss
construction Rapana at the truss Ferma-3 and the
replacement of the Kurs-antenna on the outersurface of
the P.Kh.O. (transitionsection). John Blaha who stayed
inside the complex took care of the communications and
executed commands given to him by TsUP. He gave the
cosmonauts all possible moral and technical help. The
cosmonauts and Blaha did an excellent job during this
EVA, they gave an example of fruitful international
cooperation and so they all deserve a loud: 'MOLODTSY'
(very well done).
Of course the cosmonauts were very tired after the EVA
and back in the airlock they had to do hard labour to
put off their spacesuits.
Just before midnight Korzun could be heard in a contact
with a Portugese radio-amateur via the repaired antenne
for the 145 mc.
Thusfar there are no more EVA's on schedule for this
crew.
I hope this fills in the gaps, it was working much better tonight,
they must have found something else..
73 DAVE
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:54 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: gsteve490@aol.com (GSteve490)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: My Hat's Off to Mir-EVA
Date: 17 Dec 1996 05:48:34 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <19961217054700.AAA29913@ladder01.news.aol.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
tough enuff to run up the tower in the middle of winters night to fix a
broken 2m antenna, at least the wind was nominal for such an adventure.
fly on, peace.
george n2lzh
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:55 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news.msfc.nasa.gov!spacelink!glue9600
From: Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: 11 Dec 1996 22:12:41 GMT
Organization: NASA Spacelink Teacher Resource Center-a service to educators
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.961211161124.29968B-100000@spacelink>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net> <Pine.SOL.3.91.961210193117.21646B-100000@spacelink> <wkrantz-1012962317320001@doyl114-pri.voicenet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: glue9600@spacelink
In-Reply-To: <wkrantz-1012962317320001@doyl114-pri.voicenet.com>
X-Disclaimer: Message author is solely responsible for message content.
On Tue, 10 Dec 1996 wkrantz@voicenet.com wrote:
>
> What's the chance of getting DirecTV or USSB to carry NASA Select if we
> all wrote or called? Anyone have any inside info on these DSS providers?
>
> Bill Krantz
>
> wkrantz@voicenet.com
>
Bill: I do know of several schools where, during a particular
spaceflight, cable providers have added NASA Select to the choices,
but only temporarily. Give it a shot, but don't expect miracles.
-Dick
---------- Richard David Glueck
Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:55 1996
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!166.84.0.219!panix!netaxs.com!news.pond.com!kd3bj!kd3bj.ampr.org!robert
From: robert@kd3bj.ampr.org (Robert E. Garland)
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Sender: news@kd3bj.ampr.org (news)
Organization: The KD3BJ Usenet BBS
Message-ID: <robert.850269457@kd3bj.ampr.org>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net>
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: jupiter.jtan.com
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 1996 01:57:37 GMT
Lines: 19
"Charles M. Clark" <charlie@smarty.smart.net> writes:
>Can anyone give me the low down on what is required in order to receive
>live NASA TV. I don't know much about this, but would like to learn. I
>would like to be able to receive NASA live TV during the shuttle
>flights. What would I need in order to do this?
>Reply: charlie@smarty.smart.net
>Thanks in advance for any help.
Methinks a "C" band dish setup is required. I don't think the digital
guys like Dish, USSB, Primestar, etc. are carrying NASA TV. For the
"bird" and transponder, check a copy of Satellite Times.
--
Robert Garland NX3S @ N3ACL.PA.USA.NOAM
Hilltown Township Bucks County robert@kd3bj.ampr.org
Pennsylvania USA Grid FN20ii
"Ham Radio is a calling"
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:57 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!pandora.digitaladvantage.net!news.upo.com!news4.noc.netcom.net!noc.netcom.net!ix.netcom.com!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!news.hal-pc.org!usenet
From: "Dale Martin" <kg5u@hal-pc.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: 12 Dec 1996 01:45:26 GMT
Organization: Houston Area League of PC Users
Lines: 47
Message-ID: <01bbe7ce$2b0be660$b6a1dece@kg5u.hal-pc.org>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net> <Pine.SOL.3.91.961210193117.21646B-100000@spacelink> <wkrantz-1012962317320001@doyl114-pri.voicenet.com> <Pine.SOL.3.91.961211161124.29968B-100000@spacelink>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm9-182.hal-pc.org
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
--
Dale Martin
kg5u@hal-pc.org
http://www.hal-pc.org
Richard David Glueck <glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov> wrote in article
<Pine.SOL.3.91.961211161124.29968B-100000@spacelink>...
> On Tue, 10 Dec 1996 wkrantz@voicenet.com wrote:
> >
> > What's the chance of getting DirecTV or USSB to carry NASA Select if we
> > all wrote or called? Anyone have any inside info on these DSS
providers?
> >
> > Bill Krantz
> >
> > wkrantz@voicenet.com
> >
> Bill: I do know of several schools where, during a particular
> spaceflight, cable providers have added NASA Select to the choices,
> but only temporarily. Give it a shot, but don't expect miracles.
> -Dick
>
>
> ---------- Richard David Glueck
> Email:glue9600@spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov
>
>
>
I believe the local cable company (TCI) here in the Clear Lake area of
Houston (near Johnson Space Center) carries NASA TV (NASA Select is a
non-term....). It's been years since I was a subscriber, but back then,
they were just carrying it during missions. I have heard they are carrying
it 24 hours a day, now. But, I don't know that firsthand. I believe a lot
of people asked the cable company for it and TCI (then Storer Cable)
accomodated.
I suppose the same could happen with the DSS groups. Also, with local
cable companies, if enough of their subscribers request it. Having a few
school administrations backing the request might help, too.
Press for mission and non-mission airing of NASA TV. Might as well go all
the way. Maybe it can be compromised down to mission coverage.
Good luck,
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:57 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!news.netset.com!ragnarok.oar.net!malgudi.oar.net!mcnet.marietta.edu!not-for-mail
From: bret Johnson <bret@baj.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: NASA TV Links
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 12:50:43 -0500
Organization: Marietta College
Lines: 23
Message-ID: <32B43A73.4A64@baj.com>
References: <32AC8067.3BBA@smarty.smart.net> <robert.850269457@kd3bj.ampr.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: [mcax2]slippp-12.marietta.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Check out CU-SEE-ME.
I use it to see the same feeds that they show on the Sat.
It is only 28.8 but, you can get it..
Robert E. Garland wrote:
> "Charles M. Clark" <charlie@smarty.smart.net> writes:
>
> >Can anyone give me the low down on what is required in order to receive
> >live NASA TV. I don't know much about this, but would like to learn. I
> >would like to be able to receive NASA live TV during the shuttle
> >flights. What would I need in order to do this?
> >Reply: charlie@smarty.smart.net
> >Thanks in advance for any help.
>
> Methinks a "C" band dish setup is required. I don't think the digital
> guys like Dish, USSB, Primestar, etc. are carrying NASA TV. For the
> "bird" and transponder, check a copy of Satellite Times.
>
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:40:58 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!EU.net!howland.erols.net!math.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!news
From: JungHo Yu <kc8djq@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Need info about military satellite
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 1996 15:13:36 -0500
Organization: OSU
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <32B9A1F0.865@amsat.org>
Reply-To: kc8djq@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: ts24-16.homenet.ohio-state.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win95; I)
I need info about the freqs of military satellite and other info.
I saw some special forces using satellite communication system which
must be military one during Gulf War. pse let me know where i can find
these infos.
thanks in advance.
73s de Matt
kc8djq@amsat.org
--
"Make your Dream Biger even if you can't accomplish it in future"
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:01 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!metro.atlanta.com!news.he.net!calweb!news.campus.mci.net!news.telis.org!s21-pm05-ontro-t.telis.org!user
From: wb6siv@telis.org (wb6siv)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New Concept! Cybersched your next satellite/DX contact
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 21:18:15 -0800
Organization: Raymond Sarrio Co.
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <wb6siv-1512962118150001@s21-pm05-ontro-t.telis.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: s21-pm05-ontro-t.telis.org
By combining the benefits of the World Wide Web and E-mail, you can use
the internet to set up schedules to contact hard to find hams all over the
world.
How can Cyberscheds help me?
Are you in need of a single state to qualify for the WAS Award? Do you
need one more country to qualify for DXCC? Are a county hunter, looking
for a few allusive counties? Are you into QRP, and trying to reach a DXCC?
Then Cybersched can be a great benefit to your ham radio operations.
DX stations will also find that by establishing prearranged schedules,
they can avoid the pile-up mania that makes working the states anything
but enjoyable.
Using the same procedure one would use to work the Space Shuttle, you can
now (thanks to the World Wide Web) work DX and stateside stations in an
orderly and productive way.
Visit http://www.sarrio.com and estabish your own cybersched
*********BELOW IS AN EXAMPLE OF A CYBERSCHED POST FROM MY WEB PAGE**********
Station: EI8ESB
Name: Robbie
QTH: Ireland
Mode: Satellite Comments: I would like any skeds on either RS10/11 or RS15
on SSB up on
2 down on 10Mtrs.I am available most evenings and e-mail me for details.
Regards Robbie...
Post Date: November 10,1996
--
The Raymond Sarrio Co. a full feature Ham Radio Storefront and web site develo
per. Located at http://www.sarrio.com.
In association with Brillar Enterprises http://win-win.com/brillar provider of
discount CD-Roms!
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:08 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.conterra.com!news.cps.udayton.edu!news.engr.udayton.edu!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE916)
Date: 16 Dec 1996 23:23:43 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 742
Message-ID: <594llv$kne@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial 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 #916 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96347.25522173 .00000066 00000-0 67354-4 0 2520
2 00424 80.4632 108.0479 0022668 296.8989 62.9836 13.67882844706681
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96344.32353062 -.00000156 00000-0 10000-3 0 9931
2 02608 14.5763 350.9421 0007513 102.7943 257.2938 1.00291909 26623
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96351.19387854 -.00000121 00000-0 10000-3 0 5938
2 03029 14.9172 357.8374 0010455 269.9461 141.8874 1.00273206106594
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96346.90353360 -.00000135 00000-0 81261-5 0 199
2 07646 49.8299 167.4101 0206207 97.4534 264.9849 13.82192225103545
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96347.90118574 .00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 2492
2 08820 109.8520 87.2463 0043097 89.3164 271.2410 6.38664452225245
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96343.27079014 .00000111 00000-0 10000-3 0 907
2 09852 13.4400 30.9317 0006386 146.9783 213.0419 1.00006436 19383
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96346.54548751 .00000052 00000-0 10000-3 0 7765
2 10061 12.6016 35.0717 0012379 131.2765 293.3311 1.00275674 16221
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96350.25999944 -.00000027 00000-0 10000-3 0 3290
2 10637 35.7510 80.6641 1339678 62.5418 277.3574 1.00057422 21748
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96346.24792791 -.00000109 00000-0 10000-3 0 7533
2 10953 11.6045 38.0174 0002843 200.1378 187.5181 1.00265062 20834
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96350.56421603 -.00000019 00000-0 38322-4 0 5380
2 10967 107.9999 190.0530 0001701 256.8615 103.2338 14.38139023967522
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96350.63063770 -.00000050 00000-0 -76670-5 0 6352
2 11080 98.9205 203.8082 0008473 195.8284 164.2608 13.83689336916268
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96350.29106950 .00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 9738
2 12472 8.4800 48.3662 0005327 89.1419 270.8669 1.00289267 14914
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96350.55768630 .00000056 00000-0 48128-4 0 5515
2 13301 82.9304 0.8153 0028733 98.2948 262.1464 13.68080002722178
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96350.71994807 .00000036 00000-0 17663-4 0 297
2 13367 98.0517 35.8916 0006368 303.6251 56.4338 14.57196667766973
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96350.56062553 -.00000002 00000-0 17642-4 0 1400
2 13736 98.6204 176.0222 0007913 218.4277 141.6340 14.25814811726911
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96351.12821499 -.00000245 00000-0 -13887-3 0 5214
2 13777 98.9679 172.7910 0012977 314.8175 45.1932 13.99259946378815
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96350.28017004 .00000041 00000-0 27533-4 0 6434
2 13916 82.9478 57.1075 0038814 9.3741 350.8130 13.74349756688611
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96349.09408205 -.00000296 00000-0 00000+0 0 6811
2 13969 9.2459 41.9911 0003532 215.7374 169.6196 1.00258529 23191
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96351.21053942 -.00000098 00000-0 10000-3 0 5916
2 14050 7.3376 51.9578 0003057 54.9349 309.2427 1.00217294108026
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96285.03170314 -.00000150 00000-0 10000-3 0 4581
2 14129 25.8858 184.9970 6048316 56.3073 347.4042 2.05879930 72258
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96348.59128561 .00000027 00000-0 16258-4 0 5757
2 14780 98.3110 46.1962 0003426 86.6922 273.4668 14.57061947680082
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96350.53098959 .00000118 00000-0 27819-4 0 9369
2 14781 97.8146 333.3430 0010730 229.7950 130.2291 14.69507894684281
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96351.20704811 .00000016 00000-0 40413-6 0 8436
2 15055 82.9554 111.7073 0026921 192.3770 167.6719 13.73642133625979
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96350.40190393 .00000204 00000-0 21060-4 0 5257
2 15331 82.5313 303.2348 0022150 68.7623 291.5956 14.84816947659865
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96350.54332363 -.00000136 00000-0 93286-5 0 2426
2 15354 56.9955 13.4797 0007767 144.6676 215.4871 14.95002941663964
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96350.87678261 .00000079 00000-0 65510-4 0 9587
2 15427 98.9281 55.7128 0015099 155.6953 204.4936 14.13824151619301
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96351.13813213 .00004193 00000-0 51709-4 0 8790
2 16609 51.6525 286.6910 0013163 146.9833 213.1984 15.62643805618449
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96349.81307370 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 148
2 16613 98.8171 57.3411 0001953 89.8148 270.3250 14.19992196245944
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96347.09215500 .00000202 00000-0 21392-4 0 4393
2 16881 82.5191 4.0078 0020830 106.2818 254.0693 14.83786684560229
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96350.84176560 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1397
2 16908 50.0091 158.5202 0011549 114.6062 245.5977 12.44415827139026
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96350.84704975 .00000006 00000-0 20827-4 0 8899
2 16969 98.5312 342.7937 0012593 179.3391 180.7807 14.25013431532475
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96350.69885257 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4935
2 17527 98.9187 48.5483 0017829 180.2733 179.8420 14.00450216500390
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96351.24024946 -.00000165 00000-0 10000-3 0 1904
2 17561 3.4215 68.1379 0002546 301.7410 67.2705 1.00278712 19133
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 8439
2 17845 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838552477
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96350.69307411 .00000025 00000-0 35267-4 0 7231
2 18123 98.7632 177.9859 0015039 95.4784 264.8104 14.15461432490170
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96350.51784597 .00000030 00000-0 15988-4 0 2928
2 18129 82.9258 14.5048 0012802 17.8961 342.2647 13.72372433475047
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96351.13135512 .00000055 00000-0 35532-4 0 5302
2 18312 82.5541 207.7613 0013817 68.9091 291.3546 13.84089188471340
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96350.83568848 .00000068 00000-0 47407-4 0 1243
2 18820 82.5403 262.5877 0016924 131.3659 228.8959 13.84766203448661
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96350.85156872 .00000036 00000-0 33980-4 0 4157
2 18822 98.3798 174.2388 0005841 189.1029 171.0048 14.23210451460417
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96347.37612515 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 1406
2 19163 65.3427 79.8361 0009179 134.0401 226.0592 2.13102495 66030
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96347.90248834 -.00000001 00000-0 10000-3 0 5499
2 19165 65.3059 79.7712 0003760 2.8166 357.2118 2.13102233 66662
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96341.81525328 -.00000034 00000-0 10000-3 0 2969
2 19215 3.6100 66.8050 0006013 130.5628 229.1530 0.96946923 18852
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96351.01799754 .00000224 00000-0 24911-4 0 1403
2 19274 82.5135 101.3943 0018273 245.6045 114.3280 14.82550629456317
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96349.67150072 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5353
2 19336 82.5388 38.7119 0016953 140.5258 219.7103 13.16979969403231
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96340.89426952 -.00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 4317
2 19503 65.5212 318.9279 0006330 137.0269 223.0446 2.13101621 64008
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96350.84864952 .00000000 00000-0 25164-4 0 7801
2 19531 99.1717 13.5839 0012626 90.9937 269.2681 14.13114334424108
TDRS 3
1 19548U 88091B 96344.24256366 -.00000170 00000-0 10000-3 0 2595
2 19548 2.8425 70.9053 0006372 191.1728 348.0769 1.00262066 17289
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96349.37826751 -.00000005 00000-0 10000-3 0 6456
2 19749 65.2894 79.2799 0006523 255.9248 104.0328 2.13101483 61693
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96349.43307360 -.00000006 00000-0 10000-3 0 5501
2 19750 65.2958 79.3528 0008251 234.9640 124.9874 2.13101749 61715
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96348.63466394 .00000014 00000-0 00000+0 0 3316
2 19802 55.4177 103.4908 0019702 180.2135 179.7735 2.00559050 57316
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96351.10598272 .00014450 00000-0 73304-3 0 8302
2 19822 75.0946 18.0165 3731927 328.6465 13.6959 7.95063677181128
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96350.90280847 .00000034 00000-0 16707-4 0 5292
2 19851 82.5193 136.1936 0013688 181.8989 178.2123 13.84421939393972
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96347.62844567 -.00000114 00000-0 10000-3 0 2366
2 19876 2.3507 71.2747 0016943 279.7611 79.3721 0.97110057 8359
TDRS 4
1 19883U 89021B 96346.69137153 -.00000258 00000-0 00000+0 0 2866
2 19883 0.2319 88.1711 0005702 154.7325 45.6713 1.00267856200882
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96349.47268776 -.00000030 00000-0 10000-3 0 3264
2 20061 54.0823 278.9498 0165635 223.3862 135.3259 2.00562923 55076
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96350.48055480 .00000039 00000-0 25623-4 0 46
2 20103 82.9546 334.9690 0036301 270.3354 89.3642 13.73871834373575
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96351.17608866 .00000007 00000-0 10000-3 0 3747
2 20185 55.0423 103.6682 0184840 305.3237 52.9418 2.00807855 53687
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96346.64649285 .00000000 00000-0 10000-3 0 5033
2 20217 2.1244 73.2857 0003182 253.9951 105.9739 1.00278561 27202
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96350.84099706 .00000067 00000-0 17027-4 0 5510
2 20261 82.5894 154.7075 1242062 348.6378 8.8855 12.47369702328552
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96348.84247331 .00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 3532
2 20302 53.1964 218.7171 0024992 186.4741 173.5715 2.00571007 52436
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96350.52842210 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7099
2 20305 82.5440 359.2080 0006020 234.5798 125.4702 13.04433602341845
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96349.53241718 .00000275 00000-0 20372-3 0 2674
2 20322 98.9339 1.6922 0008306 257.4801 102.5447 14.03463182362226
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 7695
2 20335 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838401489
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96349.35930078 -.00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 1545
2 20361 56.0968 46.1582 0094564 140.3190 220.4333 2.00565583 41927
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96350.06202323 -.00000138 00000-0 00000+0 0 4778
2 20391 4.1913 62.2947 0003131 174.6961 212.9550 1.00275199 25811
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96348.25095746 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1627
2 20436 98.7486 59.3554 0001206 113.0076 247.1228 14.20015868357250
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96347.20220662 -.00000005 00000-0 14875-4 0 2324
2 20437 98.5347 66.7954 0011910 40.1294 320.0773 14.29941463359498
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96350.72189000 -.00000019 00000-0 96143-5 0 318
2 20439 98.5505 72.7974 0011993 31.6633 328.5276 14.29992661360015
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96350.79607098 -.00000042 00000-0 34611-6 0 329
2 20440 98.5536 73.6113 0012440 30.9765 329.2152 14.30134919360053
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96350.78983261 -.00000011 00000-0 12375-4 0 358
2 20441 98.5527 73.5238 0012698 30.8668 329.3262 14.30103763360053
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96350.84163179 .00000019 00000-0 24054-4 0 314
2 20442 98.5540 74.1495 0013567 28.6466 331.5453 14.30215744360081
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96349.75467193 .00000075 00000-0 10000-3 0 2510
2 20452 54.0437 159.4117 0074838 91.2196 269.7773 2.00550983 50439
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96350.22346220 .00000168 00000-0 15999-3 0 79
2 20478 99.1110 57.3381 0006124 109.1227 251.0597 13.93970858269779
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96347.01933182 .00000069 00000-0 21911-3 0 310
2 20479 99.0229 338.2659 0541003 80.7668 285.4182 12.83347717320715
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96351.04695389 -.00000067 00000-0 -85699-4 0 9283
2 20480 99.0224 341.2927 0541166 72.2650 293.6741 12.83235388321219
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96344.74729878 -.00000359 00000-0 -60761-3 0 3016
2 20491 99.0623 46.9253 0469451 243.3691 111.8608 13.02995539324722
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96350.86259537 .00001373 00000-0 46221-4 0 7120
2 20496 43.1027 245.9301 0010122 162.8239 197.2961 15.36184947381769
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96350.87864766 -.00000002 00000-0 -18477-4 0 38
2 20508 82.9486 109.1531 0042864 220.3821 139.4151 13.73515131340838
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96350.80819998 .00000114 00000-0 12361-4 0 5484
2 20510 82.5251 57.0711 0020772 83.5632 276.7949 14.78649959366516
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96343.15602082 -.00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 2926
2 20533 54.4477 280.0123 0048409 77.9996 282.5546 2.00569707 49072
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96350.80289739 .00007314 00000-0 12482-3 0 69
2 20546 94.1261 96.0305 0058229 23.3821 337.0071 15.49444675373104
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96348.50270340 .00000310 00000-0 15410-4 0 8993
2 20580 28.4675 145.8391 0006003 248.1184 111.8765 14.91140653165372
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96351.04977556 .00000131 00000-0 19439-4 0 2335
2 20608 89.9255 171.8340 0106675 138.8192 222.1136 14.64962521352914
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96348.80684217 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 3490
2 20619 65.1135 317.8152 0025621 209.5914 150.2856 2.13102513 51139
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96350.80256749 -.00000024 00000-0 10000-3 0 3379
2 20620 65.1052 317.7186 0008520 45.9336 314.1242 2.13102528 51219
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96339.13861834 -.00000016 00000-0 10000-3 0 9456
2 20621 65.1238 318.1772 0012921 196.8449 163.1199 2.13102528 50967
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 5610
2 20635 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838372311
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96350.03808917 .00000108 00000-0 25820-4 0 6188
2 20638 52.9926 204.5676 0011402 322.5514 37.4683 15.07515394359596
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96350.56526525 .00000049 00000-0 30382-4 0 1574
2 20670 82.5469 203.8099 0016698 102.3020 258.0010 13.84131311326834
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96349.69109863 .00000140 00000-0 20876-3 0 3743
2 20712 17.6350 176.3049 7176518 154.7985 272.6954 2.35812321 47373
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96347.48813292 .00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 1518
2 20724 55.0570 101.4937 0131616 186.7825 173.0716 2.00565299 45034
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96350.87377371 .00000091 00000-0 88232-4 0 2012
2 20788 98.8084 350.0993 0015222 358.2622 1.8493 14.01374850321546
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96350.92685712 .00000017 00000-0 18700-5 0 400
2 20826 82.5253 139.7194 0014237 13.5377 346.6159 13.83641477313973
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96350.03564447 -.00000058 00000-0 00000+0 0 1281
2 20830 56.0392 44.0447 0065165 94.4254 266.3778 2.00568181 45711
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96350.93676711 .00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 1109
2 20959 55.2431 103.4608 0111144 235.7962 123.1307 2.00556820 44323
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96350.82027350 .00000073 00000-0 41637-4 0 8827
2 20978 98.5796 60.2991 0079307 354.9307 5.1062 14.32703436315721
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96343.38533206 -.00000019 00000-0 10000-3 0 9079
2 21006 65.2726 78.8203 0057188 186.0433 173.9000 2.13102799 46724
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96346.39335358 -.00000005 00000-0 10000-3 0 450
2 21007 65.2842 78.8002 0033200 178.0277 182.0021 2.13101165 46772
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96348.63635443 -.00000003 00000-0 00000+0 0 3117
2 21008 65.2642 78.6615 0008863 268.6405 91.2892 2.13098713 46811
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96350.54972146 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7695
2 21087 82.9416 187.4834 0036925 61.0300 299.4549 13.74575383294924
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96350.21013624 .00000045 00000-0 31418-4 0 9416
2 21089 82.9222 55.0995 0030621 88.4512 272.0151 13.74075335293897
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96348.84607707 -.00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 3085
2 21140 0.9100 78.5260 0001977 137.4568 171.1041 1.00270698 23414
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96350.54722392 .00000045 00000-0 32412-4 0 6901
2 21152 82.9212 11.4561 0041070 196.9568 163.0224 13.73540900288649
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96348.09609931 -.00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 5633
2 21216 64.8568 317.3093 0012304 200.1119 159.8336 2.13103215 44338
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96349.10694108 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 9696
2 21217 64.8484 317.2755 0009985 220.6866 139.2333 2.13101791 44344
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96343.11624376 -.00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 4384
2 21218 64.8449 317.4556 0007818 301.7159 58.2094 2.13102526 44224
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96349.41254100 .00002394 00000-0 44158-4 0 4134
2 21225 28.4592 7.0187 0003230 114.3320 245.7618 15.44663809197825
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96350.78829946 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9438
2 21232 82.5387 244.3892 0014947 70.3948 289.8776 13.16474048271435
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96350.87417406 .00000077 00000-0 53478-4 0 1985
2 21263 98.5469 4.6845 0013797 104.4463 255.8248 14.22677072290297
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96347.00705403 .00000115 00000-0 13144-4 0 2405
2 21397 82.5235 335.4163 0022031 171.4522 188.7067 14.76530058297604
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96349.21812945 -.00000052 00000-0 10000-6 0 603
2 21552 56.3247 41.9508 0075600 252.6064 106.6224 2.00553868 39880
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96350.26649658 .00000054 00000-0 36058-4 0 3879
2 21574 98.5521 61.7045 0001135 79.5677 280.5635 14.32245091283367
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96351.19705165 .00000024 00000-0 22328-4 0 7381
2 21575 98.3300 51.9613 0008633 81.1076 279.1086 14.37048953284206
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96350.25491370 .00000013 00000-0 18710-4 0 8321
2 21576 98.3269 48.7531 0004622 87.9526 272.2164 14.36465624283940
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96347.22406086 .00000013 00000-0 18700-4 0 7312
2 21577 98.3266 46.4442 0007321 94.7615 265.4407 14.36534881283540
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96350.55166901 .00000383 00000-0 13699-3 0 9337
2 21578 98.3632 59.1889 0005811 80.2891 279.8963 14.39289568284428
TDRS 5
1 21639U 91054B 96346.52986459 .00000092 00000-0 10000-3 0 1263
2 21639 0.0245 41.5354 0003178 207.3640 208.0992 1.00273787 19642
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96350.56938592 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9417
2 21655 82.5543 192.3568 0014594 76.0715 284.2012 13.16850290256547
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96346.56582471 -.00000193 00000-0 42298-5 0 8113
2 21701 56.9839 119.1044 0005148 107.6023 252.5572 14.96556341286918
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96350.88925448 .00000067 00000-0 58805-4 0 5526
2 21798 98.9351 8.2272 0013615 73.7963 286.4711 14.14010354260602
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96348.02088542 -.00000002 00000-0 10000-4 0 1411
2 21853 65.2123 78.3115 0006785 205.0299 154.9654 2.13102281 37934
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96349.71351745 -.00000009 00000-0 00000+0 0 3869
2 21854 65.2169 78.2419 0014718 17.4163 342.6651 2.13104498 37958
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96350.72132774 -.00000018 00000-0 00000+0 0 3682
2 21855 65.2169 78.2127 0008467 204.5823 155.4088 2.13102087 37968
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96351.20907794 .00000626 00000-0 56950-4 0 493
2 21867 97.6748 65.7788 0000446 110.3245 249.8029 14.98659456265125
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96349.67054992 .00000034 00000-0 00000+0 0 9135
2 21890 53.7424 219.2011 0062274 199.6812 160.1800 2.00562087 35262
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96350.33179722 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 8289
2 21930 55.6697 341.3914 0022874 192.8023 167.1511 2.00554791 34202
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96351.23583547 .00001022 00000-0 36793-4 0 5930
2 21987 28.4326 38.7617 0009754 245.0595 114.9004 15.20021311251408
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96350.91348349 .00000575 00000-0 47989-4 0 7685
2 22012 81.6702 287.3441 0116304 298.4864 60.4678 14.91811090242326
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96350.41662801 .00000081 00000-0 00000+0 0 8091
2 22014 54.8308 161.3153 0150276 325.7214 33.2575 2.00567276 26046
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96350.14910352 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2959
2 22056 64.6900 317.2427 0006557 268.6769 91.2451 2.13103477 34046
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96349.50755956 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2663
2 22057 64.7028 317.2999 0009300 312.7850 47.1336 2.13102837 34001
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96346.16218193 -.00000026 00000-0 10000-3 0 1656
2 22058 64.7016 317.4138 0008297 276.2500 83.6485 2.13102642 33986
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96350.90313447 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 143
2 22076 66.0411 195.2316 0007360 269.1159 90.9013 12.80930740203396
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96350.87635717 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6276
2 22077 66.0788 169.0485 0015223 254.2786 105.6552 12.86299491204174
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96350.60545902 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6252
2 22078 66.0768 167.9189 0016369 254.4359 105.4852 12.86584223204239
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96348.88589660 .00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 8322
2 22108 53.9738 220.1398 0120001 162.2914 198.2165 2.00571384 31190
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96347.84200648 -.00000131 00000-0 -30280-5 0 6749
2 22161 62.9777 147.7572 0856280 32.8633 332.2757 13.21931978202040
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96350.37872651 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5494
2 22195 52.6532 237.1381 0137428 155.9872 204.7176 6.47293831 98008
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96349.56742871 .00000077 00000-0 00000+0 0 8451
2 22231 54.6888 162.5108 0026542 269.4409 90.2520 2.00562246 29788
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96350.67847907 .00000082 00000-0 00000+0 0 8377
2 22275 54.6378 159.9468 0052510 251.4225 108.0052 2.00588089 29219
TDRS 6
1 22314U 93003B 96347.18225390 .00000000 00000-0 10000-3 0 6751
2 22314 0.0910 99.7406 0006353 200.7799 159.1939 1.00269247 14362
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96350.78281696 -.00000042 00000-0 10000-3 0 8278
2 22446 54.0875 279.7440 0094646 5.3991 354.7171 2.00572465 28209
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96349.43073528 -.00000007 00000-0 10000-3 0 8506
2 22512 65.2325 78.1254 0008685 176.8446 183.1902 2.13102171 29538
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96349.36866622 -.00000007 00000-0 00000+0 0 84
2 22513 65.2269 78.1325 0007803 196.3838 163.6228 2.13102338 29728
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96350.13216839 -.00000013 00000-0 00000+0 0 66
2 22514 65.2490 78.1034 0011412 189.3404 170.6706 2.13101653 29744
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96350.24308639 .00000812 00000-0 50145-4 0 5451
2 22521 31.1030 350.4354 0055619 163.8516 196.3901 15.03210538209730
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96349.13548234 -.00000262 00000-0 00000+0 0 5443
2 22563 24.9853 285.7680 0010142 265.2626 94.6575 0.99254760 17864
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96348.93353293 -.00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 6187
2 22581 55.1578 340.7624 0058695 40.0071 320.4563 2.00574151 27223
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96351.05939502 -.00000057 00000-0 00000+0 0 7895
2 22657 55.1908 340.5513 0085750 229.5164 129.7433 2.00563222 22596
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96351.21910980 .00000076 00000-0 27186-4 0 5401
2 22698 89.5465 261.9183 0093375 92.3662 268.8232 14.21386173180287
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96351.02679034 .00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 6228
2 22700 54.1597 220.8955 0054677 5.9334 354.2141 2.00563119 25394
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96350.87901993 -.00000070 00000-0 -13358-4 0 2197
2 22739 99.0670 307.5499 0010685 75.2645 284.9712 14.10978391172671
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96350.61414779 -.00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 6873
2 22779 54.2442 279.8256 0014374 282.1351 77.7312 2.00553105 24149
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96347.16908469 .00000054 00000-0 35999-4 0 5315
2 22782 82.5498 206.0807 0020937 197.7760 162.2670 13.83065472165735
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96349.94925596 -.00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 6986
2 22787 4.0002 327.7630 0005313 268.4379 260.9490 1.00275088 10645
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96351.24954764 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 6378
2 22823 98.7381 62.2825 0016380 231.6975 128.2727 14.16976040167068
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96351.25829723 -.00000048 00000-0 -21451-5 0 5223
2 22824 98.5617 62.6182 0007279 60.5611 299.6296 14.27106276167907
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96347.22609161 -.00000010 00000-0 13553-4 0 5229
2 22825 98.5667 59.4224 0009541 67.4006 292.8174 14.27711712167392
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96347.20883789 -.00000021 00000-0 90460-5 0 5201
2 22826 98.5677 59.6097 0010053 68.4097 291.8150 14.27820597167402
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96351.24375988 .00000045 00000-0 35506-4 0 5842
2 22827 98.5646 63.4527 0010382 43.8387 316.3614 14.27960725167994
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96347.21778396 -.00000014 00000-0 11686-4 0 5003
2 22828 98.5630 59.6883 0011199 52.9501 307.2692 14.28161774135523
POSAT
1 22829U 93061G 96347.23673053 -.00000001 00000-0 17002-4 0 5149
2 22829 98.5648 59.7804 0010976 56.4990 303.7238 14.28143687167446
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96350.16505661 -.00000060 00000-0 10000-3 0 5262
2 22877 55.7610 41.9437 0043681 300.6478 58.9785 2.00562377 23021
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96346.11591435 -.00000072 00000-0 00000+0 0 5888
2 22912 0.3066 71.8940 0004118 162.4170 237.8436 1.00273673 9637
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96350.83074709 .00006666 00000-0 42908-3 0 5609
2 22920 28.4614 20.8079 0001960 258.1572 101.8843 15.06447396166827
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96349.91412190 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3075
2 22969 82.5572 132.9914 0015654 143.2065 217.0135 13.16739968138835
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96349.91396490 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2979
2 22970 82.5568 132.8718 0016960 140.4943 219.7421 13.16828151138849
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96350.74567876 -.00000057 00000-0 10000-3 0 4630
2 23027 55.0474 342.5013 0072392 205.4592 154.1825 2.00566691 20349
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96348.33179049 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 4422
2 23043 64.5790 317.6404 0006441 210.3003 149.6560 2.13103078 20822
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96349.15274338 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 4128
2 23044 64.5724 317.6123 0030718 207.7169 152.1118 2.13103071 20848
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96349.33057282 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 4126
2 23045 64.5598 317.6068 0010631 25.4672 334.5773 2.13102509 20840
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96345.12294264 -.00000242 00000-0 10000-3 0 6254
2 23051 0.3842 87.8410 0004058 159.9354 160.8500 1.00278307 17131
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96349.17609246 .00006650 00000-0 97604-4 0 3852
2 23101 97.0727 180.7424 0011506 21.6345 338.5394 15.55773379147268
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96345.19808747 .00000981 00000-0 35547-3 0 3667
2 23125 7.0259 161.6440 7232236 212.0101 69.1351 2.32945252 20227
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96334.95871629 .00012955 00000-0 51553-2 0 3218
2 23126 7.0816 165.9016 7233674 203.5475 90.6584 2.33114876 20025
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96350.36170603 .00000006 00000-0 -92496-5 0 2422
2 23179 82.9456 102.3287 0036368 339.6891 20.2811 13.75687679121700
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96348.99879476 .00000076 00000-0 00000+0 0 3735
2 23203 64.7579 198.0900 0007686 136.9364 223.1932 2.13102259 18237
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96351.10933752 .00000074 00000-0 00000+0 0 3953
2 23204 64.7528 198.0401 0014833 354.2243 5.8250 2.13102423 18276
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96348.17612380 .00000082 00000-0 00000+0 0 3799
2 23205 64.7568 198.1282 0001183 7.7229 352.3552 2.13102872 18214
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96350.88593093 .00000086 00000-0 69749-4 0 394
2 23233 98.8042 46.7967 0013076 28.3136 331.8742 14.12760870118481
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96349.19463262 .00000165 00000-0 21686-4 0 2054
2 23317 82.5428 253.4168 0024477 213.7884 146.1784 14.74061978117055
ELEKTRO (GOMS)
1 23327U 94069A 96347.78931788 -.00000099 00000-0 00000+0 0 2323
2 23327 0.4157 101.2372 0001156 88.5198 252.4919 1.00271936 7798
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96351.17869421 .00000046 00000-0 15640-4 0 6278
2 23342 97.9426 43.6734 0001633 85.8250 274.3159 14.69885512113545
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96350.83573579 -.00000020 00000-0 00000+0 0 3579
2 23396 65.1634 78.1185 0030215 191.5932 168.3676 2.13102200 16118
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96350.07362580 -.00000012 00000-0 00000+0 0 3407
2 23397 65.1519 78.1482 0011873 315.2871 44.6491 2.13102051 16099
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96350.42664533 -.00000016 00000-0 00000+0 0 3606
2 23398 65.1435 78.1096 0003393 266.7358 93.2561 2.13101914 16114
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96349.86186046 -.00000275 00000-0 00000+0 0 4427
2 23426 1.0700 264.0178 0002834 8.4574 216.8679 1.00270146 7311
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96346.84075219 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1833
2 23439 64.8153 95.7869 0155559 167.5257 192.9570 11.27529321 80810
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96350.87991607 .00000117 00000-0 88823-4 0 8642
2 23455 98.9676 295.9911 0010431 86.0939 274.1425 14.11632982101088
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96349.44572840 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2730
2 23511 64.5934 317.8794 0007516 231.7432 128.1856 2.13103621 13818
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96349.56630420 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2799
2 23512 64.5847 317.8737 0007816 310.4486 49.4793 2.13101502 13817
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96349.38817264 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 2995
2 23513 64.5883 317.8989 0014057 211.0922 148.8188 2.13103116 13818
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96350.50555372 -.00000289 00000-0 10000-3 0 1878
2 23522 0.4774 24.2611 0000481 201.2206 180.7380 1.00266658 6276
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96350.88536376 .00000061 00000-0 56585-4 0 7892
2 23533 98.8428 351.0443 0006380 263.2890 96.7556 14.12767110 89289
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96346.88118940 .00000094 00000-0 43686-4 0 1859
2 23545 69.9714 117.7938 0015641 290.8508 69.0946 14.45446931 89330
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96346.84625486 .00000173 00000-0 66208-4 0 2195
2 23546 69.9774 118.0650 0015298 282.9033 77.0389 14.45458736 89331
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96346.85330797 .00000205 00000-0 75058-4 0 1575
2 23547 69.9776 117.7411 0015574 283.2377 76.7015 14.45623749 89348
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96351.21429455 .00018082 00000-0 42585-3 0 3947
2 23549 143.3611 260.9658 0210970 236.0784 121.9721 15.19739730 94011
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96349.23186445 .00004008 00000-0 48404-4 0 1874
2 23558 51.6525 284.3539 0006933 173.9708 186.1377 15.63377457618162
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96351.19667032 -.00000031 00000-0 46224-5 0 3117
2 23560 98.5511 62.6247 0000774 77.0684 283.0595 14.32245498 86620
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 5226
2 23579 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838 89798
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96349.59133362 .00000086 00000-0 10000-3 0 2938
2 23581 0.0350 266.6481 0003703 8.2323 246.0332 1.00272136 5730
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96349.73746375 .00000087 00000-0 25793-4 0 3718
2 23605 98.1379 282.9762 0001524 63.4555 296.6831 14.63829992 76978
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96349.82687697 .00000198 00000-0 43681-4 0 2370
2 23606 98.1194 284.7120 0007880 344.5114 15.5849 14.67324780 77200
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96350.88601880 .00000067 00000-0 20681-4 0 1402
2 23607 98.1182 285.5575 0006423 340.6440 19.4484 14.66984301 77378
TDRS 7
1 23613U 95035B 96350.19978894 .00000097 00000-0 00000+0 0 2690
2 23613 1.0555 81.8348 0002922 166.5482 96.6770 1.00281412 5191
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96348.70281004 .00000078 00000-0 00000+0 0 2200
2 23620 64.8212 197.9670 0018467 163.0382 197.0993 2.13103121 10830
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96349.34987556 .00000074 00000-0 00000+0 0 2315
2 23621 64.8260 197.9474 0018049 173.8606 186.2303 2.13102262 10841
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96348.46939882 .00000080 00000-0 00000+0 0 2369
2 23622 64.8185 197.9814 0036776 163.3425 196.8564 2.13102631 10820
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96347.64998010 -.00000676 00000-0 00000+0 0 976
2 23632 71.6610 247.8830 7805094 326.3990 21.2160 0.26373900 1324
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96350.24044025 .00000122 00000-0 15213-4 0 1310
2 23657 82.5331 33.9118 0027632 178.3164 181.8111 14.73516188 69495
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96349.58459891 .00000142 00000-0 72025-4 0 2171
2 23710 98.5785 353.7053 0001165 60.7370 299.3926 14.29983067 58023
Glonass 79
1 23734U 95068A 96349.05667434 .00000076 00000-0 00000+0 0 2101
2 23734 64.8250 197.8775 0017392 328.0759 31.8912 2.13102230 7809
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96349.71922623 .00000073 00000-0 00000+0 0 2038
2 23735 64.8223 197.8406 0006154 202.4111 157.6300 2.13125049 7814
Glonass 77
1 23736U 95068C 96348.82185059 .00000077 00000-0 00000+0 0 1813
2 23736 64.8080 197.8870 0007271 186.9924 173.0712 2.13102245 7799
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96347.19654324 .00000538 00000-0 15980-4 0 1076
2 23757 22.9819 280.0053 0013389 31.7531 328.3775 14.97740068 52186
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96349.94576061 .00000081 00000-0 00000+0 0 880
2 23802 86.3241 24.1170 6535055 277.2347 17.9242 1.36265221 4026
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96347.14656182 .00332021 00000-0 35946-1 0 1482
2 23824 47.5190 203.8640 7220150 72.3883 349.6559 2.37871914 6614
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96349.38420735 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 1226
2 23833 54.6515 340.6800 0028792 143.2141 216.9918 2.00564983 5291
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 2109
2 23848 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838 36889
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96351.08803933 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1508
2 23851 99.3985 334.3225 0006206 20.0727 340.0424 13.97495612 32906
SAX
1 23857U 96027A 96343.48681186 .00001179 00000-0 41425-4 0 456
2 23857 3.9494 284.3100 0012499 354.1731 6.1064 14.91674524 33212
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96348.55488986 .00000856 00000-0 18859-4 0 938
2 23868 97.1184 175.9092 0009139 240.8706 119.1630 15.46665222 32534
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96351.22984095 .00002648 00000-0 11985-3 0 679
2 23940 97.4321 254.4205 0014698 65.9209 294.3565 15.21681835 25312
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96350.29638589 .00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 926
2 23953 55.0693 100.9867 0026932 329.7448 30.0882 2.00563445 3106
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96350.20890328 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1217
2 24277 98.6165 64.5482 0000907 23.0213 337.1013 14.27646116 17111
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96351.21372502 -.00000028 00000-0 11102-4 0 445
2 24278 98.5687 51.1757 0351173 300.3231 56.3607 13.52627269 16384
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 1149
2 24280 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838 18789
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96349.90690717 .00000729 00000-0 73928-4 0 441
2 24285 82.9904 124.7153 2207263 318.2546 26.9143 10.81640111 12493
Microsat
1 24291U 96050A 96351.15811187 .00040804 62802-5 27160-3 0 915
2 24291 62.7917 18.5483 0610344 123.2998 242.8104 14.67437090 15933
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96350.44401218 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 527
2 24305 82.9296 130.3701 0029972 359.5463 0.5657 13.73086171 13847
GPS BIIA-27
1 24320U 96056A 96349.16351918 -.00000028 00000-0 00000+0 0 500
2 24320 54.7056 281.1474 0051225 99.5124 261.0868 2.00568286 1742
SAC-B/HETE
1 24645U 96061A 96351.09610558 .00000425 00000-0 28291-4 0 304
2 24645 37.9778 236.2886 0048908 272.3951 87.1214 15.14795512 6286
Progress M-33
1 24663U 96066A 96350.62652028 .00017068 00000-0 19171-3 0 278
2 24663 51.6533 289.2813 0013160 143.0508 217.1293 15.62650838 4026
1996066B
1 24664U 96066B 96327.41277526 .58399191 12743-4 19260-3 0 190
2 24664 51.6425 45.7297 0017318 127.1554 233.1175 16.57786928 401
Hot Bird 2
1 24665U 96067A 96327.75000000 .00002618 73664-6 10000-3 0 62
2 24665 23.8873 196.7180 7311335 179.2354 352.6087 2.28438038 23
1996067B
1 24666U 96067B 96348.16957079 .00068365 -79526-6 11577-2 0 264
2 24666 23.8616 187.4398 7277915 194.3610 120.7071 2.33452473 498
1996068B
1 24668U 96068B 96351.19289612 .00260499 23528-5 66742-3 0 283
2 24668 36.3851 291.1676 1787325 84.1622 295.8942 12.16299467 1447
1996069A
1 24670U 96069A 96350.22912502 -.00008345 00000-0 -13253-3 0 119
2 24670 65.0421 282.8624 0010525 266.0583 93.9339 15.52044402 579
1996069B
1 24671U 96069B 96347.11039533 .49714734 85636-5 28432-3 0 89
2 24671 65.0090 293.1401 0084681 53.5910 308.4744 16.43706240 94
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-hub.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-9.sprintlink.net!news.ao.net!usenet
From: Herb Perkins <wa2jrv@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 09:17:04 -0400
Organization: Access Orlando (407) 895-1200
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org>
References: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net>
Reply-To: wa2jrv@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: 205.244.242.114
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Macintosh; I; 68K)
Ken,
I may not be of much help but I have assisted W4AVO (George) put his
station together. He is a live aboard and blue water sailor. Last year
he was in the Bahamas and will be there again this year. He has been on
UO22 and has used his station very succesfully. AF4N Wes and I have both
put in a good bit of time getting his boat ready (all three of us are
sailors). George just went off internet and will be on the air for the
next six months. Wes and I will be on internet and can offer some
suggestions.
The first point is that it is not difficult and even underway the system
works just fine. However antenna placement is a problem. George uses one
J pole for up link and a small yagi for down link (3 elements). He
rotates it 180 degrees during the pass and has no difficulity going from
the radio to the cockpit to make the change. Since UO22 is basically
automated his computer does all the work.
He uses a 386 that is not fast and is just a work horse.
If I can be of help please contact me.
73's
Herb WA2JRV
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:09 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news-out.internetmci.com!news.internetMCI.com!news-admin
From: "Bob Smith" <rsmith@internetmci.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: 12 Dec 1996 22:45:31 GMT
Organization: InternetMCI
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <01bbe87e$547ca9c0$51ecbdcc@rsmith>
References: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net> <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: infolink-204.189.236.81.chicago.mci.net
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
What kind of radio does he use Herb?
Herb Perkins <wa2jrv@amsat.org> wrote in article <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org>...
Ken,
73's
Herb WA2JRV
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:10 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.palmnet.net!usenet
From: ghunt@palmnet.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: Fri, 13 Dec 1996 06:22:11 -0500
Organization: Sailing Vessel Promise
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <32B13C63.41DA@palmnet.net>
References: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net> <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org> <01bbe87e$547ca9c0$51ecbdcc@rsmith>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pn113.palmnet.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win16; I)
To: Bob Smith <rsmith@internetmci.com>
CC: wa2jrv@aol.com
See http://www5.palmnet.net/~ghunt for a full system
description incl photos. Transceiver is IC 820h modified.
73 george w4avo
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:11 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!199.60.19.15!news.island.net!wandw-10
From: kwalker@qb.island.net (Ken Walker)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 96 04:16:41 GMT
Organization: Island Internet Inc. - (604) 753-2383
Lines: 35
Message-ID: <597r9p$3vh@cliff.island.net>
References: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net> <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org> <01bbebe2$4cb3ab00$22e10ece@vantive->
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip22.qb.island.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #2
In article <01bbebe2$4cb3ab00$22e10ece@vantive->, "Ken Harris" <kjh@shoreline-
studios.com> wrote:
>
>
>Herb Perkins <wa2jrv@amsat.org> wrote in article <32B005D0.9C@amsat.org>...
>> Ken,
>>
>> I may not be of much help but I have assisted W4AVO (George) put his
>> station together. He is a live aboard and blue water sailor. Last year
>> he was in the Bahamas and will be there again this year. He has been on
>> UO22 and has used his station very succesfully. AF4N Wes and I have both
>
> Very interesting. What kind of gear? Radio? TNC? Software?
>Was the radio modified for 9600? How much power do you transmit?
All of the details are on George's home page at:
http://www5.palmnet.net/~ghunt/
Check it out. Great info!
Now I am wondering whether a dual band mobile rig would do the job like
the two Alinco mobile rigs, the DR605 and the DR610, which they say are 9600
baud ready, would work. Details on them can be found at :
http://www.durhamradio.ca/alinco.htm
Both feature rear-panel data jack for easy connection.
Any further comment???
From: Ken Walker VE7KGW (kwalker@qb.island.net)
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:12 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!cliffs.rs.itd.umich.edu!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: wb4lnm@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: PacSat for Offshore Sailing
Date: 20 Dec 1996 03:25:22 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <19961220032400.WAA27726@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <58lbap$f6r@cliff.island.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
I guess I don't understand why you would want to use this as any kind of
reliable communications medium. If you want this type of store and
forward service, why not use Inmarsat-C? It is inexpensive and has
interfaces directly to the internet. The antennas are small, power
consumption is very low, and the terminals are pretty much plug and play.
John...
WB4LNM
WB4LNM@aol.com
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:13 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!EU.net!Austria.EU.net!01-newsfeed.univie.ac.at!swidir.switch.ch!news.rccn.net!master.di.fc.ul.pt!archie.inesc.pt!scorpius.inesc.pt!jms
From: jms@scorpius.inesc.pt (Joao Maria Schiappa)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: radio help on Aconcagua
Date: 13 Dec 1996 10:53:09 GMT
Organization: inesc
Lines: 13
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <58rcil$mie$1@archie.inesc.pt>
Reply-To: jms@scorpius.inesc.pt (Joao Maria Schiappa)
NNTP-Posting-Host: scorpius.inesc.pt
Hello everyone,
A group of portuguese climbers are going to climb the Aconcagua in Argentina,
between 18 Dez - 3 Jan, they have a radio (VHF 140-146MHz) they want to know i
f
there is anyone in the area that they could contact, to forward their messages
to my email address.
thank's in advance
joao schiappa
email: jms@scorpius.inesc.pt
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:14 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!dciteleport.com!usenet.logical.net!news
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Repeater on Mir
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 1996 04:51:56 GMT
Organization:
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <32b3831c.44778402@news.capital.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup043.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Can someone tell me the frequency of the 70 centimeter repeater aboard
Mir? I saw it somewhere, but can't remember what it was. I need the
uplink and downlink or offset.
Thanks
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:15 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!hunter.premier.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!207.76.102.250!newman.pcisys.net!news
From: Bob Snyder <rsnyder@pcisys.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Repeater on Mir
Date: Mon, 16 Dec 1996 19:15:28 -0700
Organization: Precision Communications Inc. (PCI)
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <32B60240.68B0@pcisys.net>
References: <32b3831c.44778402@news.capital.net>
Reply-To: rsnyder@pcisys.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.76.102.155
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win95; I)
To: orion@capital.net
orion@capital.net wrote:
> Can someone tell me the frequency of the 70 centimeter repeater aboard
> Mir? I saw it somewhere, but can't remember what it was. I need the
> uplink and downlink or offset.
FM repeater with CTCSS subtone 141.3 Hz.
Downlink 437.950 MHz
Uplink 435.750 MHz
Hope this helps,
Bob
KB0YGD
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:16 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!newsgate.duke.edu!newshost.convex.com!bcm.tmc.edu!news.msfc.nasa.gov!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!visi.com!newsfeeder.toronto.ican.net!news.uunet.ca!news
From: Rod Adkins <rod@mail.border.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 1996 17:12:22 -0500
Organization: Border
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <32AF31C6.1CC2@mail.border.com>
References: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu> <58mgv7$k41@faatcrl.faa.gov>
Reply-To: rod@mail.border.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: rock.border.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win16; I)
I am using up to 100w SSB with a J-pole ant for the uplink, & this is
plenty for RS-10, but not good enough for RS-15 (steerable beam in
progress).
I use a horizontal loop at about 25ft for 10m receive, & this works well
for on RS-10, only ok for RS-15 on near-overhead passes. I find vertical
antennas too noisy.
Rod, VE3INE
Jeff Griffin wrote:
>
> For RS-10/11 ssb I,m using a Yaesu ft726r up with 15 to
> 160watts with a 7db gain 2m vertical. Dowm I'm using an Icom
> 706 with a homebrew 1/4 wave 10m wire vertical. RS-15 same
> setup no contacts yet. Seems to be alot of fading in and out,
> might need a cicular polarized antenna system ?
>
> 73 Jeff kb2wqm@juno.com
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:17 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!news.idt.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!uunet!in1.uu.net!142.77.1.4!news.uunet.ca!news
From: Rod Adkins <rod@mail.border.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 06:58:04 -0500
Organization: Border
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <32AFF34C.11C3@mail.border.com>
References: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu> <58mgv7$k41@faatcrl.faa.gov> <32AF31C6.1CC2@mail.border.com> <32AF7553.F1B@fetchsoft.com>
Reply-To: rod@mail.border.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: rock.border.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0Gold (Win16; I)
Keith Erskine wrote:
> 100 Watts??!!! Yikes - Have you tried 10 Watts?
>
> 73....KA1RHO
1. I have about 100ft of feedline
2. I know the J-pole is not properly tuned yet (it's igloo-time up here)
3. I am surrounded by apartment buildings
4. In my experience, & in my situation, low power & omni-antennas work
only when the satellite is on a near-overhead pass, and the satellite is
not busy. I have almost given up working weekends, due to being stomped
on.
5. If you want to work passes other than overhead, then because of the
path loss, there is no choice but to increase power &/or antenna gain.
6. I was trying to give this guy the confidence that with his TX set-up
he darn well ought to be able to make contacts.
Rod, VE3INE
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:17 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!199.0.65.182!news-in.tiac.net!posterchild!news@tiac.net
From: Keith Erskine <kerskine@fetchsoft.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: RS-10 /RS-15 what are you using?
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 1996 22:00:35 -0500
Organization: Fetch Software, Inc.
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <32AF7553.F1B@fetchsoft.com>
References: <58jo6h$2a40@sol.caps.maine.edu> <58mgv7$k41@faatcrl.faa.gov> <32AF31C6.1CC2@mail.border.com>
Reply-To: kerskine@fetchsoft.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: astro.tiac.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Rod Adkins wrote:
>
> I am using up to 100w SSB with a J-pole ant for the uplink, & this is
> plenty for RS-10, but not good enough for RS-15 (steerable beam in
> progress).
100 Watts??!!! Yikes - Have you tried 10 Watts?
73....KA1RHO
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:18 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!cs.utexas.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!207.65.96.4!news.planetc.com!station1!115-668!george.henry
From: George.Henry@115-668.station1.planetc.com (George Henry)
Date: 17 Dec 96 16:31:40
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Sat gear for sale
Message-ID: <b21_9612181145@station1.planetc.com>
Organization: Station 1 BBS
Lines: 15
Posting for a friend who does not have access:
Kenwood 790A all-mode 2M/432. New condition. $1325
PacComm NB96 TNC and PSK-1 modem. ??? (what did they go for new?)
M2 432 Eggbeater with Ampire 20 dB mast-mount preamp (RF-switched, handles
up to 100 Watts) $200
Contact Bob, W3MDM, directly at (630) 653-2421, or at his callbook address.
73 de KA3HSW
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:19 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news2.jaring.my!usenet
From: rinda@pl.jaring.my (TEO ZEE VON)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TEST
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 1996 15:01:42 GMT
Organization: Unconfigured
Lines: 2
Message-ID: <59blie$8ng@news2.jaring.my>
NNTP-Posting-Host: j16.srg3.jaring.my
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
TEST
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:20 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!uunet!in2.uu.net!136.142.185.26!newsfeed.pitt.edu!news.pgh.net!panda
From: John Straughn <JTarn@envirolink.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.astro,sci.astro.amateur
Subject: Re: Test - Do not read
Date: 12 Dec 1996 10:16:36 GMT
Organization: U of Iowa Panda System
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <850385791-0-24962@manatee.envirolink.org>
References: <58jjt6$p43$1@nova.thezone.net>
Reply-To: JTarn@envirolink.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: envirolink.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:32625 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20648 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1562 rec.radio.amateur.space:9093 sci.astro:150602 sci.astro.amateur:67571
In note <58jjt6$p43$1@nova.thezone.net>, p.piercey@thezone.net (Paul J.
Piercey) writes:
>Test.
\MWAHAHAHAHAH I'M A REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE!!!
---
The Triaist
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:22 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.Traveller.COM!news
From: "Paul E. Traufler" <wintrak@traveller.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: TRAKSAT 4.00 Released
Date: 15 Dec 1996 21:47:02 GMT
Organization: WinTrak
Lines: 39
Message-ID: <01bbead1$f4a2e040$51ae1ace@traveller.com.traveller.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.26.174.81
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
TRAKSAT Version 4.00 Has Been Released
TRAKSAT is a general purpose satellite tracking program, by that
I mean any satellite that has a NORAD, NASA 2-Line element set
can be used. The solution to the satellite motion which is used
by TRAKSAT is completely analytic and therefore requires no
numerical integration. This makes the program fast, even faster
when a coprocessor is used, since the solutions can be evaluated
at arbitrarily large, or small, time intervals.
The purpose of this program is to provide the user with a means
of propagating NORAD element sets in time to obtain tracking
information of the space object.
What is new?
New with this version is two fully rendered 3D earth views with full
color Sun/Shadow. These views are breath taking! TRAKSAT is now a
fully protected mode program with no DOS 640K limits! The program
uses Extended or Expanded memory and requires only 250K of free
RAM. This is the FOURTH major re-write of the program and is
considered the best by all the trial users.
The program has expaned on-line help along with better and additional
error checking. Speed and features are what is it all about.
Take a look at the Home Page
http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
Paul E. Traufler
15 Dec. 1996
--
WinTrak Pro
Satellite Tracking Program For Win95/NT
http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
wintrak@traveller.com
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:22 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!news
From: Antonio D Robinson <adr76@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Wanted - TV Sat Antenna
Date: Tue, 17 Dec 1996 05:08:09 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 2
Message-ID: <5959ls$k71@dfw-ixnews7.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ela-mi4-04.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Mon Dec 16 11:05:00 PM CST 1996
X-Newsreader: NETCOMplete/3.0
Looking for 12-15' alum TV Sat Antenna, just the antenna, do not need Mwave ho
rn....
Thanks!
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:23 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!nntp.coast.net!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!hunter.premier.net!worldnet.att.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.net.uk!netcom-uk-feed0!news.enterprise.net!usenet
From: knowsleyhotel@enterprise.net (Graham Atkinson)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: wanted wx receiver
Date: Mon, 16 Dec 1996 08:08:21 GMT
Organization: Enterprise PLC - Internet Services
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <59245u$dha@news.enterprise.net>
Reply-To: knowsleyhotel@enterprise.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: max06-113.enterprise.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
hello,I am looking for a second hand wx reciver for polar orbiting
satss,any help can email 73 all the very best for Christmas....DE
graham GD0WKX..
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:24 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!EU.net!Belgium.EU.net!news
From: VTM Lijnencentrum <lijnencentrum@qmserver.vtm.be>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Wisp Power Saver
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 18:29:57 +0200
Organization: VTM
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <32B03305.741A@qmserver.vtm.be>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 193.75.185.253
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Macintosh; I; 68K)
The Wisp Power Saver will be available soon
Check my home page:
www.dma.be/p/bewoner/ON4BCB/wps.htm
73 ON4BCB
From amsoft@epix.net Sat Dec 21 16:41:25 1996
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!dciteleport.com!worldnet.att.net!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!news.itd.umich.edu!usenet
From: rkling@umich.edu (Rob Kling)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: WTB FT 736
Date: 12 Dec 1996 08:41:35 GMT
Organization: University of Michigan
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <58ogfv$old@lastactionhero.rs.itd.umich.edu>
Reply-To: rkling@umich.edu
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm233-08.dialip.mich.net
X-Newsreader: News Version 5.0 from Hummingbird Communications Ltd.
Turn that underutilized FT-736 Satellite radio into cold hard cash! I am look
ing to purchase a good used FT726R
with modules(6M and/or 22Mhz and/or 1.2Ghz). Please reply if you are willing t
o part with yours.
Rob Kling(N8YBV)
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:27 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!spool.mu.edu!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.texas.net!news
From: dbarillo@texas.net (Dave)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: need info- 10 meter rec for mode A
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 1996 05:16:19 GMT
Organization: Texas Networking, Inc.
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <58o1bj$pgq@news3.texas.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dnet01-08.sat.texas.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Im looking for an inexpensive reciever (or tranciever) for 10 M SSB
to use on mode A-- thinking of the Uniden HR 2510 or the radio shack
HTX 100 does anyone have experiences/strong opinions on the pros and
cons of these radios, or other suggestions for a easy way to recieve
10 m SSB? Thanks Dave
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:28 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!news
From: Dave Crocker <holonet@concentric.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New Space Site opens!
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 13:31:18 +0000
Organization: MultiScope I=?iso-8859-1?Q?=A9 Productions?= Productions
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <32BBE6A6.6224@concentric.net>
Reply-To: holonet@concentric.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc122047.concentric.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (Macintosh; I; 68K)
The new "SPACE" Research Web Site opens for space enthusiasts at:
=
http://www.concentric.net/~Holonet/NEBULA/NASA/NASA.shtml
A MultiScope I=A9 Production
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:29 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!204.71.0.48!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.rio.com!news
From: "FUman" <kg7fu@rio.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
Date: 21 Dec 1996 15:18:52 GMT
Organization: kg7fu
Lines: 112
Message-ID: <01bbef52$d1bcf900$758260ce@surf.rio.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: p17.t0.rio.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
> From: orion@capital.net
> To: FUman <kg7fu@rio.com>
> Subject: Re: Best Ant for RS-10 Down Link
> Date: Friday, December 20, 1996 9:33 PM
>=20
>=20
> >I use a turnstile for 10m in my apartment's attic/crawlspace. Cheap, =
=3D
> >easy,
> >cross-polarized and effective from horizon to horizon.
>=20
> Hello Eugene. I want to try one of these too, but I'm a bit confused
> on the feedline. Can you describe your set up? I don't know the
> lengths of the matching line, stub, etc. Can you help?
Hi Butch,
The antenna is amazingly simple. See just about any ARRL Antenna
Book or Handbook for pictures.
Mine is wierd as it's in the attic/crawlspace of my apartment. But here
it is..
The first dipole length 468/f and trimmed to resonance using an MFJ-259
SWR Analyzer. I won't give you the exact length as being in an attic =
there
are affects of the surrounding structure on resonance. It is fed with a =
Van
Gorden 1:1 Balun and about 50' of RG-58 (no kidding!) to the shack. I =
usually
never recommend RG-58, but I have the unusual problem of being within
someone else's property. Drilling one hole for three runs of RG-58 (one =
for the
turnstile and two for other antennas) was easier to justify than the =
size that
would have been required for RG-8. They are short runs, so the loss is =
only
around 1.5dB overall.=20
The second dipole is laid across the first, approximating a plus (+) =
sign,
but not touching the feedpoint of the first. The phasing line is 1/4 =
wavelength
of 92 Ohm coax. The phasing line shield and center conductors are =
paralelled
with the 50 Ohm feedline. The output of the phasing line is connected as
usual to the second dipole. I used a Budwig insulator at the feedpoint. =
It's
length is also 468/f. I think the length of each side worked out to be =
99 inches.
The phasing line length is f/234 * cable VF. In this case, the RG-62 I =
used has
a published VF of .86 so the formula worked out to be 234/28.400 =3D =
98.8
inches * .86 =3D 85 inches. I added three inches on each end to allow
for the connections at the feedpoint and feedline. The phasing line was =
looped
into a small circle and held together with a few ty-wraps. Note that I =
used 28.400
as the center frequency. I operate a bunch of 10m phone down in the =
novice/tech
and cw at the bottom portions of the band so I chose the length of both =
dipoles on this. The
match at 29.400 is not bad at all, SWR is less than 1.5:1 over the =
entire 10m
band. A bit more broad than the average dipole.
Make sure the 92 or 100 ohm coax you use for the phasing line is of the
highest quality. I got mine from a local electronic supply house and =
they
had several grades. I chose the most expensive which had a really nice
braid and a solid center conductor.
The 2m version was much easier. I used 1/8" diameter brass rod and used
staggered mounting holes in the top of a 1-1/8" x 1-1/8" x 24" piece of =
furniture
grade cedar with a 12" x 13" x 3/8" piece of scrap plywood for a base. =
The elements
were about 20 inches long so I could prune to resonance (around 19.5 =
inches
for 146.000) and the same coax was used as with the 10m version. The =
phasing
line is 16.5 inches plus only the extra needed to make connections. The =
only difference
between this one and the 10m is each dipole has a 9pF trimmer cap in the =
center
conductor of each coax at the feedpoints for resonance. This is because =
I used
no balun and there is a bit of reactance present from using wood as a =
support and
the staggered element arrangement. The 2m turnstile sits above my desk =
in the living room
and my wife (KD6UFQ) referrs to is as modern art.
good luck! - de kg7fu
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:30 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!news
From: mfield@ix.netcom.com (David Gillooly)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: IC-821H vs Yaesu 736R
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 17:36:13 GMT
Organization: Mayfield Systems
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <32bc1f20.96185468@nntp.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: sjx-ca68-17.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Sat Dec 21 9:36:43 AM PST 1996
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Everyone has always told me the Yaesu was a great rig for
satellite work, but it has been around a long time.
Does anyone have any opinions on the IC-821H?
Dave, AA6RE
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:31 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK094 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 21 Dec 1996 13:37:17 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 85
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk094.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12433 rec.radio.amateur.space:9185
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK094
ARLK094 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK94
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 94 ARLK094
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 21, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK094
ARLK094 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96299.11613815 -.00000305 00000-0 10000-3 0 4631
2 14129 25.8792 182.5891 6052907 60.2572 346.3435 2.05882271 72548
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96355.11101058 .00000017 00000-0 21244-5 0 03002
2 18129 82.9251 11.1087 0012562 5.9821 354.1480 13.72372520475675
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96354.95691601 .00000181 00000-0 38345-4 0 09380
2 14781 97.8149 337.5801 0010722 214.4743 145.5744 14.69509888684933
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96355.16170271 .00000034 00000-0 19485-4 0 09459
2 21089 82.9224 51.4280 0030785 75.1274 285.3289 13.74075552294571
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96355.17910636 .00000016 00000-0 23101-4 0 02532
2 20437 98.5345 74.6146 0011719 18.2936 341.8667 14.29942740360633
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96355.17795816 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 02124
2 23439 64.8192 82.3077 0155814 165.9175 194.6164 11.27528664081752
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96355.19998775 .00000041 00000-0 32716-4 0 00332
2 20439 98.5502 77.1951 0012033 18.9004 341.2625 14.29993798360654
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96355.20376159 -.00000047 00000-0 -15275-5 0 332
2 20440 98.5484 77.9372 0013015 16.1085 344.0522 14.30135144360685
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96355.19761875 .00000020 00000-0 24375-4 0 366
2 20441 98.5526 77.8550 0012776 18.0970 342.0670 14.30104514360686
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96355.17911551 -.00000019 00000-0 94036-5 0 320
2 20442 98.5542 78.4157 0013657 17.1631 343.0013 14.30215742360709
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96355.49093092 .00000019 00000-0 10697-3 0 9290
2 20480 99.0220 344.8895 0541247 62.2054 303.2823 12.83236247321781
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96355.06273878 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07794
2 21087 82.9408 184.1425 0036769 48.8627 311.5692 13.74575624295548
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96355.58357352 .00000013 00000-0 18501-4 0 7396
2 21575 98.3292 56.2046 0008742 68.7534 291.4601 14.37049429284833
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96354.91936715 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6288
2 22077 66.0784 160.5828 0015271 253.4363 106.4979 12.86299592204693
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96355.20461664 .00000028 00000-0 28509-4 0 05228
2 22828 98.5621 67.5182 0011122 32.3631 327.8228 14.28162932136661
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96355.19757816 .00000004 00000-0 19187-4 0 05418
2 22826 98.5669 67.4412 0010198 46.5995 313.6025 14.27821755168542
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96355.14536052 .00000026 00000-0 28031-4 0 05400
2 22825 98.5665 67.1860 0009721 45.0627 315.1335 14.27712788168521
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96355.35595076 -.00000040 00000-0 -10581-5 0 454
2 24278 98.5673 54.7624 0351041 289.5984 66.7572 13.52627299 16949
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96355.42278607 .00005792 00000-0 68975-4 0 8900
2 16609 51.6549 265.0680 0013116 160.8621 199.2865 15.62703146619110
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW.
Due to the holiday, the next scheduled transmission of these data
will be Saturday, December 28, 1996, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:32 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!insync!uunet!in3.uu.net!205.137.48.149!news7.agis.net!agis!newspeer1.agis.net!agis!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!not-for-mail
From: fritzing@mhv.net (Keith Fritzinger)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 21:50:07 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet Connection
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <59hm1g$a03$1@news.mhv.net>
References: <32B98365.60BC@mindspring.com> <59cvfc$mqk$2@news.mhv.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port2.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
trandall@mhv.net wrote:
> Mir had antenna trouble which is now fixed. Packet is on 145.800 simplex
>now.
>Tom
Heard voice activity on 145.840 today (Saturday 12/21). Miles, WF1F
arranged an "autopatch" for KC5TZQ to his mother.. kinda of strange
hearing an astronaut saying "mommy"! The repeater on 437.950 is also
working extremely well.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:33 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!cliffs.rs.itd.umich.edu!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: wb4lnm@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: ARLS017 Phase 3D delayed
Date: 21 Dec 1996 22:03:10 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <19961221220200.RAA03374@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <32B8FA04.AA8@rcru.rl.ac.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
Better a delayed message than a destroyed message! Remember what happened
to Ariane 501!
John...
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:34 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.mindspring.com!usenet
From: Wave@mindspring.com (Pieter Ibelings)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: High Precision Synthesizer for sale. Cheap.
Date: 22 Dec 1996 01:36:32 GMT
Organization: www.mindspring.com/~wave
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <59i3b0$in4@camel5.mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: user-168-121-20-253.dialup.mindspring.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.8 (x86 32bit)
I have two high quality direct analog synthesis synthesizers for sale. These
are Programmed Test Sources PTS160. They cover .06 to 159,999,999 in steps of
1Hz. They have the built in TCXO or can be referenced to an external source of
5 or 10 MHz. Power is AGCed and can be varied from about 0 to 16 dBm.
Switching time is between 5 and 20 microseconds depending on the frequency.
All the units have the rack mount and GPIB and parallel interface allowing
them to be fully computer controlled. Spurious outputs are down
-75dBc(discrete), -35dBc(Harmonics). Phase noise is -63dBc(.5 Hz to
15KHz),-105dBc (100Hz), -115 dBc(1KHz). Power is within 0.5 dB flatness
between .1 and 160 MHz. Price is $550 shipped. Current price on identical
units is around $7000. These units are surplus from used NMR imaging equipment
and are in great shape. For more information please e-mail me. Thanks
Pieter Ibelings
N4IP
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:35 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!news-xfer.netaxs.com!news.voicenet.com!news
From: Kingfish@voicenet.com (Kingfish)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Blocking ham/cb interference on stereo equipment?
Date: Sun, 22 Dec 1996 05:47:02 GMT
Organization: Voicenet - Internet Access - (215)674-9290
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <59jrgm$5bp@news1.voicenet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: philly152.voicenet.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Hi Everyone,
A neighbor of mine has a ham or cb radio, and his transmissions come
out over my stereo, telephone, clock radio - anything with a speaker.
The FCC won't do anything about it.
I know there are filters you can put on your telephone to block some
of the interference. Is there anything like that for stereo
equipment?
Thanks,
JOn
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:36 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!in1.uu.net!151.99.250.2!server-b.cs.interbusiness.it!slip4.etrurianet.it!user
From: ngaggiolir@etrurianet.it (Riccardo Gaggioli)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.swap,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.amateur.dx
Subject: Re: Want Kenwood IF-10D Computer Interface.
Date: 22 Dec 1996 15:13:36 GMT
Organization: Centro Servizi Interbusiness
Lines: 4
Message-ID: <ngaggiolir-2212961614110001@slip4.etrurianet.it>
References: <56l7cr$6d7@login.freenet.columbus.oh.us> <56na4m$qk@sjx-ixn2.ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip4.etrurianet.it
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.swap:100694 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:33061 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20812 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:44842 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22276 rec.radio.amateur.misc:121395 rec.radio.amateur.policy:44527 rec.radio.amateur.space:9192 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1641
Hello mike,I own a kenwood ts 50,and I would like if there is a 'home
made' version of IF-10D ,usable with our rtx:any help?
73,cu on 40 & 80 fm IK5WQO Riccardo
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:37 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!portc02.blue.aol.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!208.195.156.10!news.walltech.com!hsnx.wco.com!news.wco.com!news
From: steve <kd6fyk@wco.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Blocking ham/cb interference on stereo equipment?
Date: Sun, 22 Dec 1996 16:56:04 -0800
Organization: redheads inc.
Lines: 22
Message-ID: <32BDD8A4.6625@wco.com>
References: <59jrgm$5bp@news1.voicenet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: aurora22.wco.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
To: Kingfish <Kingfish@voicenet.com>
Kingfish wrote:
>
> Hi Everyone,
>
> A neighbor of mine has a ham or cb radio, and his transmissions come
> out over my stereo, telephone, clock radio - anything with a speaker.
> The FCC won't do anything about it.
>
> I know there are filters you can put on your telephone to block some
> of the interference. Is there anything like that for stereo
> equipment?
>
> Thanks,
>
> JOn
jon,ask him to ground everything and do the same.make all your
leads(wires)as short as possible,and/or coil them in small diameters.
if everything else fails and he is not a ham have a stranger cut his
coax.
73 steve
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:38 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.campus.mci.net!news.telis.org!s08-pm06-ontro-t.telis.org!user
From: wb6siv@telis.org (wb6siv)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New Concept! Cyberscheds Your Next DX and Satellite Contact!
Date: Sun, 22 Dec 1996 22:13:30 -0800
Organization: Raymond Sarrio Co.
Lines: 50
Message-ID: <wb6siv-2212962213300001@s08-pm06-ontro-t.telis.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: s08-pm06-ontro-t.telis.org
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 http://www.sarrio.com for hams to post their request for over-the-air
schedules. Included in each posting is a place to list the posters
specific ham radio contact needs (countries, zones,IOTA, grid squares
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?
Do you need a certain state to complete a WAS award? Are you just a few
countries away from a DXCC? Are you a QRP operator looking to make
contacts with hams all over the world? Are you a DX station that has grown
tired of the stateside pile-ups on 20 meters? Or are you going mobile into
a hard to work county?
In all the above examples you could have prearranged cyberscheds with
those hams that you want to work. If band conditions are poor just e-mail
the hams you could not work and set up a new schedule.
Cyberscheds are a simple way to have the internet work to the benefit of
hams all over the world.
All posting will stay on-line for 6 months, or until the posting is asked
to be deleted. Below is an example of one cyberpost visit the cyberpost
page and view them all. Below is an example of one of the postings:
Station: BV/N0IAT
Name: Joe Fitter
QTH: Taipei, TAIWAN Republic of China
Bands: 40/20/17/15/10
Mode: CW (occasional SSB, but not much)
Comments: Looking for South America, Central America, and Carribean QSO's.
I QRV from a
neighbors shack (local law), so operating times are limited to station
availability. QSL via my CBA --
I DO NOT accept IRC's or Greenbacks, just please send me your QSL card and
a route for returning
the favor.
Post Date: Sept. 6, 1996
--
The Raymond Sarrio Co. a full feature Ham Radio Storefront and web site develo
per. Located at http://www.sarrio.com.
In association with Brillar Enterprises http://win-win.com/brillar provider of
discount CD-Roms!
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:39 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!uunet!in1.uu.net!208.6.192.243!news.magicnet.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-atl-21.sprintlink.net!connix.com!usenet
From: "Bob Berg" <bberg@connix.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Wanted: Plans to Build A Quadrifilar Ant. for WEFAX
Date: Mon, 23 Dec 1996 08:37:32 -0500
Organization: Robohand, Inc
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <01bbf0d6.732e43a0$9967f6cd@bob-berg>
NNTP-Posting-Host: robohand.connix.com
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1080
Hello,
I'm looking for plans to build a Quadrifilar Antenna for WEFAX reception
{137 Mhz}. The one Quorum Communications Sells looks fairly easy to
build but what are the internal connections like?.
Any Help about constuctions plans would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in Advance!
N1YCH
Bob
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:40 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!raphael.davinci.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-4.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.intersource.com!ansel.intersource.com!kenwells
From: Ken Wells <kenwells@kiva.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Blocking ham/cb interference on stereo equipment?
Date: Mon, 23 Dec 1996 12:41:05 -0500
Organization: InterSource, Bloomington, IN
Lines: 54
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.95.961223123233.15973B-100000@ansel.intersource.com>
References: <59jrgm$5bp@news1.voicenet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ansel.intersource.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
X-Sender: kenwells@ansel.intersource.com
To: Kingfish <Kingfish@voicenet.com>
In-Reply-To: <59jrgm$5bp@news1.voicenet.com>
Interference to consumer electronic devices is seldom the fault of the ham
or CB operator. This problem is usually caused by manufacturers who are
unwilling to spend a dollar or two to put necessary filters into their
designs. Calling the FCC will not solve your problem.
I suggest:
Purchase RFI filters from Radio Shack. These are ferrite cores in a
square configuration that are used to wind RF chokes. Take these and wind
your speaker wire on them (according to directions) right at the amplifier
terminals. You can also add them to the power cables of your appliances
which will keep the RF energy from coming in through the power cables.
The same can be done for phone lines, although there are special filters
built just for phones that you just plug in.
If interference is to your TV/VCR, first check to see that your cables
are tight! loose connections are an invitation to interference problems.
This is a start. If your neighbor is a ham, talk to him/her and see if
you can build a partnership to solve the problem, rather than making an
enemy by blaming him for a problem that is not his fault.
If this person is a CB er, or a ham that is just an appliance operator who
does not really understand his own hobby, contact the local Ham Radio
club. Someone there might know how to help you.
Good luck,
Ken Wells - NM9P
kenwells@kiva.net
-----------------------------------------
On Sun, 22 Dec 1996, Kingfish wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> A neighbor of mine has a ham or cb radio, and his transmissions come
> out over my stereo, telephone, clock radio - anything with a speaker.
> The FCC won't do anything about it.
>
> I know there are filters you can put on your telephone to block some
> of the interference. Is there anything like that for stereo
> equipment?
>
> Thanks,
>
> JOn
>
>
>
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:41 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.fibr.net!news.txdirect.net!news
From: bheaton@txdirect.net (Brian D Heaton)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Need info about military satellite
Date: Mon, 23 Dec 1996 22:33:51 GMT
Organization: Internet Direct, Incorporated
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32bf08cd.18915897@news.txdirect.net>
References: <32B9A1F0.865@amsat.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dtp02-30.txdirect.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
Matt,
They were most likely using AFSATCOM or FLTSATCOM/LEASAT
(currently being replaced by UHF Follow On (UFO)). Just about
everything on there will by encrypted (KY-57 voice or Minterm/ANDVT
voice/data) There is a good spread on it in the November/December
Satellite Times...
73 N5VFF
On Thu, 19 Dec 1996 15:13:36 -0500, JungHo Yu <kc8djq@amsat.org>
wrote:
>I need info about the freqs of military satellite and other info.
>I saw some special forces using satellite communication system which
>must be military one during Gulf War. pse let me know where i can find
>these infos.
>thanks in advance.
>73s de Matt
>kc8djq@amsat.org
>--
>"Make your Dream Biger even if you can't accomplish it in future"
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:47 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!svr1.pdx.gstis.net!news.callamer.com!news1.crl.com!nexp.crl.com!nntp.crl.com!howland.erols.net!cs.utexas.edu!newshost.convex.com!newsgate.duke.edu!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE920)
Date: 24 Dec 1996 03:16:38 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 742
Message-ID: <59nhum$h9d@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial 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 #920 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96355.37418699 .00000066 00000-0 67354-4 0 2541
2 00424 80.4630 100.0363 0022417 275.4295 84.4292 13.67883597707792
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96357.28522603 -.00000164 00000-0 10000-3 0 9949
2 02608 14.5714 350.8002 0007178 101.9620 258.1137 1.00290646 26755
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96353.24404113 -.00000124 00000-0 10000-3 0 5959
2 03029 14.9158 357.8082 0010919 266.6508 165.2847 1.00273018106619
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96355.79645605 -.00000095 00000-0 38756-4 0 210
2 07646 49.8284 132.3250 0206386 126.8565 235.1451 13.82192371104771
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96356.20051874 -.00000017 00000-0 00000+0 0 2518
2 08820 109.8493 90.0897 0043548 88.2006 272.3629 6.38664674225779
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96353.26952944 .00000093 00000-0 10000-3 0 919
2 09852 13.4494 30.8201 0006106 154.2971 205.7133 1.00010627 19487
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96355.62051130 .00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 7804
2 10061 12.6135 34.9739 0011158 135.8443 324.9328 1.00278308 16318
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96357.50948147 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 3341
2 10637 35.7635 80.5483 1340276 62.7465 8.5613 1.00058099 21827
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96354.43843520 -.00000121 00000-0 10000-3 0 7567
2 10953 11.6145 37.9228 0002438 214.0174 250.1418 1.00264690 20916
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96354.59857133 .00000012 00000-0 48403-4 0 5392
2 10967 107.9998 198.4014 0001635 254.3863 105.7100 14.38140271968100
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96354.67998422 -.00000063 00000-0 -19975-4 0 6360
2 11080 98.9204 207.6502 0008621 183.8167 176.2923 13.83688963916828
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96350.29106950 .00000090 00000-0 10000-3 0 9738
2 12472 8.4800 48.3662 0005327 89.1419 270.8669 1.00289267 14914
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96355.09212388 .00000056 00000-0 48128-4 0 5524
2 13301 82.9297 357.4892 0028963 86.3984 274.0470 13.68080236722799
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96355.18321583 .00000041 00000-0 18907-4 0 308
2 13367 98.0514 40.2063 0006194 287.6610 72.3911 14.57197538767625
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96355.54306722 -.00000004 00000-0 16543-4 0 1447
2 13736 98.6214 180.9244 0007990 202.9612 157.1211 14.25815170727623
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96357.20618485 -.00000200 00000-0 -10801-3 0 5278
2 13777 98.9669 178.7385 0012418 297.2372 62.7530 13.99258260379660
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96354.72111433 .00000054 00000-0 40899-4 0 6443
2 13916 82.9462 53.8203 0038546 357.3811 2.7136 13.74350159689222
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96349.09408205 -.00000296 00000-0 00000+0 0 6811
2 13969 9.2459 41.9911 0003532 215.7374 169.6196 1.00258529 23191
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96355.27290863 -.00000096 00000-0 10000-3 0 5942
2 14050 7.3441 51.9173 0003398 60.6014 329.2651 1.00217172108061
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96299.11613815 -.00000305 00000-0 10000-3 0 4631
2 14129 25.8792 182.5891 6052907 60.2572 346.3435 2.05882271 72548
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96357.17525342 -.00000114 00000-0 -15140-4 0 5779
2 14780 98.3104 54.7568 0003564 64.3166 295.8390 14.57061886681339
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96354.88882485 .00000206 00000-0 42552-4 0 9376
2 14781 97.8149 337.5149 0010702 215.1143 144.9357 14.69510093684920
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96355.35894966 .00000036 00000-0 21713-4 0 8440
2 15055 82.9570 108.6459 0027311 180.5623 179.5504 13.73642422626549
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96354.84963541 .00000289 00000-0 31062-4 0 5269
2 15331 82.5324 299.0680 0022128 55.2334 305.0966 14.84819604660523
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96355.09031734 -.00000141 00000-0 88619-5 0 2430
2 15354 56.9952 355.3034 0006822 144.1519 215.9958 14.95003582664644
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96357.81220272 .00000066 00000-0 58160-4 0 9672
2 15427 98.9271 62.6345 0015386 136.1880 224.0515 14.13825796620286
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96358.17257349 .00003736 00000-0 46600-4 0 9004
2 16609 51.6542 251.1855 0013015 171.2077 188.9052 15.62723155619544
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96356.22515375 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 169
2 16613 98.8169 63.7254 0001945 90.0299 270.1107 14.19992896246856
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96356.06123319 .00000262 00000-0 28564-4 0 4413
2 16881 82.5181 355.5978 0021201 78.3567 281.9993 14.83791019561551
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96354.85743115 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1400
2 16908 50.0068 146.1720 0011382 128.0665 232.1198 12.44415525139528
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96357.86853028 .00000025 00000-0 28954-4 0 8982
2 16969 98.5318 349.6198 0012940 158.4126 201.7604 14.25014345533471
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96355.70001945 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4958
2 17527 98.9163 53.4263 0017612 166.4659 193.6957 14.00448483501098
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96355.43294109 -.00000167 00000-0 10000-3 0 1989
2 17561 3.4316 68.1181 0002418 284.8788 157.7364 1.00277948 19173
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 8485
2 17845 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654553613
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96357.69117846 .00000043 00000-0 44283-4 0 7327
2 18123 98.7647 184.8666 0015098 76.2031 284.0821 14.15462118491168
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96357.51695352 .00000034 00000-0 20557-4 0 2983
2 18129 82.9254 9.3308 0012351 359.7999 0.3153 13.72372740476004
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96355.54106615 .00000050 00000-0 31229-4 0 5318
2 18312 82.5547 204.2636 0013825 57.6547 302.5951 13.84089504471957
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96358.20571033 .00000100 00000-0 75658-4 0 1316
2 18820 82.5408 256.7265 0017485 111.6869 248.6156 13.84767342449686
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96357.53043021 .00000059 00000-0 44115-4 0 4203
2 18822 98.3798 180.5980 0006134 167.3188 192.8148 14.23211690461368
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96354.41509865 -.00000057 00000-0 10000-3 0 1414
2 19163 65.3412 79.6008 0008700 137.2309 222.8856 2.13102332 66184
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96356.34917178 -.00000061 00000-0 10000-3 0 5510
2 19165 65.3071 79.4849 0004073 357.5155 2.5000 2.13102194 66846
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96351.09840041 -.00000115 00000-0 10000-3 0 2973
2 19215 3.6280 66.7542 0006014 130.7880 228.9672 0.96947912 18942
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96355.40503883 .00000318 00000-0 36605-4 0 1414
2 19274 82.5133 97.2874 0018406 229.6940 130.2681 14.82553525456966
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96358.18030179 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5376
2 19336 82.5391 32.6911 0017849 119.7659 240.5240 13.16980213404358
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96354.97212994 -.00000056 00000-0 10000-3 0 4336
2 19503 65.5128 318.4482 0004350 139.8479 220.2141 2.13101732 64305
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96357.78751194 -.00000037 00000-0 52598-5 0 7908
2 19531 99.1720 20.6921 0012655 71.7666 288.4882 14.13114944425082
TDRS 3
1 19548U 88091B 96354.71334469 -.00000188 00000-0 10000-3 0 2611
2 19548 2.8615 70.2114 0025935 271.5802 88.1271 1.00262519 17398
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96357.82498100 -.00000052 00000-0 10000-3 0 6472
2 19749 65.2915 78.9936 0006870 258.5639 101.3798 2.13101461 61871
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96354.12568356 -.00000056 00000-0 10000-3 0 5513
2 19750 65.2971 79.1924 0008291 233.8779 126.0656 2.13101731 61816
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96354.61778098 -.00000035 00000-0 10000-3 0 3339
2 19802 55.4209 103.2529 0018755 184.1561 175.8621 2.00558592 57447
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96357.89782474 .00012224 00000-0 62398-3 0 8345
2 19822 75.0999 14.0473 3730584 323.4852 16.1001 7.95259126181666
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96355.23919531 .00000049 00000-0 30190-4 0 5302
2 19851 82.5194 132.7360 0013929 169.4233 190.7229 13.84422201394574
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96356.89635470 -.00000118 00000-0 00000+0 0 2376
2 19876 2.3710 71.2242 0016875 280.3835 78.8459 0.97110331 8442
TDRS 4
1 19883U 89021B 96358.11299769 -.00000269 00000-0 00000+0 0 2905
2 19883 0.2469 87.3096 0009207 215.9001 148.3079 1.00265368201007
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96355.95422647 -.00000069 00000-0 10000-3 0 3298
2 20061 54.0772 278.6819 0164814 223.4837 135.2220 2.00562795 55203
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96357.47204829 .00000028 00000-0 14199-4 0 128
2 20103 82.9554 329.8103 0035968 249.9152 109.8131 13.73871979374530
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96354.16391793 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 3764
2 20185 55.0462 103.5488 0181881 305.6068 52.6953 2.00807546 53745
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96357.81324074 -.00000370 00000-0 10000-3 0 5064
2 20217 2.1661 73.9351 0000433 343.3148 87.1994 1.00272199 27316
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96354.85101485 .00000078 00000-0 21389-4 0 5522
2 20261 82.5906 152.1472 1242036 339.5288 15.9895 12.47370184329054
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96355.82227188 .00000056 00000-0 10000-3 0 3543
2 20302 53.1959 218.4280 0024744 188.5424 171.5242 2.00571142 52572
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96357.50835812 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7173
2 20305 82.5418 354.3728 0005091 219.2359 140.8355 13.04423025342759
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96357.08932101 .00000081 00000-0 79387-4 0 2694
2 20322 98.9346 9.1156 0008161 232.4770 127.5652 14.03465584363283
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 7731
2 20335 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654402625
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96354.34504769 -.00000079 00000-0 10000-3 0 1555
2 20361 56.1019 45.9614 0094440 140.4854 220.2615 2.00565907 42022
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96357.76121650 -.00000139 00000-0 00000+0 0 4800
2 20391 4.2043 62.2398 0003399 172.1093 114.9999 1.00275251 25885
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96357.90416006 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1658
2 20436 98.7475 68.8968 0001700 111.7141 248.4216 14.20016708358626
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96355.80886135 -.00000007 00000-0 14115-4 0 2343
2 20437 98.5343 75.2312 0011657 16.3599 343.7943 14.29942615360727
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96354.78016617 .00000039 00000-0 31910-4 0 323
2 20439 98.5502 76.7828 0012027 20.1632 340.0024 14.29993710360594
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96355.20376159 -.00000047 00000-0 -15275-5 0 332
2 20440 98.5484 77.9372 0013015 16.1085 344.0522 14.30135144360685
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96355.19761875 .00000020 00000-0 24375-4 0 366
2 20441 98.5526 77.8550 0012776 18.0970 342.0670 14.30104514360686
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96355.17911551 -.00000019 00000-0 94036-5 0 320
2 20442 98.5542 78.4157 0013657 17.1631 343.0013 14.30215742360709
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96355.73801973 .00000069 00000-0 10000-3 0 2549
2 20452 54.0466 159.1689 0083060 92.0824 268.9520 2.00552691 50558
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96358.04711312 .00000063 00000-0 80621-4 0 96
2 20478 99.1069 65.0475 0006157 91.2569 268.9128 13.93967941270866
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96356.53020360 -.00000017 00000-0 28435-4 0 337
2 20479 99.0219 345.9656 0541075 59.2497 306.0740 12.83347320321931
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96355.49093092 .00000019 00000-0 10697-3 0 9290
2 20480 99.0220 344.8895 0541247 62.2054 303.2823 12.83236247321781
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96358.18507375 -.00000241 00000-0 -38823-3 0 3042
2 20491 99.0617 58.2306 0469489 211.9315 145.2529 13.02986662326479
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96356.06411483 .00002102 00000-0 66333-4 0 7147
2 20496 43.1001 216.2105 0009918 196.4687 163.5851 15.36212386382567
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96357.79912749 .00000093 00000-0 82895-4 0 113
2 20508 82.9516 104.0500 0043354 199.7919 160.1557 13.73516387341784
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96355.20679847 .00000190 00000-0 22632-4 0 5497
2 20510 82.5247 52.9843 0020790 69.9076 290.4371 14.78651944367162
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96343.15602082 -.00000039 00000-0 00000+0 0 2926
2 20533 54.4477 280.0123 0048409 77.9996 282.5546 2.00569707 49072
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96356.80897776 .00007511 00000-0 12808-3 0 84
2 20546 94.1272 99.4729 0057038 0.6218 359.5083 15.49544763374032
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96357.87320368 .00000502 00000-0 34392-4 0 9027
2 20580 28.4684 85.5940 0005930 350.6492 9.3979 14.91147275166771
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96355.55803826 .00000183 00000-0 28292-4 0 2348
2 20608 89.9252 171.7927 0107117 123.1269 238.0280 14.64964373353571
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96353.96867222 -.00000048 00000-0 10000-3 0 3502
2 20619 65.1066 317.6325 0024680 211.2237 148.5953 2.13102447 51240
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96355.96445246 -.00000065 00000-0 10000-3 0 3390
2 20620 65.1027 317.5403 0008835 39.6499 320.4049 2.13102509 51326
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96356.03195778 -.00000066 00000-0 10000-3 0 9489
2 20621 65.1178 317.5976 0012935 196.8686 163.0740 2.13102510 51320
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 5655
2 20635 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654373456
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96357.86117088 .00000272 00000-0 36500-4 0 6200
2 20638 52.9912 169.3290 0011530 348.4891 11.5837 15.07521231360771
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96357.64951292 -.00000020 00000-0 -31414-4 0 1638
2 20670 82.5470 198.1844 0017048 84.0907 276.2195 13.84130542327810
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96356.03561937 .00000248 00000-0 40967-3 0 3756
2 20712 17.6507 173.7316 7175020 159.5361 258.7229 2.35816288 47526
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96355.46536265 -.00000049 00000-0 00000+0 0 1527
2 20724 55.0582 101.1724 0132984 186.6529 173.1504 2.00564272 45189
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96358.22773411 .00000201 00000-0 16132-3 0 2072
2 20788 98.8094 357.1972 0014951 337.0957 22.9543 14.01378599322574
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96354.97642063 .00000027 00000-0 11350-4 0 416
2 20826 82.5250 136.4963 0014033 2.8231 357.3013 13.83641598314537
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96351.03277113 -.00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 1293
2 20830 56.0372 44.0027 0065950 95.2422 265.5654 2.00568105 45733
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96354.42695189 -.00000033 00000-0 10000-3 0 1127
2 20959 55.2411 103.3220 0110064 237.7311 121.1767 2.00556670 44398
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96357.80401522 .00000095 00000-0 49590-4 0 8920
2 20978 98.5793 67.2126 0079001 334.2671 25.4589 14.32705717316725
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96351.36276624 -.00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 9082
2 21006 65.2768 78.5517 0056577 185.8379 174.1250 2.13102801 46894
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96353.43230517 -.00000050 00000-0 10000-3 0 465
2 21007 65.2873 78.5626 0032974 178.3688 181.6610 2.13101147 46927
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96356.14463456 -.00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 3121
2 21008 65.2670 78.4081 0008974 267.0447 92.8810 2.13098727 46978
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96356.95529299 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7716
2 21087 82.9406 182.7414 0036750 43.6418 316.7634 13.74575799295804
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96358.22002023 .00000033 00000-0 18183-4 0 9439
2 21089 82.9223 49.1598 0030825 67.3450 293.0938 13.74075670294994
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96354.34829471 -.00000014 00000-0 00000+0 0 3099
2 21140 0.9161 78.3327 0002161 148.4686 346.4848 1.00271695 23467
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96357.54042619 .00000045 00000-0 31477-4 0 6983
2 21152 82.9222 6.2751 0041478 176.7052 183.4386 13.73541030289606
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96356.54274579 -.00000070 00000-0 10000-3 0 5652
2 21216 64.8529 317.0153 0011769 202.9544 156.9806 2.13103206 44515
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96358.02274190 -.00000073 00000-0 10000-3 0 9722
2 21217 64.8403 316.9662 0008941 244.0263 115.7583 2.13102142 44538
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96352.97069614 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 4394
2 21218 64.8407 317.1142 0007812 301.6937 58.2286 2.13102528 44431
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96356.71300689 .00003120 00000-0 59104-4 0 4156
2 21225 28.4596 316.0484 0003145 180.5349 179.5161 15.44708356198952
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96355.12032883 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9448
2 21232 82.5390 241.3277 0014740 60.3948 299.8648 13.16474008272002
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96357.83683415 .00000079 00000-0 53983-4 0 2066
2 21263 98.5466 11.4382 0013883 85.4356 274.8407 14.22678751291284
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96355.88466666 .00000240 00000-0 31011-4 0 2429
2 21397 82.5228 327.1930 0022949 142.0957 218.1878 14.76533422298911
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96357.19538225 -.00000069 00000-0 10000-6 0 669
2 21552 56.3345 41.6377 0083624 267.2074 91.9147 2.00579337 40047
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96357.88127994 .00000054 00000-0 36058-4 0 3902
2 21574 98.5516 69.2120 0001210 76.2948 283.8370 14.32246741284453
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96355.58357352 .00000013 00000-0 18501-4 0 7396
2 21575 98.3292 56.2046 0008742 68.7534 291.4601 14.37049429284833
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96354.64321557 -.00000002 00000-0 13740-4 0 8335
2 21576 98.3257 52.9916 0004658 78.7589 281.4129 14.36466214284576
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96355.72163186 -.00000011 00000-0 10660-4 0 7335
2 21577 98.3259 54.6570 0007403 71.2340 288.9639 14.36535643284760
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96354.72279846 .00000478 00000-0 16760-3 0 9341
2 21578 98.3609 63.2545 0005832 70.2596 289.9220 14.39294842285027
TDRS 5
1 21639U 91054B 96358.00000000 .00000082 00000-0 10000-3 0 1290
2 21639 0.0522 87.3137 0003639 187.5814 2.7647 1.00277859 19753
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96354.82420335 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9422
2 21655 82.5535 189.3516 0014558 65.6593 294.6055 13.16850118257109
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96351.50888282 -.00000242 00000-0 -34212-7 0 8128
2 21701 56.9844 99.2918 0005210 108.7338 251.4325 14.96556634287654
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96357.68222696 .00000054 00000-0 51708-4 0 5617
2 21798 98.9346 15.0151 0013625 55.8271 304.4190 14.14011855261567
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96354.12126249 -.00000057 00000-0 10000-4 0 1427
2 21853 65.2137 78.1044 0006848 205.0292 154.9591 2.13102272 38066
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96356.75234563 -.00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 3909
2 21854 65.2184 78.0051 0014885 16.3440 343.7299 2.13104400 38107
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96357.29098204 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 3705
2 21855 65.2185 77.9923 0008323 206.1708 153.8144 2.13101937 38102
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96355.88281177 .00000787 00000-0 70351-4 0 513
2 21867 97.6740 70.3787 0001206 117.7280 242.3984 14.98668568265822
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96357.64784926 .00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 9162
2 21890 53.7390 218.8697 0058648 200.3673 159.4625 2.00561874 35421
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96357.31226426 -.00000084 00000-0 10000-3 0 8314
2 21930 55.6682 341.1109 0023217 191.7309 168.2577 2.00555125 34348
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96354.45301917 .00001435 00000-0 55413-4 0 5945
2 21987 28.4322 17.1224 0009346 280.3690 79.5854 15.20030404251899
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96358.15734703 .00000832 00000-0 70366-4 0 7706
2 22012 81.6706 279.6929 0115810 274.4786 84.3209 14.91824317243404
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96357.39666370 .00000052 00000-0 00000+0 0 8166
2 22014 54.8383 161.0425 0136069 327.3174 31.8355 2.00566013 26188
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96356.71871115 -.00000071 00000-0 00000+0 0 2976
2 22056 64.6888 317.0153 0006628 270.2618 89.6501 2.13103230 34185
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96357.48496182 -.00000073 00000-0 00000+0 0 2690
2 22057 64.6987 317.0202 0009268 312.8941 47.0156 2.13102613 34173
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96353.67034323 -.00000046 00000-0 10000-3 0 1675
2 22058 64.6979 317.1510 0009190 279.5356 80.3551 2.13102616 34140
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96355.19730987 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 152
2 22076 66.0404 186.3124 0007362 268.4240 91.5934 12.80930687203941
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96354.91936715 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6288
2 22077 66.0784 160.5828 0015271 253.4363 106.4979 12.86299592204693
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96354.88077451 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6266
2 22078 66.0762 158.9600 0016534 251.6750 108.2468 12.86584058204789
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96356.86287026 .00000060 00000-0 10000-3 0 8354
2 22108 53.9721 219.8125 0120279 161.9818 198.5654 2.00571569 31350
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96355.86043241 -.00000177 00000-0 -17120-4 0 6763
2 22161 62.9794 127.4050 0857331 33.4782 331.7517 13.21934288203108
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96354.39467521 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5508
2 22195 52.6527 234.6000 0137469 157.7254 202.9350 6.47293915 98266
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96357.54468172 .00000052 00000-0 00000+0 0 8494
2 22231 54.6878 162.1877 0030689 274.9997 84.6425 2.00562872 29940
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96357.65770578 .00000046 00000-0 00000+0 0 8382
2 22275 54.6403 159.6650 0052468 251.0197 108.4021 2.00588097 29358
TDRS 6
1 22314U 93003B 96355.90749293 -.00000284 00000-0 10000-3 0 6781
2 22314 0.0318 113.0148 0003233 168.2414 88.2175 1.00271971 14454
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96357.76265646 -.00000060 00000-0 10000-3 0 8304
2 22446 54.0825 279.4545 0096618 5.9636 354.1635 2.00572064 28349
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96357.40816385 -.00000055 00000-0 10000-3 0 8512
2 22512 65.2376 77.8675 0008793 171.8325 188.2029 2.13102171 29703
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96356.87682034 -.00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 145
2 22513 65.2364 77.8743 0007807 199.2040 160.7967 2.13102477 29884
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96356.70182796 -.00000060 00000-0 00000+0 0 83
2 22514 65.2511 77.8794 0011333 190.5361 169.4642 2.13101441 29880
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96354.22714159 .00001113 00000-0 71058-4 0 5463
2 22521 31.1028 325.0235 0055709 203.6722 156.1352 15.03219404210338
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96358.00000000 -.00000235 00000-0 00000+0 0 5454
2 22563 24.9641 285.6257 0009366 304.0139 343.4335 0.99252311 17943
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96356.91039998 -.00000084 00000-0 10000-3 0 6203
2 22581 55.1555 340.4381 0058866 39.6364 320.7971 2.00573780 27384
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96354.05086494 -.00000068 00000-0 00000+0 0 7927
2 22657 55.1900 340.4300 0086185 229.4240 129.8319 2.00563442 22653
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96355.79501884 .00000073 00000-0 25724-4 0 5411
2 22698 89.5467 261.6836 0093616 77.7674 283.3978 14.21386628180935
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96355.01723054 .00000047 00000-0 10000-3 0 6250
2 22700 54.1852 220.7355 0099050 42.6250 318.1202 2.00563536 25479
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96357.40291322 -.00000006 00000-0 22069-4 0 2244
2 22739 99.0678 314.1351 0010628 57.1528 303.0635 14.10979827173590
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96355.10156666 -.00000072 00000-0 10000-3 0 6897
2 22779 54.2429 279.6390 0014393 283.1509 76.7065 2.00553105 24232
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96355.63333716 .00000035 00000-0 17903-4 0 5339
2 22782 82.5493 199.3731 0021473 172.5662 187.5816 13.83065735166902
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96357.89538021 -.00000064 00000-0 00000+0 0 6992
2 22787 4.0055 328.0037 0005195 298.3561 219.2910 1.00275598 10720
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96355.48628707 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 6395
2 22823 98.7351 66.4454 0016263 220.1470 139.8509 14.16978756167660
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96355.74544906 -.00000025 00000-0 73512-5 0 5238
2 22824 98.5622 67.0119 0007258 47.9221 312.2576 14.27106655168540
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96356.19659004 .00000107 00000-0 60759-4 0 5244
2 22825 98.5668 68.2191 0009638 41.3638 318.8352 14.27713633168676
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96356.24872760 .00000018 00000-0 24567-4 0 5223
2 22826 98.5667 68.4713 0010221 43.6719 316.5267 14.27822009168693
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96355.72822710 .00000030 00000-0 29485-4 0 5853
2 22827 98.5589 67.8438 0010199 33.2561 326.9259 14.27961486168631
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96355.76509576 .00000035 00000-0 31288-4 0 5028
2 22828 98.5619 68.0669 0011125 30.8700 329.3134 14.28163109136746
POSAT
1 22829U 93061G 96356.20451502 .00000003 00000-0 18559-4 0 5160
2 22829 98.5634 68.5711 0010684 32.3215 327.8630 14.28144893168720
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96355.15090906 -.00000077 00000-0 10000-3 0 5287
2 22877 55.7646 41.7465 0044537 300.0391 59.5709 2.00562106 23122
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96356.07870949 -.00000086 00000-0 00000+0 0 5890
2 22912 0.3342 69.2572 0003900 166.5354 232.7612 1.00272995 9730
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96357.65418962 .00009341 00000-0 60349-3 0 5667
2 22920 28.4557 335.8792 0001653 343.6200 16.4135 15.06584276167859
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96354.24527986 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3088
2 22969 82.5580 129.9353 0015961 133.2795 226.9660 13.16740515139403
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96354.39679294 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 2984
2 22970 82.5578 129.7079 0016818 129.0617 231.1985 13.16828872139437
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96355.23280465 -.00000074 00000-0 10000-3 0 4678
2 23027 55.0466 342.3173 0072751 206.2800 153.3585 2.00567028 20434
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96355.37068271 -.00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 4443
2 23043 64.5727 317.4019 0006208 212.8012 147.1518 2.13102678 20977
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96358.06864836 -.00000074 00000-0 00000+0 0 4155
2 23044 64.5677 317.2957 0030586 207.9242 151.8972 2.13102918 21038
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96357.77724826 -.00000074 00000-0 00000+0 0 4168
2 23045 64.5562 317.3122 0010813 24.9867 335.0519 2.13102314 21020
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96355.19571394 -.00000258 00000-0 10000-3 0 6262
2 23051 0.4020 88.1620 0003976 163.4469 193.2591 1.00274138 17231
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96357.73018169 .00006950 00000-0 10147-3 0 3883
2 23101 97.0743 189.2138 0010943 351.0714 9.0343 15.55907264148599
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96345.59154604 .00000770 00000-0 28286-3 0 3676
2 23125 7.0352 161.3911 7231354 212.4365 39.0380 2.32941619 20228
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96334.95871629 .00012955 00000-0 51553-2 0 3218
2 23126 7.0816 165.9016 7233674 203.5475 90.6584 2.33114876 20025
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96354.36194700 .00000062 00000-0 48333-4 0 2432
2 23179 82.9453 99.3633 0036158 328.7017 31.1986 13.75688200122259
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96356.97622385 .00000103 00000-0 00000+0 0 3772
2 23203 64.7610 197.8208 0007848 135.5310 224.6041 2.13102010 18408
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96354.86342050 .00000102 00000-0 00000+0 0 3967
2 23204 64.7522 197.9130 0014831 354.3284 5.7238 2.13102227 18357
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96355.21499915 .00000104 00000-0 00000+0 0 3817
2 23205 64.7596 197.8922 0001129 19.5582 340.5127 2.13102571 18364
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96357.82655983 .00000098 00000-0 76502-4 0 479
2 23233 98.8039 53.6182 0012832 9.3710 350.7687 14.12763169119460
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96357.20464025 .00000255 00000-0 35274-4 0 2073
2 23317 82.5429 246.0485 0024993 186.2639 173.8266 14.74065865118233
ELEKTRO (GOMS)
1 23327U 94069A 96354.80900502 .00000000 00000-0 10000-3 0 2331
2 23327 0.3872 96.2662 0001117 8.0635 351.9420 1.00270711 7877
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96356.89686722 -.00000007 00000-0 67157-5 0 6317
2 23342 97.9434 49.2394 0001820 84.6343 275.5073 14.69886849114381
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96357.40535750 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 3601
2 23396 65.1654 77.8907 0030235 191.8841 168.0710 2.13102490 16254
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96355.70475799 -.00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 3448
2 23397 65.1532 77.9557 0012111 314.5786 45.3442 2.13101657 16216
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96357.46557607 -.00000055 00000-0 00000+0 0 3636
2 23398 65.1442 77.8671 0003472 270.7508 89.2370 2.13101673 16268
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96356.15204750 -.00000275 00000-0 00000+0 0 4453
2 23426 1.0543 263.7902 0002855 16.0434 320.0795 1.00267256 7371
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96355.71012044 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1858
2 23439 64.8190 81.4472 0155755 165.8181 194.7188 11.27528630 81816
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96357.82607926 .00000157 00000-0 11111-3 0 8720
2 23455 98.9684 302.9337 0010539 68.2691 291.9611 14.11634961102066
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96356.48458429 -.00000070 00000-0 00000+0 0 2763
2 23511 64.5887 317.6285 0007298 232.9238 126.9991 2.13103412 13962
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96358.01301933 -.00000074 00000-0 00000+0 0 2834
2 23512 64.5795 317.5823 0007996 313.7995 46.1331 2.13102266 13991
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96357.83483209 -.00000073 00000-0 00000+0 0 3022
2 23513 64.5875 317.6143 0013254 211.3599 148.5284 2.13101586 13992
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96353.66943435 -.00000292 00000-0 10000-3 0 1895
2 23522 0.4745 24.4651 0000471 201.2461 242.5519 1.00265343 6307
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96357.75515303 .00000064 00000-0 58067-4 0 7971
2 23533 98.8428 357.8261 0006373 241.7123 118.3404 14.12767952 90259
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96355.39295036 .00000332 00000-0 11120-3 0 1871
2 23545 69.9707 98.0358 0015933 280.2412 79.6923 14.45452913 90566
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96355.56554784 .00000381 00000-0 12505-3 0 2210
2 23546 69.9767 97.8305 0015524 272.8036 87.1325 14.45465915 90596
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96355.57161015 .00000264 00000-0 91522-4 0 1590
2 23547 69.9772 97.5045 0015813 272.6587 87.2737 14.45629327 90600
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96357.98044997 .00022990 00000-0 54073-3 0 4029
2 23549 143.3610 302.4820 0210589 292.9497 64.9070 15.20071158 95043
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96358.11669922 .00003702 00000-0 45016-4 0 1895
2 23558 51.6519 239.4420 0006141 204.2426 155.8282 15.63458714619559
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96357.20465871 -.00000031 00000-0 46224-5 0 3134
2 23560 98.5515 68.5484 0000959 86.8641 273.2654 14.32246616 87483
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 5261
2 23579 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654 90935
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96354.44962900 .00000082 00000-0 10000-3 0 2965
2 23581 0.0263 263.9334 0003683 12.3608 198.4011 1.00273769 5781
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96357.73495497 .00000096 00000-0 27497-4 0 3750
2 23605 98.1385 290.8764 0001601 58.5518 301.5873 14.63832629 78149
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96357.87351639 .00000297 00000-0 61264-4 0 2397
2 23606 98.1201 292.6868 0007582 319.5019 40.5620 14.67330339 78383
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96355.45594001 .00000131 00000-0 32112-4 0 1411
2 23607 98.1187 290.0840 0005989 327.8669 32.2166 14.66986104 78043
TDRS 7
1 23613U 95035B 96354.55583226 .00000095 00000-0 00000+0 0 2738
2 23613 1.0637 81.9126 0003176 174.9248 220.8410 1.00283013 5249
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96356.21094692 .00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 2246
2 23620 64.8154 197.7157 0018830 162.8850 197.2492 2.13102690 10997
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96355.91951744 .00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 2355
2 23621 64.8265 197.7283 0017957 173.1947 186.8987 2.13102130 10983
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96357.85457500 .00000097 00000-0 00000+0 0 2407
2 23622 64.8153 197.6690 0036951 163.0742 197.1167 2.13102361 11024
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96355.51482150 -.00000821 00000-0 00000+0 0 987
2 23632 71.5740 247.9960 7788482 326.5330 47.5280 0.26381100 1340
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96354.51855762 .00000194 00000-0 26216-4 0 1327
2 23657 82.5331 29.9741 0027927 164.3733 195.8347 14.73517940 70121
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96355.88196944 .00000142 00000-0 72025-4 0 2190
2 23710 98.5794 359.9124 0001165 65.3831 294.7474 14.29985280 58928
Glonass 79
1 23734U 95068A 96355.62632340 .00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 2125
2 23734 64.8255 197.6592 0017364 328.5123 31.4543 2.13101891 7941
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96356.28815681 .00000106 00000-0 00000+0 0 2052
2 23735 64.8216 197.6187 0006116 201.9954 158.0442 2.13124877 7952
Glonass 77
1 23736U 95068C 96357.73779017 .00000098 00000-0 00000+0 0 1864
2 23736 64.8104 197.5895 0007497 186.0790 173.9762 2.13101764 7982
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96355.99029059 .00000693 00000-0 28827-4 0 1092
2 23757 22.9805 220.1334 0013987 136.8629 223.2958 14.97746454 53505
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96355.08290203 .00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 914
2 23802 86.3306 24.0562 6531491 277.0070 18.0455 1.36263876 4092
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96355.04137057 .00364004 00000-0 45298-1 0 1516
2 23824 47.4645 201.2744 7173280 74.7731 348.8261 2.43527380 6785
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96353.37282135 -.00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 1232
2 23833 54.6506 340.5168 0028458 144.2757 215.9268 2.00564868 5378
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 2144
2 23848 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654 38026
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96358.03286561 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1557
2 23851 99.3979 341.4236 0006297 11.4397 348.6905 13.97480760 33870
SAX
1 23857U 96027A 96343.48681186 .00001179 00000-0 41425-4 0 456
2 23857 3.9494 284.3100 0012499 354.1731 6.1064 14.91674524 33212
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96356.57738393 .00000878 00000-0 19293-4 0 958
2 23868 97.1188 183.7947 0008893 210.8257 149.2472 15.46681182 33776
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96357.21379156 .00003240 00000-0 14577-3 0 691
2 23940 97.4322 260.3318 0014563 47.3123 312.9338 15.21725233 26221
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96356.27939725 -.00000056 00000-0 00000+0 0 942
2 23953 55.0611 100.7364 0028044 328.9422 30.8659 2.00562642 3226
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96355.53537236 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1236
2 24277 98.6171 69.8041 0000836 80.3763 279.7514 14.27646706 17879
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96355.35595076 -.00000040 00000-0 -10581-5 0 454
2 24278 98.5673 54.7624 0351041 289.5984 66.7572 13.52627299 16949
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 1184
2 24280 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654 19925
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96356.47304478 .00000870 00000-0 89695-4 0 464
2 24285 82.9908 121.6637 2206045 306.6602 35.0815 10.81656403 13209
Microsat
1 24291U 96050A 96358.10741835 .00033992 62055-5 22955-3 0 950
2 24291 62.7946 356.0606 0607501 124.2941 241.7199 14.67979088 16955
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96354.45183101 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 531
2 24305 82.9308 127.4080 0030236 348.1194 11.9240 13.73086790 14390
GPS BIIA-27
1 24320U 96056A 96357.14058803 -.00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 517
2 24320 54.6895 280.8441 0052349 108.6207 252.0932 2.00570173 1902
SAC-B/HETE
1 24645U 96061A 96357.88578065 .00000693 00000-0 42016-4 0 323
2 24645 37.9774 195.7243 0049685 325.5272 34.2353 15.14807665 7313
Progress M-33
1 24663U 96066A 96357.91680255 -.00016654 00000-0 -17558-3 0 314
2 24663 51.6532 252.4801 0013093 172.4296 187.7947 15.62698654 5161
1996068B
1 24668U 96068B 96358.07934394 .00279054 21716-5 67607-3 0 433
2 24668 36.3857 264.2394 1771960 121.4363 257.1728 12.20106026 2285
1996069A
1 24670U 96069A 96358.34813887 .00000318 00000-0 10000-4 0 260
2 24670 65.0419 255.4322 0009959 270.8707 89.0917 15.52047243 1831
1996070A
1 24674U 96070A 96357.27634671 -.00000155 00000-0 00000+0 0 50
2 24674 2.6815 286.7422 0024055 107.5676 314.1839 1.00171619 34
1996070B
1 24675U 96070B 96357.35510368 -.00000231 00000-0 00000+0 0 107
2 24675 22.7115 283.8219 7016432 183.1417 167.4533 2.22334146 90
1996071A
1 24677U 96071A 96356.50726807 .00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 45
2 24677 82.9400 217.3204 0022369 259.6636 100.1921 13.71045781 167
1996071B
1 24678U 96071B 96357.89104079 .00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 84
2 24678 82.9394 216.3024 0019405 236.7497 123.1741 13.72557697 358
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:48 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.iarc.com!news.maxwell.syr.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!news
From: kc5egg@ix.netcom.com(Gerald Schmitt )
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: KO-23 status
Date: 24 Dec 1996 04:26:17 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 19
Message-ID: <59nm19$3jj@sjx-ixn3.ix.netcom.com>
References: <32BC53EF.667B@erols.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: sfe-nm2-12.ix.netcom.com
X-NETCOM-Date: Mon Dec 23 8:26:17 PM PST 1996
In <32BC53EF.667B@erols.com> Art Jeyes <chrishil@erols.com> writes:
>
>KO-23 seemed to be having a problem that affected my receive perf. In
>the past I routinely got about 90% ... then KO-23 dropped to about
50%
>and about 3 days ago... my KO-23 perf dropped to 0%.... i now only
copy
>about 500 bytes per pass... other sats are fine... any one else
having
>this problem?
>
>Thanks & 73
>Art Jeyes -- AA3GU
I was down for a few days and when I came back up I noticed just what
you did. KO-23 seems to be one sick bird.
Jerry KK5YY
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:49 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.iarc.com!econ4.econnect.net!news.insinc.net!ocean.netrover.com!amberjack.netrunner.net!news2.agis.net!agis!newsgod1.agis.net!news1.agis.net!agis!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!prairienet.org!w9sz
From: w9sz@prairienet.org (Zack Widup)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: AO-13
Date: 24 Dec 1996 04:58:22 GMT
Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <59nnte$5j7@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
Reply-To: w9sz@prairienet.org (Zack Widup)
NNTP-Posting-Host: firefly.prairienet.org
I haven't been keeping up lately, but did AO-13 finally fall to Earth?
I remember reading in QST a while back that it was predicted to enter the
atmosphere some time in early December.
Zack W9SZ
--
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:50 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!arclight.uoregon.edu!worldnet.att.net!newsadm
From: "Bob Bocskay" <phoniexbobb@worldnet.att.net>
Newsgroups: alt.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: O-scope for sale
Date: 24 Dec 1996 14:58:25 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <01bbf175$e4bbc840$9ca993cf@default>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.147.169.156
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net alt.radio.scanner:43583 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20848 rec.radio.amateur.misc:121573 rec.radio.amateur.space:9201
Tektronics 543 scope with plugins (CA,53E/54E, type H wideband), probes and
a real nice Tek scope cart all for $60
contact:
Luis Ibarra
(602)759-8903
PHX AZ
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:51 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.mindspring.com!usenet
From: "Timothy S. Powell" <tpowell@mindspring.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,alt.ham-radio.ssb,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Kits for phase-3D?
Date: Tue, 24 Dec 1996 10:08:42 -0800
Organization: MindSpring Enterprises, Inc.
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <32C01C2A.4A4D@mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: user-168-121-33-127.dialup.mindspring.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Server-Date: 24 Dec 1996 23:25:29 GMT
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Win16; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20858 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:44996 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22358 rec.radio.amateur.space:9202
Does anyone know of any 6-meter, 2-meter and 70-cm SSB kits that would
be good to use for the Phase-3D sat when it gets in orbit. I'm a
college student with limited funds. I would like to work the sat when
it get up but can not buy the high price equipment that is needed but
would like to build a small sat station if possible.
Thanks
Timothy
KD4IKY
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:52 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!super.zippo.com!zdc-e!szdc!szdc-e!news
From: <n4okl@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: AO-13
Date: 24 Dec 1996 21:29:40 GMT
Organization: Zip News
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <01bbf1e1$7a18c580$39ac63ce@Pjharmon.newwave>
References: <59nnte$5j7@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Zack Widup <w9sz@prairienet.org> wrote in article
<59nnte$5j7@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>...
>
> I haven't been keeping up lately, but did AO-13 finally fall to Earth?
>
> I remember reading in QST a while back that it was predicted to enter the
> atmosphere some time in early December.
>
> Zack W9SZ
>
> --
>
>
Yes it died Nov 24th and bit the big one Dec 5...
de John - N4OKL
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:53 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!arclight.uoregon.edu!enews.sgi.com!news.sgi.com!news-out.microserve.net!news-in.microserve.net!not-for-mail
From: skerns@mail.talon.net (Steven Kerns)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,alt.ham-radio.ssb,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Kits for phase-3D?
Date: 25 Dec 1996 01:35:56 GMT
Organization: Penn Biomedical Support, Inc.
Lines: 20
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <59q0ds$72c$1@news3.microserve.net>
References: <32C01C2A.4A4D@mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp10.talon.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20864 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45006 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22374 rec.radio.amateur.space:9203
Try Down East Microwave; http\\downeastmicrowave.com
They have a lot of neat stuff for VHF/UHF/microwave.
73 Steve N3FTI
In article <32C01C2A.4A4D@mindspring.com>, tpowell@mindspring.com says...
>
>Does anyone know of any 6-meter, 2-meter and 70-cm SSB kits that would
>be good to use for the Phase-3D sat when it gets in orbit. I'm a
>college student with limited funds. I would like to work the sat when
>it get up but can not buy the high price equipment that is needed but
>would like to build a small sat station if possible.
>
>Thanks
>
>
>Timothy
>KD4IKY
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:54 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-4.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!usc!news.service.uci.edu!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!news1.ucsd.edu!news-mail-gateway
From: sermon@plug-in.COM.BR (Sergio A.Monteiro)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Wanted:Plans to build a quadrifilar ant. for WEFAX
Date: 25 Dec 96 01:37:10 GMT
Organization: ucsd usenet gateway
Lines: 7
Message-ID: <32C08546.1EBD@plug-in.com.br>
Reply-To: sermon@plug-in.com.br
NNTP-Posting-Host: mail.ucsd.edu
Originator: daemon@ucsd.edu
<"Bob Berg" <bberg@connix.com>
<I'm looking for plans to build a quadrifilar ant for WEFAX reception
Bob
Look QST august 1996. I build one and it works!
Sergio PY3BAM
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:55 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!usc!newshub.csu.net!charnel.ecst.csuchico.edu!psgrain!news.rain.net!pacifier!usenet
From: dhutter@pacifier.com (derek hutter)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,alt.ham-radio.ssb,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Kits for phase-3D?
Date: 25 Dec 1996 04:26:52 GMT
Organization: Pacifier Internet Server (360) 693-0325
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <59qaec$5n5@news.pacifier.com>
References: <32C01C2A.4A4D@mindspring.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ip87.van3.pacifier.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20866 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45010 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22376 rec.radio.amateur.space:9206
In article <32C01C2A.4A4D@mindspring.com>, tpowell@mindspring.com says...
>
>Does anyone know of any 6-meter, 2-meter and 70-cm SSB kits that would
>be good to use for the Phase-3D sat when it gets in orbit. I'm a
>college student with limited funds. I would like to work the sat when
>it get up but can not buy the high price equipment that is needed but
>would like to build a small sat station if possible.
>
>Thanks
>
>
>Timothy
>KD4IKY
Tim,
Down East Microwave, Steve has a WEB site.
Derek K7XD
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:56 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!metro.atlanta.com!cssun.mathcs.emory.edu!news.service.emory.edu!news.bna.bellsouth.net!news.rdu.bellsouth.net!usenet
From: scederas@bellsouth.net (scederas@bellsouth.net)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Need info about military satellite
Date: Wed, 25 Dec 1996 09:18:52 GMT
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <32c0f10a.17297261@news.rdu.bellsouth.net>
References: <32B9A1F0.865@amsat.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: d00960.rdu.bellsouth.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99e/32.227
On Thu, 19 Dec 1996 15:13:36 -0500, JungHo Yu <kc8djq@amsat.org>
wrote:
>I need info about the freqs of military satellite and other info.
>I saw some special forces using satellite communication system which
>must be military one during Gulf War. pse let me know where i can find
>these infos.
\
Why don't you call the Military up and ask them to tell you
the frequencies for the military satellites and while you are at it
ask them if their is anything else that they can tell you that is a
threat to the security of this nation.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:57 1997
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!EU.net!sun4nl!rnzll3!sys3.pe1chl!rob
From: rob@pe1chl (Rob Janssen)
Subject: Re: AO-13
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV)
Reply-To: pe1chl@amsat.org
Organization: PE1CHL
Message-ID: <E2yyyC.Ey8@pe1chl>
References: <59nnte$5j7@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
Date: Wed, 25 Dec 1996 12:34:59 GMT
Lines: 14
In <59nnte$5j7@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu> w9sz@prairienet.org (Zack Widup) writes:
>I haven't been keeping up lately, but did AO-13 finally fall to Earth?
>I remember reading in QST a while back that it was predicted to enter the
>atmosphere some time in early December.
And so it did. On the day that it was predicted to do so back in 1990.
Rob
--
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Rob Janssen pe1chl@amsat.org | WWWhome: http://www.pe1chl.demon.nl/ |
| AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU |
+------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:58 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!169.132.11.200!news.idt.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: From Mir to all
Date: Wed, 25 Dec 1996 13:55:14 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <32c08cc1.33243729@news.monad.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar1-async-2.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
r 217
Stat : PR
Posted : 12/24/96 14:07
To : ALL
From : R0MIR
xID :
@ BBS :
xID :
Subject: Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas to all people aound the World.73 de MIR'crew.
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
b
- Logged off
Merry Christmas de DAVE N1PPP
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:56:59 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!mindspring!gatech!news.jax.bellsouth.net!news.rdu.bellsouth.net!usenet
From: scederas@bellsouth.net (scederas@bellsouth.net)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: someone wanted military freqs...
Date: Wed, 25 Dec 1996 19:03:30 GMT
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <32c17a15.52385720@news.rdu.bellsouth.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: d00960.rdu.bellsouth.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99e/32.227
http://users.arn.net/~webbfeat/PROJECT%20BLACK/MIL%20FREQS%20MENU.HTML
Try trhat page. Maybe you should not call up the military
like I suggested.
Let me know if this helps.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:00 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!newsgate.duke.edu!agate!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!newsadm
From: "Travis Roy" <travis.tigger@worldnet.att.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR
Date: 25 Dec 1996 19:16:04 GMT
Organization: AT&T WorldNet Services
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.146.128.116
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Hi, I'm having trouble getting anything in or out of Mir. Could someone
please tell me the frequencies they use and for what. Also I could you some
advise on what Satellite tracking software I should use. Right now I use
Logsat. My equipment is a Yaesu FT-530 (Just picked it up yesterday, I
had a Kenwood TH-79A but the display died) and a mag mount dual band
antenna. I also have a diamond dual band whip.
Thanks
TTFN
Travis
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:01 1997
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!198.69.204.8!news.fast.net!news-xfer.netaxs.com!news.pond.com!kd3bj!kd3bj.ampr.org!robert
From: robert@kd3bj.ampr.org (Robert E. Garland)
Subject: Re: Blocking ham/cb interference on stereo equipment?
Sender: news@kd3bj.ampr.org (news)
Organization: The KD3BJ Usenet BBS
Message-ID: <robert.851566020@kd3bj.ampr.org>
References: <59jrgm$5bp@news1.voicenet.com>
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: jupiter.jtan.com
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 1996 02:07:00 GMT
Lines: 29
Kingfish@voicenet.com (Kingfish) writes:
>Hi Everyone,
>A neighbor of mine has a ham or cb radio, and his transmissions come
>out over my stereo, telephone, clock radio - anything with a speaker.
>The FCC won't do anything about it.
>I know there are filters you can put on your telephone to block some
>of the interference. Is there anything like that for stereo
>equipment?
>Thanks,
>JOn
Jon: What works sometimes depends on the environment. Is you neighbor
in the next single-family dwelling? In the next apartment? Down the street?
Some fixes require filters on the power line. Some require filters on
his transmitter and your receiver. If he is getting into the stereo,
phone and clock radio, it sounds like he is VERY close. For better help,
give us some particulars, please.
--
Robert Garland NX3S @ N3ACL.PA.USA.NOAM
Hilltown Township Bucks County robert@kd3bj.ampr.org
Pennsylvania USA Grid FN20ii
"Ham Radio is a calling"
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:03 1997
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news-xfer.netaxs.com!news.pond.com!kd3bj!kd3bj.ampr.org!robert
From: robert@kd3bj.ampr.org (Robert E. Garland)
Subject: Re: Need info about military satellite
Sender: news@kd3bj.ampr.org (news)
Organization: The KD3BJ Usenet BBS
Message-ID: <robert.851566284@kd3bj.ampr.org>
References: <32B9A1F0.865@amsat.org> <32c0f10a.17297261@news.rdu.bellsouth.net>
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: jupiter.jtan.com
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 1996 02:11:24 GMT
Lines: 33
scederas@bellsouth.net (scederas@bellsouth.net) writes:
>On Thu, 19 Dec 1996 15:13:36 -0500, JungHo Yu <kc8djq@amsat.org>
>wrote:
>>I need info about the freqs of military satellite and other info.
>>I saw some special forces using satellite communication system which
>>must be military one during Gulf War. pse let me know where i can find
>>these infos.
>\
Check the scanner news group. rec.radio.scanner. Also look for info on
www.grove.net, where the Monitoring Times and Satellite Times folks have
their pages.
> Why don't you call the Military up and ask them to tell you
>the frequencies for the military satellites and while you are at it
>ask them if their is anything else that they can tell you that is a
>threat to the security of this nation.
By the time he finds someone in the military who knows the answers, and
is clueless enough to tell him, his phone bill will be too large to let him
enjoy the listening hobby.
If it's important enough to keep secret, it will be encrypted. After
all, the other governments know the frequencies, and they DO listen!
--
Robert Garland NX3S @ N3ACL.PA.USA.NOAM
Hilltown Township Bucks County robert@kd3bj.ampr.org
Pennsylvania USA Grid FN20ii
"Ham Radio is a calling"
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:04 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.idt.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!news.abs.net!usenet
From: Richard Rohrer <rrohrer@mail.bcpl.lib.md.usw>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Wanted: Plans to Build A Quadrifilar Ant. for WEFAX
Date: 26 Dec 1996 14:15:20 GMT
Organization: Personal
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <59u19o$2r0@news.abs.net>
References: <01bbf0d6.732e43a0$9967f6cd@bob-berg>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp71.bcpl.lib.md.us
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1PE (Windows; I; 16bit)
To: bberg@connix.com
Bob,
There is a good article in August or Sept QST for Quadrifilar antennas
for VHF including the 137mHz band. The 137mHz is for APT not Wefax.
Wefax is up around 1600 mHz.
Dick
KC3EF
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:05 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!newspump.sol.net!ddsw1!news.mcs.net!news.abs.net!usenet
From: Richard Rohrer <rrohrer@mail.bcpl.lib.md.usw>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Wanted: Plans to Build A Quadrifilar Ant. for WEFAX
Date: 26 Dec 1996 14:15:33 GMT
Organization: Personal
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <59u1a5$2r0@news.abs.net>
References: <01bbf0d6.732e43a0$9967f6cd@bob-berg>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp71.bcpl.lib.md.us
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1PE (Windows; I; 16bit)
To: bberg@connix.com
Bob,
There is a good article in August or Sept QST for Quadrifilar antennas
for VHF including the 137mHz band. The 137mHz is for APT not Wefax.
Wefax is up around 1600 mHz.
Dick
KC3EF
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:05 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!portc02.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail
From: wb4lnm@aol.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Need info about military satellite
Date: 26 Dec 1996 14:29:12 GMT
Organization: AOL http://www.aol.com
Lines: 9
Message-ID: <19961226142801.JAA20830@ladder01.news.aol.com>
References: <32c0f10a.17297261@news.rdu.bellsouth.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com
X-Admin: news@aol.com
X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader
The UHF frequencies for these satellites are published in an available
military standard and are unclassified. If you really need to know (you
won't be able to decrypt any of it anyhow) then send me a note and I'll
send you the title for the specification to request. You will be wasting
your time, though.
John...
73
WB4LNM@aol.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:06 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.wco.com!news
From: steve <kd6fyk@wco.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: FOR SALE - GE 19" COLOR TV/VCR COMBO - $250
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 1996 11:46:23 -0800
Organization: redheads inc.
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <32C2D60F.7627@wco.com>
References: <32e7b15f.2645603@news.uh.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: venus39.wco.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01 (Win16; U)
ccc19380@jetson.uh.edu wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I am selling a GE COLOR TV/VCR 19" COMBO. It is less than 45
> days old. I am only selling it because I just bought a sound system
> and it need audio/video outputs which this TV does NOT have. This TV
> has Audio/Video Inputs and a Cable (Antenna) Jack In. It is a very
> nice T.V. to have since the VCR is already built in. Just plug it in
> and you are ready to go!!!! Please Reply If Interested. $250
>
> ccc19380@jetson.uh.edu
>
> (Email Only)
>
> buyer must prepay only the shipping charges. i live in Houston, TX
I think he put this in space group because of name in address.
hint,it starts with a J.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:07 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!dciteleport.com!usenet.logical.net!not-for-mail
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Fri, 27 Dec 1996 05:56:17 GMT
Organization:
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32c363e5.56550648@news.capital.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup033.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
"Travis Roy" <travis.tigger@worldnet.att.net> wrote:
>Hi, I'm having trouble getting anything in or out of Mir. Could someone
>please tell me the frequencies they use and for what. Also I could you some
>advise on what Satellite tracking software I should use. Right now I use
>Logsat. My equipment is a Yaesu FT-530 (Just picked it up yesterday, I
>had a Kenwood TH-79A but the display died) and a mag mount dual band
>antenna. I also have a diamond dual band whip.
>
>Thanks
>TTFN
>Travis
Mir's frequencies are:
Uplink (they listen) 145.800
Downlink (you listen) 145.200
Packet (simplex) 145.800
I use STSplus for tracking. It's good. Logsat is good too. There are
others.
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:08 1997
From: "HB9VAF" <marcom@iprolink.ch>
Subject: how run F0-29 (MODE etc)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Message-ID: <01bbf408$8e3b7e80$03a0bd8a@mam>
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
NNTP-Posting-Host: 194.158.19.84
Date: 27 Dec 96 15:12:02 GMT
Lines: 11
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!EU.net!Austria.EU.net!01-newsfeed.univie.ac.at!swidir.switch.ch!news.iprolink.ch!194.158.19.84
hi
I dont now witch mode, freq is in use to trafic with f0-29 ?
Tank four your help
PS: Excuse my english (I speek french)
--
HB9VAF - MANCASTROPPA MARCO - SWITZERLAND
Email : marcom@iprolink.ch
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:09 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newspump.sol.net!iag.net!xara.net!emerald.xara.net!telehouse1.frontier-networks.co.uk!nildram!dgt1-ptp6.nildram.co.uk
From: perkiert@nildram.co.uk (Paul Erkiert)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: mir uhf repeater
Date: Fri, 27 Dec 1996 21:12:44 GMT
Organization: Nildram On-Line
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <32c43bdb.0@scooby.nildram.co.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: scooby.nildram.co.uk
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
I gather that mir has a uhf amateur repeater Is it 437.950 or 437.930
MHz Today (27 December 1996)
at 17:35 I heard a Xmas greeting message I also heard what sounded
like a burst of packet data. I
would be interested in any information regarding the amateur radio
activity on mir, I have a handy
talky for 430Mhz band it has no tone squelch and the repeater shift is
600khz for Europe so I think
I will only be listening.. Am I likley to hear a beacon if the
repeater is not active?
Thanks and happy new year to all.
Paul G4BKS
Locator IO91OT 51 deg 49 min north 0 deg 49 min west
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:10 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.idt.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!205.137.48.149!news7.agis.net!agis!newspeer1.agis.net!agis!news.cyberg8t.com!host34.cyberg8t.com!houghton
From: Bob Houghton <houghton@cyberg8t.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: 27 Dec 1996 22:56:02 GMT
Organization: Cyberg8t Internet Services, Inc.
Lines: 10
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: host34.cyberg8t.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Newsreader: Nuntius 2.0.4_68K
X-XXMessage-ID: <AEE992D1E901F75D@host34.cyberg8t.com>
X-XXDate: Fri, 27 Dec 1996 22:50:57 GMT
>Mir's frequencies are:
>Uplink (they listen) 145.800
>Downlink (you listen) 145.200
>Packet (simplex) 145.800
The Nov/Dec issue of the Amsat Journal shows the following:
145.200 Uplink, 145.800 Downlink, Voice or Packet. Who's right?
Bob KC6LVG
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:11 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!ix.netcom.com!news.webspan.net!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 96 01:55:58 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet Connection
Lines: 25
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <5a2gb4$3ck$1@news.mhv.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net> <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port155.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>, Bob Houghton <houghton@cyberg8t.c
om> wrote:
>>Mir's frequencies are:
>>Uplink (they listen) 145.800
>>Downlink (you listen) 145.200
>>Packet (simplex) 145.800
>
>The Nov/Dec issue of the Amsat Journal shows the following:
>
>145.200 Uplink, 145.800 Downlink, Voice or Packet. Who's right?
>
>Bob KC6LVG
The downlink where you listen for voice is 145.200, your uplink is
145.800.
Packet is simplex on 145.800
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:12 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!207.12.55.200!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-200.sprintlink.net!news.onramp.net!usenet
From: Bob Winingham <kc5ejk@onramp.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: 28 Dec 1996 05:33:40 GMT
Organization: OnRamp Technologies; ISP; Dallas/Ft Worth/Houston, TX USA
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <5a2bfk$m5t@news.onramp.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net> <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dal41.onramp.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Macintosh; I; 68K)
To: houghton@cyberg8t.com
X-URL: news:5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com
>The Nov/Dec issue of the Amsat Journal shows the following:
>145.200 Uplink, 145.800 Downlink, Voice or Packet. Who's right?
Well Amsat Journal is RIGHT but the MIR station decided
after the fact to change.
We have two large repeaters in Dallas on 145.190 and 145.210
and that makes it a problem to catch the voice downlink.
73
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:13 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.idt.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.mathworks.com!uunet!in2.uu.net!206.72.128.98!news.icix.net!news.gate.net!not-for-mail
From: "Bob Dye" <kc4hdk@gate.net>
Newsgroups: aus.radio.amateur.digital,aus.radio.amateur.misc,aus.radio.packet,in.ham-radio,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,sci.geo.oceanography,sci.geo.satel
Subject: GPS / Radio Equipment for sale
Date: 28 Dec 1996 13:55:01 GMT
Organization: kc4hdk
Lines: 41
Message-ID: <01bbf4c6$b5c35540$7214e3c7@robert-j.-dye>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pslfl2-51.gate.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net aus.radio.amateur.digital:313 aus.radio.amateur.misc:1700 in.ham-radio:409 rec.radio.amateur.antenna:33301 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20907 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45284 rec.radio.amateur.misc:121930 rec.radio.amateur.space:9229 sci.geo.oceanography:5678
Well here is the list. Most of this equipment was hardly ever used. I am
getting out of many parts of ham radio concentrating on my UHF repeater and
links to it. I will pay for shipping. Can do COD or check in advice.
Please pass on this message to others that may be interested. If you are
on packet please post it on the local BBS. Trying to generate revenue.
Thank you for your time. People have asked if I was a smoker. No I nor
anybody
in my home smokes. The TS-690SAT is stock out of the factory with no extra
filters. If interested will discuss other offers. Need cash. I have
references to others
that I have sold via e-mail/UPS and they were very happy.
Magellan Meridian GPS in good condition with Data Cable
$150!!
MFJ VERSA TUNER V GOOD
$250
KENWOOD TS690 EXCELLENT, WITH INTERNAL ANT TUNER
$1,200
AEA DSP-232 NEW IN BOX
$343
YAESU G-5400B EXCELLENT, WITH SEPARATOR KIT,
200'CABLE $456
Bob
kc4hdk@gate.net
561.552.3114 Voice Mail
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:13 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!204.238.120.21!jump.net!grunt.dejanews.com!not-for-mail
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 11:41:06 -0600
From: dmann10@juno.com
Subject: Internet satellite services
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Message-ID: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com>
Organization: Deja News Usenet Posting Service
X-Article-Creation-Date: Sat Dec 28 17:36:12 1996 GMT
X-Originating-IP-Addr: 206.81.40.78 ()
X-Http-User-Agent: Mozilla/3.0 (Win95; I)
X-Authenticated-Sender: dmann10@juno.com
Lines: 5
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60354 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27897 rec.radio.scanner:74286 rec.radio.amateur.space:9230
Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
companies are there? Thanks in advace,
dmann
-------------------==== Posted via Deja News ====-----------------------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Post to Usenet
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:14 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in1.uu.net!205.252.116.190!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!ix.netcom.com!news
From: KD1YV <jimkd1yv@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Got a Nice Visual on Mir
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 13:23:55 -0500
Organization: Hamily !
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dby-ct2-23.ix.netcom.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-NETCOM-Date: Sat Dec 28 12:24:53 PM CST 1996
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.02 (Win16; I)
On the evening of 27 Dec on a pass that peaked at 17:13 EST, I had a
nice visual sighting of Mir. There was cloud cover to my west, but as
soon as it cleared them, I had a nice view from near 50 degrees elevation
until it disappeared over my horizon to the ESE. It was neat - the first
time that I have seen it. I tried some 7x50 binoculars, though they
didn't help too much.
I used STSPLUS to predict the orbits.
--
73 de Jim, KD1YV
http://pw1.netcom.com/~jimkd1yv/hamily.html
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:17 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.stealth.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.mindspring.com!mindspring!uunet!in2.uu.net!204.177.81.3!alnilam.dancris.com!usenet
From: Mark Saunders <tracker@dancris.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 11:42:33 -0700
Organization: Dancris Telecom L.L.C.
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <32C56A19.7E2@dancris.com>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net>
Reply-To: tracker@dancris.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: d116-mfs.dancris.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01Gold (Win95; I)
Travis Roy wrote:
>
> Hi, I'm having trouble getting anything in or out of Mir. Could someone
> please tell me the frequencies they use and for what. Also I could you some
> advise on what Satellite tracking software I should use. Right now I use
> Logsat. My equipment is a Yaesu FT-530 (Just picked it up yesterday, I
> had a Kenwood TH-79A but the display died) and a mag mount dual band
> antenna. I also have a diamond dual band whip.
>
> Thanks
> TTFN
> Travis
Hi Travis,
MIR also has a 70cm FM repeater onboard, it just went on the air. The
January 1997 issue of QST has the into on page 51. The voice uplink
frequency is 435.750 MHz and the downline is 437.950 MHz with a141.3
CTCSS tone. This is an odd split, but your Yaesu owners manual tells
you how to set it up (on page 31 "Storing Independent Transmit
Frequencies"). The repeater callsign is RR0LL. QST reports, and I
quote, "Its signal is so loud that it can be easily heard with H-Ts and
"rubber duck" antennas. In fact, a number of hams have worked it with
H-Ts."
I've not heard it for a few days, but I've not been waiting by the radio
for each pass, either.
I use tracksat v3.1. It is FREE and works very well. E-mail me and
I'll tell you where you can get it. AMSAT-NA provides the orbital
elements in the 2-line format required by tracksat.
Regards,
Mark Saunders -- KJ7BS
Glendale, Arizona
tracker@dancris.com
KJ7BS@KC7Y.AZ.USA.NOAM
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:17 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.lobo.net!news
From: Mark Fossum <n0nsv@amsat.org>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: MIR Repeater Working
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 13:17:19 -0600
Organization: Lobo Net
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <32C5723F.7F7B@amsat.org>
Reply-To: n0nsv@amsat.org
NNTP-Posting-Host: 134.129.253.81
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
I've been monitoring the MIR Space Station the last few weeks. The last
couple of days, I haven't heard the repeater. Has anyone used it in the
last couple of days?
Mark - N0NSV
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:18 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!EU.net!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!ix.netcom.com!news.webspan.net!news1.exit109.com!news.westnet.com!mhv.net!Randall
From: trandall@mhv.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Got a Nice Visual on Mir
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 96 20:57:40 GMT
Organization: MHVNet, the Mid Hudson Valley's Internet Connection
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <5a4j6a$2bh$1@news.mhv.net>
References: <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: port66.mhv.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress 2.0 Beta #0
In article <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>, KD1YV <jimkd1yv@ix.netcom.com> wrote
:
>On the evening of 27 Dec on a pass that peaked at 17:13 EST, I had a
>nice visual sighting of Mir. There was cloud cover to my west, but as
>soon as it cleared them, I had a nice view from near 50 degrees elevation
>until it disappeared over my horizon to the ESE. It was neat - the first
>time that I have seen it. I tried some 7x50 binoculars, though they
>didn't help too much.
>
>I used STSPLUS to predict the orbits.
>
>--
>73 de Jim, KD1YV
>http://pw1.netcom.com/~jimkd1yv/hamily.html
Ahhh congrats Jim! Neat isn't it?! Have you seen the shuttle flyover yet?
STSPLUS is a great tracker, I've been using it for years.
Tom
Tom Randall Amateur Radio - KB2SMS
trandall@mhv.net Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club / ARRL / 10-10
Member: AAVSO Solar Division
Opinions herein are mine and may not be that of MHV.NET!
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:22 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Got a Nice Visual on Mir
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 21:37:57 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 28
Message-ID: <32c59237.2305502@news.monad.net>
References: <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar3-async-52.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
On Sat, 28 Dec 1996 13:23:55 -0500, KD1YV <jimkd1yv@ix.netcom.com>
wrote:
>On the evening of 27 Dec on a pass that peaked at 17:13 EST, I had a
>nice visual sighting of Mir. There was cloud cover to my west, but as
>soon as it cleared them, I had a nice view from near 50 degrees elevation
>until it disappeared over my horizon to the ESE. It was neat - the first
>time that I have seen it. I tried some 7x50 binoculars, though they
>didn't help too much.
>
>I used STSPLUS to predict the orbits.
>
>--
>73 de Jim, KD1YV
>http://pw1.netcom.com/~jimkd1yv/hamily.html
Seeing Mir visually, while listening to one of them talk on the radio
is really an esoteric experience, I have done this many times, and
always get a lump in my throat thinking about the realities of it..
the most rewarding viewing I ever saw was when (I believe) STS-76 was
approaching Mir to dock, I viewed them in the early morning sky, and
saw the brighter shuttle following the space station 10-12 seconds
behind, knowing there were men in both craft, it really felt like the
begining of the space age.. take your HT next time and you will
probably hear packet, but if you're lucky you will hear them on voice,
and real lucky, you might talk to them on the HT, it is possible I
have done it.. 73 DAVE
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:23 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!dciteleport.com!usenet.logical.net!not-for-mail
From: orion@capital.net
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Got a Nice Visual on Mir
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 00:13:29 GMT
Organization:
Lines: 21
Message-ID: <32c5b760.29024653@news.capital.net>
References: <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup041.qnsbny1.capital.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
KD1YV <jimkd1yv@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>On the evening of 27 Dec on a pass that peaked at 17:13 EST, I had a
>nice visual sighting of Mir. There was cloud cover to my west, but as
>soon as it cleared them, I had a nice view from near 50 degrees elevation
>until it disappeared over my horizon to the ESE. It was neat - the first
>time that I have seen it. I tried some 7x50 binoculars, though they
>didn't help too much.
>
>I used STSPLUS to predict the orbits.
>
>--
>73 de Jim, KD1YV
>http://pw1.netcom.com/~jimkd1yv/hamily.html
Congrats on your sighting, Jim. I've used STSPlus for a long time. I
don't believe there is a better program for tracking sats.
--
73,
Butch N2YMJ
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:23 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!uunet!in2.uu.net!206.149.24.18!excalibur.flash.net!not-for-mail
From: mbv@flash.net (Ken Durham)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR Repeater Working
Date: 29 Dec 1996 00:34:36 GMT
Organization: Flashnet Communications, http://www.flash.net
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <5a4eas$j1g$1@excalibur.flash.net>
References: <32C5723F.7F7B@amsat.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ipm2-54.flash.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII
X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.7
In article <32C5723F.7F7B@amsat.org>, n0nsv@amsat.org says...
>
>I've been monitoring the MIR Space Station the last few weeks. The last
>couple of days, I haven't heard the repeater. Has anyone used it in the
>last couple of days?
>
>Mark - N0NSV
>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mark, The first times I've tried to hear it were the last two
passes and there was nothing to be heard. Could it be a lack
of activity, or does the operator turn it off due to power
budget requirements?....Anyone know?
Ken K5MBV
was nothing there
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:24 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newspump.sol.net!posts.execpc.com!usenet
From: Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 20:42:15 -0600
Organization: Exec-PC BBS Internet - Milwaukee, WI
Lines: 15
Message-ID: <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com>
Reply-To: elint@execpc.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: pea.execpc.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60421 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27908 rec.radio.scanner:74343 rec.radio.amateur.space:9237
dmann10@juno.com wrote:
>
> Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
> companies are there? Thanks in advace,
> dmann
> -------------------==== Posted via Deja News ====-----------------------
> http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Post to Usenet
--
Check http://www.nsn.net
-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
Jim Leveraus
Internet: elint@execpc.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:25 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!cwix!uunet!in3.uu.net!208.194.157.4!pinta.pagesz.net!not-for-mail
From: alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 04:12:40 GMT
Organization: Pagesz.net
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <32c5ef03.23240360@news.pagesz.net>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: henryiv-68.pagesz.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/16.230
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60458 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27912 rec.radio.scanner:74373 rec.radio.amateur.space:9241
On Sat, 28 Dec 1996 20:42:15 -0600, Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
wrote:
>> Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
>> companies are there? Thanks in advace,
>
>Check http://www.nsn.net
Doesn't look to me like these folks are aiming at the consumer market
in the same way that DirecPC are. Do they even offer internet access
to individuals over their satellite service - I can't find any prices
for setup and monthly charges.
Anyone here using them care to comment?
---
Alex Chapman <alex@budgetweb.com> http://www.budgetweb.com/
lists of web space providers/list of os/2 netscape plug-ins
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:26 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.midusa.net!news
From: pvale@midusa.net (Perry L. Vale)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 04:29:03 GMT
Organization: Netspace Internet Services
Lines: 14
Message-ID: <5a4rtr$ooo1@news.midusa.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net> <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.28.168.159
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
Bob Houghton <houghton@cyberg8t.com> wrote:
>>Mir's frequencies are:
>>Uplink (they listen) 145.800
>>Downlink (you listen) 145.200
>>Packet (simplex) 145.800
>The Nov/Dec issue of the Amsat Journal shows the following:
>145.200 Uplink, 145.800 Downlink, Voice or Packet. Who's right?
>Bob KC6LVG
I have it programmed in my radios both ways.........
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:27 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newspump.sol.net!posts.execpc.com!usenet
From: Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 1996 23:06:36 -0600
Organization: Exec-PC BBS Internet - Milwaukee, WI
Lines: 26
Message-ID: <32C5FC5C.EDA@execpc.com>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com> <32c5ef03.23240360@news.pagesz.net>
Reply-To: elint@execpc.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: kumquat.execpc.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60471 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27956 rec.radio.scanner:74381 rec.radio.amateur.space:9244
Alex Chapman wrote:
>
> On Sat, 28 Dec 1996 20:42:15 -0600, Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
> wrote:
>
> >> Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
> >> companies are there? Thanks in advace,
> >
> >Check http://www.nsn.net
>
> Doesn't look to me like these folks are aiming at the consumer market
> in the same way that DirecPC are. Do they even offer internet access
> to individuals over their satellite service - I can't find any prices
> for setup and monthly charges.
>
> Anyone here using them care to comment?
> ---
> Alex Chapman <alex@budgetweb.com> http://www.budgetweb.com/
> lists of web space providers/list of os/2 netscape plug-ins
They target multiuser sites or remote ISP'S
--
-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
Jim Leveraus
Internet: elint@execpc.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:28 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.3lefties.com!usenet
From: "Earl Needham" <NeedhamE.NO.SPAM@3lefties.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Kenwood TM-401B below 440 MHz?
Date: 29 Dec 1996 05:22:07 GMT
Organization: INET of New Mexico
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <01bbf548$3ad971c0$a01865ce@SNeedha.3lefties.com>
Reply-To: "Earl Needham" <NeedhamE.REMOVE_TO_REPLY@3lefties.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ts3-port02.3lefties.com
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45346 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122048 rec.radio.amateur.space:9242
Having recently discovered FM activity through sattelites, I'd like to try
my hand at getting through the FM repeater on the Mir space station.
Unfortunately, my UHF rig (a Kenwood TM-401B) only covers 440-450 MHz. Is
there a mod available to allow this rig to operate below 440 MHz?
BTW -- the Japanese TM-401 apparently oerated from 430-450 MHz, judging by
some of the Japanese WWW pages.
Thanks for any help
Earl Needham, KD5XB
needhame@3lefties.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:29 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!arclight.uoregon.edu!newsfeed.uk.ibm.net!news-m01.ny.us.ibm.net!news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net!not-for-mail
From: herksen@ibm.net (Robbert J. van Herksen / TA2IX)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Packet <--> INTERNET Gateway??????
Date: 29 Dec 1996 05:50:44 GMT
Organization: Unorganised Mess
Lines: 17
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <5a50rk$14q8$1@news-s01.ny.us.ibm.net>
Reply-To: herksen@ibm.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: slip139-92-41-244.ut.nl.ibm.net
X-Newsreader: NeoLogic News for OS/2 [version: 4.5c 999]
Hi there, and thanks for reading my message.
Does someone know a fully functional PACKET <--> INTERNET gateway??
Thanks for any help!!
Regards
Please respond to this message by email to: <herksen@ibm.net>
------------------------------------------------
Robbert J. van Herksen / TA2IX
Istanbul, Turkey
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:30 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!192.220.251.22!netnews.nwnet.net!news-hub.interserv.net!news.sprynet.com!news
From: "David Little" <dalite01@sprynet.com>
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: 29 Dec 1996 07:38:34 GMT
Organization: Sprynet News Service
Lines: 17
Message-ID: <01bbf55a$f47216c0$34b0aec7@node2>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dd19-052.compuserve.com
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60453 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27911 rec.radio.scanner:74370 rec.radio.amateur.space:9240
> Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
> companies are there? Thanks in advace,
Planet Connect and Skylink - Both from Planet Systems; The folks
that bring you Sho at Home Network
PC-Sat http://www.pc-sat.com who recently took over Page sat operations
I know there are others, but these came to mind. I have been trying to
remember
planet connects web site, but can't recall it.
Happy hunting
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:31 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!mindspring!news9.agis.net!agis!newspeer1.agis.net!agis!atmnet.net!usenet
From: "Lorenzo & Katrina Baldwin" <KBaldwn10@linkline.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.dx,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Pro & Cons on Cordless Telephone Headsets????
Date: 29 Dec 1996 11:01:43 GMT
Organization: Preferred Company
Lines: 6
Message-ID: <01bbf576$b2ead0e0$75be43cf@KBaldwn10.stbbs.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.67.190.117
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:33343 rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors:1344 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20931 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1713 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45364 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22551 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122064 rec.radio.amateur.policy:44908 rec.radio.amateur.space:9247
Hello everyone....I hate to intrude but I'm doing some research on the
cordless telephone headset. Would you all please take a moment and reply
with some pros and cons on cordless telephone headset?
Thanks,
L & K
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:32 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.indigo.ie!usenet
From: aidan@ThePentagon.com
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: HAM TOOLKIT CD ROM..AWSOME!!!!
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 14:36:53 GMT
Organization: Indigo
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <32e4937a.3360244@news.indigo.ie>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ts02-06.dublin.indigo.ie
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.339
Check out our Awsome CD ROM.."HAM TOOL KIT"..Its jam packed with over
600MEGS of Amateur Radio Related Software..its all here on one
disk..buy no other !!!.
Surf to us at http://sphynx.com/murphy
Owned by Hams..for Hams!!!
M U R P H Y E L E C T R O N I C S
GSM Mobile Phones & Accessories. Satellite TV and Decoding Systems
CD Rom Multimedia Computer Accessories
http://sphynx.com/murphy Email: murphy@sphynx.com
Why not send us an SMS to our GSM phone..Simply surf to
http://home.sn.no/~ahaltbak/engsms.htm and type in the number
+35387527182, write your message and fill in your Email address.all for FREE !
!!
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:33 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news-paris.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!rain.fr!news.grolier.fr!usenet
From: elefther@club-internet.fr (Sotires Eleftheriou)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 15:16:25 GMT
Organization: Grolier Interactive Europe
Lines: 25
Message-ID: <32c62d90.2146551@News>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-197-94.neuilly.club-internet.fr
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/16.141
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60526 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:28005 rec.radio.scanner:74432 rec.radio.amateur.space:9253
On Sat, 28 Dec 1996 20:42:15 -0600, Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
wrote:
>dmann10@juno.com wrote:
>>
>> Besides DirectPC what other home Internet satellite service
>> companies are there? Thanks in advace,
>> dmann
>> -------------------==== Posted via Deja News ====-----------------------
>> http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Post to Usenet
>
>--
>
>Check http://www.nsn.net
TPS are planning to start offering an internet access service as part
of their DTH digital bouquet.
The internet accesss should start around the end of 1997.
>
>-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
>Jim Leveraus
> Internet: elint@execpc.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:34 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.idt.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news
From: wmeara@erols.com (Bill Meara )
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Got a Nice Visual on Mir
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:14:33 GMT
Organization: Erol's Internet Services
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <32c69884.1024461@news.erols.com>
References: <32C565BB.3B0C@ix.netcom.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: spg-as3s30.erols.com
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/16.230
FB Jim - I know that spotting the MIR is a lot of fun. I used to
follow MIR, the Shuttle and the Hubble Space Telescope from
Santo Domingo. Check out the October 95 issue of QST.
73 Bill N2CQR
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:36 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!208.194.157.4!pinta.pagesz.net!not-for-mail
From: alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:37:13 GMT
Organization: Pagesz.net
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <32c69d2c.685628@news.pagesz.net>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <01bbf55a$f47216c0$34b0aec7@node2>
NNTP-Posting-Host: isabella-43.pagesz.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/16.230
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60541 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:28006 rec.radio.scanner:74442 rec.radio.amateur.space:9254
On 29 Dec 1996 07:38:34 GMT, "David Little" <dalite01@sprynet.com>
wrote:
>Planet Connect and Skylink - Both from Planet Systems; The folks
>that bring you Sho at Home Network
>
>PC-Sat http://www.pc-sat.com who recently took over Page sat operations
>
>I know there are others, but these came to mind. I have been trying to
>remember planet connects web site, but can't recall it.
Can't find any pricing information on the PC-Sat home page. Planet
Connects home page is http://www.planetc.com/pc.htm
Their pricing seems to be in the same range as DirecPC, although they
aren't real clear on whether they offer standard internet connections.
They talk a lot about BBS and FidoNet, and only mention the internet
in passing. Furthermore I can't find where they describe how upstream
is handled. I'm guessing you don't transmit upstream via the dish, so
it must rely on a telephone connection for upstream.
DirecPC allows you to use your current ISP for upstream, and
downstream comes over the satellite. Planet Connect don't seem to go
into any details on this. Anyone using them care to comment?
---
Alex Chapman <alex@budgetweb.com> http://www.budgetweb.com/
lists of web space providers/list of os/2 netscape plug-ins
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:37 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!worldnet.att.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!208.194.157.4!pinta.pagesz.net!not-for-mail
From: alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:49:52 GMT
Organization: Pagesz.net
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <32c6a0a1.1533725@news.pagesz.net>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com> <32c62d90.2146551@News>
NNTP-Posting-Host: isabella-43.pagesz.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/16.230
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60489 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:27985 rec.radio.scanner:74398 rec.radio.amateur.space:9249
On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 15:16:25 GMT, elefther@club-internet.fr (Sotires
Eleftheriou) wrote:
>TPS are planning to start offering an internet access service as part
>of their DTH digital bouquet.
>The internet accesss should start around the end of 1997.
I can't find any mention of this at their home page http://www.tps.fr/
but then my french isn't fantastic. Presumably this service would be
aimed at France, and not available in the USA.
---
Alex Chapman <alex@budgetweb.com> http://www.budgetweb.com/
lists of web space providers/list of os/2 netscape plug-ins
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:38 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!news
From: dwittich@concentric.net (Doug Wittich)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 18:07:37 GMT
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Lines: 16
Message-ID: <32c6b2ff.186295439@news.concentric.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net> <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com> <5a2bfk$m5t@news.onramp.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: cnc04116.concentric.net
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.1/32.230
>Well Amsat Journal is RIGHT but the MIR station decided
>after the fact to change.
>
>We have two large repeaters in Dallas on 145.190 and 145.210
>and that makes it a problem to catch the voice downlink.
And with nationwide APRS activity on 145.79, that's a problem for
many, as well. Folks in Indianapolis want APRS to move from it's
coordinated frequency. Seems like MIR could have researched a bit
and tried to coordinate before they moved.
73
Doug
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:39 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!cwix!uunet!in3.uu.net!199.171.190.20!news.deltanet.com!news.deltanet.com!hiway
From: hiway@delta1.deltanet.com ()
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: LOW LOW PRICE HAM RADIO
Date: 29 Dec 1996 18:42:49 GMT
Organization: Delta Internet Services, Anaheim, Ca
Lines: 37
Message-ID: <5a6e39$1bb@news04.deltanet.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: nfs3.delta.net
X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
LOW LOW PRICE -- HAM RADIO STUFFS ON SALE!!!!!!!!!!
Please contact at 818-454-3333 10:00am to 4:00pm western time Mon
through Fri or e-mail hiway@pacificnet.net
Totally brand new:
1. c168a (VHF) $188.33 unit: 3 *full pack*
2. c528a (VHF & UHF) $236.25 unit: 5 *full pack*
3. c558a (VHF & UHF) $320.63 unit: 10 *full pack*
4. c5608da (VHF & UHF) $550.00 unit: 4 full *pack*
5. c5718da (VHF & UHF) $599.99 unit: 2
6. cbt160 battery case $2.50 unit: 8
telephone interconnects
1. cs-800 $169.50 unit: 2
2. cs-900 $169.50 unit: 4
antennas for base station
1. bsa 150 144mhz to 174mhz 2.5db $29.00 unit: 5
2. bsa 440 440mhz to 460mhz 4.5db $29.00 unit: 5
antennas for mobile
kg 2/70 144 - 148 mhz & 442 - 448 mhz 2.4db $33.96 unit: 3
charger
csa181a $58.50 unit: 1
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:40 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newsxfer2.itd.umich.edu!uunet!in2.uu.net!194.20.35.13!news.vol.it!news
From: "Brian E. Cauchi" <briane@dream.vol.net.mt>
Newsgroups: alt.ham-radio.digital-voice,es.rec.radio.amateur,fido7.hamradio,rec.radio.amateur,rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc,rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space,rec.radio.shortwave,su.org.ham
Subject: Re: FAX SSTV RTTY WEFAX with SoundBlaster: OK!
Date: 29 Dec 1996 18:53:57 GMT
Organization: Video On Line
Lines: 38
Message-ID: <01bbf5b9$82e63360$0100a8c0@mstcp>
References: <01bbb553$986b4320$0923a6c2@gateway> <01bbd3f3$91a45400$1623a6c2@gateway>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 194.166.35.34
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
Xref: news1.epix.net es.rec.radio.amateur:758 fido7.hamradio:182 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20939 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45381 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22557 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122094 rec.radio.amateur.space:9251 rec.radio.shortwave:91450
Hello.
I've just updated my FTV program, which does FAX & SSTV using a SoundCard,
to decode Baudot using the same (FM) demodulation engine.
Here is a run down of the more interesting features:
(1) It keeps the demodulated signal in memory, so that the signal can be
analysed again at a different keying rate or polarity! Garbage can be
resampled on the fly, which means that minutes of received signals decoded
at the wrong baud rate or keying polarity are recovered, on the fly, while
still receiving.
(2) Keying rate and polarity are analysed automatically - standard baud
rates are automatically set following analysis.
(3) Tuning oscilloscope available at all times, without loss of copy.
(4) Program works in real time.
(5) I wrote it, and I love it - I myself can't believe it works so well!
Download your copy of FTV from my web site, at:
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/2504
System requirements, and the standard features of FTV are described in the
following page:
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/2504/ftv.htm
By the way, AM signals from low orbiting weather satellites are also
decoded - no extra interfaces needed. Demodulation mode is user selectable
in software.
Hope you all have a load of fun receiving 'words and pictures' - I hope to
get some feedback !
Happy New Year 1997
All the best from Brian, 9H1JS, on the Island of Malta.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:41 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in3.uu.net!204.71.0.48!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.Traveller.COM!news
From: "Paul E. Traufler" <wintrak@traveller.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: WinTrak Pro Release
Date: 29 Dec 1996 23:37:56 GMT
Organization: WinTrak
Lines: 36
Message-ID: <01bbf5e1$cbe12fc0$51ae1ace@traveller.com.traveller.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.26.174.81
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155
WinTrak Pro New Release!
WinTrak Pro Version 4.5 has added and improved many areas in the program.
The Rendered views have been improved along with several new views
available also. This is just a small list of the many improvements made to
the program. Remember this program is a full 32-bit version, do not accept
any substitutions! Do not let those other programs fool you with the old,
"It works under Win95", but in reality it is a Windows 3.1 16-bit program.
Its your money, demand the best!
New Items:
Visible now satellites can be any of the 4 satellite groups.
Satellite elements statistics, such as oldest, newest and average age of
elements.
Zoom in on the Render views.
Added plot the next 2 passes option to render views.
Automatic LF to CR-LF text file detection and correction. (UNIX to DOS
Text conversion)
Mercator map added to the Rendered maps options.
Added Multi-Satellite 3D and Mercator maps Rendered views.
Added satellite labels to Rendered views.
Added option to set Sun terminator on the Render views.
Added satellite Rise/Set alarms, can play user recorded Wave files or
provided Wave files.
Greatly improved help file with printed manual options included in help
file.
Lowered the minimum satellite altitude to 90 km from the past 160 km.
This version works with Windows NT 4.0 now also.
--
WinTrak Pro
Satellite Tracking Program For Win95/NT
http://www.hsv.tis.net/~wintrak
wintrak@traveller.com
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:42 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!mindspring!uunet!in3.uu.net!198.161.84.3!scanner.worldgate.com!rover.ucs.ualberta.ca!news.agtac.net!news.cadvision.com!usenet
From: Raj Singh <singhraj@cadvision.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio,rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors,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
Subject: Re: Pro & Cons on Cordless Telephone Headsets????
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:31:35 -0800
Organization: CADVision Development Corp.
Lines: 13
Message-ID: <32C70D67.1733@cadvision.com>
References: <01bbf576$b2ead0e0$75be43cf@KBaldwn10.stbbs.com>
Reply-To: singhraj@cadvision.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: agtc164.cadvision.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Win16; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:33396 rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors:1373 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20968 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1725 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45466 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22587 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122222 rec.radio.amateur.policy:44968 rec.radio.amateur.space:9262
Lorenzo & Katrina Baldwin wrote:
>
> Hello everyone....I hate to intrude but I'm doing some research on the
> cordless telephone headset. Would you all please take a moment and reply
> with some pros and cons on cordless telephone headset?
>
> Thanks,
> L & K
The biggest pro is you don't have to learn the code to operate it. The
cons is it range is very limited, seem to run FM only
Happy New Year
Raj
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:43 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news.kei.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!feed1.news.erols.com!super.zippo.com!zdc!szdc!news
From: "Jamie R. Dean" <ke4htm@bluenet.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.antenna,rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors,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,rec.radio.b
Subject: Amateur Radio Files & Links (FREE)
Date: 30 Dec 1996 05:12:10 GMT
Organization: Zip News
Lines: 12
Message-ID: <01bbf60f$8d51a0e0$4f62f4cd@ke4htm.bluenet.com>
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1160
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.antenna:33389 rec.radio.amateur.boatanchors:1367 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc:20965 rec.radio.amateur.dx:1722 rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45455 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22582 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122198 rec.radio.amateur.policy:44959 rec.radio.amateur.space:9259
Come Visit The Western North Carolina APRS & Ham Radio Home Page. There are
lots of files to download
and links to all of the hotest ham and weather web sites on the net. And
best of all it's FREE!!
The Western NC Amateur Packet/Postion Reporting System & Ham Radio Home
Page
http://www.bluenet.net/ke4htm
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:44 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.pe.net!usenet
From: fhagan@pe.net (Frank Hagan)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 06:29:09 GMT
Organization: PE.net - Internet access from the Press-Enterprise Company
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <32c760de.20665955@news>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <01bbf55a$f47216c0$34b0aec7@node2> <32c69d2c.685628@news.pagesz.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: magnolia.pe.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
NNTP-Posting-User: fhagan
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60606 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:28067 rec.radio.scanner:74516 rec.radio.amateur.space:9257
On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:37:13 GMT, alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
wrote:
>Connects home page is http://www.planetc.com/pc.htm
>
>Their pricing seems to be in the same range as DirecPC, although they
>aren't real clear on whether they offer standard internet connections.
About 8 months ago I looked into this ... they send usenet feeds via
satellite, so you could get newsgroups, but couldn't get web service
like DirectPC promises.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:46 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news-lond.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!news.grolier.fr!usenet
From: elefther@club-internet.fr (Sotires Eleftheriou)
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 08:02:09 GMT
Organization: Grolier Interactive Europe
Lines: 27
Message-ID: <32c6fb35.33653903@News>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <32C5DA87.FC3@execpc.com> <32c62d90.2146551@News> <32c6a0a1.1533725@news.pagesz.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-197-188.neuilly.club-internet.fr
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99c/16.141
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60613 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:28071 rec.radio.scanner:74520 rec.radio.amateur.space:9258
On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:49:52 GMT, alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
wrote:
>On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 15:16:25 GMT, elefther@club-internet.fr (Sotires
>Eleftheriou) wrote:
>
>>TPS are planning to start offering an internet access service as part
>>of their DTH digital bouquet.
>>The internet accesss should start around the end of 1997.
>
>I can't find any mention of this at their home page http://www.tps.fr/
>but then my french isn't fantastic. Presumably this service would be
>aimed at France, and not available in the USA.
TPS are running off the Eutelsat satellite at 13 degrees east.
You're right, it can't be seen in the USA.
I orriginally posted this in reply to your message in a group that is
aimed primarily at European satellite TV, but I see that the orriginal
message was posted quite widely.
TPS are really only intended for France, but the signal can be picked
up all over Europe.
They haven't made much noise about their Internet plans yet as its
still early days.
It should probably use the same kind of technology as Direc PC.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:48 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!arclight.uoregon.edu!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 11:50:47 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 31
Message-ID: <32c7ab0e.1271950@news.monad.net>
References: <01bbf298$26d71040$748092cf@551137821worldnet.att.net> <5a1k62$316$1@nntp.cyberg8t.com> <5a2bfk$m5t@news.onramp.net> <32c6b2ff.186295439@news.concentric.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar1-async-8.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 18:07:37 GMT, dwittich@concentric.net (Doug
Wittich) wrote:
>>Well Amsat Journal is RIGHT but the MIR station decided
>>after the fact to change.
>>
>>We have two large repeaters in Dallas on 145.190 and 145.210
>>and that makes it a problem to catch the voice downlink.
>
>And with nationwide APRS activity on 145.79, that's a problem for
>many, as well. Folks in Indianapolis want APRS to move from it's
>coordinated frequency. Seems like MIR could have researched a bit
>and tried to coordinate before they moved.
>
>
>73
>
>
>Doug
The "players" ie Dave Larson N6JLH alias N6CO alias K6MIR and Miles
Mann WF1F were told well in advance that this was going to be a
problem with not only APRS, but also the Repeaters, they in turn I
would assume notified their contacts at AMSAT and ARRL and NASA and
SOUP, at any rate G3BGM also was told that especially here in the
states that pair would be a problem, and it was taken to the European
Amateur radio conference where the frequencies were decided upon. I
realized long ago that the doppler shift would bring it into
interference with both, and it does.. there is little hope. there is a
possibility they may try another pair, but slim. 73 DAVE
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:49 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.ultranet.com!bigboote.WPI.EDU!cam-news-feed2.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!EU.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!iol!not-for-mail
From: jim ryan <sigma4@iol.ie>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: new mir freq for 1997
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 16:46:00 +0000
Organization: Ireland On-Line
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <32C7F1C8.DF6@iol.ie>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dialup-039.cork.iol.ie
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win16; I)
Hello all ,
Just had a nice short contact with John KC5TZQ at 16:07 30-12-96
. It must be said that John is a very good operator as he worked several
stations over Europe , He also informed us that as of the first of
January 1997 they will change freq on 2meters as follows .
mir tx 145.800
mir rx 145.200
ie the reverse of now !!.
73 de Dave EI4HT and Jim EI3DP .
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:50 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!128.6.21.9!rutgers!faatcrl.faa.gov!usenet
From: Jeff Griffin <griffinj@admin.tc.faa.gov>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: MIR info..
Date: 30 Dec 1996 18:21:52 GMT
Organization: FAA Technical Center, Pomona, NJ
Lines: 5
Message-ID: <5a9180$9@faatcrl.faa.gov>
References: <5a4nk2$3om@nw101.infi.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 155.178.52.138
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.2 (Windows; U; 32bit)
Dave, try 145.200 + 600 voice, 145.800 simplex paket,
437950 - 2200 pl 141.3 repeater, and 437.925 for a recorded
greeting from Mir. Good luck, and have fun.
Jeff kb2wqm
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:52 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-15.sprintlink.net!news.smartlink.net!infosoftpub.com!george.tamayo
From: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Please Read!
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 21:01:00 (PST)
Organization: Infosoft Publishing Company (805-288-1414)
Lines: 63
Message-ID: <17704644@infosoftpub.com>
Reply-To: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm115-55.smartlink.net
X-mailer: PowrMAIL for PowerBBS Ver. 1.5 (Beta 6b) (rev. 1.00d)
Fellow Amateurs: Please read the first two paragraphs!
CLAWSON@TELEGRAFIX.COM (PAT CLAWSON) said to ALL in comp.bbs.misc:
Boardwatch may have abandoned the BBS sysop, but TeleGrafix is still standing
strong with them. However, we think that BBS systems must become
Internet-connected if they are to survive in a Webbed world.
First, we need to quit calling these online systems by the moniker "BBS."
The term has come to reflect something on the order of ham radio -- low-rent
communications run by amateurs. That may accurately reflect some BBS
systems, but we've found that many sysops run very professional online
businesses.
Second, we need to start emphasizing the Power of Telnet and talk about
Telnet Sites, not BBS systems. A telnettable BBS or legacy system can do
many things the Web can't. Most of the computer industry and public has
been Web-washed (brainwashed) by all the press hype. They think the Web
is all there is to the Internet/online experience. Just a couple of days
ago, I was talking to the Internet reporter for one of America's most
prestigious newspapers. He had never even heard of Telnet, didn't have a
clue what it was -- and his news reports influence literally millions of
Americans. BBS sysops and BBS system manufacturers need to refocus their
efforts, and begin producing tools and content that take advantage of the
Power of Telnet.
Third, Telnet Site operators (such as BBS sysops) must professionalize the
look and feel of their systems. Most sysops make little investment in
quality graphics for their systems. In a glitzy Web world, it is little
wonder that the public is turned off by ANSI BBS systems no matter how if
the content on them is of high quality. We constantly hear BBS sysops
complain about having to pay what are very modest sums of money for
RIPscrip graphics -- but the people running Web sites don't think twice
about investing thousands of dollars for a fabulous look.
Despite all the flack we take from BBS sysops, we continue to support
their efforts -- and we always will. But BBS sysops have to change with
the times, and they have to be willing to invest to upgrade their systems
to compete with (or complement) the Web.
On Christmas, TeleGrafix released the first multimedia Telnet browsers.
RIPtel Visual Telnet is available now from our Web site at
www.telegrafix.com. This is a huge step forward for the Internet, and it
represents a salvation for BBS sysops by placing Telnet graphically on a
higher level than the Web.
The serious professional operators will get on board the Visual Telnet
train, and they will live to see a brighter day.
Pat Clawson
TeleGrafix Communications Inc.
Winchester, VA
Web: www.telegrafix.com
---
George M. Tamayo - WD6EJO
South Mountain Online
---
* PowerAccess 1.50 A flashlight is a case in which to carry dead batteries.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:53 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!newsgate.duke.edu!news-feed-1.peachnet.edu!usenet.eel.ufl.edu!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!news.bbnplanet.com!cam-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!news.idt.net!cdc2.cdc.net!newsfeed.concentric.net!news-master!mariner.cris.com!Insight
From: Susan Driggers <Insight@cris.com>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Total Newbie Looking for help
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 18:37:00 -0500
Organization: Concentric Internet Services
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.95.961230183159.15918A-100000@mariner.cris.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mariner.cris.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
I am totally new to satellite communications and am looking for some
advice on the bare minimum needed to get started. I am operating on a very
restricted budget so anything that could be homebrewed would be
appreciated.
I currently have a HT 202 that I am dedicating to sattelite. Everything
else I will need advice on. THanks !
--- 73
Susan Driggers
KF4OBL
Real Radios Glow in the Dark !
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:57:59 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Sets (TLE922)
Date: 30 Dec 1996 23:38:21 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 748
Message-ID: <5a9jpd$7ge@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
The most current orbital elements from the NORAD two-line element sets are
carried on the Celestial 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 #922 -
Alouette 1
1 00424U 62049A 96363.78572947 .00000066 00000-0 67354-4 0 2564
2 00424 80.4660 91.7389 0022417 253.6086 106.2595 13.67884496708941
ATS 1
1 02608U 66110A 96357.28522603 -.00000164 00000-0 10000-3 0 9949
2 02608 14.5714 350.8002 0007178 101.9620 258.1137 1.00290646 26755
ATS 3
1 03029U 67111A 96362.07148111 -.00000114 00000-0 10000-3 0 5963
2 03029 14.9162 357.7182 0010717 267.6711 110.9249 1.00272778106702
Starlette
1 07646U 75010A 96364.68927694 -.00000160 00000-0 -13129-4 0 232
2 07646 49.8278 97.2277 0206484 156.2068 204.8538 13.82191883106000
LAGEOS
1 08820U 76039A 96364.65645091 .00000001 00000-0 00000+0 0 2530
2 08820 109.8486 92.9883 0043657 86.3716 274.2047 6.38664617226318
ETS-2
1 09852U 77014A 96353.26952944 .00000093 00000-0 10000-3 0 919
2 09852 13.4494 30.8201 0006106 154.2971 205.7133 1.00010627 19487
GOES 2
1 10061U 77048A 96364.22238557 .00000053 00000-0 10000-3 0 7817
2 10061 12.6258 34.8946 0010672 138.9117 187.3079 1.00280835 16395
IUE
1 10637U 78012A 96364.28727948 .00000003 00000-0 10000-3 0 3362
2 10637 35.7747 80.4409 1340818 62.9212 289.9138 1.00059083 21889
GOES 3
1 10953U 78062A 96365.20103067 -.00000105 00000-0 10000-3 0 7561
2 10953 11.6275 37.8052 0003665 201.9592 187.1536 1.00264354 21026
SeaSat 1
1 10967U 78064A 96363.22373529 -.00000007 00000-0 42170-4 0 5417
2 10967 107.9910 216.2497 0001408 265.3142 94.7858 14.38142886969346
Nimbus 7
1 11080U 78098A 96363.57409109 -.00000104 00000-0 -56881-4 0 6383
2 11080 98.9195 216.0866 0008715 159.2997 200.8515 13.83687496918054
GOES 5
1 12472U 81049A 96364.24976996 .00000094 00000-0 10000-3 0 9759
2 12472 8.5030 48.2212 0003965 81.6505 278.3897 1.00294831 15054
Cosmos 1383
1 13301U 82066A 96363.57590090 .00000056 00000-0 48128-4 0 5547
2 13301 82.9279 351.2643 0029188 64.3427 296.0732 13.68080598723958
LandSat 4
1 13367U 82072A 96362.18712399 -.00000385 00000-0 -75471-4 0 329
2 13367 98.0520 46.9771 0005707 258.2528 101.8030 14.57193310768649
DMSP B5D2-1
1 13736U 82118A 96364.10444308 .00000016 00000-0 25193-4 0 1467
2 13736 98.6217 189.3462 0008219 175.7884 184.3364 14.25816177728848
IRAS
1 13777U 83004A 96364.57126230 -.00000073 00000-0 -20508-4 0 5340
2 13777 98.9658 185.9459 0012059 276.6224 83.3571 13.99258083380690
Cosmos 1447
1 13916U 83021A 96363.53020204 .00000049 00000-0 35561-4 0 6463
2 13916 82.9458 47.3042 0037763 332.9624 26.9565 13.74350267690436
TDRS 1
1 13969U 83026B 96364.15731586 -.00000290 00000-0 00000+0 0 6832
2 13969 9.2613 41.7680 0002640 234.4276 189.4390 1.00275538 23344
GOES 6
1 14050U 83041A 96365.21196740 -.00000070 00000-0 10000-3 0 5960
2 14050 7.3525 51.7970 0004375 99.4148 276.4706 1.00217134108164
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96299.11613815 -.00000305 00000-0 10000-3 0 4631
2 14129 25.8792 182.5891 6052907 60.2572 346.3435 2.05882271 72548
LandSat 5
1 14780U 84021A 96364.72915709 -.00000085 00000-0 -84923-5 0 5793
2 14780 98.3092 62.2871 0003620 47.9968 312.1539 14.57059843682436
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96362.92357629 .00000134 00000-0 30439-4 0 9390
2 14781 97.8157 345.2080 0010693 187.1445 172.9616 14.69512287686109
Cosmos 1574
1 15055U 84062A 96359.36516985 .00000040 00000-0 26573-4 0 8452
2 15055 82.9572 105.6921 0027417 169.3659 190.8079 13.73642742627092
Cosmos 1602
1 15331U 84105A 96363.20595500 .00000245 00000-0 25921-4 0 5286
2 15331 82.5351 291.2403 0021626 30.1527 330.0929 14.84823756661765
ERBS
1 15354U 84108B 96363.11441142 -.00000176 00000-0 56619-5 0 2455
2 15354 56.9960 323.2320 0006200 148.3952 211.7448 14.95005960665845
NOAA 9
1 15427U 84123A 96365.10146020 .00000049 00000-0 49179-4 0 9762
2 15427 98.9261 69.9091 0015689 116.3620 243.9169 14.13827248621315
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96365.14494780 .00003246 00000-0 42561-4 0 9223
2 16609 51.6516 216.0106 0013862 182.3095 177.7859 15.61887847620638
SPOT 1
1 16613U 86019A 96362.56676891 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 186
2 16613 98.8164 70.0392 0001767 78.5562 281.5815 14.19993548247758
Cosmos 1766
1 16881U 86055A 96364.82796576 .00000307 00000-0 34043-4 0 4438
2 16881 82.5172 347.3768 0021355 52.5515 307.7640 14.83795833562852
EGP
1 16908U 86061A 96363.53126835 -.00000083 00000-0 10000-3 0 1421
2 16908 50.0072 119.5025 0011580 148.9779 211.1737 12.44415813140609
NOAA 10
1 16969U 86073A 96365.10064932 .00000017 00000-0 25459-4 0 9064
2 16969 98.5322 356.6512 0013497 137.6163 222.6060 14.25015191534505
MOS-1
1 17527U 87018A 96363.55901250 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 4981
2 17527 98.9127 61.0906 0018874 144.1448 216.0936 14.00445298502197
GOES 7
1 17561U 87022A 96365.20220328 -.00000155 00000-0 10000-3 0 2097
2 17561 3.4509 68.0603 0002260 280.4002 89.0115 1.00276435 19273
Kvant-1
1 17845U 87030A 96364.95300168 .00011431 00000-0 13426-3 0 8553
2 17845 51.6512 216.9850 0013702 180.7851 179.3123 15.61894366554718
DMSP B5D2-3
1 18123U 87053A 96365.11340088 .00000029 00000-0 37000-4 0 7412
2 18123 98.7652 192.1641 0015131 56.3728 303.8884 14.15463012492219
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96365.09931830 .00000010 00000-0 -51941-5 0 3044
2 18129 82.9241 3.7231 0011802 339.6863 20.3788 13.72372947477040
Meteor 2-16
1 18312U 87068A 96363.85445239 .00000049 00000-0 30546-4 0 5330
2 18312 82.5560 197.6730 0013795 36.7786 323.4325 13.84089832473101
Meteor 2-17
1 18820U 88005A 96364.78092156 .00000053 00000-0 33306-4 0 1377
2 18820 82.5413 251.4971 0017909 94.2828 266.0379 13.84767346450597
DMSP B5D2-4
1 18822U 88006A 96365.12323716 .00000002 00000-0 18919-4 0 4266
2 18822 98.3794 187.8258 0006384 145.4369 214.7224 14.23212204462448
Glonass 34
1 19163U 88043A 96363.33104624 -.00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 1432
2 19163 65.3437 79.3008 0008646 135.4984 224.6222 2.13102347 66370
Glonass 36
1 19165U 88043C 96363.38814308 -.00000021 00000-0 10000-3 0 5531
2 19165 65.3098 79.2469 0004492 347.1980 12.8388 2.13102099 66990
METEOSAT 3
1 19215U 88051A 96363.47599704 -.00000156 00000-0 10000-3 0 2981
2 19215 3.6520 66.6866 0006016 131.0881 228.7236 0.96948920 19062
OKEAN 1
1 19274U 88056A 96363.77415021 .00000257 00000-0 28905-4 0 1437
2 19274 82.5137 89.4539 0018869 199.4246 160.6251 14.82557792458206
Meteor 3-2
1 19336U 88064A 96362.51067307 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 5382
2 19336 82.5396 29.6282 0017796 109.8282 250.4766 13.16980248404927
Glonass 39
1 19503U 88085C 96361.07248165 -.00000059 00000-0 10000-3 0 4359
2 19503 65.5099 318.2393 0004884 147.4365 212.5800 2.13101717 64435
NOAA 11
1 19531U 88089A 96365.08038894 .00000014 00000-0 32287-4 0 7989
2 19531 99.1711 28.1601 0012634 52.5870 307.6449 14.13116440426112
TDRS 3
1 19548U 88091B 96354.80270913 -.00000193 00000-0 10000-3 0 2621
2 19548 2.8661 71.0055 0008644 207.0461 184.3786 1.00273888 17396
Glonass 40
1 19749U 89001A 96361.10984472 -.00000026 00000-0 10000-3 0 6482
2 19749 65.2923 78.8836 0007432 252.6009 107.3695 2.13101465 61943
Glonass 41
1 19750U 89001B 96364.44947528 -.00000023 00000-0 10000-3 0 5537
2 19750 65.3021 78.8464 0009003 221.7135 138.2707 2.13101768 62039
GPS BII-01
1 19802U 89013A 96360.60087025 -.00000037 00000-0 00000+0 0 3379
2 19802 55.4254 103.0067 0027109 174.0254 185.9915 2.00558921 57558
Akebono
1 19822U 89016A 96364.05953145 .00010693 00000-0 54727-3 0 8374
2 19822 75.1011 10.4477 3729681 318.7863 18.3635 7.95405797182150
Meteor 2-18
1 19851U 89018A 96363.83969211 .00000042 00000-0 23778-4 0 5326
2 19851 82.5199 125.8799 0014634 145.2401 214.9722 13.84422712395767
MOP-1
1 19876U 89020B 96358.95576504 -.00000145 00000-0 00000+0 0 2388
2 19876 2.3752 71.1746 0017119 279.8433 79.4077 0.97110789 8467
TDRS 4
1 19883U 89021B 96362.37574638 -.00000263 00000-0 00000+0 0 2914
2 19883 0.2647 87.5514 0005178 181.9706 280.9482 1.00274318201049
GPS BII-02
1 20061U 89044A 96363.93153361 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 3328
2 20061 54.0718 278.3517 0164605 223.6030 135.1352 2.00563013 55366
Nadezhda 1
1 20103U 89050A 96364.97334781 .00000009 00000-0 -65224-5 0 195
2 20103 82.9596 324.2786 0036059 227.5373 132.2732 13.73871989375563
GPS BII-03
1 20185U 89064A 96354.16391793 -.00000029 00000-0 10000-3 0 3764
2 20185 55.0462 103.5488 0181881 305.6068 52.6953 2.00807546 53745
GMS 4
1 20217U 89070A 96364.28277778 -.00000361 00000-0 10000-3 0 5117
2 20217 2.1848 73.9935 0000457 334.2922 271.5433 1.00268849 27376
INTERCOSMOS 24
1 20261U 89080A 96362.87110769 .00000100 00000-0 29502-4 0 5541
2 20261 82.5911 147.0235 1241378 321.3001 30.5150 12.47372156330050
GPS BII-04
1 20302U 89085A 96360.80780733 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 3566
2 20302 53.1957 218.2214 0024556 190.0611 169.9799 2.00571010 52675
Meteor 3-3
1 20305U 89086A 96363.03095941 .00000044 00000-0 10000-3 0 7214
2 20305 82.5311 350.5327 0004158 201.0222 159.0695 13.04419759343473
COBE
1 20322U 89089A 96364.50365831 -.00000259 00000-0 -13749-3 0 2710
2 20322 98.9340 16.3974 0008115 209.8648 150.2056 14.03461035364320
Kvant-2
1 20335U 89093A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 7796
2 20335 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366403724
GPS BII-05
1 20361U 89097A 96362.32232386 -.00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 1580
2 20361 56.1079 45.6462 0094374 140.5981 220.1528 2.00565251 42185
COSMOS 2054 (Altair-1)
1 20391U 89101A 96364.82969829 -.00000128 00000-0 00000+0 0 4834
2 20391 4.2180 62.2030 0003361 176.6109 142.2528 1.00275094 25951
SPOT 2
1 20436U 90005A 96363.75244592 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1679
2 20436 98.7463 74.6767 0001619 93.0931 267.0415 14.20017908359456
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96364.27556361 .00000024 00000-0 26190-4 0 2365
2 20437 98.5335 83.5280 0011265 352.6013 7.4998 14.29944025361931
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96363.24656844 -.00000041 00000-0 83825-6 0 346
2 20439 98.5490 85.0934 0011729 357.0387 3.0725 14.29993943361805
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96363.38946554 .00000056 00000-0 38505-4 0 352
2 20440 98.5506 85.9814 0012894 354.0834 6.0290 14.30137389361850
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96363.73332933 -.00000029 00000-0 54220-5 0 389
2 20441 98.5520 86.2408 0012432 355.3509 4.7561 14.30104776361907
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96363.29440200 -.00000005 00000-0 14885-4 0 340
2 20442 98.5554 86.3954 0013259 356.8533 3.2567 14.30216416361863
GPS BII-06
1 20452U 90008A 96359.72677644 .00000025 00000-0 10000-3 0 2562
2 20452 54.0425 159.0066 0069939 90.3808 270.6229 2.00551999 50638
MOS-1B
1 20478U 90013A 96362.21015652 .00000307 00000-0 26531-3 0 106
2 20478 99.1081 69.1507 0006322 79.0628 281.1249 13.93971212271447
DEBUT
1 20479U 90013B 96365.02749046 .00000004 00000-0 76347-4 0 352
2 20479 99.0240 352.8466 0541231 39.9770 323.9897 12.83347960323027
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96363.91101197 -.00000040 00000-0 -21925-4 0 9318
2 20480 99.0226 351.7062 0541303 43.1492 321.0740 12.83235801322868
MOS-1B R/B
1 20491U 90013D 96362.17806360 -.00000033 00000-0 38089-5 0 3057
2 20491 99.0613 61.5895 0469458 202.5646 155.4205 13.02987887326995
LACE
1 20496U 90015A 96362.89101436 .00001249 00000-0 42717-4 0 7162
2 20496 43.1013 177.2030 0011268 241.3487 118.6233 15.36231845383615
Nadezhda 2
1 20508U 90017A 96364.79245973 .00000033 00000-0 19380-4 0 189
2 20508 82.9533 98.8944 0043911 179.7075 180.4115 13.73516156342741
OKEAN 2
1 20510U 90018A 96363.66562371 .00000155 00000-0 17996-4 0 5510
2 20510 82.5240 45.1246 0020503 44.9065 315.3801 14.78654500368414
GPS BII-07
1 20533U 90025A 96344.15313412 -.00000033 00000-0 00000+0 0 2938
2 20533 54.4399 279.9734 0040350 77.4335 283.2059 2.00570186 49091
PegSat
1 20546U 90028A 96364.81658177 .00005196 00000-0 88866-4 0 124
2 20546 94.1270 104.0607 0055155 329.8738 29.9347 15.49642349375276
HST
1 20580U 90037B 96364.29867543 .00000459 00000-0 30082-4 0 9058
2 20580 28.4691 44.2856 0006305 57.6666 302.4505 14.91150929167730
MACSAT 2
1 20608U 90043B 96363.89144134 .00000143 00000-0 21371-4 0 2363
2 20608 89.9255 171.7184 0108165 94.6015 266.7566 14.64966862354799
Glonass 44
1 20619U 90045A 96361.00760275 -.00000060 00000-0 10000-3 0 3511
2 20619 65.1039 317.3905 0024872 211.2145 148.6271 2.13102456 51392
Glonass 45
1 20620U 90045B 96363.94188852 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 3400
2 20620 65.0992 317.2699 0009911 39.0085 321.0552 2.13102495 51499
Glonass 46
1 20621U 90045C 96364.00941844 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 9504
2 20621 65.1150 317.3253 0012712 197.7144 162.2598 2.13102530 51490
Kristall
1 20635U 90048A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 5711
2 20635 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366374555
ROSAT
1 20638U 90049A 96360.84454523 -.00000155 00000-0 87507-5 0 6216
2 20638 52.9919 155.8906 0011513 357.3295 2.7641 15.07520799361224
Meteor 2-19
1 20670U 90057A 96364.80604045 .00000037 00000-0 19504-4 0 1693
2 20670 82.5466 192.5008 0017109 66.2168 294.0783 13.84131356328809
CRRES
1 20712U 90065A 96364.91425450 .00000146 00000-0 26545-3 0 3798
2 20712 17.6849 170.1675 7175535 166.1367 236.1363 2.35819812 47733
GPS BII-08
1 20724U 90068A 96364.43979467 -.00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 1566
2 20724 55.0610 100.8114 0132520 187.1050 172.7224 2.00564435 45366
Feng Yun1-2
1 20788U 90081A 96364.86770033 .00000262 00000-0 20170-3 0 2126
2 20788 98.8100 3.6070 0014589 318.2048 41.8004 14.01382899323507
Meteor 2-20
1 20826U 90086A 96359.24292314 .00000068 00000-0 48098-4 0 426
2 20826 82.5250 133.1017 0013698 351.6581 8.4353 13.83642218315127
GPS BII-09
1 20830U 90088A 96362.00132499 -.00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 1319
2 20830 56.0464 43.5701 0066094 95.2019 265.6220 2.00568418 45951
GPS BIIA-10
1 20959U 90103A 96364.39893566 -.00000012 00000-0 10000-3 0 1164
2 20959 55.2477 102.9210 0113475 237.5904 121.3248 2.00556597 44595
DMSP B5D2-5
1 20978U 90105A 96365.13694532 .00000098 00000-0 50717-4 0 9006
2 20978 98.5785 74.4694 0078727 312.4931 46.9623 14.32707786317778
Glonass 47
1 21006U 90110A 96363.56357224 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 9103
2 21006 65.2807 78.1379 0056768 187.1576 172.8135 2.13102722 47155
Glonass 48
1 21007U 90110B 96363.28687250 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-3 0 480
2 21007 65.2915 78.2297 0032947 178.5838 181.4777 2.13101135 47137
Glonass 49
1 21008U 90110C 96364.59150651 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 3149
2 21008 65.2693 78.1216 0008910 268.4666 91.4863 2.13098724 47159
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96363.57922890 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 7738
2 21087 82.9407 177.8406 0036462 25.9802 334.3174 13.74576182296714
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96362.22495890 .00000040 00000-0 26507-4 0 9440
2 21089 82.9221 46.1892 0030808 57.0427 303.3683 13.74075804295540
MOP-2
1 21140U 91015B 96362.08442575 -.00000008 00000-0 00000+0 0 3100
2 21140 0.9377 77.8151 0002374 169.1324 238.9678 1.00272786 23547
Nadezhda 3
1 21152U 91019A 96365.04354541 .00000031 00000-0 16411-4 0 7052
2 21152 82.9224 0.7158 0041952 155.5192 204.7966 13.73541449290635
Glonass 50
1 21216U 91025A 96360.76606348 -.00000062 00000-0 10000-3 0 5666
2 21216 64.8515 316.8697 0011734 204.5844 155.3476 2.13103225 44600
Glonass 51
1 21217U 91025B 96361.77698568 -.00000054 00000-0 10000-3 0 9748
2 21217 64.8372 316.8396 0011084 237.1383 122.8049 2.13102200 44614
Glonass 52
1 21218U 91025C 96360.94816131 -.00000060 00000-0 10000-3 0 4433
2 21218 64.8369 316.8348 0008221 295.0496 64.9181 2.13102545 44609
GRO
1 21225U 91027B 96363.49646283 .00002302 00000-0 42129-4 0 4174
2 21225 28.4619 268.6944 0002353 256.7832 103.2456 15.44740203200002
Meteor 3-4
1 21232U 91030A 96363.70838067 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9461
2 21232 82.5390 235.2570 0014433 39.6677 320.5498 13.16474029273130
NOAA 12
1 21263U 91032A 96365.08079934 .00000099 00000-0 63176-4 0 2143
2 21263 98.5462 18.4645 0013886 65.9126 294.3504 14.22680978292314
OKEAN 3
1 21397U 91039A 96364.42341041 .00000253 00000-0 32851-4 0 2447
2 21397 82.5229 319.2843 0023850 115.0301 245.3389 14.76537408300171
GPS BIIA-11
1 21552U 91047A 96365.17232844 -.00000062 00000-0 10000-6 0 735
2 21552 56.3360 41.3281 0077813 262.3916 96.7738 2.00573156 40209
ERS-1
1 21574U 91050A 96363.88926888 .00000054 00000-0 36058-4 0 3920
2 21574 98.5511 75.1349 0001170 72.2726 287.8583 14.32247898285312
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96364.21735233 .00000023 00000-0 22033-4 0 7413
2 21575 98.3278 64.5579 0008582 44.5211 315.6664 14.37050794286079
ORBCOMM-X
1 21576U 91050C 96362.72325467 .00000029 00000-0 24217-4 0 8358
2 21576 98.3239 60.7957 0004775 58.5527 301.6126 14.36468028285732
TUBSAT-A
1 21577U 91050D 96364.56745674 .00000030 00000-0 24585-4 0 7358
2 21577 98.3220 63.2026 0007506 45.4303 314.7507 14.36536893286038
SARA
1 21578U 91050E 96363.20405853 .00000470 00000-0 16514-3 0 9364
2 21578 98.3581 71.5226 0005988 48.9859 311.1846 14.39303547286240
TDRS 5
1 21639U 91054B 96358.00000000 .00000082 00000-0 10000-3 0 1290
2 21639 0.0522 87.3137 0003639 187.5814 2.7647 1.00277859 19753
Meteor 3-5
1 21655U 91056A 96362.57404162 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 9445
2 21655 82.5531 183.8790 0014601 46.7297 313.5038 13.16850118258123
UARS
1 21701U 91063B 96361.26138373 -.00000218 00000-0 19934-5 0 8147
2 21701 56.9868 60.2074 0005031 100.6231 259.5360 14.96559853289112
DMSP B5D2-6
1 21798U 91082A 96365.11202960 .00000022 00000-0 34971-4 0 5704
2 21798 98.9339 22.4389 0013463 36.2985 323.9096 14.14013186262616
Glonass 53
1 21853U 92005A 96363.50652083 -.00000022 00000-0 10000-4 0 1443
2 21853 65.2201 77.7860 0006870 205.8157 154.2037 2.13102249 38266
Glonass 54
1 21854U 92005B 96363.32195582 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 3929
2 21854 65.2280 77.7840 0015245 15.2215 344.8785 2.13104585 38246
Glonass 55
1 21855U 92005C 96365.26845033 -.00000026 00000-0 00000+0 0 3720
2 21855 65.2219 77.7244 0008246 207.6052 152.4049 2.13102068 38279
JERS-1
1 21867U 92007A 96364.76282987 .00000956 00000-0 84373-4 0 551
2 21867 97.6733 79.1114 0001864 124.4270 235.7132 14.98687331267157
GPS BIIA-12
1 21890U 92009A 96364.12945550 .00000037 00000-0 00000+0 0 9190
2 21890 53.7347 218.5999 0057060 202.0907 157.7161 2.00560361 35551
GPS BIIA-13
1 21930U 92019A 96364.29233537 -.00000069 00000-0 10000-3 0 8346
2 21930 55.6662 340.8358 0030151 195.2412 164.5791 2.00556033 34488
EUVE
1 21987U 92031A 96363.25099247 .00001138 00000-0 42029-4 0 5964
2 21987 28.4329 317.9541 0009304 20.4981 339.5985 15.20047246253235
SAMPEX
1 22012U 92038A 96362.18171266 .00000655 00000-0 55004-4 0 7719
2 22012 81.6712 275.4428 0115728 261.1292 97.6809 14.91829190244006
GPS BIIA-14
1 22014U 92039A 96364.37666844 .00000057 00000-0 00000+0 0 8231
2 22014 54.8456 160.7686 0133445 328.7796 30.3921 2.00565342 26327
Glonass 56
1 22056U 92047A 96363.28833707 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 3007
2 22056 64.6861 316.7889 0006524 271.5868 88.3392 2.13103451 34329
Glonass 57
1 22057U 92047B 96363.58534170 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 2718
2 22057 64.6963 316.8030 0009438 316.1152 43.8074 2.13102883 34300
Glonass 58
1 22058U 92047C 96363.99404139 -.00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 1694
2 22058 64.6926 316.7910 0009678 281.5419 78.3474 2.13102644 34361
TOPEX
1 22076U 92052A 96363.86373673 -.00000038 00000-0 10000-3 0 172
2 22076 66.0401 168.3126 0007458 269.0203 90.9958 12.80930679205056
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96363.86063618 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6308
2 22077 66.0774 141.8583 0014847 254.9557 104.9817 12.86300106205847
S80/T
1 22078U 92052C 96363.82007442 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6285
2 22078 66.0762 140.2346 0016291 251.4202 108.5045 12.86583955205937
GPS BIIA-15
1 22108U 92058A 96364.84091800 .00000040 00000-0 10000-3 0 8408
2 22108 53.9820 219.4786 0116066 140.8968 220.0158 2.00572100 31510
FREJA
1 22161U 92064A 96364.25707674 .00000012 00000-0 41594-4 0 6783
2 22161 62.9792 106.0932 0857489 34.2070 331.1246 13.21937377204219
LAGEOS II
1 22195U 92070B 96363.04441015 -.00000009 00000-0 10000-3 0 5522
2 22195 52.6511 229.1355 0137559 161.5628 198.9980 6.47293940 98822
GPS BIIA-16
1 22231U 92079A 96364.52480056 .00000059 00000-0 00000+0 0 8537
2 22231 54.6884 161.9077 0030084 274.0820 85.5540 2.00562541 30089
GPS BIIA-17
1 22275U 92089A 96364.63698533 .00000058 00000-0 00000+0 0 8415
2 22275 54.6278 159.3998 0050357 245.7309 113.7046 2.00587702 29493
TDRS 6
1 22314U 93003B 96363.57846990 -.00000276 00000-0 10000-3 0 6809
2 22314 0.0573 139.0797 0003200 150.4614 329.0535 1.00270257 14524
GPS BIIA-18
1 22446U 93007A 96358.75978819 -.00000052 00000-0 10000-3 0 8319
2 22446 54.0819 279.4128 0097326 6.1666 353.9685 2.00572088 28362
Glonass 59
1 22512U 93010A 96359.75448204 -.00000036 00000-0 10000-3 0 8534
2 22512 65.2421 77.7803 0008773 183.0042 177.0197 2.13102123 29759
Glonass 60
1 22513U 93010B 96363.44649082 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 164
2 22513 65.2351 77.6518 0007636 201.3347 158.6898 2.13102553 30025
Glonass 61
1 22514U 93010C 96363.27152851 -.00000022 00000-0 00000+0 0 103
2 22514 65.2568 77.6569 0011042 191.7711 168.2571 2.13101681 30021
ASTRO-D
1 22521U 93011A 96363.92171714 .00001050 00000-0 66660-4 0 5489
2 22521 31.1039 263.1789 0055974 299.5929 59.9143 15.03240466211794
UFO F1
1 22563U 93015A 96358.00000000 -.00000235 00000-0 00000+0 0 5454
2 22563 24.9641 285.6257 0009366 304.0139 343.4335 0.99252311 17943
GPS BIIA-19
1 22581U 93017A 96361.89601253 -.00000084 00000-0 10000-3 0 6227
2 22581 55.1536 340.2391 0059420 38.7026 321.6988 2.00572136 27487
GPS BIIA-20
1 22657U 93032A 96364.02250091 -.00000071 00000-0 00000+0 0 7969
2 22657 55.1880 340.0286 0084828 232.0629 127.1653 2.00563613 22856
RADCAL
1 22698U 93041A 96364.17241516 .00000081 00000-0 29621-4 0 5437
2 22698 89.5464 261.2518 0093535 51.4641 309.4894 14.21387465182128
GPS BIIA-21
1 22700U 93042A 96364.98760781 .00000041 00000-0 10000-3 0 6292
2 22700 54.1627 220.3368 0063101 29.0995 331.2522 2.00562917 25677
NOAA 13
1 22739U 93050A 96364.91956873 .00000026 00000-0 39973-4 0 2307
2 22739 99.0674 321.7192 0010657 37.4602 322.7304 14.10981094174657
GPS BIIA-22
1 22779U 93054A 96363.57783625 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 6912
2 22779 54.2461 279.2862 0013775 284.7108 75.1881 2.00554319 24409
Meteor 2-21
1 22782U 93055A 96364.53165128 .00000031 00000-0 14180-4 0 5350
2 22782 82.5504 192.3249 0022162 147.4477 212.8062 13.83065958168132
UFO F2
1 22787U 93056A 96358.74031733 -.00000062 00000-0 00000+0 0 7006
2 22787 3.9733 328.1413 0005072 296.7235 165.7906 1.00274628 10738
SPOT 3
1 22823U 93061A 96365.23079011 -.00000043 00000-0 00000+0 0 6420
2 22823 98.7333 76.0164 0017580 192.0707 168.0095 14.16979875169049
STELLA
1 22824U 93061B 96364.22897094 -.00000007 00000-0 14731-4 0 5259
2 22824 98.5629 75.3188 0007123 27.5846 332.5713 14.27106650169750
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96364.74658965 .00000005 00000-0 19620-4 0 5269
2 22825 98.5650 76.5940 0009701 20.4350 339.7218 14.27713638169894
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96365.21853299 -.00000004 00000-0 15822-4 0 5248
2 22826 98.5658 77.2633 0010225 19.7179 340.4390 14.27822670169979
HEATHSAT
1 22827U 93061E 96364.20666869 .00000016 00000-0 24059-4 0 5875
2 22827 98.5587 76.1523 0009995 11.5012 348.6401 14.27962181169846
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96364.73275929 -.00000007 00000-0 14476-4 0 5049
2 22828 98.5610 76.8569 0011082 6.5017 353.6307 14.28163766138020
POSAT
1 22829U 93061G 96364.75192473 .00000009 00000-0 20927-4 0 5188
2 22829 98.5629 76.9507 0010490 8.2821 351.8531 14.28146126169943
GPS BIIA-23
1 22877U 93068A 96365.12276552 -.00000063 00000-0 10000-3 0 5306
2 22877 55.7699 41.3502 0042132 305.9534 53.6985 2.00561459 23323
METEOSAT 6
1 22912U 93073B 96356.07870949 -.00000086 00000-0 00000+0 0 5890
2 22912 0.3342 69.2572 0003900 166.5354 232.7612 1.00272995 9730
HST Array
1 22920U 90037C 96364.87460248 .00006220 00000-0 39712-3 0 5701
2 22920 28.4717 288.3416 0002202 74.0956 285.9691 15.06679113168942
Meteor 3-6
1 22969U 94003A 96362.45169166 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3105
2 22969 82.5621 124.1498 0016217 113.6028 246.6799 13.16740503140481
TUBSAT-B
1 22970U 94003B 96362.45069371 .00000051 00000-0 10000-3 0 3003
2 22970 82.5576 124.0245 0016775 109.3052 250.9886 13.16828802140494
GPS BIIA-24
1 23027U 94016A 96364.20697330 -.00000071 00000-0 10000-3 0 4697
2 23027 55.0464 341.9522 0072818 206.6514 152.9822 2.00569232 20613
Glonass 62
1 23043U 94021A 96363.34808392 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 4479
2 23043 64.5755 317.1211 0005910 211.2684 148.6919 2.13102937 21145
Glonass 63
1 23044U 94021B 96364.16902437 -.00000041 00000-0 00000+0 0 4179
2 23044 64.5660 317.0798 0030414 207.8273 152.0104 2.13103072 21160
Glonass 64
1 23045U 94021C 96363.40837910 -.00000045 00000-0 00000+0 0 4184
2 23045 64.5497 317.1203 0010497 26.9530 333.0989 2.13102494 21143
GOES 8
1 23051U 94022A 96365.17376422 -.00000246 00000-0 10000-3 0 6274
2 23051 0.4304 85.3851 0004129 168.8241 192.6102 1.00270929 17335
MSTI 2
1 23101U 94028A 96364.54723821 .00005642 00000-0 82398-4 0 3906
2 23101 97.0689 195.9617 0010202 325.7987 34.2608 15.55996188149657
STRV-1A
1 23125U 94034B 96364.48346959 -.00000103 00000-0 53131-4 0 3726
2 23125 7.0065 153.3928 7234775 228.0958 42.2754 2.32967308 20672
STRV-1B
1 23126U 94034C 96343.93981000 .00009011 00000-0 34973-2 0 3240
2 23126 7.0541 162.0454 7232131 211.1422 69.7200 2.33257268 20236
Nadezhda 4
1 23179U 94041A 96362.79882475 .00000026 00000-0 11427-4 0 2457
2 23179 82.9457 93.1115 0035603 304.7246 55.0559 13.75688129123412
Glonass 65
1 23203U 94050A 96364.01507534 .00000069 00000-0 00000+0 0 3797
2 23203 64.7665 197.5802 0007897 135.7873 224.3167 2.13102032 18551
Glonass 66
1 23204U 94050B 96363.31006116 .00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 3987
2 23204 64.7546 197.6291 0014650 354.6035 5.4273 2.13102235 18539
Glonass 67
1 23205U 94050C 96362.25385156 .00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 3836
2 23205 64.7614 197.6534 0001085 22.2993 337.7561 2.13102629 18511
DMSP B5D2-7
1 23233U 94057A 96365.12129137 .00000172 00000-0 11605-3 0 552
2 23233 98.8024 60.7851 0012507 348.6711 11.4181 14.12766022120491
OKEAN 1-7
1 23317U 94066A 96361.20963927 .00000223 00000-0 30292-4 0 2084
2 23317 82.5432 242.3641 0025341 172.9993 187.1576 14.74067238118826
ELEKTRO (GOMS)
1 23327U 94069A 96360.78938466 -.00000103 00000-0 00000+0 0 2346
2 23327 0.4246 99.5817 0001314 112.6584 242.8720 1.00272001 7926
RESURS 1-3
1 23342U 94074A 96363.09154481 .00000099 00000-0 24429-4 0 6346
2 23342 97.9423 55.2676 0001831 74.4905 285.6521 14.69889598115297
Glonass 68
1 23396U 94076A 96364.44428970 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 3625
2 23396 65.1698 77.6543 0030084 192.4726 167.5068 2.13102555 16406
Glonass 69
1 23397U 94076B 96363.68222596 -.00000023 00000-0 00000+0 0 3503
2 23397 65.1534 77.6860 0012504 314.0194 45.9276 2.13102016 16385
Glonass 70
1 23398U 94076C 96364.50453212 -.00000024 00000-0 00000+0 0 3654
2 23398 65.1464 77.6283 0003888 271.9224 88.0939 2.13101938 16417
LUCH (Altair-2)
1 23426U 94082A 96362.55866303 -.00000268 00000-0 00000+0 0 4476
2 23426 1.0421 263.4498 0002921 19.9893 109.0292 1.00264838 7446
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96364.31340970 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 1878
2 23439 64.8169 67.5354 0154811 164.3258 196.2532 11.27528037 82785
NOAA 14
1 23455U 94089A 96365.05574856 .00000054 00000-0 54268-4 0 8805
2 23455 98.9698 310.1613 0010552 50.0437 310.1661 14.11635757103087
Glonass 71
1 23511U 95009A 96362.58492256 -.00000050 00000-0 00000+0 0 2798
2 23511 64.6009 317.4156 0007080 231.8928 128.0369 2.13104375 14093
Glonass 72
1 23512U 95009B 96363.64416953 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 2868
2 23512 64.5778 317.3877 0007947 313.5278 46.3975 2.13101422 14111
Glonass 73
1 23513U 95009C 96364.40447342 -.00000040 00000-0 00000+0 0 3069
2 23513 64.5860 317.3770 0013388 210.4613 149.4625 2.13102914 14136
GMS 5
1 23522U 95011B 96361.58284086 -.00000283 00000-0 10000-3 0 1907
2 23522 0.4857 28.8889 0000605 186.3669 229.8386 1.00278062 6384
DMSP B5D2-8
1 23533U 95015A 96365.04987224 .00000075 00000-0 64210-4 0 8067
2 23533 98.8432 5.0289 0006523 217.3964 142.6755 14.12769233 91282
OSC 1
1 23545U 95017A 96364.25067438 .00000249 00000-0 87713-4 0 1890
2 23545 69.9706 77.4734 0016088 270.3363 89.5939 14.45460166 91849
OSC 2
1 23546U 95017B 96364.21559829 .00000271 00000-0 93790-4 0 2233
2 23546 69.9777 77.7595 0015867 261.3516 98.5818 14.45472111 91849
Microlab 1
1 23547U 95017C 96364.22069507 .00000122 00000-0 51572-4 0 1612
2 23547 69.9781 77.4325 0016213 263.4963 96.4310 14.45632485 91855
OFEQ 3
1 23549U 95018A 96364.87699976 .00017495 00000-0 40718-3 0 4089
2 23549 143.3636 344.8168 0208722 351.1132 8.5979 15.20338130 96090
GFZ-1
1 23558U 86017JE 96363.80532495 .00002124 00000-0 28255-4 0 1917
2 23558 51.6533 210.6935 0005565 223.1698 136.8872 15.63499278620441
ERS-2
1 23560U 95021A 96363.21264826 -.00000031 00000-0 46224-5 0 3151
2 23560 98.5512 74.4710 0000829 81.1463 278.9818 14.32247049 88345
Spektr
1 23579U 95024A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 5327
2 23579 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366 92035
GOES 9
1 23581U 95025A 96362.40889671 .00000089 00000-0 10000-3 0 2982
2 23581 0.0165 254.8857 0003991 28.0801 184.9833 1.00276324 5863
Helios 1A
1 23605U 95033A 96363.68180125 .00000104 00000-0 28907-4 0 3791
2 23605 98.1397 296.7506 0001503 55.3005 304.8364 14.63833937 79019
UPM SAT 1
1 23606U 95033B 96362.23778593 .00000230 00000-0 49320-4 0 2403
2 23606 98.1201 297.0105 0007274 305.4662 54.5866 14.67332614 79029
CERISE
1 23607U 95033C 96364.25472764 .00000141 00000-0 33773-4 0 1437
2 23607 98.1207 298.8029 0005521 298.2746 61.7920 14.66989512 79334
TDRS 7
1 23613U 95035B 96363.79409425 .00000102 00000-0 00000+0 0 2764
2 23613 1.0856 82.0409 0001962 192.9172 297.3340 1.00266553 5336
Glonass 74
1 23620U 95037A 96362.78051941 .00000063 00000-0 00000+0 0 2270
2 23620 64.8138 197.4969 0018665 162.8800 197.2305 2.13102985 11135
Glonass 75
1 23621U 95037B 96363.89689661 .00000069 00000-0 00000+0 0 2388
2 23621 64.8284 197.4642 0018004 173.2234 186.8434 2.13102165 11159
Glonass 76
1 23622U 95037C 96363.48565102 .00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 2429
2 23622 64.8148 197.4823 0037159 163.2409 196.9279 2.13102499 11143
Prognoz-M2
1 23632U 95039A 96362.51482150 -.00000471 00000-0 00000+0 0 1000
2 23632 71.1630 248.1760 7732851 326.9610 350.0030 0.26346200 1368
SICH-1
1 23657U 95046A 96362.53152501 .00000192 00000-0 25968-4 0 1342
2 23657 82.5329 22.5977 0028510 138.5995 221.7392 14.73520703 71301
RADARSAT
1 23710U 95059A 96364.90818249 .00000142 00000-0 72025-4 0 2226
2 23710 98.5810 8.8123 0001126 58.5629 301.5664 14.29988672 60213
Glonass 79
1 23734U 95068A 96364.07296375 .00000070 00000-0 00000+0 0 2151
2 23734 64.8260 197.3781 0017305 328.5125 31.4272 2.13102099 8122
Glonass 78
1 23735U 95068B 96363.32628408 .00000065 00000-0 00000+0 0 2070
2 23735 64.8236 197.3855 0005378 200.8843 159.1443 2.13125057 8109
Glonass 77
1 23736U 95068C 96362.89961877 .00000064 00000-0 00000+0 0 1889
2 23736 64.8141 197.4133 0007068 185.0879 174.9509 2.13102117 8094
XTE
1 23757U 95074A 96360.85345406 .00000716 00000-0 30691-4 0 1100
2 23757 22.9799 187.0114 0013801 192.1341 167.8812 14.97749861 54233
Polar
1 23802U 96013A 96360.95384396 .00000049 00000-0 00000+0 0 921
2 23802 86.3323 23.9889 6527806 276.7308 18.1855 1.36264148 4173
1996010E
1 23824U 96010E 96359.52765300 .00444128 00000-0 53211-1 0 1522
2 23824 47.4289 199.9140 7145591 76.0524 349.6752 2.47145198 6894
GPS BIIA-25
1 23833U 96019A 96361.35001648 -.00000087 00000-0 00000+0 0 1241
2 23833 54.6478 340.1903 0028404 145.6441 214.5433 2.00564915 5535
Priroda
1 23848U 96023A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 2200
2 23848 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366 39125
MSX
1 23851U 96024A 96364.47653378 -.00000047 00000-0 00000+0 0 1589
2 23851 99.3986 348.0132 0006781 347.8720 12.2256 13.97475511 34771
SAX
1 23857U 96027A 96362.74155285 .00000922 00000-0 16503-4 0 467
2 23857 3.9543 142.6384 0013239 275.8350 85.0812 14.91685898 36098
MSTI 3
1 23868U 96031A 96363.24119229 -.00000386 00000-0 -60197-5 0 979
2 23868 97.1175 190.3413 0009463 182.3452 177.7758 15.46682235 34806
TOMS-EP
1 23940U 96037A 96363.78939788 .00002502 00000-0 11318-3 0 716
2 23940 97.4336 266.8297 0014273 27.5212 332.6756 15.21760654 27220
GPS BIIA-26
1 23953U 96041A 96359.27090176 -.00000050 00000-0 00000+0 0 958
2 23953 55.1057 100.6566 0020598 358.5109 1.4602 2.00562484 3283
ADEOS
1 24277U 96046A 96363.80540922 -.00000044 00000-0 00000+0 0 1264
2 24277 98.6118 77.9459 0000790 163.0215 197.0111 14.27634832 19057
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96364.23223921 -.00000011 00000-0 28523-4 0 471
2 24278 98.5633 62.4492 0350774 266.6338 89.4603 13.52627680 18140
Soyuz TM-24
1 24280U 96047A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 1240
2 24280 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366 21026
FAST
1 24285U 96049A 96365.25881303 .00000756 00000-0 77998-4 0 485
2 24285 82.9917 117.5809 2206325 291.1706 46.8382 10.81673477 14152
Microsat
1 24291U 96050A 96364.23712763 .00026766 61402-5 18405-3 0 994
2 24291 62.7960 336.2075 0605290 125.1255 240.8108 14.68407669 17854
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96361.59304391 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 552
2 24305 82.9321 122.1265 0030086 329.5013 30.4391 13.73087597 15376
GPS BIIA-27
1 24320U 96056A 96357.14058803 -.00000066 00000-0 00000+0 0 517
2 24320 54.6895 280.8441 0052349 108.6207 252.0932 2.00570173 1902
SAC-B/HETE
1 24645U 96061A 96362.56605077 .00000522 00000-0 33355-4 0 336
2 24645 37.9775 167.7622 0049501 2.1347 357.9618 15.14812993 8020
Progress M-33
1 24663U 96066A 96364.95302371 .00011432 00000-0 13426-3 0 379
2 24663 51.6512 216.9849 0013701 180.7852 179.4362 15.61894366 6260
1996068B
1 24668U 96068B 96365.02295234 .00240695 15329-5 54336-3 0 548
2 24668 36.3887 236.9062 1756463 159.5540 208.5314 12.24057816 3138
1996069A
1 24670U 96069A 96365.11393753 -.00008726 00000-0 -13883-3 0 396
2 24670 65.0415 232.5798 0009903 271.9306 88.0654 15.52047278 2887
INMARSAT III F3
1 24674U 96070A 96364.21298193 -.00000129 00000-0 00000+0 0 137
2 24674 2.6748 286.8762 0021193 122.5138 283.0068 1.00265982 100
1996070B
1 24675U 96070B 96361.84055799 -.00000150 00000-0 00000+0 0 119
2 24675 22.7065 282.4578 7017907 185.5778 157.8790 2.22345318 193
Cosmos 2336
1 24677U 96071A 96364.53484998 .00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 61
2 24677 82.9389 211.4133 0022230 237.1643 122.7369 13.71046889 1263
1996071B
1 24678U 96071B 96364.01391560 .00000015 00000-0 00000+0 0 179
2 24678 82.9307 211.7845 0020332 214.1160 145.8785 13.72692567 1198
BION 11
1 24701U 96073A 96364.02481603 .00049321 79639-5 77763-4 0 95
2 24701 62.8047 233.7443 0119590 108.3268 253.0915 15.91895966 714
1996073B
1 24702U 96073B 96364.89776319 .00238674 80229-5 33300-3 0 188
2 24702 62.7923 230.3309 0108469 106.3946 254.9172 15.94977757 857
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:00 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!newspump.sol.net!posts.execpc.com!usenet
From: Jim Leveraus <elint@execpc.com>
Newsgroups: rec.video.satellite.dbs,alt.satellite.tv.crypt,rec.radio.scanner,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Internet satellite services
Date: Mon, 30 Dec 1996 19:40:26 -0600
Organization: Exec-PC BBS Internet - Milwaukee, WI
Lines: 24
Message-ID: <32C86F0A.1B57@execpc.com>
References: <851794158.12184@dejanews.com> <01bbf55a$f47216c0$34b0aec7@node2> <32c69d2c.685628@news.pagesz.net> <32c760de.20665955@news>
Reply-To: elint@execpc.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: java.execpc.com
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I)
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.video.satellite.dbs:60719 alt.satellite.tv.crypt:28088 rec.radio.scanner:74584 rec.radio.amateur.space:9268
Frank Hagan wrote:
>
> On Sun, 29 Dec 1996 16:37:13 GMT, alex@budgetweb.com (Alex Chapman)
> wrote:
>
> >Connects home page is http://www.planetc.com/pc.htm
> >
> >Their pricing seems to be in the same range as DirecPC, although they
> >aren't real clear on whether they offer standard internet connections.
>
> About 8 months ago I looked into this ... they send usenet feeds via
> satellite, so you could get newsgroups, but couldn't get web service
> like DirectPC promises.
Here is a two-way service for Internet via satellite I just discovered.
http://www.netsatx.com/netsatinfo.htm
--
-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-
Jim Leveraus
Internet: elint@execpc.com
Snail Mail: PO Box 451
Muskego, WI 53150
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:01 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!news.dra.com!xara.net!emerald.xara.net!Aladdin!nildram!max1-016.nildram.co.uk
From: perkiert@nildram.co.uk (Paul Erkiert)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: mir comms problems
Date: Tue, 31 Dec 1996 02:18:00 GMT
Organization: Nildram On-Line
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <32c877e3.0@scooby.nildram.co.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: scooby.nildram.co.uk
X-Newsreader: Forte Free Agent 1.0.82
I see on Hearsat mail list that there have been problems on the mir
communications, Has that effected Amateur Radio activities I wonder?
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:01 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!info.cs.uofs.edu!news.ultranet.com!news-out.communique.net!mr.net!newsfeeds.sol.net!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!usc!ccnet.com!cathryn
From: cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com (cathryn)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Re: Kenwood TM-401B below 440 MHz?
Date: 31 Dec 1996 11:13:41 GMT
Organization: CCnet Communications (510-988-7140 guest)
Lines: 11
Message-ID: <slrn5ch0lh.i6u.cathryn@junglevision.junglevision.com>
References: <01bbf548$3ad971c0$a01865ce@SNeedha.3lefties.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 207.21.11.2
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45549 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122368 rec.radio.amateur.space:9275
In article <01bbf548$3ad971c0$a01865ce@SNeedha.3lefties.com>, "Earl Needham" w
rote:
>
> Having recently discovered FM activity through sattelites, I'd like to try
>my hand at getting through the FM repeater on the Mir space station.
>Unfortunately, my UHF rig (a Kenwood TM-401B) only covers 440-450 MHz. Is
>there a mod available to allow this rig to operate below 440 MHz?
Yeah, I have the same problem with my IC-T7a. I can receive below 440, but
there's no way to transmit below 440Mhz. Arrgh.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:03 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!204.71.1.48!newsfeed.internetmci.com!a3bsrv.nai.net!mgate.arrl.org!usenet
From: w1aw@arrl.org
Newsgroups: rec.radio.info,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: ARLK097 Keplerian data
Followup-To: rec.radio.amateur.space
Date: 31 Dec 1996 13:21:31 -0500
Organization: American Radio Relay League
Lines: 88
Sender: root@mgate.arrl.org
Approved: rec-radio-info@stat.com
Message-ID: <$arlk097.1996@arrl.org>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mgate.arrl.org
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.info:12462 rec.radio.amateur.space:9278
SB KEP @ ARL $ARLK097
ARLK097 Keplerian data
ZCZC SK97
QST de W1AW
Keplerian Bulletin 97 ARLK097
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington, CT December 31, 1996
To all radio amateurs
SB KEP ARL ARLK097
ARLK097 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
AO-10
1 14129U 83058B 96299.11613815 -.00000305 00000-0 10000-3 0 4631
2 14129 25.8792 182.5891 6052907 60.2572 346.3435 2.05882271 72548
RS-10/11
1 18129U 87054A 96365.09931830 .00000010 00000-0 -51941-5 0 3044
2 18129 82.9241 3.7231 0011802 339.6863 20.3788 13.72372947477040
UO-11
1 14781U 84021B 96364.96630783 .00000071 00000-0 19851-4 0 09543
2 14781 97.8156 347.1626 0011035 179.2324 180.8903 14.69512489686408
RS-12/13
1 21089U 91007A 96365.13763955 .00000050 00000-0 36428-4 0 09649
2 21089 82.9221 44.0290 0030751 49.3645 311.0179 13.74076005295946
UO-14
1 20437U 90005B 96365.18520891 .00000032 00000-0 29375-4 0 02395
2 20437 98.5334 84.4194 0011276 349.9522 10.1438 14.29944235362068
RS-15
1 23439U 94085A 96365.11165315 -.00000039 00000-0 10000-3 0 01910
2 23439 64.8167 66.2446 0154785 164.1798 196.4034 11.27528009082876
AO-16
1 20439U 90005D 96365.13576490 .00000017 00000-0 23318-4 0 00435
2 20439 98.5489 86.9487 0011689 351.1810 8.9221 14.29994548362074
DO-17
1 20440U 90005E 96364.78872888 .00000031 00000-0 28831-4 0 00450
2 20440 98.5505 87.3563 0012745 350.1639 9.9293 14.30137315362058
WO-18
1 20441U 90005F 96364.99269554 -.00000009 00000-0 13420-4 0 00458
2 20441 98.5520 87.4786 0012378 351.6212 8.4762 14.30105019362083
LO-19
1 20442U 90005G 96365.18330293 .00000050 00000-0 35989-4 0 00459
2 20442 98.5548 88.2505 0013064 351.3288 8.7673 14.30217279362137
FO-20
1 20480U 90013C 96365.00249566 -.00000013 00000-0 39482-4 0 09409
2 20480 99.0225 352.5895 0541267 40.6829 323.3421 12.83236086323009
AO-21
1 21087U 91006A 96364.96224735 .00000094 00000-0 82657-4 0 07836
2 21087 82.9408 176.8172 0036461 21.9693 338.3016 13.74576353296907
UO-22
1 21575U 91050B 96365.12250587 .00000039 00000-0 27277-4 0 07465
2 21575 98.3277 65.4337 0008628 41.6780 318.5064 14.37051083286203
KO-23
1 22077U 92052B 96364.87138801 -.00000037 00000-0 10000-3 0 06363
2 22077 66.0774 139.7421 0014843 254.5295 105.4083 12.86300142205970
KO-25
1 22828U 93061F 96365.15311834 -.00000005 00000-0 15307-4 0 05066
2 22828 98.5610 77.2690 0011076 5.2480 354.8818 14.28163818138087
IO-26
1 22826U 93061D 96365.21853299 -.00000004 00000-0 15822-4 0 5248
2 22826 98.5658 77.2633 0010225 19.7179 340.4390 14.27822670169979
AO-27
1 22825U 93061C 96365.16708120 .00000006 00000-0 20046-4 0 05282
2 22825 98.5649 77.0060 0009691 19.2082 340.9465 14.27713692169952
FO-29
1 24278U 96046B 96365.19384463 .00000010 00000-0 49049-4 0 00548
2 24278 98.5631 63.2820 0350761 264.1510 91.9553 13.52627971018272
MO-30
1 24305U 96052B 96364.87216783 .00000204 00000-0 20364-3 0 00812
2 24305 82.9347 119.7055 0030776 320.2559 39.6340 13.73088514015827
Mir
1 16609U 86017A 96365.46485841 .00003355 00000-0 43775-4 0 9236
2 16609 51.6544 214.4000 0013679 182.2114 177.8729 15.61890800620686
Keplerian bulletins are transmitted twice weekly from W1AW. The
next scheduled transmission of these data will be Saturday, January
4, 1997, at 2330z on Baudot and AMTOR.
NNNN
/EX
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:04 1997
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-ana-24.sprintlink.net!eskimo!news
From: Tom Valenti <valenti@eskimo.com>
Subject: ICOM CT-17 (CI-V) Interface programs out there?
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: tia1.eskimo.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Message-ID: <32C95D6A.4EC@eskimo.com>
Sender: news@eskimo.com (News User Id)
Reply-To: valenti@eskimo.com
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Organization: Eskimo North (206) For-Ever
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Tue, 31 Dec 1996 18:37:30 GMT
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Win16; I)
Lines: 12
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45573 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122393 rec.radio.amateur.space:9279
Happy New Year from Seattle,
I am looking for bare bones, or better, shareware programs used by us to
tie our rigs to the PC. My shack will be automating an IC-R7000, IC-735,
IC-275H, and a IC-475H. If you have a program (BOTH binary and source
code) I would love to download it. Just let me know where to get it.
Anybody really close by, I'll buy lunch for the first few! I work near
Boeing Field. 73
--
Tom "Wunski" Valenti
KB7RSK
http://www.eskimo.com/~valenti/
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:05 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-stk-3.sprintlink.net!news.sover.net!news.monad.net!usenet
From: dhend@cyberportal.net (Dave Hendrick)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New Mir frequencies
Date: Tue, 31 Dec 1996 20:28:02 GMT
Organization: mine
Lines: 32
Message-ID: <32c976ef.2741317@news.monad.net>
Reply-To: dhend@cyberportal.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: clar3-async-21.cyberportal.net
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99g/32.326
X-No-Archive: yes
There is a reversal of the freqs on mir these messages were on the PMS
today, it implies that packet will now be duplex.
r 349
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
Stat : PR
Posted : 12/30/96 21:36
To : ALL
From : R0MIR
@ BBS :
xID :
Subject: Happy New Year
Happy New Year and successfull 1997 to all people
around the World.
73 de Mir crew Valeri Alexander John
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
Stat : PR
Posted : 12/30/96 21:31
To : ALL
From : R0MIR
@ BBS :
xID :
Subject: frq reverse
Hello all!
We are to reverse R0MIR frequencies since 1st January.
Uplink 145.200 downlink 145.800
for both voice and packet.
Best regards and 73 de Mir crew
CMD(B/H/J/K/KM/L/M/R/S/SR/V/?)>
dhend@cyberportal.net
http://www.cyberportal.net/dhend/dave1.html
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:06 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!cliffs.rs.itd.umich.edu!portc01.blue.aol.com!newsstand.cit.cornell.edu!news.acsu.buffalo.edu!news.sunydutchess.edu!zombie.ncsc.mil!blackbird.afit.af.mil!usenet
From: tkelso@afit.af.mil (TS Kelso)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: NORAD Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format
Date: 31 Dec 1996 21:05:12 GMT
Organization: Air Force Institute of Technology
Lines: 72
Message-ID: <5abv68$f6l@blackbird.afit.af.mil>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dolphin.afit.af.mil
Keywords: Satellite, Orbital Elements, Keplerian, Format, NORAD
X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #6 (NOV)
As a service to the satellite user community, the following description of the
NORAD two-line orbital element set format is uploaded to sci.space.news and
rec.radio.amateur.space on a monthly basis. The most current orbital elements
from the NORAD two-line element sets are carried on the *NEW* Celestial WWW,
http://www.grove.net/~tkelso/
and are updated daily (when possible). Documentation and tracking software are
also available on this system. In addition, element sets (updated daily) and
some documentation and software are also available via anonymous ftp from
archive.afit.af.mil (129.92.1.66)
in the directory pub/space.
==============================================================================
=
Data for each satellite consists of three lines in the following format:
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
1 NNNNNU NNNNNAAA NNNNN.NNNNNNNN +.NNNNNNNN +NNNNN-N +NNNNN-N N NNNNN
2 NNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NNNNNNN NNN.NNNN NNN.NNNN NN.NNNNNNNNNNNNNN
Line 0 is a twenty-two-character name (this change is being made to be
consistent with the name length in the NORAD SATCAT).
Lines 1 and 2 are the standard Two-Line Orbital Element Set Format identical
to that used by NORAD and NASA. The format description is:
Line 1
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
10-11 International Designator (Last two digits of launch year)
12-14 International Designator (Launch number of the year)
15-17 International Designator (Piece of launch)
19-20 Epoch Year (Last two digits of year)
21-32 Epoch (Julian Day and fractional portion of the day)
34-43 First Time Derivative of the Mean Motion
or Ballistic Coefficient (Depending on ephemeris type)
45-52 Second Time Derivative of Mean Motion (decimal point assumed;
blank if N/A)
54-61 BSTAR drag term if GP4 general perturbation theory was used.
Otherwise, radiation pressure coefficient. (Decimal point assumed)
63-63 Ephemeris type
65-68 Element number
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
(Letters, blanks, periods, plus signs = 0; minus signs = 1)
Line 2
Column Description
01-01 Line Number of Element Data
03-07 Satellite Number
09-16 Inclination [Degrees]
18-25 Right Ascension of the Ascending Node [Degrees]
27-33 Eccentricity (decimal point assumed)
35-42 Argument of Perigee [Degrees]
44-51 Mean Anomaly [Degrees]
53-63 Mean Motion [Revs per day]
64-68 Revolution number at epoch [Revs]
69-69 Check Sum (Modulo 10)
All other columns are blank or fixed.
Example:
NOAA 6
1 11416U 86 50.28438588 0.00000140 67960-4 0 5293
2 11416 98.5105 69.3305 0012788 63.2828 296.9658 14.24899292346978
--
Dr TS Kelso Adjunct Professor of Space Operations
tkelso@afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:07 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!howland.erols.net!feeder.chicago.cic.net!compuserve.com!news.production.compuserve.com!news
From: Brian Webb <102670.1206@CompuServe.COM>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.equipment,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: New Web Page
Date: 31 Dec 1996 21:48:40 GMT
Organization: Umbra Research
Lines: 8
Message-ID: <5ac1no$nmj$1@mhafc.production.compuserve.com>
Xref: news1.epix.net rec.radio.amateur.equipment:45601 rec.radio.amateur.homebrew:22627 rec.radio.amateur.misc:122453 rec.radio.amateur.space:9282
If you're interested in amateur radio or space, visit my new web
page at:
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/rawhide_home_page
Happy New Year,
Brian Webb, KD6NRP
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:08 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news3.epix.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!169.132.11.200!news.idt.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-16.sprintlink.net!hermes.is.co.za!iafrica.com!196-7-116-226
From: pbs@iaccess.za (J. L.)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Long Delayed Echo mysteries...
Date: Tue, 31 Dec 96 22:26:27 GMT
Organization: UUNET Internet Africa
Lines: 30
Message-ID: <5ac3uj$n4s_018@196-7-116-226.iafrica.com>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 196-7-116-226.iafrica.com
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #3
Long Delayed Echo mysteries...
Hi,
I'm doing some research for a documentary about anomalies. One of the
subjects I'm interested in is that of LDE's. I have done some reading on
the subject and noted a few experiments - however, I'm looking for new
information & experiences which may help to throw more light on the matter.
Of especial interest is the geographic "preferences" of LDEs. I noted for
example that some evidence pointed to LDEs being more prevalent in
the Polar regions. Do LDE's have any other preferences? Also, I'm
interested in the various characteristics of the LDEs. I noted some
saying that it tends to occur when "opening up" a frequency.
If you have had any experiences, or know of further literature or people
I can consult - I would very much appreciate it.
I have posted this in several newsgroups since I wasn't quite sure
which is the best place to go, so if this is out of place - I apologise.
If you can help in any way, kindly reply by e-mail. Thanks.
Cheers, Jan...
* Ignorant people think it's the noise which fighting cats make
that is aggravating, but it ain't so; it's the sickening
grammar they use. (Mark Twain)
* No one's life, liberty or property is safe while
the legislature is in session. (Mark Twain)
* What do politicians and porn stars have in common? They're both
experts at changing positions in front of the camera.
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:09 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news-xfer.netaxs.com!feed1.news.erols.com!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!news.smartlink.net!infosoftpub.com!george.tamayo
From: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Message from Pat Clawson
Date: Wed, 01 Jan 1997 00:41:00 (PST)
Organization: Infosoft Publishing Company (805-288-1414)
Lines: 36
Message-ID: <62114677@infosoftpub.com>
Reply-To: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm115-55.smartlink.net
X-mailer: PowrMAIL for PowerBBS Ver. 1.5 (Beta 6b) (rev. 1.00d)
Forwarded Message; CLAWSON@TELEGRAFIX.COM (PAT CLAWSON) said to GEORGE TAMAYO
C(>George...
C(>
C(>
C(>My remarks concering BBS systems were not meant in any way as
C(>a slight against ham radio operators. I've personally been involved
C(>in commercial broadcasting AND amateur radio activities for over
C(>20 years, and I have a very high regard for hams and recognize their
C(>public service activities and technical expertise.
C(>
C(>Still, there is a world of difference between commercial broadcasters
C(>-- who have tens of millions of dollars wrapped up in their stations
C(>-- and the local ham, who has at most several thousand dollars. I was
C(>attempting, perhaps somewhat inartfully at a very late hour, to make
C(>a similar comparison between BBS sysops and Web site operators.
C(>
C(>I hope you will post this to those newsgroups and lists that you
C(>forwarded my original message.
C(>
C(>Regards,
C(>
C(>Pat Clawson
C(>TeleGrafix Communications
C(>
C(>
C(>
---
George M. Tamayo - WD6EJO
South Mountain Online
---
* PowerAccess 1.50 The UART's won't take this speed, Captain
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:10 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!cdc2.cdc.net!news.texas.net!news-xfer.netaxs.com!newsfeeds.sol.net!newspump.sol.net!howland.erols.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pull.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-dc-10.sprintlink.net!news.smartlink.net!infosoftpub.com!george.tamayo
From: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Message from Pat Clawson
Date: Wed, 01 Jan 1997 00:41:00 (PST)
Organization: Infosoft Publishing Company (805-288-1414)
Lines: 36
Message-ID: <69754678@infosoftpub.com>
Reply-To: george.tamayo@infosoftpub.com (George Tamayo)
NNTP-Posting-Host: pm115-55.smartlink.net
X-mailer: PowrMAIL for PowerBBS Ver. 1.5 (Beta 6b) (rev. 1.00d)
Forwarded Message; CLAWSON@TELEGRAFIX.COM (PAT CLAWSON) said to GEORGE TAMAYO
C(>George...
C(>
C(>
C(>My remarks concering BBS systems were not meant in any way as
C(>a slight against ham radio operators. I've personally been involved
C(>in commercial broadcasting AND amateur radio activities for over
C(>20 years, and I have a very high regard for hams and recognize their
C(>public service activities and technical expertise.
C(>
C(>Still, there is a world of difference between commercial broadcasters
C(>-- who have tens of millions of dollars wrapped up in their stations
C(>-- and the local ham, who has at most several thousand dollars. I was
C(>attempting, perhaps somewhat inartfully at a very late hour, to make
C(>a similar comparison between BBS sysops and Web site operators.
C(>
C(>I hope you will post this to those newsgroups and lists that you
C(>forwarded my original message.
C(>
C(>Regards,
C(>
C(>Pat Clawson
C(>TeleGrafix Communications
C(>
C(>
C(>
---
George M. Tamayo - WD6EJO
South Mountain Online
---
* PowerAccess 1.50 The UART's won't take this speed, Captain
From amsoft@epix.net Thu Jan 02 17:58:11 1997
Path: news1.epix.net!news4.epix.net!news.sprintlink.net!news-pen-14.sprintlink.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!feed1.news.erols.com!tezcat!gail.ripco.com!news.tds.net!news
From: "BJ Arts" <bjarts@uslink.net>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space
Subject: Mode S info
Date: 1 Jan 1997 04:15:22 GMT
Organization: TDS Telecom - Madison, WI
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <01bbf79a$6d63c560$21bc92ce@bjarts.uslink.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.146.188.33
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1160
I'm looking at buying the Bob Myers mode S system for P3D. It has a nice
dish and downconverter for around $400( U.S). I am wondering if anyone has
tried one of these systems or looked at it. I seems like just what I want
to P3D, but is it a good system. Let me know via e-mail or on the amsat-bb.
Others might want to know the same thing, 73 and Happy New Year de Bj.
BJ Arts
WT0N in EN-37, ARMY MARS AAR5EL
Hibbing, Minnesota. U.S.A.
e-mail bjarts@uslink.net or wt0n@amsat.org
Amsat News Service Bulletin Editor