Mark,
Thank you for the reply. I didn't expect to hear right from the lions mouth! My only hope is that future birds do not have a downlink of 436.795. I always wanted to use satellites ever since I became a ham at 14. I thought it was a very expensive aspect of the hobby. Recently I sold be beloved motorcycle and decided to go all out with satellite gear. I purchased the only satellite capable radio I could find on the new market, the Kenwood TS-2000. I wish I had known about the birdie. It leaves me completely unable to use AO-27.

Now with AO-51 near death that leaves me with only a half pass of SO-50. Thank goodness it slipped to 436.790!

Hopefully sometime soon I can figure out how to incorporate HRD and VO-52. In order to auto track with LVB tracker I have to have HRD control my VFO which makes the linear birds difficult.

Richard
K7LWV


On 11/23/2011 4:19 AM, Mark L. Hammond wrote:
Hi Richard,

Good thoughts, but the difference between "needs to be" and "can it be" is the 
tough part.

Actually, 4 of the cells are good, 2 are bad.   One of the four good ones seems 
a bit weaker than the other three.

We cannot do any scheduling because of the great difficulty in getting all the 
satellite code uploaded and running without a crash that sends it back to 
square one.

We are lucky to see what we are seeing right now---basically, it's shutting 
itself OFF due to low voltage during an eclipse (that's the easy part...)  
What's amazing is that it's coming back ON when voltage returns!  This is 
actually a great thing--and it amounts to primitive scheduling of sorts.   We 
never expected it--but we'll take it!!

So---we have what we have.  And we don't plan to change operations until the 
bird forces us to do so.  It's all about equilibrium (temperature, power out, 
sunlight). We're balanced apparently for the time being...

Over the next month or so, eclipse times will double from what they are right 
now.  We are not too excited about that...we'll just have to see how it goes.   
If it means earlier shutdown during eclipse--so what?  What will be key is if 
it comes back on in the sun!

73,

Mark N8MH
AO-51 Command Station



At 11:21 AM 11/22/2011 -0800, you wrote:
Re-post from Amsat's twitter:

"AO-51 now shutting off tx soon after eclipse, due to batt voltage dropping below 
regulator threshold. Recovers to 1w in sun."

Were people still using this bird in eclipse with only 2 out of 6 usable cells? 
Perhaps this bird needs to be put on a schedule like AO-27. Can that be done?

Richard
K7LWV
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