Worked W5PFG and CO6CBF on the pass. Satellite sounded great as it
always does. With my Arrow and 2 FT-817s, I was able to locate my
downlink with the satellite at about 1.5 degrees of elevation. My
signal was plenty loud at about 2.5 degrees.
73,
Paul, N8HM
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 8:53 PM, Paul
Good evening,
I will be on AO-73 tonight at around 02:58Z, calling CQ at around
145.965 MHz. These passes usually don't have much, if any, activity
and I'd like to drum up a bit more.
The satellite will enter sunlight at 03:05:45, giving about 7 minutes
of transponder time here in Washington, DC.
Did you look at the Blade RF?
http://nuand.com
With available downconverter and full duplex! It is already a game changer
and being used.
Also, the HackRF is shipping now.
Stefan
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 3:00 PM, Les Rayburn wrote:
> http://www.crosscountrywireless.net/sentry.html
>
> If t
> ... puppeteer drive in my star ship in a few years
Unfortunately, the Inter-Galactic Traffic in Arms Regulations will
prevent us from talking about this! ;-)
--
73 de JoAnne K9JKM
k9...@amsat.org
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If true, this would provide the first SDR with output on 6 Meters, 2
Meters, 222, 432, and 1.2 GHz. This would be a real game-changer for VHF
weak signal operators, and provide enough drive for most amps. Can't
wait to learn more about this produ
Haha! I am sure you and everyone else is right but I really want the
puppeteer drive in my star ship in a few years!
Bob
On Aug 5, 2014 1:09 PM, "Martin Davidoff" wrote:
> Our friends in DL have the perfect word for this: Wunschdenken (wishful
> thinking about an impossibility).
>
> It may be t
Many stations, who have their FUNcube Dongle SDR setup to automatically receive
telemetry signals from FUNcube-1, will have noticed that they are now also
seeing the telemetry from the FUNcube-2 sub-system which is flying on-board the
UKube-1 CubeSat. This is part of the commissioning program fo
The Perseid meteor shower peak is predicted to occur between August 11
to 13. There are a few pre-peak pings already audible. The activity
should increase over the next several days.
Web streaming of the Perseid is on-line at:
http://spaceweatherradio.com/
Quoting from their web page here is how
> The space probe has passed within 1,000 kilometers of the
> comet and is maneuvering to match velocity.
ESA Webcast is currently providing looping playback of the Rosetta
mission and the rendezvous from earlier this morning.
I followed the link from http://www.universetoday.com with the title
As a follow-up to this thread, I would like to thank all who replied to my
questions
and helped me along the way. By following the instructions given, I now have
both Icom’s running together with
SatPC32…..how sweet Sure beats using the ‘ol overlay plotter…wasn’t it an
Oscarlator ?
T
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2715387/Rosettas-best-view-Esa-releases-incredible-images-comet-just-620-miles-away-spacecraft-closes-in.html
The space probe has passed within 1,000 kilometers of the comet and is
maneuvering to match velocity. The space probe took an amazing photo
It's either fodder for the conspiracy theorists or it'll win a Noble prize.
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 6:53 AM, Mike Lemons wrote:
> It doesn't violate any laws of physics if you are expending power from
> photovoltaics to propel your spacecraft.
>
> For example, you could push against the Earth's
It doesn't violate any laws of physics if you are expending power from
photovoltaics to propel your spacecraft.
For example, you could push against the Earth's magnetic field to get a
satellite into a higher orbit.
This article seems to confirm this model, although they don't know what
they
This is a test message
Thanks
nick
Office 337 593 8700
Cell 337 258 2527
Helping UL become a world Class Engineering and Educational School
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