Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-27 Thread Floyd Rodgers

I would also vote AO40 was not to complex, it was failed by an accident.
Not wishing to bring up bad memories, but two questions:
Did anything other than the plug incident happen? (In other words, did 
any systems fail before the explosion?)
Was there a backup bird built of the same design that just might be 
flyable if we could find a ride?


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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-27 Thread i8cvs
- Original Message -
From: Floyd Rodgers kc5...@swbell.net
To: bstguitar...@gmail.com; Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Sunday, July 27, 2014 8:17 PM
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO
sat.


 I would also vote AO40 was not to complex,

I agree ! Not to complex to be operated.

 it was failed by an accident.

Someone forgot to remove a red cap from a valv fuel and helium system.

 Not wishing to bring up bad memories, but two questions:
 Did anything other than the plug incident happen? (In other words, did
 any systems fail before the explosion?)

NO !

 Was there a backup bird built of the same design that just might be
 flyable if we could find a ride?

We got for years OSCAR-10 and OSCAR-13 in the Molnyia orbit
very similar to that of AO40 but with lover apogee and different
orbit inclination,

73 de i8CVS Domenico

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-27 Thread Andre
Op 27-07-14 om 20:17 schreef Floyd Rodgers:

 Was there a backup bird built of the same design that just might be
 flyable if we could find a ride?
 
Not a backup for phase 3d but a satelite with simular spaceframe and
capabiletie to get in the same orbit, phase 3e is capable of being
flight test ready in a short time as it was intended to be launched
around 2007 if I'm not mistaken.

it has a simpler IF system but the signals should be just as strong as
ao-40 was.

73 de Andre PE1RDW
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-26 Thread Phil Karn
On 07/22/2014 12:26 AM, Bryce Salmi wrote:
 By usher in he was clearly referring to gaining technical abilities as a
 group to attack more complex satellites.

That's not how I read it. In any event, AMSAT has already built far more
complex satellites; remember AO-40? (Maybe that one was *too* complex.)

Quite a few of the older and more experienced technical volunteers have
simply drifted away from the organization due to a lack of interesting
current projects.

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-26 Thread Bryce Salmi
Ao40 was not too complex. I work in the space industry, I've already have
my electronics fly to orbit (not AMSAT), it's awesome and scary all In one.
Watching it launch not too long ago was gut wrenching, the entire system is
complex but I trusted in my testing, I trusted my coworkers testing, and I
trusted that we all worked to do the best we could, if it didn't work and
we knew it wasn't from nativity... I'm fine with that, it's a learning
experience. Anyone willing to operate in space must be willing to accept
defeat.

we like to refer to space vehicles/missions as binary. It works or it
doesn't, space is unforgiving and by forging into it you must accept
failure as an outcome but do everything to avoid it. There's no shame in
that. It can and will still happen. Only those willing to risk it achieve
what was once thought impossible.

Having a clear path to get flight heritage on a common design is an obvious
way of mitigating future risk.

Bryce
Kb1lqc

On Saturday, July 26, 2014, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net wrote:

 On 07/22/2014 12:26 AM, Bryce Salmi wrote:
  By usher in he was clearly referring to gaining technical abilities as a
  group to attack more complex satellites.

 That's not how I read it. In any event, AMSAT has already built far more
 complex satellites; remember AO-40? (Maybe that one was *too* complex.)

 Quite a few of the older and more experienced technical volunteers have
 simply drifted away from the organization due to a lack of interesting
 current projects.

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-26 Thread Bryce Salmi
Nativity = autocorrect of being naive :) sorry about that

On Saturday, July 26, 2014, Bryce Salmi bstguitar...@gmail.com wrote:

 Ao40 was not too complex. I work in the space industry, I've already have
 my electronics fly to orbit (not AMSAT), it's awesome and scary all In one.
 Watching it launch not too long ago was gut wrenching, the entire system is
 complex but I trusted in my testing, I trusted my coworkers testing, and I
 trusted that we all worked to do the best we could, if it didn't work and
 we knew it wasn't from nativity... I'm fine with that, it's a learning
 experience. Anyone willing to operate in space must be willing to accept
 defeat.

 we like to refer to space vehicles/missions as binary. It works or it
 doesn't, space is unforgiving and by forging into it you must accept
 failure as an outcome but do everything to avoid it. There's no shame in
 that. It can and will still happen. Only those willing to risk it achieve
 what was once thought impossible.

 Having a clear path to get flight heritage on a common design is an
 obvious way of mitigating future risk.

 Bryce
 Kb1lqc

 On Saturday, July 26, 2014, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net
 javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','k...@ka9q.net'); wrote:

 On 07/22/2014 12:26 AM, Bryce Salmi wrote:
  By usher in he was clearly referring to gaining technical abilities as a
  group to attack more complex satellites.

 That's not how I read it. In any event, AMSAT has already built far more
 complex satellites; remember AO-40? (Maybe that one was *too* complex.)

 Quite a few of the older and more experienced technical volunteers have
 simply drifted away from the organization due to a lack of interesting
 current projects.

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Brenton Salmi
In addition most cubsats just buy prebut of commercial modules
(clydespace...) so those teams have to do little actual engineering. Those
teams however are limited I. Their scope for the future whereas AMSAT-NA is
developing the basic building blocks of heir own platform to build on. I.
Addition to IP being generated (designs, test hardware and software,
firmware, etc) volunteers old and especially the new generation of
volunteers that have joined in the last several year are getting experience
from the ground up. This is the first Cubesat for AMSAT NA and yes it is a
tough form factor to build in with missions longer than a few months,
actually I'd say AMSAT isone of the few if only developing a cubsat
platform for 5+ mission years. It's a tough problem and may look solved
already but it is not. ITAR also hinders this greatly.

To those of you even mildly interested in volunteering please do! We are
ally are ushering in a new wave of amateur radio satellites that will start
with FM birds but will certainly progress through more advanced functions
such as digital data. You don't have to work in Aerospace to volunteer but
when building a Cubesat that has to work you've got to cross your t's and
dot your i's. One step at a time, we will get there and it will be a
growing pace, fox-1 is the start, fox-1b and 1c are low hanging fruit to
get launches and improve upon our platform. Fox-2 and over starts getting
much more power, software defined radio transponders, etc... It's going to
be fun!

Brent, KB1LQD

On Tuesday, July 22, 2014, Bryce Salmi bstguitar...@gmail.com wrote:

 By usher in he was clearly referring to gaining technical abilities as a
 group to attack more complex satellites.

 On Monday, July 21, 2014, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net javascript:; wrote:

  On 07/21/2014 05:36 PM, Clayton Coleman wrote:
 
   It's very easy to be a pessimist or a cynic.  Very little risk is
   involved.  It doesn't take any cojones to sit in a comfy chair and
   email snarky comments. If you are optimistic about a project and it
   fails, your peers may see your actions as a fool.
 
  I absolutely agree, but I must ask you about something you said earlier:
 
   I am pleased that AMSAT-NA is going to move forward with a LEO
   CubeSat, single channel, analog FM transponder.  If successful, it
   will be immensely popular worldwide. My hope is that it will help
   usher in a new, improved series of satellites with more advanced
   payloads.
 
  I'm confused. My understanding of the idiomatic expression usher in is
  that something new and presumably revolutionary is being introduced,
  e.g., to usher in a new era.
 
  What, exactly, will a new LEO, single channel, analog FM transponder
  satellite usher in that none of the previous LEO, single channel,
  analog FM satellites managed to usher in?
 
  Will the tiny cubesat form factor (to which we've been relegated by the
  intense competition for launches from the small satellite revolution we
  pioneered) make the difference this time? If not, what will?
 
  The most common argument I've seen for launching more analog FM LEO
  satellites is that they are needed to replace existing analog FM LEO
  satellites that are now failing. Is that ushering in something new?
 
  --Phil
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Clayton Coleman
Hi Phil,

The new era I speak of is AMSAT-NA's foray into CubeSats.  Certainly FM
birds are nothing new.   I'd like to see more efficient modes and methods
in the future.  Perhaps leverage a smartphone interface for the roving
digital operator?

I am a firm believer in the direction of replenishing the FM satellite
fleet. They are a great entry point into amateur satellite operations and
experimentation for many. They aren't the only path but is something most
hams can do since dualband HT's have become ubiquitous.  I've also been
using, with success, the FUNcube Dongle Pro+ to interest people in
telemetry and digital.

73
Clayton
W5PFG
On Jul 22, 2014 12:40 AM, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net wrote:

 On 07/21/2014 05:36 PM, Clayton Coleman wrote:

  It's very easy to be a pessimist or a cynic.  Very little risk is
  involved.  It doesn't take any cojones to sit in a comfy chair and
  email snarky comments. If you are optimistic about a project and it
  fails, your peers may see your actions as a fool.

 I absolutely agree, but I must ask you about something you said earlier:

  I am pleased that AMSAT-NA is going to move forward with a LEO
  CubeSat, single channel, analog FM transponder.  If successful, it
  will be immensely popular worldwide. My hope is that it will help
  usher in a new, improved series of satellites with more advanced
  payloads.

 I'm confused. My understanding of the idiomatic expression usher in is
 that something new and presumably revolutionary is being introduced,
 e.g., to usher in a new era.

 What, exactly, will a new LEO, single channel, analog FM transponder
 satellite usher in that none of the previous LEO, single channel,
 analog FM satellites managed to usher in?

 Will the tiny cubesat form factor (to which we've been relegated by the
 intense competition for launches from the small satellite revolution we
 pioneered) make the difference this time? If not, what will?

 The most common argument I've seen for launching more analog FM LEO
 satellites is that they are needed to replace existing analog FM LEO
 satellites that are now failing. Is that ushering in something new?

 --Phil
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread John Becker

I dont keep up with these things at all but what happen to the others?
failed, dropped out of orbit, what?

One day someone is going to be saying   sorry, ghost rider the pattern 
is full


JAB
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Paul Stoetzer
Off the top of my head:

AO-51 - Battery failure (Problem fixed in Fox series - shorted
batteries will be cut loose from the circuit and the satellite will
operate when in the sun)
AO-27 - Likely radiation damaged memory (Problem fixed in Fox series -
IHU failure will cause it to become a dumb FM repeater)
HO-68 - Failed relay (Problem fixed in Fox series I think - no relays)

73,

Paul, N8HM


On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 10:09 AM, John Becker w0...@big-river.net wrote:
 I dont keep up with these things at all but what happen to the others?
 failed, dropped out of orbit, what?

 One day someone is going to be saying   sorry, ghost rider the pattern is
 full

 JAB

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Phil Karn
On 07/22/2014 06:49 AM, Clayton Coleman wrote:
 Hi Phil,
 
 The new era I speak of is AMSAT-NA's foray into CubeSats.

Well, I guess I could read that as when all you have is lemons, make
lemonade. AMSAT used to make spacecraft that, while small by
commercial/military/scientific standards, dwarfed a cubesat. So I don't
see cubesats as an advance.

Although miniaturization of electronics and improvements in solar cell
efficiency do help us cram everything into the tiny form factor, the
fact remains that we are now forced to pay far more to launch far less
than we used to.

I guess that's a new era in the same way that the Arab Oil Embargoes
of 1973 and 1979 launched a glorious new era in automobile transportation...

Sure, this is a fact of life that we can't do anything about, despite
the supreme irony of AMSAT pioneering small satellites so well that we
created a whole new industry with which we must now fiercely compete for
launches. Economics says that when demand outstrips supply, prices go
up. So they have. A lot.

Like it or not, we have to adapt to changing realities. We used to get
launches for free or at nominal rates, so our main investment in each
satellite was just the volunteer engineers' time and the cost of those
components we could not beg, borrow or steal.

But now that the launch cost dominates the budget of everything we fly,
it's time to take a very serious look at what we get from each one. Said
another way, it's time to look at how much MORE we could get from our
very substantial investment in each launch. Every launch of a FM cubesat
depletes a very large chunk of AMSAT funds that cannot be spent on
launching something else.

In other words, I'm encouraging people to look at the *opportunity cost*
of every additional analog FM satellite we launch. People don't yet
realize just how huge it is because they only know 1960s analog
technology. They simply don't realize how much more could be done with
21st century technology. That's what I'm trying to change, so far
without much success.

--Phil
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Bryce Salmi
Phil,
You're missing the point. Do I personally think Fox-1 is pushing the
bleeding edge of technology? No. Buts it's a great step to building a good
foundation. I think your frustration with the lack of digital birds is
overcoming an understanding of where AMSAT currently is and where it's
going. No one disagrees with you on wanting more advanced and possibly
digital modes. I for one am yearning for digital birds.

I got my ticket in high school in 2004. I didn't really use satellites
until a few years later so I missed out on ao40 and others. My
understanding now of amsats history may be skewed but it's the best I can
summarize.

After ao40 it appears to me many of the original players were getting too
old to keep volunteering and possibly got let down by the events of ao40.
Understandably, some chose to stop. From what I can tell reading through
email archives, eagle caused some problems and some left then too. Past is
past, I'll highlight it. Throw ITAR into the mix and now we are here at
Fox, AMSATS first series of satellites in decades.

AO51 seemed to be a collaboration of AMSAT and space quest, and suitsat and
arissat were fun and neat projects. fox is amsats chance to get a base of
solid engineering to build upon. The main payload is analog. There are
experimental PCB slots. fox-2 will have even more space. I think digital
modes will find their way on there eventually when AMSAT is ready.

Very launch of a fox-1 satellite is building flight heritage on the
designs. I work in the spacecraft and launch industry, every rocket that
flies and spacecraft that safely returns to earth is heritage on our
designs. It's worth it's weight in gold so to speak.

AMSAT has enough volunteers with the right skills to build fox 1
satellites. I personally think all of us, including me, have some to learn
before we attempt crazy ideas. Heck, fox-1 is brilliant in that it allows
AMSAT to fulfill a baseline analog fm and transponder need in the cubesat
form factor while allowing extra space for experiments whether they are
gyros or digital modes. These experiments can succeed or fail and not harm
the base satellite of done right. The only crappy part about a 1U cubesat
is it's super tiny power budget. fox-2 will be the first really power
capable satellite and I'm excited as hell for it.

I wrote this on my iPhone while riding into work. Sorry for any misspelling
:)

Bryce

On Tuesday, July 22, 2014, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net wrote:

 On 07/22/2014 06:49 AM, Clayton Coleman wrote:
  Hi Phil,
 
  The new era I speak of is AMSAT-NA's foray into CubeSats.

 Well, I guess I could read that as when all you have is lemons, make
 lemonade. AMSAT used to make spacecraft that, while small by
 commercial/military/scientific standards, dwarfed a cubesat. So I don't
 see cubesats as an advance.

 Although miniaturization of electronics and improvements in solar cell
 efficiency do help us cram everything into the tiny form factor, the
 fact remains that we are now forced to pay far more to launch far less
 than we used to.

 I guess that's a new era in the same way that the Arab Oil Embargoes
 of 1973 and 1979 launched a glorious new era in automobile
 transportation...

 Sure, this is a fact of life that we can't do anything about, despite
 the supreme irony of AMSAT pioneering small satellites so well that we
 created a whole new industry with which we must now fiercely compete for
 launches. Economics says that when demand outstrips supply, prices go
 up. So they have. A lot.

 Like it or not, we have to adapt to changing realities. We used to get
 launches for free or at nominal rates, so our main investment in each
 satellite was just the volunteer engineers' time and the cost of those
 components we could not beg, borrow or steal.

 But now that the launch cost dominates the budget of everything we fly,
 it's time to take a very serious look at what we get from each one. Said
 another way, it's time to look at how much MORE we could get from our
 very substantial investment in each launch. Every launch of a FM cubesat
 depletes a very large chunk of AMSAT funds that cannot be spent on
 launching something else.

 In other words, I'm encouraging people to look at the *opportunity cost*
 of every additional analog FM satellite we launch. People don't yet
 realize just how huge it is because they only know 1960s analog
 technology. They simply don't realize how much more could be done with
 21st century technology. That's what I'm trying to change, so far
 without much success.

 --Phil
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Jerry Buxton

On 7/22/2014 9:21 AM, Paul Stoetzer wrote:

Off the top of my head:

AO-51 - Battery failure (Problem fixed in Fox series - shorted
batteries will be cut loose from the circuit and the satellite will
operate when in the sun)
This is an original conops for Fox-1 that did not make it to reality.  
In fact this requirement was removed over a year ago because it could 
not be suitably implemented to fit in the space available on the PCB.  
You see, at that time new inhibit requirements that were received from 
the launch providers caused us to have to re-engineer the battery 
board.  Moving the battery fail feature to another board was not 
possible because we could not afford to be redesigning the whole 
satellite, moving things around from each board to another to find room, 
in the time left to delivery (at that point the launch had not yet 
slipped to 2015 and we were due to deliver in March 2014).  The choice 
had to be made to cut the battery fail protection from the battery board 
in order to incorporate the inhibits, to make the launch.
The removal of this feature was brought forth at the Symposium last 
year, but the tale lives on.  Yes, it was an outstanding feature but as 
has been pointed out in some of the other emails going on right now, 
there is a real limit to what we can fit in a 1U CubeSat and in the time 
and under the provisions allowed by our rideshare.

Don't think it didn't get cut without a fight! :-)

The Fox-1A Engineering Unit is sitting on the official AMSAT test table 
in my shack right now, having arrived FedEx this morning after some time 
in the shop for fixes to hardware that we found in the first round of 
EU testing and having a new IHU all installed.  I'm getting ready to 
load new software with the latest DSP and flight features.  Stay tuned...


Jerry Buxton, NØJY

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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Paul Stoetzer
Jerry,

Thanks for the clarification. It is unfortunate that it got removed,
but understandable. Hopefully the batteries will last the entire 11
year lifetime of the orbit and, if not, that newer and better
satellites will continually be launched!

Is the feature that allows the FM transponder to function in the event
of IHU failure still on board?

73,

Paul, N8HM

On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 1:19 PM, Jerry Buxton am...@n0jy.org wrote:
 On 7/22/2014 9:21 AM, Paul Stoetzer wrote:

 Off the top of my head:

 AO-51 - Battery failure (Problem fixed in Fox series - shorted
 batteries will be cut loose from the circuit and the satellite will
 operate when in the sun)

 This is an original conops for Fox-1 that did not make it to reality.  In
 fact this requirement was removed over a year ago because it could not be
 suitably implemented to fit in the space available on the PCB.  You see, at
 that time new inhibit requirements that were received from the launch
 providers caused us to have to re-engineer the battery board.  Moving the
 battery fail feature to another board was not possible because we could not
 afford to be redesigning the whole satellite, moving things around from each
 board to another to find room, in the time left to delivery (at that point
 the launch had not yet slipped to 2015 and we were due to deliver in March
 2014).  The choice had to be made to cut the battery fail protection from
 the battery board in order to incorporate the inhibits, to make the launch.
 The removal of this feature was brought forth at the Symposium last year,
 but the tale lives on.  Yes, it was an outstanding feature but as has been
 pointed out in some of the other emails going on right now, there is a real
 limit to what we can fit in a 1U CubeSat and in the time and under the
 provisions allowed by our rideshare.
 Don't think it didn't get cut without a fight! :-)

 The Fox-1A Engineering Unit is sitting on the official AMSAT test table in
 my shack right now, having arrived FedEx this morning after some time in
 the shop for fixes to hardware that we found in the first round of EU
 testing and having a new IHU all installed.  I'm getting ready to load new
 software with the latest DSP and flight features.  Stay tuned...

 Jerry Buxton, NØJY


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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Bryce Salmi
Being involved in the power system, I personally am hoping to get this
included in the near future on some of the next Fox's. We will see!


On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 10:19 AM, Jerry Buxton am...@n0jy.org wrote:

 On 7/22/2014 9:21 AM, Paul Stoetzer wrote:

 Off the top of my head:

 AO-51 - Battery failure (Problem fixed in Fox series - shorted
 batteries will be cut loose from the circuit and the satellite will
 operate when in the sun)

 This is an original conops for Fox-1 that did not make it to reality.  In
 fact this requirement was removed over a year ago because it could not be
 suitably implemented to fit in the space available on the PCB.  You see, at
 that time new inhibit requirements that were received from the launch
 providers caused us to have to re-engineer the battery board.  Moving the
 battery fail feature to another board was not possible because we could not
 afford to be redesigning the whole satellite, moving things around from
 each board to another to find room, in the time left to delivery (at that
 point the launch had not yet slipped to 2015 and we were due to deliver in
 March 2014).  The choice had to be made to cut the battery fail protection
 from the battery board in order to incorporate the inhibits, to make the
 launch.
 The removal of this feature was brought forth at the Symposium last year,
 but the tale lives on.  Yes, it was an outstanding feature but as has been
 pointed out in some of the other emails going on right now, there is a real
 limit to what we can fit in a 1U CubeSat and in the time and under the
 provisions allowed by our rideshare.
 Don't think it didn't get cut without a fight! :-)

 The Fox-1A Engineering Unit is sitting on the official AMSAT test table in
 my shack right now, having arrived FedEx this morning after some time in
 the shop for fixes to hardware that we found in the first round of EU
 testing and having a new IHU all installed.  I'm getting ready to load new
 software with the latest DSP and flight features.  Stay tuned...

 Jerry Buxton, NØJY


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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread M5AKA
 They simply don't realize how much more could be done with
 21st century technology. That's what I'm trying to change, so far
 without much success.

Phil, the technology you describe could equally well be used in cross-band 
terrestrial transponders. Has anyone yet developed it for terrestrial use ?

73 Trevor M5AKA




On Tuesday, 22 July 2014, 17:16, Phil Karn k...@ka9q.net wrote:
 


On 07/22/2014 06:49 AM, Clayton Coleman wrote:
 Hi Phil,
 
 The new era I speak of is AMSAT-NA's foray into CubeSats.

Well, I guess I could read that as when all you have is lemons, make
lemonade. AMSAT used to make spacecraft that, while small by
commercial/military/scientific standards, dwarfed a cubesat. So I don't
see cubesats as an advance.

Although miniaturization of electronics and improvements in solar cell
efficiency do help us cram everything into the tiny form factor, the
fact remains that we are now forced to pay far more to launch far less
than we used to.

I guess that's a new era in the same way that the Arab Oil Embargoes
of 1973 and 1979 launched a glorious new era in automobile transportation...

Sure, this is a fact of life that we can't do anything about, despite
the supreme irony of AMSAT pioneering small satellites so well that we
created a whole new industry with which we must now fiercely compete for
launches. Economics says that when demand outstrips supply, prices go
up. So they have. A lot.

Like it or not, we have to adapt to changing realities. We used to get
launches for free or at nominal rates, so our main investment in each
satellite was just the volunteer engineers' time and the cost of those
components we could not beg, borrow or steal.

But now that the launch cost dominates the budget of everything we fly,
it's time to take a very serious look at what we get from each one. Said
another way, it's time to look at how much MORE we could get from our
very substantial investment in each launch. Every launch of a FM cubesat
depletes a very large chunk of AMSAT funds that cannot be spent on
launching something else.

In other words, I'm encouraging people to look at the *opportunity cost*
of every additional analog FM satellite we launch. People don't yet
realize just how huge it is because they only know 1960s analog
technology. They simply don't realize how much more could be done with
21st century technology. That's what I'm trying to change, so far
without much success.


--Phil
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-22 Thread Phil Karn
On 07/22/2014 04:06 PM, M5AKA wrote:

 Phil, the technology you describe could equally well be used in
 cross-band terrestrial transponders. Has anyone yet developed it for
 terrestrial use ?

Sure, there are several digital schemes now appearing for ham VHF/UHF
voice use, such as D*Star (championed by Kenwood) and C4FM (championed
by Yaesu).

But they have their drawbacks, including use of proprietary voice
codecs, a lack of multi-vendor support, and a general apathy among hams
towards anything invented or deployed after 1955 or so, when SSB started
to take off in the military and hams followed.

I reserve judgment on C4FM because I haven't looked at it yet, but I was
underwhelmed when I looked at D*Star some years ago. The design was
quite old and not very efficient or ambitious, and in demonstrations it
didn't seem to perform a whole lot better than FM. And that's pretty
faint praise for a digital mode.

Also, terrestrial and satellite communications are very different
problems with very different technical solutions at the physical layer.
In satellite communications power efficiency is almost always paramount,
so you try to use simple binary modulation schemes like BPSK with
coherent detection and strong forward error correction. High symbol
rates are okay because you usually have a line-of-sight path and
multipath is seldom a problem.

In terrestrial communications, including ham repeaters and mobile
phones, power is usually not much of an issue, at least on the forward
(base station to mobile) link. But unlike satellites, interference,
fading and multipath are the real problems because you almost never have
a clean line-of-sight path.

So terrestrial and satellite communications tend to use very different
and more complex modulation and error correction methods. Everybody
seems to be converging on OFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplex)
because of its inherent resistance to multipath; it's used in everything
from WiFi to DSL to terrestrial TV broadcasting (except in North
America, which uses something else) to 4G mobile (LTE). OFDM divides a
channel into a lot of low speed channels that are inherently less
vulnerable to multipath. Each channel then uses a traditional digital
modulation like BPSK or QPSK. Higher order schemes like QAM are common
because, aside from multipath, you usually have a high SNR and can
afford to cram more bits/sec into each hertz of valuable bandwidth.

Cable TV systems are different from both satellite and terrestrial radio
as they have high SNRs and no multipath. Straight (non OFDM) QAM with
very large signal constellations are standard. 256QAM, where each symbol
carries 8 bits at once, is very common. That's something I would never
run on a satellite unless I was extremely constrained on bandwidth and
had DC power to burn.

Above the physical level there ought to be commonality between
terrestrial and satellite systems to permit interoperability between
them, but here we run into political problems. D*STAR uses a proprietary
patented digital voice codec common in public service land mobile, and I
think C4FM does too. In my opinion, proprietary technologies have no
place in ham radio, and enough people felt that way that we now have an
excellent non-proprietary alternative, CODEC2 by VK5DGR. While it has
gotten a lot of use in open source digital voice packages for HF it
doesn't seem to have gotten a lot of traction among the commercial
manufacturers of VHF/UHF mobile ham gear.

--Phil


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[amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-21 Thread Clayton Coleman
I am pleased that AMSAT-NA is going to move forward with a LEO
CubeSat, single channel, analog FM transponder.  If successful, it
will be immensely popular worldwide. My hope is that it will help
usher in a new, improved series of satellites with more advanced
payloads.  There is great potential in the ranks of AMSAT-NA and
groups worldwide to achieve lofty goals.  Look at what AMSAT-UK and
others have already done in the CubeSat platform.  The digital mode
capabilities discussed here on the AMSAT-BB are just the tip of the
iceberg to where technology can take us.

It's very easy to be a pessimist or a cynic.  Very little risk is
involved.  It doesn't take any cojones to sit in a comfy chair and
email snarky comments. If you are optimistic about a project and it
fails, your peers may see your actions as a fool.  Even worse, people
may withdraw their financial support for future missions.  Even after
great success, the optimist may receive very little praise, especially
in this field of voluntary amateur radio service.

AMSAT-NA is boldly entering the CubeSat world with the planned
satellite series FOX-1.  If you haven't noticed, there have been
full-page advertisements soliciting volunteers in the AMSAT Journal.
There is plenty of opportunity to serve and influence the direction of
AMSAT-NA.

If we all threaten to leave and stop paying our dues when things don't
go our way, what will we ever accomplish?

Please take a simple step to support amateur radio in space.  Donate
to the FOX-1C launch effort.  http://www.amsat.org/?p=2957


73
Clayton
W5PFG
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Re: [amsat-bb] I want this. I want that. Here comes another FM LEO sat.

2014-07-21 Thread Phil Karn
On 07/21/2014 05:36 PM, Clayton Coleman wrote:

 It's very easy to be a pessimist or a cynic.  Very little risk is
 involved.  It doesn't take any cojones to sit in a comfy chair and
 email snarky comments. If you are optimistic about a project and it
 fails, your peers may see your actions as a fool.

I absolutely agree, but I must ask you about something you said earlier:

 I am pleased that AMSAT-NA is going to move forward with a LEO
 CubeSat, single channel, analog FM transponder.  If successful, it
 will be immensely popular worldwide. My hope is that it will help
 usher in a new, improved series of satellites with more advanced
 payloads.

I'm confused. My understanding of the idiomatic expression usher in is
that something new and presumably revolutionary is being introduced,
e.g., to usher in a new era.

What, exactly, will a new LEO, single channel, analog FM transponder
satellite usher in that none of the previous LEO, single channel,
analog FM satellites managed to usher in?

Will the tiny cubesat form factor (to which we've been relegated by the
intense competition for launches from the small satellite revolution we
pioneered) make the difference this time? If not, what will?

The most common argument I've seen for launching more analog FM LEO
satellites is that they are needed to replace existing analog FM LEO
satellites that are now failing. Is that ushering in something new?

--Phil
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