FYI

The task for the cosmonauts to turn on ARISSat-1 is scheduled to begin at 1430 
UTC on April 11. That means that they will begin the procedure of getting the 
satellite, moving the antenna coax, adjusting the antenna switches in the ISS, 
then flipping the three switches on the satellite control panel to ON. These 
switches and the circuitry are designed to keep the satellite from transmitting 
for 15 minutes after all three switches are in the On position. This was done 
so as not to pose any hazard to the cosmonauts during the EVA to deploy the 
satellite.

Given all these activities I suspect that there will be no transmissions until 
around 1500 UTC. According to my tracking software this puts the first coverage 
area in the southeastern Pacific. Other than ships, southern South America 
should be the first area to hear the 
ARISSat-1/RadioSkaf-V signals.

The satellite will be in Low Power mode, 40-60 seconds ON and 2 minutes OFF. An 
average 8 minute pass will only have about three transmission periods and two 
minutes can seem very long when waiting for a signal to appear. Be patient
The varying ON times occur because when the On timer expires the current FM 
transmission item (ID, telemetry, greeting, SSTV) will finish before the 
transmitter shuts off.

Enjoy the event in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of man's first trip into 
space. Yuri Gagarin make the historic trip on 12 April 1961.

73,
Gould, WA4SXM
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