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CX2SA  > SATDIG   19.07.10 21:18l 295 Lines 11670 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: AMSAT-BB-digest V5 312
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Sent: 100719/1905Z @:CX2SA.LAV.URY.SA #:7864 [Minas] FBB7.00e $:AMSATBB5312
From: CX2SA@CX2SA.LAV.URY.SA
To  : SATDIG@WW

Today's Topics:

   1.  SO-50 DEMO REQUEST (n4csitwo@xxxxxxxxx.xxxx
   2.  AO7 A/B (PY5LF)
   3.  VA7EWK 3-10 July stats and wrap-up
      (Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK))
   4.  CN93 activation (LOREN RASMUSSEN)
   5.  TubeSat Satellite Kit (via Make blog) (Ollie Eisman)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 15:49:32 -0400
From: <n4csitwo@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb]  SO-50 DEMO REQUEST
To: <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>, "amsat-florida" <amsat-florida@xxxxx.xxx>
Message-ID: <EB263E413AC94D6080FEAE137D034F7F@xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="iso-8859-1"

Fellow hams,
I have a sat demo scheduled here in Orlando for tomorrow morning targeting
the 14:01 UTC (10:01 ET) pass of SO-50. I'd appreciate making a few contacts
to show how much fun the satellite part of our hobby can be. I don't want to
dominant the pass, but a few contacts would be great if anyone can help.

73s,

Dave, AA4KN

------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 20:40:29 -0300
From: "PY5LF" <py5lf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx>
Subject: [amsat-bb]  AO7 A/B
To: <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Message-ID: <006701cb26d2$9bb15970$d3140c50$@xxx.xx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="us-ascii"

Hello
I think it's internal clock AO7 changed. Today I got the exact moment when
the AO7 changes from A to B. This happened at 23:11:20 UTC, July 17, 2010

I had already noticed this a few days ago.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlSbjjrOJVw



73



PY5LF

LUCIANO FABRICIO

CURITIBA-PR-BRAZIL

GG54JM

 <http://www.qrz.com/db/py5lf> http://www.qrz.com/db/py5lf

 <http://www.falautomation.com.br/> www.falautomation.com.br





------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 20:28:04 -0700 (PDT)
From: "Patrick STODDARD \(WD9EWK/VA7EWK\)" <amsat-bb@xxxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb]  VA7EWK 3-10 July stats and wrap-up
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Message-ID: <74168.53091.qm@xxxxxxxx.xxxx.xxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hi!

I have started work on the QSL cards from my recent trip to Canada,
and will also update my web page with photos and more information
about my trip.  It was a fun time, and by far the longest satellite-
related trip I have taken.  Along with the flights between Phoenix and
Vancouver, I drove 3024km (1879 miles) in 8 days according to the
receipt I received when I returned the car to Vancouver airport on
11 July.  The driving in British Columbia was a few miles/km less than
the distance I drove on my trip into Utah last year (that was a
1905-mile/3065km trip), but overall I traveled much further this
July than either of my previous July road trips in 2008 or 2009 when
the Phoenix-Vancouver flights are added in.

During the time I worked the radios (3-10 July), I logged 391 QSOs
from 9 different grids.  Locations included one grid boundary
(CN79/CO70, at Campbell River on Vancouver Island), the Canada/USA
international border (standing near the Peace Arch south of Vancouver,
on 8 July), a mountaintop (Whistler Mountain, on 10 July), and even
from a ship (a ferry sailing between Vancouver Island and Metro
Vancouver, on 7 July).  I tried to work from CO50, but could not get
to a place that allowed for a good view of the sky, even after making
a 90km/55-mile detour out there on 5 July in the hope of finding
some place that might work for satellites.  On my first attempt to
work many passes from CO80 on 9 July, I ended up working a few passes
there followed by a long road trip through CO80, CO90, and CO99 before
returning to my motel in Vancouver (driving 671km/417 miles that day!)
and trying again the next day with more success.

I was able to work SSB and FM, although I only worked one VO-52 pass
on the first full day I was on Vancouver Island (4 July).  I generally
used the VO-52 pass times for travel to a destination, or looked to
work HO-68 with its larger footprint when the pass times were close.
FO-29 and (when in mode B) AO-7 were good for late-afternoon and early-
evening passes.  HO-68 in FM was a nice satellite to have available
during the week, for the longer-distance QSOs compared to the other 3
FM satellites.  Despite trying for passes on AO-7 and HO-68 that covered
parts of Europe during the week, no QSOs were logged with that continent.

By satellite, here are numbers of satellite QSOs VA7EWK logged in FM:

AO-27:  97
AO-51: 112
HO-68:  73
SO-50:  47
(329 QSOs in FM - 84.1% of total)

and in other modes:

AO-7:   30 in SSB, 2 in CW
FO-29:  23, all SSB
VO-52:   7, all SSB
(62 QSOs in modes other than FM - 15.9% of total)

I had my normal satellite station with me, and I hoped to make use of
the SSB satellites whenever I could.  I worked many AO-7 and FO-29
passes, including some on AO-7 where I talked to myself and maybe
some polar bears in the Arctic.  :-)  Having access to those two
satellites in particular helped some who were not able to work VA7EWK
on the FM passes due to either the small common windows on those passes
or the congestion on the FM passes.  Or, another way of looking at the
SSB effort could be "if Adrian AA5UK could work SSB from Hawaii, then
I should be able to do the same from Canada".  ;-)  I worked WC7V and
W6ZKH in CW on an AO-7 pass from CO60 for my only QSOs in that mode
during this trip.

Grids... I was able to operate from the 4 grids on Vancouver Island
I intended to make the biggest effort - CN78, CN79, CO60, and CO70.
I ended up working some passes from CN88 in and around Victoria on 7
July before returning to Vancouver, which included some operating
from the western end of the Trans-Canada Highway (a place with a good
view of the sky, even with the steady stream of tourists around there).
On the Lower Mainland, I operated from CN89 during parts of 2 days, as
well as 3 other grids - CN99, CO80, and CO90.  The breakout by grid:

CN78:      56 (from Ucluelet on the Pacific side of Vancouver Island,
               5 July)
CN79:      21 (from Port Alberni on Vancouver Island, 6 and 7 July -
               not including QSOs made at CN79/CO70 boundary)
CN79/CO70: 85 (all made from Campbell River, 4 and 6 July)
CN88:      25 (3 locations in/near Victoria, plus 2 QSOs made from a
               ferry sailing toward Vancouver - all on 7 July)
CN89:      59 (24 @ Burnaby on 3 July, 19 @ Surrey on 8 July, 16 @
               Canada/USA border on 8 July)
CN99:      12 (3 passes on evening of 9 July)
CO60:      60 (Port Hardy, on 5 July)
CO80:      53 (3 locations in/around Whistler on 9 and 10 July, plus
               another location NE of Pemberton on 9 July)
CO90:      20 (one AO-51 pass on 9 July)

I was able to attempt operating SSB from all grids except for CN88,
CO80, and CO90.  CN89 was not a priority for me, although I ended up
working a few passes shortly after my arrival in Vancouver on 3 July
and some on 8 July as I drove down toward the Canada/USA border.  I
had not mentioned my plans to attempt QSOs on the international
border publicly, since I had no idea if the authorities on either
side would attempt to stop me from doing this.  I took the "try it,
and ask for forgiveness later" approach - which worked.  In fact, 2
US Customs officers walked by me and only said "hello" - no questions
about my radio gear or what I was doing at one of the border markers
in the park that runs between the Customs buildings on each side of
the border.  Same thing with operating atop Whistler Mountain, where I
worked 4 passes on 10 July - probably the best location in all of CO80
for satellite work - and the impromptu effort during a western AO-27
pass from the ferry sailing between Vancouver Island (Swartz Bay
terminal) and Metro Vancouver (Tsawwassen terminal).  If I had worked
an AO-51 or SO-50 pass instead of the AO-27 pass, I may have had better
luck.  There's not much of the 7-minute AO-27 repeater time available
to satellite operators that far north on the best passes.

When it comes to shipborne operating, I am a novice at that.  This was
my first, and only, time trying that form of satellite operating.  I
have a new appreciation of the efforts guys like Allen N5AFV and Andy
W5ACM (among others) make when trying to get on the satellites from a
ship.  I may have been able to use my log periodic for that AO-27 pass,
but did not want to attract undue attention with that antenna as opposed
to the telescoping whip on my HT.

When I post photos to my web page shortly, some of those photos will
include the carry-on bag which contained my station excluding my Elk
log periodic, some telescoping whips for my HT, and other accessories
that were packed in a checked bag to avoid issues with airport security
checks in Phoenix and Vancouver.  I packed my two FT-817NDs, IC-2820H
dual-band FM mobile radio, IC-T7H HT, Heil Traveler headset/mic I use
with the FT-817NDs, along with cables, diplexer, GPS receiver, spare AA
batteries, and my digital recorder into that bag.  I also have some
photos of the small duffel bag that I used to carry my HT, log
periodic, and other accessories up to Whistler Mountain - and too bad
I didn't make more time to work from up there, in SSB and FM.  An
observation deck on the building atop Whistler Mountain was a great
operating location.  Maybe on another trip, or maybe someone who lives
up there will try that in the future (I still don't have CO80 in my
log).

After this trip, coupled with my Dayton trip in May when I also took
my all-mode satellite station, I think I will do this on future trips
even if I am flying. I am already looking at future destinations for
trips where I can enjoy the sights and enjoy working the radio as I
did up in British Columbia - and not just Canadian destinations.  I
now know I can get on FM and SSB satellites from wherever I go, and
being away from home isn't a problem for that.

Thanks to everyone who made QSOs with VA7EWK during that week.  And
special thanks to John K8YSE for his web site complete with MP3 audio
from selected FM satellite passes and posting some messages to the
-BB on my behalf while I was up there.  It was very interesting to
hear some of those passes from his perspective, along with my own
recordings, throughout the week.  Now, back to working on the QSL
cards...

73!





Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
http://www.wd9ewk.net/





------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2010 07:11:59 -0700
From: "LOREN RASMUSSEN" <lorenrasmussen@xxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb]  CN93 activation
To: <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Message-ID: <SNT131-ds106FE652CDEE1A41D0868CCCBF0@xxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="iso-8859-1"

Due to a trip to the ER during my vacation,
I was only able to complete 17 qso's from CN93.
Within the next couple of weeks I will again
activate CN93.  I will advise the date and times.
73
Loren
k7cwq

------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2010 11:58:35 -0600
From: Ollie Eisman <ollie@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb]  TubeSat Satellite Kit (via Make blog)
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Message-ID: <7B897554-BD12-49AA-B8DB-EEA624B0241E@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset=us-ascii

Just saw this post about an $8000 satellite opportunity on the Make blog:

http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2010/07/8000_diy_satellite_kit.html

Ollie AJ1O





------------------------------

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