[ans] ANS-344 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: JoAnne K9JKM <k9jkm@comcast.net>
Date: 2017-12-10 8:20 GMT+08:00
Subject: [ans] ANS-344 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
To: ans@amsat.org

AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-344

The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.

The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.

Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.

You can sign up for free e-mail delivery of the AMSAT News Service
Bulletins via the ANS List; to join this list see:
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans

In this edition:

* November/December 2017 Apogee View Column Posted on the AMSAT Web
* New Video: AO-91 Integration and Testing Before Launch
* Special Membership Offer Continues for RadFxSat/AO-91 Launch
* Donate to AMSAT Tax-Free From Your IRA
* AMSAT Keplerian Elements Updated with AO-91 NORAD Tracking Number
* New Distance Record via AO-91 5,955 km
* Satellite Activity From Azores Islands on Christmas
* December 20 Launch for HA-1 CubeSat with FM transponder and SSTV
* Information for Requesting UT1FG/MM QSL Cards
* English Edition of AMSAT-EA Newsletter
* New Cuban Movie Features Ham Radio Contact With MIR
* 2017 Open Source Cubesat Workshop Talks Posted On-line
* Spaceflight Prepares to Launch Eleven Spacecraft on India’s PSLV-C40
* Satellite Shorts From All Over

SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-344.01
ANS-344 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

AMSAT News Service Bulletin 344.01
From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
DATE December 10, 2017
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-344.01

November/December 2017 Apogee View Column Posted on the AMSAT Web

The November/December 2017 edition of Apogee View, a comprehensive
bimonthly update of AMSAT’s activities written by AMSAT President Joe
Spier, K6WAO, has been posted on the AMSAT website.

https://www.amsat.org/apogeeview/

[ANS thanks Paul Stoetzer, N8HM for the above information]

———————————————————————

New Video: AO-91 Integration and Testing Before Launch

AMSAT VP of Engineering, Jerry Buxton, NØJY has released a video
report on YouTube, “The Good and the Bad with AO-91”. During the
12 minute video Jerry describes what’s right and what went a little
wrong with AO-91: She hears very well, but she had a heck of a time
learning to talk. Watch on-line at: https://youtu.be/no4pHx02lSI

[ANS thanks AMSAT VP of Engineering, Jerry Buxton, NØJY for the above information]

———————————————————————

Special Membership Offer Continues for RadFxSat/AO-91 Launch

AO-91 is open to all and works great! Now is a good time to join
AMSAT and receive a free digital copy of “Getting Started with
Amateur Satellites”!

Visit https://www.amsat.org/product-category/amsat-membership/
and help AMSAT Keep Amateur Radio in Space.

AMSAT is making our “Getting Started With Amateur Satellites”
book available for a limited time as a download with any paid new
or renewal membership purchased via the AMSAT Store. This offer is
only available with purchases completed online, and for only a limited
time. A perennial favorite, Getting Started is updated every year
with the latest amateur satellite information, and is the premier
primer of satellite operation. The 182 page book is presented in PDF
format, in full color, and covers all aspects of making your first
contacts on a ham radio satellite.

Please take advantage of this offer today by visiting the AMSAT store
at https://www.amsat.org/shop/ and selecting any membership option.
While there, check out our other items, including the M2 LEOpack
antenna system, Arrow antennas, AMSAT shirts, and other swag.

Thank you, and see you soon on AO-91!

[ANS thanks Paul N8HM for the above information]

———————————————————————

Donate to AMSAT Tax-Free From Your IRA

Are you over 70-1/2 years of age and need to meet your IRA’s Required
Minimum Distribution for 2017? Consider making a donation to AMSAT!

Under the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015, individuals
over 70-1/2 years of age may make direct transfers of up to $100,000
per year from a traditional IRA to an eligible charity without
increasing their taxable income. Consult your tax advisor or
accountant to make certain you are eligible.

AMSAT is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit educational and scientific
organization whose purpose is to design, construct, launch, and operate
satellites in space and to provide the support needed to encourage
amateurs to utilize these resources. AMSAT’s federal tax ID is
52-0888529.

[ANS thanks the AMSAT Board of Directors for the above information]

———————————————————————

AMSAT Keplerian Elements Updated with AO-91 NORAD Tracking Number

AMSAT Orbital Elements Manager, Ray Hoad, WA5QGD advises that the
AO-91 (FOX-1B) object number has now been updated as NORAD CAT ID
43017 based on the results of detailed orbit analysis by Nico Janssen,
PA0DLO. This is expected to be the last change of object number. Ray
thanks to all who have labored to finally come to this conclusion.
to this point.

The AMSAT Keplerian elements have added AO-91 and EcAMSat (NORAD
CAT ID 43019) to the AMSAT-NA TLE distribution.

The following satellites have de-orbited and have been removed from the
AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution:

NORAD CAT ID 40949 – GomX-3
NORAD CAT ID 41477 – NODES 1
NORAD CAT ID 41478 – NODES 2
NORAD CAT ID 41931 – TANCREDO
NORAD CAT ID 42770 – INFLATESAIL

Visit http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/keps to subscribe to
weekly e-mail delivery of the AMSAT-NA TLE distribution

[ANS thanks Ray Hoad, WA5QGD, AMSAT Orbital Elements Manager for the above information]

———————————————————————

New Distance Record via AO-91 5,955 km

Satellite operators are continuing to push AO-91’s footprint to
the limit. Joel Diaz, EB1AO, and Mike Diehl, W8LID, completed a
5,955 km QSO via the satellite this morning. The maximum elevation
of the pass was just 0.9° for Mike and the QSO was made at 0.5°
on his end. Who will be the first to complete a 6,000 km QSO? The
theoretical maximum range is 6,072 km. Visit the AMSAT Distance
Record page for a complete list of all satellite records:
https://www.amsat.org/satellite-distance-records/

[ANS thanks Paul Stoetzer, N8HM for the above information]

———————————————————————

Satellite Activity From Azores Islands on Christmas

Pedro, CU2ZG says he will be active on satellites from grid square
HM58 on Christmas.

His equipment will include an Alaskan Arrow antenna, Yaesu FT-817ND,
Yaesu FT-857D, Kenwood  TS-2000 and a Wouxun KG-UV9DPlus. Most of
the operation will be done  using the TS-2000.

Expected operating days are December 23 and 24, plus December 25
during the afternoon/evening hours. Pedro says this will be a family
holiday and skeds will be accepted depending on his availability.
His exact location will be HM58qm, at the CU7BC QTH (check QRZ.com)
Watch his twitter account (@pdsousa) for updates.

[ANS thanks Pedro, CU2ZG for the above information]

———————————————————————

December 20 Launch for HA-1 CubeSat with FM transponder and SSTV

The IARU has announced frequency coordination has been completed for
HA-1, a 2U CubeSat developed by the Teenagers Amateur Radio Center of
Activity in Huaian, China. HA-1 is planned for launch on December 20.

HA-1 will be mainly used for teenagers in Huaian to carry out activities
related with amateur radio and aerospace science education. The cubesat
is equipped with amateur radio repeater and SSTV(Slow Scan Television)
component, which is to validate still image transmission in narrowband
voice channel.

There is an SSTV beacon, which puts Date/Time/Location information/temp-
erature etc on a SSTV picture. Amateurs worldwide can also use HA-1 to
test SSTV via the cubesat.

Uplink:    145.930 MHz FM
Downlink:  436.950 MHz FM
Telemetry: 437.350 MHz 9k6 BPSK

[ANS thanks the IARU for the above information]

———————————————————————

Information for Requesting UT1FG/MM QSL Cards

John, K8YSE, posted a message on the amsat-bb on behalf of Yuri,
UT1FG/MM currently at sea aboard the MV Seahorse, “Yuri has asked
that anyone who has not received confirmations from this year and
previous year’s operations to prepare logsheets so that he can mail
them out when he arrives in New Orleans.”

John has posted an Excel Spreadsheet for you to enter your log data
plus an example of a completed log sheet at:
http://www.papays.com/sat/ut1fgqsl.html

John’s web page includes instructions to prepare your logsheet of QSO’s
that Yuri can print, verify, sign and mail from one of his destination
ports. E-mail your logsheet to John at the address he lists in his
instructions. John will send an acknowledgement email when he receives
your request. This way you will know that Yuri will have your logsheet.

Marinetraffic.com anticipates a December 15-16 arrival in New Orleans.
John requests you send your logsheet QSL request as soon as possible
so Yuri will have time to get them ready for mailing.

Yuri’s current ship, Seahorse, is a relatively new ship and is wider
than previous vessels he has captained so it cannot go through the
locks in the Great Lakes. On this voyage he will be more restricted
as to possible destinations than he was last season.

John concluded, “Yuri has been very busy with his duties and has
had little time for anything else. He sends his regards to all.”

[ANS thanks John Papay, K8YSE for the above information]

———————————————————————

English Edition of AMSAT-EA Newsletter

Spain’s amateur satellite group AMSAT-EA have released an English
language edition of their December newsletter

It covers the recently launched RADFXSAT (FOX-1B) FM transponder
CubeSat and the HA-1 FM / SSTV CubeSat due to launch in December.
There is an article on the satellite tracking software Orbitron
and Robert KE4AL describes his experiences operating satellites
during a DXpedition to St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Island.

The translation was made by Fernando EC1AME.

Download the newsletter from
http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344-AMSATEA-News

AMSAT-EA
https://www.amsat-ea.org/
https://twitter.com/AmsatSpain

[ANS thanks Southgate and AMSAT-EA for the above information]

———————————————————————

New Cuban Movie Features Ham Radio Contact With MIR

The Havana, Cuba Film Festival begins on December 7. One of the movies
features a cuban amateur radio operator talking to the MIR space
station.

Posted on tiff.net: “As the Soviet Union crumbles in 1991, an amateur
radio operator in Cuba makes unexpected contact with stranded cosmo-
naut Sergei Krikalev as he observes the dissolution of his nation
from orbit, in Cuban director Ernesto Daranas Serrano’s comedic yet
poignant reflection on how big events can impact ordinary lives.”

Check the videos and pictures here (google translation available
on the site) http://ea1uro.com/radio/peliculacubana/

[ANS thanks the Southgate Amateur Radio News site for the above information]

———————————————————————

2017 Open Source Cubesat Workshop Talks Posted On-line

The Open Source Cubesat Workshop which was held on November 23-24 at
the European Space Operations Center (ESOC/ESA), Darmstadt, Germany
co-organized by Libre Space Foundation, the Librecube initiative and
ESA/ESOC Cybernetics Team (https://oscw.space) have posted a YouTube
playlist of the presentations and talks at:
http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344OpenSourceCubesat

[ANS thanks the Libre Space Foundation for the above information]

———————————————————————

Spaceflight Prepares to Launch Eleven Spacecraft on India’s PSLV-C40

by SpaceDaily.com Staff Writers
Seattle WA (SPX) Dec 05, 2017

http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Spaceflight_Prepares_to_Launch_
Eleven_Spacecraft_on_Indias_PSLV_C40_999.html

http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344-SpaceflightPSLVLaunch

Spaceflight, a satellite rideshare and mission management provider,
has announced it will be launching 11 spacecraft in early January
from India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). Spacecraft
include Finland’s ICEYE-X1 SAR microsatellite, Planetary Resources’
Arkyd-6 6U asteroid prospecting demonstration cubesat, four Spire
Global Lemur-2 cubesats, Astro Digital’s Landmapper-BC3, AMSAT’s
Fox-1D cubesat, and others.

Spaceflight performed the cubesat integration at its Seattle Inte-
gration Facility and is in the process of shipping the spacecraft to
India for the PSLV-C40 mission. The PSLV rocket is scheduled to lift
off from India’s Satish Dhawan Space Center in early January 2018
with the Cartosat-2ER navigation satellite, in addition to Space-
flight’s rideshare customers.

“PSLV-C40 is a perfect example of how our flexible, full-service
rideshare model is enabling new commercial space businesses to
exist while expanding into new markets,” said Curt Blake, president
of Spaceflight. “This mission brings new customers from outside
the industry into space while continuing partnerships with existing
customers for their ongoing satellite constellations.”

One first-time customer on the mission is Finland’s ICEYE with
the country’s first commercial satellite, ICEYE-X1. ICEYE developed
its own synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) sensor technologies suitable
for satellites under 100kg in weight, making it one of the bigger
payloads on the PSLV-C40 mission.

This is ICEYE’s first proof-of-concept microsatellite mission with
a SAR sensor as its payload and also the world’s first SAR satel-
lite in this size, enabling radar imaging of the Earth through
clouds and even in total darkness. Potential use-cases for the data
are monitoring sea ice movements or marine oil spills, and preven-
tion of illegal fishing.

“Working together with Spaceflight to schedule and make this launch
a reality has been an outstanding experience for ICEYE, and it has
given us the necessary opportunities for scaling up operations for
our constellation of micro-SAR satellites as planned,” said Rafal
Modrzewski, CEO and co-founder at ICEYE.

Spaceflight offers customers the most options for getting to space,
working with nearly every global launch vehicle provider, including
the Falcon 9, PSLV, Antares, Cygnus, Electron, Soyuz and others.

Much like buying an airline ticket that is valid on multiple airlines,
Spaceflight can ensure organizations have flexibility to move vehicles
if changes or delays occur. Additionally, the smallsat rideshare
service model helps organizations reach a desired orbit at a much
lower cost than buying their own launch vehicle.

Spaceflight has negotiated the launch of more than 120 satellites
on behalf of its customers and has contracts to deploy nearly 200
more through 2018. The company plans to coordinate and deploy its
largest launch to date in 2018 with its first dedicated rideshare
mission aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9.

[ANS thanks SpaceDaily.com for the above information]

———————————————————————

Satellite Shorts From All Over

+ Did you know you can help AMSAT by logging into your Amazon
account using http://smile.amazon.com/ch/52-0888529 to designate
AMSAT-NA as the organization of your choice. When shopping on-line
you must use the URL http://smile.amazon.com  for AMSAT to receive
the donation from your purchases.

+ 2017: FUNcube Status and New Developments – Wouter Weggelaar,
PA3WEG walks us through the whole FUNcube family of spacecraft
at the AMSAT-UK International Space Colloquium in Milton Keynes,
October 15th 2017. Watch on-line at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELFoLtm44Kc&feature=share

+ While waiting for the next satellite pass have a listen at
http://www.livemeteors.com/ to hear meteor pings as they
happen. The pings are a bit more frequent during the popular
meteor showers.

+ Hackaday posted an article showing how to build your own azimuth-
elevation rotor: http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344-HackadayRotor
(via Bernhard, VA6BMJ)

+ Wyatt, AC0RA plans to be active from the Carnival Sunshine cruise
between December 9-16. He will use the callsign C6AWD/MM. He will
operate in semiduplex mode with his FT817 and Arrow antenna. More
info at the callsign listing for C6AWD on qrz.com

+ The 3Y0Z DXpedition Team on Bouvet Island is asking the amateur
radio community to help with flying costs. See the details on
the web: http://www.bouvetdx.org/news-and-updates/

+ European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli, IZØJPA, is compiling
TimeLapseADay videos and is sharing them on-line. These can be
found on his playlist posted on YouTube:
http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344TimeLapseADay

+ The December 2017 issue of SatMagazine has been posted at:
http://www.satmagazine.com/  Vytenis Buzas LY1ZY features in
this issue, see pages 76-77.

+ Read about new analysis of the famous Hubble Deep Field images and
watch a video scan across the Deep Field. Each of those blobs and
dots is a galaxy. See: http://tinyurl.com/ANS-344-UniverseToday

———————————————————————

/EX

In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President’s Club. Members of the President’s Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.

Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information. And, with that consider that bowling is more advantageous
than golf since you rarely lose a bowling ball.

73,
This week’s ANS Editor,
JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM
k9jkm at amsat dot org

_______________________________________________
Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans

++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The Good and The Bad With AO-91


==//==

2017: FUNcube Status and New Developments – Wouter Weggelaar, PA3WEG

[ans] ANS-337 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Lee McLamb <kt4tz@cfl.rr.com>
Date: 2017-12-03 11:43 GMT+08:00
Subject: [ans] ANS-337 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
To: ans@amsat.org

AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-337

The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.

The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.

Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.

In this edition:

* ISS Global Testing SSTV December 5-6 Prior to MAI-75 Over Moscow
* Soyuz Launch Anomaly Results in Loss of D-Star ONE Cubesat
* AMSAT-SM Supports ARISS With New Donationn
* IARU Frequency Coordination for China’s Juvenile 3U Cubesats
* Satellite Shorts From All Over

SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-337.01
ANS-337 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

AMSAT News Service Bulletin 337.01
From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
DATE December 3, 2017
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-337.01

ISS Global Testing SSTV December 5-6 Prior to MAI-75 Over Moscow

http://ariss-sstv.blogspot.com/ published an update to the
December MAI-75 SSTV testing schedule:

**UPDATE – Nov 28**
Seems the system will be put through some extended testing from
December 5 starting around 15:00 UTC and running until 09:00 UTC
on December 6. Test images will be used during this period. This
will provide near global coverage if all works well.

The MAI-75 schedule over Moscow remains unchanged at this point.
The times correlate to a small number of passes each day in range
of Moscow.

Dec 6, 2017
Setup and power on –  13:40-14:20 UTC
Power off – 17:05-17:15 UTC

Dec 7, 2017
Power on –  13:45-13:55 UTC
Power off – 17:30-17:40 UTC

Dec 8, 2017
Power on –  14:05-14:15 UTC

Power off and stow – 17:00-17:10 UTC

[ANS thanks ARISS for the above information]

———————————————————————

Soyuz Launch Anomaly Results in Loss of D-Star ONE Cubesat

A new Russian weather observatory and the first prototype for Telesat’s planned
network of 100-plus broadband communications satellites in low Earth orbit were
among 19 spacecraft lost after a Fregat rocket stage ran into trouble soon after
liftoff aboard a Soyuz booster Tuesday.

The Fregat rocket pack was supposed to place the 19 satellites into four
different orbits Tuesday in a four-hour flight sequence following launch on a
Soyuz rocket from the Vostochny Cosmodrome, a new spaceport in the Amur region
of Russia’s Far East.

A report published by Russia’s Interfax news agency Tuesday quoted a Russian
space industry source who attributed the apparent failure to human error. The
source said a mistake uploaded to the Fregat’s flight computer caused the upper
stage to be in the wrong orientation for the main engine’s first burn, which was
scheduled to last 77 seconds to reach a temporary parking orbit a few hundred
miles above Earth.

Billed as the first German commercial CubeSat, the D-Star One spacecraft had
four communications modules on-board, two of which were to be used by the
amateur radio community. Developed by German Orbital Systems in Berlin in
cooperation with the Czech company iSky Technology, officials hope to build
follow-on satellites to construct a low Earth orbit communications network.

[ANS thanks SpaceFlightNow for the above information

———————————————————————

AMSAT-SM Supports ARISS With New Donation

AMSAT-SM is proud to announce a donation to ARISS (via AMSAT-NA) of
$285. We hope that this small donation will help ARISS further work
with amateur radio from ISS.

AMSAT-SM is the Swedish section of AMSAT with approximately 220 members. One of
their objectives is to inform Swedish hams about the fun with amateur
satellites! Not many SM hams are active via satellite at the moment. With the
help from our Swedish webpage and HF-net we hope that more Swedish hams should
be using amateur satellites. The AMSAT-SM annual meeting is held every spring.
Some weeks on Sundays we have a HF-net on 80 meters with lots of news about
satellites and space.

[ANS thanks AMSAT-SM for the above information]

———————————————————————

IARU Frequency Coordination for China’s Juvenile 3U Cubesats

The IARU Amateur Satellite Frequency Coordination Status pages,
hosted by AMSAT-UK as a service to the world wide Amateur Satel-
lite Community, report on an updated coordination for the Juvenile
project from China.

Juvenile is a 3U CubeSat project led by China Soong Ching Ling
Youth Science and Culture Center for school education and amateur
radio.

The amateur radio station onboard will provide telecommand, tele-
metry and FM repeater functions:

1. A VHF uplink and UHF downlink data control board with loop
back function, which can act as an FM repeater.

2. A VHF uplink and UHF downlink 9k6 BPSK data control back up
board, with a trigger to take a photo from a camera, and
transmit SSTV image through NBFM modulation.

3. A 2.4 GHz band with 2 MHZ bandwidth multiple frequency up
and down link communication experiment.

Planning a launch from Jiuquan Space Center into a 500km Sun
Synchronous Orbit.

The IARU reports a November 30 revised coordination has been
provided.

Frequency coordination for Juvenile 1B, 1D and 1F
Uplink     435.290 MHz FM
Downlink   145.840 MHz FM
Telemetry  145.930 MHz 9K6 BPSK

Frequency coordination for Juvenile 1A, 1C, 1E and 1G
Uplink     145.965 MHz FM
Downlink   436.250 MHz FM
Telemetry  437.475 MHz 9K6 BPSK

Source: http://www.amsat.org.uk/iaru/
(frequencies which have been coordinated)

[ANS thanks the IARU for the above information]

———————————————————————

Satellite Shorts From All Over

+ GALAPAGOS ISLANDS, HC8.  A group of operators are QRV as HC8LUT from
San Cristobal Island, IOTA SA-004, until December 8.  Activity is on
160 to 10 meters using all modes and satellites.  QSL via IK2DUW.
(via ARLD048 DX News)

+ Year-Long NASA On The Air Event Kicks off on December 11
The Amateur Radio clubs at National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) centers around the US have invited the Amateur Radio community to join
the NASA On The Air (NOTA) special event. NOTA gets under way in December 2017
and continues through December 2018.
https://nasaontheair.wordpress.com/

+ Astronaut Joe Acaba made an historic contact with the Maria Montessori
Institute Educational Unit in San Cristobal, Venezuela: the first-ever
educational ham radio contact in that country’s history. Video posted at:
https://twitter.com/ISS_Research/status/935901182811238400
(via ARISS)

+ Hackaday article shows how AMSAT teamed up with students from Rochester
Institute of Technology to create a Maximum Power Point Tracker, attached
to a Fox-1B CubeSat.
https://hackaday.com/2017/11/27/amsat-mppt-goes-to-infinity-and-beyond/

/EX

In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President’s Club. Members of the President’s Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.

Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.

73,
This week’s ANS Editor,
Lee McLamb, KT4TZ
kt4tz at amsat dot org

_______________________________________________
Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans

[ans] ANS-330 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: E.Mike McCardel <mccardelm@gmail.com>
Date: 2017-11-26 9:14 GMT+08:00
Subject: [ans] ANS-330 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins
To: ans@amsat.org

AMSAT NEWS SERVICE
ANS-330

The AMSAT News Service bulletins are a free, weekly news and infor-
mation service of AMSAT North America, The Radio Amateur Satellite
Corporation. ANS publishes news related to Amateur Radio in Space
including reports on the activities of a worldwide group of Amateur
Radio operators who share an active interest in designing, building,
launching and communicating through analog and digital Amateur Radio
satellites.

The news feed on http://www.amsat.org publishes news of Amateur
Radio in Space as soon as our volunteers can post it.

Please send any amateur satellite news or reports to:
ans-editor at amsat.org.

In this edition:

* AO-91 Commissioned – Declared Open for Amateur Use!
* Fox-1B/AO-91 Facts
* Special AMSAT Membership Offer Celebrating RadFxSat/AO-91
Launch/Commissioning
* FUNcube-1 Celebrates 4th Anniversary
* Video of Launches of the Currently Orbiting FUNcube Satellites
* EcAMSat Deployed From ISS – 1200 baud Telemetry & QSL Card for
Reports
* MAI-75 SSTV Over Moscow from ISS Planned for December 6-8
* UT1FG/MM Now Active
* Support AMSAT on Cyber Monday
* Changes to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for 11-21-2017, Object Comment
* ARISS News
* Satellite Shorts From All Over

SB SAT @ AMSAT $ANS-330.01
ANS-330 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins

AMSAT News Service Bulletin 330.01
From AMSAT HQ KENSINGTON, MD.
November 26, 2017
To All RADIO AMATEURS
BID: $ANS-330.01

AO-91 Commissioned – Declared Open for Amateur Use!

At 06:50 UTC November 23, 2017 @AMSAT Engineering officially
commissioned AO-91 (RadFxSat/Fox-1B) Satellite. AMSAT VP of
Engineering, Jery Buxton N0JY turned over operation to Mark Hammond
N8MH and AMSAT Operations in a QSO on the AO-91 repeater during the
pass over the Eastern U.S.

N8MH responded and declared AO-91 open for amateur use!

[ANS thanks AO-91 Ops Team for the above information]

———————————————————————

Fox-1B/AO-91 Facts

Name(s): AO-91 Fox-1B (RadFxSat)
NASA catalog number: TBD
Launch: Not Earlier Than 21 Sept 2017
NASA ElaNa XIV Mission
JPSS-1 Delta II, Vandenberg AFB, CA
Orbit: LEO (Low Earth Orbit)
Inclination: 97.6908 (Assuming it is Object 43016)
Eccentricity: 0259769 (Assuming it is Object 43016)
Period: Approx. 95 minutes
Estimated orbital lifetime: 5+ years
Size: 10 x 10 x 10 cm (4 inch cube)
Weight: 1.3 kg (~3 pounds)
Transmit power: 400 mW (Minimum)
Downlink: 145.960 MHz FM voice
AFSK digital data up to 9600 bps
Uplink: 435.250 MHz FM voice (67.0 Hz CTCSS tone)

From a communications standpoint Fox-1B has two major changes from
AO-85. First, it will fly with a more sophisticated power control
system which utilizes a Maximum Power Point Tracker to insure optimum
charging of the batteries under all illuminations. This will be
largely transparent to the typical user but will significantly
increase the available battery life. Second, the detection of the
67.0 Hz tone has been enhanced, which will also help accommodate
ground stations whose CTCSS tones may be slightly off frequency. The
combination will make accessing the satellite easier and also
decrease the likelihood of dropouts.

Doppler Shift Correction for Fox-1B

Correcting for Doppler shift will involve the same techniques as for
AO-85, with slightly
different frequencies to prevent mutual spacecraft interference:
Receive Frequency Transmit Frequency
(67.0 Hz Tone)
Satellite Position
145.960 MHz 435.240 MHz (Mem #1) AOS
145.960 MHz 435.245 MHz (Mem #2) Approaching
145.960 MHz 435.250 MHz (Mem #3) Passing
145.960 MHz 435.255 MHz (Mem #4) Departing
145.960 MHz 435.260 MHz (Mem #5) LOS

Note that the AFC on the receiver may be working hinting that making
the above adjustments may not be necessary. AMSAT VP of Engineering
Jerry Buxton N0JY states “… in ground testing with Fox-1A.  We
could be +/- 10 kHz and not even know it (that’s how it was tested,
one guy programmed the wrong frequency in his HT).”  He adds the
caveat,
“One station on the uplink is not the same situation as real life
though.”

Fox-1B Telemetry

Subaudible Telemetry
Except for a different downlink frequency, the low speed subaudible
telemetry will be the same as for AO-85. It will be supported by the
same FoxTelem software released for AO-85.

High Speed AFSK telemetry
There are no experiments on Fox-1B which will require the use of
high speed telemetry.

[ANS thanks “Getting Started With Amateur Satellites 2107” By G.
Gould Smith WA4SXM and Friends and other sources for the above
information.]

———————————————————————

Special AMSAT Membership Offer Celebrating RadFxSat/AO-91
Launch/Commissioning

As part of the preparations for the launch of RadFxSat on November
10th and the successful commissioning of AO-91 (RadFx/Fox-1B)opening
it for Amateur use on November 23, AMSAT is making our “Getting
Started With Amateur Satellites” book available for a limited time
as a download with any paid new or renewal membership purchased via
the AMSAT Store. This offer is only available with purchases
completed online, and for only a limited time. A perennial favorite,
Getting Started is updated every year with the latest amateur
satellite information, and is the premier primer of satellite
operation. The 182 page book is presented in PDF format, in full
color, and covers all aspects of making your first contacts on a ham
radio satellite.

Please take advantage of this offer today by visiting the AMSAT store
at https://www.amsat.org/shop/ and selecting any membership option.
While there, check out our other items, including the M2 LEOpack
antenna system, Arrow antennas, AMSAT shirts, and other swag.

Thank you, and hear you soon on RadFxSat!

———————————————————————

FUNcube-1 Celebrates 4th Anniversary

November 21st 2017, marked the fourth aniversary for FUNcube-1 in
orbit.

FUNcube-1 was launched at 07:10 UTC on November 21st 2013 and its
first signals were received immediately after deployment over the
Indian Ocean by amateurs in South Africa. Since then it has been
operating continuously in either its education mode or, with the
transponder active, in amateur mode when in eclipse and at weekends.

The spacecraft has spent the four years in space orbiting the earth
at between 640 and 580 km and has now travelled around the earth more
than 20,000 times. That represents a distance travelled of
approaching 500 million miles.

Up to now, each of the orbits has been spilt approximately 65% in
sunlight and 35% in eclipse. This has resulted in the temperatures
inside the small spacecraft varying by about 25o C during each orbit.

During the recent AMSAT Colloquium, Wouter, PA3WEG, during his
presentation about the FUNcube project mentioned that the power
available from the solar panels has been slowly increasing since
launch. This observation led the team to do some further
investigations as to the cause.

Although the launch was into a nominally Sun Synchronous orbit, over
time this has drifted and the spacecraft is now entering a period
when it will be in the sun for longer periods during each orbit.

The exact details are still being determined, but it seems likely
that, starting from January 2018, there will be periods when the
spacecraft will be in the sun for all, or almost all, of its orbits.
Of course, this means that the on-board temperatures will be much
higher than we have previously experienced in flight, although we
have some test records from pre-flight thermal air testing that were
undertaken after integration.

The key will be to discover what the equilibrium temperature will be
internally. For comparison, AO85 has already “enjoyed” periods of
full sun and its internal temperatures have reached up to around 55o
C.

So the next few months will be quite an exciting time for the team!
We remain extremely grateful to everyone is using the spacecraft for
both its educational and amateur missions. Of course we are also very
very grateful to those who are downloading the telemetry and
uploading the data to the Data Warehouse. It continues to provide a
unique record of “life on board” a 1U CubeSat in space.

FUNcube-1 / AO-73 details

TLM down link freq 145.935 MHz BPSK

Transponder:
Nominal Uplink 435.150 – 435.130 MHz LSB (Inverting) The passband
may be up to 15kHz higher depending on on-board temps. Low
temperature gives higher freqs!
Downlink 145.950 – 145.970 MHz USB

Please use a maximium uplink power of 5 watts to a 7 dBi gain
antenna. More power is not needed to use the transponder!

Currently operating full power TLM beacon (300 mW) when in sunlight,
and Transponder, plus low power (30mW) TLM beacon when in eclipse.
Normally switches to Transponder over weekends and holidays

[ANS thanks Funcube.org for the above information]

———————————————————————

Video of Launches of the Currently Orbiting FUNcube Satellites

Wouter Weggelar, PA3WEG, released a composite video showing all
currently orbiting FUNcube family satellites being launched:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLevT3C5v6c&feature=youtu.be

[ANS thanks Wouter PA3WEG and AMSAT-UK for the above information]

———————————————————————

EcAMSat Deployed From ISS – 1200 baud Telemetry & QSL Card for Reports

The E. coli AntiMicrobial Satellite (EcAMSat) mission will investigate
space microgravity effects on the antibiotic resistance of E. coli, a
bacterial pathogen responsible for urinary tract infection in humans
and animals. EcAMSat is being developed through a partnership between
NASA’s Ames Research Center and the Stanford University School of
Medicine. Dr. A.C. Matin is the Stanford University Principal
Investigator.

EcAMSAT was deployed from the ISS on November 20, 2017.

EcAMSat will investigate spaceflight effects on bacterial antibiotic
resistance and its genetic basis. Bacterial antibiotic resistance may
pose a danger to astronauts in microgravity, where the immune response
is weakened. Scientists believe that the results of this experiment
could help design effective countermeasures to protect astronauts’
health during long-duration human space missions.

Operating at 437.100 MHz FM, the EcAMSat beacon sends an AX.25 packet
every 5 seconds, similar to the format of the GeneSat-1, PharmaSat,
O/OREOS, and SporeSat beacons; the packet contains data about the
spacecraft systems operation.

A tracking screen, mission information, and mission status are dis-
played on the EcAMSat Mission Dashboard: http://ecamsat.engr.scu.edu/
Links to beacon decoding and packet uploading instructions are also
included on the Dashboard.

An example of the EcAMSat QSL card is displayed at:
https://yc3bvg.blogspot.com/2017/11/ecamsat-qsl-cards.html

[ANS thanks the EcAMSat Team and NASA for the above information]

———————————————————————

MAI-75 SSTV Over Moscow from ISS Planned for December 6-8

The MAI-75 folks have scheduled some SSTV activity during specific
periods
each day from Dec 6-8. The times correlate to a small number of
passes each
day in range of Moscow.

Dec 6, 2017
Setup and power on –  13:40-14:20 UTC
Power off – 17:05-17:15 UTC

Dec 7, 2017
Power on –  13:45-13:55 UTC
Power off – 17:30-17:40 UTC

Dec 8, 2017
Power on –  14:05-14:15 UTC
Power off and stow – 17:00-17:10 UTC

See: https://ariss-sstv.blogspot.com/

[ANS thanks ARISS for the above information]

———————————————————————

UT1FG/MM Now Active

Yuri, UT1FG/MM, is back to sea on the Vessel Seahorse. It is
currently sailing from Algiers to Morocco where it will load cargo.
The plan is to sail to a USA port in the Gulf to be determined.

There are quite a few ships named Seahorse.  The MMSI number is
538007572.

Yuri is using the Elk antenna but only has RG58 coax feeding it.
Even so he reports working K3SZH on AO-7 today.  If he doesn’t find
coax in Morocco, perhaps we can get some coax to him when he arrives
in a USA port. So he is likely to do better on a Mode B satellite
rather than one with a UHF downlink.  He has keps for AO-91, AO-85
and CAS-4B.

Please wait for a while before sending your logsheets. He will
likely be able to mail qsl’s when he docks in the USA.

[ANS thanks John K8YSE for the above information]

———————————————————————

Support AMSAT on Cyber Monday

With Cyber Monday approaching, please keep AMSAT in mind while making
purchases on Amazon.com through AmazonSmile. AmazonSmile is a simple
way to support your favorite non-profit organizations, including
AMSAT. To get started, go to https://smile.amazon.com and designate
AMSAT as the recipient of a percentage of your purchases by selecting
“Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation.” After selecting AMSAT, and when
making purchases at Amazon, be sure to navigate to
https://smile.amazon.com.

[ANS thanks AMSAT Office for the above information]

———————————————————————

Changes to AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution for 11-21-2017, Object Comment

Due to Thanksgiving being on Thursday, the AMSAT-NA TLE Distribution
for this week will be today, November 21, 2017. Next week we will
continue with the normal TLE distribution on each Thursday of the
week. Note that, per comments below, AO-91 is most likely object 43016.

It appears that AO-91 is in the group of cubesats launched on 11-18-
17 that include objects 43016, 43017, and 43018. The object 43015
that we were using for AO-91 has separated enough to be confirmed as
Buccaneer RRM by 18th Space Control Squadron at Vandenburg AFB, CA.
One of 18 SPCS many missions is launch analysis.

Therefore, based analysis (by Nico Janssen, (PA0DLO) and discussion
by Alan Biddle (WA4SCA), Jerry Buxton (N0JY), Nico Janssen (PA0DLO),
Paul Stoetzer (N8HM) and myself AO-91 is most likely object 43016.
Note that these objects are still very close together and one more
change could be needed. The process of identification is one of
waiting for a group of objects to separate enough to isolate the one
you are interested in and positively identify it’s signal as matching
a certain TLE set. Simple, right!

For comparison, Buccaneer (object 43015, not AO-91) is now at least
26 seconds from objects 43016, 43017, and 43018.  Objects 43016,
43017, and 43018 are still about 2 seconds apart. (Analysis by
Nico,PA0DLO)

[ANS thanks Ray Hoad for the above information]

———————————————————————

[ANS thanks ******** for the above information]

———————————————————————

ARISS News

+ A Successful contact was made between I.C. Villasanta, Villasanta
Italy and College Pierre de Fermat, Toulouse, France
and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign NA1SS. The
contact began Wed 2017-11-22 08:43:37 UTC and lasted about
nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge via K6DUE.
ARISS Mentor was Gianpietro IZ2GOJ backed up by Joseph F6ICS.
Quantity of questions answered: 18
Quantity of people in attendance: approximatelt 200
Quantity of media present:  local newspapers

+ A Successful contact was made between I.C. “Pascoli Forgione”, San
Giovanni Rotondo, Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using
Callsign NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-15 11:36 UTC and lasted
about nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge via K6DUE.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.

+ A Successful contact was made between Carmelita Manara, Milano,
Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign NA1SS. The
contact began 2017-11-15 11:36 UTC and lasted about nine and a half
minutes. Contact was telebridge via  K6DUE.
ARISS Mentor was Gianpietro IZ2GOJ.
Quantity of questions answered:  23
Quantity of people in attendance:  270
Quantity of media present:  Newspaper and TV
Additional information:  Raoul Nespoli (Paolo’s brother) was a
guest
at Milano.

+ A Successful contact was made between TX-801st Air Force JROTC at
Burleson High, Burleson, Texas, USA and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli
IZØJPA using Callsign NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-13 14:50 UTC
and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge
via W6SRJ. ARISS Mentor was Keith W5IU.
Quantity of questions answered:  All 19
Quantity of people in attendance:  225
Quantity of media present:  local newspaper

+ A Successful contact was made between Liceo Scientifico “Valdemaro
Vecchi”, Trani, Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using
Callsign NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-11 11:16 UTC  and lasted
about nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge via VK4KHZ.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.
Quantity of questions answered:  14
Quantity of people in attendance:  about 200
Quantity of media present:  none reported

+ A Successful contact was made between I.I.S.S. “T.Fiore-C.Sylos”,
Terlizzi, Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign
NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-11 11:16 UTC  and lasted about
nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge via VK4KHZ.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.
Quantity of questions answered:  14
Quantity of people in attendance:  about 200
Quantity of media present:  none reported

+ A Successful contact was made between Liceo Statale “Ilaria Alpi”,
Rutigliano, Italy from the University of Bari and Astronaut Paolo
Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-11
11:16 UTC  and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was
telebridge via  VK4KHZ. ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF].
Quantity of questions answered:  14
Quantity of people in attendance:  about 200
Quantity of media present:  none reported

+ A Successful contact was made between South Florida Science Center
and Aquarium, West Palm Beach, FL, USA and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli
IZØJPA using Callsign NA1SS. The contact began 2017-11-06 16:17 UTC
and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was Direct via
WS4FSC. ARISS Mentors were Steve W1HQL and Ryan W4NTR.
Quantity of questions answered:  All 12.
Quantity of people in attendance:  100
Quantity of media present:  TV and newspaper

+ A Successful contact was made between Istituto di Istruzione
Superiore “Leonardo Da Vinci”, Lanusei, Italy and Astronaut Paolo
Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign OR4ISS. The contact began 2017-11-04
10:12 UTC  and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was
direct via ISØBWM and incorporated Ham TV.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.

+ A Successful contact was made between Liceo Artistico Melotti,
Lomazzo, Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA using Callsign
IR0ISS. The contact began 2017-11-03 09:27 UTC and lasted about
nine and a half minutes. Contact was telebridge via IQ5LI.
ARISS Mentor was [NAME, Gianpietro IZ2GOJ.
Quantity of questions answered:  15
Quantity of people in attendance:  300
Quantity of media present:  Local TV and newspapers

+ A Successful contact was made between Liceo Scientifico
‘Francesco Cecioni”, Livorno, Italy and Astronaut Paolo Nespoli
IZØJPA using Callsign IR0ISS. The contact began 2017-11-03 09:27
UTC and lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was direct
via IQ5LI and incorporated Ham TV.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.
Quantity of questions answered:  15
Quantity of people in attendance:  300
Quantity of media present:  Local TV and newspapers.

+ A Successful contact was made between Asociación Civil Instituto
Maria Montessori, San Cristóbel, Venezuela and Joe Acaba KE5DAR
using Callsign IR0ISS. The contact began 2017-10-31 18:23 UTC and
lasted about nine and a half minutes. Contact was direct via
YY2CMR. ARISS Mentor was Brian VE6JBJ.
Quantity of questions answered:  15
Quantity of people in attendance:  650
Quantity of media present: 44 press media representatives,
regional, national, and international
Additional information:  It was wonderful. The signal was 9+40dB.

+ A Successful contact was made between Primaria e Secondaria di
primo grado  Istituto comprensivo Via XVI settembre, Civitavecchia,
Italy and Astronaut Joe Acaba KE5DAR using Callsign NA1SS. The
contact began 2017-10-30 11:20 UTC and lasted about nine and a half
minutes. Contact was direct via IK0WGF and incorporated Ham TV.
ARISS Mentor was Francesco IKØWGF.
Quantity of questions answered:  16
Quantity of people in attendance:  About 200
Quantity of media present:  Video streaming was on BATC.TV
Additional information:  https://youtu.be/nhWL4xLroKU

Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule as of 2017-11-22 07:00 UTC

I.C. Villasanta, Villasanta Italy and College Pierre de Fermat,
Toulouse, France, telebridge via K6DUE
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be NA1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA
Contact is a go for: Wed 2017-11-22 08:43:37 UTC 45 deg K6DUE

Ashbury College, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, telebridge via VK4KHZ
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be  NA1SS
The scheduled astronaut is Joe Acaba KE5DAR
Contact is a go for: Mon  2017-11-27 18:39:58 UTC

Huntley Centennial Public School, Carp, ON, Canada, telebridge via
IK1SLD
The ISS callsign is presently  scheduled to be IRØISS
The scheduled astronaut is Paolo Nespoli
Contact  is a go for: Tue 2017-11-28 18:46:37 UTC

S.G.B. De La Salle,  Rome, Italy and Istituto Comprensivo Luigi
Nono, Mira, Italy, telebridge via  W6SRJ
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be IRØISS
The scheduled  astronaut is Paolo Nespoli IZØJPA
Contact is a go for: Thu 2017-11-30  08:04:20 UTC

Bishop Hendricken High School and its sister  school, St. Mary
Academy –
Bay View, Warwick, RI, telebridge via IK1SLD
The  ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be IRØISS
The scheduled astronaut is  Paolo Nespoli
Contact is a go for: Thu 2017-11-30 17:02:09 UTC

The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be IRØISS
The  scheduled astronaut is Paolo Nespoli
Contact is a go for: Thu 2017-11-30 17:02:09 UTC

[ANS thanks ARISS, Charlie AJ9N and David AA4KN for the above
information]

———————————————————————

Satellite Shorts From All Over

+ EagleSat-1 Requests Help Listening for Beacon

RadFxSat-1/Fox-1B AO-91’s P-POD mate on the ELaNa XIV, EagleSat-1:
their team is having trouble hearing their beacon on 437.645MHz. The
beacon transmission timing is 1 minute. Please send reception
reports to Deborah Jackson (jacksd40 at my.erau.edu) and Steven Buck
(bucks2 at my.erau.edu) … via
[ANS thanks Jerry N0JY for the above information]

+ RSGB Space Posters

Several of @theRSGB posters promoting Amateur Radio feature Space
Communications. PDF Posters are available for free download from
http://tinyurl.com/ANS330-RSGB-Posters

[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]

+ New URL for Farnham WebSDR

The SUWS LF/VHF/UHF/uW WebSDR based at Farnham near London has a
new URL:  http://farnham-sdr.com/  The antennas on 2m and 70cm are
optimized for Satellite and High Altitude Balloon reception.

[ANS thanks AMSAT-UK for the above information]

———————————————————————

/EX

In addition to regular membership, AMSAT offers membership in the
President’s Club. Members of the President’s Club, as sustaining
donors to AMSAT Project Funds, will be eligible to receive addi-
tional benefits. Application forms are available from the AMSAT
Office.

Primary and secondary school students are eligible for membership
at one-half the standard yearly rate. Post-secondary school students
enrolled in at least half time status shall be eligible for the stu-
dent rate for a maximum of 6 post-secondary years in this status.
Contact Martha at the AMSAT Office for additional student membership
information.

73,
This week’s ANS Editor,
EMike McCardel, AA8EM
aa8em at amsat dot org
_______________________________________________
Via the ANS mailing list courtesy of AMSAT-NA
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/ans

==//==//==//==

FUNcube family Launch Composite

+++

IK1SLD Ground Station HamTV – Oct. 30, 2017 – 11:20 UTC