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CX2SA  > SATDIG   04.10.17 07:38l 833 Lines 28749 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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From: CX2SA@CX2SA.SAL.URY.SOAM
To  : SATDIG@WW

Today's Topics:

   1. 9600 Capable Dual-Band Radio? (Scott)
   2. FalconSat 3 added to Sat Reporter (Andrew Rich)
   3. Re: Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's? (Roy Dean)
   4. Re: Falcon sat (Robert Bruninga)
   5. Re: Falcon sat (Robert Bruninga)
   6. Re: 9600 Capable Dual-Band Radio? (Mike Thompson)
   7. AO-85 Experimenter's Wednesday (Andrew Glasbrenner)
   8. Re: FalconSat 3 added to Sat Reporter (Robert Bruninga)
   9. FalconSat 3 iGate using rPi and pymultimonaprs? (Mike Thompson)
  10. Alternative to M2 LEO Pack (Lou Michaels)
  11. Re: Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's? (Zach Metzinger)
  12. Re: Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's? (reflector ant) (Robert Bruninga)
  13. Weekend Rove - Full Schedule (Ken Alexander)
  14. Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule as of 2017-10-04 06:00	UTC
      (AJ9N@xxx.xxxx


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

Message: 1
Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 23:53:48 -0400
From: "Scott" <scott23192@xxxxx.xxx>
To: <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] 9600 Capable Dual-Band Radio?
Message-ID: <409281E56B1C449F80128F3BE10C0F47@xxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="iso-8859-1"

Greetings!

With the arrival of FalconSat-3's 9k6 packet capability, I've been looking
at radio options.  Perhaps others have, too.

While the Kenwood HT option is great, I would prefer to use my computer. 
So, if I understand correctly I need a radio with a data port that is
capable of handling 9600 data.

And, while FalconSat-3 needs me to transmit on 2m, I'm only considering
dual-band radios in anticipation of wanting to transmit 9600 data on 70cm in
the future.

The Yaesu FT-7900R is one of the lowest cost dual-band radios that I've seen
(new) that has a data port that the manual indicates can handle both 1200 &
9600 packets.

By chance has anyone used this radio for 9600 data at any point?

Or if you don't have first-hand experience w/ the FT-7900R, am I correct
that it's a radio that I can transmit a 9600 data stream through from my
computer?

Thanks!

-Scott,  K4KDR
Montpelier, VA  USA

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

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 14:09:35 +1000
From: Andrew Rich <vk4tec@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx>
To: Amsat BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>, aprssig <aprssig@xxxx.xxx>,
Australian APRS Users <ozaprs@xxxx.xxx.xx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] FalconSat 3 added to Sat Reporter
Message-ID: <2FA8E190-C97F-4C36-B244-848F859ACD35@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset=us-ascii

Falcon Sat has been added to Sat Reporter

http://59.167.159.165/ <http://59.167.159.165/>

Andrew VK4TEC

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

Message: 3
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 08:07:58 -0400
From: Roy Dean <royldean@xxxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's?
Message-ID:
<CADGPg2tFu=dPYG5zqEmprdhFmqYE+FGhrG8Ksmu5JW0G2Ae3SQ@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

Greg,

You are going to have a very hard time copying Falconsat with
omni/whip antenna's.   Yes, it's a strong downlink, but "strong" for
amateur satellites is misleading... It's nowhere near as strong as the
ISS voice radio, for example, which is easily picked up on my scanner
duckie.

It's supposed to be over one watt, but I can pick up AO-85 with a
stronger signal, if that gives you any idea.   Also, Falconsat has
some really serious polarity fade, so there's another issue.   I can
go from roughly S7 to 'nuttin by rotating my arrow 10?.

--Roy
K3RLD


> Ok, so I must be doing something wrong.  I have an RTL-SDR dongle hooked
> to a deep-fringe TV antenna in the attic which is my all-purpose scanner
> setup.  I can barely make out the 9600 baud downlink from FalconSat-3 in
> the GQRX Waterfall, seeing a good bit of fading during the pass.  At
> best it's a faint bar; mostly not there at all.  My D74 hand-held, with
> a Diamond RH-77B whip antenna decodes nothing, assuming there was
> something to decode.  Tried this on 3 passes this afternoon.  Nada.
> APRS traffic on 145.39, by comparison, shows up really well.
> I thought I read that the satellite had a nice strong downlink.
> 435.103, plus or minus.  I've not done much of anything with 9600 baud
> packet, so don't have much experience to draw from.  What's wrong?
> Equipment, operating, or expectations?
> Greg  KO6TH


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

Message: 4
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 09:04:13 -0400
From: Robert Bruninga <bruninga@xxxx.xxx>
To: amsat bb <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falcon sat
Message-ID:
<CALdCfNJSA06nUuhMk_2rWLg3YxTQb6x=mV9X=Z=JYB2f0ariUg@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

>
> >Can you please provide me some sample packets.
>

Here is what I copied on my D710G in packet mode using PuTTY:

I didnt see any user digipeated packets.  But the "d:1" in the LSTAT
packets show the digi is on.
It also looks like KO4MA was logged in.

Bob, WB4APR

PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PFS3-1>LSTAT:I P:0x13A8 o:0 l:26062 f:26092, d:1 st:6 e:d3
PCTRL-8>PCTRL-8:CTRL: mode=9 torq0 elog=1 alog=0
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PCTRL-8>PCTRL-8:CTRL: mode=9 torq0 elog=1 alog=0
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PFS3-1>TIME-1:PHT: uptime is 703/10:46:07.  Time is Mon Oct 02 15:54:36 2017
PFS3-1>LSTAT:I P:0x13A8 o:0 l:26062 f:26092, d:1 st:6 e:d5
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PCTRL-8>PCTRL-8:CTRL: mode=9 torq0 elog=1 alog=0
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PFS3-1>TLMS-1:C0:BD C1:00 C2:F1 C3:50 C4:F1 C5:03
PFS3-1>TLMC-1:CL:0
PFS3-1>USAFA-1:Thank you Air Force--AMSAT NA
PFS3-1>BCR-1:BCR:bv=1360 bi=123 sens=55 top=1360 low=0 t1=576 t2=1157
sv=1692 si=426
PFS3-1>TIME-1:PHT: uptime is 703/10:46:19.  Time is Mon Oct 02 15:54:48 2017
PFS3-1>LSTAT:I P:0x13A8 o:0 l:26062 f:26092, d:1 st:6 e:d6
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: N8MH\D
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PCTRL-8>PCTRL-8:CTRL: mode=9 torq0 elog=1 alog=0
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: KO4MA\D
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: N8MH\D
PFS3-11>PBLIST:PB: Empty.
PFS3-1>TIME-1:PHT: uptime is 703/10:46:28.  Time is Mon Oct 02 15:54:57 2017
PFS3-1>LSTAT:I P:0x13A8 o:0 l:26062 f:26092, d:1 st:6 e:d7


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

Message: 5
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 09:14:21 -0400
From: Robert Bruninga <bruninga@xxxx.xxx>
To: amsat bb <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falcon sat
Message-ID:
<CALdCfNJari4xOyp6fesAafvyye=XN9OPsYwCxS2BRizoWqD9gQ@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

>
> > Anyone igating falconsat ?


Since the BBS packets use a different PID I don't think you can see them
through a normal IGate and it would flood the APRS-IS..

I think someone already suggested a separate server just for FALCONSAT BBS
traffic.

THen someone could write a web page dashboard that looks just like any
ground station running PACSAT protocol, but since it would have inputs from
every ground station in the world, it would always collect mostly complete
files and anyone coiuld get them via the web page.

I think we should not let people POST to the FALCONSAT file system from the
web, just too  much chance for abuse.  But we should have an online mirror
of the FALCONSAT BBS traffic and files.

ANyone?

Bob, WB4APR


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

Message: 6
Date: Tue, 03 Oct 2017 14:06:41 +0000
From: Mike Thompson <zryder94@xxxxx.xxx>
To: Scott <scott23192@xxxxx.xxx>, amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] 9600 Capable Dual-Band Radio?
Message-ID:
<CAGD5MUEA+jKorGz3s-1O9Rz=TcVgMpPX+PO7fcRdbe3B0PriwA@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

How would a Yaesu VX-8D do with FalconSat-3?
On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 10:53 PM Scott <scott23192@xxxxx.xxx> wrote:

> Greetings!
>
> With the arrival of FalconSat-3's 9k6 packet capability, I've been looking
> at radio options.  Perhaps others have, too.
>
> While the Kenwood HT option is great, I would prefer to use my computer.
> So, if I understand correctly I need a radio with a data port that is
> capable of handling 9600 data.
>
> And, while FalconSat-3 needs me to transmit on 2m, I'm only considering
> dual-band radios in anticipation of wanting to transmit 9600 data on 70cm
> in the future.
>
> The Yaesu FT-7900R is one of the lowest cost dual-band radios that I've
> seen (new) that has a data port that the manual indicates can handle both
> 1200 & 9600 packets.
>
> By chance has anyone used this radio for 9600 data at any point?
>
> Or if you don't have first-hand experience w/ the FT-7900R, am I correct
> that it's a radio that I can transmit a 9600 data stream through from my
> computer?
>
> Thanks!
>
> -Scott,  K4KDR
> Montpelier, VA  USA
> _______________________________________________
> Sent via AMSAT-BB@xxxxx.xxx. AMSAT-NA makes this open forum available
> to all interested persons worldwide without requiring membership. Opinions
> expressed
> are solely those of the author, and do not reflect the official views of
> AMSAT-NA.
> Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
> Subscription settings: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb
>


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

Message: 7
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 10:10:08 -0400
From: "Andrew Glasbrenner" <glasbrenner@xxxxxxxxxx.xxx>
To: <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] AO-85 Experimenter's Wednesday
Message-ID: <00f801d33c51$519d30b0$f4d79210$@xxxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="us-ascii"

Just a reminder that Experimenter's Wednesday begins at 0000UTC tonight on
AO-85. Please participate by sending and receiving slow scan television
(SSTV) images via the Robot 36 mode.



More information at:
https://www.amsat.org/return-of-experimenters-wednesday-to-ao-85/



73, Drew KO4MA

AMSAT VP Operations



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

Message: 8
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 11:10:27 -0400
From: Robert Bruninga <bruninga@xxxx.xxx>
To: Andrew Rich <vk4tec@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx>
Cc: aprssig <aprssig@xxxx.xxx>, Amsat BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>,
Australian APRS Users <ozaprs@xxxx.xxx.xx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] FalconSat 3 added to Sat Reporter
Message-ID:
<CALdCfNKvbt-WYCm48=LsU64MX2J025BtxFEo=Cx6Wowj=+3vDw@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

>
> > Falcon Sat has been added to Sat Reporter
> > http://59.167.159.165/ <http://59.167.159.165/>
>

Looks good, but it does not capture packets VIA PSAT.  Remember, it does
callsign-insertion instead of callsign substitution.  So, unlike the ISS
that substitutes its call as in RS0ISS* and marks it has been digipeated,
PSAT preserves the upolink alias and INSERTS its call before it.  So to
find PSAT digipeated packets you need to select all packets that show
PSAT,ARISS*.  Though you don't really need to match the PSAT part just
match the ARISS*




>
> Andrew VK4TEC
> _______________________________________________
> Sent via AMSAT-BB@xxxxx.xxx. AMSAT-NA makes this open forum available
> to all interested persons worldwide without requiring membership. Opinions
> expressed
> are solely those of the author, and do not reflect the official views of
> AMSAT-NA.
> Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
> Subscription settings: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb
>


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

Message: 9
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 11:37:38 -0500
From: Mike Thompson <zryder94@xxxxx.xxx>
To: AMSAT-BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] FalconSat 3 iGate using rPi and pymultimonaprs?
Message-ID:
<CAGD5MUGO_+9S1aMOc8tYhGSF7aPE81fn2cU6dzrt60BLJuGbBg@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

I am running a terrestrial APRS iGate from my house using a Comet GP-15
tri-band vertical.
RF is fed into an RTL-SDR, connected to my raspberry pi. I am currently
using pymultimonaprs to make this all happen, and in Marco Kubon's tutorial
(http://www.kubonweb.de/?tag=rtl-sdr) he says it's possible to catch the
ISS APRS frames by changing the RTL section of the config file.
Does anyone know if I can add in a 3rd frequency to capture FalconSat3
packets?
Does this look reasonable?

 proc_src = subprocess.Popen(
                                        ['rtl_fm', '-f',
str(int(self.config['rtl']['freq'] * 1e6)), '-f', '145825000', '-f',
'435103000', '-s', '22050',
                                        '-p%s' %
str(self.config['rtl']['ppm']), '-g', str(self.config['rtl']['gain']),
'-l', '10',
                                        '-E', 'offset' if
self.config['rtl'].get('offset_tuning', False) else 'none',
                                        '-d',
str(self.config['rtl'].get('device_index', 0)), '-'],
                                        stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=open('/dev/null')

Thanks!


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

Message: 10
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 12:44:03 -0400
From: Lou Michaels <w2lmm.qsl@xxxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] Alternative to M2 LEO Pack
Message-ID:
<CAAYRh5cqD3MttJ_K6G_8hpXMCV7gk-iSgDSbJ8Yv4jHD_UE_xA@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

Greetings,

After an 18 month hiatus, I got the bug to put the satellite station back
up. I have all the equipment in house (g5500 rotor, antennas, radio,
interface, and cables) and can have this up and running in an afternoon -
possibly this weekend.

Now as most of you are probably aware, the LEO pack contains a 4x4 on VHF
and an 8x8 on UHF.

What if I wanted a bit more, meaning what might be the next step up in
terms of a VHF and UHF circular polarized yagi?

I'm also working with a 3ele 6m yagi under the elevation rotor, but I'm not
opposed to pulling that down to make room for center-mounted booms.

I'm asking because, while I'm leaning back towards satellites, I'd like to
retain at least some ability to work terrestrial.  The 4x4 CP on 2m ssb
certainly seems like a step down from what I'm working with now (7x7 xPol
yagi) - I'm not looking for parity, just a slight improvement over a 4x4.

As always thanks for your insights and wisdom in advance. See on you on the
birds real soon.

Cheers,
Lou

W2LMM

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=sig-email&utm_content=webmail&utm_term=icon>
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------------------------------

Message: 11
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 13:15:55 -0500
From: Zach Metzinger <zmetzing@xxxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's?
Message-ID: <fac78dce-d038-d9f0-761f-938f77d2dd93@xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

On 10/03/17 07:07, Roy Dean wrote:
> Greg,
>
> You are going to have a very hard time copying Falconsat with
> omni/whip antenna's.   Yes, it's a strong downlink, but "strong" for
> amateur satellites is misleading... It's nowhere near as strong as the
> ISS voice radio, for example, which is easily picked up on my scanner
> duckie.
>
> It's supposed to be over one watt, but I can pick up AO-85 with a
> stronger signal, if that gives you any idea.   Also, Falconsat has
> some really serious polarity fade, so there's another issue.   I can
> go from roughly S7 to 'nuttin by rotating my arrow 10?.

While polarization is still an issue, you might try a square-corner
reflector as a starter antenna:

http://www.qsl.net/ve3rgw/corner.html

Of course, you'll want to upgrade it with a rotator to track the
satellite, but aiming it by hand should work fine. Keep the coax loss
low, or, for both NF improvement and to make up for coax loss, add a LNA
right at the antenna.

If you want some historical background on this type of antenna, take a
look at this oldie:

http://www.arrl.org/files/file/History/History%20of%20QST%20Volume%201%20-%20T
echnology/QS11-40-Kraus.pdf

--- Zach
N0ZGO


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

Message: 12
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 17:08:49 -0400
From: Robert Bruninga <bruninga@xxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's? (reflector ant)
Message-ID: <6427696b3feb1a08a7f6deec38d019c8@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

The June 2004 QST cover photo shows a few of us holding a piece of rabbit
fence bent into a parabola about 2' wide by 1' high with the HT held at the
focal point.  It makes a great gain antenna and is trivial to build.  The
HT's rubber duck is at the focal point so there is no coax.

This is fine for voice satellites, but not so practical for data satelites
which need a laptop and TNC and cables.

https://s3.amazonaws.com/files.qrz.com/h/kb9sxh/cover_shot_QST_bmp.jpg

Bob


-----Original Message-----
From: AMSAT-BB [mailto:amsat-bb-bounces@xxxxx.xxxx On Behalf Of Zach
Metzinger
Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2017 2:16 PM
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Falconsat-3 and APRS HT's?

On 10/03/17 07:07, Roy Dean wrote:
> Greg,
>
> You are going to have a very hard time copying Falconsat with
> omni/whip antenna's.   Yes, it's a strong downlink, but "strong" for
> amateur satellites is misleading... It's nowhere near as strong as the
> ISS voice radio, for example, which is easily picked up on my scanner
> duckie.
>
> It's supposed to be over one watt, but I can pick up AO-85 with a
> stronger signal, if that gives you any idea.   Also, Falconsat has
> some really serious polarity fade, so there's another issue.   I can
> go from roughly S7 to 'nuttin by rotating my arrow 10?.

While polarization is still an issue, you might try a square-corner
reflector as a starter antenna:

http://www.qsl.net/ve3rgw/corner.html

Of course, you'll want to upgrade it with a rotator to track the satellite,
but aiming it by hand should work fine. Keep the coax loss low, or, for both
NF improvement and to make up for coax loss, add a LNA right at the antenna.

If you want some historical background on this type of antenna, take a look
at this oldie:

http://www.arrl.org/files/file/History/History%20of%20QST%20Volume%201%20-%20T
echnology/QS11-40-Kraus.pdf

--- Zach
N0ZGO
_______________________________________________
Sent via AMSAT-BB@xxxxx.xxx. AMSAT-NA makes this open forum available to all
interested persons worldwide without requiring membership. Opinions
expressed are solely those of the author, and do not reflect the official
views of AMSAT-NA.
Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
Subscription settings: http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb


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

Message: 13
Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 22:01:21 -0400
From: Ken Alexander <k.alexander@xxxxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] Weekend Rove - Full Schedule
Message-ID: <12fb4f52-a5b6-bd1b-b824-2632fc9c2f22@xxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed

Hi All,

Following is the full schedule for this weekend.  Pretty ambitious, so
don't be too upset if I have miscalculated travel times and show up
late.  Precision is not one of my specialties!

Some passes start minutes after the previously listed pass.  I find I
usually run through everyone in the first few minutes, so if an equally
favourable (or better) pass happens soon after then I'll move on to the
next one.

Note that I added FN65 early Sunday morning.  I received a request for
FN68, which is about the same distance out of my way.  However, FN65 is
an easy drive down the Trans Canada Highway, where FN68 is a drive
across new Brunswick (moose country) on a secondary road.  In addition,
that part of the province is mountainous and I could spend hours just
trying to find a place to set up.  I went for FN65.

I'm tired.  I hope I got my dates and times right.  I've been know to
mess this up before!  Please have a look to make sure that I have
included you and your region and if not then please let me know and
we'll try to work something else out.

== Friday Oct 6 in FN35/36 ==
2100  AO-85
2130  XW-2C
2224  SO-50
2305  XW-2C
2349  FO-29  CQ Europe!
0007  XW-2F  CQ West Coast!
0038  XW-2A
0127  AO-73

== Saturday Oct 7 in FN56/57 ==
1308  XW-2F
1311  AO-73
1329  XW-2A
1334  FO-29
1421  SO-50
1426  AO-7  CQ Europe!
1448  AO-73
1526  FO-29 CQ West Coast!
1602  SO-50
1612  AO-7  CQ Europe!

== Saturday Oct 7 in FN57/67 ==
2111  UKUBE-1 CQ West Coast!
2125  AO-85
2151  AO-7    CQ West Coast!
2215  XW-2F
2249  SO-50
2307  AO-85   CQ West Coast!

== Sunday Oct 8 in FN65/66 ==
0009  AO-73
0030  SO-50  CQ West Coast!
0037  FO-29  CQ Europe!
0147  AO-73  CQ West Coast!
0222  FO-29

== Sunday Oct 8 in FN47 ==
1426  FO-29
1446  SO-50
1507  AO-73  CQ West Coast!

73!  Hope to work you this weekend!

Ken
VE3HLS



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

Message: 14
Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 01:17:20 -0400
From: AJ9N@xxx.xxx
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule as of 2017-10-04
06:00	UTC
Message-ID: <3626b6.79ae72e6.4705c8e0@xxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

Upcoming ARISS Contact Schedule as of 2017-10-04  06:00 UTC

Quick list of scheduled contacts and  events:

Kugluktuk High School, Kugluktuk Nunavut, Canada,  telebridge via IK1SLD
The ISS callsign is presently scheduled to be  IR?ISS
The scheduled astronaut is Paolo Nespoli IZ?JPA
Contact was  successful: Tue 2017-10-03 15:32:57 UTC 30 deg  (***)


****************************************************************************
**
International  Space Station Astronauts are Calling CQ Students ?
ARISS-US program education  proposal deadline is November 15, 2017


September 18, 2017: The  Amateur Radio on the International Space
Station (ARISS) program is seeking  proposals from U.S. schools,
museums, science centers and community youth  organizations to host
radio contacts with an orbiting crew member aboard the  International
Space Station (ISS) between July 1 and December 31,  2018.

Each year, ARISS provides tens of thousands of students with  oppor-
tunities to learn about space technologies and space  communications
through the exploration of Amateur Radio. The program  provides
learning opportunities by connecting students to astronauts  aboard
the International Space Station (ISS) through a partnership  between
NASA, the American Radio Relay League, the Radio Amateur  Satellite
Corporation and other Amateur Radio organizations and  worldwide
space agencies. The program?s goal is to inspire students  worldwide,
to pursue interests and careers in science, technology,  engineering
and mathematics (STEM) through Amateur Radio.

Educators  overwhelmingly report that student participation in the
ARISS program  inspires an interest in STEM subjects and in STEM
careers. Ninety-two percent  of educators who have participated in
the program have indicated that ARISS  provided ideas for encourag-
ing student exploration, discussion, and  participation, and 78
percent said that ARISS was effective in stimulating  student
interest in STEM.

ARISS is looking for organizations that will  draw large numbers
of participants and integrate the contact into a  well-developed
education plan. Students can learn about satellite  communications,
wireless technology, science research conducted on the  space
station, what it is like to work in space, radio science, and  any
related STEM subject. Students learn to use Amateur Radio to  talk
directly to an astronaut and ask their STEM-related questions.
ARISS  will help educational organizations locate Amateur Radio
groups who can  assist with equipment for this once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity for  students.

The proposal deadline for 2018 contacts is November 15,  2017.

The ARISS website has additional details on expectations,  proposal
guidelines, and the proposal form.  See:
http://www.ariss.org/hosting-an-ariss-contact-in-the-us.html


****************************************************************************
**
ARISS  is always glad to receive listener reports for the above contacts.
ARISS  thanks everyone in advance for their assistance.  Feel free to send
your  reports to aj9n@xxxxx.xxx or aj9n@xxx.xxx.

Listen for the ISS on  the downlink of 145.8?  MHz.

****************************************************************************
***

All  ARISS contacts are made via the Kenwood radio unless otherwise  noted.

****************************************************************************
***

Several  of you have sent me emails asking about the RAC ARISS website and
not being  able to get in.  That has now been changed to
http://www.ariss.org/

Note that there are links to other ARISS  websites from this  site.

****************************************************************************
Looking  for something new to do?  How about receiving DATV from the  ISS?

If interested, then please go to the ARISS-EU website for  complete
details.  Look for the buttons indicating Ham  Video.


http://www.ariss-eu.org/

If you need some  assistance, ARISS mentor Kerry N6IZW, might be able to
provide some  insight.  Contact Kerry at  kbanke@xxxxxxxxx.xxx
****************************************************************************
ARISS  congratulations the following mentors who have now mentored over 100

schools:

Satoshi 7M3TJZ with 124
Gaston ON4WF with  123
Francesco IK?WGF with 119
Sergey RV3DR with 100

****************************************************************************
The  webpages listed below were all reviewed for accuracy.  Out of date
webpages were removed and new ones have been added.  If there are
additional
ARISS websites I need to know about, please let me  know.

Note, all times are approximate.  It is recommended that you  do your own
orbital prediction or start listening about 10 minutes before  the listed
time.
All dates and times listed follow International  Standard ISO 8601 date and
time format  YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS

The  complete schedule page has been updated as of 2017-10-04 06:00 UTC.
(***)
Here you will find a listing of all scheduled school contacts, and
questions, other ISS related websites, IRLP and Echolink websites, and
instructions for any contact that may be streamed live.

http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/arissnews.rtf
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/arissnews.txt

Total  number of ARISS ISS to earth school events is 1162. (***)
Each school counts  as 1 event.
Total number of ARISS ISS to earth school contacts is 1121.  (***)
Each contact may have multiple schools sharing the same time  slot.
Total number of ARISS supported terrestrial contacts is 47.

A  complete year by year breakdown of the contacts may be found in the
file.
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/arissnews.rtf

Please  feel free to contact me if more detailed statistics are  needed.

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

The  following US states and entities have never had an ARISS contact:
Arkansas,  Delaware, South Dakota, Wyoming, American Samoa, Guam, Northern
Marianas  Islands, and the Virgin  Islands.

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

QSL  information may be found at:
http://www.ariss.org/qsl-cards.html

ISS callsigns:  DP?ISS, IR?ISS, NA1SS, OR4ISS,  RS?ISS

****************************************************************************
The  successful school list has been updated as of 2017-10-04 06:00 UTC.
(***)

http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/Successful_ARISS_schools.rtf

Frequency   chart for packet, voice, and crossband repeater modes showing
Doppler   correction  as of 2005-07-29 04:00  UTC
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/ISS_frequencies_and_Doppler_correction
.rtf

Listing  of ARISS related magazine articles as of 2006-07-10 03:30  UTC.
http://www.amsat.org/amsat/ariss/news/ARISS_magazine_articles.rtf

Check  out the Zoho reports of the ARISS  contacts

https://reports.zoho.com/ZDBDataSheetView.cc?DBID=412218000000020415
****************************************************************************
Exp.  52 on orbit
Randy Bresnik
Paolo Nespoli IZ?JPA
Sergey  Ryazanskiy

Exp. 53 on orbit
Mark Vande Hei KG5GNP
Alexander  Misurkin
Joe Acaba  KE5DAR

****************************************************************************

73,
Charlie  Sufana AJ9N
One of the ARISS operation team  mentors








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End of AMSAT-BB Digest, Vol 12, Issue 244
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