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CX2SA  > SATDIG   04.05.16 21:49l 637 Lines 25645 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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From: CX2SA@CX2SA.SAL.URY.SOAM
To  : SATDIG@WW

Today's Topics:

   1. APRS Satellite DTMF uplink - Voice downink (Robert Bruninga)
   2. Re: Amsat Radio Log (Rupert Hamblin)
   3. Re: APRS Satellite DTMF uplink - Voice downink (Dani EA4GPZ)
   4. ARRL on 432-438 satellite radar (M5AKA)
   5. AMSAT at ARRL Nevada State Convention last weekend -	report
      (Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK))
   6. WD9EWK from southern Nevada & northwestern Arizona, last
      weekend - report (long) (Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK))
   7. AMSAT at Sierra Vista (Arizona) hamfest on Saturday,	7 May
      2016 (Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK))
   8. ISS packet (skristof@xxxxxxx.xxxx
   9. Jetstream and TYT UHF rigs (John Geiger)
  10. Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC (ingejack@xxx.xxxx
  11. Re: Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC (John Brier)
  12. Re: Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC (John Brier)
  13. Gulfalpha Satellite Antennas for sale! (Stefan Wagener)


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

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 3 May 2016 14:26:41 -0400
From: Robert Bruninga <bruninga@xxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] APRS Satellite DTMF uplink - Voice downink
Message-ID: <901150d0b749f58361bd30b55442fbe0@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Next APRS satellite has APRStt (DTMF and Voice) too:



Launch maybe this summer:  http://aprs.org/qikcom-2.html



Here are some recordings of our next QIKCOM-2 satellite which in addition
to APRS on 145.825 digipeating also lets any user with a DTMF keypad to
uplink his GRID, QSL?s and other messages on a different VHF uplink.  It
gets converted to voice for the DTMF listeners and to APRS on the APRS
downlink so it gets into the global APRS system on http://pcsat.findu.com



Grid:  http://aprs.org/QIKcom/voice/Grid-FM19.wma



Then the manual entry of the contact number:

http://aprs.org/QIKcom/voice/QSL-fast.wma



Then an example of a message:

http://aprs.org/QIKcom/voice/message-73.wma



The voice sucks, but our next satellite http://aprs.org/psat-2.html after
this one uses a better synthesizer.



Bob, WB4APR


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

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 3 May 2016 21:16:51 +0100
From: Rupert Hamblin <rupert.hamblin@xxxxx.xxx>
To: W2JV <PeteW2JV@xxxxxxx.xxx>, AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Amsat Radio Log
Message-ID: <57290733.5010205@xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252; format=flowed

Thanks guys - really appreciate the updates here ! :-)

Regards

RH / G0TKZ

On 03/05/2016 21:09, W2JV wrote:
> Hello,
> I'm using Logic9, http://www.hosenose.com/logic/,  it was recommended
> to me and I'm very pleased with the program, the support is outstanding.
> 73 Peter
> W2JV



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

Message: 3
Date: Tue, 3 May 2016 22:40:36 +0200
From: Dani EA4GPZ <daniel@xxxxxxxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] APRS Satellite DTMF uplink - Voice downink
Message-ID: <57290CC4.6080209@xxxxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

El 03/05/16 a las 20:26, Robert Bruninga escribi?:

> The voice sucks, but our next satellite http://aprs.org/psat-2.html after
> this one uses a better synthesizer.

Oh god! A non-native speaker here is finding the voice quite hard to
understand. Working the satellite with the real background noise will be
quite a real challenge.

73,

Dani.



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

Message: 4
Date: Tue, 3 May 2016 22:20:47 +0000 (UTC)
From: M5AKA <m5aka@xxxxx.xx.xx>
To: AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] ARRL on 432-438 satellite radar
Message-ID:
<1982885084.67864.1462314047256.JavaMail.yahoo@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

ARRL have issued a? post about 432-438 MHz P-Band SAR allocation.

Oddly they say:
"ARRL Chief Technology Officer Brennan Price, N4QX, said SAR activity has
not been found to be a significant problem to Amateur Radio activity on the
70 centimeter band."
But there have not been any SAR satellites operating in 432-438 MHz so given
the complete absence of any transmissions it is not surprising that there
have been no significant problems.

The first SAR satellite in this band is AIST-2D which was launched a few
days ago on April 28, 2016.
See
http://www.arrl.org/news/view/no-need-for-panic-regarding-synthetic-aperture-r
adars-on-70-centimeters-arrl-cto-says
In 2002 the ARRL reported the FCC's WRC-03 Advisory Committee and the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration's
Radiocommunications Conference Subcommittee determined that SAR
transmissions could periodically impact amateur reception and even held "the
potential for significant interference."

73 Trevor M5AKA




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

Message: 5
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 03:28:33 +0000
From: "Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK)" <amsat-bb@xxxxxx.xxx>
To: "amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxxx <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] AMSAT at ARRL Nevada State Convention last weekend
-	report
Message-ID:
<CAN6TEUdKgqT+qdps_pNvNz3mfz-jjoSg2sV9tvTHEOWLqxeAKw@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Hi!

Last weekend's ARRL Nevada State Convention, or "NVCON", in Las Vegas was a
great way to spend a weekend. A ham convention, located in a hotel/casino,
with lots of activities available to visitors in southern Nevada. Despite
a heavy rainstorm on Saturday, which wiped out my chances for satellite
demonstrations at the convention, it was a great weekend for AMSAT to talk
about amateur satellites.

AMSAT's long-time Area Coordinator in southern Nevada, Frank Kostelac
N7ZEV, along with his wife Linda KC7IIT, usually have a booth at these
events in Las Vegas and other locations in Nevada. With Linda working in a
variety of roles at the convention, Frank and I took care of the AMSAT
booth. Frank also had other convention-related tasks, and he was definitely
busy throughout the weekend. When I arrived at the convention Friday
afternoon, Frank had the booth ready to go. I set out some flyers, some
equipment, and spent most of the weekend around the booth.

The day before I arrived in Las Vegas, the region had a big rainstorm.
Another storm blew through southern Nevada on Saturday morning, which made
travel around Las Vegas a mess, and washed out my plans for demonstrations
at the convention. Instead of being outside in the rain, I had set up a
couple of tablets to run videos of past demonstrations, show off SatPC32,
and show what software-defined receivers can do. Frank and I talked almost
non-stop for the weekend. I posted photos from the convention throughout
the weekend on my @xxxxxx Twitter feed. If you want to see those photos,
but don't do Twitter, you can get to the photos with a web browser at:

http://twitter.com/WD9EWK/media

Just because there was rain that washed out the demonstrations I planned to
do at the convention, that didn't ruin plans for me to work satellites from
Nevada. I'll post a separate message describing my operating from around
Las Vegas and while driving to and from Las Vegas.

I have to thank Frank and Linda for letting me help with the AMSAT booth
over the weekend. I had asked Frank about this convention a while back, and
I am glad I made the trip. The NVCON organizers were all friendly, and the
crowds were good, despite the Saturday rain. There were a bunch of people
who came over from California, and a few from Arizona that I also saw. I
will seriously consider heading back to Las Vegas the next time this event
takes place up there.

73!





Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
http://www.wd9ewk.net/
Twitter: @xxxxxx


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

Message: 6
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 04:11:12 +0000
From: "Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK)" <amsat-bb@xxxxxx.xxx>
To: "amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxxx <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] WD9EWK from southern Nevada & northwestern
Arizona, last weekend - report (long)
Message-ID:
<CAN6TEUf00SnyU9Tk5WOrx8o4Amt7VqPNKnUr+TXGfgJj+q8JYg@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Hi!

In addition to attending the ARRL Nevada State Convention ("NVCON") in Las
Vegas last weekend, I did a fair amount of operating from two locations
around Las Vegas, plus another location in northwestern Arizona. I worked
from 3 different grid locators in the two states, and also operated from
the Lake Mead National Recreation Area - a site operated by the National
Park Service, and my first activation of a National Park Service site for
the ARRL's National Parks on the Air activity in 2016.

On my way to Las Vegas on Friday (29 April), I stopped at a spot in
Kingman, Arizona, so I could park on 114 degrees West - the line between
grids DM25 and DM35. The spot I use is in a field west of old US-66, which
is now an Arizona state highway, and north of the I-40 freeway. At the time
I reached Kingman, there were AO-85 and FO-29 passes around midday, and I
wanted to work both passes to put these grid locators on the air. Kingman
is about 200 miles northwest of Phoenix, 100 miles southeast of Las Vegas,
and it was a nice stopping point to get out of my car and play some radio.
I worked 9 stations on the AO-85 pass, followed by 5 QSOs on the FO-29
pass, before I got back in the car for the 90-minute drive up to Las
Vegas and the convention.

Later Friday evening, I planned to make a drive to one of two spots in
the Lake Mead National Recreation Area where I could work some passes on
AO-73 and AO-85. I settled on a location just inside the park boundary at
the end of Lake Mead Parkway, which connects the I-215/I-515 interchange
in the Las Vegas suburb of Henderson with a entrance to the park. There
is a parking lot just inside the park boundary at a trailhead, before a
toll booth, and that parking lot was actually a nice spot to work lower
passes. I worked two pairs of passes on those two satellites - one pair to
the east (this included a 5-degree AO-85 pass), and a pair to the west.
Three stations on the AO-73 pass, and Paul N8HM on the low AO-85 pass, made
a good start toward my goal of working 10 different stations to make this
effort qualify as a National Parks on the Air activation. The later pair of
passes were more productive - 3 QSOs on AO-73, followed by 5 more on AO-85,
and the 4th of those 5 AO-85 QSOs represented the 10th unique station I
worked from the lake. This meant my evening at the lake qualified as an
activation of the Lake Mead National Recreation Area (site RC13) for NPOTA.

Saturday (30 April) started out with a big rainstorm. Between the rain,
lots of road construction around Las Vegas, and some unfortunate highway
accidents, it made for a tough time getting around. I started the day at a
spot I know very well for satellite operation - the DM25/DM26 grid boundary
in the south end of the Las Vegas metropolitan area, east of Las Vegas
Boulevard and the I-15 freeway. I had an SO-50 pass around 7am (1400 UTC)
that covered most of the continental USA, and stood outside to work this
pass. In the span of 10 minutes, 10 stations went in the log. Then I went
back in my car, making what should have been a 20 minute drive to the
convention in about 45 minutes.

After the convention ended Saturday evening, I made a return trip to Lake
Mead. I stopped at the same parking lot just inside the park boundary,
this time to work one pass each on AO-73 and AO-85. I had already made the
required number of contacts to be considered an official activation under
the ARRL's NPOTA rules, so these passes were to get this location into more
logs. Being a Saturday evening, not many were on. I worked 2 stations on
AO-73, and 3 on AO-85. Not bad for just the pair of passes to the east.

Sunday (1 May) morning started out like Saturday morning, but without the
rain. I drove to the DM25/DM26 grid boundary once again for an SO-50 pass
starting around 7.15am (1415 UTC). Eight stations went in the log this
time. Then the drive to the convention, which took about 20 minutes.

Once the convention wrapped up late Sunday morning, I made two stops for
working passes before driving home. I worked FO-29 and AO-85 from Lake
Mead around midday (1900 UTC), followed by an SO-50 pass in Kingman on the
DM25/DM35 grid boundary just before 4pm (2300 UTC). Four FO-29 QSOs and
8 AO-85 QSOs were logged from the lake, before driving around to the
visitor center between Boulder City and Hoover Dam, on the way to Kingman.
At the visitor center, I was able to get the National Park Service passport
stamps for Lake Mead and the National Park Service centennial, along with
some photos of the lake, before driving to Kingman to work the SO-50 pass.
At Kingman, during a busy SO-50 pass, I was able to make 12 QSOs with
stations across the continental USA, western Canada, and WA7HQD/MM sailing
off the California coast.

A comment... with WA7HQD/MM popping up on that pass, it became very busy
quickly. I wasn't at home, yet after hearing many stations unsuccessfully
trying to get through and work Doc, I made a call. There's no rule that
says I can only work the rare ones when I'm at home, or in the area covered
by a satellite VUCC award. I believe I was the first station to
successfully work WA7HQD/MM on that pass. After my QSO, several others were
able to make their QSOs with him. Even though I normally welcome stations
working me on any pass they hear me on, I appreciate that several stations
who were on that SO-50 pass, but worked me either on Friday afternoon or
other times in the past at the DM25/DM35 boundary, did not call me on that
busy pass Sunday afternoon. That is smart operating, what W1PA recently
called on Twitter "situational awareness". I did not know Doc was planning
to work that SO-50 pass, but know that several were able to work both Doc
and me for some rarely-heard grids on the satellites.

It was fun to get on the air from those grids in northwestern Arizona and
southern Nevada. I have been thinking about visiting National Park Service
sites here in Arizona to activate them on the satellites, like Fernando
NP4JV has been doing a lot, and it was a twist that the first time I
activated a site in the NPOTA activity came outside of Arizona. :-)  To
satisfy the ARRL's rules for NPOTA, I documented my presence at Lake Mead
as I would operating from a grid boundary under the VUCC rules - photos of
my GPS receiver and my station, along with screenshots of my mobile phone
showing my location on the http://aprs.fi web site. And the stamps from the
Lake Mead visitor center on my way out of Las Vegas, too. I tweeted some of
these photos and screenshots while I was up there.

All of these QSOs have been uploaded to Logbook of the World. Participation
in the ARRL's National Parks on the Air event is done using LOTW, although
I will also send QSL cards out to anyone who worked me and wants to receive
a QSL card (including the NPOTA site code, RC13, listed on the cards for
the Lake Mead QSOs). Please e-mail me directly with the QSO details, so I
can check my log for the QSO(s). There's no need to first send me a card or
SASE to get mine in return.

Thanks again, and 73!





Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
http://www.wd9ewk.net/
Twitter: @xxxxxx


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

Message: 7
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 04:24:26 +0000
From: "Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK)" <amsat-bb@xxxxxx.xxx>
To: "amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxxx <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] AMSAT at Sierra Vista (Arizona) hamfest on
Saturday,	7 May 2016
Message-ID:
<CAN6TEUfqQfsA1FzmY3GFmQNLWSzX7EPq6HbTUNLpV0trg=Ljuw@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Hi!

Even after last weekend in Las Vegas, I have another event I will attend
this Saturday, 7 May 2016. I will have an AMSAT booth at the Cochise
Amateur Radio Association's annual May hamfest in Sierra Vista, Arizona.
The hamfest starts at 7am (1400 UTC), and should run through 12 noon (1900
UTC). The hamfest is located at the club's Green Acres site on Moson Road,
south of AZ-90 and east of the Fort Huachuca army base, in Sierra Vista.
More information about the hamfest is available at:

http://www.k7rdg.org/CARA%20Hamfest%20Flyer%202016.pdf

The club's web site is at:

http://www.k7rdg.org/

During the hamfest, weather permitting, I will have on-air demonstrations
of satellite operating from my booth. If you hear WD9EWK on the satellites
Saturday morning, please call me and be a part of the demonstrations. The
hamfest site is in grid DM41.

All QSOs made during these demonstrations will be uploaded to Logbook of
the World, and I will be happy to send QSL cards to anyone who works
WD9EWK at the hamfest. Please e-mail me the QSO details, and I will check
those details against my log. If you're in the log, I will send a QSL card.
No SASE required.

Thanks, and 73!





Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
http://www.wd9ewk.net/
Twitter: @xxxxxx


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

Message: 8
Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 08:25:24 -0400
From: skristof@xxxxxxx.xxx
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] ISS packet
Message-ID: <8d04e9191b105109faf789a85361a386@xxxxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Thank you to Jack, K5UBQ, for the full QSO via ISS packet this morning
(1203UTC). It can be done!

Steve AI9IN

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

Message: 9
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 10:30:02 -0500
From: John Geiger <af5cc2@xxxxx.xxx>
To: AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] Jetstream and TYT UHF rigs
Message-ID:
<CAHC1P2-HrQmxD7x4eaY2zbSksEKL2HdLv8ryG6DFp_=50Y51Pg@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Has anyone used the UHF side of the Jetstream dualband mobile on the FM
satellites?  If so, how does it work? Is it pretty sensitive?  How about
the TYT UHF mobile rig?  These seem to go for pretty good prices.

73 John AF5CC


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

Message: 10
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 11:17:33 -0700
From: <ingejack@xxx.xxx>
To: amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: [amsat-bb] Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC
Message-ID: <20160504141733.Y9TO0.57711.imail@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

I am trying to set my internal packet tnc in my Kenwood TH D72A  to contact
ARISS to no avail !! I have tried AGWPE and UISS to work with the radio but
no luck. I was wondering if anyone out there has been able to contact ARISS
with The TH D72A TNC ?? If so, how are you hooking up the radio to the
computer to work ?? I am about to order the Siganlink Usb that comes with
the cables set up for this radio but hesitate to do so if the built in TNC
can work!! Any help will be appreciated  Thank You  JACK-KC7MG


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

Message: 11
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 14:31:52 -0400
From: John Brier <johnbrier@xxxxx.xxx>
To: ingejack@xxx.xxx
Cc: AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC
Message-ID:
<CALn0fKOU2XyP4nj2MJvP-b=98zc2sJ3UCBEdE-z=L3tCfz3UPw@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

You have to set the path right. Here is Patrick, WD9EWK's explanation:

"Besides using different frequencies (145.825 for the ISS, vs. 144.390 for
the terrestrial APRS), you will need to define a path that is different
than the WIDE1-1,WIDE2-1 that the HT will use by default. Look for menu
option 3H0 to set up the new path. Press MENU, select APRS, then spin the
VFO knob until you see PacketPath. You will want to use the 4-way button to
get over to the Type field. Change that from New-N to Others, then move to
the PATH field and enter ARISS. When you change the path fro New-N to
Others (or one of the other paths available in the HT), you have to press
the * key to confirm you are choosing that particular path. This will let
you move between terrestrial and ISS packet/APRS."

Another issue I have run into is when you beacon to the ISS you have to
have the squelch closed or else it won't TX at all.

Apparently some TNCs require this, including the Kenwood TNCs.

73,

John KG4AKV
On May 4, 2016 2:17 PM, <ingejack@xxx.xxx> wrote:

> I am trying to set my internal packet tnc in my Kenwood TH D72A  to
> contact ARISS to no avail !! I have tried AGWPE and UISS to work with the
> radio but no luck. I was wondering if anyone out there has been able to
> contact ARISS with The TH D72A TNC ?? If so, how are you hooking up the
> radio to the computer to work ?? I am about to order the Siganlink Usb that
> comes with the cables set up for this radio but hesitate to do so if the
> built in TNC can work!! Any help will be appreciated  Thank You  JACK-KC7MG
> _______________________________________________
> 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: 12
Date: Wed, 4 May 2016 14:55:18 -0400
From: John Brier <johnbrier@xxxxx.xxx>
To: ingejack@xxx.xxxx AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Kenwood TH D72A and packet TNC
Message-ID:
<CALn0fKMubHtoia03u+_n8JKgoimwv5jFZcDbTFXF5WXKtGfp-g@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

You do beakon using the BCON button. I believe you need the TNC set to
APRS since that is the type of communications most people do on the
ISS digipeater.

KG4AKV

On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 2:50 PM,  <ingejack@xxx.xxx> wrote:
> John: Thanks for the info> I have the path to OTHERS  and also set to
ARISS  However I didn't press the  * key and also didn't know about the
squelch having to be closed.. I will try that and see what happens. Do I
beacon using the Beacon button as with APRS and do I change the TNC to show
Packet12 ?? Thanks again  Jack-KC7MG
> ---- John Brier <johnbrier@xxxxx.xxx> wrote:
>> You have to set the path right. Here is Patrick, WD9EWK's explanation:
>>
>> "Besides using different frequencies (145.825 for the ISS, vs. 144.390 for
>> the terrestrial APRS), you will need to define a path that is different
>> than the WIDE1-1,WIDE2-1 that the HT will use by default. Look for menu
>> option 3H0 to set up the new path. Press MENU, select APRS, then spin the
>> VFO knob until you see PacketPath. You will want to use the 4-way button to
>> get over to the Type field. Change that from New-N to Others, then move to
>> the PATH field and enter ARISS. When you change the path fro New-N to
>> Others (or one of the other paths available in the HT), you have to press
>> the * key to confirm you are choosing that particular path. This will let
>> you move between terrestrial and ISS packet/APRS."
>>
>> Another issue I have run into is when you beacon to the ISS you have to
>> have the squelch closed or else it won't TX at all.
>>
>> Apparently some TNCs require this, including the Kenwood TNCs.
>>
>> 73,
>>
>> John KG4AKV
>> On May 4, 2016 2:17 PM, <ingejack@xxx.xxx> wrote:
>>
>> > I am trying to set my internal packet tnc in my Kenwood TH D72A  to
>> > contact ARISS to no avail !! I have tried AGWPE and UISS to work with the
>> > radio but no luck. I was wondering if anyone out there has been able to
>> > contact ARISS with The TH D72A TNC ?? If so, how are you hooking up the
>> > radio to the computer to work ?? I am about to order the Siganlink Usb
that
>> > comes with the cables set up for this radio but hesitate to do so if the
>> > built in TNC can work!! Any help will be appreciated  Thank You 
JACK-KC7MG
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > 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: Wed, 4 May 2016 14:35:22 -0500
From: Stefan Wagener <wageners@xxxxx.xxx>
To: AMSAT BB <amsat-bb@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: [amsat-bb] Gulfalpha Satellite Antennas for sale!
Message-ID:
<CAKu8kHDPS=khVjJ5Lii-fhUieAbnStrNfmmNMA1fWbeJvO11-Q@xxxx.xxxxx.xxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Hi folks,

Selling 2 Gulfalpha satellite antennas:

1. 70cm Circular Polarized Satellite Yagi 8x8
2. 2m Circular Polarized Satellite Yagi 5x5

plus the 2m & 70 cm polarisation switches from GulfAlpha, plus the phasing
cables, connectors and boom brackets for both antennas. They are the
complete LEO+ setup.  For those of you that have been around for a while
know that the GulAlphas ser some of the best antennas ever produced. They
are in very good conditions and will come disassembled for
transportation/shipping.

Asking $435 for the complete set (plus shipping). I can bring them to
Dayton if you like since I am driving down there anyway (no shipping cost
for that one).

Questions, send me an email separately (not the list): mycallsign@xxxxx.xxx

Thanks, Stefan VE4NSA


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

Subject: Digest Footer

_______________________________________________
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 member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program!
http://www.amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb

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

End of AMSAT-BB Digest, Vol 11, Issue 139
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