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#1
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Amsat Oscar 7, A proud moment
http://www.planetemily.com/ao7/userStats.php
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Not every one uses the AO-7 log book and I do not log every contact my self. Just knowing that this bird is still active after so many years and getting to chance to operate via it is great. |
#2
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That shows your dedication to this hobby Buddy. Well deserved at that.
__________________
Peace will not be found at a MidEast table. Peace began at a MidEast STABLE, but everyone seems to deny it. We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. Believing in evolution is like expecting a tornado to go through a junkyard and create a Mercedes Benz on its way out! If you don't stand behind our US troops, then please feel free to stand in front of them. Yea, that's what I thought.......... |
#4
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Thanks guy's,
Much appreciated. I am not the man That would be Joe K3SZH. He has made over 5881 contacts via AO-7. Now he is the man! :D Not sure how much you all know about AO-7 but it is the oldest working amateur bird in space. And has a long history. Put up in 1974 and fell dead in 1981. Some history: About AO-7 AO-7 was the seventh OSCAR (Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio) satellite to be launched since the inception of the OSCAR program. AMSAT-OSCAR 7 built by a multinational team under the direction of AMSAT-NA and was launched November 15, 1974 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Lompoc, California. AO-7 carries two working linear transponders, one in Mode A (145.850-950 MHz uplink; 29.400-500 MHz downlink) and another in Mode B (432.180-120 MHz uplink; 145.920-980 MHz downlink). It also containst two working beacons on 29.502 and 145.972 MHz. A third beacon on 435.1 MHz has been reportedly heard sporatically, and a fourth beacon on 2304.1MHz was never turned on. In mid 1981 AO-7 ceased operation due to battery failures. It was thought at that time that the batteries had shorted. However on June 21, 2002 Pat Gowen, G3IOR reported hearing AO-7s 2m beacon. After the news was relayed through AMSAT bulletin boards, several more hams monitored the satellite. AO-7 continues to operate continuously, albeit a bit whimsical. After emerging from an eclipse AO-7 may turn on in one of four modes. Mode A and Mode B are shown above, and Mode C is a low power version of Mode B. Mode D is a beacon only mode. It is impossible to distinguish between Modes B and C, although in the short time I have been using AO-7 I think I have heard it twice because there was a noticeable decrease in signal strength from normally strong signals. More technical information about AO-7 can be found in the useage page shown above, and at the AMSAT Satellite Summary page for AO-7 at http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/satel...ummary/ao7.php. |
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