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Home Disaster Management AO-7 Mode B - Brazil to Belgium 7,000 km Contact

AO-7 Mode B - Brazil to Belgium 7,000 km Contact

Amsat News carried a brief report of a successful AO-7 Mode B contact between Piraja, PS8RF in Brazil and Jean-Jacques, ON7EQ in Belgium.

Since last week's report, additional information has been received on how they accomplished their 4736 mile (7622 KM) contact.

Jean-Jacques wrote, "As the theoretical window between both stations only lasts about 1 minute, 30 seconds, careful preparation was required for selection of the optimal window and calculation of doppler shifts both ways.

The effective contact was only possible during about 20 seconds, just enough to exchange reports, while both stations met on the transponder within an offset of 500 Hz of calculated frequencies
.
"


Well done and congratulations gents!

PS8RF has posted this video of the Satellite DX event on famous video sharing portal youtube. This video has been linked in the videos section of this website - should you need to review it later!

About AMSAT: The Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (as AMSAT is officially known) was first formed in the District of Columbia in 1969 as an educational organization. Its goal was to foster Amateur Radio's participation in space research and communication. AMSAT was founded to continue the efforts, begun in 1961, by Project OSCAR, a west coast USA-based group which built and launched the very first Amateur Radio satellite, OSCAR, on December 12, 1961, barely four years after the launch of Russia's first Sputnik. 

About AO-7: AMSAT-OSCAR 7 was launched November 15, 1974 by a Delta 2310 launcher from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Lompoc, California. AO-7 was launched piggyback with ITOS-G (NOAA 4) and the Spanish INTASAT. The second phase 2 satellite (Phase II-B). Weight 28.6 kg. Orbit 1444 x 1459 km. Inclination 101.7 degrees. Octahedrally shaped 360 mm high and 424 mm in diameter. Circularly polarized canted turnstile VHF/UHF antenna system and HF dipole.

Similar to AO-6. Built by a multi-national (German, Canadian, United States, and Australian) team of radio amateurs under the direction of AMSAT-NA. It carried Mode A (145.850-950 MHz uplink and 29.400-500 MHz downlink) and Mode B (432.180-120 MHz uplink and 145.920-980 MHz downlink (inverted)) linear transponders and 29.500 and 145.700 MHz beacons. The 2304.1 MHz was never turned on because of international treaty constraints. 

Four radio masts mounted at 90 degree intervals on the base and two experimental repeater systems provided store-and-forward for morse and teletype messages (Codestore) as it orbited around the world. The Mode-B transponder was designed and build by Karl Meinzer, DJ4ZC and Werner Haas, DJ5KQ. The Mode-B transponder was the first using "HELAPS" (High Efficient Linear Amplification by Parametric Synthesis) technology was developed by Dr. Karl Meinzer as part of his Ph.D. 

Additional information about AO-7 was printed in the September 1974 AMSAT Newsletter.

AO-7 was operational for 6.5 years until a battery failure ceased operation in mid 1981
and now the bird is considered to be semi-operational as it relies solely on solar power for it's operations.

 


Newsflash

The Pakistan Amateur Radio Society (PARS) in association with Islamabad Jeep Club (IJC) and Pakistan Academy of Family Physicians (PAFP) has started relief activities by providing food, tents and medical support to the northern flood effected areas of Nowshera, Charsadda and central Sargodha districts.

The Cellular services are down and so is the landline. (Why Ham Radio in Disaster Management)Last week, the joint team carried out survey in the north and the centre of the country and to its dismay the situation isn’t promising. Restoration of cellular services and Landlines could take months.

In order to address the communication breakage PARS in collaboration with Islamabad Jeep Club has constituted two teams. One would cater for the northern cities linking Islamabad with Peshawar, Nowshera and Charsadda. The other would link cities in the centre and would include, Sargodha, Lahore and Faisalabad and Multan.

PARS already has a 2-meter repeater in place and a weak signal whereof can be heard in these areas, but would need cross band repeaters to further increase its strength and allow penetration into the remote areas. This would result in effective communication through handhelds rather than reliance on base stations where there is an issue with electricity.

We would therefore request International and National Ham Community to provide us the following equipment, if possible.

   1. Cross band repeater radios (any brand)
       x 3  (144-430 MHz)
   2. Coaxial Cable 100 ft x3 with connectors
   3. Power supplies x 3
   4. Hi gain dual band antennas x 3
   5. Handhelds (any brand vhf 2meter) x 5

The equipment could be new or used but should in workable condition.

Please email directly ap2nk or ap2mks for further clarification and information.

CONTACT
Nasir Khan AP2NK (President, PARS)
Add: H# 30 , Street 28 , Shalimar F-6/1 Islamabad
Phone:+92 (0)300 5230052 or +92 (0)51 2273755
Email:
ap2nk.nasir@gmail.com

Muhammad Khalid Shoaib AP2MKS
Phone:+92 (0)333 5106595
Email:
khalid.shoaib@gmail.com
Skypee: Voyager303

Asadullah Marwat AP2AUM
Phone:+92 (0)300 8529852
Email:
ap2aum@gmail.com

Pakistan Amateur Radio Society
http://www.pakhams.com/