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Tag: Owen Garriott

Working satellites

Those who know me, know I am not keen on VHF, nor on repeaters – and are surprised to find my latest hobby is working satellites.  It’s not quite the same as working a stationary terrestrial repeater – not when the repeater is traveling at 11 – 27 thousand kilometers per hour!

So, what can you do working satellites?

There are a variety of satellites with ham radio transponders/repeaters on board.  These range from download only (usually telemetry or CW beacons) to cross-band repeaters on FM and SSB.

Working an FM satellite is a piece of cake!  Get a handheld – a UV-5R or equivalent is more than adequate.  Set the radio to the receive frequency, the tx to the tx frequency and go.  The standard “rubber duck” antenna on the handheld is all you need for a high pass.  Working the passes closer to teh horizon you need a yagi.

The AMSAT yagi I love so much!

The AMSAT yagi I love so much!

The AMSAT yagi as available on the AMSAT SA website is a good place to start.  That and a fitting onto the HT of your choice and you have a fully operational “Ground station”.

Antennas and polarization: While you must understand the satellite is travelling at one hell of a rate of knots, it is also turning.  Consider, also, the path a satellite might take and how a standard vertical antenna will work on receive and transmit.  When the satellite is directly overhead of a vertical antenna, you will get no signal.  When the satellite is on the horizon (further away utilizing a lower radiation angle) the vertical will be better.  A yagi, however, wins hands down in both cases.

There are plenty of youtube tutorials about working satellites and they will all tell you antenna orientation is important.  And it is, but get out and play – you will soon figure it out.

Apart from working other hams through a satellite, downloading telemetry from a satellite, you might also get a chance to work an astronaut on-board the ISS.  This is indeed a rare occurrence, although schools can schedule a QSO with the ISS, regular radio hams like Andre, ZS2BK need to be in the right place at the right time to get the contact.  Andre, ZS2BK had a chat with Richard on the ISS and managed to record the QSO – one of which he is very proud!

What about getting images from the ISS?  Every so often the ISS transmits images on SSTV – usually now in mode PD120.  At the time of writing this post, the ISS is transmitting a range of images in remembrance of astronaut and engineer Owen Garriott.  Download an app to decode SSTV – I use Robot36 on android and MMSSTV on Windows.  Set the mode to PD120 and place it within “earshot” of a radio receiving on 145.800MHz while the ISS crosses overhead.

The first image I received from the ISS

The first image I received from the ISS

The PD120 mode takes 2 min to send an image and is then followed by a 2 min break, so you would think you would get  5  images per 10 minute pass, but it is not quite that simple.  You should get between 3 and 5 images – along with partial images depending on where in the tx cycle the satellite is at your AOS/LOS and so on.

For more on images from the ISS, check out my post here.  What about a SOTA activation by satellite ?  What about RADAR?  The possibilities are almost endless.

I will leave you with a single thought that blows my mind.: There are people (Andre, ZS2ACP for example) who have worked a DXCC via satellites!

Images from the ISS

Working satellites has certainly upped my activity level as far as ham radio is concerned.  Between not getting out to do SOTA and the current sun spot activity making DX from my rather limited shack a hard task, ham radio was taking a beating.

My very first image - ever!

My very first image – ever!

I will be the first to admit that VHF does not press my buttons.  If I wanted to be a security guard with a “mall cop” radio, that would be different – but I am HF and SOTA and a bot around the edges!

Working a local repeater is about as much fun as well, its not fun.  Nor is it exciting.  Working a satellite is about the same thing – with one subtle difference – its moving at one hell-of-a-lick!

Tracking satellites and being available for the relevant *workable* passes is also a challenge, but at least it requires a bit of thought and planning – not like keying the local repeater.

My setup

My setup is probably about as basic as it comes – a 5W handheld with one of the cool AMSAT Yagi’s developed by ZSYI.  You can imagine me walking all over my backyard pointing the yagi into the sky at odd angles, turning it around and keeping the squelch open.  I often think my neighbours must think I am ET calling for an Uber!

Now, getting images from the ISS – that sounds difficult and almost illegal.  So of course I am interested!

Well it turns out it is neither difficult nor is it illegal.  It is, however, still rather rewarding!

I downloaded the Robot36 app (from the google play store) – it is a free app and decodes SSTV (Slow Scan TV) signals.  A simple, nice app that does what it claims to do!

I connected my handheld Baofeng UV-5R up to the station’s vertical antenna (on the roof) and tuned the Baofeng to 145.800MHz, FM.  I placed the cell phone next to the radio and waited for a pass.

Ta-da! images

Remembering Owen Garriott - ISS images

Remembering Owen Garriott – ISS images

From this very simple station I got the following images.  QRM on the signal gives the “shaky/out of focus” look to parts of the image.  As far as I can understand, the “green belts” are lack of signal into the decoder (rather than distorted signal).

Another part of the puzzle – with my station in particular – is the fact that I used a single vertical antenna (rather than a yagi pointed at the satellite) so the signals on the horizon are better (into the vertical) than when the ISS is directly overhead.  Imagine computer controlled yagis tracking the ISS in real time!  Ok, it is a reality for some people, but not me in my shack – I have to do it the hard way 😉

Here are a few more images:

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