Commemorative QSL card from 2004, celebrating the 30th anniversary of the 1974 launch of AO-7 |
ANS also reports that AMRAD-OSCAR 27, launched in
1993 and long thought to be dead, has come back to life (just as AO-7 did several
years ago). It is primarily sending telemetry but controllers say they've
managed to activate its FM repeater transponder for about two minutes at a
time. Controllers are working to bring it back more consistently.
Finally, a brand new satellite – Russia's RS-44 –
was the focal point of a record-setting contact in mid-May between KI7UNJ in
Oregon and EB1AO in Spain. Newsline reports that the contact stretched
over 5,166 miles, or 8,314 kilometers, and that both stations had negative
elevation on their antennas, meaning that the satellite was below the horizon
at both ends of the contact. (The satellite has an uplink on 2 meters and a
downlink on 70 centimeters, so there must have been some type of enhancement on
both ends of the path. – ed.)