AMSAT Vice-President of Operations Drew Glasbrenner,  KO4MA, provided the latest details in AMSAT's work to keep the amateur  radio satellite AO-51 operational             for as long as possible.
Drew wrote, "Keeping AO-51 operating requires the US command team                routinely restarting the satellite, and tweaking the power settings                to find a combination of operating parameters to get it through                eclipse. Currently one of the 6 battery cells onboard is shorted,              and another is in really poor shape."
Continuing, Drew explains, "The onboard computer was  crashing each                orbit because of low voltage when the solar cells were no  longer receiving illumination and the satellite relies entirely on its  internal battery power. Through experimentation the Command Team seems                to have found a balance point where it will sometimes go  up to two              days before crashing."
Each time the computer crashes the Command Team has to restart                it using the housekeeping software onboard in ROM. The firmware               code has a limited functionality compared to the normal flight                software which we would upload from the ground over a few days                time. However the eclipses and battery problem were causing a             crash before the upload can complete.
Drew concludes, "With lots of luck we will be able to continue to 
limp along. How long is anyone's guess. I'd encourage you  to use                AO-51 while it's available, and to financially support new  satellite programs like Kiwisat, Funcube, and Fox when you can."
Uplink: 145.880 MHz, no tone.
Downlink: 435.150 MHz
The repeater is open to all when the satellite is operational.
Keep up with the latest AO-51 Control Team News on-line at:
http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/echo/CTNews.php
Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA
AMSAT-NA VP Operations
From http://www.southgatearc.org/index.htm
 
 
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