Moon Bounce from 1000 ft dish!!

[html] I wasn’t sure if you knew about this, but thought I’d send you the link incase you hadn’t.
Enjoy……73s……..Jack Spink

http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2010/04/07/11420/?nc=1 [/html]

  • #1 written by VE6CIA
    about 15 years ago

    That link must have moved on as it is a dead link already see the info here…Garry

    Arecibo on 432 MHz Moon Bounce

    The Arecibo Observatory Amateur Radio Club will be putting the 1000-foot radio telescope on the air for 432 MHz EME from April 16-18. It can be heard with a small hand-held yagi pointed at the moon.

    The scheduled times of operation are:

    April 16: 1645 – 1930 UTC
    April 17: 1740 – 2020 UTC
    April 18: 1840 – 2125 UTC
    Callsign: KP4AO

    Tx Frequency: 432.045 MHz

    Rx Frequency: 432.050 to 432.060+

    Tx power: 400 W

    Antenna gain: 60 dBi

    System noise temp: 120 K (cold sky)

    System noise temp: 330 K (when pointed at moon)

    KP4AO can be heard with a small hand-held yagi pointed at the moon and a good receiver. A 15 dBi antenna and 100 W will be enough to work us on CW.

    Operators at KP4AO will do their best to work as many stations as possible. Each session will start with a brief announcement and CQ in SSB. SSB QSOs may continue for 30 minutes to an hour, if the QSO rate remains high.

    The mode will be shifted to CW as soon as it is judged that higher QSO rates would result.

    We will listen for calls at frequencies 5-15 kHz higher than our own, and even higher if QRM warrants. Callers who s-p-r-e-a-d o-u-t are more likely to be copied.

    If you’ve already worked us in any mode, please do not call again — give others a chance.

    If we call “CQ QRP”, we will listen for stations running 100 W or less to a single yagi. Please do not answer such a CQ if you are running more power or have a larger antenna.

    On April 18, if we reach a condition where most calling stations have been worked, and we judge that operating in the digital mode JT65B would produce a higher QSO rate, we will switch to JT65B.

    Note that any of these planned operating strategies may be changed as circumstances dictate.

    We are extremely fortunate to have been granted access to the world’s largest radio telescope for this amateur radio good-will event. We look forward to working as many stations as possible in the alloted time.

    Here is a EME event you cant miss. Dust off your CW key, its time for Satellite, QRP EME.

    The 1,000 foot dish has 60 dBi on 432 mc and 400 watts. That comes out to be approximately 243,902,443 Million Watts ERP.