Great points Dan!  I can think of anything I could add.

73, Ken N2WWD




-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Daniel Schultz
Sent: Sunday, August 23, 2009 12:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: Don't Fly SuitSat2 to ISS (rebuttal)

The worldwide amateur radio community must interface with one unified voice to 
the various space agencies that form the ISS partnership. The ARISS 
organization, whatever its flaws may be, was created by the efforts of a lot of 
hard working hams in many countries to provide that interface. Without it ham 
radio would have no access to the manned space program, and as a child of the 
1960's who grew up with the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions, I am thrilled 
that we hams have such access. I could easily imagine a world where this was 
not allowed. The fact that we are able to launch anything to the ISS, given the 
astronomical value of every kilogram of payload mass on the Progress or the 
Shuttle, and every minute of astronaut and cosmonaut time on orbit, is truly 
amazing. 

The recent complaints on the BB remind me of the hams who bash the ARRL without 
understanding that without the ARRL, amateur radio would have been abolished 
long ago by the powers that be. We hams need to understand that whatever 
disagreements exist between us are not nearly as serious as the external 
threats to our amateur radio avocation. Whatever your beef is, please work 
within the organization to make it better, and not tear it down in public view. 
Writing open letters addressed to the worlds space agencies is not helpful to 
this effort or to your fellow hams. 

Moving on another amsat-bb thread, AO-40 was designed and built to take 
advantage of what turned out to be a once in a lifetime opportunity to launch a 
very large amateur payload into geosynchronous transfer orbit. Had we chosen 
not to build it, I can imagine lots of people complaining on amsat-bb about how 
Amsat management had dropped the ball and squandered an amazing launch 
opportunity. 

The presence of exotic transponders on AO-40 is not what caused its failure.
The 24 GHz payload was contributed by an Amsat member organization and was 
built because they believed strongly enough in its value that they committed 
their effort and their funds to get it built. There were transponders on AO-40 
to serve every interest, from VHF to UHF to S-band to millimeter wave. Hams 
MUST push their technical limits and explore new frontiers, it is one of the 
reasons amateur radio still exists. Critics cried about the "complexity" of the 
S-band downlink and then some clever hams took some cheap off the shelf TV down 
converters, made some slight mods to retune the input frequency, and got a lot 
of hams active with 2.4 GHz receive capability for very little money. 

I agree with the letter in this month's QST (September issue, page 24), 
suggesting that those who complain that the amateur radio has gotten "too 
technical" might better enjoy reading People Magazine instead.

Dan Schultz N8FGV



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