[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-15 Thread w6zkh
Good morning all...well, interesting reading to say the least for me, 
being a noobie here chasing the birds. Now that I have my KLM's up for LEO's, 
and not having computer control of the cheap Radio Shack rotator, (which only 
travels about 355 degs stop to stop),I used the close enough for govt work or 
horseshoe and hand grenade approach. I ended up trying the compass method 
with inclination correction, and set it like that, but didnt seem right. So 
next used the Dracula method of driving a stake into the ground and waited 
till High Noon (1pm PDT) and looked at the shadow. Well, the compass method was 
as close and being I dont need exact degrees, this is where I am set. Course 
someday I hope to get the nice AZ-EL system up with computer control and then I 
will probably be more critical. Subject is interesting though about using the 
sun for a noise generator. 

John W6ZKH 


- Original Message - 
From: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com 
To: ni...@ngunn.net 
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org, n...@lavabit.com 
Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 10:41:00 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific 
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions 


Hi Nigel, 

In theory, yes, the Sun is a known signal generator and can be used for this 
purpose, if you've got a good enough receive system to pick up the noise, and 
have the right test equipment to measure it. (Recall the original question 
started around an Elk-class antenna system, which I do not believe qualifies.) 

Logistically, however, you are up on the roof or tower, screw drivers and 
wrenches in hand, and likely your instrumentation is not. How are you going to 
know when you have the right position? Using the shadow method - I actually use 
the shadow of my 2.4 ghz feed on the BBQ Grill dish as my guide - takes me all 
of a few seconds, and I'm consistently within a few degrees of perfect. Why not 
go with the easy method? 

Greg KO6TH 


 Date: Thu, 13 Aug 2009 12:17:10 + 
 From: ni...@ngunn.net 
 To: ko6th_g...@hotmail.com 
 CC: n...@lavabit.com; bhow...@mail.utexas.edu; amsat-bb@amsat.org 
 Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions 
 
 How about aiming for maximum receiver noise? That should be even more 
 accurate. 
 
 Greg Wrote: and then adjust the antenna so the shadow falls directly down the 
 antenna boom. 

_ 
Get back to school stuff for them and cashback for you. 
http://www.bing.com/cashback?form=MSHYCBpubl=WLHMTAGcrea=TEXT_MSHYCB_BackToSchool_Cashback_BTSCashback_1x1
 
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-15 Thread David Gendle
Greetings!

This thread is bringing back memories.

Eons ago (60's) when I was servicing long range radar for the USAF 
once a month the third shift crew would have to verify the proper 
azimuth and elevation orientation of our antennas.  We would stop all 
antenna motion, stop transmitting and crank the receiver gain full 
up.  At a specific instant when the sun just broke over the horizon 
we would verify if the azimuth and elevation of the antenna was 
correct by using the large noise burst from the sun.  Using this 
method we could get the antennas within 2 degrees of perfect 
orientation.  It was a foolproof procedure because the location of 
the sun was always predictable.

Ahh the good old days! :-)

73,
Dave _ K4DLG





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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-14 Thread Edward Cole
Using my 85cm offset feed dish on 2400-MHz with a 0.6 dBNF preamp 
(MK232A2), I could see about 1/2 s-unit of sun noise and a similar 
amount of ground noise when looking at nearby forest on the 
horizon.  Comparing the sun shaddow on the dish vs. noise peak az-el 
readings would indicate how close the feed was to perfect boresight 
and alignment.

73, Ed - KL7UW

At 06:53 AM 8/13/2009, i8cvs wrote:
Hi Nigel, G8IFF/W8IFF

You are right

Aiming the antenna for maximum receiver Sun noise is the best method
because the antenna pattern can be affected by some squint angle and not
be perfectly aligned with the boom but receiving Noise from the Sun in
2 meters and 70 cm implies a very high antenna gain and a very low overall
receiving Noise Figure with a very low Antenna temperature.

By the way at microwave such as 2400 MHz it is possible to receive the Sun
Noise using a modest dish diameter even when the Sun activity is low as
actually with around 67 sfu at 2800 MHz (10.7 cm)

See here:

http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/DSD.txt

I use this method with my 1.2 meter dish 27 dBi at 2400 MHz and an overall
receiving Noise Figure of 1 dB equivalent to a Noise Temperature of 75
kelvin

With the above dish and receiver I actually get a Sun Noise of about 3.5 dB
of (S+N)/N wich is easily readible on the S meter or better using an AC
Voltmeter connected to the audio output of receiver.

Using a tracking program and aiming the dish for maximum Sun Noise
it is possible to calibrate the AZ and EL angle of the control box for the
through reference Sun position in the sky.

In addition repeating time to time the above procedure and knowing the
actual Sun's sfu it is possible to monitor the state of healt of our
receiving system.

By the way without an HEO satellite using 2400 MHz the above procedure
is as well a little and interesting Radioastronomy exercise.

Best 73 de

i8CVS Domenico

- Original Message -
From: Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF ni...@ngunn.net
To: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org; n...@lavabit.com
Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 2:17 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions


  How about aiming for maximum receiver noise? That should be even more
accurate.
 
  Greg Wrote:  and then adjust the antenna so the shadow falls directly
down the antenna boom.
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-13 Thread Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF
How about aiming for maximum receiver noise? That should be even more accurate.

Greg Wrote:  and then adjust the antenna so the shadow falls directly down 
the antenna boom.
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-13 Thread i8cvs
Hi Nigel, G8IFF/W8IFF

You are right

Aiming the antenna for maximum receiver Sun noise is the best method
because the antenna pattern can be affected by some squint angle and not
be perfectly aligned with the boom but receiving Noise from the Sun in
2 meters and 70 cm implies a very high antenna gain and a very low overall
receiving Noise Figure with a very low Antenna temperature.

By the way at microwave such as 2400 MHz it is possible to receive the Sun
Noise using a modest dish diameter even when the Sun activity is low as
actually with around 67 sfu at 2800 MHz (10.7 cm)

See here:

http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpdir/indices/DSD.txt

I use this method with my 1.2 meter dish 27 dBi at 2400 MHz and an overall
receiving Noise Figure of 1 dB equivalent to a Noise Temperature of 75
kelvin

With the above dish and receiver I actually get a Sun Noise of about 3.5 dB
of (S+N)/N wich is easily readible on the S meter or better using an AC
Voltmeter connected to the audio output of receiver.

Using a tracking program and aiming the dish for maximum Sun Noise
it is possible to calibrate the AZ and EL angle of the control box for the
through reference Sun position in the sky.

In addition repeating time to time the above procedure and knowing the
actual Sun's sfu it is possible to monitor the state of healt of our
receiving system.

By the way without an HEO satellite using 2400 MHz the above procedure
is as well a little and interesting Radioastronomy exercise.

Best 73 de

i8CVS Domenico

- Original Message -
From: Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF ni...@ngunn.net
To: Greg D. ko6th_g...@hotmail.com
Cc: amsat-bb@amsat.org; n...@lavabit.com
Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 2:17 PM
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions


 How about aiming for maximum receiver noise? That should be even more
accurate.

 Greg Wrote:  and then adjust the antenna so the shadow falls directly
down the antenna boom.
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-13 Thread n0jy
Yes that's a good point, I'm not encouraging anyone to go on their roof at
night, in fact I would heartily discourage it for the sake of safety. 
What I intended to mean was, I looked at Polaris at night, got the
difference from the way my house/roof points, then took that protractor up
to the roof during daylight to tweak the antennas.  And as you also
mention, a couple of degrees isn't going to make a lot of difference
unless you are using some extremely narrow beamwidth antennas, so the fact
that Polaris is actually about 2 degrees right of how my house points to
the north is not of importance in my opinion.  I positioned the antennas
to point along the lines of the house and it works fine.

Jerry


 The only problem using Polaris, or most any star for that matter, is that
 the only time you're going to see it is when it's too dark to go climbing
 up the roof or tower to adjust the antenna.  I use the one star that is
 always visible during the day, the Sun.


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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-13 Thread Daniel Schultz
To find true north at your QTH:

Go to
http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/rs-one-day-us

Enter your nearest city and state into the menu

If you prefer to enter latitude and longitude, or if you are outside of the
USA, go to
http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/rs-one-day-world

You will get a chart like this for your location:

Thursday
13 August 2009Eastern Daylight Time 

SUN
Begin civil twilight   5:50 a.m.
Sunrise6:19 a.m.
Sun transit1:12 p.m.
Sunset 8:05 p.m.
End civil twilight 8:33 p.m.

MOON
Moonrise  11:04 p.m. on preceding day
Moon transit   6:29 a.m.
Moonset2:04 p.m.
Moonrise  11:44 p.m.
Moonset3:13 p.m. on following day

Make a note of the Sun transit time. Set your watch by WWV or some other
reliable time source. Drive a stake in the ground (use a plumb line to make
sure it is vertical). Go outside at the exact moment of the sun transit, at
that time the shadow of the stake (or your tower if it is vertical) will be
true north. Mark the ground at that exact time.

Dan Schultz N8FGV



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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-13 Thread jmfranke
Or go to:

http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/alt-az-us

enter your location and get the azimuth of the Sun for every 10 minutes so you 
do not have to worry as much about clouds or trees, etc.

John WA4WDL


 Daniel Schultz n8...@usa.net wrote: 
 To find true north at your QTH:
 
 Go to
 http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/rs-one-day-us
 
 Enter your nearest city and state into the menu
 
 If you prefer to enter latitude and longitude, or if you are outside of the
 USA, go to
 http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/rs-one-day-world
 
 You will get a chart like this for your location:
 
 Thursday
 13 August 2009Eastern Daylight Time 
 
   SUN
 Begin civil twilight   5:50 a.m.
 Sunrise6:19 a.m.
 Sun transit1:12 p.m.
 Sunset 8:05 p.m.
 End civil twilight 8:33 p.m.
 
   MOON
 Moonrise  11:04 p.m. on preceding day
 Moon transit   6:29 a.m.
 Moonset2:04 p.m.
 Moonrise  11:44 p.m.
 Moonset3:13 p.m. on following day
 
 Make a note of the Sun transit time. Set your watch by WWV or some other
 reliable time source. Drive a stake in the ground (use a plumb line to make
 sure it is vertical). Go outside at the exact moment of the sun transit, at
 that time the shadow of the stake (or your tower if it is vertical) will be
 true north. Mark the ground at that exact time.
 
 Dan Schultz N8FGV
 
 
 
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-12 Thread Bill Howell
Joseph,
Check out this page:
http://www.thecompassstore.com/decvar.html#
There's a link on that page to plug in your Zip code and figure  
declination, or
you can use the handy map on the main page.
For Austin, the magic number is 4 degrees.

If I recall correctly (it's been a few years), I set the rotor  
control box to North, went up on the roof and rotated the *mast*  
until the ants pointed to magnetic north (using a compass). Note that  
the compass will read inaccurately if held near a metal mast.
Then I rotated the mast a bit more so the ants were pointing about 4  
degrees *West of magnetic North*.

That's the way I remember doing it.

Bill N5AB

On Aug 12, 2009, at 10:28 AM, Joseph Armbruster wrote:

 Hey everyone at the amtat-bb!

 I spent a good portion of the day sick in bed yesterday and only  
 naturally
 got to thinking about quite a few things.  I figured i'd pop on  
 here and
 start asking questions.  Here's some background information on my sat
 experience; my rig consists of a TH-F6A (handheld, not full-duplex)  
 and an
 arrow antenna.  I have been successfull at manually trakcing the  
 ISS and
 AO-51, but I have been unsuccessful at making a contact.  I went  
 out to
 field day (in Oviedo Florida) and was able to check out the rig the  
 LMARS
 club uses.  This got me wondering about sat tracking software, the  
 internals
 and what definition of North that is used.

 I'm familiar with the IGRF (from my day job as a GIS guy) and was  
 wondering
 if any of these apps use the IGRF for calculating magnetic  
 declination:
 http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/IAGA/vmod/igrf.html

 I've thought about creating my own rotator and started wondering  
 about the
 configuration used.  When you buy a rotator and put it out in the  
 yard, i'm
 guessing you have to orient the base 'correctly'.  How is the base  
 of a
 rotator usually aligned?  Do you get a compass out and use local  
 magnetic
 north (without compensating for the declination from the IGRF).

 I'm still in learning mode and very new to the world of sat, so if  
 these are
 really dumb questions, my apologies!

 I am open to any reading materials you can suggest on the matter.

 Joseph Armrbuster, KJ4JIO
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-12 Thread n0jy
One can also use Polaris (the North Star) at least in most of the northern
hemisphere where it is visible.  A long time ago, I went outside after
dark and looked at how my house lined up with Polaris.  In my case, it was
a dead sight along the front or back side and the peak of the roof to
Polaris.  If it's not, you could use a protractor to determine the
difference.  I have done that, relative to the E/W lines of the side of
the house, to point the TV antenna to 125 degrees toward the transmitter
site for this area.

Jerry
N0JY

 Joseph,
 Check out this page:
 http://www.thecompassstore.com/decvar.html#
 There's a link on that page to plug in your Zip code and figure
 declination, or
 you can use the handy map on the main page.
 For Austin, the magic number is 4 degrees.

 If I recall correctly (it's been a few years), I set the rotor
 control box to North, went up on the roof and rotated the *mast*
 until the ants pointed to magnetic north (using a compass). Note that
 the compass will read inaccurately if held near a metal mast.
 Then I rotated the mast a bit more so the ants were pointing about 4
 degrees *West of magnetic North*.

 That's the way I remember doing it.

 Bill N5AB




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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-12 Thread Alan VE4YZ
Hi Joe and the group.   IMHO when we get to discussing IGRF for mounting an
antenna and rotator for amateur radio use, we are over thinking this issue.
Now I must admit that I only have a 3 degree difference in EN19 which I
completely ignore.  I find there is too much magnetic QRM around here to get
a good reading of MN and then correct for TN.  The more sensitive the
compass the harder to get a bearing.  Well you get a bearing, but you know
its dead wrong because you get a different reading my moving a few feet  in
any direction.  So, unless you use the super desensitized 1/2 diameter
compass on a Captain Canada Decoder Ring I find Google Earth pragmatically
good enough. 

Software such as SatPC32 and others allow you to make permanent corrections
for AZ and EL changes or compensation for mounting the antenna a little off
horizontal and true north, or changes that occur over time.  A little
slippage in any of the half dozen U-Bolts between the terra firma and the
antenna beam during a windstorm can be corrected - U-bolts on the mast to
rotator, rotator to boom, boom to the antenna saddle, the saddle to the
beam.  It's a wonder anything stays pointing to where you want it.

However, to contradict myself, I have been known, on occasion, to sight
along the beam of my yagis to the Sun and use any number of the freeware Sun
locator applications.  Very handy on Field Days in remote locations.   I've
never found the Sun's RF useful for aligning antennas mainly because I've
never heard the difference on UHF/VHF or S band even with preamps, but,
maybe that hearing loss due to age :-)

73, Alan VE4YZ
EN19kv
AMSAT LM 2352 
http://www.wincube.ca




 Hey everyone at the amtat-bb!

 I spent a good portion of the day sick in bed yesterday and only 
 naturally got to thinking about quite a few things.  I figured i'd pop 
 on here and start asking questions.  Here's some background 
 information on my sat experience; my rig consists of a TH-F6A 
 (handheld, not full-duplex) and an arrow antenna.  I have been 
 successfull at manually trakcing the ISS and AO-51, but I have been 
 unsuccessful at making a contact.  I went out to field day (in Oviedo 
 Florida) and was able to check out the rig the LMARS club uses.  This 
 got me wondering about sat tracking software, the internals and what 
 definition of North that is used.

 I'm familiar with the IGRF (from my day job as a GIS guy) and was 
 wondering if any of these apps use the IGRF for calculating magnetic
 declination:
 http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/IAGA/vmod/igrf.html

 I've thought about creating my own rotator and started wondering about 
 the configuration used.  When you buy a rotator and put it out in the 
 yard, i'm guessing you have to orient the base 'correctly'.  How is 
 the base of a rotator usually aligned?  Do you get a compass out and 
 use local magnetic north (without compensating for the declination 
 from the IGRF).

 I'm still in learning mode and very new to the world of sat, so if 
 these are really dumb questions, my apologies!

 I am open to any reading materials you can suggest on the matter.

 Joseph Armrbuster, KJ4JIO
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[amsat-bb] Re: rotator questions

2009-08-12 Thread Mark Lunday
My 2 cents.

Use a handheld GPS to align, or refer to a map.  Reason: the Arrow is not a
small beamwidth antenna...don't put too much accuracy into alignment.  Like
tracking pennies on a million dollar contract.  Case in point:  I took a TV
rotor into the unfinished attic of my house, taped it to a cross beam on the
floor with duct tape, inserted a sawed off handle from a standard shovel,
and taped the Arrow at 30 degrees elevation to the handle.  Aligned the
Arrow to North by going outside and referencing the North Star after sunset
against the alignment of my roof longitudinal.  Works like a charm.


Mark Lunday
WD4ELG
Hillsborough, NC - FM06kb
wd4...@arrl.net
http://wd4elg.net
http://wd4elg.blogspot.com


-Original Message-
From: amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org] On
Behalf Of Joseph Armbruster
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 11:29 AM
To: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Subject: [amsat-bb] rotator questions

Hey everyone at the amtat-bb!

I spent a good portion of the day sick in bed yesterday and only naturally
got to thinking about quite a few things.  I figured i'd pop on here and
start asking questions.  Here's some background information on my sat
experience; my rig consists of a TH-F6A (handheld, not full-duplex) and an
arrow antenna.  I have been successfull at manually trakcing the ISS and
AO-51, but I have been unsuccessful at making a contact.  I went out to
field day (in Oviedo Florida) and was able to check out the rig the LMARS
club uses.  This got me wondering about sat tracking software, the internals
and what definition of North that is used.

I'm familiar with the IGRF (from my day job as a GIS guy) and was wondering
if any of these apps use the IGRF for calculating magnetic declination:
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/IAGA/vmod/igrf.html

I've thought about creating my own rotator and started wondering about the
configuration used.  When you buy a rotator and put it out in the yard, i'm
guessing you have to orient the base 'correctly'.  How is the base of a
rotator usually aligned?  Do you get a compass out and use local magnetic
north (without compensating for the declination from the IGRF).

I'm still in learning mode and very new to the world of sat, so if these are
really dumb questions, my apologies!

I am open to any reading materials you can suggest on the matter.

Joseph Armrbuster, KJ4JIO
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