Courtesy Dallas Remote Imaging Group Datalink RBBS ============> 214-394-7438 Dedicated to satellite tracking, decoding of NOAA/Soviet meteorological satellite telemetry, and Digital Image Processing of satellite pictures. Jeff Wallach, N5ITU, Chairman John Williams, Co-Chairman T S Kelso, Air Force/NASA liason Jim Blocker, KF5IW, Director Software Development Jose Sancho WB5YFU, Director of Engineering All aspects of Amateur Radio covered on Datalink RBBS (IF YOU COPY THIS BULLETIN FOR OTHER SYSTEMS, PLEASE BE KIND ENOUGH TO LEAVE THIS BANNER AS DUE CREDIT TO THE HARD-WORKING FOLKS WHO DEVELOPED AND CONTINUALLY UPDATE THIS INFORMATIVE 'HOW-TO'BULLETIN) (rev 8) Tom Gentry, K5VOU, has been kind enough to help us prepare the following: HOW TO RECEIVE APT PICTURES FROM THE NOAA SATELLITES ---------------------------------------------------- So you have decided you want to receive the NOAA and Russian METEOR orbiters and you have a radio that receives 137.500 MHz and a computer. So now what do you do? I hope this short dissertation will steer you in the correct direction. To display a picture from the orbiting birds you need several things. First you need to 'acquire' the satellite. This means you need the program to calculate its position at any time and determine if you can hear the signals from the 'bird'. The best place to get this program is probably AMSAT-NA an organization dedicated to AMateur SATellites. They have several very good tracking programs for the IBM and also for Commodore and Apple as well. After you have acquired the program and have it running on your computer, you then need the Keplerian Elements for the NOAA satellites. These elements as well as some tracking programs are available from the CELESTIAL RCP/M, run by TS Kelso, at 512-892-4180 (Austin, TX) and from the Weather Fax and Remote Imaging DATALINK BBS run by Dr. Jeff Wallach, N5ITU as bulletins for some 50 + sets of satellite data. Another bulletin also tells you to what the printed numbers correspond so you can enter them into the computer program. Use the newest elements you can find as the orbiting satellites are subject to forces which change their orbits. If you use Keplerian Elements more than 3 or 4 weeks old, your chances of hearing the bird are reduced. Once you are tracking the birds you should hear them on your receiver. They will be on 137.62 (NOAA-9), 137.500 (NOAA-10), 137.850 (Meteor 2-14,2-15), 137.4 (Meteor 2-16), 137.3 (Meteor 2-17). Now comes the first thing different about NOAA orbiters. The frequency deviation of the FM transmission is about +/-18-20 kHz. This is 4 times the normal deviation of a police call and 1/3 the deviation of the FM broadcast band FM signal. If you receive the signal on the regular communications width of the scanner the light areas of the picture will be noisy and the signal will sound distorted and the picture will basically be useless. If you use the FM broadcast bandwidth (assuming your scanner will let you), the signal will be weak and there may be too much background noise to see the picture. So what now ? Well there are two ways to fix the problem, find a receiver with the proper I.F. bandwidth filter of 50 kHz, or modify the I.F. of your scanner to about 50-80 kHz. The simplest mod which has been found to be workable is to remove the narrow communications I.F. filter and replace it with a 0.01 uFd capacitor. This provides for good Wefax pictures from GOES and pretty fair NOAA orbiter pictures. It can of course result in retuning the radio, voiding the warranty and making the squelch not work properly. The other characteristic of the NOAA satellite transmissions is THEY ARE WEAK. To get good pictures over a large area we have found a pre-amplifier to be essential. A GaAs-FET type can be obtained from various sources at a reasonable price but still about 50-100 dollars. You can also build one for about 25 dollars from plans for a pre-amp for the 2-meter amateur band and tune it to 137.5 easily. Lastly but importantly, the antenna needs to be of an omni directional, uniform pattern type such as a turnstile antenna similar to those used in the FM broadcast reception business but of course tuned to 137.5 MHz. Mount the pre-amp at the antenna if possible. Crooked coathangers on broomsticks have been known to work with the pre-amps mounted on the broomstick, so it is not difficult to build the antenna. Now that you have a nice audio signal from the satellite, what happens next? The audio tone of 2400 HZ which is the carrier tone that is used to carry the picture information (video), must be detected and the video data converted from analog to digital and then displayed on the computer monitor by the software. The hardware and software to do this is available from several sources with more coming along. Several stand-alone boxes are also available that produce some form of computer output either in printed form or on the display. In addition the people on the DATALINK BBS may also have some data to share with you regarding this equipment. One of the best sources for information is the WEATHER SATELLITE HANDBOOK available from Dr. Ralph Taggart of Michigan State University at 602 S. Jefferson, Mason, MI 48854 for $15.00. Taggart also writes the monthly WEATHERSAT column which appears in '73 Magazine. A must is THE JOURNAL OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL SALELLITE AMATEUR USERS' GROUP - JESAUG - which is published quarterly. It is available for $12.00 per year from the editor, Greg Mengell, 2685 Ellenbrook Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670. Back issues of the 'Journal' are also available. At the present the simplest software for the IBM is the Elmer Schweittek MULTIFAX 3.0 software. A hardware kit is available from A&A Engineering which includes the video dectector circuit and A/D converter. Input to the PC is via the game port. If you want to build your own, complete documentation to build an interface circuit on an IBM PC prototyping board is available from H. Paul Shuch, N6TX, for $6.00 - FAXBOARD. The WEPIX(tm) software and hardware should be available from Encomm by March 1988, and it will produce pictures of 1200 lines by 800 samples per line displayed at 640 x 350 pixels in 16 shades of gray or 16 colors using an IBM PC with 640kB, EGA card and at least one 360k disk. 'Typical' APT Receiving Station ------------------------------- [1] ANTENNA - [2] PRE-AMP - - - - [ STAND ALONE UNITS ] - [3] RECEIVER -----------------> FAX MACHINE ---> PAPER - WRASSE UNIT ---> MONITOR - YU3UMV UNIT ---> MONITOR - - - [4] - VIDEO DETECTOR - - - - - [5] - ANALOG/DIGITAL - - - - - [ SCAN CONVERTERS ] - - [6] - INTERFACE TO PC - <=======> ROBOT 1200 - - TAGGARTS'S WSH - - IMAGEWISE - - [7] - SOFTWARE - ** SECOND DISPLAY ** - - for weather images - - - - [8] - GRAPHICS ADAPTOR - - - - - [9] PC DISPLAY / MONITOR Display weather images (or commands for SCAN CONVERTERS) [10] PC PRINTER / DOT MATRIX / LASER NOTES: ------ [4] VIDEO DETECTOR, [5] ANALOG/DIGITAL CONVERTER, and [6] INTERFACE TO PC may be in seperate hardware units or all on one circuit board. Sources: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NOAA Data / Keplerian Elements: DATALINK RBBS, N5ITU, Dr. Jeff Wallach, 214-394-7438 DALLAS REMOTE IMAGING GROUP ELECTRONIC BULLETIN BOARD UPDATES ON NOAA BULLETINS, SATELLITE LAUNCHES, FREQUENCIES DISPLAY PICTURES FROM NOAA SATS ON YOUR OWN P.C. CELESTIAL RCP/M, TS KELSO, 512-892-4180 Tracking Software: AMSAT-NA, PO Box 27, Washington, DC 20044, Software Exchange, phone 301-589-6062 (voice) DATALINK BBS, download SATTRAK0.ARC and others CELESTIAL RCP/M, TS KELSO, 512-892-4180, SATTRAK0.ARC and others Receivers: Vanguard Labs, 196-23 Jamaica, Hollis, NY 11423, phone 718-468-2720 Hamtroincs, Inc.,65-D Moul Road, Hilton, NY 14468-9535 phone 716-392-9430 Crystals: JAN Crystals, 2400 Crystal Dr, Fort Myers, FL 33906-6017, phone 1-800-237-3063 or 813-936-2397 Pre-Amps: THL/Encomm, Inc, 1506 Capital Ave, Plano, TX 75074, phone 214-423-0024 Spectrum International,Inc., Box 1084, Concord MA 01742, phone 617-263-2145 Vanguard Labs, Hamtronics and GLB for Helical RF Filters for intermod Antennas: ARRL Handbook, 1986, turnstile over ground antenna. ARRL Satellite Experimenter's Handbook by Martin Davidoff, K2UBC Hardware Interface to PC: A&A Engineering, 2521 W. La Palma, Unit K, Anaheim, CA 92801, phone 714-952-2114 - both AM dectector and A/D converter, input to PC via game port (4-bits) or parallel I/O Interface (8-bits) - kit is $50. - assembled and tested unit is $70. Microcomm, H. Paul Shuch, N6TX, 14908 Sandy Lane, San Jose, CA 95124, phone 408-377-6137 - FAXBOARD - A Weather Facsimile Display Board for the IBM PC - Complete documentation to build your own interface circuit on an IBM PC prototyping board - video and an 8-bit A/D interface - $6.00 Video Detectors: RTM Circuit Boards, 205 Elm St.,Van Horne, IA 52346-0400, video detector only (the 'Wilson Board') see QST Magazine, Jan '86 QST Magazine, August 1985, Grant Zehr article, page 27, video detector circuit A/D Converter & Parallel I/O Interfaces for the IBM PC: MetraByte, 440 Myles Standish Blvd., Taunton, MA 02780, Model PIO-12 board for the IBM PC, phone 617-880-3000 John Bell Engineering, Inc, 400 Oxford Way, Beimont, CA 94002, phone 415-592-8411 Sources: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Display Software: Encomm, Inc. 1506 Capital, Plano, TX 75074, WEPIX(tm) system, phone 214-423-0024 Multifax, Elmer Schwittek, 2347 Coach House Lane,Naples, FL 33942, phone 813-434-2268 - Multifax 3.0 for EGA, 2.1 for CGA on the IBM-PC Clay Abrams Software, 1758 Comstock Lane, San Jose, CA 95124, software for the ROBOT 1200 - see QST Magazine, Jan '86 Ralph Taggart, 602 S. Jefferson, Mason, MI 48854, Weather Satellite Handbook Scan Converter - for the Radio Shack CoCo3 - see 73 Magazine, Nov '84 and Dec '84 and Handbook. Ralph Taggart also writes the monthly WEATHERSAT column for 73 Magazine. Marta Systems, 209 W. Santa Paula St, Santa Paula, CA 93060, phone 805-933-1270, 'Live From Space' for the AMIGA PC - $500. ImageWise Display/Receiver, Circuit Cellar Inc. - Micromint Inc., 4 Park Street, Vernon, CT 06066, phone 203-875-2751 - BYTE Magazine, May, Jun, Jul, Aug 1987. JASAUG 88-2 has information to build video and A/D interface. Software is available for $22.00 from Vince Coppola, N1VC, 6 Bobbin Road, Terryville, CT 06786 ASAT: An Apple-based Satellite Imaging System by Grant Zehr, WA9TFB - QEX Magazine, March '88 - has complete information to build an excellent unit using the APPLE with a Redshift Ltd graphics card giving 256 * 256 pixels at a full 256 levels of gray. AMIGA Imaging Software - Jim Blocker, 2524 Sundance Lane, Dallas, TX 75252, contact via the DATALINK BBS. Complete Systems - Hardware and Software: Greg Mengell, 2685 Ellenbrook Drive, Rancho Cordova, CA 95670, APT Associates, phone 916-364-1572, Wraase System, FAX recorders, and hi-end, commercial units. (Ask for DEPT. J. == Specify referral by Dallas Remote Imaging Group) YU3UMV Digital Storage and Scan Converter for Weather Satellite Images, described in VHF Communications Magazine, Winter 4/82 and Spring 1/83 - Modifications are described in the Satellite Users' Group Journal - JESAUG - available from Greg Mengell. Back issues of VHF Communicatons and the YU3UMV printed circuit boards are available from Fred Sharp, TimeKit, P.O. Box 22277, Cleveland, OH 44122, phone 216-464-3820. Loren Johnson, P.O. Box 219, Cleveland, MN 56017, system for the IBM-PC - $750, phone 507-931-4849 WEATHERTRAC[tm] IBM-PC Based Satellite Image Acquisition and Animation System - $1885, Fred Bartlett, Softworks, Inc, Allentown, PA, phone 215-395-4441 or George Isleib, Lehighton, PA, phone 717-386-4032 TRUfAX by CompuMAX IBM-PC based facsimile system - $600, Compumax Corporation, 26 West Boylston Street, West Boylston, MA 01583, phone 617-835-2722 Bibliography: NOAA Satellite Predictions, see DATALINK Bulletins NOAA APT NOTES, see DATALINK Bulletin NOAA Bibliography, see DATALINK Bulletin Summary of Soviet Meteorological Satellites, see DATALINK Bulletin Wrasse Dedicated System, see DATALINK Bulletin MULTIFAX 2.0, see review on DATALINK BBS - download MULTIFAX.DAT Review DATALINK RBBS bulletins for more information ====> 214 394-7438 DALLAS REMOTE IMAGING GROUP - DRIG Voice: 214 394-7325 P.O. Box 118053 Carrollton, TX 75011-8053 Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253