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On Mon, 16 May 2005 02:01:18 +0000, Doug Smith W9WI wrote:
When you transmit a shortwave signal from an earth-bound transmitter, it gets "bounced" off the ionosphere to come back down to the listener a few thousand miles away. If you were to transmit such a signal from space, it would bounce in pretty much the same way -- except that instead of bouncing down to a listener on Earth, it would bounce back out into space. Not particularly useful. Nonsense (at least above the MUF). Consider QSOs made using Mode K (21 MHz uplink, 29 MHz downlink) of the RS-10/11 and RS-12/13 ham satellites. ===== RS-12 RADIO SPORT RS-12 Catalog number: 21089 Launched: February 5, 1991 Uplink: 21.210 to 21.250 MHz CW/USB Downlink: 29.410 to 29.450 MHz CW/USB Beacon: 29.408 MHz Robot: 29.454 MHz [05232004] ===== |
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