Hi NV Shooters,
Tonight will be a full visible ISS pass at 78°.
This means you will see the station pass almost directly over head and it will remain visible for about 4 minutes and overhead for about 11 minutes.
If you have a uhf/vhf handheld radio, tune into the downlink frequency of 437.800MHz.
You can hear ground stations making contact using the on board repeater.(even a simple baofeng with stock antenna should hear something. Especially if you are on the outskirts of the city with a clear view of the sky)
If you're lucky, you may hear the crew contacting ground stations on 145.800MHz
If you use APRS, the digipeater frequency is 145.825MHz with the signal path WIDE-1, ARISS.(this mode is not active at the moment.)
If you want to use the repeater, refer to this graphic on how the doppler shift if you want to preload your pass channels.
This is fun of course but it is also a useful thing to be aware of if you needed transmit your grid coordinates and emergency messages for hundreds of miles via APRS for example. Even with no cell coverage)
Tonight will be a full visible ISS pass at 78°.
This means you will see the station pass almost directly over head and it will remain visible for about 4 minutes and overhead for about 11 minutes.
If you have a uhf/vhf handheld radio, tune into the downlink frequency of 437.800MHz.
You can hear ground stations making contact using the on board repeater.(even a simple baofeng with stock antenna should hear something. Especially if you are on the outskirts of the city with a clear view of the sky)
If you're lucky, you may hear the crew contacting ground stations on 145.800MHz
If you use APRS, the digipeater frequency is 145.825MHz with the signal path WIDE-1, ARISS.(this mode is not active at the moment.)
If you want to use the repeater, refer to this graphic on how the doppler shift if you want to preload your pass channels.
This is fun of course but it is also a useful thing to be aware of if you needed transmit your grid coordinates and emergency messages for hundreds of miles via APRS for example. Even with no cell coverage)
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