Phil
Thanks for your reply.
The following info which has previously been posted on the web may provide an idea of what is required -
The Ham Video DATV transmitter, which is installed in the Columbus module, features the following characteristics: Downlink frequencies: 2.422 GHz, 2.437 GHz & 2.395 GHz
DVB-S standard (QPSK modulation) with tables removed, Symbol rates: 1.3 Ms/s and 2.0 Ms/s FEC : ½ SIF: 352x240 or D1:720x480 RF radiated power : approximately 10 W EIRP.
GROUND STATION REQUIREMENTS:
Parabolic antenna with AZ-EL pointing The dish must be mounted for accurate azimuth and elevation pointing within +/ 2 degrees of the ISS - currently I am using a Yaesu G5500 and Martin VK6MJ is using also using a Yaesu rotator. The elevation movement must cover 180 degrees (flip mode capability). The azimuth movement must also cover 360 degrees.
Tracking software A number of tracking software options are available. The popular ones seem to be SatPC32 and Orbitron. When selecting the software be sure it has the capability to drive the AZ-EL motors, flip mode included.
Antenna Feed - LHCP dish feed ARISS antennas on the Columbus module are right circularly polarised. For a ground station the feed must therefore be left hand circularly polarised, since the dish reflection reverses the polarisation. The dish feed can be a patch type or a helix type, positioned in the focus of the parabola.
LNB An LNB /Converter is required to be mounted as close as practicable to the feed. Two popular options which are suitable are manufactured by Kuhne.
Option 1 : KU LNC 25 TM ( centered 2450 MHz) Frequency range : 2350 – 2550 MHz IF : 1433.5 – 1633.5 MHz Amplification : 40 dB
http://www.kuhne-electronic.de/en/produ ... 25-tm.html
Option 2 : KU LNC 23 TM (centered 2385 MHz) – specific DATV Frequency range: 2320 – 2450 MHz IF : 1404 – 1534 MHz Amplification : 40 dB
http://www.kuhne-electronic.de/en/produ ... 23-tm.html. Both Martin and myself are using the 23TM however I have also experimented with a Spectra Developments SPDC2400 with similar results.
DVB-S satellite receiver A suitable DVB-S satellite receiver PCI tuner card is produced by Techno Trend
http://www.technotrend.eu/2920/TT-budget__S2-1600.html
The Techno Trend card fits in a PCI computer slot and supports HD TV (MPEG2 and MPEG4/ H.264) : Computer OS : Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8 CPU for SDTV: at least 800 MHz CPU for HDTV: at least P4 3,4 GHz or comparable AMD Athlon (Dual Core recommended) - not needed for Ham TV 512MB main storage (1024MB recommended) at least 1GB free hard disc storage Graphics card with at least 64MB and DirectX 9 support Sound card with DirectX 9 support
Besides the TT-budget S2-1600 card, TechnoTrend produces the TT-S2-3200 card, also suitable.
In addition to the PCI card ground station solution described, it is understood that some specific DVB-S “set top” boxes are able to operate correctly at the symbol rates that will be used by the Ham TV system.
Measurement and Display software Jean Pierre Courjaud F6DZP has developed a free software utility providing radio amateurs and DVB technicians a tool that allows Digital ATV (DVB-S) to be measured precisely. Please see :
http://www.vivadatv.org/page.php?p=tutioune-en
This software comes in two versions : Tutioune V2.0 for use with the TT S2-3200 card
http://www.vivadatv.org/viewtopic.php?f=60&t=205
Tutioune 1600 V0.1 for use with the TT S2-1600 card
http://www.vivadatv.org/viewtopic.php?f=60&t=214
With the above mentioned setup, Ham Video from Columbus can be received, decoded and visioned when the transmitter is powered on.
If there is any interest I can try and post some photos of the installation of the ground station equipment such as building the 1.2m mesh dish and mounting hardware as well as the reception results to date.
BTW - Martin VK6MJ has achieved possibly the best results to date having consistently received 6 minutes of video lock on most high elevation passes. To date my best effort is just seconds over 5 minutes of video lock.
Regards
Shane