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Oscar 4 [Amsat] |
Oscar 4 (Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio 4) was a regular tetrahedron with edges 48 cm long. It had four independent monopole antennae and contained a tracking beacon transmitter and a communications repeater. It was powered by a solar cell array and batteries but an unplanned 161km x 33000-km orbit prevented nominal use.
Oscar 4 was launched piggyback with three United States Air Force satellites on a Titan-3C. The launch vehicle had a partial failure
and placed the spacecraft in a low orbit preventing widespread amateur use. Weight 18.1
kg. Four monopole antennas. OSCAR IV was built by the TRW Radio Club of Redondo Beach,
California. It had a 3 Watt 10 kHz wide linear transponder (144 MHz uplink and 432 MHz
downlink). In operation until March 16, 1966. Re-entry April 12, 1976. Total operation 85
days. Only about 12 two-way communications were established through the repeater, but one
on December 22, 1965 was the first direct satellite communication between the United
States and the USSR.
| Nation: | USA |
|---|---|
| Type / Application: | Amateur communication |
| Operator: | |
| Contractors: | TRW Radio Club of Redondo Beach, California |
| Equipment: | Tracking beacon transmitter, communications repeater |
| Configuration: | Tedrahedron |
| Propulsion: | None |
| Lifetime: | |
| Mass: | 8 kg |
| Orbit: | 168 km x 29120 km, 26.8° (GEO planned) |
| Satellite | Date | LS | Launcher | Remarks: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oscar 4 | 21.12.1965 | CC LC-41 | Titan-3C | with LES 3, LES 4, OV2 3 |
Last update: 27.09.2009
Contact: gunter.krebs@skyrocket.de
© Gunter Dirk Krebs