Motorola Unified S-Band RF Track Test Panel
I am looking for more information on this 1960's artifact used for Earth-to-CSM-spacecraft communications testing for Apollo. Part numbers in the comments below.
I am wondering why there is knob for 0-3.5 ms of delay. If it were seconds, it could be round-trip time delay to the moon.
The original “USB” (Unified S-Band) was a common communication channel used during the Apollo missions. With just 20 Watts, they could communicate with Houston from the moon (across 239,000 miles). And a single antenna combined voice, television, command, tracking and ranging.
After nine months of effort, the incredible team of Curious Marc, Ken Shirriff and Mike Stewart have revived my 50+year-old Apollo S-Band communications system, using my ground support equipment and the vintage Apollo CSM transponder. In the most recent episode, they powered it up and got the Apollo transponder to lock bidirectionally, with the original NASA test transmitter and receiver, which we both restored to their original Apollo frequencies.
An artifact from the Future Ventures’ 🚀 Space Collection.
Motorola Unified S-Band RF Track Test Panel
I am looking for more information on this 1960's artifact used for Earth-to-CSM-spacecraft communications testing for Apollo. Part numbers in the comments below.
I am wondering why there is knob for 0-3.5 ms of delay. If it were seconds, it could be round-trip time delay to the moon.
The original “USB” (Unified S-Band) was a common communication channel used during the Apollo missions. With just 20 Watts, they could communicate with Houston from the moon (across 239,000 miles). And a single antenna combined voice, television, command, tracking and ranging.
After nine months of effort, the incredible team of Curious Marc, Ken Shirriff and Mike Stewart have revived my 50+year-old Apollo S-Band communications system, using my ground support equipment and the vintage Apollo CSM transponder. In the most recent episode, they powered it up and got the Apollo transponder to lock bidirectionally, with the original NASA test transmitter and receiver, which we both restored to their original Apollo frequencies.
An artifact from the Future Ventures’ 🚀 Space Collection.