HamTV school contact – a world first!
Thursday 11 February 2016, 
at 18:11 UTC, an educational ARISS radio contact took place at the Royal
 Masonic School for Girls, Rickmansworth,, United Kingdom. The school 
contact was operated by Tim Peake, KG5BVI in the frame of the Principia 
mission.
It was a historic event: the radio contact was enhanced 
with video! Tim Peake activated the Ham Video transmitter on board 
Columbus.
As far back as the year 2000, a proposal for an ATV 
system on the International Space Station was submitted to the ARISS 
 Project Selection and Use Committee by Graham Shirville G3VZV.
November
 2002, a request for amateur radio facilities on the then under 
construction Columbus module was submitted by Gaston Bertels, ON4WF to 
Mr Jörg Feustel-Büechl, Director of Manned Spaceflight and Microgravity 
Directorate of the European Space Agency (ESA).
The request was to 
install wideband amateur radio antennas on the nadir of Columbus, facing
 the earth. With such antennas, the on board amateur radio facilities 
could be extended to amateur TV.
In 2003 the request was examined
 in detail and finally accepted. ARISS would pay for the development, 
manufacturing and qualification of the antennas. ESA would support the 
installation cost.
ARISS-Europe started a funding campaign, all donations being published on the website.
In
 2004 coaxial feed throughs were installed on the port cone of Columbus.
 This was needed for accessing the antennas with feedlines from inside 
the module.
In 2005, the Royal Belgian Amateur Radio Society 
(UBA) signed a contract with the Wroclaw University of Technology, 
Poland for the development and manufacturing of the antennas. Whereas 
initial plans were for UHF, L-band and S-band antennas, only L- and 
S-band antennas could be ordered by lack of funding. The cost of the 
project was 47.000 Euro.
Early 2006 the antennas were delivered 
to ESA. Meanwhile main Columbus contractor EADS and subcontractor Alenia
 Spazio had reviewed mechanical and thermal constraints. Wroclaw 
University proceeded to qualifications tests (cost 3.000 Euro) and the 
antennas failed.
In 2007 an additional contract was signed with 
the Wroclaw University for the development of modified antennas. This 
amounted to 36.000 Euro. These antennas were accepted and installed on 
Columbus, October 2007.
The cost of the antennas finally amounted to 86.000 Euro and was covered by a wordwide funding campaign.
ESA supported the total installation cost of the antennas, including feed throughs and coaxial cables.
After
 the successful launch of Columbus and its integration into the 
International Space Station complex, an ARISS-Europe working group 
started a study for the development of an amateur television transmitter
 on Columbus, using one of the the S-band antennas. A debate started 
between the supporters of analog television (ATV) and the proponents of 
digital television (DATV). The working group, which met monthly per 
teleconference, made progress, but was stuck by the lack of funding.
As
 time went by, the debate on ATV versus DATV evolved at the advantage of
 the latter, but no funding was in sight… Then, suddenly, supported by 
the enthusiasm of Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli IZ0JPA, who had 
performed many ARISS school contacts during his 2010-2011 expedition 
aboard the Space Station, at the initiative of AMSAT Italia, an Italian 
manufacturer, Kayser Italia, presented a project for an amateur radio 
DATV transmitter to ESA’s educational services. In 2012, this proposal 
was accepted and ESA signed a contract with Kayser Italia for the 
development and the manufacturing of a DATV transmitter on S-band. This 
transmitter, dubbed “Ham Video, was installed on Columbus and ESA 
transferred the custodianship of this equipment to ARISS.
It was a
 long way, spanning sixteen years, from the initial proposal to the 
first ever HamTV school contact. A new era opens for ground station 
operators, interested in receiving digital amateur television from the 
International Space Station. A technical challenge already met by a few 
ground stations in Europe, USA and Australia. Long life to HamTV and 
success to the pioneering ground stations, world wide!
73,
Gaston Bertels, ON4WF
ARISS-Europe past chairman
Source directe  :   ARISS  
From :  f6agv (@) free.fr
 
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