The following article was reposted to rec.ham-radio by Richard Crisp
(crisp@mips.com) in late 1990; I'm not sure if he's the original author.
Questions on this topic should be directed to Usenet group
rec.radio.amateur.misc, not sci.space.


	HOW TO RECEIVE APT PICTURES FROM THE NOAA SATELLITES
	----------------------------------------------------

So  you  have  decided you want to receive the NOAA and Russian METEOR
orbiters  and  you  have  a  radio  that  receives  137.500  MHz and a
computer.  So  now what do you do? I hope this short dissertation will
steer you in the correct direction.

To  display a picture from the orbiting birds you need several things.
First  you  need  to  'acquire' the satellite. This means you need the
program to calculate its position at any time and determine if you can
hear  the  signals from the 'bird'. The best place to get this program
is  probably AMSAT-NA an organization dedicated to AMateur SATellites.
They have several very good tracking programs for the IBM and also for
Commodore  and	Apple as well. After you have acquired the program and
have it running on your computer, you then need the Keplerian Elements
for  the  NOAA	satellites.  These  elements  as well as some tracking
programs  are  available from the CELESTIAL RCP/M, run by TS Kelso, at
513-427-0674 (Fairborn,OH) and from the Weather Fax and Remote Imaging
DATALINK BBS run by Dr. Jeff Wallach, N5ITU as bulletins for some 80 +
sets of satellite  data.   Another bulletin also tells you to what the
printed  numbers  correspond  so  you can enter them into the computer
program.  Use  the  newest  elements  you  can	find  as  the orbiting
satellites are subject to forces which change their orbits. If you use
Keplerian Elements more than 3 or 4 weeks old, your chances of hearing
the bird are reduced.

Once you are tracking the birds you should hear them on your receiver.
They  will be  on 137.62 (NOAA-11), 137.500 (NOAA-10), 137.850 (Meteor
3-2), 137.4 (Meteor 2-16), 137.3 (Meteor 2-17 and 2-18). Now comes the
first  thing different about NOAA orbiters. The frequency deviation of
the  FM transmission is about +/-18-20 kHz. This is 4 times the normal
deviation  of  a police call and 1/3 the deviation of the FM broadcast
band   FM   signal.   If   you	receive  the  signal  on  the  regular
communications	width  of  the	scanner the light areas of the picture
will be noisy and the signal will sound distorted and the picture will
basically  be useless. If you use the FM broadcast bandwidth (assuming
your  scanner  will let you), the signal will be weak and there may be
too much background noise to see the picture.

So  what  now ?   Well there  are two  ways to fix the problem, find a
receiver  with	the  proper I.F. bandwidth filter of 50 kHz, or modify
the  I.F.  of  your scanner to about 50-80 kHz. The simplest mod which
has  been  found to be workable is to remove the narrow communications
I.F.  filter  and  replace it with a 0.01 uFd capacitor. This provides
for  good  Wefax  pictures  from  GOES	and  pretty  fair NOAA orbiter
pictures.  It  can of course result in retuning the radio, voiding the
warranty and making the squelch not work properly.

The  other  characteristic of the NOAA satellite transmissions is THEY
ARE  WEAK.  To	get  good  pictures  over a large area we have found a
pre-amplifier  to  be  essential. A GaAs-FET type can be obtained from
various  sources at a reasonable price but still about 50-100 dollars.
You  can  also build one for about 25 dollars from plans for a pre-amp
for the 2-meter amateur band and tune it to 137.5 easily.

Lastly,  but  importantly,  the antenna can be of an omni directional,
uniform pattern type such as a turnstile antenna similar to those used
in  the  FM  broadcast reception business but of course tuned to 137.5
MHz. Mount the pre-amp at the antenna if possible. Crooked coathangers
on  broomsticks  have  been  known to work, and it is not difficult to
build  the antenna. Of course 2-meter beams with Az/El tracking will do
the job well.

Now that you have a nice audio signal from the satellite, what happens
next? The audio tone of 2400 HZ which is the carrier tone that is used
to  carry  the	picture  information (video), must be detected and the
video  data converted from analog to digital and then displayed on the
computer monitor by the software. The hardware and software to do this
is  available  from  several  sources  with more coming along. Several
stand-alone  boxes  are  also  available  that	produce  some  form of
computer  output either in printed form or on the display. In addition
the  people  on the DATALINK BBS may also have some data to share with
you regarding this equipment.

One  of  the  best  sources  for  information is the WEATHER SATELLITE
HANDBOOK available from Dr. Ralph Taggart of Michigan State University
at  602  S. Jefferson, Mason, MI 48854 for $15.00. Taggart also writes
the monthly WEATHERSAT column which appears in '73 Magazine. A must is
THE  JOURNAL  OF  THE  ENVIRONMENTAL  SALELLITE AMATEUR USERS' GROUP -
JESAUG	- which is published quarterly. It is available for $30.00 per
year  from  the  editor,  Jeff Wallach, PO Box 117088 Carrollton, TX.
75011-7088	   Back issues of the JESAUG are also available.

At  the  present  the  simplest  software  for	the  IBM  is the Elmer
Schweittek  MULTIFAX  software.  A  hardware kit is available from A&A
Engineering  which  includes  the  video  dectector  circuit  and  A/D
converter.  Input to the PC is via the game port. If you want to build
your  own,  complete documentation to build an interface circuit on an
IBM  PC  prototyping  board is available from H. Paul Shuch, N6TX, for
$6.00 - FAXBOARD.

The  WEPIX(tm) software and hardware is available from Encomm. It will
produce  pictures  of  1200 lines by 800 samples per line displayed at
640  x	350  pixels  in 16 shades of gray or 16 colors using an IBM PC
with 640kB, EGA card and at least one 360k disk.



		     'Typical' APT Receiving Station
		     -------------------------------


	[1]   ANTENNA
		 -
	[2]   PRE-AMP
		 -
		 -
		 -
		 -			    [ STAND ALONE UNITS ]
		 -
	[3]   RECEIVER	----------------->  FAX MACHINE  ---> PAPER
		 -			    WRASSE UNIT  ---> MONITOR
		 -			    YU3UMV UNIT  ---> MONITOR
		 - - - - VCR
		 -
		 -
		 -
	[4] - VIDEO DETECTOR   -
	    -		       -
	    -		       -
	[5] - ANALOG/DIGITAL   -
	    -		       -
	    -		       -	    [ SCAN CONVERTERS ]
	    -		       -
	[6] - INTERFACE TO PC  - <=======>  ROBOT 1200
	    -		       -	    TAGGARTS'S WSH
	    -		       -	    IMAGEWISE
	    -		       -
	[7] -	 SOFTWARE      -	    ** SECOND DISPLAY **
	    -		       -	       for weather images
	    -		       -
	    -		       -
	[8] - GRAPHICS ADAPTOR -
		 -
		 -
		 -
		 -
	[9]   PC DISPLAY / MONITOR

		 Display weather images
		 (or commands for SCAN CONVERTERS)


       [10]   PC PRINTER / DOT MATRIX / LASER



       NOTES:
       ------

	      [4] VIDEO DETECTOR, [5] ANALOG/DIGITAL CONVERTER, and
	      [6] INTERFACE TO PC may be in seperate hardware units
	      or all on one circuit board.






Sources:
----------------------------------------------------------------------

NOAA Data / Keplerian Elements:

DATALINK RBBS, N5ITU, Dr. Jeff Wallach, 214-394-7438,
 DALLAS REMOTE IMAGING GROUP ELECTRONIC BULLETIN BOARD
 UPDATES ON NOAA BULLETINS, SATELLITE LAUNCHES, FREQUENCIES
 DISPLAY PICTURES FROM NOAA SATELLITES ON YOUR OWN P.C.

CELESTIAL RCP/M, TS Kelso, 513-427-0674, NASA Prediction Bulletins	  |
 are online and updated several times weekly				  |

Satellite Tracking Software:

AMSAT-NA,  PO  Box  27, Washington, DC 20044, Software Exchange,
 phone 301-589-6062 (voice), N4HY - QUIKTRAK, W0SL - ORBITS II,III,IV
Roy D. Welch, W0SL, 908 Dutch Mill Drive, Manchester, MO 63011,
 phone 314-391-1127, ORBITS II-EGA, ORBITS III-EGA, ORBITS IV-VGA	  |
DATALINK BBS, download SATTRAKx.ARC, SEESATxx.ARC and others
CELESTIAL RCP/M, TS Kelso, 513-427-0674, SATTRAKx.ARC or SEESATxx.ARC	  |
Astronomical Data Service, Rodger Mansfield, 3922 Leisure Lane,
 Colorado Springs, CO 80917-SPACE BIRDS program and Newsletter, $40.

Receivers:

Vanguard Labs, 196-23 Jamaica, Hollis, NY 11423,
 phone 718-468-2720
Hamtroincs, Inc.,65-D Moul Road, Hilton, NY 14468-9535
 phone 716-392-9430
DARTCOMM, Mr. N. Hearn, DARTCOMM Ferndale, Postbridge, Yelverton,	  |
 Devon PL20 6SY, Great Britain, UK, phone 011 44 0822 88253		  |

Crystals:

JAN  Crystals,	2400  Crystal  Dr,  Fort  Myers,  FL 33906-6017,
 phone 1-800-237-3063 or 813-936-2397

Pre-Amps:

THL/Encomm, Inc, 1506 Capital Ave, Plano, TX 75074, phone 214-423-0024
Spectrum   International,Inc.,	Box  1084,  Concord  MA  01742,
 phone 617-263-2145
Vanguard Labs, Hamtronics and GLB for Helical RF Filters for intermod
Ehrler-DuBois Very High Performance LNA for 1500-1750 Mhz, contact	  |
Greg Ehrler or John DuBois via DATALINK					  |

Antennas:

ARRL Handbook, 1986, turnstile over ground antenna.
ARRL Satellite Experimenter's Handbook by Martin Davidoff, K2UBC
Modern Electronics, September 1988, Hank Brandli article, page 82,
 Receiving Satellite Weather Photos

Hardware Interface to PC:

A&A  Engineering,  2521  W. La Palma, Unit K, Anaheim, CA 92801,
 phone 714-952-2114 - both AM dectector and A/D converter, input to PC
 via game port (4-bits) or parallel I/O Interface (8-bits) - kit is
 $50. - assembled and tested unit is $70.
Microcomm,  H. Paul Shuch, N6TX, 14908 Sandy Lane, San Jose, CA 95124,
 phone 408-377-6137 - FAXBOARD - A Weather Facsimile Display Board for
 the  IBM  PC  -  Complete  documentation  to build your own interface
 circuit  on  an  IBM  PC  prototyping	board - video and an 8-bit A/D
 interface - $6.00

Video Detectors:

RTM  Circuit  Boards,  205  Elm  St.,Van  Horne, IA  52346-0400,
 video detector  (the 'Wilson Board')  see QST Magazine, Jan '86 and
 Vince Coppola's  article in Oct 1988  73 Magazine
QST Magazine, August 1985, Grant Zehr article, page 27, video detector
 circuit

A/D Converter & Parallel I/O Interfaces for the IBM PC:

MetraByte,  440  Myles Standish Blvd., Taunton, MA 02780, Model PIO-12
 board for the IBM PC, phone 617-880-3000
John  Bell  Engineering, Inc, 400 Oxford Way, Beimont, CA 94002,
 phone 415-592-8411






Sources:
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Display Software and Hardware - 'Amateur':

Encomm,  Inc.  1506  Capital, Plano, TX 75074, WEPIX(tm) system,
 phone 214-423-0024
Multifax, Elmer Schwittek, 2347 Coach House Lane,Naples, FL 33942,
 phone 813-434-2268 - Multifax 3.3 for EGA, 2.x for CGA on the IBM-PC	  |
Clay Abrams Software, 1758 Comstock Lane, San Jose, CA 95124, software
 for the ROBOT 1200 - see QST Magazine, Jan '86
Ralph  Taggart,  602  S. Jefferson, Mason, MI 48854, Weather Satellite
 Handbook  Scan  Converter  -  for  the  Radio	Shack  CoCo3  - see 73
 Magazine, Nov '84 and Dec '84 and Handbook. Ralph Taggart also writes
 the WEATHERSAT column for 73 Magazine.
ImageWise Display/Receiver, Circuit Cellar Inc. - Micromint Inc.,
 4  Park Street, Vernon, CT 06066, phone 203-875-2751 - BYTE Magazine,
 May, Jun, Jul, Aug 1987.   JESAUG 88-2 and Oct 1988  73 Magazine have	  |
 information  on  how  to  build  the video and A/D interface. Ver 2.0	  |
 software  supports  VGA  graphics and 640 samples per line at 64 gray	  |
 levels.  With	VGA  the  ImageWise  Display unit is not required. The	  |
 software  is  available for $29.95 from Vince Coppola, N1VC, 6 Bobbin	  |
 Road, Terryville, CT 06786						  |
ASAT: An Apple-based Satellite Imaging System by Grant Zehr, WA9TFB -
 QEX  Magazine,  March	'88  -	has  complete  information to build an
 excellent  unit  using  the  APPLE  with a Redshift Ltd graphics card
 giving 256 * 256 pixels at a full 256 levels of gray.

AMIGA Imaging Software - Dallas Remote Imaging Group			  |
			 PO Box 117088					  |
			 Carrollton, TX 75011-7088			  |
			 Voice 214 394 7325				  |
 Uses standard Amiga hardware - no special display			  |
 Powerful NASA digital enhancement curves built-in			  |
 Digital image processing capabilities					  |
 Uses A&A Engineering $49 demodulator					  |
 Image saved for use by other graphics programs				  |
 Full histogram analysis						  |
 Full 8 bit data is stored on diskette or hard disk			  |
 Unattended operation							  |
 Can be setup in 30 minutes						  |
 Call for special pricing						  |

IBM-PC	Interface  Card  and Software - Jim MacLean and Paul Atkinson,	  |
 2112 Parsons Avenue, Melbourne, FL 32901, 407-727-3646 - plug in card	  |
 for   IBM  XT	or  AT,  9600  samples/second  at  8  bits,  automatic	  |
 synchroniztion  for  NOAA,  METEOR  and WEFAX, data saved realtime to	  |
 hard disk, supports CGA, EGA, and VGA, $300 for hardware and software	  |

Complete Systems - Hardware and Software:

Dallas Remote Imaging Group						  |
       P.O. Box 117088							  |
       Carrollton, Texas 75011-7088					  |
       214 394 7325							  |
 Complete Earth-Scan Amiga turnkey system ready to put on air		  |

YU3UMV	Digital  Storage  and  Scan  Converter	for  Weather Satellite
 Images,  described  in  VHF  Communications Magazine, Winter 4/82 and
 Spring  1/83  -  Modifications  are described in the Satellite Users'
 Group	Journal - JESAUG - available from Jeff Wallach. Back issues of
 VHF Communicatons and the YU3UMV printed circuit boards are available
 from  Fred Sharp, TimeKit, P.O. Box 22277, Cleveland, OH 44122, phone
 216-464-3820.
Loren  Johnson,  P.O.  Box  219,  Cleveland,  MN 56017, system for the
 IBM-PC  -  $750,  phone  507-931-4849
WEATHERTRAC[tm] IBM-PC Based Satellite Image Acquisition and Animation	  |
 System  -  $1885  for	EGA - $3495 for VGA, Fred Bartlett, Softworks,	  |
 Inc,  Allentown,  PA, phone 215-395-4441 or George Isleib, Lehighton,
 PA, phone 717-386-4032
TRUfAX	by  CompuMAX  IBM-PC  based  facsimile system - $600, Compumax
 Corporation,  26 West Boylston Street, West Boylston, MA 01583, phone
 617-835-2722

Satellite Meteorology:

Satellite  Imagery  Interpretation  for  Forcasters  -	a 3 volume set	  |
 published  in	1985  for NOAA now available from the National Weather	  |
 Association,  4400  Stamp  Road,  Room  404,  Temple Hills, MD 20748,	  |
 301-899-3784,	$32  for  members, $45 for non-members ( Membership is	  |
 $20. )									  |




Bibliography - Online DATALINK Bulletins:   (214 394 7438 -- BBS)

NASA Satellite Prediction Bulletins, NASA-PB.xxx
How to use NASA 2-Line Keplerian Elements
AMSAT Bulletins and Weekly Notes / Orbital Elements
NOAA APT NOTES
NOAA User Bibliography
Summary of Soviet Meteorological Satellites by Grant Zehr
How to Build a Weather Satellite Groundstation (This Primer)
Wrasse Dedicated System Review
GOES VAS Imaging System for the IBM PC, John DuBois W1HDX		  |
LNA for WEFAX-VAS-HRPT-GPS, John Dubois and Greg Ehrler			  |
GOES WEFAX Information Note 89-W1 (3/89)				  |
GOES I-M Converence Summary						  |
Dallas Remote Imaging Group online Image Files				  |

Review DATALINK RBBS bulletins for current information ====> 214 394-7438


DALLAS REMOTE IMAGING GROUP - DRIG  Voice: 214 394-7325
				     Data: 214 394-7438
P.O. Box 117088
Carrollton, TX 75011-7088
ATTENTION:  Jeff Wallach, Chairman

									  |
						   New or Changed Items = |
									  |

--
		    Richard Crisp	       crisp@mips.com
		MIPS Computer Systems	     !decwrl!mips!crisp
		 928 Arques MS 2-02	       (408) 524-8177
		 Sunnyvale, Ca 94086