[ARC5] OT: X-15 Radios

Roy Morgan k1lky68 at gmail.com
Sat Dec 1 21:40:38 EST 2018


I can tell of a system that worked:

I was copilot on the photographers helicopter as Apollo 7 came back to a water landing near Bermuda.  Our aircraft (the SH-3D) had been fitted with two antennas, one on each main landing gear strut, and presumably some sort of receiver (possibly the normal UHF radio, I don’t remember that part of the installation).  Each antenna was a small yagi and was fastened to the strut on each side.  This was a temporary installation for the event.

The returning space capsule had a beacon transmitter on it that was transmitting both during the last phase of descent (by parachute) and while in the water.  I assume that all three or four helos in the greeting flight were able to home in on the thing as it came down and floated in the water.  It did land within a mile or so of the target location.

The weather was good with plenty of visibility, so finding the thing was not a big challenge.  I have no idea of the expected accuracy of the bearings we got.  I can assume that the antennas and receivers were tested before the actual recovery of the space capsule.

Roy


> On Dec 1, 2018, at 8:10 PM, Brian Clarke <brianclarke01 at optusnet.com.au> wrote:
> 
> Is that really the best? For such an expensive system?
> When you get equal signals from two antennas, they can be pointing many degrees off alignment because of the insensitivity –…

> From: arc5-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:arc5-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of bob at vanirmail.com
> 
> Subject: Re: [ARC5] OT: X-15 Radios
>  
> Hi Mike.  
>  
> If I were designing this DF system for the X-15  I would install small titanium stub antennas on each wing with the fuselage shielding one antenna from the other.   

Roy Morgan
K1LKY since 1958
k1lky68 at gmail.com






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