Satellite APRS for the backpacker?
Part 1 - The Idea
So I had this crazy idea. I am sure it is not unique but it is unique to me.
After all the COVID-19 lockdowns have eased and I am back out hiking and camping again, far from civilisation, long after my mobile phone is useful for anything other than a camera and audio book reader. I arrive at a lunch spot, or set up camp for the evening. I take out my trusty Kenwood D72 Handheld radio with built in TNC, connect it to a lightweight folding antenna, point it skyward and burst off some APRS packets to mark my position and status messages via passing satellites. Sounds crazy right? Well it's actually doable as a radio amateur.
Down here in Australia we don’t have access to the geo-stationary (GEO) satellite QO-100 that covers the entire Eurasian landmass from the east coast of Asia to the west coast of the UK that was launched recently and has been welcomed by many Amature Radio Operators under it’s ‘footprint’.
What we do have access to is a number of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites equipped with flying APRS digipeaters. These LEOs pass over a number of times a day and passing over with various ‘elevations’. The most famous of these is the International Space Station (ISS). For clarity, I have lumped the ISS into the collective term for satellites.