SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS008 ARLS008 Phase 3D delayed ZCZC AS08 QST de W1AW Space Bulletin 008 ARLS008 From ARRL Headquarters Newington, CT March 25, 1997 To all radio amateurs SB SPACE ARL ARLS008 ARLS008 Phase 3D delayed Modifications to the Ariane 5 rocket's electrical systems and software will mean another costly delay for the Phase 3D Amateur Radio satellite. The European Space Agency (ESA) announced March 24, that the Ariane 502 which will carry Phase 3D aloft from Kourou, French Guyana, has been rescheduled for a mid-September launch. ESA said the schedule change was in response to recommendations of a board of inquiry that looked into the causes for the failure of the Ariane 501 launch last year. ''This additional action, which does not call into question the design of the launcher nor its flight readiness, is intended to improve its robustness, increase the operational margins and allow for degraded operating modes,'' an ESA press release said. AMSAT-NA President Bill Tynan, W3XO, said a complete analysis had not yet been done but that he believed the delay would add ''on the order of 100,000 dollars'' to Phase 3D's cost. That's on top of an estimated 200,000 dollars combined funding shortfall that AMSAT-NA and AMSAT-DL were reporting in late February. So far, AMSAT-DL has invested nearly 2 million dollars in Phase 3D, compared to nearly 1.4 million dollars for AMSAT-NA. ''Every month adds costs,'' Tynan concluded. Phase 3D fund-raising efforts will continue. Earlier this year, the Japanese AMSAT group, JAMSAT, helped bridge the funding gap by transferring 50,000 dollars to AMSAT-NA. The money represented excess donations from JAMSAT members for the Phase 3D SCOPE camera. The completed SCOPE camera, designed and built entirely by JAMSAT, has been installed and successfully powered up at the Phase 3D Integration Laboratory in Orlando, Florida, where preparation and testing continue. Tynan emphasized that the Phase 3D team plans to take maximum advantage of the schedule change to perform additional testing. ''It's not time being wasted,'' Tynan said, adding that the Phase 3D team ''will use the delay to be even more sure about the spacecraft's readiness.'' Prior to announcement of the latest delay, AMSAT-NA Vice President Keith Baker, KB1SF, had been reporting that AMSAT was racing to meet the early July launch schedule and that work on the satellite was moving along swiftly. A series of pictures of Phase 3D work in progress is available via the AMSAT-NA Web site at http://www.amsat.org. Depending on its workload, the integration team hopes to be able to update these photos as work progresses. NNNN /EX