Intelsat II explained

Intelsat II
Manufacturer:Hughes
Country:United States
Bus:HS-303A
Applications:Communications
Orbits:Geostationary
Operator:Intelsat
Lifetime:3 years
Derivedfrom:Intelsat I
Preceded:Intelsat I
Succeeded:Intelsat III
Status:Retired
Built:4
Launched:4
Retired:4
First:Intelsat II F-1
26 October 1966
Last:Intelsat II F-4
28 September 1967
Autoconvert:off
Power:85 watts
Equipment:2 transponders

Intelsat II was a series of four communications satellites operated by Intelsat which were launched in 1966 and 1967. Built by the Hughes Aircraft Company, the Intelsat II series was a follow-up to the Intelsat I series, of which only one satellite was launched.

Intelsat II spacecraft were based on the HS-303A satellite bus, which was cylindrical in shape and spin-stabilised. The satellites had a diameter of, and were long.[1] They were equipped with an SVM-1 apogee motor to circularise their orbits following launch atop Delta E1 carrier rockets. All four satellites were launched from Launch Complex 17B at the Cape Kennedy Air Station. Each satellite had a mass at launch of, which decreased to around once the satellite had fired its apogee motor and manoeuvred into its orbital position.[2]

Intelsat II spacecraft were designed to be operated in geostationary orbit; however the first satellite's apogee motor malfunctioned leaving it in a lower than planned orbit.[3] It was able to perform a limited communications mission, however the other three spacecraft successfully achieved geostationary orbit. Each satellite carried two transponders, powered by solar cells mounted on the body of the spacecraft, which generated 85 watts of power.

Operations

Intelsat II F-1 provided a transpacific communications link for 240 telephone channels or two television channels. Provision was made for 180 hours of telecasting per year (an average of 30 minutes per day) via the satellite.[4]

A 50-minute programme was relayed between Tokyo and Washington, D.C. via Intelsat II F-1 on 27 January 1967. It was the first newscast and the first colour programme to be telecast across the Pacific. Japan's Fuji Television used the satellite to present direct telecasts of the world featherweight boxing title match between Vicente Saldivar and Mitsunori Seki from Mexico City on 29 January. It was the first live transmission of a sport event across the Pacific. Stars and Stripes reported that the pictures were clear.[5]

Satellites

SpacecraftNicknameCOSPAR ID[6] SATCATLaunch date[7] LongitudesDecommissionedRemarks
Intelsat II F-1Blue Bird1966-096A2514 UTCn/aApogee motor failure, limited operations from transfer orbit
Intelsat II F-2Lani Bird1967-001A2639 UTC174° East (1967-1969)
Intelsat II F-3Canary Bird1967-026A2717 UTC15° West (1967-1971)
35° West (1972)
15° West (1973)
Intelsat II F-4Pacific-21967-094A2969 UTC176° East (1967-1970)
166° West (1971)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Intelsat II. Boeing. 10 September 2013.
  2. Web site: Intelsat-2. Gunter. Krebs. Gunter's Space Page. 10 September 2013.
  3. Book: Harland, David M. Lorenz, Ralph D.. Space Systems Failures. Springer-Praxis. Chichester. 2005. 2006. 0-387-21519-0. 20.
  4. News: U.S.-Japan Television Link Opens With 50-Minute Show. Stars and Stripes. January 28, 1967. 7.
  5. News: Lanibird Filled the (TV) Bill. Stars and Stripes. February 1, 1967. 18 - 19.
  6. Web site: Satellite Catalog. Jonathan. McDowell. Jonathan's Space Page. 10 September 2013.
  7. Web site: Launch Log. Jonathan. McDowell. Jonathan's Space Page. 10 September 2013.