SB QST @ ARL $ARLB031 ARLB031 2 amateur satellites lost ZCZC AG97 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 31 ARLB031 >From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT March 30, 1995 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB031 ARLB031 2 amateur satellites lost Two amateur satellites were lost when their launch vehicle exploded. The Israeli-built Gurwin-1 TechSAT and the Mexican UNAMSAT were part of the payload of a Russian SS-25 rocket originally built to carry ballistic missiles and recently converted to launch satellites. The Reuters news agency said the rocket, which was launched from Russia's Plesetsk cosmodrome, came down in the Russian Far East, in the Sea of Okhotsk, on March 28. Both satellites were designed for packet radio repeater use. Gurwin-1 TechSAT was built at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa as a 9600-bit/s packet store-and-forward satellite. UNAMSAT was assembled by students at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) in Mexico City. In addition to packet store-and-forward operation at 1200 bits per second, UNAMSAT carried a unique ''meteor radar'' experiment. (See January 1993 QST, page 97, for more information on UNAMSAT.) Reuters noted that the 115-pound Gurwin-1 TechSAT was a prototype for communication satellites and ''was to have been used by amateur radio enthusiasts.'' Reuters did not mention UNAMSAT. Two Russian satellites also were lost in the failed launch. In November 1993 the first test launch of a converted SS-25 was successful, but with a lighter payload. Radio amateurs, particularly in Europe, have hoped that the Russian rockets will provide an inexpensive way to launch Amateur Radio satellites. NNNN /EX