The following was posted on rec.radio.shortwave by David Neece, dneece@startel.net, on 30 October 1998 02:43:15 GMT.
Launch and Landing Operations
NASA Malabar/Palm Bay, FL Nets
(in KHz, USB commonly)
Solid rocket booster recovery 2622 primary, 2764, 3187, 4510, 7765, 11407, 11621
NASA tracking vessels 5180, 5187
ETR range control 2678
ETR primary night channel 5190
ETR secondary night channel 5810
ETR primary day channel 10780
ETR secondary day channel 20390
Launch support ships 5680, 11104, 11252, 18009, 19303
Launch support aircraft 5350, 7676, 9022, 9043, 9132, 13227, 13878
Cape Radio/Leader 4856
Cape radio/Coast Guard Ships 4992
Cape Radio/Launch support A/C 7461
Cape radio 6896, 6837, 11414, 11548, 19640, 23413
S&R Coast Guard primary 3024
S&R Primary recovery zone 4376
S&R Primary Atlantic 6720
S&R comm with Bahamas 7412
Backup mission audio 2664
Navy harbor control 2716
Launch tracking net 7525, 20186
Space missle tactical net 10305
OCC Shuttle mission audio 20198
NASA CB radio channel 9 27065 AM
Data buoys 2405
Data channels 7919, 7985, 13237,13495
Malabar-Ascencion Island MUX 10310, 13600, 20192
Ascencion Island-Malabar MUX 14937, 19966, 22755
USAF/NASA communications 4510, 4760, 4855, 4992, 5350, 5810, 6727, 6740, 8993, 9315,
9974, 10780, 11104, 11414, 11548, 14615, 19303, 19984, 20191, 20475
Communications and other stuff: S-band (MHz)
2205.000 Air-to-ground
2217.500 Air-to-ground secondary
2287.500 Air-to-ground primary digital downlink
2041.900 Ground-to-air
2201.400 Ground-to-air
1831.800 primary (USAF uplink, phase modulation)
1775.100 secondary
2250.000 wide band FM with main engine analog
telemetry during launch, or TV during
orbit operations.
Note from Ron Parise, WA4SIR, on above S-band frequencies:
"The S-band system is one of the primary orbiter downlink bands.
The voice channels are digital slope delta modulation and are
MUX'ed in with the rest of orbiter telemetry very difficult to
copy. Much of the downlink TV is S-band wide band FM and should
be easy to copy.
The Ku-band system is used in conjunction with the TDRS
satellites, and is used more heavily during Spacelab flight than
others. The data rate is very high digital (50 Mbits/sec), and
will be nearly impossible for you to demodulate and decommutate
in your basement. Nevertheless, the shuttle transmits on 15.003
GHz. These transmission are directed toward the TDRS satellite
with a high gain antenna, and cannot be copied from the ground.
The UHF frequencies are fun to listen to, but are not
heavily used except during EVA's. You will almost always hear
some activity on them during a mission, just be patient."
Ron WA4SIR
Contractors
Rockwell (Edwards)
2995.5, 3282.5, 3475.5, 5597.5, 10010.5, 17966.5 (kHz,USB)
122.800, 123.050, 123.350, 123.525, 462.925 (MHz)
Rockwell (Edwards/Kennedy)
123.475 (MHz)
McDonnell Douglas (Edwards)
123.300, 123.550 (MHz)
Com-Tech Associates (Kennedy)
151.955 (MHz)
IBM & Harris Corp. (Kennedy)
152.480 (MHz)
TWA (Kennedy)
154.515 (MHz)
Ground-to-Air : 2041.90, 2201.40 MHz