Digitizing NASA-ESA Taped Imagery, project to digitize 60s-70s data |
Digitizing NASA-ESA Taped Imagery, project to digitize 60s-70s data |
Feb 28 2019, 10:11 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 12 Joined: 27-August 18 Member No.: 8441 |
Hello dear readers,
Here are some satellite telemetry tapes I have acquired. They are from the 60's to 70's. These tapes contain the raw signal received from satellites at NASA tracking stations like GFORKS, STIAGO and WINKFIELD. It seems that there 2 telemetry tracks, 4 misc tracks (Including a reference track) and one voice track. I am working on getting a recorder to play these tapes. If you know the location of any 7-track instrumentation recorders (Ampex FR-100, FR-600) that would help. Here is a sample of tape 3141/2N003 played back on a 1/4 inch 4-track Akai at 7.5 I.P.S: https://www.dropbox.com/s/k2jbyoka6n50yhh/3...168-2.flac?dl=0 The tape number on the boxes and documentation is 3141/2N003. The number on the reel itself is 10786-16-8. Satellite: 1963-014A & B (ERS5) Recorder: FR-100 Speed: 15 I.P.S Station Name: GFORKS Here is an other sample from a different tape: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php...1683;sess=54302 Here is a video showing the tracks: https://youtu.be/I85-aZuupxM With this we have proven that something is on the tape, and it can be picked up with a sound head. This is the case with most of my tapes. I am currently talking with someone who has several 1/2 8-track studio tape recorders, and we are looking into getting an Otari MX-5050 8 unit working. This unit is most useful because it can play at both 7.5 I.P.S and 15 I.P.S, which is what we need. All mechanical functions seem to work fine, and the input VU meters register when the build-in tone generator is switched on. But... there is no sound from his tape! (His own audio, not a NASA tape) This recorder is currently undergoing repairs. Other tapes I have acquired are ESA tapes from the same era. I have tested out three of the five ESA tapes with a magnetic viewing solution, and all three clearly showed 7 tracks like the NASA tapes. This means they have not been degaused or overwritten with an audio recorder. The tracks look like raw telemetry, not computer tapes. One tape has a label that clearly says it came from a tracking station. I think we should be able to digitize these too eventually. The tracks are very clear. The tapes I have tested are: TD-1 (Tape ID: 1117-09-08- ESRO 1A (Tape ID: 800 645 08 10B) HEOS A2 (Tape ID: 1115 06 11B) I have made two videos on it in dutch. First, a tutorial on how to make your town magnetic viewing solution. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_kA0cnkBLI And finally, a video where I visualize the magnetic tracks on 3 tapes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAjU2AHIksA I have attached some photos of the tracks to this message. I promise I will publish a big archive with detailed scans and photos of all ESA and NASA tapes currently in my possession. Macro photos (Large!) https://imgur.com/a/rnlJH9P So what are we looking for? I am interested to know if its possible to determine the frequency of a track with the track photos.Is it possible to replace the 8-track head in an 1/2 inch Otari tape recorder with a 7-track head, perhaps from a computer tape drive?Is it possible to decode the digitized raw telemetry data into numbers, perhaps a spreadsheet or interactive database?Would people be interested to crowdfund some of the greater expenses that may be required? Best regards,Niels |
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Mar 8 2019, 11:44 PM
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#2
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 12 Joined: 27-August 18 Member No.: 8441 |
Some interesting new finds, did we play telemetry?
Last week I took the time to play some ESA tapes (1/2 inch 7-track) on my Akai X201D (1/4 inch 4-track) The tapes played: 1. SAT: ESRO 1A TAPE ID: 680841-292-230 ESOC/Section TLM: 13496 DATE: 24 JULY 70 2. SAT: 720,141 TAPE ID: 1135 05 10A ESOC/Section TLM: 21554 DATE: 3. SAT: TD-1 TAPE ID: 1117 09 08 B ESOC/Section TLM: 16837 DATE: "Day 089" 4. SAT: TD-1A TAPE ID: 1118 07 09 A ESOC/Section TLM: 16672 DATE: To give you an idea of how satellites sounded in the 60's and 70's check out this website with recordings. I made a video where I play the tapes and show it on an oscilliscope: ESA satellite tape playback - YouTube Some remarkable details: ESRO 1A has a lot of activity at the beginning, it looks like a reference signal that is being adjusted. There pitch changes and there are periods of noise. Eventually we receive a stable signal which is certainly more complex than a simple sine wave. ESRO 1A: Oscilliscope: Spectrogram: seems to show a kind of square wave, would this be satellite data? Signal played at 20% original speed, sounds like morse code. The space between the signals is similar to track 6 of the ESRO 1A tape: TD-1 Oscilliscope : The wave of this signal swells up and comes down again. Spectrogram : And here you can see that too. TD-1A Oscilliscope: This signal has two harmonic waves: And when we zoom out, it has a kind of block pattern: But when it is very interesting to delay the signal, it sounds like a morse code again. Spectrogram: Signal played at 15% original speed, sounds like morse code again. A lot of new information that will take some time to process. It seems to me quite possible that this is the received data. If we find documents from the relevant satellite with information about telemetry, should it be possible to create a program or circuit that processes the signal? A program could convert it to a spreadsheet. How much volts the battery outputs every second for example. I do not know anything about it, but the ESA recordings do not seem to be FM-modulated, since such a wave looks very different. The NASA recordings are usually not, so apparently AM and FM modulation was not common in recordings from this time. The NASA documentation usually also has "Direct" recordings and not "FM" I am looking for people who may be able to help with the relevant satellites, and who are more acquainted with this kind of work. Niels |
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Mar 11 2019, 03:10 AM
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#3
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2346 Joined: 7-December 12 Member No.: 6780 |
But when it is very interesting to delay the signal, it sounds like a morse code again. Spectrogram: ...rtfturlunnvaana... if interpreted as Morse code. No idea, what that might mean. Some of the tape sounds like data tapes widely used until about the early 1980s, or similar to modems until the early 1990s, with some carrier signal followed by data. So, it might be, that a code typically transmitted by RS-232 interfaces, like Baudot codes, BCD, EBCDIC, or ASCII would result in more meaningful interpretations. Then, you'd have to find out, which the start and stop bits are, and translate the enclosed character. But it's long ago, and has been rare, that I needed to work on that very fundamental level. |
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