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:''"Satcom" is also an acronym of, and generic term for, [[satellite communications]].''
''"Satcom" is also an acronym of, and generic term for, [[satellite communications]]''
[[Image:STS-61-C SATCOM Ku-1 deployment.jpg|thumb|Satcom K1 being placed into orbit by the [[Space Shuttle]] ''[[Space Shuttle Columbia|Columbia]]'' in 1986. The illuminated (right hand) side of the satellite is one set of solar panels which were extended when the satellite propelled itself to its geostationary orbit]]

The '''Satcom''' series was a family of [[communications satellite]]s originally developed and operated by [[RCA American Communications]] (RCA Americom). Satcom was one of the early [[geostationary satellites]]; the first were the [[Syncom]] series, in 1964. The first Satcom satellite, Satcom 1, was launched on December 13, 1975. The last satellite, Satcom K2, was placed into orbit on November 27, 1985 and was de-orbited in February 2002. Satcom was first superseded and then replaced by the GE series of satellites.
[[Image:STS-61-C SATCOM Ku-1 deployment.jpg|thumb|upright=1.0|right|Satcom K1 being placed into orbit by the [[Space Shuttle]] ''[[Space Shuttle Columbia|Columbia]]'' in 1986. The illuminated (right hand) side of the satellite is one set of solar panels which were extended when the satellite propelled itself to its geostationary orbit]]

The '''Satcom''' series was a family of [[communications satellite]]s originally developed and operated by [[RCA American Communications]] (RCA Americom). Satcom was one of the early [[geostationary satellites]]; the first were the [[Syncom]] series, in 1964. The first Satcom satellite, Satcom 1, was launched on 13 December 1975. The last satellite, Satcom K2, was placed into orbit on 27 November 1985 and was de-orbited in February 2002. Satcom was first superseded and then replaced by the GE series of satellites.


Satcom (which stands for "satellite communication") was an [[Communications satellite#Geostationary orbits (GEO)|artificial geo-stationary satellite]] that facilitated wide-area telecommunications by receiving radio signals from Earth, amplifying them, and relaying them back down to terrestrial receivers.
Satcom (which stands for "satellite communication") was an [[Communications satellite#Geostationary orbits (GEO)|artificial geo-stationary satellite]] that facilitated wide-area telecommunications by receiving radio signals from Earth, amplifying them, and relaying them back down to terrestrial receivers.


The Satcom system passed to [[General Electric]] with its purchase of [[RCA]] in 1986. RCA Americom became [[GE American Communications]] (GE Americom) and the satellite construction division became [[GE Astro Space]]. GE Astro Space was sold to [[Martin Marietta]] (now [[Lockheed Martin Space Systems]]) in 1993. In 2001 GE sold GE Americom to [[SES Global]], creating [[SES Americom]].
The Satcom system passed to [[General Electric]] with its purchase of [[RCA]] in 1986. RCA Americom became [[GE American Communications]] (GE Americom) and the satellite construction division became [[GE Astro Space]]. GE Astro Space was sold to [[Martin Marietta]] (now [[Lockheed Martin Space|Lockheed Martin Space Systems]]) in 1993. In 2001, GE sold GE Americom to [[SES Global]], creating [[SES Americom]].


==History==
== History ==
Most early commercial communications satellites were built for and operated by telecommunications companies. RCA, with its own [[RCA Astro Electronics]] satellite construction business, identified a role for itself as a satellite owner/operator.
Most early commercial communications satellites were built for and operated by telecommunications companies. RCA, with its own [[RCA Astro Electronics]] satellite construction business, identified a role for itself as a satellite owner/operator.


Satcom 1 was used as the launching ground for many cable TV services including [[HBO]], [[Showtime (TV network)|Showtime]], [[TBS (U.S. TV channel)|Superstation TBS]], [[Nickelodeon]], the [[Christian Broadcasting Network|CBN cable network]] (now [[Freeform (TV channel)|Freeform]]), [[ESPN]], and [[The Weather Channel]]. The satellite spurred the cable television industry to unprecedented heights with the assistance of HBO (who moved their programming from the competing [[Westar 1]], where they had been since their nationwide debut in 1975, to Satcom 1 in February 1976). Cable television networks relay signals to ground-based [[cable television headend]]s using satellites, which allowed cable TV to enter into the suburban and metropolitan markets, thus allowing HBO to accumulate 1.6 million subscribers by the end of 1977.
Satcom 1 was used as the launching ground for many cable TV services including [[HBO]], [[Showtime (TV network)|Showtime]], [[TBS (U.S. TV channel)|Superstation TBS]], [[Nickelodeon]], the [[Christian Broadcasting Network|CBN cable network]] (now [[Freeform (TV channel)|Freeform]]), [[ESPN]], and [[The Weather Channel]]. The satellite spurred the cable television industry to unprecedented heights with the assistance of HBO (who moved their programming from the competing [[Westar 1]], where they had been since their nationwide debut in 1975, to Satcom 1 in February 1976). Cable television networks relay signals to ground-based [[cable television headend]]s using satellites, which allowed cable TV to enter into the suburban and metropolitan markets, thus allowing HBO to accumulate 1.6 million subscribers by the end of 1977.


A notable legal battle involved [[Ted Turner]] suing RCA to get a Satcom 1 transponder in 1980 for the launch of [[CNN]] on June 1, 1980. CNN had been scheduled for a Satcom 3 transponder but that satellite failed to reach geosynchronous orbit upon its launch on December 7, 1979.
A notable legal battle involved [[Ted Turner]] suing RCA to get a Satcom 1 transponder in 1980 for the launch of [[CNN]] on 1 June 1980. CNN had been scheduled for a Satcom 3 transponder but that satellite failed to reach geosynchronous orbit upon its launch on 7 December 1979.


Shortly after its launch, Satcom 1 was the first satellite used by broadcast TV networks in the United States. The networks [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], [[NBC]], and [[CBS]] distributed their programming content to some local affiliate stations, which had before relied on [[AT&T]]'s terrestrial microwave and coaxial networks to distribute & relay programming (although NBC used it on an experimental basis for this purpose in the late 1970s). The networks fed to both Satcom 1 and AT&T's network at the same time (for the benefit of those stations who hadn't yet been equipped with [[earth station]] equipment for reception of the satellite) up until the [[Breakup of the Bell System|breakup of AT&T]] in 1984, when the networks switched exclusively to satellite distribution on Satcom 1 (and later satellites), due to the much lower transmission costs, as well as due to AT&T's divestiture itself.
Shortly after its launch, Satcom 1 was the first satellite used by broadcast TV networks in the United States. The networks [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], [[NBC]], and [[CBS]] distributed their programming content to some local affiliate stations, which had before relied on [[AT&T]]'s terrestrial microwave and coaxial networks to distribute and relay programming (although NBC used it on an experimental basis for this purpose in the late 1970s). The networks fed to both Satcom 1 and AT&T's network at the same time (for the benefit of those stations who hadn't yet been equipped with[[Ground station|Earth station]] equipment for reception of the satellite) up until the [[Breakup of the Bell System|breakup of AT&T]] in 1984, when the networks switched exclusively to satellite distribution on Satcom 1 (and later satellites), due to the much lower transmission costs, as well as due to AT&T's divestiture itself.


The reason that Satcom 1 was so widely used by both cable and broadcast TV networks is that it had twice the communications capacity of the competing [[Westar 1]] (24 transponders as opposed to Westar 1's 12), which resulted in lower transponder usage costs in general.
The reason that Satcom 1 was so widely used by both cable and broadcast TV networks is that it had twice the communications capacity of the competing [[Westar 1]] (24 transponders as opposed to Westar 1's 12), which resulted in lower transponder usage costs in general.


==Satellite fleet==
== Satellite fleet ==
All the remaining Satcom satellites were retired in the early 2000s and replaced by the GE/AMC series, originally by [[GE Americom]], then sold to [[SES S.A.|SES]].
All the remaining Satcom satellites were retired in the early 2000s and replaced by the GE/AMC series, originally by [[GE Americom]], then sold to [[SES S.A.|SES]].


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|Satcom 1
|Satcom 1
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|December 12, 1975
|12 December 1975
|[[Delta 3000]]
|[[Delta 3000]]
|{{cospar|1975-117A}}
|{{cospar|1975-117A}}
Line 43: Line 46:
|Satcom 2
|Satcom 2
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|March 26, 1976
|26 March 1976
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1976-029A}}
|{{cospar|1976-029A}}
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|Satcom 3
|Satcom 3
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|December 7, 1979
|7 December 1979
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1979-101A}}
|{{cospar|1979-101A}}
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|Satcom 1R
|Satcom 1R
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|April 11, 1983
|11 April 1983
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1983-030A}}
|{{cospar|1983-030A}}
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|Satcom 2R
|Satcom 2R
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|September 8, 1983
|8 September 1983
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1983-094A}}
|{{cospar|1983-094A}}
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|Satcom 3R
|Satcom 3R
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|November 20, 1981
|20 November 1981
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1981-114A}}
|{{cospar|1981-114A}}
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|Satcom 4
|Satcom 4
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|January 16, 1982
|16 January 1982
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1982-004A}}
|{{cospar|1982-004A}}
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|Satcom 5
|Satcom 5
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|October 28, 1982
|28 October 1982
|Delta 3000
|Delta 3000
|{{cospar|1982-105A}}
|{{cospar|1982-105A}}
Line 92: Line 95:
|Satcom 4R
|Satcom 4R
|[[Boeing Satellite Systems|Hughes]]
|[[Boeing Satellite Systems|Hughes]]
|November 8, 1984
|8 November 1984
|[[STS-51-A]] (''[[Space Shuttle Discovery|Discovery]]'')
|[[STS-51-A]] (''[[Space Shuttle Discovery|Discovery]]'')
|{{cospar|1984-113B}}
|{{cospar|1984-113B}}
Line 99: Line 102:
|Satcom C1
|Satcom C1
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|November 20, 1990
|20 November 1990
|[[Ariane 4|Ariane 42P]]
|[[Ariane 4|Ariane 42P]]
|{{cospar|1990-100A}}
|{{cospar|1990-100A}}
Line 106: Line 109:
|Satcom C3
|Satcom C3
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|September 11, 1992
|11 September 1992
|[[Ariane 4|Ariane 44LP]]
|[[Ariane 4|Ariane 44LP]]
|{{cospar|1992-060B}}
|{{cospar|1992-060B}}
Line 113: Line 116:
|Satcom C4
|Satcom C4
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|August 31, 1992
|31 August 1992
|[[Delta II]] (7925)
|[[Delta II]] (7925)
|{{cospar|1992-057A}}
|{{cospar|1992-057A}}
Line 120: Line 123:
|Satcom C5
|Satcom C5
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|May 29, 1991
|29 May 1991
|Delta II (7925)
|Delta II (7925)
|{{cospar|1991-037A}}
|{{cospar|1991-037A}}
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|Satcom K1
|Satcom K1
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|January 12, 1986
|12 January 1986
|[[STS-61-C]] (''[[Space Shuttle Columbia|Columbia]]'')
|[[STS-61-C]] (''[[Space Shuttle Columbia|Columbia]]'')
|{{cospar|1986-003B}}
|{{cospar|1986-003B}}
Line 134: Line 137:
|Satcom K2
|Satcom K2
|RCA Astro Electronics
|RCA Astro Electronics
|November 27, 1985
|27 November 1985
|[[STS-61-B]] (''[[Space Shuttle Atlantis|Atlantis]]'')
|[[STS-61-B]] (''[[Space Shuttle Atlantis|Atlantis]]'')
|{{cospar|1985-109D}}
|{{cospar|1985-109D}}
Line 141: Line 144:
|Satcom K3
|Satcom K3
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|March 2, 1991
|2 March 1991
|Ariane 44LP
|Ariane 44LP
|{{cospar|1991-015A}}
|{{cospar|1991-015A}}
Line 148: Line 151:
|Satcom K4
|Satcom K4
|GE Astro Space
|GE Astro Space
|June 10, 1992
|10 June 1992
|[[Atlas II]]
|[[Atlas II]]
|{{cospar|1992-032A}}
|{{cospar|1992-032A}}
Line 154: Line 157:
|}
|}


==External links==
== External links ==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20051123033019/http://www.astronautix.com/project/satcom.htm Astronautix]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20051123033019/http://www.astronautix.com/project/satcom.htm Astronautix]
* [http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/satcom-1.htm Sky Rocket]
* [http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/satcom-1.htm Sky Rocket]

Revision as of 21:49, 5 April 2021

"Satcom" is also an acronym of, and generic term for, satellite communications

Satcom K1 being placed into orbit by the Space Shuttle Columbia in 1986. The illuminated (right hand) side of the satellite is one set of solar panels which were extended when the satellite propelled itself to its geostationary orbit

The Satcom series was a family of communications satellites originally developed and operated by RCA American Communications (RCA Americom). Satcom was one of the early geostationary satellites; the first were the Syncom series, in 1964. The first Satcom satellite, Satcom 1, was launched on 13 December 1975. The last satellite, Satcom K2, was placed into orbit on 27 November 1985 and was de-orbited in February 2002. Satcom was first superseded and then replaced by the GE series of satellites.

Satcom (which stands for "satellite communication") was an artificial geo-stationary satellite that facilitated wide-area telecommunications by receiving radio signals from Earth, amplifying them, and relaying them back down to terrestrial receivers.

The Satcom system passed to General Electric with its purchase of RCA in 1986. RCA Americom became GE American Communications (GE Americom) and the satellite construction division became GE Astro Space. GE Astro Space was sold to Martin Marietta (now Lockheed Martin Space Systems) in 1993. In 2001, GE sold GE Americom to SES Global, creating SES Americom.

History

Most early commercial communications satellites were built for and operated by telecommunications companies. RCA, with its own RCA Astro Electronics satellite construction business, identified a role for itself as a satellite owner/operator.

Satcom 1 was used as the launching ground for many cable TV services including HBO, Showtime, Superstation TBS, Nickelodeon, the CBN cable network (now Freeform), ESPN, and The Weather Channel. The satellite spurred the cable television industry to unprecedented heights with the assistance of HBO (who moved their programming from the competing Westar 1, where they had been since their nationwide debut in 1975, to Satcom 1 in February 1976). Cable television networks relay signals to ground-based cable television headends using satellites, which allowed cable TV to enter into the suburban and metropolitan markets, thus allowing HBO to accumulate 1.6 million subscribers by the end of 1977.

A notable legal battle involved Ted Turner suing RCA to get a Satcom 1 transponder in 1980 for the launch of CNN on 1 June 1980. CNN had been scheduled for a Satcom 3 transponder but that satellite failed to reach geosynchronous orbit upon its launch on 7 December 1979.

Shortly after its launch, Satcom 1 was the first satellite used by broadcast TV networks in the United States. The networks ABC, NBC, and CBS distributed their programming content to some local affiliate stations, which had before relied on AT&T's terrestrial microwave and coaxial networks to distribute and relay programming (although NBC used it on an experimental basis for this purpose in the late 1970s). The networks fed to both Satcom 1 and AT&T's network at the same time (for the benefit of those stations who hadn't yet been equipped withEarth station equipment for reception of the satellite) up until the breakup of AT&T in 1984, when the networks switched exclusively to satellite distribution on Satcom 1 (and later satellites), due to the much lower transmission costs, as well as due to AT&T's divestiture itself.

The reason that Satcom 1 was so widely used by both cable and broadcast TV networks is that it had twice the communications capacity of the competing Westar 1 (24 transponders as opposed to Westar 1's 12), which resulted in lower transponder usage costs in general.

Satellite fleet

All the remaining Satcom satellites were retired in the early 2000s and replaced by the GE/AMC series, originally by GE Americom, then sold to SES.

Model Manufacturer Launch date Launch vehicle COSPAR ID Comments
Satcom 1 RCA Astro Electronics 12 December 1975 Delta 3000 1975-117A
Satcom 2 RCA Astro Electronics 26 March 1976 Delta 3000 1976-029A
Satcom 3 RCA Astro Electronics 7 December 1979 Delta 3000 1979-101A Failure during GTO (currently in non-geosynchronous orbit)
Satcom 1R RCA Astro Electronics 11 April 1983 Delta 3000 1983-030A Replaced Satcom 1
Satcom 2R RCA Astro Electronics 8 September 1983 Delta 3000 1983-094A Replaced Satcom 2
Satcom 3R RCA Astro Electronics 20 November 1981 Delta 3000 1981-114A Replaced Satcom 3
Satcom 4 RCA Astro Electronics 16 January 1982 Delta 3000 1982-004A
Satcom 5 RCA Astro Electronics 28 October 1982 Delta 3000 1982-105A Also called Aurora 1, still on 105.2'W (2006)[1]
Satcom 4R Hughes 8 November 1984 STS-51-A (Discovery) 1984-113B Launched as Anik D2, purchased in orbit
Satcom C1 GE Astro Space 20 November 1990 Ariane 42P 1990-100A Replaced Satcom 1R
Satcom C3 GE Astro Space 11 September 1992 Ariane 44LP 1992-060B
Satcom C4 GE Astro Space 31 August 1992 Delta II (7925) 1992-057A
Satcom C5 GE Astro Space 29 May 1991 Delta II (7925) 1991-037A Originally called Aurora 2, replaced Aurora 1 / Satcom 5
Satcom K1 RCA Astro Electronics 12 January 1986 STS-61-C (Columbia) 1986-003B
Satcom K2 RCA Astro Electronics 27 November 1985 STS-61-B (Atlantis) 1985-109D
Satcom K3 GE Astro Space 2 March 1991 Ariane 44LP 1991-015A Sold during construction to SES; launched as Astra 1B
Satcom K4 GE Astro Space 10 June 1992 Atlas II 1992-032A Sold during construction to Intelsat, launched as Intelsat K