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Eutelsat 33C

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 88.207.156.253 (talk) at 23:26, 28 August 2015 (History: Removed completely speculative supposition promoting BSkyB proprietary receivers which should never have been present in the article and which has proved to be without any factual basis now that satellite has been re-deployed at 33 East). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Eutelsat 33C
NamesEurobird 1 (2001-12)
Eutelsat 28A (2012-2015)
Eutelsat 33C (2015-)
Mission typeCommunications
OperatorEutelsat
COSPAR ID2001-011A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.26719
Mission duration12 years
Spacecraft properties
BusSpacebus 3000
ManufacturerAlcatel Space
Launch mass2,950 kilograms (6,500 lb)
BOL mass1,810 kilograms (3,990 lb)
Power5,900 watts
Start of mission
Launch date8 March 2001, 22:51 (2001-03-08UTC22:51Z) UTC[1]
RocketAriane 5G V140
Launch siteKourou ELA-3
ContractorArianespace
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeGeostationary
Longitude33° East (2001, 2015-)
28.5° East (2001-2015)
Transponders
Bandwidth12*33
12*72
TWTA power90 watts

Eutelsat 33C (formerly Eurobird 1 and Eutelsat 28A) is a Eutelsat operated Eurobird satellite, used primarily for digital television. It was launched in March 2001, and after a short period testing at 33°E, joined Eutelsat 2F4 at 28.5°E in the Clarke Belt, just within the range of satellite dishes pointed at SES' Astra 2 satellites at 28.2° east. It moved to 33° east and joined Eutelsat 33B in July 2015.

Operations

The satellite has three beams. A fixed beam covers almost all of Europe as well as north-western Africa. There are also two steerable beams - the first, "S1", co-focused with the fixed beam but with a Europe-only footprint, and a second, "S2", aimed to central Europe. This beam features many transponders with low symbol rates, used for satellite news gathering.

It features 24 active transponders and 12 backup transponders, all Ku band. 12 of its transponders are significantly wider (72 MHz bandwidth) than traditional broadcast satellites, and are reconfigurable into multiple "virtual" transponders. Each transponder is fixed only in its polarity, and many are carrying at least two, and up to 6 virtual transponders.[2]

History

Once stationed at 28.5°E, the satellite was promoted as providing satellite coverage for all of Europe, and featured both analogue and digital television and radio services serving Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and other countries. Many of the services it carried had previously been on Kopernikus 2 which had operated at 28.5°E since 1990. These stations slowly started to leave, mostly due to viewers/listeners in those target audiences moving to more traditional orbital positions - 19.2°E for Austria, and the relatively new 23.5°E for the Czech and Slovak Republics.

On 1 March 2012 Eutelsat renamed Eurobird 1 to Eutelsat 28A.[3]

In August 2012 it was confirmed that, after some loss of power events on Eutelsat 28A, Eutelsat 48B would be redeployed to the orbital position of 28.5 degrees East to ensure continuity of service.[4]

In January 2014 SES and Eutelsat agreed that SES would run the whole spectrum at the 28.5°E slot. Eutelsat leases eight transponders and commercializes 12 transponders from the Astra 2 fleet.[5] The last active Eutelsat 28A transponders transferred to Astra 2E on June 29, 2015.[6] It has been redeployed at 33° east[7] and renamed into Eutelsat 33C on 3 July 2015.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The fleet - Eutelsat 28A". Eutelsat. Retrieved 2013-06-27.
  2. ^ Eutelsat 28A at 28.2°E IMS. Accessed July 3, 2015
  3. ^ Eutelsat renames fleet Advanced Television. December 1, 2011
  4. ^ "Eutelsat redeploy satellite to secure UK satellite TV coverage". a516digital. 2012-08-23. Retrieved 2013-06-27.
  5. ^ Settlement in SES-Eutelsat 28 degree dispute Broadband TV News. January 30, 2014. Accessed June 30, 2015
  6. ^ Freesat EPG and last few channels transfer from Eutelsat 28A to new Astra 2 satellites Sat and PC Guy blog. June 29, 2015. Accessed June 29, 2015
  7. ^ The fleet - EUTELSAT 33C satellite Eutelsat.com. Accessed July 21, 2015
  8. ^ Eutelsat Twitter @Eutelsat_SA. Accessed July 3, 2015