Try these one's. I find that these are bright, they were easy to see when I was using a borrowed 8 ince telescope. NIMIQ 1 1 25740U 99027A 02092.35330791 -.00000190 00000-0 00000+0 0 4354 2 25740 0.0042 180.8492 0002393 175.4241 230.2615 1.00270288 10557 GALAXY 11 1 26038U 99071A 02092.35588720 -.00000191 00000-0 00000+0 0 6321 2 26038 0.0426 18.1787 0000404 272.5932 296.8550 1.00270267 8449 PAS 1R 1 26608U 00072A 02092.18105229 -.00000291 00000-0 00000+0 0 2942 2 26608 0.0401 20.3181 0000098 101.0854 89.0847 1.00268350 5095 XM-2 1 26724U 01012A 02091.79168757 -.00000042 00000-0 00000+0 0 2109 2 26724 0.0399 2.3463 0000135 79.4246 278.1896 1.00272745 3892 XM-1 1 26761U 01018A 02090.11512485 -.00000222 00000-0 00000+0 0 1819 2 26761 0.0164 104.5330 0000342 321.2963 78.7938 1.00270004 3353 I easy saw 26608, 26038 and 25740 in my 70 mm refractor the other night. Kevin _________________________________________________________________ Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe from SeeSat-L by sending a message with 'unsubscribe' in the SUBJECT to SeeSat-L-request@lists.satellite.eu.org http://www.satellite.eu.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Apr 03 2002 - 08:06:30 EST