Success again. After looking at the tv to locate the milstar at 68 degrees west, I found it. It was easy to spot once I knew where to look:) I took mike's following orbit Unknown 041002 1 90023U 04776A 04318.58857651 0.00000000 00000-0 00000-0 0 02 2 90023 5.1400 196.9199 0001000 0.9272 359.0727 1.00270000 04 And changes one of the values, so it was more close to the time it passes between some star patterns. Unknown 041002 1 90023U 04776A 04318.58857651 0.00000000 00000-0 00000-0 0 02 2 90023 5.1400 197.8199 0001000 0.9272 359.0727 1.00270000 04 Not the proper way, but I don't care. It works for what I want to do. Go milstar. Now to wait for milstar 6 to flare up. Kevin __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Read only the mail you want - Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Frequently Asked Questions, SeeSat-L archive: http://www.satobs.org/seesat/seesatindex.html
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