Sensor type: Absolute position sensing 3D Magnetometer/Accelerometer.Anti-Windup safety mechanism: Quick-disconnect power cables with lanyard.Provides a quick-disconnect DC power connector and lanyard - Foolproof anti-windup safety device.Provides safe operation under continuous motor-stall condition.Provides an intelligent anti-windup algorithm - Automatically unwinds the cables between passes.New PID motor controller - Smoother antenna positioning and better stability.Factory calibration - Improved pointing accuracy and repeatability.High Electro Magnetic Compatibility - Tested with 50Wrms continuous RF power on VHF/UHF.Low Radio Frequency Interference - Barely audible noise on VHF/UHF.Low power - Runs off 12VDC, 125mA, 1.5W.Built in microcontroller - Low noise, fast start up and no shutdown procedure required.
Can be remotely controlled by any Windows or Linux PC, Laptop, Raspberry Pi etc.Built-in, high-torque DC motors - Steers a hand-held, dual band, satellite antenna via a counterbalanced lift-arm.Uses a 3D sensor mounted on the antenna-boom - Does not require any on-site orientation or calibration.
Light-weight and quick setup on a sturdy tripod - Best suited for portable operation.Automatically rotates a satellite antenna under the control of a PC-based, satellite tracking application.School kids in space? We say "No problems"! SARCTRAC helps kids spend more time listening to signals from space, receiving data or pictures and even communicating with others via satellites. So, we designed SARCTRAC to be quick and easy for the kids to set up, and now, it does all the work for them. Setting up an automatic tracking system, with a commercial antenna rotator is both tricky and expensive. Tracking a satellite by hand, while trying to tune an Amateur Radio transceiver for a typical 10-minute overhead pass, is a real chore for kids. “Of course, you can.” But the reality is that satellites move so fast that their position and radio frequency is constantly changing. It is really exciting when the kids hear their first satellite and then realise where it is. It is a bit like fishing in the sky and just as challenging. To make friends with a satellite you first have to know when and where it will be point a small, directional antenna at it and use an Amateur Radio transceiver to listen or talk through it.