Optus (satellite)
This is a list of the satellites operated by Optus, an Australian telecommunications company. The satellite communications facility is located at Belrose on Sydney's Northern Beaches. Optus' satellites are divided into 4 classes A, B, C and D. As of April 2014 it owns and operates Optus B3, Optus C1, Optus D1, Optus D2 and Optus D3. Optus A1, Optus A2, Optus A3 and Optus B1 satellites have been retired. Optus has the largest network of satellites in Australia and New Zealand.
On 2 February 2014, NBN Co of Australia chose Optus for a five-year contract to operate two purpose-built satellites to deliver high speed broadband across rural and remote Australia.
A-Class
- Satellite Type: Hughes HS-376
- Design Life: 7 Years for A1 & A2 – 10 Years for A3
- Equipment: 15 Ku band transponders
- Diameter: 2.2m
- Height: 2.9m, 6.3m
Aussat (Optus) A1
- Operational Location: 160° east
- Launch Date: 27 August 1985
Aussat (Optus) A2
- Operational Locations: 156° east, 164° east
- Launch Date: 27 November 1985
Aussat (Optus) A3
- Operational Locations: 164° east, 156° east, 152° east
- On retirement from Optus service, Optus A3 was transferred to the 31.5°E orbital position which belongs to SES.
- Launch Date: 16 September 1987
- Moved to graveyard orbit and shutdown: April 2008
- Was the oldest HS-376 still in active operation
B-Class
- Satellite Type: Hughes HS-601
- Design Life: 10 Years
- Equipment: 15 Ku band transponders, 1 L band transponder, Ka band beacon, laser retroreflector
Optus B1
- Primary mission location: 160° east
- Current location: Sent to Junk orbit
- Launch date: 13 August 1992
- Beacon frequencies: 12.748.000 H / 12.749.000 H
Failures
Satellite Control ProcessorOn 21 May 2005 services were temporarily lost when the Primary Satellite Control Processor failed. The satellite was switched to use the Backup SCP in order to restore services. Thereafter the satellite continued to operate from the Backup SCP.
March 2006 Positioning Failure
At 06:52 UTC on 30 March 2006, a routine repositioning manoeuvre failed, resulting in loss of pointing control of the satellite. Although communication with the satellite was not lost, transmission services provided by the satellite failed due to its incorrect positioning. Services were progressively restored between 18:00 and 20:00 UTC.
Local time at the time of the start of the outage ranged from 14:52 AWST to 18:52 NZST, a peak time for listeners and viewers of the radio and television broadcast and subscription services provided directly or indirectly by the satellite.
Optus B2
- Launch Date: 21 December 1992
Optus B3
- Primary mission locations: 156° east, 152° east
- Current location: 164° east inclined
- Launch Date: 27 August 1994
This satellite is owned by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and leased back to Singtel Optus. It was replaced by Optus D2.
Optus (and Defence) C1
- Satellite Type: Space Systems/Loral : LS-1300
- Launch Date: 11 June 2003
- Location: 156° east
- Design Life: 15 Years
- Equipment: 24 Ku band transponders, 4 Ka band transponders, 4 X band transponders, 6 UHF transponders
D-Class
- Manufacturer: Orbital Sciences Corporation
- Satellite type: Orbital STAR 2 platform
- Design life: 15+ years
Optus D1
- Location: 160° east
- Launch Date: 13 October 2006
- Equipment: 24 Ku band transponders
- Launch mass: 2350 kg
Customers on D1 include the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Special Broadcasting Service, the Seven Network, the Nine Network, Sky Television New Zealand and New Zealand's Kordia. D1 also supports VSAT users.
Kordia is leasing a full transponder for sublease to TVNZ and Discovery New Zealand for the Freeview service. The Kordia transponder will be on 12.4697 GHz.
Incorrect configuration of New Zealand spot beam
During in-orbit testing of the satellite, it was discovered that the New Zealand spot beam had been configured with horizontal polarisation instead of the expected vertical polarisation – as had been used on its predecessor Optus B1.As many existing receivers did not have the ability to receive horizontally aligned signals, Sky Television was unable to transfer services from Optus B1 to this beam as expected. Sky was instead assigned capacity on the more general Australia/NZ beam. Due to restrictions on broadcast rights, the unencrypted Freeview service could not make a similar allocation switch and was set up as a horizontally-aligned service on the New Zealand spot beam.
On 31 July 2007, Sky successfully performed an over the air software upgrade to all of its customer set-top boxes, enabling them to receive the horizontally-aligned signals from the New Zealand spot beam. Accordingly, Sky was able to return to their original capacity allocation.
Optus D2
- Location: 152° east
- Launch date: 5 October 2007
- Equipment: 24 active Ku band transponders.
- Launch mass: 2375 kg
Optus D2 replaced Optus B3, which had been in operation for 13 years at the time of D2's launch.
D2 also carries a large number of Free To Air channels, many in languages other than English
Optus D3
- Location: 156° east
- Launch Date: 21 August 2009
- Equipment: 32 Ku band transponders
- Launch mass: 2500 kg
Optus 10
- Location: 156° east
- Launch Date: 11 September 2014
- Launch Site: Guiana Space Center
- Rocket: Ariane 5 ECA
- Manufacturer: Space Systems Loral
- Bus: LS-1300
- Possible Equipment : 32 Ku band transponders
- Launch mass: 3200 kg
- Regime: Geostationary
Optus 11
Optus 11 is expected to be launched in Q4 2025 by an Ariane 6 rocket. The Ariane 64 configuration for this mission will provide enhanced launch energy performance to directly insert the Optus-11 satellite into a high-energy geostationary transfer orbit, enabling it to be commissioned more quickly.Satellite information and orbital data
- A1: | |
- A2: | |
- A3: | |
- B1: | |
- B3: | |
- C1: | |
- D1: | |
- D2: | |
- D3: | |