Investigating the Transit 5B-5/E-5 Satellite: The oldest satellite still transmitting

Transit 5B-5 is a US Navy navigation satellite that was an early version of the GPS/GNSS system we enjoy today. It was launched in 1964 and has been transmitting continuously for roughly 60 years. Unlike many dead satellites that only emit a carrier tone, this one still broadcasts modulated telemetry on about 136.65 MHz, making it a fascinating target for amateur radio and SDR hobbyists.

Over on YouTube dereksgc has uploaded a video that is a deep dive into the Transit satellites, and tries to unravel the convoluted naming scheme. In the video, dereksgc digs into historical documents and compares orbital decay rates, modulation schemes, and expected signal formats.  The results strongly suggest that this “Transit 5B-5” signal may actually be coming from a different spacecraft altogether, likely “Transit 5E-5.” 

Detailed SDR recordings and analysis of its subcarriers and data rates reveal that the format, frequency, and stability align better with the Transit 5E series rather than the navigation-oriented Transit Oscar series as previously believed.

If you are interested in receiving Transit 5B-5/5E-5, you can do so with a simple RTL-SDR and 137 MHz antenna, which is commonly used for NOAA and Meteor weather satellite reception. We have posted about receiving Transit 5B-5/5E-5 before on this previous post too.

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