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Boeing Managed Rocket Launches Boeing Built Satellite

A Boeing HS-601 series satellite will be deploed at 127 degrees west longitude as Galaxy XIII/Horizons-1.

St. Louis - Oct 02, 2003
Last night, a successful launch orbited Galaxy XIII/Horizons-1, a Boeing 601HP satellite built by Boeing for PanAmSat Corporation, Wilton, Conn., and JSAT Corporation of Japan. The satellite will provide coverage over North America, Central America, Alaska and Hawaii from an orbital slot between the Hawaiian Islands and the U.S. west coast.

The 4,090 kg (8,998 lbs) satellite rocketed to geosynchronous transfer orbit aboard a Zenit-3SL provided by Sea Launch Company, LLC. Lift-off occurred at 9:03 p.m. PDT (4:03 a.m. GMT) from the Sea Launch Odyssey Launch Platform positioned on the equator in the Pacific Ocean. The spacecraft received its first signals at about 10:03 p.m. PDT at a ground station at Fucino, Italy, confirming normal operation.

"Communications satellites have erased the distance between the far corners of the globe," said Dave Ryan, president of Boeing Satellite Systems International, a wholly owned subsidiary of Boeing.

"Galaxy XIII/Horizons-1 will continue that heritage as it also links the aspirations of PanAmSat and JSAT, who will use it to deliver trans-Pacific communications services. We are very proud to continue our legacy of teamwork with these two very important long time customers."

Galaxy XIII/Horizons-1 with a final orbit slot at 127 degrees west longitude is the 207th Boeing-built commercial communications satellite launched to date. Forty years ago this year, the Boeing-built Syncom ushered in a revolution as the world's first geosynchronous communications satellite.


Related Links
Galaxy XII/Horizons-1 fact sheet
PanAmSat
JSAT
Boeing Satellite Systems
SeaLaunch
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An Open Letter to DirecTV CEO Eddy Hartenstein
Washington - Oct 02, 2003
Hartenstein: I am writing to ask you to stop your campaign of distortion against Northpoint Technology's plans to create a low cost competitor to DBS and cable. You say our company should not be licensed in the same manner as international and global satellites because the "DBS industry must participate in auctions to receive spectrum." This is totally disingenuous and you know it.







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