The body of the Hispasat 1A was based on the Eurostar E2000 bus. It consisted on a box shaped metal casing (1.7 x 1.9 x 2.21 meters) with retractable solar panels on the lateral faces (when extended measured 22.02 m) and space for the communications module on the upper and lower faces. It was built by British Aerospace and Matra Marconi Space (now part of Airbus Defence and Space).[6][7] It had a RCS of 7.143 m2.[8]
The satellite weighed 2,194 kg at launch and had a dry weight of 1,325 kg. It was 3 axis stabilized.[9]
Additionally, the satellite carried 12 bypropellant (N2O4-MMH) engines with 10 N of thrust each for attitude control and auxiliary maneuvers.[12]
Electrical Power Subsystem
The satellite had 3,790 W of electric power. Its voltage was 42,5 V. it had solar panels and batteries especially design to provide power twice a year, when the satellite was deprived of sunlight for 80 minutes due to solar eclipses.
Communications module
The satellite offered both military and civilian communication channels for its customers. The module consisted in 15 active transponders divided between the upper, containing the high gaincircularly polarized L antenna and lower (containing a set of low gain antennas) faces of the prism. As a whole, it weighed 280 kg.
For governments and the military it offered three X-band of 110 W each and TWTA amplified (compatible with NATO Standards) with one spare. The bandwidth was 27 MHz and it had a maximum effective isotropic radiated power of 58 dB. In addition its uplink speeds were 12.1-12.5 GHz and 17.3-17.7 GHz downlink.[13]
For the civilian market, it had twelve Ku-band (8 at 55 W, 4 at 110 W) with six spares. They were mostly used for TV coverage.[14][15]
Antenna Failure
The 18 December 1997 the X-band antenna suffered a catastrophic failure and ceased functioning. This was later attributed to defects during production and made Matra Marconi Space choose Aérospatiale when building Hispasat 1B's antenna.[16]
During its service life it was monitored from Hispasat's headquarters in Arganda del Rey and Rio de Janeiro.[24] Its operating life officially ended in July 2003 when the satellite was definitely moved to a graveyard orbit 7º W and since then it has been drifting 3.458º a day.[25][26]
Service life
During its 10 year service life, the Hispasat 1A accomplished a series of milestones for the aerospace industry of Spain such as:[27][28][29][30]
Although its service life officially begin in 1993, 12 November 1992, it performed its first mission during the closure ceremony of the Expo Universal Sevilla 1992.
It was the first private satellite to be contracted by the Spanish Armed Forces during their deployment in the Balkans.
It was responsible for the creation of 5 new TV channels in Spain and 2 in Latin America. Particularly, it allowed the broadcasting of TVE (Spanish National TV channel) in Mexico and Canal América in Spain, after it was negotiated in the Chief of state meeting in Guadalajara (Mexico).
Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ). Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).