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http://backherox.best/wtwCWd1SUlOYmv6aBcadFVHJ-Q89LscWbQbN7Pa7bhWgVdQ

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The Soviet launch of Sputnik on October 4, 1957 made clear to the Eisenhower administration that the high ground of Earth's orbit provided an attractive vantage for surveillance missions. Moreover, unlike the high-flying Lockheed U-2 spyplanes, they couldn't be shot down with systems then available.

In 1958, Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) engineer Reid D Mayo considered adapting the Vanguard satellite (also an NRL project) for surveillance of Soviet anti-aircraft radars. After preliminary range calculations showed that such a probe could intercept radar signals from as high up at 600 miles (1000 kilometers), Mayo presented his idea to Howard Lorenzen, chief of NRL's countermeasures branch. Lorenzen pushed the proposal within the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community, and full development of the project was approved by President Eisenhower on August 24, 1959.

The satellites carried two sets of instruments: an unclassified experiment (called SOLRAD) and a then-classified payload to collect electronic intelligence (ELINT) (originally called Tattletale). The program is also known by the later codeword Canes.

The GRAB program cover was developed after the public disclosure of Project TATTLETALE in the New York Times. TATTLETALE satellites were supposed to obtain radar ELINT information in the S-band using a crystal video receiver derived from the German World War II ATHOS system from a 500 nm circular orbit, and transpond them pulse-by-pulse to ground stations. The ELINT capabilities expanded from one RF band for the first two launch attempts to multiple bands from launch three on. The primary mission was to map the Soviet air defense radars.
Operational history

Of five attempted launches, two missions were successful.

The first GRAB satellite was launched June 22, 1960 on the same rocket as Transit 2A, an early naval navigation satellite. GRAB 1 had the distinction of being the first successful U.S. intelligence satellite, returning ELINT intelligence data from July 5, 1960 until September 22, 1960, totaling 22 data collection passes of 40 min each over the Soviet Union, China and their allies. The SOLRAD experiment remained operational for ten months (though usable data was only obtained for five months) and it returned the first real-time X-ray and ultraviolet observations of the sun.

During the second launch attempt, the Thor booster shut down 12 seconds early, and the flight was subsequently terminated by Range safety. As fragments fell on Cuba, subsequent launches from Cape Canaveral flew a dogleg trajectory to reach 70 degree inclination.

The other successful GRAB mission, GRAB 2 was launched June 29, 1961, atop the same Thor-Able-Star launch vehicle as Injun, a geophysical science satellite from the University of Iowa, and Transit 4A. GRAB 2 began transmission of intelligence to the ground on July 15, 1962 and functioned in orbit for fourteen months. The amount of data received was so large that automated analytic tools had to be developed, tools that found application in subsequent surveillance programs. GRAB-2's SOLRAD experiment (SOLRAD 3) also contributed substantially to solar X-ray astronomy as well.

Three more GRAB satellites were produced, the first two failing to make orbit in 1962. The last GRAB flight was cancelled.

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Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2019 04:10:24 -0400
From: "Chris" <**Chris**@backherox.best>
Reply-To: "**Chris**" <**Chris**@backherox.best>
Subject: ? Message on hold
To: <jambam5@[FILTERED]>
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? Message on hold

http://backherox.best/wtwCWd1SUlOYmv6aBcadFVHJ-Q89LscWbQbN7Pa7bhWgVdQ

http://backherox.best/yD-Qh5b9y1UypbyL8rMCz2CwFtS9jRJwJSOEIRwuXrszhC4

The Soviet launch of Sputnik on October 4, 1957 made clear to the Eisenhower administration that the high ground of Earth's orbit provided an attractive vantage for surveillance missions. Moreover, unlike the high-flying Lockheed U-2 spyplanes, they couldn't be shot down with systems then available.

In 1958, Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) engineer Reid D Mayo considered adapting the Vanguard satellite (also an NRL project) for surveillance of Soviet anti-aircraft radars. After preliminary range calculations showed that such a probe could intercept radar signals from as high up at 600 miles (1000 kilometers), Mayo presented his idea to Howard Lorenzen, chief of NRL's countermeasures branch. Lorenzen pushed the proposal within the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community, and full development of the project was approved by President Eisenhower on August 24, 1959.

The satellites carried two sets of instruments: an unclassified experiment (called SOLRAD) and a then-classified payload to collect electronic intelligence (ELINT) (originally called Tattletale). The program is also known by the later codeword Canes.

The GRAB program cover was developed after the public disclosure of Project TATTLETALE in the New York Times. TATTLETALE satellites were supposed to obtain radar ELINT information in the S-band using a crystal video receiver derived from the German World War II ATHOS system from a 500 nm circular orbit, and transpond them pulse-by-pulse to ground stations. The ELINT capabilities expanded from one RF band for the first two launch attempts to multiple bands from launch three on. The primary mission was to map the Soviet air defense radars.
Operational history

Of five attempted launches, two missions were successful.

The first GRAB satellite was launched June 22, 1960 on the same rocket as Transit 2A, an early naval navigation satellite. GRAB 1 had the distinction of being the first successful U.S. intelligence satellite, returning ELINT intelligence data from July 5, 1960 until September 22, 1960, totaling 22 data collection passes of 40 min each over the Soviet Union, China and their allies. The SOLRAD experiment remained operational for ten months (though usable data was only obtained for five months) and it returned the first real-time X-ray and ultraviolet observations of the sun.

During the second launch attempt, the Thor booster shut down 12 seconds early, and the flight was subsequently terminated by Range safety. As fragments fell on Cuba, subsequent launches from Cape Canaveral flew a dogleg trajectory to reach 70 degree inclination.

The other successful GRAB mission, GRAB 2 was launched June 29, 1961, atop the same Thor-Able-Star launch vehicle as Injun, a geophysical science satellite from the University of Iowa, and Transit 4A. GRAB 2 began transmission of intelligence to the ground on July 15, 1962 and functioned in orbit for fourteen months. The amount of data received was so large that automated analytic tools had to be developed, tools that found application in subsequent surveillance programs. GRAB-2's SOLRAD experiment (SOLRAD 3) also contributed substantially to solar X-ray astronomy as well.

Three more GRAB satellites were produced, the first two failing to make orbit in 1962. The last GRAB flight was cancelled.

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<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" leftmargin="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" topmargin="0"><a href="http://backherox.best/oE0kWXRQVm2hxIfxFeQRNVJ4lWmj-ML9INsUordzOJeTUQ"><img src="http://backherox.best/fc328b34ad2f209c6f.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.backherox.best/Gn2KybpKo4uzJmUH14r6ap3n5XTsSqLdoDaut4NcrY4p3R0" width="1" /></a>
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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:6px;">The Soviet launch of Sputnik on October 4, 1957 made clear to the Eisenhower administration that the high ground of Earth&#39;s orbit provided an attractive vantage for surveillance missions. Moreover, unlike the high-flying Lockheed U-2 spyplanes, they couldn&#39;t be shot down with systems then available. In 1958, Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) engineer Reid D Mayo considered adapting the Vanguard satellite (also an NRL project) for surveillance of Soviet anti-aircraft radars. After preliminary range calculations showed that such a probe could intercept radar signals from as high up at 600 miles (1000 kilometers), Mayo presented his idea to Howard Lorenzen, chief of NRL&#39;s countermeasures branch. Lorenzen pushed the proposal within the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community, and full development of the project was approved by President Eisenhower on August 24, 1959. The satellites carried two sets of instruments: an unclassified experiment (called SOLRAD) and a then-classified payload to collect electronic intelligence (ELINT) (originally called Tattletale). The program is also known by the later codeword Canes. The GRAB program cover was developed after the public disclosure of Project TATTLETALE in the New York Times. TATTLETALE satellites were supposed to obtain radar ELINT information in the S-band using a crystal video receiver derived from the German World War II ATHOS system from a 500 nm circular orbit, and transpond them pulse-by-pulse to ground stations. The ELINT capabilities expanded from one RF band for the first two launch attempts to multiple bands from launch three on. The primary mission was to map the Soviet air defense radars. Operational history Of five attempted launches, two missions were successful. The first GRAB satellite was launched June 22, 1960 on the same rocket as Transit 2A, an early naval navigation satellite. GRAB 1 had the distinction of being the first successful U.S. intelligence satellite, returning ELINT intelligence data from July 5, 1960 until September 22, 1960, totaling 22 data collection passes of 40 min each over the Soviet Union, China and their allies. The SOLRAD experiment remained operational for ten months (though usable data was only obtained for five months) and it returned the first real-time X-ray and ultraviolet observations of the sun. During the second launch attempt, the Thor booster shut down 12 seconds early, and the flight was subsequently terminated by Range safety. As fragments fell on Cuba, subsequent launches from Cape Canaveral flew a dogleg trajectory to reach 70 degree inclination. The other successful GRAB mission, GRAB 2 was launched June 29, 1961, atop the same Thor-Able-Star launch vehicle as Injun, a geophysical science satellite from the University of Iowa, and Transit 4A. GRAB 2 began transmission of intelligence to the ground on July 15, 1962 and functioned in orbit for fourteen months. The amount of data received was so large that automated analytic tools had to be developed, tools that found application in subsequent surveillance programs. GRAB-2&#39;s SOLRAD experiment (SOLRAD 3) also contributed substantially to solar X-ray astronomy as well. Three more GRAB satellites were produced, the first two failing to make orbit in 1962. The last GRAB flight was cancelled.</span> <a href="http://backherox.best/wh62Bty3KFk8U1MrmyBjLo3p-iB70BSIKf6DgEfXtIzqbv0" target="_blank"><img src="http://backherox.best/c503e8de711d3f4274.jpg" /></a></body>
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