Tag: ISS-Reshetnev Company

  • GLONASS company to build 27 more satellites

    GLONASS company to build 27 more satellites

    Artist's rendering of a Glonass-K satellite. (Image: ISS-Reshetnev)
    Artist’s rendering of a Glonass-K satellite. (Image: ISS-Reshetnev)

    ISS-Reshetnev Company — the primary GLONASS contractor — has a backlog of orders for navigation satellites up to 2025, according to General Director Nikolay Testoyedov.

    Testoyedov discussed GLONASS production on Dec. 30, 2019, at a meeting hosted by ISS-Reshetnev Company for Russia’s Science and Technical Council.

    “Within the Federal Target Program, GLONASS ISS-Reshetnev Company is tasked with the production of 27 navigation satellites,” Testoyedov said. “Taking all things together, we plan to double the number of satellites launched in 2020 compared to 2019.”

    The orders require production at full capacity at the company’s facilities. At any given time, about 50 satellites are in varying stages of production, including 12 ground spares. Some of them are slated for launch in 2020.

    In 2019 eight satellites designed and built by the company were launched into various orbits. As of today,  104 ISS-Reshetnev-made satellites are in space, or two-thirds of Russia’s entire orbital fleet of satellites. ISS-Reshetnev also successfully completed several projects for the manufacture of satellite onboard systems and instruments, including the international ExoMars-2020 program slated to launch this year.

    Glonass-M satellite goes into service

    The Glonass-M navigation satellite launched on Dec. 11, 2019, entered service Jan. 13.

    A joint team of experts representing ISS-Reshetnev Company and the operating organization successfully completed all procedures moving the Glonass-M satellite to its proper orbital position, and switched on its main instruments. To this date, all the required data has been received from the satellite, which allowed it to be commissioned into service.

    The new Glonass-M replaced a retired satellite of the GLONASS constellation that had surpassed its designed life expectancy by seven years.

  • GLONASS-M satellite shipped to Cosmodrome for launch

    GLONASS-M satellite shipped to Cosmodrome for launch

    The Russian navigation satellite GLONASS-M 52 has traveled from ISS-Reshetnev Company’s facilities in Zheleznogorsk to the Plesetsk launch site, reported ISS-Reshnetev on Aug. 25.

    GLONASS-M 52 is one of the GLONASS system’s ground spares. It was built by ISS-Reshetnev Company more than two years ago and was stored at the company’s facilities waiting for launch.

    Before flying to the cosmodrome, GLONASS-M 52 was thoroughly tested and prepared for transportation. ISS-Reshetnev technicians used multi-layer insulation and special cases to protect the satellite’s sensitive equipment from damage during transport.

    GLONASS-M 52 was loaded in a special container and flown to the Plesetsk cosmodrome on an IL-76 aircraft accompanied by ISS-Reshetnev specialists. The satellite is due to launch in September.

    There are currently six GLONASS-M satellites in the ground reserve of the GLONASS navigation satellite system. All of them were constructed by ISS-Reshetnev Company in strict compliance with contract terms and are now stored at its facilities.

    Each of these satellites is on standby for launch and can be shipped to the cosmodrome whenever needed to augment the GLONASS orbital constellation.

    GLONASS-M 52 will replace a retired long-lived satellite that carried out its mission in orbit 1.5 times longer than initially designed.

    GLONASS-M 52 is expected to launch in September. (Photo: ISS-Reshetnev)