Boeing and partner Orbital Sciences Corporation are a step closer to helping the government of Mexico provide advanced communications services throughout the country and surrounding maritime area with the completion of the MEXSAT Bicentenario communications satellite. Orbital designed, manufactured and tested MEXSAT Bicentenario before shipping the completed spacecraft to Kourou, French Guiana, where it is scheduled to be launched aboard an Ariane 5 rocket on Dec. 19.
Under a contract with Boeing, Orbital completed the work on MEXSAT Bicentenario as part of a three-satellite order for the Federal Government of Mexico. As prime contractor for MEXSAT, Boeing is providing two larger satellites in the series that are scheduled for launch in 2013 and 2014. The Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transportes of Mexico will take over day-to-day operations of the satellites as they are launched and undergo on-orbit testing, verification and positioning.
“MEXSAT Bicentenario is based on Orbital’s flight-proven GEOStar-2 platform, which enabled us to deliver the spacecraft on a short delivery schedule,” said Christopher Richmond, Orbital senior vice president of Communications Satellite Programs. “We are looking forward to a successful launch and a smooth on-orbit checkout sequence.”
Boeing
Space
&
Intelligence
Systems
is
the
overall
integrator
of
the
MEXSAT
communications
network,
which
will
comprise
three
satellites,
two
ground
telemetry
and
control
sites,
associated
network
operations
systems,
and
reference
user
terminals.
The
second
and
third
MEXSAT
satellites
will
be
Boeing
702HP
geomobile
satellites
that
will
each
supply
14
kilowatts
of
power
and
carry
a
22-meter
L-band
reflector
for
mobile
satellite
services.