Neha Patil (Editor)

Sino Satellite Communications Company

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Former type
  
Limited company

Defunct
  
January 2008

Headquarters
  
Beijing

Ceased operations
  
January 2008

Industry
  
Aerospace

Area served
  
mainland China

Founded
  
May 1994

Sino Satellite Communications Company wwwsinosathkcomimageslogogif

Fate
  
Merged into China DBSAT

Products
  
Satellite communication

Parent organization
  
China Satellite Communications Co. Ltd.

The Sino Satellite Communications Company or Sinosat (Chinese: 鑫诺卫星) was a Chinese limited company, which provided satellite communications through a pair of communications satellites in geostationary orbit. It ceased to exist in January 2008, when it merged with the China Satellite Communications Corporation to form the China Direct Broadcast Satellite Company. Their two satellites were, Sinosat-1 and Sinosat-3. A third satellite, Sinosat-2, failed shortly after launch.

Contents

Sinosat-1

Sinosat-1 was built by Aérospatiale using a Spacebus 3000 satellite bus. It was launched by a Long March 3B carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre at 09:20 GMT on 18 July 1998. It was placed into a geostationary orbit, and is currently operating in a slot at 110.5° East of the Greenwich Meridian. With the merger of Sinosat into China DBSAT, it was redesignated Chinasat 5B.

Sinosat-2

Sinosat-2 was based on the DFH-4 bus. It was launched at 16:20 GMT on 28 October 2006, also using a Long March 3B. After launch, its solar panels and communications antenna failed to deploy, making the satellite unusable.

Sinosat-3

Sinosat-3 is a DFH-3 satellite, which was launched at 16:08 GMT on 31 May 2007. A Long March 3A rocket was used to place it into geosynchronous transfer orbit, making the 100th flight of a Long March rocket. It operates in geostationary orbit at 125° East. With the merger of Sinosat into China DBSAT, it was redesignated Chinasat 5C.

Sinosat-6

Launched in 2010 by a Long March rocket

References

Sino Satellite Communications Company Wikipedia