All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
RSCC’s orbital constellation of 12 geostationary satellites controls 69% of the Earth’s surface.
Russian Satellite Communications Company Ops Department specialists completed the translation of the Express-AM33 satellite from the orbital position of 96.5° E to the 11° W slot.
On 2021-07-14, Intersputnik International Organization of Space Communications and Russian Satellite Communications Company signed an Agreement on cooperation in using frequency assignments in geostationary orbit and other satellite orbits for the implementation of the Joint Use of Satellite Capacity project.
WORK Microwave’s RSCC-T switch provides 1:1 redundancy for IP modulators.
The APAC operator is using WORK Microwave’s AT-61 satellite modulators and RSCC-T 1:1 redundancy switches to distribute satellite TV services.
WORK Microwave’s RSCC-T 1:1 Redundancy Switch provides 1:1 redundancy for IP modulators to maintain uninterrupted video distribution operations.
Russian Satellite Communications Company (RSCC) operates a geostationary satellite constellation that includes Express, Express-AM, Express-AT, Express-AMU type satellites.
Russian communications satellite companies RSCC and Gazprom Space Systems have purchased satellites built by ISS Reshetnev.
RSCC has two more satellites, Express-AMU3 and Express-AMU7, scheduled to launch in 2021 on another Proton rocket.
The first Proton launch of 2020 took place on 2020-07-30 carrying two satellites for the Russian Satellite Communications Company.
RSCC has four geostationary satellites slated to launch before the Express-RV elliptical orbit satellites.
Russian Satellite Communications Co. (RSCC) plans to order four satellites for highly elliptical orbits later in 2020 to add Arctic coverage.
RSCC generated 12.3 billion rubles in revenue and 4.8 billion rubles in net profit in 2019.
RSCC operates 10 geostationary communications satellites and is Russia’s largest geostationary communications satellite operator.
RSCC intends to have the Express-RV satellites in orbit in 2024 to provide Ku-band coverage to Russia’s Far North.
ISS Reshetnev built eight of RSCC’s 10 satellites with international partners providing payloads.
RSCC retained 85% of Express-AM6’s Ka-band customers after shutting off the satellite’s Ka-band payload.
RSCC scheduled Express-80 and Express-103 to launch together on a Proton rocket in March 2020 but delayed the launch to the second half of 2020 because of technical issues with the rocket.
RSCC slated Express-AMU3 and Express-AMU7 to launch on a Proton rocket in 2021.
RSCC shut off the Ka-band payload on Express-AM6 in March 2020 because of a thermal control system malfunction.