Hi Brian -
The group that I was part Monday did a little bit of data comparision
and found out that we were about 1.1 degrees off of XP14. So we were
deluding ourselves into thinking that we saw it.
Problem is, we're not sure why the data sets we used are so far off. I
did find my laptop was some 22 seconds slow, but that only accounts for
a little bit of the error. Rechecked everything and the latitude and
langitude along with the elevation were entered correctly. So we're
stumbed at this point.
Tom
Brian Tung wrote:
tmnathe wrote:
It was very faint and an irratic tumbler by my estimate. Only visable
for about a second every 5 - 10 minutes or so (not an accurate time by
any means). At its brightest, maybe mag 11, but invisable the rest of
the time. My hunch is that there is a flat spot that was acting as a
reflector.
Interesting--that was my experience. I had just two moments when I
thought I might have seen it, and it seemed to flash into visibility for
a brief moment, and when I tried to confirm, I couldn't see it. But of
course that doesn't prove that I saw it; for all I know, it could have
been a random piece of junk in my eye.
I did see a north-to-south satellite cross the field while I was hunting
for XP14. 
--
Brian Tung
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