The crew on the space station have been transmitting SSTV images. This morning I threw together a receiving system: I used my four element refrigerator tubing quad feeding the an RTL-SDR Dongle with HD-SDR software in the computer. For the SSTV decoding I downloaded a program from Japan: MMSSTV (very nice). To get the signal from HD-SDRto MMSSTV I just plugged a cheap little electret computer mic into the computer and taped it to the speaker.
At 0838 local today ISS flew almost directly over me. I aimed the quad south-west, and almost as soon as it was above the horizon very strong signals started pouring in. They produced the first picture (above).
ISS went silent as it passed over head. I swung the quad to the north-east hoping to catch another image as the station moved away. That is the second image (below). You can see that I was losing the signal about halfway through.
The distortion in the video image may be the result of me manually adjusting the receiver for Doppler shift.
Here is a little video of the action in the shack during the first half of the pass.
Here is the RTL-SDR Dongle Receiver in an Altoids Box:
Here is that the programs looked like on the screen -- HDSDR on top, MMSS on the bottom:
Here is what the orbital pass looked like. ISS was East of New Zealand when I took this picture. ISS came up over the Eastern Pacific and Mexico before passing over N2CQR. This display comes from the excellent Heavens Above web site: