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Further to the above and this is direct quoting Blackstar on NSF:
There is some good information in the newly-released documents.
The long interview with Reid Mayo of the Naval Research Laboratory has a lot of great details and flavor about their development of satellites. One story Mayo told was about his meeting with an admiral to tell him about what NRL was doing. He mentioned that NRL had been tracking the brand new Soviet helicopter carrier Moskva as it deployed, detecting its unique radar emissions. The admiral got mad, saying that the Navy was looking for the Moskva, so why hadn’t NRL informed them where it was? It is a great anecdote showing how even while NRL was developing new systems and capabilities, the Navy had a demand for immediate intelligence.
We now have much better info on the P-11 satellites and on some of them in particular. An official history stated that WESTON’s launch had been delayed by more than two years “by a combination of trouble in passing the system test and the overwhelming priority of the ABM-intercept P-11s.” But the new documents indicate that the WESTON payload problem was the primary reason for the delay. (This might be open to interpretation, but I think it is fair to say that most of the delay was due to a technical problem.)
We have new information and illustrations of the FARRAH satellites, and confirmation of some things that I had learned through sources.
FARRAH I and II were the box-shaped satellites launched off KH-9 HEXAGONs.
FARRAH III and later were the “tuna can” shaped satellites, although seeing them covered in antennas and insulating foil (mylar? Kapton?) they look less like tuna cans.
One new confirmation is that FARRAH IV never turned on in orbit at all. It suffered from a command sequencer failure. Somebody told me that several years ago, but now we have it in an official document. That person also said that it was ultimately traced to software originally developed for a shuttle launch but never fully updated for the Titan II. That remains unconfirmed, and it would be nice to have the failure investigation report for FARRAH IV. I wonder if that is releasable?
More info on FARRAH V. And evidence indicating that both FARRAH III and V were still operating after November 2004.
Also, there was a FARRAH VI. It was partially completed and placed in storage when the program was canceled in the early 1990s. I wonder if it is still sitting around in classified storage somewhere?
The follow-on to FARRAH in 1992 was named Lisa. What actress was named Lisa?
The GAMBIT mission launched in March 1976 attained a resolution of 4.5 inches, "the best to date."