Official name OV1-8
Alternative name OV1 8 (PasComSat)
Cospar ID 1966-063A
Norad ID 2324
Launch date 1966-07-14
Launch site AFWTR
Launch vehicle Atlas-D OV1
Country/Organization USA
Type application Experimental
Operator US Air Force (USAF)
RCS size LARGE
Decay date 1978-01-04
Shape Sphere
Mass (kg) 10.31
Height (m) 9.13
Width (m) 9.13
Depth (m) 9.13
Span (m^2) 9.13
Lifetime 11 years
Contractors Goodyear Aerospace Corp.
Propulsion None
Configuration 9.1 m gridsphere
Power None

PasComSat (Passive Communications satellite) was an inflatable gridsphere launched on an OV1 propulsion module. A gridsphere is a balloon consisting of wire mesh embedded in a photolyzable balloon. After inflation in space, the UV radiation causes the balloon to vaporize, leaving a wire frame in spherical shape. This gridsphere reflects radio waves as good as a aluminized balloon, but has much less atmospherical drag compared to a balloons satellite.

To reduce the effects of solar pressure and space drag, the USAF contracted with the Goodyear Aerospace Corp. for construction of a 30-foot diameter grid-sphere balloon. It was made of a soft aluminum wire grid imbedded in a special plastic designed to dissolve in space under the sun's strong ultraviolet rays. On 14 July 1966, the USAF grid-sphere payload was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., atop an Atlas booster. It went into orbit 620 miles above the earth and was automatically inflated with helium. The plastic covering soon dissolved, leaving a 30-foot diameter open aluminum structure orbiting the earth. Tests indicated that the satellite would remain in orbit for at least 11 years and that it had a reflective power five times greater than that of a solid sphere.

A follow up was launched as experiment AVL-802.

Satellite COSPAR Date LS Launch Vehicle Remarks
OV1-8 1966-063A 1966-07-14 AFWTR Atlas-D OV1 with OV1 7, NC20.189 *