GPS IIF-1 over Austin tonight
Pass predictions for Austin, TX.
Next visible pass
Wed, Jun 10, 9:12 AM
Peak elevation 47.60° · rises NW · sets SW
Tracking: GPS BIIF-1 (PRN 25) (NORAD 36585)
7-day pass forecast
| Date | Time | Peak elev | Rises | Sets |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 10 | 9:12 AM | 47.60° | NW | SW |
| Jun 10 | 6:00 PM | 25.00° | SE | NE |
| Jun 11 | 9:02 AM | 47.59° | NW | SW |
| Jun 11 | 5:56 PM | 25.00° | SE | NE |
| Jun 12 | 8:58 AM | 47.59° | NW | SW |
| Jun 12 | 5:52 PM | 25.00° | SE | NE |
| Jun 13 | 8:54 AM | 47.59° | NW | SW |
How to spot GPS IIF-1 from Austin
GPS navigation satellite in MEO at ~20,200 km — visible with binoculars in the right window.
- Look in the direction listed — passes start near the horizon and arc across the sky.
- Peak elevation matters — a 60°+ peak means it'll go nearly overhead; under 30° stays low.
- Best viewing is in the 90 minutes after sunset or before sunrise — the satellite is sunlit while you're in shadow.
- No equipment needed for bright passes — the ISS at peak rivals Venus.
Going to look up?
For fainter satellites you'll want 7×50 or 10×50 binoculars. A pair of Celestron SkyMaster binoculars is the consensus pick. Affiliate placement — replace with your affiliate link.
Pass alerts on your phone
Browser push, no email needed. We'll notify you 30 minutes before GPS IIF-1 is visible from Austin.
Prefer email?
One email tonight before GPS IIF-1 is visible, never more than 2/week.