I do not know how the band is crowded or empty in UK. Maybe it is enough
for you to listen few minutes and you hear some station at weekend mornings.
Not so in OK. I must listen hours and hours and most is given by
chance here. Signals are few and tiny. If there were some prefered
times (let say each hour starting at 00 min) I would listen each hour for five
or ten minutes to check the band and rest of hour I could devote to another
work.
Certainly such a rule wouldn't prevent anybody from listening/transmitting at
any time he wants. That is my point of view.
Petr, OK1FIG
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Od: Mike Dennison[SMTP:[email protected]]
Odesláno: 17. cervna 1999 11:00
Komu: [email protected]
Predmet: LF: Re: Operating times
Lets resume the discussion about a talk back frequency and a special
operation time as df2py suggested. I am not sure if there was an agreement.
I have been puzzled by the call for special operating times, and I
think it may be driven by those outside the centre of activity who do
not know when most activity occurs now.
Quite simply, the vast majority of 136kHz activity takes place on
Saturday and Sunday mornings from about 0600 to 1000 UTC. This
is because many people are at home and the QRN and electrical
QRM are at their lowest.
There is an opportunity for low noise QSOs between 0600 and
0730 UTC most days - but best to set up skeds, and if the QRN is
low there is a peak of activity for an hour or so after sunset in the
evening.
But if you want QSOs, go for weekend mornings.
Also, if any newcomers don't know, activity tends to peak between
136.4 and 137.0kHz and you can find extremely slow CW around
137.7kHz.
Another tip: if you are making fewer QSOs than you think you
should, check this reflector to find out if you have been heard by
people you cannot hear - then perhaps spend some time on the
receive system. Old amateur radio saying: "If you can't hear them,
you can't work them."
Mike, G3XDV (IO91VT)
http://www.dennison.demon.co.uk/activity.htm
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