Nothing in io83lk Roger, wspr or
spec lab only decoding Jim and
Gus
G ..
G0NBD
Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2009 8:47 PM
Subject: Re: LF: Re: Re: WSPR threshold reports
Thanks for the screen shots Jim.
I continue to be simply
amazed that my tiny signal is being decoded by ANYONE at all. It certainly
proves what a wonderful resource WSPR is for experimenting with QRP, antennas,
rigs etc. on any band, but especially on 136 and 500kHz.
73s Roger
G3XBM
On 17 Sep 2009 20:29, James Moritz <[email protected]>
wrote: > Dear Dave, Roger, LF Group, > > > > I
have attached a screen shot of WSPR signals from SM6BHZ and G3XBM received just
now, using Spectrum Lab set up for QRSS3 reception. The corresponding WSPR spots
were: > > > > 1836 -12 0.0 0.503925
0 SM6BHZ JO57 33 > > 1840 -27 2.9 0.503890
0 G3XBM JO02 0 > > > > SM6BHZ was an audible
signal which would have been weak but copy-able CW - I expect Gus's signal will
pick up by 10dB or so as the night progresses. G3XBM is never audible at all -
the QRN is building rapidly now, but during the day I get 100% copy at about -25
or -26dB; when noise levels build up I sometimes get correct copy at -30dB or
so. So that's what it looks like when it is working ;-) > >
> > It makes no detectable difference whether I use the SSB filter
or 250Hz CW filter on the IC718 - even the local signals on 500k are not really
strong enough to overload the audio, provided the RF gain is backed well off so
that the S meter reads about s7 or 8. You do need the narrow filter on 136k of
course. > > > > Cheers, Jim Moritz > >
73 de M0BMU >
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