Hello Doug,
it was not me,i started this afternoon,i blow up
the power supply,so i can only make 25 watt on the moment,
henny pa3cpm
best 73's
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 8:17
PM
Subject: Re: LF: QRSS-60 to the
west
Actually, I may have a clue who it was after all.
"Hello LF, cpm qrp is me,pa3cpm ,henny jo-22-md, the power is only
25 wattt he freq.is 136.170.3Khz. henny
cpm 73's"
Henny, were you transmitting at 07:12 UTC?
Doug KB4OER
On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 2:06 PM, Douglas D. Williams
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Stefan. You are most welcome. :-)
On my ARGO display, 700Hz is the CW sidetone "BFO", so whatever
frequency I have the radio tuned to should be 700Hz on my ARGO display.
Signals on frequencies higher than that should appear above 700Hz, and
frequencies lower than that should appear below 700Hz.
Here is an example:
In this capture, I had the radio tuned to the USA Lowfer "watering
hole" of 185.300kHz. You see station "WM" on approx 700Hz (his ID is a
graphical ID that varies in frequency approx 0.5Hz), and his claimed
transmit frequency is 185.2995kHz. Above him, at approx 701.6 on the ARGO
screen, you see Lowfer beacon "WMS", who runs a straight QRSS60 signal on a
claimed frequency of 185.3015 kHz.
So, having said that, whatever signal (whether it be a QRSS signal or
some sort of QRM) that appears below you on last night's screen capture was
on an approx frequency of 136.171kHz. I have no idea who (or what) it is,
but it appears to be a QRSS signal to me.
73,
Doug KB4OER
2012/1/20 Stefan Schäfer <[email protected]>
Thank you Doug for the
feedback! Hmm, who could be the other one? I saw VE7SL on the VE2IQ
grabber but he was higher in frequency... Or do you use a LSB receiver?
:-) 73, Stefan7DK7FC Am 20.01.2012 11:30, schrieb
Douglas D. Williams:
Good copy here in TN, Stefan. Looks like you weren't alone after
all, as I see another operator slightly below your signal.
Doug KB4OER
2012/1/19 Stefan Schäfer <[email protected]>
LF,
Again i'm running a lonely beacon tonite
at 136.172 kHz (with a small offset of -0.1 Hz) in QRSS-60. There
was rain so a dB is lost but anyway some grabbers over the pond catch
the first traces. Propagation might be a bit better.
73 all
and many thanks to all the grabber runners! That a really good service
a definitively essential to keep transmitting station (the few)
motivated to stay on air.
Stefan/DK7FC
PS: After further
changes on EMC issues in the system i shall come back tomorrow using
the IQ converter to generate my VFO
signal...
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