Good morning (in Europe) all, a brief look at wspr.net showed that the transatlantic propagation on 630 m was excellent last night: AA1A, K5DNL, N1BUG, W3LPL, W4BCX, WA1OJN, WA4SZE and ZF1EJ were cop
Hello Paul, "I am looking for information on QSO operating procedures for QRSS. I have only seen it used for beaconing." See http://www.472khz.org/pages/technical-topics/weak-signal-modes/extreme-nar
Hi Paul, I am not sure if I can be QRV tonight (and neither if I have the ERP to cross the pond in JT9). But I will leave the RX in JT9 mode overnight, so you can monitor if you are reaching me in PS
Just a thought: if multiple stations at either side of the pond are participating it might be a good idea to have all Europeans transmitting the even minute and all Americans the odd minute (or vice
Hello Chris, there is no need to TX to spot on PSKreporter.info. To enable PSKreporter spotting (assuming you are using WSJT-X): - go to settings (in the file menu or simply press F2) - click the tab
aha, that explains; 73, Rik ON7YD - OR7T That is because the U3S cannot transmit a standard formatted CQ message. They may appear standard but they are not, they are sent as free text messages which
Hello Chris, I believe that in the past I saw stations reporting me without having a QSO with them, so to my experience anything that "comes in" is reported to PSKreporter.info. But I have to check t
Hello Paul, No TA copies here. According to pskreporter Mal made it at least once to you: Txmtr Band Mode Distance Time (UTC) G3KEV 600m JT9 4820 km 01:32:49 73, Rik ON7YD ___________________________
​Excellent transatlantic propagation right now, just being copied by AA1A in JT9 (and earlier in WSPR). 73, Rik ON7YD - OR7T Van: [email protected] <[email protected]
​Hello Mal, congrats on both QSO's. I got one copy by AA1A around 23 UTC, but had to go QRT at midnight UTC (not retired yet, I had to get out of bed at 05:30 UTC). Tomorrow I have a day off, s
Hello Joe, I see your mail just now (8:50 local time). Can you transmit JT9? Maybe not as good (in regard with SNR) as QRSS3, but much faster (if there are no missed transmissions a QSO takes only 5
For those with transatlantic ambitions tonight: someone fired up the SA NDB. It is 599+++ here (and probably all over Europe) with strong sidebands, making 1250-1350 Hz audio (475450-475550) useless
Hi Paul, I'm still awake and looking for you ;-) But NIL so far. I had 4 copies in 20 minutes at AA1A arround 23 UTC, would heve been enough for a QSO. 73, Rik ON7YD - OR7T TNX Mal for 2nd QSO... pea
Same here, I will stay QRV for at least another 30 minutes (02:50 AM now in Belgium) 73, Rik Hi Rik, I decoded you calling me at 0114z but we lost each other in QSB. I continued to sent R-report for
Hello Paul, I will be QRV tonight, WX permitting (we have a snowstorm prediction). My antenna supports are 4 tall birch trees, when the winds become to strong I have to loosen the ropes to avoid ante
Hello Paul, OK, I will let you know if I have to go QRT on transmit due to WX. But even then I will leave the RX running in JT9 mode over night. 73, Rik ON7YD ________________________________________