I am qrv on all HF bands and surprised to work so many ex LF ops, they have all left for bands where qso's are more plentiful on CW. Just worked HB9ASB Toni on 10 Mcs ex 137 kcs op, we had many cw qs
Hi Gary If you cannot get your kite higher than 60 metres, 9 Kcs could be a damp squib in the uk. Between 200 - 500 metres would be a more realistic height for this band. Did the German man say his k
HiGary, Does the same apply to balloons, i.e. 60m? Chris, G4AYT. Extract from CAA "AIR NAVIGATION: THE ORDER AND THE REGULATIONS" ** Gliders, kites and parascending parachutes 164 (1) This article ap
Mal, You wrote :- >>>Kilroy says kites are banned in the Uk above 5 metres, 9 Kcs could be a damp squib g3kev Extract from CAA "AIR NAVIGATION: THE ORDER AND THE REGULATIONS" ** Gliders, kites and pa
I fully agree. Even as a simple listener, I like LF and VLF very much for the same reasons :-) Regards D. From: Stefan Schäfer <[email protected]> To: rsgb_lf_group@blacksheep
Stefan, "Each (personal, not relative to others!) record on that band or reception at all is a great feeling and tastes like the perfect combination of nostalgic radio and modern reception technics :
Hi Gary, Am 18.11.2010 12:13, schrieb Gary - G4WGT: Got to agree that the uk limit is not good news for 9kHz but I won't be trying to fly a kite anyway But my signal was detected in UK by Paul Nichol
Mal & Chris, Yes, that's correct, Stefan did use his kite at 300m bt had to get special authorization for that height. Even at that height I did not see anything on SpecLab, still working to improve
HiGary, Does the same apply to balloons, i.e. 60m? Chris, G4AYT. Extract from CAA "AIR NAVIGATION: THE ORDER AND THE REGULATIONS" ** Gliders, kites and parascending parachutes 164 (1) This article a