Hello John.
Thanks for the reply, the receive problem has only just started, I have been
working 500 for several months with no problems, working into europe. Just
recently I have not been having any contacts, hence my posting yesterday.
I have not yet got to grips with 'grabbers' and their use, the pc in the
shack is very slow and temperamental. any help and advice you are able to
give me will be greatly appreciated. The noise here in Luton last night was
very high, which did not help matters.
On receive I am using the RX part of my Kenwood TS140S, with a homebrew
pre-amp in front, first I thought it was the pre-amp, but when switched into
bypass made no difference.
Very pleased that my 90mW is reaching shetland, the vertical section of
doublet which is commoned on the variometer is only 7m, with the combined
top section of 102ft (the doublet works very well on 40).
Enought of my waffle, hope to work you soon
73
Ken
IO91TV
----- Original Message -----
From: "John P-G" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 6:16 AM
Subject: Re: LF: To John GM4SLV
Hello Ken, LF,
Yes, your signal was getting out, at least as far as Shetland and to Dave
G3YXM at his holiday QTH in Ullapool too.
500kHz, I've discovered, is greatly limited by local noise levels,
especially in urban areas.
I also heard G3XIZ calling CQ last night and despite good, if fading,
signals Chris sent that he could just detect my signals on his "Argo"
screen, and could I try QRSS. Not having a PC hooked up to do it properly
I had to send my callsign in QRSS by hand - it was tricky to avoid getting
lost in the dots and dashes! Noise again was his limitation.
What do you use for receive, antenna/receiver/IF and audio fiters/pre-amp
etc?
Can you hear the QRSS/CW ident of DI2AM on ~505.2 at night?
Finbar on 501.318 - check my grabber first to make sure he's on the air,
use his signal as a target to aim for. Nothing's ever very strong on this
band, unless you have locals nearby, but it's amazing what sort of weak
signals you can get used to after a while.
It's in situations like yours (and others setting up receive systems) that
demonstrate the value of a regular beacon. Others will say that you should
be able to do do without these niceties and just get on the air and work
people, optimising as you go, but there's no guarantee that suitable QSO
partners will be available at the right time. An amateur run beacon is at
least a known signal source.
Hope you hear something soon.
Cheers,
John
On Mon, October 27, 2008 23:31, Ken wrote:
Hello John.
Thanks for your report, it looks as if my 90mW is reaching you ok, on the
receive side I could not hear any signal on the band with or without the
RX pre-amp in circuit. So will still need a local signal to check the RX
with. Hope be able to work you soon.
73
Ken M0KHW
IO91TV
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