Dear Jay, LF Group,
This is a listing of the successful decodes:
230001 10 -21 0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
234801 7 -23 -0.2 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
235001 8 -22 -0.3 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
235401 9 -17 -0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
235601 9 -19 -0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
235801 12 -17 -0.3 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
000000 12 -18 0.8 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
000201 13 -18 -0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
000801 8 -18 -0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
001001 13 -17 -0.3 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
001201 8 -21 -0.3 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
002001 7 -22 -0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
003601 5 -22 0.1 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
010201 7 -19 -0.2 0 3 * WE2XGR/2 FN31 1 0
The total number of decodes at this QTH was 14. Most occured between 2348
and 0012, when there were 10 decodes out of a possible 13. The first decode
occured at 2300 and the last at 0102. So these are over a similar period of
time to G3XVL's reception, although differently distributed.
I think more decodes would have occured if the level of mains noise here
last night had been lower. I often experience bursts of mains noise which
"white out" the spectrogram for between a few seconds and a few minutes. The
noise bursts tend to tail off after midnight. A similar situation applied to
the WSPR tests.
Cheers, Jim Moritz
73 de M0BMU
----- Original Message -----
From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 30, 2008 11:19 PM
Subject: LF: Re: Re: Re: Re: 600MRG> WE2XGR/2 in JT65A mode tonight
Jim
Good deal. I've received a number of reception reports from this side of
the pond as well. Will be interesting to see how many time periods yield
successful decodes.
Jay
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