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Re: LF: "WA" beacon received at 503kHz.

To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: LF: "WA" beacon received at 503kHz.
From: Rik Strobbe <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 26 Dec 2009 18:34:15 +0100
In-reply-to: <1EE1D37E49A445A0A1CE9703C17EECCF@AGB>
References: <6EFC885C8DAB4DC3A8454505BAF5D3A7@ns94d01ae4d850> <1261823989.6451.9.camel@vaio3rd> <1EE1D37E49A445A0A1CE9703C17EECCF@AGB>
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Graham, Rick, Bob,

I guess that when the CW id of a WSPR station is audible there should be solid copy in WSPR. But, as mentioned by Bob, WSPR 2.0 was used to transmit the unusual WD2XSH/37 callsign. I noticed that older version of WSPR do not copy this properly, even when the signal is strong. I have been running WSPR2 and WSPR1.1 simultaniously for some days (the first spotting as ON7YD the other as OR7T) and noticed that WD2XSH/37 produced all kinds of odd messages with WSPR1.1. WSPR2 decodes OK.

73, Rik  ON7YD - OR7T

Quoting Graham <[email protected]>:

Rick,

Looks like  wd2x ..   was the  station .. you  can  check what stations are
operating at :  http://wsprnet.org/drupal/wsprnet/spots

2009-12-24 03:38   WD2XSH/37   0.503912   -26   0   FN42fo   2   ON7YD
JO20ix   5615   52

G..

--------------------------------------------------
From: "Rick Wakatori" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, December 26, 2009 10:39 AM
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: LF: "WA" beacon received at 503kHz.


Using WSPR, I heard "WA" beacon in CW or QRSS at around 503kHz.
The signal was visible on the screen during last night.
Please let me know the callsign and the QTH?
Rick
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