Hello John,
No it is QRSS/DFCW 60. Take a look on the local grabbers to ensure the
QRG is free.
http://www.alice-dsl.net/df6nm/grabber/Grabber.htm
http://members.aon.at/grabber/index.html
http://jpmere.online.fr/Grabber/Grabber.htm
http://www.iup.uni-heidelberg.de/schaefer_vlf/DK7FC_LF_DX_Grabber.html
http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/wgtaylor/grabber2.html
These should be the closest to you and thus most probably.
Right now i can see HL2HRE and it seems IK1HSS is preparing a
transmission at 136.170 kHz.
73, Stefan/DK7FC
Am 30.10.2011 21:19, schrieb John Rabson:
I meant 136.17x Sorry. Is it QRSS3?
On 30 Oct 2011, at 21:15CET, John Rabson wrote:
Hello Stefan,
Thank you for the comments. Next steps here are to improve the antenna and
build a bigger PA (100W?).
I will try a beacon at 136.15x but it will have to be tomorrow during the day.
73
John F5VLF
On 30 Oct 2011, at 19:39CET, Stefan Schäfer wrote:
Hello John,
Good to see some few are coming on the band (again). Looking forward to a QSO!
Do you plan further system improvements? You know my grabbers are running all the time
for any signal, so if you want to test... They are "locked" to GPS so you can
also check for a frequency offset or drift.
If you want, you can directly join in on 136.17x (e.g. 136.1705 kHz) to become
visible at F1AFJ, G4WGT, OE3GHB, DF6NM, YO/4X1RF and so on :-)
73 and good luck!
Stefan/DK7FC
Am 30.10.2011 14:04, schrieb John Rabson:
|