Hi Stefan, LF,
Nice job there, well done.
Martin's situation makes us realise how fortunate we are
in UK, US & Eu etc.
73, Gary - G4WGT.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2012 2:27
AM
Subject: LF: 137 kHz in South America
!
LF!
I'm glad to tell you about a most interesting and
pleasant story and good news for the LF DX interested OMs, especially in the
U.S., the UK and EU.
Some weeks ago the VK guys and me decided that the
EU-VK 137 kHz spring season is over now. The DCF39 S/N became lower and lower
and QSB rised. An overview of my worked DX (one-way) showed that i have EU,
AS, AF, NA and OC but SA, the South American continent is missed. Compared
to the VK path, where a significant part goes above land, even desert, SA
should be much easier, at least the northern part.
From the recent
history i know that it is possible for all of us to motivate and
recruit radio amateurs to the LF and VLF band, even if they didn't even know
that an amateur allocation arround 137 kHz exists for many countries. I can
tell you it is an exciting work to tell others about the LF hobby and we could
do much more to make the band more alive. Well, so my idea was to find
someone in SA to arrange a LF system (at least for receive) and a grabber page
that makes it available to all. First i wanted to concentrate on the northern
part of the continent.
That's how it goes: :-) A very suitable
website to find potential LF newcomers is http://pskreporter.info/pskmap.html.
You can simply zoom the country where you like to have a new station and see
if you can find a callsign :-) You can be sure that everyone who apperas on
this website is an active amateur radio station that has a RX, antenna, PC and
internet connection. Most often they have an account at www.qrz.com too.
Here you will find their email adress. It doesn't matter if they are still
concentrated to HF and digimodes. You know, LF is a very interesting part of
amateur radio work and if you can fascinate them, it is a small
step!
Quickly i actually found a station in Venezuela, Martin/YV7MAE.
He is in the very north east, in FK81BD. He has never done anything on 137 kHz
but is very interested... The receive setup is a IC706 and a IC703. The 703 is
used for LF now. In that country it is not so easy just to build a PA0RDT
antenna or a resonated loop since the electronic parts are simply not
available. Parts are rare and expensive. Even ordering parts from ebay or so
isn't easy since it's not so easy to change the money in USD or EUR. So we had
to improvise and were limited to some few antenna systems. There is not even a
chance for him to get an oscilloscope or a signal generator. So we tried to
get out a signal from the 703 or 706 but nothing seems to come out.. It would
be possible to down divide a signal at 1.8 MHz to the LF band, using a CD4060
or so. But it is not available!!... So, we decided to use a normal wire
antenna and took an old ferrite transformer from an old damaged PC supply. A
isolating transformer was wound with 60 turns on the antenna side, grounded at
the lower end with an exclusive LF earth. The RX winding has 20 turns and is
connected by a short 75 Ohm coax cable to the RX (all improvised). Martin
still plays arround to find the best ratio and number of turns for an optimal
S/N, i.e. matching, because the magnetic parameters of the transformer are
unknown. BTW the wire is a 38m long iron wire (improvised :-) ) at about 7m
above ground.
First nothing at all was received. There was a
misunderstanding how to connect the antenna to the transformer but later it
was all fine. In the web i found a NDB which is very close to his QTH: http://www.ourairports.com/navaids/MTA/Margarita_NDB_VE/ After
spending some disappointing receive nights, now Martin actually received
another NDB, TAB at 323 kHz! This was his first received signal with this
receive setup, yesterday! Now he acutually has a reference signal which comes
from the far field. Quickly he found that 60 turns primary were better than 40
and that 80 turns resulted in the same signal strength than 60.... So far so
good...
We tried then to receive the carrier of the 153 khz AM
broadcast staions, which worked very well in the first attempt. Slowly it
became dark in YV and so we actually successfully received traces of DCF39!!!
:-) The mile stone! After preparing the grabber page i prepared a SpecLab file
to display DCF39 in 45 mHz over the night. The images were uploaded to the
webpage and saved to a local folder. Now looking to the archive, best S/N was
arround 20 dB (so far without any noise reduction!), seen here on Martin's
dropbox: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/74746618/Pictures%20for%20exchange/DCF39_09.jpg
This
is a very clear trace but still it looks like lack of sensitivity, so we have
to improve the system further. Also the typical QRN morning dip is not
visible! But anyway a very good result after some days. It shows that the
frequency drift and offset of the 703 is reasonable, also suitable for QRSS-60
detections later. We also checked in a wideband window, covering 0...3 kHz,
i.e. the SSB filter width, that there seems to be no drifting mains harminics
or SMPS sidebands, hopefully not due to lack of sensitivity
;-)
Probably we need an air coil and a well resonated receive system to
generate a higher signal level for the deaf IC703. He also has some
variable capacitors that look like arround 200 pF or so. So it should be
possible to match the system if it has some Q. This first success with the
SMPS transformer was very important though! Also the absence of strong QRM
makes the project even more promising now.
Luckily Martin has a
internet flatrate, so we worked together on his PC using a Teamviewer remote
connection to install a dropbox, a grabber page and SpecLab, with automatic
jpg upload. It was quite difficult for me since the PC is in Spanish
:-) Who knows, maybe some day he will appear here in the LF reflector. He
is also in a nice local radio club where they have a high tower for a VHF
repeater. Maybe they will add a transmit antenna soon? ;-) Does someone know
about a LF allocation in Venezuela?
Not only for US, UK, and EU but of
course for the southern stations in South america this could be an interesting
new challenge. Soon we will make first tests in the 137 kHz band but it looks
like we have to find another 10 dB S/N from somewhere. Any good ideas? No, a
preamp cannot be built, due to lack of electronic parts! Somehow i find that
all very exciting, i mean not having all the parts available but have to
improvise, maybe like in the very early days! :-)
So let's hope for
continued progress, improvements and interest!
Ah, of course, the link
tho the new Venezuela LF Grabber (still in test mode): http://dl.dropbox.com/u/74746618/LF/YV7MAE_LF_Grabber.html It
becomes more interesting at night of course. Local time is UTC-4. So far a
test window of DCF39 is shown but soon we will run a EU60 and/or TA60
window.
73, Stefan/DK7FC
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