Markus,
Thank you, I will contact Paul.
I also have a 3kW VLF PA with matched 70m antenna operational. The TX oscillator stability is ~ 500uHz rms over 4 hours; will replace with Thunderbolt GPSDO when it arrives this month (ordered 1 for RX and 1 for TX). If you think this could be useful in Paul’s efforts I’ll make it available.
73, Jim AA5BW
Hi Jim, thanks for the flowers - yes we were all excited about these possibilities.
But it's still a long way to go to the other side of the pond... Paul mentioned that he is interested in possible overseas detections of eg. a long carrier from an amateur station. So it may be worthwhile for you to get in direct contact to him. Paul is also maintaining the Natural Radio VLF Discussion Group on Yahoo: http://tech.dir.groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/VLF_Group/conversations/messages
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2014 12:25 AM
Subject: LF: RE: Opds-4H detections in Todmorden
Markus, Paul, Stefan and Uwe,
Outstanding collaboration and individual work! This is quite exciting. Directionally optimized 55uHz VLF Opera rings in the new year on a very memorable note.
Markus, was your TX configuration ~.3A to 9m, ~ 20uW?
Thank you for the good news, and the fine collaboration.
73, Jim AA5BW
Most who are interested in VLF will be aware of the excellent work of Paul Nicholson, who is running a very sensitive dual-loop receiver for VLF and natural radio in Todmorden UK. He is also actively interested in monitoring man-made VLF signals, and has provided outstanding reception reports on several low-power transmit experiments.
With the recent upsurge of trying to put Opera mode to work at VLF, Paul has kindly provided spectrum data during announced Opera-4H transmissions from DJ8WX and myself. In Todmorden, signals from the two loops are continuously being digitized along with GPS time stamps. The loops were combined in software for maximum SNR from the expected direction, and noise blanking was applied. Then relevant five-hour chunks were Fourier transformed (0.12 Hz around 8970 Hz, 54.936 µHz bin width) and emailed to me. Here the files were fed to unmodified Opds correlation software, using a search list containing nine callsigns from potential VLF transmit stations http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/26404526/callsloc_vlf.txt. This process has resulted in four unambiguous hits:
Receiver: Paul Nicholson IO83XQ Opds-4H 8969.94 - 8972.06 Hz
date time call distance frequency bandwidth snr correlation
2014-01-02 06:14:01 DJ8WX 760km 8969.997Hz 0mHz -54.1dBOp 100% 17.2dB
2014-01-02 01:50:49 DJ8WX 760km 8969.997Hz 0mHz -55.0dBOp 100% 18.0dB
2014-01-01 16:36:38 DJ8WX 760km 8969.990Hz 0mHz -53.6dBOp 100% 16.4dB
2014-01-01 14:22:32 DF6NM 1026km 8970.000Hz 0mHz -59.1dBOp 100% 16.3dB
For comparison, my first two Op-4H transmissions on Dec 31st had been successfully detected by Stefan in Heidelberg, but have not produced sufficient SNR in Todmorden at the time.
Receiver: DK7FC JN49IK VLF OPDS-4H correlation Range: 8969.87 ... 8970.23 Hz
date time call distance frequency bandwidth snr correlation
2013-12-31 22:30:04 DF6NM 175km 8970.000Hz 0mHz -60.3dBOp 82% 14.2dB
2013-12-31 18:07:58 DF6NM 175km 8970.000Hz 0mHz -58.3dBOp 100% 17.0dB
Today we were able to also extract transmissions on Uwe's new frequency 8270 Hz, although the SNR seemed not as good as before:
Receiver: Paul Nicholson IO83XQ Opds-4H 8269.94 - 8272.06 Hz
date time call distance frequency bandwidth snr correlation
2014-01-05 07:18:54 DJ8WX 760km 8270.000Hz 0mHz -57.2dBOp 97% 15.1dB
2014-01-05 02:55:38 DJ8WX 760km 8270.000Hz 0mHz -56.1dBOp 100% 14.4dB
2014-01-04 22:32:14 DJ8WX 760km 8270.000Hz 0mHz -57.6dBOp 100% 12.8dB