Hi Uwe,
congrats to successfully debugging.
Now it's time to try again today. :-)
Is the antenna properly matched to 50 Ohm?
If so you shold get some spots this evening, even with only with 1.3watts.
73
Clemens
DL4RAJ
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [email protected]
>[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of wensauer
>Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2015 9:37 AM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: LF: Re: WSPR 630m
>
>Yes - Dial was one obstacle.
>As cw enthusiast, was thinking in "CW".
>now I can decod myself and others.
>Need mor power and/ or bigger antenna
>
>73
>Uwe
>
>From: Markus Vester <mailto:[email protected]>
>Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2015 10:25 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: LF: Re: WSPR 630m
>
>If you receive yourself, wspr(x) will decode and display your
>own callsign locally, but the spots won't appear in the
>wsprnet database. You could circumvent this by modifying your
>callsign in the wsprx setup dialog (eg. something like
>DK1KQ/2), but normally this is not very useful.
>
>BTW those unid dashes on 136.7 kHz actually looked a bit like
>failed 33% wspr transmissions, except for wrong frequency,
>missing modulation, and slightly short.
>
>73, Markus
>
>
>
>From: DK7FC <mailto:[email protected]>
>Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2015 6:22 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: LF: Re: WSPR 630m
>
>
>Hi Uwe,
>
>If you can decode other stations, you must of course decode
>yourselfe as
>well. If not, there is either a time- or frequency shift. You will see
>it in the WSPR-waterfall. As a test, disconnect your RX
>antenna and look
>on your own signal which should be strong enough. It must
>appear to the
>right time and frequency band.
>Maybe you are transmitting 1500 Hz to high? I don't know the
>Ultimate 3s
>but maybe there is the old problem with that "dial" frequency.
>"dial" is
>set to 474.200 kHz. Just try that to be sure...
>
>73, Stefan
>
>...
>
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