To: | [email protected] |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS |
From: | Markus Vester <[email protected]> |
Date: | Sat, 1 Jul 2017 17:35:36 -0400 |
Dkim-signature: | v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=mx.aol.com; s=20150623; t=1498944937; bh=QFvqycAip9ALmQ9O26YCI7aFpJhZQ6ZbyNV13/qhZwU=; h=From:To:Subject:Message-Id:Date:MIME-Version:Content-Type; b=U9Bj6tShH0Yw96rRsKZqjDc5K9KCr0pAMxbP8P2OypRf7nJKbckTlVLTJvrhWcC8n vEHkXkWch6casjs+9PKZbrdApTYk7ZH5xnP6E+EU7ErHPvzBdl59E9pUWmaHOQ6U23 zaP11PEllFAco8bgSjT1wojjbPZ9a25Saw2Xhdss= |
In-reply-to: | <[email protected]> |
Reply-to: | [email protected] |
Sender: | [email protected] |
> Perhaps we should have a QRSS weekend on Fri/Sat/Sun 14/15/16 July? I was involved in the naming of "QRSS". It is simply QRS (slow CW) > Any takers? Sounds good, Mike! Best 73, Markus (DF6NM) -----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung----- Von: Mike Dennison <[email protected]> An: rsgb_lf_group <[email protected]>; rsgb_lf_group <[email protected]> Verschickt: Sa, 1. Jul 2017 23:11 Betreff: Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS but the extra 'S' indicates "very", using the same syntax as "QRPP" meaning "very QRP". It is hard to imagine now what a breakthrough Andy and Peter's experiments were, communicating over what were unheard of distances in those days. My first received QRSS involved a rather fast spectrogram (waterfall) and a stopwatch as it scrolled off the screen. I believe Andy and I had the first two-way QRSS QSO, and I certainly had the first international QRSS contact, with ON7YD - also a UK-Belgium first. Perhaps we should have a QRSS weekend on Fri/Sat/Sun 14/15/16 July? Any takers? Mike, G3XDV ========== > Looking back in my logbook I see on the 12 July 1997 that I made a > transmission on 73kHz that was received by G3PLX 393km away in a > bandwidth of a few tens of milli-Hz. Peter was using the new fangled > DSP stuff in a Motorola DSP card, to display the narrowband filtered > signal on a waterfall display. > > I was radiating perhaps 5 - 10 milliwatts ERP (from a 200W > transmitter) > > No information was exchanged that day, just confirmation of the > carrier being switched on or off using the telephone as a back link. > Peter suggested I write some software to generate very slow CW to key > the transmitter and send it to him. > > On 27 July He received the first SLOWCW signal from me with positive > ID of the callsign, sent according to my logbook notes with 100s dots > between 0400 to 0718 UTC. We then did the same again for several > nights running, varying the dot speed . This completely smashed the > one-way distance record for the 73kHz band. There were several at > the time who said "its not real amateur radio, it's computers talking" > but those voices were soon silenced. > > Others wrote software to generate the keying and suddenly everyone > started using SLOWCW which for some unfathomable reason started to be > called QRSS (why ?) > > Now 20 years later, it still seems to be widely used, albeit with a > few variations like DFCW to speed up exchanges. > > Andy G4JNT > > > --- > This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. > http://www.avg.com > |
<Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
---|---|---|
|
Previous by Date: | Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS, jcraig |
---|---|
Next by Date: | Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS, Mike Dennison |
Previous by Thread: | Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS, Mike Dennison |
Next by Thread: | Re: LF: 20 Years of QRSS, jcraig |
Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |