Hi Marco,
Yes, i totally agree with you :-)
Fortunately i have enough time and money but room, room is never enough
if you are as crazy as i am..
BTW i've been on the tree again today until it was nearly total dark. I
took a photo, see
http://www.iup.uni-heidelberg.de/schaefer_vlf/VLF/20190206_175937.jpg
It was below 0 C up there (~ 420m AGL). BUT now my VLF E field is back
again so the grabber (
http://www.iup.uni-heidelberg.de/schaefer_vlf/DK7FC_VLF_Grabber2.html )
has full functionality again. I'm just sitting here listening to the E
field with headphones, i like the deep sferics, the bummph and there
are some tweaks at higher frequencies.
So now i am ready to receive Dimitris! ;-)
Indeed, Marco, we have our fun, despite the hard life. BTW didn't you
want to get started with VLF some time? :-)
73, Stefan
Am 06.02.2019 19:39, schrieb [email protected]:
Hi
Stefan, Dimitris,
room is sure a thing that is not missing in VK :-)
I remember a vacation I had there some years ago ... a lot of km
between "adiacent places".. so ideal place for LF, VLF and even close
to DC frequencies!
During my travel, just for fate, I drove close to Holt Navy Base
sporting an antenna just a bit larger than your loop ;-)
Anyway you know the grass of the neighbor is more green...
Dimitris has room but not a lot of time..
I have more time but less room
somebody else has room and time but no money...
What an hard life!
But... we all have fun!
73 Marco IK1HSS
P.S. who's looking the legal aspects?? ;-)
----Messaggio originale----
Da: [email protected]
Data: 5-feb-2019 23.40
A: <[email protected]>
Ogg: Re: VLF: in VK?
Dimitris,
Am 05.02.2019 21:14, schrieb Dimitrios Tsifakis:
G'day Stefan and Edgar,
My house is on QF44OX00OR and the property extends to QF44NX (50 acres
or 200,000 m^2). I do have permission from some neighbours to lay
wires into their properties, so an extra large (over 1km) ground wire
is entirely doable but not at this point in time.
Wow, i'm envious and happy that you have such
possibilities!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Not at this time, ok. I would suggest to start in small steps anyway,
then you can be happy about many improvements, not just a single big
one :-)
I often imagine to live in Canada or Australia and do such experiments
exactly!
The reference loop
is from the shed, about 100 metres south of the house, to the tractor
shed.
100m is very close, the far field begins at about 5.7 km distance at
8.27 kHz. A RX in that distance is only useful to check and observe the
signal stability and compare levels. A feedback monitor like my tree
which is 3.5 km distant from my INV-L antenna in the city. From my
ground loop antenna in JN39WI it is 57.6 km distant, which is already
an interesting distance and can be challenging below 3 kHz.
I have mains in the shed and I also have a 200 W audio linear
amplifier to get things started.
Excellent, just excellent! Your signal could be the stongest of the
radio amateurs! 200W is just fine for the first steps. But be careful
with those audio amplifiers, they do not seem to like to much reactive
power.
For tuning the antenna you will only need a capacitor in series. For my
portable VLF system i built a current transformer to produce a small
voltage that goes to the soundcard. Then, using SpecLab, i can
calculate the antenna current directly and even keep the phase of the
current stable, even if there should be a soundcard glitch. For the
signal generation i also use SpecLab and a cheap GPS module. It all
works very reliable, there were no problems so far.
With a house at one of the ends of the antenna you are in a very
comfortable situation! You may already have a ground system there, so
the effort is at one end only.
I can build a class-E kilowatt if
necessary later. I like the roughly north-south loop configuration as
it favours many large cities (Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Tassie)
and most importantly Canberra which is only 30 km to the South. I will
try to get some signals received in Canberra before I start asking
people further away to have a listen.
Yes, this is a very good distance to observe your own signal. If you
have internet access there and can leave a small PC/notebook/tablet ...
then you could build up a webpage and run a grabber from there like i
do from my tree (still under maintenance). That would be ideal and it
just feels good to see the own signal very clearly on a real RX in a
short distance. You are then independent.
I currently have assembled an XO
clocked DDS controlled by an arduino to do the initial tests but later
when I decide to go QRSSSSSI can dig out and use the old rubidium
clock as a reference for extra stability. For receiving I use a 24
bit, 192 kHz USB sound card and spectrum lab (thanks Wolf!). The
antenna I will use for receive is one of those monster ferrite rods.
Amplification may not even be necessary, the signals I get when the
antenna is tuned seem to be already quite good. Once I have a decent
RX antenna I think I will start gifting these rods (I have a few) to
interested amateurs in the region and help them get started with
receiving on VLF. Make a small army of receivers, that would make life
much easier when evaluating antennas!
Oh yes! Fortunately there are a few arround here. These days this is
(sorted by distance to my VLF loop): DK7FC, DF6NM, DL0AO, DL4YHF,
IK1QFK, Paul Nicholson, SQ5BPF and RN3AUS. Oh and W1VD, K3SIW and Edgar
J.T. This is about the complete VLF group worldwide, at least those who
prooved to detect narrow band (sub mHz) signals close to the limits, in
the last 3 years until now.
Hey, you should document your experiments even if it is a summary of
the activities and nothing more. The list is great but perhaps we are
missing out on many other potentially interested people that may have
not discovered the list.
Yes, you are right. I had the same thought sometimes. Certainly there
are many amateurs who would feel like having a new life when starting
at VLF, It is an unknown spectrum for 99.9 % of the amateurs. Actually
it is not even amateur radio because it is not a spectrum allocated to
amateur radio. So everyone could operate there.
But there is a risk, you know. There are those people who do not simply
start to transmit/receive there and feel good. There are those who
prefer to ask if this is legal at all. And then they ask here and
there, as long as they find someone who triggers their fears and phobs,
and then they do nothing at all! Beware of such people, they are
contaminating your free mind. Concentrate on ideas and wishes, like for
example detecting your own signal in Canberra. And then the question
"Will this also work on lower frequencies", for example.
When writing an article in a radio magazine, what will be the result?
Will it actually lead to more active people on the band, who
transmit and/or receive for a longer time, say at least 5 to 10 years?
Or
will it rise a short interest only, dominated by people telling it
is not legal and so on... I'm not sure about that. It could be even
better to stay in a smaller group who can do what it wants instead
causing a decision / regulation by an 'authority'.
You are clearly not lazy having achieved so
much on MF and below :-)
Thanks but i'm lazy into a certain spectrum. On the other side, there
are people who write many articles over the years but it is simply
impossible for them to even imagine to wind a coil which has more than
100 turns. Maybe it is good that there is a variety of people, the
article writers and the coil winders and something inbetween :-) Oh,
and the programmers! Very important. Without Wolfgang and Paul and
Markus we would do nothing at all!
Oh BTW maybe i'll transmit on my loop again the next weekend. I can't
await it, it is more than 2 weeks ago, a very long time!!
I have played with ground loops before and had some good results in
LF.
On VLF it should work much better (relative to a vertical E field
antenna). The idea is that the current runs back in a deep layer (skin
depth), depending on the ground conductivity. So it should work better
on poor conducting ground.
Once I establish a reference system, I can compare antennas
including ground loops. Unlike Europe where you have plenty of people
around you, I have to do both the TXing and the RXing and that
requires effort and time. The latter is a very scarce resource!
Anyway, looks like a nice day today to do some more outdoor work. We
had lightning storms and plenty of rain the past few days, so I
haven't made any progress.
RR, good luck and fun with the new challenges.
Looking forward to your next steps and reports.
73, Stefan
73, Dimitris VK2COW
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