Posts Tagged ‘band condx’
Mountain to mountain QSO.
My lunchtime QRP session had that ominous look, like it was going to end up being a bust. The bands were nowhere near as hearty and robust as they were the past few days. 15 Meters had one strong signal, HA9RT booming in. I’ve worked Jozsef several times in the past, and even though he was coming in like gangbusters, I figured I’d let him get some new stations in his log.
20 Meters was a ghost town and 17 Meters seemed to be the liveliest of the three bands. Still, there wasn’t much activity and the signals I was hearing weren’t the strongest. I didn’t feel like going back into the building, so I decided to call CQ on 17 Meters.
Much to my surprise, I was answered by George KX0R who was the first place finisher in last year’s NJQRP Skeeter Hunt. George had a nice 579 signal into New Jersey. He was using an ATS3B at 5 Watts into an inverted “L” on a mountain in Colorado. Bald Mountain, SOTA peak W0/FR174, to be exact. 9,190 feet above sea level to be even more exact.
If you really, really, really, REALLY want to stretch the truth ….. you could say we had a mountain to mountain QSO. But that would be stretching the truth almost to the point of breaking it!
Warren, the town where I work, is located on the second ridge of the Watchung Mountains here in New Jersey. My height above sea level there is all of about 500 feet or so. Not much, by mountain standards, but since most of New Jersey is coastal plain and Piedmont, 500 feet is pretty high up there for a relatively flat state.
Now, according to geologists, if we went back in time, say about 200 million years or so, the Watchungs were about as tall as the present day Rockies or even the Alps. Just goes to show what time, rain, ice and wind can do to you, eh? So in essence, compared to the Rockies, and even the farther western Appalachians, the Watchungs are more or less just “hills”. But they’re our hills and the original settlers of New Jersey called them mountains, so who are we to argue?
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Sizzling hot!
Not the weather (for once) although, it’s still pretty warm. No, I meant 15 Meters at lunch time was sizzling hot!
Besides telling you who I worked, let me tell you about “the one that got away” a bit later. (As if I ever stood a chance!). First things first, though. I got to the car and set up the station. A quick scan of 17 Meters left me feeling – “meh”. 20 Meters was a little better, but not all that much to write home about, either. That’s when I got the inspiration to check out 15 Meters.
At 1614 UTC, I heard and worked a very loud OL2013CM from the Czech Republic. Later, when I looked OL2013CM up on QRZ, it turned out to be a very big deal for this Ham, considering my background. You see, OL2013CM is one of several Special Event Stations from the Czech Republic honoring the 1150th anniversary (Yes, the 1150th!) of the arrival of Saints Cyril and Methodius to that area.
Saints Cyril and Methodius were the two men responsible for bringing Catholicism to the Slavic nations. Today this area includes the following countries – Bulgaria, Croatia, Belarus, the Slovak Republic, the Czech Republic, Belarus, Russia, the Ukraine, Macedonia, Lituania and Latvia, Estonia, and yes, Poland – the land of my ancestors.
There is a big seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan named after Saints Cyril and Methodius. Almost all the priests that were in the Polish ethnic parish that I attended while growing up, graduated from that seminary. For me, working OL2013CM held a lot of sentimental value, and was a big deal.
And as always, there’s a diploma that’s available for working stations associated with the Special Event. For the details, you can visit: http://award-cm.ok2kyd.cz/en/award-rules.html Now, time for a bit of trivia. Besides introducing Catholicism to that part of the world, this duo also developed the Glagolitic alphabet, which was used to transcribe the Gospels into the Slavonic languages. While that alphabet is no longer in use today – one of its descendant scripts is still very much in use today – the Cyrillic alphabet. Wonder where they got that name !!!
After working OL2013CM, I also worked 4O/UA3RF in Montenegro and HA8QZ in Hungary. Indeed,
15 Meters was open and very hot to Europe. Three solid QSOs to Europe in the span of minutes. Priceless!
But now for the one “that got away”. Down towards the bottom of the band (just above where CO8LY was calling CQ), I heard a very loud (extremely loud!) BY4IB/4. China! Holy cow, I never heard a station from China so loud. 599+ loud! Insanely, I thought I stood a chance. He was working split, and with the KX3’s Dual Watch feature, I was very handily able to figure out the split, in no time. I was determined to keep on throwing my call out until either:
1) I worked him
2) He faded away
3) I had to break down to go back inside to work.
Well, Door Number Two opened first, as he slowly faded away into oblivion. And I never made contact, despite my best efforts. But if I had, how cool would that have been? NJ to China on 5 Watts with a Buddistick! I’d still be doing the ecstatic dance (never mind the happy dance) if I had been able to pull that off!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Toasty!
It sure has been warm here since last Sunday. This morning I Tweeted that you know your in for a rough day when you wake up at 6:30 AM and the air conditioner has already turned itself on …… and we keep the AC set on the kind of high side here at the W2LJ household. We try to keep the house comfortable, but not like a meat locker. So when the cooling turns on, it’s already pretty warm in the house.
So when the weather is like this, what does a sensible QRPer do for lunch break? Does he stay inside the nice, cool office building, kick back and maybe read for a while while eating his sandwich?
Well, maybe that’s what a wise, sensible, pragmatic QRPer does, but none of those descriptions fit me, so I headed out to the parking lot to get the Buddistick on top of the Jeep and the KX3 on the air! When I got out there, I set out the thermometer that I brought along from home. I set it in a shady spot, out of the direct sun, and let it sit while I operated. The plan was to check it and snap a photo of it, after I broke the station down, but before I headed back inside.
My first band of choice was 17 Meters as it has been really good to me over the last months of lunchtime operating. However, there must have been some kind of device turned on in the Engineering Building at work, because I had terrible electronic pulse noise from 18.068 to about 18.083 MHz. The KX3’s noise blanker (which is the best noise blanker I have ever used) put only a slight dent in the noise. The incoming signal would have had to have been 599+ to overcome that racket. The funny thing is that right at 18.083 MHz, it was like someone turned off a light switch and the pulse noise quite literally vanished. The problem is that on 17 Meters, the majority of DX stations will be found on the lower portion of the band, so I decided to QSY.
On to 15 Meters! I didn’t hear a lot of signals on the band, so I decided (for whatever reason) to do something I hardly ever do. I went to the QRP watering hole of 21.060 MHz and actually called “CQ QRP” for a bit. Normally, the only time I do that is during a QRP Sprint or contest, but for some reason unbeknownst to me, I decided to try it today. And strangely enough, I got an answer. The answer came from Reiner DL5ZP. The QSO was a tough 2X QRP affair, as QSB was fierce, but we got in an exchange of the basics. Afterwards, I had to wonder if I was taken in by a “slim” or a “pirate” as they are better known. DL5ZP does not appear on QRZ.com. He does kind of halfway show up on QRZCQ and DX Summit and even Google, but by not coming up on QRZ.com, I have to wonder if this was legitimate, or what.
After the QSO with DL5ZP, I went to the 20 Meter QRP watering hole and did the same thing. This time I was answered by W7USA in Arizona, and we had a very brief QSO. Band conditions did not seem to be the best this early afternoon.
So after I put everything away, as far as the station goes, I went and fetched the thermometer from it’s shady spot. Here’s what it indicated:
About 96 or 97F (36C) with just under 50% humidity. Hot enough for me to almost burn my fingers on the magmount when I lifted it off the Jeep, but not hot enough to keep me inside.
Band conditions were much better tonight for the 20 Meter QRP Foxhunt. I managed to grab two furs tonight by working John K4BAI in Georgia and Jay KT5E in Colorado. But I have to admit that as soon as I bagged both pelts, I shut the station down and disconnected the antennas. The weather service is saying that this 6 day heat wave may break tomorrow afternoon with possible severe thunderstorms anytime from tomorrow afternoon into Saturday morning. I don’t need to be driving home tomorrow afternoon, in the middle of a bad boomer, only to be worrying that I forgot to disconnect my aerials.
By the way, it’s now 11:00 PM here. The sun has been down for about 2 1/2 hours, and it’s still 84F (29C). Those are probably going to be some pretty powerful thunderstorms to break the back of this hot spell.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Weekend
We arrived home from Lake George yesterday. I went to go pick up Sandy, our cat, from the place where we took her and Jesse to be boarded while we were away. When Sandy got home, she was as upset as I was. She was looking all over the house for her “big brother”.
They were real good buddies and it’s quite obvious that I’m not the only one around here who has a bit of a broken heart right now.
The manager of Best Friends came over and explained to me that last Tuesday morning they found Jesse laying on his bed, which wasn’t unusual at all. He was an older dog and was no longer very active. They thought he was asleep and when they tried to wake him, well ……… he didn’t. The manager told me that one of her own dogs did the same thing. He was old and hanging on and hanging on and waited until she and her husband were away to pass. I don’t know if it has any merit or not, but she told me that some dogs do that. It’s like they want to spare their owners the hardship of seeing them pass.
This house is not the same without him, and I am definitely not the same without my pal. The sun just seems to be a little bit dimmer than it used to be. And while I am thinking of Jesse, I’d like to thank all of you who left very kind comments or sent me an e-mail with the same. I appreciate it and thank you so much – you’re all in my prayers.
But life goes on, so even though I really wasn’t in the mood, I decided to go to the Sussex Amateur Radio Club hamfest anyway – to at least take my mind off of Jesse for a while. I got there at 8:30 AM, about a half hour after the doors officially opened. I got there to a double line of cars, backed up, paying admission and waiting to get in. When was the last time you saw THAT at a hamfest that isn’t Dayton or one of the other true “biggies”?
It was sunny and hot and humid! I was sweating just walking around at a leisurely pace. I ran into Don W2JEK who I have worked so many times in various QRP Sprints. I walked up to the table where he was selling stuff and shook his hand and said “Hello”. You could tell he was taken aback for half a split second until he noticed my call sign on my cap. We talked for a bit and then I continued to meander around.
I noticed a lot of QRP stuff on the tables. There were at least two HW-8s and one HW-7 that I saw. There were at least two of the Chinese/TenTec HB-1As and there were several MFJ QRP rigs for sale. I will take it as a good sign for QRP, that when I made my last pass of the tables, all the QRP equipment seemed to have been sold and in the hands of eager, new users.
There was lots of other interesting stuff, too, including this:
Strangeness
While the rest of the blogosphere and Amateur Radio world seems to be having a spit-feckled nutty about Heathkit zombies, I decided to get on the air tonight (only after replacing the towel rack in the XYL’s bathroom, mind you).
On 40 Meters, I had a pleasant, but rather taxing QSO with Bruce W1CVE from Providence, RI. Summertime conditions were the rule for 40 Meters with lots of band noise, QRM, QRN and QSB. Despite it all, Bruce and I had a pleasant chat. He was 579 here and I received a 559 in return – not terrible.
On 20 Meters, I had a brief QSO with EW1DJ in Belarus. Alex was 599 here, and I received an honest report of 579 in return (not the automatic 599 DX report that you usually get). For this one instance, the haul from NJ to Belarus was far easier than the haul from NJ to RI. Go figure.
A word about last night’s post regarding the tuner and amp for the KX3. In no way did I mean to disparage anyone who has already ordered, or is considering ordering these pieces for their KX3s. If the KX3 is your only radio and you have the funds to afford these, then I am heel clicking, somersault tumbling, high fiving happy for you! I was commenting on my own situation and was not attempting to cast sour grapes upon the Amateur Radio landscape.
73 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
In a word
One word to describe the bands tonight – stinky! (I could have used a more colorful and apropos term, but I’ve sworn off swearing.)
Oh, I had my share of success. I worked St. Barthelemy again, but on 30 Meters this time, and I worked Morocco and Ecuador. But each was akin to pulling teeth.
These were not 599 QSOs, even though that’s the default DX exchange, it seems. Signals were weak, warbly, and almost hazy and indistinct, for lack of a better description.
I saw on the DX Cluster that a fellow NJ QRPer, Chris KQ2RP managed to snare an Algerian, 7T9A on 17 Meters. I tried for a while, also, but I couldn’t hear him well enough to be sure that he would be coming back to me. And if you can’t hear him well enough to know that he’s answering you, then why even bother? I’d probably only get in the way of people who actually stood a chance, so I gave up the chase after a few tries.
Over the next 24 to 36 hours we’re supposed to get around 3 inches of rain from this first tropical storm of 2013. Maybe as our terrestrial weather deteriorates, the solar weather will improve. Here’s hoping, anyway!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Struggle for a new one
I worked a new DXCC entity via QRP tonight, and it was a workout. The funny thing is, the actual distance? Not so much. This one was a Caribbean Island. And from the East Coast, the islands of the Caribbean are usually not very hard at all.
But conditions on 17 Meters tonight were soupy. The QSB was rolling in and out. My quarry was 599 one second and about 569 the next. But I finally got FJ/K5WE in the log, and worked Saint Barhtelemy for the first time, using QRP power to boot.
If you look at the map, your first reaction is probably the same as mine. No big deal, right? I mean I’ve worked just about every single island down that way, many of them lots of times over. We’re talking just a couple of thousand miles – really no big deal even for QRP. But the pileup was busy and the QSX frequency kept moving. Once I was able to establish the pattern, it didn’t take long. But because of the QSB, I couldn’t hear a lot of the stations that FJ/K5WE was working, so it made establishing that pattern just a little bit tougher.
Like I said before, once I was actually able to hear a few of the stations and was able to figure out where FJ/K5WE was listening, I just tweaked my transmit frequency a touch higher and just kept calling until he worked his way up and just kind of fell into my lap.
Conditions are probably just “meh” – definitely not the greatest. The sunspot number is down to under 100 and the A index is up there. Not as bad as it was a few days ago, but still not great. The few Russian stations that I was able to hear were all warbly as if the signals were experiencing polar flutter. CO8LY was louder than all get out as was H70ORO. I was surprised that FJ/K5WE wasn’t stronger, considering that Eduardo CO8LY was so strong. Could be an antenna situation, not sure what K5WE is using down there on his tropical get away.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!




















