On Tuesday 24 November 2009 21:45:18 DANNY DOUGLAS wrote:
I have seen the same thing. One of the problems is that 20 and 15 are the
two dx freqs in the daytime, where we might reasonably contact other scouts,
in the rest of the world. I.E. That is the typical Scout hangout for
contacts.
- Original Message -
From: James French w8...@wideopenwest.com
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 25, 2009 12:12 PM
Subject: Re: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting
serious about ALE / LID factor
On Tuesday 24 November 2009 21:45:18 DANNY DOUGLAS
Hi Dave
I'm no fan of the way in which many contest stations seem to use, and
abuse, the band plans (..)
I could not agree with you more.
73 de LA5VNA Steinar
Dave Ackrill wrote:
DANNY DOUGLAS wrote:
Bonnie, sitting on the side, I see both sides of this. You, on one hand,
always
Rick Karlquist wrote:
That reminds me. During the CW Sweepstakes 2 weeks ago, I was trying
to operate on ~7030 and bursts of RTTY-sounding stuff kept coming
on the frequency for 5 or 10 seconds every once in a while.
Is that ALE?
That was not ALE, as the common frequencies used for ALE are
Alan Barrow wrote:
Rick Karlquist wrote:
That reminds me. During the CW Sweepstakes 2 weeks ago, I was trying
to operate on ~7030 and bursts of RTTY-sounding stuff kept coming
on the frequency for 5 or 10 seconds every once in a while.
Is that ALE?
That was not ALE, as the common
KH6TY wrote:
Your prejudice is obviously showing! (Uh - long live HFlink and others
that run unattended transmitters outside the beacon bands and transmit
without checking for a clear frequency???)
With tongue in cheek: your ignorance is showing (in the misinformed
sense, no insult implied)
DANNY DOUGLAS thoughtfully asks:
We already require this of CW/SSB/RTTY/PSK etc. users. Why should a
user of these higher-newer modes not be held to the same requirements?
How is busy channel detection done in PSK or RTTY? people listen for a
bit then, transmit. It's not common practice, nor
:14 PM
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting
serious about ALE / LID factor
KH6TY wrote:
Your prejudice is obviously showing! (Uh - long live HFlink and others
that run unattended transmitters outside the beacon bands
Sure, there's an alternative!
- How about operating in compliance with PART97, which prohibits harmful
interference?
73 DE Charles Brabham, N5PVL
Prefer to use radio for your amateur radio communications? - Stop by at
HamRadioNet.Org !
http://www.hamradionet.org
Personally, I don't think
KH6TY wrote:
There are VHF contests that are limited to only certain bands out of
all available. There are HF contests for just phone, or CW or RTTY, so
it should be no problem for HF contest sponsors to only allow credit
for Q's made between certain frequencies on each band.
I do radio
Alan Barrow wrote:
I do radio with boy scout troops when camping. And find increasingly,
that contests are making weekend operation very difficult. It's hard to
find a weekend without a major contest, sometimes more than one.
Have you tried 60, 30, 17 or 12 meters? No contests there.
Rick
Rick Karlquist wrote:
Have you tried 60, 30, 17 or 12 meters? No contests there.
Yep, I'm a regular 60m user for that reason. And 30m for digital.
17m is of course one of the best options, but lately prop has not made
it a good spot to demo for scouts. For that matter, 60m can be hard to
://groups.yahoo.com/group/digital_modes/?yguid=341090159
- Original Message -
From: Rick Karlquist
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 9:13 PM
Subject: Re: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting
serious about ALE / LID factor
DANNY DOUGLAS wrote:
I have seen the same thing. One of the problems is that 20 and 15 are the
two dx freqs in the daytime, where we might reasonably contact other
scouts, in the rest of the world. I.E. That is the typical Scout
If those bands are open, 17 meters will be open. I have had
Charles,
Your constant efforts to spread disinformation about ALE use in ham radio shows
how little you know about how hams are using ALE.
If you are really concerned about lids on HF, start with the #1 primary source
of QRM: contesters.
Bonnie VR2/KQ6XA
--- In digitalradio@yahoogroups.com,
-
From: expeditionradio
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 9:23 AM
Subject: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting serious
about ALE / LID factor
Charles,
Your constant efforts to spread disinformation about ALE use
Charles,
Your constant efforts to spread disinformation about ALE use in ham
radio shows how little you know about how hams are using ALE.
If you are really concerned about lids on HF, start with the #1 primary
source of QRM: contesters.
Bonnie VR2/KQ6XA
That reminds me. During
OK all put a stop to this.
John, W0JAB
moderator
/?yguid=341090159
- Original Message -
From: expeditionradio
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 10:23 AM
Subject: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting serious
about ALE / LID factor
Charles,
Your constant efforts
DANNY DOUGLAS wrote:
Bonnie, sitting on the side, I see both sides of this. You, on one hand,
always appear to be pushing expansion of new modes
- Original Message -
From: expeditionradio
If you are really concerned about lids on HF, start with the #1 primary
source of
Good point Skip, in this modern era with cabrillo files, it should be easy
to do.
On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 6:37 PM, KH6TY kh...@comcast.net wrote:
There are VHF contests that are limited to only certain bands out of all
available. There are HF contests for just phone, or CW or RTTY, so it
expeditionra...@yahoo.com wrote:
From: expeditionradio expeditionra...@yahoo.com
Subject: [digitalradio] Disinformation about ALE by N5PVL Re: Getting serious
about ALE / LID factor
To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, November 23, 2009, 10:23 AM
Charles,
Your constant efforts
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