Great, Marv. And I'm sure your presence has been appreciated! I was on 6M in my high school days in WV in '57-'59, which included the F2 openings from the sunspot max in '58. Otherwise, I mostly worked CW, so I was prepared for Aurora openings, and had a lot of fun there too.

73, Jim K9YC

 On 8/27/2020 7:59 PM, [email protected] wrote:
In 58 years of amateur radio operation, I had never been on 6 meters until last 
year. I was told about the Fred Fish Award and the rarity of CN77 on 6 meters I 
decided to dive it. I did not get on the band until late July last year but was 
able, this year, to confirm 2261 contacts this year. It has been fun.

Marv
KG7V
CN77

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Jim Brown
Sent: Thursday, August 27, 2020 7:43 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Elecraft] 6M E-skip

On 8/27/2020 12:26 PM, Rick Bates, NK7I wrote:
Jim, I'd submit that not only is 160M more challenging on the left
coast, but 6M is worse since it tends to be N/S much of the time and
even the coastline leans left so not many stations are south. ;-P   6M
like 160, also 'spotlights' but in pinpoints.  I have managed DXCC on
160M since the move, 6M is still a greater challenge (up to 6 so far,
it's a start).

NC6K has made some interesting posts concerning how 6M Sporadic-E propagation 
is related to upper level winds, which in turn is strongly related to 
topography. He's explained some events by studying upper atmosphere weather 
plots.

Most of my hamming from late April to early August is spent on 6M, in pursuit of new 
grids. Yes, Sporadic E (Es) can be very "spot-lighty,"
especially for double-hop openings, which is what it takes to reach beyond 
about 1800 miles, and even more so to hit Japan. For double-hop to happen, two 
Es hot spots must exist AND line up; it's quite common to make multiple QSOs 
into a single grid, then 10-20 minutes later in an adjacent grids as the 
spotlight moves. And, of course, to make those QSOs there must be stations 
there on the other end.

This season, there was a week-long expedition to a rare grid in the Northern 
Peninsula of MI; they were workable from NorCal for a few hours on two days. I 
managed to work one expedition to a grid a few hundred miles inland from the 
Gulf Coast that was there for several days, but missed one to another grid.

Es prop peaks around the summer solstice, and is pretty good for a month or so 
either side, falling off gradually. Year round, and for distances less than 
about 1200 miles, meteor scatter and ionospheric scatter are effective with 
good antennas, power, and persistence. I picked up about
8 new grids this season with MS.

73, Jim K9YC
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