Hi Gary,

Interesting reading your reports, as always.  I hope you're recording videos of 
some of your catches and will be posting them soon after returning to Puyallup. 
:)

I see you often had S/N levels pegging the meter at 25 dB.  Have you had any 
signals pegging the RSSI meter at 98 dBµ? ;)  I'd think that if you've had 
stations testing the overload level, maybe you've come close?  (I've noticed 
that when the RSSI goes above about 94-95 dBµ or so, the audio starts 
clipping/distorting even when tuned on-frequency, and in more extreme cases 
will start cutting out, or worse.)

How close have any of those DUs come to being as strong as in these KCBQ 
videos?  ;)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE2n94DLDak - this was recorded 9.2 mi S of the 
station

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEIU3mP5f38

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fEMLcEqCu3E


That "Tijuana ESPN noise generator" is a local for me, being around 15-16 miles 
away to the SSW (which would probably make it a bit tough for me to get that 
Christian broadcaster on 1701 here ;) ) and indicating around the low 50s dBµ 
around the clock on the barefoot PL-606 at my house.  I almost wish I would 
have known to check to see if it was actually off the air, or maybe conditions 
were preventing your reception of them.  Come to think of it, too, I also think 
I have heard them sending out just an unmodulated carrier on maybe a couple 
occasions, but I didn't check them last night / this morning.

I do notice that sometimes it will have audio pumping due to the soft mute 
engaging, though.  I suspect that maybe that station (as well as XEPRS-1090 
which I suspect should be a blowtorch up there if it wasn't for KPTK, KECR-910 
and especially XESDD-1030 and XESS-620) pushes the modulation envelope possibly 
well beyond 100% on peaks.  I've noticed that the higher the modulation peaks, 
the lower the S/N dB indication is.  I've even had 620 and 1030 read a solid 0 
dB S/N for a minute or longer at a stretch when using the 4 kHz bandwidth, even 
though the RSSI is in the low to upper 40s or so, and they're not close enough 
to other strong stations to have a 40s RSSI be the result of front-end overload.

Sometime I'd like to try my luck at some early morning TP DXing from a better 
place than my house.  Problem for me now is, due to motels being over my 
budget, I'd have to do it close enough so I could go and come back the same 
day.  I personally would be ok with up to a 2 or 3 hour drive each way.

So, if I was going to do one of those excursions (won't be anytime soon though 
as I don't have my own car), which would you think would be the lesser of two 
evils?  Going to the coast, where my radio would be bombarded by all the 
high-powered signals in southern California that direct, in some cases, 
hundreds of kW ERP at the ocean (and would have several signals well into the 
80s dBµ on barefoot ULRs unless I went past Santa Barbara, which would be 
probably 4+ hours away)?  Or, going out to the desert (maybe near Salton Sea in 
Imperial Valley), where I'd be on the back sides of the patterns, but dep 
ending on where I was, the local ground conductivity may be fairly low?  (It's 
terrible in Coachella Valley, but is pretty good around Salton Sea, El Centro, 
etc.)

About that 7.5" loopstick plus 8" FSL ...  how much gain does the combo have 
over the stock PL-380 that you're using?  If I don't have strong signals 
nearby, I can often get 50 dBµ gain or so with a Select-A-Tenna and utility 
pole grounding wire inductively coupled to my PL-606 as in the video clips 
below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyhuL8sdNeU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wCT-DxAfJY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyH8roZYys8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRB-64G4iws
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ay5k3txG_Q - this was recorded at my house, the 
above 4 were recorded in rural Pauma Valley in north San Diego county

Also, as for being up to a weather challenge ... we don't get as much rain 
here, but we do frequently have to deal with hundred-plus-degree temperatures 
in summer.  I've even had my PL-606 temperature display peg outside at 121° and 
my PL-398mp peg at 122°, and will often even see the display turn dark from the 
heat.  How would you deal with that? :)

After you return and when you have some time, is there a chance you could post 
a mediumwave bandscan on one (or more) of your barefoot (no external 7.5" 
loopstick modification) Tecsun ultralights?  I did one - 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylEOx3TRNVg - with my PL-398mp, which I realize 
is not a ULR.  I also tried one on my PL-606 - 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKf4IqAy1Sk - but between having the frequency 
display not functioning (forcing me to rely on station presets from 540 to 1530 
kHz, and another radio's 450 kHz local oscillator above that) and the display 
being very dark due to the intense heat outside that day, it's very tough to 
read the display, I think.
I personally would like to videos of other bandscans in addition to mine, like 
yours, others, etc, so I could get an idea of what the local stations / QRM are 
like in other locations. :)


73 and good DX,
Stephen Airy



________________________________
 From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]; [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, July 20, 2012 1:29 PM
Subject: [IRCA] Oregon Cliff Ultralight DU's for 7-20
 
Hello All,

The typical rules of medium wave propagation seemed to be thrown out the window 
this morning on the Cliff, as numerous low-powered New Zealand stations tested 
the overload level of the Tecsun PL-380 Ultralight. 2.5 kW Radio Kahungunu (a 
Maori-language station which has apparently never been heard at Grayland) was 
maxing out the PL-380's S/N display at 25 for about 5 minutes with its 
distinctive Island Music around 1230, while 828-Radio Trackside (2 kW) was 
solid copy at the same time. 567-RN, 657-Southern Star, 675-RN and 603-Waatea 
all were maxing out the PL-380's S/N at 25 this morning, and although the time 
was limited, I crammed in as much fanatical DXing as I could.

The Aussies were decidedly weaker than the Kiwis this morning, but I pushed my 
luck by checking for X-band Aussies (all 400 watts or less). On the X-band the 
Aussies had no New Zealand competition, and on 1701 kHz I was lucky to find 
fairly decent DU English audio as soon as I tuned in. For some unknown reason 
the Tijuana ESPN noise generator was silent, and I was able to record a fairly 
decent ID from an obscure Christian broadcaster on the frequency. Totally wacky!

The rain and wind were nasty on the Cliff this morning, but fortunately the 
hot-rodded radios and FSL antennas were up to the weather challenge. Thanks 
very much to Nick, Steve and Dennis for the daily DU-DXing reports... but I 
feel more than a little embarassed at the relative results here. I wish that 
you could all join me for at least one of these wacky ULR + FSL transoceanic 
sessions (like Norm Clark plans to do tomorrow morning)... the experience would 
probably turn any of you into a DU-DXing fanatic!!

73, Gary DeBock (temporarily DXing at Cape Perpetua, OR ocean side Cliff, 400' 
high)
7.5" Medium Wave Loopstick PL-380 (new design) + 8" MW FSL antenna



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