>From what I can tell, 7040 has been co-opted by WSPR beacons. If I listen
there, I can hear little except their garble.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
73,
Gwen, NG3P
On Mon, Sep 20, 2021 at 9:22 PM Al Lorona wrote:
> If you regard QRP ARCI as a de facto authority on QRP in the US, they
> recommend 7030, a
Al Lorona wrote:
> 7030.0 - on the peak
> 7029.7 - a little down the south slope, couldn't make it up the last crag
> 7028.9 - in the car at the trailhead parking lot
:)
These mixed-metaphor units of measure remind me of what we used to say about
the 30 meter option for the KX1, which sold for
7030.0 - on the peak
7029.7 - a little down the south slope, couldn't make it up the last crag
7028.9 - in the car at the trailhead parking lot
Al W6LX/4
On Monday, September 20, 2021, 10:11:55 PM EDT, Wayne Burdick
wrote:
Gaussian describes the shape of the QRP frequency distribution *and*
Gaussian describes the shape of the QRP frequency distribution *and* the
topology of most SOTA peaks. So please, if you don't make it to the top, move
off frequency in proportion :)
Wayne
> On Sep 20, 2021, at 6:21 PM, Al Lorona wrote:
>
> If you regard QRP ARCI as a de facto authority on QR
If you regard QRP ARCI as a de facto authority on QRP in the US, they recommend
7030, and they call it a 'center of activity' rather than a calling frequency.
I take that to mean we should imagine a Gaussian distribution of activity above
and below this center. I imagine a standard deviation of
Factors for 40 seem to be:
1. There's often mixed digital in the 7032-7035 area, sometimes it pops
up anytime a CW signal shows up [see 14230].
2. QRP freqs can be non-productive for SOTA folks who often need to
make a number of quick QSO's and get off the mountain. They're also
looking f
I believe 7.030 is the normal QRP CW frequency, at least in NA. There are a
lot of SOTA and POTA activators who seem to choose 7.060.
Tim N9PUZ
On Fri, Sep 3, 2021 at 10:37 PM Wayne Burdick wrote:
> The opinions on this are bimodal: some say ~7030, others ~7060. Hopefully
> someone else will we
The longstanding QRP frequency for 40 has been 7040-European 7030.
Dan Presley 503-701-3871
danpresley@me. com
n7...@arrl.net
> On Sep 4, 2021, at 01:59, Nate Bargmann wrote:
>
> * On 2021 03 Sep 21:47 -0500, Dave wrote:
>> Any frequency like that for 40?
>
> I used to park somewhere betwee
* On 2021 03 Sep 21:47 -0500, Dave wrote:
> Any frequency like that for 40?
I used to park somewhere between 7033 and 7035 overnight and would
always hear something going on it seemed. Perhaps I need to revisit
that practice.
73, Nate, N0NB
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best o
Those with dual receive can also monitor the FISTS frequencies, usually 2
KHz below the QRP ones.
In Europe 3558 and 7028 are popular FISTS watering holes, be prepared for
long “ragchew” QSOs on there…
73 Dave G4AON
--
Sent from my iPhone SE
__
The opinions on this are bimodal: some say ~7030, others ~7060. Hopefully
someone else will weigh in with something more definitive.
Wayne
N6KR
> On Sep 3, 2021, at 7:45 PM, Dave wrote:
>
> Any frequency like that for 40?
>
> 73, and thanks,
> Dave (NK7Z)
> https://www.nk7z.net
> ARRL Volun
Any frequency like that for 40?
73, and thanks,
Dave (NK7Z)
https://www.nk7z.net
ARRL Volunteer Examiner
ARRL Technical Specialist, RFI
ARRL Asst. Director, NW Division, Technical Resources
On 9/3/21 4:58 PM, Wayne Burdick wrote:
Whenever I'm not using the K4 for something in particular, I leav
Whenever I'm not using the K4 for something in particular, I leave it parked at
14.060 MHz, with the AF gain just high enough to catch my attention if a signal
appears. I use a medium bandwidth (1 kHz) to allow for signals a bit
off-frequency.
For those who didn't know: this is the most common
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