[Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Darwin, Keith
This relates to my consideration of purchasing a K3.
 
I know NOTHING about 6 meters.  I'm an HF op who does CW and some SSB.
What I believe about 6 meters comes from my (limited) experience on 10
meters.  I'm expecting that 6 is mostly closed but has occasional
openings, provided you're not at a sunspot low.  I'm assuming the
successful 6 meter operator has to be watching propagation and has to
pick their operating time.  I assume it is a hit or miss band and that
you don't have any fun up there unless you put in the time and happen to
catch it when it is open.  I'm assuming the same effort put into to 10
meters would produce more QSOs.
 
Like I say, I know NOTHING.  Someone please educate me.  If you're reply
is long, e-mail me off-list since this topic is mostly OT.
 
keith.darwin (dit-dah  dah) goodrich.com
 
73!
 
- Keith N1AS -
- K2 5411.ssb.100 -
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Julian G4ILO
Keith, I think your assumptions are pretty close to the mark. 6 is
mostly closed except during the summer months when there are
occasional sporadic-E openings giving 59++ contacts over distances up
to 1,000 miles (sometimes more, with double-hop) even when using low
power. As the name suggests, these openings are completely
unpredictable, except they occur during a season of a couple of months
or so centered around mid-June, and more often than not occur during
the day when most people are at work. They are great fun when you
catch one, though.

The number of sporadic-E openings in a year doesn't seem much affected
by the solar cycle. Regular openings like you get on the lower bands
obviously are, but the MUF is rarely high enough to support 6m
propagation even during the solar maximum, so even when 10m may be
workable, 6m often is not. You do have to be dedicated and watch for
such openings to catch them, even more than for sporadic-E.

The same effort put in to 10m probably would produce more QSOs, though
I've often found 6m busy during a Sporadic-E opening when 10m is dead.
That may be because 6m has its own dedicated fans, many of whom only
work VHF. To them, the kind of distances workable via Sporadic-E are
DX, whereas to the HF DXer they are short skip, local and not very
interesting.

-- 
Julian, G4ILO K2 s/n: 392  K3 s/n: ???
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
Ham-Directory: www.ham-directory.com


On 9/27/07, Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 This relates to my consideration of purchasing a K3.

 I know NOTHING about 6 meters.  I'm an HF op who does CW and some SSB.
 What I believe about 6 meters comes from my (limited) experience on 10
 meters.  I'm expecting that 6 is mostly closed but has occasional
 openings, provided you're not at a sunspot low.  I'm assuming the
 successful 6 meter operator has to be watching propagation and has to
 pick their operating time.  I assume it is a hit or miss band and that
 you don't have any fun up there unless you put in the time and happen to
 catch it when it is open.  I'm assuming the same effort put into to 10
 meters would produce more QSOs.
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RE: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Brett gazdzinski
 I also don't know anything about 6 meters, but heard the broadcast
engineers over in Philadelphia used it and had a repeater on it.
Maybe it can work like CB over short range?

The 756 pro had 6 meters I think, but I never tried it, I don't
have any short antenna's for 10, 11, or 6 meters, and never hear anything
up there when I listen on the long antenna's.

There is also a LOT of bandwidth to tune to listen for any signals...

Even 15 seems dead, I remember making a lot of contacts on 15 with my
hw7, I even put up a 3 element 15 meter beam, what fun working NJ
to Wyoming solid copy on 3 watts.

Its all the sunspot cycle I supposeor will people forget those
bands and they will be empty even if open?

Brett
N2DTS 
 

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Darwin, Keith
 Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 8:15 AM
 To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)
 
 This relates to my consideration of purchasing a K3.
  
 I know NOTHING about 6 meters.  I'm an HF op who does CW and some SSB.
 What I believe about 6 meters comes from my (limited) experience on 10
 meters.  I'm expecting that 6 is mostly closed but has occasional
 openings, provided you're not at a sunspot low.  I'm assuming the
 successful 6 meter operator has to be watching propagation and has to
 pick their operating time.  I assume it is a hit or miss band and that
 you don't have any fun up there unless you put in the time 
 and happen to
 catch it when it is open.  I'm assuming the same effort put into to 10
 meters would produce more QSOs.
  
 Like I say, I know NOTHING.  Someone please educate me.  If 
 you're reply
 is long, e-mail me off-list since this topic is mostly OT.
  
 keith.darwin (dit-dah  dah) goodrich.com
  
 73!
  
 - Keith N1AS -
 - K2 5411.ssb.100 -
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread JT Croteau
There is nothing like working Europe on 6M when such an opening
results here in New England.  I will likely always have 6M capability
in the shack, it is a fun band.  There can be openings in the
Winter-time but they are much, much more rare than the summer time.

-- 
JT Croteau, N1ESE - Manchester, NH (FN42gx)
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Robie Elms
WARNING!  6 meters is addicitive!  Once you work an E opening you will be 
hooked for life.


You have received a lot of good info on 6 already.  I will not repeat it. 
Chasing grid squares is a lot of fun.  You have several interesting 
propagation modes on 6.


Meteor scatter

sproadic e

tropospheric ducting

All of these produce some significant openings.  The apparent randomness of 
the openings is why 6 is refered to as the Magic Band (IMHO).   I have 
worked into europe with a dipole and 100 watts (cw  ssb) from EL29lm 
(Houston, TX) as well as 38 states!


Good luck,

Robie - AJ4F

- Original Message - 
From: Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 7:14 AM
Subject: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)



This relates to my consideration of purchasing a K3.

I know NOTHING about 6 meters.  I'm an HF op who does CW and some SSB.
What I believe about 6 meters comes from my (limited) experience on 10
meters.  I'm expecting that 6 is mostly closed but has occasional
openings, provided you're not at a sunspot low.  I'm assuming the
successful 6 meter operator has to be watching propagation and has to
pick their operating time.  I assume it is a hit or miss band and that
you don't have any fun up there unless you put in the time and happen to
catch it when it is open.  I'm assuming the same effort put into to 10
meters would produce more QSOs.

Like I say, I know NOTHING.  Someone please educate me.  If you're reply
is long, e-mail me off-list since this topic is mostly OT.

keith.darwin (dit-dah  dah) goodrich.com

73!

- Keith N1AS -
- K2 5411.ssb.100 -
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Ken Kopp
To get an idea of when 6M may be open, keep an eye on 
TV channel 2 or 3.


My satellite receiver feeds the house distribution system
on Ch 3 and there's sometimes enough signal from distant 
Ch 3 TV stations to QRM the satellite receiver's output. 
Switching to Ch 2 usually shows dueling TV signals.


Six tends to peak near the Spring and Fall equinox because
of the earth's tilting towards the sun at these times.

Tip:  Knowing your grid square ia a must!! (:-))

73! Ken Kopp - K0PP
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Simon Lewis
And much more.

Don't forget 

Aurora

Auroral E

Ionoscatter

F2

And mixed mode!



6 is HIGHLY addictive!!!

From GM I ran 2 x 7 ele long yagis and 400w and regularly used to work
100-150 + US stns during F2 openings!

Many using dipoles and 100w inside rooms!

I am small fry - 138 countries on the band but many of the big guys are 200
countries+

And you can work some real DX - JA/VK etc

In terms of openings - SpE can be kind of hit and miss but many opening such
as F2, Au, AuE, Iono etc you can predict with some skills on the band.

Best place to see what is happening is on the UK six metre pages UKSMG 

Have fun but be warned its very addictive and once tried you wont want to
give it up

73 Simon GM4PLM/DL4PLM




Simon Lewis 
GM4PLM/DL4PLM
http://www.dl4plm.net


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Robie Elms
Sent: Donnerstag, 27. September 2007 15:24
To: Darwin, Keith; elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)


WARNING!  6 meters is addicitive!  Once you work an E opening you will be 
hooked for life.

You have received a lot of good info on 6 already.  I will not repeat it. 
Chasing grid squares is a lot of fun.  You have several interesting 
propagation modes on 6.

Meteor scatter

sproadic e

tropospheric ducting

All of these produce some significant openings.  The apparent randomness of 
the openings is why 6 is refered to as the Magic Band (IMHO).   I have 
worked into europe with a dipole and 100 watts (cw  ssb) from EL29lm 
(Houston, TX) as well as 38 states!

Good luck,

Robie - AJ4F

- Original Message - 
From: Darwin, Keith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 7:14 AM
Subject: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)


 This relates to my consideration of purchasing a K3.

 I know NOTHING about 6 meters.  I'm an HF op who does CW and some SSB. 
 What I believe about 6 meters comes from my (limited) experience on 10 
 meters.  I'm expecting that 6 is mostly closed but has occasional 
 openings, provided you're not at a sunspot low.  I'm assuming the 
 successful 6 meter operator has to be watching propagation and has to 
 pick their operating time.  I assume it is a hit or miss band and that 
 you don't have any fun up there unless you put in the time and happen 
 to catch it when it is open.  I'm assuming the same effort put into to 
 10 meters would produce more QSOs.

 Like I say, I know NOTHING.  Someone please educate me.  If you're 
 reply is long, e-mail me off-list since this topic is mostly OT.

 keith.darwin (dit-dah  dah) goodrich.com

 73!

 - Keith N1AS -
 - K2 5411.ssb.100 - ___
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread JT Croteau
Don't forget, we have a 6M Sprint coming up on October 20th.

http://svhfs.org/fall_sprint_rules.htm

Activity is historically sparse for this contest, only 17 logs were
submitted in 2006.  However, that's no excuse to not get on the air
and make some noise.  I'll be on with my puny 20W from the XV50 with
no expectations other than to make at least one QSO.  If more, all the
better.

-- 
JT Croteau, N1ESE - Manchester, NH (FN42gx)
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Vic K2VCO

Julian G4ILO wrote:


Regular openings like you get on the lower bands
obviously are, but the MUF is rarely high enough to support 6m
propagation even during the solar maximum, 


The biggest recorded solar maximum in history occurred in 1957. A friend 
 of mine had built a little crystal-controlled 6 meter AM transmitter 
whose final had an INPUT of around 10 watts, and a sloppy yagi up about 
15 feet.


One afternoon we sat in his basement and worked station after station 
all over the US. The band was full of signals and hetrodynes. It sounded 
like 40 or 75 meters.


Who knows, maybe it will happen again in a few years?
--
73,
Vic, K2VCO
Fresno CA
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco
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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Bill W5WVO

Ken Kopp wrote:


Six tends to peak near the Spring and Fall equinox because
of the earth's tilting towards the sun at these times.


Probably a typo, but should be corrected.  :-)  6M sporadic-E propagation 
peaks around the SOLSTICES (June and December), not the equinoxes. There is 
rarely ever any sporadic-E propagation around the equinoxes.


The summer Es season in North America typically runs from mid-May through 
mid-August, with the southeast US getting some early sporadic-E openings by 
late April. The winter Es season, in which the openings are typically less 
numerous and weaker than during summer, extends from roughly late November 
through mid-January. Sporadic-E can occur at any time, but it is extremely 
rare from mid-February through mid-April and from mid-September through 
mid-November in North America.


There is a tremendous amount to be learned about 6 meter propagation. It is 
the only band we have where ALL known radio propagation modes (and probably a 
few unknown ones) can be experienced at one point or another. It is truly a 
mix of HF and VHF characteristics.


Bill / W5WVO
DM65 


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[Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Phil Debbie Salas
Six meters is VERY addictive.  I started back in the late 60's with a
Lafayette 1-watt AM transceiver (HA-650), and worked all over the country
and even down into South America with just a squalo antenna on my Dad's
chimney in MD when the band would open.  Now I just use a 6-meter dipole,
and I monitor six as much as I can.  There have been some great openings
this summer - and you can find plenty of SSB and CW when the band opens.
Looking forward to the K3 where I can leave the second receiver on the SSB
calling frequency (50.125).  I have a friend who has DCXX and WAC on 6
meters from here in the Dallas area.
 
Phil - AD5X

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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread Bill W5WVO

Hi Tony,

Good to hear you are using HFTA. Excellent tool.

It's all about takeoff angle, which is determined by (a) the kind of 
antenna(s) you are using,  (b) their height above ground,  (c) the terrain 
characteristics, and  (d) frequency. What takeoff angle you need is in turn 
dictated by the kind of propagation you are using and the path distance.


A single 6M yagi at 82' will have several deep nulls in its elevation profile, 
as HFTA is undoubtedly telling you. For sporadic-E propagation, you will want 
to be able to cover takeoff angles from 0 up through around 16 or 18 degrees 
elevation, which will cover single-hop path lengths from the theoretical 
maximum single-hop distance (1400-1450 miles) down to around 350-400 miles.


You need those higher takeoff angles mostly for sporadic-E propagation. When 
the F2 comes back in four or five years, it is unlikely that you will need a 
takeoff angle much higher than 0 degrees because the band will be at or just 
below the F2 MUF, placing the critical angle of refraction close to the 
visible horizon. It will be an extremely rare (though not impossible) 
occurrence to have an F2 path on 6M with shorter than the maximum possible 
skip distance. Shorter skip is likely to be sporadic-E, which can and does 
coexist with F2 during solar maxima.


Therefore, if you have no interest in working grid squares over shorter path 
distances of 400-1000 miles or so (plus any multi-hop Es paths that may be 
comprised of these shorter hops), you needn't worry about covering the higher 
takeoff angles. But that's really where most of the fun is on 6M IMHO, and to 
cover all the bases for sporadic-E, you definitely need to have a solution for 
covering those takeoff angles. This can be done either through phasing of 
stacked arrays, as modeled in HFTA, and/or by placing one or more antennas 
closer to ground. Just trust HFTA to give you the best configuration for what 
you want to do.


Bill / W5WVO

N2TK, Tony wrote:

Interesting info about 6M. I am presently using the XV50 with my K2.
Had a lot of fun in June working many Europeans and Caribbean
stations. Can't wait till I get my K3 with a little more power on
that band. Now I need to get an XV144.

I do have a question for you 6M aficionados. Hopefully this isn't too
far off the normal intent of this reflector. I have 6 el at 82'.  I
can also put a 6 el beam at 47'. HFTA says that will help me.
My questions are:
- I have heard a rumor that 6M beams don't work too well when
side-mounted. Is this true?
- Since I am not yet familiar with all the types of propagation on
6M, are there rules of thumb for high and low antennas? Do you think
I am too high at 47' and 82'? Do I need a lower antenna also like on
10M for when the sunspots are high again?

If this is too far off normal topics on this band, please respond
directly.

Tnx
N2TK, Tony
#3481 K2
Batch #1 K3


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill W5WVO
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:16 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

Ken Kopp wrote:


Six tends to peak near the Spring and Fall equinox because
of the earth's tilting towards the sun at these times.


Probably a typo, but should be corrected.  :-)  6M sporadic-E
propagation peaks around the SOLSTICES (June and December), not the
equinoxes. There is rarely ever any sporadic-E propagation around the
equinoxes.

The summer Es season in North America typically runs from mid-May
through mid-August, with the southeast US getting some early
sporadic-E openings by late April. The winter Es season, in which the
openings are typically less numerous and weaker than during summer,
extends from roughly late November through mid-January. Sporadic-E
can occur at any time, but it is extremely rare from mid-February
through mid-April and from mid-September through mid-November in
North America.

There is a tremendous amount to be learned about 6 meter propagation.
It is the only band we have where ALL known radio propagation modes
(and probably a
few unknown ones) can be experienced at one point or another. It is
truly a mix of HF and VHF characteristics.

Bill / W5WVO
DM65

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Re: [Elecraft] 6 meters - need info (OT?)

2007-09-27 Thread George Cortez Jr

A link to a ton of 6 meter stuff

http://6mt.com/6tech.htm

George NE2I


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