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HAARP performed a propagation test last year for
several weeks during the night, I had sent them
several CD's worth of recordings/logs and they replied
with 2 QSL cards, a very large poster of the
transmitter array, and a large photograph of an Aurora
taken on the road that leads to the HAARP
installation. Apparently they forward the reports to a
HAM who then sends out the replies. 


You got to get a bit creative for these stations to
send you anything, it was a goal of mine to QSL HAARP
and maybe in the future I can QSL them again if I hear
them. 

They transmitted a series of "rising and falling
whistlers" with a "peak" at the highest ones. Certain
time slots they would use lower power, others really
high because the signal would drop considerably, the
stronger ones came in around S10 and stronger or so
and I am in East Pennslyvania, quite a distance from
Alaska. 

73

Tom

_________________________________

Message: 1
Date: Mon, 28 Nov 2005 14:15:11 -0500
From: Ed <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [Spooks] Something really funny
To: Shortwave Spy Numbers Stations
<[email protected]>
Message-ID:
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii";
format=flowed

yup, and when HAARP performed those propagation tests
(about 8 years 
ago) i 
mailed them a QSL request and received very nice QSL
with a photo of 
their 
amazing antenna array.  i just read in Monitoring
Times magazine that 
you 
can now submit QSL requests to HAARP via email.

-ed, N3KOW


        
                
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