Hi, Herb!
Yes - and sometimes the daytime noise level will be a bit lower on 160 and then pick up as the grey line and then darkness move over us! And I can sympathize with those Europeans - and being in the city, where my inverted L with the three resonant elevated radials has been somewhat maligned here (it's down now because a bad storm/hurricane tilted the tree that was supporting the far end of the flat top portion and we had to take it down with a crane), I generally found that, if I could hear them, I could work them! My problem was hearing!! BEST thing I EVER did for myself on 160 and 80 was to build a modest size "KAZ" terminated receiving loop that I ran through an old AMECO preamp into the receive antenna port on the FT-1000MP. Suddenly I could HEAR stations that I just couldn't tell were there or make out when copying on the Inverted L or my quad. Beverages are completely out of the question for me. The loop worked great on 80 also and was a really good receiving antenna for 40 and 30 also. I need to relocate and rearrange my inverted L. Thank heavens it wasn't being operated against a buried radial field!! J I hope you and yours have a wonderful Christmas, Herb!! Best regards, Charlie, K4OTV FRom: Herb Krumich [mailto:wa2...@yahoo.com] Sent: Sunday, December 16, 2012 7:29 PM To: Charlie Cunningham Subject: Re: Topband: Strange Condx Thanks Charlie Yes many years ago I learned that we might have a quiet band, but others might not. Some very good points you made. Always willing to learn from others Merry Christmas Herb From: Charlie Cunningham <charlie-cunning...@nc.rr.com> To: 'Herb Krumich' <wa2...@yahoo.com> Cc: topband@contesting.com Sent: Sunday, December 16, 2012 6:23 PM Subject: RE: Topband: Strange Condx Hi, Herb! Well, it's easy to forget that receiving conditions can be quite different at different ends of the path! An hour before your sunset, it had been dark for a while western and central Europe and the noise level on 160 can often pick up as darkness settles in on the eastern end of the daylight path. Also, it's worth keeping in mind that most of Western Europe is at considerably higher latitude than we are and may be more subject to auroral-related disturbance and noise! A good example showed up last night. I was sitting here and watching DX Summit on my computer in between work tasks. I especially like to watch 30m spots. A W7 remarked about a Chinese BA7 station "bad ears" and the Chinese op, apparently was watching, and posted the W7's call and said "Sorry - GP antenna and S6 noise level". So we don't always know what the guy a world away is up against, and it's worth remembering, too, if we post critical remarks on the DX clusters, the other op may be watching also and be offended or suffer some "hurt feelings" Regards, Charlie, K4OTV -----Original Message----- From: Topband [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Herb Krumich Sent: Sunday, December 16, 2012 6:47 PM To: topband@contesting.com Subject: Topband: Strange Condx Friday late afternoon around 4 pm (EST), I was listening to 160 and was hearing many signals from Europe and Russia. Some were quite loud. I probably called at least a dozen different stations with no luck. My transmit antenna is an inverted L which is about 85 feet vertical. I even went outside to make sure the horizontal leg was not disturbed due to wind. I operate EME on 144 mhz and have had times where signals would only go one way. Was this the case ? Or could it have been storms which would have produced high levels of noise on their receive end ? After a radio club dinner, I went back to 160 and was able to work two stations in Europe with single calls from me. I'm going to try the SP contest next weekend for some fun Isn't this the greatest hobby ever ? Herb K2LNS _______________________________________________ Topband reflector - topband@contesting.com _______________________________________________ Topband reflector - topband@contesting.com