Hi Jeff and any one else interested, You may already know abt the Night of Nights. If not, here is some info on a truly fun event...and there should be some 500kc activity too. Coastal station KSM is also active each Sat for several hours, on the old Maritime freqs. Check the MRHS web site for lots of good info on how it was done back when CW was King of the Maritime airwaves. Below is a link to the N of N info:
http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?ca=21c83753-4552-46ae-b771-a24edc095a5b&c=87e94620-790b-11e3-93dd-d4ae5292c4bc&ch=88dd6a20-790b-11e3-9409-d4ae5292c4bc FLASH! USCG WILL PARTICIPATE IN NIGHT OF NIGHTS! NEW USCG STATION ON THE AIR! KPH, KFS, KSM, WLO AND KLB WILL BE ON THE AIR! Event Date: 12 July 2014 Pacific Daylight Time First Transmission form MRHS Stations: 5:01pm Pacific Daylight Time 12 July, 0001Z 13 July 2014 > Historic coast stations KPH, KFS, KSM, WLO AND KLB will return to the air > RCA "H Set" Transmitter 298 will be on the air > 1942 Press Wireless PW15 transmitter will be on the air > USCG Coast Stations NMC, NMQ and NMW will be on the air > K6KPH will be listening for calls and signal reports > Join us in person or on the air! It is a real treat to hear these Coastal/USCG stations sending out the beautiful sounds of CW on the Maritime frequencies once again. Tune in for some great signals and CW from the good ole days of Maritime CW. 73 de Bill K4JYS PS: Tnx Jeff for the link to your 500kc info. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Radio KH6O" <[email protected]> To: "Eric NO3M" <[email protected]> Cc: [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, June 25, 2014 9:47:47 PM Subject: Re: Topband: Field Day 630M Beacons / On-air Demo Gosh, all the years that I worked ships from around the Pacific nightly on 500 kc (with ship working frequencies of 425, 454, 468, 480, and 512 kc), I never thought the 600M band would have hams using it. It's wonderful that the band will be alive again with CW. I was stationed at US Coast Guard Radio Station NMO in Wahiawa on the island of Oahu in Hawaii in the 1970s. All maritime traffic was passed by CW back then. The propagation on that band was such that the entire Pacific would open after sundown: from New Zealand to Alaska and from China to the West Coast. All ships and shore stations monitored the international calling and distress frequency of 500 kc which sounded like a circus at times. Look for my seven part series on 500 kc on many web sites (here's one: http://jproc.ca/radiostor/cw500pt1.html). The series ended up being published in books, magazines, radio journals, ham club newsletters, etc. 73, Jeff KH6O _________________ Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband _________________ Topband Reflector Archives - http://www.contesting.com/_topband
