Hi

Not to mention latest rise of solar arrays and MPPTs, chargers, inverters.

My neighbor installed one such an array and doesnt care so I had to resort to 
informing local authorities whi will be performing measurements (I measured 
62dBuV at 10m distance, while limit is 50dBuV on the output of the inverter!!
And since 110kHz is main frequency, I also often see birdies on harmonics, 
which are exactly the whole numbers...
I moved all my beverages to nearby forest, 300m away, but still the QRM is few 
dB above noise when listening to NW.

If this will go as it is we might lose the low bands from sub urban areas 
totally.

Jiri OK2IT
________________________________
Od: Topband <[email protected]> za uživatele 
[email protected] <[email protected]>
Odesláno: středa 27. května 2026 18:00
Komu: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Předmět: Topband Digest, Vol 281, Issue 6

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Today's Topics:

   1. Industrial Birdies on Round Frequencies ([email protected])
   2. Re: Industrial Birdies on Round Frequencies (Robert Urban)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Wed, 27 May 2026 04:01:16 +0200
From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Topband: Industrial Birdies on Round Frequencies
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed

?For many years on Top Band I have noticed one recurring problem which is 
becoming more and more significant, especially for stations using traditional 
receiving systems.
A large amount of industrial QRN, heterodynes, birdies and various spurious 
carriers appear exactly on round kHz frequencies such as 1825.0, 1826.0, 1827.0 
etc. Unfortunately, many DX stations also choose these exact frequencies when 
calling CQ.
During my years on 160m I have lost several rare and potentially new DX QSOs 
only because the DX station happened to operate exactly on one of these 
whole-kHz frequencies where local industrial heterodynes made reception 
extremely difficult or even impossible.
I would therefore like to kindly ask DX stations to consider using slightly 
offset frequencies when calling CQ on Top Band, for example 1825.3, 1826.7, 
1829.4 etc., instead of exact integer frequencies.
This is especially important for those of us who still use the traditional way 
of receiving ? our own antennas, local receiving arrays and real on-site 
receivers ? rather than remote SDR receivers located hundreds or thousands of 
kilometers away in electrically quiet locations.
Today, a large number of DXers use remote SDR systems for reception, and 
naturally they often do not hear the same local industrial noise and 
heterodynes that many traditional stations still have to fight every night on 
160m.
A small frequency offset may seem insignificant, but in practice it can make 
the difference between a readable signal and a completely lost QSO.
Thank you very much to everyone who takes this into consideration and helps 
keep Top Band enjoyable and accessible also for stations using classic 
receiving methods and local antennas.
73
Karel? OK1CF



------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 26 May 2026 21:51:03 -0500
From: Robert Urban <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Topband: Industrial Birdies on Round Frequencies
Message-ID:
        <ca+tmvk3ka9d6ujhzpik69l3uadkudjfytodlh29msr_ngnu...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

Thank you Karel. Similar problem here in NA involving Broadcast station
harmonics.
*Bob W9EWZ*

On Tue, May 26, 2026 at 9:15?PM Karel via Topband <[email protected]>
wrote:

>  For many years on Top Band I have noticed one recurring problem which is
> becoming more and more significant, especially for stations using
> traditional receiving systems.
> A large amount of industrial QRN, heterodynes, birdies and various
> spurious carriers appear exactly on round kHz frequencies such as 1825.0,
> 1826.0, 1827.0 etc. Unfortunately, many DX stations also choose these exact
> frequencies when calling CQ.
> During my years on 160m I have lost several rare and potentially new DX
> QSOs only because the DX station happened to operate exactly on one of
> these whole-kHz frequencies where local industrial heterodynes made
> reception extremely difficult or even impossible.
> I would therefore like to kindly ask DX stations to consider using
> slightly offset frequencies when calling CQ on Top Band, for example
> 1825.3, 1826.7, 1829.4 etc., instead of exact integer frequencies.
> This is especially important for those of us who still use the traditional
> way of receiving ? our own antennas, local receiving arrays and real
> on-site receivers ? rather than remote SDR receivers located hundreds or
> thousands of kilometers away in electrically quiet locations.
> Today, a large number of DXers use remote SDR systems for reception, and
> naturally they often do not hear the same local industrial noise and
> heterodynes that many traditional stations still have to fight every night
> on 160m.
> A small frequency offset may seem insignificant, but in practice it can
> make the difference between a readable signal and a completely lost QSO.
> Thank you very much to everyone who takes this into consideration and
> helps keep Top Band enjoyable and accessible also for stations using
> classic receiving methods and local antennas.
> 73
> Karel  OK1CF
>
> _________________
> Searchable Archives: http://www.contesting.com/_topband - Topband
> Reflector
>


------------------------------

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