It’s been clearly observed that in many state QSO parties in the northeast,
there is little activity on the higher bands, making things uninteresting for
those some distance away. This is a chicken and egg sort of situation: little
in state activity on those bands leads to little out of state activity, and
that in turn reinforces the disinterest from in state stations.
This past spring, from Florida I tried to initiate some 15 meter activity in
the Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan QSO Parties, including lots of CQing. I
worked a half dozen or so guys in MN and WI, and one in MI. Some had good
signals, some did not. I never was sure if my signal was making it up there or
not.
This Saturday is the Ohio QSO Party, and I encourage those from more distant
areas give it a try, with help from the Reverse Beacon Network
(www.reversebeacon.net) to verify propagation. There are three RBN skimmer
sites in northeast Ohio, W8WTS, K8AZ, and KQ8M, plus K8ND in central Ohio near
Columbus. Send a few CW CQs and watch to see if and how well those skimmers are
hearing you. If they are, try some CQ’s yourself (21045 on CW and 21300 on SSB
are the suggested activity frequencies), or catch some Ohio stations on another
band (likely 20) and ask them to move.
And the same concept applies to 20 meters later in the day after activity
migrates to the lower bands.
Note that skimmers hear a lot better than humans - a 10db skimmer S/N ratio is
still a pretty weak signal. But above that you ought to be heard.
The OhQP runs from 16000z Saturday to 0400z Sunday. Full OhQP details are at
www.ohqp.org. I’ll be mobile, mostly on CW, and can very easily change bands
80-15 meters. (I can also change between CW and SSB, and OhQP multipliers are
by mode).
And we do have very nice plaques for the top scoring stations from outside W/VE
and from the Mountain/Pacific time zones.
73 - Jim K8MR
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