- 1. [CQ-Contest] 160 SSB (score: 1)
- Author: luther@penalvagold.net (Martin Luther)
- Date: Tue Feb 25 00:53:27 2003
- I listened for a while, but you really have to be keen! K8CC on1.847 N0FW on 1.850 K9NR on 1.8551 A bit later N7GP on 1.858 Later still WE3C on 1.841 I listened and called until 1200z when they seeme
- /archives//html/CQ-Contest/2003-02/msg00298.html (7,437 bytes)
- 2. [CQ-Contest] 160 SSB (score: 1)
- Author: john.devoldere@pandora.be (john devoldere, ON4UN)
- Date: Tue Feb 25 15:34:04 2003
- Hi there: I am sure Steve (VK6VZ) will not mind me quoting from an E-mail he sent me: G'day John Fascinating stuff. I only managed to work three Europeans, although signals were quite strong (S7 - S9
- /archives//html/CQ-Contest/2003-02/msg00303.html (10,074 bytes)
- 3. [CQ-Contest] 160 SSB (score: 1)
- Author: VE5RA@sasktel.net (Doug Renwick)
- Date: Tue Feb 25 11:43:43 2003
- One thing you learn when operating on the 160M band is that there is a lot of "ONE WAY PROPAGATION." Signals do not equally cover the path between stations. Doug -- Doug Renwick VA5DX PO Box 50, Clav
- /archives//html/CQ-Contest/2003-02/msg00308.html (8,312 bytes)
- 4. [CQ-Contest] 160 SSB (score: 1)
- Author: n5ia@zia-connection.com (Milt Jensen, N5IA)
- Date: Wed Feb 26 00:35:05 2003
- Martin, Thanks for the insight. Let me explain how the operation was run at N7GP. We certainly are aware of Grey Line propagation. We use Geo-Clock to keep track of the critical locations, both conti
- /archives//html/CQ-Contest/2003-02/msg00321.html (10,718 bytes)
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