Thanks for the info, very interesting.
I was looking for RBN spots while operating and noticed that other station
in LU and PY had more spots that us.
We use RIT to catch callers, so our TX frequency is fixed for example in
28025.0 and we tune with the RIT for stations calling us (28025.2; 28024.9;
28025.5, etc). So this that seems to be a good practice is not very good to
get more RBN spots :-(
Stations that where moving around TX frequency just 100 hz have double spots
than we had.
South America
Call Spots
--------- -------
PJ4X 20330
PJ2T 20096
P49Y 5477
P49V 5371
LS1D 5096
PS2T 4928
FY5KE 4245
HD2A 4002
CW5W 3810
73,
Jorge
CX6VM/CW5W
-----Mensaje original-----
De: cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com] En nombre de Pete Smith N4ZR
Enviado el: Miércoles, 22 de Febrero de 2012 08:28 p.m.
Para: reflector cq-contest
Asunto: [CQ-Contest] Reverse Beacon Network Stats from ARRL DX CW
Thanks to N6TV, the stats from last weekend are now on the RBN blog at
<http://reversebeacon.blogspot.com/2012/02/arrl-dx-cw-stats-thanks-n6tv.html
>
--
73, Pete N4ZR
The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at
reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000
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