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Re: [VHFcontesting] [NEWSVHF] July 16 happens to be a Tuesday.

To: k1whs@metrocast.net
Subject: Re: [VHFcontesting] [NEWSVHF] July 16 happens to be a Tuesday.
From: <ww1z_1@juno.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 18:15:15 -0400
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
The National Weather Service has posted a number of severe weather alerts
for this evening. The weather radar shows several severe thunderstorm
warnings over Vermont and Western Massachusetts heading  east.

I was planning on listening for K1WHS with my Quansheng. 

John WW1Z

On Tue, 16 Jul 2024 12:07:13 -0400 David Olean <k1whs@metrocast.net>
writes:
> Hello boys and girls,
> 
> We live in exciting times.  A portion of that excitement happens 
> with 
> many of us on Tuesday nights.  The last couple of weeks showed a 
> distinct bump in activity on the 222 band. There is now a reasonably 
> 
> sized group of operators so that it is possible for Good Buddy Ron, 
> WZ1V,  to make 30 contacts for two weeks running! That was with 
> K3SK 
> missing due to antenna refurbs and VE3DS, KO4YC, and others not 
> being 
> able  to get on and make noise etc etc..  So the activity is 
> spreading!!  I just delivered two boom to mast plates to Jay, W1VD. 
> He 
> is revamping some old 220 Boomer yagis and I expect that we will 
> hear GB 
> Jay soon on the band. Both K1TEO and W1VD are in fantastic locations 
> in 
> SW New England and can  make those long DX contacts South and West, 
> and 
> can detect those miniscule openings that might be missed by a 
> "smaller" 
> station.  Having such beacons on the air should really improve 
> activity 
> even more and provide a realizable goal for stations that are far 
> away 
> from the high activity areas of Washington DC up to Southern New 
> England.
> 
> I am always excited when Tuesday rolls around because you can get on 
> the 
> 222 MHz band and make some nice SSB or CW contacts and spin your 
> rtators 
> all around looking for stations to work. This is just like the good 
> olde 
> days and you are guaranteed to make a few contacts.  If you are in 
> an 
> area with zip, zilch, nada activity, then it is up to you to talk up 
> the 
> band and try to enlist others in your operating area to get on.  
> W7JW 
> worked a nifty meteor scatter contact from Michigan when he was only 
> 
> running 25 watts a few weeks ago!  Being in a far away place with 
> no 
> local activity does not mean that you are out of luck. It is just a 
> cue 
> for you to explore the DX modes and see what is possible. Ant 
> distance 
>  to about 1000 miles is typicaly possible on 222 with a normal VHF 
> setup. It will not be simple and easy, but who likes "simple and 
> easy"?  
> ..... Well maybe we do like "simple and easy", but you get my drift.
> 
> I am at the far end of the activity corridor that extends from 
> Washington DC up to Boston. I am maybe 80 or 90 miles North of 
> Boston. I 
> can work lots of stations but things slow down after about 00:30 
> UT.  By 
> 01:00 UT most of the activity has dried up. It sure would be nice to 
> 
> extend that time by utilizing MSK144 skeds and even Q65B-60 or 120 
> skeds 
> and play around with digging signals out from the noise.  I always 
> try 
> long haul skeds after about 00:45 or so. Last week, I stopped at 
> 02:30 
> UT as there were a few long haul skeds involved.  Get on the ON4KST 
> chat 
> page and set something up with another station out of your immediate 
> 
> area. The worst thing that will happen is that you don't make a 
> contact.
> 
> N1JEZ and I have been discussing a tropo path that affects both of 
> us. A 
> few times we have found very week tropo enhancements extending from 
> Northern New England out to Indiana.  After finding this path open 
> occasionally over the years, when other paths are not viable, I am 
> convinced that the two Great Lakes, Erie and Ontario, have a lot do 
> do 
> with it. We suspect that the path loss drops when conditions are 
> just 
> right over those water bodies. More investigation is needed, but 
> Tuesday 
> night skeds are a good way to look into it.  A quick look at the 
> tropo 
> scatter models shows a path loss of over 265 dB, and some of the 
> models 
> are out of range at 750 miles, but all it takes is about a 15-20 dB 
> enhancement (reduction of path loss) and we are at 245 dB which is 
> possible with the amateur power limits and a god setup.  I am sure 
> there 
> are other paths worth exploring.
> 
> So fire up the gear. Turn off Tik Tok, and spend some time on 222 
> this 
> evening.  Let us know what happens.
> 
> 73
> 
> Dave K1WHS
> 
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