[RTTY] hk0gu on 12 meter rtty

Dave Bernstein aa6yq at ambersoft.com
Tue Mar 23 17:11:07 EST 2004


You might also consider SpotCollector, which is free via
www.qsl.net/dxlab .

SpotCollector can connect to up to 4 telnet clusters, the DX Summit
cluster (via the #CQDX IRC channel), and a local packet cluster (via a
TNC). Duplicate spots are automatically discarded, and spots of the same
DX station in the same mode on the same frequency are combined into a
single entry with "first heard" and "last heard" times; you can specify
what "same frequency" means. Filters for Callsign, DXCC entity, Band,
Mode, Continent, and Origin (spotter location) are available, and can be
used in combination. See
http://www.qsl.net/spotcollector/spotdatabase.jpg for a screenshot.

SpotCollector automatically interoperates with other members of the
DXLab Suite. It color-codes spots based on award progress in DXKeeper,
it will QSY your transceiver via Commander when you double-click on a
spot and will rotate your beam to the correct SP or LP heading via
DXview, it will plot spots on DXView's world map, it will set WinWarbler
to the correct digital mode (PSK31, PSK63, or RTTY) and audio offset,
and it will perform QSL route lookups via Pathfinder.

    73,

       Dave, AA6YQ

-----Original Message-----
From: rtty-bounces at contesting.com [mailto:rtty-bounces at contesting.com]
On Behalf Of Tom Homewood
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2004 09:22
To: FireBrick; RTTY List
Subject: Re: [RTTY] hk0gu on 12 meter rtty


You can have a dedicated RTTY/PSK Packet Node on all of the AR Clusters
and DX Spider too. Just set the filters to only pass RTTY/PSK modes and
frequencies. VE7CC has a great program to do this for the AR Cluster
nodes.

Pick one of the nodes that has worldwide spots and you are all set.

73, Tom, W1TO


----- Original Message -----
From: "FireBrick" <w9ol at billnjudy.com>
To: "RTTY List" <rtty at contesting.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2004 7:04 AM
Subject: [RTTY] hk0gu on 12 meter rtty


>
> I WILL POST ON THE INTERNET/PACKET CLUSTERS if and when I hear him.
>
> This may seem like a novel idea, but there is this thing called a 
> packet
cluster.
> You use it to tell others that a station is on the air.
> They get the info almost immediately.
> It's much faster and easier to get than DX Summit.
>
> It would be nice if we had a dedicated RTTY/PSK Packet Node.
>
>
>
>
> Bill H. in Chicagoland
>
>

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