[RTTY] RTTY frequencies to avoid

David G3YYD g3yyd at btinternet.com
Fri Sep 22 14:42:02 EDT 2017


Jeff

What is the likely USA 80m frequency segment that will be used? Any hints on
how UK might avoid very congested segments would be helpful.

73 David G3YYD aka M7T in contests

-----Original Message-----
From: RTTY [mailto:rtty-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of Jeff Stai
Sent: 22 September 2017 18:20
To: REFL-RTTY; cq-contest at contesting.com; MLDXCC; NCCC
Subject: [RTTY] RTTY frequencies to avoid

I was asked to provide this - like I'm an expert ;) - but I did some digging
and this seems to be a good start. If anyone else has further info please do
chime in.

First, the information I have received is that the following frequencies
within the RTTY segments may contain emergency traffic. Please take steps to
avoid them:

7045, 7060, 7075, 7090
14120

These are all phone nets and we are asked to give them wide berth (phone
bandwidth). For obvious reasons there may be weak stations you can't hear
but others are trying to hear them. (Source: ARRL and others)

Also don't forget about the beacons at 14100 and 21150 - NCDXF recommends
giving them 500Hz on either side, at least. (Be nice if 21150 was actually
an issue!)

And of course, there are our friends using various other digital modes in
the 70-80Khz segments on each band.

And remember that the US 80m RTTY band is limited to 3500-3600. Non-US
stations CQ-ing above 3600 please consider listening below as well.

Have fun! 73  jeff wk6i

ps: Please do not avoid 10m. Take a listen and throw out a couple CQs. You
never know.

--
Jeff Stai ~ wk6i.jeff at gmail.com
Twisted Oak Winery ~ http://www.twistedoak.com/ Facebook ~
http://www.facebook.com/twistedoak
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