13 Aug 2017
Parsonage Farm - NOT amateur radio
This started as a workers co-operative where everyone was paid the same. It is still going strong today (Delta-T) making scientific kit mainly related to plants. This is in our village (Burwell, Cambs, UK).
Labels:
delta-t
6m MSK144 RX again
As mentioned yesterday, the Perseid meteor shower is peaking, so I am monitoring 6m MSK144 (50.280MHz) all weekend, hoping to catch some meteor scatter activity.
UPDATE 0916z: MS spots from all over the place including Norway, Germany and Italy.
UPDATE 1906z: Now spotting Switzerland on 6m MSK144.
UPDATE 0916z: MS spots from all over the place including Norway, Germany and Italy.
UPDATE 1906z: Now spotting Switzerland on 6m MSK144.
Sunspots - Sunday August 13th 2017
Solar flux is 70 today. Sunspot number is 11. A=11 and K=2.
Labels:
sunspots
Reviews - NOT amateur radio
It seems that almost everything you do on the phone or internet now is followed up by a request for feedback asking how good they were. Being a cynic these days I refuse to complete these. Some may well be genuine, hoping to get feedback so they can do better, but I suspect many sell your details on so you can be targeted with junk mail and junk phone calls. So, I just delete these. Call me a boring old fart, but I am not increasing my chances of being a target.
If I get very good or bad service I am quite happy to write an email. Many years ago I wrote to the MD of Dell. Within days I had a phone call back from their head office and my PC was fixed. Sometimes this works. The last thing big companies want is adverse publicity. When you get very good or very bad service you tell people. They prefer you to tell others when things are good.
If I get very good or bad service I am quite happy to write an email. Many years ago I wrote to the MD of Dell. Within days I had a phone call back from their head office and my PC was fixed. Sometimes this works. The last thing big companies want is adverse publicity. When you get very good or very bad service you tell people. They prefer you to tell others when things are good.
Labels:
reviews
4m QRP transverter
It is some years since I was active on 4m. Several years ago now, I designed and built this transverter as I had no gear for this band. I worked a few stations in a 4m contest with it and just a wire dipole.
Of course, these days the IC7300 from ICOM covers 4m. These days there are lots of EU countries on the band, so it can be good in the Es season.
Years before I recall working ZB2VHF with 4W of AM in my university days by Es.
At some point I intend to get on 4m again.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/vuhf/4m_tvtr .
Of course, these days the IC7300 from ICOM covers 4m. These days there are lots of EU countries on the band, so it can be good in the Es season.
Years before I recall working ZB2VHF with 4W of AM in my university days by Es.
At some point I intend to get on 4m again.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/vuhf/4m_tvtr .
Labels:
4m,
transverter
12 Aug 2017
Perseid Fireballs?
This weekend the Perseid meteor shower peaks. According to Southgate News relaying a post on spaceweather.com the Perseid shower produces more fireballs than any other shower.
See http://spaceweather.com/ .
See http://spaceweather.com/ .
Labels:
southgate,
spaceweather
Nostalgia - SW interval Signals
Well I am pretty sure I've posted this link before, not that it matters.
When I started in the 1960s my first experiences were with short wave broadcast stations. There was no such thing as TV live from the USA or Australia. Skype and FaceTime were in the far future.
Radio Australia would fade in and out. Radio New Zealand was a good catch. Many broadcasters had English language services. On the hours and half hours we'd listen for the interval signals. Many communist nations tried to blast us with propaganda. All I wanted was a QSL card!
Anyway, grab a drink and listen to the past. Enjoy.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/hf/interval.
When I started in the 1960s my first experiences were with short wave broadcast stations. There was no such thing as TV live from the USA or Australia. Skype and FaceTime were in the far future.
Radio Australia would fade in and out. Radio New Zealand was a good catch. Many broadcasters had English language services. On the hours and half hours we'd listen for the interval signals. Many communist nations tried to blast us with propaganda. All I wanted was a QSL card!
Anyway, grab a drink and listen to the past. Enjoy.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/hf/interval.
Labels:
interval signals,
shortwave
In Australia - NOT amateur radio
At the moment a couple of our grandchildren are in Australia visiting their Australian grandparents with their mum and dad. The photo was taken on Hamilton Island in the Whitsunday Islands. The grandparents live in Brisbane.
Labels:
grandchildren
PF1 UHF
In my professional life I worked first for Pye Telecom. My first ever job (I think it was really a test of my capabilities) was converting the PF1 (a small UHF portable with separate RX and TX) to 12.5kHz channel spacing. In those far off days we had 995 signal generators and these took hours (really) to stop drifting! The task was completed OK as I recall.
The task was set by Mike Gotch , G0IMG, who is now a SK. At the time I had no idea Mike was interested in amateur radio. Apparently years before he had been a pirate and got caught! In the early days of UK CB he was a keen DXer and I last worked him on 6m I think.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/vuhf/pf1.
The task was set by Mike Gotch , G0IMG, who is now a SK. At the time I had no idea Mike was interested in amateur radio. Apparently years before he had been a pirate and got caught! In the early days of UK CB he was a keen DXer and I last worked him on 6m I think.
See https://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp3/vuhf/pf1.
Labels:
pf1
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