6 Feb 2023
The Almonry, Ely - NOT amateur radio
Sub 9kHz amateur radio
At one time I was very active monitoring amateur radio below 10 kHz. Stations from all over Europe were decoded. I also used to regularly run a website dedicated to amateur experiments at the very low frequencies. Some remarkable distances were spanned.
To TX, very big antennas are needed. For RX an E-field probe, which is tiny, is very effective. Extremely accurate frequency control is essential. This is usually achieved by GPS locking or locking to a VLF MSK signal, which is what I did. Bandwidths are measured in uHz. Timescales are measured in hours or even days! Casual listening is extremely unlikely to result in success, except perhaps by earth-mode over much shorter ranges.
Since my 2013 stroke, I have not been active below 10 kHz. Experiments continue and keen amateurs are still knocking on the boundaries and achieving what many thought was impossible.
The photo shows my reception of DK7FC in 2011. In more recent times he has been testing on ever lower frequencies and with earth-electrode antennas.5 Feb 2023
DX soundbiites 2022
Although I do not actively seek DX these days, you may like to hear the DX soundbites recorded in Ohio last year.
8m FT8 (Sunday)
For the last few hours, I have been on 8m (40.680 MHz) QRP FT8. At 1206z, no spots on TX or RX.
UPDATE 1956z: No spots.
10m 500mW WSPR TX (Sunday)
My 10m WSPR beacon has been on much of the morning. So far, 4 unique stations have spotted me.
UPDATE 1735z: 25 unique stations have spotted my QRP today.
23cm aircraft scatter
It looks like my best chance of copying beacons on 23cm is via aircraft scatter. This is reflection off aircraft in the correct part of the sky. I have not tried this yet.
I am told that using software like Airscout allows one to predict when paths might be possible.
Of course, this is no guarantee of success, but at least tells you when it is worth a try. I have no idea how strong such signals might be. Based on lower frequencies, I would expect such signals to be quite good. I expect there would some Doppler as the plane is moving across the sky. I guess how much depends on the path and plane direction.
This should be interesting. I wonder which beacons I can see? From here, I hope I can see the beacons on Dunstable Downs and at Martlesham Heath.
Dropbox (nasty) - NOT amateur radio
Just received an email from Dropbox saying my free account is over limit. The page is very intimidating and almost forces you to pay an extortionate £95 plus a year for extra space. All their stuff seems designed to take money off you or send you emails you really do not want. Even cancelling is made difficult.
I think I have deleted my account. I do not like their approach at all.
For information, Google offers all the file storage that I need for far, far less.