[HCARC] NVIS - Local 10 meter Propagation Test
H. Vordenbaum
tower2 at stx.rr.com
Fri Jul 27 12:46:34 EDT 2012
And then there are "no-solder Extras"..........
hv
-----Original Message-----
From: hcarc-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:hcarc-bounces at mailman.qth.net]
On Behalf Of Kerry Sandstrom
Sent: Friday, July 27, 2012 8:41 AM
To: hcarc at mailman.qth.net; Gary and Arlene Johnson
Subject: Re: [HCARC] NVIS - Local 10 meter Propagation Test
Gary,
Ham radio is full of terms and expressions from the old days which have
little meaning now. In rthe early days wavelength was mainly used. When
hams talked about moving "down" they were talking about going to shorter
wavelengths (and higher frequencies). There was no way to directly measure
frequency then. Everything was in terms of wavelength. Times have changed.
Now frequency is what everybody uses and the meter designations of our bands
have little real meaning, they are just names.
If you want to find the ionosonde data, it is at
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/ftpmenu/lists/iono_day.html. SWPC is the space
Weather Prediction Center in Boulder, CO. if you just go to
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov you will find an unbelievable amount of information
about the Sun and the relationship between the sun and radio conditions on
the earth.
Yes, a lot of people now get their Extra license without ever getting on the
radio. When there was a Morse code requirement and a 2 year experience
requirement it was more difficult to get on as an Extra without having spent
a lot of time on the radio. Times change, but radio is still fun. I
noticed that the people who were involved in the experiment the other night
were all old guys and all Extras. That just happened. I guess we're all
lifeless and don't having anything else to do. Gale, made it a point to
pick a band and frequency where everyone could be involved. Besides the
guys that called in, were there any others who listened in? Gale was
looking for participation from thre largest number possible. The whole
purpose was to encourage as many people as possible to get on HF and to find
a frequency/time where any of us, Extra or Tech or whatever, could get on
and chat about whatever. Unfortunately, 10 meters may not be the best
choice and we may have to try the General bands/frequencies.
Kerry
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