[OMIK] WSPR and the Eclipse
Lloyd Mitchell KO4L
lmitchell at gmail.com
Sun Apr 7 18:49:52 EDT 2024
This guy is a ham in Florence SC and is part of the WSPR fans. I thought
younwould enjoy his writeup
Lloyd KO4L
This message is from club member, Keith Wyrick KY4KK
To anyone curious about how the eclipse might impact the ionosphere and
amateur radio communications, this may be of interest. On Saturday, 4/6/24,
I set up 2 WSPR transmitters in my back yard. These will hopefully operate
uninterrupted through sometime Tuesday afternoon, 4/9/2024. This should
provide good baseline information before and after the solar event.
NASA scientists and other professional and amateur space engineers will
consolidate data from amateur operators around the world to help understand
how this rare event impacts the various layers of the ionosphere.
During the partial eclipse last year, a similar test revealed that several
bands showed significant propagation changes for stations along the path of
the event.
Tommy Walker (NG4S) graciously provided the WSPR transmitters and one of
the antennas I’m using.
The configurations I’m operating:
WSPR Lite Classic (20 Meter Band)
Frequency: 14.097077 MHz (If you tune your HF rig to as close to this
frequency as you can get, you MIGHT be able to hear some of the WSPR
traffic going on)
Callsign: KY4KK
Transmit Power: 20 mW (.02 Watts)
Antenna: Chelegance MC-750 vertical - adjusted to resonance (no tuner)
Grid Square: FM04be
Start time: 00:44 Zulu 4/7/2024
WSPR Lite Classic (40 Meter Band)
Frequency: 7.040142 MHz (see above)
Callsign: KY4KK
Transmit Power: 20 mW (.02 Watts)
Antenna: Chelegance MC-750 vertical with 40 meter coil - adjusted to
resonance (no tuner)
Grid Square: FM04be
Start time: 23:10 Zulu 4/6/2024
WSPR is a one-way digital communication protocol using VERY low power (less
than .2 Watt or 200 mW). I usually set the transmitters to much lower power
than that (.02 Watt or 20 mW) because the weaker signal is more likely to
reflect subtle changes in either the antenna or the atmospheric conditions.
The sending station transmits a beacon on a specific frequency for each
band. The digital package sent by the transmitter contains the callsign of
the operator, grid square location and transmitted power in milliwatts. The
message is sent slowly and repeated several times. Then, there is a pause
and it starts again.
There are amateur receiving stations around the world that are specifically
configured to look for WSPR signals. If they can hear me, they record my
information and the strength of my signal (how loud it is against the
background static - measured in decibels). Their receiver, connected to the
internet, then adds information about their station and automatically sends
all of it to a central database that is accessible to the public in real
time.
Several websites are available to extract the data or view it in map
format. All of the ones I use are free and do not require a login. The ones
I most frequently use are listed below, but there are others. In general,
use my callsign (KY4KK) as the transmitting station, leave the receive
station blank and select either 20 or 40 meters.
DXPLORER SB
This site will allow you to pull raw data into a spreadsheet in .csv format
if you want to do data analysis.
It also shows the most distant contacts and can display a map
Specifically, I will use this to look at individual stations that recorded
me several times during the day. Where was the eclipse during each of the
recordings, and did my received signal significantly change?
Also, I will look for differences in how the two bands will be affected.
https://dxplorer.net/wspr/tx/spotsmap.html?callsign=KY4KK&timelimit=1d
WSPR Rocks
I like this site for mapping my contacts.
The interface takes some getting used to, but to start, go to the search
button, select the number of spots to show, the time frame (10 minutes if
you want to see immediate activity only), band (20m or 40m) and TX Call
(KY4KK) and click Search. Then you can click map and it will show all of
the contacts the station has made in that time frame.
http://www.wspr.rocks
PSK Reporter
This is another mapping program that may have an easier interface.
Display Reception Reports
As I have mentioned to some of you before, I am continuously amazed at how
far WSPR transmissions can go with such low power. There has to be magic
involved…
Final Disclaimer: When doing a test like this over several days, a lot of
things can go wrong. Batteries die in the middle of the night, a dove
crashes into my antenna, the dog runs away with one of my antenna radials
(all of these have happened). If I see something has interrupted the
transmission, I will try to correct it as soon as possible.
Best Regards,
Keith Wyrick – Amateur HAM Scientist
KY4KK
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