[South Florida DX Association] June VHF Test Info
Kai Siwiak
ksiwiak at earthlink.net
Fri Jun 18 11:56:02 EDT 2010
Hi Pete,
Your grid square map is extremely interesting, especially since you have a significant number of QSOs, and you were operating from a location in roughly mid-country. I was wondering if you could possibly expand on that data?
Gene Zimmerman, W3ZZ, in QST July and August 2009, comments on the work of Joe Kraft, CT1HZE, suggesting that arrival angle probabilities for 6m band sporadic-E are bimodal, with one peak at ~5 degrees and another at ~10 degrees with very little below 3 or 4 degrees or above ~13 or 14 degrees. Those arrival angles correspond to distances of about 1500 km and 1000 km (940 and 620 miles) for a 100 km high ionospheric reflection/refraction height.
Is it possible for you to report your QSOs as a function of distance? Perhaps them "bin" the QSOs within, say, 100 mile wide range bins? I'd be VERY curious to see if Zimmerman's observation holds for your TN operation which is in "mid-country". Joe Krafts QSOs were from Europe. Do you see broad clusters of QSOs vs. range at around the 1000 and 1500 km (620 and 940 mi)?
73
Kai, KE4PT
-----Original Message-----
>From: Peter Rimmel <n8pr at bellsouth.net>
>Sent: Jun 18, 2010 10:14 AM
>To: SFDXA <sfdxa at mailman.qth.net>
>Subject: [South Florida DX Association] June VHF Test Info
>
>Sorry this took so long to get onto the net, but AT&T was screwing with their systems.
>
>I have placed a Grid Square Map on my Ham radio web page that shows where I was able to work during the recent VHF test. I worked 220 stations in the US, VE, XE, C6, CO and VP5 from here. Note that the grid map almost creates a halo around Nashville at distances from 600-900 miles with a few longer, double skip contacts. Other than the locals, I worked no one in close. Interesting.
>
>Just thought you might find this interesting, compard to the South Florida propagation. The worst part of operating from here is that I had to keep the antenna rotating 360 degrees to work them all... Down in broward county, we can just scan back and forth 90 degrees to "see" the whole of th US.
>
>The map is at the bottom of the page.
>
>http://personal.mia.bellsouth.net/n/8/n8pr/new_page_2.htm
>
>73 y'all from nashville.
>
>PeteR
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