First HF Radio

(After passing the test, I immediately ordered a Quansheng UV-K5 HT. I also ordered this weird $120 HF radio based off the open source usdx project. The HF radio was garbage: the screen was tiny, the audio/CAT control was confusing or non-existent, and it liked to lock up and stop updating its screen. I returned it to Amazon.)

I had been in a hurry, since I was heading to Florida for the week. While I was down there, I discovered the Ham Radio Outlet in Orlando, so I ran there to look around and purchased the Xiegu X6100 QRP rig.

I also picked up a couple accessories shortly afterward to go with it:

  • connectors between bnc and sma
  • 5W adjustable power supply that didn’t quite cut it all the time (24Vx5W)
  • 10w adjustable power supply (12Vx10W)
  • speaker wire
  • banana clip connectors
  • Ham Radio Today: X6100 book on kindle
hf  x6100  xiegu 

Passed General

I went to the Hamfest in New Holland and tested for my Ham license. I had studied for Technician, and that went really well, so I tried the test for General. I passed that by only 1 or 2 correct answers, so I’m a General!

Time to order some gear.

SWL

I was using the horizontal dipole from the RTL-SDR v3 kit, fully-extended. I saw some good gray-line propagation into Asia.

  • China
    • 17605khz in Indonesian
    • 17530khz in Vietnamese
  • Taiwan
    • 15970khz Chinese
    • 15340khz Chinese
  • Australia
    • 15460 Japanese and English - Reach Beyond Australia (HCJB)
  • Philipines
    • 15250khz Chinese - Voice of America
  • Cuba
    • 15140khz

Matthew

Matthew passed his test for Technician. Callsigns:

  • GMRS: WRXX561
  • HAM: KC3WRY

He can use 10m and up with technician license.

callsign  gmrs  ham 

SW Broadcast

I heard around 31m band (9700khz):

  • Romania
  • Cairo
  • France
  • Turkye

Also:

  • 11620khz Romania
  • 11850khz Kuwait
  • 13590 Algeria
  • 13790 Algeria

ISS Repeater

I tuned to the ISS Repeater on 437.8Mhz as it went overhead (according to gpredict). I couldn’t hear anything really, but I saw a signal sweeping in and out (doppler shift) as it would have been crossing over head.

Busy 40m

I used the fully-extended, large dipole kit and the RTL-SDR to successfully receive lots of 40m signals. It may have been especially busy, since it was Labor Day in the US and Canada. I found FT8 (40m and elsewhere) signals from St Lucia, Slovinia, South America, Cuba, and a little FT4 (40m).

I also found some BPSK31, RTTY/45, and still unidentified digital signals.

HF  FT8  FT4  SDR  rtty  PSK31  DX  digital