I’m running FT8 on 10m with only the internal battery. I’m finding I’m only able to push ~3W. SWR looks good.
On external power supply, I can push up to 10W
I’m running FT8 on 10m with only the internal battery. I’m finding I’m only able to push ~3W. SWR looks good.
On external power supply, I can push up to 10W
(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:
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.
I was using the horizontal dipole from the RTL-SDR v3 kit, fully-extended. I saw some good gray-line propagation into Asia.
I decoded an
iceberg map with fldigi from WeFAX.
qsstv tried to decode it as well as PD240, but poorly.
New Zealand SW station!
Gander HF Air Traffic HF is used for transatlantic routes.
Matthew passed his test for Technician. Callsigns:
He can use 10m and up with technician license.
I heard around 31m band (9700khz):
Also:
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.
I heard WWV, the Fort Collins time signal at 5MHz in Neffsville. It was beeps, chirps, and an announcement.
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.