Pete KE9OA wrote:
Why? Take a look at a globe, and you will see that the most direct path from
Greenland to the USA is over the pole.
Here is a link to a map I just made up which shows the great circle path from
the (supposed) transmitter site near Tasiilaq, Greenland (airport code AGM) and
Holland, MI (airport code HLM).
http://makeashorterlink.com/?G13726F97
Show me where the path crosses the pole?
Steve
Holland, MI
Drake R7, R8 and R8B
http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm
Pete
"DxAce" wrote in message
...
Pete KE9OA wrote:
Down on 80 meters, the F layer would be the mode of propagation. I
wonder...................with Greenland being that far north. would it
propagate over the pole?
Why would it have to propagate over the pole to reach the East Coast USA
or even
Michigan for that matter?
Pete
"J999w" wrote in message
...
Isn't that around 2,000 miles? (East coast or MI). How many hops E
skip
is
that? Seems like a long shot at that time of day unless you've got
some
BIG
antennas on your side.
jw
wb9uai
E skip? What darn propagation school did you guys go to?
Sheesh, I ask a simple question...
Well, to cover 2,000 miles how many different propagation modes do you
have?
and what are the odds? E skip? F skip? What else is there for this
path???
I'd guess perhaps 2 hops for E skip would be the most prevalent mode
(I
could
be way off here). So what are the chances considering the time of day,
frequency (3.8mhz), transmitter power (?), high latitude the path has
to
cover,
and receiving equipment.
Just thinking out loud on this one.
jw
wb9uai