Thread: Memo To: dxAce
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Old February 17th 10, 04:12 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
bpnjensen bpnjensen is offline
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Default Memo To: dxAce

On Feb 17, 5:14*am, dave wrote:
dxAce wrote:

dave wrote:


bpnjensen wrote:


Thanks - yes, I was including that in my verbal "equipment" bundle.
Looks great!


Moreover, no PC near the radio. *So, more hardware too. *I am
(probably to your chagrin) a pretty old-fashioned guy when it comes to
radio. *I like the catch to be fairly tough (although QRN sucks).


Bruce


Like I said, my antenna is 30' away from my computer. *I live in a
neighborhood with underground power lines and no detectable light
dimmers. *I can hear very weak stations from Europe that no one else on
the West Coast of the USA can get.


No one? And you know this how?


* My K3 was the only 20 meter PSK31 autospotter (out of at least a dozen
on the West Coast) to hear a station from Scotland last week. *This
stuff is reported on a Google map in near real time. *SWLs are welcome
to participate. *It's jolly good fun and boffo yocks. *Sure beats
trying[?] to hear 100,000 Watt stations from Maine or Cuba.

www.pskreporter.info- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Dave, I checked the link but it seems broken. Can you give us a few
details? Freq, antenna, time and etc? This sounds quite interesting.

BTW, you are lucky - My neighborhood does NOT have buried powerlines
(in fact, we have more than our share of aerial cordage) and the noise
levels reflect it. Light dimmers and other noise sources are legion.
Did get some good copy on hams from South America the other night on
40, though - but still have to wait for the sunspots to rise again
before the subkilowatt fleas come banging through again.

I will say, though, that the newest types of spiral fluorescent bulbs,
when new and working properly, give off no perceptible RFI. I am
impressed.

Bruce Jensen