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Owen is correct- and anyone operateing 10& 6
meters will tell you the same thing! Have been on 6 for around 45 years now, an can attest that "E" openings can occur ANYTIME, day, or nite! And, the "E" layer is ionized , to a degree, 24 hours per day (There are more than a few running "Scatter", with power levels of 100-1KW makeing contacts, when the band(s) are literally closed ). Es is the "bread and butter" of the VHF operator, rangeing from 35-400 miles for super intense openings, out to 1200, or so miles, when the band is barely open. Figure stations (on scatter), from Montana, New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming being copied with NO major opening, into Reno, Nevada! And, keep in mind, you also get Double hop, 2 adjacent (or more) layers , giveing you cross country capabilities. One further thing: IF you shea short E skip on a band (say 10 meters), odds are great that 6 is open; Same for 6 meter short skip, often means that 2 meters, or at least F.M.Broadcasts (88-108 MHz) will be open!. F2 is associated with sunspots-Es seems to get worse as sunspot activity increases!Might you find this interesting? Jim NN7K Owen Duffy wrote: I don't really know much about sporadic E, have a vague idea what it is and that's about all, but doesn't it assume that there is an E layer to begin with? This was about 7:30 PM, sunset was around 4:45 PM, and the E layer would have been pretty much gone along with the sun, wouldn't it? Sporadic E does not depend on sunlight, it is one of the mysteries of Es. Owen -- |