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wrote in message ups.com... Guy Atkins is very lucky to live in what must be one of the quitest RF environments around. My home RF level isn't as bad as I had thought, I know see what real bad RFI is, but at that there is very little I can hear on a AOR7030+, R8B, or a R2000. Yes, it's very quiet here in the Pacific NW, with the fewest "thunderstorm days" of any place in the continental USA. In mid-winter, with a Western Beverage antenna at dawn, aimed out over the Pacific Ocean, you'd swear your receiver was defective, or the antenna broken. In these conditions, extremely faint tropical band and foreign (TP) mediumwave signals have a fighting chance to be heard (assuming a top-notch, low noise receiver like a AR7030 or my current fave, the SDR-1000. It was under these mid-winter, dawn enhancement conditions that I heard tantalizing faint signals around 3174 kHz (variable) in the late 1990s, which had all the clues of Indonesian "amatir" stations. Think: Indo college kids back home on holiday or weekend breaks, playing non-stop Indo rock music with flea-powered transmitters, no IDs, often distorted audio, no official "RRI" news at the top of the hour, etc. I've heard enough of the real RRI and RPD Indonesian stations to recognize the Indo amatir (pirate) station. Similarly, I've logged very low power Australian x-band stations such as Radio Brisvaani, the Hindi station on 1701 kHz (Brisbane, Queensland). I'd never have a chance to hear this sort of DX, however, at home in the suburban RF jungle near Seattle-Tacoma. These catches were on coastal DXpeditions, under ideal conditions. I do have pretty low noise levels of the RFI, hash-and-buzz sort at home, due to the underground AC mains. The main problem are the dozen or so MW stations registering S-9+40 to S-9+60 dB on the SDR's (calibrated) signal meter. My local 1 kw'er, 1450 KSUH in Puyallup, is a bit over 1 mile from home. When I had a 700 ft. Beverage antenna aimed at my Asian targets, the antenna unfortunately was oriented right at KSUH, too. The signal on 1450 from that antenna registered -13 dBm, which is, I believe, around S-9+65 dB. This is an example of what the trans-Pacific MW stations need to fight through to be heard in a suburban location like this. So far, I'm finding the Wellbrook ALA 100 on a rotator does just fine for snagging the foreign MW DX that makes it through the RF jungle; a Beverage is no advantage. 73, Guy Atkins Puyallup, WA www.sdr-1000.blogspot.com |
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