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Guy Atkins November 6th 07 06:42 AM

DXpedition to Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii) Article on DXing.info
 
MW DXers may enjoy the newly posted www.DXing.info article about the DXpedition to the Queen Charlotte Islands I recently attended: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/ha...aii_09_2007.dx. Logging stations such as Sri Lanka, Sao Tome, Vietnam, Algeria, Libya, UK, and Holland from the west coast of North America--on medium wave-- was a real hoot!

Guy KE7MAV
Puyallup, WA

[email protected] November 6th 07 01:50 PM

DXpedition to Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii) Article on DXing.info
 
On Nov 6, 12:42?am, "Guy Atkins" wrote:
MW DXers may enjoy the newly postedwww.DXing.infoarticle about the DXpedition to the Queen Charlotte Islands I recently attended: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/ha...aii_09_2007.dx. Logging stations such as Sri Lanka, Sao Tome, Vietnam, Algeria, Libya, UK, and Holland from the west coast of North America--on medium wave-- was a real hoot!

Guy KE7MAV
Puyallup, WA


Guy,

This is fascinating. What receivers and other peripherals were you
using? How did the antennas compare, particularly the Wellbrook array
vs.the Beverages?

Thanks and 73

John KC0G


[email protected] November 6th 07 02:48 PM

DXpedition to Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii) Article on DXing.info
 
Great loggings and great report Guy!
You fella's sure had a wonderful time
A DXpedition from a great site is sure fun.

John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa
South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s
RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods
Drake SW8 & ERGO software
Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100
BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A.
Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270
Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whip
http://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx

On Nov 6, 8:42 am, "Guy Atkins" wrote:
MW DXers may enjoy the newly postedwww.DXing.infoarticle about the DXpedition to the Queen Charlotte Islands I recently attended: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/ha...aii_09_2007.dx. Logging stations such as Sri Lanka, Sao Tome, Vietnam, Algeria, Libya, UK, and Holland from the west coast of North America--on medium wave-- was a real hoot!

Guy KE7MAV
Puyallup, WA




Guy Atkins November 6th 07 04:33 PM

DXpedition to Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii) Article on DXing.info
 
Hi John,

Among the five DXers, we had the following:

1 - SDR-1000 w/HPSDR
2 - Winradio g313e
3 - SDR-IQ
1 - NRD-535D Kiwa modded
1 - Drake R8A
1 - Drake R8B
2 - Eton E1
1 - AR7030+

We were all using laptop computers as usual on our DXpeditions, and of
course the computers are needed to run the SDR radios. I suppose the other
main peripherals were the various splitters and impedance matchers always
necessary for a group DXing event like this. Most of us use hard drive
recording software such as RecAll Pro or Total Recorder Pro to capture
audio. Most of the SDR gear in use has the ability to record swaths of RF
spectrum to a wav (IQ) file for later analysis, so most of us had external
hard drives (320-500 gb) with us.

We've used the prototype Wellbrook arrays on DXpeditions beginning in June,
as well as during this QCI DXpedition. In a nutshell, it is probably the
antenna that's come the closest to Beverage antenna performance as I've ever
encountered. The F/B ratio is excellent on most signals, particularly if the
unwanted signal is on-axis with the array's orientation. We noted as much as
45 dB attenuation in these cases (using the forward/reverse switch on the
array's control box, and measured with the highly accurate signal meters on
the SDR radios). There were instances where either the Beverages or the
Wellbrook arrays (we had two arrays in use) were notably better than the
other, but most of the time they were comparable. During the summer
DXpeditions at the WA coast, more often than not we found the Wellbrook
performance exceeding our "rather short" 800 ft. Beverage antennas.
Sometimes the longer Beverage aimed northwest (1200 ft.) was better.
However, the Wellbrook does its job with just 40 meters (approx. 131 ft.) of
element spacing!

73,

Guy


wrote in message
ups.com...
On Nov 6, 12:42?am, "Guy Atkins" wrote:
MW DXers may enjoy the newly postedwww.DXing.infoarticle about the
DXpedition to the Queen Charlotte Islands I recently attended:
http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/ha...aii_09_2007.dx. Logging
stations such as Sri Lanka, Sao Tome, Vietnam, Algeria, Libya, UK, and
Holland from the west coast of North America--on medium wave-- was a real
hoot!

Guy KE7MAV
Puyallup, WA


Guy,

This is fascinating. What receivers and other peripherals were you
using? How did the antennas compare, particularly the Wellbrook array
vs.the Beverages?

Thanks and 73

John KC0G




[email protected] November 8th 07 02:04 PM

DXpedition to Queen Charlotte Islands (Haida Gwaii) Article on DXing.info
 
Guy,

Thank you very much.

73 John KC0G


On Nov 6, 10:33?am, "Guy Atkins" wrote:
Hi John,

Among the five DXers, we had the following:

1 - SDR-1000 w/HPSDR
2 - Winradio g313e
3 - SDR-IQ
1 - NRD-535D Kiwa modded
1 - Drake R8A
1 - Drake R8B
2 - Eton E1
1 - AR7030+

We were all using laptop computers as usual on our DXpeditions, and of
course the computers are needed to run the SDR radios. I suppose the other
main peripherals were the various splitters and impedance matchers always
necessary for a group DXing event like this. Most of us use hard drive
recording software such as RecAll Pro or Total Recorder Pro to capture
audio. Most of the SDR gear in use has the ability to record swaths of RF
spectrum to a wav (IQ) file for later analysis, so most of us had external
hard drives (320-500 gb) with us.

We've used the prototype Wellbrook arrays on DXpeditions beginning in June,
as well as during this QCI DXpedition. In a nutshell, it is probably the
antenna that's come the closest to Beverage antenna performance as I've ever
encountered. The F/B ratio is excellent on most signals, particularly if the
unwanted signal is on-axis with the array's orientation. We noted as much as
45 dB attenuation in these cases (using the forward/reverse switch on the
array's control box, and measured with the highly accurate signal meters on
the SDR radios). There were instances where either the Beverages or the
Wellbrook arrays (we had two arrays in use) were notably better than the
other, but most of the time they were comparable. During the summer
DXpeditions at the WA coast, more often than not we found the Wellbrook
performance exceeding our "rather short" 800 ft. Beverage antennas.
Sometimes the longer Beverage aimed northwest (1200 ft.) was better.
However, the Wellbrook does its job with just 40 meters (approx. 131 ft.) of
element spacing!

73,

Guy




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