Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz
Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
On May 2, 2:40*pm, wrote:
Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim Hi, Jim - is 40 meters generally open right now? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
On Sun, 2 May 2010 15:21:56 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen
wrote: On May 2, 2:40*pm, wrote: Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim Hi, Jim - is 40 meters generally open right now? Depends. Midwest propagation is good both short and long path from about 1900UTC on becoming longer until just before sunset when there is a peak in propagation to Europe and then the middle east. In the early morning local time many Australian hams join in the local nets just before sunrise. The band goes more local again a few hours after sunrise. In think peak propagation on 40m to Europe is 0000UT around here because I talked to G4ATA in England like he was local last week at that time. Jim |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
On May 2, 5:24*pm, wrote:
On Sun, 02 May 2010 19:24:46 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 2 May 2010 15:21:56 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen wrote: On May 2, 2:40*pm, wrote: Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim Hi, Jim - is 40 meters generally open right now? Depends. Midwest propagation is good both short and long path from about 1900UTC on becoming longer until just before sunset when there is a peak in propagation to Europe and then the middle east. In the early morning local time many Australian hams join in the local nets just before sunrise. The band goes more local again a few hours after sunrise. In think peak propagation on 40m to Europe is 0000UT around here because I talked to G4ATA in England like he was local last week at that time. Jim Propagation generally can be figured out from the gray line map:http://dx..qsl.net/propagation/greyline.html However, 40 meters can be kind of an outlier. When conditions are good it can propagate signals worldwide (like 31m and 25m) for a good portion of day. This is why broadcasters don't want to give it up. Jim Indeed. Regarding the grayline, what I have found is that, not only is propagation right along the terminator good, but - even after darkness been over us for awhile, even into the wee hours, stations along the sunrise terminator continue to be enhanced until an hour or so after their sunrise. A wonderful thing! I rarely get good international BC reception on 40/41 meters during the day; very spotty. Bruce |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
On May 2, 8:34*pm, bpnjensen wrote:
On May 2, 5:24*pm, wrote: On Sun, 02 May 2010 19:24:46 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 2 May 2010 15:21:56 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen wrote: On May 2, 2:40*pm, wrote: Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim Hi, Jim - is 40 meters generally open right now? Depends. Midwest propagation is good both short and long path from about 1900UTC on becoming longer until just before sunset when there is a peak in propagation to Europe and then the middle east. In the early morning local time many Australian hams join in the local nets just before sunrise. The band goes more local again a few hours after sunrise. In think peak propagation on 40m to Europe is 0000UT around here because I talked to G4ATA in England like he was local last week at that time. Jim Propagation generally can be figured out from the gray line map:http://dx.qsl.net/propagation/greyline.html However, 40 meters can be kind of an outlier. When conditions are good it can propagate signals worldwide (like 31m and 25m) for a good portion of day. This is why broadcasters don't want to give it up. Jim Indeed. *Regarding the grayline, what I have found is that, not only is propagation right along the terminator good, but - even after darkness been over us for awhile, even into the wee hours, stations along the sunrise terminator continue to be enhanced until an hour or so after their sunrise. *A wonderful thing! I rarely get good international BC reception on 40/41 meters during the day; very spotty. Bruce- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - When conditions are good,40 meter band is excellent in late afternoon/ nighttime, in general. Lately,it is actually much worse than 49 meter at night. We definetely need more sunspots. When is the new solar cycle going to take off? |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Radio Sweden (Madagascar)
On May 3, 12:02*am, wrote:
On May 2, 8:34*pm, bpnjensen wrote: On May 2, 5:24*pm, wrote: On Sun, 02 May 2010 19:24:46 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 2 May 2010 15:21:56 -0700 (PDT), bpnjensen wrote: On May 2, 2:40*pm, wrote: Radio Sweden - Madagascar relay heard s/on 2130UTC / 7460kHz Music was clear but voice audio modulation was poor. Jim Hi, Jim - is 40 meters generally open right now? Depends. Midwest propagation is good both short and long path from about 1900UTC on becoming longer until just before sunset when there is a peak in propagation to Europe and then the middle east. In the early morning local time many Australian hams join in the local nets just before sunrise. The band goes more local again a few hours after sunrise. In think peak propagation on 40m to Europe is 0000UT around here because I talked to G4ATA in England like he was local last week at that time. Jim Propagation generally can be figured out from the gray line map:http://dx.qsl.net/propagation/greyline.html However, 40 meters can be kind of an outlier. When conditions are good it can propagate signals worldwide (like 31m and 25m) for a good portion of day. This is why broadcasters don't want to give it up. Jim Indeed. *Regarding the grayline, what I have found is that, not only is propagation right along the terminator good, but - even after darkness been over us for awhile, even into the wee hours, stations along the sunrise terminator continue to be enhanced until an hour or so after their sunrise. *A wonderful thing! I rarely get good international BC reception on 40/41 meters during the day; very spotty. Bruce- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - When conditions are good,40 meter band is excellent in late afternoon/ nighttime, in general. Lately,it is actually much worse than *49 meter at night. We definetely need more sunspots. When is the new solar cycle going to take off?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - 40/41 is also really good in the morning too, a fine source for Asian outlets. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Radio Sweden | Shortwave | |||
Radio Sweden - "We're back (I hope)..." | Broadcasting | |||
Radio Sweden - "We're back (I hope)..." | Shortwave | |||
Radio Sweden B-04 | Shortwave | |||
Radio Sweden B04 | Shortwave |