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In article , SR wrote:
The last few evening the moon was almost full and the evening sky was fairly clear here in New York. I then transmitted on my CB but no DX only locals. I read something somewhere that mention about Moon Bouncing. Meaning that a signal can travel far. But I am not sure if that is true. It's a VHF and microwave thing. You actually illuminate the Moon with enough power that another station back on Earth can pick up the reflection. But that requires an antenna that can focus most of your power on the Moon, a target only 1/2 degree across. Hams, with 1 kilowatt, can get morse code and slow digital signals (on the higher bands). Before satellites the Defense Department was able to send several teletype channels at at time, maritime mobile. That was with a big dish and probably 10's of kilowatts. (The best description of using that equipment, that I've seen, was in a description of the incident where the USS Liberty, the radio intelligence ship, was attacked by the Israelis. In the Atlantic Monthly about 10-15 years ago, as I remember). Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
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