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Old February 7th 06, 04:01 AM
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Nov 2005
Location: san francisco, ca
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Telamon
20 MHz WWV weak and WWVH not at all.
15 MHz WWV strong and WWVH a little weaker.
10 MHz WWV and WWVH strong.
5 MHz WWV weak and WWVH not at all.
By the way, both WWV and WWVH send QSL cards. I requested additional information about the station operations from WWV, and received a 72-page softcover booklet called NIST Time and Frequency Services. It contains lots of history and technical information.
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Old February 7th 06, 08:24 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
HFguy
 
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Default WWV and WWVH on 20MHz

http://tf.nist.gov/timefreq/stations/wwvhistory.htm
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Old February 7th 06, 02:21 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
Jim Hackett
 
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Default WWV and WWVH on 20MHz

Don't forget 2.5 Mhz!



"weatherall" wrote in message
...

Telamon Wrote:
20 MHz WWV weak and WWVH not at all.
15 MHz WWV strong and WWVH a little weaker.
10 MHz WWV and WWVH strong.
5 MHz WWV weak and WWVH not at all.


By the way, both WWV and WWVH send QSL cards. I requested additional
information about the station operations from WWV, and received a
72-page softcover booklet called NIST Time and Frequency Services. It
contains lots of history and technical information.


--
weatherall



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