The answer to QRN is to learn and use CW using an adequate receiver and low
noise receiving antennas.
As long as darkness paths prevail at both ends it is possible to work
worldwide DX on 80/160 in any month with a bit of cooperation from the sun.
Carl
KM1H
80% CW, 15% AM, 5% SSB on HF/MF
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jim Thomson" <Jim.thom@telus.net>
To: <amps@contesting.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 20, 2010 5:24 AM
Subject: [Amps] QRO vs QRP
> The same is true for a noisy band. 160, 75, and 40 are particularly
> prone to QRN and the warmer the weather the worse it gets. If 75 is
> open in the evening, thunderstorms from Georgia to Florida, to Texas can
> be S-9 or louder up here in the central part of Michigan. That's when
> you hope for some one out there to call you that is running power. OTOH
> if you call CQ running power when the band is noisy in your area you are
> likely to miss quite a few answers from areas with less noise. In the
> massive pileups power may be a considerable help for the one running it,
> but timing and technique will trump power quite often unless the station
> is running REAL POWER. OTOH some one in the pile up running power, but
> with poor timing and technique is a hindrance to every one.
> Still if it gets the station with poor timing and technique out of the
> pileup quicker then the rest of us benefit.
>
> Remember that power like many things is a double edge sword
>
> 73 and good luck,
>
> Roger (K8RI)
>
> ## Our small group on 75m agreed to have all it's member's run at least
> 1 kw
> output. The idea was, then everyone could hear everyone else. Then along
> comes the odd break in from the 100 w fellows [summertime static crash's]
> who none of could hear very well. One of the 100 w stations broke in, and
> gave us all this 14 minute stinging lecture, about the evils of QRO, I
> why the
> legal limit should be 100w max, blah blah. The fellow was Q1 copy, so
> we
> just talked right over top of him. The normal deal, when that happens,
> is, we record
> them, then send them a MP-3 file, so they know what they sound like at
> our end.
>
> ## Then once in a while, some 3 watt pep station breaks in, [trys to] and
> go's
> on and on and on about how wonderful real qrp is. The fix for this is,
> we all
> switch the linears to bypass mode, then reduce the xcvr power output to
> say
> 2-5 w pep. The QRP fellow immediately complains that he can't HEAR any
> of
> us ! We do the same technique in summer time, with the 100w stations,
> we all drop to
> 100w, then they complain , "i can't hear, can u pse turn the amp back on"
>
> ## sure, ant's are great and everything, but most folks are maxed out,
> then what?
> How do u get another 10 db on 160m... you can't ! If ur inverted v on
> 75m is up 60'
> and that's all you can do, there is no way to get any more ant gain, ur
> maxed out.
>
> ## some will say, 'u can't work em, if you can's hear em' To that I
> say.." you can't work
> em, if they can't HEAR you" Amps are great, one small box, that provides
> another 10-12db
> of gain on ALL bands ! [only on TX] Ok, it doesn't work on RX... well
> that's the other fellow's
> two edged sword. It's actually cheaper for both stations on a noisy 75m
> band to have an amp,
> vs each station trying to figure out how to increase ant gain by 13 db .
>
> Just my 2 cents.
>
> later.... Jim VE7RF
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