I still have what I think is a still working Dr. DX in its original box, but no
Commdore computer anymore, so let me know if you are interested. You would
need a Commodore or some technical knowledge. It was an astounding program at
the time.
Dave K3ZJ
> On Dec 16, 2013, at 5:39 PM, kr2q@optimum.net wrote:
>
> I don't remember the year, but I used Dr. DX at Dayton, out in the one the
> convention center
> areas.
>
> They didn't have much of a pileup (people), but I gave it a try.
>
> For those who never got to play with it, you would set your call (location)
> and go. It "knew"
> what the bands (all of them) should be like for YOUR location (including for
> that time of day.
>
> So if you set it up for east coast USA and went to 80m at local noon time,
> the band was dead.
> But if you went to 80 at, say 10pm local time, it was hopping, including QRM
> and static crashes.
> But if you went to 10m at 10pm local time,
> hisssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss.
>
> I remember one guy set it up as if his call were an HS. All he had were JA
> callers on 20m at whatever
> time he had set it up for. Pretty cool stuff.
>
> And you "tuned the band" to find DX too. It was the BEST contest simulator
> I've ever experienced.
>
> Too bad there isn't something like that now with a windows GUI. During
> crappy SFI, it
> was more fun than the actual contest (not sure if that would still hold
> true...activity has
> just gone through the roof compared to back then...no matter what).
>
> Bring it back....I'd buy one!
>
> de Doug KR2Q
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