Scott,
Burn the midnight oil a little more and move a little lower in
frequency, 7.000 - 7.025. Pop out a CQ around midnight (EST) when
the Europeans are having their first cup of coffee and if you
don't find yourself on the receiving end of a European pile up
it's time to check your antenna :-) I do that now and then and
find myself still there at 2:00 AM when the tooth picks in my
eyelids are beginning to fail :-) The same is true of 80 meters -
last night it was jumping. The low end of 30 meters is also good
most of the evening. I agree that it is slow during the day and I
find myself on PSK31 a lot.
----
73, Rich - W3ZJ
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-tentec@contesting.com
> [mailto:owner-tentec@contesting.com]On
> Behalf Of Ten-Tec Inc. Amateur Radio Sales
> Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2001 12:58 PM
> To: tentec@contesting.com
> Subject: [TenTec] CW inactivity
>
>
>
> >That's been my experience, too. I was first licensed
> in the mid-60's
> >and the cw bands were very busy, especially at night.
> You didn't even
> >need a calibrated receiver to find the ham bands. 40
> is still fairly
> >active during the day on weekends, but 80 cw is really
> dead except
> >for a few traffic nets, even at night.
>
> Over the last 18 years I have spent a lot of time
> ragchewing on 40
> meter CW in the 7.030 range where many of the QRQ CW gang
> are lurking. Back even about 10 years ago, I could get on 7.030
> +/- 5 kHz and call CQ at 35-40 WPM and get a response after a
> couple of tries any time of the day or night. I used to stealth
> operate in the middle of the night when I was in high school in
> the early and mid 1980's and could always raise someone.
>
> Nowadays, most of my operating is "prime time" weeknights - in
> the 8 pm to 10 pm Eastern window. Often I will call CQ for
> quite a while around 7.030 without receiving a response. Then
> try 20 or 80 meters and much the same thing will happen. After
> 15 or 20 minutes of this I find myself drifting to SSB or the AM
> shortwave bands....I'm on the radio a lot these days, just not
> transmitting very much, it seems.
>
> Scott Robbins, W4PA
>
>
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
> ---------
> Ten-Tec, Inc., 1185 Dolly Parton Pkwy, Sevierville, TN
> 37862 USA
> Contact Mon-Fri Eastern: Office/Tech (865) 453-7172 9
> am-5 pm.
> Repair (865) 428-0364 8-4. Sales (800) 833-7373 9 am-5:30 pm.
> Fax (865) 428-4483 24 hrs. Visit us at
> <http://www.tentec.com>
>
> --->--->---> Please note: E-mail <sales@tentec.com> for sales
> and general product info only. We presently do not offer
> repair, parts, or kit building tech support by
> electronic mail,
> please telephone (865) 428-0364 or (865) 453-7172.
>
> Ten-Tec manufactures amateur radio equipment,
> military and com-
> mercial use HF radio equipment, custom aluminum and steel
> enclosures and has an on-premises, fully equipped tool and die
> facility supplying metal and plastic injection mold
> industries.
> Potential tool and die, custom enclosure or communications
> electronics customer? Contact us with your needs.
>
>
>
> --
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> Problems: owner-tentec@contesting.com
>
>
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