A related issue is that frequencies ending in 0 and 5 tend
to attract casual operators who can't hear DX. Many times
I have heard them start up and call CQ on top of DX. I
like to choose a frequency ending in 2.5 to avoid the
casual ops. On the high end of 40, this neatly avoids
BCB stations, and any decent rig can notch out the 2.5
kHz heterodyne.
Rick N6RK
On 11/12/2018 10:04 AM, Filipe Lopes wrote:
Thanks to everyone who answered, basically I will be avoiding all /10 and
/9 frequencies.
73's Filipe Lopes
CT1ILT - CR6K
F4VPX - TM3M
<k8gg@voyager.net> escreveu no dia segunda, 12/11/2018 à(s) 19:01:
Filipe:
In the USA and Canada: 1810, 1820, 1830, 1840, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880,
1890, and every 10 KHz through 2000 KHz.
I missed some Eastern Europeans because they TX on 1870 in CQWW CW Contest
and we have loud 'birdie" signal from two nearby AM broadcast stations
near my QTH.
73, George, K8GG..
Hi
Is there a listing of such frequencies? Want to avoid those in the coming
contests
73's Filipe
CT1ILT CR5E CR6K
Sent from my Huawei Mate 8
Na(o) Seg, 12 de nov de 2018, 17:28, Mike Waters <mikewate@gmail.com>
escreveu:
I wish we could get the word out to avoid frequencies like that: 1810,
1820, 1830, etc. There are almost always AM BC harmonics on those freqs.
73, Mike
www.w0btu.com
On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 4:24 PM k1zm--- via Topband <
topband@contesting.com>
wrote:
Band still down a bit from last week but 4k6fo good sigs now on 1830.0
from Alim.
73 JEFF
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