I was there too Mike, for way too many hours! Up here they peaked at -10
and were usually -16 or so. They never heard my kw+ and full size 4
square. Same on 80m earlier. For that area of the world, their transmit
signal was pretty weak (that night) and their rx certainly is poor. I
thought conditions were fairly decent.
Don VE6JY
On Mon, Oct 21, 2024 at 3:03 AM Michael Tope <W4EF@dellroy.com> wrote:
> C21MM has been in solid for well over 1.5 hours on FT8 tonight and it's
> still early. They were loud enough at times (at least on my end) for a
> CW QSO, but they didn't decode my signal on FT8 until their signal
> peaked up to R=0, whereas on this end I was decoding solidly down to
> R=-20. Clearly they have some receive challenges. The DHDL antenna that
> C21MM plans to use for receive has been employed by AA7JV on some of his
> expeditions, so it's got a proven track record. Perhaps there is a storm
> that is very close to them causing unusually high QRN.
>
> I need to go to bed, today is a work day 🙁
>
> 73, Mike W4EF.................
>
> On 10/20/2024 6:13 PM, Wes Stewart via Topband wrote:
> > The realities about some of these DXpedtions is that they are
> organized by Europeans and favor working EU. Take the just concluded (if
> they kept to schedule) PX0FF expedition. The ops were all Europeans and
> >60% of their Qs were with EU and only 21% were with NA. They didn't even
> operate 160 CW. They made 1046 FT8 QSOs on 160 out of >150,000 total.
> >
> > 8R7X was another one with EU 54% and NA 31%. Of course propagation
> favored EU, but they were active long enough that I worked them on both 160
> CW and FT8 as well as 22 other band/modes.
> > Ditto A8OK that I worked on 33 band/modes, none on topband. EU 64%, NA
> 19%.
> > I'm not trying to disparage our EU friends, I'm just pointing out the
> numbers.
> >
> > C21MM will be QRV for at least another week. So far they haven't made
> any topband CW contacts and only 6 with NA presumably on FT8. They claim
> to have installed an RX antenna, but have high noise. So we shall see, but
> I'm not holding my breath. To their credit they have worked about the same
> number of CW and FT8 Qs and a few on RTTY, three of them mine.
> >
> > AA7JV is a dedicated 160 man, who will put in the hours needed. These
> other guys are not so motivated and want to run up their Q count by working
> the most productive bands, or by turning on the FT8 robots.
> > Wes N7WS
> >
> >
> > On Sunday, October 20, 2024 at 12:11:54 PM MST, Jim Brown <
> jim@audiosystemsgroup.com> wrote:
> >
> > On 10/20/2024 11:14 AM, Steve Harrison wrote:
> >> If possible, please spend some time attempting to work some North
> >> American stations on *160 and/or 80m **CW*. A few minutes here and there
> >> is NOT enough; HOURS on the low bands are needed in order to catch the
> >> propagation peaks all across the NA and SA continents.
> > YES! Veteran expeditioner AA7JV recognized that topband openings tended
> > to happen on one or two nights of a multi-week activation, and developed
> > networks to allow simultaneous operation on CW and FT8 during every hour
> > there's a possibility of propagation. One of the most glaring failures
> > is abandoning the band at the first hint of daylight, when propagation
> > PEAKS over the next 45 minutes to an hour!
> >
> > 73, Jim K9YC
> >
> >
> >
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