Modest stations?
Well, compared to W5UN.....
But, the 50-160Watts and single 2-3wavelength Yagi that
most people have I would consider "average". In CN87QL I
ran a severely modified Cushcraft A147-11 (stretched boom
length to 20 feet, elements D3 to end spaced double the
stock distance, fed with a T match...) and 70 or so watts,
from a modified Mirage amp. (B1016G with driver transistor
removed, input retuned, so now 30W in!)
This is a bit more boom length than the rover and half the
power from a terrible home QTH for VHF. Still made 19Q's
and 4 grids. Two of the mults were from VE7DXG/Rover up on
Vancouver Island, some 130 miles distant over less than
forgiving terrain.
The powerline noise, not normally a problem here, decided
to kick into high gear just as the tropo from down South
started to pick up. Yuck. Missed a multiplier and at least
2 Q's due to the noise.
Eric
KB7DQH
On Wed, 5 Apr 2006 13:00:51 -0400
"Joel Stanley" <kc8dqh@gmail.com> wrote:
> The band was relatively quiet in EN82ir. From 7 PM local
> to 9 PM
> local, I was able to make six QSOs in two grid squares.
> I heard a
> third, but was unable to make that QSO.
>
> Alex KR1ST wrote:
> > The rig was a FT-897 running 50 Watts. I get a chuckle
> out folks calling their
> > multi-hecto-Watt -with-deca-plus-element-beam-stations
> "modest". :-)
>
> Total agreement here! :-) My station is a FT-736R,
> advertised as 25
> W, 40 feet of 9913, and a Cushcraft A27010S advertised as
> 10dBd and at
> 31 feet AGL, aimed south.
>
> I hope to hear all of you during the 70 cm Sprint!
>
> 73 de Joel KC8DQH
> _______________________________________________
> VHFcontesting mailing list
> VHFcontesting@contesting.com
>
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/vhfcontesting
_______________________________________________
VHFcontesting mailing list
VHFcontesting@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/vhfcontesting
|