Hi Barry et al,
I understand this is a contesting reflector. But, in the long run, I
think the amateur radio community should consider running WSPR on 2
meters which runs at 5Hz bandwidth, allows some serious weak signal
decoding and runs 24/7, as we work and sleep. The results are sent to an
online website, which all can see and can be operated as an rx only or
as a tx only, or both.
Frequency stability is important to the mode, but WSPR allows the entire
beacon operation to run in a single 200 Hz band.
http://wsprnet.org/drupal/wsprnet/map
The map here has settings which can be programmed to show bands and time
periods of reception.
Art
On 08/11/2018 07:54 PM, barry@k7bwh.com wrote:
> Also for those interested in digital modes and frequencies on VHF
> bands in the Pacific Northwest:
> http://pnwvhfs.org/digital-modes.html
>
> Barry K7BWH
>
> On Aug 11, 2018, at 4:14 PM, James C <jabeco@gmail.com
> <mailto:jabeco@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>> FWIW,
>> Here in the PNW at the last conference of the Pacific Northwest VHF
>> society, 144.174 was adopted as the 144mhz FT8 calling frequency.
>> .-James K7KQA DN06
>>
>>
>>
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