VHFcontesting
[Top] [All Lists]

[VHFcontesting] 222 Night Summary Halloween K1WHS

To: "NEWSVHF@mailman.qth.net" <NEWSVHF@mailman.qth.net>, "222 >> 222Activity@groups.io" <222Activity@groups.io>, "vhfcontesting@contesting.com" <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: [VHFcontesting] 222 Night Summary Halloween K1WHS
From: David Olean <k1whs@metrocast.net>
Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2023 10:48:18 -0400
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
wow!  What a night on 222 MHz. To say it was exciting is an understatement. With the Tropo Map showing zippo for conditions, I figured that things would be slow. I started off by swapping out my defunct circuit breaker, a Cutler Hammer 30 amp 230 volt unit. That was accomplished in the afternoon. I did not test things under power, but was sure that I had found the problem. The old breaker was definitely "hosed". I fired things up at 22:45 UT and K1FSY was my first QSO. I was immediately aware that my LVA and the 222 MHz liaison antenna were not working. I could not hear anything when they were selected, but the tower mtd preamp on the four rotating yagis was working, so I spent the evening using just the four rotating yagis. There is an indoor preamp that gets bypassed when the tower preamp is activated. I figured that with the HV power supply dropping out during transmit, all the coax relay cycling caused the indoor preamp to bite the dust. I monitored the circuit breaker all evening and it stayed cool and never hic cupped.

Initially, I thought that conditions were not that good. QSB was evident on K1PXE and VE2XX among others. I did not hear anyone in the Philly area and was wondering what might happen if I tried working WA3EOQ in FM09jo. As winter conditions take over, contacts with Howard get a bit more difficult with many repeats required. Last winter, we never missed a contact, but we had to try twice a few times. So last evening, I called WA3EOQ and heard him come right back sending his grid. Then W2TMA came on the same frequency calling N1JEZ.  That was rather unfortunate that we both chose 222.130 for a sked attempt at the same time.  I sent my grid and got a response right away from WA3EOQ as soon as W2TMA stopped xmitting. That was fortunate as I did not want to mess up another sked.  So the really long haul attenuation on a 500 mile path was not that different from a day when the tropo map shows local enhancements, and local signals are loud.  Sometimes that is difficult for me to grapple with, but it is true. A short time later, I worked George KC1V in CT and signed with him and heard N1LHP calling me along with another station. I had the sharp antenna aimed at 216 degrees, a good heading for Milford CT and Pete K1PXE. It also allows me to hear stations west of Boston in FN42. So I stood by for the other SSB station who was under N1LHP, and it was  Cornell KO4YC in VA, a bit north of Richmond! He was a good S3 and I peaked the antenna on him and he was a very nice 5X4 or so on SSB. We never missed a word, which is FB for a 510 mile path.  That convinced me to try an FT8 attemptv with K3SK in FM07 and 570 miles away. Nothing heard though.  The northern contingent in VT were active and N1JEZ, W1GHZ, W1AIM, and VE2XX were all doing well. No activity in Philadelphia and the VE3s were not visible here. Too bad, because the activity level was pretty good and I ended up with 27 different contacts. I managed to talk to Stu VE2XX twice!

Here is my log from last night.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   DATE     TIME CALLSIGN        LOCATOR TX       RX       BAND MODE PRO.REMARKS                                             QRB
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

10/31/2023 22:52 K1FSY           FN31MR  57              220 MHzSSB TR                                                     154 10/31/2023 22:54 N1JEZ           FN44AR   59              220 MHzSSB TR                                                     105 10/31/2023 23:01 WA1PBU      FN42EK   59              220 MHzSSB TR                                                      74 10/31/2023 23:16 K1FMS          FN32    59       59       220 MHzSSB  TR 118+- 10/31/2023 23:21 WA1RKS       FN32IN  559   559      220 MHzCW TR                                                      131 10/31/2023 23:22 K1ZK             FN34JJ  579               220 MHzCW   TR                                                      132 10/31/2023 23:29 W2BYP         FN13IB  579      579      220 MHzCW TR                                                      320 10/31/2023 23:32 K1PXE           FN31ke  57       57       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                      186 10/31/2023 23:35 WA1MBA     FN51AS  57      59        220 MHzSSB TR                                                      123 10/31/2023 23:40 W9KXI          FN12NE  57      57        220 MHzSSB  TR                                                      311 10/31/2023 23:42 N1GLT          FN42IW  57       59       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                       36 10/31/2023 23:43 K1NKR         FN42FI    57       59       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                       78 10/31/2023 23:45 WA3EOQ     FM09JO   429               220MHzCW TR                                                       502 10/31/2023 23:51 W2TMA       FN30HV  57                220 MHzSSB TR                                                      212 10/31/2023 23:54 KC1V            FN31    57                220 MHzSSB  TR 165+- 10/31/2023 23:55 N1LHP          FN42KM  57                220 MHzSSB  TR                                                       61 10/31/2023 23:56 KO4YC          FM17GV  57       55       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                      510 10/31/2023 23:59 N1LHP          FN42KM  57                220 MHzSSB  TR                                                       61 11/01/2023 00:06 WA1NLG      FN41XS  57                220 MHzFT8 TR                                                      122 11/01/2023 00:09 NZ3M           FN10PD  -7       -2       220 MHzFT8  TR                                                      372 11/01/2023 00:16 VE2XX          FN25WK  55       55       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                      210

11/01/2023 00:29 W1GHZ        FN34    55                220 MHzSSB TR                                                      126+- 11/01/2023 00:29 VE2XX          FN25WK  55       59       220 MHzSSB  TR                                                      210 11/01/2023 00:34 W1AIM        FN34    55                220 MHzSSB TR                                                      126+- 11/01/2023 02:14 KM0T           EN13VC  -16      -24      220 MHzQ65  EME                                                    1266 11/01/2023 02:15 K3SK             FM07TH  -21      -22      220 MHzQ65  EME                                                     573 11/01/2023 03:17 W2BYP         FN13IB  -24      -20      220 MHzQ65 EME Lost his HV supply so ran 90 watts from his driver  320 11/01/2023 03:21 N1AV            DM43FF  -17      -18      220 MHzQ65  EME                                                    2284
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


When the terrestrial activity died down, I figured that I would try some EME.  I immediately heard K3SK calling CQ around 01:00 UT. I called a number of times, but I was not making it. I watched his signal fade over about 15 minutes and then I was not hearing Dave, so I quit.  I was waiting for N1AV in Arizona to show up and had over an hour to wait before the Moon rose out in AZ. I decided to look at my defunct indoor preamp. I took off the cover of the 222 MHz coax relay and filter box and traced the wiring. I was quite surprised to see that the 12 volt preamp wire had been knocked off the connector on the back. I re attached it and  lo and behold, the preamp was operating again!  I called a CQ and had an immediate caller. I figured it was K3SK, but it was KM0T in Iowa and very loud while running his Larcan at 750 watts output. That was my first contact with Mike KM0T on EME. Right after that contact, I was called by K3SK who was at -21 dB.   All this time, W2BYP was getting ready to call on EME. John has a big 28 ft dish but has to wait until the Moon clears the tree foliage at about 30 degrees. He was hearing me, but as soon as he started calling he heard a loud crack from the HV supply and lost his HV.  He was off the air so announced that he was an SWL only. AFter a while I started CQing again and then heard W2BYP calling me with great signals at -21 or -20 dB on Q65. I figured he had fixed his HV supply, but after the QSO he announced that he had connected up his exciter to the antenna and was running just 90 watts.    90 watts? That is crazy. He was actually rather loud and was using less RF than needed to power a 100 watt light bulb.  Raising power to 1500 watts is a 12+ dB improvement. That means that his -20 signal would have been at -8 dB which is insanely strong.  The 28 ft dish is really playing on 222.  He will be a beacon on the band.

Right after the W2BYP contact, I started calling N1AV as the Moon was now just starting to clear the metal barn out in Arizona. I was greeted by a very large signal as soon as Jay started transmitting. He peaked at -16 or so, which is very audible in headphones with a 2.8 kHz bandwidth.  That made for four EME contacts and the EMEdegradation was fairly high last night.  It was getting late, but I heard KM0T work N1AV, and I also heard W2BYP calling N1AV. After a few sequences, W2BYP and N1AV also worked with John's 90 watts of exciter power.   So people, take notice of this.  222 EME is not hard. All it takes is to pay attention to how well you set up the gear. No matter what your feedline loss is, you will need a good selective preamp up at the antenna. The way noise works, is that a loss of 0.5 dB can result in a much greater loss in S/N ratio. This is due to the low sky temperatures encountered on 222 MHz.  I can compare my indoor preamp with the tower mtd preamp. I have 0.4 dB of feedline loss (160 ft LDF-7) and I see several dB of improvement. Coax is not ur friend on the higher frequencies. I have worked several contacts with horizon only EME stations at powers down to 200 watts at the antenna. It seems that the bottleneck for most is that they have hearing troubles. Put that preamp as close to the antenna as possible.

CU next week on 222 Night!

Dave K1WHS


_______________________________________________
VHFcontesting mailing list
VHFcontesting@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/vhfcontesting
<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>