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Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal

To: <donovanf@starpower.net>, <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal
From: "Ed Sawyer" <sawyered@earthlink.net>
Reply-to: sawyered@earthlink.net
Date: Tue, 1 Mar 2016 19:33:03 -0500
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Frank, I have never focused on the reflection points.  But obviously, that is 
where the interaction is most critical.

 

I notice that my path to EU is virtually the same as K3LR, just somewhat 
shorter.

 

73 and thanks for the info and enlightenment.

 

Ed  N1UR

 

From: donovanf@starpower.net [mailto:donovanf@starpower.net] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 1, 2016 7:00 PM
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal

 

Hi Ed,

 

The first ionospheric reflection point for propagation from

K3LR and W3LPL to Europe is over Eastern Canada.  For high 

angles its located near the U.S border, for low angles it near 

Labrador and Newfoundland.  

 

There will usually be at least one additional ionospheric reflection 

point, in the North Atlantic west of Ireland.  For both reflection

points and for any specific propagation path to Europe, K3LR's

ionospheric reflection points are about 200 miles NW of  W3LPL's 

reflection points. 

 

Normally 200 miles wouldn't make much difference, but near 60

degrees magnetic latitude the difference in MUF is sometimes

significant.  The mid-latitude trough frequently (but not always)

occurs during darkness near 60 degrees magnetic latitude during

the fall and winter and sometimes the more southerly reflection

point will be outside the trough while the more northerly reflection

point may be in the trough.  When this occurs, the MUF will 

degrade earlier in the day for K3LR than for W3LPL.

 

You can clearly see the electron depletion caused by the 

mid-latitude trough in this NOAA Total Electron Content forecast 

map:

 

http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/products/ctipe-total-electron-content-forecast

 

There is good news: because the mid-latitude trough is mostly a fall

and winter phenomenon byy late this month (WPX SSB), late afternoon

and evening propagation across the North Atlantic will be much more 

common on both 15 and 20 meters

 

73

Frank

W3LPL

 

  _____  

From: "Ed Sawyer" <sawyered@earthlink.net>
To: donovanf@starpower.net, cq-contest@contesting.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 1, 2016 9:38:42 PM
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal

 

Frank. Thanks for the knowledge base and I agree with your statements.

 

The key for my area, similar to what K3LR experienced last weekend, is the 
further north reflection point and the MUF and absorption properties of that 
point heading to EU or JA.  That can clearly be 20 or 30 dB of degradation as I 
can hear it swing up and down on 40, 80, and 160M. Take a pass on a band and 
hear DL1A 20 or 30dB stronger than the last time 30 mins or an hour earlier.  
If the conditions are not too brutal, then its not that big a deal. If they 
are, it’s a game changer.

 

How many miles out are you calculating that first reflection point to be?  It 
depends on the angle of radiation that is favoring the day on the band in 
question.  

 

Ed  N1UR

 

 

From: donovanf@starpower.net [mailto:donovanf@starpower.net] 
Sent: Monday, February 29, 2016 8:16 PM
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Cc: sawyered@earthlink.net
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal

 

Hi Ed,

 

The efficiency of a horizontally polarized antenna over salt water

or a salt marsh improves by one dB or less compared to the same

antenna over fertile farm soil in a flat (or nearly flat) Fresnel Zone.

Even desert soil degrades the performance of horizontally polarized

antennas by only a few dB.

 

On the other hand, salt water significantly improves the efficiency

of vertically polarized antennas particularly at low elevation angles

but only if most of the antenna's Fresnel Zone is over salt water or

a salt marsh. Only a few U.S. contesters have vertically polarized

antennas in or at the edge of a salt marsh or salt water such as

K1DG (at his Maine QTH), W1KM and K3ZM.

 

When K3LR and W3LPL are working Europe, the most important

factor is the MUF at our first ionospheric reflection points at

roughly 60 degrees magnetic latitude over eastern Canada.

Coincidentally 60 degrees magnetic latitude is a region of high

interest to ionospheric scientists, including PVRC's N3HBX who

wrote a scientific paper about his research into ionospheric

behavior at that latitude when he worked at MIT's Haystack

Observatory researching a well known (to ionospheric scientists)

phenomenon known as the mid-latitude ionospheric trough or

simply the Mid-Latitude Trough.

 

For any propagation path to Europe, K3LR's ionospheric 

reflection is about 200 miles northwest of W3LPL's reflection

point in the immediate vicinity of the mid-latitude trough. While 

the trough isn't present every night, it is present very frequently

and it causes significantly lowering of the MUF over a distance

of just a few hundred miles to the north as dusk approaches

eastern Canada.  The reduced MUF to Europe steadily becomes

more severe during the night until the trough suddenly disappears

as sunrise illuminates the ionosphere as it approaches eastern

Canada.

 

Those interested in exploring this phenomenon can Google

"mid-latitude trough" and "magnetic latitude"

 

73

Frank

W3LPL

 

 

  _____  

From: "Ed Sawyer" <sawyered@earthlink.net>
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Sent: Monday, February 29, 2016 5:56:25 PM
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Ohio is now West Coast - rebuttal

Arguing the "West Coast" is not NM is no different than calling W1 just W1.

 

W1 and W2 are equally as capable in the DX contests to win, it depends on
where you are in W1 or W2.  And the area is not homogenous in capability.
W1WMU, K8PO, K1DG, K1ZM, and W1KM are all within the Fresnel zone of salt
water or salt march to EU.  There are equally great areas in W2 and all the
way down to K3ZM's location that define as much a universe within W1, W2, W3
as NM vs CA.

 

As a W1 that is 50 miles from the Canadian border and literally 350 miles in
the EU direction from salt water, I can tell you that W1 is NOT all the
same.

 

Don't get me wrong, its better to EU than W6/7, but I drool listening to the
saltwater stations run loud and early just like you do listening to W1 in
general.  There are time when it matters BIG and times when it doesn't
matter as much.

 

K3LR's more northern path to EU vs W3LPL was "just enough" with disturbed
conditions that I witnessed much further north than them to change the game
on K3LR.

 

Broad brushing conclusions is not a wise idea.

 

73

 

Ed  N1UR

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