Good Evening,
The Elecraft CW Net is a directed net. There is no need to call CQ to get my attention; my location allows me to hear very well. Just wait for me to call for check-ins then send your call or a part of it as a hail sign. This allows me to gather two to three stations and work them in order. Once I have cleared my list I call for more check ins. I repeat this until I get no response three times. If you call CQ during the net I'm not sure what you intend. Are you trying to get my attention while I am working other operators? Or are you calling your own net? If you wait for my call up sequence and respond when I send your call sign it is much easier to direct the net. On 14050.5 kHz at 2200z: NO8V - John - MI K6XK - Roy - IA W0CZ - Ken - ND K4JPN - Steve - GA WS1L - Chuck - MS KF0QS - Bernard - CO WU0A - John - CO KC1ACL - Steven - NM J?5?EG - ??? - ??? The QRM was too heavy to copy this op even though we tried five times. Good signal though at S5 or better. On 7047.5 kHz at 0000z: K0DTJ - Brian - CA K6XK - Roy - IA W6JHB - Jim - CA K6PJV - Dale - CA W0CZ - Ken - ND Twenty meters was loud. Jupiter was mentioned as a culprit. With all the clouds here I have a hard time keeping track of the moon let alone the planets. The QSB was slow but Roy had a fast flutter on top of his signal. The solar flux index has gone up from where it had been stuck for so many months. From 69 a few months ago to 74 today. A bit of solar wind is enough to support these bands for another week. I know a good contest lights up the ionosphere too. Forty meters was less noisy with slow QSB. Copy was very good. Most of the talk was about snow or rain. A few rare folks actually have sunlight. Here there is about two inches of sloppy snow. The wind is rising too so I better put antenna work on my list. Until next week stay warm 73, Kevin. KD5ONS - The answer is 42. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [hidden email] |
Hello Kevin;
Thank you for the managing the Elecraft CW net! I have been listening for the past several months but am not able to hear you. I'm wondering if an Elecraft CW operator that has a good location and antenna might volunteer to be a CW relay station with you? Similar to the Elecraft SSB net. I think keeping it very simple for example just send their Call, WX, State to the relay station after Kevin completes his check-ins. Ie for me, after I hear the Relay Station call, with QSP? I would send the following: QSP de WM5F WX Snow ID The relay station would pass WM5F Snow ID on to Kevin. Kevin would acknowledge with a simple QSL. So is anyone interested to try it this Sunday? Is there a better way to conduct a relay message for a net? Much Regards, Dwight (WM5F) -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of kevinr Sent: Sunday, January 12, 2020 7:13 PM To: Elecraft Reflector <[hidden email]> Subject: [Elecraft] Elecraft CW Net Report Good Evening, The Elecraft CW Net is a directed net. There is no need to call CQ to get my attention; my location allows me to hear very well. Just wait for me to call for check-ins then send your call or a part of it as a hail sign. This allows me to gather two to three stations and work them in order. Once I have cleared my list I call for more check ins. I repeat this until I get no response three times. If you call CQ during the net I'm not sure what you intend. Are you trying to get my attention while I am working other operators? Or are you calling your own net? If you wait for my call up sequence and respond when I send your call sign it is much easier to direct the net. On 14050.5 kHz at 2200z: NO8V - John - MI K6XK - Roy - IA W0CZ - Ken - ND K4JPN - Steve - GA WS1L - Chuck - MS KF0QS - Bernard - CO WU0A - John - CO KC1ACL - Steven - NM J?5?EG - ??? - ??? The QRM was too heavy to copy this op even though we tried five times. Good signal though at S5 or better. On 7047.5 kHz at 0000z: K0DTJ - Brian - CA K6XK - Roy - IA W6JHB - Jim - CA K6PJV - Dale - CA W0CZ - Ken - ND Twenty meters was loud. Jupiter was mentioned as a culprit. With all the clouds here I have a hard time keeping track of the moon let alone the planets. The QSB was slow but Roy had a fast flutter on top of his signal. The solar flux index has gone up from where it had been stuck for so many months. From 69 a few months ago to 74 today. A bit of solar wind is enough to support these bands for another week. I know a good contest lights up the ionosphere too. Forty meters was less noisy with slow QSB. Copy was very good. Most of the talk was about snow or rain. A few rare folks actually have sunlight. Here there is about two inches of sloppy snow. The wind is rising too so I better put antenna work on my list. Until next week stay warm 73, Kevin. KD5ONS - The answer is 42. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [hidden email] ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [hidden email] |
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