There was a typo in my KSM/KPH post: My brain knew that they activate
the station on Sunday, but my fingers ran amok and typed Saturday. Ron D'Eau Claire wrote: > Fred wrote: > K6KPH DE <yourcall> QLB KSM 6474 QSA 5/KPH 426 QSA 4 K > > Fred, you are sounding like a Ham contester!! I am a contester. Not a good one, but I'm about to enter the JIDX a bit. Lotsa QSL cards to follow in about a year and a half. QSA is also the origin of the phrase, often heard on 75 in the evening from some of the older hams, "Roger Tom, you're Q5 tonight." Officially, QLB means, "I have monitored <station> (on <xxxx> Kcs) and report as follows <brief report>." Nearly all Q-signals are a question-answer pair. QRX as a question means, "Will you call me again?" As a statement it means, "I will call you again at <time[GMT]> on <xxxx> Kcs." We hams have verb-ified, adjective-ified, and noun-ified many of them. QRP as a question means, "Shall I decrease power." As an answer, it means, "Decrease power." However, we readily tell someone that "My KX1 is a QRP rig." There is an amusing note for QRP (and QRO) that cautions "Refers to communications," as opposed, I guess, to the throttle on the airplane (I think I know the class of pilots who would need that guidance, but to name it would disclose an unfounded personal bias). Strictly speaking, Q-signals have no place in radiotelephone transmissions. Another commercial practice you can use to confuse and annoy people in the ham bands is the interrogatory prosign, INT (sent as one letter). Since the Morse question mark duplicates the prosign IMI (which is used a lot, especially if you're a member of SOC), you send di di dah dit dah prior to the Q-signal (or sentence) to make it a question. You can get an exhaustive list of all Q-signals at <www.geocities.com/wa6tbh/qsigs.htm>. Some are fairly quaint. I'm about 140 km from KPH, and in the afternoon, it has a huge field strength here in the Sierra foothills. However, the LF sensitivity of all my receivers with that coverage really sucks, the only untuned antenna I have is my flag pole, so KPH is only about S7 or so on the meters on 426 KCs. Ron can probably hear KSM just fine on 6474 Kcs. Fred K6DGW Auburn CA CM98lw _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
Fred wrote:
There was a typo in my KSM/KPH post: My brain knew that they activate the station on Sunday, but my fingers ran amok and typed Saturday. -------------- Hey, how else can you get to use a neat word like "amok". It's as much fun to say as it is to write... Oh yeah, even 600 meters comes in from KPH here FB in the evenings, about 600 miles up the coast from their transmitters. For SWL's, the HF/LF bands are great fun - lots of non-directional beacons all over the country to 'DX', etc., although the transmissions get even more boring that "reading the mail" on contest exchanges <G>. Folks who can monitor VLF can even get a chance to listen for Grimedon's huge alternator transmitter from a century ago - nothing more than a huge AC generator hooked to an antenna working on 17 kHz with a key in the antenna circuit. (That's one you don't want to bump the contacts on with your hand...) It's in Sweden. One work the world on 500 kHz even with QRP and a short antenna. I'm aware of one instance of a hand-cranked lifeboat radio, running a couple of watts into an electrically short antenna on 500 kHz in the Mediterranean Sea, being heard half way around the world clearly enough to trigger a search in the middle of the Pacific ocean. As we've discussed many times here on the reflector, when using a short antenna, the ground is EVERYTHING! And sitting in the middle of an ocean filled with salt water is about as good as a ground can get... Ron AC7AC _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
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