In a recent post, I outlined how seven stations in the USA had been given experimental permits for the 40 MHz band.
One of those permits (WM2XCW) went to Halden Field, NR7V in the far north-west of Washington state. Halden also holds the Canadian callsign of VE7UTS and he has also received an experimental license from the Canadian authorities for the 40 MHz band.
The experimental callsign allocated is CGB209 and it is for 50 watts ERP from a fixed location in a 4 kHz wide frequency allocation centered on 40.6635 MHz.
VE7UTS writes... "CGB209 is now transmitting from the same location as VE7UTS on a 10-minute interval. The VE7UTS receiver is deaf when CGB209 is transmitting.
CGB209 is encoded in reverse sequence in the WSPR packet because WSPR protocol doesn't support numbers in a callsign suffix or a letter as a callsign's 3rd character."
CGB209 has been transmitting for the last few weeks on WSPR on 40 MHz and has been received by the following stations locally in the Vancouver area.
2021-11-16 20:02 902BGC CN89 VE7RPX CN89lh 40.663529 0.2 -3 0
2021-11-17 04:52 902BGC CN89 VA7MM CN89og 40.663528 0.2 -13 0
2021-11-21 15:36 902BGC CN89 VE7UTS CN89li 40.663406 1 -13 0
2021-11-23 05:30 902BGC CN89 VE7AFZ CN89ji 40.663526 1 -25 0
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