Wednesday, February 6, 2019
Poor conditions on 28 MHz - Tues 5th Feb 2019
Since the modest opening on 28 MHz on the 24th of January 2019, conditions on the band have been pretty dire. Tuesday the 5th of February was one of the better days and that was hardly noteworthy. The FT8 signals heard are shown above.
There seems to be two factors at work. One is that we're at the bottom of the solar cycle, the solar flux is down around 70, it's February which is a month not noted for Sporadic-E and so perhaps it's no suprise that conditions are poor.
The other factor seems to be just a lack of stations on 28 MHz.
Some of the other days are shown below...
Monday, January 28, 2019
PE5HV looking for interested parties on 40 MHz
The following comment was left on the blog by Harry, PE5HV who is interested in conducting some experiments on 40 MHz.
"Hello ham radio operators from Ireland and elsewhere, Some time ago I heard about the 8 m band allocated in some countries: - ZS - G (beacon GB3RAL0 - OZ (beacon OZ1IGY) - S5 - EI I have setup a websdr as an experiment (can switch easily between 70 MHz and 40 MHz) for 8 m. My antenna is a tunable HF dipole, now north-south. If there is some interest, I might install a 40 MHz dipole in the direction of interest. Please let me know if there is some interest. You can find my email address on QRZ.com. Hope to hear some reactions, 73 Harry PE5HV PS: no allocation in PA yet !"
"Hello ham radio operators from Ireland and elsewhere, Some time ago I heard about the 8 m band allocated in some countries: - ZS - G (beacon GB3RAL0 - OZ (beacon OZ1IGY) - S5 - EI I have setup a websdr as an experiment (can switch easily between 70 MHz and 40 MHz) for 8 m. My antenna is a tunable HF dipole, now north-south. If there is some interest, I might install a 40 MHz dipole in the direction of interest. Please let me know if there is some interest. You can find my email address on QRZ.com. Hope to hear some reactions, 73 Harry PE5HV PS: no allocation in PA yet !"
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Opening on 28 MHz... 24th Jan 2019
After two dismal days on the 22nd and 23rd of January, the 10 metre band finally opened up on Thurs 24th of January.
As can be seen from the plots above, I heard F2 signals from the south of Italy, Greece and Israel.
Further afield, I heard 3B8CW in Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. According to the PSK Reporter website, he was only heard by five stations in Europe... three in France, one in England and myself. I suspect perhaps that might be because of a lack of stations on the band even in Europe.
The solar flux was 72 so not great change.
A closer look at what I heard in Europe is shown below...
The reception reports for the two previous days are shown below...
As can be seen from the plots above, I heard F2 signals from the south of Italy, Greece and Israel.
Further afield, I heard 3B8CW in Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. According to the PSK Reporter website, he was only heard by five stations in Europe... three in France, one in England and myself. I suspect perhaps that might be because of a lack of stations on the band even in Europe.
The solar flux was 72 so not great change.
A closer look at what I heard in Europe is shown below...
The reception reports for the two previous days are shown below...
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
70cms Repeater EI7HXR nr Clonmel off air
The 70cms repeater EI7HXR at Harney's Cross near Clonmel is currently off the air for maintenance. This is part of the Southern Ireland Repeater Network and provides coverage to south Tipperary and Kilkenny.
Callsign: EI7HXR (Tipperary Amateur Radio Group)
Location: Harney's Cross, Co. Waterford.
Locator: IO62EH
Output: 430.850MHz
Link...
Southern Ireland Repeater Network
Callsign: EI7HXR (Tipperary Amateur Radio Group)
Location: Harney's Cross, Co. Waterford.
Locator: IO62EH
Output: 430.850MHz
Link...
Southern Ireland Repeater Network
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Special call EI19RE active for 2019
The special call sign EI19RE will be active for the duration of 2019 to commemorate the establishment of the Dáil, the first Irish parliament. The first Dáil met in January of 1919 following a landslide victory for Irish nationalists in December 1918.
The call EI19RE is an amalgamation of the term Éire and 1919.
EI19RE will be activated by Mark Turner EI3KD during the year of 2019 on the HF and VHF bands.
Keep an eye on the DX cluster for spots!
Monday, January 21, 2019
FT8 signals heard on 28 MHz - Mon 21st Jan 2019
Conditions on 28 MHz have been very poor for the last week with just a few signals from Europe heard most days. The only exceptional day was Saturday the 19th of January when I heard a ZP station in Paraguay. The PSK Reporter website at the time however was not working so my report failed to upload.
On Monday the 21st of January, there was a reasonable opening. The one sole signal from South America was PU1JSV in Brazil.
As the map shows below, there was a nice collection of signals from across Europe. Probably Sporadic-E but the SV stations in Greece may have been F2.
Solar Flux was 70.
On Monday the 21st of January, there was a reasonable opening. The one sole signal from South America was PU1JSV in Brazil.
As the map shows below, there was a nice collection of signals from across Europe. Probably Sporadic-E but the SV stations in Greece may have been F2.
Solar Flux was 70.
Monday, January 14, 2019
EI DMR Registrations at the end of Q4 2018
At the end of 2018, a grand total of 143 DMR numbers were allocated to EI stations. This is an increase of 44 for the year and up 7 in the last quarter.
In Northern Ireland, the grand total was 424, up 66 for the year.
It's probably likely that the growth in EI will remain at this level until there is a digital repeater in areas like Dublin.
Poor conditions on 28 MHz - Sat 12th & Sun 13th Jan 2019
Band conditions on 28 MHz on both Saturday the 12th and Sunday the 13th of January 2019 were pretty poor.
On the 12th of January shown above, just three signals were heard on FT8 on 28 MHz.
On the 12th of January shown above, just three signals were heard on FT8 on 28 MHz.
Friday, January 11, 2019
Opening to the USA on 28 MHz... Fri 11th Jan 2019
Well today was a bit of a suprise! It started off quiet enough with just a handful of FT8 signals from around Europe on 28 MHz. It just seemed like a typical poor day until around 17:40 UTC when two signals from the USA popped out of the noise.
174345 -14 -0.8 971 ~ CQ N4TL FM05
175300 -16 -0.6 1109 ~ CQ N3GWZ FM19
Looking at the PSK reporter website, it seems as if I was the only person in Europe to hear them.
Local sunset here in Cork was at 16:47 UTC so I presume it was sunset related.
At about 19:13 to 20:25, there were a bunch of signals from Brazil in South America. There were some Sporadic-E signals in there from Spain and Portugal as well so that would have helped the signals from Brazil reach up into northern Europe.
191345 -21 -0.3 542 ~ EB8AC PY2EZL GG67
191945 -16 -0.3 547 ~ EB8AC PU2MVE GG66
192545 -2 -0.1 637 ~ 2E0XXO PU1JSV R-15
195015 -17 0.2 645 ~ CQ PY2JOS GG66
195315 -8 -0.5 709 ~ CQ G8KHF IO92
195500 -16 -0.9 1235 ~ G0OYQ EA3IEF JN12
200000 -22 -0.3 1196 ~ PY2CP PY2UG GG66
200215 -4 -0.3 821 ~ G4XYT PY2RJ RR73
201630 -11 -0.4 1890 ~ CQ CS7ANU IN51
202515 -14 -0.3 1493 ~ CQ DX PY2CP GG66
Solar Flux is at 68 so pretty much at rock bottom of the cycle.
Thursday, January 10, 2019
FT8 signals on 28 MHz... Wed 9th & Thurs 10th Jan 2019
Conditions were pretty poor on 28 MHz for the last two days with relatively few signals heard on FT8.
On Wednesday the 9th of January, there were a few signals from around Europe with the only suprise being a ZP5 station in Paraguay who was heard around 20:00UTC, about 3 hours after sunset.
On Wednesday the 9th of January, there were a few signals from around Europe with the only suprise being a ZP5 station in Paraguay who was heard around 20:00UTC, about 3 hours after sunset.
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
Practical Wireless article on Network Radios from July 2018
An article from the July 2018 issue of Practical Wireless about Network Radios has now appeared on the G7DDN website. He is the author of the article and it is published on his site with permission from the publishers.
It gives an overview of what Network Radios are and how they might be used.
The article in PDF format is HERE
Link...
Previous article on Network Radios from April 2018
Monday, January 7, 2019
IRTS CW Tests for 2019
From the IRTS News...
CW Tests
CW testing will be carried out at the following rallies over the coming months starting with Coolmine on February 17th, Limerick on March 10th and at the IRTS AGM in Athlone on April 14th.
Booking for these tests is essential and intending candidates should contact Dave EI4BZ by email “davebeag /at/ gmail /dot/ com”.
Full details of the Morse test are available on the IRTS web site under licensing at www.irts.ie
Sunday, January 6, 2019
Italy heard on 144 MHz... Sun 6th Jan 2019
Compared to the previous two days, there were a lot fewer FT8 signals heard on 144 MHz on Sun 6th Jan 2019.
Best DX heard was IK4ADE at 1679 kms! As for how??? Meteor scatter?
Saturday, January 5, 2019
Another day of FT8 signals on 144 MHz... Sat 5th Jan 2019
Another day listening to FT8 signals on 144 MHz and the map looks like I had been on 80m or 40m. All those shown above were heard with a vertical Slim Jim antenna in the attic of my house, pretty amazing.
There were 9 which were over 1000 kms with the nest DX being DF6PW at 1261 kms.
The conventional convention is that anyone using FM on 145 MHz uses a vertical antenna where as anyone using SSB on 144 MHz uses a horizontal beam.
I wonder how many guys are just using a simple vertical with FT8? A lot of people have deserted SSB because it was dead but FT8 seems to have given new life to the band. Are most stations just pressing their verticals into use with FT8 rather than putting up horizontal Yagis???
It just seems a bit strange that I can hear so many signals with a basic vertical antenna.
Addendum...
Following the publication of this post, Hardy DF6PW kindly sent on his station details...
FYI: I was operating from a hilltop QTH in JO40AQ 652 m asl. In your direction I was using the 6-over-6 homebrew stack on the right hand side of the pic attached (36m above ground) . Rig was a Icom-IC-706 boosted by a very gentle 4CX250 tube amplifier ... no pre-amp.
Hardy, DF6PW
Friday, January 4, 2019
Good opening on 144 MHz... Fri 4th Jan 2019
The map above shows the FT8 signals heard on 144 MHz on Friday the 4th of January.
It almost looks like it might have been on say 80m but this is in fact the 2-metre band. And all with an indoor Slim Jim vertical in the attic!
Five stations were over 1,000kms were heard so conditions were pretty good.
The common mantra is that the VHF bands are dead and nobody is on. The map shows the impact that FT8 mode is having on the VHF bands with plenty of people active.
Thursday, January 3, 2019
SD Contest Software now Free
As of the 1st of January 2019, Paul EI5DI has kindly made his SD contest software free.
While the appearance may look a bit old fashioned, the most important thing is how it functions. Back in 2017 when I was dabbling in the odd contest, I found the software great. The priority for me was for it to tell if the person I was hearing was a dupe, something that would calculate my score and for it to generate a format so that I could submit an entry.
As with anything, there is a learning curve but it's reasonably easy to use with practice.
As someone who wasn't hugely interested in contesting, I didn't want some bloatware with loads of features. I wanted something easy and functional and I found SD did what I wanted.
The contest software can be found on Paul's website at http://www.ei5di.com/
FT8 signals heard on 144 MHz... Thurs 3rd Jan 2019
After spending most of the day on 28 MHz and hearing just a few European signals on FT8, I changed over to 144 MHz at about 18:00.
Despite the fact that I was using just a simple Slim Jim half-wave vertical in the attic of my house, I still picked up some nice signals.
Best DX heard was EA2XR at 1011 kms on the north coast of Spain.
Also heard was GM0EWK at 639 kms.
All of this is of course due to a high pressure system over the British and Irish Isles at the moment.
Despite the fact that I was using just a simple Slim Jim half-wave vertical in the attic of my house, I still picked up some nice signals.
Best DX heard was EA2XR at 1011 kms on the north coast of Spain.
Also heard was GM0EWK at 639 kms.
All of this is of course due to a high pressure system over the British and Irish Isles at the moment.
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
IRTS 80m Contest on New Years Day
The annual IRTS 80m Counties Contest on New Years Day seemed to be pretty busy this year with lots of EI stations on the band. I'm not all that interested in contests but anything that gets EI stations on the air and communicating with each other is a good thing.
The highest contact number I heard was around 100 which is well up up on 78 which was the highest last year.
I didn't bother calling CQ and just went up and down the band giving away points. All said and done, I worked 26 stations and 6 of these were on CW.
It's been ages since I have used morse but it was nice to give the key a rattle again. I'm as rusty as anything but it's something I must get back into again.
Monday, December 31, 2018
Looking back on 2018...
Just like the propagation, my own levels of activity on the radio has been sporadic over the last few years. I was off the air from 2012 until October 2016 and then went off again in April of 2017.
At the start of 2018, my interest was renewed and I have managed to stay on for all of 2018. These are probably the main highlights of 2018 for me.
January 2018... DMR
In January of 2018, I purchased a DMR handheld radio and explored the world of digital radio. Between making up my own code plugs and using the radio, it has been interesting over the last year learning about the system.
April 2018... VHF Activity Nights
At the start of the year, it was very obvious that the levels of activity on the VHF bands in Ireland was very low. It seemed that it would make a lot of sense to try and have particular activity nights where there might be a better chance of making contacts.
I approached the IRTS to ask that they would help publicise activity nights on the Tuesdays of each month which they duly did in their publications and on their website. This became the EI VHF Activity Nights in April of 2018 and it has been a modest success to date.
After 6 months, we did a review of the activity net in Cork and this was refined to become the Cork VHF Net. This has certainly resulted in more activity locally in Cork on several VHF bands which is welcome.
April 2018... 40 MHz
When the IRTS announced at the start of the year that there would be new allocations at 40 and 60 MHz, it really grabbed my interest. There was however very little information to the found. To remedy this, I set up a special page on this site for all 40 MHz information so that others could find out about the band. By the end of 2018, it had been looked at 776 times according to the website stats.
May 2018... FT8
Since the start of May 2018, I have been monitoring FT8 signals on 28 MHz for most of the time and feeding the reception reports up to the PSK Reporter website. At the height of the Sporadic-E season, I was uploading about 6,000 to 8,000 reports per week.
For me as such, it was very low maintenance and required very little of my time. The radio just listened on the FT8 frequency on 28 MHz and I just checked the PC from time to time. Checking what I had heard out of curiosity was the difference between having the radio turned on or having it turned off completely.
Website Traffic...
The year ended with the website getting about 6,000 page views for the month of December. There are some spam clicks buried in amongst those so the number of real click is probably around 5,000. In the second half of 2018, the site has been getting between 4,000 and 10,000 page views per month.
And for 2019???
I'm not exactly sure but probably all of the above. I was reading another blog recently when I saw something which pretty much sums up the reality for a lot of radio amateurs. Many people are just more interested in experimentation rather than communication. Making a contact on the HF bands like 20m is no real challenge as is talking on a local repeater. A lot of people just want to experiment. To try out new bands, modes or new equipment. To build something rather than just use a black box. I'd guess that experimentation is the one facet of the hobby that is likely to keep me interested in the future.
At the start of 2018, my interest was renewed and I have managed to stay on for all of 2018. These are probably the main highlights of 2018 for me.
January 2018... DMR
In January of 2018, I purchased a DMR handheld radio and explored the world of digital radio. Between making up my own code plugs and using the radio, it has been interesting over the last year learning about the system.
April 2018... VHF Activity Nights
At the start of the year, it was very obvious that the levels of activity on the VHF bands in Ireland was very low. It seemed that it would make a lot of sense to try and have particular activity nights where there might be a better chance of making contacts.
I approached the IRTS to ask that they would help publicise activity nights on the Tuesdays of each month which they duly did in their publications and on their website. This became the EI VHF Activity Nights in April of 2018 and it has been a modest success to date.
After 6 months, we did a review of the activity net in Cork and this was refined to become the Cork VHF Net. This has certainly resulted in more activity locally in Cork on several VHF bands which is welcome.
April 2018... 40 MHz
When the IRTS announced at the start of the year that there would be new allocations at 40 and 60 MHz, it really grabbed my interest. There was however very little information to the found. To remedy this, I set up a special page on this site for all 40 MHz information so that others could find out about the band. By the end of 2018, it had been looked at 776 times according to the website stats.
May 2018... FT8
Since the start of May 2018, I have been monitoring FT8 signals on 28 MHz for most of the time and feeding the reception reports up to the PSK Reporter website. At the height of the Sporadic-E season, I was uploading about 6,000 to 8,000 reports per week.
For me as such, it was very low maintenance and required very little of my time. The radio just listened on the FT8 frequency on 28 MHz and I just checked the PC from time to time. Checking what I had heard out of curiosity was the difference between having the radio turned on or having it turned off completely.
Website Traffic...
The year ended with the website getting about 6,000 page views for the month of December. There are some spam clicks buried in amongst those so the number of real click is probably around 5,000. In the second half of 2018, the site has been getting between 4,000 and 10,000 page views per month.
And for 2019???
I'm not exactly sure but probably all of the above. I was reading another blog recently when I saw something which pretty much sums up the reality for a lot of radio amateurs. Many people are just more interested in experimentation rather than communication. Making a contact on the HF bands like 20m is no real challenge as is talking on a local repeater. A lot of people just want to experiment. To try out new bands, modes or new equipment. To build something rather than just use a black box. I'd guess that experimentation is the one facet of the hobby that is likely to keep me interested in the future.
Sunday, December 30, 2018
FT8 signals heard on 28 MHz... Sun 30th Dec 2018
Another day listening to FT8 signals on 28 MHz. The interesting ones today were W2UH and W2VW in the state of New Jersey in the USA.
At 5000kms or so distant, they were interesting because they were East-West paths on 28 MHz which is much harder than the more usual North-South paths.
The other interesting thing was that I seem to be the only person in Europe that actually heard them according to the PSK Reporter website. This certainly wasn't due to my antenna but more likely due to my westerly location.
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