I had heard that VP8 was coming in on 6m earlier in the week, but I missed the excitement. This Sunday afternoon I did manage to catch them, but it didn't seem like many folks were actually completing with them:
More good signs....
I had heard that VP8 was coming in on 6m earlier in the week, but I missed the excitement. This Sunday afternoon I did manage to catch them, but it didn't seem like many folks were actually completing with them:
More good signs....
Sunday afternoon WW1L posted that he was hearing FK8CP, so I swung the antenna around to listen direct. I actually managed to get a single decode!
That's roughly 14,265km or 8,800 miles on 6m! I would have to assume this is F2 or a mix of F2 and some other propagation.
This is going to be a good year for 6m I tihnk....
We had a brief EU opening on February 21st. From my location I was hearing some western european stations and some Caribbean stations (Suriname and Dominican Republic). Some of the other guys appear to have worked into the Indian Ocean (Rodriguez?), and I saw a local station calling a 9K2. There was talk that is could have been F2.
I only ended up with a few EAs and PZ5RA (who I've worked before) in the logbook. Hopefully this is a sign of good things to come this season. I had a dreadful DX season last year.
For me, this season got off to a big start in April with a number of days of TEP into South America, getting me a few new DXCC. The normal Es season, however, seemed to be a bit different than the previous two years. I witnessed a much later start, not seeing my first big domestic opening until the end of May (28th.). There were a number of smaller, fast, openings, but nothing sustained. The first EU opening for me didn't happen until June 1st, and that was just into England a Northern France. Unfortunately for me, the big EU openings all happened while I was away at a conference in Montreal, then again in July when I was busy getting Covid-19 in Nova Scotia. My last regular season contact was on 7/25.
In October we started to hear some TEP again. Early November (as I write this) I had a busted QSO with CE8EIO (he responded back to me, but JTDX refused to xmit) and then a QSO with PY8WW. Meanwhile, WW1L is working into South Africa and other exotic locations :)
Other notes, I had a (7) QSO JA run that got me a few new grids on June 12th.
88 new confirmed grid squares, putting my total at 682.
32 of those squares were new FFMA squares, which puts my total at 326
I worked at least 7 new ones, finally getting over the 100 mark with 4X4DK! I was hoping to have Eric, FP/KV1J since he's local and part the local VHF community, but 4X4DK was in and I grabbed him while I could. I've had a few busted contacts with 4X4 stations, so I didn't want to leave anything to chance.
Here is the (mostly) final list:
#95 CE3SX - Chile
#96 EA9ABC - Ceuta & Melilla
#97 C31CT - Andorra
#98 UB7K - European Russia
#99 5B4AGN - Cyprus
#100 4X4DK - Israel
#101 FP/KV1J - St. Pierre & Miquelon
93 confirmed in LoTW. Now I either need to find a local card checker, or figure out the process to send my remaining cards to the ARRL for LoTW credits.
Even with working seven new DXCC entities this year, there were some very notable misses.
ZP5 - in South America
KH6 - a couple of times 6-12 (This gives me hope that WAS is achievable at some point)
D44 - Cape Verde (have heard them two years in a row now, yet to work them)
ER5 - Moldova 6-12
D2UY - Angola 6-28
OD5 - Lebanon 7-8
UN7 - Kazakhstan 7-9 (Had a busted QSO with him, will look for again next year)
My first two years of truly dedicated 6m operation were 2020 and 2021, prime covid years. I wasn't travelling for work and summer vacationing was minimal. 2022 was somewhat of a "back to normal" year with me travelling to my usual June conference then again going to Nova Scotia in mid-July for our normal week in Pubnico.
That's two weeks of Prime 6m operating dead smack in the middle of the season. I may need to rethink this a bit :)
DXCC on 6m has been attained!
Now to collect cards and LoTW entries...
On July 6 I worked:
UB7K for #98
5B4AGN for #99 ...and finally
4X4DK for Country #100
I was trying to work it out that Eric, FP/KV1J was in the #100 spot, but the propagation to Israel was there, so I wasn't going to waste the opportunity.
Other random notes:
- The band has been open to Europe all week, some days more than others, but the lack of propagation in June seems to be made up for in July to this point.
- Almost completed with UN7LZ in Khazakstan, but didn't quite make it:
- Confirmed LoTW grid count is now up to 668
Comparing this Es season to the previous two seasons, this one has been weird for me. Here's the rough highlights:
- One big EU opening (I was traveling and missed it)
- Only a few big domestic openings
- One decent JA opening on the 12th of June (worked 7 JA and some new grids)
- Lots of TEP this season (Worked a number of new grids plus new DXCC)
Misses so far:
- ZP5 during one of the TEP openings
- KH6 - for state number 49, had half a QSO, but didn't complete
- D44 in Cape Verde
- D2UY in Angola
Somehow I still have managed to work 50+ new grids so far:
The first opening to EU in 2021 was on May 19th, this season got off to a very late start. The first EU that I hear here was on June 1st, and I was not in front of the radio!
It was a relatively small opening, looking forward to the rest of the season.
I snagged a quick QSO with PY1MHZ today on 6M ft8 via TEP propagation.
The bigger stations near me were giving reports of ZP, LU and other PYs being loud.
Timing is everything in life....
I noticed some bigger stations calling CQ SA, so I spun the beam around and just got a few decodes from LW2EDM, so I gave him a call when he finished with the other station. He came right back and boom, was in the log! PSK reporter showed there were a few other LUs that heard me, but I didn't see any decodes from them:
Last August I had some system integration issues with my station that kept me off the air for a number of months. May last log entry was from August 5th, with N2RJ on 6m FT8. I had a really tremendous 6m season in 2021, but my shack was in an epic wiring nightmare. Halfway through the season I integrated my Larcan 1KW and and also moved to using an Airspy R2 for my main RX.
The result of both integrations was rats nest of splitters, pre-amps, relays, control boards, and DC wiring. Work and life got busy, I pushed it aside and started dreaming of the 2022 Es season.
This past week I decided that I really missed having a working station, so I every so slow started to pull all the cables apart. At the same time I started integrating a new station computer, a mini system that has a ton of CPU and memory, but the size of a mac-mini.
A clean slate. I got the 6M station wired up to the power supply and antenna and audio interface. Simple, nothing fancy. I could heard signals again!
I was somewhat surprised at the level of local 6m FT8 activity, it seemed like much more than last winter. This is a good thing.
This Saturday evening, around 9pm local, I started to hear some mid-west stations calling and I managed to get a few in the log:
The day started with a pretty solid opening into Europe, with a very specific reflection off of an E cloud that gave me a bit of a spotlight into G/PA/DL:
There was activity most of the day, but the early buzz was about HV0A, Vatican City. I only ended up getting a single decode, so there is hope that it could happen eventually:
Since my last post on June 19th there was a terrible drought on 6m right during the peak of the season here in FN42. This, unfortunately, happened the same time as the N4EME team was operating from their second grid in the big expedition. Some highlights:
- Working two new grids on 2m and 6 with N4EME (FN57, FN66)
- Working Market Reef on 6/18 on 6m
- Decent EU openings on 6/19 and 6/21
- Working Mauritius on 6M finally! (5T5PA on June 27)
- Working OX3LX (Bo, in Greenland) on 6m SSB
The drought to EU finally broke big on July 1st and I worked quite a number of new stations and new grids. Then on the night of the 1st and into July 2nd we had consistent openings into the PNW and I worked quite a few new grids, which pushed my VUCC totals over 500. We had another small opening to EU on July 3rd.
Some misses:
I had one decode from OH0Z and OH0100AX operating from Aland Island. That certainly would have been a new DXCC entity for me, but they faded before I could work them. I only got a single decode:
I actually decoded Japan on 6m, which blows my mind a bit.
I need to get more aluminum in the air, higher in the air!
I had to spend most of the day away from the radio working on other projects (always a risk during 6m season). I got back in the late afternoon and sat down to see what I missed, which wasn't much thankfully. I managed to time it just right to see an opening into the Baltics, which doesn't happen frequently for me. I managed to work 2 stations in Estonia (ES6RQ, ES5PC) and one Latvian station (YL2CP). I wasn't able to work a few Finnish stations, but we'll get them next time.
The big news, however, was that as I was working the Estonian stations, the rare DX entity, Market Reef came up and I was able to very quickly work them.
Looking at LOTW, it seems there are records from this callsign in 2019, so there is hope they will confirm via LoTW!
The N4EME grid expedition to FN57/FN66 is in full swing, this week finishing up their FN57 stint. I worked them on 6m MS shortly after they arrived at that location. Later they got 2m working and we tried doing some MSK meteor scatter, but that didn't end up working.
I got on the chat page again this morning and tried with them, no luck. K1OR, who was at the keyboard, suggested we try the new Q65 protocol provided by Joe Taylor in WSJT-X. After fumbling around with the radio and setting I finally got it together and successfully worked N4EME!
There are several things worth notiing, first of which is they are roughly 380 miles to the north. That's a pretty tough path on a good day. Second, I have a fairly modest station, 200W into 12 elements at only about 25-30 ft.
After a few sequences I noticed I decoded them, but I hadn't entered their info into WSJT-X, so it was not using A Priori decoding. It took me by surprise because I didn't see anything at all on the waterfall display!
Apparently that is enough signal for WSJT-X to decode!
From what I understand (I have a lot more reading to do) the q3 indicates that it's using message re-construction from previous (in the sequence) decodes.
Thanks to John and Paul for getting me a new, very rare, grid on 2m. With any luck we'll do the same next week when they are in FN66.
-Steve
6m here in FN42la was somewhat dead for 6 days in a row, which is somewhat unusual for the month of June. The previous big opening here was on June 4, which I talked about in my blog post "Another big US-EU opening 2021 June 4."
Finally, on June 11th, we started to see some signs of life, including some DX excitement. I was decoding TZ4AM in Mali, but he wasn't hearing me. Still, very exciting:
-Steve
This was a busy radio weekend. First, the N4EME crew set up in rare grid FN57 in Northern Maine. I tried with them on FT8 on Friday night but wasn't successful. The next morning I got on the chat server and saw they were working folk on 6m meteor-scatter, MSK144 on 50.260. I don't have a lot of meteor scatter experience, but I gave it a shot an was decoding them on pretty regular pings. I was able to quickly work them and then focus on getting ready for the ARRL June VHF contest.
The June Contest is usually dominated by 6m activity, and now with FT8, that can make it somewhat boring. I love operating 6m FT8, but it's not super fun during a contest. I find there are soo many people on that I have a hard time completing contacts. So, off we went and of course, we ended up having a massive opening to the Caribbean, which normally is great, but a lot of times the DX stations aren't running in contest mode, so you have to either switch WSJT-X out of contest mode or run JTDX at the same time (Which is what I did). In the end I worked number of the DX stations, including:
TO11A - Guadalupe
PJ2BR - Curacao
VP9NM - Bermuda
HK3O - Colombia
PJ4NX - Bonaire
HK3W - Colombia
9Y4D - Trinidad and Tobago
8P2K - Barbados
J79WTA - Dominica
PV8DX - Brazil
NP3YL - Puerto Rico
I had recently been complaining that we hadn't had much activity in the Caribbean this season, but this list seems to say otherwise.
The big DX news for the weekend happened further to the north. I was able to work Bo, OX3LX, who is operating in Greenland. Bo has been there since the previous Tuesday, but I hadn't been able to hear him at all. We finally got the opening during the contest and I was able to grab him before he had a big pileup.
After that the other DX was Western Sahara in Africa, S01WS. I've been seeing other folks work him on and off for a while, and I've occasionally had a few decodes from him, but again, was finally able to work him. I had a busted QSO earlier in the week, this times I was able to confirm it.
The contest was a low priority effort for me. My main goal was to get my voice capabilities working again for 6m, which I was successful at doing. Calling CQ on 6m SSB was a lot more fun than operating FT8, and it produced a number of contacts, faster than digital.
The end result was about 14k points
I was up early Saturday morning and was chatting on the ON4KST region 2 chat page. There wasn't much activity for me, but I did see WW1L and K1TOL talking about middle east stations. I couldn't stick around, I had a T-ball game for my 5 year old at 8:30am.
When I got back from the game around 9:30, I was gobsmacked to find that I had decoded 9K2 on 50.323!
What makes this really special is that I have a very modest station. I have a M2 6M5XX up around 25 feet, no tower, no dual stack!
This particular propagation path was really unique since there was ZERO other stations decoded. I would have expected at least some EU stations to be hear, but nothing. The really interesting thing was that XE2X was also decoding the middle-east stations, and I was hearing him call them back!
Another incredible opening happened on Friday, June 4th. It started early in the AM and lasted 'till just about 8pm local. It slowed down during the day, but picked up full-force around 4pm local. I was able to work a number of new grids, and new DXCC entities. Here is the breakdown:
119Q's in total
By DXCC entity:
9A (1)9H (1)DE (14)EA (5)EA6 (1)EI (7)F (17)G (9)GD0 (1)GI (2)GW (3)HB (3)I (21)IS (1)LA (4) ** New DXCCLX (1)OK (1)ON (3)OZ (5)PA (3)SM (4)SP (2)SV (1) ** New DXCCTA (1) ** New DXCCTK (1) ** New DXCCUR (1)VE (1)YT (1)Z3 (1) ** New DXCC
I haven't figure out how many new grids that was, but at one point I was only working new ones.
It was a very different opening that I've experienced before. The propagation seemed to be very sharp at times. Where normally I only hear OZ occasionally, this time it was it was many at time! LA was a new one, but I heard 5-10 total, mostly at the same time. It would be all Italians, then all French, etc.
At times both 313 and 323 were full of stations, and now that I'm using my new SDR setup it's easy for me to switch back and forth. Here is what JTDX looked like:
The next morning I was able to go back and look at PSK Reporter and you can tell where the strongest path was:
I woke up early to an email from Bill, AA2UK, that the band was open. I checked the APRS map:
So I jumped on and mad a bunch of contacts on FT8! I checked SSB, but didn't hear anyone on.
KO4YC, FM17
AA2UK, FM29
KA2BPP, FN30
WB4IUY, FM05
N3ASF, FM27
Things settled down a bit, then out of the blue Bill, VA1WV called me from the back of my beam:
VA1WV, FN75
(at that point I wrote an email to Roger, VE1SKY telling him the bands were open)
KN4SM, FM16
NG4C, FM16
AB4SF, FM17
and then VE1SKY, FN74
N1CLG, FN41
KB1GMX, FN42
W1FKF, FN43
K1RZ, FM19
The final grid map for today on 2m:
Not a bad start for the season!
-Steve
Addendum: It looks like Hepburn got this one right. Here was the prediction map