Friday, 23 October 2009

Snowdonia Radio Company SRC X65 65ft end fed


I bought one of these at a local rally. It is a 65ft wire and a 9:1 UN-UN. The guy who sells them is very friendly and is an ex Royal Signals op (I think). At only £30 it is barely worth making your own. I set it up as an inverted L with a 10m fishing pole. So it was about 9m up and about 10m sloping down to my shed, tied off with fishing line so that the end was about eight feet off the floor. I used a single ground stake and six 20ft radials.

Here are the results:
SWR measured with MFJ 269 at end of 30ft of coax.
Single earth stake and six 20ft radials

3.5MHz – SWR 3.5:1
3.6MHz – SWR 4.4:1
3.8MHZ – SWR 6.2:1
7.10MHz - SWR 4.8
10.1MHz – SWR 2.6:1
14.2MHz – SWR 2:1
18.14MHz – SWR 1.7:1
21.2MHz – SWR 1.9:1
24.9MHz – SWR 1.7:1
28.5MHz – SWR 1.3:1
29.6MHz – SWR 1.9:1
50.1MHz – SWR 1.9

On–air comparison with 135ft Windom (OCF)

80m
Similar signal strengths to Windom around UK, sometimes 2-4 S pts down, but 1-2 S pts. less noise. Holland down 2 S points. Germany 1 S pt better.

40m
Similar to Windom on PA and DL, F similar, IK similar, G similar.

20m
UA 1 S pt better on SRC, IK better by 1 S pt, YO similar

17m
Similar – inverted L has slight edge at times. Slightly quieter

15m
Better than Windom by about 1 S point, sometimes better, sometimes worse.

12m
All signals better by 1-2 S points

10m
Much better than Windom, dipole and mag loop, by about 2 S points. UA three S pts better. Slightly noisier. 5B4 beacon 2 S pts better.

I was very surprised at how good it was on 10m – or my Windom is very bad. I think this could be a keeper. See http://www.snowdonia-radio-company.co.uk/

Update: In the CQWW SSB contest on 24/25 October I worked more than 20 countries using the antenna on 10m, including ZS9 - very good!

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

HF Propagation Podcast, October 2009

Slight change to the format this month. I was very pleased to meet Carl K9LA at the RSGB Convention last week. Carl is an HF propagation expert and a fellow member of the RSGB's Propagation Studies Committee. I took the opportunity to talk with Carl about Solar Cycle 24. We also talked about the theory that galactic cosmic rays are affecting Top Band (160m) propagation during this solar minimum. You can listen to the podcast by clicking on the link above. Or you can search for G0KYA on iTunes.

Monday, 12 October 2009

What is WSPR?

I gave a talk at the RSGB's National Convention on WSPR, what it is and how it is being used. I was asked if I could make the PowerPoint presentation available so here it is. It is quite a big download though - about 12Mb. Just click on the title to download it.

Sunday, 4 October 2009

Propagation predictions for P29 DXpedition to Papua, New Guinea


Gordon G3USR asked me to produce some propagation predictions for the P29 DXpedition to Papua, New Guinea, that he is joining between 20.10.09 – 10.11.09.

I have used a combination of ACE-HF and W6ELProp, plus a bet of guess work to come up with the attached. It will be interesting to see how they work out.

Click on the main heading to download the PDF

Wednesday, 16 September 2009

HF Propagation - Autumn

The equinox periods provide longer daytime periods than winter, but logically, shorter night-time periods too. These tend to be the best months for working North-South paths, such as UK to South Africa.

On 160m (1.8MHz or Top Band), look for short-skip and DX openings at night. Again, no daylight skip is possible due to absorption, but openings out to 1,300 miles and occasionally further afield can be expected at night with conditions peaking around midnight and again at sunrise (greyline).

80m (3.5MHz) will generally follow the characteristics of Top Band at night, but will also provide good openings out to around 250 miles during the day. These will lengthen to around 500-2,300 miles at night with fairly good DX opportunities at times.

40m (7MHz) Forty metres should open to DX in an easterly direction at sunset. Openings to the west should be possible after midnight and should peak just before sunrise. Contacts should be possible during the day, although, again, lower critical frequencies may mean that it is difficult to work other UK stations while perfectly possible to talk to European stations.

20m (14MHz) is likely to be the best DX band between sunrise and sunset. The bands may occasionally open after dark, mainly to the southern hemisphere. Good openings will be possible during daylight hours out to around 2,300 miles.

17m/15m (18MHz/21MHz) should provide fairly good DX openings during daylight hours, especially to Africa and South America, with 17m being open more often than 15m. Once again, 15m may struggle to open during times of low solar flux. Both bands are likely to close after sunset.

12m/10m (24MHz/28MHz) will continue to be disappointing bands at this point in the solar cycle. There may be many days where there are no signals at all, although occasional brief openings to DX may be possible, especially if the solar flux heads towards the high 80s/90s.

HF Propagation Podcast, September 2009

Are sunspots disappearing completely? Some scientists think so. But a large spot is just around the back of the sun and should swing into view around September 20th. Find out more about this and the best HF bands to use in September in this month's podcast. Also available on iTunes

Sunday, 9 August 2009

HF Propagation Podcast, August 2009

A look at HF propagation conditions for August 2009, including the solar and geomagnetic data for July 2009, Sporadic E and how to work stations VQ9JC on Chagos Island and 5N0OCH in Nigeria. All this plus a band-by-band round-up of what you can work and hear. Also available on iTunes