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Date: | Thu, 14 Oct 2010 08:52:32 -0400 |
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Phil,
Those "common" caribiean stations you were hearing were in fact new DXCC
countries. While I haven't followed this very closely, this past
weekend the Dutch possessions in the carribien were redone into new
entities.
Sunday afternoon they were all over 20 meters giving me fits as I tried
to work some contacts in the PA QSO party.
73, Steve KW3A
On 10/14/2010 12:27 AM, Phil Scovell wrote:
> For awhile, these last few nights, I was beginning to think I was going =
> to have to see if my G5RV had fallen down off the tower due to the =
> horribly weak and poor 75 meter band conditions. Then tonight, =
> conditions have been slightly better and I heard various guys =
> complaining about how poor 75 meters has been of late. I also noticed =
> in the last couple of days, huge CW pile ups on 20 and 30 and 40 meters. =
> The quote rare DX station unquote was down 1 or 2 KHz from the huge, I =
> mean very big, pile ups so naturally, after ringing up 312 countries =
> worked over the years, I figured it had to be something really worth the =
> trouble to work. Tuning down below the pile, I would find common old =
> every day Caribbean stations that had generated pile ups so big, they =
> had to run split frequency to get everybody off their transmit =
> frequency. I honestly don't think the bands have been as bad as they =
> sound. People just aren't on the air as much because they are thinking =
> the bands are dead when they tune through an individual band. At any =
> rate, 75 meters, for sure, has been weak the last few nights and it =
> isn't my antenna fortunately. Even the Texas boys on certain round =
> table frequencies I check and listen to have been down in the mud when =
> normally they run 20 and 30 over nine.
>
> Phil.
> K0NX
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