Doug,
I remember hearing them a couple of times a long time ago.
Phil.
K0NX
----- Original Message -----
From: "Doug Payne" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2014 9:58 PM
Subject: Re: WWV From Colorado
> Does anyone ever remember hearing VNG, The Australian time signal station
> on
> 12.000 mHz? I remember copying them late at night in Ohio throughout the
> 80s. I think they've been gone quite a while now.
>
> --Doug, AC7T
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> On Behalf Of Phil Scovell
> Sent: Friday, April 18, 2014 10:09 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: WWV From Colorado
>
> Denver is about 50 to 60 miles from WWV and there are lots of hills
> between
> here and Fort Collins where the antennas are. During the day, you would
> normally think that their 2.5 signal would be booming into Denver but most
> days, from noon to about 3 PM local, I can't copy them strong enough to
> hear
> the voice announcement. I can here the carrier, of course, but some days
> I
> just can bearly hear them on 2.5 MHz. The 5.0 frequency is fair during
> the
> afternoon but some nights is 40 over and a few times this winter, I copied
> the actual female voice of WWVH in Hawaii on 5.0 as it transmits on the
> same
> frequency. She makes the announcement before the voice out of the Fort
> Collins stations begins to talk and I have copied her over the WWV carrier
> often over the years. The same is true on 10.0 and 15.0 MHz. I copied
> the
> carrier and her the voice in the noise on 20.0 and 25.0 but the one I copy
> the best, being so close, is the 5.0 MHz as I said. In 1992 with my 2
> element 40 meter beam at 70 feet, some mornings I copied WWVH on 5.0 at 40
> over S9. In other times, I have copied, how be it a handful of time, WWVH
> on the 2.5 MHz frequency, too, but that has been pretty rare. As I
> recall,
> most of those times were back in the mid to late seventies. I sure miss
> hearing the time and condition levels given in CW like it was back then,
> too. I've never been able to copy the atomic clock signals down there in
> the 50 to 60 to 70 Hz range but of course I'm not using any kind of super
> long wire, say 500 miles long, at that low frequency range, haha.
>
> Phil.
> K0NX
>
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