1 / 28

Hearing Weak DX on 80 & 160

Hearing Weak DX on 80 & 160. Bill Tippett W4ZV October 1, 2005 SEDCO – Ten-Tec Hamfest. Introduction. “You can’t work ‘em if you can’t hear ‘em!” ~ The Old Timer K4RID – QRV 80m 1960 W0ZV – QRV 80m ‘80, 160m ‘84 80m DXCC 339 (need 4 more) 160m DXCC 317 (need 22 more).

Download Presentation

Hearing Weak DX on 80 & 160

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hearing Weak DX on 80 & 160 Bill Tippett W4ZV October 1, 2005 SEDCO – Ten-Tec Hamfest

  2. Introduction • “You can’t work ‘em if you can’t hear ‘em!” ~The Old Timer • K4RID – QRV 80m 1960 • W0ZV – QRV 80m ‘80, 160m ‘84 • 80m DXCC 339 (need 4 more) • 160m DXCC 317 (need 22 more)

  3. Weak Signals in Noise • “Since you can’t increase the weak signal, reduce the noise!” ~The OT • 1. Noise reduction (S/N issues) • 2. Signal strength (propagation issues) • 3. Other (experience, practice)

  4. Noise Reduction • Different types of noise: • Atmospheric (lightning-induced) • Man-made (power lines, electric fencers, FCC part 15 devices) • Precipitation static (rain, snow, dust)

  5. Antenna Metrics • Beamwidth – included angle for 3 db gain reduction (azimuth or elevation) • RDF – W8JI definition based on Eznec calculations of max forward gain versus 3D gain at all azimuths and elevations • DMF – ON4UN calculation based on forward gain versus averaged F/R in rear 180 degrees (best F/R metric)

  6. Azimuth Example

  7. Elevation Example

  8. Where ’s the noise coming from?

  9. Lightning Strikes

  10. Noise Reduction – Forward Direction • If the noise is from the same direction as the signal, minimize forward beam width to “slice through” the noise • BSEF 8 el / 4el BS vert = ~25 deg. (but not practical to cover 360 degrees) • Parallel 2wl Bev = 44 deg. • W8JI 8-circle vert = 55 deg. • Single 2wl Bev = 62 deg. • Single 1wl Bev = 78 deg. • 4-square vert = 86 deg.

  11. …but, Optimize S/N • If noise not exactly same direction, use knowledge of geography and antenna patterns. • Example: FT5XO’s bearing SE and thunderstorm noise South. • Solution: ESE Beverage includes FT5XO but attenuates noise.

  12. Noise Reduction – Rear • Most wintertime DX not the same direction as storm QRN…don’t need narrow forward beamwidth. Winter storms from Texas to Caribbean are very common...thus need maximum F/R performance toward EU (JA normally not an issue). • ON4UN’s DMF is the most useful metric for F/R performance.

  13. Directivity Merit Factor • 2X 2wl Beverages EF – 33.8 dB • 2X 1wl Beverages EF – 30.1 dB • 4-square – 24 dB • W8JI 8-circle – 22.6 dB • Conclusion: 1wl Beverage EF pair extremely effective for Middle East, Europe and Africa…not much more space than single Beverage

  14. For City Dwellers… • Acreage matters! So don’t set unrealistic expectations. • K9AY/Flag/Pennant/EWE arrays quite effective but cannot compare to phased Beverages or large vertical arrays. • K2UO has ~225 DXCC on 160 from a city lot so you can still have lots of fun!

  15. High-angle Antennas • Sometimes high-angle antennas are optimum. Most common at your sunrise and sunset. • Beverages and vertical arrays are all low-angle antennas, so consider an inverted-V or dipole as a complement. In this case use the same antenna for both transmit and receive.

  16. Inv-V vs 3el Vertical TOA

  17. Man-made Noise • Noise audit (home, neighborhood, power lines) and remove at the source (or move!) • SWL RX and whip or loop antenna • MFJ-852 (for power lines) • Tune 1710 kHz on your car radio • RX noise blankers work well for modern electric fencers (but RX overload) • MFJ-1025 for local single-point noise

  18. Precipitation Static • Verticals are bad • Beverages are good • Noise blankers sometimes work • Sometimes nothing works

  19. About That Weak Signal • You can’t make it stronger but Mother Nature can! Remember the 3 P’s --- Propagation, Patience and Persistence. • Propagation – Know when the DX signal may peak and watch azimuth changes. • Patience – Propagation may move toward you. Don’t call if you can’t hear! • Persistence – Keep trying! JT1CO and UK8DAN literally took seasons to work!

  20. Other Issues • Practicelistening to weak signals. N2XE’s Beacon starts in October; YR2TOP on 1810.5. • Modern receiver sensitivity (MDS) not a factor, but learn which settings work best for your ears (i.e. Pitch, Bandwidth, AGC, RF Gain, NR, NB, Diversity, etc).

  21. Need more info? • ON4UN’s Low-Band DXing 4th edition (the only book you need) • W8JI.com (many pages of info) • Topband reflector archives

  22. Conclusion • Low Bands are challenging but fun! • Great conditions are just ahead. • Good RX antennas are a must. • Nobody said it would be easy! • Get in there and have some fun!

  23. Beverage Kits - $10 • Transformer (50 or 75 ohm coax), non-inductive termination & instructions

More Related