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ON5ZO - OQ5M73 from Belgium
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October 11 Blowing the dust offThis weekend it'll be 6 weeks since my last QSO. This weekend it'll be 6 weeks since my butt last touched the shack's chair. In between I only let the amp run dry for a few hours to keep things going. So I vowed that this weekend, I'll make a few contacts. The first thing to do after such a period is let the PC do its updates both for the operating system as for anti-virus. Then I installed the latest N1MMLogger and K5ZD's SCP. Finally it was time to make the move from V5 to V7 for my microHAM MK2R+ 's USB routing software. This went unexpectedly smooth. No glitches, no settings lost, no problems to get things going after the upgrade. Great stuff from microHAM! Then on to get my K3's firmware up to date. Last time (and the first time I did that) wasn't exactly a big success (see link). Guess what? Same issue again. Same solution to the problem. And now I remembered to set the baudrate to 4800 again! Finally time for some action. TT8JT was firing away on 20m. I think I worked him. He sent what I assumed to be my call but I was not sure due to "simplex rude manners" so I replied 'QRM DE OQ5M OQ5M 579 PSE CFM' to which he replied 'TU TT8JT UP'. So I did not get a confirmation and I simply did not log the contact. I don't care about DXCC or work - not work a DX. I want a decent QSO which is at least a proper confirmation of my call to see if the DX has it straight. I didn't bother to call again and moved up to 17m. SFI=69 and A was 0. So I did what I like most: park myself and call CQ (in CW of course) and see what happens. After a couple of CQ's WA6NHD answered. His loud signal lead me to believe he was an Eastcoaster. But not so: he sent 'CA'! My first QSO in 6 weeks and there you go. I continued for a while and worked some more W5+6+7 and a W0. California, Texas, Nevada, Colorado and Pennsylvania too. I like working USA regardless the band. Then I got a "Dinner Is Served" call so I called it a day. My weekend's vows are met. October 04 Less is more!You get less yet you pay more. Welcome to the 2008 purchasing power dip. I try to keep the non-ham stuff here limited to a strict minimum but radio activities @ ON5ZO are reported to be at an all time low. No further research is needed about correlation with sunspots. There is a proven link. However I wanted to vent something that has been on my mind for a few days. We moved in here half 2003 after a few months of cleaning up the house and giving it a 21st century look inside. Since then our "two head family" (don't count the paws, too many pets) succeeded in consuming less electrical energy year after year. For 5 years in a row the annual graph to document our power supplier's invoice shows less kWh year after year. We replaced appliances with new versions that consume less energy. We replaced all lights with compact fluorescent light bulbs and (credit goes to XYL) we don't waste power. Mild winters helped too since we didn't need to fire up some auxiliary electrical heating in office rooms and the shack. So despite the fact that during the September 2007 to September 2008 time span we consumed LESS kWh than ever before, our annual invoice has gone up with ALMOST 200 Euro. I must admit that this number is a rough calculation that I need to redo next year when I can make the difference between the sum of the monthly deposits and the balance with the measured consumption per kWH-meter but still I am not amused. That is a relative increase of over 20%. Last time I checked our salaries didn't grow this much in a year. On the other hand bringing our fuel stove to the scrap yard (scrap metal pays 300 Euro per metric ton these days) seems to have been a good deal. We bought a pellet stove last winter. We're very happy with that as a first indication shows that annual heating costs are half of what gasoline ("mazout" as we say here) would have cost us. But it gets better. I asked a price quote for the pellets last week and... the price has dropped with about 15% since last year. Sceptics warned us that the price of the pellets would rise with demand but until now it seems that its increasing popularity does not affect the price. By all means the price of pellets is not susceptible to international geopolitical circumstances, unlike fossil fuels. I hope to heat the shack with about 1 kW of RF power this winter. More on ham radio later (contest certificates, upgrading my software tools, Belgium's biggest ham fair...) after I finish an URGENT project for my boss (the one at work, not the one at home). September 21 QSL cards: halfway through the pile upI finally processed 7 months of incoming QSL cards for OQ5M. That's 1014 QSOs confirmed, good for about 750 cards sent via globalQSL. So my card is finally heading your way! Glad I don't need to print labels and stick 'm. That's the good news. The bad news is: I still have almost as many cards to process for my other calls (OO5ZO / ON5ZO). My current stock still counts a considerable pile of QSL cards so I'll be printing labels until they run out. I hope to get that job done before the end of the year... On my daily scan of the latest eHam reviews I saw a review for two NY guys (W2RE + WW2DX) owning a tower works company. There's a video on the website (direct link) where W2RE shows off his three towers with multiple stacks. Very nice stuff that makes guys like me (and probably you too) drool. What struck me is that when W2RE shows his 10m stack he says "I can't wait for ten meter to open up again". That's an observation I come across a lot these days. I read a lot of amateur radio pulp literature every day (blogs, 3830 comments, reflectors) and I think we're all monitoring the SFI closely to see it climbing out of the "Propagational Valley of Death". Read last week's WAE SSB comments on 3830 or look at the 15m numbers of the claimed scores... K3WWP even has a poll going: "So email me your guess as to what date you think I'll post a SF number of 70 or above again. No prizes other than if you win, you'll have the satisfaction of knowing you guessed better than everyone else.". My on air activities are still very limited. I am waiting for better propagation too. Contesting on 28MHz. Working DX on 12m. I never had the chance to do that from here with reasonable antennas. Although I must admit that it's starting to itch again. Any (CW) QSO is better than no QSO at all... September 10 4 out of 4Last week the official results came out for the UBA DX CW contest 2008. Great: another win in the 12h HP class. To put things in perspective: mine was the only log submitted in this category. Nonetheless: I won both SSB and CW in 2007 and 2008. So 5 UBA plaques on the wall in total (2006 CW or so? I'm not in the shack right now). I have a slightly higher score in 12h than the winner in the 24h class. I really hit it hard in CW. I tried that in the SSB part but that was a painfully slow contest. My CW score (about 850 QSO) was almost double than the SSB part (460 QSO). Same conditions, same setup, only 4 weeks apart. Main difference is the mode. The UBA CW contest coincides with CQ 160 SSB. The UBA SSB coincides with CQ 160 CW. Contesters prefer CW - period. UBA CW in 2009 might be a problem. The usual date (last full W/E of February) is the same weekend as ARRL DX CW. That would kill UBA CW for sure. Since it's unlikely the ARRL will move dates and the fact that those weekends are jam packed with contests (2x ARRL, 2x CQ 160, 2x UBA, 2x REF etc), I pointed this out to the UBA HF Manager a few weeks ago. I hope the UBA will move their CW DX contest. Last weekend was SSB fieldday. I set the alarm to wake me at 6AM on Sunday to visit locals ON4BHQ and ON4ALY. They did a joint effort with 2 of the local clubs. When I arrived on the scene (about 10km from here) another familiar face arrived (ON4AFU). They had a nice setup with two big construction cranes to support the antennas. One of the cranes was illuminated making it a visible landmark. Their /P shack was a touring car. It's for sale HI. Other than that again nothing to report. September 03 FluIt's been 10 days since my last posting but I got a sudden and severe case of flu. The little time I spent on the bands showed daily openings to KH6 in the morning on 20m. I worked a KH6 in RTTY for a new one in that mode. The opening at my sunrise on 30m to W6-land is still there. But the W6-guys weren't. I only worked 2 or 3 Californian stations on the mornings I was QRV. One afternoon I had a short run of JA on 20. And I made 200-and-a-few QSO's in the YO DX contest last weekend. I'm half way through the box of QSL cards. That's over 600 QSO's. I don't count the cards but the logging program says I marked +600 contacts to QSL. When the other half is done, I can process the ADIF export and upload to the GlobalQSL system. Yes, it's really calm here. I enjoyed the "It's not a job" part N0AX wrote in his biweekly ARRL newsletter (link). It might as well be written for my 2008 contesting... August 24 K3 = OKAs expected yesterday's test didn't reveal anything wrong with the K3's CW signals. Last night I wanted to work some W8 stations in the Ohio QSO Party. Conditions on 20m were absolutely poor. I quit with the counter stuck at 23 QSO. I tried 40m later that night but didn't hear any USA there. I couldn't get anything going on 30m because of local noise. And I didn't even try 40m for some DX. I got very bored with propagation and at 23.00 local time I called it a day. Before closing the shack, I decided to give the K3 a firmware update. It was running the latest official release which is almost 3 months old. So I downloaded the last beta firmware and started uploading. The screen's progress bar didn't show much progression before the Elecraft software told me there was an error. I could not start the K3 anymore and could not establish communication with the PC to downgrade back to the working version. So I was completely stuck. My last resort without sending emails was the RTFM route. No go. In a wave of blind accusations I decided to blame the USB-to-serial conversion. I use microHAM's USB routing software with virtual COM ports. Maybe a real serial port would work? I dug up some serial cables as an RS-232 extension cord to connect the K3 to a spare PC that still has native COM ports but stands on the opposite side of the shack. I installed the needed software and there you go: connected. I uploaded the official release and after checking that one I installed the B-version successfully. Then reloading the rig's settings from a file and I was good to go. Or so I thought. The microHAM band decoder couldn't communicate with the rig. This decoder is the link between the rig and the MK2R+ / PC. I knew it was the band decoder since antenna selection didn't follow the K3's QSY. A lot of head scratching later it turned out to be the K3's baud rate that was higher after the update than the 4800 I had it set to to match the band decoder's baudrate. That parameter does not seem to get saved into the config file. I think there is nothing wrong with the microHAM stuff and its protocol. It worked the first time when I loaded the firmware after assembling the K3. It works again now. It must have been a glitch on this particular operation. I hit the sack at 01.00. Two hours for a firmware upgrade. I woke up this morning at 06.30. Too early after last night's adventure but since the tower is up and my 40m vertical too, I wanted to check 40/30m at sunrise. The light switch in the hallway upstairs didn't illuminate my path. Neither did the one downstairs. The fridge was dead too. I went to the power distribution panel to find all circuit breakers in the 'on' position. Except the earth leakage differential breaker. So it wasn't a short circuit but current flowing to ground. I did not need to scratch my head over that one: I cut the water boiler's circuit and activated the differential breaker. All system's go. Exit HF bands. Guess how I spent my Sunday morning (apart from working 2 Hawaiian stations on 20)? August 22 K3 keying testA few weeks ago I was running EUHFC (see link) when a loud signal comes up telling me "CHECK UR TX - CHECK UR TX". I was stunned by this remark and I asked what was wrong. I got an answer telling me something was wrong with the signal (can't remember the exact words). Since no one else complained about it, I forgot this happened. Until G4BUE mentions on the Elecraft reflector (link) that some people can ID a signal coming from a K3 as being 'hard keying'. He also says 'I was using the NR option at the time'. Then it hit me: when the guy (gal?) broke in to tell me to check my TX, I was actually playing with the NR parameters. The low bands were very noisy here and I wanted to see if the fancy K3 DSP toys could make RX better. My old TS-850 doesn't have this feature. Following my reply on the Elecraft reflector, I got the offer from a SM station (also K3 owner) to check my keying on the air. So I arranged a sked with the SM station and invited G4BUE as well. We'll be around 7020 and 10115, sked made around 04.30 - 04.45 utc on Satuday August 23. Care to join us? August 15 WAE CW 2008Short version pasted from ON5ZO's Contest Template 2008: Bad weather + no propagation = no motivation >> no contest. Long version for the records. WAE CW is my favorite contest. Only for the QTC of course. I've never missed one since I accidentally stumbled in WAE CW 2001 (follow this link to read more about that). But since 2008 is really my off year, and it's the sun's off year and the summer weather's off year I decided to skip this one completely. We had to attend an event on Friday night so I couldn't start on 40/80 anyway. Better make that: I could have done so if I wanted to. While WAE is big fun it isn't an easy contest. You need to get out of EU. On the higher bands that's a 'no go' because of the total lack of sunspots. On the low bands you need to have good antennas and preferably good ears. In mid summer 40 and especially 80 can be really noisy and full of summer QRN. The money band is 20m but you need the low bands for the multiplier weighting. I was looking at the online cluster on Saturday and saw a few spots EU-W and EU-JA on 15m. That looked promising. The week before in EUHFC conditions were horrible from here. I gave up on 10 and 15 for DX. And given the shape of 20m I wasn't expecting a lot. But this looked different. I decided I would crank up the tower one level on Sunday and play 'fresh meat' to gather at least some QTC for the fun of it. And so I did. By local noon on Sunday -way too early to be considered 'fresh meat'- I got on 15m and immediately heard YE1ZAT. I could work him right away and solicited QTC. I got only 7 but the QSO/QTC ratio was 1:7 right away. Until last year I practiced copying QTC a few days in advance with a batch of MP3 files and the N1MMLogger software. Not so this year. But the copying went amazingly well, even better than before. Apart from QSB and QRN and the occasional QRM from an impatient LID. After YE1ZAT I worked some 'local DX' on 15m like TA, RA9, D4 etc. I even worked AP2IA. Sweet. On 10m only 4L0A was worked and he was weak. So off to 20m where my goal was to run and ask for QTC on each QSO. That went fairly well. I went to work VY2MT (= KD4D as close to EU as possible) on 20 and of course got some QTC. VY2's are always loud here on all bands. Their signals on all bands are an indication of propagation. VY2MT must have thought an ON on 15m was badly needed so I was happy to QSY to 15 for him. That worked as well. I stayed on 20m where K7SV called in. I was mislead by his signal. It was weak but on K7SV's 3830 post I read he's LP and not on the West Coast. QTC were granted but it wasn't easy. I had (have? - need to check) a terrible noise on 20m when the yagi is pointing between 320° and 220°. That is from KL7 to PY... Next up was K5KG. On 3830 K5KG tells he's HP but in FL. Sure sounded as if he was deep into Texas. QTC were a pain too - SRI OM. Maybe it was too early for good 20m propagation to USA? RZ9OZO (= RW1AC) was louder and he asked for a sked on 80m. I had to turn him down as my low band antennas are down and packed away. That might have cost him the ON multiplier. At about 12.00 utc I moved up to 15m again. I could run some USA but a) not many heard and b) those heard were not too loud. But beggars can't be choosers so I was glad to make it across the Atlantic. Ten minutes later I worked VY2EJ on 10m. Great: DX on 28 MHz. I moved back to 15m for more USA and then up to 10m again. I worked about 20 stations from North-America on 10m. Almost 4x more than last year! At that time I had set myself a goal: work as many stations and beg until you have 500 QTC. I figured the best thing to do was run USA on 20m. Conditions were only so-so and the truckload of loud PY/LU on 15m was absent, even quieter on 10m. I kept asking and quit the contest with 508 QTC in 182 QSO. I've come to terms with 2008 being a serious dip in my operations. I'm still profoundly in love with ham radio and especially contesting. It took me almost 8 months to figure out that taking it easy for a while doesn't make me a lesser ham or contester. I'm pretty sure that by the time the solar conditions pick up I'll be hungry like a wolf again to enter each and every contest, be it full time or just handing out some Q's. August 13 K3 delivery fallout: more to payTwo months ago I told the story of the K3's arrival (link). A few weeks later UPS called me to say I had to pay over 300 Euros. The lady explained it concerned the shipping costs. I got in a panic. I already paid such an amount! This would blow the anticipated K3 budget. I told her the vendor charged the shipping costs and I paid +300 COD to the delivery guy. She checked her records and confirmed that everything was OK and that all costs were already paid. A few days ago I got another UPS invoice in the mail. They checked their calculations and compared those figures to what they actually paid the Belgian customs upon import. In fact I didn't pay enough. There was an open debt of... 0.01 Euro. One euro cent. Sending me the invoice in bulk mail costs them about 30 cents or more. So I transferred 0.01 Euro. The worst part is that the invoice has a slip you have to return after the payment. A stamp to get this mailed to UPS would cost me 54 cent. I called their toll free helpdesk (luckily it's a free 0800 number) and the lady told me that this amount should not be paid. I answered I already did but sticking a stamp would be ridiculous. She told me that there was no need to send the slip and that the 1 euro cent shouldn't have been paid in the first place... August 12 CW Skimmer: burn a candle for the busted callsignsNow I finally know what Skimmer is. It was on display in the Brussels Ikea store yesterday. Funny isn't it? Click the link and behold: SKIMMER! August 10 Hallelujah: I'm working DX on Ten Playing around in WAE - nothing serious BUT I AM WORKING W/VE ON TEN METER as we speak. YES!!! Also some on 15m. More on WAE later. August 04 EUHFC 2008 - #2A follow up to my earlier posting on this topic (see below). Yesterday evening after posting my previous message and this morning I started reading the 3830 postings. I'm screwed. My score definitely won't be in the top 10 box this year. I'm currently #13 claimed (see 3830). I really feel bad because I thought I made the most out of the cards that were dealt. What went wrong? Basically if you don't win a contest that means others have done better. So why did they do better? Let's not take the setup into account. Apart from the 80m antenna there was no change from the antennas used in 2007.
I should check all this when the logs are out in a few months. But by that time I probably won't care anymore. The only thing I will care about is: when will we have at least a handful of sunspots? And right now on a more decisive level: is it worth to do WAE CW next weekend when you can't even work EU on the bands? August 03 EUHFC 2008I discovered this contest a few years ago and I like it a lot. In 2005 I did about 600 contacts low power. I made 950 QSO or so in 2006 when going QRO. I astounded myself with over 1200 QSO last year so stakes were high in 2008. I don't want to repeat myself but once more can't hurt: 2008 is really not a good year for me in this contesting business. Motivation low, propagation low and it has become a statistical certainty that contest weekends bring bad weather. Usually in the form of storm or heavy winds and during summer the WX even throws in some thunderstorms. Regulars know that I have a field day setup: all antennas down except for contests. A crank up tower under high wind load is lethal or at least unhealthy. The weakest point is my 80m vertical. It's a killer antenna for EU and DX but an elevated GP with feedpoint 4m high and a flimsy 15m high radiator do not support wind or gusts. No I can't guy it as I don't have access to the other side of the garden. Long story... So it wasn't any different this time. One of the biggest T-storms since we moved in 5 years ago dropped on our heads Thursday night with fall out on Friday morning. No use cranking up the tower before Saturday then. And so I did. Tower up to 'EU take off level' (yagi @ 15m high, enough for EU only). The wind was present but definitely not a hazard to the tower and yagi. Then I put up the 40m GP that can stand more wind than the 80m GP. But the wind was blowing too hard for the 80m GP. It would remain up when installed, but it would be a pain getting it up in the first place. I tried that too often in the past. Must be a funny sight for sure, but not for me with the clock ticking to the start of the contest. It wasn't the first time my 80m contest operations were in danger thanks to the meteorological powers that be. For this year's UBA DX SSB in January I needed to think of and execute a 'plan B' a few hours before the contest. I made a 80m dipole since I wasn't expecting any DX in the SSB part. However I could not raise that dipole on the tower's pulley this time since the 160m dipole already took that spot. And I know from experience that 2 dipoles for 80 and 160 interact when too close to each other. 'Cross polarization' antennas do work though. With about 3 hours to go I decided to use the 80m dipole in a strange configuration. A long shot... I raised one leg on the tower's opposite side pulley. I grabbed the feed point and stretched it as far as the garden's edge. With a piece of rope in a spruce tree I suspended the feed point about 1.5m above the ground. From there I took the other leg and used it as a single elevated radial also 1.5m high, going back to the tower. All this was done making sure the 80m experiment would make an angle as close to 90° to the 160m dipole's plane as possible. I needed to avoid interacting and coupling between both bands. It took a little pruning and adding some wire to the radial formerly known as Dipole's Leg but it got resonant. Only the dip was too sharp reducing my 2:1 bandwidth too much. This was measured right at the feed point so I figured about 50m of coax into the shack would broaden this due to the losses. I ran to the shack and hooray - we had achieved "broadbandness". I could span 80m CW with SWR low enough (less than 1.5) not to trip amps or fold back power. No coupling on 160m. The Top Band dipole was still resonant where needed and everything else seemed to be working. ON5ZO, I dub thee the McGyver of antennas. A wire and a rope and he makes a resonant antenna. If only this stuff actually radiates and picks up RF! You see, it's all this stuff that has attenuated my contesting fun. A turnkey setup would be easy: sit down, flip switch, fire CQ at will on all HF bands. In stead all my contest efforts turn into a one-man field day show over and over again. Setup up, play radio, break down, store till next weekend. Repeat sequence. But it's like that and it will remain like that. Moreover faint heart never won fair lady (or a contest for that matter) so by this time I still had one hour to go and I was ready. Boy was I ready! The XYL cooked la lovely lunch (I really liked that sauce honey!), I took a shower and with 10 minutes to go I hit the chair. I proceeded to checked 10m. Uh oh... Empty! I ran there prior to the contest last year to reserve my seat and made an 120/hr on 28 MHz to start the contest. Let's do this on 15m then this year? Same story. At 12.00utc I tried to run 10m, dropped to 15m and made QSO #1 after 4 minutes... on 20m! Oh boy, nasty. That 20m QSO was to make sure the RX was working. Back to 15m. I made 2 QSO there for a total of 3 and already 9 minutes were gone. I figured this situation was the same for everyone so let's all end up on 20m gain shall we? I ran 20m, moved to 15m and 10m to do some S&P then ran 15m and tried running 10m again. This was absolutely a propagation nightmare and a night and day difference with last year. The rest of the contest I kept staring at last year's rates I printed and realized that if my 80m antenna turned out to be crap, it would be even more of a mess. The rates were low, and apart from no propagation it seemed that there was not too much of a crowd on CW. When I finally got to 40m the band let me down too. I've seen it better for EU only rates. The facts for the rest of the contest:
I haven't checked 3830 for the comments and scores so I hope everyone suffered from the bad propagation and that my score will be in the top 10 again. It was fun but not as much fun as it would be with some propagation. Fingers crossed for 2009! July 29 Antennaworks: K9AY loop @ ON5ZOLast Sunday my nephew and I put up the K9AY loop. A temporary setup for testing purposes only. Apart from a light sunburn, all went well. Except I discovered the PVC sticks I bought in a garden supplies store are in fact metal sticks covered with a layer of PVC. I use these as corner supports for the wires. I did some initial testing at about 15.00 utc on all HF bands between 7 MHz and 28 MHz. Not really the targeted bands for such a loop nor the right time. The plan was to test at night when the Low Bands would show some life. But around 19.30 the sky began to darken and roar. So I took the wires down and disconnected all coaxes. Glad I did: half an hour later we had a severe T-storm with nearby lightning strikes. So further testing is in order when I find a more permanent place to put it down. I must say that the loop seems to hear as well as any TX antenna here on the higher bands. But I only heard signals in a 1000 km radius. Directivity wasn't great but that might be due to the proximity of the signals or to the corner supports that turn out to be conductive after all. I should look for strong bamboo sticks and find a way to jam them into the ground without breaking them. The setup works so I only need to tweak it and do some serious nighttime testing. Speaking of antennas: I found a REALLY interesting article on 4SQ antennas on the RRDXA website (link here). It's written by DF6QV who designed the 4 square arrays used on TS7N, 5A7A and more recently VP6DX. Reading the article makes me (and you?) dream of big 80m arrays. My garden is a tidbit too small for that. And it would only be blown over by the storm on every contest weekend. As a coincidence I received my VP6DX QSL card in the mail today. In fact it is not quite a card - it's a real 16 page booklet the size of a QSL card. It's full with descriptions of the setup and the expedition in general with a lot of nice color pictures. Great signals, great expedition, great QSL! July 26 Tower maintenance + some HF contactsNormal life here is on a break. My niece and nephew are here for their annual holiday visit which means there is time for some radio. Not too late or too early though because the shack is also a sleeping room for the moment. With an extra pair of hands available eager to turn the winch we tilted the tower over this week. Time to realign the WARC dipole over the tribander's boom. They got shifted in one of the storms earlier this year. I took the opportunity to do a visual check of all elements of the antenna system. It's been 15 months since I last checked everything up there. All nuts and bolts still tight, weatherproofing seemed OK, lubricated the tower's moving elements. I found a loose nut on the bolt of one of the 'roller thingies' that makes the inner section of the tower glide smoothly. In fact it was a nut / counternut combination. The nut combo was tight alright but it wasn't screwed against the plate so the 'roller thingy' could slide over the bolt that serves as a shaft. Gee this is hard to describe. Should have taken a picture. When the tower was vertical again my tower-intern insisted on cranking it up. And so he did. I let it there from Tuesday to Friday. In the mean time I checked daytime propagation with about 300 QSO. Oh solar spots, where art thou? I really like casual DXing in between contests but -and I keep coming back to this- this is very boring. I guess most people feel the same and don't bother to get on the air awaiting cycle 24 solar spots. Of course the W's and JA's suffer the same disease: not getting out of their own continent. Hang in there friends. I hope we'll soon meet again above 18 MHz. WX forecast mentions heavy T-storms the coming days, so on Friday I had the winching intern slide the tower down and I disconnected all cables before they enter the house. While I am typing this the sky is roaring. This weekend is IOTA contest. Last time I checked I wasn't attributed an IOTA reference so why bother? A real IOTA activation is still unchecked on my 'try at least once'-list though.
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