K
kf4rca
Guest
Might be some interesting daytime DX as the eclipse passes overhead form Oregon to S.C.
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@ RBruce: Might that lack of totality have blunted the DX effect by you more than the speed of the atmosphere re-arranging conditions is considered?
I mean, we've all seen the sun go behind a big cloud, and that never changed reception. This is a 3000-mile swath, though.... supposedly 70 miles wide .... going in motion to be sure, but lasting at its peak for (so says NASA) 2:40 at some place in Illinois. Those living or driving right along that thin medial vein, with 35 miles of elbow room on either side of them, would provide the best summaries ; what actually happens to the dial.
(Non-DX-wise, but doubtless interesting to some, would be the effect on the tides in Oregon and South Carolina).
73,
The firm of Carly (Total Eclipse of the sun) Simon
Cat (I'm Being Followed By A Moon Shadow) Stevens
Bonnie (Total Eclipse of The Heart) Tyler
* * * * * * *
On Long Island we saw a partial solar eclipse in early 1979. We used the cardboard-box method of viewing it; worked pretty good! Reception didn't budge one bit on AM, though.
It'd be real cool if the event along the path also happened to coincide, independently, with some of that daytime skywave stuff.
No doubt, some FM DXers here will have their ears Q-tipped, their headsets on, and the tape rolling, hi
https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1703/1703.01491.pdf
There are charts of some stations that were received with higher signals than usual. Interesting.