Here are the stations I picked up: 162.450 somewhere in S. Texas.162.475- Waco, 162.425- Throckmorton, 162.400- Austin/San Antonio, and 162.500- Cisco. KWBU, KXAN, KHCE, KXXV, LPB, KIAH, and KTXS
added KZJL and KBTX.eskipper411 said:Here are the stations I picked up: 162.450 somewhere in S. Texas.162.475- Waco, 162.425- Throckmorton, 162.400- Austin/San Antonio, and 162.500- Cisco. KWBU, KXAN, KHCE, KXXV, LPB, KIAH, and KTXS
Decatur, TXBRNout said:Where's your location?
eskipper411 said:I did'nt know because I am new to DXing.
DeadElvis said:BRNout is, for the most part, right. But there are a few amplifications I might make.
NOAA radio, in the 162 MHz band, would almost always be tropo when heard over long distances. But, there are indeed times that they are heard via sporadic-E (Es). In extreme openings, e-skip signals can get that high. As a ham, I work 144 MHz, not far below, and I have already seen a couple of openings this Summer. In one opening, there was a path on 162 MHz between NJ and AR. Still, it is rare.
Tropo can happen over long distances. I have gotten tropo out to 1000 miles. But, again, it's rare. Over time, you'll develop a feel for the two, and can tell the difference easily.
But, if you're getting high VHF (like NOAA) at just a few hundred miles, it will be tropo.
DE
LibertyNT said:I've Tropo'd some NOAA before. During a heavy thunderstorm NOAA weather radio was practically useless. My Local NOAA was being overrun by one In Shreveport. all the Other NOAA's were Louisiana And East Texas.