BRNout said:
Yes, I've read tales of dxpeditions where dxers would string up a kilometer of wire along a select coastline in Newfoundland or a desolate part of northern Finland, connect it to a $10,000 rig, and pick up the likes of Iran or a graveyarder from Battle Creek, Michigan. But, in some ways, that's cheating.
Also, from what I understand, they do most if not all of their DXing at night. I was talking about in the middle of the day... and due to the multiple time zones traversed, I should mention that it should be solar noon at the middle of the path, and preferably at a time of the year where at the ends of the path it's still at least 2 hours after sunrise / 2 hours before sunset.
radioman148 said:
gar fla said:
... DXing in the Bahamas ... video ... good steady strong signal from WCBS in the daytime.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-W_RgQogINQ
I've seen this video before and the fact is that the reception is at 5PM EST which means this was most likely a skywave signal in January.
I'd like to see a video of this at noon or 1PM, then I'd be really impressed. Hearing skywave signals at 5PM in the winter months is very common.
I've heard them as early as 2:30 in Dec & Jan.
In the 80s I heard WLS in Miami at 4:15 and that's not over water.
gar fla said:
I've heard many northern stations start to come in here around 5 pm in the winter (the time that WCBS video was done) but again, the fading is there.
Also, for example here in San Diego, 5pm is actually 15 minutes after the time that local stations change patterns at sunset this month and next. (They change at 4:45pm.) Even in summer, I've heard skywave an hour after sunrise and an hour before sunset, sometimes longer.
gar fla said:
In the dead of the Winter, one can often hear skywave -- ALL DAY.
I'm aware of that and I've seen it happen even here in Florida midday but the dead giveaway that it's a skywave is the fading in and out.
Another dead giveaway, for me at least, is that even if the signal is not fading, if I can receive it well enough to identify using a barefoot portable at noon in January, but can't detect more than a carrier with the Select-A-Tenna in July, I'd think it's probably skywave.
R. Fry said:
wffm78 said:
This may be a dumb question, and I am not an engineer, but usually isn't the lower part of the AM band where signals go out the farthest? Why would it be different for skywave?
The
groundwave of AM broadcast stations has less loss for lower frequencies.
The reflection coefficient from the ionosphere for nighttime skywaves is about the same for all AM broadcast frequencies, but the higher power, higher frequency AM broadcast stations may have useful (but weak) skywave reflections during daylight hours, especially in the winter months.
RF
So what time of the year (and local time of the day) would there be at least an hour-long window when it be absolutely impossible for someone in the 20-70° (preferably 32-35°) latitudes to detect any trace of skywave reception on 1700 kHz in QRSS CW or PSK31 (whichever requires the less field intensity to be detectable)? To attempt to ensure that "if it doesn't happen under these conditions, it will
NEVER happen", assume that the nearest source of QRM/QRN is the moon, any manmade spacecraft beyond that is completely powered off, the ionosphere is exhibiting maximum blocking of extraterrestrial mediumwave signals, the transmitted signal is still strong enough to spontaneously boil tungsten as it's arriving up to the lowest regions of the ionosphere (and the groundwave is virtually nonexistent), and the receiver cost the factory $1M just for the physical components to build the radio, and the antenna is a tuned beverage.
DeadElvis said:
In the dead of the Winter, one can often hear skywave -- ALL DAY. The top of the band does much better, of course. Here in Memphis, WTDY/Madison, WI is pretty common on 1670 midday. Sometimes, it can be quite listenable. 50 kW KXEL/Waterloo, IA is another station that might be heard all day. A 5kW daytimer on 1500 from Indianapolis also pops in and out (they're directional -- three towers pointing right at me. ERP in my direction is a lot higher than 5 kW.)
In those cases, of course, you have a nice combination of big power and a high spot on the dial.
DE
It's still only November, but I was getting some skywave at around 1:15 to 1:45 pm today. I recorded these clips in my back yard at 32°45'38.6" latitude...
PL-606 (1k BW, SAT) - 1290 @ 1:31pm PST - first minute is KKDB San Bernardino (5kW DA {edge of lobe toward me} @ 95 mi N, signal indicating 34/01-17), next half minute is KZSB Santa Barbara (500 watts ND @ 195 mi NW)
GE Superradio III barefoot - 1290 @ 1:35pm PST - starts with KKDD, then at 1:05 is rotated to bring in KZSB
In summer, KZSB Santa Barbara (500 watts ND @ 195 mi) usually dominates the frequency throughout most of the day.
PL-606 (1k BW, SAT, aimed E/NE) - 1290 @ 1:41pm PST - Radio Disney (KMIK Tempe, AZ - 50kW @ 300 mi) is in there faintly, along with KBLA Santa Monica (more noticeable later in the clip; 50kW @ 119 mi). Normally it seems KMIK is not receivable at midday in summer here with the equipment I'm using.
PL-606 (1k BW, SAT) - 1670 @ 1:44pm PST - KHPY Moreno Valley, CA, indicating 34-39/08-25 on the signal display
GE Superradio III barefoot - 1670 @ 1:47pm PST - KHPY
Do I definitely hear skywave fading on KHPY, or is it just my imagination or is there some extremely slightly off-frequency (maybe less than 0.1 Hz for example) co-channel interfering carrier causing that fading?
P.S. slightly OT, but would it be better if I break up my multiple replies into separate posts in the future? I was just thinking (and reminiscing) about one of the reasons why I (from my observation) seem to say a lot in one post, but go longer between individual posts (based on people who registered well after me having much higher post counts and not just on this forum)... I remember a decade or so ago I got banned from a computer gaming forum for spamming - not advertising, just posting too often with short messages to get my post count up (maybe that's flooding not spamming?) so I could reach a certain level that provided extra priveleges (specifically a custom avatar and message below my avatar as that's how the forum was set up), so it left a bad taste in my mouth.