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Dxers Unlimited
Dxers Unlimited's mid week edition for 30 Sept and 1 October 2003
By Arnie Coro
Radio amateur CO2KK
Hi amigos radioaficionados around the world !, you are now listening to Radio
Havana Cuba's twice
weekly radio hobby program, Dxers Unlimited that comes to you on Tuesdays and
Wednesdays UTC days
for the mid week edition and Saturdays and Sundays UTC days for the weekend
edition. I am Arnie
Coro, radio amateur CO2KK , your host here in Havana and here is item one...
what a nice HF
propagation we all enjoyed during the weekend.... The 10 meters amateur band
came back to life after
a terrible summer season, and it was really a joy to hear stations from all over
Europe, South
America, and the Asia Pacific region for what may be the last 10 meter Dx season
of this solar
cycle... I also heard several South American stations on the 50 megaHertz band ,
but could not work
them because my 5 element 6 meter band Yagi is down for repairs... The
ionospheric absorption was at
quite a low level for most of the weekend, so many signals usually buried by the
local noise level
came out in the clear, making reception of several 60 meter tropical band
stations possible...It
seems like we may continue to enjoy good HF propagation during the next several
days, because there
are no signs of really significant solar coronal holes or large active sunspot
regions.... Item two:
Radio is a lot of fun, because you can play with your radios in many different
ways... for example,
a very interesting challenge for medium wave AM broadcast band Dxers is often
overlooked... that
challenge is simply testing your receiving setup capability to pick up stations
during the local
daylight hours, from two hours after local sunrise to about an hour before local
sunset... The only
propagation mode available during those hours is the so called ground or surface
wave, and it is
really amazing how a good AM band Dxing setup can bring in stations from very
far away via the
ground wave mode... More about surface wave or ground wave AM band dxing later
in the show... Item
three: Breadboard construction " a la antique ", like our grandfathers and great
grandfathers
assembled their radios is also a lot of fun... You can test many circuits,
rewire them to a new
configuration in a few minutes, and after you are sure that everything is
working properly, then you
can simply make the breadboard radio look better by placing the wiring in such a
way that it will be
appealing to the eyes of those you are going to show the receiver... More about
breadboard
construction and all its possibilities later... Item four: No, I can't miss it ,
its going to be
always here by popular demand, YES, I am talking about the very popular YOU HAVE
QUESTIONS section
of Dxers Unlimited. Today I will be answering a question sent in by a listener
in Hong Kong, who
picks up the show via the INTERNET live audio feed... And as always at the end
of the show, I will
be presenting Arnie Coro's HF plus low band VHF propagation update and
forecast...with the most
recent data available about the behavior of the ionosphere... Stay tuned for
more radio hobby
related information , direct and from the source... I'll be back with you in a
few seconds...
.......
This is Dxers Unlimited's mid week edition amigos, and now here is item two in
detail...When
everyone thinks about AM medium wave broadcast band Dxing, the mind goes
immediately to the local
night hours... As many of you familiar with AM band Dxing know, the existence of
the highly
absorptive D layer during the local daylight hours, blocks the frequencies below
about 2 megahertz
or so from reaching the E layer of the ionosphere.
Then the only available service from the AM stations operating from about 530
kiloHertz to 1710
kiloHertz is provided by the surface or ground wave, that propagates along the
surface of the Earth,
and the attenuation of those ground wave signals is very significant, so to
explain it in simple
language, the distance that AM stations may reach during the local daylight
hours is limited, and
the lower the frequency that the station uses , the greatest distance that it
can reach via ground
wave. In other words, Am stations using frequencies between 530 and 800
kiloHertz will be heard at
much farther distances during the daytime daylight hours than those using
frequencies above 800
kiloHertz. As a matter of fact, experts split the AM broadcast band into three
frequency ranges...
from the above mentioned 530 to 800 kiloHertz that provides the best ground wave
signals, from 800
to 1200 kiloHertz that have a more limited range during daytime, and the
frequencies between 1200
and 1700 kiloHertz that are limited to much shorter daytime coverage. Daytime AM
dxing is also
dependent on another very important key element... ground conductivity, and that
explains why
daytime reception of some stations is possible at impressive far away distances
when between the
transmitter and the receiver the only the ocean is present. Sea water has a very
high conductivity,
when compared to any type of land, so AM signals traveling over the ocean suffer
very little
attenuation amigos ! AM broadcast band daytime Dxing is one of the more than 70
ways you and I enjoy
this wonderful hobby, and you can be sure that by carefully tuning the range
from 530 to 1710
kiloHertz during the local daylight hours you will be able to log in several
stations that are
really far from your location... Log them in, and send their chief engineers a
daytime report... I
can assure you that response to your QSL request is going to be much faster than
when you report AM
band skywave DX at night !. Want to know why ? .... The answer is very logical ,
AM stations are
designed for local ground wave coverage, and those are the reports that they can
show to their
advertisers in the case of commercial stations or to those that provide the
operating budget in the
case of non-commercial broadcasters !
.......
Si amigos, this is Dxers Unlimited's mid week edition reaching you from Havana,
and here is the URL
for our streaming audio, so that you can type it directly into your Internet
browser... , well I
think I'll better wait a bit before giving the direct URL for the audio, so that
you can reach your
notepad and pencil or pen to write it down...Now here is item three... My most
recent radio project
is a breadboard version of the simple three vacuum tubes regenerative receiver...
It is mounted on a
piece of half inch plywood to which I attached an aluminum panel. The power
supply providing 150
volts D.C. for the plates and screen electrodes and 6.3 volts DC for the
filaments is also built
using a smaller breadboard.
The three tube sockets and the two coil sockets were mounted using long bolts ,
to that the socket's
connecting points may be easily reached for soldering. The receiver uses a 6SK7
Radio frequency
amplifier stage, a 6SK7 regenerative detector and a more modern triode-pentode
ECL-82 audio
pre-amplifier and output stage. The coils were wound to cover from the AM
broadcast band up to
almost 16 megaHertz, giving me the possibility of listening to the most popular
short-wave
international broadcast bands and also to the 160,80,40,30 and 20 meters amateur
bands.
I did enjoyed assembling this radio because there was almost no need to drill
holes trough metal,
except for the ones that I had to made to the aluminum front panel in order to
install the main
tuning and bandspread capacitors dials, the regeneration and the audio gain
control.
This is , like all straight regenerative receivers , a radio that does require
an operator right at
the controls, but , I can assure you that it has amazing sensitivity and when
taken to the point of
the edge of regeneration, selectivity is also extremely good. The use of DC
regulated voltage on the
filaments of the detector and audio tubes also helps to reduce background hum,
often present in
tuned radio frequency and regenerative receivers that are powered from the AC
house power lines
instead of from batteries.
Breadboard construction is excellent also for teaching , as one can follow the
wiring from the
schematic diagram very easily... so it is difficult to make wiring mistakes
during construction.
You can provide very nice finnishing to the breadboard radios by learning from
old radio handbooks
and magazines, the ones that our grandfathers and even great grandfathers used
to learn about the
hobby during the early days of this wonderful hobby.......
.......
Well, I hope you have now your notepad ready, so here is the direct URL for the
streaming audio ...
it starts with mms, not with the more common http... so here it goes:
mms://tvinternet.icrt.cu/rc4
again, now in phonetics..
mike mike sierra, colon, slash, slash, tango victor india nancy tango echo romeo
nancy echo tango,
symbol for period india charlie romeo uniform
slash romeo charlie 4...
mms://tvinternet.icrt.cu/rc4
Now here is today's radio hobby question, sent in by listener Mike in Hong Kong..
Dear Arnie, I pick
up RHC via Internet... my question is if you think that there is a short-wave
receiving antenna that
can be useful here in Hong Kong, where space is really at a premium. Dear amigo
Mike, the antenna
that I will strongly recommend you is the MAGNETIC LOOP, of no less than one
meter diameter, and if
you want to tune stations on frequencies below 10 megaHertz better, then go for
a two meters
diameter magnetic loop. These loops have to be constantly retuned when you
change frequencies, but
they have three distinctive advantages over long wires, inverted L's or dipoles.
First they are more
much more compact and may fit almost anywhere... You can even keep them in
storage and unpack them
just for the time you are listening. Secondly , they offer a very high Q, so
that adjacent channels
interference is less noticeable, and in the third place, the magnetic loops
offer the unique
advantage of ground wave signals cancellation by turning the loop around, so at
locations like yours
with many noise sources and a high background noise level, you can turn the loop
around to obtain
the minimum possible noise level and achieve a significant improvement in front
to back ratio.
Search the INTERNET using the words MAGNETIC LOOP ANTENNAS and placing a plus
sign in between the
words on the search engine... You will be suprised by the hard work done by
radio amateurs in order
to develop this unique antenna system... !
And now as always at the end of the program, here is Arnie Coro's HF plus low
band VHF propagation
update and forecast... Solar activity will continue to move from low to moderate
according to
scientists, the effective sunspot number is around 90, while the A and K indexes
are going to be
nice and low, enhancing the equinoctial propagation conditions. The 3000
kilometers maximum useable
frequency worldwide map shows some paths with the MUF reaching figures not seen
for many months now,
and 6 meter band openings are possible on North-South paths across the equator.
AM medium wave band
and Tropical Bands DX conditions are certainly going to be good during the next
72 hours if no big
solar flare erupts to change the propagation. See you all at the weekend edition
of the program and
don't forget to send directly to me your signal reports and comments about the
program... Send mail
to: arnie@rhc.cu, and VIA AIR MAIL, a postcard
will be nice sent to Arnie Coro, Radio Havana Cuba ,
Havana , Cuba.