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Dxers Unlimited
Dxers Unlimited's weekend edition 27-28 December 2003
By Arnie Coro
Radio amateur CO2KK
Hi mis amigos radioaficionados around the world and in space... Nice to have you
listening to the
weekend edition of this twice weekly program devoted to our wonderful hobby,
yours and mine: RADIO..
and here is item one: Two big sunspots regions... one visible, the other one now
transiting the side
of the Sun that we don't see, but that we can now explore with the help of
ultrasophisticated
HELIOSISMIC TECHNOLOGY... So, Sunspot active region 528 is now very clearly
visible and by the New
Year we may see yet another big sunspot region reaching the visible side of the
Sun... By the way ,
the solar flux is hovering around 130 to 140 units, and we will be experiencing
quite stable HF
propagation conditions during the next five to seven days...IF, region 528
doesn't become too active
generating solar flares. For amateur radio operators around the world enjoying
the end of the year
holidays, the good news is that present solar activity levels allow for quite
nice openings even on
the 10 meter band. The openings will not be fantastic as when the solar flux is
above 200, but they
will certainly be there for all of us to enjoy. ITEM TWO: DRM , Digital Radio
Mondiale test
transmissions continue to puzzle radio engineers around the world, as they are
certainly using much
more actual bandwidth than what was predicted by those who created the digital
transmission
standard... This may be related to non linearity of the transmitters that are in
use for the DRM
tests, and among them the best example of excessive bandwidth is the 6010
kiloHertz DRM broadcasts
coming from Sackville , Canada and spreading all along a wide area of the 49
meters international
short wave broadcast band... As many Radio Havana Cuba listeners have told us in
their e-mail
messages, the noise coming from the DRM tests on 6010 kiloHertz is certainly
making reception of our
6000 kiloHertz signals to Eastern North America rather difficult. Let's hope
that ITU monitoring
stations become aware of the problem and will report the problem to the
corresponding
telecommunications administrations.
Item three: Microwatts, yes thousands of a WATT transmitters can be heard at
long distances via
ionospheric propagation when conditions are right, and the signals are
transmitted on the optimum
working frequencies... Recent experiments using ultra low power amateur
transmitters on the 10
megaHertz or 30 meters amateur band have shown that beacon stations operating
below the one
milliWatt level can be picked up by standard antennas and receivers , especially
if the receiver is
connected to a computer and software combination especially designed to detect
very low level
signals within a very restricted bandwidth. Low frequency band experimenters are
using digital
signal processing technology on an everyday basis and are achieving fantastic
results on the 136
kiloHerts or two point two kilometers wavelength band... ITEM THREE: Our
technical topics section
today will be presenting information about low cost approaches to amateur radio,
as I do insist that
ham radio need not be considered an expensive hobby at all... especially if you
enjoy shopping
around or homebrewing your equipment... Then ITEM FOUR will be our very popular
you have questions
and Arnie tries to answer them section of Dxers Unlimited, and as always when I
am in town, at the
end of the program our exclusive and not copyrighted HF plus low band VHF when
it applies,
propagation update and forecast... Standby for a few seconds, I'll be back on
the air and on the web
with the weekend edition of Dxers Unlimited after a brief musical interval.
........
You are listening to Radio Havana Cuba, the name of the show is Dxers Unlimited,
I do hope that you
all are in good health and enjoying the holidays amigos... And now here is a bit
more about item
two: Several freeware programs that are now available will allow your receiver
plus computer
combination to be used as an ultrasophisticated space age detector of extremely
weak signals. The
programs are very similar from the ones used by the space agencies to keep in
touch with vehicles
far beyond the solar system, and they are in their present version rather easy
to install and use...
The fact is that the weak signal detecting and processing software is a major
breakthrough in
amateur radio, making possible two way contacts that no one could imagine before
the appearance of
this technology. As I have explained here several times, the LOWFERS or Low
frequency bands
enthusiasts have played a decisive role in promoting the use of the low
frequency bands, the 160 to
190 kiloHertz band in North America and the 136 kiloHertz band now becoming
available to amateur
radio operators in many countries. If you want to learn more about kilometric
wavelength
communications, this holiday season may be the right time to explore the
INTERNET for more
information about Low Frequency Communications, one of the more than seventy six
ways you and I may
enjoy this wonderful and fascinating hobby amigos !.
Now item three in detail: If you want to enter into amateur radio there are many
different ways of
doing so, from opening up the check book or credit card and buying a
sophisticated and also
expensive transceiver, antennas, towers etc. etc. to just homebrewing a simple
radio that will also
put you on the air with an antenna that may be built at very low cost... If you
ask me about which
one I will prefer, there is no doubt that I will go for the homebrew radio, as
every second using it
will bring much more enjoyment than we you are just another electrical appliance
operator using a
two or three or even six thousand dollars transceiver connected to an also very
expensive tower and
antenna combination. Now, I must admit that for newcomers to amateur radio
homebrewing will prove to
be a challenge, but you can always get help from other amateurs, especially if
you are already a
member of a local radio club. That's why I always recommend to all of you
interested in owning your
ham radio station, to go ahead and obtain the easiest license of them all, buy
yourself a 2 meter
band FM handie-talkie and start using it to contact your local ham radio
community... HF, or short
wave bands operations will come later, and you can use simple homebrew radios to
enjoy talking to
people not across town, but across the continents !.
Here is a nice example of what I am talking about amigos !. There are now
several transceiver kits
that are very reasonably priced, will save you the time and efforts trying to
locate the components
and will help you to assemble the equipment with very well written step by step
instructions... Or
you can go all out for homebrewing and build a replica of a World War II
transceiver that was used
by paratroopers and behind the enemy lines radio operators.. It is known as the
PARASET, and
apparently it is of British origin... With a very slight modification to the
original 1940's
circuit, the PARASET provides the amateur with an amazing little radio that
makes possible two way
contacts on a regular , daily basis when you use it on the 40 meter amateur
band. If you want to
learn more about the PARASET, just drop me an e-mail and I'll be more than happy
to send you all the
information about this unique set that can be assembled rather easily and will
put you on the air
with a most relieable piece of equipment. All I can say that I have built so far
not one , but three
of them, and they all have performed flawlessly from the very moment power was
applied to them. The
slight modification I have made to the PARASET was to improve the regenerative
receiver's
bandspread, in order to make tuning easier than on the original model. The
PARASET's frequency is
controlled by a quartz crystal resonator, and mine produce from 2 to 8 Watts of
power output, more
than enough to work Europe from the Caribbean when propagation conditions are
good enough... You can
send for the PARASET INFORMATION PACKAGE, via e-mail: send mail to
arnie@rhc.cu, OK, I'll say it
again, arnie@rhc.cu, and if you are not yet in
cyberspace, just drop me a postcard to Arnie Coro,
Radio Havana Cuba, Havana, Cuba ,and I will send you the printed version of the
PARASET
diagrams,photos and text files... Even if you continue your amateur radio career
and buy yourself a
nice and expensive solid state transceiver, I am sure , that you will keep the
homebrew PARASET in
its nice wooden box ready to operate whenever you feel like facing the challenge
of QRP or low power
operation !
.....
On the air and on the world wide web, this is Radio Havana Cuba's Dxers
Unlimited radio hobby
program , I am Arnie Coro, radio amateur CO2KK your host here , and here is item
four of today's
program, our numero uno, the most popular section of this show... YOU HAVE
QUESTIONS, and your amigo
Arnie tries to answer them .. Here is today's question, this one came from no
less than sixteen
listeners, who wrote to arnie@rhc.cu via
e-mail. The question was written more or less in the same
terms and essentially deals with something that is known as BPL or Broadband
over the POWER LINES, a
system that uses the electricity distribution networks to carry into your home
broadband digital
communications services , including INTERNET connectivity... Well amigos, this
is now a very
controversial issue, and according to what I have read , learned and discussed
with several digital
technologies expert engineers, BPL or Broadband over the POWER LINES,may prove
to be a real menace
to radio reception as we know it today... in the range from as low as the AM
broadcast band to as
high as the TV low band channels reaching up to 88 megaHertz. So amigos, the
answer to your concerns
about BPL is that it is potentially very damaging to our radio hobby , but not
only to us , but also
to other users of the short wave spectrum that may see their communications
systems seriously
affected by the radio frequency interference generated by the BPL systems. And
last but not least,
many engineers have the opinion that there is now way to stop the QRM or
interference to users of
the radio spectrum coming from the BPL systems once they are in permanent
service !. In fact the
problem is so acute that many telecommunications authorities around the world
are now revising their
criteria about BPL and some of them may even decide to completely ban the
installation of such
systems at all.
....
And now amigos, at the end of the program, as always when I am in town, here is
Dxers Unlimited's HF
plus low band VHF propagation update and forecast...
Solar flux presently hovering around 130 to 140 units, one BIG, and I mean BIG
sunspot region in
sight, and this one is capable of producing M class solar flares during the next
several days. The
effective sunspot number, the really important data item you want to provide to
your propagation
forecasting software is now near 90 units, and that means that the daytime
maximum useable frequency
curve will be reaching as high as 30 megaHertz and even higher on some selected
paths... BUT, expect
rather fast downfall of the maximum useable frequency curve as soon as the Sun
sets at your
location. Chances for 50 megaHertz or 6 meter band openings due to the winter
Sporadic E season are
now increasing, so keep your watch on both 50.110 and 50.125 kiloHertz DX spot
frequencies on the
magic band... Hope to see you all next Tuesday and Wednesday UTC days at the mid
week edition of
Dxers Unlimited... Seasons Greetings amigos , and don't forget to take a little
time and send me an
e-mail saying what you like and what you don't like about the program , in order
to help me make it
a little better every time it goes on the air !!!