Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jack Painter" wrote in
news:uAGGd.17853$B95.5757@lakeread02: Hi Gary, that's all right. I was talking about an MMSN member checking in with the net from the dock. If that's training, so be it. I don't know if there are ever missed calls because of that chatter, but it seems possible there would be. Training with check-in chatter could be accomplished off-net, much like the Sunday afternoon training already goes off-frequency for a short broadcast of interest to users of the net. Many Hams are admittedly very skilled with break-in techniques that keep the MMSN full of non-stop chatter with few breaks for service, so to speak. Just my observation from over a decade of listening to it! Jack So, tell us how DO you know what area you can hear on your HF net? Noone transmits for fear of raising your ire. Can you hear Florida today? Galveston? 100 miles out? 200? 500? What magic on that dead HF frequency tells you the sun has exploded, again, and communications is useless? Surely you're not depending on WWV's propagation forecast, are you? If we observe the two quiet periods for emergency traffic calls, wouldn't it be better for everyone involved if you knew what boats/ships are also your ears and eyes on the frequency, expanding your pitiful little receiving antenna cross section by several thousand miles? "CG Net this is WDB-6254, "Lionheart" at 32 24N, 75 12W checkin, no traffic monitoring 802 for next 2 hours." Aha! I can hear a 150W insulated backstay offshore of Charleston on Channel 802 at this time. HE, on the other hand, will HELP me monitor the frequency, relaying to areas I cannot hear because of propagation, any calls that get no answers from me. What harm have I done to Coast Guard Communications? They USED to do it on CW, you know! It's how I learned the code when I was 10 in 1956.....(c; This is precisely why hams "waste bandwidth", as you say.....see? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
wrapping ssb antenna on kevlar backstay | Electronics | |||
SSB Antenna theory | Electronics | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Cruising | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Electronics | |||
How to use a simple SWR meter and what it means to your VHF | Electronics |