[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [HCDX] Dxers Unlimited's mid week edition for 27-28 November 2007



Dxers Unlimited
Dxers Unlimited's midweek edition for 27-28 November 2007
By Arnie Coro
radio amateur CO2KK

Hi amigos radioaficionados and shortwave listeners around the world. 
This is the midweek edition of Dxers Unlimited coming to you from 
Havana. I am Arnie Coro, radio amateur CO2KK, the host of this twice 
weekly program devoted to the promotion and development of our wonderful 
hobby ... radio, the one and only you and I can enjoy in more than 81 
different ways... from homebrewing simple radios like a two transistor 
plus one diode AM broadcast band receiver to designing and building an 
Earth-Moon -Earth antenna array with no less than 16 long 17 elements 
Yagis...Si amigos, this is a most enjoyable hobby and now that the 
winter DX season is in full swing here in our northern hemisphere r we 
are seeing some very interesting propagation conditions that provide 
lots of DX even for radio amateurs running low power and simple 
antennas...And this is happening despite the very low solar activity 
that has prevailed from many weeks now. Here is item one. Solar flux at 
rock bottom lvels while the A index, the planetary geomagnetic 
disturbance indicator is at a rather nice and low level...




Item two: results obtained with the MICRO VERT simple antenna have 
surprised many of those who have built it ... another simple antenna 
that also brings nice results despite its simplicity of construction is 
the BOBTAIL curtain, an antenna especially useful for long haul DX as it 
has a very low take off angle even at low heights above ground. You will 
need quite some space to install a three element BOBTAIL, but its 
smaller counterpart , the HALF SQUARE will also provide rather 
outstanding results. A HALF SQUARE built for the 10  or 15 meters 
amateur bands using just wire and dacron fishing lines for insulators is 
extremely easy to homebrew ... a similar antenna for the two meter band 
is my favorite choice for accesing repeaters located in opposite 
direction.Item three: Comments from listener Miguel regarding variable 
reception with deep fading and sometimes the signal just vannishing is 
quite characteristic of short paths on frequencies above 6 megaHertz... 
That's the reason why he can copy all day long the Radio
Rebelde station on 5025 kiloHertz, on the 60 meters Tropical Band , 
while our 6 and 9 megaHertz frequencies are sometimes difficult to copy 
at his QTH in Florida when HF conditions are not too good. Item four of 
today's Dxers Unlimited will be dealing with the HALF SQUARE antenna, 
Item five:
Dxers Unlimited's update on recent developments
of the Cuban broadcast system: Item five:


You already guessed it's going to be YOU HAVE QUESTIONS, and Arnie tries 
to answer them section of the show, while Item 6 will bring Dxers 
Unlimited's midweek edition to its end.
Standby for more radio hobby related information... on the air and on 
the web in a few seconds..

.....
This is the midweek edition of Dxers Unlimited amigos, and here is our 
ANTENNA TOPICS section of the program...today providing you with 
information about the HALF SQUARE single band
wire antenna. If you have space for just one horizontal half wave dipole 
antena , my advice is not to install such antenna , and instead try to 
use up the horizontal space to install a vertically polarized DX 
antenna, the HALF SQUARE. My 20 meter band HALF SQUARE fed directly with 
RG213 coaxial cable has proven to be anywhere between one and three S 
units above
the half wave wire dipole that it replaced.
The reason why the HALF SQUARE has proven to be so effective for working 
DX , is the fact that even at low height above the sorrounding terrain, 
the HALF SQUARE sends out a low take off angle signal... in other words 
the HALF SQUARE will be much more useful for Dxing than a half wave wire 
dipole, or even a two element Yagi installed at a similar low height.

Another important advantage of the HALF SQUARE is that it is vertically 
polarized, something that produces much less interference than what
is generated by the use of any type of horizontally polarized antenna. 
The "wrong polarization"has an outstanding effect in reducing TVI or 
television interference... The TV signal reaching a TV set is 
horizontally polarized, and that's why many newcomers to amateur radio 
are using the HALF SQUARE, a vertically polarized antenna that will 
attenuate the horizontaly polarized signal by as much asn 100 times, and 
that in turn will solve many TVI problems .
There is something that you must know about both the HALF SQUARE and the 
BOBTAIL vertical curtains, and that is the fact thay they are by design, 
single band antennas.As my good friend Bob Chandler from the Ontario DX 
Association is one of the most enthusiastic users of HALF SQUARE 
antennas for his CQ Zone 2 Contest Stations way up north in Canada, I 
want to quote him here today...Bob told me after a very succesful 
contest station operation using the HALF SQUARES that they provided 
extremely good performance and could be transported very easily.
The Canadian contest team used PVC pipe masts that are both lightweight 
and transparent to radio frequency energy, so that they don't distort 
the antenna's radiation pattern.



Here in Havana, I am using a 2 meter band version of the HALF SQUARE to 
solve a problem.
We have two long range mountaintop repeaters, one to the West and the 
other one to the East of the Havana metropolitan area...With the HALF 
SQUARE I can reach both of them with about 4 dB gain , providing 
excellent communication while running only one Watt on my 2 meter band 
handie talkie... If you need more information about both the BOBTAIL 
three element and the HALF SQUARE two element vertical arrays , go to 
http://www.cebik.com the wonderful website created by Dr. L.B. Cebik Ph 
D , amateur radio operator W4RNL, who has made available to the world's 
amateur radio enthusiasts an incredible collection of antenna information...
again the URL is http://www.cebik.com
.....

Si amigos, we are working hard here to improve the quality and 
reliability of Cuba's broadcasting service on short wave, AM , FM and 
Television. RadioCuba, the totally state owned company that is in charge 
of the transmitters is now well advanced into the installation of new 
AM, FM and TV transmitters all along the Cuban archipelago.






At the Isle of Youth, Radio Caribe is now with a new 5 kiloWatt AM 
transmitter operating on 1220 kiloHertz and RadioCuba engineers also 
installed an FM transmitter there operating on 101.7 megHertz with 3 
kiloWatts effective radiated power, more than enough to cover the Isle 
of Youth and the adjacent Cayo Largo tourist resort. At the same time, 
the Cuban Broadcast Institute implemented a modernization plan at the 
Radio Caribe studios using digital technology. The Radio Caribe studios 
are linked to the FM transmitter using a digital UHF link, and soon the 
analog UHF link to the AM site will be replaced by a new digital one 
too. Similar projects are in progress all along the Cuban archipelago, 
like for example in Matanzas province, east of Havana, where the old 
Radio Rebelde 30 kiloWatt Tesla transmitter that I helped to install in 
1963 was replaced by a new solid state 25 kiloWatt transmitter capable 
of up to 125 percent positive peak modulation. Radio Rebelde's Matanzas 
relay is operating on 620 kiloHertz , while at the same site, a new 
Radio Reloj network also solid state transmitter is running 5 kiloWatts 
on 860 kiloHertz, improving the coverage of that news and information 
broadcast service.
Cuba's fourth national TV network transmitters are now on the air too.
Now,here is item five: The popular you have questions and Arnie tries to 
answer them...



You can send your questions to arnie@xxxxxx , and the answer will go 
right back to your mailbox pretty fast... Here is today's question: It 
was sent by listener Kate in Vancouver... She says that now she is 
having some difficulty copying the 6000 kiloHertz English language 
broadcast from Radio Havana Cuba...  Well amiga Kate, I ran several 
computer software programs used here to calculate the frequencies that 
should be used for a given part of the world, solar activity etc. and 
sure, you are right, each time a geomagnetic disturbance caused by the 
now so frequent coronal holes is in progress, reception of our 6000 
kiloHertz in Vancouver should be rather difficult, especially when the 
antenna is not beaming in your direction. Let me remind you and other 
Radio Havana Cuba listeners located along the Pacific Coast of North 
America, that we beam into that area from 05 to 07 UTC ... If you are 
able to listen to us from 01 to 05 hours UTC , then you are actually 
picking up the beam that is centered on Eastern Region of North America, 
so the signal intensity at that time in Vancouver should not be very 
strong...
Maybe soon we will be able to broadcast on one more frequency , so that 
at the same time we may be beaming to Eastern North America,  the Great 
Lakes Region on two frequencies and the Pacific Coast using another 
frequency.




Today's second question, came from South Africa, where several listeners 
are reporting our 11760 kiloHertz English language broadcast... Amigo 
Alex from Cape Town wants to know if I have heard about a new version of 
the BAYLISS crank up generator that is capable of providing power to a 
radio for periods lasting up to two hours.
Well amigo Alex, I have seen and actually tested several models of AM, 
FM and SHORT WAVE radios that use the crank-up Bayliss generator for 
powering up the receiver by cranking up for about 30 seconds to make the 
radio play for about half and hour. By the way , for those of you that 
have not heard about the BAYLISS crank-up generator, let me explain that 
it was invented by a South African and is now becoming extremely popular 
not only for powering radios, but also for many other applications where 
expensive batteries may be replaced by this unique system. The BAYLISS 
Direct Current crank up generator is a very reliable source of 
electricity for powering up radios during emergencies !!!
And now amigos, as always at the end of the program , here is Arnie 
Coro's Dxers Unlimited's HF propagation update and forecast .Solar flux 
is now hovering around 72 units, and it is expected to continue at very 
low levels, optical sunspot count near ZERO and now the effects from  a 
  coronal hole that was located at a geoeffective position have ended, 
and this in other words means that propagation conditions will be a 
little better for the next two  to three days,especially a latitudes 
above 40 degrees North. Very slight chances of sporadic E openings at 
this moment, while chances for tropospheric ducting are increasing 
especially all along th Gulf of Mexico region. I hope to see you all at 
the weekend edition of the program amigos , and don't forget to send me 
an e-mail with your comments about the program, as they do help make a 
better Dxers Unlimited for you all !!!


---[Start Commercial]---------------------

Preorder your WRTH 2007:
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/redirect2.php?id=wrth2007
---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
Hard-Core-DX@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at 
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/dsl.html