PARSgram 2022-05-16

NO PARSGRAM NEXT MONDAY

Your inbox gets a break. The weekly PARSgram will resume, Monday May 30th.

 

EARLY REMINDER – PARS BREAKFAST MEETING SATURDAY MAY 28TH

Our next meeting will be at 0900 Saturday, May 28th at Brantley’s

Village Restaurant on Broad Street in Oriental. Please park on the side

or out back. We hope to see you all there. For more information contact

Pamlico Amateur Radio Society President Mike Marsh, K4NLC, 252-636-1257

or mike@marshconsulting.com.

 

DISTANT REPEATERS

A note from Bill Michne, WM3X:

This may be of some value to those of us interested in using distant

repeaters.  I had been trying to access the C4FM/WIRES-X repeater system

on the WNCT TV tower in Greenville (approximately 60 miles from my home

QTH) without any success.  I was running 50 watts into a Diamond X-50A

vertical antenna at 35 feet.  According to Figure 4.4 in the ARRL

Antenna Book, 23rd Edition, my signal would be at ground level at a

distance of only 8 miles.  To reach the repeater antenna my signal would

have to travel another 52 miles, but the receive antenna would have to

be at roughly 1200 feet.  So I sent a note to the Pitt County Repeater

Association inquiring about the height of the repeater antenna(s) in

questions.  I got a response almost immediately from John Johnson,

KE4TZN, informing me that, “the RX antenna is at 300 feet and the TX

antenna is currently at 150 feet until I can get some tower work done.”

Going back to Fig. 4.4, an RX antenna at 300 feet would extend my

range out to only about 30 miles, or about half the distance to the

repeater.  The return signal radiating from only 150 feet up would

require my RX antenna to be mounted at about 900 feet!  OK, so these are

theoretical results, but even if they are off by a factor of 2 (a large

error in physics) they bode ill for success.  The price of a hotspot is

starting to look more reasonable…  73 de WM3X, Bill Michne.

 

SOLAR NUMBERS TODAY

NOAA reported that solar activity was moderate during the 24 hour period

ending yesterday at 5 p.m. local.  There are 7 numbered sunspot regions

on the Sun facing Earth this morning. There were 5 last Monday.  The

largest solar event of the period was a M2 event observed at 15/0008Z.

 

The Prediction Center expects solar activity to be low today, Tuesday

and Wednesday with a chance for M-class flares and a slight chance for

an X-class flare. At noon yesterday, the observed Solar Flux Index (SFI)

at Penticton was 154. Last Sunday it was 119. The index is predicted to

measure 154 at noon today, 152 Tuesday and 152 on Wednesday. The SFI 90

day trailing average is up two to 120.

 

The Earth’s geomagnetic field was quiet to active yesterday.  NOAA

expects conditions be unsettled to active today, quiet to unsettled on

Tuesday and quiet on Wednesday. The estimated Kp-index of 3 reported at

5 a.m. local this morning indicates current quiet geomagnetic conditions.

 

Did you have trouble with HF last Tuesday morning?

OK1HH reported in ARLP019: “An intense solar flare of class X1.5 was

observed on May 10 at 1355 UT in the active region 3006 with a complex

magnetic structure. Radiation from the flare ionized the Earth’s

atmosphere and caused a shortwave radio outage around the Atlantic

Ocean, more specifically from Central Europe to the east coast of the

United States… Radio transmissions at frequencies below 30 MHz were

attenuated for more than an hour after the eruption.” Now you know why!

 

We can expect poor day and fair nighttime operating conditions today on

80 to 40 meters, good day and night on 30 to 15. Conditions should be

good to fair on 12 and 10. In sum, better than early last week for the

middle HF bands. Six meters has been open daily in North America. Most

of the magic band activity has been FT8.

 

For an explanation of the numbers used in our PARSgram, see the

excellent article written by Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA at

http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere.

 

DX CHALLENGE

Extracted from ARRL DX News ARLD019-

RODRIGUES ISLAND, 3B9.  Robert, 3B9FR has been active using CW on 17

meters around 1500z.  QSL via M0OXO.

MOZAMBIQUE, C9.  Kiyo, JA7NQQ is QRV as C83YT from Macuti.  Activity

of late has been on 17 to 10 meters using FT8.  QSL to home call.

THAILAND, HS.  Werner, DH7OT is QRV as HS0ZMO from Phuket Island.

Activity is on 40 to 10 meters.  QSL to home call.

 

HAM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE, TRADE, OR WANTED

For listing in the PARSgram send me your amateur radio related items

that are for sale, trade, or wanted. PLEASE let me know when you have

have sold your item or your listing is no longer needed. Listings will

EXPIRE AFTER 90 DAYS unless I hear otherwise.–Jim.

 

For Sale: Hy-gain AV-18HT vertical antenna.  Covers 80, 40, 20, 15, and

10 meters.  See full specs at dxengineering.com.  Antenna is

disassembled and can be delivered within 100 miles or so.  $500 OBO. A

portion of the proceeds will go to PARS.  Bill Michne, WM3X,

drmichne73@gmail.com, 252-249-1175 or 252-671-6703.(20220404)

 

PARS CALENDAR:

* May 28, PARS MONTHLY MEETING, Saturday, 9am, Brantley’s Village

Restaurant, Oriental. For more info, contact Mike Marsh, K4NLC,

252-636-1257 or mike@MarshConsulting.org

* Jun 4, PAMLICO COMMUNICATIONS TEAM MEETING, Saturday, 9am,

Florence-Whortonsville VFD. AUXCOMM & ARES–All are welcome. For more

info, contact Bruce Perkins, K4ONC, 252-626-2730 or K4ONC@aol.com

* Jun 25, PARS MONTHLY MEETING, Saturday, 9am, Brantley’s Village

Restaurant, Oriental. For more info, contact Mike Marsh, K4NLC,

252-636-1257 or mike@MarshConsulting.org

* Jun 25-26, ARRL Field Day, home operation. To add your score to that

of other PARS members for a combined club score, list your club

affiliation as “Pamlico Amateur Radio Society, LTD”.  For more info,

contact Bill Michne, WM3X, 252-249-1175 or drmichne73@gmail.com.

 

LOCAL NETS OF INTEREST TO PARS MEMBERS:

*  Wednesdays,”Pamlico Communications Net”, 7:30 pm local, N4ONC

(Oriental) Repeater, 147.210 + (CTSCC Tone Squelch 88.5).

*  Thursdays, “DownEast/Pamlico Six Meter Net”, 8 pm local, 50.200 MHz,

USB. A non-directed open net to promote operation on the ‘Magic Band’.

(For more nets see www.arrl.org/arrl-net-directory-search )

 

PARS WEB SITE: https://www.n4prs.org/

Our Web Master is Paul Jodoin, K4MMB, 561-308-3456, PARSwebman@gmail.com

 

73, Jim AI4WL

——–

This email is sent to members and friends of the Pamlico Amateur Radio

Society. We are pleased that you asked to receive our weekly newsletter

and hope that you enjoy reading it. If you no longer wish to receive the

PARSgram please let us know by reply email or by email to

jth350@embarqmail.com.

Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *