Due to the recent 2024 east coast hurricanes, I have become very interested in NVIS. I am currently in the process of setting up a dipole antenna based on a DX Eng. diagram. I was happy to hear your explanation at the beginning as I am a recent ham (less than 3 years), so this is fairly new to me. Thank you for the video.
@bradarmstrong39522 жыл бұрын
Even as an experienced ham, I enjoyed listening to your whole explanation including the introductory material. Keep doing what you know is best! You've earned a subscribe here.
@douglasrice47535 жыл бұрын
Last year for the PA QSO Party, I wanted to experiment with NVIS. I put up a 60' wire endfed with a 9:1 unun. It was roughly 10' above ground level, and I used an MFJ manual tuner and 100w power. I wasn't seriously contesting, and I didn't get a clean sweep of all 67 PA Counties, but I was able to work enough (45 counties) to prove to myself that I could work any county in Pennsylvania on 40m or 80m, depending on the optimal frequencies for the time of day. Thanks for the great video!!! 73 de W3COB
@vironpayne34052 жыл бұрын
I've recently taken NVIS as a serious pursuit and I've been quite happy with what I am able to do with an Ultimax 80m-10m EFHW antenna on 80m running SSB phone at 10W and 20W. The antenna is configured as an inverted-L at about 25ft resting on the top of some trees. Beneath is a 5ft tall chainlink fence that is probably acting as a reflector. I've done a little bit of comparison of the EFHW against my Chameleon Emcom III portable antenna on 80m. On 80m ancedotal testing suggests it is about -6dBr from the EFHW. I only have the stock single 25ft counter poise wire. There is an optional 4 wire set. As I operate portable in parks I don't like a lot of wire on the ground so I bought two of the Super Antenna 17m, 15m, 11-12m, and 10m counterpoise sets. They seem to provide a slight improvement to both antennas. Especially to 80m and 40m on the Emcom III. The Emcom III is my first try at a manpack portable HF antenna for my FT-857D go-kit. It wasn't my first choice, but I had a $200 Amazon card and Packtenna doesn't sell on Amazon so I thought I would give the Chameleon a try. Its performance 40m and up seems good enough to be a keeper antenna, at least until I try something better. Hopefully I'll rack up a bunch of counties during the Florida QSO party with just a few watts.
@junkman27585 жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting the lids in their place at the beginning of the video. I’m glad you chose to continue to explain before you show as I do not know everything about everything and I hate it when somebody start something in the middle without give me a background of what I’m Luke trying to learn. Keep up the good work
@DreamsCatcher1014 жыл бұрын
I'm new to radio and appreciate that you explain thing in a way a beginner can understand but deep enough to open my eyes to what it is and does.
@loughkb4 жыл бұрын
I'm happy to know it was helpful for you.
@rkaag995 жыл бұрын
I always thought of NVIS as a propagation mode and any antenna that helps you achieve it is therefore a NVIS antenna. I use a full length 80M dipole with a feedpoint roughly 10ft above ground. I get very consistent regional (400'ish miles) coverage with stray lobes landing not so consistent long range. One long range was Alaska (I'm in SE PA). That really made my night!!! I enjoy your content! Thanks for your videos! 73
@cwqrpportable Жыл бұрын
I have the same understanding as you
@kkeller34613 жыл бұрын
NVIS is a fairly new term for something that has been going on for a very long time. Using short-skip-favoring antennas on 160, 75, and 40 meters has been happening since the 1920s. In fact, it's what most stations have always done: use horizontal antennas low to the ground in terms of wavelength. On 75 meters, any horizontal wire under about 90 feet in the air is primarily an NVIS antenna. Such an antenna between 60 and 90 feet up will work the best. Below about 60 feet up (a quarter wave), efficiency goes noticeably down due to ground losses. So between 60 and 90 feet in the air is optimal for NVIS communications (though lower and more lossy antennas obviously do work). Above 110 feet up, the upward radiation starts to fall off quite significantly. Double those height figures for 160 meters, halve them for 40 meters.
@KF4LXS5 жыл бұрын
Very helpful info. I am new to HF. Continue ignoring the haters and keep producing these great videos. Much appreciated.
@SevenFortyOne5 жыл бұрын
A local EOC here in CT was having the same problem with HF communications you describe at the end of this video. They had originally set up the EOC with a vertical antenna due to space restrictions but found it was almost useless for local work. They then experimented with an NVIS dipole and had much better luck with local communications within their coverage area.
@Marty48034 Жыл бұрын
Good explanation. I run the Cha Emcomm II much like this for NVIS. Good stuff.
@n1zw4 жыл бұрын
I think your research was fine and the information was also great. Working with different types of antennas is what we as amateur radio operators do, meaning we experiment on antennas of all types and we practice what knowledge we can gain from it. I learned as kid and pretty sure at some point in your lives. "The dumb question is the one question you never asked." Information is key in this field of radio communications. For what it's worth, any type of antenna we Hams may work on it alone, in a group,with a friend or more, and our radio clubs around the world. If works awesome if not we try something else that makes it work make it better. We as hams help newcomers by addressing questions and we give input on what rigs to start with in the beginning. We help our Senior hams by helping with antennas on towers, digging holes for a tower, or just sitting around and discussing anything to do with radio operators and gather information and passing it on. Don't stop helping because some people are just know it all's and no one knows everything.
@buckbrown8235 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the great NVIS lesson. As a 1980 novice cw operator, I did not realize my 70 foot end-fed just 12 feet in the air was NVIS at its finest. Just made the longest and highest within my means. It worked super well for any qso up to about 700 miles on 40 meter daytime. Any more than 50 watts was a rude excess to go +30dB over S9.
@georgeriedel93574 жыл бұрын
Good Stuff Kevin, We used NVIS after Hurricane Irma even to PR, but during Hurricane Maria while on St. John USVI, we were the EOC and operated to St. Croix, St. Thomas but we lost all comms on PR after Maria came ashore.. It was a military net on 60 meters. I just cut a wire and used an IC7000, and IC AH4 turner
@acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE3 жыл бұрын
You made me think about NVIS in a slightly different way, as in "how can I make use of it", thank-you for the insight.
@99corncob Жыл бұрын
I've heard a lot about the Chameleon MPAS on KZbin so I checked the company Web site. The good news is that if you buy one they will give you free shipping worldwide. The bad news is that the antenna set costs $600. No matter how great it is, this is a lot of money for a wire antenna.
@KarlMartin5 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the videos you post here on KZbin. They’ve been very informative. During hurricane Michael NVIS was the primary antenna configuration used in deployments and at some emergency operation center’s (EOC). In some cases HF what’s the only means of communications. NVIS covered the entire panhandle of Florida and in some cases reached into South Florida. I wanted to pass along our experience with NVIS here in North Florida. Karl KG4HBN
@kd4stt1515 жыл бұрын
What band worked best for you?
@BlessedLaymanNC4 жыл бұрын
Some of our local hams are interested in meeting on direct frequencies. We are scattered about in a 35 mile diameter or so and in the foothills of the mountains. Yesterday, in the video recommendations, I saw this one and it reminded me to consider NVIS. My antenna is only about 12 feet on the ends with most of it running about 9 feet high. I thought it was NVIS until you said yours was only 6 feet, LOL. We tried 40 and 80 meters, but the antennas were my dipole and Buddi Stick, an inverted V and another dipole. None of us could hear each other well. So, I'll suggest we try the NVIS. (For those who read in the future, we are all in the COVID 19 Stay-at-home restrictions here at this time.) Weather looks good today, so I think we can try it.
@james19X4 жыл бұрын
The antennas on the hmmwv are for the ACIP(SINCGARS) radio UHF/VHF. They are tied down so you don't tear shit up. The HF antennas most of the Army uses are twice as long.
@semoranman135 жыл бұрын
Hi Kevin, just decoded your WSPR signal on 40m while logged into a remote SDR at PSU in State College, PA. Call sign used on the remote end was SWL3/SDR for WSPR spots. The audio was passed to WSJT-x via "Virtual Cable" so the actual decode took place on my PC here in south Texas. 73 de N0IJK/5.
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
Hey that's cool. Actually testing a new antenna project I just finished up today. Two vids on this one, just getting ready to release the first.
@semoranman135 жыл бұрын
@@loughkb Looking forward to watching them!
@michaeledmonds30274 жыл бұрын
Your instructional approach works great for me as always. Please keep it coming as you enjoy your new nomadic lifestyle.
@mikemcdonald51475 жыл бұрын
keep doing what you're doing. Not sure who's complaining. But most videos and presentations will explain stuff before they show you the actual thing they are explaining. SO keep it up its what should be done. Luv your videos.
@chrisbaker29035 жыл бұрын
Los Angeles has several asiatic language stations and KNX 1070 is a clear channel station also out of LA. If you tuned to 640 you could probably hear KFI as well. Interesting. This came up as one of the alternate suggested channels that are on the right side of the you tube screen. Being a new ham I clicked on it. Nice to have the explanation and then the demo. It lets me know what I'm going to be listening to. I currently live in Kingman, AZ moved from Rosamond, CA after I retired. KK6LOP here.
@BigMacGyver4 жыл бұрын
An NVIS antenna works well on 80m at night and 40m during the day. It is also great to use on 30m, 20m, and 17m when there is sporadic E nearby. The critical frequency of some of the Es can get as high as 20 MHz, so an NVIS antenna is perfect for working stations that are normally in the F-layer skip zone on 30m, 20m, and 17m.
@hulldefilade48973 жыл бұрын
I have a chameleon emcomm3 portable running off an icom 7100 with no external amplifier. I love that antenna. 73' long and I have it 15' up running horizontal for NVIS. 40m is the clearest out of 40m, 80m, or 160m. I'm in central Indiana and I have talked to people as far away as Georgia with decent clarity. But I have heard people coast to coast, furthest has been Italy and Puerto Rico so far. Ive had it up and running now for one week. 73 all
@georgeriedel93574 жыл бұрын
Hey Kevin, nice vid on NVIS. I have ordered the new CHAMELEON HYBRID MINI 2.0 from Carl L., but ordered it with a 130 foot wire for NVIS , I cannot wait , thanks again
@wdm2135 жыл бұрын
Maybe those not happy with the order of things, should spend 5 minutes watching a youtube video on how to watch a youtube video. Like how to advance forward by using their mouse or the right arrow keys in 10 sec. increments. I'm not always happy with how slow others speak so i've learned to use the speed adjust at 1.25x or 1.5x speed, and if I miss something I happily use the left arrow key to jump back a bit. Keep up the great efforts.
@cinderblue32515 жыл бұрын
Thank you for continuing to explain the basics before diving in. Your explanations are straight and to the point. I always learn something.
@paulbaker92775 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your explanations, as I have always enjoy your presentation, to simply say what I mean is, you engage with people wanting to learn more which has also encouraged myself to get my licence. 73's VK4 fpkl.
@Liberty4Ever5 жыл бұрын
I don't mind you talking about what you're going to talk about at the start of the video but it drives me nuts when you talk about talking about what you're going to talk about. LOL. Just kidding. NVIS is one of my favorite ham subjects. As a result I didn't learn a ton from this video because I'd already done a lot of research on my own but it was still great to have you covering NVIS and I'm very glad you made the video. It's very hilly around here and my primary interest is in talking to friends who are 100 miles away or so but without relying on a repeater so NVIS is very interesting to me. I'm also extremely interested in some of the low power digital modes like Olivia. And the WSPR beaconing is always interesting too, so I'm glad you included that in this video.
@edbeckerich37375 жыл бұрын
Guys used to have 160 loaded verticals on their vehicles, with a whip bent from front bumper to the back, and talk to locals, back before repeaters took over.
@theunconventionaldeal38795 жыл бұрын
Police radios were on the low bands also for the same purpose.
@caseyl36314 жыл бұрын
Refraction not reflection. Thanks for sharing. Never used that antenna b4. Looking good!
@philipchandler96345 жыл бұрын
Excellant and thorough as always glad you made it up to N AZ
@westralia73285 жыл бұрын
Great to see. Not enough common discussions about NVIS. ...Thanks!
@davidsradioroom96785 жыл бұрын
Very good video. I like your practical demonstration with the MPAS.
@edwymer22265 жыл бұрын
Hi Keven. Great video. I’ve been doing a lot of reading about NVIS lately An I appreciate the extra info. Keep up the great work. I’ll catch you on Callum’s show.
@thenomadicham53295 жыл бұрын
Great topic. Next time you are in Quartzsite, look up K1AN as he is very much interested in NVIS.
@aurtisanminer28274 жыл бұрын
I live in alaska and nvis is the most useful for this area due to all the mountains. 80 meters is the most commonly used by hams up here for local comms.
@Jonshome3374 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed your Video,and the explanation at the beginning Kevin- Thankyou !
@dandypoint2 жыл бұрын
There are a few places on line where you can get soundings that give the real-time critical frequency. They also give a chart of the MUF for various distances. If at or below the critical frequency your signal will come straight back down. At or below the critical frequency there is no skip zone. Above the critical frequency and you start to have a skip zone. There is always a skip zone on 20 meters. The only exception I ever heard about was once in 1947 and a few times in 1957 at the peak of the super sunspot cycle where the critical frequency did reach 14 MHz! There is some sporadic E skip on 20 meters that yields some very short skip with extremely strong signals but that’s not really NVIS.
@buckstarchaser23765 жыл бұрын
The mystery language sounded like Laotian, the language spoken in the country of Laos (next to Vietnam).
@romanhar41513 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this very informative Video. - I will put something like this on my flatt roof. 73 de Roman HB9XBK
@kenrangen5 жыл бұрын
"Well, too bad". LOL!
@fakecubed4 жыл бұрын
When he said that, I gave the video an immediate thumb's up.
@thomasstandley63095 жыл бұрын
I don't know if you were speaking with someone from Rockport or Aransas Pass, but Aransas Pass seems to have done exactly what you were suggesting. If you go the W5ICC entry on QRZ.com you'll find an explanation of what they did which included having several city staff members get amateur radio licenses and the city obtaining ham radio equipment for emergencies. They also set-up a D-Star repeater which is pretty easy to reach from Rockport.
@HillCountryDemo5 жыл бұрын
Great and informative video. Please keep these kind of videos coming.
@rtgideon5 жыл бұрын
Kevin; I am really into antennas, this was great information for me here! Thank You. Randy. California.
@dsmith0045 жыл бұрын
I prefer to hear what we're going to learn before the demo. Tell'em what you're going to tell'em, tell'em, and tell'em what you told'em. That's what you do when teaching adults.
@zetaalpha72005 жыл бұрын
I've been confronted with multiple stations on same frequency and my 1886 listening to Radio New Zealand on 5.945 and close by same frequency. My antenna is fixed and I had to use all 4 notch filters to get copy on RNZ. RNZ uses multiple frequencies as time passes. The antenna is fixed 50 degrees East of North and the opposite if I remember correctly concerning directivity of the loop. NVIS is a great way to work the stations closer, yet not LOS. I'm really surprised by the loop configuration that has opened a lot of doors for me across the world. I live in Kansas near Kansas City in a suburb using first the SDRPlay RSP 1a, and now the RSP 2. I hear the local FAA operations along with plenty of 2 meter repeaters even repeaters some 50 miles away or better. I get plenty of South American stations on SW and Radio Havana is no problem. I also hear Italian and other languages not from the SA stations like VOA transmitting Vietnam in English through I think is re transmitted from Florida or TENN. Great stuff; these mag-loops and LNA even with overhead power lines and such. Being SWL with good antenna is satisfying knowing how much of a challenge listening can be at times. I like your channel, I'm retired as well and it is good to hear about subjects like NVIS that you bring to the table.
@lowelljacobsen51222 жыл бұрын
Ecellent explanation, Thank you!!
@semoranman135 жыл бұрын
Go to wikipedia, type in "1120 AM" in the search box (no quotes). It brings up a list of all the stations on 1120 kHz. Click KZSJ. It brings up format and other info. Great tool for AM BCB DXers! Video suggestion since you have the room: Beverage Antenna. 73 de N0IJK/5.
@bhamptonkc7 Жыл бұрын
Best antenna for NVIS is a dipole tuned at NVIS height, in a shallow inverted V configuration I beleve 1/4 wave above ground is closer to optimal I have good luck 100 to 471 miles from my location
@izzzzzz6 Жыл бұрын
You can only have effective ground waves if using a vertical antenna. Ans even then you are more likely to benefit from ground reflected waves, to have any luck with ground waves you would want to be near salt water or wetlands and it also depends on frequency. I am interested in leaning more about how to get better ground reflected waves such as by using a ground shield or parasitic ground reflector which could work better than the reflection from the actual ground. Part of a ground planes job is to match the antenna but obviously radiation pattern and the reflected signal is also very important. Most deserts are really not good for ground waves and generally anything above 1.5Mhz is not usually worth thinking about other than with amazing conductivity ground.
@talleyrand27394 жыл бұрын
HI have bee playing with one of these on field days mine transmitting wire7foot.3 inch,s agl one wire directly under with over run of 6ft ech end and a wire 8ft out either side works a treat long distance was from Central Coast NSW au to Sigapore on 10watts on a 120v 40m ,all home brew woth plastic conduit poles in sections for easy transport
@normk7nwf3236 ай бұрын
Any thoughts of using 2 40 meter hamsticks in a dipole configuration mounted on a 6’ tripod. Thinking maybe for an emergency situation if local repeaters go down, hf as an alternative.
@loughkb6 ай бұрын
Sure, there's even adapters made for that that I've seen. Not sure where to get them. The bandwidth will be somewhat narrow, so you'll have to retune the hamsticks if you want to go from the CW portion to the SSB portion of the band.
@razzwilmz79705 жыл бұрын
GREAT VIDEO AS USUAL .....
@jeffreyeide75125 жыл бұрын
Yo Kevin!: Great video as USUAL! I am not a proponent of NVIS as I want distance generally, BUT DO understand it's usefulness just the same. I have a G5RV up about 35 feet and appreciate every foot of distance I can get. I really want to work on 160 mtrs, but have issues with my tuner that need solving. Hi. Keep on with your style, you know my feelings about that! 73's my friend! de seeker/Jeff WA7LFP
@ClickBAITFishing4 жыл бұрын
Yes please keep up the explanations
@warplanner88525 жыл бұрын
"Envis has left the building.." 1070 is KNX in the Los Angeles market. The 1120 station is probably Vietnamese.
@compgeek225543 жыл бұрын
Please explain first always. Great lecturer.
@markgraves64645 жыл бұрын
So is it correct to say that all dipoles are NVIS antennas because of the way they're oriented? Won't you always get skywaves with a horizontal wire?
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
There will always be some signal going up. By lowering the antenna closer to the ground you increase the degree of vertical radiation.
@davidshermanlittle9193 жыл бұрын
A couple of us in Dallas, Tx view you. It occurred to me if you had a dipole about 1/8 to 1/4 above a tuned reflector, you should get 3dB going up. That’s about it. And only a part of that 3dB would bounce off and make it back ( over that mountain ) you were talking about. That’s not much at all. Are you forting in the wind or what?
@forthy625 жыл бұрын
Kevin, really nice video. As always :-) NVIS is ansolutly important in an SHTF szenario. BTW. I always wonder how do you secure your shack and equipment while on the road with the RV? 73s de Stephan, DF6PA
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
Search for my "desk tour" video. I show the whole setup.
@nontimebomala22675 жыл бұрын
NVIS, especially QRP NVIS is more difficult to locate. This was more important when HFDF was done principally from ground based systems, even so worth knowing. NVIS is principally a 10 MHz and lower propagation mode. It is unusual for higher frequencies to be reflected back to earth at near vertical incidence. One of the defining criteria is a propagation range of less than 400 miles. Otherwise it might be short range but not be NVIS. I don't think I have ever heard of exactly what the refraction angle is required to be for it to be deemed NVIS.
@zazugee Жыл бұрын
thanks, the ones complaining could be people who are famiiliar with topic and got sick of theory i'm currently interested in NVIS, i saw local petrol prospecting companies using NVIS antenna around here (Algeria, Sahara desert), and we have lot of valleys and VHF woudn't reach that far. i was curious if i could pick something so i setup a 40m inverted V, and also hopped to pick HF airband too but no luck, but picked shadwick in irland
@clark82504 жыл бұрын
Hi. I just bought the Chameleon EMCOMM III. Will probably utilize as an NVIS, but in your experience, can you skip pretty far with different configurations such as an inverted ?
@loughkb4 жыл бұрын
Just about every antenna sends RF off in all directions. Anything heading out 20 degrees or closer to the horizon will most likely skip.
@toastrecon5 жыл бұрын
"We got the entire country" *cries in Alaskan :-) Great video! Very interesting.
@analyticalmastermind25695 жыл бұрын
Great channel Kevin! keep up the good work. I have a question. Can you bend a NVIS wire in two places and still get a decent radiation pattern? I was thinking of mounting a wire under the eaves. it would be 8 feet above ground. 40 foot run then 90 degree turn to a 60 foot run then 90 degree to another 40 foot run for a total distance of of 140 feet. basically 3 sides of a rectangle. Not sure if this is worth experimenting with. Anyway thanks for all the good content!
@dovergerald15793 жыл бұрын
Did you use a counterpoise for this setup? I have the same antenna with not so very good results. I'd like to Use it for nvis as well. 73s from Ohio
@loughkb3 жыл бұрын
I'd never seen great performance with the Chameleon hybrid module. I saw a German guy's post where he'd torn it down to find a dual transformer setup inside, a 5:1 unun arrangement. He filmed it with a FLIR camera and found it was generating a lot of heat during TX. Makes sense. In an effort to provide a sub 2:1 SWR across all the bands, compromise needs to be made. It eats some of the power. I gutted mine and replaced the transformer with a more common 9:1 unun design and it performs much better. Although I do need to use a tuner with it on all bands now. I don't' mind the trade-off. I like the physical hardware itself. I was using a counterpoise with it, to answer your question.
@NICKGAR75 жыл бұрын
Hi Kevin - interesting video. Thanks a lot. Hope the motorhoming is suiting you. I also do some ham radio from my M/H.. I have a few basic videos on my channel. I need to make more time to video, edit and show some of my /P antenna experiments. Mainly wires. I like NVIS for local comms especially our ‘Worked All Britain’ net on 80m. Cheers, Nick M1DDD
@noegregorio94955 жыл бұрын
Helpful video, thank you Kevin, 73s , KD2PHM
@earlkisiel4 жыл бұрын
Very helpful
@mikehorvath47803 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the videos! I appreciate the explanations, and I learned something. I’m curious if you are still using the MPAS antenna? 73 K7NFO
@loughkb3 жыл бұрын
Yes I am. Although I modified the hybrid. I gutted it and replaced the transformer with a 9:1 unun. I have to use an antenna tuner with it now, but it hears much better and I get heard better.
@DominicMazoch2 жыл бұрын
I am game for 80m NVIS for ARES comms. Houston local to TranStar. And so I can get into Austin.
@n8tuwstevenewland9335 жыл бұрын
Thanks I found it interesting. Now I think i'll try one. Now it was well exlpained
@HitchHiker4Freedom5 жыл бұрын
Do the higher frequencies just go straight threw the atmosphere? Be interesting to try moon bounce with a beam antenna in that case. I've been toying with the idea myself.
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
Depending on solar activity, the amount of bounceback from the higher F layers varies greatly. The solar flux number can give a good indication. When it's low, below 100, less is bounced back at higher frequencies.
@gertkok21135 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Kevin, makes you think how much antennas make a difference. 73's - ZS2GHK
@davidclark616810 ай бұрын
what Rig are you using in the video
@loughkb10 ай бұрын
Icom 705
@gipsysmith33835 жыл бұрын
I would like to know if a dipole attached to the backstays of a sailboat would work, realizing it would be an inverted V?
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
I've seen antennas on boats. Don't they usually put the center feed point up on the mast and bring the legs down to the ends of the boat? That seems like the best case solution to an antenna on such a craft. Provided it's oriented to keep the wires out of the way of the rigging. But then again, I'm no sailor, so it's just a guess.
@stevejones86655 жыл бұрын
Yes it would work very well depending on the lenght you can get...The Salt Water is a great advantage being an excellent ground and reflector of the radio waves. Best of Luck with your efforts.
@prestonshute72435 жыл бұрын
There are lots of folks who always know they are the smartest one in the room. So you keep wasting a few minutes, cause it’s a good teaching practice to give some background about the subject. 73 wd4dda
@stevejones86655 жыл бұрын
What suprizes me is how Many of the Hater,s don't want to know what the Video is about but are so Clever they still haven't worked out how to fast forward past the explanation part... Seems common sense to me and the vast majority of the viewer's that we need an explanation 1st so we know what we are learning.
@philippehaake61235 жыл бұрын
Very intersting Thanks a lot, HB9GUR 73 qro
@bruhzooka4 жыл бұрын
Emergency mode Pilgrim. Tune dat baby on 160.
@albing13975 жыл бұрын
Add JS8CALL to the mix and you have the possibility of very low power, unattended reception of messages and relaying. WA9RYO
@charlesschindler19715 жыл бұрын
Kevin ... just wanted to say 👋 hi!
@danielmorrison7579 Жыл бұрын
That language you were wondering about is Vietnamese.
@pd1jdw6305 жыл бұрын
You’re close to David Cassler. Ke0og, maybe you could do a video together with him.
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
530 miles. Not that close!
@pd1jdw6305 жыл бұрын
Kevin Loughin close enough for a radio contact with nvis. 😉
@californiakayaker4 жыл бұрын
One question, when both stations have NVIS, how much of a difference is there. Also, when only one has it, how do the numbers show signal levels. Your wsper maps were most likely shwoing stations which did not have NVIS. Here, at night, 80 meters is "going long" and making local nets very tough copy. One set of stations is about 60 miles, the other is 120 miles I'm estimating. In the AM propagation is great on 80, at night terrible. So trying NVIS hoping for some results. That language might have been Indonesian. Correct on 8mhz and lower . The only thing I'm seeing is a reflector laying on the ground is sometimes recommended, say 5% longer .. Would love to do some tests with NVIS at the other end. I believe there is a chance that was done by OH8STN here kzbin.info/www/bejne/fGG3nH2AftiMadE
@loughkb4 жыл бұрын
For two way comms to work best, both stations should use nvis antennas. But there is a distinct advantage when only one is.
@californiakayaker4 жыл бұрын
@@loughkb The heighth I've used is too high. Need to come down from 10/12 to 6. And try the reflector on the ground. 80 at night is terrible, we have a net at 6:30
@kenzurawski80095 жыл бұрын
Hi Kevin, thanks for doing your great videos. In order to get optimal NVIS propagation, you must be operating below the F0Fc frequency. This freq changes quite a bit during a 24 hour period. Best NVIS comms are a little below FoFc, 5 to 10%. Real time F0Fc can be found here: www.sws.bom.gov.au/HF_Systems/6/5 Keep up the great videos. 73 Ken WB9QDL Colorado
@xanatax1844 Жыл бұрын
9:04 I’m not making any jokes … the Chinese sounding station could be California? 😂 I mean, that could be Taiwanese, for example. It’s *probably* an American signal.
@jeromegrzelak82365 жыл бұрын
why a 7300 and not ft991??
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
I like the user interface on the 7300 much better. The yaesu menus can be confusing.
@robkc5ret1265 жыл бұрын
Hello, what program are you using to map your WSPR contacts?
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
I did a video on that. kzbin.info/www/bejne/oYuxnJepn8qDb5Y
@AndrewMurphy83835 жыл бұрын
KEVIN since i dont have a ham radio call sign i can get ur email to send you the schematic for my cw code practice oslater what you want me to do
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
Loughkb at yahoo dot com
@JimN5QL5 жыл бұрын
Vietnamese
@thorhilda5 жыл бұрын
@08:50 Yes, seems to me also that... Đó là tiếng Việt.
@loughkb5 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Now I know what it sounds like.
@brianogram51945 жыл бұрын
Good call, I thought it might be Thai.
@jeromegrzelak82365 жыл бұрын
1200 could be Koren callrnia pomona might bee kg6mn
@brianogram51945 жыл бұрын
1120 isn't Korean, I am fluent. The audio is low on the video but maybe Thai? Definitely not Japanese, and probably not Chinese.
@maytronix72013 жыл бұрын
For someone who calls themselves "the old tech guy"... you sure have few wrinkles
@davidkennerly5 жыл бұрын
Vietnamese.
@MoTown442405 жыл бұрын
Have teaching methods changed? Show me first then explain? Yes, don't change for the minority. Explain first then show.
@Hermit-Of-Poverty-Point5 жыл бұрын
Hi Kevin, like at 8:55 a lot of our AM broadcast stations here in Melbourne have gone over to DAB+ or FM, only for those vacated frequencies to be re-allocated as ethnic community radio stations. Also perhaps you could explain Sporadic E propagation, or even Tropospheric Ducting to the newcomers of our wonderful hobby.
@estring694 жыл бұрын
NVIS something that would be really useful if HAMs actually did it. So is HF for that matter :)