19-11-2019, 11:17 AM
Hi Nev
At different times of the year you see different amounts of stations on the maps, more so in their summers as you can imagine, particularly on 6m. The VK7JJ site will only show up reported paths, and doesnt show how many stations are on air but not actually been heard or heard anything, but your right, 2m particularly across USA and EU is very lacking.
In European areas, I am aware of some significant reasons why WSPR is not used by a larger amount of people, but I wont comment on it here. This can also have a flow on effect to USA stations on the east coast loosely. All I can say is that it is a great shame when you think about the Atlantic Ocean crossing often talked about.
Across the USA there is often talk of use of APRS as a propagation indicator for 2m tropo & Es. While no doubt this works for strong signals, I have tried it myself and the signal strength required to get it to decode is huge in comparison to a WSPR signal. You also dont need a real good stable radio to make it work either, but having said that, APRS was not designed to detect DX paths so many people running it are not even chasing DX. So the paths not detected and missed by this method, I would not like to think about.
In Hawaii though there is a 70cm WSPR beacon beaming towards California, which is regularly RXd by Chris N3IZN & some others near-by to Chris which is in excess of 4000 km.
After using WSPR for a while I realise the potential, but having VK6KXW decode my 2m WSPR signal last week @ 2806 km unexpectedly at -29dB and also hear VK5AKK, is pretty incredible and reinforces its ability to find paths at VHF.
You might wonder, well what can I do with a -29dB signal? If using minimal TX power, say 2 or 5W and have a lot in reserve you should be able to make a contact if you can increase your power by say 6dB or more. If already using say 50W and only have about 90W out of your rig u may not be able to do anything really, except marvel at the possibilities and keep monitoring hope that it gets strong enough to be able to use other modes and maybe get a contact. But now at least I know a path to VK6KXW is a possibility and that this particular path could occur when you are least expecting it.
One thing I would say about WSPR, particularly on 2m and to a lesser extent 6m, is that it works extraordinarily well when you get your set up right, and you have a reasonable grasp on signal propagation techniques and characteristics, but its also very easy to get it wrong, especially for newcomers.
The hardest thing for most people to achieve is to have their radio's set up to a high precision GPS type reference signal for oscillator stability and accuracy (we see how hard that is when ICOM cant even get it right with their IC9700). So when people start out with a basic radio, they could be no where near the WSPR bandpass and not even know it, so they dont get any decodes obviously and or their TX signal drifts like crazy.
Having said that, some standard rigs do work extraordinarily well when it comes to stability, and one currently is the IC910 rig that Nigel VK6NI is using, with only a hi-stability option crystal, its working perfectly.
At different times of the year you see different amounts of stations on the maps, more so in their summers as you can imagine, particularly on 6m. The VK7JJ site will only show up reported paths, and doesnt show how many stations are on air but not actually been heard or heard anything, but your right, 2m particularly across USA and EU is very lacking.
In European areas, I am aware of some significant reasons why WSPR is not used by a larger amount of people, but I wont comment on it here. This can also have a flow on effect to USA stations on the east coast loosely. All I can say is that it is a great shame when you think about the Atlantic Ocean crossing often talked about.
Across the USA there is often talk of use of APRS as a propagation indicator for 2m tropo & Es. While no doubt this works for strong signals, I have tried it myself and the signal strength required to get it to decode is huge in comparison to a WSPR signal. You also dont need a real good stable radio to make it work either, but having said that, APRS was not designed to detect DX paths so many people running it are not even chasing DX. So the paths not detected and missed by this method, I would not like to think about.
In Hawaii though there is a 70cm WSPR beacon beaming towards California, which is regularly RXd by Chris N3IZN & some others near-by to Chris which is in excess of 4000 km.
After using WSPR for a while I realise the potential, but having VK6KXW decode my 2m WSPR signal last week @ 2806 km unexpectedly at -29dB and also hear VK5AKK, is pretty incredible and reinforces its ability to find paths at VHF.
You might wonder, well what can I do with a -29dB signal? If using minimal TX power, say 2 or 5W and have a lot in reserve you should be able to make a contact if you can increase your power by say 6dB or more. If already using say 50W and only have about 90W out of your rig u may not be able to do anything really, except marvel at the possibilities and keep monitoring hope that it gets strong enough to be able to use other modes and maybe get a contact. But now at least I know a path to VK6KXW is a possibility and that this particular path could occur when you are least expecting it.
One thing I would say about WSPR, particularly on 2m and to a lesser extent 6m, is that it works extraordinarily well when you get your set up right, and you have a reasonable grasp on signal propagation techniques and characteristics, but its also very easy to get it wrong, especially for newcomers.
The hardest thing for most people to achieve is to have their radio's set up to a high precision GPS type reference signal for oscillator stability and accuracy (we see how hard that is when ICOM cant even get it right with their IC9700). So when people start out with a basic radio, they could be no where near the WSPR bandpass and not even know it, so they dont get any decodes obviously and or their TX signal drifts like crazy.
Having said that, some standard rigs do work extraordinarily well when it comes to stability, and one currently is the IC910 rig that Nigel VK6NI is using, with only a hi-stability option crystal, its working perfectly.
Leigh VK2KRR
The Rock Hill West
QF34
The Rock Hill West
QF34