January 6, 2002 18:15
Updated: January 6, 2002 Rev.:R1B

This page is (hopefully not) another contribution to the "Worlds Most Useless Webpages Competition". Its intention is just to supply some impressions and links regarding ham radio and radio related issues. Some hams may find inspiration here, experts may feel free to have a good laugh.Those links have been very helpful for my own little projects . Moreover it´s also an html playground for me just to learn a litte bit more about this as well...
I built a simple 4 element quad antenna out of thin bamboo sticks from the garden shop, a wooden lath and some coax-cable rests which gives me say at about 8dBd. If you are wondering about the design, i picked up a shortwave 4 element quad from the famous Rothammel antenna book and recalculated it for 144MHz. Not an optimized hightech antenna but it turned out to work fine....Put onto a 3m pole and slightly elevated directed to 330 degrees, it made it possible to work LA, LY, ES, OH, OZ, DL, and stations in northern and southern Sweden from this location. It´s quite useful to watch VHF-beacons but also the spaceweather
and OH2AQ DX-Summit-links below give you useful information about possible openings which appear depending on the solar activity 10 to 50 times a year, lasting from some minutes to several hours.Unfortunately they occur also when you´ve got to work or to sleep....
Aurora operation is one of the "modes" that work preferably best on CW, during strong openings even SSB works, it sounds like a very strange whispering.
I myself spent many interesting hours watching radio auroras. Also visual auroras, the northern lights, are unforgettable events. How to find out that an Aurora is coming up? Well, the first thing is to monitor the sun on the spaceweather page. If a strong flare appears (M or X level), check whether it is earth-directed or not.(A strong ongoing earth directed flare will also often cause an "immediate" radio-blackout on the earths sunside, for instance on shortwave. But this is not an aurora yet.)
The particle stream will reach the earth after half a day up to 2 days later , the tables and graphs on the spaceweather page will show its speed and density. The main thing to watch then is the direction of the interplanetary magnetic field in the related window. When it starts tilting south, a geomagnetic storm and also an aurora can be expected.
Also coronal holes can be the reason for solar windstreams causing auroras. Watch the beacon band and the CW part of the 2m-band and of coarse the sky on clear evenings for visible AU´s....I experienced it only twice, but when a visible aurora appears, it does not seem to work on radio, maybe this is because my position then was below the reflecting "curtain"..... 6m-band is another good and fascinating alternative for aurora operation, 70cm and 23cm reflections are very weak.
Due to the fact that good software is available, the only thing i had to worry about was how to get a suitable receiver and antenna. For instance a scanner would do it in case it provides FM-wide mode. I decided to "wreck" an old analogue car-radio by changing the variometer-coils and the capacitors in the oscillator and preselector circuits. This made the radio unusable for its former purpose and moreover it was only working in a small range around 137.5 MHz but at least there it worked. The next victim was an old home-stereo receiver due to the fact that it had such features as field-strength and center tuning indication and memory buttons, i mistreated it in a similar way and this also worked. The sensitivity was not too good so i had to add an antenna preamplifier, modified an old dualgate-mosfet preamp i built for 144 MHz some years ago. A very good antenna was published in the swedish QTC-magazine and also by Jerry, K5OE. The picture shows my ugly "prototype". The body is made of PVC-water pipes and the active parts are coax- rests. Today i´m using a similar construction with reflector under the roof. It allows to receive the NOAA and Meteor satellites with a good coverage from southern Germany to northern Sweden. For instance the NOAA-satellites will provide at least two 45 degrees to overhead passes per day. Those of you using directional circular polarized antennas will be able to get weather pictures from northern Africa to Greenland. 
| Propagation links: OH2AQ DX-SUMMITongoing Ham activities SPACEWEATHERsolar activities G0ISWBeacons, propagation, Aurora spots,MS and more... |
| Satellite tracking and satellite picture processing WXSAT,WXTRACK... Excellent tracking and weather satellite reception program SW by David Taylor Remote Imaging Group Lots of information and links regarding WX-satellites and more NOAA NOAA WX-satellite APT related documents PA0ROJ Antenna... About Helical quads, in dutch, see the drawings! |
| QRA-locator links Where are we? by Jon, SM3OJR ON7VZ homepage (VB) download QRA-loc program by ON1KVE |
|
Antennas for satellite operation and more... K5OE´s antennas fantastic antenna projects by Jerry,K5OE |
|
PSK 31 information and downloads: PSK31Info about PSK31 DIGIPANHere you can download the SW |
| RTTY and SSTV MMSSTV,MMRTTY etc. |
| Ham Radio Equipment photographs and manuals etc. RIGPIX by Janne, SM0OFV |
| Meteorscatter and WSJT... DK3XT Meteorscatter and more.... WSJT K1JT WSJT homepage |
| QRP and homebrew/misc. JF1OZLinteresting,exotic and plentiful, don´t care about tanks and planes, if you dislike it.... |
| Organisazional links SSA (Swedish ham-radio organisazion) AMSAT-SM (Swedish ham-radio satellite organisazion) DARC (German ham-radio organisazion) AMSAT-DL (German AMSAT, good AO40 info) RAC Canadian Radio Club index, many interesting links |
| Tillbehör www.elektrondata.se webconter om du bor i Sverige, här finns det en bra webbräknare att hämta....Tack för det! GOOGLE my favorite search engine Gör en egen hemsida Lättpocket, pagina förlaget aspire HTML-editor SW |
| SM0WXV Send me an e-mail if you like |