I've been lurking here for a few years and enjoy reading all of the wonderful things done by the group. I use citizen science myself as I'm the project scientist for the mPING app. Today I have an HF propagation questions that has puzzled me for quite some time.
Today at about 1745 UTC on 15 m, I noticed what may be a long-delay echo: my transceiver is a TenTec Orion II running full break-in. When my antenna (KLM KT34A, roughly equivalent to a 3 el yagi) points eastward (30-139 deg) or westward (200-300 deg), if I send a dit I hear its echo. It gas to take long enough for the rx to recover, so from what I've read that counts as a long-delay echo. I would notice this occasionally when I live in CO and worked for NCAR (I'm now at OU working with NSSL as a research scientist) and this isn't the first time I've heard it here. This time, it occurred to me to ask people far more knowledgeable than me about the ionosphere and propagation: what's going on? What process might explain what I'm experiencing?
73 & Happy New Year,
Kim N5OP
Kim Elmore, Ph.D. (Adj. Assoc. Prof., OU School of Meteorology, CCM, PP SEL/MEL/Glider, UAS, N5OP, 2nd Class Radiotelegraph, GROL)
“People that make music together cannot be enemies, at least while the music lasts." – Paul Hindemith
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Hi Phil,
That's a great question and one that I can address in only approximate/qualitative based on ears.My receiver doesn't recover fast enough for me to effectively hear the start of the echo. but the end sounds as crisp as any other signal. Because it's so short, I can't assess fading continuously but if I send a fast (50 WPM) dit every half second to second (think of a 1 s time series sample), I can hear that there is definitely fading.
What you suggest is most certainly needed, but I don't have a
coupler or the rest of the necessary equipment to do it.
73 & HNY,
Kim N5OP
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Hi Ethan,
Thanks for the book reference! I need to snag a copy.
LP is certainly RTW propagation by definition. I have a TS-930
(alas, currently out for service) that has a much faster RX
recovery. When I heard this using the '930 in CO, I became
convinced that I was hearing RTW echoes because, by varying the
keying speed, I determined that the delay was about 100 ms (a bit
longer, actually). My determination was very crude: I'd manually
adjust the keying speed until the keyed dit exactly masked the
echo, then converting the delay between dits to seconds based on
the keying speed.
I've only ever heard this at my station and with my antennas on
15 m. I've never heard in on 20 m and until recently didn't have a
directional antenna for 12-17-30 m; I recently put up a 2 el
antenna for those. I didn't think to look for this on 17 m but I
will the next time it happens.
73 & Happy New Year,
Kim N5OP
I wish I could provide more information about it; I'm simply not
equipped to provide it.
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Hi Phil,
There isn't a KiwiSDR near me that I know of. The very few times
I've actually worked anyone LP it's never been over a polar path,
so There's no auroral quality to the signals. That these are heard
from E-W directions -- I failed to mention that the signal I hears
was stronger when I was pointed E than when I was pointed W --
must be significant. I'm now quite convinced given what I'm
reading that what I hear is my own LP signal and not true LDE.
My QSK is set up to be as fast as it can be without clicks. But
it's not fast enough to hear anything between infra-character
elements fsater than about 40 WPM. The TS-930S has much, much
faster QSK because it's hardware not software.
73,
Kim N5OP
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Hi Ethan,
I do, too. I bought it new in 1986, so it's a late S/N unit. It
has the PIEXX board, the K6IOK PSU, and PA in it, along with the
Inrad roofing filter, making it a pretty bullet-proof FD rig.
While I very much like my Orion II, the ergonomics of the '930
are the best I've ever used. It's in Dave Phillips's shop and I
think he has a *huge* backlog.
73,
Kim N5OP