Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Pete Smith N4ZR
Having totally struck out raising this topic on Towertalk, I'm bringing 
it here in the hopes of getting some solid advice.

I have a 20 dB ARR preamp of the type praised by ON4UN in his book.  I 
want to use it with a variety of RX antennas - loops, BOGs, etc. - that 
have very low output levels.  My choice is whether to put it at the 
antenna end, incurring the added complexity of sending 12V DC to it via 
the coax, or to put it in the shack.

I realize that if this was 2 GHz, there'd be no question where it should 
go.  But for 160-meter purposes, I don't know.  I am wondering if 
putting it at the antenna end might enhance directivity, by amplifying 
the signals from the directive antenna relative to any pickup on the 
350-foot feedline.  I will be trying to choke as much common mode 
current as possible, at both ends, but am not sure how effective I can be.

On another topic, I am building a hub for BOGs.  Rather than switch at 
75 ohms and putting a matching transformer on each BOG, I wonder if it 
would be feasible/desirable to switch at the high-impedance side and use 
a single transformer.  It would certainly simplify the hub.

Any advice would be much appreciated.

-- 
73, Pete N4ZR
The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Bill Cromwell
On Fri, 2012-01-20 at 10:53 -0500, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 Having totally struck out raising this topic on Towertalk, I'm bringing 
 it here in the hopes of getting some solid advice.
 
 I have a 20 dB ARR preamp of the type praised by ON4UN in his book.  I 
 want to use it with a variety of RX antennas - loops, BOGs, etc. - that 
 have very low output levels.  My choice is whether to put it at the 
 antenna end, incurring the added complexity of sending 12V DC to it via 
 the coax, or to put it in the shack.
 
 I realize that if this was 2 GHz, there'd be no question where it should 
 go.  But for 160-meter purposes, I don't know.  I am wondering if 
 putting it at the antenna end might enhance directivity, by amplifying 
 the signals from the directive antenna relative to any pickup on the 
 350-foot feedline.  I will be trying to choke as much common mode 
 current as possible, at both ends, but am not sure how effective I can be.
 
 On another topic, I am building a hub for BOGs.  Rather than switch at 
 75 ohms and putting a matching transformer on each BOG, I wonder if it 
 would be feasible/desirable to switch at the high-impedance side and use 
 a single transformer.  It would certainly simplify the hub.
 
 Any advice would be much appreciated.
 

Hi Pete,

I'm thinking if your 350 foot feedline is coax and your antenna output
is very low it will be even lower at the shack end before it meets the
preamp. I think I would put mine at the antenna end of the feedline and
for the same reasons as you would at microwave frequencies. Once the
received signal is 'lost' no amplifier is going to get it back.

73,

Bill  KU8H

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Greg - ZL3IX
Hi Pete,

The common mode issue doesn't really affect your decision.  You will 
need to ensure that common mode pickup on the coax doesn't get into the 
antenna, which ever position you choose for your preamp.  This is really 
important for low output antennas like the Pennant

The decision on whether to place it at the Rx and or the antenna end, 
depends on the expected signal level at the antenna, the loss in the 
coax, and the sensitivity of your receiver.  These are exactly the same 
parameters as you would use to make the decision at UHF and above.  Here 
is an example.

Typical band noise output from a small Rx antenna in a quiet location on 
160m might be -127 dBm in a 500 Hz BW.  A typical noise figure for an HF 
preamp might be 6 dB, putting the noise floor at -168 dBm/Hz, or -141 
dBm in 500 Hz.  With no additional coax loss, your Rx will degrade the 
available S/N by 0.1 dB.

Now with 350 ft of good quality RG6, you can expect around 2 dB loss, 
dropping your antenna noise down to -129 dBm, still 12 dB above the Rx 
noise floor.  The Rx now degrades the available S/N by 0.3 dB.

Provided your coax loss is not much worse than this, I wouldn't worry 
about it and put the preamp where it's convenient for you, but I advise 
you to do the maths and insert the actual figures for your own situation.

73, Greg, ZL3IX

My choice is whether to put it at the antenna end, incurring the added 
complexity of sending 12V DC to it via the coax, or to put it in the 
shack. 
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Don Kirk


N4ZR said : I have a 20 dB ARR preamp, My choice is whether to put it at the 
antenna end, incurring the added complexity of sending 12V DC to it via the 
coax, or to put it in the shack.


Per the ON4UN book, In most cases you can put the preamplifier in the shack.  
The signal loss in the feed line is a loss that affects both the signal and 
external noise.  That means that the loss in the feedline does not affect the 
S/N ratio.


I personally have 3 point fed pennants that are very small (51.6% the size of 
full size pennants), and therefore their gain is around -46dbi, and my preamp 
is located in the shack (W1FB slightly modified preamp).  I've done some simple 
tests with my preamp out at the feedpoint versus in the shack and I personally 
was unable to detect any difference in S/N performance but my measurement 
system was not highly sophisticated.

My feedline is 160 feet of RG58/U, and I intentionally have no breaks (no 
connectors) in this feedline (one solid run of feedline from the connector on 
the back of my preamp to the primary of my transformer which is located at the 
antennas (my feedline is soldered directly to the transformer primary), and I 
did this to eliminate any and all weather related connector problems.  

I only use one transformer to feed my 3 pennants, and I do switch the high 
impedance side of the transformer (the transformer secondary), and I switch 
both ends of the secondary (mandatory for multiple point fed pennant systems).

I have 14 turns of my coax run through 3 stacked 2.4 O.D. 31 mix cores to help 
prevent common mode current, and this choke is located approximately 25 feet 
away from the base of multiple pennant feedpoint.  Also have 14 turns of my 
relay control cable (CAT 5 cable) running through 2 stacked 2.4 O.D. 31 mix 
cores which are located on the ground below my antenna feedpoint.
 
73's
Don (wd8dsb)

 
 
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Topband: Announcing the 2012 Dayton TopBand Dinner

2012-01-20 Thread Tim Duffy K3LR
We are carrying on the great TopBand dinner tradition that George, K8GG and
George, W8UVZ put together for so many years at Dayton.

Dinner reservations and Tickets are now available for the 23rd Annual Dayton
TopBand dinner.

Friday evening May 18, 2012 at the Crowne Plaza  - downtown Dayton, Ohio

Frank Donovan, W3LPL will be the main speaker.

Reservations are available on line with credit cards and PayPal. 
Use the contact us information if you need to make other arrangements.

All of the updated details are here:

http://topbanddinner.com

Scroll down to make your reservations.

Hope to see you at the 2012 Dayton TopBand Dinner

73,
Tim K3LR

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Chuck
I feed my normal Beverages with 320' of RG-58. and sometimes (at other 
locations) feed a Beverage with a shorter cable. Never ever have I been 
able to pull the antenna from the transformer between antenna and coax 
and have  quietness in the receiver.  Always there is too much pickup 
from AM BC stations (which I DX) and also noise.

So I'll agree with Guy that few people's coax feeds are as clean as they 
think. For that reason, I'd put the preamp at the transformer so that 
the receiver thinks there's more S in the numerator with the same N in 
the denominator. Of course in a low noise environment, there will be 
little or no difference.

The loss is immaterial to me. At .4 dB/100 ft at 1 MHz, 300 feet of 
RG-58 has 1.4 dB loss on paper and measured results show somewhat less loss.


Chuck


On 1/20/2012 10:44 AM, Guy Olinger K2AV wrote:
 I am getting comments from people who have installed FCP plus isolation
 transformer 160 TX antennas, how their new TX antenna is quieter than their
 K9AY or pennant, maybe a third or half of respondents (!!!) with some hint
 or outright statement of this.  But I think, rather than the TX antenna
 being all that good, it's really the RX antenna's common mode isolation
 really being that grotesquely BAD.

 I can make this happen in a model by putting the coax on the ground and
 making the now low velocity factor ELECTRICAL length of the coax on the
 ground somewhat near a multiple of a halfwave.  Typically something in the
 range of 125 or 150 feet, give or take, can have this VOLTAGE node, high Z
 point at one or both of the typical common mode blocking points.

 If one models this literally, and puts an EZNEC source on the shield, then
 you need common mode blocks in the  100k+ order of magnitude to keep noise
 down low enough to protect a non-amplified pennant antenna.  The reason the
 TX FCP + isolation transformer is so quiet is that the UNCONNECTED windings
 of the transformer have only the capacitance between windings as a through
 path, and at the low 160m frequency the isolation is in the half megohm
 range against a 75 ohm-ish shunt to ground at amp or RX.

 So from where I'm setting, transformer ISOLATED preamps at EACH RX antenna
 need to be PROVED OUT for naturally lossy RX antennas, rather than the
 other way around, and you may need to run a separate DC lead to the preamp.
   I'm not saying they CAN'T be proved out, it's just that the beginning
 assumption needs to be that they are needed UNTIL it's proven they aren't
 need.

 I think that what is amiss is our perceptions about how quiet we think coax
 shields are.  Apparently coax shields are just plain gawd-awful noisy, and
 must be assumed to be just plain gawd-awful noisy in the planning and
 construction stages.

 And I still get correspondence where the writer thinks they can evaluate RX
 antenna performance by A/B tests and how loud the desired signal is.
   Signal to noise cannot be done with the human ear and an A/B switch.
   Nobody's ear is that good.   Borrow the equipment, do the work, get it
 right.  Good 160 RX is a nasty, technical, unforgiving business with a mean
 mind toward deception.

 73, Guy.

 On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 12:08 PM, Don Kirkwd8...@aol.com  wrote:

 
 N4ZR said : I have a 20 dB ARR preamp, My choice is whether to put it at
 the antenna end, incurring the added complexity of sending 12V DC to it via
 the coax, or to put it in the shack.
 

 Per the ON4UN book, In most cases you can put the preamplifier in the
 shack.  The signal loss in the feed line is a loss that affects both the
 signal and external noise.  That means that the loss in the feedline does
 not affect the S/N ratio.


 I personally have 3 point fed pennants that are very small (51.6% the size
 of full size pennants), and therefore their gain is around -46dbi, and my
 preamp is located in the shack (W1FB slightly modified preamp).  I've done
 some simple tests with my preamp out at the feedpoint versus in the shack
 and I personally was unable to detect any difference in S/N performance but
 my measurement system was not highly sophisticated.

 My feedline is 160 feet of RG58/U, and I intentionally have no breaks (no
 connectors) in this feedline (one solid run of feedline from the connector
 on the back of my preamp to the primary of my transformer which is located
 at the antennas (my feedline is soldered directly to the transformer
 primary), and I did this to eliminate any and all weather related connector
 problems.

 I only use one transformer to feed my 3 pennants, and I do switch the high
 impedance side of the transformer (the transformer secondary), and I switch
 both ends of the secondary (mandatory for multiple point fed pennant
 systems).

 I have 14 turns of my coax run through 3 stacked 2.4 O.D. 31 mix cores to
 help prevent common mode current, and this choke is located approximately
 25 feet away from the base of multiple pennant feedpoint.  Also 

Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread ZR

- Original Message - 
From: Don Kirk wd8...@aol.com
To: n...@contesting.com; Topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 12:08 PM
Subject: Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?



 
 N4ZR said : I have a 20 dB ARR preamp, My choice is whether to put it at 
 the antenna end, incurring the added complexity of sending 12V DC to it 
 via the coax, or to put it in the shack.
 

 Per the ON4UN book, In most cases you can put the preamplifier in the 
 shack.  The signal loss in the feed line is a loss that affects both the 
 signal and external noise.  That means that the loss in the feedline does 
 not affect the S/N ratio.


That is a very misleading statement typical of all revisions and corrections 
to that book.

Any loss before the first active device will degrade the MDS, noise figure, 
SNR, or whatever else you wish to call it.

A low NF preamp with sufficient gain will overcome the feedline loss as well 
as the radios front end noise resulting in a better SYSTEM noise figure, 
MDS, SNR, etc.

While the 350' feed of the OP should have a minimal loss of about .8dB at 2 
MHz and an in shack preamp would be sufficient 99.9% of the time others with 
more loss should do the calculations to determine the cost/benefit of both 
settings.

Carl
KM1H


___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Rick Karlquist
Guy Olinger K2AV wrote:
 I am getting comments from people who have installed FCP plus isolation
 transformer 160 TX antennas, how their new TX antenna is quieter than
 their
 K9AY or pennant, maybe a third or half of respondents (!!!) with some hint
 or outright statement of this.  But I think, rather than the TX antenna
 being all that good, it's really the RX antenna's common mode isolation
 really being that grotesquely BAD.

This advice is spot on and something I have advocated for years.
Transformer coupling is the only way to go for feedline isolation.
Unfortunately, many hams want to use a common mode choke
because they are comfortable with that concept.  The DX engineering
active antenna makes this mistake, and as a result has poor
feedline isolation which made it unusable in my application.

Now the argument for common mode chokes and against transformers
is that it it easy to send DC through the former.  The correct
solution is to send the RF through a transformer and send the
DC through a small inductor that is self resonant at the frequency
of interest.  This permits the preamp to be transformer
isolated from the feedline.

Note that this technical problem is independent of whether you
send DC over the coax or over a separate wire.  The separate
wire still requires the self resonant inductor to isolate it
from the antenna side of the transformer.  If you are operating
on more than one band, get a resonant inductor for each band
and put them in series.  They will interact, but not at
frequencies in the ham bands.

Finally, my experience is that a vertical is the worst possible
receive antenna, even if transformer isolated (yep, tried that).
If your receive antenna is not as good as a vertical, it has
serious problems.

Rick N6RK

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Where to place a preamp? Switching Beverages?

2012-01-20 Thread Pete Smith N4ZR
Thanks, everyone, for too many good inputs to list here.  A lot of good 
ideas, both for experimental approaches and for the final 
configuration.  At least for experimental purposes, I will go with the 
preamp in the shack and, assuming that my feedline is not quiet, 
significant improvements in management of common mode currents.  One 
correspondent advocated transformer coupling instead of common mode 
chokes, and I'll need to correspond further with him on that, because I 
don't understand quite how it would work.

73, Pete N4ZR
The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band

2012-01-20 Thread wa3mej



I have been a ham for almost 46 years now and having been on 160 off an on for 
much of that time. Tonight I saw something that I had not really seen on 160 
and kinda ticked me off big time; some idiot intentiionally trying to jam VE1ZZ 
while he was trying to work a DX station that I didnt even hear (I'M Jealous 
obviously).  This kind of thing happens a lot on 80 what with all the idiots 
directly challenging the FCC and all but I have not really run into it on the 
gentlemens band.  Everyone is for the most part so pleasant on this band.  I 
mean if why not just turn it into a contest for who can work the station 
first?  but to intentionally be a spoiler for another station just doesnt cut 
it. 



It would be nice to find this joker and poke pins in his coax.  Whats the 
saying  I'm mad as hell and not going to put up with this  ??? 



Jim WA3MEJ 



P.S.  VE1ZZ  hope you got the contact anyhow.
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK

Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band

2012-01-20 Thread Larry
Unfortunately 160 is not immune to that kind of behavior. I have run into
it before (including from an A1 Op member). Some would argue they were
agressively pursuing a DX QSO. Most of us would classify the operation
as just plain QRM.

73, Larry  W6NWS
- Original Message - 
From: wa3...@comcast.net
To: topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 10:01 PM
Subject: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band





 I have been a ham for almost 46 years now and having been on 160 off an on 
 for much of that time. Tonight I saw something that I had not really seen 
 on 160 and kinda ticked me off big time; some idiot intentiionally trying 
 to jam VE1ZZ while he was trying to work a DX station that I didnt even 
 hear (I'M Jealous obviously). This kind of thing happens a lot on 80 what 
 with all the idiots directly challenging the FCC and all but I have not 
 really run into it on the gentlemens band. Everyone is for the most part 
 so pleasant on this band. I mean if why not just turn it into a contest 
 for who can work the station first? but to intentionally be a spoiler for 
 another station just doesnt cut it.



 It would be nice to find this joker and poke pins in his coax. Whats the 
 saying  I'm mad as hell and not going to put up with this ???



 Jim WA3MEJ



 P.S. VE1ZZ hope you got the contact anyhow.
 ___
 UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK 


___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band

2012-01-20 Thread Jim F.
As an avid QRPer I find that QRM is a fact of life
almost never intentional, but frequently occuring.
 
Also a fact of life is that there are so many considerate 
and patient operators willing to stand by and
to listen for and try to copy weak signals..
 
BTW,
VE1ZZ here in NH has an absolutely outstanding signal.
 
jim / W1FMR
 
 


--- On Fri, 1/20/12, Larry lkn...@nc.rr.com wrote:


From: Larry lkn...@nc.rr.com
Subject: Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band
To: topband@contesting.com
Date: Friday, January 20, 2012, 10:42 PM


Unfortunately 160 is not immune to that kind of behavior. I have run into
it before (including from an A1 Op member). Some would argue they were
agressively pursuing a DX QSO. Most of us would classify the operation
as just plain QRM.

73, Larry  W6NWS
- Original Message - 
From: wa3...@comcast.net
To: topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 10:01 PM
Subject: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band





 I have been a ham for almost 46 years now and having been on 160 off an on 
 for much of that time. Tonight I saw something that I had not really seen 
 on 160 and kinda ticked me off big time; some idiot intentiionally trying 
 to jam VE1ZZ while he was trying to work a DX station that I didnt even 
 hear (I'M Jealous obviously). This kind of thing happens a lot on 80 what 
 with all the idiots directly challenging the FCC and all but I have not 
 really run into it on the gentlemens band. Everyone is for the most part 
 so pleasant on this band. I mean if why not just turn it into a contest 
 for who can work the station first? but to intentionally be a spoiler for 
 another station just doesnt cut it.



 It would be nice to find this joker and poke pins in his coax. Whats the 
 saying  I'm mad as hell and not going to put up with this ???



 Jim WA3MEJ



 P.S. VE1ZZ hope you got the contact anyhow.
 ___
 UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK 


___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Topband: My First DX

2012-01-20 Thread Jerry Keller (K3BZ)
Pardon my exuberance, but I worked my very first Topband DX this evening... 
PJ4C on Bonaire. Me happy.

73, Jerry K3BZ
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: My First DX

2012-01-20 Thread Joe K2UF
Unless you have a large area to build massive 160 meter antennas you will
probably not have that same feeling again but every 160 QSO will feel very
close to that.

Congrats

Joe K2UF 

No trees were harmed in the sending of this e-mail; however, many electrons
were inconvenienced.


-Original Message-
From: topband-boun...@contesting.com [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com]
On Behalf Of Jerry Keller (K3BZ)
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 11:44 PM
To: (REFLECTOR) Topband
Subject: Topband: My First DX

Pardon my exuberance, but I worked my very first Topband DX this evening...
PJ4C on Bonaire. Me happy.

73, Jerry K3BZ
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: My First DX

2012-01-20 Thread Gene Smar
Jerry:

 Congrats on the achievement.  Your first QSO on, let's say, 15M, 
probably wasn't as exciting or gave you the same thrill as this, I bet. 
Keep up the good work.

73 de
Gene Smar  AD3F


- Original Message - 
From: Jerry Keller (K3BZ) k...@verizon.net
To: (REFLECTOR) Topband topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 11:44 PM
Subject: Topband: My First DX


 Pardon my exuberance, but I worked my very first Topband DX this 
 evening... PJ4C on Bonaire. Me happy.

 73, Jerry K3BZ
 ___
 UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK 

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band

2012-01-20 Thread Greg
Sure sometimes there is some inadvertent QRM because of call timing or poor
reception ...but too often it is just plain lack of consideration and
rudeness -- seems to be a sign of the times.  What is becoming of some
people...who call in the pile-ups continuously...on top of stations that are
answered...the dx station says QRZ  AD and you hear something like GH,
BGN, or RJ and many others calling, calling, calling not because they
can't hear...because they are too self-centered and inconsiderate to wait
and let AD make his QSO and finish.   It's disgusting behavior.  What can
we do?  I'm for posting calls on a website of the LIDS for all to
see...Enough peer pressure and maybe they'll get the idea.  Why let a few
ruin it for the rest?  If you know people who do it, call them on it?  Step
up and let's keep 160 as W1BB would have liked -- the gentleman's band.  73
de Greg-N4CC
  
-Original Message-
From: topband-boun...@contesting.com [mailto:topband-boun...@contesting.com]
On Behalf Of Jim F.
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 9:18 PM
To: topband@contesting.com; Larry
Subject: Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band

As an avid QRPer I find that QRM is a fact of life almost never intentional,
but frequently occuring.
 
Also a fact of life is that there are so many considerate and patient
operators willing to stand by and to listen for and try to copy weak
signals..
 
BTW,
VE1ZZ here in NH has an absolutely outstanding signal.
 
jim / W1FMR
 
 


--- On Fri, 1/20/12, Larry lkn...@nc.rr.com wrote:


From: Larry lkn...@nc.rr.com
Subject: Re: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band
To: topband@contesting.com
Date: Friday, January 20, 2012, 10:42 PM


Unfortunately 160 is not immune to that kind of behavior. I have run into it
before (including from an A1 Op member). Some would argue they were
agressively pursuing a DX QSO. Most of us would classify the operation as
just plain QRM.

73, Larry  W6NWS
- Original Message -
From: wa3...@comcast.net
To: topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 10:01 PM
Subject: Topband: Ticked over intentional interference on top band





 I have been a ham for almost 46 years now and having been on 160 off an on

 for much of that time. Tonight I saw something that I had not really seen 
 on 160 and kinda ticked me off big time; some idiot intentiionally trying 
 to jam VE1ZZ while he was trying to work a DX station that I didnt even 
 hear (I'M Jealous obviously). This kind of thing happens a lot on 80 what 
 with all the idiots directly challenging the FCC and all but I have not 
 really run into it on the gentlemens band. Everyone is for the most part 
 so pleasant on this band. I mean if why not just turn it into a contest 
 for who can work the station first? but to intentionally be a spoiler for 
 another station just doesnt cut it.



 It would be nice to find this joker and poke pins in his coax. Whats the 
 saying  I'm mad as hell and not going to put up with this ???



 Jim WA3MEJ



 P.S. VE1ZZ hope you got the contact anyhow.
 ___
 UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK 


___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK
___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK


Re: Topband: My First DX

2012-01-20 Thread Jerry Keller (K3BZ)
You're right, Gene, although after 52 years I can't really remember the 
first on 15M.  I won't forget this one tonight though.

Thanks,  73, Jerry K3BZ

-Original Message- 
From: Gene Smar
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2012 12:23 AM
To: Jerry Keller (K3BZ) ; (REFLECTOR) Topband
Subject: Re: Topband: My First DX

Jerry:

 Congrats on the achievement.  Your first QSO on, let's say, 15M,
probably wasn't as exciting or gave you the same thrill as this, I bet.
Keep up the good work.

73 de
Gene Smar  AD3F


- Original Message - 
From: Jerry Keller (K3BZ) k...@verizon.net
To: (REFLECTOR) Topband topband@contesting.com
Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 11:44 PM
Subject: Topband: My First DX


 Pardon my exuberance, but I worked my very first Topband DX this 
 evening... PJ4C on Bonaire. Me happy.

 73, Jerry K3BZ
 ___
 UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK 

___
UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK