For what it’s worth, I too printed that station a couple of times (and saw 
many, many calling him). I could see that it was P4/WE9V in reality. I’m not 
clear on what the ask is, Reino. I decoded many, many messages (normal QSOs) in 
that time frame, including others calling P97USI/P.

 

240226_195930    28.074 Rx FT8     13  0.3  703 CT1GYD RR73; M0JUE <P97USI/P> 
-06

 

--Dennis NE6I

 

From: Reino Talarmo via wsjt-devel <[email protected]> 
Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2024 3:34 AM
To: 'WSJT software development' <[email protected]>
Cc: Reino Talarmo <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [wsjt-devel] Another fun hash collision P97USI

 

Jon,

It would be interesting to know whether you have decoded a message containing 
P97USI/P within 231900 and 232530 and what that message was?

 

73, Reino OH3mA

 

From: Jon Anhold via wsjt-devel [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2024 2:50 AM
To: WSJT software development <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Cc: Jon Anhold <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: [wsjt-devel] Another fun hash collision P97USI

 

231900 16 0.4 909 ~ BG2AUE <P4/WE9V> -25 Aruba

232530 5 0.4 909 ~ JR3UIC RR73; JA7WND <P97USI/P> +06 DPR of Korea

 

Maybe some logic that checks "am I *really* North Korea?" would be good :)

 

73 de KM8V Jon

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