Sunday, December 21, 2014

20141221 VR2CB(Hong Kong) on 12m CW

20141221 VR2CB(Hong Kong) on 12m CW


VR2CB Hong Kong flag Hong Kong
Carl B
123 Main Street
Yuen Long, New Territories
Hong Kong
QSL: QSL VIA BURO/DIRECT NOT ELECTRONICALLY/EQSL
Email: Use mouse to view..
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20141221 0830UTC 24910.8kHz VR2CB
Date : 21/Dec/2014 0830UTC
Freq : 24910.8kHz CW
Rig   : KENWOOD TS-590
ANT : LOOP
PC recording

This call has been assigned to me since December 2007 - my first VR2 call (I was licensed in the UK before I came to Hong Kong) being VR2LH, issued to me in mid 1994. Although licensed I never actually transmitted from VR2 until December 2005. Amateur callsigns previously used in Hong Kong started with VS6. The assignment of the VS6 series callsigns was discontinued in August 1993. The VR2 series were then introduced (existing holders of the VS6 series callsigns were allowed to retain these callsigns in parallel with their newly assigned VR2 series callsigns until 30 June 1997- Britain handed Hong Kong over to China on 1st July 1997). Incidentally just two letters after a VR2 prefix signifies that the holder has passed the 12 wpm morse exam and originally meant that the amateur held a 'Class A' (full) license thus allowing HF privileges. All VR2 amateurs now have access to HF, whether they have passed a morse test or not, so apart from vanity two letters after the VR2 prefix means nothing in reality. By the way VR2CB was issued previously to another amateur however I have no information as to who or when other than there may have been a station with the call 'VR2CB' active from Fiji in the 1950's - if you know more on the previous VR2CB license/station please let me know!
I'm QRV on HF, mainly 15m, 12m or 10m SSB (due to noise issues on lowwer bands), usually using a 10m 5/8 wave vertical although some times the odd short bit of wire or a mag loop.
Recently started to try the key again (25+ years since my last CW QSO so sorry as it is kinda BAD but getting there - reminds me of golf: practice at the range and think you are 'maybe' reasonable however once on the course it is a whole different game...).
If you really do need a QSL card send it direct as the buro takes a while and although the guys do a great job it could get lost my end/damaged in a typhoon/eaten by bugs or rot in the 95%+ summer humidity! By the way if you send a QSL card via the post/mail I suggest that you do not write 'China' or 'Peoples Republic of China'on the envelope as it will probably get sent elsewhere rather than straight to Hong Kong. And sorry to say for those chasing IOTA my QTH is not on HK island. 73!

1026913 Last modified: 2014-06-16 13:30:34, 2490 bytes

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