Friday, December 28, 2012

5T0JL(Mauritania) on 30m CW-2!!!

5T0JL(Mauritania) on 30m CW-2!!!



5T0JL Mauritania flag Mauritania 
Jean J. Lewuillon
Avenue E. Verhaeren 110/1
1030 Brussels
Belgium

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   87310
Email: Use mouse to view.. QSL: ON8RA


20121227 2111UTC 10105kHz 5T0JL
Date : 27/Dec/2012 2111UTC 
Freq : 10105kHz CW
Rig  : SDR(PI4THT) 
ANT  : GP
PC recording

IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL

5t0jl

is currently active from  16 nov 2012 at 1900Z mainly on 10 Mhz CW with homebrew folded dipole & 90 watts.

The GAP Titan DX has been eaten by the ambient salty conditions.

5T0JL QSLing policy please note:

A special word of thanks to those amateur radio who have exchanged cards with me. All in all the normal SASE procedure was used throughout with some exceptions where many IRCs were invalidated because they were missing the stamp of ORIGIN. some other envelopes had nothing except a Qsl card. All will get their cards later anyway.

QSL'S ! ! ! Some new Premium Card Service are taken care of since today 17 december 2012. Please be patient, Thanks

BESIDE ALL CATEGORY CARDS HAVE BEEN CLEARED BY LAST MID NOVEMBER !

I'm takingthis opportunity to address my deep hearted thanks to all friends recorded in my manual log. and the nice compliments or superlatives addressed for my fairness about my operating practices while handling huge and incredible pile-up on simplex.

Why simplex you may ask? To me it is natural, It's the rule, it's the law, and I could not find any recommendations by IARU or the ITU to wildly use substitutes such as Qsx, UpUp or Split.
At 84, I am simply trying to keep 5T alive despite the many odds, still I am dependent on others for station cleaning and other tasks, set up or antennas checks, checking electrical installations as frequent outages are occuring in the city, cleaning the radio shack etc. in fact I really need a full solar battery back up to keep the radio alive in any circumstances.

                                                                                                                                               Here below the T42EU mixed team of 11 SSB/CW operators in Cuba
Other callsigns: ex-F3JL (1960-1983), 9Q5LJ (1965-1967), ON8RA (since 1965),

9X5AB (1980-1983), W3/ON8RA (1969-1975), W6/ON8RA (1996-1998).

Team opr with: OR5EU, T42EU, 5T0EU and 5T0CW.
Actually I am the only licensed ham radio opr in 5T/Mauritania since july 2008 when 5T5SN Qsy'd to TN9SN.
Are you interested to run a Dx-Ped in 5T ? I sure can
help in licensing, lodging, discovering the Sahara rocks
and sand beauties. Just drop me an email.

5T0EUHosted in 2004
5T0CWHosted in 2005
5T0ID Hosted in 2007
5T0SP Hosted in 2012 a friendly DX Polish team with big success this year see it here: http://5t0sp.dxing.pl
5T0ZA  Will be Hosted this february 2013 with Jon/TF3ZA and his truck drive through Africa via Morocco, Mauritania, Senegal, Guinea Conakry, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and further on to Kinshasa, Kamina, Lubumbashi to end up in Cape Town, South Africa. Complete itinerary to be disclosed soon. Mali has been totally removed from plans. An amateur radio license has been requested for all country visited. So 5T0ZA will be used while in Mauritania only. So look for Jon if you want to follow him in this Dx Trip thrilling adventure ! He will not be Qrv while driving, trafic in the evening/night only. 5T license granted.
Full biography below this pics gallery

9Q5LJ 1965/1967 and ON8RA since 1965 still going strong as 5T0JL today.

Shown below is one of our DC3's with it's usual crew of 5 ! Pilot, co-Pilot, Nav, Wireless op and Flight mechanic.

Below is my 9X5 QSL card used during my sporadic stay in Rwanda which ended with a three full years until 1983.

Below is my Qsl card used during myUS tour 1970-1975. The antenna was a home brew Quad not a beam as shown.



THE MAN & HIS RADIO, DESTINY or PASSION?
ON8RA/5T0JL/Jean, Belgian born 1928, grew up in the middle of the new era of radio broadcasting with the growing importance of shortwave radio.
At teenage back in 1939/1940 WWII is striking Belgium, despite the odds I joined the local Boy Scouts where I will be learning the Morse code by using a «whistle» and built my first crystal radio with the help of my father. completed my ability to copy the code by listening to the many CW networks during the war. and I finally joined the Royal Air Force to be a pilot but I could not fulfill the eyesight requirement so I ended up as Wireless Operator end of 1946/early 1947 flying DC3, 4 and 6, I retired in 1968 and kept on going over HF since.
An interesting part of my radio life occured between 1978 and 1980 when working in the Silicon Valley, California, on an HF oblique ionospheric sounding program to observe the ionosphere behaviour in real time which ultimately led to the production of the AN-TRQ 35V. At 84 in october 2012, I'm still currently involved in HF, CW being my favourite mode, while being professionally involved with Data over HF.
Up to now I scored a total of 58 countries, lived in or visited. I speak fluent french, english and brasilian. My current call signs are ON8RA, Class A CEPT licence and 5T0JL, delivered in Mauritania by the Regulation Authority. as well as a few expired international licenses. What a page of history. HF radio, passion or destiny ?

THE RADIO SET UP AS FROM FEBRUARY 2011

Simple and very modest, Located N180603 / W155904.57, Elev. 3m ASL
Transceiver Kenwood 570D conservatively set @ 90 watts output
Old TenTec KR5A keyerworks much better now with new 9V battery thanks to 0N4TC for helping. A very good keyer allowing ratio adjustments for a more personal Morse signature.
A Ten Tec KR20A keyer, by special donation from Ron/K4SSMhas been added for high speed CW traffic. In recent trafic 35 to 40 Wpm was easily reached but with a very impersonal keying and Morse signature.
A home brew G5RVhas been put down for good.
A brand new CAROLINA WINDOM Model 80 from a special donation byEd/KG4W is ready to go up but the next door building manager changed his mind and has not authorized a nylon cord attachment for higher height yet.
A GAP Titan Dx Vertical Dipole from which I am learning a lot on antenna theory because in the past I was more focused to cubical quads or yagis construction and never paid attention to the natural vertical dipole characteristics giving us the key to ease our hobby. as you do not have to bother on direction nor propagation, nor LP or SP, nor height above ground, nor radials, nor gray line, amazingly the antenna will feel all that for you and will bring the DX on your log easy. It is as simple as this. Unsollicited dope on my signal's quality are here to prove it and confirm, simply blowing out all my past experience regarding antennas.
NEW - Home brew Folded Dipole
As of 12th August 2012, construction of a homebrew Folded Dipole for 30 meters built from tits and bits available on the local market completed this 13th august with an antenna analyzer testing and adjusting. That's approximately 28 meters of wire in a bulky construction. I had a 4/1 new Balun four years in a drawer. Total cost so far equivalent to 5 USD. Works like a dream antenna with fantastic results.

THE OPERATOR'S DESK

Clock, paper Log Book and pencils. My shack is 9 square meters, inside temperature constantly between 28°C and 33°C depending the outside temp. No air conditioning.

HELPFUL TOOLS ARE:

A portable computer w/internet connection but not really mandatory. hopefully we can still grab the world with our HF radio can't we?
Propagation software such as: PropMan 2000 by Rockwell-Collins, VOAProp by G4ILO, and the VE3NEA suite complete with Ionoprobe, HamCap, Dx Atlas and Band Master.
CW learning tool: The G4FON software, a fantastic program where I can simulate the worst to the harshest receive conditions. A perfect tool to keep my rusty receive CW capability still going at 35wpm on paper/pencil, 45wpm mentally, I used to type 50wpm on dedicated typewriter long years ago and it feeled really slow., we do not have those typewriter anymore. Just a bit faster than TTY@45 bauds to give you an idea.
HAMMING PRACTICES
  • Adhere and effectively apply the DX Code of Conduct to gather efforts and tryto improve our DX Etiquette by visiting G3SWH/Phil's page on Qrz.com and implement his best recommendations.
  • Dedicated to simplex operation, please do not ask me for Split or QSX or Up as our CW Bandwidth is ample enough to accomodate an eventual pile-up. By doing so I am staying within the ITU/IARU regulations and I do not induce my fellow hams to put themselves at risk. I will clarify all this later.

MY CW HAMMING PRACTICE

Coming soon

PROJECTS PENDING

  • 160m with an end loaded vertical dipole or,
  • to set a Top loadedfor 160m
  • to experiment a MOXON vertical either wired fullsize or with coaxial elements
  • to get on the air with PSK31 and possibly other modes.
  • to launch another challenging Dx Ped where, on the move right now with 5T0SP, please look up athttp://5t0sp.dxing.pl/; where amplifiers would be prohibited, only wire antennas would be accepted, the use of renewable energy would be imposed. A reachable goal to anyone's goodwill

 

SPECIAL NOTE ON QSLing

Due to my irregular stay in both Mauritania and Belgium on one hand, and knowing the mailing of all QSL's is donein Belgium exclusively it is easy to realize that receiving the exclusive 5T0JL qsl card may take a long time. So I am asking all my fellow hams to exercise their patience as, I repeat, all Qsl's received Direct will be answered. Owing the many questions received recently I felt having the obligation to explain.
Answering QSLs has taken place this 8th december 2011, a nice gift for the Holiday Season's still I do apologize for the long waiting time. Sorry my friends I could not do any better
New Qsl rules downhere, but nothing is perfect, please remember.
1. Premium Qsl service @ 5 greens:This service has been slow lately. With all my apologies. Do not shoot at the pianist please.(coïncidence, my son acting Qsl Mgr is a classical pianist.)
2. Custom service @ 3 greens:Very sorry this service already backlogged needs some adjustments too.
3. No Rush service @ 2 greens: Qsl received at on8ra will be responded when back to ON land
NOTE. IRCs accepted but not recommended as they are accumulatinga lot of burden plus a small surcharge added by the BelgianPost office counter due to the last raise worldwide Postal rates.
One must understand this Premium and Custom services implies third party dedication and work with internet communications alike for Data exchange.Indeed a lot of emails going back and forth as many cards have confusing data at times.
So all in all I will not get rich with this new plan, to the contrary, it will give an opportunity to anyone to choose the Qsl service they want for those in need of quick confirmation.At least we are trying..

CLUB MEMBER / CERTIFICATE HOLDER

FOC 2005 - A1Operator Club ARRL - UFT n°0176 - Croatian CW Club n°882 - UTF Member
CWJF n° 541 - A1 Club Japan

NOUAKCHOTT WEATHER





THE GAP TITAN DX SAGA
Air Shipping torture to the GAP Titan Dx with resulting damages upon arrival !!! See below
The GAP disaster in plain.
Below the GAP disaster in details.
Below, A nice bend on the main radiating element of the GAP. I used a hand plumbing bender tool to correct this cm by cm !!
A reverse tubing treatment in a way. there was no other solution !
More pîcs coming soon.



J28NC(Djibouti) on 40m CW!!!

J28NC(Djibouti) on 40m CW!!!

QSL image for J28NC
J28NC Djibouti flag Djibouti 
Christian

Djibouti

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   13183 Ham Member
QSL: F5RQQ

20121227 2027UTC 7014kHz J28NC

Date : 27/Dec/2012 2027UTC 
Freq : 7014kHz CW
Rig : SDR(PI4THT)
ANT : GP
PC recording

I'm in Djibouti since july 2012. I must stay 3 years.
I'm QRV on 10 - 12 - 15 - 17 - 20 - 40 - 80m.CW and SSB
QRV on 50 Mhz !
 I'm Qrv in RTTY and PSK31


QSL: buro or direct via F5RQQ.
QSM:
F5RQQ
M. VIGIER Jean-Marc
4 impasse des Lys
63800 COURNON D'AUVERGNE
FRANCE
Please IRC+SAE or ETSA for french HAM

Equipment: Yaesu FT2000D 10 - 200 w.
Verticale antenna Cushcraft AV5 (5 bands) + Fritzel FD4
I thank J28RO Freddy (F5IRO) and J28UC (F4FUC)Johnfor his help, and F5RQQ my QSM.
Best 73,
J28NC Christian
More informations on the very nice "J28RO website" http://j28ro.blogspot.com/


YAESU FT2000D + MD100

Verticale AV5 Cuschcraft + Dipôle FD4

Verticale AV5 Cushcraft + ant 50 Mhz











3B9/OH1LEG(Rodriguez Island) on 40m LSB!!!

3B9/OH1LEG(Rodriguez Island) on 40m LSB!!!



OH1LEG Finland flag Finland 
Juha Kesalainen
Koukkarinkatu 6 D 57
Turku 20610
Finland

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   9237 Ham Member
Email: Use mouse to view.. QSL: PLEASE NO QSL TNX


20121227 1920UTC 7090kHz 3B9/OH1LEG
Date : 27/Dec/2012 1920UTC 
Freq : 7090kHz LSB
Rig  : KENWOOD TS-870S
ANT  : LOOP(for 20m not enough Gain)
PC Recording


3B9/OH1LEG QRV 18.12.2012-7.1.2013 Rodrigues isl.QTH Baie du nord www.lerefuge.mu holiday style operation 160-10M SSB,RTTY,PSK31 QSL direct via home call.




Rodrigues (Frenchîles Rodrigues), named after the Portuguese explorer Dom Diogo Rodrigues, is a semi-autonomous island part of the Republic of Mauritius located in the Indian Ocean, about 650 kilometres (400 mi) east of Mauritius.[3] It is part of the Mascarene Islands which include Mauritius, Cargados Carajos shoals and the French island Réunion, other nearby island countries and territories include TromelinAgalégaComoros,Mayotte and the Seychelles to the far north-west. The area of Rodrigues is 108 km2.[3] It is of volcanic origin surrounded by coral reef, and just off its coast lie some tiny uninhabited islands and islets. The island used to be the tenth district of Mauritius before it gained autonomous status in 2001 and is governed by the Rodrigues Regional Assembly. The capital of the island is Port Mathurin.
As of 2011, the island's population was about 37,922. Its inhabitants are Mauritian citizens.[2] English is the official language of the island,[1] though people also speak FrenchIndian languages and some oriental languages are also spoken, the lingua franca is Rodriguan Creole.[4] The main religion is Roman Catholicismwith small minorities of other religions. Most of the inhabitants are of mixed African and French descent. Its economy is based mainly on fishingfarminghandicraft and a developing tourism sector.[

LX75RL(Luxembourg) on 40m LSB!!!

LX75RL(Luxembourg) on 40m LSB!!!


LX75RL Luxembourg flag Luxembourg 
Radioamateurs du Luxembourg 75th anniversary of the RL
P.O.Box 1352
Luxembourg L-1013
Luxembourg

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   34020
Email: Use mouse to view.. QSL: LX2A

20121227 1908UTC 7155kHz LX75RL
Date : 27/Dec/2012 1908UTC 
Freq : 7155kHz LSB
Rig  : SDR(PI4THT)
ANT  : GP
PC recording

The RL was founded 1937 and we are proud to celebrate our 75th anniversary.
Today we have 383 active members.

Special Award for the 75th anniversary of the RL

2. Rules

The Award is available to licensed radio amateurs and shortwave-listeners.
Activity is from January 1st, 2012 to December 31st, 2012. Two way contacts on HF bands (160 to 10 meters and 6 meters) must be established. Contacts made via active earthbound reflectors, repeaters and EchoLink may not be counted. There is no restriction on the mode used.
Applicants should submit a list showing the date, station worked or heard, time, frequency and mode duly certified by two licenced radio amateurs or by the award manager of their society.
Please use our application form available on the RL-website www.rlx.lu.
Any dispute concerning the award shall be settled by the RL Board.
Each award is numbered.
Each contact with the Club Station LX75RL counts 50 points
Each contact with the Headquarter Station LX75HQ counts 50 points
(LX75HQ is only active during the Headquarter contest)
Each contact with any other LX station counts 5 points
Examples:
LX75RL on 7 MHz CW
50 pts
LX75RL on 7 MHz RTTY
50 pts
LX75HQ on 10 MHz CW
50 pts
LX75HQ on 21 MHz CW
50 pts
LX2A on 28 MHz SSB
5 pts
LX9UN on 14 MHz SSB
5 pts
LX1JX on 50 MHz CW
5 pts
Total Score
215 pts

3. Award categories

Bronze
100 points
Silver
250 points
Gold
500 points

4. Applications

The application fee is USD 8 or EUR 5.
Applications shall be sent to:
Réseau Luxembourgeois des Amateurs d’Ondes Courtes
Award Manager
P.O. Box 1352
L-1013 Luxembourg
(Please check if your postal service is able to deliver mail to Post Office Boxes. Please also send an email to the Award manager to inform him that you sent out your application)
Important information: Awards will not be sent out before autumn 2012. Applications can be sent earlier! Award numbers will be distributed as by the date of the incoming mail with the application form.

5. LX75RL Activities

In order to use the special callsign LX75RL you need to be a member of the RL. Please contact the award and station manager Philippe LX2A for registration. After activation please sent the logs in ADIF format to Philippe at lx75rl arlx.lu
All QSOs will be uploaded at the end of the activity on LoTW and QSL-cards will be sent via GlobalQSL service.
An Online log will be available on http://www.clublog.org/logsearch.php?log=LX75RL&iframe=1


Lookups34020 (48628)
QRZ AdminLX2AJ
Last Update2011-12-06 21:52:37
Geo SourceFrom DXCC
Bearing329.1° NNW (from JJ5IZX)
Distance5865.1 mi (9438.9 km)
Long Path18991.8 mi (30564.3 km)
Sunrise07:31:42 UTC
Sunset15:40:46 UTC
Web Pagehttp://www.rlx.lu/lx_awards_files/rl_75.htm
QSL InfoLX2A
Uses LOTW?Yes (e.g. Does this ham use ARRL's LOTW ?)
Apply for a new Vanity callsign...


Trans World Radio Africa(Swaziland) on 3200kHz AM!!!

Trans World Radio Africa(Swaziland) on 3200kHz AM!!!

20121227 1849UTC 3200kHz TWR Africa(from Swaziland)

Date : 27/Dec/2012 1849UTC 
Freq : 3200kHz AM(need S/N..USB)
Rig  : KENWOOD TS870S
ANT  : LOOP(for 20m not enough Gain)
PC recording


Trans World Radio Africa HP


Radio Specifications

TWR Transmitter Building
What to look for when buying a short wave radio?
The satisfactory reception of TWR places several demands on the radio used. While it is certainly possible to hear the programmes on most receivers, some special features are desirable to facilitate reception. A suitable radio should therefore possess certain qualities best summarized as follows :
  • Sensitivity - the ability to receive weak signals.
  • Selectivity - the ability to distinguish between signals separated by a small frequency difference.
  • Stability - the ability to stay on a signal under variations of signal strength, changes in temperature, or vibration etc.
While most radios do indeed possess these qualities, this cannot be taken for granted. For this reason the following recommendations should provide some guidance.
  1. The frequency range of a radio which has short wave bands does not necessarily imply it covers the relevant bands. Make sure that the radio provides for reception on the short wave bands used by TWR. . (See our broadcast bands)
  2. Spreading the bands out is particularly useful on short wave. Many radios currently on the market try to cover all of the meter bands in the space of seven or eight centimeters on the radio dial. This reduces the effective width of any one meter band to half a centimeter or even less. Fifteen or more stations may be operating on this band, which means that tuning into a particular station on such a radio may be difficult. Try to locate a radio that spreads individual bands over a wide space on the dial. Some radios provide separate tuning for each of the short wave broadcast bands.
  3. Fine tuning is often included by many manufacturers on their radios to compensate for the crowded conditions of short wave. Rough tuning is done on the main tuning control and fine adjustments are then completed on this control.
  4. Many short wave receivers are not sensitive enough. Finding a radio that uses a large number of transistors and/or integrated circuits in its design will help ensure satisfactory reception. A radio having a powerful output and a large loudspeaker are not indicators of good reception.
All radios have a built-in automatic volume control. Its purpose is to give a reasonably consistent sound with varying strengths of the stations. A strong transmission along with any noise needs to be amplified less than a weak station. This is why a strong station sounds much clearer. Thus there are two ways to improve reception: decrease the amount of noise, or increase the strength of the signal with a good antenna.



Owning an expensive radio is not the answer to good listening. The largest factor in reception is determined by where your radio is located. High on top of a mountain is the best place, while the ground-floor flat dweller in a large city probably has the worst spot. A residential area generally provides a very satisfactory location. Wherever you stay, consider what affects reception and follow a few simple tips that will hopefully improve reception for you.
Short waves are transmitted over very long distances. Short wave signals bounce off the ionosphere and follow the curvature of the earth. The ionosphere, which is produced by the ultraviolet rays of the sun, consists of several layers of electrified particles encompassing the earth at a height of 100 to 300 km. The sun spot activity repeats in a cycle every eleven years and greatly affects short wave reception. Therefore, reception depends on the year, the season and the time of day.
TWR transmits several of its programmes on more than one meter band at the same time. Also, we change the meter bands throughout the day and in accordance with the time of year. The seasonal adjustments are normally carried out on the last Sunday of March and October and the broadcast schedules are updated accordingly.
Propagation
The radio signal from Swaziland will have covered a considerable distance before it reaches your radio. It may therefore suffer in quality. There are two main features of long range broadcasts worth mentioning.
  1. The ionosphere with its many layers is constantly shifting, subjecting the signal to occasional fading. This causes variations in signal strength. Hopefully this should not be serious and should still allow you to understand what is being said.
  2. The international broadcast bands are frequently very crowded and the many stations operating are in continual conflict for a clear spot. Occasionally another station may broadcast on a frequency very close to TWR. This is called interference. If you hear interference during our broadcasts, do not simply accept it. Often by fine-tuning your radio, you may be able to tune out the interference. Please report it to us. If we are aware of the problem it can possibly be rectified through our intervention. Within a few days you will notice that either the interfering station or TWR will have shifted frequency to a clear spot on the band.

Swaziland, officially the Kingdom of Swaziland (SwaziUmbuso weSwatini), and sometimes called Ngwaneor Swatini, is a landlocked country in Southern Africa, bordered to the north, south and west by South Africa, and to the east by Mozambique. The nation, as well as its people, are named after the 19th century kingMswati II.
Swaziland is a small country, no more than 200 kilometres (120 mi) north to south and 130 kilometres (81 mi) east to west. The western half is mountainous, descending to a lowveld region to the east. The eastern border with Mozambique and South Africa is dominated by the escarpment of the Lebombo Mountains. The climate is temperate in the west, but may reach 40 °C (104 °F) in summer in the lowveld. Rainfall occurs mainly in the summer and may reach 2 metres (6.6 ft) in the west.
The area that Swaziland now covers has been continuously inhabited since prehistory. Today, the population is primarily ethnic Swazis whose language is Swati, though English is spoken as a second language. The Swazi people descend from the southern Bantu who migrated from Central Africa in the 15th and 16th centuries. The Anglo-Boer War saw the United Kingdom make Swaziland a protectorate under its direct control. Swaziland gained independence in 1968. Swaziland is a member of the Southern African Development Community, the African Union, and the Commonwealth of Nations. The head of state is the king, who appoints the prime minister and a small number of representatives for both chambers of parliament. Elections are held every five years to determine the majority of the representatives. A new constitution was adopted in 2005.
Some 75% of the population are employed in subsistence farming, and 60% of the population live on less than the equivalent of US$1.25 per day.[4] Swaziland's main trading partner is South Africa, and its currency is pegged to the South African rand. Many of Swaziland's peasants make their living by growing marijuana, which is sold to South Africa.[5] Swaziland's economic growth and societal integrity is highly endangered by its disastrous HIV epidemic, to an extent where the United Nations Development Program has written that if it continues unabated, the "longer term existence of Swaziland as a country will be seriously threatened."[6] The infection rate in the country is unprecedented and the highest in the world at 26.1% of adults,[7] and over 50% of adults in their 20s.[6] According to the CIA World Factbook, Swaziland has the lowest life expectancy in the world, with an average life expectancy of only 31.88 years.

7P8JA(Lesotho) on 30m CW!!!



7P8JA(Lesotho) on 30m CW!!!



7P8JA Lesotho flag Lesotho 
Takao Miyatani
Rome
Lesotho
Lesotho

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   342
QSL: TO JE1WVQ

Caution : Tonight is no goo propagation on 30m
              may be 40m is better

              Look!!  I found K3 and JT65 on PC  in his pic

20121227 1839UTC 10126kHz 7P8JA
Date : 27/Dec/2012 1839UTC 
Freq : 10126kHz CW
Rig  : SDR(PI4THT)
ANT  : GP
PC recording

Lookups342 (431)
QRZ AdminJE1WVQ
Last Update2012-12-24 10:59:52
Geo SourceFrom DXCC
Bearing251.5° WSW (from JJ5IZX)
Distance8157.0 mi (13127.5 km)
Long Path16699.8 mi (26875.7 km)
Sunrise03:05:42 UTC
Sunset17:08:09 UTC
QSL InfoTO JE1WVQ
QSL by Mail?Yes (e.g. Will this ham QSL by Postal Mail?)
QSL by eQSL?No (e.g. Will this ham QSL with eQSL?)
Uses LOTW?No (e.g. Does this ham use ARRL's LOTW?)
Other
Callsigns
AliasComment
JE1WVQMy home call
Apply for a new Vanity callsign...