On looking through the mail at lunch time I saw that I had received a letter from Ofcom. My NoV permitting me to operate on the 60m experimental band had arrived!
Until now I hadn't been bothered about operating on 60m because I couldn't see how I could possibly find room for an antenna for that band. However a couple of weeks ago I heard someone activating a SOTA summit in the Lake District on 60m and was frustrated that I could not reply to them. So I decided to put in an application for permission to operate and here I am.
I don't have an antenna that is resonant on 60m so I tried tuning up my multiband dipole using the K3 auto ATU. After a lot of persuasion it managed to find an acceptable match on the higher frequency channels but it gave up on the lower ones. So I should be able to manage some activity on the new band.
Fortunately, the channel allocated for beacon and WSPR use is one of the ones I was able to match. And today just happened to be a 60m WSPR activity day. So I fired up the WSPR software and beaconed on 60m using 2 watts, increasing to 5 watts in the evening when propagation went long and most of the traces faded out. The 5 watts did me no good at at all, but my 2 watt signal was heard by 7 different G stations all around 400km distance from me plus F/G6AIG at 760km. I received 6 different G stations including G4ZFQ at 458km running 20mW, plus OZ1PIF (my best DX at 984km) and LA3JJ.
Tomorrow is QRP day on 60m when everyone is supposed to run 500mW or less. I have not decided yet how little power I will run but I will be WSPRing on 60m all day. Hopefully there will be a few more people who manage to spot me.
Hello Julian, congrats with your permission to work on 60 meter. I hope that we (Dutch) in the future also will be allowed to work on 60m. 73 Paul
ReplyDeleteSo do I. In the meantime, I suppose you can still receive?
ReplyDeleteI can receive on 60 meter. I will listen out for you today. 73 Paul
ReplyDeleteVery unusual but leave it on 60m WSPR receive only as well for today. Hope I can receive you Julian. 73, Bas
ReplyDeleteLooks like you just have, Bas!
ReplyDeleteHello Julian, I realized that I can't tune my antenna for 60 m, but finally I spotted you at 16.42 and 17.18 UTC. 73 Paul
ReplyDeleteYes, mine doesn't tune very well on this band either so it was good to be spotted by both you and Bas!
ReplyDelete