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LF Experimentation by Radio Amateurs Continues Quietly:

from The ARRL Letter, Vol 24, No 44 on November 11, 2005
Website: http://www.arrl.org/
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LF Experimentation by Radio Amateurs Continues Quietly:

Experimentation by radio amateurs in the nether regions of the radio spectrum continues quietly and largely unnoticed outside of the LF community. Since the FCC turned down the ARRL's 1998 petition to create an Amateur Radio "sliver band" in the vicinity of 136 kHz, some US amateur licensees have obtained FCC Part 5 Experimental licenses to research the possibilities of LF, including transatlantic and transpacific propagation. A few hams in Canada have obtained special permission from Industry Canada to operate on LF using Amateur Radio call signs. The latest noteworthy accomplishment was a 137 kHz QSO http://www.w1tag.com/XDWQSO.htm October 29 between US Experimental licensees Laurence Howell, KL1X--operating as WD2XDW--and John Andrews, W1TAG--operating as WD2XES.

"This is the second two-way between US Experimental licensees in that frequency range, the first being a 25-mile CW contact between K2ORS/WD2XGJ and myself last year," said Andrews. The QSO between Andrews, in Massachusetts, and Howell, in Oklahoma, spanned some 1340 miles.

In 2001, Larry Kayser, VA3LK (SK), and Laurie Mayhead, G3AQC, received a special Transatlantic Challenge plaque for completing the first two-way Amateur Radio LF contact between the UK and Canada earlier that year. Another plaque went to Dave Bowman, G0MRF, John Currie, VE1ZJ, and Jack Leahy, VE1ZZ, for completing a crossband (HF/LF) transatlantic QSO in 2000.

A year ago, New Zealand LFer Mike McAlevey, ZL4OL, copied Howell's WD2XDW 137 kHz carrier "bursts" over a path of more than 13,000 km (8000 miles), while Jim Moritz, M0BMU, copied LF signals from WD2XDW, Andrews' WD2XES and Joe Craig, VO1NA, in Newfoundland. Craig and Alan Melia, G3NYK, described their LF exploits and experiences in "The Transatlantic on 2200 Meters," in July 2005 QST http://www.arrl.org/qst/2005/07/craig.pdf.

More recently, the first confirmed transpacific reception of Canadian Amateur Radio LF signals occurred October 4 when the very slow speed (QRSS) CW signals of VA7LF were heard by ZM2E in New Zealand. "Signals from the ZM2E club station were heard in Canada as well, but propagation was not of sufficient duration to enable a QSO to be completed," said Steve McDonald, VE7SL, one of the VA7LF operators. ZM2E and UA0LE hold the current Amateur Radio two-way LF world record at a distance of 10,311 km (6393 mi). The distance between VA7LF and ZM2E is approximately 11,700 km (7254 mi).

LFers typically use very low data rates and process the incoming sound-card audio in real time using DSP software like WOLF or ARGO.

During the October 29 contact, which took more than two hours to complete, Andrews was running 200 W output into a large, tree-supported vertical loop. Howell was running 1 kW into a tree-supported vertical loop.

Experimentation under FCC Part 15 rules in the vicinity of 160 to 190 kHz has been going on for years by radio amateurs and non-amateurs alike. Amateur Radio licensees in Europe and elsewhere have an allocation at 135.7 to 137.8 kHz, and most Amateur Radio experimentation takes place in this band.

Source:

The ARRL Letter Vol. 24, No. 44 November 11, 2005

Member Comments:
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LF Experimentation by Radio Amateurs Continues Qui  
by ZS2BL on November 14, 2005 Mail this to a friend!
I fail to understand the purpose of all this "testing", to what end is this "knowledge" going to be applied. Different strokes for different folks, I guess - but it seems rather retrogressive.
 
RE: LF Experimentation by Radio Amateurs Continues  
by KD6NEM on November 21, 2005 Mail this to a friend!
Maybe they enjoy enjoy a good challenge? From what I can tell there is a lot more to LF than merely tuning up your longwire for 160. I'd like to learn more. There is more to radio (for some at least) than racking up more QSO cards & contest points. Both nostalgic and genuine valid experimentation at the same time. Not to mention offering some very real technological challenges of its own. It is getting hard to find areas to work & play where the pathways are not already so well rutted that there is little left to discover. I applaud these fellow's efforts.
 
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