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{
    "url": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/email/LJSSY7WPDA6AHRGOOGYHTVDNXNI65ALS/?format=api",
    "mailinglist": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/?format=api",
    "message_id": "CAN6TEUfOM9sdeXun3ZM+Z7D+=2e6R=KBapHqkAMfWprMS7SDdg@mail.gmail.com",
    "message_id_hash": "LJSSY7WPDA6AHRGOOGYHTVDNXNI65ALS",
    "thread": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/list/[email protected]/thread/LJSSY7WPDA6AHRGOOGYHTVDNXNI65ALS/?format=api",
    "sender": {
        "address": "amsat-bb (a) wd9ewk.net",
        "mailman_id": "21664df01bef4757931b7cdb42a9e768",
        "emails": "https://mailman.amsat.org/hyperkitty/api/sender/21664df01bef4757931b7cdb42a9e768/emails/?format=api"
    },
    "sender_name": "Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK)",
    "subject": "[amsat-bb] WD9EWK from DM34, today - report",
    "date": "2015-12-20T04:53:19Z",
    "parent": null,
    "children": [],
    "votes": {
        "likes": 0,
        "dislikes": 0,
        "status": "neutral"
    },
    "content": "Hi!\n\nThis morning's trip up to the Sunset Point Rest Area, about 50 miles/80km\nnorth of Phoenix along the I-17 freeway, was a quick trip to help some\noperators looking to make a contact with someone in DM34. I was able to\ndo that, and work a half-dozen passes before coming back to Phoenix to\nresume my weekend.\n\nI left the house early this morning, around 6.30am (1330 UTC). After making\na stop for breakfast, and getting around a closure on one of the freeways\nlooping around Phoenix, I made it to the rest area in about an hour. I was\nable to park in the space I hoped to use, the southernmost space at the\nrest area, on the highest ground up there. Despite checking my gear several\ntimes last night, I forgot to bring my cable to connect my SDRplay receiver\nto a tablet, so I didn't use an SDR receiver for any of today's passes. I\ndid OK with \"normal\" radios for the SSB and FM satellites - an Icom\nIC-2820H 2m/70cm FM mobile radio for AO-85, and two Yaesu FT-817NDs for\nAO-73 and FO-29.\n\nThe first pass I attempted was an 11-degree AO-85 pass around 1518 UTC. The\nsatellite was moving from north to east, and I had great visiblity of the\nsky in that direction. In the span of 8 minutes, I logged 14 QSOs from\ncoast to coast, plus Stefan VE4NSA in Manitoba to add a Canadian contact to\nmy log. This was the most productive AO-85 pass I've had since its launch.\nAO-73 came up a few minutes later, a 4-degree pass that was basically to my\neast. I logged 4 QSOs on this pass, not bad for a shallow pass.\n\nA little more than an hour after this, just before 1700 UTC, I had another\npair of passes coming by - a 76-degree AO-85 pass, then a 71-degree AO-73\npass. AO-85 was another productive pass, with 8 stations worked, and 3 more\non the AO-73 pass that overlapped the last few minutes of the AO-85 pass.\n\nThe next passes of AO-85 and AO-73 almost overlapped 100%. I decided to go\nwith AO-85, and worked 3 stations on that 10-degree pass to my west - not\nthe best direction to work satellites from this location. The AO-73 pass\nonly went up to a maximum elevation of 7 degrees, another reason I opted\nfor the AO-85 pass at this time.\n\nMy last pass for this quick trip was an FO-29 pass that covered the\ncontinental USA, a 23-degree pass to my east at 1942 UTC. I logged 7 QSOs\non this busy pass.\n\nWhenever I had about an hour or so between passes, I updated my logbook for\nthose passes from my recordings. Since I had enough time between these\npasses, and had time after the FO-29 pass, I went ahead and uploaded the\nQSOs to Logbook of the World. I had a good signal from an LTE mobile phone\nnetwork at the rest area, so I used my tablet to get these QSOs uploaded.\n\nI posted photos of my radio setups, and of the rest area and the\nsurroundings, to my @WD9EWK Twitter feed during the time I was up there.\nIf you don't use Twitter, you can see the photos at this link:\n\nhttp://twitter.com/WD9EWK/media\n\nor my Twitter feed with all tweets, not just photos, is accessible at:\n\nhttp://twitter.com/WD9EWK\n\nIf you still need DM34 and didn't work me today, I can make plans to go\nback to that rest area. It's about 60 miles/100km from my driveway to the\nrest area, a drive I can make in an hour or a little less than that. As\nlong as the snow level doesn't make it down to 3400 feet/1036m, I can go\nup there during the wintertime as well as other times of the year.\n\nThis is probably the last grid expedition I'll do for 2015. DM34 is the\n44th grid I have operated from during this calendar year. Most of these\ngrids (36) were either covering Arizona or most of the states around\nArizona (California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah), plus the 8 grids I worked\nfrom around October's AMSAT Symposium in 3 states (Indiana, Michigan, Ohio)\nand Ontario. It has been fun to get on the radio and work satellites from\nall of these places, and I'm sure I will do more of this in 2016. With the\nNational Parks on the Air event hosted by the ARRL next year, many of the\nplaces I visited in 2015 could count toward that program - and satellite\noperating is permitted under the rules for that year-long event. :-)\n\n73!\n\n\n\n\nPatrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK\nhttp://www.wd9ewk.net/\nTwitter: @WD9EWK\n",
    "attachments": []
}