Another thought - if you're operating a special event or in a rare grid, announce your frequencies on this board and pick one well out of the way of the center. If people want/need to work you, they'll spin the dial! This also helps those who may have short windows to your location on a particular pass.
73,
Paul, N8HM
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:30 PM, Paul Stoetzer n8hm@arrl.net wrote:
Great point, Drew.
The middle has been quite clogged the last few nights while zero activity is heard below 840 or above 870.
73,
Paul, N8HM
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:20 PM, Andrew Glasbrenner < glasbrenner@mindspring.com> wrote:
Lots of activity has been happening on FO-29 in the evenings lately. The pass times are favorable, and there are rovers out and about.
This evening, there were at least three mobile, portable, or omni antenna stations all piled up in the very center of the passband calling CQ on top of each other. None were hearing the others it seems, or willing to move. It was an ugly, embarrassing mess, completely unnecessary.
Folks, FO-29 has a passband that is 100 kHz wide. There is no reason to all pile up in the dead center and QRM each other. Spread out a little bit, ESPECIALLY if your operational plan is to call CQ with omni antennas or half-duplex and tune around for replies. You'll make more contacts and have less QRM in the long run.
The long standing convention on linear transponder satellites has been lower third CW, middle mixed CW and SSB, and upper third SSB. Let's try to use this resource in a more responsible and cooperative manner.
73, Drew KO4MA
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