And I thought people were supposed to be working during the daytime, hi hi!
Anyway, my first ever sat QSO was on CAS-4B and I do see at least one station using CAS-4A/B whenever I can monitor them. But YB0NXX is right, we can use more operators of linear birds in Asia.
73 de Hans
BX2ABT
On 05/05/2019 10:37 AM, Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK) via AMSAT-BB wrote:
Hi Don!
Current pass times for the CAS-4 satellites may have something to do with the small number of stations, at least for North America. With pass times in the evening and into the night right now, many passes would be quiet. Compare that to late March, when CAS-4 passes were during the daytime for North America. I had fun working the many passes on both CAS-4 satellites from locations in Arizona and New Mexico. When more of the passes are in daylight, or at least not during the night, you'll hear more stations.
73!
Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK http://www.wd9ewk.net/ Twitter: @WD9EWK or http://twitter.com/WD9EWK
On Saturday, May 4, 2019, Don KB2YSI via AMSAT-BB amsat-bb@amsat.org wrote:
It has been interesting how quiet the XW's and CAS-4's have been at times over the US. I'm not up on how big footprints are of the different satellites, but it seems like MOST of the US would be in the footprint yet there might be 1 or 2 stations on a pass.
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