PROPAGATION - by AD5Q HOUSTON, TEXAS -- JANUARY 1996


It is now the dead of winter, so nighttime MUF's and noise levels are at their lowest. This is peak season for lowband work. There is more activity than last year, and conditions are better with louder signals. In the evening, the MUF along the path to Europe drops below 7 MHz, so much of the transatlantic activity moves to 80 (actually 75 SSB). Those with good setups for transmitting and receiving on 160 are doing very well this season. Conditions peak at the European sunrise, which now occurs after our midnight. The louder EU stations are able to work stateside without benefit of the sunrise phenomena, especially on 80.

The East Coast enjoys excellent conditions to Europe on 40 with high activity well before sunset. Most of the rest of use the band peak following the EU sunrise. There is another interesting opening to Europe at our own sunrise. At this time of year, the grey line tilts toward the northeast in the morning. This opens a high latitude path to the north that serves up loud signals from Scandinavia and can extend into some hard to reach areas of Central Asia. Since this opening is of short duration, your experience with this path will vary if you live in other parts of the US (or world), since the grey line will lead to different countries than here in W5. High latitude paths are difficult on the low bands, and this sunrise opening gives us our best shot at certain countries.

20 has become primarily a daypath band, replacing 15 which has gone the way of 10. Let's not forget that it is summer in the southern hemisphere, and that 20 Meter nightpaths are open down there. Long path is not nearly as good or reliable as it was at the sunspot peak, but signals come through quite regularly in the Southern US. From W5, the opening begins with a short opening to the Middle East and then broadens to Europe. (The path to VU and 4S7 usually doesn't open first, but is a daily happening higher in the cycle.) There is less activity on long path than at the sunspot peak, and little competition in pileups. The East Coast is busy working Europe short path, and sigs switch to short path for us after an hour or so. Long path is also workable around our sunset, but the activity at the other end of the path is scarce. Instead of Europe, we work S.E. Asia. Our sunset is also a good time to tune for other signals from the south, like Antarctica. The loud signals with equatorial ring are South Americans. Certain exotic areas of the Indian Ocean are also along this path, so this is your short path window to FT, ZS8, 3Y & Heard (the long path is a summer opening).

ad5q@wa4imz.#setx.tx.usa.na or 73374.2465@compuserve.com

Annual Propagation FAQ:

This writing completes the 8th year of this monthly series of articles, and hopefully I can continue them for another 3 years to complete the cycle. The article is written following the first Friday of each month, usually over the weekend. It is posted to the Propagation and DX Internet reflectors, to local Packet Clusters & BBS's, and to land line BBS's here in Houston. Several web pages are also posting it.

I have started to supply the article on the Web myself. The CURRENT article will always be available using the following URL:

http://www.nol.net/~ids/prop.html

This modest attempt at a Home Page will also contain a link to download a ZIP file containing the complete set of articles. The archive file will always include the CURRENT article. Since this monthly series has run since February 1988, it serves as documentation for DX conditions through the recent sunspot peak.

Emphasis in these articles has been on the seasonal variations in DX conditions from month to month, and not on forecasting solar statistics (which others are doing). There is no need to pray for sunspots unless you are a novice SSB operator. DX is workable at any level of solar activity, and a knowledge of seasonal trends will help you find a path to any country you need.

73 & DX -- de Roy, AD5Q