HFU HF Underground
Loggings => Utility => Topic started by: LanceLovejoy on March 07, 2010, 2154 UTC
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At 21:30z on 11387usb caught the HFDL sig from COA87 at position 78.27N, 56.23W, in the northern reaches of Greenland, closing in on the Arctic Ocean on the way from Newark to Shang-Hai. At that latitude is the farthest North I have ever caught an HFDL signal from my StL locale. Ah the amusements of the high frequencies!
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Indeed, nice catch! :)
Most of those northern crossers I catch on their 3 or 6MHz channels.
Peace!
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Yes my friend, hearing those Northern Crossers via HFDL, or even better, by voice contacts with Gander and Shanwick carries a special charm as those fragile signals, buffeted by the frigid North Atlantic waters, (call me crazy but I swear I can almost hear those ocean winds roaring in the background) make their way to our humble radios and remind us of the trecherous journeys made in years gone by between the old world and the new! Plus they do make for some great DX catches!
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At 21:30z on 11387usb caught the HFDL sig from COA87 at position 78.27N, 56.23W, in the northern reaches of Greenland, closing in on the Arctic Ocean on the way from Newark to Shang-Hai. At that latitude is the farthest North I have ever caught an HFDL signal from my StL locale. Ah the amusements of the high frequencies!
Dude....ships go "over the top" to get to China via the Arctic Ocean? Am I understanding you correctly? Every now and then, the massive void of ignorance in my brain gets filled with new info and it blows me away. ;D
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scratch what I just said.....Continental 87...as in the air plane.
Still...despite going in air....i don't picture a plane tracking due N out of Newark to get to China.
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damn I'm a dullard sometimes