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Topics - R4002

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1381
Ship to ship frequency 4 MHz 4A or "A" 4146 USB heard SIO 333 this morning.  Several Spanish-speaking OMs chatting away, reminds me of some of the traffic heard in the 6-7 MHz region (legal and illegal).  Minor fading and several instances of operators talking over each other with minor static crash QRN.  

1382
Hearing an OM talking about weather conditions near Key West, Gulfstream Waters, Bahamas.  Sounds like a weather forecast but doesn't sound like an automated broadcast.  OM frequently pauses and says "uh, okay, lets take a look at the winds..." which makes it sound like a recording or perhaps live transmission.  High quality signal a solid SIO 444 armchair copy, still listening at 1053 UTC.  

According to: http://radionerds.weebly.com/hf-marine.html. 4045 kHz USB is used for Caribbean weather information as part of the Yachtsman Radio Net in addition to 8104 kHz USB and 8137 kHz USB as well as 4003 kHz USB for Bahamas weather.  

1383
6984 USB via Indiana remote SDR [KiwiSDR].  Checked several other remote SDRs (and local RX) and can only hear these guys on the Indiana SDR.

Tuned in at 1040 UTC and QSO was already in-progress. 

6984 kHz USB - Spanish langauge, right above noise floor but readable - sounds like freebanders.  Faded away or went QRT at 1045 UTC.

1384
After 2200 UTC or so, the band started to wake up...rapidly.

6792 kHz LSB - Portuguese (considerably stronger than traffic heard on 6792 USB)
6792 kHz USB - Portuguese
6800 kHz USB - Spanish (weak)
6848 kHz LSB - Spanish
6850 kHz USB - Spanish [rather unfortunate frequnecy choice with WRMI being on 6855 kHz AM]
6858 kHz USB - Unknown language, likely Portuguese, but too weak to know for sure (at 2226 anyway)
6868 kHz USB - Portuguese, weak
6888 kHz USB - Spanish
6900 kHz LSB - Spanish - as usual for this frequency (and 6900 USB)...strong signals and busy frequency, freebanders or outbanders
6919 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6925 kHz LSB - Portuguese, our usual friends on 6925 LSB
6950 kHz USB - Spanish - sporadic signal

1385
More Spanish chatter, these guys are popping up all over the place.  Time to make one log for all the frequencies.

1386
I'm mostly sure this is Portuguese but I've heard a couple words that sound more like Spanish than Portuguese.  Two OMs chatting away, sounds a lot like the peskies heard in the 6800-7000 range but a lot of these stations like the 6600-6800 kHz range too. 

1387
Very difficult copy due to strong data carrier on 6915 kHz or thereabouts, but I was able to dig through that by dropping the receive bandwidth passband down.  Sounds a lot like the usual traffic heard on 6919 LSB, 6925 LSB, etc. 

1388
Another freebander two-way radio pirate bootlegger on HF.  6.888 MHz 6888 kHz USB.  

Very Strong signals this evening (US East Coast time).  Tuned in at 2211 UTC to hear several Spanish-speaking OMs chatting away.  Decent signal strength and nice audio.  Possibly pescadores, likely freebanders or outbanders.


1389
While tuning through the bands last night and this morning looking for freebanders, peskies, etc, I noticed 6739 USB is a lot busier than it has been in recent memory.  No doubt this has to do with the activity in the Mediterranean Sea.  Heard "Guidepost" and "Andrews" making long alphanumeric broadcasts, mostly with the prefix "All Stations All Stations" and the ominous "Skyking Skyking Do Not Answer"  After a several minute long string, heard "disregard this transmission, this is Guidepost out" followed by 5 or so seconds of silence and then another alphanumeric string. 

1390
Strong Spanish language traffic has been going on and off for nearly an hour (started listening around 0500 UTC) on 6999 kHz USB.  Some CW QRM from 7002 kHz and 7002.5 kHz (possibly intentional QRM/hams jamming the voice traffic that's most definitely intruding on 40 meters). 

Interesting frequency choice.  I listed 6999 kHz USB in my previous logging thread that contains a bunch of frequencies but 6999 is, well, I suppose I shouldn't be surprised

1391
Other / HF Marine Net 4149 kHz USB 0500+ UTC 10 April 2017
« on: April 09, 2017, 0525 UTC »
Several English-speaking stations talking to each other about boating, unemployment in Florida, crews from Cuba, working in Lake Charles, Louisiana, etc.  Callsigns are either numerical or simply the other stations' first name (Cicil, 7508, Janine, etc).  Talking trash about other boaters, crews etc ("any of y'all been sailing with Andrews lately?")  Several instances of stations talking over each other.  

I'm calling this a net but there's no net control station.  No actual callsigns heard after ~15 minutes of listening.  Very informal conversation, likely a regular net.  4149 kHz USB is one of the 4 MHz marine HF-SSB simplex frequencies, designated "channel 4B".  

1392
Starting at 0400 UTC April 9th 2017

6 MHz marine band 6200 kHz to 6525 kHz
6 MHz aeronautical band 6525 kHz to 6765 kHz
6 MHz super fun do whatever you want pirate military government pescadore band aka "fixed and mobile" 6765 kHz to 7000 kHz

Only a couple of these in the legal HF marine bands.  WLO marine broadcast at 0700 UTC 6519 kHz USB shows that the Spanish traffic on 6521 USB wasn't on a one of the channelized marine frequencies (channels), 6200 kHz, 6203 kHz....6519 kHz, 6522 kHz, 6525 kHz [3 kHz steps].  6521 and 6524 kHz are 3 kHz away from each other but don't follow the ITU HF SSB marine channel plan.  I tried listening to 6519 kHz and the Spanish language traffic on 6521 was making it impossible.

Lots of stations using the aircraft frequencies

Frequencies/remarks:

6412 kHz USB - Asian language, very busy after 0500 UTC
6521 kHz USB - Spanish - very strong signals 0655+ UTC - at 0700 UTC, WLO marine broadcast started up on 6519 kHz USB, causing severe QRM
6524 kHz USB - Spanish
6544.4 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6546 kHz USB - Portuguese, active around 0700-0720+ UTC
6556 kHz USB - Portuguese (??) - with adjacent channel QRM from strong HFDL data bursts on 6560
6564 kHz USB - Unknown language, active after 0700 UTC
6568 kHz USB - Unknown language, very difficult copy due to heavy QRM form 6569 USB
6569 kHz USB - Unknown language possibly Portuguese, QRMing traffic on 6568 USB terribly
6646 kHz USB - Spanish, active around 0710-0720 UTC
6706 kHz LSB - Spanish, active after 0440 UTC
6720 kHz USB - weak, Spanish
6722 kHz USB - Unknown language, possibly Portuguese comms (on after 6720 USB went quiet)
6727 kHz USB - Spanish (sporadic traffic)
6728 kHz LSB - Unknown Language, weak traffic after 0705 UTC
6729 kHz USB - Unknown Language (active after 0540 UTC and after 0700 UTC) - Portuguese???
6737.5 kHz USB - possibly Portuguese (very poor frequency choice due to USAF using 6739 kHz USB)
6745 kHz USB - Unknown language, possibly Asian comms (active around 0451+ UTC)
6753 kHz LSB - Spanish, getting obliterated by data bursts and OTH Radar
6755.5 kHz USB - Spanish
6757.7 kHz USB - Spanish
6760.5 kHz USB - Spanish (very strong signals, very busy after 0425 UTC)
6766 kHz USB - Spanish, sounds like a OM and YL talking, heavy fading so difficult to tell for sure
6770 kHz USB - Portuguese, active after 6771.5 USB went quiet
6771.5 kHz USB - Spanish
6776 kHz USB - Spanish (different from group using 6776.5 USB as far as I can tell)
6776.5 kHz USB - Spanish (active after 0645 UTC)
6790 kHz USB - Portuguese (active after 0725-0730 UTC)
6794 kHz USB - Unknown language, possibly Portuguese (distorted audio - stations appear to be off-frequency from each other)
6808 kHz LSB - Unknown language
6838 kHz USB - Spanish, active after 0545-0555 UTC
6840 kHz USB - Spanish, active after 6838 went quiet
6876 kHz LSB - Unknown language
6885 kHz LSB - Spanish, active after 0440 UTC
6899 kHz LSB - Spanish, then QSYed back up to 6900 LSB
6900 kHz AM carrier  - Station tuning up, then switched to 6900 LSB and said "Hola! Hola! Hola!" several times S9+30 signal!
6900 kHz LSB - Spanish
6900 kHz USB - Spanish (strong)
6907.5 kHz USB - Spanish (I think) with extremely strong QRM from data signal on 6909 USB
6910 kHz LSB - Portuguese (QRMing 6907.5 USB and getting QRM from 6909 USB)
6919 kHz LSB - Portuguese
6923 kHz USB - Spanish - active after 0645 UTC
6930 kHz LSB - Portuguese (very strong and busy)
6930 kHz USB - Spanish
6940 kHz LSB - Portuguese (busy after 0500 UTC)
6950 kHz USB - Spanish, sporadic signal
6957 kHz USB - Portuguese
6966 kHz LSB - Portuguese, weak signals but readable
6985 kHz USB - Portuguese, followed by Spanish traffic at ~0430 UTC
6988 kHz USB - Spanish
6999 kHz USB - Spanish, active at 0530-0545 UTC and 0705-0710 UTC with [possibly intentional] QRM from CW on 7002 kHz.

1393
More Spanish-speaking traffic popping up this afternoon.  Interesting frequency choice (appears to be closer to 6699.45 kHz USB), but 6699.5 USB is another easy to remember frequency to that checks.

Strong data carriers on 6700 and 6701.9 making listening to these guys very annoying.  Sounds similar to the traffic heard on 6905 LSB earlier.  Radio-related discussion, including one op whistling into their mic.  

1394
Two OMs talking about antenna tuning, radios and various other "ham-like" QSO stuff "el antena tuner AT-180" [assuming they're making reference to the Icom AT-180] "un Yaesu" and other recognizable equipment names/model numbers. Long-winded discussion regarding antenna tuners. One station is considerably stronger than the other (peaking at S6 with good audio).  No names or callsigns heard so far (at 2023 UTC).

The rest of the 6700-7000 kHz region looks quiet right now (afternoon on US East Coast).  Checked a couple remote SDRs and they're showing the same - that is, the guys talking on 6905 LSB are the only stations on 43 meters right now.  

Appear to have gone QRT at 2032 UTC.

1395
New frequency logged.  Two OMs chatting away on 6750 kHz USB.  I've logged traffic on 6755.5 USB, but not 6750 USB.  Frequency is clear at this time (0310 UTC).  Perhaps this is the "net" that was previously on 6755.5 USB (Trenton VOLMET is going strong on 6754 USB but this frequency is far enough away to avoid QRM). Stronger station is peaking at S9 and weaker station is considerably weaker (S2-S3).  Stations are Spanish speaking with Mexican accents.  No location information clues or names/callsigns heard in ~10 minutes of listening.  

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