The 5 HF frequencies you should always monitor

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 100

  • @davidwilliams5567
    @davidwilliams5567 Год назад +9

    Thank you for explaining this information to someone new to HF

  • @HamRadioDX
    @HamRadioDX Год назад +11

    Great summary and video Peter. These beacons provide a valuable service

  • @James_Bowie
    @James_Bowie Год назад +30

    Now we need an app that dynamically paints those signal paths by color (for signal strength) onto a map.

    • @hamshackleton
      @hamshackleton Год назад +1

      That would be one monster programme to write, though, as it would need to know where you (every user) are!

    • @SignalsEverywhere
      @SignalsEverywhere 3 месяца назад

      @@hamshackleton Wouldn't be too hard realistically as you can use GPS or IP for user location

  • @LuisPerez-xe6nu
    @LuisPerez-xe6nu Год назад +4

    As an active SW listener, I have been monitoring those frequencies for last two years almost daily. And from my location Southwest US, 12 meter band at 24.930 MHz is the best performer hands down, followed by 17 meter at 18.110 MHz. The worst performer has been 10 meter (28.200). Depending on propagation and time of the day, I have received all, except RR9O (Siberia), 4S7B (Sri Lanka), and 5Z4B (Kenya). The most challenging one for me has been OH2B (Finland), which I have managed to hear once in two years.

  • @acars9999
    @acars9999 3 месяца назад

    Great video! Finally I understand the beacon network and logic behind their transmission order.

  • @RhettSparrow
    @RhettSparrow 6 дней назад

    Useful video, thanks for making it and sharing!

  • @tiggydorset9041
    @tiggydorset9041 Год назад +1

    Great resource for our toolbox. Thanks Peter.

  • @andrewd4890
    @andrewd4890 Год назад +2

    For iphone there is an app Beacon Aid which is aligned to the schedule and can reveal which beacon is transmitting on each band

  • @TheSpitfiregoggles
    @TheSpitfiregoggles 10 месяцев назад

    Many thanks for the explanation, Peter; I was sort of aware of the IBP but had never got around to actually using it! 73, Simon G0CIQ

  • @hamshackleton
    @hamshackleton Год назад +1

    I've been licensed for about 12 years, and nobody ever mentioned this site! Thanks! m0hff

  • @kc8wvg
    @kc8wvg Год назад

    Thanks, Peter. I'm going to put these frequencies in the memory of my IC-7300.

  • @ben31tube
    @ben31tube Год назад

    Thank you for the information. I am just getting back into amateur radio and had forgotten about these!

  • @bill-2018
    @bill-2018 Год назад +1

    Thank you Peter, I'd forgotten about these.
    G4GHB

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE Год назад

    This is really useful information, I've made a note of the frequencies and the site. Thanks Peter!

  • @PortableRadio
    @PortableRadio 11 месяцев назад +1

    There are also handy and free apps (I tested the one for Android) called NCDXF Beacon that should also work off-grid. Handy when you're portable.

  • @peter-vk3acz
    @peter-vk3acz Год назад +3

    Frustrating when I find bands wide open according to the beacons, but dead for phone activity. Worse when 27 MHz is busy but can only hear crickets on 10.
    Of course the thing that so many hate is what makes the real difference, not beacons… it’s ‘contests.’
    Argh… just tune In during a contest and even low in the sunspot cycle 10 metres was/is open to somewhere 24 hours a day! 🤷‍♂️
    Peter, VK3ACZ

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      11 meters has far better propagation than 10 meters and it always has so you are judging apples and oranges.The FCC of course doing what Government does gave away the best of the two bands as usual.

    • @peter-vk3acz
      @peter-vk3acz Год назад +2

      @@1OFGODSOWN one MHz… really? Judging apples and oranges? Huh?
      Who, me? Where did you read fruit into what I said. There happens to be more activity on 27. That’s a fact. Better propagation with 1 MHz difference? Not sure that’s a fact!

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      @@peter-vk3acz I have been watching and listening to the bands since 1965 and I assure you it’s a Fact like it or not.I have made contacts on 11 meters and I could not make the same contact on 10 meters with more than one station. Neither of us could hear the other? If what you say is true then explain why we couldn’t work each other on both bands and we were running far more power on 10 meters? Guess your theory has some large holes in it so it’s a good thing for you that it’s not a Boat.👍🎙

    • @peter-vk3acz
      @peter-vk3acz Год назад +1

      @@1OFGODSOWN you are the one with the theory… I still don’t know how you made what you did out of what I said, but while you are the one comparing apples to oranges… Oh, how could I ever argue against your scientific, subjective experience? I know, because the lucky rabbit’s foot I carry in my pocket keeps polar bears away… because I’ve never seen a polar bear in my Southern Hemisphere’s capital city! Cheers, brother.

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      @@peter-vk3acz We have Polar Bears all over North Florida but we are not allowed to hunt them.😂

  • @turinskiboy
    @turinskiboy Год назад +1

    It's surprising where signals come from. Long Beach California, South Africa, New Zealand and Darwin are some I've noticed on 10 metres at various times, all of which are good indicators of band openings despite an absence of other signals to be heard.

  • @DonzLockz
    @DonzLockz Год назад +1

    Thanks Peter, good info mate.
    Simple but super helpful. Cheers.🍻🤠

  • @TheUrbanHam
    @TheUrbanHam Год назад

    Amazing! I'll program them into my radio now.

  • @MisterBigDave
    @MisterBigDave Год назад

    Great job going through these! All the best!

  • @TR6Telos
    @TR6Telos Год назад

    Thanks, I will check this very useful info and store.

  • @JxH
    @JxH Год назад +3

    From eastern Canada, I often hear a beacon from Texas. But the entire 10m band is 'dead'. I guess nobody wants to be the first to call CQ, including me... 🙂

  • @BrooksBarrow
    @BrooksBarrow Год назад

    Great video. Thank you.

  • @2E0RME
    @2E0RME Год назад

    Brilliant, thank you. Saved to memory bank 👍

  • @patrickbuick5459
    @patrickbuick5459 Год назад +1

    Also of related interest is the Reverse Bsacon Network to test in both dkrections.

  • @KD0MMF
    @KD0MMF 28 дней назад

    Good to know! Thanks for a great video! 73 KD0MMF

  • @migalito1955
    @migalito1955 Год назад

    Thanks. Thats a fabulous tool.

  • @danedewaard8215
    @danedewaard8215 Год назад

    This is GREAT!!! Thank you so much!!!!

  • @thehamjazz
    @thehamjazz Год назад +1

    G'day Peter, love your channel mate! I got an email from VE3GAM Al in Ontario with a link to this video. This is fantastic intel mate, and with my Flex Radio in Euroa that I am controlling remotely from over here in British Columbia, it will be a wonderful resource to see what propagation is what. Hope to hear you on the airwaves 'remotely' one day Peter. Cheers! Simon VA7BIX (VK3BIX coming call coming shortly)

  • @paulalbers1935
    @paulalbers1935 Год назад

    Tnx Peter, Plugged them in, great resource. vk3da

  • @aj2isotadxing
    @aj2isotadxing Год назад

    Good info thanks Peter

  • @Siskiyous6
    @Siskiyous6 Год назад

    I often tune to these.

    • @Francois_Dupont
      @Francois_Dupont Год назад

      i personally tune on Radar signals. you know those constant BEEEEEEEEEP you get on some bands?

  • @MrWaalkman
    @MrWaalkman Год назад

    Very handy, thanks!

  • @lilblackduc7312
    @lilblackduc7312 3 месяца назад

    Very good! thank you...🇺🇸 👍☕

  • @vk3xe
    @vk3xe Год назад

    Feel like I've heard VK6RBP so many times

  • @johndavis3615
    @johndavis3615 Год назад +1

    I rarely hear any of the DX beacons, I have better luck with the many 10M beacons between 28.200 and 28.300 !

  • @Wes_Jones
    @Wes_Jones 3 месяца назад

    I tried all of the frequencies and got nothing except 14.1 but what I am hearing is not CW, it's some sort of extremely fast varying tones. Doesn't sound like RTTY either. Interesting.

  • @Trent28888
    @Trent28888 Год назад

    28.205 sounded like a constipated bird chirpin in friday

  • @TonyLing
    @TonyLing Год назад

    Bonza, thanks mate!

  • @wesley20991
    @wesley20991 Год назад

    Awesome video thankyou, any chance you can shed some light on the cw reverse setting mode on radios.

    • @CG-rr6yx
      @CG-rr6yx Год назад

      As far as I know, the reverse CW mode is used to improve reception of signals interfered by a station on a close frequency. The transceiver uses (e.g.) the USB receive path for CW. After switching to reverse mode, the receiver improves the signal by using the LSB path. This way, the frequency of the "beats" of the interfering source changes (while the pitch of the intended station remains almost constant, depending on the tuning accuracy). At the same time, the perturbation may get on the high attenuation side slope of the intermediate frequency filters and the power ratio to the intended signal becomes more favourable.

  • @Ben_3113
    @Ben_3113 Год назад

    Wow thanks

  • @jeffmachul9562
    @jeffmachul9562 Год назад

    Awesome thanks

  • @JT-py9lv
    @JT-py9lv Год назад

    Very interesting

  • @ebaystars
    @ebaystars Год назад

    doesnt WSPR now do the same job or will someone write some SDR chirpsounder software that works I've real chirpsounders (TCI) in the UK not my QTH here in Thailand

  • @johnwest7993
    @johnwest7993 Год назад

    Thanks. I didn't know about this beacon network. BTW, posting the link to the web page would have been quite convenient.

    • @scottwood1143
      @scottwood1143 Год назад +4

      2:45 shows the URL, and the link is in the description.

    • @peterfitzpatrick7032
      @peterfitzpatrick7032 Год назад +1

      ​@@scottwood1143 People are so lazy... 🙄😒

  • @jjhendo
    @jjhendo Месяц назад

    Should i be able to get these on shortwave?

  • @patrickslevin6424
    @patrickslevin6424 11 месяцев назад

    Does this just check propagation? On the HF bands

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  11 месяцев назад

      Yes and Yes.

  • @phoneticau
    @phoneticau Год назад

    My kiwi sdr mini-whip active antenna has sadly s5 noise floor in suburban melbourne

    • @MarkoManiac
      @MarkoManiac Год назад

      Choke the power and antenna. Might be surprised how much the floor drops.

  • @LuisPerez-xe6nu
    @LuisPerez-xe6nu Год назад

    What Antenna are you using? Sorry if I missed the info in the video.

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  Год назад

      G5RV

    • @LuisPerez-xe6nu
      @LuisPerez-xe6nu Год назад

      I liked the video, showing the entire rotation of beacons gives me a good idea and base to compare to what has my experience. I am surprised to see how good you can receive beacons East and West of VK.

  • @JxH
    @JxH Год назад

    Nice.

  • @Ressy66
    @Ressy66 Год назад

    never understood why 40m was left out of the IBP

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  Год назад +1

      When the IBP was conceived 40m was a crowded band only 100 kHz wide in some countries.

    • @Ressy66
      @Ressy66 Год назад

      @@vk3ye Ahhh ok, thanks

  • @burnout-d
    @burnout-d Год назад

    Great video. Only, there is no country named Siberia.

  • @syspangylium
    @syspangylium Год назад

    What are the frequencies for 40, 80 and 160 meters?

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  Год назад

      There are no IBP beacons on those bands

    • @bill-2018
      @bill-2018 15 дней назад +1

      I'm aware of one beacon on 160m. OKM1, Czecchoslovakia.
      G4GHB.

  • @rick5078
    @rick5078 Год назад

    any 40m beacons around the world? (currently only have a improvised 40m inverted v antenna)

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  Год назад

      Not that I know of. Better to use SW broadcast stations on 41m.

  • @20807shane
    @20807shane 6 месяцев назад

    Newbie here, just wondering what the point in listening to Morse code if ya don’t know it.

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  6 месяцев назад +2

      Sometimes just knowing a signal is there is enough. Especially with the online resources mentioned in the video.

  • @LA6UOA
    @LA6UOA Год назад

    Thanks! Very interesting! 73 de LA6UOA

  • @alexander19681
    @alexander19681 Год назад

    Try 10.460Mhz USB

  • @KingLoopie1
    @KingLoopie1 Год назад

    Just learning about beacons. Thanks for putting this info together! This video just pulled more together about beacons for me than studying the arrl manual 👍 kd0ndc

  • @miker8379
    @miker8379 Месяц назад

    Gee, i thought was going to be something new.

  • @michael-tq1ri
    @michael-tq1ri Год назад

    For.....?

  • @HarryHamsterChannel
    @HarryHamsterChannel Год назад

    Tell ya what: You monitor that noise. Let me know what happens.

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      I will watch my band scope on whatever band I’m on as usual.🎙

    • @patrickbuick5459
      @patrickbuick5459 Год назад

      ​@@1OFGODSOWN Good for you, not all of us have a bandscope.

  • @1OFGODSOWN
    @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

    USELESS for those who don’t copy CW.I passed the 5 wpm CW Test long ago and I never used it because it gives me a Killer Headache.I can’t even copy my own call sign any longer because all I have ever done is Phone & I will never try and learn CW again.🎙🎙🎙

    • @vk3ye
      @vk3ye  Год назад +1

      I suggest watching the video again. It shows you how you can identify the beacon transmitting without knowing CW by following along on a continually updating website.

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      @@vk3ye As I stated,CW gives me a KILLER HEADACHE so I will NEVER give myself a HEADACHE on purpose.I will just watch my Band Scope.👍🎙

    • @patrickbuick5459
      @patrickbuick5459 Год назад

      It takes me a lot longer to check the bands using the beacons than 1 minute.
      I'm very surprised that more amateurs don't know about the IARU beacons because I swore it was on the exams.
      The amount of QRM has been astounding...

    • @Francois_Dupont
      @Francois_Dupont Год назад

      5wpm CW, LOL!

    • @1OFGODSOWN
      @1OFGODSOWN Год назад

      @@Francois_Dupont I passed what was Required as did anyone else that took the test back then.I did something called,Following the Rules.Have you ever tried that? 😂🤣🤪🎙

  • @spencerhochstetler
    @spencerhochstetler Год назад

    Fantastic information to us newbies! Thank you! Add 1 subscriber... WD4AWD

  • @1965wazza
    @1965wazza Год назад

    Thanks Peter. Just got my Foundation, and there is a lot to learn.vk4wrw

  • @bigpimp347
    @bigpimp347 11 месяцев назад

    'what if you don't know morse'
    you should !!, or you're not a proper Amateur, just a corn flake packet poor excuse.

    • @BreannaVK3BBS
      @BreannaVK3BBS 9 месяцев назад

      The CW requirement to hold a licence has been removed in many jurisdictions. Your attitude is gatekeeping of the highest order and is likely to hurt the hobby. I’m keen to get licensed and learn CW but in that order. Once licenced I can call on USB or use 70cm/2m without any CW knowledge at all. Learning it will be an extra challenge later on, one I’m confident I will enjoy.

    • @CBRadioWayBack10-4
      @CBRadioWayBack10-4 9 месяцев назад

      If you don't know morse then you shouldn't be allowed to use HF or certain bands, simple..
      Bring back the RAE (for the UK) and a morse assessment,
      RAE you're limited above 30MHz, no HF,
      do a simple Morse test to show you understand the letters, distress, numbers, repeaters etc then gain access to HF..
      now days any idiot CBer can pass a foundation test, and trust me many manage after several attempts still have no knowledge on radio, band plans, some can't even SWR an antenna or wire a mains plug.. yet they pass a simple idiots test and get 'given' everything..
      then you say you then want to learn ??? why should you ?? learn for what ?? you already have everything, no need to learn anything..
      @@BreannaVK3BBS

  • @kokokaka5250
    @kokokaka5250 Год назад +1

    You R Great indeed
    From ST2KI/7Z1FA

  • @sleeve8651
    @sleeve8651 3 месяца назад

    Sadly, with the Morse Code requirement no longer needed, those new to Amateur Radio would likely find this pointless ?
    Kudos to those that have found the joy of using CW !
    The 1st Digital mode !
    😉🫴