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VP8SGI 20m CW pileup seen and heard on FLEX-6700

William Hein
William Hein Member ✭✭
edited June 2020 in SmartSDR for Windows
Testing prototype of updated Force 12 6BA 6-band Yagi and FLEX-6700 running SSDR v1.6.17 in the VP8SGI pileup on 20m CW Jan 30 2016 at about 0100z, antenna on the VP8 side is a Force 12 C-3S. High-resolution panfall really helps identify where DX is listening in a monster pileup like this!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EABRRLPANr0

Comments

  • wg c
    wg c Member
    edited March 2017
    You is right my man!  The ability to see where the action is becomes quite an advantage.  Even with a lousy, piece of junk vertical (my big "man's" antenna came down for a move") this feature is a HUGE advantage.  Without these features I'd never work anybody.  

    73, Bill
    AH6FC.W7
  • Walt - KZ1F
    Walt - KZ1F Member ✭✭
    edited November 2016
    I've asked this before and gotten no answer. Where in that video can one tell where VP8 is listening? And that one was pretty well behaved but there was still enough people just non-stop sending their call there is no way I could glean where he was listening. Even when I tried cw skimmer, it was sufficiently bad at deciphering cw there were some reasonable looking call signs but mostly gibberish.
  • Barry N1EU
    Barry N1EU Member ✭✭
    edited December 2016
    I'm with you Walt.

    Maybe the panadapter will help find a hole in the pileup for you to call in but I find the caller with my ears not my panadapter.

    73, Barry N1EU
  • km9r.mike
    km9r.mike Member ✭✭
    edited February 2016
    I agree this pileup on sgi is very tame. I was using a legacy radio when trying to work them and it is quite clear some ops do not know etiquette nor how to recognize their own call.

    So to determine where the dx is listening on my flex while they are operating split I will use two techniques simultaneously. I will listen on both slice A and B and eliminate the possibilities and I will look for dx operator trends. Rarely do the rare ones listen on a single freq and you already know this., but if they are not busy they probably will. Even if they do not, it is easy to determine where they  presently are but the big unknown is where will they be next. Trend analysis and a little luck are important but you should be able to increase the odds substantially.

    Now if all ops responded only to their call then this could all be done visually except for honest mistakes.
  • KY6LA_Howard
    KY6LA_Howard Member ✭✭✭
    edited February 2016
    Funny.... I do the exact opposite

    Far too many frequencies and caller cacophony to listen to on SSB 


    I use the panadapter exclusively to SEE who is calling and when and where they respond Then I quickly pounce the TX slice on the response frequency...

    Usually takes 1 or 2 tries for a Q.

    Of course it helps to have ERP in excess of 10KW to bust the pileup

    For those who are math challenged ..

    Effective Radiated Power (ERP) = Power x Antenna Gain.
    So 1.5KW power = 9dB Antenna Gain = about 12KW ERP.

    Gotta love SteppIR MonstIR + SPE 2K-FA

    The 6700 display helps too...
  • Al_NN4ZZ
    Al_NN4ZZ Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    Hi Walt,
    If you are working CW and using CW Skimmer, do you use the "call list"  feature?  I usually use it in the big pileups to help find where the DX is working.  It's not foolproof since CWS doesn't always pick up all of the callers.   But the list is ordered so it's easier to find a call than on the waterfall display. 
    • Turn on (view)  the "call list" in CWS
    • Look for the OP he just worked in the call list to see his freq
    This example is not from VP8 but the K1N DXpedition
    image


    Regards, Al / NN4ZZ  
    al (at) nn4zz (dot) com
    6700 - HW.................... V 1.6.17.74
    SSDR / DAX / CAT...... V 1.6.17.156
    Win10





  • William Hein
    William Hein Member ✭✭
    edited November 2018
    I have made ten QSOs so far with VP8SGI and most have been within a few calls. I'm running 600W and a prototype Force 12 6BA (2 el on each band 40 - 10), so nice station but hardly Big Gun.

    My typical CW pileup procedure:

    (1) Slice A goes on the DX frequency with the audio mix 80% to the left ear, 250 or 100-Hz filter

    (2) Slice B goes on the pileup frequency with the audio mix 80% to the right ear, 400 or 800-Hz filter, this way the audio in my headphones has a stereo effect in my brain that mirrors what I am seeing on the screen

    (3) Panfall "pulled out" to show individual callers to the extent possible and listen for a few cycles before transmitting, get a feel for the DX stations calling pattern

    (4) Watch which signals pop up in the pile after DX goes back to someone

    (5) Click on one, if it's not the station called, ignore that spot in the pile and move to the next "candidate"

    (6) Repeat until you find the caller being worked

    (7) Slide up or down about a few tens of Hz - don't zero beat (lots of other guys will zero beat and cover each other up, you want to be at a different tone than the dogpile but still within the DX station's rx cw filter passband)

    (8) Alternative plan - If the DX station is moving his rx VFO a certain measure each QSO, find the first open space that direction and camp there

    GL in the pileups
    Bill AA7XT




  • Walt - KZ1F
    Walt - KZ1F Member ✭✭
    edited November 2016
    Yes, it it was largely gibberish
  • Walt - KZ1F
    Walt - KZ1F Member ✭✭
    edited November 2016
    what I do, which works incredibly well, like a contact within a min or two is camp somewhere in the clear. Pan IS good for that. It's from boy scouts, "if you are lost in the woods, stay put, they will find you faster if you aren't a moving target". I think the whole cw skimmer is wishful thinking. Plus, you have to be outstandingly good to hear everyone they call. When it's a challenge to understand your own call in the noise or a partial or incorrect partial, this is what they call in flight school "being behind the plane".
  • Walt - KZ1F
    Walt - KZ1F Member ✭✭
    edited June 2020
    I had this conversation with Al yesterday. My prior comments about 'gibberish' were 100% accurate when I was trying to run cw sweeper on the 15" laptop. Just for grins and chuckles I installed it yesterday on my replacement for my Linux development system. It took perhaps an hour to 'figure it out' but, yes works really well. So now I have to agree more fully with Burt, 'hunting in a zoo' and 'shooting fish in a barrel'. Where did that phrase even come from? Shooting fish in a barrel is WAY harder than hunting in a zoo (optical distortion).

    What a tad humorous is not only seeing the guy just worked but all the cwskimmerfolks converging on his frequency. Ponder this, it makes the entire thing rather meaningless, which I believe was Burt's point.
  • Rob Fissel
    Rob Fissel Member
    edited February 2016
    I'm a hybrid, Walt. I'll camp in the clear, while using the waterfall to visually figure out how the OP is moving through the band. I can quickly pick up on OP VFO patterns this way. See where he's going, and preemptivly camp up or down of where he's working so that I can snag him next when he spins the VFO. Also, CW skimmer's got a great feature that will pop up 599 in red text when it detects it. Certainly not fail proof, but another useful tool to have in the bag. 
  • Ken - NM9P
    Ken - NM9P Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    "...seeing the guy just worked but all the cwskimmerfolks converging on his frequency..."

    It kind of reminds me of sock-hop scene in "Grease" where all of the kids ran to the various TV cameras whenever the red light came on.

    I still have a few bugs to work out with my CW Skimmer setup....I must not be dancing right.

    Ken - NM9P
  • Ken - NM9P
    Ken - NM9P Member ✭✭✭
    edited June 2020
    I got K5P seven times using much the same techniques, but without Skimmer.  
    I got the South Sandwich one time - my schedule didn't help.
    I haven't got VP8SGI yet...schedule problems again...
    I will be in the home office off and on today...perhaps I will get lucky.

    Ken - NM9P

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