Jim's Amateur Radio Station |
My QSL Card |
EVERETT WEATHER Local Weather |
KH6CN'S Ham Radio Station |
Teletype Model 28 Automatic Send & Receive (ASR) |
Teletype Model 28 Keyboard Send & Recieve (KSR) |
High Frequency Antenna Farm |
Radio Station Contact Postcards (QSL Cards) |
The table below shows recent contacts logged on qrz.com.
The Reverse Beacon Network is a revolutionary new idea. Instead of beacons actively transmitting signals, the RBN is a network of stations listening to the bands and reporting what stations they hear, when and how well.So why should you care? Well, to begin with, you can see band openings in near-real time on an animated map. You can call a quick CQ CQ CQ DE "Your Call", and see which reverse beacons hear you, and how strong you are. But the real breakthrough is in the database of past "spots". You can instantly find out what stations, from a given country or zone, have been heard, at what times and on what frequencies. You can see when you've been spotted, who spotted you, and how loud you were.
The table below is generated by a PHP script that pulls JSON data from the Reverse Beacon Network, parses it, calculates distance and bearing based on latitude and longitude, then shows data for the last 100 spots. Frequency changes greater than 1 kHz or time changes greater than 1 hour are shown in bold. The Rx links link to the QRZ page for the station. The SNR links link to a graph of signal to noise ratio versus time for that receiver, mode (CW or RTTY), and band (data limited to 100 spots from RBN)
The background color is green if the distance is greater than 3,000 miles. The Relative Distance column has a * for every 200 miles.
| Time | Rx | Freq (kHz) | SNR | Mode | Speed | Rx Location | Distance and Bearing | Relative Distance |
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