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Query: north
Links: 257 | Categories: 8
Categories
- Ham Radio > Clubs > North America
- Ham Radio > Clubs > North America > USA > North Carolina
- Ham Radio > Clubs > North America > USA > North Dakota
- Ham Radio > Clubs > Europe > UK > Northern England
- Ham Radio > Clubs > Europe > UK > Northern Ireland
- Ham Radio > Clubs > Europe > UK > Central England
- Radio Scanning > RailRoad
- Ham Radio > Clubs > Europe > UK
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Starting the season with us. Large indoor area plus tailgating
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The Northern Greece Contest Team (NGCT)official home page
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Located in Wynne Arkansas. Repeater 147.375(107.2he Cross County Amateur Radio Club is an ARRL Affiliated Special Services Club. The Club is located in North East Arkansas and is based in Wynne Arkansas which is the County seat for Cross. With members from Cross County and surrounding Counties and communities in Eastern Arkansas the club works to serve our communities as well as the Amateur Radio Community.
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The NIDXA is an active DX club affiliated with the ARRL. NIDXA runs the W9 Incoming QSL bureau, a DX Packet Cluster, and the world famous W9DXCC convention.
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Small, but growing, group of amateur radio enthusiasts, most of whom are within 90 miles (and more) of Atlanta
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The Northern Alberta Radio Club serves Edmonton, Alberta and area.
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Home page of the first hamradio club created in Northen Greece.
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Located in Port Richey, Florida in Pasco County, West Central Florida just Northwest of Tampa.
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Amateur Radio Sales from North Central Texas
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This resource provides a unique historical audio archive of 50 MHz DX contacts, documenting significant F2 and Es propagation events experienced by PA2S (formerly PA2HJS) since 1978. The collection includes recordings of beacons and two-way QSOs with stations across North America, South America, Asia, Australia, Europe, and Africa. Specific entries detail contacts with rare DX entities such as ZS6PW, VE1AVX, C5AEH, J52US, TR8CA, LU8MBL, VK8ZLX, and various Japanese stations, often noting the mode (SSB or CW) and propagation type. The archive also highlights challenging pile-up situations and frustrating near-misses during major openings. The recordings, initially in RealAudio format for solar cycles 21 and 22 and later in MP3 for cycle 23, offer a practical illustration of 6-meter band conditions over several solar cycles. The content allows hams to listen to actual signals from different continents, observing signal characteristics like typical TEP fading from 5H3RA or strong F2 backscatter from OZ1BVW. It provides a comparative perspective on propagation effectiveness between solar cycles, noting that cycle 23, while not as robust as previous cycles, still yielded interesting openings. The archive serves as a valuable educational tool for understanding real-world 50 MHz DXing and propagation phenomena.
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Alexander The Great AWARD from Northern Greece Contest Team
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AM DXing taken to the extreme. Reports and station logs from DXpeditions to Arctic Northern Finland. Also articles, QSL news, links, audio and video on AM DXing. Published by Finnish DXer Mika Mikelainen.
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The Ellis County Amateur Radio Club is in Ellis County, located in North Central Texas just south of Dallas.
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Illinois Cook County, police scanner includes Chicago Fire Dispatch channels (North, South, and HazMat)
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Promoting Amateur Radio in Kitsap County Washington
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Demonstrates the construction and tuning of a **20-17-15 meter fan dipole** using 12-gauge PVC insulated copper wire and an Alpha-Delta C kit feedpoint. The project details the use of 14-inch pine dowels with 6-inch spaced holes to maintain wire separation for the parallel elements. Initial tuning was performed at shoulder height, with final adjustments made after elevation to 38 feet, accounting for frequency shifts observed between ground-level and elevated antenna positions. SWR analysis graphs are presented, showing performance below 1:3 across the entire 20-meter band, below 1:2 for 17 meters, and below 1:3 for 15 meters. The author notes significant RX improvements of +3 to +9 dB, occasionally exceeding +20 dB, compared to a commercial Alpha Delta DX LB Plus. The total hardware cost for this DIY antenna project was approximately $90, with the author emphasizing the utility of an **antenna analyzer** like the RigExpert AA54 for precise tuning. The fan dipole also exhibits tunable resonance on 12, 10, and 6 meters, though with reduced efficiency. Performance comparisons on 20 meters showed the fan dipole outperforming the Alpha-Delta on long-path north-south DX contacts.
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Piedmont NC ham radio and scanner information.
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NFDXA is a small group of amateurs located in and around the Jacksonville area in Northeast Florida
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Dedicated to the advancement and promotion of amateur radio, Rome, Ga.
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W9dc north america amateur radio checkpoint for iota islands on the air and wlh world lighthouse award applications and award instructions
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Wrexham is in North Wale's and our club is open to all radio fans
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Automatic 144MHz E-skip Alerts for North America
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What may be received from africa in north-west of france, french and english data
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Broadcasts to Western Europe on AM/FM and shortwave 9710 kHz, to Russia on shortwave on 9555 kHz, and to North America on shortwave on 9855 kHz.
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A large amateur radio club north of boston, ma.
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Located in North Dakota
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The KnightLites QRP Association is a world wide fellowship of low power (QRP) amateur radio communications enthusiasts founded in 1996, and is coordinated through the efforts of a small group of radio amateurs located in the Research Triangle region of North Carolina in the United States.
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A non-profit public service and educational amateur radio organization specializing in advanced and experimental microwave communications.
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The Peekskill / Cortlandt Amateur Radio Association, Inc. (PCARA) is a Volunteer Non-Profit Community Service Organization Serving the Greater Peekskill / Cortlandt Area of Westchester and Putnam Counties in New York State. PCARA operates three voice repeaters in the Northern Westchester / Southern Putnam County region of New York State.
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C.A.R.L.A. is a growing network of repeaters providing coverage across Northern & Central California and Western Nevada. It is intended to be used as a reliable communications resource during significant local, regional and wide area incidents, and is open to all licensed amateur radio operators
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Northeastern pennsylvania's premiere amateur radio club
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Non-profit public foundation dedicated to providing research and educational access to optical and radio astronomy. Located in Rosman, North Carolina.
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KB9AMG's Top WSPR Spots presents a focused online tool for monitoring **2-way WSPR reports**, specifically detailing propagation data from February 2026 through March 2026. This resource aggregates _WSPRnet_ data, allowing radio amateurs to observe weak signal propagation conditions across various bands. The interface is straightforward, presenting callsigns, frequencies, signal-to-noise ratios, and distances for each reported contact, which is crucial for understanding current band openings and signal paths. The utility of this WSPR spotter lies in its ability to quickly visualize global propagation. Users can identify active stations and assess signal viability over long distances, with reports often showing contacts spanning thousands of kilometers. For instance, a typical WSPR report might indicate a signal from Europe reaching North America with a _SNR_ of -25 dB, demonstrating effective low-power communication. This data is invaluable for planning DX operations or evaluating antenna performance under actual propagation conditions.
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The 160-meter amateur radio band, spanning 1.8 to 2 MHz, was historically the lowest frequency amateur allocation until the introduction of the 630-meter and 2200-meter bands. ITU Region 1 allocates 1.81–2 MHz, while other regions use 1.8–2 MHz. This band, often called "Top Band" or "Gentleman's Band," was established by the International Radiotelegraph Conference in Washington, D.C., on October 4, 1927, with an initial allocation of 1.715–2 MHz. Effective operation on 160 meters presents significant challenges due to the large antenna sizes required; a quarter-wavelength monopole is over 130 feet, and horizontal dipoles need similar heights. Propagation is typically local during the day, but long-distance contacts are common at night, especially around sunrise and sunset, and during solar minimums. The band experienced a resurgence after the LORAN-A system was phased out in North America in December 1980, leading to the removal of power restrictions.
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Located in the northeastern corner of New York State Between the shores of Lake Champlain and the foot hills of the Adirondacks
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A DX and Contest Minded Amateur Radio Club Serving the California Coast North of the Golden Gate Bridge
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The Sandusky Radio Experimental League Inc,(SREL), is a club of amateur radio operators in Northern Ohio. SREL sponsors the 53.35, 146.655 and 444.375 repeaters.
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Having Fun & Fellowship since 1955. The Keystone VHF Club has extensive facilities right outside Rocky Ridge Park just northeast of York, PA.
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European relay station broadcasting every weekend on short-wave to all of Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East on 13840 kHz.
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The NWAPRS is here to support APRS events, activities and amateur radio enthusiasts primarily in British Columbia, Alberta, Northwest Territories, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana
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Provide an ATV repeater function for the North Jersey Exterior Area that is available not only for general amateur radio use, but also for providing a unique communications resource during emergencies as well (FCC Part 97.1 (a))
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The club focuses on ham radio not only as a hobby, but also as a community service.
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Welcome to the Northern Berkshire Amateur Radio Club website.
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The onslow amateur radio club provides this web site as a public service to all radio amateurs within jacksonville, onslow county, and the surrounding areas in north carolina.