Really nice seeing how your setup was at the park Eric. What a great demonstration. It is so fun to work you with so many different setups this last season. Thank you for all that you do.
Really, the thanks goes to you, Kevin. You made all this happen. These videos are nice to have because I can literally look back on it and see how much fun we had. Thanks for providing so much footage and for setting this NVIS test up. I hope we can do a lot more next year. Thank you Kevin, have a nice weekend! 73
Thank you! it was amazing how well we were all coming through. I'll tell you though, capturing all that audio got a little tricky. But pulling that experiment off was a stellar show of how useful radio can be out there. Have a great weekend - 73
Absolutely! I took out all the footage of me getting there, realizing I'd forgotten some critical hardware... then going back to the shack, and returning, just time time to catch the other guys. I was a bit out of practice myself. Thank you Robert.
Don't forget about the 60 meter band. When skip is too long on 40 meters and D-layer absorption is high on 75/80 meters, 60 meters can be an excellent option.
Thank you and thanks for checking it out David. It was a lot of fun and I hope to do more of it. I'm still impressed by how clear our transmissions were. One may have thought we were using VHF.
Happy to share! I'm still just learning all this stuff myself and I hope it helps someone along the way. I know I learned a few things! haha! Thank you, 73 - Eric
Eric ... you were transmitting at 2.5 watts ("L" symbol/power meter with 3 bars is 2.5 watts ... lack of any symbol means full 5 watts) so test is more impressive than you think! The 817 manual is confusing.
Thanks for doing this. I have a fishing backpack set up with my 817 batteries tuner and wire antenna for NVIS but was not sure how well it would work QRP. I can also tie into my car 100W if needed. Maybe I will give the QRP a shot next field day. My coworker ran NVIS while deployed in Afghanistan. They ran 5W secure comms. In cases where it was a hot situation he said they would put the antenna only a couple ft off the ground.
Thanks for this comment! I hope you've had some great experiences with NVIS. It's a great technique. In fact, it is a borrowed technique from military operators. Interesting to hear about it in use in the field. Hopefully you've come across the Tech Prepper's channel where he does a whole lot of comm testing with NVIS. 73
NVIS antenna here is Chameleon Emcomm II at 12 feet up. In between the Hustler 6btv vertical and the Emcomm II, there are not too many places I cannot establish a comms path with.
fantastic video, really gives me some ideas that I would like to try out with my station as well. I would like to see this tested with the Chameleon MPAS in the vertical config since they claim it to be an NVIS antenna
I have heard of verticals being used for NVIS. I have no experience with them. I hope you can get out there and put those ideas into play. It's a ton of fun. Thank you for watching! 73
Spanish Fork to Heber? that ain't ground wave. I recall a few mountains in the way. Something about a Timp. Dropped my antenna to 1-8 feet and still hitting most of the continent on 40/80
Really nice seeing how your setup was at the park Eric. What a great demonstration. It is so fun to work you with so many different setups this last season. Thank you for all that you do.
Really, the thanks goes to you, Kevin. You made all this happen. These videos are nice to have because I can literally look back on it and see how much fun we had. Thanks for providing so much footage and for setting this NVIS test up. I hope we can do a lot more next year. Thank you Kevin, have a nice weekend! 73
exactly what we needed to know. NVIS sounds good on 75m and 40m when we are awake. tu de K5TZ
To be fair, I don't know if I've NVIS sound this good at night! Thank you for watching, 73 - Eric, KI7WJP
Great video and great audio coming through for you guys! 73!
Thank you! it was amazing how well we were all coming through. I'll tell you though, capturing all that audio got a little tricky. But pulling that experiment off was a stellar show of how useful radio can be out there. Have a great weekend - 73
I agree that it is important to practice your setups…..practice makes perfect. Thanks Eric!
Absolutely! I took out all the footage of me getting there, realizing I'd forgotten some critical hardware... then going back to the shack, and returning, just time time to catch the other guys. I was a bit out of practice myself. Thank you Robert.
Don't forget about the 60 meter band. When skip is too long on 40 meters and D-layer absorption is high on 75/80 meters, 60 meters can be an excellent option.
Looks like I need to get to work on a 60m antenna! Thank you for the advice.
Awesome video Eric. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you and thanks for checking it out David. It was a lot of fun and I hope to do more of it. I'm still impressed by how clear our transmissions were. One may have thought we were using VHF.
Excellent video! Thanks for sharing your results. 73
Happy to share! I'm still just learning all this stuff myself and I hope it helps someone along the way. I know I learned a few things! haha! Thank you, 73 - Eric
Eric ... you were transmitting at 2.5 watts ("L" symbol/power meter with 3 bars is 2.5 watts ... lack of any symbol means full 5 watts) so test is more impressive than you think! The 817 manual is confusing.
Well, Thank you! I guess if there's a good prank for my radio to play on me, that's it!
Another great video, thanks for sharing! Learning a lot
Thank you, Chris! I’m grateful you’ve found this stuff useful. NVIS is a ton of fun and a practical way to bypass the use of repeaters.
Thanks for doing this. I have a fishing backpack set up with my 817 batteries tuner and wire antenna for NVIS but was not sure how well it would work QRP. I can also tie into my car 100W if needed. Maybe I will give the QRP a shot next field day.
My coworker ran NVIS while deployed in Afghanistan. They ran 5W secure comms. In cases where it was a hot situation he said they would put the antenna only a couple ft off the ground.
Thanks for this comment! I hope you've had some great experiences with NVIS. It's a great technique. In fact, it is a borrowed technique from military operators. Interesting to hear about it in use in the field. Hopefully you've come across the Tech Prepper's channel where he does a whole lot of comm testing with NVIS. 73
Great stuff Eric
Thanks Joe! I think it was an exchange I had with you that prompted me to get my 80m antenna built. So, thank you again!
@@backcountryamateurradio We do a lot of NVIS here in Georgia. Great stuff.
Yessir…, nvis comms are paramount at my QTH.
73 sir
Makes sense to me. I wish we could have an 80m NVIS antenna here at my shack. 73 - Eric
NVIS antenna here is Chameleon Emcomm II at 12 feet up. In between the Hustler 6btv vertical and the Emcomm II, there are not too many places I cannot establish a comms path with.
@@jstrunck that sounds like a lot of fun!
fantastic video, really gives me some ideas that I would like to try out with my station as well. I would like to see this tested with the Chameleon MPAS in the vertical config since they claim it to be an NVIS antenna
I have heard of verticals being used for NVIS. I have no experience with them. I hope you can get out there and put those ideas into play. It's a ton of fun. Thank you for watching! 73
Spanish Fork to Heber? that ain't ground wave. I recall a few mountains in the way. Something about a Timp. Dropped my antenna to 1-8 feet and still hitting most of the continent on 40/80