ULF and Winfried Otto Schumann

The ULF region is most interesting, I was surprised to see quite a reasonable response from my VLF E-Probe at down to 0Hz.
Even more surprising is the possibility that when Sferics are very quiet I can see Schumann resonances. The fundamental resonance of the Earth’s natural cavity resonator is 7.5Hz with multiples on the even and odd harmonics.
Our Brains and Nervous system work in this frequency range, what a coincidence aye.ULF

 

The peak in general noise level below 5Hz is not necessarily equipment noise but there is a natural peak in signals due to magnetic micropulsations which originate in the EarthÂ’s magnetosphere.

At my urban location there are several carriers visible, 5.9Hz,8.8Hz,11.7Hz,16Hz, 23Hz and 32Hz. I had to smile when we searched for the source of 11.7Hz signals. Would you believe that the small hairs (cilia) in your nose resonate at 11.73 Hz, unless you ingest cocaine, that slows them down.
One possible source of 16.7Hz and 33.4Hz signals are some European railways. The 15 kV, 16.7 Hz AC railway electrification system is used in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Sweden and Norway. I don’t see these frequencies or indeed 60Hz US mains.
I do see 16Hz and 32Hz from unknown origins. I wondered if the Tetra radio system which uses a 17.6Hz switching rate mixes to produce any carriers, I see nothing here. The Police Tetra system is unbelievably strong at my location being line of sight to both local and regional masts.
50Hz is of course prominent, the Railway overhead cables are closer, 2km than the HV Grid cables, around 10km.

Vertical lines on the Screen shot above (white and bright red) are strong sferics from lightning strikes, this really is the wrong time of year for examining these frequencies.

WSPR Frequencies HF VHF UHF

I thought I would try some 2 meter WSPR. The Barometric pressure has been high for several days the other morning was quite misty, maybe a chance of some DX.

On VHF above 6 meters there are a couple of problems, any Rig may be easily be 500HZ off calibration and there still does not seem to be an established dial frequency for WSPR mode.

WSPR incidentally according to our wonderful national magazine Rad Comm which arrived today, 20th March 2009 is a ‘brand new mode’, ‘rather difficult to get going’ and ‘not capable of any QSO mode communication’. I know it takes time for articles to get published but I am sure glad I don’t rely on our National Society to keep me abreast of the latest in Ham Radio.

Anyway, back to frequencies. I carefully calibrated 2 rigs against GB3VHF and G8EUX calibrated his with a ‘posh’ bit of test gear. We were then both pleased when our RX’d signals reported 2 to 5Hz difference.
The French stations tend to use a dial frequency of 144.48800, a table on the web says 144.48850 after a short period of operation the concensus of opinion settled on 144.48860, there are other frequencies published too.

We had better get these frequencies settled if we don’t there will an awful lot of wasted time and effort.

We still need to fix and confirm dial frequencies for 23cm and 70cm.
At this time the frequencies in use are:-

Band Dial freq USB (MHz) Tx freq (MHz)

160m 1.836600 ………. 1.838000 – 1.838200

80m 3.592600 ……….. 3.594000 – 3.594200

60m 5.287200 ……….. 5.288600 – 5.288800

40m 7.038600 ……….. 7.040000 – 7.040200

30m 10.138700 ……… 10.140100 – 10.140300

20m 14.095600 ……… 14.097000 – 14.097200

17m 18.104600 ……… 18.106000 – 18.106200

15m 21.094600 ……… 21.096000 – 21.096200

12m 24.924600 ……… 24.926000 – 24.926200

10m 28.124600 ……… 28.126000 – 28.126200

6m 50.293000 ……… 50.294400 – 50.294600

2m 144.48860 …….. 144.490000 – 144.491000

It’s like trying to Tune a Piano with a Feather

“Like trying to tune a Piano with a Feather” that was my description of getting a home brew MEPT tuned in the 100Hz segment of the QRP-QRSS sections of the bands.

When Bill of Soldersmoke fame built his MEPT the only RX he had was a very inaccurate solid state rig that drifted. These are some sugestions I made to help him find his TX frequency. The number of new stations coming onto QRSS and the same problem being encoutered prompts me to write this. In addition my memory does not get better, I use my blogs to record things so that if I go away for a few months and forget something I have a reference.

Like most things a good understanding of the Receive side is essential before venturing a signal onto the air. If you can receive other MEPT’s and know their frequencies then you are 99% there.

First the RX needs to be warmed up for quite some time to make sure it has settled.

Here is my Kenwood TS870, a Transceiver I consider to be very accurate and very stable after 5 minutes from switch on the display should read above 070, it will never quite get there it is a few Hertz low but it can be seen to be heading up that way.

Here is my ‘G’ MEPT signal at this time received by the Italy I2NDT Grabber I have just adjusted my TX frequency to 10.140073MHz plus or minus a bit.

So how do we get Spectran or Argo and our RX to display MEPT’s.
First we need to get the received signals in the audio passband of the RX, for convenience 1KHz is a good frequency to choose, it is near the middle of the passband and a round number. No matter what band we are receiving on always use USB (Upper Side Band) and the standard 2.4KHz bandwidth. To produce a 1Khz audible beat note of a particular radio frequency we need to tune 1KHz below its frequency. Hence to receive 10.14000 MHz we need to set our RX dial to 10.13900 MHz.

Next we need to set up Spectran to match.
From the Menu select Mode – Preset QRSS3. The display will now scroll Horizontally.
At the bottom select Show Controls – in the Freq Offset box enter -1000 (minus 1000) as shown.

Now point your mouse to the grey bar between the top and bottom spectrun displays. In the top display is a vertical red line it is reading -150 or more at the red line, Left click the mouse and drag the scale to the left through Zero to place 100(+100) at the red line.
The Right hand vertical grey scale now reads 10 – 20 – 30 up to 100 if it was not hiding at the top. This scale now shows the 100Hz of the 10.140000 to 10.140100 QRSS Band.

When you close Spectran these settings will be saved so you only need to set up once.

If you are new to Spectran do some thinking and tune to the frequency you need to to display WWV on what ever frequency you can hear it on, check the accuracy of your RX dial.

If you are seeing MEPT’s you can put your newly built TX into a Dummy Load and adjust its trimmer to sit your signal where you want in the QRSS band
But beware there will be more than one of you, even with a few mWatts into a screened dummy load you will find it hard to get rid of your signal.

Here I have re-tuned my RX 70Hz higher than 10.13900MHz the signal is some 30dB down but strong, comparison with the Left Hand side of the trace makes it obvious which is the fundamental.

This is where the Feather comment comes in, a tiny adjustment of the trimmer can shift your signal way out of the 100Hz window, you are using a Dummy Load so tweek and twiddle to get used to it, like all things after a time minute adjustments become easy.

When you are fully confident in your skills, settings and accuracy you can put your MEPT on the air. If you are lucky like me, (I2NDT Grabber is almost a certainty during daylight hours) your signal will pop up right on your determined frequency on a Grabber. Alterantively you can get a friend to listen / look for you but beware many Hams do not know within 200 to 300 Hz where they are on the band despite what their dial reads.