FT8WW actif sur FT8

FT8WW Thierry de l’île de Crozet a commencé à émettre la veille de Noël pour faites un beau cadeau au monde des radioamateurs ! Les premiers QSO de FT8WW sur 30m, également sur FT8.
Sur son blog, il a signalé qu’il y avait beaucoup d’humidité, de brouillard et de vent dans l’endroit, des conditions météorologiques qui l’empêchaient, pour le moment, d’installer des antennes pour des fréquences supérieures à 18 MHz.
Vous pouvez suivre toutes les mises à jour sur sa page officielle.

Info de la Source Publié * ICI









Cape Hallett 72°19’ South, 170°16’ East, was the location of a joint scientific base, Hallett Station, between the United States and New Zealand during the International Geophysical Year of 1957, and was manned permanently until 1964, when there was a major fire.
At the time, thirty Navy men and scientists were stationed at a “rookery” near Hallett Station from October through February to study the over 100,000 Adelie penguins which populate the area. These birds, 18 inches tall and weighing 14 pounds, return annually to breed and raise their young. An area of 74 ha, is protected under the Antarctic Treaty System as Antarctic Specially Protected Area (ASPA) No.106 because it contains habitats with a rich and diverse range of plant communities that are the most extensive and representative examples known at the northern end of the latitudinal gradient of Victoria Land and the Ross Sea.
The only activity known from Hallett Station (
Jim, KBØMZFwrote:



