gdavis316 Posted May 10, 2014 Report Posted May 10, 2014 Thursday morning i was hearing some strange station id's, so i decided to give a few channels a try that had the travel tone. On 725 i id'd my station, and got a reply......it was from a station in jacksonville, Fla., the owner answered, and we had a nice conversation. Oh, i forgot to say i am in the upper midlands in SC. I then tried my buddies repeater in myrtle beach.......it was like i was looking at the tower it was so clear. Anyone else experience this yesterday?glenn Quote
PastorGary Posted May 10, 2014 Report Posted May 10, 2014 The weather front that was moving into your area from the west created the situation. Occasionally when atmospheric conditions are just right, "tropospheric ducting" is formed. This is a temperature inversion effect created by a stable-high pressure system over oceans or very large lakes where a warm, moist air mass is sandwiched between two cool air masses. VHF and some UHF signals can be ducted through this conductive tunnel by bouncing off the dense air within the system to propagate waves for hundreds of miles. Think of it as mother nature's coaxial cable or waveguide. This effect is usually seen only during the warm weather months. UHF is defined as the range from 300 Mhz. to 3 Ghz., and along the shorlines of the Atlantic and Great Lakes, it is common to have this effect present several times each year where single repeaters and trunked 400, 700 and 800 Mhz. Public Safety, business and other radio systems in the frequency range hundreds of miles apart interfere with each other so severely that communications are all but impossible - lasting for minutes to several hours. This can be a very serious situation when a trunked system with the same control channel properties affects another system a couple hundred miles away. That is why it is essential to have a simplex backup plan in place during such events. Logan5 and Ken 2 Quote
gdavis316 Posted May 10, 2014 Author Report Posted May 10, 2014 That's what i like about this site......i learn from yall. Thanks pastor Gary, and if you can delete the title......don't know what happened there, except long day, laying in bed posting from phone. it should read gmrs band opening. Thanks for all you do to keep things going.Glenn Logan5 1 Quote
Guest spd641 Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 I too have heard those kind of band openings before.I have listened to stations in different areas of Florida and it sounded like they were outside my house.My first GMRS band opennig was several years ago and I never got a chance to see if I could make contact but the thought of UHF being able to receive signals from afar was exciting. Like Pastor Gary said it is a warm weather senerio and will happen from minutes to hours and sometimes only for a brief period of time.If you are fortunate enough to hear it enjoy while you can,it may be gone in the next few seconds. I am one who loves to experience new things in the radio world,while far from being a radio geek it does interest me and from the time I was small until now it has stayed with me and I will continue to enjoy anything related to radio.....William Quote
deputycrawford Posted May 15, 2014 Report Posted May 15, 2014 We had some ducting here in Toledo, Ohio. We were getting into a repeater south of Cleveland. The guy in Cleveland asked for our ID's and said we were on HIS PL. It caused a bit of an argument with the guy until the repeater operator explained to him what we were saying about the ducting. I hear it on the ham bands once in awhile so I knew what was going on. It was so strong that we were hitting the other repeater with just a watt or two. Crazy. Jerry Quote
PastorGary Posted May 16, 2014 Report Posted May 16, 2014 Once in awhile in August, I can light up a GMRS repeater at the far southern end of our state from my seasonal residence in the northeast part - roughly 193 miles straight line. It usually starts around 5 AM and goes until 'sun plasma' noise kills it around 9 AM Quote
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