But endlessly just racking-up QSOs for the sake of it, rarely looking operators up because they come and go so fast, it's just so unrewarding!
Remember what this is? |
So, I twiddled the FT-450 - now reaching five-and-a-half years of faultless daily service (it reached me as an immaculate, probably never-used second hand unit) - and sent a SSB 'CQ' on 21.275MHZ with about 60W peak into my monoband vertical delta loop.
Lo and behold! A couple of strong US stations came back to me straight away. The details went down on my diary, ready for later logging, just like the old days (i.e., a couple of years ago!)
I have to say that having a good QSO by SSB leaves one feeling much more satisfied, having learned about a fellow ham, their location, station and little details like the weather. It serves the imagination so much better than the mindless digital handshakes that the digimodes ultimately are. Voice takes the mind elsewhere in a way that digital doesn't, really.
But there you go. At least we have the choice to use digimodes or voice, and that is a valuable thing.
Nice to get a voice contact on 15m.
ReplyDeleteI was on the radio a month or so ago and as I always scan around and had never heard anything on 15m, this one day it was jam packed, end to end, with French stations all talking in French. I mean jam packed. I made no contacts, as there didn't seem to be anywhere to get a signal in without interference. Then within an hour or so the band was silent.
SSB, the human voice, ye cannae beat it.