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#1
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This evening I flew from Buffalo, NY, down to Cleveland, over to
Binghamton, NY, and back home to Syracuse for an Angel Flight. Total time in the air was probably 3 hours just before sunset. At first I thought something was wrong with my Garmin GNS430 radio because I kept hearing numerous pilot-side communications, but no ATC. This happened on the Buffalo departure frequency, the Erie, PA, approach, and the Cleveland approach frequencies. Just after departing Cleveland, I heard this again, but this time I caught a check-in. The pilot mentioned Chicago Center and it finally became clear to me that I was hearing pilots from 600 to 1,000 miles away. Is this phenomenon called skipping? What causes such a large outbreak of this, high clouds or something else? A very interesting evening, as it was occurring on just about all of the center and approach frequencies that I was monitoring. -- Peter |
#2
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Is this phenomenon called skipping? What causes such a large outbreak of
this, high clouds or something else? A very interesting evening, as it was occurring on just about all of the center and approach frequencies that I was monitoring. Skipping, ducting, different places call it different things. Solar radiation affects the ionosphere, causing the various layers to rise or descend. Depending on the frequency and the ionosphere layer, the radio signal will make a single bounce/reflect or may become temporarily trapped between two layers and bounce/reflect off the top and bottom before escaping some distance from the source. |
#3
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Is this phenomenon called skipping?
IIRC, it's called "skip zone phenomenon." I can recall more than one occasion, when I was stationed at Cherry Point, NC in the early '50s, receiving a Puerto Rican TV station. (VHF TV stations broadcast on frequencies very close to those used by Aviation.) vince norris |
#4
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Not so. Channels 2-6 occupy the band 54-88 MHz., while channels 7-13 occupy
174-216 MHz.. Neither one is remotely close to the aviation band. In the late summer, we generally get decent skip propagation due to sunspot activity directly overhead the USA, but the sunspot cycle isn't all that high right now. What the OP heard was truly a very rare phenomenon. Most of the time, the skip doesn't get to 30 MHz. Sometimes to 50. Rarely to 150 (listening to New York taxicabs in Los Angeles). Rare indeed. Jim "vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... (VHF TV stations broadcast on frequencies very close to those used by Aviation.) |
#5
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john smith wrote:
Depending on the frequency and the ionosphere layer, the radio signal will make a single bounce/reflect or may become temporarily trapped between two layers and bounce/reflect off the top and bottom before escaping some distance from the source. Now that I thought about it some more, the frequencies that were picking up the skipping transmissions were between 120.30 and 128.00 or so, which included Erie approach, Syracuse approach, Buffalo approach, and sections of Cleveland center. -- Peter |
#6
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Here near St Louis I was seeing skip last night all the way up to TV
channel 9, which is 187 mHz. -- Gene Seibel KB0NNN http://pad39a.com/gene/broadcast.html Because I fly, I envy no one. Peter R. wrote: This evening I flew from Buffalo, NY, down to Cleveland, over to Binghamton, NY, and back home to Syracuse for an Angel Flight. Total time in the air was probably 3 hours just before sunset. At first I thought something was wrong with my Garmin GNS430 radio because I kept hearing numerous pilot-side communications, but no ATC. This happened on the Buffalo departure frequency, the Erie, PA, approach, and the Cleveland approach frequencies. Just after departing Cleveland, I heard this again, but this time I caught a check-in. The pilot mentioned Chicago Center and it finally became clear to me that I was hearing pilots from 600 to 1,000 miles away. Is this phenomenon called skipping? What causes such a large outbreak of this, high clouds or something else? A very interesting evening, as it was occurring on just about all of the center and approach frequencies that I was monitoring. -- Peter |
#7
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![]() Peter R. wrote: This evening I flew from Buffalo, NY, down to Cleveland, over to Binghamton, NY, and back home to Syracuse for an Angel Flight. Total time in the air was probably 3 hours just before sunset. At first I thought something was wrong with my Garmin GNS430 radio because I kept hearing numerous pilot-side communications, but no ATC. This happened on the Buffalo departure frequency, the Erie, PA, approach, and the Cleveland approach frequencies. Just after departing Cleveland, I heard this again, but this time I caught a check-in. The pilot mentioned Chicago Center and it finally became clear to me that I was hearing pilots from 600 to 1,000 miles away. Is this phenomenon called skipping? What causes such a large outbreak of this, high clouds or something else? A very interesting evening, as it was occurring on just about all of the center and approach frequencies that I was monitoring. -- Peter A large solar flare is hitting earth right now... visit http://www.spaceweather.com to learn more... Dean |
#8
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(VHF TV stations broadcast on frequencies very close to those used by
Aviation.) Not so. Channels 2-6 occupy the band 54-88 MHz., while channels 7-13 occupy 174-216 MHz.. Neither one is remotely close to the aviation band. Well, if I remember correctly, the frequencies I use to talk to a tower, or approach control, or center, or tune in a VOR or an ILS, are BETWEEN 88 MHz and 174 MHz. That is, between channel 6 and channel 7. Seems to me that justifies saying they are " close." Perhaps I should have omitted the "very." A nearby VOR is on 108.8, as I recall. That's less than 21 Mhz. from 88 MHz. When we're meassuring in megas, isn't that "close" enough? BTW, after all these years, I have no recollection of which channel it was on which we could pick up Puerto rico. vince norris |
#9
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Is $88 million close to $108 million? Only if you're in congress, imho.
Jim "vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... A nearby VOR is on 108.8, as I recall. That's less than 21 Mhz. from 88 MHz. When we're meassuring in megas, isn't that "close" enough? |
#10
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RST Engineering wrote:
Is $88 million close to $108 million? Only if you're in congress, imho. Jim Jim, I'll be happy with either amount. Shall I provide you an address to which to send the check? :-) Matt |
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