The TX6G dxpedition is just about to wind down as I write this, but they are still on 12m CW and with a good signal here at 11pm local time. I decided to make a quick video of them before they close. It's been a fantastic dxpedition. They are brilliant operators, and they kept good discipline on the pile-ups too. I am both ecstatic and surprised to have worked them on 13 band slots, including that coveted 80m slot, which only three Irish operators managed. Here is the video shot a short time ago of TX6G on 12 metres CW:
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
VK9MT logged for a third time, and TX6G logged 13 times
This is just a very quick update because it's late and I need to get to bed!! I worked the VK9MT Mellish Reef dxpedition for a third time this evening, on 17m CW. He had a good signal, and was working both EU and Japan. I managed to get in after about five minutes of calling. Below is a video I made shortly after my QSO. You can hear EI7NET being worked by them:
Labels:
17 metres,
Austral.,
CW,
Dxpedition,
EI7NET,
IC-756PRO,
Icom,
Mellish Reef,
morse,
TX6G,
video,
VK9MT,
YouTube
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
All comments are moderated - so spam will not get through.