{"id":3089,"date":"2014-02-02T23:29:30","date_gmt":"2014-02-02T23:29:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/?p=3089"},"modified":"2021-06-02T22:29:06","modified_gmt":"2021-06-02T22:29:06","slug":"dx-records-and-shortwave-reflections","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/dx-records-and-shortwave-reflections\/","title":{"rendered":"DX Records and Shortwave Reflections"},"content":{"rendered":"<h3><em>\u2026or, The Heaviside Road to the Antipode<\/em><\/h3>\n<p>Summer 1924 brought the first explorers to the four new, shorter wavelength bands that were opened up to amateur use in July. Amateurs anticipated interesting times ahead based on their earlier experimental work that produced the first transatlantic QSOs.\u00a0 Those had been achieved at 100 meters under special licenses for operating below 150 meters, a region the government designated as \u201creserved\u201d the previous year without explanation.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-1' id='fnref-3089-1' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>No one knew how the shorter waves would behave, but hams began to form a vague intuition based on understanding the high-altitude atmospheric layers. A long series of experiments during 1924 by John Reinartz at his experimental station, 1XAM, resulted in five thousand reception reports from five European and eighteen North American receiving stations,<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-2' id='fnref-3089-2' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>2<\/a><\/sup> and led to some new insights.<\/p>\n<p>Reinartz wrote that when very short waves were used\u2014say, 20 meters or lower\u2014signals became weaker at night rather than stronger, opposite the case for the familiar wavelengths above 100 meters. Also, signals were often stronger at long distances than short ones. Explaining these behaviors he noted the existence of the <em>Heaviside layer<\/em>, a conductive shell of upper atmosphere that reflects radio signals<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-3' id='fnref-3089-3' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>3<\/a><\/sup>. It was believed that at lower altitudes air is a conductor in the daytime but becomes an insulator at night, due to the sun ionizing the air in the daylight hours. Therefore, the reflecting layer was at a lower altitude in the daytime than at night. His tests tended to confirm much of this but also suggested some modifications to the theory.<\/p>\n<p>Reinartz noticed there were two sides to the propagation-limiting phenomena. At noon there was a minimum wavelength in the vicinity of 50 meters below which no signals propagated regardless of the power level, falling off in strength within a one-meter change in wavelength. At the opposite extreme, there was a maximum wavelength above which signals would also fall off. Thus there seemed to be a band or window of wavelengths that could get through at mid-day, and the whole window would move upward (in wavelength) as the day wore on.<\/p>\n<p>He also observed that in daylight there was a region near a transmitter where its signals could be easily heard, followed by a broad range of distances in which there was no signal, followed by a much greater distance where signals could again be heard. The second, longer receive distance was, of course, the more interesting one.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_3097\" style=\"width: 624px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-3097\" class=\" wp-image-3097\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag-1024x750.jpg\" alt=\"QST April 1925 p. 9\" width=\"614\" height=\"450\" srcset=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag-1024x750.jpg 1024w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag-150x109.jpg 150w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag-300x219.jpg 300w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag-409x300.jpg 409w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2194-Reinartz-skip-diag.jpg 2007w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 614px) 100vw, 614px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-3097\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Reinartz view of reflections and layers<\/p><\/div>\n<p>This distance tended to be shorter toward the east than toward the west before noon, about the same in both directions at noon, and reverse after noon, following the sun. Also, the wavelength of the window would move lower in the morning, then increase in the afternoon.<\/p>\n<p>His analysis of reception reports also suggested that different frequencies were reflected from layers of different heights at any given time of day. Reinartz speculated that if higher frequencies penetrated further into the reflection layer than lower frequencies, that would account for the frequency dependence on distance. In all of this analysis he was considering only a 45\u00b0 radiation angle.<\/p>\n<p>Another useful way to view these propagation zones was as concentric rings surrounding a transmitting station. The short, dead, and long zones formed circles around the station at noon, became elongated towards the west in the morning and toward the east in afternoon. Following this logic, the circles were also elongated away from the equator at any particular time of day. Reinartz concluded that if this theory held it should be possible to pick an optimal wavelength on which to best communicate with any given distance on the earth depending on the time of day\u2014an essentially correct view, lacking complications not yet understood.<\/p>\n<p>But he failed to reason that if ever shorter wavelengths penetrated further into the reflecting layer, there might be a wavelength above which they never reflect but shoot right through. He asserted with confidence that 1925 would \u201csee direct international contact on waves below 1 meter.\u201d He also conceded that amateurs were just beginning to probe propagation phenomena and only through continued experiments at short wavelengths could they gain a more thorough understanding.<\/p>\n<p>In \u201cEditor\u2019s Notes\u201d following Reinartz\u2019s article, technical editor R. S. Kruse added ideas about radiation angle and its effects on propagation distance when radio waves travel through a diffuse refracting layer, as opposed to a reflecting one, thus rounding out the theory.<\/p>\n<p>H. A. Joyce of the University of Detroit later proposed to build further upon previous theory by Reinartz and Kruse.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-4' id='fnref-3089-4' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>4<\/a><\/sup> He may have been the first to link shortwave reflection to similar refraction and reflection of light from interfaces, such as can be seen in a glass of water, leading to a discussion of the radiation angle of vertical antennas of various lengths. Joyce used simple geometry to approximate the height of the atmospheric reflecting layer by using the radiation angle and the distance of the received station.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-2988\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/11\/BT-sep-sm.jpg\" alt=\"BT sep sm\" width=\"61\" height=\"8\" \/><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_3101\" style=\"width: 263px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-3101\" class=\" wp-image-3101\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2210-z4AA-253x300.jpg\" alt=\"QST February 1926 p. 52, z4AA\" width=\"253\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2210-z4AA-253x300.jpg 253w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2210-z4AA-126x150.jpg 126w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2210-z4AA-866x1024.jpg 866w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2210-z4AA.jpg 1616w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 253px) 100vw, 253px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-3101\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Frank Bell, z4AA<\/p><\/div>\n<p>As fall turned to winter in late 1924 and DX work accelerated, new records were set at a rapid pace. Word spread and amateurs worldwide were entering the shortwave realm in increasing numbers, not just in the US. \u201cThe laurels in this little old game of amateur radio no longer belong to America,\u201d reported Warner.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-5' id='fnref-3089-5' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>5<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>On 19 October a sheep farmer named Frank D. Bell in Palmerstown South, New Zealand, made contact as z4AA with C. W. Goyder, g2SZ, at Mill Hill School, London for a 90-minute QSO on 92 meters. Six days later, Ralph Slade of Dunedin, New Zealand was in contact with British 2NM, Gerald Marcuse (IARU VP)\u2014an 11,900-mile new distance record.<\/p>\n<p>Several US\u2013NZ QSOs were also made, and would normally have been a big deal, had they not been overshadowed by the UK\u2013NZ contacts. \u201cIt is staggering!\u201d exclaimed Warner. \u201cUnless somebody can arrange to get into communication with a ship diametrically opposite his station on the other side of the earth, carefully arranging to achieve the world&#8217;s maximum of 12,500 miles, it is very doubtful if this record will ever be exceeded,\u201d he wrote, failing to anticipate long-path propagation.<\/p>\n<p>However, shortly afterward, R. Y. Orbell, z3AA, took a station to sea, sailing from New Zealand to England on an easterly route that took him past Cape Horn into the Atlantic, while in constant contact with home. \u201cWhy, if the New Zealanders can follow z3AA across the Atlantic to England they will have succeeded in working around the world in both directions, for the g2SZ\u2013z4AA communication apparently occurred over a line east from Greenwich!\u201d wrote Warner, although how he knew this he did not say. Presumably it was because that was the nighttime path, as the prevailing theory would predict. He added that \u201canybody willing to outfit a floating shortwave ham station under the Stars and Stripes and send it to the Antipodes<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-6' id='fnref-3089-6' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>6<\/a><\/sup> of good U.S. stations, please communicate with ARRL Headquarters. There\u2019s a mathematical possibility of exceeding this British-New Zealand DX record by 600 miles and a chance in a million of doing it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>As 1924 \u00a0concluded, reports arrived that several new countries had been added to the list of those known to be active on the new amateur bands:<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-7' id='fnref-3089-7' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>7<\/a><\/sup> Station c1AR in Halifax contacted b4YZ in Belgium for the first contact between North America and that country. c1AR also made the first North American contact with Sweden, working SMZS in Stockholm. Bermuda had an amateur licensing process in the works but was not yet on the air. WJS in Brazil made a first US contact with the Stanford University station, 6OI, in December. There was a first report from British South Africa of receiving US signals there. In India, an amateur received signals from US station 1AAC in QSO with z4AA in New Zealand. 1KC in Northampton, Massachusetts worked GHH1 in Mosul, Mesopotamia for the first contact with Asia since the still-unconfirmed 7HG contact with JUPU a year earlier. He also worked fAIN in Casablanca on Christmas Eve for the first QSO with Morocco. American 2BY worked EAR2 for the first contact with Spain. Denmark joined in, when d7EC contacted u1MY in East Hartford in November, passing several messages.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-8' id='fnref-3089-8' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>8<\/a><\/sup> And on it went.<\/p>\n<p>On 8 December, the Haverford College, Pennsylvania, chess team played a game via amateur radio with a team from Oxford that had travelled seventy miles to the home of Marcuse at g2NM. u3OT hosted the Haverford side. It was not the first chess game played on the air but was certainly the first <em>international<\/em> one. (Haverford had previously played chess with a group at the City College of New York.) The two stations tested conditions at various wavelengths finally arriving at sufficient reliability on 85 meters. The game did not conclude but went for 5-1\/2 hours and eleven moves for each side at which point the two sides agreed to continue in January. Warner wondered whether \u201cGodley ever thought that just a few years after his memorable visit to England we would be playing 5-1\/2-hour chess matches across the puddle.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>International QSOs were now occurring nightly between all continents, all in the wavelength range of 75 to 100 meters, still only a small step beyond the previous year\u2019s work.<\/p>\n<p>UK and NZ stations now in regular contact at dawn and dusk, respectively, reported that it was easier than contacting the US and attributed that to \u201cantipodal effects\u201d rather than the as-yet unknown gray line propagation. It also implied that the signals were going via the long path, throwing most commonly held notions of DX limits out the window. This alone should have ended all the talk about antipodes.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWith thus auspicious a curtain-rise, who can say what this season has in store for us? Apparently there is no end to the possibilities. Just think, we haven&#8217;t plumbed the shorter-wave bands yet!\u201d wrote Warner.<\/p>\n<p>What he referred to as shorter wavelengths were still largely a mystery. Recent tests demonstrated that 220 miles could be covered on 40 meters in daylight\u2014something not possible on any other wavelength, as far as was known, making the band very interesting to experimenters. Referring to 20 and 5 meters as extremely short wavelengths, at this point they were touted as being free from interference and nothing more.<\/p>\n<p>To encourage amateurs to explore the new allocations, the ARRL established awards for experimental operation, one for each new band.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-9' id='fnref-3089-9' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>9<\/a><\/sup> The rules emphasized low power operation and limited transmitters to using a single tube rated at five watts. Because directly measuring power was not yet easy to do, the rule was based solely on tube specifications. If you bent the rules you risked burning out an expensive piece of equipment.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-3104 alignright\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2190-1XAM-receiver-509x1024.jpg\" alt=\"QST March 1925 p. 9, 1XAM Tx, RX\" width=\"293\" height=\"589\" srcset=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2190-1XAM-receiver-509x1024.jpg 509w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2190-1XAM-receiver-74x150.jpg 74w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2190-1XAM-receiver-149x300.jpg 149w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2190-1XAM-receiver.jpg 1672w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 293px) 100vw, 293px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>The \u201ccontest\u201d period (it was called that despite being billed as an experiment) would run nearly four months, from 1 February to 25 May 1925. It was not fully QSO-based as contests are today. Contacts mattered, of course, and counted in the score, but the event was more of a \u201ctest\u201d like the transatlantics, where one-way communications were the main objective. Any given transmission would be counted for the contest only when a receiving station confirmed it by letter, telegram or postcard and agreed with the submitted transmission log. An entry consisted of complete logs and confirmations of transmissions, diagrams and photographs of the station, and a notarized sworn affidavit attesting to adherence to the rules! Excessively long CQing or other such calls would disqualify an entrant as would violating any of the rules.<\/p>\n<p>A 40 meter award, the Cooper Cup, was sponsored by J. C. Cooper of Atlanta, and 20 and 5 meter ARRL Cups were sponsored by the League itself. The announcement offered very little description of what would constitute a winning entry, but experimentation was key. Kruse emphasized that, although <i>QST<\/i> had been publishing information about how to operate below 100 meters, the League had no monopoly on ideas. \u201cThe way to get somewhere in this short-wave business is not to trail after someone else but to make a trail of your own,\u201d he wrote.<\/p>\n<p>The 20 meter test results were encouraging despite a general lack of adherence to the schedules.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-10' id='fnref-3089-10' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>10<\/a><\/sup> While no nighttime signals got much further than about 100 miles, daylight QSOs were plentiful; among the best were a QSO between Hoffman, 9EK in Madison, Wisconsin, and Reinartz at 1XAM, who worked each other until signals dropped out around 4:40 p.m. Eastern Time. 6AJF had copied the entire QSO from California, too. Since it was about 2-1\/2 years past the solar minimum, they may have randomly hit a particularly quiet string of nights for their test. A few days later the pair made contact again, this time decreasing power to a very low level (8.5 and 16 watts).<\/p>\n<p>On the heels of his QSO with 9EK, Reinartz worked 6TS on 20 for fourteen consecutive days.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-11' id='fnref-3089-11' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>11<\/a><\/sup> (They worked each other on 40 meters at night on those same days\u2014also something new.) It was all done with standard circuits, no \u201ctrickery;\u201d it was just the latest demonstration of the usefulness of the shortwaves. Reinartz was also the first to cross the Atlantic on 20 in a QSO with g5LF.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-12' id='fnref-3089-12' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>12<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>But as amazed as they were with 20 meters, they did not yet grasp the band\u2019s full potential. While the tests had provided \u201cbrilliant proof that 20 meters is one of the most useful waves we have,\u201d they prematurely proclaimed the \u201cutter worthlessness\u201d of the band at night.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-13' id='fnref-3089-13' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>13<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_3111\" style=\"width: 624px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-3111\" class=\" wp-image-3111 \" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2195-6AWT-plus-station-1024x798.jpg\" alt=\"QST May 1925 p. 54, 6AWT\" width=\"614\" height=\"479\" srcset=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2195-6AWT-plus-station-1024x798.jpg 1024w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2195-6AWT-plus-station-150x116.jpg 150w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2195-6AWT-plus-station-300x233.jpg 300w, http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/02\/MG_2195-6AWT-plus-station-384x300.jpg 384w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 614px) 100vw, 614px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-3111\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Molinari and his station, 6AWT<\/p><\/div>\n<p>William H. Shick, 2MU, had been listening on 40 meters from his Brooklyn home for some time, logging mostly harmonics. On 2 January 1925, he heard 6TS in Santa Monica and thought it was yet another harmonic until 6TS signed his call and added \u201c40 meters\u201d to his identification. (Such was the pervasiveness of harmonic generation.) Using his one-tube Hartley oscillator feeding a 50-foot-long T-antenna strung between the roofs of apartment buildings, 2MU returned the call.\u00a0 The two city-dwellers established contact around 7:00 p.m., the first cross-country QSO on 40 meters.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-14' id='fnref-3089-14' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>14<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>And in February, the first confirmed QSO between the US and Japan took place when 6AWT worked JA2 at the Imperial Naval Academy in Nagasaki.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-15' id='fnref-3089-15' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>15<\/a><\/sup> Bartholomew Molinari, owner of 6AWT, was a baker who operated from his home on Union Street in San Francisco.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-16' id='fnref-3089-16' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>16<\/a><\/sup> By the end of the year, his station had been heard in multiple countries on all continents and he had worked all forty-eight states. Not due to any special equipment or antennas, his success rather stemmed directly from pushing to ever-shorter wavelengths, brought about in part by necessity. He had originally moved down to concentrate his operation on 80 meters because with fifty broadcast listeners within a six-block radius of his home, he could not use 200 meters lest he be deluged by interference complaints. He later received the 1924 Hoover Cup,<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-17' id='fnref-3089-17' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>17<\/a><\/sup> following Don Wallace, 9ZT, the year before.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-2988\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/11\/BT-sep-sm.jpg\" alt=\"BT sep sm\" width=\"61\" height=\"8\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Taking its cue from the various 1924 shortwave tests, the League organized a mid-summer 1925 test to continue the effort with everyone participating worldwide.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-18' id='fnref-3089-18' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>18<\/a><\/sup> It was again to be a one-way test, meaning some stations would transmit and others would receive, but no QSOs would be made. This time it would run for three, 48-hour periods, each one devoted to single-band operation on 40, 20, and 5 meters, during 18\u201319 July, 25\u201326 July, and 1\u20132 August, respectively. Transmit schedules would run according to local standard time for each station. A thirty-minute restricted transmit period, a thirty-minute free-for-all period, and a three-hour listening period would rotate in sequence, with six such cycles during each of the two days. As in earlier tests, the restricted periods were reserved for high power stations selected by the League. The organizers urged station owners to provide a continuous watch for the entire period using two or three operators in shifts, so as to get as much experience with propagation as possible around the clock. For similar reasons they advised hams to listen for the same stations during each four-hour time period, noting how each signal changed throughout the day. When transmitting, stations would send a self-assigned code word followed by \u201ctest\u201d and the station call sign, all repeated during a thirty-minute transmitting period.<\/p>\n<p>Thousands of stations participated, producing hundreds of logs mailed to ARRL HQ containing data collected on 40 and 20 meters but hardly anything on 5 meters.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-19' id='fnref-3089-19' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>19<\/a><\/sup> But because of a lack of standards and equipment for measuring received signal strength, and the fact that many reports were incomplete, the usefulness of the data for empirical analysis was quite limited. In fact, no coherent set of conclusions could be made. Nevertheless, the participation level alone demonstrated that \u201cradio is no longer a strictly winter sport,\u201d remarked ARRL traffic manager Fred Schnell.<\/p>\n<p>After the successful 20-meter transatlantic tests, E. J. Simmonds operating 2OD at Gerrards Cross, Bucks, England, cabled Maclurcan, the well known Australian experimenter at 2CM, asking him to construct equipment for the band.<sup class='footnote'><a href='#fn-3089-20' id='fnref-3089-20' onclick='return fdfootnote_show(3089)'>20<\/a><\/sup> In April 1925 they began testing on 20 meters (coincidentally on the same day the first IARU Congress opened), resulting initially in several receptions of 2CM in England. Encouraged, they continued testing for two weeks and finally worked each other on 3 May from 0552 until 0715 GMT when Simmonds had to get ready for work. The next day, they repeated the feat and passed three messages, including one to the English prime minister from his peer in Australia, one to Eccles of RSGB from Maclurcan, and one from Eccles to the Wireless Institute of Australia. Simmonds and Maclurcan were then in regular contact.<\/p>\n<p>Recognizing the reality of what he called the \u201cinternational era\u201d in amateur radio, Warner\u2019s editorial for July 1925 rhetorically asked, \u201cHave we not almost reached the ultimate of amateur accomplishment?\u201d specifically referring to this first daylight amateur QSO between England and Australia\u2014at the antipodes!<\/p>\n<p>Maybe \u201calmost\u201d was his operative word, or maybe each generation redefines \u201cultimate.\u201d\u00a0 Either way the answer would turn out to be \u201cno.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-2990\" src=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/11\/AR-sep-sm.jpg\" alt=\"AR sep sm\" width=\"56\" height=\"8\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: 14px;\">de W2PA<\/span><\/p>\n<div class='footnotes' id='footnotes-3089'>\n<div class='footnotedivider'><\/div>\n<ol>\n<li id='fn-3089-1'> See <a title=\"First Band, Top Band\" href=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/first-band-top-band\/\">\u201cFirst Band, Top Band.\u201d<\/a> <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-1'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-2'> J. L. Reinartz, \u201cThe Reflection of Short Waves,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, April 1925, 9. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-2'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-3'> Several pages later in the same issue of QST, an obituary noted the death of Oliver Heaviside, \u201cone of the greatest mathematical physicists of all time,\u201d on 14 February 1925. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-3'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-4'> H. A. Joyce, \u201cHow are Short Waves Reflected?,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, July 1925, 29. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-4'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-5'> K. B. Warner, \u201cAntipodes Linked by Amateur Radio,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, December 1924, 14. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-5'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-6'> Diametrically opposite points on the globe.\u00a0 See also the \u201cTranspacifics\u201d chapter. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-6'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-7'> \u201cThis Month\u2019s International DX,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, February 1925, 13. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-7'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-8'> K. B. Warner, \u201cSuper DX,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, January 1925, 13. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-8'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-9'> S. Kruse, \u201cThree Cups Offered for Short Wave Work,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, January 1925, 17. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-9'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-10'> Experimenters Section Report, <i>QST<\/i>, February 1925, 31. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-10'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-11'> \u201cDaylight Radio Communication Wins!,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, March 1925, 9. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-11'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-12'> \u201cWho Was Fist Across on 20 Meters?\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, July 1925, 30. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-12'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-13'> Experimenters Section Report, <i>QST<\/i>, March 1925, 50. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-13'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-14'> \u201c6TS and 2MU First Across on 40 meters,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, March 1925, 35. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-14'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-15'> Clinton B. DeSoto, \u201cTwo Hundred Meters and Down,\u201d The American Radio Relay League, Inc., 1936, 100. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-15'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-16'> \u201c6AWT, Hoover Cup Winner 1924\u201d Amateur Radio Stations, <i>QST<\/i>, May 1925, 54. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-16'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-17'> See &#8220;What is an Amateur?&#8221; <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-17'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-18'> \u201cAnnouncement of Midsummer Short-Wave Tests,\u201d The Traffic Department, <i>QST<\/i>, June 1925, 47. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-18'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-19'> F. E. Handy, \u201cThe Mid-Summer Short Wave Tests,\u201d The Traffic Department, <i>QST<\/i>, January 1926, I (The first page of appendix &#8211; apparently not currently available in the on-line QST Archive as of January 2014). <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-19'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<li id='fn-3089-20'> \u201cEngland and Australia Work in Daylight!,\u201d <i>QST<\/i>, July 1925, 23. <span class='footnotereverse'><a href='#fnref-3089-20'>&#8617;<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u2026or, The Heaviside Road to the Antipode Summer 1924 brought the first explorers to the four new, shorter wavelength bands that were opened up to amateur use in July. Amateurs anticipated interesting times ahead based on their earlier experimental work that produced the first transatlantic QSOs.\u00a0 Those had been achieved at 100 meters under special licenses for operating below 150 meters, a region the government designated as \u201creserved\u201d the previous year without explanation.1 No one knew how the shorter waves &hellip; <a class=\"more-link\" href=\"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/dx-records-and-shortwave-reflections\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[183,276,328,326,254,327,323,292,325,314,311,324,310,320,252,329,182,138,321,274,322,317],"class_list":["post-3089","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-main","tag-1qp","tag-1xam","tag-6awt","tag-6ts","tag-antipode","tag-bartholomew-molinari","tag-c-w-goyder","tag-charles-maclurcan","tag-cooper-cup","tag-frank-d-bell","tag-g2nm","tag-g2sz","tag-gerald-marcuse","tag-h-a-joyce","tag-heaviside","tag-hoover-cup","tag-john-reinartz","tag-propagation","tag-r-y-orbell","tag-shortwave","tag-z3aa","tag-z4aa"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3089"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3089"}],"version-history":[{"count":28,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3089\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3484,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3089\/revisions\/3484"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3089"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3089"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/w2pa.net\/HRH\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3089"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}