That's great w9cll, keep on enjoying the contacts. That looks like a high end radio.
I have not worked an endless number small islands (though I have worked many) as on 11m the ops tend not to be there. However I can say I have worked all continents with the most distant contact 13,300 miles away, long path to New Zealand from the U.K. with an omni vertical.
On $500.00 of cb equipment. $130.00 multimode radio, $250.00 linear and a $160.00 vertical antenna.
I feel there is nothing having a ham licence can add to the nitty gritty of actual "in the bag" DX contacts, except expense.
Though I do respect hams as without a beam being used at the RX end I probably would not have been heard. (although arguably beam use means omni stations in general don't get heard as well, but when you do get through, and the best beam/ham operators let the quiet stations in first as they are likely more challenging / interesting to RX, it is all the more satisfying.)
I don't know it all, but I do my bit and have the right operational attitude.
I have not worked an endless number small islands (though I have worked many) as on 11m the ops tend not to be there. However I can say I have worked all continents with the most distant contact 13,300 miles away, long path to New Zealand from the U.K. with an omni vertical.
On $500.00 of cb equipment. $130.00 multimode radio, $250.00 linear and a $160.00 vertical antenna.
I feel there is nothing having a ham licence can add to the nitty gritty of actual "in the bag" DX contacts, except expense.
Though I do respect hams as without a beam being used at the RX end I probably would not have been heard. (although arguably beam use means omni stations in general don't get heard as well, but when you do get through, and the best beam/ham operators let the quiet stations in first as they are likely more challenging / interesting to RX, it is all the more satisfying.)
I don't know it all, but I do my bit and have the right operational attitude.
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