
By Courtesy of the Propagation team




G3YLA JIM

G0KYA STEVE

G4BAO JOHN
Its all about the weather

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Pictured :
Jim Bacon G3YLA
NARC club member
and Nick Henwood
RSGB President.

Propogation News
10th April 2026
HF

3
After a pretty stormy run up to Easter, from a geomagnetic disturbance point of view, the Sun has been pretty quiet.
In fact, the Kp index has been below three all week. Unfortunately, the solar flux index has also declined, standing at 108 on Thursday the 9th. The only advantage has been a lack of solar flares – there have only been 12 minor C-class flares over the past three days compared with 29 C-class flares and six M-class flares on the fourth and fifth of April.
We always look for a low Kp index over a higher SFI for better HF conditions.
So how does this all affect HF propagation? The MUF over a 3,000km path has been struggling to get up to 28MHz on most days. Leaving only 21 and 24MHz open after the initial post-dawn ionospheric build-up. This doesn’t mean 10-metres is dead, but it may be that the band is only open to DX and not open to Europe. This may change once the Sporadic-E season starts, but we are still a month away from that.
DX being worked, according to the CDXC Slack group, includes 5W1SA Samoa on 17m FT8, F0/F6BCW French Polynesia on 12m CW and 3DA0TM Eswatini (formerly Swaziland) on 20m USB. T31TTT Kanton Island, Central Kiribati, has also been spotted on 20m and 30m FT8/FT4 – the DXpedition is focusing on FT modes, although they are also operating some CW.
Next week, NOAA predicts that the SFI will start around 105, but will increase a little over the week to reach the low 120s. Geomagnetic conditions are forecast to be quiet, with a maximum Kp index of three once we get over this weekend’s predicted disruption, which has a forecast Kp index of five.
Then we are in for a rough ride next weekend, with a predicted Kp index of six on April 19th and disrupted conditions for three days. This is likely due to the return of active region 4392, which produced a CME that hit the Earth and caused the Kp index to rise to seven on its last rotation.
VHF and up

The warm, dry weather of the middle of last week has left us with ideas of spring, but it’s now been replaced by cooler unsettled weather with rain or showers.
In fact, the next week or two will be generally unsettled, not atypical of April. This will be a good period for rain scatter on the upper GHz bands since April showers can be heavy and present good scatter opportunities. This unsettled weather means Tropo retreats into the background for this period.
Meteor scatter is still under the influence of random activity and best in the early morning hours, but aurora is currently looking more promising with solar conditions offering coronal holes and possible auroras as a result.
Sporadic-E will start to make an appearance soon, especially on 10m, but realistically we probably need to wait until we are into May before chances are more rewarding for 6m. It is often a feature of the early part of the Es season that the traditional two periods of activity, morning and afternoon, of the high season start off as one broad period around the middle of the day.
For EME operators, Moon declination is starting to climb again, going positive on Wednesday the 15th. Earth-Moon-Earth path losses are past maximum now and continue to fall all week. 144 MHz sky noise starts high at the start of the weekend and falls to low for the rest of the week. The exception being Friday the 17th when the Moon and Sun are close in the sky.
G3YLA JIM


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