APRS -
Every FD site will usually have APRS on line. Remember, you can contact any
other FD site in the world on your APRS channel. (144.39 in North America).
Just send them an APRS text message.
Of course, this assumes you know their callsign. To facilitate learning who
else is on the air, send a CQ FD message to the APRS CQSERVER and your CQ will go to every other CQ FD site on the planet. This has nothing to do with FD rules and points. It is just a way to have fun and be able to contact any FD site without knowing apriori their calling freq.
Just send an APRS message to CQSRVR and make the first two words of the
message be CQ FD .... for example, "CQ FD from Bob in Annapolis, MD". These do not count for points, but are a great way to have ham radio fun with other sites.
This will log you onto the CQ FD message group and from then on, you will
get ALL OTHER such messages from all other such stations. When you DO see an incoming CQ FD message, now then you know their callsign and can MESSAGE THEM DIRECTLY from then on.
To keep the load down, you can only send one CQ FD message once every 30
minutes, but you will remain logged on for up to 12 hours. After no activity, you will be dropped.
Oh, for more info about APRS and Field Day, see http://aprs.org/cqsrvr.html
Bob, WB4APR
JT65-HF -
While this will require manually entering callsigns, it should work -- really same format as a RTTY contest qso. All free-text except the initial search/pounce call. Note that don't need 2-way grid exchange, or RRR or 73's ... the FD info is the non-callsign info being exchanged ... and going to next step implicitly R's the previous.
CQ FD KJ4IZW
KJ4IZW KB3EAW EM00 (structured)
KB3EAW 3A WNY
KJ4IZW 1H EPA
TU KJ4IZW FD
KJ4IZW W1LIC FM00 # flows to next caller
...
Also, doesn't require any custom initial reply to the CQ ... and hopefully they mimic the FD report format ...
I'll be operating as K4NAB club call, running the digital station .. PSK31 & RTTY, but would like to proof-of-concept JT65 too.
--david
KJ4IZW