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WSPR Field Day 2026 — Propagation Comparison

Method. For each day in June (days 1–29, excluding FD), we counted distinct non-FM29 stations that appeared as either a transmitter heard by an FM29 receiver or a receiver that heard an FM29 transmitter, within the 22-hour 18:00 UTC → 16:00 UTC+1day window (2 PM EDT → noon EDT next day). The Field Day count is the same metric for 6/27 18:00 UTC → 6/28 16:00 UTC. Data: wspr.live. Solar indices: GFZ Potsdam archive (authoritative source for Kp/Ap/F10.7). FM29-grid stations active on WSPR during FD: 9; across the 28 baseline windows: 13.9 average.

The chart

Field Day vs June baseline column chart

Summary table

Band FD unique stations June baseline avg Median Std dev Min / Max FD vs avg
40m408587.2581.553.3447 / 702-179.2 (0.69×)
20m661995.51005.0147.7734 / 1275-334.5 (0.66×)
15m310255.9250.581.4123 / 406+54.1 (1.21×)
10m12977.964.040.219 / 188+51.1 (1.66×)

Solar conditions

June 2026 solar context

Analysis

Field Day 2026 propagation was a headwind on the workhorse bands and a tailwind on the high bands. Operators working 40m and 20m faced reach well below the typical June day, while 15m and especially 10m delivered substantially better openings than average. The net effect depends entirely on where a station chose to spend its operating time.

The two main nighttime and daytime DX bands told opposite stories. Both 40m and 20m showed markedly reduced reach to distant stations compared to the June baseline, with 20m running about two-thirds of its typical range and 40m similarly depressed. In contrast, 15m punched above its June norm by a meaningful margin, and 10m delivered exceptional propagation, reaching roughly half again as many unique stations as a typical June day and running well above even the month’s best performances. For teams that committed significant hours to the higher bands, conditions were a genuine scoring opportunity.

Solar conditions on Field Day weekend were favorable overall but came with a mixed bag of propagation signatures. The solar flux was well above the June mean, sitting near the top of the month’s range, which normally lifts the maximum usable frequency and favors the higher HF bands. That signal came through clearly in the 15m and 10m data. Geomagnetic activity was quiet, with Kp values mostly in the calm-to-unsettled range and well below the month’s stormier days. The low Kp is consistent with stable mid-latitude propagation, though it doesn’t explain the suppressed performance on 40m and 20m; that points to other factors in the ionospheric profile during the window, possibly absorption or unfavorable layer geometry that disproportionately affected the lower bands.

One important caveat clouds any propagation-only interpretation: FM29 had only nine active WSPR stations during the Field Day window, compared to nearly fourteen on a typical June day. That thirty-five percent reduction in the local participant pool means fewer receive sites and fewer transmit opportunities, which mechanically lowers the count of unique distant stations detected. Some of the apparent propagation deficit on 40m and 20m may therefore be an artifact of reduced local activity rather than purely ionospheric. The higher-band improvements are less likely to be participant-driven, since those bands depend more on openings than on station density, but the comparison is not entirely apples-to-apples.

For score interpretation, the lesson is straightforward: if your 20m or 40m contact counts fell short of expectations, propagation offers only a partial excuse, and the reduced number of local WSPR participants suggests other Field Day sites may have faced similar headwinds from non-propagation factors like participation or setup time. If your 15m or 10m results were strong, you can credit both good operating and genuinely favorable conditions. If you logged few 10m contacts despite the exceptional opening, that points to missed opportunity, either from antenna limitations or from not having an operator on that band when it was open.

For 2027 planning, this analysis argues for a dedicated high-band rover or second station with a strong 10m and 15m capability, staffed throughout the daylight hours. The 2026 data shows that even in a solar maximum June, the upper bands can deliver outsized reach when conditions align, and a team that ignores them leaves QSOs on the table that the propagation gods are offering for free.

Source: wspr.live (FM29-involving spots, 22-hr windows starting 18:00 UTC). Solar: kp.gfz.de archive. Narrative: Claude Sonnet 4.5. This page compares only what was visible on WSPR — Field Day phone/CW QSOs are not in this data. The metric is “unique distant stations involved in any WSPR exchange with an FM29 station,” which is a clean proxy for raw propagation reach in this grid but is not a count of Field Day QSOs.
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      • WSPR Network Monthly Reports
        • May 2026
        • April 2026
      • WSPR Field Day 2026 — Propagation Comparison
    • Satellite Activities
      • Saturday Clubhouse Satellite Opportunities
      • Weekly Satellite Report
      • Upcoming ISS APRS Activities
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    • Networking Infrastructure
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      • Satellite Rotator Controller
      • Satellite Station Remote Operation
    • SatNOGS Ground Station
    • Earth-Moon-Earth (EME)
    • Discovery Satellite Snooping Dish
    • GOES-19 Satellite Reception
    • Clubhouse Remote nRSP-ST Resource
    • Skunkworks GitHub Resource
    • ISS SSTV
    • NOAA Weather Fax
    • ADS-B
  • Technical Resources
    • Working Meteor Scatter at W2MMD
    • WSPR Network Resources
      • The TAPR WSPR Board for Dummies
      • Why Is My WSPR Signal 1500 Hz Off? — A Tale of Two Frequencies
      • GCARC WSPR Network — Project Description
      • GCARC WSPR Network — Technical Reference
      • GCARC WSPR Network — Band Selection Guide
      • GCARC WSPR Network — Analysis and Reporting
      • The GCARC WSPR Network — Member Q&A
    • DMR
      • What is a DMR Codeplug?
        • What Are DMR Channels?
        • What Are DMR Timeslots?
        • What is a Talkgroup in DMR?
        • What Are DMR Zones?
      • What is a DMR Hotspot?
      • Configuring DMR Hotspot for GCARC Talk Group
      • Connecting to the GCARC DMR TalkGroup with a Yaesu System Fusion Radio and a Hotspot
      • Using DM-1701 CPS Program
      • Open GD77 on Baofeng DM1701
      • Pi-based OpenGD77 Flasher: Bypassing Windows Driver Headaches
        • OpenGC77 Codeplug
    • Software-Defined Radios
      • Software Defined Radio Demystified
      • Installing an RTL-SDR on a Windows PC
      • SDR Tech Saturday Presentation January 2025
      • SDR Client Applications for Mac
      • Creating a PiAware Station to Track Airplanes
        • Installing PiAware Using the Prebuilt SD Card Image with Raspberry Pi Imager
        • Installing PiAware using Command Line Commands
    • Receiving ISS SSTV Images
    • Meshtastic
      • Getting Started with Meshtastic on 915 MHz
      • How to Join the GCARC Channel on Your Meshtastic Device Using a QR Code
      • Installing the Meshtastic CLI on a Windows PC
      • Window-Mounted 915 MHz Meshtastic Yagi Antenna Project
      • Meshtastic CLI Commands
    • Exploring Ham Radio Digital Modes: Packet Radio and WSJT-X
      • Packet Radio (AX.25) in Amateur Digital Communications
      • Exploring WSJT Digital Modes
    • BTECH UV-PRO Radio
      • Satellite Mode for the UV-PRO
    • TIDRADIO H3 Resources
      • TIDRADIO TD-H3 Transceiver: Comprehensive Briefing
      • Overview of Stock Firmware Menu System
      • Comparison of Stock TIDRADIO Firmware vs. nicFW V2 Firmware
    • Balloon Project
      • Balloon Launch – 2025-03-17
    • 3D Printed Projects
    • Tech Saturday Presentations
    • Receiving ISS HamTV
  • STEM Activities
    • STEM Club Weather
    • STEM Club Villanova Trip
    • STEM Club Satellite Pass Schedule
    • STEM Camp 2026
      • Calculator Skills — TI-84 Evo
  • Public Service
    • Amateur Radio & Served Agency Integration
    • Building Served Agency Capability
    • Winlink VHF and HF Gateways
    • APRS Weather Reporting Station
    • AREDN Development
  • The Foundation
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  • Contact

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