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APRS station WA7JH-7 - show graphs
Comment: TH-D75A
Mic-E message: Custom 0
Location: 47°47.65' N 122°29.66' W - locator CN87ST00QO - show map
581.0 m Southeast bearing 150° from Kingston, Kitsap County, Washington, United States [?]
5.7 km Northeast bearing 24° from Indianola, Kitsap County, Washington, United States
24.2 km Northwest bearing 330° from Seattle, King County, Washington, United States
96.2 km Southeast bearing 137° from Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Last position: 2026-01-12 15:48:35 UTC (11h44m ago)
2026-01-12 07:48:35 PST local time at Kingston, United States [?]
Altitude: 3 m
Course: 176°
Speed: 0 km/h
Device: Kenwood: TH-D75 (ht)
Last path: WA7JH-7>EHEWVU via WIDE1-1,WIDE3-3,qAR,CRYSTL (suboptimal)
This station is transmitting packets with a configured path of over 3 digipeaters. This causes serious congestion in the APRS network and errors when plotting the station's route on a map. Please consider using a path of WIDE1-1,WIDE2-1 or WIDE2-2, or even WIDE1-1,WIDE2-2 if you are moving very far away from an iGATE.
Positions stored: 121
Other SSIDs: WA7JH WA7JH-14 WA7JH-13 WA7JH-RPT WA7JH-2 WA7JH-3 WA7JH-1 WA7JH-5
Stations which heard WA7JH-7 directly on radio –
callsign pkts first heard - UTC last heard longest (tx => rx) longest at - UTC

Only position packets which were originated by the station are shown here. The range statistics show some extra long hops, because some digipeaters do not correctly add themselves to the digipeater path. Please check the raw packets.
About this site
This page shows real-time information collected from the Automatic Position Reporting System Internet network (APRS-IS). APRS is used by amateur (ham) radio operators to transmit real-time position information, weather data, telemetry and messages over the radio. A vehicle equipped with a GPS receiver, a VHF transmitter or HF transceiver and a small computer device called a tracker transmits it's location, speed and course in a small data packet, which is then received by a nearby iGate receiving site which forwards the packet on the Internet. Systems connected to the Internet can send information on the APRS-IS without a radio transmitter, or collect and display information transmitted anywhere in the world.
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