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confused about all the cluster spotting stuff — QRZ vs DXwatch vs the other ones

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ok so ive been licensed about 8 months now (general) and i keep hearing people talk about dx clusters and spotting networks but honestly i still dont fully understand how it all fits together. like i know QRZ is where you look people up and log QSOs but then theres also this DXwatch thing and i saw someone mention DX Summit too and i dont know if these are all showing the same spots or different ones or what.

i downloaded the Ham Radio Deluxe trial a while back and there was something in there about clusters but i never really connected it to anything. do you actually need to log into these sites to get spots or can your radio software just pull them automatically? and is there a reason to use one over another, like is DXwatch actually better for certain bands or regions or something

basically just trying to figure out what the workflow is supposed to look like when youre actually trying to work DX. right now i just spin the dial and hope lol

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so the way it basically works — all those sites (DXwatch, DX Summit, the cluster on QRZ) are pulling from the same underlying network of DX cluster nodes. operators around the world are posting spots either manually or through software, and those spots propagate through the whole network. so yeah you're mostly seeing the same data no matter which site you use, though there can be small timing differences and some sites filter differently by default.

the QRZ logbook has a built in spot lookup which is handy if youre already on the site logging a contact, but for actual hunting i usually just have a browser tab open to DXwatch with filters set for my bands. you can filter by continent, band, mode, all that stuff. DX Summit (oh3bk) is another good one and has been around forever, feels a bit old school but reliable.

for your radio software question — yeah HRD and a lot of other logging programs can connect directly to a cluster node via telnet. once you set that up spots can pop up in a bandmap or a window right inside the program and sometimes you can even click a spot and it tunes your radio. takes a bit of setup but once its working its pretty slick. just google your logging software name plus telnet cluster and youll find instructions for your specific program.

spinning the dial is honestly not a bad way to learn the bands though, dont give that up entirely

I was in the same boat not that long ago honestly. What clicked for me was just opening DXwatch in one tab while I was on the radio and watching what showed up. After like an hour of seeing spots come in you kinda get a feel for how it works — callsign, frequency, who spotted it, sometimes a comment like "599 loud" or whatever.

One thing nobody told me at first is that the spots arent always accurate. Like sometimes theyre dupes, sometimes the frequency is off by a couple kHz, sometimes its just completely wrong. So you still gotta tune around a bit even when you go to a spotted frequency. But its a huge head start compared to just scanning.

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