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using DXwatch and cluster spots — am i doing this right?

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so ive been licensed about 8 months now and finally starting to get into chasing DX a bit more seriously. i downloaded the QRZ app and been using DXwatch on my laptop while im operating and honestly its kind of overwhelming at first but i think im starting to get the hang of it

my question is really about how people actually use the cluster in practice. like do you just scroll through the spots and tune to whatever looks interesting, or is there a smarter way to filter things down. i have the band filter set to 20m most of the time because thats where i spend most of my time but i still feel like im missing stuff or not really understanding what im looking at half the time

also is DXwatch basically the same data as what shows up in logging programs? i use log4om and i think it pulls spots too but i wasnt sure if they were pulling from the same network or different ones. sorry if this is a dumb question just trying to figure out the workflow here

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not a dumb question at all, this stuff genuinely takes a while to click. the short version is yeah most of the cluster tools — DXwatch, DX Summit, what your logging program pulls — they're all tapping into the same underlying Telnet cluster network more or less, so the spots are basically the same data with maybe a few minutes difference depending on the node. log4om definitely has built in cluster support so you can have spots pop up right in your logging window which is actually pretty handy once you get it configured.

for filtering, honestly the band filter is the right instinct. beyond that i usually also filter by my continent or sometimes specifically look for spots where the spotter is somewhere near me geographically, because a spot from a station in western Europe doesnt tell me much about whether i can actually hear the DX from here in the midwest. some of the tools let you filter by spotter location which helps a lot.

the other thing i'd say is dont stress too much about catching every spot. just pick one or two targets for a session and focus on those rather than spinning all over the place chasing everything. took me a while to learn that one honestly.

yeah what he said about the spotter location thing is real, i learned that the hard way spending like 20 minutes trying to work something that a guy in Japan spotted and i couldnt hear a thing lol. HamAlert is also worth looking at if you havent already — you can set it up to send you a push notification on your phone when a specific callsign or entity gets spotted, which is great if youre waiting on a particular one for a new country. its free and works pretty well in my experiance

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