| UTC | Freq | Call | DXCC | Comment | Spotter |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14:37 | 18155.5 | J88IH | St. Vincent |
CQ DX & j88vl USB | J88IH |
| 14:37 | 28182.3 | DC3LH | Fed. Rep. of Germany |
W9YUM | |
| 14:37 | 21075.2 | 4T95O | Peru |
TNX, FT8, HNY, | PU2TES |
| 14:37 | 28503.0 | K1NF | United States |
ME Cumberland | 2I0WMN |
| 14:37 | 14235.0 | SP3TYJ | Poland |
CQ CQ | SP3POB/P |
| 14:37 | 432482.0 | DB0INN | Fed. Rep. of Germany |
JN67JT-IO92WS 529 tr | G4ODA |
| 14:37 | 21049.0 | ZA/ZL4TE | Albania |
POTA AL-0010 | F4HZR |
| 14:37 | 28010.9 | HH2K | Haiti |
cw | N1BMT |
| 14:37 | 14015.0 | K1LZ | United States |
CW | YB9ELS |
| 14:37 | 21074.0 | UT8SQ | Ukraine |
FT8 -16dB from KN28 950Hz | YB1HR |
| 14:37 | 28463.0 | 9A5M | Croatia |
5-9 79 | W8DEO |
| 14:37 | 21140.0 | KE1VT | United States |
FT4 1059hz tnx | F5MNW |
| 14:36 | 14080.0 | R1CP | European Russia |
FT4 +04dB from KP50 2617Hz | EA2DYB |
| 14:36 | 28350.0 | 9A1A | Croatia |
59 IN MS | KI5YWP |
| 14:36 | 28475.0 | CX4DPG | Uruguay |
F4LDN | |
| 14:36 | 18101.6 | RT6Z | European Russia |
KB8OTK | |
| 14:36 | 28355.0 | VP9/MM0EFI | Bermuda |
57 NA-005 | LX1AX |
| 14:36 | 21260.0 | VE9FI | Canada |
DXEU | VE9FI |
| 14:36 | 7143.0 | PD2026HNY | Netherlands |
5/9 +++ 73 specaill call goed | PD1HT |
| 14:36 | 28180.3 | WB8P | United States |
IM98PG<>EM99 FT4 FT4 Sent: -05 Rcvd: -13 | EA5BCO |
The DX Cluster is a tool used by radio amateurs to share real-time information about radio links (DX) and active stations in frequency. It is a network of interconnected servers that allows radio operators to post and receive reports (called "spots") on active DX stations in the band, indicating frequency, callsign, mode and other useful information.
A DX Cluster node is a server or access point that offers service to other hams, allowing them to connect via specific software, via packet radio, or via telnet terminal.
Radio operators publish "spots" to report DX stations they have heard or connected to, specifying the frequency and other information.
The spots are shared in real time with all users connected to the DX Cluster's worldwide network.
Radio amateurs and SWLs can use this information to search for new DX stations to connect (or listen to), following the frequency and mode directions.