23:52 JK1DHT/1 on JP-0010(Nikko National Park, JP-FS,JP-GM,JP-TC) 7003.5 CW RBN 19 dB 20 WPM via JN1ILK-#[JN1ILK-#]

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It looks like you've provided a text output of a ham radio transmission. Here's a breakdown of the information:

**23:52**: The time of day, in 24-hour format.

**JK1DHT/1**: The amateur radio call sign of the operator who is transmitting. The "/1" indicates that JK1DHT is operating with a remote antenna system (RAS) or a repeater at an output power of 1 W (this can vary).

**JP-0010**: The location of the transmission, specifically Nikko National Park in Japan.

**JP-FS**, **JP-GM**, and **JP-TC**: These are suffixes that indicate the transmission is within specific geographic areas: Fuji-Shizuoka (FS), Gunma (GM), and Tochigi-Chiba (TC) prefectures. This helps with propagation prediction and RBN reporting.

**7003.5**: The frequency of the transmission, in kHz.

**CW**: The mode of transmission, which stands for Continuous Wave or Morse code keying.

**RBN**: This is likely referring to the Reverse Beacon Network (RBN), an online network that reports amateur radio transmissions to help with propagation and contest scoring.

**19 dB**: The signal strength, measured in decibels relative to 1 W (dBm). A higher number indicates a stronger signal.

**20 WPM**: The speed of the transmission in words per minute. This is relatively fast for Morse code.

**via JN1ILK-#[JN1ILK-#]**: This is likely indicating that the transmission was received and relayed by an amateur radio station (JN1ILK) as part of a multi-hop path or cluster, which helps with propagation prediction and real-time reporting on RBN.

This output would have been generated by a software tool called "RBN" or another type of DX cluster client, which aggregates and reports amateur radio transmissions in near-real time.