06:25 JQ2DUX/2 on JP-1458(Ishimakisan Tame Prefectural Nature Park, JP-AI) 7006.0 CW RBN 21 dB 19 WPM via JH7CSU1-#[JH7CSU1-#]

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This appears to be a message from a ham radio operator in Morse code, which is being decoded and transmitted through the internet using a service called RBN (Reverse Beacon Network). Here's a breakdown of what we can infer:

* **06:25**: The time of transmission.

* **JQ2DUX/2**: This is the callsign of the transmitting ham radio operator. Callsigns are unique identifiers assigned to amateur radio operators worldwide.

+ "JQ" indicates that the operator is from Japan (ham radio prefix "JA" was changed to "JO" in 2008, but some operators kept their old "JQ" prefix).

+ "2DUX/2" suggests this is a temporary or portable callsign (the "/2" suffix), likely used for expeditions or specific events.

* **JP-1458(Ishimakisan Tame Prefectural Nature Park, JP-AI)**: This is the location of the transmitting station. It appears to be an IOTA (Island On The Air) reference number (**JP-1458**), which corresponds to a specific geographic location on land in Japan. However, it seems like there's additional information embedded here.

+ "Ishimakisan Tame Prefectural Nature Park" suggests the operator is operating from this nature park in Japan. IOTA reference numbers usually refer to islands or remote locations, but this appears to be a non-island location.

+ "(JP-AI)" seems to indicate that the IOTA reference number corresponds to "Japanese mainland" category AI (the format of such identifiers can vary).

* **7006.0 CW**: The transmission frequency is 7.006 MHz, which is a well-known amateur radio band for CW (Continuous Wave) transmissions.

* **RBN 21 dB 19 WPM via JH7CSU1-#[JH7CSU1-#]**: This part refers to the reception of the transmission through the RBN service.

Here's what we can infer from this message:

* The ham radio operator (JQ2DUX/2) is transmitting a CW signal on 7.006 MHz from the Ishimakisan Tame Prefectural Nature Park in Japan.

* The transmission has been received and decoded through the RBN service, with an SNR of 21 dB and an operating speed of 19 WPM via JH7CSU1-#, which suggests that another operator (JH7CSU1) is receiving and decoding this transmission.

Keep in mind that Morse code transmissions like this are usually short-lived, and the information above may be specific to a particular moment in time.