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Amateur radio operators go on air for field day
Valley Press on ^ | Friday, June 26, 2009. | RICH BREAULT

Posted on 06/26/2009 12:06:22 PM PDT by BenLurkin

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To: usconservative
Our nightly chat typically consists of what the a**hole in chief has screwed up that day.

I enjoy monitoring these ragchews immensely

21 posted on 06/27/2009 5:40:08 AM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: BenLurkin

Thanks for the post.
I think the last time I did a field day was in the late 50s, hahaha.
After that, I spent my time chasing DX and finally made it to top of the honor roll.
I also did Army Mars.
DE W4EX


22 posted on 06/27/2009 5:40:59 AM PDT by AlexW (Now in the Philippines . Happy not to be back in the USA for now.)
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To: BenLurkin

Thanks for posting. Am off to “Field Day” in ten minutes to begin setting up. Hopefully, we’ll not break 100 degrees today. We’ve had 9 of last 11 days over 100 including one 105 degree day.
73


23 posted on 06/27/2009 6:06:45 AM PDT by miele man
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To: BenLurkin
Here is a link to the info on Field Day 2009 http://www.arrl.org/contests/forms/fd-2009-packet.pdf

TTUL...73...Al...WB6YNM...SK www.Varmintal.com

Good Hunting... from Varmint Al

24 posted on 06/27/2009 7:02:31 AM PDT by Varmint Al
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To: Oshkalaboomboom

During the 60’s and 70’s, Barry Goldwater (K7UGA/AF7UGA) had a team of hams authorized to use his station in Paradise Valley (on a hill at the head of 40th St) to run phone patches for servicemen, principally in Southeast Asia.

A friend of mine from work was on that team, and invited me to Barry’s shack one Sunday morning to watch the operation. It was in the guest house, next to the main residence.

As you drove up, you saw this tall aluminum forest consisting of several gigantic beam antennas (mostly log-periodic designs IIRC) on similarly gigantic towers. A couple of them were “sky needles,” which were tapered masts which rotated at the bottom, turning the tower along with its antennas.

Inside the shack was a station with two or three operator positions. Two things caught my eye: A TMC transmitter capable of about 4KW (IOW, about 4 times the Amateur’s legal limit) which they could use on the AF MARS (Military Amateur Radio Service) frequencies. And also the captured VietCong flag draped across the couch. The drapes over the window above the couch were drawn, Bob said, to frustrate any possible sniper.

When my friend Bob took over the operator’s chair, I saw how smoothly they ran the operation. He had a headset on which was in constant contact with an AT&T operator the whole day. Each military base in S.E.A. had an appointment list ready, and would read that list, along with stateside phone numbers, to Bob and simultaneously to the phone operator (whom Bob had set up to listen in).

The phone operator would phone the stateside family while the distant counterpart Ham made sure the service member was avaiable on base, either at the base’s station or on the base telephone system.

When both ends were ready, the Hams on both ends would say something like, “you’re on the air—go!” and there would ensue a three-minute phone call. Each Ham would operate their transmitter with a foot switch, listening to the conversation to know when to transmit. Meanwhile, the Ham on the far end and the stateside telco operator were getting the next pair ready for their appointed time.

In a good month, AF7UGA logged about 3,000 phone patches like this.


25 posted on 06/27/2009 7:44:57 AM PDT by Erasmus (Barack Hussein Obama: America's toast!)
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To: xrmusn
I used to tell my ‘ham’ buddies, I was never an “Amateur Operator”, I was always a Professional....

I was a 'perfessional' in radio for a couple of years before I was a 'amatoor.' [Although I will confess to being a 'Charlie Bander' before I were a pro.]

We used to joke around at our dinky commercial stations by saying our station ID with the zone digit in the middle (e.g., "W9RMN). Never had the guts to do it on the air though.

26 posted on 06/27/2009 7:57:38 AM PDT by Erasmus (Barack Hussein Obama: America's toast!)
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To: Erasmus
Back in the '50s I was a student engineer (had a 1st Class commercial phone ticket) at the Miami University (Ohio) campus radio stations. Our carrier current station, limited to campus only, was WRMU. Our FM station, still on the air, was WMUB. We engineers joked about "This is WRUM and WBUM, your Rum-Bum stations in Oxford, Ohio." Never on the air, of course.
27 posted on 06/27/2009 10:33:30 AM PDT by JoeFromSidney
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To: Oshkalaboomboom
I read just a week ago or so that Navy MARS intends to shut down within a year.

Too bad, but I reckon the various comm sats make up a fairly robust system, and in reality are pretty hard to shoot down (though I'm not sure they can't be effectively jammed).

28 posted on 06/27/2009 11:23:10 AM PDT by Clinging Bitterly (He must fail.)
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To: BenLurkin

Bookmark


29 posted on 06/27/2009 11:52:18 AM PDT by dragnet2
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To: Gator113
I would appreciate any of you Ham’s coming forward on listing or commenting on justifications for the expense and effort for a guy to get into Ham radio.

Ham radio is great...Trust me, when and if the $hit ever hits the fan bad, your cells, computers, blackberries whatever, will be absolutely useless.

I can talk to the world, completely off the grid, portable power...Dependent on no one...

It's very cool to talk to some guy living on a small boat with his dog, on some tiny remote south pacific island, as he describes his environment and life...

I've talked to people at 35,000 feet flying Lear jets others navigating Alaskan mountain peaks in twin engine turbo props, guys in Russia, Tasmania, the Congo, Cuba... you name it...

Very cool stuff. Oh, and Morse code is addicting and has helped many people to quit smoking and pick up a new habit, a habit that turns out to be really fun and extremely addicting. So addicting, some guys never use a microphone...

Then throw in the broadcast shortwave bands...Some very interesting and bizarre listening there. If you make the leap, get a radio with a general coverage receiver, and sit back and listen to Radio Cuba for a good laugh.

30 posted on 06/27/2009 12:13:51 PM PDT by dragnet2
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To: Texas Fossil; mylife
QRZ?

I'm going to see what our local club has going on today. Honestly their (and many clubs) Em Comm activities are too much in bed with the government for my liking. But still, as I have mentioned in another thread, I am interested in being set up for portable, rapidly deployable HF operation for whatever purpose it might have in the future.

I'm putting together a balanced fed flat top mostly for NVIS work on the lower bands, but I do want some interstate and transcontinental capability.

With that in mind I recently picked up a store bought AV-18VS vertical which is just large enough to be a full size radiator on 20M and up, yet collapses to about a 5’ package. I could not have bought the material for a home built antenna that would be as light and rugged as that for the 99 bucks, I tried. There are the buddistick variants and other compromise designs that would appeal more to, say, a backpack QRPer, but that is not my aim.

I have been perfecting a more rugged coax feed and coil mounting arrangement for the little Hy-Gain, but haven't figured out a better tap setup yet. Maybe a spring loaded hook probe (as in a standard test lead kit). I see them used for coil taps on some of the antenna kits out in the wild, but I don't know how much power the small hook will handle and the rest of the setup will easily handle full legal limit. I plan a stake down tripod mount using a standard camera tripod, putting the base of the antenna almost 4’ off the ground, and from there will work out an assortment of throw down radials that will simply alligator clip to the base. Finally, when I find a suitable joining piece I'll split the bottom section just above the coil so the longest part of the whole thing will be within the 5’ maximum, and paint the vertical element for decreased visibility.

So it will be no tuner required for any band (though I use a mid size MFJ manual tuner), and full size on the higher bands. I expect 5 minute setup will be no problem.

I wanted to have it on the air to try this weekend but prospecting for work has interfered the last several days. That's something that has to take priority right now as I'm close to running out of money. Something good may be happening in the very near future at a location I had not considered. Everything is a compromise though and I could do a whole lot worse than North Carolina.

Still need to get a decent portable rig. I'm really liking the look of the FT897D and if I can scratch up the dough that is probably what it will be. I really like the internal battery capability that would give some operating time without setting up power. 857D is probably a close second and certainly lots of used ones are around. The various Icoms are really nice but seem to be a lot more expensive. I can wait though. The old FT747 I dug out of the packed up stuff has had all of the issues associated with age and disuse worked out, and I did some mods to improve the audio and provide variable SSB drive, and installed LED lighting. Full general coverage was implemented ages ago. Bare bones as it is, it's working pretty darn good and will eventually make a great backup rig.

31 posted on 06/27/2009 12:31:29 PM PDT by Clinging Bitterly (He must fail.)
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To: mylife
I enjoy monitoring these ragchews immensely

Are you out in my neck of the woods?

32 posted on 06/27/2009 1:03:36 PM PDT by usconservative (When The Ballot Box No Longer Counts, The Ammunition Box Does. (What's In Your Ammo Box?))
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To: All

THREAD BUMP.

#

QUOTE:

http://www.arrl.org/contests/announcements/fd/

ARRL Field Day

June 27-28, 2009

Always The Fourth Full Weekend In June
Field Day T-shirts, participation pins and other items available for order now!

To find a group in your own home area, use the FD Station Locator or find a club

#

http://www.eham.net/articles/21891?ehamsid=57f0b8b1dc5c3c541c21e77f6accf6a9

“Governors Show Support for Amateur Radio as ARRL Field Day Approaches:”

from The ARRL Letter, Vol 28, No 25 on June 26, 2009
Website: http://www.arrl.org/


33 posted on 06/27/2009 1:26:43 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

VIDEO:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8v3mxBxAp4

“Ham Radio Field Day Tests Emergency Communications”
(Added June 26, 2009)


34 posted on 06/27/2009 1:30:29 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

stepping back in time...

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1589748/posts

“ARRL Ham Aid ‘Gear Ready to Go’ Awaits Next Disaster”
The Amercian Radio Relay League ^ | Feb 28, 2006 | awextra@arrl.org
Posted on March 3, 2006 6:52:50 PM PST by Denver Ditdat


35 posted on 06/27/2009 1:32:26 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: usconservative

Nooo... Texas


36 posted on 06/27/2009 1:40:27 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: All

A Look at SKYWARN (via Videos)

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_type=videos&search_query=SKYWARN&search_sort=video_date_uploaded


37 posted on 06/27/2009 1:41:39 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: Gator113
Do it!

Getting into Ham Radio has probably never been easier. Some folks call it “dumbing down” but I'm not so sure. No code eliminates a hurdle (if only psychological) for lots of folks but I think the various exams still pretty well cover the technical subjects most Hams should know.

Get The ARRL Ham Radio License Manual. Lots of places carry it. Radio Shack, I suspect, and I know Wal Mart has it online. Within it you will find everything you need to pass a Technician exam, as well as info on how to find local test sessions and radio clubs.

Technician class is easy and will get you started, but it won't give you the usable (right now) HF privileges it sounds as though you want. But you can gear up for VHF/UHF on the cheap to get started, used rigs abound for a hundred bucks or less and antennas are an equally negligible expense. Once active, a lot of the knowledge you will need for higher classes will come naturally from experience.

When you do pass your Technician exam (and it will be easier than you think), I would advise you to go ahead and take the General exam at the same session anyway. It won't cost any more but some of your free time and you just might get lucky. I passed my Extra exam a couple months ago. I had gone to the test session from my “free” General since I had passed that written element back in ‘82 when it was a requirement for Technician. The exam was difficult and required a lot of thought, and I just barely passed it, but I had not studied for it at all (but note well what I said about experience).

The expense and complexity of your station will only be what you want it to be. For a home HF station you can pick up something like an old Kenwood TS530 or TS830 for something near a couple hundred bucks and you will have one of the nicest sounding stations on the air (not to mention one of the prettiest rigs ever built). More modern compact solid state gear is somewhat more expensive but you can get something suitable for the boat and portable use for close to three hundred. And the free and super cheap hand me down stuff is out there as others have said.

Antennas likewise. Stringing wires between buildings and trees gets you on the air with little expense, and just starting out you shouldn't go to the expense of a tower and so forth right off the bat anyway, not knowing wat you're really going to want.

38 posted on 06/27/2009 1:44:20 PM PDT by Clinging Bitterly (He must fail.)
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To: Clinging Bitterly

Good luck with your rig.

Im gonna be a while. heck, I cant even seem to set up an internet radio this weekend.


39 posted on 06/27/2009 1:47:11 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: All

Quote:

http://www.arrl.org/FandES/field/pscm/sec1-ch1.html

Public Service Communications Manual
Section I: The Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES)

Previous | Next · PSCM Contents
Chapter One: Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES)

The Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) consists of licensed amateurs who have voluntarily registered their qualifications and equipment for communications duty in the public service when disaster strikes. Every licensed amateur, regardless of membership in ARRL or any other local or national organization, is eligible for membership in the ARES. The only qualification, other than possession of an Amateur Radio license, is a sincere desire to serve. Because ARES is an amateur service, only amateurs are eligible for membership. The possession of emergency-powered equipment is desirable, but is not a requirement for membership.

1.1 ARES Organization

There are four levels of ARES organization—national, section, district and local. National emergency coordination at ARRL Headquarters is under the supervision of the ARRL Field and Educational Services Manager, who is responsible for advising all ARES officials regarding their problems, maintaining contact with federal government and other national officials concerned with amateur emergency communications potential, and in general with carrying out the League’s policies regarding emergency communications.

1.2 Section Level

At the section level, the Section Emergency Coordinator is appointed by the Section Manager (who is elected by the ARRL members in his or her section) and works under his/her supervision. In most sections, the SM delegates to the SEC the administration of the section emergency plan and the authority to appoint District and local ECs. Some of the ARRL sections with capable SECs are well-organized. A few have scarcely any organization at all. It depends almost entirely on who the section members have put into office as SM and whom he/she has appointed as SEC.

1.3 Local Level

It is at the local level where most of the real emergency organizing gets accomplished, because this is the level at which most emergencies occur and the level at which ARES leaders make direct contact with the ARES member-volunteers and with officials of the agencies to be served. The local EC is therefore the key contact in the ARES. The EC is appointed by the SEC, usually on the recommendation of the DEC. Depending on how the SEC has set up the section for administrative purposes, the EC may have jurisdiction over a small community or a large city, an entire county or even a group of counties. Whatever jurisdiction is assigned, the EC is in charge of all ARES activities in his area, not just one interest group, one agency, one club or one band.

1.4 District Level

In the large sections, the local groups could proliferate to the point where simply keeping track of them would be more than a full-time chore, not to mention the idea of trying to coordinate them in an actual emergency. To this end, SECs have the option of grouping their EC jurisdictions into logical units or “districts” and appointing a District EC to coordinate the activities of the local ECs in the district. In some cases, the districts may conform to the boundaries of governmental planning or emergency-operations districts, while in others they are simply based on repeater coverage or geographical boundaries. Figure 2 depicts the typical section ARES structure.

1.5 Assistant ECs

Special-interest groups are headed up by Assistant Emergency Coordinators, designated by the EC to supervise activities of groups operating in certain bands, especially those groups which play an important role at the local level, but they may be designated in any manner the EC deems appropriate.

1.6 Planning Committee

These assistants, with the EC as chairman, constitute the local ARES planning committee and they meet together from time to time to discuss problems and plan projects to keep the ARES group active and well-trained.

There are any number of different situations and circumstances that might confront an EC, and his/her ARES unit should be organized in anticipation of them. An EC for a small town might find that the licensed amateur group is so small that appointing assistants is unnecessary or undesirable. On the other hand, an EC for a large city may find that even his assistants need assistants and that sometimes it is necessary to set up a special sub-organization to handle it. There is no specific point at which organization ceases and operation commences. Both phases must be concurrent because a living organization is a changing one, and the operations of a changing organization must change with the organization.

1.7 Operation and Flexibility

We have discussed how a typical ARES unit may be organized. Just what shape the plan in your locality will take depends on what your EC has to work with. He/she uses what he/she has, and leaves provision in the plan for what he/she hopes, wants and is trying to get. Flexibility is the keynote. The personnel, equipment and facilities available today may not be available tomorrow; conversely, what is lacking today may be available tomorrow. In any case, bear in mind that organizing and planning are not a one-person task. The EC is simply the leader, or, as the title indicates, the coordinator. His/her effectiveness inevitably will depend on what kind of a group he/she has to work with; that is, on you and your cohorts. Make yourself available to your EC as a member of his planning committee, or in any capacity for which you think you are qualified.

Local ARES operation will usually take the form of nets—HF nets, VHF (repeater) nets, even RTTY, packet or other special-mode nets, depending on need and resources available. Your EC should know where your particular interests lie, so that you can be worked in where your special talents will do the most good.

It is not always possible to use the services of all ARES members. While it is general policy that no ARES member must belong to any particular club or organization to participate in the program, local practical considerations may be such that you cannot be used. This is a matter that has to be decided by your EC. In some cases, even personality conflicts can cause difficulties; for example, the EC may decide that he cannot work with a particular person, and that the local ARES would be better served by excluding that person. This is a judgment that the EC would have to make; while personality conflicts should be avoided, they do arise, more often than we would prefer. The EC on the job must take the responsibility for making such subjective evaluations, just as the SEC and DEC must evaluate the effectiveness of the job being done by the EC.

1.8 ARES Operation During Emergencies and Disasters

Operation in an emergency net is little different from operation in any other net, requires preparation and training. This includes training in handling of written messages—that is, what is generally known as “traffic handling.” Handling traffic is covered in detail in the ARRL Operating Manual. This is required reading for all ARES members—in fact, for all amateurs aspiring to participate in disaster communications.

The specifications of an effective communication service depend on the nature of the information which must be communicated. Pre-disaster plans and arrangements for disaster communications include:

Identification of clients who will need Amateur Radio communication services.
Discussion with these clients to learn the nature of the information which they will need to communicate, and the people they will need to communicate with.
Specification, development and testing of pertinent services.
While much amateur-to-amateur communicating in an emergency is of a procedural or tactical nature, the real meat of communicating is formal written traffic for the record. Formal written traffic is important for:
A record of what has happened—frequent status review, critique and evaluation. Completeness which minimizes omission of vital information.
Conciseness, which when used correctly actually takes less time than passing informal traffic.
Easier copy—receiving operators know the sequence of the information, resulting in fewer errors and repeats.
When relays are likely to be involved, standard ARRL message format should be used. The record should show, wherever possible:
A message number for reference purposes.
A precedence indicating the importance of the message.
A station of origin so any reply or handling inquiries can be referred to that station.
A check (count of the number of words in the message text) so receiving stations will know whether any words were missed.
A place of origin, so the recipient will know where the message came from (not necessarily the location of the station of origin).
Filing time, ordinarily optional but of great importance in an emergency message.
Date of origin.
The address should be complete and include a telephone number if known. The text should be short and to the point, and the signature should contain not only the name of the person sending the message but his title or connection also, if any.
Point-to-point services for direct delivery of emergency and priority traffic do not involve relays. Indeed, the full ARRL format is often not needed to record written traffic. Shortened forms should be used to save time and effort. For example, the call sign of the originating station usually identifies the place of origin. Also, the addressee is usually known and close by at the receiving station, so full address and telephone number are often superfluous. In many cases, message blanks can be designed so that only key words, letters or numbers have to be filled in and communicated. In some cases, the message form also serves as a log of the operation. Not a net goes by that you don’t hear an ARL Fifty or an ARL Sixty One. Unfortunately, “greetings by Amateur Radio” does not apply well during disaster situations. You may hear an ARL text being used for health and welfare traffic, but rarely during or after the actual disaster. Currently, no ARL text describes the wind speed and barometric pressure of a hurricane, medical terminology in a mass casualty incident or potassium iodide in a nuclear power plant drill. While no one is suggesting that an ARL text be developed for each and every situation, there is no reason why amateurs can’t work with the local emergency management organizations and assist them with more efficient communications.

Amateurs are often trained and skilled communicators. The emergency management community recognizes these two key words when talking about the Amateur Radio Service. Amateurs must use their skills to help the agencies provide the information that needs to be passed, while at the same time showing their talents as trained communicators who know how to pass information quickly and efficiently. We are expected to pass the information accurately, even if we do not understand the terminology.

Traffic handlers and ARES members are resourceful individuals. Some have developed other forms or charts for passing information. Some hams involved with the SKYWARN program, for instance, go down a list and fill in the blanks, while others use grid squares to define a region. Regardless of the agency that we are working with, we must use our traffic-handling skills to the utmost advantage. Sure, ARL messages are beneficial when we are passing health and welfare traffic. But are they ready to be implemented in times of need in your community? The traffic handler, working through the local ARES organizations, must develop a working relationship with those organizations who handle health and welfare inquiries. Prior planning and personal contact are the keys to allowing an existing National Traffic System to be put to its best use. If we don’t interface with the agencies we serve, the resources of the Amateur Radio Service will go untapped.

Regardless of the format used, the appropriate procedures cannot be picked up solely by reading or studying. There is no substitute for actual practice. Your emergency net should practice regularly—much more often than it operates in a real or simulated emergency. Avoid complacency, the feeling that you will know how to operate when the time comes. You won’t, unless you do it frequently, with other operators whose style of operating you get to know.

Previous | Next · PSCM Contents


40 posted on 06/27/2009 1:48:54 PM PDT by Cindy
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