Coming up next weekend is the 2015 ARRL Sweepstakes SSB Contest, and I'm in a quandary whether to do it as a QRP station....or a QRO Station. No doubt I'll make my mind up at the very last minute after checking the propagation.
This year the contest runs from 2100 UTC on November 21st till 0259 UTC on November 23rd. The rules can be found on the ARRL website....HERE.
I'm looking forward to this contest so I can try out my brand new addition to my antenna arsenal, a 148' inverted L which runs across my backyard approximately South-West to North-East. It's about 60' off of the ground up in my trees. Over the past two months I have been experimenting with various wire antenna designs, and none of them have come close to my 80m OCF Dipole up at 50' from the ground. Most signals have been 3 to 4 S units down from my dipole. We will see how this antenna does and do a full report after the contest.
Sunday, 15 November 2015
Thursday, 12 November 2015
Get Ready..............
Get Ready, Winter Field Day is coming !!!! January 30th & 31st, 1700Z to 1700Z.
Don't be late !!
Check out the new Winter Field Day Association Website.....HERE.
Monday, 9 November 2015
In Remembrance
In Loving Memory of the
Officers, NCO's, and Men
of
2816 Squadron RAF Regiment
1941 - 1946
"PER ARDUA"
In Memory of
WO Derek Pilkington, BEM
Cpl Dave Crombe
United Kingdom Mobile Air Movements Squadron
"SWIFT TO MOVE"
Monday, 26 October 2015
CQ WW SSB Contest
What an outstanding weekend on the bands!!!!! I think all the bands were full of DX signals, I know 20m, 15m, and 10m were rocking practically the whole contest, and 40m was hot at night. It was really nice to have 10m wide open, I spent a lot of time there.
I managed to work 158 countries in a little over 12 hours operating. All the usual suspects were on the bands, but I did get to work a new country, 4L0A from the Republic of Georgia, heard him on 20m and snagged him on the second call. That's the first time I've ever heard Georgia on the air.
I also worked VU2CPL in Bangalore, India, on 20m Sunday afternoon on 20m. How I broke that pileup I will never know, it was frightening!!
The downside of the weekend is that on Saturday afternoon, in the middle of a huge pileup, my antenna decided it would be a good time to come down. Outside I went, man it was cold in the wind, I managed to get it back in the air and also put up a 31' vertical and some radials down as a spare in case I needed it during the night. We had winds of 60 kph gusting to 75 kph all afternoon and over night. So two hours of valuable operating time was lost.
Once again the "tuner uppers" were out in force, tuning up on top of active QSO's, and a few band police were heard, but not as many as usual. There were tons of European stations between 7.040 and 7.124, and very few of them working split for a change.
Overall the propagation wasn't bad, it certainly wasn't as bad as the numbers would have led us to believe. We started with SFI=115, SN=91, A Index at 7, and the K Index at 1, and finished on Sunday with the SFI=106, SN=74, A Index at 11, and the K Index at 2. The bands did get a bit noisy, but there was so many signals on them it was hard to tell what real affect the SFI had on them.
It's all over except submitting the log, and then it's getting things tuned up and sorted for the ARRL Sweepstakes on November 21st & 22nd.
I managed to work 158 countries in a little over 12 hours operating. All the usual suspects were on the bands, but I did get to work a new country, 4L0A from the Republic of Georgia, heard him on 20m and snagged him on the second call. That's the first time I've ever heard Georgia on the air.
I also worked VU2CPL in Bangalore, India, on 20m Sunday afternoon on 20m. How I broke that pileup I will never know, it was frightening!!
The downside of the weekend is that on Saturday afternoon, in the middle of a huge pileup, my antenna decided it would be a good time to come down. Outside I went, man it was cold in the wind, I managed to get it back in the air and also put up a 31' vertical and some radials down as a spare in case I needed it during the night. We had winds of 60 kph gusting to 75 kph all afternoon and over night. So two hours of valuable operating time was lost.
Once again the "tuner uppers" were out in force, tuning up on top of active QSO's, and a few band police were heard, but not as many as usual. There were tons of European stations between 7.040 and 7.124, and very few of them working split for a change.
Overall the propagation wasn't bad, it certainly wasn't as bad as the numbers would have led us to believe. We started with SFI=115, SN=91, A Index at 7, and the K Index at 1, and finished on Sunday with the SFI=106, SN=74, A Index at 11, and the K Index at 2. The bands did get a bit noisy, but there was so many signals on them it was hard to tell what real affect the SFI had on them.
It's all over except submitting the log, and then it's getting things tuned up and sorted for the ARRL Sweepstakes on November 21st & 22nd.
Monday, 19 October 2015
Winter Field Day 2016
On January 13th
& 14th, 2007, the airwaves came alive with the QSO’s of the very
first ever SPAR Winter Field Day.
Winter Field Day came about because many hams realized that we needed a
method of testing ourselves for winter emergencies. It’s not only during the warm months that
disasters and emergencies happen, so why don’t we practice in the cold
months…….frigid winds, icy limbs and bitter cold simply replace the
thunderstorms and blistering heat of summer.
Over the past four years SPAR has actually accomplished very little, the five
members of the Board of Directors are all getting up there in age, and have
admitted that they are not in the best of health. The silly thing here is that when the SPAR Bylaws were first written they do not allow for new Board members to be elected, the current five members are it, and are “there for
life”.
Just before Winter Field Day 2015, Walt, W5ALT, who had actually been
doing all of the work and was the “face” of SPAR suffered a very big
stroke. Of course nobody in SPAR knew
this until people started trying to upload their logs and the website wouldn't let them do it.
Around the end of February, Charlie, KY5U, another board member appeared on the
website for the first time in a very long time, and advised everyone that Walt had had a major stroke, and asked everyone to re-submit
their logs to him for scoring. Well, the re-submitted logs have never been seen again and no results have ever been posted. Most of us figured this was going to happen
as SPAR has been operating by accident for a long time.
Several individuals decided that Winter Field Day just had to be saved,
and given the current state of the SPAR Board members health wise, it would be
prudent to form a new association to take over the running of Winter Field Day,
and they have done just that.The new Winter Field Day Association website can be found HERE. And you can all pencil in January 30th & 31st 2016........that’s the
next Winter Field Day.
There is also a Facebook page, available HERE.
There is also a Facebook page, available HERE.
JOTA
What a great weekend for JOTA!! While the bands were not in the best of shape, I did manage to have nearly 100 QSO's with JOTA stations around the world......some more easily that others.
The propagation numbers at 1843 UTC Saturday were SFI=115, SN=68, A Index=8, and K Index=2. One can really feel that the bands are now slipping away to the bottom of this cycle, and I wonder what the numbers will be for next years Field Day.
I did learn something this weekend, from a seven year old Brownie in Tennessee, she told me that she knew all about Canada because we all worked in Santa's Workshop making the toys for the Children, and she was very happy we all did that............who was I to argue !!
It was great to hear so many youth on the air, perhaps there's hope for this hobby after all.
The propagation numbers at 1843 UTC Saturday were SFI=115, SN=68, A Index=8, and K Index=2. One can really feel that the bands are now slipping away to the bottom of this cycle, and I wonder what the numbers will be for next years Field Day.
I did learn something this weekend, from a seven year old Brownie in Tennessee, she told me that she knew all about Canada because we all worked in Santa's Workshop making the toys for the Children, and she was very happy we all did that............who was I to argue !!
It was great to hear so many youth on the air, perhaps there's hope for this hobby after all.
Sunday, 11 October 2015
Jamboree on the Air
It's that time of year again.........next weekend, October 17th & 18th, the HF bands should come alive with the voices of youth.
Jamboree on the Air, which is more commonly
known by its acronym JOTA, is an
international Scouting and Guiding activity held annually on the third full
weekend in October.
The event was first held in conjunction with the fiftieth
anniversary of Scouting in 1957, and was devised by a radio amateur with the
callsign G3BHK. It is now considered the largest event in Scouting.
Amateur radio operators from all over the world will participate with over
500,000 Scouts and Guides to teach them about radio and to assist
them to contact their fellow Scouts and Guides by means of amateur radio.
Since JOTA isn't a contest, there is no designated start time. Get on the air when you're ready!
In North America the following frequencies are used:
3.690 and 3.940
7.090 to 7.190
14.290
18.140
21.360
24.960
28.390
JOTA is a worldwide event, and JOTA stations in Europe will be looking for contacts as well. To avoid conflict with the Worked All Germany Contest, European JOTA Stations will be active on the following frequencies:
3.650 to 3.700
7.080 to 7.140
14.100 to 14.125 and 14.280 to 14.350
21.350 to 21.450
28.225 to 28.400
Get on the air and work the kids !!!!
Saturday, 3 October 2015
Antenna issues....
We have had a heck of a gale blowing here in Kingston for the past 24 hours and it is expected to continue into tomorrow. Winds are gusting to 50 kph and are expected to die down over-night.
Well, after three years up 50' in a maple tree my centre support line for my 80m OCF Dipole finally broke. The antenna is still up the tree, either the balun or the coax has found a branch to hang on to, but I could pull it all the way down using the coax.
Oh well, I can't complain after having to do little to no maintenance to it over the past 3 years. I'll have to get one of the guys to shoot a new line over the same tree with their compressed air cannon and I'll be back in action in no time.
The plan is to replace the current rope with UV resistant and to also use a piece of aircraft cable attached to the balun for extra strength.
The fun of amateur radio!!
Well, after three years up 50' in a maple tree my centre support line for my 80m OCF Dipole finally broke. The antenna is still up the tree, either the balun or the coax has found a branch to hang on to, but I could pull it all the way down using the coax.
Oh well, I can't complain after having to do little to no maintenance to it over the past 3 years. I'll have to get one of the guys to shoot a new line over the same tree with their compressed air cannon and I'll be back in action in no time.
The plan is to replace the current rope with UV resistant and to also use a piece of aircraft cable attached to the balun for extra strength.
The fun of amateur radio!!
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