NOVEMBER 3 VICTOR ECHO MIKE
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NOVEMBER 3 VICTOR ECHO MIKE

ham radio Projects and musings from a (Relatively) new operator

survey says

11/28/2016

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     A couple posts ago I tacked a short survey onto the end, asking what the strangest thing you.ve ever used as an antenna was.  For me, it's my downspout/gutter inverted L that I wrote about previously.  Some of you really had some doozies though!  Before I get to those, here's the survey results:
  1. Other 65% (I guess it doesn't surprise me to see this as the top choice - the strangest antenna's are things you wouldn't think to put on a survey form!)
  2. Flagpole 24%
  3. Rain gutters 12%
     So, ignoring the fact that these numbers add up to more than 100% (thank you rounding errors!) here are some of the more interesting "Other" antenna's that popped up in this informal survey.  Thanks to those that shared them!
  • "In grad school I lived in a "garden level" (half underground) apartment.  After some experimenting, I attached a couple of clamps to the copper pipes that ran up to the air conditioner condenser unit on the roof.  Fed it with copper wire, tuned it as best I could and worked (the former) Yugoslavia with my 5 watt Argonaut."
  • "Went to Saipan during Easter week 1968 after a devastating typhoon.  Loaded a chain link fence at Kobler Airfield on 75 meters with a Swan 500C.  Got comms back to Guam, used it for several days until TTPI got their links back in operation.  Navy gave me a commendation."
  • "Two hacksaw blades used on 2 meters"
  • "Disused cable TV network, the whole length of the street. Tuned up a treat on top band."
  • Fences - both barbed wire and disconnected electric came up
  • "Car body"
  • "A long wire mounted on a building to shock birds away. It had been disconnected but they left the wire intact."
  • "Round aluminum sled"
  • "Metal bunk bed in a Navy barracks."
  • "bed springs"
So, after reading some of these, my rain gutters don't sound so unusual after all......

73!
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Loving the standards

11/27/2016

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     No, I'm not referring to the Jazz standards by Duke Ellington or John Coltrane - I'm referring to the "standards" that exist in ham radio and electronics.  While the standards aren't always followed, it is nice to be able to rely on certain things, like the fact that red wires are generally positive and black wires are generally negative.  It's also great that powerpoles are generally assembled with "Red on the Right."  Another "standard" that we use in Ham Radio is the 50 ohm antenna/feedline system standard.  Then there's the pneumonic that my dad taught me as a kid to remember the legs of a transistor - his name and his two buddies - Ed, Barry, & Charlie (Emitter, Base, Collector.)  None of these however, are the standard that I'm geeking out about today.
     Today, I'm excited about the 3/8-24 thread standard that we use for antenna's.  I have no idea how this standard came about, or even if it's really the ideal thread and bolt size for our service's application, but I'm still pumped about it.  Why is that?  Because it makes playing around easier when parts made by different manufacturers fit together!  In my case, I'm thankful for it, because it let me play around, and use parts from my Buddipole Antenna in my mobile mount while I activated Hopewell Furnace for National Parks on the Air.

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     For this arrangement I put 2 of the 11 inch arms together, screwed them into the mount on my trunk, followed by the coil, and then one of the telescoping whips to top it off.  Because I was shooting for the 20 meter band, and I wanted as much efficiency as possible, I basically started with the telescoping part fully extended, and the tap on the coil set to jump over pretty much the entire coil - this made the antenna resonant a frequency higher than 20 meters, meaning the antenna was electrically to short.  To "lengthen" the antenna I just adjusted the coil by moving the tap down (physically) a couple windings at a time, until I found the point where one tap made the antenna just a little to short, and the next tap made it just a little too long.
     Since I started with the telescoping whip fully extended, I chose the tap that made the antenna just slightly too long, and then I adjusted the telescoping whip to make shorter, to fine tune the antenna where I needed it.  It worked great!
     Now, without an actual antenna range, and all kinds of fancy measurement tools, I can't actually make any performance claims, but it "felt" like this worked better than my 20 meter hamstick normally does.  My logic is this:
  • It ended up being a slightly longer antenna than the hamstick.  More antenna element and less coil generally makes for a more efficient antenna, all else being equal.
  • The coil for the Buddipole has a much larger diameter and more spacing between windings than the tiny wire tightly wound around the fiberglass rod inside the hamstick.  A Bigger coil, bigger wire, more space between windings also generally makes for a more efficient antenna.
  • The diameter of the antenna element is larger, so in theory this should also be more broad-banded than the hamstick.
     Now, for 20 meters, I'd probably be even better off with something that can be full size, with no coil, like this little number from MFJ (17' telescoping whip), but since I don't have one of these, I'll just make what I have work.  At some point I plan on grabbing a couple of these at it would definitely help give me more flexibility with my portable antenna stuff.  Once I do, I'll be sure to share what I find as I play around with it.

     Playing around with this arrangement also made me realize that I have a couple other options that should work better than my hamsticks too (when I'm parked anyway - I'm not about to use this while going 70mph down the highway, I have no idea what wind loads the Buddipole parts where designed to handle!)  The first and most obvious would be to use the same arrangement, but with the tap on different spots of the coil to use it for 6, 10, 12, 15, 17, 30, and 40 meters.  I also realized that it "might" work to put both coils in a row, one after the other, to use it on 80 meters - I'll let you know how that works out when I have time to try it.
    With all that being said, I'll wrap up with a salute to the 3/8-24 standard, and say "thank you" to all the manufacturers that so kindly make stuff according to the standards!
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A New Antenna

11/16/2016

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     I'd like to shoot some RF in your direction:
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     During a recent NPOTA activation of the Petersburg National Battlefield (where, by they way, the hours on the website are wrong - I learned the hard way that the Eastern Front Visitor's Center closes at sunset, not 8pm as stated on the web) I took the above picture.  
     The canon here was very close to the parking area, and I suddenly had the urge to run a wire over to it, clip it on with a battery clamp, load it up with tuner, and use it as an antenna.  Alas, the paint was really thick, so that wouldn't have actually worked.  I mentioned this on the old trusty book of faces, and Scott Davis had an idea....
     So.....without further ado, I bring to you the newest antenna design to be sweeping the amateur radio world - look out G5RV....here comes....

The SDLC

Otherwise known as the Scott Davis Loaded Cannon
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Where will you use yours?

    whats the strangest antenna you've used?

Submit
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roughing it in cuyahoga

11/11/2016

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     I had to travel to Eastern Ohio for work, and rather than stay in a hotel, I figured I'd stay in a national park, so that I could play radio every evening.  Three nights in Cuyahoga National Park to be exact.  It's a forest, which means out there, in the woods, areRacoons, Eagles, Fungus Carrying Bats, and Coyote.  There are also Fox, Possum, Mice, Rats, and Skunks.  
     Well, none of that scares me!  I'm a big bad ham radio operator.  Because I spent the whole first day getting there, setting up Monday night had to be done in the dark.  Thanks to my incredible bravery I was able to set up my antenna by flashlight, unload the rest of my gear and set up the operating position where I was going to have to brave the next 3 nights of ham radio activation:



​
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     It's all in how you spin the story isn't it?  So, where in Cuyahoga did I find such a great operating position?  At a Bed and Breakfast inside the park!  The accommodations couldn't have been  more perfect!  The place I stayed was The Inn at Brandywine Falls which is a great place, run by Katie and George.  I found the Inn through the National Park Service web site for Cuyahoga Valley National Park the last time I was in the area, so I had decided that when I needed to come back I was going to make reservations, so that I could activate in the evenings, from a comfy spot!  I e-mailed the owners to let them know what I wanted to do, and they were very accommodating.  While it wasn't snowing at the time I was there, this would be an awesome spot for anyone wanting to activate this winter, who doesn't want to be stuck out in the cold....the picture from their website below says it all:
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     Because I was in the area for work I didn't get to stay for the breakfast each morning, so they actually packed my breakfast to go!  Now that's service!!

The Radio Stuff

     So here's the summary of the setup I used;  Inside, I had my Yeasu 857d, running either directly to the antenna or through my LDG YT100 tuner (depending on the band.)  This was powered by my 30amp MFJ power supply running through a RigRunner 4004U.  I set the radio equipment next to the window and ran the coax out.  The room I stayed in (The James Wallace Parlour) also had it's own exterior door, which made getting in and out to my antenna super easy!  Because I had a comfortable place to set up, I also had my Dell Latitude E6430 ATG laptop (This is "rough and ready laptop" perfect for those that take a laptop places that most others don't, despite what that 1 guy on Amazon says.) and my Signalink USB so that I could do digital modes as well.
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​     Outside the window, at the other end of my coax, in the big grassy yard, was my Buddipole Mast.  I used several configurations throughout the 3 days.  In band order (but not necessarily the order I operated in) I used the standard 20 meter dipole configuration, my home-made NVIS wire with the VersaT as the feed-point, and something that I rigged up on the spot with no prior testing - an 80 meter NVIS antenna.  You might notice too, the caution tape to warn any unsuspecting wanderers of the wires on the ground, and in the air.
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     For the 80 meter antenna, I basically disconnected my 40 meter wire, connected an 11" arm and one of the coils to each side of the Buddipole feedpoint, and then reconnected my 40 meter wire, to make a loaded 80 meter dipole.  It actually worked, and I put a few in the NPOTA log on 80!  If anyone has a buddipole and wants to recreate this, it technically would have been an OCF dipole, because on the shield side, I used the whole coil, and on the center conductor side, I jumped the coil about halfway.  This gave me an SWR under 2:1 across most of the General portion of the voice part of the band.  My tuner knocked it down to go anywhere else in the band I wanted to wander.

How did it Go?

     Ultimately, I had 3 nights.  The first night, Monday, was spent mostly setting up.  The spoiler on monday night was that the batteries in my Antenna Analyzer died, and I didn't have spares, so I was stuck to just 40 meters where I knew my wire was resonant.  I only managed a couple contacts that night.  The second night was downpouring, so even though I had stopped and picked up batteries, I didn't mess with the antenna.  For that reason night 2 was spent back and forth between 40 meters ssb and 40 meters digital.  Got a bunch of contacts though!  The last night was the home-run night.  I started on 20, got a bunch.  Went to 40, got a bunch more.  Went to 80, got a few more, Went back to 40 digital, and got a couple more.  In the several hours on Wednesday night I ended up with somewhere over 100 contacts - what a blast!
     So, to wrap it up, in case you didn't figure it out, I wasn't roughing it at all.  This was by far my "cushiest" NPOTA activation, and I can recommend it to anyone!  If you're looking for a place to do an activation this November or December, but don't want to mess around in the cold too much I can definitely recommend The Inn and Brandywine Falls, inside of NP14!
73 de N3VEM
P.S.  It's also close to this place if you want to stop by like I did:
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3 days in cuyahoga

11/3/2016

1 Comment

 
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     News flash!!  Starting Monday I will be activating Cuyahoga Valley National Park National Parks on the Air Unit NP14.  My work is taking me to the Cleveland Area, so rather than shack up in the standard Hampton Inn, Holiday Inn, etc.  I found alternative arrangements - this means that I'll be staying inside the park.

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     During the day I'll be working, so my plan is to be on the air every night, from the time I get back into the park after my work day, until sleep knocks at my door. I plan on eating my dinner between contacts, so I'll only stop for a couple hours each evening when I pause for nightly Facetime chat with my family back at home, and to take care of any work related odds and ends that just can't wait.  

    The plan is to be on at least 40 meters and 20 meters, but I'll have the capability for everything from 80 meters through 6.  If I do anything other than 40 and 20, 80 would be the most likely candidate, followed by "maybe" 6 meters in the early mornings before I have to head out (if I didn't stay up too late the night before...).  With any luck I'll have more success than I did the last time I was at Cuyahoga.  You can read about that here.
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     Anyway, that's it for now - watch for updates here on my blog and on the NPOTA Facebook group on the 7th, 8th, and 9th of November, and we'll see how much of a dent I can help to make towards 1 million QSO's for NPOTA!
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    - N3VEM -

         Welcome to my Ham Radio Blog!  This blog was started primarily to share my two concurrent shack builds - my mobile station and my home station.  Over time, this has grown to include sharing about my operations, and general radio-related thoughts that I have as a newer operator.  
         
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