Author Archive
Profiles in QRP – Volume 1 – Ken Louks WA8REI
One day, I was thinking about how much I like to read about my fellow Amateur Radio operators. I love it when they tell stories about how they became Hams and how they first learned about Amateur Radio, what they’re doing now, and what their other interests are. It simply fascinates me.
I decided to develop a series of blog posts titled “Profiles in QRP”. A series of questions will be posed to those who have shown interest and dedication to the QRP game. In the coming months, some of the profiles published will be of QRPers you are probably very familiar with – some maybe not so. The idea is to ask these questions across an entire cross section of QRPers – portable operators, contesters, rag chewers, tinkerers, inventors, entrepreneurs, (maybe even bloggers!), etc.
I had intended to kick this series off last month, but I was delayed in doing so. My intention is to run one profile a month. For August, I will run two profiles – one at the beginning of the month and one at the end.
The first profile is of Ken Louks WA8REI. If you’re on the air at all, you’ve probably run into Ken numerous times. He is active in a lot of the QRP Sprints and is always to be found, ready and eager for a rag chew. Ken is also very active in the Polar Bears QRP group – a bunch of QRPers dedicated to portable outdoor ops away from the conventional shack. There he is most affectionately known as Blackjack Bear. It’s always a great pleasure to run into Ken, whether it be a short sprint QSO or a longer one where you can gnaw on a piece of “sammin” with him.
1) How did you first become interested in Amateur Radio?
My first exposure to Amateur Radio was through my Uncle Ed Wissmiller, formerly 8CEH, who resided in Saginaw, Michigan. He helped me learn the code when I was 12 years old. He had let his ticket expire years before I was born, but he was quite the guy! He was a WW I pilot, and later, a stunt pilot and a wing walker. In fact, he invented the remote water meter reader, so he had quite the technical bent. He was a printer by trade, and had several printing presses in his basement.
Also, my dad had given me a Heathkit CR-1 Crystal Receiver when I was 10 years old, in 1957. I still have it, and it works like new! My dad always encouraged me to learn about many things. I sent and received Morse Code via light to and from another neighborhood kid. I was also inspired by several other Hams who all lived within 2 or 3 miles from me – “bicycle range”. I was both a Cub Scout and a Boy Scout.
2) How long have you been licensed?
Since June, 1965. My Novice station was a Knightkit T-150 transmitter and a Heathkit HR-10 receiver, both of which I built as new kits.
3) What drew you to QRP?
I had a Heath HW-100 Transceiver, which I always tuned up at minimum power. One day, I forgot to increase my power after tuning up, and following a long, solid QSO, calculated that my output power was 4 Watts. I’d operate QRP a few times a year in the ’90’s. Always liking a challenge, I became a serious QRP Op in about 2000.
4) Who has been your biggest QRP influence?
Nobody in particular! I had no QRP Elmers. With the advent of the Internet, I’ve found many like-minded Hams throughout the world and many QRP clubs, so I’d have to give credit to the Internet for being my main influence. Again, the challenge of working other stations at 5 Watts or even milliWatts is a thrill that kW QRO Ops will never experience!
5) What is your favorite QRP activity?
Contesting. It keeps my CW skills honed, and it shows me how well my antennas are performing. This can be a major contest or a QRP Sprint; either are enjoyable. I like the competition, but I’m never a sore loser!
6) What’s your favorite piece of QRP gear (past or present)?
My Yaesu FT-817ND. My first QRP rig was its predecessor, the FT-817. It’s a great all band, all mode rig, and it’s very portable.
7) Describe your current QRP station.
FT-817, Hustler 4BTV Vertical, 80 M Dipole, Bencher Paddle (I’m 100% CW), LDG Z100 Autotuner at my camping trailer in the woods near Rhodes, MI – “Permanent Portable” Hi! At home, a FT-2000 at 5 Watts and a Mosley Pro 67B Yagi at 48 feet. I also have a DC40B, built by my friend WD9F that puts out about 700 milliWatts on 40 Meters. It’s a fun rig!
8) What is your fondest QRP memory.
That would be working 3B9C, Rodriguez Island in the Indian Ocean, through a MASSIVE pileup while I was on Wagon Wheel Hill, elevation 1,500 feet back in the Winter of 2006. My 2nd best was working Tanzania from near Dayton Hamvention, using 2.5 Watts.
9) What other hobbies/interests do you enjoy when your not on the radio?
I was a professional organist/pianist from the age of 16 until I had a stroke in 2008. I taught private piano lessons for many years. I play the hammered dulcimer. Ham Radio has always played “second fiddle” to my music. I have a grand piano in my living room, 4 electronic keyboard and a professional recording studio.
I have hiked 1,500 miles in 2007, bicycled 60 miles per day. I enjoy traveling, especially to the mountains of New Hampshire or Colorado. I could live outdoors if not for the bugs and weather!
Thank you Ken – for being my first victim …… err, QRP Profile! You are indeed a very brave soul!
Seriously – a very hearty “Thank You” to Ken for sharing his Amateur Radio and QRP background with us. As I stated before, I hope to have a profile for you every month. Ken was supposed to have been the profile for July 2013. There will be another at the end of the month for August.
So ……. if you see an e-mail from me in your Inbox titled, “Profiles in QRP”, please don’t run, screaming into the night. It will be a request for us to get the opportunity to know one of our fellow QRPers just a little bit better!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Lunchtime QRP continues to be successful
My lunchtime QRP sessions continue to be a success with QSOs all over the world. SOTA stations, special event stations, DX stations and rag chews all have been making it into the log.
FOBB 2013 and some Skeeter Hunt news
Distracted.
That’s the best word that I can think of to describe my effort for Flight of the Bumblebees 2013.
The weather was certainly a distraction. With the forecast (all week long) calling for a 60% chance of rain on Sunday, I was not surprised to find that it was raining when I left Mass yesterday morning. That sealed the deal for me regarding my operating position. Right then and there, I decided that I would be a home station this year, and would forgo using my Bee number. As it turned out, it ended up being sunny, then rainy, then sunny, then rainy in small cycles just about all afternoon. Thunderstorms and torrential downpours waited until the 5:00 PM hour, just when I would have been tearing down.
Operating from home has its conveniences and creature comforts, but it also comes with its share of distractions. The phone rings when you don’t need it to, spouses and children ask for things like they always do …. it’s just a bit different than an evening Sprint, which are generally shorter and occur when things have already pretty much settled down for the night.
But the biggest distraction of all was this little guy (and I am definitely NOT complaining!). Meet Harold, the newest member of the W2LJ family, who came to live with us on Saturday.
We met Harold last Sunday, when we went to the local Petco store to pick up a bag of cat food for Sandy. Happy Paws Rescue was there with a full compliment of dogs looking for homes. Harold was not down on the floor with the other dogs, he was sitting in one of the volunteer’s laps. We didn’t even see him at first.
The first dog we were interested in was a retriever mix named Tia. She was a very playful and friendly little girl, and most importantly, I was informed that she was cat friendly. But it turned out that someone was already filling out papers for her while we were looking at her. There was another retriever mix there, a little older and a little bigger, named Hershey. However, the volunteers weren’t able to tell me if he was good around cats, or not.
Disappointed, we were about to head to the checkout with our cat food, when I decided to ask if they had any dogs that were cat friendly. They immediately told us that Harold was being fostered in a house that had cats and that there were no problems. Interested, they put Harold on a lead for us, and allowed us to take him for a walk around the store. That’s when the volunteer told me about Harold’s background.
Harold is a nine month old beagle pup who was bred to be used as a test animal at either a pharmaceutical or cosmetics company. The inside of his ears are tattooed with a serial number, as a testament to this fact. Lab dogs like him are never really “named”. It turned out that Harold was never used for testing, and was just an extra dog that was going to be offered for adoption. A secretary at the company found out about this and got him put into the custody of Happy Paws.
And now, he’s with us. He’s a very friendly little fellow, who like Jesse before him, seems “to not have a mean bone in his body”. He loves to be held and played with, and right now, is a bit of a “nose and stomach on four legs”. While he’s a tad underweight, this little guy eats his meals so thoroughly, and with such gusto, that we briefly kidded about changing his name to Hoover. He loves to join you in whatever chair you’re sitting in and totally relax next to you, in essence becoming a “puppy puddle”.
So far, Sandy our cat, has made a few wary attempts at getting familar with Harold. With Jesse, she was used to an older dog who really paid her no mind. She is not quite sure what to make of this little brown, black and white furball of energy. They have been getting closer and closer to each other (nose to nose at one point, in fact) without any bouts of barking, hissing or chasing. If they don’t end up becoming best friends, I am fully confident that at the very least, they will become quite comfortable with each other’s presence.
So while I was making a few paltry contacts on 20 and 40 Meters yesterday afternoon, my head just wasn’t in the game this year. My head and my heart were more fixed upon Harold, and also Jesse, whom I think would approve of his successor, very much. Even though he is a totally different breed and a much smaller dog, each time I look at Harold, I can see Jesse shining through him. And that’s a very good thing, because now it really does feel like Jesse is still right here with me.
As for the news about the Skeeter Hunt – Brady AC0XR wrote a logging program specifically for the Skeeter Hunt this year. It can be found at http://www.qsl.net/ac0xr/skeeterhuntlogger.html Some of you may remember Brady from last year’s hunt. He was one of the few entrants who built a homebrew key for the event for bonus points.
I feel like we’ve hit the big time! Our own logging program – thanks, Brady!
By the way, as of tonight, we’re up to 94 entries. I’ll be issuing Skeeter numbers right up until the morning of the event – but don’t wait for the last minute. And remember, this year SSB has been added as a mode. So if Morse Code’s not your thing? You can join us anyway and get in on the fun!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Busted the pileup!
My lunchtime QRP session stalled for a day. I went out to the car yesterday, and could not get the KX3 to tune the Buddistick. If I twisted the coax near the radio connector, it would intermittently tune, but would not stay tuned. A SWR of 25:1 is certainly not desirable.
I brought my magmount into the house when I got home. With some time to kill before the 20 Meter QRP Foxhunt, I checked out the PL-259 with my VOM, and found an intermittent short between center connection and shield. So I snipped the cable back a few inches and soldered on a bright and shiny new PL-259. Viola`! Problem solved! And this is exactly the reason why, that one of my yearly purchases at some local hamfest is a small bag containing PL-259s. You never know when the need for one will arise.
Today, my results were like night and day. The Buddistick tuned today with not even a blip of the KX3’s autotuner. I had 1:1 matches on both 20 and 15 Meters. 20 Meters yielded two nice QSOs, one with John K9DX down in Lakeland, FL and the other with Scotty KG3W in PA. Scotty and I have worked many, many times before. A few rag chews but mostly brief QRP Sprint QSOs. It was good to spend a few minutes with him.
The coup de grace, came on 15 Meters however, after I had finished up with Scotty. There was an extremely loud PY0F/PP1CZ on 21.023 MHz with quite a pile up chasing him. He was soooo loud, though, that I knew if I could figure out the split he was using, I stood a good chance. Trying to figure out the split can be tricky on 15 Meters, though, because you can’t always hear the station the DX is working. If you’re patient and give it enough time, sooner or later the DX station is going to work someone that you can hear, too.
That was the case today. I waited long enough until I heard him go back to a European station that I was also able to hear. I figured out the split and within a few minutes, I had Fernando de Noronha in my log. Worked with 5 Watts to a Buddistick plopped on the roof of my Jeep. Don’t let ANYONE tell you that QRP doesn’t work!
By the way, did you know that tomorrow is “Respect the QRP Frequencies Day”? The QRP Respect Committee (an Italian organization) is running a day long QRP QSO Party tomorrow. A non-competetive event on or about the QRP Watering Holes. Check out their Webpage here.
So spend some time around those frequencies tomorrow if that’s not something you already do. You just might find more DX than you might otherwise expect!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Mountain to mountain QSO.
My lunchtime QRP session had that ominous look, like it was going to end up being a bust. The bands were nowhere near as hearty and robust as they were the past few days. 15 Meters had one strong signal, HA9RT booming in. I’ve worked Jozsef several times in the past, and even though he was coming in like gangbusters, I figured I’d let him get some new stations in his log.
20 Meters was a ghost town and 17 Meters seemed to be the liveliest of the three bands. Still, there wasn’t much activity and the signals I was hearing weren’t the strongest. I didn’t feel like going back into the building, so I decided to call CQ on 17 Meters.
Much to my surprise, I was answered by George KX0R who was the first place finisher in last year’s NJQRP Skeeter Hunt. George had a nice 579 signal into New Jersey. He was using an ATS3B at 5 Watts into an inverted “L” on a mountain in Colorado. Bald Mountain, SOTA peak W0/FR174, to be exact. 9,190 feet above sea level to be even more exact.
If you really, really, really, REALLY want to stretch the truth ….. you could say we had a mountain to mountain QSO. But that would be stretching the truth almost to the point of breaking it!
Warren, the town where I work, is located on the second ridge of the Watchung Mountains here in New Jersey. My height above sea level there is all of about 500 feet or so. Not much, by mountain standards, but since most of New Jersey is coastal plain and Piedmont, 500 feet is pretty high up there for a relatively flat state.
Now, according to geologists, if we went back in time, say about 200 million years or so, the Watchungs were about as tall as the present day Rockies or even the Alps. Just goes to show what time, rain, ice and wind can do to you, eh? So in essence, compared to the Rockies, and even the farther western Appalachians, the Watchungs are more or less just “hills”. But they’re our hills and the original settlers of New Jersey called them mountains, so who are we to argue?
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Sizzling hot!
Not the weather (for once) although, it’s still pretty warm. No, I meant 15 Meters at lunch time was sizzling hot!
Besides telling you who I worked, let me tell you about “the one that got away” a bit later. (As if I ever stood a chance!). First things first, though. I got to the car and set up the station. A quick scan of 17 Meters left me feeling – “meh”. 20 Meters was a little better, but not all that much to write home about, either. That’s when I got the inspiration to check out 15 Meters.
At 1614 UTC, I heard and worked a very loud OL2013CM from the Czech Republic. Later, when I looked OL2013CM up on QRZ, it turned out to be a very big deal for this Ham, considering my background. You see, OL2013CM is one of several Special Event Stations from the Czech Republic honoring the 1150th anniversary (Yes, the 1150th!) of the arrival of Saints Cyril and Methodius to that area.
Saints Cyril and Methodius were the two men responsible for bringing Catholicism to the Slavic nations. Today this area includes the following countries – Bulgaria, Croatia, Belarus, the Slovak Republic, the Czech Republic, Belarus, Russia, the Ukraine, Macedonia, Lituania and Latvia, Estonia, and yes, Poland – the land of my ancestors.
There is a big seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan named after Saints Cyril and Methodius. Almost all the priests that were in the Polish ethnic parish that I attended while growing up, graduated from that seminary. For me, working OL2013CM held a lot of sentimental value, and was a big deal.
And as always, there’s a diploma that’s available for working stations associated with the Special Event. For the details, you can visit: http://award-cm.ok2kyd.cz/en/award-rules.html Now, time for a bit of trivia. Besides introducing Catholicism to that part of the world, this duo also developed the Glagolitic alphabet, which was used to transcribe the Gospels into the Slavonic languages. While that alphabet is no longer in use today – one of its descendant scripts is still very much in use today – the Cyrillic alphabet. Wonder where they got that name !!!
After working OL2013CM, I also worked 4O/UA3RF in Montenegro and HA8QZ in Hungary. Indeed,
15 Meters was open and very hot to Europe. Three solid QSOs to Europe in the span of minutes. Priceless!
But now for the one “that got away”. Down towards the bottom of the band (just above where CO8LY was calling CQ), I heard a very loud (extremely loud!) BY4IB/4. China! Holy cow, I never heard a station from China so loud. 599+ loud! Insanely, I thought I stood a chance. He was working split, and with the KX3’s Dual Watch feature, I was very handily able to figure out the split, in no time. I was determined to keep on throwing my call out until either:
1) I worked him
2) He faded away
3) I had to break down to go back inside to work.
Well, Door Number Two opened first, as he slowly faded away into oblivion. And I never made contact, despite my best efforts. But if I had, how cool would that have been? NJ to China on 5 Watts with a Buddistick! I’d still be doing the ecstatic dance (never mind the happy dance) if I had been able to pull that off!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Neat!
A top o’ the callsign cap to Wey Walker K8EAB from the NoGa QRP group for pointing me towards this video by K7AGE:
Even if you don’t care for the subject matter, the music’s pretty catchy!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!























