Author Archive
You can sign up!
Rich Fisher KI6SN, has begun issuing Bee numbers for the 2013 Flight of the Bumblebees. I signed up this evening, and was awarded Number 16.
You can get your own Bee number, by going to the ARS blog. All the instructions are there. You can view the Bumblebee numbers already give out by clicking here.
Pick out three numbers you would like (that aren’t already taken) and then send an e-mail to: [email protected]
Include your name, your call, where you plan on operating from, and your three number choices.
It’s that easy!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Field Day – this the way to do it.
Field Day, as it should be. QRP, fun and good friends. This is a wonderful example of putting out the maximum effort to get the most out “of sending the very least!”
I’ve worked these fine folks individually many times over the years. It’s so nice to be able to put faces and voices to the people “behind the code”.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP -When you care to send the very least!
Radials done!
For now at least! 😉
After mowing the lawn early this afternoon, I finished the job that I had started the other evening. I finished getting my new set of radial wires down for my Butternut vertical.
My first set, put down so many years ago, consisted of a set of 25 foot (8 Meter) long wires, fanned out from the base of the Butternut. If memory serves me correctly, I originally put 25 radials down. They have long since disappeared under the lawn, but I know for a fact that two were damaged over the course of the years. One by me, and one by our dog.
Today, I put another dozen wires down, but these were not 25 footers. Today, I laid down wires as long as I could to the opposite end of the back lawn. In all, I put down approximately 650 feet (198 Meters) worth of wire. I used up what I had leftover from last time and entirely used up a brand new 500 foot spool of 14 gauge wire.
I still need to buy another bag of landscaping pins, so that I can secure the wires to the ground s little more securely in several areas. There are a few spots where I believe the lawn mower wheels might push the wire around, unless it’s secured a little better.
So that makes a total of 37 radials down around my Butternut. Someday, I’d like to get that total closer to 60. I have read in several articles that 60 is the magic number, where adding more than that causes no significant increase in benefit.
73 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Summertime and the living is easy …….
The day started out hazy, warm and humid. As I parked my car at work this morning, I was able to see the haze just hanging in the air, against the dark background of the trees. According to Google, humidity at the time was 91% – almost like being in a shower.
This is the type of summer weather that you get accustomed to if you live in New Jersey for any extended period of time. While it is expected, it can make a Ham’s life …. interesting, to say the least. Antennas are left disconnected, as you never know when a thunderstorm is going to pop up. And pop up they do, swiftly – and seemingly without a lot of warning. Just yesterday, we had two bouts – one near 4:00 PM and another around 7:00 PM, complete with lightning, thunder rumbles and heavy downpours. The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch for just about all of New Jersey, effective until 10:00 PM tonight. Summer in NJ – you gotta love it!
This weather is also making my radial project interesting. Kneeling down on a wet lawn, in order to secure the wire to the earth is, well …. just so much fun. The bright side is that the grass will grow much quicker in these tropical conditions, and as a result, the green colored insulation will disappear into the lawn all that much faster. My wife will appreciate that.
Pickings were slim at lunchtime. There were many signals on 17 Meters. But it seemed like it was a case of either,
A) It was a new station and I wasn’t being heard, or
B) It was a station that I had already worked before.
As a personal rule, I try to avoid working the same DX stations over and over on the same band. I would much rather someone else get the chance to put that particular DX station in their log for that band.
I did snare DL6ZXG, Klaus in Derenburg, Germany, receiving a 559 report. From his QRZ page, you can tell that Klaus is quite the active Ham. Not only does he hold 5BDXCC, and the ARRL’s Triple Play WAS award, but he also has over 20,000 look ups on QRZ. That shows me that you’re on the air a lot!
The lack of working a plethora of stations at lunch time gave me time to snap some photos of the setup, as requested. Nothing exotic or spectacular, which is a good thing. If I can have success with this arrangement, then you can too, with something similar.
Will I earn DX Honor Roll this way? No, of course not, but I will get more than my fair share of fun, and THAT’S the point, isn’t it?
I must give credit where credit is due. Bob W3BBO gave me the idea of using my Buddistick on the car this way. Up until then, I had been deploying the Buddistick in a much more “conventional” manner. Bob clued me in about using the car as an enhanced ground plane, and let me tell you – this arrangement makes the Buddistick soar! (That’s a W3FFism!) I had never thought of this on my own (duh!) and I will forever be indebted to Bob for his “out of the box” thinking. This works so much better than individual Hamsticks.
Some thoughts
Argh! If my head wasn’t screwed on, I would probably forget that, too!
Rem K6BBQ wanted me to mention that he has added a SOTA category to this year’s inaugural Scorch Your Butt Off contest, coming this July. If you activate a SOTA summit, you can claim an additional 100 points to your SYBO score. Please keep in mind that this has NOTHING to do with your SOTA activation points, this is for your SYBO score only.
I had my last Pastoral Council meeting tonight, so I didn’t get the chance to put any more radials down this evening. I have served on the Parish Pastoral Council for the last four years. Two meetings a month, all year around. That may not sound like much, but there are always many peripheral duties involved, as well as peripheral events where attendance was not mandatory, but desired. The normal term of service is three years, but I was asked to, and served for four. Now that these are going to be over, I will be able to attend Amateur Radio club meetings again. I hesitated to in the past, as I always tried to keep away from being out of the house multiple nights a week. To say my attendance of club meetings was sporadic is being generous. It was, for all intent and purpose, non-existant.
This Friday evening is an Electronic Testing Society of NJ meeting. Fancy name for a repeater club meeting, eh? The group is better known as the Greenbrook repeater group, and the meetings are always the last Friday of the month. Even though this would mean being out two evenings this week, I am going to make a best effort to attend, so as to get back into the swing of things.
I also hope to attend a lot more VE sessions when license exam season starts up again in earnest this September. I have always enjoyed being a VE, going back to the days when I regularly attended and volunteered at the sessions that were offered by the Raritan Bay Radio Amateurs.
I had to go to a remote site at work today, so I didn’t get in my lunchtime QRP session, so no photos today, maybe tomorrow, weather permitting (but alas, it seems there’s a 75% chance of rain for tomorrow).
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Asbotively tropical
Again today, I headed out at lunch time to the car. It was hot …. 90F again, but this time before I left the building, I checked into WeatherUnderground and saw that the humidity was at 77%. It was tropical to say the least. I had a very pleasant QSO on 20 Meters with my good friend and fellow Polar Bear Ken WA8REI. He was at home on his Mosley, so he was a solid 599+. Fortunately, the beam was able to rope in my signal and I got a 579 in return.
Ken was enduring the sogginess in Michigan too, and was telling me that he is going to head on up to his trailer “in the country” soon to escape the heat and humidity. Can’t say I blame him. When I got back to my desk, I felt a bit soggy myself.
Tomorrow, I will bring a camera along with me to snap a few quick photos of the set up in the back of the Jeep. A few have asked, curious to see exactly how I have the Buddistick set up.
With that much humidity, you know that sooner or later, something has to give. Around 4:00 PM, we had a prototypical summer afternoon thunderstorm and downpour. Sad thing is, it really hasn’t changed anything, and it feels just as soggy after, as it did before. No cool fronts will be running through for several days at least.
After dinner, I got the first two radials down. The lawn was all soggy and while that made things a bit messier than they would be otherwise, at least the gardening pins that I am using to hold down the wires went into the soil like a warm knife through butter.
The wires are screwed down onto to the sink strainer using crimped eyelets, which have been dipped in anti-oxidant paste. I am using De-Oxit’s paste which is the same thing as Butternut’s “Butter it’s Not” as far as I can tell. Each is also secured with a star washer.
When all is said and done, I hope to have another 20 radials down which will put me very close to 50 total if count the original 25 I put down years ago.
Oh, I worked Crete for the first time in 13 years this evening. I heard SV9/SV2FPU calling CQ on 30 Meters (88′ EDZ antenna) and I threw out my call. Out of all the stations calling, I was amazed to hear him come back to me! This also makes the first time I have worked Crete via CW. Last time, all the way back in 2000, I actually used that mikeyphoney thing. Don’t tell anybody!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!













