Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
3830 Claimed Scores | 2010 CQ World Wide RTTY WPX | International Low Power
- CT1ILT | 1697 Qs | 6012 Pts | 716 Prfxs | 29h52m | 4,304,592 Points [WWYC].
- VA2UP | 1700 Qs | 6077 Pts | 708 Prfxs | 4,302,516 Points [Contest Group du Que].
- PJ2T (W8AV) | 1443 Qs | 5951 Points | 576 Prfxs | 30hrs | 3,427,776 Points.
n = 40 scores submitted in this division.
Bam! World Wide Young Contesters struck like Jedi after the Death Star. Ionospheric force is strong with CT1ILT who logged most prefixes in the game. Mission accomplished for the WWYC who garnered, yet, another banner position.
Contest on.
Doohhhhh!

Apparently the Utility DXers Forum (UDXF) reported that LORAN had been saved by radio amateurs, a story first reported here at The K3NG Report. The Milcom Monitoring Post blog attempts to set the record straight.
3830 Claimed Scores | 2010 CQ World Wide RTTY WPX | USA Low Power
- WE4M (N2QT) | 1690 Qs | 4988 Pts | 683 Prfxs | 30hrs | 3,406,804 Points [PVRC].
- K9NR | 1317 Qs | 4028 Pts | 602 Prfxs | 30hrs | 2,424,856 Points [SMC].
- N9CK | 1139 Qs | 2957 Pts | 565 Prfxs | 23hrs | 1,670,705 Points [SMC].
n = 55 scores submitted in this division.
Maximum effort rewards maximum score equals 3830 Top Three position prior to log adjudication. Two of three operated single operator 2 radio (SO2R) for this event.
One radio called CQ while the other chased multipliers. I recommend downloading an SO2R mp3 at K5ZD while he operated the 2008 North American Sprint CW. The exercise is worth its value in learning about this distinctive RadioSport style.
73 from the shackadelic on the beach.
Shell Beach CM95 And 144 MHz Tape Measure Beam


Fred, KI6QDH loaned his 144MHz Tape Measure Beam for field testing here in Shell Beach this afternoon. My location is ideal for pushing antenna performance issues at near zero feet above sea level to include geography conundrums. I found maintaining line-of-sight with our local repeater was problematic. Additionally, we shifted our frequency to simplex 145.500 and Fred’s signal was full quiet however he did not hear my transmission.
I experimented with an 1/8th vertical and the 3-element beam neither antenna produced dissimilar results. Both, in fact, performed poorly between .05 mW and 5-watts into our local repeater. The next antenna adventure at 144 MHz while walking Radio Dawg includes operating in the direction of Avila Beach beaming south of Shell Beach.
Project instructions are available from W6AB, Satellite Amateur Radio Club as a download portable document file.
73 from the shackadelic on the beach.
Sunspots are back … and so am I
Those of you who are regular readers here know that I normally try to publish something around once every week or so. I’ve had some unplanned downtime in the past, and that’s the case with my recent 2 month absence. For the most part, I have been trying to get on the radio, but I’ve been dealing with some things for a while and I haven’t really felt up to writing. I’m going to to try to change that and get back on a somewhat regular schedule again.
The good news is that there is something to write about. As I indicated in the title of this post, solar cycle 24 finally seems to have taken hold. For weeks or even months at a time, the sunspot number had been a miserable zero. Now and then there would be a single brief spot over the past few months, but typically they wouldn’t last very long or be large enough to have any positive effect on the ionosphere. That seems to be changing, at long last.
For the past couple of weeks, the sunspot number has been in the 30-50 range. The number itself is a little confusing: as I write this, the Boulder sunspot number is 37, but that doesn’t mean that there are 37 sunspots. This explanation from spaceweather.com gives a general overview, and there are many others (ask your favorite search engine for “sunspot number), but a really simplified explanation is that the number represents both the number of groups of sunspots as well as the actual count of spots. For hams, higher is better, as it causes more ionization to occur, which in turn means that we’ve got a better “surface” to use to bounce our signals.
In addition to the sunspot number, one of the other important indicators is the solar flux index. This number had been stuck at around 69 or 70 (the minimum) for many months. Finally, it’s started to move up the scale and has been in the mid-90s for most of the week. Again, this is an indication that propagation will be good.
My recent on-air experience has shown that things have improved significantly. Increased propagation means that bands like 10m and 12m become useful. This has happened recently, and I took a look at my log to try to see just how good things have gotten.
I’ve made 8 contacts in the last two days on 12m, including working into South Africa and Nigeria. That doesn’t sound like much until you consider the following: In 2009, I had 2 contacts on 12m, and one of those was with 4U1UN, the United Nations station, which is only about 20 miles or so from me. (That was ground wave propagation, not bounced off the ionosphere.) In 2008, I had 4 contacts, 7 in 2007, 8 in 2006, and so on, I hadn’t made a significant number of contacts since 2002 and earlier on 12m.
The point is that things are finally starting to turn around. The bands are improving, and I am having a tremendous amount of fun being able to pick up some new bands for a bunch of countries again.
As I’ve told a few hams who weren’t around for solar cycle 23, You ain’t seen nothin’ yet.
The Future Of RadioSport Is 2010 ARRL Rookie Roundup
I’m speaking only for myself as one who is passionate about the game despite my station configuration. Whatever one’s resources, attitude, is not measured by the height of a tower or the output of an amplifier. Attitude instead is a matter of the heart.
I’m forever grateful that a phone call on a Pennsylvania winter’s day changed the direction of my life in a subtle but unyielding way. The ARRL Novice Roundup was in full swing while I operated a Heathkit DX-60 throwing a knife switch between it and a Heathkit HR-10 receiver.
My antenna system was a simple dipole strung between the house, a tree, and the knife switch. The phone rang that spoke to the heart of ham radio spirit. I was invited to operate a dream shack as a 16-year old who recently discovered the thrill of RadioSport.
I threw on my winter jacket and walked a country mile without a second thought.
The objective of the ARRL Rookie Roundup as an entry level event is RadioSport cause number one at all levels from clubs to individuals. It is clear, “Experienced operators are strongly encouraged to participate and help new operators – either on the air or in person.“
Furthermore it is stated, “For newly-licensed operators in North America (including territories and possessions) to experience competitive Amateur Radio…“
It is a rally call for active involvement in the execution and success of the ARRL Rookie Roundup at all levels. The long view value of this event cannot be underestimated or dismissed. However trying to please everyone, everywhere leads to not pleasing anyone, anywhere. Subsequently, real-time logging is a long awaited RadioSport innovation because Internet cloud service and storage is the future; right now.
Those organizations getting there first will own the high ground.
I do not agree with eliminating the Best of the Best while awarding everyone a certificate of participation. I participate because I want to and I compete because that is who I am. One does not need a certificate to participate although one needs recognition for their effort, commitment of resources, energy, and time.
I submit for consideration, if the Roundup is a group effort, incorporate club competition into the model wherein individual effort contributes to a Roundup Cup much like the coveted Sweepstakes’ gavel, and its historical competition between the Potomac Valley Radio Club and the Northern California Contest Club.
There is a need for a little more skin in this game.
I can vividly see the dream shack nearly 30-years later where I sat in front of a Drake TR-7 pumping radio frequency into a 4-element 40m monobander while penciling nearly 600 contacts into the log. His phone call changed the trajectory of my life that is the future of RadioSport is the 2010 ARRL Roookie Roundup.
73 from the shackadelic on the beach.
Wooden Tower Plans

The Pacific Northwest Region Forest Service has this neat collection of wooden fire tower plans available on their website. The various plans are from 1936 to 1965 and are provided for historic reference. While as the website mentions they do not meet current building codes, I've often dreamed about building one of these and using it for a station tower and perhaps having a hamshack up in the tower cab. Maybe someday when I have a ten acre wooded lot and a lot of time on my hands...and lots of life insurance.... :-)













