Another nice day as GB5LBC
Well, that has to be the longest day I’ve ever spent at the mic. Both Norman, G7MRL and myself have been at the coalface from about 8am. The morning sun was just starting to peep through the fells and made for a lovely sight. The bonus was that the ground that had been boggy and muddy last week was stiff with the hard morning frost and it made setting up the mast much easier.
The St Bees lifeboat station manager has been so helpful and not at all concerned by our muddy footprints that have given away our movements on his clean floor. We’ll need to clean it up properly tomorrow afternoon.
Conditions weren’t as good as last weekend. The band seemed to have a lot of static in the morning and QRM at lunchtime followed by bedlam in the afternoon with stations on top of each other on 40m. 20m was contest town and we only managed 1 contact before be gave it up as a bad idea. 17m, 12m and 10m gave a few contacts including Greece on 10m FM, which was nice.
Both Norman and myself had a tiring day and at 3pm headed back to 40m for a few more QSO’s. We’re back on the air tomorrow although I’m on home duties in the morning but Noel and Norman will be on in the morning. Perhaps I’ll get a chance to use my 6m 5/8 vertical.
Anyway, although it was a tiring day we couldn’t have filled 5 pages in the log without everyone coming back to our CQ call. Without those patient people who helped us when the conditions were against us. The number of stations that wanted our little extra award certainly helped get the numbers up. I’ve a sneaking suspicion that GB1LBC will be in big demand tomorrow after Bill had to call it a day with feeder troubles today.
Alex Hill, G7KSE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, UK. Contact him at [email protected].
The One
Ham radio is an activity that’s been around for over a hundred years and boasts millions of adherents around the world. It should come as no surprise that an institution so ancient and so compelling would harbor a few mysteries.
During the early development of radio the activity was particularly attractive to a certain kind of fellow, one with a keen interest in science and industry and often a fellow whose station in life was a cut or two above that of the ordinary man. The formation of clubs and societies, recondite in nature and hidden within the rank and file of this adventurous lot of explorers led to more than a few secrets.
That much you might know. What you probably don’t know is that a few of these clandestine organizations remain active inside the hobby to this very day.
I’m not personally a member of any of these groups nor do I have first-hand knowledge of who they are or what they do on a daily basis. But from time to time I hear from some of these secret members who drop bombshells on me that strain credulity.
I think they’ve given me a few of these nuggets to distribute because I’m an oddball. Really, compared to other ham radio bloggers I rarely over-hype the hobby and pretend to be its personal spokesman as has become common among those intent on making “X” number of contacts a day and who extol only the virtues while never telling the whole story of what it’s like to be a radio amateur.
That’s what I like to think anyway.
More’s the likely they know I’m close friends with W6OBB and they’re looking for a higher profile outlet in exposing the reclusive activities of the Lodges and are using me to get that information to him. In any event, on occasion a package arrives at my shack, delivered by a personal courier as happened just a few days ago.
This time the package included a short tale of something that happened 35 years ago and it included instructions to share it with my readers, which I’m doing today…
It seems that back in the late 1970’s a distinguished scientist and radio amateur whose name must not be spoken had developed a rather amazing antenna that performed well at high frequencies. It’s precise construction remains a secret to this very day but imagine if you will a six-foot long tube whose diameter was about two-inches. A coil of wire was wrapped around almost the entire outer body and inside there were active components, including a small pump as most of the tube was filled with a Noble gas compound that periodically required refilling.
To simply say that this antenna worked well would be a serious understatement.
Reports indicated that the antenna was highly effective without a tuner across all of the HF amateur bands. Placed horizontally or vertically in the corner of a room or the attic it was an order of magnitude more effective than any directive array installed at 150-feet.
In a nutshell, it was The One, the killer antenna that the prophets had written about.
This would revolutionize the world of HF communications. No longer would the fellow with the 100-acre antenna farm and California Kilowatt rule the Honor Roll. Now even the lowliest QRPer with his milliwatt homebrew designed gear would be on equal footing with the millionaire.
In essence, the new antenna would instantly turn the 99 percent into the 1 percent and at least when it came to hardware, there would be no more elite amateur radio stations.
Plans were made to manufacture the small wonder. This scientist/inventor wanted to sell the antenna for US $1000 and he fully expected to eventually sell one million of them making him the first amateur radio manufacturer with $1 billion dollars of revenue.
He tried to keep these plans as secret as possible for obvious reasons so he never patented the antenna which would have announced it to the world. His belief was that the gas compound required was so exotic that even if someone managed to reverse engineer the design, the compound would remain the only edge he needed.
The first five-thousand units were assembled in a large, vacant building somewhere in New Mexico.
It was about that time that the inventor discovered that his secret had leaked when he got a call with an offer to purchase the design – which he refused – and he continued to build inventory. But the phone calls and strange contacts never ceased – all warning him to sell the design for the antenna or risk losing it all.
He underestimated the threat and continued in the pursuit undaunted. Until one night when he was visited by four members of one of these secret societies who explained to him that ham radio was bigger than he and his design. And that his antenna while extremely clever would ruin the hobby by allowing those with the most basic equipment to compete on equal footing with those who had invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in hardware and antenna farms.
Equal wasn’t good nor was it even “fair” he was told.
Unmoved by their threats, he stood to leave so they grabbed him, pulled a covering over his head and tossed him into the back of a dark colored sedan and drove off into the desert where he was never seen again.
The inventory of over five thousand antennas was moved by truck to a landfill outside of Alamogordo, New Mexico where they were first crushed and then buried. Three feet of concrete cover the burial site and while a few of the local hams had some knowledge of this activity, the years have created doubts as to its veracity and scope, leading some to conclude that this was just another urban legend.
But I know better and now so do you.
I can tell you this because the inventor had an assistant.
A fellow radio ham who hid in the shadows when the abduction took place and who watched this all unfold.
And at 85 years of age, he figures there’s no reason to take this story to his grave…
Jeff Davis, KE9V, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Indiana, USA.
A QSL card that was almost a quarter century in coming!!
| A contact from 23 years ago |
have not sent out QSL cards (all electronic cards now) for over 10 years. Now I was just a bit confused...maybe this was a mistake....he must had copied a call wrong and sent me a card......Then I look a closer look at the front of the card..... this card was from 1989!!! To say the
| The back of the card |
| The station 23 years ago |
| The log (N8LA at top of log) and QSL |
Mike Weir, VE9KK, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from New Brunswick, Canada. Contact him at [email protected].
Ham Nation 32
Hosts: Bob Heil (K9EID), Gordon West (WB6NOA), and George Thomas (W5JDX)
Tim Allen’s shack, more from Gordo at CES, iCOM 718 and 7200 reviews, and more.
Download or subscribe to this show at http://twit.tv/hn.
We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes at wiki.twit.tv.
Thanks to Joe Walsh who wrote and plays the Ham Nation theme.
Thanks to Cachefly for the bandwidth for this show.
Running time: 57:21
http://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp4/twit.cachefly.net/video/hn/hn0032/hn0032_h264b_864x480_500.mp4
http://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp4/twit.cachefly.net/video/hn/hn0032/hn0032_h264b_640x368_256.mp4
http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/twit.cachefly.net/hn0032.mp3
Dr. Bob Heil, K9EID, is the founder of Heil Sound and host of TWiT.tv's Ham Nation which streams live each Tuesday at 6:00pm PT (9:00pm ET) at http://live.twit.tv. Contact him at [email protected].
Handiham World for 25 January 2012

The new handiham.org is up and running. I hope you like it, but I am sure open to suggestions if there is something you find that does not work. In the meantime, the old website is still alive, but it is at the URL handiham.net. The two sites are different, but many of our users have not yet registered with the new site, and will probably just find it easier to log in at handiham.net until they have time to get set up in the new handiham.org. So if you visit handiham.org and find that your log in credentials don’t work, the reason is that the new site uses an entirely new database and re-registration is necessary. I have done this in advance for some users, but have not had the time to devote to manually entering so much data. If you wish you can use the create an account link to enter your own data, but please remember that this is a Handiham member service, so I would appreciate it if you used the credentials you already registered with us for the old website. That way, I can check against our database and approve your account because I will know it is really you, not some spammer who wants access to the site. Most of our users registered with their callsigns, except for those studying for a first license. Please stick with your existing username from the old site and, unless you have a different email address, the same email you registered with us in the first place. Be sure you always keep your email address up to date. If you are not a Handiham member, you may still enjoy the public portion of our website without logging in. If you are a Handiham member and need access, please use the Create Account link and apply for access. I will review and approve as soon as possible.
Another change is that our QST audio digest for February 2012 is available to our blind members in DAISY format from the members section. DAISY is the same special format used by the Library of Congress and other organizations providing specialized adapted audio to blind users. It is a single zip file, the preferred method for download simplicity. It will play on DAISY players and the the new Library of Congress player. The complete issue of QST generally takes a month to a month and a half to be released from the Library of Congress, so our audio digest gives blind hams some of the time-sensitive information at around the same time print subscribers to QST are reading their copies.
VOLLI, our volunteer hours logging system, has stopped functioning. We ask that Handiham volunteers simply email Nancy their hours on a regular basis. The best way is to fire off an email as soon as you finish a project. For example, if you volunteer at a hamfest giving out our literature, when you get home just send Nancy a message letting her know the volunteer activity and the hours you spent at the fest. For recording a big project, such as an audio tutorial or a book for our blind members, you might want to keep a log of your hours and then inform Nancy of the total when you complete the recording project.
The Handiham Radio Club and Handiham Volunteer mailing lists have both gone into the bit bucket! I should have thought about that before changing the domain name, but I forgot that detail. We still have the ability to set up mailing lists, so I will see what we can do. That project will have to wait just a little while because I want the website project to be further along and secure before taking on another task.
So that’s my update for this week. I expect to release a new General Class audio lecture on Friday, but we will see what time is available. We are always looking for help from talented volunteers who can record audio, teaching into a microphone. Be on the lookout for an upcoming two part “With the Handihams” series in Worldradio online about how to record using the open-source software Audacity. It is cross-platform, running on Windows, Mac, or Linux!
Handiham Manager
Pat Tice, WA0TDA, is the manager of HANDI-HAM and a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com. Contact him at [email protected].
The Best Ham Radio Books

If you had to clean out all but three amateur radio and electronics related books from your bookshelf, which three would you keep?
What makes each of these three so useful to you?
Can’t think of three? At least tell us about one or two favorites.
With well over 4,500 daily readers worldwide (thank you!), I’m always so impressed by the answers we get here.
Here are the top 10 answers so far…
- ARRL Handbook (7 votes)
- ARRL Antenna Book (5 votes)
- ARRL Operating Manual (2 votes)
- Simple Wire Antennas (2 votes)
- Experimental Methods in RF Design (1 vote)
- Rothammels Antennenbuch (1 vote)
- Grob Basic Electronics (1 vote)
- TTL Cookbook (1 vote)
- ON4UN’s Low-Band DXing (1 vote)
- Vertical Antenna Classics (1 vote)
Matt Thomas, W1MST, is the managing editor of AmateurRadio.com. Contact him at [email protected].
I Crossed Those Hurdles
I’ve been trying to master Morse code since 2009. I have known the basic characters since my teens, but never got the speed and I freaked out whenever I didn’t get a character, stopping cold in my tracks. I never got passed those two hurdles. So when I got my novice licence and decided to get serious about learning Morse code I read a lot about different methods, why Koch is the best, software to help you and most important, that you should be fluent in taking down the code before grabbing key.
But I always had a bit of a problem with the last one. My good friend Wouter (PG2W) was a R/O in the 1970s and his story about him going to maritime school always stuck with me. Back then would-be R/O’s started out from day one by tapping out Morse code signals on their desks, not listening to them. They weren’t stupid then, so why do I have to be fluent in taking code no before I can start sending code? “Well, simply because you can’t understand what the other is sending to you, sonny!”
True, but I am a firm believer of multi-sensory – or Auditory-Visual-Kinaesthetic (AVK) – learning. I am practising it daily in my job as ESL teacher, so I should apply it to my own learning, too. So for a while I have been sending code and checking it with help of the computer. Every now and then I would answer a CQ from a station and try my hand at a real CQ while keeping Fldigi running in the background for back-up. By constantly hearing, watching and doing I felt I was improving more than by only taking down code.
So on December 23 last year I sat down itching to have a QSO. Busy with work and family I hadn’t had a single one in 9 days. I had just put together a new keyer (the AA0ZZ one, it was on my To Do-list, remember?) and hooked up my Kent paddles to test it. The power was turned down to nil (or so I thought, later it turned out I was still putting out a Watt or two) and when I heard VK2IG calling CQ I answered him, just for fun, because I thought he would not hear me anyway. But he came back to me, went QRS to my speed of 10 wpm and we had a QSO. And all-of-a-sudden it worked! I could understand his code, take it down by hand and answer him. Whenever I didn’t catch a character I simply shrugged it off and kept on writing. I felt great, because I finally crossed those two hurdles.
So later that night I tried 80 meters for a change. In Taiwan we are allowed to operate on 3.500 to 3.5125 and 3.550 to 3.5625 MHz, so CW territory. I heard JO4CTB, answered him and it worked again. BA5HAM, no problem, although he was pretty fast and I had to use Fldigi for part of the QSO. Ever since I have been having a ball. It has been CW all the way and I am glad to say that most hams I called have been nice enough to go slow. Some QSOs have been simple RST exchanges, others short conversations. But every one helps to get me more fluent and gain speed and I enjoy every one of them.
And to set a goal for myself I decided to go for the Prefix Award, which is to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of FISTS CW Club. 250 CW QSOs of which 10 need to be with FISTS members. No small feat, but one I am very eager to achieve. I know I can cross that hurdle, too.
Hans "Fong" van den Boogert, BX2ABT, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Taiwan. Contact him at [email protected].















