Goodbye 2011, Hello 2012

Where did the year go? Like many of you, yes I’m asking myself that question. It seems just yesterday we were saying goodbye to 2010 and hello to 2011. But this is what they say about getting older. Time passes by much faster or certainly appears to do so. I’m sure 2012 will also speed past, best sit down and buckle our seat belt.
My 2011 started off a bit slow in the area of my amateur radio hobby involvement. This partly was due to other work and life commitments. I believe it was sometime in early summer when I really got rolling again both with this blog and my amateur radio podcast. I would have to list both of these (the blog and the podcast) as major accomplishments to 2011. Mainly because they both got very close to extinction. With better focus and organization, I’m proud to say that I kept up my publishing schedule and both will be around for a long time. Here are a few of my other highlights for 2011.
1. Amateur Extra
As my regular readers (and listeners of PARP) know. I was licensed as a technician in August 2007 and upgraded to general in January 2008. Since perhaps January 2008, certainly since January 2009, every one of my annual New Years Resolutions involved upgrading to extra. Of course I failed to accomplish this in 2008, 2009 and 2010. But just like clock work I put it on my 2011 list with somewhat of a soft-target of getting accomplished before June 30, 2012. Why June 30, 2012? Well that is when the current extra class question pool expires. I told myself I couldn’t purchase another study guide and I better just get it done.
The half way point of 2011 came and went and I hadn’t really made any progress towards extra preparation. The book was on the bookshelf collecting dust. Then one Tweet from Twitter in early August changed everything. From this tweet I learned about an online (via Echolink) extra class study group which planned to meet twice a week. This was hosted by the South Coast Amateur Radio Service. I signed up and it was exactly what I needed. Even before the 6 week class was finished, I was passing sample tests and on Saturday, 28 August I attended a local VE session where I passed the amateur extra exam.
2. New Amateur Radio Club
I’ve always believed in the importance of belonging to a local amateur radio club. I talk about this on a regular basis on the podcast as I feel it is the best way for new amateur’s to gain experience and also share a common interest with likeminded individuals. Having said that, I certainly realize not all amateur radio clubs are created equal. I’ve heard some real horror stories and while I must state I’ve never experienced any rude behavior towards other hams, I had grown extremely bored with my old club and simply had stopped going to monthly meetings.
Sometime in early September I was invited to attended a club meeting with the Tri-Lakes Monument Fire Radio Association from Bob Witte, K0NR. I attended my first meeting in September and proud to say this is my new home. In addition to Bob being a member, I’m also extremely fortunate to also share the club with Steve Galchutt, WG0AT. I’ve certainly learned a lot from both.
3. Summits On The Air (SOTA)
I certainly couldn’t end the previous paragraph of talking about Steve and not mention SOTA. I’ve previously explained how I stumbled onto SOTA and will let you read that blog posting if you haven’t already. As we all know, the amateur radio hobby is extremely diverse in what it offers those who participate. SOTA has been a way for me to combine the love of the great outdoors with amateur radio. I’ve completed two SOTA activations and am counting the days until I can get out for #3. If you would like to learn more about the Summits On The Air program, please listen to episode 50 of the Practical Amateur Radio Podcast.
4. JT65
JT65 is the weak signal mode that has a lot of our fellow amateur’s talking and for the right reasons. The QSO’s I’ve been able to make and not even always in the best band conditions, really have me excited about this mode. Since I started running JT65, I’ve worked a little over 350 different and unique call signs and it continues to gain in popularity. In addition, JT65 has been successful at allowing me to work many new DX entities. If you would like to learn more about JT65, please listen to episode 46 of PARP.
5. Worked All States
Now one might think having been licensed for over four years I would have collected multiple WAS certificates by now. Especially after holding a general class license with its great HF privileges for almost the entire duration of this time. Yes it is true I’ve also seen many brand new amateurs obtain WAS within their first year or so.
To be perfectly honest, it was never really anything I looked into until just this year. I set my sights on obtaining the basic (mixed mode) version of Worked All States as a New Years Resolution and begin mapping out how to accomplish it. With the help of both my HRD logbook and both eQSL and the ARRL Logbook of the World systems, I identified what I had versus what I needed.
Of course what I found was I had worked many of the states I needed and in some cases multiple times. However, the contact had not been confirmed in either eQSL or LoTW by the other operator. Around the late summer timeframe I worked both the Colorado and Texas QSO parties and along with just casual operating I had managed to get my list down to just two remaining states Wyoming and South Dakota.
Wyoming went into the logbook and was confirmed in early November. This just left South Dakota. Up to this point I had worked and confirmed 49 of the 50 US States without the need of a sked. I had hoped to do this with South Dakota, but time was running out. So in early December I contacted a fellow ham in South Dakota who routinely operates JT65 and asked if he would be willing to work me for SD. He agreed and between me getting sick and the Christmas holiday, we finally managed to complete the sked and South Dakota was in the logbook and confirmed on 26 December. Ironically, two days later I worked another station from SD completely random on JT65. So I suppose even if the sked wouldn’t have been possible, I would have still earned WAS in 2011.
Final Thoughts…
In closing, 2011 has been a very good year for me in the area of amateur radio. As I approach my 5th year of being licensed I’m reminded of what this hobby truly is all about. The friendships I’ve made over the years and especially those who I interact with on a regular basis are truly very important to me. It is these friendships made possible through this hobby which truly help to complete who I am as a person.
The hobby of amateur radio and those who participate in it, are often referred to as ambassadors. We are ambassadors who are not restricted by political, religious or even geographical boundaries. We do what we do and are who we are as individuals because of a common shared interest. It is my wish for the new year for all of us to use this common shared interest and our roles as ambassadors to continue to bridge peaceful relationships around the world.
Until next time and next year,
73 de KD0BIK
Jerry Taylor, KD0BIK, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Colorado, USA. He is the host of the Practical Amateur Radio Podcast. Contact him at [email protected].
2011: Annus Horribilus
Well, what a year 2011 turned out to be! As I write this it will be six months since I learned that I have incurable brain cancer.
Let me tell you, nothing prepares you for the shock of being told you have a terminal illness. One day I was a reasonably fit 58-year-old who had never been seriously ill in my life, enjoyed long walks in the outdoors, didn’t eat junk food, never smoked and drank only in moderation. I fully expected to live until my 80s – the average expectancy of people in Britain.
A week later and our world had been turned upside down. Within hours of being referred to hospital after complaining of a persistent slight headache and fuzzy vision I had been give a CT scan and told that there was something in my brain that shouldn’t be there, something that might be a tumour.
Then I was told that whatever it was, I would need brain surgery, and asked to sign a form to show it had been explained to me that I might never recover from the operation, I might be left in a coma, or unable to speak or recognize my wife. The thought of brain surgery was scary but with no time to even think about alternatives I signed. A couple of hours after that and I was being whisked by ambulance across the breadth of the country in the middle of the night to the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle. There, they made an MRI scan and then performed the brain surgery to remove as much as they could of the tumour without harming normal brain function.
A few days later I was recovering in hospital from the operation, feeling better by the day and fully expecting that I would be home soon and in a few weeks life would get back to normal. Then a grave-faced hospital registrar accompanied by a nurse drew the curtains round my bed, sat down and informed us that the material taken from my brain had been analyzed. It was a brain tumour, and not just any old brain tumour but the worst sort possible (glioblastoma multiforme grade 4) that only one in 40,000 people are unlucky enough to get. I’d hit the brain tumour jackpot. The prognosis was from a few months to a year, but I would receive treatment to “prolong quality of life as far as possible.”
The news was like being punched in the stomach. Nothing in our life would ever be the same from that moment on. And Olga and I, stunned and numb, were left to find our way home to Cockermouth from Newcastle.
Since then, we have been through a whole gamut of emotions. At first, I felt that nothing I did before I knew I had a tumour mattered as much as making the best of whatever time was left to myself and Olga. In that frame of mind I felt that ham radio was a fairly pointless activity and posted in this blog what I thought would be The Final Over.
But I soon came to realize that life wasn’t over yet. Because of the need for rest and treatment, Olga and I couldn’t just take ourselves off on a world cruise anyway. I needed to be available to see the doctors and go to the hospital. So I regained my interest in my hobby and was soon very thankful for it as gave me something to do during the weeks spent at home, something that took my mind off the darker thoughts I often had.
Learning that I had a brain tumour and that my life was likely to be shorter than I had hitherto expected has made me a different person. I now live from day to day and try to be grateful for whatever each day brings me. I used to be the archetypal “grumpy old man” ranting about the government or other people. I haven’t altered my opinions about bankers, politicians and the EU but now I don’t waste precious time grumbling about things I can’t change.
After I began writing my brain tumour diary one or two people pointed out that it wasn’t just me, we are all mortal and we all die eventually. Some people go off to work and die in car accidents or suddenly drop dead of a heart attack giving their loved ones no opportunity even to say goodbye to them. Others die after long and painful illnesses with months in hospital. We don’t know for how long the treatment will keep my tumour at bay. At the moment I’m feeling no pain, just frustration sometimes at not being able to do things I could when I was fit. But I’m at home with my wife and expecting that I will eventually get back to something more akin to normal.
The realization that time is precious means that Olga and I will do things that we otherwise would probably never have got around to. I am lucky that I have been able to give up work and devote my energy exclusively to recovery and recreation. We are both savers not borrowers so we are fortunate not to have money worries – well, not apart from the possibility of a world economic collapse making all of our savings worthless! Being diagnosed with a terminal illness has even allowed me to fulfil a goal I thought I never would – that of retiring before I was 60. Every cloud has a silver lining.
Most of all, I am so fortunate to be married to my wife and soulmate Olga. She has never once complained about the stresses and strains of suddenly finding her husband has brain cancer. She is always there for me, making sure I take all the right pills at the right time and helping me keep my strength up with lots of tasty home-cooked food, fruit and vegetables.
My situation has been harder for Olga to bear than for me. I have always had a bit of a fatalistic view of life – that what will be will be – and a tendency to look for dark humour in a situation. But I only have to imagine how I would feel if the situation was reversed to know how Olga must be feeling. I would be heartbroken to lose her and it won’t be easy for her if she loses me.
For Olga, even more than for myself, I need to beat this tumour. I need to prove the doctors wrong and show that you can survive a glioblastoma. I’m optimistic about it. So my one and only resolution for 2012 is to beat the bugger and still be here in a year’s time to write about all the things we have done despite my having a brain tumour.
Thank you for reading my blog and for all the messages and cards of support sent by many of you. They have all made a difference and helped us both to feel better about the situation. I hope that 2012 will be a great year for you and not spring any nasty surprises like 2011 did for us.
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Simple keyer trouble
It should have been simple. I needed a basic CW keyer that would allow me to use a paddle with my homebrew QRP / QRPP rigs because my shaky hands make sending Morse with a straight key too difficult at the moment. I also needed to be able to record a message and play it once or repeatedly until I heard someone reply or was spotted on the reverse beacon network.
A couple of years ago I built a DC20B QRP transceiver. I didn’t like it very much and eventually sold it on eBay but I did like the keyer built into it which used an ATTiny13 microcontroller. One day, I thought, I would build a keyer using this chip. I got two of the Atmel chips and Steve Weber KD1JV sent me the hex file so I could program them but I never got around to doing anything more until a couple of days ago.
The simple keyer circuit uses only a handful of components but due to my condition it took a lot longer than it would have done pre-tumour to work out a perf board layout and build it. So you can imagine that I was a bit upset when after all that effort the keyer didn’t work. It responded to the dash key and the function button, but not the dot key. Also the sidetone was very high pitched and the Morse speed was about 100wpm!
Thinking I had made a mistake programming the clock setting in the chip I tried programming the other one. This ended up just the same. Unfortunately with the simple keyer program you have to disable the reset pin that is used by the programmer so you only get one chance to write the code to the EPROM. But as I don’t have the source code and so can’t try modifying it that shouldn’t have been a problem. If I hadn’t sold the DC20B I could have tried the keyer chip from that, but now I am now stuck with no idea what to try next.
I have the code for another keyer that uses a PIC12F509A – the K9 from K1EL’s freeware page. But I’d have to start over with the circuit board as the pinouts of the Atmel and Microchip microcontrollers are not compatible. The functionality of the K1EL keyer program is not what I was after either, so I don’t feel much like trying it at the moment.
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
What The Hell Am I Blogging About?
I am an entrepreneur (cofounder of 6 companies including Enigma Records, Restless Records, Enigma Digital, Bigger Picture Group and InnovAntennas), former music business executive (president of Rykodisc, SVP/GM of EMI Music’s Astralwerks and Caroline divisions, SVP/GM at Live Nation Artists, plus the aforementioned record labels I cofounded), amateur radio operator (currently callsign AA7XT, former callsigns include NT1Y, AA6TT and KC6EDP), family man (happily married to Christine since 1992, we have a rambunctious 8-year old daughter – are there any other kind? – and assorted pets), triathlete (3-time Ironman finisher) and cycling fanatic, early stage investor in tech companies, and owner of an Earthship house in Glade Park, Colorado.
This Blog will focus on amateur radio, Glade Park, Colorado and Earthship topics. Amateur radio has been a passion since I started SWL-ing (Short Wave Listening) in 1969 on a Zenith Trans-Oceanic transistor radio and hamming in 1970 when I passed the novice license exam, and Earthships, well, because we live in one and sustainable living is an interesting topic. I will be writing about Glade Park, Colorado – where we moved in 2011 – because it is a fascinating place in so many different ways.
Radio recently became more than a hobby to me when I became a partner in InnovAntennas with company founder Justin Johnson (whose amateur callsign is G0KSC). InnovAntennas is based in Canvey Island, England and I run the North American office here in Grand Junction, CO. InnovAntennas designs and manufactures extraordinary high-performance antennas for amateur, military and commercial use from HF up through UHF frequencies.
My perspective on sustainable living will take a different line from much of what I read about sustainable living which tends to have a political undercurrent if not an avowed political stance. I’m not that political a person to begin with – haven’t occupied much of anything lately except my Aeron chair, the driver’s seat of my diesel GMC Sierra 2500 truck, and my Bianchi road bike seat and I’m in favor of things that work whether from the right or left – and my interest in Earthships stems from (a) general admiration of well-engineered things and (b) affinity for not sending more money to utility companies than I absolutely have to. If I save the earth a little by living the way I do, well, hey, why not?
Bill
Bill Hein, AA7XT, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Colorado, USA. He is co-owner of Force 12 and InnovAntennas. Contact him at [email protected].
70Mhz and 500khz allocations for the Netherlands
I just saw a tweet from OY3JE containing a link to the IARU Region 1 website noting that the Netherlands will have allocations at 70MHz and 500khz from January 1st 2012.
Personally, I’m particularly pleased with the opportunities at 70MHz, though I suspect I will be lucky to work into the Netherlands with my current 70MHz setup.
See the Region 1 article here
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Mixed Signals from Yaesu
This just in from the Things That Make You Go Hmmm Department: the amateur radio portion of Yaesu splits from Mother Motorola while the land mobile portion stays. This is right on top of an announcement that Yaesu will pursue a digital amateur radio offering based on land mobile technology (i.e., definitely not D-STAR).
The K0KDS blog has a post about the split, so go there for the full story. The ARRL has this news item about the organizational change. Here’s the paper that Yaesu published about their move into digital technology for amateur radio.
73, Bob K0NR
Bob Witte, KØNR, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Colorado, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
My amateur radio highlights of the year
1. JT65
If you’ve seen my posts recently you’ll see that I have been very active on JT65 on HF using the W6CQZ JT65-HF software. It’s excellent for working DX with low power. And actually I get just as much satisfaction from working a station using something like a loft dipole, knowing that on any other mode, I would struggle to make the contact. It’s a very relaxing mode too, also ideal for those late night contacts without keeping other occupants of the house awake.
Having seen how effective JT65 is on HF, I really want to try it on VHF. But that’s something for 2012.
2. The 50/144/432MHz collinear
The aerial was installed in April and it has given me a new perspective on 144 and 433MHz in particular. There have been plenty of surprises about how much variation there is on a day-to-day basis in terms of propagation. There have been some exceptional contacts and loggings too; a repeater from Norway completely out of the blue on 144MHz as well as more recently a 144MHz FM contact to the South of France.
On 50MHz during this year’s Es season, the antenna worked out well with many contacts being made.
3. 28MHz
During the summer the new Anytone AT5555 proved great fun with low power with the Es propagation. And earlier in the year, my bike ride portable operations with the FT817 and a simple antenna were always interesting.
In the autumn it was a real surprise and pleasure to find the band so good for worldwide DX again.
4. Practical Wireless
Being part of the team and writing for PW is great fun and I’ve enjoyed every column and review in different ways. It’s been great to engage with the contributors and find out what interests them. Thanks to Rob, Tex and the team in Poole for making it such a great experience.
5. Memorable contacts
Hard to single them out as there’s always something interesting in each contact. But a few contacts of different types spring to mind quickly:
The contacts that come out of apparently nowhere! Being fascinated by radio propagation, it’s magical to me how signals can come up out of noise and then fade back down again (hopefully having been worked in between); 9H1BT on 50Mhz late one May evening, EA1FDI on 144MHz in August, HB10K on 144MHz on a September evening, F4FGB worked on 144MHz FM via a repeater in the South of France and F5ICN on 144MHz SSB from the South of France more recently. Earlier this week, working Rene DL6NAA on 144 and 432MHz was really pleasing.
JT65 has been quite a mind shift for me. Working W7YES from the west coast with just a few watts on 28MHz as well as KP4ED on 3.5MHz JT65 on a noisy winter’s evening were QSOs that I know I would have struggled to make on other modes.
Of course it was good to work some real DX; my friends at T32C on the other side of the world did a wonderful job and it was great to work them with no hassle on 10 and 24MHz CW. In September, I realised that 28MHz was back in business when I worked NE0X with a huge signal on CW early one evening.
It’s no longer all about DX for me though. Working Larry G4OXY on 70MHz FM via the Tring parrot was great. We used to work on 50MHz when Larry was in Portishead and I was in Cheltenham back in the mid 1980s, so there was much to catch up on! Likewise with Mattias DH3NAN who I worked recently on 144MHz SSB – we remembered QSOs from the SquareBashers 1985 expedition to IN79 square GB2XJ.
I always enjoy radio contacts with my Twitter friends, so it was really good to chat with Jerry KD0BIK from Denver on D-STAR. Rob M0VFC persuaded me onto 18MHz SSB for the first time in many a year when the Camb-Hams were operating from St Pierre et Miquelon – that was a fun QSO.
D-STAR provides the ability to make some nice QSOs across the world or closer to home and I particularly enjoyed a lovely QSO one August morning with Rod G3TXA on the Isle of Wight and another QSO with old friend Gordon G8PNN in Northumberland.
All in all, an enjoyable year on the radio. Always something new and interesting to try and fascinating people to talk to. 2012 will mark the start of my 30th year on the air. Short compared to some – but a hobby has to be good to keep you keen after 30 years, doesn’t it?
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].














