VHF Sporadic E season not over yet..
By the time August comes along, the Es openings on the VHF bands are generally dying down a bit. Certainly, I’ve been checking 50MHz less frequently from the car and I’ve even been thinking about what band I’m going to use the IC706/mobile for over the winter (more on that soon!).
However, chatting to Ken, G3LVP this morning about 70MHz, he told me that yesterday there had been an opening to Portugal on 70MHz. Ken had worked CT1FJC from the Algarve.
So, keep checking those bands!
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].
More on the DX Code of Conduct (www.dx-code.org)
Paul, VP9KF (W4/G4BKI) has posted on his blog that the ‘DX Code of Conduct’ initiative appears to have drifted away from the originators of the concept, FOC
Either way, the DX Code of Conduct website which Paul is a little disparaging about DOES take the DX Code of Conduct to a new level and invites amateurs to sign up to it. If you sign up to it, your callsign is displayed as a mark of your commitment to reducing the level of poor behaviour on the DX bands.
Paul’s right – there are a few technical issues with the site – which I am sure can be resolved really quickly, but the intent and concept is great. It’s good to see the idea being developed and moved forward.
You can sign up and demonstrate your commitment here
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].
NS Ladder (27 August 2010)
This score looks familiar, but the distribution by band is different. Need more practice!
NCCC Sprint Ladder - Aug 27 Call: K8GU Operator(s): K8GU Station: K8GU Class: Single Op LP QTH: MD Operating Time (hrs): 0.5 Radios: SO2R Summary: Band QSOs Mults ------------------- 160: 80: 10 10 40: 9 7 20: 10 6 15: 10: ------------------- Total: 29 23 Total Score = 667 Club: Potomac Valley Radio Club
Ethan Miller, K8GU, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Maryland, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
Hacking a USB GPS
As regular readers will know, I’ve been playing about with APRS quite a lot in recent weeks and I’m starting to get the urge to build something APRS related. I’m planning to order one of the inexpensive FoxTrak kits, which lets you use a standard VHF FM radio to transmit position reports. To do that you also need a serial GPS and on searching eBay I became aware that serial GPSes seem to be rather more expensive than USB or even Bluetooth devices. This led me to wonder whether it would be possible to hack a USB GPS to use with a tracker like the FoxTrak. My investigations led me to this article by Primiano Tucci on GPS Hacking.
This post is basically an un-loseable bookmark to myself, since it will probably be a few weeks before I get around to working on this and by then I’ll have lost the article and never be able to find it again. But it might be of interest to someone else or provoke some interesting comments.
Although I’ll probably build the the FoxTrak as-is and test it with one of my 2m rigs I’m really interested in trying HF APRS on the move without having to buy an expensive TNC or lug a laptop around me so I can use AGWPE to generate the 300baud audio. So I’d also be interested to know whether anyone has modified the FoxTrak (or the TinyTrak which I believe is very similar) for the 300baud tones? I know the OpenTracker+ from Argent Data does 300baud “out of the box” but it’s quite a bit more expensive, enough more expensive to attract the punitive import fees that will almost double the price.
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Maplecon 2010 Report
I attended the first Maplecon last weekend, which was a gathering of Canadian QRPers. The venue was Emily Provincial Park campground. Gerry, VA3GLT, and myself headed down on Saturday morning, despite the convention’s start on the Friday, as both of us had commitments in the afternoon and evening of Friday 20th Aug. We had an early start and drove down the 401 highway to Port Hope then turned off and travelled North to the park. By noon we arrived and had put up the tent and an antenna.
The antenna for this event was a freshly homebrewed doublet made from some TV twin-feed I bought a few years ago and now decided to use. It was split 16′ 7″ down to form two arms of the doublet, and the remaining 23′ or so of twin feed was the feedline. At the end of the twin feed we installed a homebrew 4:1 current balun, which I had built a few years ago. The antenna was raised between two trees high enough that the feedline dropped vertically down and just reached into the tent. A short run of coax was used from the balun to my Elecraft K2. It tuned on 40m, 20m, 17m, 15m and surprisingly 80m (given the length of the antenna is would be a pretty inefficient). I could not get a tune on 10m. Possibly if I took out the 4:1 balun I may have made it.
There was a just short of thirty attendees at the convention and we chatted with quite a few. There were three tables set out as stalls, one with QRP rigs, one with QRP-ARCI information and one with Youkits radios. I would have like to have spent more time looking at the QRP equipment table, but things felt a little rushed as we had arrived late. We had a lovely barbecue lunch prepared by Jeff, VE3JFF, and his family after which I had a chat with Yimin and Fred, VE3FAL from Youkits about their new line of QRP radios. That will be covered in a future post as I made a recording of that conversation.
There was an antenna competition on so I spent a little time in the tent in the afternoon trying to make contacts on PSK31. Beside the antenna and the K2 I was using a little Asus notebook, a homebrew interface for digimodes and a large battery pack. It is so large that Martin, VA3SIE accused me of being a secret QRO operator! (That hurt Martin).
I had little success with contacting stations on 20m PSK until finally just before dinner when we made a contact with a weak station that was calling CQ. I replied and was acknowledged by Mirek, SP9ONC in Kozy, Poland. He was running QRP from a TS-2000 and and we exchanged details. I was really pleased that my first contact was DX and a QRP-QRP contact too. Soon after came my second contact Fred, KD8AQ in Mt Pleasant, TX and we had a nice chat. As the call for the chilli dinner had gone up earlier I had to break off that conversation.
Dinner was provided by the Ottawa Valley QRP Club and that was the second good meal. The chilli was tasty and Martin, VA3SIE, had brought some British delicacies for dessert, including Battenberg cake, which I had not eaten in many years as it does not often appear on shelves in Canadian stores.
After dinner there was the antenna competition, door prizes and a raffle for a ‘shack in a box’. For the antenna competition Michael, VE3WMB, won the prize for the best technical design with a folded over vertical antenna, and I won for the best performing antenna with the DX contact with SP9ONC. I was extremely pleased to find my prize was a Norcal BLT tuner which will very likely become the tuner for that doublet in future.
There were plenty of door prizes including several transceivers. Gerry, VA3GLT, was lucky to get the first of two HB1A transceivers that had been generously donated by Youkits. There were so many door prizes that I think all attendees went away with something. I won a set of pliers and a year’s subscription to QRP Quarterly, the QRP ARCI’s excellent magazine. So when my current subscription is up I can use that.
After all the prizes had been given out there was chatting into the evening and then Gerry, Martin and myself went back to the tent and made two more contacts on 20m. These were Tom, KJ4QDZ , in Lillian, AL and Virgil, WA5TLP, in Willston, ND. Not too many contacts but enough to make me happy with the performance of the antenna.
Over Saturday night and Sunday morning there was a lot of rain. So after breakfast next morning there were a lot of people leaving. Gerry and I thought it was prudent to take the tent down during a brief lull in the rain so there was no making contacts, just collapsing and packing a wet tent. We thanked Jeff, VE3JFF, for all his hard work that had resulted in a successful first Maplecon 2010, said goodbye to those that remained and we headed home before noon on Sunday.
Will there be another Maplecon next year? Well after the prize giving it was discussed by all and it was unanimous to have another. So here is looking forward to Maplecon 2011.
Alan Steele, VA3STL, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Ottawa, Ontario. Contact him at [email protected].
Cut the quotes, please
Why do some people find it necessary to put some irrelevant quote after their signature in forum and mailing list postings? When you see posts from these people several times a day it becomes incredibly irritating.
One person whose posts I seem to encounter frequently has two quotes after his signature: “Whoever said nothing is impossible never tried slamming a revolving door!” and “A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have.”
I can’t say I ever found the first one very funny but it has got very old after the 100th viewing. And I didn’t join a ham radio mailing list to learn about people’s political opinions, whether or not I agree with them. So please, just stop doing it.
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Handiham World for 25 August 2010
Welcome to Handiham World!
Telling the story: Mike Runholt, KC0YFV, on ARRL website
Photo: Mike, KC0YFV, left, and Bill, N0CIC, take down one of the wire antennas following a memorable radio camp session at Courage North. This radio camp was the last of a long run of week-long camp sessions at the Courage North location. In 2010, the radio camp session moved to Camp Courage, about 40 miles west of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Courage Center owns both camps. The Handiham System headquarters is at Camp Courage.
Mike Runholt, KC0YFV, has written an excellent article about the Handiham System and Radio Camp. It appears this week on the ARRL website. You can reach Mike at his callsign at ARRL.net if you wish to comment on the story.
“The pontoon slowly motors around the lake. A group of hams gathers around the radio. “CQ, CQ 80 meters this is W0EQO, KC0YFV at the mike, maritime mobiling from Courage North in Lake George, Minnesota, over.” So begins a typical contact at the Handiham Radio Camp sponsored by the Courage Handiham System, a program of the Courage Center. You have probably seen our quarterly ad in QST and wondered what we do.”
Read the entire story on the improved and newly-redesigned ARRL website.
Our thanks to Mike for telling the Handiham story so well. Good work, Mike! And, hey, Bill, you look good in that photo, too. Are you the wire tangler or the wire untangler?
Pat Tice, WA0TDA, is the manager of HANDI-HAM and a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com. Contact him at [email protected].


















