Icom IC-7610 In Depth
It’s the IC-7610 video you’ve been waiting for…

Ray Novak, N9JA joins George, W5JDX and Tommy, N5ZNO of AmateurLogic.TV for an in depth look at the new IC-7610.
Lots of detailed information about this great new transceiver plus comparisons with the IC-7600 and IC-7300.
View on YouTube .
George Thomas, W5JDX, is co-host of AmateurLogic.TV, an original amateur radio video program hosted by George Thomas (W5JDX), Tommy Martin (N5ZNO), Peter Berrett (VK3PB), and Emile Diodene (KE5QKR). Contact him at [email protected].
NooElec Giveaway Winners — March 2018

NooElec and AmateurRadio.com have picked the winners of our
March 2018 NooElec Giveaway!
Prize Package Winners
Jon KD9AMP
HackRF Bundle
w/ aluminum enclosure, TCXO module & ANT500 antenna

Ted KK4LXY
Ubertooth Bundle
w/ aluminum enclosure

Len KA1LOR
Jan ZS6VOL
NESDR SMArt HF Bundles
Amazon Exclusive

Viktor UA6ATG
Dean K6DIN
John WA3UHZ
Ham It Up Plus HF Upconverters

Del KG6LS
George AB2MI
Arne K5ARN
Ham It Up Plus Upconverter PCBs

Jason KE7IET
Michael N0PDG
Randy K4LJA
Joe K0NEB
Ville OH2VSY
NESDR Nano 3 OTG Bundles

Phil KU0Z
James WU7G
Jerry W3CDE
Justin KN4JZB
Ryan WC6Q
Flamingo AM & FM Filter Bundles

Matt KD9AEZ
Kevin KF7MF
Igor RA3XDX
Bob W2RWM
Jeff VE6DV
NESDR SMArTee SDR Bundles

Geoff G8BMI
Jeff KD3AR
Kevin M0XLT
Bruno W6USC
George DU1GM
SMA Cable Connectivity Kits

Guido LU8EQ
Paul KG7OWO
Vladamir RV9U
Lowell NE4EB
Keith KN4CRI
Craig KO5S
John KK4QYM
John KI4CFH
Mika KF4IVM
Dean KC9REN
NESDR SMArTee SDRs

Stewart KM4APN
Stormy AA1ES
John KB5HCT
Bill KD5YYK
Peter G4EYV
SMA Adapter Connectivity Kits

Mark KG5HEM
JoAnne K9JKM
John WI6P
Robert VE3TXF
Lynette MI3WLW
Ratlsnake M5 Antenna Bundles
Claiming Your Prize
Winners will be receive an e-mail shortly.
We must hear back from you by Saturday, 3 March 2018 at 20:00.
You can get future winner announcements by
subscribing to our free Amateur Radio Newsletter (subscribe below),
following our posts via RSS feed, via Twitter (@amatradio),
or via Facebook (facebook.com/amatradio).
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Sign up so you won’t miss our next prize drawing!
Thank you to NooElec for offering these fantastic prizes!
Visit their website at NooElec.com / eBay store / Amazon store
Please follow NooElec on Facebook and Twitter for the latest news about their great products!
Matt Thomas, W1MST, is the managing editor of AmateurRadio.com. Contact him at [email protected].
Keep The Faith, Having Fun With No Sunspots
As it would happen today, with the flux at 67, I did my 258th SOTA activation on a summit near Santa Fe, NM that has no name, but goes by it's elevation, 8409. There are beautiful views in every direction, from the summit of 8409, and I enjoyed them immensely. With me, on my trek up the mountain, was my KX2, a 21ft. collapsible pole to support a 29 ft. piece of wire through an 81 to 1 transformer. I feed the antenna about a foot above the ground and run the wire up the pole in an inverted L configuration. The pole was propped up among the branches of a pine tree and I tied off the antenna to a close-by pine branch. I had the power set to 5 watts and tuned the wire with the KX2. I operated CW using the Elecraft plug-in paddle and I logged with a golf pencil on a, write in the rain, index card. The temperature was a crisp 39 degrees, but the sun was shining and not wisp of a breeze. It was a good day to be on the mountain top.
I was on the air from 1642z - 1722z. I operated on 40, 30m, 20m and 17m and completed 40 QSO's in the 40 minutes that I was on the air from 8409. Also, with the flux at 67, I managed to work two EU stations, ON and EA. I heard a 9A calling me but we couldn't complete the contact. So, 40 QSO's, coast to coast in the US and 2 DX QSO's from EU was my catch for the day. Not bad for a short QRP/portable outing. Keep in mind that's with the flux at 67. I'm glad I didn't look at the numbers before I left or I might have been a bit discouraged and perhaps wouldn't have gone out at all. I would have missed the beautiful views, the warming sunshine and a QSO a minute QRP operation. I wouldn't have worked EU with 5 watts and a wire. I would have had to put off my 258th SOTA activation for another day.
The moral of this story is simple, don't look at the numbers. In fact I would recommend that you ignore them. There is plenty of fun to be had keying up your radio even when conditions, or at least the numbers, are this bad.
Keep the Faith. Go call CQ. I was glad I did.
Mike Crownover, AD5A, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Texas, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
Condo Hamming, The NRR and Ron’s Logs
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| courtesy: K4VRC Group |
Rick, KB2NAT, describes the learning curve in his 'How To Overcome Some Condo Issues' post.
Amateurs contemplating downsizing to a restricted development or those finding themselves in a similar situation to Rick will likely soon be subjected to more noise, less space, more neighbours and an abundance of rules. Hopefully the comments of Rick and others will be helpful if this is your situation.
For many restricted hams, Mag loops appear to be a popular choice and one of the comments points to a good deal of information on building one for yourself. The Villages Amateur Radio Club (K4VRC) group's 'resources' link will provide some interesting ideas for restricted antenna builders. As well, they have put together an informational presentation, full of great antenna ideas for those contemplating ways to get on the air from antenna-restricted locations.
If you live in the USA, the 'Freedom to Display the American Flag Act of 2005' has been used by many antenna-restricted hams, to legally erect their own 'antenna flagpole'! It may be an easy route for a nice antenna system for you as well.
The 'Novice Rig Roundup' Starts Tomorrow!

Just a reminder that 9 days of CW operating fun begins tomorrow afternoon. After last year's most enjoyable event, the NRR is now one of my 'must do' operating activities. You can read all about it here.
Ron's Logs
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| courtesy: California State Parks |

Ron lives in the seaside city of Monterey (CA) and on most mornings he makes the short pre-dawn drive to Asilomar State Beach (CA), a spectacular location on the coast.
After stringing out his 100' wire antenna on the nearby fence posts, Ron proceeds to log and record some truly exotic stuff before heading home.
Early last Fall, before being aware of Ron's daily regime, I had visited his exact location and after watching the big sea lions playing in the surf, had drooled over the location's great DX potential, little knowing that Ron had likely packed his gear up a headed home just a few hours before my arrival! I'm sure you'll be inspired to tune around the SW broadcast bands after checking out theses Group's daily posts.
Steve McDonald, VE7SL, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from British Columbia, Canada. Contact him at [email protected].
Feeling gassy
Ionization is a beautiful thing
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| OA2 VR tube glowing beautifully in back corner |
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| Tbis 6EA8 should not be glowing violet |
Lots of flatulent tubes
Solved a bit of a mystery tonight
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| Tube shield needed to be grounded to the socket spring |
Richard Carpenter, AA4OO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from North Carolina, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
uBITX professional case
The case comes predrilled, with the cut out of the panel for the frequency display, ready to house the uBITX PCB. This sure makes the uBITX look the part in the shack. Complete with all the missing fittings, speaker, knobs, USB, SO239, mic skt, etc (the full list of parts is on the website).
Shipping starts early March.
Link here for:
Universal Case DA Grey
Steve, G1KQH, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from England. Contact him at [email protected].
Travel Footage: 3Y0Z Antarctic Bouvet Island DXpedition 2018 Expedition (by EY8MM)
Here is video footage of the journey to Antarctic Bouvet Island, made by the 3Y0Z amateur ham radio team. This footage caught a few moments on the deck of M/V Betanzos.
As you can see in the last moments of this footage, the weather conditions contributed to the decision to abort the DXpedition, as it was far too dangerous to continue this expedition.
As reported by ARRL:
“Our captain has decided that it is in the best interest of safety and expediency to proceed directly to Capetown, South Africa, rather than Punta Arenas, Chile. We are now heading north to avoid the possibility of encountering ice. Currently, there is no ice in sight or on radar. In due time, we will head easterly toward Capetown. Our entire team is safe. Most are resting in their bunks and in good spirits. We will keep the amateur radio community and our families informed, as we continue our journey.”
In a huge disappointment for the DX community and the members of the 3Y0Z Bouvet Island team, the DXpedition’s leaders announced at 2000 UTC today (February 3) that a decision had been made to abort the DXpedition and head back to Chile.
“During the last 72 hours, we continued to experience the high winds, low clouds, fog and rough seas that have prevented helicopter operations since our arrival at Bouvet,” said an announcement on the 3Y0Z Bouvet Island website. “No improvement was predicted in the weather forecast for the next 4 days. Then, last night, an issue developed in one of the ship’s engines. This morning, the captain of the vessel declared it unsafe to continue with our project and aborted the DXpedition. We are now on our long voyage back to Punta Arenas. As you might imagine, the team is deeply disappointed, but safe. There is already talk about rescheduling the DXpedition.”
Bouvet Island currently is the third most-wanted DXCC entity, behind Kosovo and North Korea. The 3Y0Z DXpedition, comprised of top operators with considerable DXpedition experience, has been in the planning stages for 2 years and had attracted contributions from clubs and individuals around the world.
A dependency of Norway, Bouvet is a subantarctic island in the South Atlantic. The last Bouvet activation was 3Y0E, during a scientific expedition over the winter of 2007-2008.
Video Author: Nodir Tursun Zade, EY8MM
This copy is used BY PERMISSION from EY8MM, given in writing on 23 February 2018
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