by Laurie Porter (noreply@blogger.com) at July 24, 2008 04:47 AM

click here to check it out !
steve

by noreply@blogger.com (Don Keith N4KC) at July 24, 2008 12:45 AM
by noreply@blogger.com (Larry W2LJ) at July 23, 2008 11:58 PM




picture of YV5MSG Werther.
by noreply@blogger.com (2E0HTS Simon) at July 23, 2008 10:06 PM
Welcome to Handiham World!
Photo: Will, KC0LJL, holds up a sign that says "Courage Center Handiham System" at Dayton. This is the place to find out about any and every interest in amateur radio, but not every ham radio club can do it all. Should your club be a "special interest" amateur radio club? Or should it be a general-purpose club with no special concentration on a given type of operating or purpose?
If you have been an amateur radio operator for quite a long time, you know that there is an ebb and flow to ham radio activities and interests. There is a clear seasonal difference between summertime amateur radio and wintertime amateur radio. As a teenager, I was extremely busy during the summertime, because I enjoyed experimenting with antennas. Conditions might not have been the best for long-distance communications on the lower HF frequency bands, but that didn't matter to me. Other amateur radio operators simply hung up their headphones until the cool, crisp days of autumn brought them back into their ham shacks. During the hottest weeks of summer, even antenna work was problematic for me. The local ham radio club suspended meetings during the summer anyway, so it was truly the "dog days of summer". Even today, decades later, many radio clubs still follow the same pattern of taking the summer off. People want to get outdoors and enjoy summer activities, band conditions are generally poor, aside from sporadic E-skip, and (even worse) we are stuck at the very bottom of the sunspot cycle with new cycle 24 taking its sweet time getting started.
As usual, my main amateur radio activity during the summer has been operating VHF mobile, checking into some regional HF nets, and doing a bit of antenna maintenance in the backyard -- hardly a frenzy of amateur radio operation! I didn't expect the e-mail I got from our local club president seeking the opinion of each and every club member about what kind of activities we would like to see in the upcoming "ham radio season".
The e-mail asked, "what kind of a club would you like us to be?"
Now, that sort of took me by surprise. What kind of club did I want to be in? Would it be an amateur radio club that is primarily a social organization, where I meet friends face-to-face on a monthly basis and participate in on the air social nets? Would it be a club that is more focused on competition and contesting, perhaps sponsoring its own contests and offering awards? Maybe a club that is dedicated to technical and engineering excellence, including building and experimentation, would be more fun and might be more attractive to newcomers interested in learning about electronics and engineering. We wouldn't want to forget about public service, either. The club would probably be interested in supporting SKYWARN training, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service, participating in public service communications for non-emergency events like parades and bicycle races, and working with government organizations and public utilities in shared training programs. Maybe the club would want to direct its efforts toward specific parts of the spectrum and modes of operation, such as VHF and UHF. Or perhaps DX should be a main focus.
There is no doubt that a successful amateur radio club is able to define its scope and purpose to meet the needs of its membership. This e-mail just appeared in my inbox, so I am still thinking about it. While I enjoy all of the aspects of a social club, I realize that simply visiting and enjoying a cup of coffee with other club members is not going to be enough for those who are interested in serious amateur radio competition on the air or members who are interested in building equipment or designing antennas. The question then becomes, "What is the right mix of amateur radio activities for MY club?"
Here is the thing you have to understand about specialization versus generalization: In an environment like a large urban area with high tech industries and a robust economy, there are likely to be more specialized activities, and I don't just mean in amateur radio. In the San Francisco Bay area, for example, you will find your choice of specialized food stores and coffee shops, just as you will amateur radio clubs with specialized goals and interests. If you live in Podunk, you are probably going to have to buy your cup of coffee at the gas station on the corner of Elm Street and the main highway, and the nearest radio club will be 10 miles away in a somewhat larger city, and the population of amateur radio operators in the area will be too small to make up a group that is anything but a general-interest amateur radio club. The forces of demographics will not be denied! Furthermore, even in an urban area where there is a choice of perhaps six to eight amateur radio clubs, over half of them may be general-interest, rather than having any sort of specialized purpose. If there is a club in your urban area that is specialized, chances are that its geographic reach is much larger than the city limits, and it may be statewide or regional, or even national in its reach for membership.
These are the thoughts that are swirling around in my head as I wonder about how to answer our club president's e-mail. I enjoy more than one amateur radio activity and would hate to see the club get too specialized. On the other hand, my QTH is in the greater Twin Cities area, which has a variety of clubs from which to choose. I wouldn't want to stubbornly stand in the way of a club changing its focus, when clearly there are other members who might be energized by such a change. I guess I'll continue to think about this before weighing in on the subject. In the meantime, I wonder if your local ham radio club ever does this sort of polling of its members to see if interests are being served, if the club is on the right track, or if there might be something that needs to be changed. Summertime, the ham radio doldrums, may not be the best time to get on the air, but I'm pretty sure that you can still sit on the patio with a glass of lemonade and contemplate what should happen in your radio club after summer vacation.
Patrick Tice
wa0tda@arrl.net
Handiham Manager
That's the one. That's the radio that Giorgio, I0YR, and I have had our eyes on. I found it in a local charity shop (location to remain secret, pending final transaction!). The one I found had no identifying plates, but with the scant info I provided in SolderSmoke 88, Steve, VE7SL, figured out what it was, and sent this picture to confirm. Not a BC-348, but instead a USMC BC-312.by noreply@blogger.com (Bill N2CQR CU2JL M0HBR) at July 23, 2008 06:18 PM
Last October, I purchased a used, iBook G4 Mac laptop and promptly started looking for logging programs. I found one that was kind of expensive (MacLoggerDX); one that was free, but didn’t want to work so well (RUMLog); and one that worked OK and cost somewhere in between the first two (Aether).
I ended up purchasing Aether, but was never very happy with it. For one thing, it took forever to do any kind of sort or look up previous QSOs. Another pain was that it carried over none of the information from the previous contact, so you had to enter all of the information from scratch, even if you didn’t change frequencies or bands. It also had an odd way of doing notes about a contact, and I was disappointed to find out that it didn’t import the notes from the ADIF file I created from the N3FJP logging program I used previously. Since I had paid for it, though, I was reluctant to just dump it.
Well, a couple of weeks ago, I’d had enough and decided to start searching again. Since RUMLog was still free, I decided to give the new version (v 3.0, March 15, 2008) a go. I’m happy to report that this version likes my computer a lot better, and I like using it a lot!
One of the coolest things is that it did import the notes from my N3FJP ADIF file properly. So, now, when I type in a callsign, the program searches the database, finds all the previous contacts I’ve had with that station, and then displays them in spreadsheet style WITH the notes. If I’ve taken notes about a previous conversation, I can pick up right where I left off. Very cool.
It also has a very nice way of showing you what countries you’ve worked, on what bands you’ve worked them, and whether or not you’ve QSLed that country or not. Not only that, it shows what type of QSL you have, either a paper QSL or a Logbook of the World (LOTW) QSL. To get it to show LOTW QSLs, you have to somehow feed it information that you download from LOTW. I haven’t figured out how to do that yet.
According to RUMLog, I have 142 countries worked, but only 69 confirmed. After getting this report, I pawed through my QSL file and found cards from 18 countries that weren’t QSLed via LOTW, so I’m still 13 short for DXCC. I guess I’m going to have to generate some more paper to get that certificate.
Dr. Arnie Coro, of Radio Havana’s DXers Unlimited, noted on his July 22/23, 2008 show:
The top quality microphones used by cellphone manufacturers are ideal for amateur radio use. A broken down, or an obsolete cellphone is a low cost source of two highly valuable devices… a nice high quality electret microphone element, and an also high quality optimized for voice communications earphone… So, follow your friend ARNIE CORO´S advice and don´t let your friends throw away the old analog cellphones before removing the microphone element and the earphone capsule…
For your information, my amateur radio two meters band handie talkie, a recycled unit itself, now has a much better microphone element than the original one, thanks to that simple surgical electronic transplant operation…The microphone from a Nokia analog cellphone has proven to receive much better audio reports than those that I got with my factory installed handy talkie built in microphone, an it took just about an hour to extract the analog Nokia cellphone microphone element and then install it on the old 1991 vintage YAESU FT 411 two meters band handie talkie… Reports received on the local 145.190 Havana Metropolitan Area repeater were very encouraging, with several of my friends telling me that the Nokia microphone element from the cellphone was sounding much better than the original element used by YAESU… And of course that as soon as I am able to get a hold of another broken down cellphone I will use it to replace the active element on an very old 6 meters band transceiver that has received some not very nice audio quality reports recently…
Not being a cellphone user myself, I don’t know how many of these are still available, but you might want to keep your eyes open for them.
by noreply@blogger.com (Parma Radio Club) at July 23, 2008 11:33 AM

The Telpac node TI2HAS was recently installed in Costa Rica. It serves as a port of entry to send signals through the internet that are received in VHF - PACKET, messages to other BBS in other countries, and to the Winlink network.
Last weekend, Hugo Soto TI2HAS, president of RCCR, received a visit from Cesar Santos HR2P, EMCOR of IARU R2, to whom he showed the radio that was equipped with the Echo Link System TI0RCR-R. It is linked to one of the local VHF repeaters.
They also discussed the cooperation of Emergency SM Communications with the Red Cross and other support organizations; the implementation of a reminder in the bases of Ham Radio Competitions to avoid transmitting within 5 Khz above and below the frequencies reserved for the centers of emergency activity GAREC, to leave them free of interference from the competition. (GAREC 2008).

The following updates are from Teresa Laxfoss, Vessel Manager: P/V Lady Gudny, skippered by the owner (and her husband) Capt. Kristjan B. Laxfoss.
Update 1 (02:14z)
E-mail received at noon today states that they are in Skiff Cove. New ash accumulations, foggy with 1 mile visibility. There is a low rumbling in the distance from Cleveland. They state that they are going to the beach and will camp until Sunday, and will have HF ham radio station.
I will report more after radio schedule tonight.
~ T
Update 2 (03:27z)
Time now: 19:24 AST on 7/22 ~ Capt. Kristjan on the Lady Gudny reports that the expedition team went on shore at noon today. By 17:10 they had set up camp and the expedition flag was flying. They are starting to transmit, and hopefully receive at this time. Cleveland continues to rumble but the Captain reports that the ash has subsided.
All is well and hopefully some of you are talking to them as of this writing.
Best regards,
Teresa

Please consider one of the following social networks especially FriendFeed and/or Twitter in the near future. Also, consider subscribing to KA3DRR, using the RSS symbol just below my picture.
Contest on.
by noreply@blogger.com (Parma Radio Club) at July 22, 2008 04:45 PM
I was looking through the ads in the back of the August QST, and I was reminded of how I used to do this as a kid. I would scour the ads, looking for some company or product I hadn’t seen before, then circling the appropriate number on the reader service card. Of course, now that we have the Web, there’s no need for reader service cards!
The first ad to catch my eye was a 1/16-page ad on page 144 for Liu & DB Enterprises, the “proud distributor of LDB brand electronics testing & measurement instruments.” They sell an eclectic mix of things including an analog audio generator, analog RF generator, five digital multimeters, a couple of frequency counters, and some soldering/desoldering stations. They even have a couple of ion air cleaners!
Just below the LDB ad, is an ad for Kintronics Labs, Inc. It’s a little bit unclear as to why they’re advertising in QST. Their ad shows a “49m, 10kW HF Balun” and their website notes, ” From concept to on air, Kintronic Labs, Inc. is ready to serve your AM/Medium Wave radio broadcast facility needs in a timely, efficient, and cost effective manner.” I suppose that if you have a lot of money, you could get them to design a custom antenna for you.
Finally, check out the ad on page 140 for Odyssey of an Eavesdropper. This book, written by Marty Kaiser, W3VCG, is subtitled “My life in electronics countermeasures and my battle against the FBI.” Check out his website to get an idea how an early interest in ham radio can get you in trouble. <grin>
Greetings from Dutch Harbor!
This team is presently aboard our vessel, the P/V Lady Gudny, skippered by the owner (and my husband) Capt. Kristjan B. Laxfoss.
While preparing to depart the vessel to set up their station this morning, the volcano Cleveland erupted. I am in e-mail contact throughout the day, and have radio schedule, via Single Side Band, with my husband nightly.
They will attempt to go ashore again in the morning (7-22) to set up the station. We are hopeful that this can & will be accomplished.
They report that all is well.
Best regards to all!
Teresa Laxfoss
Vessel Manager

by noreply@blogger.com (Sailin Gudhka) at July 22, 2008 07:40 AM

Mike K9AJ and Bruce KD6WW will be active between July 25 - 28 as homecall/VY0.
NA-229 (Hearn Island) is a new IOTA counter.
Mike states:
I will be active, along w/ KD6WW, from NA-229 (new) just offshore the far NE tip of Quebec (just across the strait from Baffin Island) a day before, during and after the IOTA contest. Home call/VY0. Should be working some SSB also.

In this episode Shep builds a 2 meter rig to talk to locals, but picks up signals from much farther away. Musings on extraterrestrial DX. Also, our hero gets zapped by a spark coil.by noreply@blogger.com (Bill N2CQR CU2JL M0HBR) at July 22, 2008 03:13 AM
by noreply@blogger.com (Larry W2LJ) at July 22, 2008 01:47 AM
Being a member of DMC give me some additional point. The contest committee have invited me to join on DMC RTTY Contest. Nice invitation!by noreply@blogger.com (YB2ECG, Sardjana) at July 22, 2008 01:19 AM
If I could click my steel toed boots three times? I would ask for a Collins KWM2 or KWM2A. One collector noted an item of interest and that is winged emblem (WE) or round emblem (RE). The RE tends to fetch a higher market price. However I have not found a satisfactory answer to why an RE or WE on the rig? Perhaps I'm not searching the Collins Collectors Association using appropriate terms i.e. winged or round. As a teenage ham in the late 70s a few radios stood out and one of them is a Collins KWM2 or KWM2A. I gravitated toward the stories. Let's see if I can find anything on a Drake C-Line? 73 from the shackadelic.