Category Archives: General

Articles about Amateur Radio and the Nashua Area Radio Society. This is a general category which includes most articles on our website.

The 2020 13 Colonies Special Event Begins on July 1st

The 2020 13 Colonies Special Event begins on Wednesday, July 1st at 9 am Eastern Time! There will be stations in each of the states that grew from the original Thirteen Colonies plus two bonu…

Source: 13 Colonies Special Event Begins on July 1st

The 2020 13 Colonies Special Event is almost here! We’ve got a great team of operators lined up for K2K, New Hampshire this year and we’re looking forward to a great event and some on the air fun. The 2020 event starts at 9 am on July 1st and ends on July 7th at midnight eastern time.

2020 13 Colonies Special Event QSL Card for K2K, New Hampshire
13 Colonies Special Event QSL Card for K2K, New Hampshire

The idea is to try to work all 13 Colonies Special Event stations K2A – K2M and the two bonus stations – WM3PEN and GB13COL. There is a nice certificate available for working one or more of the Colonies as well as QSL cards from each of the K2x stations. Check qrz.com for QSL information and the Thirteen Colonies Special Event website for certificate information.

K2K New Hampshire will be operating from a number of locations in the great state of New Hampshire including from AB1OC/AB1QB and KC1XX. We will be operating SSB, CW, Digital (FT8/FT4), and via Satellites! We are going to spend some time on 6m and perhaps 2m and 70cm if we have some Tropo openings.

You can learn more about the 2020 event via the link above. I hope we’ll see you in the pileups!

Fred, AB1OC

AC1EV Plans for 2020 Summer Field Day

AC1EV is operating 1E for Summer Field Day this year. I would have loved to operate in an ambitious club organized remote field day like we did last year, but Covid-19 social distancing requirements canceled that. I hoped to exercise my mobile setup and operate near saltwater, but again restrictions due to the virus made that difficult. I have a full house generator, so I will operate my home station on emergency power as class 1E. Here is how I am setup.

Power

17KW generator with 3 x 120-gallon propane tanks and Transfer switch

Power
Power

Antennas

K4KIO Hex Beam, 6 meters through 20 meters @33 feet and Alpha Delta 40/80 Dipole as an inverted V @ 45 feet.

Antennas
Antennas

AC1EV Field Day Station

Here is my shack in Tewksbury. I have an Icom IC-7300 with an Elecraft KPA500 amplifier along with an Elecraft KAT500 antenna tuner. Top that off with a Heil Pro 7 headset. The tuner allows me to select between the antennas. I have N1MM+ running on my laptop with two additional monitors leftover from my days as an IT Guru.

MA FD Shack - AC1EV Field Day
MA FD Shack

Jon, AC1EV

Field Day 2020 at W1AKI

Normally for the Nashua Area Radio Society, Field Day is a large, well-organized group activity of members, and many family members, setting up (and, later, taking down — safely!) at least a half a dozen stations, temporary towers with beam antennas, some interesting wire antennas, and our own emergency power grid. It’s a chance for members to try out transceivers and antennas and bands and modes that they may not have at their home QTH. It’s also a chance for members of the public to see what ham radio is all about and get an idea of what a temporary communications center hams can create in 24 hours in the event of a natural disaster or other emergency situation. So here’s what W1AKI Field Day plans are for 2020.

Life is What Happens When You’re Making Other Plans

This year, of course, things are different. They aren’t completely unprecedented — health care professionals and scientists have learned a lot from the 1918 Pandemic and, unfortunately, numerous others. But this is a new virus and a new disease, and the world is a much more crowded and interconnected place than it was over a century ago. Fortunately, we have technology undreamed of in 1918 to help science deal with the SARS-CoV-2 virus and the deadly COVID-19 disease it can cause.

So far, our modern, global communications infrastructure has held up well, and many people are very fortunate that they can continue working from home using the Internet and broadband communications channels. I’m extremely lucky that I’m one of them. And it’s not only the Internet, but technology like 3-D printing and small embedded computers have become additional tools that people have been able to make use of in this crisis.

Always Have a Backup Plan.  And a Plan C.  And Sometimes a D.  Maybe an E.

But what if that communications infrastructure does start to buckle under the load? As hams, and as members of the public, Field Day gives us a chance to think about how we would respond to that. And since we’re right in the middle of the pandemic ourselves, it forces us to look more closely at the changes we need to make to respond now. Does your “go kit” have a supply of face masks, hand sanitizer, and sterilizing wipes, not to mention soap and extra water for washing as well as drinking? Whether or not it did a year ago, I’m sure it does now!

So, this year, NARS won’t be setting up temporary towers in an idle athletic field. We won’t have a half dozen or more stations operating under the N1FD call sign with a small pool of gasoline-powered generators pushing our signals up to the ionosphere and back. We’ll be operating with our own call signs, from vehicles in isolated locations, from temporary stations set up by an individual or family member, or from our regular home stations.

Meanwhile, Back at W1AKI Field Day

I’ll be operating from home like so many others, with “100 watts and a wire” — an IC-7300 transceiver barefoot and an Alpha Delta 5 band fan dipole. (Okay, sorry, that’s more than “a” wire. And they’re mostly parallel, not in a wide fan. But it’s such a nice, traditional phrase. How can someone with a W1 call not love it? But I digress.) The 80m elements are extensions of the 40m elements with traps so that it is short enough to fit (just barely!) in my back yard.

My preparations so far have mostly included moving stuff around the shack so I can operate more comfortably, and updating the applications I use Firefox, N1MM Logger+, the DXLab suite, and DXLab’s various databases.

I won’t be using emergency power because I know that my generator works well (we have a few power outages here each year that give us a chance to test it; fortunately, power usually comes back in less than a half a day) and I’m willing to sacrifice the points to save fuel. (I’ll just have to make, what, 100 more contacts to make up for it? Oh, well, it is good practice.)

I’ve dug out some em-comm information and started refreshing my memory on message traffic procedures, that’s one thing I haven’t gotten to do before at Field Day. If I’m lucky, I’ll have time to finish tuning my antenna Saturday morning. My stretch goal is to get my son (an entomologist and microbiologist) on the air, but we’ll just have to wait and see how that goes.

It’s time to go double-check what the exchange is and get some rest.  I hope to see you on the air. 73 and take care of yourselves!

Aron, W1AKI

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