The Nashua Area Radio Society has partnered with Bishop Guertin High School for several years on STEM and Amateur Radio activities. The latest activity is the Bishop Guertin ISS Contact.
Astronaut Shannon Walker, KD5DXB
The recent Bishop Guertin ISS Contact with Astronaut Shannon Walker has had quite a bit of media coverage. There is news of the Contact everywhere that you look. You will find coverage of the students talking with Shannon Walker on the ISS on TV, in Newspapers, on the Radio, and on the Internet,
Television Coverage
After the conclusion of the Contact, a reporter from WMUR interviewed the BGHS students over Zoom. The story was on all of their evening news broadcasts on Friday as well as Saturday morning. Readers can view the story below.
The Bishop Guertin Students were also interviewed for Boston TV.
The BGHS students and their partnership with the Nashua Area Radio Society were featured in a spot on WCVB News in Boston on Tuesday, February 23rd. You can view the video and an article about the contact at this link on their website.
The BGHS ARISS contact was also featured on the front page of the New Hampshire Union Leader newspaper. Here is a link to the article on the Union Leader’s website.
The Nashua Telegraph published an article announcing the contact on February 18th. The article can be found at this link.
On YouTube
You can watch the Contact in its entirety below. The video includes a great introductory program with a video made by the BGHS students.
We will keep an eye out for additional media coverage of the contact and add links to this article as we see them.
2020 was a year that most people would like to forget. However we had a great year at the Nashua Area Radio Society, as we continued to have great meetings and activities online despite the pandemic. Here is our 2020 Year in Review.
Winter Field Day
WFD 2020 Operations
Winter Field Day 2020 was held the last weekend in January. We improved our score by over 100% and came in 2nd in the Outdoor Category. See this article for more on our operation and this article for the results. This was the last major event that we were able to spend together.
Craig N1SFT Working to setup for Winter Field Day
The Pandemic – Meetings Moved Online
May Meeting – Bob Heil, K9EID
When the Coronavirus Pandemic hit, we could no longer meet together. We moved our meetings online and continue to hold our monthly membership meetings and tech nights over Zoom web conferencing. Although we miss getting together in person, this allowed us to include our internet members in our meetings. In addition, geography was no longer a barrier so we brought in some great speakers for our monthly meetings including Bob Heil from Ham Nation, Tim Duffy, K3LR from DX Engineering, Ray Novak from Icom, Fred Lloyd from QRZ, Doug Grant, K1DG, world class contester, and more!
Tim Duffy, K3LR Speaking at June Membership Meeting
September Meeting – Doug Grant, K1DG – Getting Started in Contesting
Ray Novak, N9JA, tells us about the Icom-705 at our November Meeting
Summer Field Day – 2020 Year in Review
Field Day Virtual Site Visit on Zoom
The Nashua Area Radio Society decided to not hold a large group operating event for Field Day 2020 due to the pandemic and the need to social distance. The ARRL modified the rules to allow Category D (Home w/non-emergency power) stations to contact each other and to allow operators to designate a club with their entries.
We held a social distanced field day but still maintained a few of the annual field day activities. Sterling, AK1K took the lead in teaching us all how to send and receive messages for the messaging bonus, and led a messaging net during Field Day. We also held a Zoom meeting and invited an elected official and several club members who are in public agencies so that the members attending could claim those bonuses. Club members who were operating published articles with their plans on the website. You can visit this link to see the Field Day stories.
Our total club score was 14,952, and put us in the top 3% of all clubs.
Jeff, AC1FX Operating at Field Day 2020
Summer Field Day Antenna Setup at Jon, AC1EV’s Station
Spencer Webb, W2SW, Taught us about Antennas, Feedlines and much more!
In addition to taking our membership meetings online, we also took our Tech Nights online each month. This allowed our members as well as internet subscribers to have access to the live training sessions. We had some great speakers including Spencer Webb, W2SW, Jamey Finchum, AC1DC, Fred Kemmerer, AB1OC and learned all about EME, Antennas, Contesting, Portable Operating, PCB Design with Eagle and more! Members and Internet Subscribers can find video recordings of our tech nights on our website.
Jamey, AC1DC, Teaches us about Portable Operations
Gordon West Checks In to Technician Class
We also took our license classes online this fall. We are now offering an online exam session after the class to all students in the class. Gordon West dropped in to offer some words of encouragement to our Technician class! Our Spring 2021 Classes are on the calendar and registration is open.
Class Zoom
Ham Bootcamp
October 2020 QST Cover
This year we took our Ham Bootcamp program online. We held an all day Ham Bootcamp on Saturday November 7th, where we taught new and inactive hams the skills they need to get on the air. The session was very successful – we had over 200 people attend! The ARRL published an article about our Ham Bootcamp in the October Issue of QST, which helped Hams all over the country and in Canada find out about it. Our next Ham Bootcamp is scheduled for April 24th, 2021. See this article for more information and links to register for Bootcamp.
Thanks to our Ham Bootcamp instructors, Abby, AB1BY, Jamey, AC1DC, Aron, W1AKI, Burns, WB1FJ, Fred, AB1OC and Anita, AB1QB.
Abby Speaks About Fox Hunting in Fall 2020 Ham Bootcamp
Membership
300 Member Cake
2020 was a great year for membership! We celebrated over 300 members at our December Meeting – an increase of over 100 members since 2019! We now have over 240 regular members and over 80 internet subscribers!
Student Teacher Contest Series
Keith Sangillo, KC1IMK – Winner of the Student Teacher Contest Series
We held a Student Teacher Contesting competition this year to encourage young people to get on the air and develop their operating skills. The winner was Keith Sangillo, KC1IMK, who won an IC-7300. Abby Finchum, AB1BY was a close 2nd and will win a DX Engineering Hex Beam Antenna.
NARS in the Media – 2020 Year In Review
Ham Nation Bob with Ham Bootcamp QST Article
The Nashua Area Radio Society got quite a bit of media exposure this year. We published 2 articles in QST, were on Ham Nation twice, and were mentioned in a youth contesting article in the National Contest Journal.
Jim, K1BRM, tells Ham Nation audience about the NARS QSO Party
Our activities chairperson Jim, K1BRM was interviewed by Val, NV9L on Ham Nation to publicize the NARS QSO party, which we held in the fall. We also publicized Ham Bootcamp on that episode.
Note that ARRL Membership is Required to access QST and NCJ online
December Meeting
We ended the year with a memorable December Meeting, where we held Elections, heard from our NH Section Manager, John Gotthardt, K1UAF. We even had a visit from Santa where we could tell him Ham toys we want for the holidays! I hope everyone got what you wanted!
Santa at December Meeting
As we close 2020, we are hoping for a better 2021, and that we can finally get together in person with our fellow club members. We wish all of you a Happy and Healthy New Year!
When I was first licensed in 1957, Collins was king of the hill in amateur radio equipment. Collins pioneered the practical application of SSB to both military and amateur radio communications and SSB was state of the art in 1957. The Collins S-line was just coming to market and I so wanted this gear over the 10 years I was active (1957-1967). (The S-line was in production from the late fifties to the early eighties.) However, as a very poor kid at the beginning of this 10 year period and a poor college student at the end, personal finances made this a no-go situation. When I returned to amateur radio in 2017, I resolved to relive to some extent the good old days from the fifties and sixties and was in a position to do something about it as 50+-year-old Collins gear is much cheaper today, adjusted for inflation, than it was then. IOW, a 75S-3B receiver sold for about $600 new in 1970, equivalent to about $4200 today, and sells today on the used market for about $600 in today’s dollars. So, I set out to find both the Collins and E.F. Johnson gear I would have given an arm for back in the day. I carefully researched the market for this Vintage Radio gear and when the opportunity presented, acquired a few of my favorites.
Collins S-line @ K8EZB
The Collins gear (75S-3B receiver, 32S-3 transmitter, KWM-2A transceiver, 30L-1 amplifier, 312B-4 station control, and 516F-2 power supply) was mostly working (the seller said) but was unrestored. It had been serviced 20 years previous by Dennis Brothers, a well-known Collins guru, and former Collins S-line production technician, but had been very little used by the seller and had been stored for at least 10 years. With this recent history and taking into account, these radios are 50+ years old, I decided to do some restoration work and updating before putting these on the air. Some of this work I did myself, but I lacked the knowledge, skills and equipment to do everything necessary. I had, by coincidence, at about the same time developed an online friendship with Dave Harmon, K6XYZ, through the Collins Collectors Association (CCA) forum. Dave is a Collins S-line guru and offered to take on the task of checking out and updating this gear as appropriate to make it a useable, reliable station. In early 2018, I packed this equipment to withstand a thermonuclear event and shipped it off to Dave in Sperry, OK. He installed new tubes (including substituting 572Bs for the 811As in the 30L-1 amp), new power supply boards in the Harbach style, replaced capacitors and resistors where necessary, did a comprehensive alignment, and tested as a station on the air. Dave turned around these repairs quickly and shipped the equipment back to NH where it sat on a shelf in my shop until recently.
After setting up and using a thoroughly modern station for a couple of years, as a diversion from the Covid mess and from DC (District of Confusion) politics, a few weeks ago I decided to get this gear back on the air. Despite Dave’s excellent work, a few gremlins had crept in which required some troubleshooting and minor repairs. Using a vintage EICO tube tester I had acquired and restored a few years ago, I was able to trace the problems to two bad tubes which were easily replaced. I also had to deal with a steep learning curve since I had not previously used a Collins transmitter and had not tuned a tube transmitter and amp since about 1965. Fortunately, the manuals, service bulletins, and much other useful information are available online at the CCA website. Also, many parts (new, NOS, and used) are available from multiple online sources, especially tubes, as this gear was used extensively by the U.S. military and there are large quantities of surplus NOS mil-spec tubes available at very reasonable prices. The exception regarding tubes is the 30L-1 572B final amplifier tubes which are now being made only in China and vary greatly in quality; a U. S. company, RF Parts, is importing, testing, and creating matched sets of these tubes, so adequate replacements are available at somewhat premium prices but are not unreasonable given current prices of other transmitting tubes from that era.
Vintage tube transmitters typically require high impedance microphones. To meet this requirement, I added a Heil Gold Elite Vintage mic to the station. This mic is a wide range low impedance dynamic mic with an on-board impedance matching transformer and is intended specifically for use with vintage tube gear.
So, after a few days of preliminaries (repairs, tuning into a dummy load, monitoring transmit signal, generous coaching via email by Dave Harmon, etc) I checked into a 40m net. Success! Excellent signal reports including some reports of “fantastic” audio. The 32S-3 transmitter uses a Collins 2.1 kHz mechanical filter to determine the transmit bandwidth, with no adjustment possible, unlike modern DSP-based transceivers which typically offer several BW choices, most wider than 2.1 kHz. I have by now made quite a few contacts with this station and continue to get excellent reports including a few S9+25 reports from NJ and VA-based stations. Out of curiosity, I have decided to add some W2IHY outboard audio processing gear to see if “fantastic” can be made even better. I doubt this will be the case given the narrow transmit bandwidth, where audio equalization may offer little benefit. However, this gear does also provide for adjustable audio compression, which, when added to the designed-in 10 dB compression in the Collins RF circuitry, may increase average power. We’ll see. In any event, this outboard audio gear will be more beneficial with the older vintage gear coming next. The 30L-1 amp is spec’d at 1000 watts DC input (nominally 500mA at 2000 volts) which translates to about 600 watts PEP output. I have added a modern CleanRF demodulator and RF sampler to the station to allow monitoring of the transmit signal for flat-topping and linearity using RF envelope and trapezoid patterns on a vintage Tek 485 scope. So far, all is working well, and this has been a great learning/refresher experience. Quite a contrast vs my FTDX-101MP and Acom 1200S modern station!
EFJ PacemakerEFJ Thunderbolt
Next up in my vintage radio adventures is substituting a Collins KWM-2A for the 32S-3/75S-3B combination. This should be an easy transition as the KWM-2A is essentially a 32S-3 and 75S-3B in one box. Then, something more challenging. Waiting on the shelf is a Collins 75A-4 receiver and Johnson Pacemaker transmitter, Thunderbolt amp, electronic TR switch, and KW Matchbox. This gear is from the generation preceding the Collins S-line and is a bit more primitive. The 75A-4 was restored a few years ago by Howard Mills, W3HM, another very well-known Collins guru (now reportedly retired from guru’ing), and the EFJ gear was restored by Chuck Hurley, K1TLI. Both of these guys are master craftsmen and their restorations are works of art (at least to some of us!). The Thunderbolt amp weighs 120 lbs so I am hoping I can move it to the station bench.
I suspect many NARS members were born after this gear went obsolete, and will find this topic of limited interest. However, for some of us old-timers (never thought this term would apply to me!) who were into amateur radio when this gear originally came to market, pretty cool stuff!
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