Category Archives: On The Air

Articles and other information related to On The Air Operations, Special Events, Activations, DXxpeditions, Portable and Mobile On The Air Activities, Nets, etc.

Huh? 2 meter QSO into Canada!

Ok, this is slightly misleading but it’s true.  I had a QSO with a Canadian station over 200 miles away on 2 meters. From my car none the less!

You may wonder how this was done. I had some help from above that’s how. I discovered that on the International Space Station (ISS) is this cool thing called a digipeater.  Now I’m no pro at this but I will attempt to explain in hopes that someone else can enjoy getting their toes wet in Amateur Satellite opportunities.

To start, here is an eQSL card of my from my first QSO of this nature:

ISS Packet Contact QSL

Note the mode on this card. It’s packet. The digipeater on the ISS relays APRS messages.  This was all foreign to me prior to this contact. I discovered all of this by accident while I was monitoring the ISS frequencies for voice and SSTV. APRS transmissions were pouring out of my radio. Curiosity got me to research the sounds and ultimately steered me towards giving it a go.

Although I already had all the parts and pieces to start my way I lacked the knowledge of what to do. It took some figuring out, but I now have a simple and relatively low-cost way of working some satellites. Unlike voice mode, you do not need a directional antenna to do packet through the ISS. I use my mobile radio in my car, an omnidirectional antenna, a USB SignaLink sound card and an inexpensive Windows tablet pc. I downloaded UISS and AGW packet engine (both are free).  I think I blew a brain fuse or two figuring out how it all goes together, but in the end, it works.

The uplink and downlink frequency for this is the same: 145.825

Go ahead, tune in and listen while the ISS is over your location.  There are many websites and smart phone apps to give you the pass schedule.

If you are interested in this and want help getting started on this for yourself then feel free to shoot me an e-mail [email protected]

Hope to hear you on the air!

Curtis (KB1RTQ)

6M Propagation to Europe on JT65.

Wow, six meters was wide open this morning to Europe. I started playing on CW, but the signals were so steady that I decided to go to JT65 so I could see where I was being heard. I have included a pskreporter.info map filtered for my station for the previous 6 hours. The snapshot was taken at 2016-06-13 at 18:05 UTC. Beam was between 45 and 60 degrees. The USA stations were all off the back of a 3 element Yagi. Running 70 watts. The rig was my Flex-5000.

The ARRL VHF contest this weekend also had great openings, primarily state side, although I did work an EA8.

This is the time of year to get on 6 meters.

73,
Bill
NJ1H

Activating Saint-Gaudens National Historical Site

We will have two club events in Cornish, NH to activate the Saint-Gaudens National Historical Site as part of the ARRL National Parks On The Air (NPOTA) program celebrating the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service.  The dates are:

  • July 10, 2016.
  • August 7, 2016.

This should give more club members a chance to operate, more HAMs a chance to make a QSO with Sullivan County, and more of the world to hear what a treasure we have in New Hampshire’s only National Park!

The park has a lot to see, and we hope that you will bring along friends and family members — even if they are not (yet!) HAMs.

The artist’s studio, his wife’s gardens, and their house (originally built as an inn in the early 1800s) should be open.  (Tickets for the house tour are free and first-come, first-served, although its hours are slightly limited on these Sundays.)  Sculpture by the artist is displayed on the grounds and in the studio.

For anyone who wants to take a break and explore the woods, there are two short nature trails (0.25mi and 1.5mi) for anyone who wants to take a break away from the radios.

This is one of only a couple of National Parks dedicated to the arts, and they have an Artist-in-Residence program, so we hope to get a chance to see and talk to a working sculptor.

The park’s new bronze cast of Augustus Saint-Gaudens’ famous 12′ statue of Abraham Lincoln will be on permanent display.  This picture of the original sculpture will give you an idea of what a monumental work of art it is:

ASG-Standing-Lincoln-finished-clay-Cornish-1886

As an added attraction, the park has concerts in July and August, following a tradition set by Augustus Saint-Gaudens.  There is no fee for them beyond the park entrance fee.  The concerts for our operating days are:

  • July 10Ensemble Amphion – Music from the Court of Henry VIII
  • August 7 – Creek River String Band – Blue Grass Music from Appalachia

The concerts will be near the studio and house, and we will be operating from the far end of the field, so there won’t be any risk of us inadvertently transmitting music and incurring the wrath of the FCC.

Concert

There are more pictures, and information on the operating conditions in the park, in the article about our trial run.

The town of Cornish also has 4 covered bridges, one of which is a National Civil Engineering Landmark.  However, not all of Cornish has been blessed with advanced Civil Engineering projects, and the NPS points out that most GPS devices and mapping software will send you over rough dirt roads to get there, so be sure to follow the directions on their website instead!

We will meet at the park to set up at 11:00 am, at the far end of the meadow/overflow parking area, away from the buildings.  The entrance to this is on the left, and it is the first part of the park that you will see as you approach it using the paved road.  The paved parking area is shortly after that, on the right.

There is no food service at the park, so we suggest packing a picnic lunch or stopping en route to eat or pick up food.  And even though Cornish is much further from the equator than Nashua, it is summer and it will be warm, so be sure to bring enough fluid to keep yourself hydrated.

Entrance to the park is $7 for those 16 and older, and there are season passes for a carload of up to 4 adults for $30.  Senior, Active Military and other special passes are available.

Aron W1AKI

Radio Amateurs Developing Skills Worldwide