Looking for something to do? Join NARS on-air nets and on-line meetings

In these difficult times where many of us are practicing social distancing, Amateur Radio gives us many opportunities to have fun on-the-air and stay in touch with friends. The Nashua Area Radio Society has several weekly on-air nets that can provide you with some Amateur Radio fun as well as a chance to socialize with friends. We are also taking our April and May Meeting online and add a new, 40m Phone net, to our lineup. You can read more about our plans here.

Our Existing On-Air Nets

The Nashua Area Radio Society currently holds two weekly on-air Nets. The purpose of our nets includes:

  • Testing and using our equipment; being prepared to support communications in emergency situations
  • Sharing information about Nashua Area Radio Society upcoming activities and events
  • Sharing our recent Amateur Radio Activities
  • Having Fun!

All licensed Amateurs are welcome to join our weekly nets.

Weekly Repeater Net

Our weekly repeater on-air net is held on Sunday Evening at 7:30 pm eastern time (Monday 00:30 UTC during standard time). The format of our Repeater Net includes a weekly discussion question or two which gives all who participate a chance to share something about themselves and their interests. This Net also includes information about upcoming Nashua Area Radio Society activities and events. We conduct our weekly nets on the N1IMN-N1IMO Repeater System whose wide coverage includes New Hampshire and Massachusetts.

N1IMO-N1IMN Repeater System Access Information
N1IMO-N1IMN Repeater System Access Information

You can access our Repeater Net via any of these repeaters or via EchoLink as N1IMO-R.

We have a different Net Control Operator (NCO) for our Repeater Net each week. The NCO for the next few nets posted in our On The Air Forum here on our website. The NCO will also post a list of the operators who check in each week in this same forum.

We hope to hear you on our next Weekly Repeater Net!

Weekly HF Net

We also hold on Weekly HF on-air net on the 10m band. This Net begins at 8:30 pm eastern time (Monday 01:30 UTC during standard time) on Sunday evenings and features a round-table chat format. We hold our HF Net on or around 28.480 MHz using SSB Phone mode.  The NCO for our HF Net can be contacted here.  You can find more information about this net on our club calendar. All licensed Amateur Radio operators are invited to join our HF net.

We Are Going Online!

We are inviting all Nashua Area Radio Society Members, Internet Subscribers, and all US-based Hams to join us for online our April Meetings.

NARS will hold our meeting using the Zoom online service. Zoom is free and all you need to join us is an Internet-connected Windows or Mac PC or a Tablet (ex. an iPad).

Here are the zoom links for our April Meetings:

  • April 7th, 7 pm Eastern – Nashua Area Radio Society Regular Meeting. Our speaker will be Jim Idelson K1IR who will talk about Tower Safety. Join Zoom Meeting
  • April 14th, 7 pm Eastern – Nashua Area Radio Society Tech Night. Fred, AB1OC will provide a presentation on How to Get Started in 2m EME (Moon Bounce). Join Zoom Meeting

We suggest that you join our meetings online at least 15 minutes before the scheduled start times.

A New HF Net is Comming!

NARS will also be conducting a new, after-meeting on-air net on 40m after our meetings. We will hold new after meeting on-air nets on or around 7.260 MHz LSB. Look for us to post an update on the final frequency on our home page (and here) just before our nets begin. We hope that these nets will give our members and guests a chance to communicate and socialize with each other. Folks who join us for the preceding online meetings will also be able to monitor our new after meeting nets via the online share.

We will also be live streaming video and audio from our nets to the Nashua Area Radio Society Facebook page.

We hope to see all NARS Members, Internet Subscribers as well as some new Ham friends around the United States and around the World join us for one of our Nets and/or join us for our April online meetings.

Peter, KC1FNF and Fred, AB1OC

Member Spotlight, Tony AA3HD

Greetings.  I’m Tony Baker AA3HD, and I’m relatively new to the amateur radio world, just getting my Technician’s license in August of 2019.  Getting an amateur radio license was something I had been wanting to do for a long time but hadn’t gotten around to it for one main reason…my employer of over 35 years did not allow it.  One security restriction in working for the Central Intelligence Agency is that you cannot have an amateur radio license.  (Perhaps this standard prohibition has been dropped or relaxed today.)

From a very young age, I remember always being interested in two-way radios.  I think it was around the 7th grade that a friend of our family – “uncle” Bill – bought me a Knight 2-channel walkie-talkie kit.  Uncle Bill helped me put the two kits together, teaching me how to solder, and me learning what the different parts, like resistors, looked like, and the importance of ensuring polarity was correct, etc.  I remember having so much fun with my friends with those crystal-controlled radios after I got them together and the satisfaction of building them.

At age 20 I went to work for the CIA.  It’s been nine years since I retired.  Because of my employment restrictions, I did what I could do and got into citizens’ band radio.  Probably a lot of us hams were into or dabbled in CB radio at one time.  As a matter of fact, about two years ago I got out one of my old CB’s – an E.F. Johnson 40-channel SSB unit – and hooked it up in my truck, and, it worked!!!  But it wasn’t like the good old days of the mid- to late 1970s when every CB channel was very active, and you could talk skip in a heartbeat.  It seemed all the channels were silent.  My old CB call sign was KHK-7098.  Children and wives, (I’ve been divorced twice), forced me to change my priorities, and I eventually was unable to devote any time at all to my CB radio hobby.

Fast forward to last summer.  (As background, I went to elementary school in Deer Isle, Maine, and have been going there for summers my entire life.  Some of my relatives still live on Little Deer Isle, and my family still has a seasonal house on Little Deer Isle as well.)  For whatever reason, this past summer I started reminiscing about how great the skip on CB was back in the day from Little Deer Isle, but how silent all the channels were now.  I wondered to myself; why not get your amateur radio license now?  After some research, I discovered you no longer needed to learn Morse code to pass the test.  At that point, I decided to get my Technician’s ticket.  With some more research, I found out about a two-day licensing class in Natick, MA, and after completing the course, passed the Tech test.  Two weeks later I took and passed the General test, and two weeks after that, on September 7th in Boxboro at the HamXposition, I passed the Extra test.  That said, I was probably the only Extra who hadn’t even made a transmission, not to mention that I didn’t have a radio either!!

Boxboro was an exciting time for me.  It was here that I got exposed to some real hams, and some real radios, both new and old making and receiving transmissions.  It also was in Boxboro that I first became exposed to the Nashua Area Radio Society, soaking up all the displays, taking the HAM Bootcamp course, and learning that NARS was ARRL’s choice for the best ham radio club for 2019.  It also was at Boxboro that I decided to go to a NARS membership meeting and join if I liked what I saw.  I realized that by living in Wells, Maine I wouldn’t exactly be close, but I couldn’t find any ham clubs in Maine that were nearly as diverse, active, or successful as NARS.  Between Boxboro and attending my first NARS meeting in October, I bought two radios, the first being a Xiegu G90 HF, and the other an Anytone 868 dual-band DMR ht.  I had also applied for a vanity call sign.

At that first NARS meeting, I was hoping to meet some Elmers, as I had still not made an amateur radio transmission and was hoping I could get some help getting on the air.  It was at this meeting that I was introduced to NE1B – Bill Barber.  He agreed to help me with my DMR radio and get me on the air.  That Friday – October 4th – I went to Bill’s house.  Bill is a well-seasoned ham with quite a radio shack and impressive awards to prove it.  It was also the day I received my vanity call sign – AA3HD.  I never made a call with my originally assigned call sign of KC1LUN.  Bill helped me get my DMR radio up and programmed.  At about 2:30 pm that day I made my first transmission.  It was with Bill as I was driving away from his house.  Not very far, but what a thrill.  After literally decades of wanting to be a ham, I finally made it!

In Boxboro I also saw the instructor that helped me get my Tech license – K5TEC, Bob Phinney.  When I told him I had just passed my Extra exam, he encouraged me to become a Volunteer Examiner.  When AB1QB, Anita Kemmerer, made an appeal for VE’s at that first NARS meeting I attended in October, I decided to try to get my VE certification.  In mid-November, I became a VE, and have, as my schedule permits, helped out at NARS VE sessions.  How rewarding it is to see new hams and those getting upgrades to fulfill their dreams.  Besides joining NARS, I also am an ARRL Life Member.

At the NARS holiday party, I got a Baofeng ht in the gift swap.  I also have a Zumspot hotspot, and a Mirage VHF/UHF amplifier, all that I need to get up and running, and I still have to get my HF rig hooked up as well.  Antenna limitations imposed by XYL have made my beginning ham journey challenging to say the least, besides the fact that in terms of amateur radio she says, “I couldn’t imagine something that I would be less interested in.”  Right now I have my portable DMR radio working in both my truck and at home.  My base antenna is a portable dual-band J-pole type (DBJ-2) that I purchased at Fall 2019 NEARFest.  (A review of this antenna is in the March 2007 issue of QST.)  In the mobile, I’m using a Diamond NR770HNMO antenna.  I have plenty to figure out and explore, and I am finding amateur radio just as exciting as I always imagined it would be.

Other interests of mine include cars and motorcycles, but that will have to wait for another time.

73,

Tony, AA3HD

RSU 21 Students to Communicate to Outer Space – Portland Press Herald

Ann Stockbridge, Educator at Kennebunk’s Sea Road School - RSU 21 ISS Contact
Ann Stockbridge, Educator at Kennebunk’s Sea Road School

Regional School Unit 21 has been selected for an out-of-this-world opportunity. An international association of space agencies and Amateur Radio organizations has chosen RSU 21, represented by Sea Road School, to advance in a process climaxing in a conversation between students and astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

RSU 21 was one of 10 schools selected nationally to continue through the multi-month acceptance process. The contact event with the ISS could occur between July and December of this year.

The opportunity is provided by ARISS (Amateur Radio on the International Space Station), an association that includes NASA, the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, the American Radio Relay League, the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation, and space agencies in Canada, Japan, Europe, and Russia. They collaborate to enable students to communicate with ISS astronauts and help inspire interest in space, communications and STEM coursework.

Source: RSU 21 students to communicate to outer space – Portland Press Herald

As our readers may know, I have joined the ARISS program as a Mentor to help schools prepare for and make successful contacts with Astronauts on the International Space Station. I am working with RSU 21 Sea Road School teachers and local Ham Radio folks in Maine, USA to help them make contact with the ISS during 2H2020. The link above shares more about the STEM learning program that is being created around this contact.

Fred, AB1OC

Radio Amateurs Developing Skills Worldwide