Tag Archives: HF

Plans for Field Day 2021

We are holding an in-person Field Day operation at Keyes Memorial Park in Milford, NH. Here’s some more on our plans for Field Day 2021.

Stations and Antennas for Field Day 2021

We will be a 4A Station with the following Station available for members to use:

  • 20m HF Station (All Mode, can do SSB Phone, CW, or FT8/FT4 Digital)
  • 40m HF Station (All Mode, can do SSB Phone, CW, or FT8/FT4 Digital)
  • 10m/15m/80 HF Station (All Mode, can do SSB Phone, CW, or FT8/FT4 Digital)
  • 6m VHF Station (All Mode, can do SSB Phone, CW, or FT8/FT4 Digital)
  • Computer Controlled 2m/70cm Satellite Ground Station (Can do SSB Phone and CW)

We will have a Tower up with a Triband Yagi and Wire Antennas to Cover 80m – 10m. We will have a 6m LFA Yagi up for the Magic Band. Finally, we will have a Computer-Controlled portable satellite station with Yagis for 2m and 70cm.

You can see a prediction of the Satellite Passes during Field Day here.

Station setup will take place on Friday, June 25th with on-site activities beginning at 11 am.

We will hold a training session on our Stations and other Field Day fun on Saturday, June 26th starting at 12:30 pm. Training will cover:

  • Operating FT8 Digital and Using the 6m Station
  • Operating Using the Satellite Ground Station
  • Fox Hunting

Field Day Operations will begin at 2 pm on Saturday, June 26th, and go for 24-hours ending at 2 pm on Sunday, June 27th. We will take down our station beginning at 2 pm on Sunday.

We will be holding a Message Passing activity on Saturday afternoon at 3:30 pm. This is a great activity for Technicians – bring your HT and learn how to pass emergency message traffic at Field Day. Contact Aron at [email protected] for more information and to sign up.

Sign-Up To Operate!

Members can sign-up to operate in our Field Day forum.

Field Day Coaches

Field Day at the Nashua Area Radio Society is all about learning and trying new things. We encourage you to sign-up to operate our stations and to learn about modes and bands you may not have experience with. In addition to our planned training, we will have Field Day Coaches available to help you get started and learn to use our Station, and have fun operating.

Field Day Tech Night

We have held two Tech Night sessions to provide training on how to operate at Field Day. Members can view the videos and training presentations for these sessions on our Tech Night Page.

Visitors and the Public are Welcome

If you’d like to learn more about Amateur Radio, we’d like to invite you to visit us at Keyes Memorial Park during Field Day. Noon into the evening on Saturday, June 26th, and Sunday morning, June 27th, up until 2 pm in the afternoon would be a great time to stop by. We’ll be happy to show you around our site, answer your questions, and even get you on the air a bit if you’d like. Also, if you have an HT, bring it and you can hunt our Foxes (hidden radio transmitters).

Logistics for Field Day

We will be operating in the Open-Air Pavillion at Keyes Memorial Park. This will provide shelter should we have any rain. The Pavillion is one-air and this will facilitate safe social distancing and an outdoor environment.

We encourage everyone to get vaccinated for COVID-19 if possible before Field Day. Our site is set up to facilitate social distancing and we will have masks and sanitization supplies available onsite for those who need them.

Several members have graciously volunteered to handle Take Out food runs during Field Day operations. We will also have water and light snacks available.

If you have any questions about Field Day, please post them as part of this thread or email us at [email protected]. We hope that you’ll join us for Field Day!

The NARS Field Day Team

My experience with Selecting and Installing a New Tower and New Antenna

Our New Home

It started over 2 years ago when my wife and I decided to downsize and chose a home for us to enjoy our final years.  I was also looking for a home that had a view and would allow a ham radio tower to be erected.

New Tower
Antenna and Tower with a View

My home and property

My house is at 810’ above sea level.   I have exceptional views South, and it extends both East and West.  I’m going to describe the home/tower exposure because it’s important for later.

To the North and East the tree line is about 100’ away and the ground slopes away about 40’ down North and a 60’ slopes down to the east.  To the West is nothing for 300 yards and slopes down over 160’.  To the south, there are 300 yards to the tree line which is below the line of sight and slopes down 160’.  Otherwise, we can see 40 miles south and 2 miles west and east.  To date, as a weather front comes through, we have experienced winds at around 45 MPH.  You can see from the photo that the view is spectacular.  I included a topo of where the house/tower is located, from this you can see the hilltop location.

Topo of Tower Location

Antenna Selection: Vertical

One of the first things I was told about selecting an antenna was to wait until you can afford a SteppIR antenna.  It made sense because you don’t have to worry about VSWR. The antenna will change the element length to match the frequency currently tuned to.  I have a Stepp BigIR Mark IV vertical which covers 40 Meters through 6 Meters. This antenna works great for FT8 also.  You just need to make sure you have lots of ground radials. I have 32 40’ radials.

Antenna Selection: Horizontal

I had a Mosley Classic 33, 10M, 15M 20M, tuner for voice, auto tuner had fits if I wanted to do FT8.  I was looking for something that would provide good results for low sun cycle propagation.  That meant wanting 20M and 40M and the other bands would be nice when the sun cycles improved.  I focused on 3 elements vs 4 elements.  So, I settled on the SteppIR DB18, because I could not justify a $2000 increase for an antenna that gave less than 2dB more gain.  Also, this antenna allows me to flip the antenna 180 in like 2 seconds, make the director the reflector and the reflector the director

  • Antenna: SteppIR DB18 7MHz to 50MHz
    • 1 sqft wind load
    • 96 lbs
    • SDA2000
  • Rotator: Alfa Spid Big RAK
    • 1’ wind load, 3,240 in-lbs turning torque, 14,000 lbs braking torque
    • 16 lbs, 2” top to 2.6” bottom.
    • Hold >700 lbs.
  • Mast: ¼” thick walls, 17’ long, 2” at the base and 1 ½” at the top. 5-foot wind load buried 4 feet into the tower

Town Requirements

Some towns only allow amateur radio towers to be 50’ while other towns allow 70’.  Antrim initially had 70’ for amateur radio and if you wanted taller than that you had to follow the commercial tower requirements.  It is now whatever the FCC / State requires.  When I filed for the permit the inspector stated that a building permit is not required for amateur radio towers, but he did look at the request to ensure there was no safety issues, ie., could the tower fall on a neighbor’s house, public roadway, etc. and that I was more than 50’ from the roadway and 25’ to the property line. I had also submitted a copy of my Amateur Radio License, which he thanked me for and requested that I submit my renewal when I do my 10 year renewal.  He then filed all of it into the town records.

It doesn’t hurt to talk to your neighbors to ensure that they will not be upset at you for putting up this (non-hams) ugly tower.  I did this and we agreed that if I put the tower towards the front of my garage it would not be as visible to him.

My Tower Requirements

To start with you have to have a wish list in mind.  Mine was as follows:

  • DIY (do it yourself) Install
  • No climbing
  • Fold Over at the base
  • Would be nice to be able to hang an 80m inverted Vee (65’)

Tower Selection

The easiest way was to start looking at the Rohn catalog.  They have a section in front to get you started.  They start with understanding TIA-222 revision G.  It goes through Classification of the antenna structure, HAM’s will always be Class I.  Next is the EPA (Effective Projected Area) or area (size) of your antenna, don’t forget the mast and the rotor.   Next is what is your exposure, folks in the flatlands of Ohio(?) will be exposure C, here in New Hampshire where we have mostly 100’ trees around most homes and will be Exposure B.  Anyone living along the coast fits the last exposure D.  The next category is what snagged me.  Topographic category, remember the section above where I pointed out the terrain of my house.  I got snagged as a category 3 site, at the top of a hill which means you must multiply the wind load by 2.3.  Damn, that’s 10.1 + 1 + 1.5 = 12.6 * 2.3 = 28.98.  That’s a huge value.

So now I set out to search for an antenna company to meet my wish list.  Remember, I’m not interested in climbing a tower.  There are lots of towers out there, but I needed something with the ability to handle 29 EPA (that’s TIA-222 talk for wind load).  ROHN towers did not meet my wish list of no climbing towers.  Universal towers have an aluminum tower rated for 35 sqft at 110 MPH winds. Next was Heights Towers, they had aluminum towers rated by the exposure that would meet the requirements.  I love the features that they offer and the fold-over kit.  But not the cost.  I’m retired and don’t make a lot of money, so I opted for the Universals tower.  When looking at these towers don’t forget the cost to ship it to you.  There is a big difference shipping from Florida to NH vs Michigan to NH (more than double).

Tower Height

I read in QST “The DR Is In” article where someone was asking how high does a Yagi antenna needs to be?  His reply was a Yagi only needs to be 43 feet off the ground.  I also know that angle is related to the topology of where the tower is installed.  Therefore my 40-foot tower is great for my topology.

The base for a Standalone Tower

Tower Installation

Did you know that digging a hole for a self-supporting tower is a really BIG HOLE.  5 feet by 5 feet by 6 feet deep?  It took me 2 weeks of digging a couple of hours per day to dig the hole and I move the dirt away.  The last foot was this stone and stone dust mixture.  I only got down a couple of inches per day.  Lessons Learned don’t wait to make the bottom of the hole 5’ by 5’, because every shovel full is going up over 6’.  Why not a backhoe?  They don’t want the dirt disturbed around the hole.  Besides I wanted to DIY.  It takes 6 cubic yards of cement to fill a 5’ x 5’ x 6’ deep hole. I waited almost 2 weeks to raise the tower/antenna.  The concrete was nice and hard.  I actually built the antenna during the curing time.

Another lesson learned, concrete in the center will shrink, next tower (HaHa) don’t level it, instead have the center higher than the sides and exaggerate it.

New Tower
Raising the tower.

Tower Raising

I had some older tower parts and I thought I’d use them as a fulcrum.  On the back of the truck is a hand winch.  Went high enough on the tower (halfway to the top of the actual tower) to anchor onto the back 2 legs.  The fulcrum didn’t respond well so I called a safety assessment time out.  We lowered and only went up about 12’ and only used a 10’ section of the tower.  This ended up working much better but the winching was much harder.  I’d like to redesign the fulcrum and swap out the hand winch with a power winch.

Cable Selection

I choose to use LMR-900 to run from the entry point to the top of the tower.  Worked out to be 110’.    The top of the tower to the antenna is 10 feet of LMR400, from the house entry point to the back of the radio is 15’ of LMR400.

Did you ever want to know how much power you are radiating in the direction of your wonderful Yagi? First, you must determine the power you’re going to lose through the cable at the frequency you’re transmitting at.  Next subtract the cable loss from the power out of your transmitter, say 100 watts. Then look up your antenna gain, convert dBi to dB and multiply that by how much power you are providing the antenna at that frequency.  The results will be how much transmit power you are sending in a direction.  This whole exercise is based on dB and Transmit Power or dB loss/gain.  I had to convert things back and forth to get the right power from dB gain.

Antenna Power Out by Frequency

It’s the little details that are missed sometimes.  Making drip loops to ensure that water doesn’t run down your cable and right into your connector or control box.  Have enough cable for the rotor to turn 360 degrees.  Have enough cable to fold down the tower.New Tower

Tower Completion

I grounded the tower on all three legs.  I used 4 gauge bare solid copper wire from the tower leg to ground rods, 4’ from the tower legs.  I wanted to run the RF cable down the center of the tower.  It made sense that lightning would travel on skin effect (tower legs) and not on the RF/control cables to the ground.  I did not have a good enough method to hold the cable suspended in the center of the tower.  A failure of my ingenuity.

Also, at the entry point into the house, there is a ground rod that I have an RF lightning arrester attached to.  There are no lightning arrestors for the control cables.  This ground rod is also grounded to the point of entry ground rod and is the ground point for all of my radios and support equipment.

At the very top of the tower, I have a wind gage (anemometer) but it doesn’t give me the wind direction.  It’s a very simple device.  It uses a bicycle reader and the anemometer at the top.  Just counts revolutions, it gives you current, average and MAX speed.  It was all I needed, I’ve tried others and they didn’t last very long or did not give an accurate wind speed.

Now the SteppIR doesn’t help me for VHF/UHF and you probably asking why didn’t I put a VHF/UHF antenna on top of the tower.  I have a CREATE Log periodic in my attic on a rotor.  It is able to do a full circle in less than 60 inches.  My cable run is very short, so power loss is kept minimal.   Covers 50 to 1,300Mhz and has 10dBi gain.  I have this going to an antenna switch to go to multiple radios.

So far, I’m getting great reception in Europe.  Had contacts with Japan, South Africa and have been hearing Australia and Indonesia.  One of the reasons I love FT8 is it labels the contact’s country of origin.  Just wait as the sun cycle improves, so will my contact log.

The next project is to complete a wiring diagram of my shack.  I’d like to be able to visually know how everything is wired together.

Hope this helps you with your design and planning process for your dream tower.

It would be nice if there was an Elmer antenna and tower board to submit your ideas to get feedback.

73,

Brian, W1XMM

NARS QSO Party Update

The Nashua Area Radio Society is sponsoring the NARS QSO party on September 26th. This  QSO party is born from the frustration of not being able to have large groups of our members meet for the  SOTA, POTA, and IOTA  events that we had scheduled before the Pandemic.

There have been some important rules changes that you need to know about. We have adjusted the final exchange and scoring to make it easy for you to use the existing North American QSO Party set up in a contest logger such as N1MM+ to participate and score your operation in the NARS QSO Party.

Exchange and Multipliers

The exchange and multipliers for this contact are patterned after the North American QSO Party. Here’s a summary of what has changed:

  • The most important rule change is that this will be a phone contest only. It wasn’t possible to do an all-mode contest without having some issues in other areas related to using standard contest setups that are available in most loggers.
  • Also, the exchange will be the operator’s first name plus (state/DC/province/country).
  • Finally, the time window has been changed to 1600 UTC on September 26 to 04:00 UTC  September 27th. That’s Saturday 12:00 noon to midnight on the East coast.

Setting up N1MM+

I want to quickly go over how to set up N1MM+ to log contacts and score your entry correctly.  N1MM+ is a free logging software that will allow you to log contacts, score the contest for you and also provide you with a log in Cabrillo format as well.

When you are finished downloading open the software.

  • Go to file> new log in the database and choose NAQPSSB.
  • Change the start date and time.
  • Go down the options and change as needed taking special care with the sent exchange, mode, and operator information boxes.
  • Click ok at the bottom of the page. You come back to the logging screen.
  • The next important change to make is to right-click anywhere in the logging window and go down to change band panel display.
  • Click on this option and click on the VHF tab and the UHF tab. this will allow you to add contacts from 2 meters on up.

This explanation probably sounds kind of clunky but once you open the software it will make a lot more sense. I think you should have N1MM+ configured correctly if you follow the steps above. I have pictures that I took. Email [email protected] if you want a copy of the setup pics.

Ryan KC1KJS field day 2019
Ryan KC1KJS field day 2019

Summary of the Rules

There will be two operating categories for the NARS QSO Party: HF and VHF and up.   A summary of the rules is below.

NARS QSO Party Rules
NARS QSO Party Rules

You should submit your final log as an Electronic Entry only and your submission should include a complete Cabrillo format log and your claimed score. Logs should include date and time in UTC, Frequency, Mode, Call Signs, and the Exchange for each of your contacts. Logs are due 7 days after the contest is finished.

Certificates will be awarded to the top 3 stations in each category.

Ham Nation
Ham Nation

Fred, AB1OC, and I will be on Ham Nation this Wednesday, September 23rd, starting at 9 PM Eastern Time, to publicize this so we should see plenty of activity on the air.

I hope to get you in my log!

73

Jim Lajoie, K1BRM

Radio Amateurs Developing Skills Worldwide