[CC-ARES-RACES] Getting the Most from Your Hand-Held Transceiver
JD Delancy
[email protected]
Tue, 21 May 2002 23:41:47 -0400
KE4SKY (Virginia State RACES Training Officer) presents some interesting information
in the article below.
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Getting the Most from Your Hand-Held Transceiver
�1998-2001 Virginia RACES, Inc. Nonprofit reproduction is permitted with source
attribution
Ed Harris, KE4SKY, Virginia State RACES Training Officer
If repeaters are unavailable after a disaster and you are limited to simplex
operation, a
portable transceiver with its original flexible antenna is inadequate for emergency
communications.
I started with a "handy-talkie" or "HT" when I first got my ham license. Today, as
Virginia ARES /RACES training officer I recommend that new operators buy 2-meter
mobile transceivers. They cost no more than a portable. Today's equipment is very
compact, rugged and reliable. For portable operation, carry the mobile transceiver
in a briefcase with a 17ah-gel cell battery and telescoping 1/2 wave or
magnetic-mount mobile antenna. Include 25 feet or more of coax to get the antenna up
high, away from people. This arrangement may not work for everyone. Therefore, if
all you have is a portable transceiver, the following will help you to make the most
of it!
An "HT" makes perfectly good sense for:
� Anyone who doesn't drive;
� Commuters who use public transportation;
� Controlling a mobile radio as a cross-band repeater
� As a spare, a backup or loaner.
The National Institute of Science and Technology tested Public Safety "high-band"
VHF and amateur 2-meter antennas. Flexible antennas commonly used on portable
transceivers have negative gain compared to a quarter wave whip held at face level.
This means that 5-watt portable VHF with stock antenna has an effective radiated
power of only 1-watt. Placing the portable on your belt produces -20db of
attenuation, reducing EIRP to 50 milliwatts! UHF results are no better...
"Rubber ducky" antennas are rubber covered helical springs, which are intended to
withstand some rough handling, but they are not indestructible. Flexible antennas
used on California fire lines for several weeks showed a 60% failure rate. Flexible
antennas should be replaced annually or as soon as they show ANY apparent kinks,
cracks, abrasion or other wear to visual inspection. An effective expedient to
improve a flexible antenna is to attach a counterpoise (19.5" long for the 2-meter
band, or 6.5" for the 70 cm band) of stranded wire, crimped and soldered to a
battery clip or ring terminal which will fit over the antenna connector. Reinforce
the soldered connection with heat shrink to resist flex. When attached to the outer
collar of the BNC connector or the antenna shield, the counterpoise prevents
transmitted RF from coupling with your body. This enables it to perform like a
center-fed dipole, instead of an "end-fed dummy load!" The main lobe of the
radiation pattern can be "aimed" by, grasping and pointing the end of the
counterpoise in the where you need a stronger signal.
Some after-market and home-made antennas perform much better than the standard
helical "rubber duck." A J-pole antenna constructed of 300-ohm twin-lead rolls up
and fits into your pocket. When thrown up in a tree, it increases both height and
gain. Full-sized, flexible 1/4 wave and telescoping 2-wave antennas work very well.
A quarter wave provides unity gain when used with a counterpoise and held at face
level. This represents a 5 dB improvement over a stock flexible antenna, because
most of the effective signal is radiated. If operating from a vehicle, connect your
portable to a magnetic mount mobile antenna to provide a clear RF path outside the
vehicle. This overcomes the substantial attenuation, which results from operating a
portable unit from inside a metal vehicle. Always carry suitable adapters so that
you can connect your portable transceiver to an outside base or mobile antenna, when
one is readily available.
In marginal operating locations a telescoping, half-wave is much better, because it
provides the same unity gain without a ground plane that a 1/4 wave antenna does
when used with a ground plane. A 2-wave antenna can be pulled up into a tree,
dangled out a window, attached to a windowpane with suction cups, or be used bicycle
or motorcycle mobile, or in city driving on a window clip mount. A telescoping
half-wave increases useable simplex range of a typical 5 watt, 2-meter portable from
about a mile with the stock flexible antenna to 3 miles or more, depending upon
terrain. Adding a counterpoise to an efficient antenna enables a portable unit to
keep in reliable contact within 5 miles of an EOC or base station equipped with an
efficient antenna elevated on a tower.
Telescoping antennas are more fragile and work best when stationary or in the open,
avoiding side impacts or rough handling. Avoid prolonged mobile use of telescoping
antennas on window clip mounts at highway speed, because excessive flexing loosens
their internal electrical connections. Never collapse a telescoping antenna by
whacking it down with the palm of your hand. Gently pull it down with your
fingers. If you note any wobbling or looseness, replace the antenna.
Flexible antennas are safer when working in close quarters around people and are
more durable when walking through dense vegetation for wildfire suppression or
search and rescue operations. They better for dual-band transceivers because
telescoping antennas are usually mono-band. Dual-band flexible antennas approximate
a 1/4 wave on 2 meters and a 5/8 wave on 70 cm, are optimized for one band and may
resonate poorly on the other. How efficient a particular antenna is can be
determined only by testing. A telescoping half-wave, or half-wave, dual-band-mobile
antenna with magnetic mount, will work well either with or without a ground plane,
and offer the best bang for the buck.
Any emergency antenna for your portable transceiver is rated to safely handle up to
25 watts of RF output. This enables it to be used as an expedient antenna for a
mobile radio in portable operation, or to permit use of an external "brick"
amplifier with the portable transceiver.
A magnetic mount works best on a car, but an improvised ground plane can almost
always be found around the home or office, such as a metal filing cabinet, metal
trash can, cookie sheet, rain gutter, refrigerator, window air conditioning unit,
balcony railing or any other large metal object. On boats, motorcycles, fiberglass
truck caps or wooden balcony railings use a half-wave antenna, which does not
require a ground plane.
BATTERY POWER BASICS
A common error of new ARES / RACES operators is failure to plan to carry enough
battery power. Always carry at least one spare charged NiCd pack and AA battery
case, which enables you to keep operating when the power goes off, if you can't
recharge your NiCd pack.
Cycle and recharge dry NiCd packs monthly. Write the recharge date on a strip of
tape on each pack. In cold weather keep NiCd packs warm by keeping them in an inside
coat pocket and not exposed on your belt.
An adapter cord to power your transceiver from an auto cigarette lighter plug or a
gel cell battery is needed for extended operation. Cigarette lighter cords are often
unreliable because auto sockets aren't the best conductors, due to contamination and
size variations, which cause the plug to vibrate loose. As an alternate power
source, you should still have one, because they are ubiquitous and in a pitch, much
better than nothing!
Portable power packs such as Quantum are excellent, but expensive. We encourage our
operators to make their own using 12-volt gel cell batteries obtained from local
hospitals. Sealed lead-acid (SLA) batteries are used to power emergency lighting,
alarm systems, medical instruments and computer backup power supplies. They are
replaced on a fixed schedule, usually before they are worn out. Because SLA
batteries require disposal as hazardous waste unless recycled or reused, a hospital
donation to your CERT or ARES / RACES group reduces their disposal cost. Contact
your local hospital and explain how SLA batteries they discard can support auxiliary
emergency communications.
Donated SLA batteries must be inspected, recharged and load-tested. Any 12V
batteries with an open circuit voltage (Voc ) of 12.8V or more are tested
immediately and distributed for reissue, if OK. Batteries with Voc <12.8V are
connected in parallel across a regulated 13.8V power supply. Those which are not
accepting charge after 4 hours are discarded. Total charge time and current should
not exceed 140% of battery capacity. Gel cells should never be recharged at over 14V
due to gassing.
Reject batteries if their internal resistance exceeds an ohm, as determined by
voltage drop divided by the current load in amps. Good batteries suitable for
re-issue should not drop below 11.7V under a test load approximating AC,@ their
amp-hour capacity, for 30 seconds or AC/5" for one minute.
A simple test load for small gel cells up to 20ah is a 50w, 12V-marine/RV bulb or
automotive droplight. This equals about 3.8A, approximating a mobile radio on low
power 5w transmit or a portable 2-meter hand held, plus a laptop PC and packet TNC.
Using two bulbs and 'Y' adapter simulates mobile or brick amp at 25w RF output. This
is a good test load forbatteries to 30amp-hours. In a good battery, voltage drop
stabilizes quickly, does not fall below 11.5V under load, and recovers quickly when
the test load is removed.
STANDARD POWER CORD CONNECTORS
Auxiliary power cords should follow the configuration shown in the ARRL ARES
Resource Manual. Use twin lead, red-black AWG14 or AWG16 zip cord with Molex Series
1545, 2-pin polarized connectors and .093 pins. The female pins are assembled into
the male plug, which is attached to the power source, and the male pins into the
female receptacle, which is attached to the rig.
The plug, receptacle and pin set is rated for 8A continuous duty and costs $0.99
from Radio Shack, Part No. 274-222. Wiring is simple. The end of the two-conductor
Molex plug in cross section resembles a little 2-story house with peaked roof.
Remember proper polarity by the word associations red roof and black basement, or
pointy positive and flat black. Crimp wires before soldering to ensure a strong
connection. After inserting the pins into the plug and receptacle, check fit of the
assembled fitting. Reinforce the wires behind the plug and receptacle with heat
shrink or tape. On the battery ends attach crimp type female tab terminals to fit
the male tabs on
the battery.
It is recommended that you rig two sets of cords directly to your car battery to
power your portable or mobile radio, and laptop computer, if you will send data via
packet radio to your EOC. Splice type fuse holders onto both leads, as close to the
battery as possible.
If all you have is a portable transceiver, the above information will help to
ensure that you can provide an adequate signal for reliable emergency
communications. Doing so is vitally necessary to enable your volunteer disaster unit
to complete its mission efficiently and safely. More training materials for amateur
radio operators to learn essential core skills in emergency communications are
featured on the Virginia ARES / RACES Training page located at:
http://va-ares.org/Training/training.html