[HCARC] Field Day Observations

Gary J - N5BAA qltfnish at omniglobal.net
Fri Jul 4 16:40:07 EDT 2014


I should have said "having only one Coax position of 4 available connecting 
to the 3 HF antennas on the roof".  I know, having the 3 antennas feeding 
the one station is fine for most normal times, however there is at least one 
and I think more manual switches on the shelf collecting dust that could be 
put into the system to allow more flexibility in antenna connection.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Gary J - N5BAA
Sent: Friday, July 4, 2014 3:20 PM
To: hcarc at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [HCARC] Field Day Observations

First, I would like to thank all of you who participated in Field Day, 
especially those of you who brought goodies to eat and MOST ESPECIALLY those 
of you who indicated in advance  that you would be there to support Field 
Day.  Field Day is quite an undertaking and as the COORDINATOR (it’s your 
Field Day, not mine) and to go into the weekend not knowing what/who would 
be there supporting the endeavor is a scary event at the very least.  PLEASE 
next year support the COORDINATOR with a commitment in advance that you 
would be there (1) HELP SET UP, (2) OPERATE, (3) HELP TEAR DOWN, AND (4) 
HELP WITH FOOD.  Not knowing the size of the crew available is uncomfortable 
at the very least, and makes for significant amounts of unnecessary worry. 
ALL that I kept seeing on the Reflector was this person and that person, etc 
etc would not be attending.  I began to wonder if I was going to be the only 
one in attendance – nah, I knew I could count on Terry H, Robert Russell, 
Mike and Tony (our resident Brits), Charlie, Dale and Chuck.  Fortunately 
many more showed up.  I passed out a few paracord key chains last night to 
guys for whom I had sufficient little white letter and number cubes to make 
their call signs.  I have more letter and number cubes coming to make one 
for each club member that signed our attendance sheet as a remembrance of FD 
2014 and to thank you in some small way.

Second, if we decide to hold Field Day again at the Red Cross (RC) we need 
to do something about the antenna situation.  Having only one of 4 coax 
positions connecting to the 3 antennas on the roof is almost unworkable. 
During the day at least one of the antennas (40/20) are not being used and 
the same goes for the night (80/40 and possibly 20).  We need to make sure 
that the antennas can be uncoupled and attachable to the “Extra Coax” 
position.  The coax on the outside need to be color coded just the same as 
they are now in the radio room, except that the 80/40/20 each need their own 
color coding system to prevent them from being hooked up wrong.  We also 
need to be able to put up additional antennas.  I didn’t get to Dr Jim early 
enough to get the club’s tower trailer moved down and that is my fault.  If 
the club and Dr Jim are amenable and since Dr Jim is trying I understand to 
sell his ranch, I propose to move the trailer down to my property in Center 
Point.  It needs some welding done and since I am not trying to sell my 
property I can probably make it easier for club members to get for use than 
having it in Fredericksburg.  Dr Jim is a very busy man and sometimes it is 
hard to get in his busy schedule.  All of my “busy” is usually feeding my 
sheep and they don’t wear watches or have complex schedules.  Having the 
tower trailer at Field Day would allow us to get better separation between 
the “other antennas” we might want to string up.  To that end we did leave a 
semi-permanent pulley and halyard on the tower to obviate needing to climb 
the tower next year to put up a dipole.  I just got a Butternut HF-5B beam 
antenna from Gale Heise that should be easier to assemble and put up on the 
tower trailer next year – it only has a 12 foot long beam and is much 
smaller than the Cushcraft A4S we used last year.  That will give us 
additional 20/17/15/12/10 meter capability however only 20/15/10 are usable 
on Field Day.  As it turns out according to the presentation by the MARS 
folks last night 6 meters might have been a good band and maybe even 10 
meters.  We tried some 10 meters but apparently not enough.  We need access 
to the Ionosond info that Lew spoke about last night for Field Day too.  All 
it would take is a computer attached to the internet.  We wouldn’t have to 
guess the bands to use.

Third – someone needs to instruct me in the proper use of the Band Pass 
filters I picked up earlier this year for Field Day use.  Would they have 
helped keep one local radio from talking to another??  Would they permit 
more than one radio to be on 15 or 20 meters (different antennas) at the 
same time??  How far apart do the antennas/radios need to be to safely be 
one the same band??  There is so much I don’t know about operating in a 
radio dense situation.  Of course that is what Field Day is supposed to 
teach us.

last there were about 38 total attendees prior to passing the attendance 
sheet last night.  Many were guests several of whom are very interested in a 
Ham radio.

Thanks again to Ruthie Guida for making the bread and Banana bread.  The 
ability to make brisket sandwiches and have a sweet pick me up at 2 am was 
invaluable.

Thanks also to the Red Cross for the use of their facility – it was great 
and I hope we left it in as good a condition as we found it.

Gary J
N5BAA
HCARC Secretary
2014 Field Day COORDINATOR
______________________________________________________________
HCARC mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/hcarc
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:HCARC at mailman.qth.net

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html

-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2014.0.4716 / Virus Database: 3986/7797 - Release Date: 07/04/14 



More information about the HCARC mailing list