[PPRAANet] Colorado 14er Event
Bob K0NR - email list
list at k0nr.com
Tue Jul 14 10:27:06 EDT 2015
Oh geez, sorry. The reflector mangled the formatting on this message.
Please go to ham14er.org to view the information.
73, Bob K0NR
On 7/14/2015 8:07 AM, Bob K0NR - email list wrote:
>
> Amateur Radio Fun in the Colorado Mountains
>
> *Sunday, August 2, 2015*
>
> www.ham14er.org
>
> Amateur Radio Fun in the Colorado Mountains
>
> *Sunday, August 2, 2015*
>
> www.ham14er.org
>
> Amateur Radio Fun in the Colorado Mountains
>
> *Sunday, August 2, 2015*
>
> www.ham14er.org
>
> *Amateur Radio Fun in the Colorado Mountains*
> Sunday, August 2, 2015
> www.ham14er.org
>
> Amateur Radio Fun in the Colorado Mountains
>
> *Sunday, August 2, 2015*
>
> www.ham14er.org
>
> Amateur Radio operators from around Colorado will be climbing many of
> *Colorado's 14,000-foot mountains* and *Summits On The Air* (SOTA)
> peak to set up amateur radio stations in an effort to communicate with
> other radio amateurs across the state and around the world. Join in on
> the fun on the first full weekend in August and see how many of the
> mountaintop stations you can contact. The prime operating hours are on
> Sunday from 9 AM to noon local time (1500 to 1800 UTC), but activity
> can occur throughout the weekend.
>
> Now including *Summits On the Air (SOTA)*, which adds over 1700
> potential summits! If you aren’t up to climbing a 14er, there are many
> other summits to choose from (with a wide variety of difficulty). See
> the W0C SOTA web page at w0c-sota.org
>
> Radio operators who plan to activate a summit should set an “Alert” on
> the SOTAwatch.org web site. To subscribe to the “ham14er” email list,
> visit the yahoo groups site at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ham14er/.
> Also, be sure to check out the event information at
> http://www.ham14er.org
>
> *Frequencies used during the event
> *Activity can occur on any amateur band including HF and VHF. The 2m
> fm band plan uses a "primary frequency and move up" approach. _The 2m
> fm primary frequency is 147.42 MHz._ At the beginning of the event,
> operators should try calling on 147.42 MHz. As activity increases on
> that frequency, move on up the band using the 30 kHz steps. /Don’t
> just hang out on 147.42 MHz…move up! /The next standard simplex
> frequency up from 147.42 MHz is 147.45 MHz, followed by 147.48,
> 147.51, 147.54 MHz.
>
> Frequency (MHz)
>
>
>
> Comments
>
> 147.42
>
>
>
> Primary 2m FM Frequency, then up in 30 kHz steps
>
> 223.5
>
>
>
> Primary 222 MHz FM frequency
>
> 446.000
>
>
>
> Primary 70 cm FM frequency
>
> 446.025
>
>
>
> Alternate 70 cm FM frequency
>
> 52.525
>
>
>
> Primary 6m FM frequency
>
> 1294.5
>
>
>
> Primary 1.2 GHz FM frequency
>
> 144.200
>
>
>
> 2m SSB calling frequency
>
> 50.125
>
>
>
> 6m SSB calling frequency
>
> 14.060
>
>
>
> 20m CW Frequency
>
> 14.345
>
>
>
> 20m SSB Frequency
>
> 18.092
>
>
>
> 17m CW Frequency
>
> 18.158
>
>
>
> 17m SSB Frequency
>
> 21.060
>
>
>
> 15m CW Frequency
>
> 21.330
>
>
>
> 15m SSB Frequency
>
> 28.060
>
>
>
> 10m CW Frequency
>
> 28.350
>
>
>
> 10m SSB Frequency
>
> Other Bands/Modes
>
>
>
> Standard calling frequencies and/or band plans apply.</TBODY>
>
> _Warning:_Climbing mountains is inherently a _dangerous activity_.
> Do not attempt this without proper training, equipment and preparation.
>
> Sponsored by /The Colorado 14er Event Task Force/
>
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