[SIERA] ARRL Club News for January 2008

Dick Flanagan dick at twohams.com
Fri Jan 18 23:14:18 EST 2008


ARRL Club Newsletter
January 18, 2008
____________________________________________________________________

Norm Fusaro, W3IZ, Editor

IN THIS ISSUE:
+ It Was Always There
+ Field Day Tidbits
+ Webinar/teleconference For Atlantic Division Clubs
+ First Contact Award
+ Customizable Awards

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______________________________________

It Was Always There
By Eric P. Nichols, KL7AJ
President, Arctic ARC
kl7aj at arrl.net

At a recent Arctic Amateur Radio Club board meeting, during a rare
lull in the oft-heated discussions about how best to increase our
membership, I threw out a simple question.
"How did you get into ham radio?"
The responses were revealing, to say the least.  One by one, our
board members, some young, some old, told the story of how they got
into this hobby of all hobbies.  One gentleman had a father who was a
ham, and more or less forced him into the hobby, for which he was
unspeakably grateful...years later, of course.	One XYL saw a
shortwave radio at a friend's house, started twiddling knobs, and got
frustrated that she could only listen.	For her, the rest was
history.  A couple of others were exposed to amateur radio in high
school, one in Boy Scouts.  Another credited me with getting him into
ham radio, much to my gratification.  One other confessed that he
didn't really know; it just seemed to him that ham radio was "always
around."
Interestingly enough, not one of the hams entered the hobby because
of a concentrated recruitment program.	Although occasional public
relations "Blitzkriegs" have their place in Amateur Radio, I'm not
sure they produce lasting hams.  Like many other clubs, we manage to
get a lot of hams licensed, but the dropout rate is appalling.	The
vast majority of our newly licensed hams never get on the air.
I don't think our message is flawed; I think it's our delivery.  Of
all the board members I mentioned above, I believe the last fellow,
the one who said ham radio was "always around" had the key.  We need
to get back to the place where amateur radio is a continual, if
quiet, presence.  People who get lured into the hobby, stick with the
hobby.	People who get coerced and cajoled into the hobby leave as
soon as we aren't looking.
The fact is, most new hams never see a working ham shack, about all
they see is a handheld, which isn't all that fascinating.  When a
young person sees a ham shack equipped to cover everything from DC to
daylight, they take notice...it doesn't matter whether they're a geek
or not.  I've never seen anyone who wasn't impressed by a Moon bounce
(Earth-Moon-Earth contact) array swinging around on its
rotators...whether they had a clue what it was or not!	
People don't know about ham radio because they don't see ham
radio...except, perhaps at Field Day.
The best place to cultivate that "always around" feeling is in the
schools.  We need to infiltrate the middle and high schools again.
Notice, I said, again.	There was a time, not too long ago, when it
was difficult to find a high school without a club station.  Field
Day should be a three hundred and sixty five day a year event, and
that is easier to achieve in the schools than anywhere else.
There is no better way to teach science than with ham radio.  We need
to remind our public (and private) school teachers and administrators
of that.  We need to let our students get their hands grubby making
things happen, rather than merely watching things happen.  We need to
get some real hardware into the schools.  We have wonderful new
allocations now, and the technology to use them is cheaper and easier
than ever.  When I was in high school in the late 60s, it was
everything one could do, and then some, to do Moon bounce.  It was
only because we had a lunatic (no pun intended) electronics teacher,
that we were able to pull off such a stunt.  Now, Moon bounce is
practically within reach of any determined high school club station.
Wouldn't it be great if Moon bounce stations proliferated at our high
schools the way H.F. stations once did?
Of course, I only use Moon bounce as one radical example.  We have
exciting things happening down at 500 kHz, as well.  What better way
to learn weak signal, digital signal processing techniques than with
our newly allocated MF experimental spectrum?
This all may be rocket science, but it doesn't take rocket science to
get it into the schools!  Our teachers want to see us excel in the
sciences.  Let's give them the tools to do so.
Fifty years from now, someone may be asked how they got into ham
radio.	It would be nice if they could answer, "I don't know...I
guess it was always there."
******
Eric P. Nichols was born in 1954 in what is now Silicon Valley.  As
Eric describes it, his exposure to physics research came at an early
age, having grown up "down the barrel of the Stanford Linear
Accelerator."  In 1976 he felt the call of the wild and abandoned a
fledgling engineering career to move to Alaska and live life "with
the bark still on."  As it turned his call to the wild kept him in
engineering as he spent a twenty year career as Chief Engineer for
KJNP, a 50,000 watt radio station in North Pole, Alaska.  Afterwards,
Eric became a development engineer for HIPAS observatory, an aurora
research facility near Fairbanks operated by UCLA.  The experience
set the stage for his first novel, Plasma Dreams, published in 2004.
ISBN 9781413748260
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Bon Appétit sur Field Day!
You may recall the Field Day Cookbook that appeared in the June 2007
issue of QST. Well, we're doing it again in 2008. In addition to the
technical tips, readers greatly enjoyed the Field Day recipes. Send
us your culinary concoction and you'll have a shot at QST stardom.
Keep in mind that it has to be something that can be prepared at a
"normal" Field Day site (one without access to stainless steel ovens,
etc). The shorter the recipe, the better; we'd like to fit several
onto one page. If you have a digital photo of your masterpiece, send
it along too. E-mail your recipe to Steve Ford, WB8IMY, QST Editor at
sford at arrl.org by no later than February 29.

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Any Day Can Be Field Day

Paul Milward, AB4PM tells us that the Daytona Beach ARA uses a mini
filed day type operation to attract people to Amateur Radio.  Paul
says that the club visits various parks on alternating weekends and
sets up a HF station and starts calling CQ.  Curious parkgoers are
treated to an infromative demonstration on ham radio and recieve some
club information and how to get their own Amateur Radio license.
_____________________________________________________________________
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Atlantic Division Director Bill Edgar, N3LLR is hosting a
webinar/teleconference for ARRL affiliated clubs in the Atlantic
Division

	Meet with ARRL leadership within the Atlantic Division along
with ARRL Membership Manager - Katie Breen W1KRB and ARRL Member
Volunteer Program Department Assistant Manager - Norm Fusaro W3IZ.
Presentations from Katie and Norm will focus on building club
membership and building club meeting attendance.

*** This webinar/teleconference is for clubs within the Atlantic
Division. ***

Space is limited to 1 representative per club, except current ARRL
Special Service Clubs which may have 2 representatives per club.

Registration for this event is on line at <
http://www.atldiv.org/training.htm >
*** Again, this webinar/teleconference is for clubs within the
Atlantic Division. ***


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First Contact Award

Do you want to recognize someone who just made their first two-way
radio communications by Amateur radio? Perhaps you just made your
first CW contact or first HF contact and want to have a certificate
to remember that exciting time.

Whether you are presenting the award to someone or creating a
landmark of your own Amateur Radio journey, use the on-line form to
fill in the QSO information and the operator who is being presented
with this certificate and ARRL will mail a beautiful First Contact
Award.

The award can be mailed directly to the recipient or it can be
presented in person or at a club meeting.

http://www.arrl.org/FandES/ead/award/certificate/1contact.html
_____________________________________________________________________
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New ARRL Award Products Available

The ARRL now offers custom awards for clubs, groups and individuals
for recognition and achievement, offering a wide range of styles and
price levels. Each award is customized with your text and the ARRL
logo.

Products offered include a tan leather rectangular key fob with a
call sign on one side and the ARRL diamond on the other; a rosewood
pen and pencil set with personalization available on the pen and
pencil, as well as the presentation box; an 8x10 inch wood plaque
with blue plate engraved with up to 14 lines of gold text; a
swiveling wood desk clock that holds a photo or an insert ---
personalize this with up to 25 characters on two lines, and a
beautiful crystal 3-inch etched globe on a crystal base, presented in
a velvet-lined gift box.

Do you have that one ham in your group who comes out every Field Day,
rain or shine, who stays from beginning to end, helping out in any
way possible? Acknowledge their involvement with a beautiful gift
that shows how much you value their service? What about the ham in
your club that has been a member for 25 years and has yet to miss a
meeting? Show them how much you appreciate their contribution with a
small personalized token. Do you have an Elmer you would like to
thank with more than words? A personalized gift with their name and
call sign on it would remind them of you every time they used it.

Each item features the ARRL diamond logo. Award orders will be
processed and delivered within 20 working days. View the entire award
product line, as well as ARRL clothing items, at the Barker
Specialties Web site <http://www.barkerstores.com/arrl >.
_____________________________________________________________________
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ARRL Affiliation Milestones for January 2008

	60 yr	
*W5		
STX	Orange Amateur Radio Club, Inc	W5ND


Copyright 2008 American Radio Relay League, Inc.
All Rights Reserved

======================================================================
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======================================================================
--
Dick Flanagan K7VC NV SM
k7vc at arrl.org




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