[TWIAR] Two Radio Amateurs Die During Mobile Hidden Transmitter Hunt

Greg Williams k4hsm at lock-net.com
Wed May 31 20:12:45 EDT 2006


Two Radio Amateurs Die During Mobile Hidden Transmitter Hunt

Mike Obermeier, K6SNE, had adapted several vehicles for use in mobile 
T-hunting. Here, he was showing off a new rotating antenna mount that 
he'd installed. [Joe Moell, K0OV, Photo]

NEWINGTON, CT, May 30, 2006--Two ARRL members from California are dead 
after the vehicle in which they were riding during a mobile hidden 
transmitter hunt went over a cliff in rugged terrain near Lake Isabella 
in Kern County. They were identified as Michael G. Obermeier, K6SNE, of 
Anaheim, and David A. Gordon-Ross, of Yucaipa. Obermeier, an ARRL 
Official Observer in Orange County, was 46. Gordon-Ross was 35.

"Mike and Dave were some of the best T-hunters in the biz," said Scott 
Press, N6SAP, calling both "true assets to this hobby." In his role as 
an OO, Obermeier reportedly had participated in the infamous Jack 
Gerritsen radio jamming case in the Los Angeles area.

According to media accounts, a Kern County Sheriff's Department 
search-and-rescue team located the victims early Monday, May 29. 
Obermeier was driving the 1991 4-wheel-drive Jeep Cherokee that 
apparently went out of control on Cook Peak Road while the pair was 
proceeding to the next hidden transmitter site. After caroming off a 
rock wall, the vehicle crossed the road and plunged down a 900-foot 
cliff. They were reported missing after failing to check in with T-hunt 
organizers.

Greg Pitta, KF6DBJ, reports Obermeier and Gordon-Ross were on a half-day 
multiple-transmitter T-hunt on Saturday, May 27. "Both K6SNE and N6IDF 
were expert transmitter hunters, each with hundreds of hunts completed, 
ranking with top scores in most," he said.

ARRL Amateur Radio Direction Finding (ARDF) Coordinator Joe Moell, K0OV, 
knew both men. He notes that Obermeier had suffered a sports-related 
spinal cord injury that left him a paraplegic. "He did all the adaptive 
work on his vehicles, of which he had quite a few that he used over time 
for RDF," Moell said. Despite his physical limitations, Obermeier also 
enjoyed foxhunting from his wheel chair.

Moell says Gordon-Ross had been a proficient mobile T-hunter for many 
years. He took a brief hiatus after his first child was born in April 
2005 (his wife, Melanie, is KF6GWV), but he recently became active again.

According to Moell, the mobile transmitter hunts take place on the 
fourth Saturday of each month on 2-meter FM simplex, starting out from a 
hilltop in Rancho Palos Verdes. He says it's not uncommon for the main 
hidden transmitter to be hundreds of miles away--175 highway miles in 
this instance.


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