Despite the poor propagation, this was a banner year for Field Day at KL2R. Not just a contest, Field Day is a great exercise in teamwork. Also, to Connie KL1BE and yours truly N1TX, Field Day represents a time for socializing and a chance to "integrate" family/friends with the radio hobby through fellowship and mutual generosity from everyone involved. This year proved a resounding success in that regard. We had about 20 visitors, some of whom I had never met before, and several I had not seen for a long time.
The preparation team and operators demonstrated a tremendous amount of enthusiasm, innovation, and sheer determination. The personal contributions of each resulted in an accomplishment greater than their sum, which was an event far more fun and enriching (and fattening) than I had imagined it could be.
About six weeks of planning in earnest paid off when Friday setup began. We had many equipment options available and were able to adapt as needed to changes in personnel and time available to test. By the time Friday morning rolled around, the shack was ready to accept new gear and antennas. Dan KL1JP brought a portable solar setup with batteries, a Moxon 6m antenna, and a strong arm for slinging lines to put up the two additional G5RVs.
About six weeks of planning in earnest paid off when Friday setup began. We had many equipment options available and were able to adapt as needed to changes in personnel and time available to test. By the time Friday morning rolled around, the shack was ready to accept new gear and antennas. Dan KL1JP brought a portable solar setup with batteries, a Moxon 6m antenna, and a strong arm for slinging lines to put up the two additional G5RVs.
We had four HF stations set up in the shack with my FT950 and FT100, KL1RL's FT1000MP Mark V, and KL1AZ's TS2000. Elaine KL6C rolled in an 18-foot trailer complete with table, generator, and Ten-Tec Jupiter for a fifth HF station. Ken W6HF and Luci KL1WE operated their mobile FT897D briefly as HF #6. Thank goodness for the effectiveness of W3NQN bandpass filters. Two Honda 2 kW generators powered the shack, and the solar-charged batteries kept things going in Elaine's trailer.
The entire layout was networked using N1MM software. Although basic configuration of multi-multi operation is fairly straightforward with N1MM, I believe this arrangement proved to be the most problematic aspect of the entire weekend. As with anything, you can do planning to the smallest detail, but only thorough testing can wring out the bugs. Alas, Murphy was lying in wait in several dark corners once the contest began. As an example, we painfully discovered N1MM is far more stable in multi-user mode with fixed IP addresses instead of using DHCP. Fortunately, no fatal errors occurred, and the log did not suffer.
Mother Nature once again demonstrated her cruel sense of humor by teasing us earlier in the week with decent propagation only to pull the magic ionospheric carpet out from under us on Saturday with high aurora and Kp index See below. We hardly heard any east coast stations. Even our relative proximity to the west coast didn't seem to help much with contacts. Twenty meters CW was the money band, disappointing as it may have been, thanks largely to the skill and tenacity of Phil KL8DX. Elaine KL6C tried like the dickens to resuscitate 80m, and John KL1AZ persevered on 10m and 6m. He netted one QSO on the latter. Along with digital guy Kevin NL7WO and newcomer Rich W8VK, Elaine and John earned gold stars in my book for exemplary commitment by keeping the CQs going despite few or no prospects most of the time.
With these contact results, of course, bonus points will play an essential role for any sort of competitive standing. We had that pretty well covered. W1AW bulletin? Check, thanks largely to the booming signal of K6KPH. Satellite QSO? No problem, as W6HF and KL1WE have that down to a science. Public relations? Done. Neal WL7NZ even got us a plug on radio station KIAK. Alternative power? Yup. KL1JP's solar-charged battery configuration worked with aplomb. QTC? Ed AL7N took traffic for me on 2m CW. Public official? State Rep. Tammie Wilson stopped by with her SWL husband, Bob, and spent a good long time asking a lot of questions. Again, planning and teamwork paid dividends.
Food, of course, played an essential role in keeping the team motivated and rolling in the right direction, largely thanks to KL1BE and KL1WE laboring in the kitchen day and night. The menus included biscuits and gravy, home fries, huevos rancheros, refried beans, tortillas, homemade bread, grilled cheese sandwiches, vegetable pie, pea soup, green salad, bean salad, moose chili, burgers, bratwurst, angel food cake with fresh strawberries, and other tasty treats. Gallons of coffee, iced tea, sodas, wine, and plenty of water kept us well-lubricated.
Special guest Rich Carstensen W8VK happened to be visiting family in the area and hitched a ride with KL8DX. Rich spent most of Saturday entertaining us with tales of QRP conquests on Top Band and his time as lead tech at Alinco. He never missed an opportunity to call CQ on CW when a position was free. Andre KL7AC, Mike AL7KC, Ruth KL2WR, Larry KL2WS, Eric KL7AJ, Chad AL2D, John AL7ID, and Fred WL7IJ rounded out the guest list. (I am sure there are a couple of others I am not recalling in the post-FD fog, and I hope they forgive me.)
In the end, 2010 brought a Field Day for the memory book. Even though I'm a competitive sort of guy, the points are secondary. The published results can hardly reflect the wonderful rewards of camaraderie and good cheer gained from the whole weekend experience. Thank you, all!
KL8DX's video of the weekend: http://www.youtube.com/user/KL8DX
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