Sunday, October 12, 2014

Final Week of W1AW/KL7

Rich KL7RA pulled off a miracle and herded Alaska cats again for the second and final week of W1AW/KL7 operations for the ARRL Centennial.  KL2R contributed about 9% of the 37k QSOs thanks to KL1JP, KL3UI, KL6C, WL7BDO, and N1TX.  Overall it was a greater count than June operations, but KL2R's log was lighter this time around.  Fewer operating hours were possible from this location.  

Gary NL7Y generously loaned the use of his FTDX5000MP, which proved a very solid performer in receive.  It did duty a lot on CW and RTTY without flinching.  The audio is easy on your ears, and the dual-receive is extremely useful for a variety of conditions.

A Miss at CQWW RTTY

Preparations for W1AW/KL7 (starting Oct 1) meant we had to give a pass on the WPX RTTY contest in 2014.  It was a bit painful to miss out.  KL2R holds Alaska records for M/S HP, M/2, and SOAB LP Assisted in CQWW RTTY.  We -- KL1JP, KL3UI, and N1TX -- wondered briefly if any of those records would fall as we took advantage of fleeting decent weather to do antenna work. C'est la guerre.  In these parts, antenna season is decidedly compressed even in the best of times.  The summer of 2014 broke many rainfall records, so any semblance of an outdoor project schedule soon washed away.  

There we were, in the final days of reliably above-freezing temperatures, and there was no time to waste for antenna work.  A new 5-element 6m yagi is up, at least in its temporary location for testing. The DSEJX5-50 arrived about a month ago.  Terry W8ZN and his crew at Directive Systems are breathing new life into a company originally founded by Dave K1WHS.  The entire experience of ordering/paying to final assembly was smooth as silk.  And the new antenna, built according to the instructions, tuned right up without issue and performs as advertised, with a sweet VSWR for 50-52 MHz.

A little cleanup was in order, too.  The Hexx beam, which never really saw much action due to location, was partially disassembled and sent to its new home with Dan KL1JP.  It's a very good performer, but we never could find the right location for it at a decent height.  It definitely could not go on the tower.

Now the BIG project on our minds was a new phased vertical system for 40m.  Last summer we got the ground mount holes dug and cemented into place.  Dan made a command decision to make a herculean effort to get this project off the ground before another winter fell, and the rest of us followed.  DX Engineering and amazon.com delivered the parts in short order.  So we got busy measuring 2000 feet of wire into suitable segments, trimming, crimping, and heat-gunning.  I can highly recommend Ancor marine-grade ring terminals with heat shrink on the ends for superior mechanical integrity and reducing wire corrosion.

We hit a few snags.  Last year I had my fence guy put in three mounts with standard chain link fence corner posts  buried in cement about 3' into the ground.  It turns out these posts are 2-3/8" OD and too big to fit the DX Engineering clamps.  Rather than drill, grind, or otherwise make-to-fit, I ordered two sets of CommScope heavy duty pipe-to-pipe clamps (model BC-30-10) from Tessco while KL1JP picked up 2" steel pipe in town to clamp on to the fence posts.  

A second snag was initially more troubling but resolved quickly.  We bought the Comtek 40VA vertical antennas, and upon first inspection, it appeared parts were missing.  The included instructions didn't quite reflect reality. When we opened the second box and found the same thing, it was a real puzzle.  After checking on line at the DXE web site, there is a Rev. A instruction manual, which was more aligned with reality, and assembly could proceed as normal.

Each 40m base is substantial. The antenna shows a very favorable VSWR across the band so far. It gets above 1.5:1 at the high end of the phone segment, and we often work split anyway.  Anything below 7100 is great.  The real proof of the design is with two antennas.  It's worth noting the paint on the steel pipe is slightly resistive (25 ohms or less), and some changes in VSWR could be expected by binding all the metals to the buried support.  


Saturday, September 13, 2014

Respectable Showing in ARRL DX

2014 ARRL International DX Contest (Phone)
Displaying entries for Class=MM and Division=Non-US
Entries 1 to 9 of 9 listed
#
Call
Score
QSOs
Mult
Class
DXCC Entity
Continent
Club
1
II9P
7,466,391
7,688
327
MM
I
EU

2
LP1H
6,049,953
7,605
267
MM
LU
SA

3
HG1S
5,431,968
6,354
288
MM
HA
EU

4
JA3YBK
3,454,908
4,568
254
MM
JA
AS

5
C6ANM
3,015,699
3,651
277
MM
C6
NA
Yankee Clipper Contest Club
6
KL2R
1,439,955
2,924
165
MM
KL7
NA

7
JE1ZWT
1,091,196
1,815
204
MM
JA
AS

8
LI5O
581,544
1,195
164
MM
LA1
EU

9
9A5BWW
339,465
1,882
61
MM
9A
EU


Guest op AC0W led the charge with the usual cast of characters at KL2R pushing hard into a respectable #6 place worldwide in the DX listings.  We used a multi-2 configuration.  

Sunday, August 31, 2014

JARL Awards At Last

Thanks to HV0A

Yesterday I worked The Vatican HV0A on 17m CW.  A career first from Alaska.  As it happens, I have been agonizingly close to Worked All Europe Class I with one point to go for many weeks.  I received the LoTW confirmation today, imported it into my DARC contest logbook, and voila!  WAE-I is in the bag.

Friday, August 29, 2014

WL7BDO in the News

Club member Carl Horn WL7BDO has been in the news lately.  First of all, he was an operator at KL7RA to set a new North American record in CQ WPX SSB in 2014.  Quite impressive.  His appearances at KL2R have led the way for top-notch placing.  The W1AW/KL7 operation from Two Rivers pushed new boundaries, and Carl was a key participant.  

Beyond ham radio, Carl's work with the Nenana School District is featured in a newsletter from the Alaska Association of School Business Officials: