Jan 2015 - Yakima Amateur Radio Club
Transcription
Jan 2015 - Yakima Amateur Radio Club
AT E U R R A D YA KI MA ON C LU B YA K I M A IO AM WASHIN YAKIMA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB GT Ladder Line Newsletter Club Founded in 1930 85 years of Continuous service to the Yakima Valley ARRL Affliated in1931 Featured member Inside this issue: • Club Meeting Tuesday Jan 13, 2015 7:30 P.M. • January Social Tuesday Jan 27, 2015 6:30 P.M. • Featured member • Mission Statement • Voux Swifts .5 gram Tx • Christmas Party • Mr President Feel free to email us and complain, brag, make suggestions, or write copy for the newsletter. Send your email address to bobruth@nwinfo.net 73 A Ham Club with it’s own Weather Man Stu Seibel K0YQM when you go anywhere with Stu, people people remember that he was on TV or that he was the weatherman and they always have something nice to say to him. WB7WAM It all started with a World War II surplus ARC-5 transmitter with 40 watts of CW power feeding a 40 meter dipole. Put that together with a Hallicrafters S-40 I bought from my cousin and it was a 1957 amateur radio. . A high school buddy and I elmered each other to get licensed and then had to come up with all of $6.00 to get the ARC-5’s from the surplus bins at Burstein-Applebee in Kansas City. My buddy was intrigued with radar and ham radio gave him the springboard to a career in the Air Force. My interest was focused on a building across the street from B-A where the inventor of the Top-40 radio format, Todd Storz, had the studios of his flagship WHB. Little did I realize I’d be talking ham radio with him. Having that ham ticket impressed the folks at a 500 watt daytimer in Leavenworth, Kansas, into giving me a weekend job. A proposed power increase meant I had to get a commercial First Class Radiotelephone License at 16 and after a few stops wound up at the Storz station in Oklahoma City, the 50,000 watt KOMA. Following a move of the studios to the transmitter, Todd Storz would often show up to study the huge Western Electric blowtorch, fascinated by its Doherty amplifier with wide modulation and power capabilities. When he found out the kid minding the place at night was a fellow ham, that meant ham talk. An ill-fated experiment to automate format radio convinced me I wasn’t cut out for voice tracking and prompted a move north to Wichita’s KLEO. A very good move because that’s where I met Carol, my bride of 51 years. It was also the place where I was the only one who got paid at a Beach Boys performance. The owner of a roller rink called to ask if I would help promote and introduce a band he got for free. He said he got a call from Murry Wilson who said his three sons were in a band he was managing and he was offering him a free show to see if their California surfing style would appeal to landlocked Kansas. Somehow we got a crowd that left as Beach Boys fans and Murry Wilson, a Kansas native, left thinking the band just might make it beyond California. Another milestone was at KIOA in Des Moines (Iowa) with music director added to my other duties and the big question of why The Beatles could be a gigantic hit in Europe and get nowhere in the U.S. with an early 1963 release of “She Loves You.” That is until one fall night AT E U R R A D YA KI MA ON C LU B YA K I M A IO AM WASHIN GT YAKIMA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB Ladder Line Newsletter Club Founded in 1930 85 years of Continuous service to the Yakima Valley ARRL Affliated in1931 January 2015 Stu Seibel K0YQM (continued) a Drake University student pounded on the studio window clutching a copy of the latest British album. European record charts indicated the cut to play was “I Saw Her Standing There.” It was instant pandemonium and The Beatles conquered the Midwest. A few months later Capitol Records released that cut as a single backed with “I Wanna Hold Your Hand.” To my amazement, the Des Moines Register tracked me down last fall to confirm this urban legend and printed an extensive article on Iowa being a beachhead in the British Invasion. In August of 1964, The Beatles embarked on their first U.S. tour and one of the stops was Denver. The promoter immediately teamed up with the mighty KIMN, leaving little daytime challenger KDAB out in the cold. KDAB’s management correctly reasoned that KIMN’s “hard news” news department probably wouldn’t put that much effort into covering the arrival. The problem was, how could KDAB do that much coverage with no news department. The answer was to get deejay friends from other cities to help them in return for getting access to The Beatles news conference. It worked, KDAB stole KIMN’s thunder and the deejays got an interview where The Beatles asked as many questions as the interviewers. This was their first trip to the Old West and Paul and John especially wanted to know more about Native Americans they read about in England. That was one time this farm boy was glad he grew up on land between a couple of reservations and when they found out my wife was part Cherokee, those city slickers didn’t have a chance. Radio was very transient in those days and television was very stable. So, when it came time for family, it was a time to move to television. Moving up to news director and program director in Colorado and Wyoming, we enjoyed stability until John Noel and Dale Hazen called from KIMA-TV. Somehow they figured out I would be a good replacement for the retiring Jimmy Nolan and agreed that I wouldn’t have to do weather or a children’s program, only carrying on as program director. Carol was thrilled. Finally I could shed the weather duties and be home at night. After a few months, things didn’t work out as planned and Carol was persuaded to let me do weather for no more than six months until they could find a replacement. Well, you know the rest of the story, don’t you? Ever since selling the ham gear for college tuition, other demands kept me from getting back to ham radio, until retirement. Caring folks came up with all sorts of ways to keep the mind and body active, flattering, but not appealing. Hey, I grew up in the payola years, need I say more. Then I remembered an old chief engineer friend who found the answer in ham radio when he retired. It sounded like it might work for me, so I’ve now worked up to Extra Class, a V.E. and trying to solve low profile city slicker antenna challenges. 73 CHRISTMAS PARTY See if you can pick out Santa Bev KK7OE & Don KC7FFG with help from others do the 146.520 simplex net on Wendsday night at 8:30. They came up to the Christmas party and invited everyone to the Lower Valley Ham Club Christmas party. We always enjoy Don & Bev, That’s why we go to Lower Valley Club Christmas party so we can get to know everyone a little better. All you can eat Chinese dinner now that’s Christmas. AT E U R R A D YA KI MA ON C LU B YA K I M A IO AM WASHIN YAKIMA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB Club Founded in 1930 85 years of Continuous service to the Yakima Valley GT Ladder Line Newsletter ARRL Affliated in1931 January 2015 The Ultimate Bunny Hunt .First you have to learn what you are looking for. A 4 inch long bird that flies at 100mph. Then you find out the transmitter weighs . .5 grams and is attached to the birds back. You can buy a receiver for a $1000 and go to work. We are ham radio operators “we don’t need no stinking wild life receiver”. Then you notice everyone that has a receiver has a hand held Yagi antenna. OK now it’s starting to get a little harder. First week we tried to receive a signal sent from a transmitter used for woodpecker tracking. Paul N7XOP had an idea using his Ic7000. I took the transmitter to his house and just as we started to receive a signal. the battery died. I returned the transmitter and was loaned 4 other transmitters that I could try to install a battery on and the first one I tried worked. Now we had a transmitter with full power. To our surprise the IC7000 on 156.346 CW not only had a S meter reading, on CW it had a tone, when they installed the transmitters on the birds. I was in the parking lot, receiving great signals from all six birds. Larry Schwitter Paul N7XOP, Linda K7LKH and I attended an Audubon meeting and met everyone and they had a program.The speaker was Larry Schwitters. We got to know him as the "King of the Swifts" because of his vast knowledge of the Vaux's swift. Larry had a fast paced PowerPoint presentation. Larry examined Audubon's ongoing citizen science project, Vaux's Happening, launched six years ago to gather the data necessary to make a compelling case for the preservation of a single chimney roost site in Portland, OR. Vaux's Happening quickly expanded into an attempt to locate, raise awareness of, and hopefully preserve the important roost sites used by this species all along their migratory path. In the last twelve migrations the project has documented nearly six million Vaux's Swift roosting events from San Diego to the Yukon. Larry will share images and information captured by the project's chimney surveillance cameras and precision temperature recorders. Last September, Yakima Valley Audubon Society member Lori Isley discovered Vaux’s Swifts funneling into the Johnson’s Auto Glass Chimney on First Street just after sunset. Over the next 21 days, 19 observations documented a total of 24,481 Swifts entering this chimney. On twelve occasions, the nightly total exceeded 1,000 individual birds with the high count of 1,595 tallied by Greg Bohn on Oct 2. This fall, Larry, with the assistance of several Yakima Valley Audubon Society volunteers, will attempt to mist net a few swifts and attach radio locators on them. This will allow the tagged birds to be monitored to see how long they remain at the Yakima roost and even better, monitors at chimneys to the south may be able to track their migration route. Swift Snips: These 4-5 inch long birds are the smallest and most numerous of the swift species in Washington State. They spend much of their time in the air and forage, eat, drink, court, collect nesting materials and mate all in flight. Vaux’s Swifts prefer to roost in hollow old trees but frequently use brick chimneys as a substitute. Vaux’s Swifts can-not perch because they have weak feet so they must clutch the rough surface of wherever they roost upon, using their stubby tail as a brace. Prior to entering the chimney, the swifts often gather just prior to sunset in great numbers and circle the chimney. As they begin to enter the chimney, they change from their head-first direction and go in tail first. Once in the chimney, they overlap one another in “shingle” fashion to conserve body heat. They often slow their metabolism to a near-dormant state to conserve energy while roosting. Transmitter in place Now for the next challenge. Woodpeckers that have transmitters on them. They have been monitoring them with no problem. The woodpeckers have started covering a lot more ground and they need help locating them. They are in the Nile Valley & Bethel ridge areas. The Vaux Swifts 6 transmitters are 159.103, 159.204, 159.304, 159.406, 159.506, 159.605 The woodpeckers transmitters are 159.100, 159.200, 159.300, 159.400, 159.500, 159.600 Ham in the park Started a little slow, then it got so hot, no one wanted to be at a park. As the weather started to cool the turnout started to grow. When it got too cold, I figured that ham in the park would stop till spring. Everyone wanted to keep it going some how. The group started ham in the shop. The groups first project was to get a Drake model 2-B receiver working. The last time it was plugged in, was the early 70’s. This project started with a tube radio activation program and this has been on going and we have many tube radios to get up and running. This has been very educational for everyone involved. We have coffee, donuts, pizza, subway sandwich, fudge. We never know who will show up or what we will be eating. Come join us and get to know a new generation of hams. Coffee is always on. AT E U R R A D YA KI MA ON C LU B YA K I M A IO AM WASHIN GT YAKIMA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB Net Schedules W7AQ Net 146.660 tone 123 7:30pm Monday Ladder Line Newsletter January 2015 Simplex Net 146.520 simplex 8:30pm Wednesday From the President W7AQ has started working on the HamFest. If you would like to help or have any suggestions for the club or HamFest committee let them know. Vendor friendly will be priority one. Vendors will have all the help they need going in and out. Vendor tables will be handled a lot differently because of the comments made by the vendors last year. We have a solution to stop early sales and that will be implemented. Parking is an issue for the vendors and that has been solved. Everyone will be very happy with the parking solution. Vendor parking and Handicapped parking will be much improved. Attendees of the HamFest will not have to walk a block or two. You will only have to walk across the street and you’re in. One solution to the big crowd at the door, give everyone the opportunity to pay or get their preregister started at 7:00 or 8:00, have their hand stamped. Then at 9:00am, show your hand and walk in. There is a small group on 147.300 every Friday night at 8:00pm. They call it the Subject Net. Lots of fun, meet new hams, answer the question or pass it on. Check in and get on the list. Net Control starts with a subject. Anyone can have a subject and anyone can be net control, it goes around until it gets back to the net control. New subject and start all over. We try to close the net at 10:00. I must say the group of new hams have been participating in club member activities and have been upgrading their license and have been participating and learning about radios and antennas. Every day their stations are better and stronger and they have lots of ideas for the future. Insomniac Net 145.555 tone 100 445.875 tone 103.5 every night 11:00pm Tech Net 145.555 tone 100 simplex 445.875 tone 103.5 simplex Friday night 7:30pm W7AQ Repeaters VHF 146.660 Tone123 146.840 Tone123 147.300 Tone123 UHF 224.900 Tone123 Other Repeaters VHF 147.040 Tone123 146.200 Tone ? 146.940 Tone173.8 Echolink Connected to Ireland Conference Nodes 145.555 simplex Tone100 445.875 simplex Tone103.5 I talked to many inactive hams at the fair booth. 10 days and every day I talked to a ham that would like to get involved and get back on the air. I have noticed many of the hams I met at the fair are showing up, and emailing me, and wanting to get their old radios on the air. The last board meeting of the year was tuesday, the 30th. Joe KA7LJQ had a cough and should have been home. Jo had spent the last three days putting together work books so Dave W7ICW could handle the job of Treasurer. Jo walked Dave through all of his responsibilities. Work the world with a handheld Get ham news anytime 0016 Jo put together a great presentation to help Dave as much as possible, as he takes over as Treasurer for 2015. Jo got all of us up to speed on what will be expected of us to make Dave and Sharon’s job as Secretary easy as possible. Ham Breakfast Old Town Station Every Monday 8:30am Meetings of the Yakima Amateur Radio Club are held on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of each month 2nd Tuesday: Short Business Meeting with a Program 7:30pm Red Cross building 302 S. 2nd St. Yakima, Wa 4th Tuesday: Dinner Social 6:30pm Power House Grill Restaurant 3807 River Rd. Yakima WA 2015 Officers President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Past President Trustee Robert Rutherford Joe Ackermann Sharon Fisher Dave Hansen Joe Ackermann Mark Tharp Board Members 2014 - 2015 Harold Hutchinson Andy Thomson Board Members 2015 - 2016 Stu Seibel Keith Bowman WB7WAM KK7KI KB7MKF W7ICW KK7KI KB7HDX KE7LA W7CXA K0QKM N7TRN
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