Second Annual Pete Lawson Outdoor Adventure – Sunday, September 10, 2023

When:
Sunday, September 10, 2023
1:00pm to 5:00pm
(UTC-04:00) America/New York

Where:
Colt State Park, Bristol RI

SITE #25 MAP

Organizer: NCRC k1jsm@arrl.net

Description:
Newport County Radio Club is happy to announce our second annual Pete Lawson Outdoor Adventure recognizing the achievements of club members, and the many activities that the club participates in throughout the year. It’s also a fun way to get together and enjoy a late summer day! This year’s event will be held at Colt State Park in Bristol RI on Sunday September 10 starting at 1 PM.

PETER LAWSON OUTDOOR ADVENTURE
The 2nd annual Peter Lawson Outdoor Adventure will be at Colt State Park

Sunday September 10, 2023.
Register and Save the Date Now!

The picnic starts Sunday at 1 pm. Delicious catered dinner by Scratch Kitchen of Newport (same as last year).

Our Sunday picnic caps off three days of the All-RI POTA event, sponsored by NCRC, and managed by Jim Garman, KC1QDC. There will be active radio stations at the event so you can experience Parks-On-The-Air. Colt State Park is K-2872 in the Parks-On-The-Air (POTA) radio event.

The PLOA Sunday picnic event is for all NCRC members and their families. All RI POTA participants are invited as well. Best of all, it is FREE! You may wish to make a donation of any amount but not required.

WE NEED A HEAD COUNT to accurately forecast the amount of food to order. PLEASE sign up on the club web site now, W1SYE.ORG. Or, if web sites are not your thing, send an email to k1jsm@arrl.net.

As a reward for registering now, we have several drawings for prizes:

  • An antenna survey, recommendations & set-up assistance at your QTH by Mr. DX, W1LY.
  • $100 Gift Certificate to DXEngineering
  • A POTA activation (a guided training session) on another date & in RI with a POTA pro who will provide all the equipment.
  • A Wolf River Coil antenna (the antenna shoot out winner).

PLUS – events for the kids, and recognition of Jack Garforth, N1JK, (SK-Silent Key) and more.

Hope to see you there. Register now!

Should you be willing to donate to the event to cover expenses, please use the following Donation Button or find the link Pay Dues or Donate on the club website (You don’t need a PayPal account to donate as any credit card can be used).

The Great POTA Antenna Shootout!

AA1XQ and his cab-mounted Wolf River Coils base loaded vertical

Wouldn’t it be great to know how your portable antenna setup compares with your buddies’?  Does size matter? Is a small footprint better?  Is rapid deployment the key?  Is it $$?  Is it single band or multi-band?  Well that’s what a small group of NCRC members set out to determine this spring.  After a goodly amount of friendly banter (aka, “trash talking”) K1JSM, WB4SON, KA1ZOU, AA1XQ, W1LY and KB1ZZU met behind the Eisenhower House at Fort Adams on the morning of June 10th,  2023 to determine bragging rights for the foreseeable future.

Rules were determined in advance by K1JSM and WB4SON with WB4SON tallying the scores. In short, all stations using 100 Watts transmitted relatively close in frequency and time on the 20 meter band.  Reception on the Reverse Beacon Network was the impartial judge.  Each score was determined by multiplying the distance in miles of each spot by the LINEAR SNR.  So going further is worth more than a shorter contact. The SNR weighted score for each spot is then added to a running sum. This means someone heard by more stations (perhaps because of a more omnidirectional antenna) will receive more points because they will have more spots.  All rigs were pre-programmed to send “CQ TEST CQ TEST DE callsign callsign” twice at 25 wpm to make sure to catch the attention of the RBN.  This initial test group of six was purposely kept small to iron out any kinks in the process.

And the winner is ……..

Fellas, it wasn’t even close – Mike AA1XQ wins the first POTA Antenna Shootout with a score over 6 million! Second place was Willy W1LY, and 3rd place was Bob WB4SON.

It’s worth pointing out that the old saying “size doesn’t matter” was pretty much true in this case. Mike’s winning antenna was a simple vertical on the roof of his car, as was WB4SON’s. Willy, got into 2nd place with a 1/4 wave ground plane. AA1XQ and WB4SON only needed a few minutes for their set up and take down.

WB4SON captured all the raw data for all six stations. He noted that often there were spots before the test period as well as after. Those were removed from the scoring, leaving spots in the range of 1414 to 1420 UTC. Strangely one station in Greenland always reported twice.

The complete results are shown below. Note that 6.07E+06 is 6.07 Million. 7.33E+05 is 733 thousand. That big number calculated by summing up distance times a linearized SNR for each spot.

AA1XQ W1LY WB4SON KA1ZOU K1JSM KB1ZZU
Score 6.07E+06 3.50E+06 2.30E+06 1.85E+06 1.52E+06 7.33E+05
Total Spots 48 53 41 30 36 40
Longest Distance 3496 3500 2493 3182 2481 2471

This was an interesting project. Propagation was amazingly consistent. There was a spread from 30 to 53 in terms of total number of spots, but DX distances were not spread as much: 2471 vs 3500 miles. For the most part, all the participating stations were heard by the same group of spotting stations. The BIG difference was Signal to Noise, with Mike really putting out a consistently stronger signal.

WB4SON’s simple antenna was a 7 foot tall Hamstick on a mag-mount. AA1XQ won with Wolf River Coil base loaded vertical. An interesting experiment would be to compare base loaded short verticals to center loaded ones (A Hustler whip is center loaded vertical, for instance). That said, there was quite a large range of antennas tested.  K1JSM came with a Delta Loop dubbed the “Hook’em Horns” or “El Diablo” for it’s shape.  KA1ZOU used a roughly 130 foot long end-fed setup as an “inverted v” and 9:1 UNUN with the feed line shield as counterpoise.  KB1ZZU used an Alpha Antenna 10-to-80-meter tuner free off-center-fed vertical.  W1LY used his custom designed “Junk box Vertical” initially configured as a vertical dipole.

Great way to spend an hour this morning!  Be on the look out for an opportunity to knock someone off the podium with your favorite portable antenna.

And Congratulations Mike!

73.

WB4SON and his 20M Hamstick

K1JSM and his custom “El Diablo” delta loop

A view of Narragansett Bay East Passage and part of the temporary antenna farm

KA1ZOU, WB4SON and AA1XQ standby while W1LY hustles by to tweak his “Junk box Vertical” (just visible in the background behind the W1LY white panel POTA van)

The Pell (Newport) Bridge is the background for the KB1ZZU off-center-fed “L” with the Pell Bridge in the background

What the heck is that: ÄRTEN™ Workshops Continue …

 

 

 

 

The ÄRTEN™ project held it’s fifth bi-weekly workshop on April 3, 2023 at FabNewport.  Project members and students from Pull It Apart! – FabNewport joined in a “What the heck is that?” gameshow to identify electronics gear stored in the hamshack closet at All Saints STEAM Academy.  SPOILER ALERT – from left to right the team identified an antenna rotator controller, a signal generator, a Heathkit® power supply and its matching amateur radio transceiver the venerable HW-101.

Glowing with gameshow success, project members then attempted to integrate an Ethernet-enabled CO2/Temperature/Humidity sensor from TEMCO Controls with a notebook controller.  Unfortunately, the aura of invincibility wore off and attempts to communicate with the device were unsuccessful; no habla IEEE 802.3!   Stay tuned.

Antenna-Build-A-Thon

RI ARES is having a J-Pole build party this Saturday afternoon.  Details:

All Are welcome!

We will be building the antenna.   Some Kits still available.

AT: Warwick Public Library

600 Sandy Lane

Warwick, RI 02889

1:00 PM – 4:00 PM EDT
In large conference room