How to Skin a Cat

W1AN on N1HRA Tower Installing 900MHz Yagi

I dont’ want to cause any undue alarm to animal lovers amongst you, nor to risk a boycott by PETA when this title shows up in the search engines. So I’ll say right off that this is an allusion to the pre-Political Correctness saying “there is more than one way to skin a cat”. No animals were killed or harmed in this production. With that reassurance out of the way I want to tell you a story of old fashioned ham ingenuity.

Over the past year an increasingly larger proportion of the fine presentations at club meetings have needed Internet access. Our first attempt to skin this cat was the direct approach. We asked how we could connect to the Internet at Crandall House. Somewhat to our surprise we learned that there was no provision for guests of the facility to connect. Some discrete inquiries made it clear that trying to change this policy was unlikely to succeed.

Our next approach was to schedule meeting at members’ houses when we just had to have Internet access. This works but leads to confusion about where we are meeting. Also some members are set in their ways and don’t want to move around. I know this doesn’t apply to you or me but to those other guys.

Many would give up at this point. Our president, John Spigel, W1AN, is not one of those. He reasoned that the judicious application of some ham ingenuity should be able to solve this problem. This is basically a communication problem. We are hams. Communication is what we do, by HPM!

During a lull in a contest John and I speculated that it ought to be possible to connect wirelessly, either by eavesdropping on an unlocked wireless net at a neighbor’s building or some more upstanding approach that used RF to connect. John researched the issue and came upon some devices that might permit a radio link from Crandall House to the QTH of Bill, N1HRA, a straight line distance of about a mile. Bill has broadband Internet in his shack. What we needed was to build a “bridge” from his shack to the Crandall House over which could flow the bits.

Now anyone who lives in New England, particulary Rhode Island, knows that building a bridge is a decades long affair. After all there are two nearby bridges that have been undergoing just painting for more than five years! Imagine what would happen to emergency communications if hams took that long to build a bridge. We do things faster, better, and cheaper!

John found some used equipment (of course) that looked promising. It seemed to function in a test across about 500 feet. Would it work over ten times that distance? Less than a month from concept we were ready to try it out.

The nearby illustration shows the hookup. At N1HRA we would connect a Wireless Router & Switch operating at 2.4GHz. Attached to that would be a Wireless Bridge operating at 900MHz. Up twenty-five feet on one of Bill’s towers we would mount an eighteen element yagi pointed at the Crandall House a mile away to the North East. Although the illustration shows the Crandall House with an antenna mounted on the roof we didn’t want to raise that issue, so the antenna was mounted on the top of John’s truck which was parked next to the Crandall House.

Skinning the Cat

 

There was a matching 900MHz Yagi positioned to point at N1HRA when John’s truck was properly oriented. The antenna was connected to another 900MHz Wireless Bridge jumpered to be a “child” device which feeds a Wireless Router and Switch at 2.4GHz. The Router establishes a link with any nearby computer equipped with a wireless adapter. In this case the computer will be inside the Crandall House in the basement meeting room where we have met for some years.

So much for theory. It was time to smoke test the lash up, err… Bridge.

W1AN, N1HRA, and W1PN met on Sunday at 1300 at Bill’s QTH and began installing the antenna and “Parent” side equipment. It was a nice day and the antenna work went quickly. After a few moments confusion over which Bridge was which, the equipment was installed in the shack and tested ‘locally’. That is, from the tower to the driveway.

W1AN Testing Outside N1HRA Before Travel to Crandall House

Just as we were preparing to drive to the Crandall House for the other side of the Bridge, Bill got a call on his EMT HT and had to rush off to save someone’s life. John and I proceeded to Crandall House stopping midway at the Ashaway Post Office for a trial run. John positioned the antenna and I attempted a connection. Two seconds later the home page of WA1RR.org was on the screen and we had a half-mile connection operating at broadband speeds!

Flushed with success John and I drove on to Crandall House and set up near the building. Again I attempted a to make a connection with the club website.

Nothing heard.

We were crestfallen.

“Gimme a minute,” John said as he climbed on the roof of the truck and proceeded to swing the antenna back and forth. After a few repositionings we found a bearing that would work and again we had high speed connectivity.

So, now we have not only proof of concept but a workable solution to the problem as is. It would be convenient to have a permanently mounted antenna on the building but it isn’t required so we may just continue to operate with a half-fixed and half-mobile approach. Either way it’s great to have Internet access at our regular meeting room.

If you want to see all this in operation you’ll have to come to the April 16th meeting.

 

Test MORSE CODE CHALLENGE – CTRI Contest Group

MORSE CODE CHALLENGE – CTRI Contest Group
So, how goes the battle?  I mean, of course, your battle with Morse code.  At the upcoming April meeting of CTRI Contest Group, you will have an opportunity to demonstrate how much you have improved in just one short month.  I would also like to know how many hours you have spent practicing, or at a minimum, how many runs of RufzXP you have completed.  You can find that out by viewing the RufzXP main screen:

 

Meeting of March 12, 2011

Mike, K1DM, Challenges Members to Improve CW Performance

The best attended meeting in recent memory was held at the Crandall House in Ataway, RI, on Saturday, March 12, 2011. Eighteen members enjoyed multiple technical presentations and exceptional cuisine as well as good fellowship.

John, W1XX  announced and promoted  “Operation NEQP:  1 Million or Bust”, a project to establish an unbeatable record for this contest. Members are urged to ready their stations for the contest which is held in early May. At the April meeting we can count on our esteemed Contest Manager for additional exhortations to surpass our previous efforts and set the bar beyond the reach of others forever.

Mike, K1DM  presented his Morse code training regime. He also did a TEST RUN using the RufzXP program to let everyone see another way to improve their code proficiency. Members interested in improving their own CW performance had the opportunity to run the program and establish a baseline from which to improve before the April meeting.  There is much of interest about Mike’s methodology to which this short description fails to do justice.

Bob,W1YRC  gave a presentation on the way his other club is approaching lifting the level of technical expertise of members and prospective members. It is an unusual way to make real hams out of people who hold a license but whose understanding of ham radio or electronics comes mainly from the license manual. Members found this account to be fascinating and of potential use to CTRI CG. After a long and stimulating discussion it was moved by W1XX and seconded by NG1G that the Executive Committee be directed to study the potential of the club establishing a similar undertaking to the one W1YRC described but with a contest bent and to report back to the membership. Motion passed.

Lunch is served.

At this point the meeting recessed for lunch provided by Chris, KA1GEU, coffee by John, W1AN, ice cold milk by Pat, NG1G. A special treat was a selection of oatmeal-raisin and chocolate chip-pecan-bourbon cookies by Pam K6NDV, and Bob W1YRC.

After lunch the meeting resumed.

Members were asked what topics would interest them for future meetings:

  • A review of N3PU experiences
  • LOTW workshop
  • Demo of TeamView and remote operation
  • Logging programs: XMLOG, DXWIN, DXLABS, N1MM, WriteLog, etc.
  • Construction projects

Some discussion surrounded each of these possible topics as well as other general conversations.

Meeting adjourned at 1330

Respectfully submitted,

Ed Haskell W1PN, Secretary

 

 

With a stunning new technology …

With a stunning new technology, a well known company has decided to re-enter the Amateur market.  Will they re-invent Ham Radio when they do?

BUFFALO, NY — An upstate New York company has announced the development of a new technology with profound implications for modern communications, including Amateur Radio.  Dr. Robert F. “RF” Burns, president of Buffalo Chip Technology, provided some information at an April 1st press conference.

“We have successfully created what amounts to a very high gain, very broadbanded directional antenna in a single computer chip smaller than a book of matches.  Our discovery of Enhanced Integrated Electronic Input/Output (EIE-I/O) has enormous potential”

Montgomery Scott, chief engineer for the Enterprise, added some details.  “While it is true that you cannot change the laws of physics, it is sometimes possible to use them creatively.  What we have done here is exactly that.”  Scott went on to explain some of the background behind the breakthrough.  “Until now, electronic theory has described radio propagation in terms of Sine Waves.  One of our laddies, Jim Tiberius, started looking instead at Cosine Waves.  This led to the discovery of EIE-I/O, and the subsequent development of the CosineOptimized Waveform Chip.  C.O.W. chips may represent the most significant advance in electronics since the Di-Lithium Crystal.”

“Unlike Sine waveforms, which vary in length depending on frequency, Cosine Optimized Waveforms are almost uniformly short across the entire radio spectrum.  The functional equivalent of a nine element, full sized 40 meter beam antenna will now fit in a package no larger than a credit card.  The 80 and 160 meter versions will be the size of a pack of cigarettes.”

EIE-I/O also has applications in transceiver design,” added company spokesman Richard Tracy.  He demonstrated a prototype of a full-featured, all mode HF through microwave rig.  The radio, including the antenna, is worn on the wrist and resembles an everyday wristwatch.  “We expect this to be especially popular with contesters and their families,” he continued.  Imagine being able to attend your daughter’s dance recital or your son’s soccer game, while never missing that big band opening!  And won’t the XYL be thrilled – no more ‘laundry problems’ caused working ‘just one more multiplier’ before a trip to the Theory Room.”

Industry insiders have reported a few nagging problems with the C.O.W. chips.  “They’re apparently made in a really ugly shade of brown,” said one.  “I don’t know how the market will accept that.”  Others pointed to a somewhat unpleasant odor emanating from the chips.  Buffalo Chip experts have described the problems as small, but unavoidable.

Newer hams may not be familiar with the company.  Many long-time Amateurs have fond memories of the firm, however.  Founder Joseph MacDonald was legendary for finding and developing electrical engineers.  “Sometimes it seemed like old MacDonald had a farm,” recalled one veteran.  “He always had a great crop of home-grown talent.”

Spokesman Burns confirmed the company’s re-entry into the Amateur Radio Market.  “Our management team believes that Amateur Radio operators deserve the best in C.O.W. Chip products and EIE-I/O technology.  We are committed to providing exactly that.”

Competitors were less than enthusiastic, saying it is a long overdue move.  According to one anonymous rival, “Suddenly, their management team is committed?  Big deal!  They should have been committed years ago!”  Said another, “It seems like just more of the same old bullcrap to me.  The major manufacturers have known about this technology for years.  The problem is in maintaining consistent quality control over the manufacturing process.  But if they can do that, I think the rest of us might be in deep doo-doo.”

Buffalo Chip personnel insist that they have solved the manufacturing and quality issues, and are ready to go.  Production of EIE-I/O units is expected to begin shortly.  According to a company press release, Quicksilver Radio Products has been appointed as the exclusive worldwide distributor.

 

Reprinted by permission for those who may have missed it.

 

Meeting Notice — April 16, 2011

The next meeting will be held April 16 at a place to be announced later. Location depends upon the success of an experiment to provide internet access at the Crandall House.

So far we have:

  1. Pat on LOTW.
  2. Mike on Improving CW second checkpoint.
  3. W1XX on the Million or Bust contest.
  4. W1PN on the new website.
  5. WRTC 2014  please read before meeting
  6. Demo of How to Skin a Cat

At the March meeting interest was expressed in seeing presentations on all of the popular logging programs.If you have something to present on this subject or any other please step forward now.

Is there a volunteer for providing the lunch makings?

 

 

EME Contact at 600THz

This is a bit off topic but it has been my observation (no pun intended) that many Hams are interested in astronomy. To that end some of you may be interested in Earth’s Moon’s closest approach (perigee) in its orbit of our home world occurring this Saturday just before sunset. Thus the full moon which occurs at sunset will appear larger than usual. The coincidence of perigee and the full moon occurs once every 18 years.

More information may be seen by visiting http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1yalg_Apdw

Notification test 141254MAR11

S1=ON S3=ON S4=ON

This will be a test in four parts.
1. Post published
2. Comment entered
3. Forum Topic created
4. Forum Topic reply entered

If you are part of the test group please report reception details. Any of the rest of you are certainly welcome to indicate whether/when you receive any of the test emails.

Ed W1PN

COOKIES !! March 12, 2011 Meeting Notice

The theme of this meeting is COOKIES!!

Why cookies you ask? Will, K6ND, is imposing on the good nature of his XYL (and premier distaff contester), Pamela, K6NDV, to bring her famous cookies. Not to be outdone, Bob W1YRC is making a batch of his West Texas Chocolate Chips cookies too. This is truly a meeting not to be missed by cookie lovers! My recommendation is to skip breakfast so as not to waste stomach capacity on lesser foods.

Meeting place: Crandall House at 11am to 2pm

At the moment of posting the following presentations are scheduled. Check back often for additions to this agenda.

  1. W1XX to announce and promote:  “Operation NEQP:  1 Million or Bust”?
  2. K1DM  presentation on his Morse code training regime. He will also do a TEST RUN using the RufzXP program to let everyone see another way to improve their code proficiency. There is much of interest about Mike’s methodology that this short description fails to do justice to.
  3. W1YRC will give a presentation on the way his other club is approaching lifting the level of technical expertise of members and prospective members. It is an unusual way to make real hams out of people who hold a license but whose understanding of ham radio or electronics comes mainly from the license manual.


Lunch by Chris, KA1GEU  Coffee by John, W1AN, ice cold milk by Pat, NG1G

[wpgmappity id=”2″]



CTRI CG Swapmeet online

If you look at the Member Menu (the top menu line) you will see a new entry called SWAPMEET. Click on it to buy and sell goodies.

This facility is brand new so if you notice anything that seems wrong please open a problem report in the Forum.