Today had been a pretty busy one at work, so afterwards I wanted to go over to K-2169 (Cloudland Canyon State Park) and just work some contacts to take my mind off things and to just relax for a while since it was 77 degrees on November 7th!
I get my sBitx V2 and head over there with the plan to run my hamsticks since I only have about 2 hours, maybe less, to get my activation in before dark. I roll up to the frisbee golf parking lot and notice another car in the lot with an antenna on the roof…a very large antenna mind you when compared to the ones you usually see on top of smaller cars.
I go ahead and park in my usual location and decide to walk over to see if there is someone in the car and THERE WAS! What do you know, I found another ham already doing POTA! It was none other than KB4QXI (John Law) and he was working SSB with a 20 meter hamstick on the roof of his car none the less. It only took me a year and a half and over 120 activations at this one park to finally run into another ham radio operator doing POTA. John had a pretty sweet system setup in his car with a computer, I assume for logging as I failed to ask him if that is what it was for, but I am pretty sure it is. He was also running a Yaesu radio of some sort on a mount that placed it right in hand’s reach but out of the way of the passenger seat, which happened to be where the computer was residing. I failed to get a photo of any of that so just let your minds run amuck with the verbal description and we will move on.
After talking with John for a while we agreed that it would be best if I setup in the next parking area down the hill which is right at 2/10s of a mile away. I personally figured that was far enough that we shouldn’t have problems with cross talk if I went to 30 meters since I was going to be operating with CW anyway since he was already on 20 meters when I arrived. I figured that if 30 meters was really bad that I could just drop down to 40 instead and work all the locals. Lol. Something else I had not noticed was that this lot had powerlines running right over it (as you can see in the above photo). I figured at this point I might as well give it a shot anyway and see if I could get the activation at the minimum. I did only have about 2 hours till the end of the UTC day at this point.
I setup three counter poise wires, you can see one of them in the photo I took above just barely because I forgot to get a closer photo prior to it getting dark… soooo. Suffice it to say, I ran out the two 30 meter tuned radials and even had the opportunity to run them elevated about 5 or 6 feet above grade, which is probably why my radio worked so well on 30 tonight to the point I didn’t move off that band. Tuned radials seem to work SO much better than radials that are just close. The key when I operate from the truck seat can vary between the Gemini and the N3ZN paddle, it just depends on the mood I am in as well as how fast I want to setup as the Gemini is in the carry tote and the paddle is in the hard case with the Argonaut 5… I normally choose my paddle based solely on things like this as I really like using them all.
After talking to some of the more code savvy hams in the email reflector on the bitx group and them helping me solve the code problem (actually they solved it and told me how to implement it), I was able to get the FT8 mode operational. It actually worked when you called CQ already and it had an issue operating when you would answer someone else calling CQ. It is a stop gap fix that does allow it to work but it doesnt work as efficiently as it should. Still it got FT8 working for me so I am stoked!
To be fair, this is Ashhar’s first iteration of this mode in his hand coded software he wrote and it does work so I got no complaints as it allows me to work the mode WITHOUT the need of an additional computer. He is currently testing a revision that works even better so I am excited to see what happens with that. In the photo above you can see the exchanges and the log entry for my QSO with K4SQL. This is all in the radio too!
On the way out, it was pitch black as it now gets dark at 5:30…uggg. Have I mentioned how much I dislike Daylight “Savings” Time? Well, I dont like it… This is a prime reason too. Even without DST being implemented, it would be dark at 8PM in November. Regardless, I had to use a flash light to break down my antenna tonight.
I powered down and quit before the UTC day flipped over as that would have forced me to stay two more hours to get a second activation in…lol. I do need one more activation at this park to get me over 4000 QSOs. I never planned on getting that many QSOs at one park to be honest, my only goal to start off with was to get 20 activations so I could get the repeat offender award, now I am well north of 120 activations and almost 4000 QSOs! By the time this blog post goes live, I should be past that mark.
Something else of note is that I am currently still logging my FT8 QSOs on my paper log and typing them into HAMRS as there isnt that many of them at this point and I can easily keep up with this quantity manually instead of learning how to export them from the radio and then add them to my HAMRS log electronically or even a new logging program of some sort instead. There will be a point when I will have to do that, but for now I can still get them in the log like this really easily. So till next time warm up the air waves with your radio and hopefully I will work you from a park!
73
WK4DS