Top Left Corner Top Right Corner
QRZ.COM Callsign Lookup:
Wireless Gnus Masthead

Issue 152 – February 2006

Monthly Newsletter of the Southern Oregon Amateur Radio Club

SOARC, P.O. BOX 1164, GRANTS PASS, OREGON 97528
VISIT THE SOARC WEBSITE AT: http://www.qsl.net/soar/SOARC/
EDITOR: Brandon Michaels, (KD7WHY), PO Box 242, R.R., OR 97537
EMAIL: soarc.newsletter.editor@gmail.com

Upcoming Events:

Calling All Ladies: Western Belles is a women's ham radio group that gets together regularly for lunch and all female hams are invited to attend.

Our next luncheon will on March 4th, place: Hart's Café.

Antenna Class: (Series Part 1 of 2) Make your own yagi for $5 for upcoming club Foxhunting. At the club meeting Feb. 21st.
Contact Galen Kelm (KE7LM) Tel. 582-2267

(Series: Part 2 of 2): Make your own Yagi attenuator, for upcoming club Foxhunting. At the club meeting March 21.
Contact Galen Kelm (KE7LM) Tel. 582-2267

NEXT CLUB MEETING: 1900 (7:00 PM),
TUESDAY, February 21st & Tuesday, March 21
Senior Center, 3RD & B STREETS, GRANTS PASS

For Sale, Trade or Wanted:

(Remember you can list your "for sale or trade" or "wanted" items in the newsletter. Please limit them to ham or computer-related merchandise or services.)

FOR SALE: TenTec Omni V HF transceiver, 10-160 m bands, extra IF filters for 2400, 1800 and 500 Hz bandwidths, TX output variable 25-100 W, not sensitive to antenna impedance mismatch. Complete with TenTec model 961 regulated power supply/speaker output 13.5 V DC 23 A, TenTec hand mike and operator/service manual. A very sensitive rig, easy to operate and with one of the best front panel layouts in the business. Price $300.- Jan Moller K6FM tel. 474-5031.

*If you have anything to be considered for publication in the Gnus, see the contact information above.

Important Club Miscellaneous Club Notes:

DUES ARE DUE NOW FOR 2006!

Due March 31st. Please pay your dues at this time, for those due. Individual dues are $15.00 and additional amateur family members are $7.50 each. This is a very important part of our clubs revenue, to operate & carry out our goals.

Change of Meeting Locating In the Future

As you may already know, the Senior Center will need to be vacated by all current agencies and users by July 1st. For this reason, the 2006 License Exam Schedule is held to just two Friday sessions. Yes, we are back to Friday. The reason? I have Fridays off from work again. Gee, you would think the government would be more considerate and not move me around? Remember when you signed your enlistment forms? At the bottom it read: "Subject to the needs of the (army, navy, air force, marines, coasties)" In other words, all bets, all contracts, all promises are off if and when we say!

Walk-ins are welcome!

March 31 6:00 PM Examiners meeting, 6:30 PM Exams Administered.

June: These two exam sessions will be held at the Senior Center, 4th and C St. Grants Pass, OR. (Continued) &

When SOARC finds a new location for meetings, I will attempt to slide into that space also. If not then by the third quarter of the year (about Sept) I will have found a new place where we can hold our 3rd and 4th Exams. Tentatively these will be the last Friday of Sept and November. Bare in mind, these last two dates are tentative! The first two are engraved in stone. See you at the March 31st exam or at the June 23rd exam!!!!

73 Bill Tyner (WX7U)
ARRL VEC Liaison

Contests And Events

-Lost Dutchman Days 2/25 1400Z to 2400Z

-CQ 160M SSB Contest 2/25 0000Z to 2/26 2359Z

-Mississippi QSO Party 2/25 1500Z to 2/26 0300Z

-North American RTTY QSO Party 2/25 1800Z to 2/26 0600Z

-USS Kidd Launching 2/28 1500Z to 2230Z

-ARRL International SSB DX Contest 3/4 0000Z to 3/5 2400Z

-RSBGH Commonwealth Contest 3/11 1000Z to 3/12 1000Z

-Idaho SO Party 3/11 1300Z to 3/12 0100Z and 3/12 1300Z to 3/13 0100Z

-QRP Contest 3 /11 1400 to 2000Z

-Oklahoma QSO Party 311 1400Z to 3/12 0200Z and 3/12 1400Z to 2000Z

-Wisconsin QSO Party 3/12 1800Z to 3/13 0100Z

-Russian DX Contest 3/18 1200Z to 3/19 1200Z

-Virginia QSO Party 3/18 1800Z to 3/20 0200Z

-CQWW WPX SSB Contest 3/25 0000Z to #/26 2359Z

See you on the airwaves.
73, Elmer Seutter, W6IGK

President's Corner

Well, my schedule didn't allow me time to put together a presidents note this time, and I won't be at the meeting, my work commitments have taken over and I'm off to New Orleans on Tuesday, to spend the week in the area.

Dennis Recla
WA5KTC

Welcome From Your Editor

Dear SOARC Members & Readers,

I would like to say I am really happy to be on board as your newest newsletter editor. I consider it a great honor. There will be some changes to the newsletter. Your positive feedback and suggestions are welcome. Thank you.

Sincerely,
Brandon (KD7WHY)

Hints And Tips & Projects

Information for single loop transmitting antennas. These are sometimes useful in restricted circumstances as antennas that don't need an extensive ground system, although there are still ground losses due to the proximity of the antenna and ground.
http://home.datacomm.ch/hb9abx/loop1-e.htm
http://www.standpipe.com/w2bri/
http://www.kr1st.com/magloop.htm

Both have detailed instructions.
http://www.iri.tudelft.nl/~geurink/magnloop.htm

A discussion on eliminating noise caused by cheap PC supplies:
http://dayton.akorn.net/pipermail/rfi/1998-may/000195.html

By replacing the ac power cord connector with a filtered variety, Icom owners have several third-party options for band decoders that operate from the Icom CI-V data interface: microHam's band decoder
http://www.microham.com/band%20decoder.html

Bob K6XX has a homebrew design at
http://www.k6xx.com/radio/icbsciv.html

Elecraft's KRC2 is very flexible
http://www.elecraft.com

Thanks, Risto W6RK and Rick K6VVA

We're unlikely to see ham radio construction programs on prime time TV, but there is an alternative. Bill N2CQR (a.k.a. M0HBR and CU2JL, http://www.qsl.net/n2cqr
has developed "Solder Smoke," a video show for home brewers. His latest, Solder Smoke 11, is available at http://www.ourmedia.org/node/123300
(It's a 36.8 Mbytes file) Topics include "Solar-Powered Station on 80-Meters," "Understanding Solid-State Design," and a few other interesting tidbits. Bill has also produced some pod casts of himself and KL7R discussing homebrew projects the URL is
http://www.ourmedia.org/mediarss/user/36170
which can be cut-and-pasted into your pod control software or just listen on your PC at
http://www.ourmedia.org/node/123300

There is a very nice summary of several types of basic transistor circuits, "An introduction to analog circuits part 1: transistors and more" by Reno Rossetti on the Planet Analog Web site:
http://www.planetanalog.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=163702498

Visited the Heil Sound Web site lately? There is a useful page of topics of interest to all at http://heilsound.com/amateur/harmonics.htm#DC This issue includes notes about setting your DSP properly, getting rid of RFI to your mike, and other things.

I am in awe of the inventiveness of the amateur antenna erector. For a good time, browse through the archives of the TowerTalk reflector at
http://dayton.akorn.net/pipermail/towertalk
then select "Thread" and search for "EZ". Oiling one's line, indeed! Supplemented by K0WA's maxim, "If you don't have any Common Sense - get some and use it. If you can't find any common sense, ask for help from somebody who has some common sense."

If you run out of "Coax Seal" on your next antenna project, you could try "Duct Seal" that is found at places like Lowes and Home Depot. It's a soft pliable putty that doesn't harden. Self-vulcanizing tape is also available at hardware-type stores and has the added advantage of being a lot easier to remove than putty. The old stand-by is three carefully wrapped layers of Scotch 33+ or 88+ tapes. K7C trip, Kimo KH7U demonstrated that a piece of mastic (a flexible material not unlike putty) at significant diameter transitions, such as at the back of the PL-259 outer shell, make the tape wrap behave much better. (Thanks, Rick KC8AON, Larry N8LP, and George K5TR)

One of my trade magazine subscriptions, Design News, has a pair of columns that any ham-tinkerer would love. The first, The Gadget Freak Files, features a nifty invention or creation by a Design News reader. The 15 December issue's column is "You Can Get Scrooged Opening a Trap Door" about a better way to open those attic stairs. The second column, Calamities, is a case study in some kind of product or device failure and the method by which the root cause is discovered. Read them both at http://www.designnews.com scroll halfway down the page to find the links in the "Design News Today" section.

At the risk of invoking another Plastic Owl uproar, here is a great way to determine True North, even if you have no compass and are lost in the woods. All it takes is the sun...

  1. Jab a double-pointed stick into the ground
  2. Mark shadow of stick point on ground (with a pebble or twig)
  3. Wait a while
  4. Mark point shadow, again
  5. Line between shadow marks is E-W
  6. Construct perpendicular for N-S
  7. For better accuracy use a longer stick and wait longer

(Thanks, Russell W4NI)

73 W6IGK, Elmer

More Hints And Tips

Are you interested in originating or receiving on CW nets? If so check out the following:

Oregon Section Net(OSN)3587KC0130Z
Washington State Net(WSN)3658KC145Z
Northern California Net(NCN)3630KC0200Z
British Columbia Emergency Net(BCEN)3652KC0200Z
Southern California Net(SCN)3598KC0300Z
Idaho Montana Net(IMN)3647KC0300Z

Also here are some slow speed nets suitable for Tech Plus, Novice and rusty old guys.

Utah Code Net3708KC 0130Z
Colorado-Wyoming Net3715KC 0130Z
West Coast Slow Speed Net (WCN) 3715 KC0200Z
Northern California Net (NCN)
(slow speed morse code sessions)
3705KC0400Z

See you on the bands. 73 W6IGK Elmer

A Space Suit Circling Earth.

Contributed by Dennis (KD7PHT)
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/26jan_suitsat.htm

SuitSat

Using a simple police scanner or ham radio, you can listen to a disembodied spacesuit circling Earth.

January 26, 2006: One of the strangest satellites in the history of the space age is about to go into orbit. Launch date: Feb. 3rd. That's when astronauts onboard the International Space Station (ISS) will hurl an empty spacesuit overboard. The spacesuit is the satellite -- "SuitSat" for short. "SuitSat is a Russian brainstorm," explains Frank Bauer of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "Some of our Russian partners in the ISS program, mainly a group led by Sergey Samburov, had an idea: Maybe we can turn old spacesuits into useful satellites." SuitSat is a first test of that idea. Right: ISS astronaut Mike Finke spacewalks in a Russian Orlan spacesuit in 2004. SuitSat will have no one inside.

"We've equipped a Russian Orlan spacesuit with three batteries, a radio transmitter, and internal sensors to measure temperature and battery power," says Bauer. "As SuitSat circles Earth, it will transmit its condition to the ground." Unlike a normal spacewalk, with a human inside the suit, SuitSat's temperature controls will be turned off to conserve power. The suit, arms and legs akimbo, possibly spinning, will be exposed to the fierce rays of the sun with no way to regulate its internal temperature. "Will the suit overheat? How long will the batteries last? Can we get a clear transmission if the suit tumbles?" wonders Bauer. These are some of the questions SuitSat will answer, laying the groundwork for SuitSats of the future. SuitSat can be heard by anyone on the ground. "All you need is an antenna (the bigger the better) and a radio receiver that you can tune to 145.990 MHz FM," says Bauer. "A police band scanner or a hand-talkie ham radio would work just fine." He encourages students, scouts, teachers and ham radio operators to tune in. For years, Bauer and colleagues at Goddard have been connecting kids on Earth with astronauts on the ISS through the ARISS program (Amateur Radio on International Space Station). "There's a ham rig on the ISS, and the astronauts love talking to students when they pass over schools," Bauer explains. ARISS is co-sponsoring SuitSat along with the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT), the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), the Russian Space Agency and NASA.

Right: Tune your FM radio to 145.990 MHz. When will SuitSat orbit over your hometown?

Use Science@NASA's J-Pass utility to find out. The online program will ask for your zip code that's all. Then it will tell you when the ISS is going to orbit over your area. (Be sure to click the "options" button and select "all passes.") Because the ISS and SuitSat share similar orbits, predictions for one will serve for the other. Observers in the United States will find that SuitSat passes overhead once or twice a day – usually between midnight and 4 o'clock in the morning. At that time of day, SuitSat and the ISS will be in Earth's shadow and, thus, too dark to see with the naked eye. You'll need a radio to detect them.

"Point your antenna to the sky during the 5-to-10 minute flyby," advises Bauer, and this is what you'll hear: SuitSat transmits for 30 seconds, pauses for 30 seconds, and then repeats. "This is SuitSat-1, RS0RS," the transmission begins, followed by a prerecorded greeting in five languages. The greeting contains "special words" in English, French, Japanese, Russian, German and Spanish for students to record and decipher. (Awards will be given to students who do this. Scroll to the "more information" area at the end of this story for details.)

Next comes telemetry: temperature, battery power, mission elapsed time. "The telemetry is stated in plain language in English," says Bauer. Everyone will be privy to SuitSat's condition. Bauer adds, "Suitsat 'talks' using a voice synthesizer. It's pretty amazing."

The transmission ends with a Slow Scan TV picture. Of what? "We're not telling," laughs Bauer. "It's a mystery picture." (More awards will be given to students who figure out what it is.) Students and teachers who want to try this, but have no clue how to begin, should contact their local ham radio club. There are thousands of them around the country. Click here to find a club near you. "Hams are notoriously outgoing; most would be delighted to help students tune in to SuitSat," believes Bauer. Bauer expects SuitSat's batteries to last 2 to 4 days. "Although longer is possible," he allows. After that, SuitSat will begin a slow silent spiral into Earth's atmosphere. Weeks or months later, no one knows exactly when, it will become a brilliant fireball over some part of Earth – a fitting end for a trailblazer.

(Source: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/26jan_suitsat.htm )

2006 SOARC Officers and Board

(This list may be out of date and subject to update.)

Officers
President: Dennis Recla,
WA5KTC, 955-1704
recla@magick.net
Vice President: Mike Wright,
N7GEI, 471-0440
Wireless Gnus Editor
n7gei@msn.com
Secretary: Jim Woods,
W7PUP, 956-5287
woods@grantspass.com
Treasurer: John Stubbe,
K7VSU, 479-3718
baldeagle@atiinternet.com
Board of Directors:
Michael Kelley,
N6ZOC, 597-2155
mkelley@cavenet.com
Jim McNutt,
WA6OTP, 479-5630
jim@wa6otp.com
Sean Smithers,
N7ZWU, 476-7964
SOARC Webmaster
n7zwu@fiascolabs.com
Patrick McTamany,
NO2N, 955-1788
cheeta@grantspass.com
Burton Griffin,
WB6CYK, 479-7888
br_griffin@yahoo.com
Galen Kelm,
KE7LM, 582-2267
ke7lm@charter.net

Last Minute News:

Part II: Application of an Inexpensive Headset to FT-897 Tranceivers

Last month I put a blurb in the SOARC Newsletter about good deals on electronic related components from All Electronics Corp., specifically a headset for $4 and a head-mounted magnifier for $4.95. I ordered both items and on arrival was pleased with the quality. The next day I set down to modify the headset for my new Yaesu FT-897 that has a different microphone connector than the 8 pin DIN used by my Icom IC-735. It required an Ethernet type connector, a RJ45 plug. It turned out that the easiest source of this connector is an Ethernet cable available at most office supply stores for about $8. These cables contain four sets of twisted pairs. Since I didn t own the required crimping tool to attached the plug, the easiest solution was to cut the cable to the required length and splice the microphone wires from the headset on to the RJ45 cable. I also spliced the PTT and ground wire pair to a length of audio cable with a RCA plug on the other end. This cable goes to my foot switch. The remaining four unused wires in the RJ 45 cable were cut to random length so the would not short to each other in the harness. To make this splice more durable, I used appropriate sizes of heat shrinkable tubing to secure the soldered connections and a larger piece to go over the whole splice in the cable. The next step was on-the-air testing. John Stubbe and Elmer Seutter helped with this and both reported very good microphone tone and quality without compensation from the radio. Long distance testing also gave very positive reports. The microphone element is dynamic so it does not require voltage activation like Electret elements used for the Icom, which makes this headset ideal for the Yaesu. Incidentally, the earphone plug was not modified since it will plug directly into the rig. Total cost of the project was about $14 and I have a spare RJ45 cable to use on another project . I now have a dedicated headset for both radios. All I need now is another head or pair of ears. The magnifier I purchased is a welcome addition to my repair bench and was used to help complete the headset.
Burton (WB6CYK)