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![]() Chak (VU2TTC) amidst his homebrewed ham radio station |
Reproduced below is a report (TUNED TO THE WORLD WITH A HOME BREW) published in "The Hindu", Sunday, July 28, 1985 (SUNDAY EDITION) Acknowledgement: -Sri Deepak Sarma (who provided me a copy of The Hindu) -Staff Reporter, The Hindu -Sri B.M. Hedge, VU2HEG -OM Chakravarthy, VU2TTC |
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STORY "EVEN though I cannot see, I am bringing the
world to my house through my hobby." These words, stated without any trace of
self-pity, sum up the saga of Mr. R. Chakravarthy, the blind ham (amateur radio
operator) from Paithambadi-Chatram village, off Villupuram, Tamil Nadu, simply
known as "Chak" to hams all over the world.
TUNED TO THE WORLD WITH A HOME
BREW
(Acknowledgement: Staff Reporter ,"The
Hindu", Sunday, July 28, 1985)
"Welcome to my shack," he
announces as he leads us up a rigged-up ladder to his terrace-shack and proudly
displays his "home-brew" amateur radio equipment amidst a tangled skein of wires
, supplemented by an array of switches and also points to his new
acquisition-sophisticated, imported equipment.
Never one to cavil at his
fate or weep over his shoulders, Chak speaks fluent English as he cuts jokes,
breaks into whodunits and brands his hobby "a crazy one." And he goes on to
illustrate his remark with the story of a hermit who raised a cat to catch the
mice wreaking havoc in his hut, then bought a cow to feed the cat with the milk
and then engaged a servant to look after the cow. Drawing a parallel, he says,
"You can start (on this hobby) with Rs. 200 but may end-up spending As. 2,000 or
As. 20.000. This hobby is for experimentation and not entertainment in the field
of wireless technology, he pointedly remarks.
How did he get initiated into
this hobby (which was almost by fortuitous circumstances) overcoming his
crippling handicap and its attendant troubles, and making him a hero among
fellow-hams.
Chak lost his eye-sight in 1960 because of a retinal
detachment. He was hardly 22 years and had obtained a B.Sc. (Hons) in
Mathematics from the Annamalai University. "I was very depressed and spent six
years at the Egmore Eye Hospital, spending As. 20,000 trying to regaining my
sight but to no avail. Detachment of the retina is incurable." The doctors were,
obviously; slowly preparing him for the eventuality.
During his sojourn in
the hospital, Chak, however, attended a number of medical conferences on eye
diseases and picked up quite a bit on the subject. "I am half a doctor in
ophthalmology. I can feel the tension in the eyes of a patient and say whether
he suffers from glaucoma or trachoma," He reminisces "Blind patients suffering
from stomach-ache used to holler out for nurses and whenever the nurses were
absent, I quietly used to administer them distilled water. And when the patients
later thanked the nurses. I was found out and given a scolding."
"However,
with the light world gone. I turned to the hearing world, he soon bought a pile
of books on electronics and parallel circuits, which were read out to him by the
staff nurses and his brother. R. Varadachari, who had been a pillar of strength
to him. "I assembled my own radio-set in the hospital in 1961 and slowly
developed an interest in electronics. Taking my handicap sportingly, I returned
to my village in 1966 and started assembling valve-sets and high-fidelity
amplifiers. Long before I took to hamming, I made my hi-fi amplifier system in
1972 (which almost brings down his shack with the blast of Hindi songs) and also
assembled an electronic key.
Chak was married
in 1969. "My wife is not worried about leading me anywhere, She is my friend.
When I told her about my disability before marriage, her reply was, What if the
person I marry loses his sight afterwards?" (The couple have two daughters and a
son-all school-going).
Chak's opportunity to become a ham presented itself
in 1974 when he chanced to listen to a ham-station on 41m when he was repairing
a transistor-radio, The ham, Prof. Jayaraman, was giving a demonstration on ham
radio to the Tiruchur Engineering College students and it was assembled an
electronic key. But the rub lay in soldering the joints. Not only did Chak
learn soldering wearing gloves but his brother and his nephew helped him in the
task while he supplied the circuit ideas.
Chak was married in 1969. "My wife
is not worried about leading me anywhere, She is my friend. When I told her
about my disability before marriage, her reply was, What if the person I marry
loses his sight afterwards?" (The couple have two daughters and a son-all
school-going).
Chak's opportunity to become a ham presented itself in 1974
when he chanced to listen to a ham-station on 41m when he was repairing a
transistor-radio, The ham, Prof. Jayaraman, was giving a demonstration on ham
radio to the Tiruchur Engineering College students and it was then that he came
to understand amateur radio. But to his dismay he found that when he wanted to
know more about this amateur radio hobby, no ham gave him his address on the air
(which is forbidden) and the nearest hams were in Bangalore and Madras. Luck
soon came his way when he read about a ham-station in a receiver-book and also
got the ham's address-Mr. Hari Rao of Bangalore.
Chak and his wife met Mr.
Hari Rao in Bangalore who asked them to meet Prof. Vasan of Salem. "The tragedy
was everybody was prepared to help me but did not know how to help a blind
person get into this hobby," he says. It was Prof. "Vasan, who gave Chak the
address of Mr. M. V. Chauhan of the Federation of Radio Amateur Societies of
India, whose "achievement was to initiate me into the hobby, He has helped me a
great deal.
"Mr. Chauhan gave him all the assistance to learn the Morse-code
and also got him a number of Morse-code recorded cassettes. Mr. K. Mahalingam,
President of the Madras Amateur Radio Society, also helped him in this regard.
Another ham-Mr.Seshanandam of Nellore tutored him on the telecommunications
part of amateur radio-its rules, regulations, procedures, frequency allocations
for hams etc. The lessons were taped and played many times over and he committed
them to memory. Meanwhile, he attained a proficiency of sending 30 words a
minute-both sending and receiving. He appeared for the Amateur Radio Operators'
Certificate Examination in December 1976 with the help of a proxy and attended
the viva voce on telecommunications.
However, doubts were raised about his
safety. How could he solder and how did he keep his children away from his
shack? His reply was, "1 solder with gloves on and my shack is upstairs, free
from domestic activity and whenever, I enter my room, I latch it from inside.
Besides, all the equipment is on a wooden rafter, above the reach of children."
A visit to his house by an official from the Union Ministry of
Telecommunications made his dream come true-he received his ham licence in
December 1978. (His call-sign is VU2 TTC). "And finally, on March 9, 1979, I
made my first contact with VU2MKS-Kumar of Cochin-with just one watt
transistorised transmitter and using my Philips transistor for receiving. It
cost me only Rs. 200." he says with a triumphal look on his face.
From then
on, he has never looked back. Chak is now the winner of three prestigious
awards-the VU9 award of Asiad 82. The Worked Republic of India Award, and The
Worked All Continent Award. One among the seven Indians so far to have got the
VU9 award for Asiad 82, he bagged it for contacting 532 foreign hams on his
home-brew set-up, which is 50 watts on Continuous Wave and 20 watts on Amplitude
Modulation. The second award was for contacting 50 other fellow Indian-hams and
the "Worked All Continent Award," for establishing contacts with hams in six
continents-North America, South America, Asia, Africa, Europe and 1- Oceana (New
Zealand and Australia).
However, his big day was when he met Mr. Rajiv
Gandhi (a M.P then). who is a ham himself in 1982 at a hams' meet -in Hyderabad.
He proudly shows us a -photograph of himself with Mr. Gandh!
"My ambition is
to get 100 countries (to contact 100 foreign hams) on 40 m with my home-brew
set-up. I have already finished 87 though it is difficult to work with my
set-up," he says. In addition, he has already made 30,000 QSOs ) (a
communication between two hams is called a QSO). "In all my efforts, my nephew
Govindarajan, is my PA ...in electronics," he adds jocularly and shows us the
bundle of QSL cards (cards sent by one ham to another whom he has contacted) and
jokes about the postal expense entailed on him. "I send thin QSL cards (put in
an envelope) to hams abroad to cut down on my postal rates and use thick cards
for local hams. I am sure I will be flooded with letters once people read your
write-up on me. They should write to me with a self-addressed stamped envelope."
As if to demonstrate his hamming ability, Chak tunes in the transceiver and
quickly encounters his friend, Mr. Babu from Pondicherry. Soon Mr. Krishnan
Kutty of Trivandrum and Mr. Raman of Karaikudi follow and he has an informal
chat with them.
Seeing this reporter trying to break the ice with them, he
promptly observes, "This is one hobby where you should be able to master the art
of talking about everything and anything with a stranger." Switching over to
another band, he works a new contact-a ham from Korea and is quite thrilled
about it.
Chak�s ancestral house (he comes from a lineage of Sanskrit
scholars) is situated right on the southern banks of the broad Thenpennaiyar
river and it is in the fitness of things that he should have rescued his
villagers from a flood in 1979 by warning them about the impending danger using
his transmitter.
He talks excitedly about Steve Baur a fellow-ham from West
Germany whom he first contacted in 1980. "He is a close friend now. He came to
Paithambadi in 1981 and 1983 and on both the occasions, stayed with me for a
fortnight. Mr. Baur has gifted Chak a transceiver, while a Japanese ham, Mr.
Kazu Nakamaro gave him the linear amplifier for the transceiver. Mr. Chauhan
helped him in clearing them from the Madras Customs, The battery and the
battery-charger were gifts from Mr. Babu of Pondicherry and Dr. Samath of
Trivandrum.
An exquisite gift, which is of much use to him. however, is a
Casio voice-clock, gifted by the ham, Ambadi Bhaskar of Tiruchur. With the press
of a button, it announces not only the time, but also the date and month and
instructions like "It is time to wake up ,.. it is time to go out etc." It also
announces the results of calculations up to eight digits. All the announcements
are shown on a display. "Hams from West Bengal, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Madras
come home because of their love and affection for me" : he says.
As we say
good-bye to Chak what keeps echoing through our minds are the words of a
villager when we asked him: for directions to Chak's house: "Isn't there any
possibility of taking him to Madras and have him undergo an eye transplant
surgery? He has done so much for our village. He gives tuitions to all the
children here." And as Chak himself says, "Coaching children (in school lessons)
is my secondary hobby while hamming comes first."
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