2008-12-27

Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge 2008 | The Plaques

Searching for a challenge? Looking for adventure? Want to operate the extreme level? Stew Perry has answers and motivation.

Stew Perry Plaques.

  • KL7RA : Highest # of QSO's.
  • KB7Q : Top Score QRP.
  • K1EP : Top Score, Low Power using Elecraft K3 radio.
  • TF3KX : Aurora Borealis Award (Top score > 60 deg North geomagnetic latitude QTH).
  • AE6RF : Top Score Low Power in W6.
  • NA0Y : Top Score USA.
  • VK6VZ : Top Score with antenna in space <>
  • W7TMT : Top Score Low Power First Time Entry.
  • N7UA : Top Score High Power.
  • K6DBG : Top Score First Time QRP (no qrp entry X past 3 years).
  • KI7Y : Top Score High Power Oregon-(W7GG/Ai7B Memorial).
  • N7KQ : Top Score Central/South America.
  • K7FL Top Score 100% Search & Pounce.
  • KR2Q : Golden Log Award (highest # of Q's with no errors).
  • N7JW : Top Score South of The Equator.
  • K7CA : Top Score from Zones 17, 18, 22 or 23.
  • F8BPN : Top Score, Europe, Low Power.
  • N5IA : Most Grid Squares Worked.
  • W7KF : Old Timer's Award- Oldest Participant to make at least 50 or more Q's.
  • KH6LC : High Score Oceania.
  • KH6LC : VK-ZL Challenge, Top Score VK/ZL.
  • KJ9C : Top Score Black Hole (W9+MN, IA, MO).
  • BARC : Top Score JA.
  • GMCC : Top Score > 4000' elevation.
  • GMCC : Top Score Hi-power, W, VE, XE West of 100 deg longitude.
  • GMCC : Top Score Low-power, W,VE, XE West of 100 deg longitude.
  • UX1UA : USA Station with highest # with Zone 16 contacts.
  • K6ND : K6SE Memorial Plaque (criteria being developed).
  • BARC : Top Score with CW Speed always less than or equal to 18 wpm.
Contest on.

2008-12-26

On The Role Of Amateur Radio In The New Century | Bob, K0NR commented "We better have our act together on #3 and #5."

Read comment (link).

Digital mode(s) and software defined radio (SDR) is my future as commercial enterprise seeks to privatize spectral resources. Mobile devices, on the other hand, are the new personal computer and there numbers will compete against ham radio, as they are now and in greater numbers.

Unrealized and paramount to the health of our community is competition. We are not paid for our contributions but prestige is intrinsic to any accomplishment. Wherein, informal organizations or individuals, drive needed innovation thus defending our spectrum while achieving a stated Federal Communication Commission goal.

FRRL is running a series of evocative postings--

  • Amateur Radio Clubs: Good to Great; Good to Gone; Lost in Mediocracy (link).
  • Good to Great Part II: The Gift of Governor Rod Blagojvech (link).
  • Good to Great Part III: Building the Team (link).
  • Building Teams: Prescriptive Advice for Building Great Teams (link).
One mega goal for everyone to consider as the new year draws near is just operate one's favorite mode and defend our spectrum. Additionally, early adopters of SDR and digital modes are now trail blazing the next wave of ham radio innovation as well. Great tracts of undiscovered territory still exist. May they boldly go where no ham radio operator has gone before.

73 from the shackadelic.

P.S. I'm still reading the FCC's strategic plan and tango uniform on the link.

Paolo, IK0YKK Conducts Morse Code

Bravo. Bravo. Bravo.
Morse Code Maestro Paolo, IK0YKK Scores.
(link)

Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge 2008

Stew Perry Topband Challenge 2008

Everyone loves a challenge and the Stew Perry Topband Challenge is no different. One operates the monster wavelength where giant antennas prowl and others are taken to their engineered upper reaches. One hundred and sixty meters is Frankenstein.

I'm not kilowatt because inside Stew Perry rules is a nugget of opportunity for low power and/or QRP operators.

Stew Perry Highlights.
  • One operates only 14-hours, basically, when the family is sleeping. The monster wavelength is all about what goes bump in the night.
  • Stew Perry is pure RadioSport without spotting network(s). This is human, machine, radio frequency, and guts.
  • No cloned 599 in the exchange. Stew Perry exchange DNA is one's grid square. That's cool in my logbook.
  • Operating low power and/or QRP? Stew Perry is groovy because a low power station counts (2x) points and QRP is (4x) points. However Stew maintains an element of mystery in the game equation; one's points are calculated by the robot. Operators will discern one's signal strength using their innate listening skills. Ultimate.
I have chores too complete through the day before Stew Perry rocks the top band. For my favorite low power and QRP operators--push your antenna to the extreme this weekend.

Turn on, tune, operate.

2008-12-25

Merry Christmas To You and Yours

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from KA3DRR.

Photograph taken with a Sony Silver Cyber-shot® T77 Digital Camera (link).

2008-12-23

Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge 2008

Tune Your Antenna To The Extreme
Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge 2008

photography (link).

2008-12-21

The Future Of Ham Radio | 2000.06.17 "The Role of Amateur Radio in the New Century" By Dale N. Hatfield, W0IFO

If ham radio has a crystal ball then Dale N. Hatfield, W0IFO scored with "The Role of Amateur Radio in the New Century."

I want a map of understanding as the challenges of the future define the context of my life. The future is here, right now, and its shock wave continues expanding. In effect, I'm restructuring, redefining, and allocating personal resources both in thought and action as the future defines my lifestyle. Or does my lifestyle define the future?

In either case, examining "The Role of Amateur Radio in the New Century" opened my eyes to the broader context shaping ham radio's future. Hatfield illuminated with clarity those topics which are gestating at this moment.

Spectrum As A Natural Resource.
Who thought that our radio spectrum would define itself as a "natural resource." The day is here and now. I took for granted that endless ocean called the ionosphere. My perception being that our spectrum belonged to ham radio under the auspices of the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) hence I'm a stakeholder. Admittedly, I was filled with youthful exuberance but the pragmatics of today dictate otherwise.

New wireless communication pressures are weighing heavily on our spectrum especially in the microwave range.

  • "The increasing mobility of our workforce."
  • "The convenience and increased efficiency produced by mobile/portable communications."
  • "The increasing performance and falling cost of wireless devices."
  • "The dramatically growing interest in accessing the Internet on a wireless basis."
Hatfield in his remarks to AMRAD, "We simply do not have enough spectrum to give everyone all they want."

Furthermore a new concept is floated in his remarks to AMRAD and it is spectrum drought. Hatfield noted the frequency range below about 3 GHz as vulnerable. He stated, "[W]e must think about it [role of Amateur Radio] in the context of increasing pressure on the underlying spectrum resource."

Our Future As Operationally Defined By Dale N. Hatfield, W0IFO.
We need a metaphorical rock concert of stadium sized activity across all of ham radio. I do believe, we are at the level of small venue, one that is wanting of super charged amplifiers, giant plasma screens, and interconnectivity.

Hatfield remarked with clarity from eight years ago, "The rapidly growing demand for spectrum coupled with the increased visibility of its economic value due to auctions makes it almost inevitable that amateurs will be under a certain amount of pressure to justify their "free" use of this precious resource."

He is absolutely correct in today's context. Our natural resource is under commercial scrutiny. The rock concert of ham radio activity must engage itself. Or we will lose.

I just do not see a happy medium justifying impoverished spectral real estate.

"We could probably discuss at some length the proper measure of spectrum efficiency but for our purposes here this evening it might be simply the number of simultaneous conversations that can be accommodated in a given amount of spectrum in a particular geographic area," as communicated by Hatfield.

Others might have to step up as ham radio celebrities and make the cross over into trendy, cool, and geeky for the Millennial to hear our message.

Abhorrent and heretical as this maybe there is a new generational reality.

Strengthening Our Position As Suggested.
The name of the new spectral real estate game is efficiency. Whatever one's position Hatfield clearly defined the course, "In the commercial sectors, where organizations pay for their use of the spectrum, there is a significant economic incentive to use the resource efficiently – to spread costs over as many users as possible while maintaining good quality service. That is, there is a strong incentive to develop and adopt more spectrally efficient technology."

We are in the ascendancy stage of digital and one might call this 'our digital rock concert'. But we haven't achieved Woodstock status, yet. Hatfield warned, "I would urge you to continue shifting towards more spectrally efficient communications techniques – especially digital techniques."
  • "[D]emonstrates to policymakers and regulators that you are good stewards of the public’s airwaves even without direct economic incentives."
  • "[U]sing what you have efficiently, it strengthens your case when you need to ask for additional spectrum."
  • "[A]llowing more users to access the available allocations simultaneously, it improves the amateur experience and ultimately increases the attractiveness of the service to new and old users alike."
  • "[P]rovides the opportunity or "headroom" for increases in data rates to more closely match those available on wireline networks and, in the future, on commercial wireless networks as well."
And Hatfield's clincher,
  • "[A]s the rest of the telecommunications world makes the transition to digital techniques – and there are very few exceptions to that trend – the amateur service will look antiquated if it is not making progress in that direction as well."
My Brave Ham Radio Future.
I stumbled across this document however somethings in life are not coincidental. I felt like Hatfield opened ham radio's digital rock concert. Maybe eight years later but everything is timing. His points are clear and poignant. We are, in effect, in the turmoil as ham radio feels the pressure.

Hatfield gets the final remark, "[I]t is even possible to envision Software Defined Radios as a means of facilitating a new era of amateur experimentation. One intriguing possibility is that it could enable hams without skills and/or interest in hardware construction to build and experiment with new systems by writing new code. It might also allow the rapid sharing of new modulation techniques and receiver designs through electronic publication of the implementing software. This could stimulate a whole new generation of amateur innovation that not only includes the more spectrally efficient systems I mentioned earlier, but also radios that could adapt to their environment as well."

73 from the shackadelic.