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[VHFcontesting] 222 MHz Activity night

To: "NEWSVHF@mailman.qth.net" <NEWSVHF@mailman.qth.net>, "vhfcontesting@contesting.com" <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: [VHFcontesting] 222 MHz Activity night
From: David Olean <k1whs@metrocast.net>
Date: Wed, 1 Feb 2023 15:03:30 -0500
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Hi VHFers

Last night was quite an adventure.  With a VHF shack that is way out behind the house, access can be difficult in winter.  With about 2 ft of snow, my only way to get on for the activity night was via snow shoes.   Fred, N1DPM suggested a snowmobile. I have so many small engines here that I cringe to have any more as they are a huge amount of work with maintenance, storage, and all that goes with it.  Too bad my neighbor doesn't have one and likes ham radio! (see below)

I was working on all my 160 meter Beverage wires while we had some snow free days, and I made the best of it. We got a big dump of snow towards the end of that project, and I ended my Beverage repairs by using the snow shoes. While I was traversing the property, I decided to break a trail up the hill toward the ham shack. I broke a trail about 2/3rds of the way up there. I stopped when I gained the ridgetop and the remainder of the trail was only a slight upward walk.  In hindsight, I should have gone to the top as the snow developed a pretty good crust which made snow shoeing pretty hard. If you have not done any snow shoeing, just imagine your big web feet breaking through a hard crust, and then try to lift your feet up and have those big web feet get caught on the crust and you have to lift that crust along with your feet! It is difficult.  Last night I broke the remainder of the trail and it took a long time. I left the house cat 6:15 PM and made my first contact 47 minutes later.

It was quite beautiful trudging through the woods with all the snow, but then I had to dig out the two doors of the shack. There was a lot of snow all drifted up! I keep a snow shovel up there just for that reason.  I stowed the snow shoes and entered the building and turned on the genset, 30 seconds later I saw the voltmeter come off the bottom peg and go up to 120 volts.  (Yay!) The 30 second delay is due to glow plugs heating the cylinders for awhile so the fuel will ignite in cold weather.  My old military 30 KW diesel did not have glow plugs. That beast had a metal bottle of ether, and you yanked a lever and sent pure ether into the cylinders to aid starting in cold weather.  Kaboom!  Since my generator repairs, the diesel has been working great!  I have its 12 volt battery on a tiny solar panel and charge controller,  and it keeps the battery healthy in winter.

Here is my log. Conditions were OK. I cannot complain when I have two contacts over 500 miles in January!

   DATE     TIME CALLSIGN       FREQUENCY  MODE   SENT RECEIVED   PROP GRID   REMARKS
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

02/01/2023 00:04 N1YCQ            222.100 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN41LP   1st contact solid signals from the Cape. 02/01/2023 00:08 N1GLT            222.106 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN42IW     Wally in the derry area 02/01/2023 00:10 KA3FQS           222.106 SSB    55 55                        TR  FN20JF    311 MILES 02/01/2023 00:11 K1FSY            222.106 SSB    59        55                         TR  FN31LN   I think my 1st QSO. 02/01/2023 00:13 K1PXE            222.106 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN31KE     Voice of Milford! 02/01/2023 00:15 WW1Z             222.106 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN42ET   reliable John 02/01/2023 00:15 WZ1V             222.106 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN31     Good Buddy Ron. 02/01/2023 00;16 WA3EOQ        222.130 CW    429    529             TR    FM09    502 MILES!  Thanks Howard! 02/01/2023 00:26 WA1RKS           222.130 CW     559 589                       TR  FN32IN   Great tropo peak to S7! (then down to about 449!) 02/01/2023 00:27 WA3NUF           222.130 CW     559 599                       TR  FN20KE    310 MILES 02/01/2023 00:38 WA1MBA           222.115 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN51AS   Tom  great signal 50 watts 02/01/2023 00:38 N1SV             222.115 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN42    Les 02/01/2023 00:47 K1TR             222.115 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN40IU   Ed  (we talked about 160 meters.) 02/01/2023 00:57 KA1SUN           222.115 SSB    55      55                           TR  FN32LN     FT736 120 watts  13 el yagi 02/01/2023 01:02 W1AIM            222.110 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN34   Chip in Cabot, Cheese land! 02/01/2023 01:15 KE1LI            222.110 SSB    59 59                        TR  FN41AU 02/01/2023 01:25 KO4YC            222.129 SSB    42 42                        TR  FM17GV     520 MILES 02/01/2023 01:31 VE3DS            222.131 CW     559 559                       TR  FN03FQ   433 MILES
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Number of QSO listed: 18


My try with Howard, WA3EOQ was rather difficult. There was fairly rapid QSB where he disappeared into the noise. I only copied him on peaks. It took about 5 minutes to complete. Howard mentioned that I was pretty solid there, but I had a 12 dB power advantage. Howard runs 100 watts output. The only way I worked Howard was due to the low noise efforts on my system here. My first try with no tower mtd preamp was not good enough for EME. Yes, I made contacts, but I could tell that the other station always heard me better than I heard them. Upgrade #2 was a tower mtd preamp, but I was always plagued by RFI from a CH 11 digital TV station at a 219 degree heading. Other directions well away from 219 degrees worked fine, but 219 degrees is the main heading for all the VHF activity. What made the situation difficult was that the overload artifacts from CH 11 did not sound like RFI. The only evidence was a slight increase of the noise floor. It sounded like natural random noise. Many attempts at high dynamic range preamps could not eliminate the problem. I tried a LNA Technology cavity preamp and it did not fix the degradation.  When confronted by this, Who ya gonna call?  Not the Ghostbusters, but WD5AGO!!!  He made up a silver plated cavity thatuses a TX FET as the active device with the silver plated cavity to reject the CH11 signal.   After fitting that preamp in a larger box up on the tower, I was finally getting down to the nitty gritty and that made it possible to contact Howard and others down that way.  I mention all of this to relay the fact that such RFI is everywhere and it may be harming your frontend.  Remember that the TV signal will have peaks that are 10 dB above what you will see on a spectrum analyzer. TV frontend overload is everywhere.  On 432, I was getting hammered by a CH14 TV station in Portland Maine off the back of my 432 antenna. The tower is about 45 miles away. I had to install a large copper HB cavity up on the tower to get rid of that problem.

KO4YC was a difficult contact as well. Cornell was using SSB and was very weak. I was calling on CW in a narrow passband and heard what sounded like weak SSB so I kept going between CW and SSB trying to figure out what was happening.  Finally we connected up with the right passband and completed. Signals were very weak.  I tried with K8TQK with little success. A few meteor pings were heard each way. That is a long haul over 700 miles.

The shack was not as cold as I figured. It was 30F when I started and soon it was rather comfortable. Still, I had the long trek back home on snow shoes, so I quit early at about 8:30 so I could make it back home at a reasonable time. It took about a half hour to get back home. I was very [leased that I could participate in the 222 MHz Activity period and would like to thank all who made an effort to get on and make noise.  AJ6T had an iced up antenna and apologized for not being able to transmit! NiGC, AA9MY, K8TQK, W5EME, and K9MRI were all in there making contacts.  In the NE, semi newcomers like WA1MBA, KA3FQS, N1FSY, WA1RKS, and K1FSY are adding to activity and it shows.  It bodes well for an upward climb in 222 MHz activity coming in the future. Thanks to all.

Dave K1WHS


Dave's Small Engine Collection:

Husqvarna Snow Thrower
Toro Snow Thrower
Honda Lawnmower
John Deere Lawnmower  (his and hers lawnmowers!
Husqvarna Chainsaw
Homelite Chainsaw
DR Brushmower (The lawnmower of death)
Stihl brush cutter
Honda Brush cutter

That is nine small engines that have to be maintained. Note the redundancy. When you need these things you need these things!! I sold my Troy-Bilt rototiller. I used to have ten engines!



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