- 15m was LIT UP this year, and in fact that's where I made most of my contacts.
- 20m was good too. 40m was useable, and 80m was a stretch but the little antenna that could came through and got me that band as well.
- The FT-710 was a joy to use, but it drinks power at about 1.3A when just listening. That's about double the draw of the FT-857d. All that computing power and the big shiny waterfall display come at a cost.
- Draw in transmit was about 10A for 100 watt SSB and 25 watt digital transmissions. To sustain operations at that draw level – about 4A average – you'd need at least 240 watts of solar panel and appropriate storage to maintain day and night operations. For fun operating no more than 8 hours a day 80 watts of panel would be needed. Round it up to 100 watts so as to have enough left over to run a coffee grinder.
- The event used 28.5AH out of the 40AH LiFePO4 battery. Towards the end though, on transmit there was a 2 volt drop at the battery – pretty serious. But the radio kept going and all seemed OK.
- On recharge, the battery drank in 29.5AH. That's a loss of 1AH, or 2.5% after sitting for eight months. Not bad at all!
- Of the four objectives that I thought were feasible while operating from home – running 100% on alternate power, copying the WFD special bulletin, using multiple modes, and operations to include one six-hour continuous operating period – all four were met.
- It was easy to copy the 18:15Z WFD special bulletin on 20m from the NW7US Ohio station . That transmission was in Olivia 8/250. Even when someone dumped a PSK-31 signal right on top of the Olivia signal, the copy was perfect. The 00:15Z K1DDN transmission on 40m out of Colorado in Olivia 8/500 was just as easy to copy as well.
- I like most of this year's changes in the rules, with one exception. Formerly there was a points multiplier for each band/mode combo worked. This year, there's a single 6x multiplier iff you work at least six bands. Zero if work less than six, and no more than six if you work more bands. Note that these are bands, not band/mode combos. That's tough, and it comes as an all-or-nothing step function.
- Probably just as well, because I forgot to grab a few 40m phone contacts when I easily could've.
- Back to the cold weather and operating from home this year. It seems that I wasn't the only one to chicken out with this arctic cold blast coming in a few days before. In 2023, 37% of the stations I worked were in the Outdoor class (as was I); this year, that was down to 16%. That's a pretty significant drop. It was a cold week and I think a lot of people needed a break.
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Winter Field Day 2025 is Wrapped
Sunday, January 26, 2025
And That Was The Ice Storm That Was
Saturday, January 25, 2025
Oh for goodness' sake, these things are back?
Friday, January 24, 2025
Winter Field Day – Too Damned Cold This Year
In Praise of Physical Media
Monday, January 20, 2025
New Fortran Compiler
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Winter Field Day 2025 – Looks Like a GO
Once again, W4ZNG and whoever the heck else wants to show up will be at Wright Lake in the Apalachicola National Forest off of SR 65, at the very northern edge of Franklin County. This probably includes the Tate's Hell Amateur Radio Club (THARC), but being a highly informal group, it's hard to speak for the other members.
To get there from Hwy 98: Turn north on SR 65, then after 22 miles, turn left onto Wright Lake Road (it's a dirt road, but well maintained). At about a mile and a half, turn right onto the campground road (it's well marked). Enter the campground loop and look for an old blue F-150 and a bunch of antennas. (note: there is no "Wright Lake Road" sign, but it is two miles past the Fort Gadsden sign)
The extended weather forecast looks good but, being tent-based campers, we do reserve the right to curtail operations if the weather turns truly awful. (We're in this for the cool weather fun, not to prove ourselves in inclement weather – we'll save that for hurricane season!) If there are any last-minute changes in plans, we'll post them at the website link. The plan is to set up on Friday mid-day, be on the air at start time, and then operate into Sunday afternoon, leaving time to break camp and get home well before sunset.
We should be operating on HF on 80m-10m, as well as 6m, 2m, and 70cm – if the tropoducting conditions smile upon the atmosphere during the event. All on solar power, of course. Cell phone service at the site is almost non-existent, but we will monitor 146.52 as a talk-in frequency.
Bring your own coffee cup (though we may have some spares), and any gear you might want – especially camping gear if you're staying. Campsites at the Nat. Forest campground are $20/night. Breakfasts will be eggs and spam, and feel free to BYOG (bring your own grits).
Monday, January 13, 2025
Sunday, January 12, 2025
Wooden Satellites – Not As Crazy As It Sounds
Monday, January 6, 2025
A Couple of Neat Techniques
Sunday, January 5, 2025
My Year So Far
So far I've stayed ahead of events, but still it's been hectic. No, I won't elaborate further. It might give that pilot a heads-up on which direction to start turning.