Perturbation
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The Hard Stuff
Posted: 31 May 2016 04:54 PM PDT
https://ke9v.net/2016/05/31/the-hard-stuff/
I brought home a Kenwood THD-72A, spare battery, and rapid charger from  
Dayton. The plan was to employ this handheld transceiver along with an  
Arrow Antenna to jump back into the world of amateur satellites. The 72A  
being practically the only choice for a full-duplex package in a modern  
design, excluding some of the latest gear from China.
This radio has a plethora of features and options, and just reading about  
all of them would take time. It wasn’t too difficult to figure out how to  
configure it for what I wanted to do – without even cracking open the  
manual. Success was measured by a handful of contacts on AO-85 and SO-50.
That was the fun part. Now comes the hard stuff.
Years ago, when the FCC told us we no longer needed to maintain a station  
log, I took them serious and quit logging. I hate logging. I have to count  
beans during my day job, why on earth would I want to extend that metaphor  
into my avocation? But at some point you realize that “the man” won’t give  
you any awards without logging, so I resumed the chore several years ago.
But my current logging application doesn’t make recording satellite  
contacts easy or intuitive. I’m told it can handle the task, but I’ve yet  
to figure that out and that’s something I need to solve quickly.*Which  
brings me to more hard stuff…
When I was a young satellite enthusiast, LoTW didn’t yet exist. Now we  
can’t live without it. So in addition to working out basic logging, I need  
to figure out how to get those contacts properly uploaded. Solving the  
logging problem will likely resolve the LoTW issue, but it’s one more task.
Full-duplex is a wonderful feature that permits me to hear my down-link  
while I’m transmitting. But with a handheld, the speaker and microphone are  
separated by a couple of inches at best so while listening to the  
satellite, I was talking into my own ear.
Annoying.
I need a separate microphone so I can put some distance between the  
audio-in and audio-out.
Recording every pass is a big help with logging, plus, it’s nice to have an  
audio recording of every pass I operate. I managed to collect decent audio  
by using the voice recorder option in my iPhone, but that was purely  
acoustical. I’d like to find a way to get a line-in for better results.
I want a tripod to support the antenna and a pre-amp might be useful for  
AO-85.
I’d like to assemble a carrying case for all these things so I can easily  
take my portable satellite station with me wherever I roam.
And I really need to open the manual and learn about using the transceiver.  
That could take weeks but the radio has so many interesting features and  
creature comforts that would streamline satellite operation.
Making contacts is the easy part. Perfection of the craft, thats the hard  
stuff.