W2LJ QRP .... Do More With Less
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The KISS principle - always a winner.
Posted: 04 Oct 2016 01:17 PM PDT
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WARNING!  The following post contains OPINION. It is not meant to slight  
anyone, or to infer that the author knows better than anyone else. The Good  
Lord knows, THAT'S not true. LOL!
I was wafting through Facebook, and I saw a post on the ARRL NPOTA page  
about a "busted" activation that only yielded 5 QSOs - a minimum of 10 is  
needed for a valid activation. Mind you, not 10 QSLs - 10 QSOs.
I looked at the pictures he posted and everything looked pretty good.  I am  
thinking that it was just a case of lousy band conditions. He definitely  
deserved an "A" for effort.  BUT, (there's ALWAYS a "but", isn't there?)  
his setup, while looking marvelous, appeared a bit too elaborate for my  
taste.
And that, I think, is where a lot of NPOTA activators and I part company.  
I've seen many photos of setups that approach Field Day scenarios.   
Like ....... did anyone notice the cover of the latest DX Engineering  
catalog? There was an NPOTA setup there that looked better than our SPARC  
Field Day.
It seems many NPOTA activators are there for marathon sessions - hours upon  
hours, handing out hundreds of QSOs. That's good for all the chasers and I  
applaud them; but I like the simpler approach.
The KISS principle, or "Keep It Simple, Stupid" has worked well for many  
portable ops, such as SOTA, the QRP Sprints, etc.  Break out the rig, hook  
up a battery, throw a wire up in a tree (or to a portable mast where using  
trees is a no-no), or perhaps a doublet, or a vertical or magloop and go to  
town.  The emphasis being on the word "portable".
It seems to have worked very well for the SOTAteers (Steve WG0AT comes to  
mind) all these years, and for NPOTA activators such as Joe N2CX and Eric  
WD8RIF, Ed WA3WSJ and "yours truly" among others. And if dropping those  
names wasn't enough, if you follow the adventures of the "Premier" portable  
op, Jim W1PID, then you know the words I speak are true.
Keep It Simple = less to forget, less to break, less to not work, less to  
lose, more time to actually operate (who wants to spend all their valuable  
time setting up and tearing down an elaborate setup?) and hopefully, more  
success!
Simple doesn't handicap the superb ops - for a reminder, here's a re-post  
of KX9X's Pigeon Key video:
72 de Larry W2LJQRP - When you care to send the very least!
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Emergencies
Posted: 04 Oct 2016 06:39 AM PDT
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This coming Saturday is the annual Simulated Emergency Test.  Amateur Radio  
operators who volunteer with Public Service and Emergency Management  
agencies throughout the United States will be getting on the air, sending  
an receiving drill messages. This is done in preparation for "If this had  
been an actual emergency" - re, the verbiage of the National Emergency  
Broadcasting messages.
Here in Middlesex County, New Jersey, our simulated emergency is another  
hurricane scenario.
How appropriate. because in the following couple of days,this may become a  
very real possibility:
Meet Hurricane Matthew.  He's a nasty bugger. Today, he's dropping 40  
inches (100 cm) of rain (yes, you read that right) on portions of Haiti and  
Cuba. This hellion may make landfall somewhere over the Carolinas early  
Sunday morning, if he doesn't turn out to sea.
If he hugs the coast, New Jersey will be in for a lot of rain, coastal  
flooding and a wicked storm surge sometime Sunday into Monday.  Not exactly  
the way you want to start off your week.
Our barrier islands and low laying coastal towns are already making plans  
for evacuations and other hurricane preparedness activities.  We've been  
very lucky in New Jersey as we haven't been hit hard since Hurricane Sandy  
in 2012.
Let's hope we dodge another bullet with Matthew.  If not, and Amateur Radio  
ops are needed by our towns or counties - we're ready.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP - When you care to send the very least!