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"Dee D. Flint" wrote in message ...
"N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , Mike Coslo writes: No, just a kind of passive resistance thing. I seriously do not agree with the person who is our field day planner and club vicepresident. I am not the only one boycotting the club field day either.... It has been chosen solely by him to be placed at one of the high schools out in the county (as opposed to the city) where there is little traffic on the weekends (passing by the school that is). Perhaps he/she couldn't get permission to set up anywhere else. Although if that was the case, they should have communicated better. Getting a site has become more difficult around here, mostly because of development. Running generators all night requires some room. What were once open fields are now McMansions. There's also the liability issues. In the '80s, radio club I belonged to did FD at what used to be a Nike missile radar site. Off Delchester Road and West Chester Pike. Lots of ready-made ham antenna structures and shelter. All gone now. Good times. To me FD is mainly can you actually get a GOOD station or stations set up at a location that has no existing facilities? Everything else is a secondary function of FD. Yep. What constitutes a "good" station varies all over the place. As I said above, for me it's all about getting a good station setup and then verifying (through the contest portion) that it is indeed a good station. Now we do some other things too. For example, we have people assigned to do advance promotional work (publicity), people assigned to handle food, etc. But without stations, there's no FD. "Without stations, there's no FD." That's a keeper quote! [big snip] Under most real emergency circumstances, some emergency personell is going to tell you to go to a certain place, and operate a certain transciever. You won't set up a tent or put together a station or anything. Maybe or maybe not. Depending on how much the local EC knows about hams and their abilities, he/she may just say set up stations that will cover area X. It would be more common that the EC talks to the leader of the ham group and then puts that ham in charge of communications. And it all depends what kind of comms are needed. In some cases, the need is strictly local. In others, it may be long-distance. Also to me it is to see what can you do with the resources available to you or your group. Small groups for example may not have a lot of resources. In past years, our club set up, from scratch, 3 towers of 50 feet each with beams in about two hours plus some wire antennas and ran 4A. This year, due to illness of several members and the possible poor turn out due to last year's poor band conditions, we put up one tower with beam and a couple of loops and ran 2A. It worked out very well despite the fact that some of us had our reservations about it (me for one). One thing that I've seen way too much of are the groups who try to do too much with too little. Somebody gets a bug in their ear to do 5A, and it doesn't matter to them that the site isn't big enough for 3A, or that there won't be enough ops to keep 5 rigs on the air full time. Or even most of the time. Here's another possible scenario. You are in a county with a low population perhaps you are the only ham in the county and there is no emergency coordinator. A disaster has smashed everything flat including your home and YOU and only YOU are even a possible source of communications. It will be up to you to salvage the equipment from the rubble and get it set up and on the air. Don't say this scenario can't happen because it or something similar has happened. All sorts of variations. Maybe your area is untouched except that the power is off and land communications out. Or maybe a critical bridge is washed away. Remember the San Franscisco earthquake of some years back, when that upper roadway section of the Bay Bridge partially fell? It took a bunch of telco cable with it. Very little long-distance capacity was left, and most of that was needed for emergency comms. So hams handled a lot of health-and-welfare traffic. Which doesn't sound like a big deal unless you have a loved one there and haven't heard from them in a few days, and the TV news shows their neighborhood on fire or the multilevel freeway they use twice a day has collapsed.... Point is: You can't duplicate real emergencies that ham radio would be involved in. Who would have expected the WTC to be attacked and their subsequent collapse? Exactly. Or that a shuttle would burn up on reentry and scatter itself over thousands of square miles? As amateurs, our FD exercise (to me) is to learn what we can and cannot do as individuals and as a group. Yep. And to expand our skills. Actually it is probably good to try something a little different each year. Next year I and the OM may choose to try a FD by ourselves NOT because we don't want to participate with the club but just to do something different and see how well we can do without the larger resources available through the club. Good advice. I've done big groups, medium groups, small groups and singlehanded. All kinds of sites, too. Lots of fun. Don't think I've missed one since 1968. 364 days till the next one... 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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