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Mon, Nov. 22, 2004
By Nikki Waller Knight Ridder Newspapers Miami - (KRT) - With pursed lips and a steady hand, WA4YDK spins the dial, searching for a voice or a signal somewhere amid the fuzz caused by solar flares and an especially low-hanging aurora borealis. Eventually, a voice crackles from the speaker: "Copy. Copy, WA4YDK." A connection made, WA4YDK - known outside radio land as Elliot Kleiman of Cooper City, Fla. - smiles faintly. Ham radio operators like Kleiman delight in moments like this. Kleiman, 67, has been a federally licensed amateur radio operator, or ham, for more than 50 years. The retired computer science professor has been a resident of Cooper City's Embassy Lakes gated community for about three. But like many hams today, he faces growing pressure to choose between his hobby or his home. As the nation grows more urbanized and more housing developments write no-antenna rules into their deeds, many southern Florida hams find themselves squeezed out of their communities or pushed off the air. "Hams are finding that communities are less friendly," said Stephanie Phillips, a Brevard County, Fla., ham operator and a Florida spokeswoman for the Amateur Radio Relay League, or ARRL. Despite obstacles, ham radio appears to be growing. According to ARRL, about 680,000 Americans are licensed amateur radio operators, up about 25,000 from 1995. A breed known for ingenuity, hams find crafty ways to stay on the air and in touch with the world. Some send signals from radio setups hidden in their cars, some jury-rig stealth antennas behind bushes or shrubs or in rain gutters. And more than one southern Florida resident, including Kleiman, has been known to transmit messages while riding a bike. Hams insist they serve their communities by maintaining an emergency network that still buzzes with activity when other forms of communication go down. Towns with rules that send hams elsewhere may find themselves out of luck when disaster strikes, Phillips said. Local hams often refer to this year's hurricane season, when hams helped emergency personnel in several storm-ravaged Florida cities. Kleiman resolved to give up his ham habit when he learned Embassy Lakes does not permit antenna towers. But he could not ignore the hobby that first fascinated him as a young man. He considered running an antenna from his yellow Corvette until his wife reminded him the `Vette is a lease. So he set up a spindly antenna on a stepladder beside his backyard pool, where a glade of palms conceals him from the neighbors' view. The weak signal barely allows Kleiman to be heard above the static, but he can still tune in and talk to someone across the county or halfway around the world. A spin of the dial on a recent weekday afternoon yielded lots of static and some normal ham chatter: reports of weather conditions in different places, discussions of antenna setups and complaints about zealous local zoning rules. "Michael, you would not believe the bureaucracy," said one ham to another before Kleiman tuned to the next station. Hams frequently use the word `magic' to describe moments of two-way contact, known in ham lingo as QSOs. Some operators go for distance - DX to hams - seeking QSOs from faraway countries. Ham signals can travel thousands of miles with the help of repeaters and other devices that relay signals from one spot to the next. Alan Wolfe, a Miami-Dade County, Fla., elementary school music teacher who gives after-school ham classes to students, hopes to pass his hobby along to a the generations raised on Internet and video games. Ham radio first enthralled Wolfe at age 9. It has not let go, he said. "I watched my uncle sit there with his microphone at night, I watched the radio tubes glow, listening to see who in the world would get back to us," he said. Today, he and his wife, a cellist who lives in New Jersey, talk over ham frequencies every night. Married last year in Wellesley, Mass., the couple performed some of their vows over the airwaves. Their call letters were spelled out on the cake. Wolfe (also known as WB4L) transmits from his home in unincorporated Miami-Dade, where city rules do not obstruct his antenna. He also has mounted radio equipment on his car and his bicycle. His wife, WX2L, communicates with a rotating antenna attached to her Honda Civic. When they are together, the two sit in a hammock and send signals out side by side, said Wolfe. "We'll look up at the stars through our antennas, and to us, it's like some beautiful work of art. It's magic." http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansas...0245181.htm?1c |
#2
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Ya can always throw a KW into your 5,000 lb SUV and operate from there, almost
as good as operating from home. jw k9rzz |
#3
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J999w wrote:
Ya can always throw a KW into your 5,000 lb SUV and operate from there, almost as good as operating from home. I think a large house would be cheaper to operate...and far less likely to cause an accident due to inattention. Less pollution, too. mike |
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"Mike Terry" wrote in message
... Mon, Nov. 22, 2004 By Nikki Waller Knight Ridder Newspapers Miami - (KRT) - With pursed lips and a steady hand, WA4YDK spins the dial, much good stuff snipped I wonder how good magnetic loops are in the context of 2-way HF. They're certainly one answer for SWL's when space and noise and/or external antennae are a problem. I think ingenuity will win in the end. By the way, Mike; thanks for this article. You may/may not have me "killfiled" for off-topic posts, but I appreciate a lot of the information you bring here to RRS. That goes for many other regulars too. :-) .................................................. ............... Posted via TITANnews - Uncensored Newsgroups Access at http://www.TitanNews.com -=Every Newsgroup - Anonymous, UNCENSORED, BROADBAND Downloads=- |
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In article ,
"Ian Smith" wrote: "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... Mon, Nov. 22, 2004 By Nikki Waller Knight Ridder Newspapers Miami - (KRT) - With pursed lips and a steady hand, WA4YDK spins the dial, much good stuff snipped I wonder how good magnetic loops are in the context of 2-way HF. They're certainly one answer for SWL's when space and noise and/or external antennae are a problem. I think ingenuity will win in the end. By the way, Mike; thanks for this article. You may/may not have me "killfiled" for off-topic posts, but I appreciate a lot of the information you bring here to RRS. That goes for many other regulars too. :-) Mike Terry is clueless. I have him kill filed. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#6
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Telamon wrote:
Mike Terry is clueless. I have him kill filed. The whole point of kill filing someone is so that you may continue on in life without being distracted. Why make little interjections like this if his opinion means so little to you? You are either going to ignore him or not. Make up your mind. Personally I think he's great. A positive, pro shortwave attitude, with none of that horrible off topic stuff. More radio, less filler! He shoulda been a beer. mike |
#7
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Telamon wrote:
Mike Terry is clueless. I have him kill filed. But yet you still respond. I think I know who is clueless and it isn't Mike. |
#8
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In article ,
Sir Cumference wrote: Telamon wrote: Mike Terry is clueless. I have him kill filed. But yet you still respond. I think I know who is clueless and it isn't Mike. Show me where I responded to him Goof ball. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#9
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"Telamon" wrote in message
... In article , "Ian Smith" wrote: "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... Mon, Nov. 22, 2004 By Nikki Waller Knight Ridder Newspapers Miami - (KRT) - With pursed lips and a steady hand, WA4YDK spins the dial, much good stuff snipped I wonder how good magnetic loops are in the context of 2-way HF. They're certainly one answer for SWL's when space and noise and/or external antennae are a problem. I think ingenuity will win in the end. By the way, Mike; thanks for this article. You may/may not have me "killfiled" for off-topic posts, but I appreciate a lot of the information you bring here to RRS. That goes for many other regulars too. :-) Mike Terry is clueless. I have him kill filed. -- Telamon Ventura, California No problem, Telamon. I think he killfiled me, or is just ignoring. I used to block senders, but later stopped in case I missed something interesting. Each to his own; I say! good DX, Ian, Clydebank, Scotland. .................................................. ............... Posted via TITANnews - Uncensored Newsgroups Access at http://www.TitanNews.com -=Every Newsgroup - Anonymous, UNCENSORED, BROADBAND Downloads=- |
#10
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"Ian Smith" wrote in message ...
"Mike Terry" wrote in message ... Mon, Nov. 22, 2004 By Nikki Waller Knight Ridder Newspapers Miami - (KRT) - With pursed lips and a steady hand, WA4YDK spins the dial, much good stuff snipped I wonder how good magnetic loops are in the context of 2-way HF. They're certainly one answer for SWL's when space and noise and/or external antennae are a problem. I think ingenuity will win in the end. By the way, Mike; thanks for this article. You may/may not have me "killfiled" for off-topic posts, but I appreciate a lot of the information you bring here to RRS. That goes for many other regulars too. :-) About 30 years ago, "73", a ham radio magazine, ran sevveral articles on a DDRD or DRRD, or something very similar antenna. The antenna was amde from 1.5" muffler pipe formed into a circle with a piece notched out. The antenna had a farily narrow BW, so a different on was required for each ham band. They could be nested one loop inside the other. The follwup letters rated the antenna from very good to bad. I suspect I have the name wrong because a Google came up with nothing. Anyone remember the real name of this antenna? Terry |
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