I added some sections to the flag pole to reach 37 feet, and I increased elements on the home-made yagi from 2 elements to 4 elements. Upon adding elements, I needed to stretch the driven element a couple millimeters longer to tune it. In testing, I’m seeing about -100 RSSI listening to W3GMS on a Quansheng. It was about -105 RSSI when mounted lower and only 2 elements.
2-Element Yagi on the Flag Pole
Tilt-up Flag Pole
I figured out to do a tilt-up flag pole against the house reaching 25 feet into the air. It sits on a stake in the garden, and is secured to the house with paracord in an eyelet and hook screwed into the side of the roof.
2-Element Yagi
I built a new 2-element yagi using an online calculator It tuned OK with the banana-clip adapter directly connected to the driven element. I first tuned the dipole, and then added the reflector element. As predicted, it shifted the tuning slightly, so I trimmed the driven element to retune. The nice thing is that the spacings and sizes of the original elements don’t change as you add more director elements, so I calculated it with 2 or 3 directors, but put none in for the first iteration. I can add more elements later.
I gave it a try to reach 985 with the TYT TH-9800 running 50W. It was scratchy, but copy-able. I have more flag pole sections ordered to make it a little higher.
985 Workbench: 2024-10-14
My week in Radio
- I saw aurora for the first time, and I got some nice photos.
- I visited K3IR tower sight in Mount Joy during PA QSO party
- I listened to people contesting, but didn’t participate.
- TYT TH-9800: 50W into the tape measure yagi, tried it on the roundtable, still have work to do
- I threw my main 71-foot EFRW higher into another tree.
- I watched my flagpole and yagi in the wind
- walked it down while I had a kid here to help
- scoping a new location for it as a tilt-up attached to the house
- collecting pieces for some experiments in engineering
Questions
- W8CRW, CR:
- National Electronics Museum is hosting a class for general license.
- How far from the mast should a vertical yagi antenna be installed?
- Can it be installed 45-degrees to be used for both horizontal and vertical?
- WA3VEE, Ron: some have had success at 45 degrees for satellites.
- KC3SQI, Wayne: 45-degree will lose you 1.5dB
- WA3VEE, Ron: what is the ideal thickness for a bus-bar
to which you’re mounting a lightning arrester.
- KC3RFG, Jim:
- 1/4-inch minimum. thicker won’t hurt anything.
- mechanically strong (bolted) instead of soldered
- woven ground strap is best, but 6AWG stranded is good.
- NA3CW, Chuck:
- avoid inductance, so use strap or bar, not wire
- no right angles, no coils, no spirals
- KC3RFG, Jim:
- KC3RFG, Jim: Hearing ignition noise on HF on battery or on truck power.
How best can one eliminate that noise?
- KC3SQI, Wayne: Remove the mast from the coax and see if you still have the noise. If it’s still there, then it’s coming from power cables. Try a better ground directly to the battery. On vehicles that rust, bolts don’t ground so well after a while, so then you get lots of grounds connecting back through the antenna.
- KC3KZB, Aaron: go for a short ground, and keep ground wire away from ignition wires
- KC3SQI, Wayne: What’s the mechanical strength for 1.5-inch conduit?
- WA3VEE, Ron: See Ugly’s Electrical Reference.
- KC3RFG, Jim: that’s right.
- KC3WWC. John: I like that I can build my transformers and cut, measure,
and test wire antennas,
Is it practical to build, iterate, expand a homebrew yagi?
- NA3CW, Chuck:
- blatant plagarism: they’ve been around for a long time.
- modeling programs, manuals, existing antennas.
- different goals: gain, bandwidth, front-to-back ratio examples in the antenna book
- software
- moxon antenna: 2 element yagi with bent ends, massive front-to-back ratio
- great for direction-finding: forward to get in the neighborhood, then reverse to find the null where it disappears
- not much gain though
- NA3CW, Chuck:
- W8CRW, CR: Is there a program for windows to map out a computer network?
- W3DIB, Greg:
- there are lots of tools to probe and fingerprint machines to try to disclose the host OS.
- also ping, angryping, etc.
- W3DIB, Greg:
985 Workbench: 2024-10-07
My Week in Radio
- I saw some antennas at the Ham Fest, but I couldn’t bring myself to buy any. I’ll build.
- I passed extra at the Ham Fest
- I guess enough workbench discussion sunk into my brain.
- Found I can download and search a copy of the entire ULS database like some of those other helpful websites that show available callsigns.
- POTA along the Susquehanna River.
- Normal FT8 to get to 10 contacts.
- 1 CW contact, and it wasn’t painful.
- I tested out my newest printed EFHW antenna winder.
- Running and comparing Meshtastic and APRS more
- Why use it?
Other News
- WA3VEE, Ron, PA QSO Party this weekend.
- KC3SCY, Luke, switched his loose couple radio from diode to cat whisker.
- KC3ZSJ, Gary, is playing with new antennas.
- W3FES, Fred, has a new FT-60R
- AF3Z, Jim, is headed to Cornwall Ranger Station for PA QSO Party
Questions
- KC3SZO, Chris: How can I overcome some terrain in the way of my RF?
- WA3VEE, Ron: Antenna in the attic
- NA3CW, Chuck: VHF isn’t exactly line-of-sight, so there is hope.
- KC3WWC, John: Lower YAGI inside had advantages over a higher outside ground plane quarter wave.
- AA3LH, Leon: Let’s confirm repeater settings for this old radio and new antenna going in the car.
- KC3WWC, John:
- I could change my callsign now.
- I’ve only used this one for a year, so not super-attached.
- For contesting, I see the benefit of a shorter call, so I might ultimately consider phonetic and morse weight.
- How did you choose your vanity call? What strategies should I consider?
- NA3CW, Chuck: initials.
- W8CRW, CR: initials.
- AA3LH, Leon: initials, and wanted an “A” call.
- AF3Z, Jim: assigned by FCC. Consider how it sounds in CW.
- WA3VEE, Ron: assigned, and sounds cool.
- He also has K3DTS for the campus location of his old club.
- quick and simple for CW
- 1-by-1 is for special events.
- easy to understand, so stay clear of confusing letters; V, C, Z, etc.
- sound in sideband: normal or phonetic.
- KC3OOK, Bill: assigned.
- catching phonetic for DX
- NA3NA was catchy.
- KC3QQD is funny: Quack Quack Duck
- Callsign ideas:
- KD3FN
- KB3VI
- KC3VI
- AA3WW
- AA3KK
985 Workbench: 2024-09-30
My Week in Radio
- I moved the tape-measure yagi
to the top of a 25-foot flagpole
in the backyard.
- 10 W, but not quite doing it.
- There’s still too much of a hill.
- I upgraded the X6100 baseband, stock firmware, and 3rd-party firmware.
- Some CW
- barely got 2 CW contacts hunting POTA, but I got into their logs
- heard AF3Z on 40m out on his trip
- morsle app to practice copying CW words and call signs
- I redesigned and printed a new antenna winder.
- I heard some AM and some RTTY during contests.
- I cleaned up and organized all the radio stuff from the move instead of contesting.
- I’m going to try for my extra ticket at the next Ham Fest.
Others’ News
- KB3RFG, Jim: all the bands open today in lots of directions
- NA3CW, Chuck: lot’s of AM fun
- AF3Z, Jim
- spectated some RTTY contesting
- 10m CW conversations
- WA3VEE, Ron: LMR400 (KMR400) coax is lowest loss practical
Questions
- KN3I, John: How does one make an AM rig sound good? Carrier power, modulation, etc.
985 Workbench: 2024-09-15
My Week in Radio
- Tried some new firmware for X6100, but no good
- Moved Houses
- installed some antennas
- 71ft random wire
- 1/4 wave ground plane
- installed some antennas
- POTA weekend
- Michaux State Forest
- Caledonia State Park
- King’s Gap Environmental Education Center
- Pine Grove Furnace
- Used an EFHW for everything
- Ran out of battery on Pine Grove Furnace on the second day, so did the whole thing with 1W FT8.
- Tried calling CQ on CW to see if RBN would pick me up.
Questions
- Charles, KC3SWC: What books about operating do you recommand?
- Ron, WA3VEE
- ARRL Operating Guide
- ARRL: Basic Electronics for Radio
- Electronics for Hobbyists
- John, KC3WWC
- Spend lots of time listening to others
- Youtube
- Chuck, NA3CW
- Lots of people are listening
- Keep it civil
- Keep it technical
- Don’t bore people with aches and pains
- ARRL Operating Manualy
- ARRL Handbook
- ARRL Antenna Book
- Be helpful
- Be interesting
- Ron, WA3VEE
- Wayne, KC3SQI: How do you tone squelch for receiving and filtering away QRM
from another repeater on the same frequency?
- Ron, WA3VEE: tone squelch or “split tone”
- CR, W8CRW: T-SQL = tone squelch
- Chuck, NA3CW: would be useful when the band opened and a distant DMR is overtaking 985.
- Ron, WA3VEE: Yaesu HTs can only do one of the other, not both.
985 Workbench: 2024-08-26
My Week in Radio
- The photos looked great from Bill’s, KC3OOK, antenna party
- https://ft8.live/ for a more responsive visualization of pskreporter data.
- POTA at Susquehannock
- No digital, only sideband
- QSO parties for Hawaii, Kansas, and Ohio
- Bothered someone with a bit of CW badly
- Morse Machine app on Android for practicing
- I finally confirmed 50 states on QRZ.com with Hawaii
- generally 5-10W
- mostly digital, some sideband
- I started playing with a couple Meshtastic nodes
- Impressive range for low power, ~125mW
Questions
- W8CRW, CR: Is there any device that would log a date-time every time you key
your VHF/UHF transmitter?
- W3DIB: string together an arduino, some AI, and voice recognition
- WA3VEE: pull it from broadcastify
- K3VIL: newer ICOM has a recording feature
- NA3CW: security system that can log contacts opening/closing
- W8CRW: looking for something radio agnostic
- KC3OOK, Bill: Balanced-L vs T-Match network tuner for open wire feed.
Is one better than the other?
- Balanced L = L-C-L and it’s fed on the low-impedance side.
- T-Match has a wider range, but maybe less efficient.
985 Workbench: 2024-08-19
My Week in Radio
- Iambic Keying
- Tap, instead of squeeze, since I’m having trouble releasing the paddles in time.
- Squeeze Keying at Ham Radio QRP
- I started patching and compiling my own firmware for my Quansheng radios
- building and flashing works
- my minor change had no effect
- New R1CBU 0.22.0 firmware for x6100
- whole firmware is like a new radio
- minor fixes and conveniences
- peak marger on S-meter
- nicer scrolling on waterfall
- POTA by the Susquehanna River in Marietta
- I heard some lighthouse events
- I spoke to someone on a nuclear ship in Baltimore
- I ran into a fellow ham and ex-professor from 25 years ago, Paul Ross, W3FIS.
- It’s so quiet away from my normal desk of computers, I thought noise reduction was stuck ON
- 10m looking pretty open today to California
- I’ve been keeping the blog up-to-date, and I use this net to document my week.
Topics
- Jeff, W3JAM, is having trouble with an MFJ antenna analyzer that’s not being reliable compared to his other analyzers.
- Bill, KC3OOK, is preparing for the weekend’s antenna party.
- Jim, AF3Z, participated in the QRP Skeeter Hunt with his Penntech, 68ft of wire, and a tuner. 5W on 40M got him 25 CW contacts.
- Luke, KC3SCY, is building a transmitter from 1929.
- Tim, W3QP, is planning some hiking and SOTA in Virginia.
- Harvey, KC3NZT, was in PEI (I think) doing a little HF and listing to ship traffic.
- Question from Jeff, W3JAM: What is Supermon and how does one get started?
- It’s a web-based interfacet to an Allstar node.
- ClearNode app runs on Android.
- Question from Harvey, KC3NZT: In 120V wiring,
does a voltage between 0V and 120V mean a broken or loose ground or common?
- KC3RFG: Yes! The AC world is different from the DC world.
985 Workbench: 2024-08-12
My Week in Radio
- Watching APRS
- trying different radios/antennas w/ aprsdroid
- slim-jim working better with any radio
- watching logs and better-understanding the structure of the packets
- N3TWT repeater (South Mountain) looks good
for “off grid” communication
when camping in Cumberland county
- heard lots of volunteer event activity
- also heard N3FYI & N3KZ
- moving in September, so scheming new antennas
- maybe noticing a bug on AUBS firmware on Quansheng. I have copy of code to read and see about a fix.
- I tried another firmware, but missing the killer feature: scan on start
Notes from Others
- Everyone went to Kimberton Hamfest
- AF3Z, Jim: wait 30 years, and that shiny new radio will be affordable.
Questions
- W3JAM, Jeff:
- using a generator, how important is ground?
- KC3RFG, Jim:
- already grounded if connected to home.
- job site may require a ground rod, but doesn’t do much.
- for field day, generator is the only “reference”, so no need for ground
- modern generators have GFI built-in.
- NA3CW, Chuck:
- don’t let generator run down and stop under load, because it’ll degauss the residual magnetism
- KC3RFG, Jim:
- Heathkit SB102 w/ 6146B tubes. It wouldn’t tune up.
is there concern with using 6146W tubes?
- NA3CW, Chuck: 6146W is the ruggedized version. it should work. neutralize, and you’re good to go.
- AF3Z, Jim: be sure to check the tubes with a tube-tester
- using a generator, how important is ground?
- AF3Z, Jim:
- cable management while being able to access and change.
beat the rats’ nest. Are there good systems for cable management?
- WA3VEE, Ron:
- best if you can walk behind the desk
- everything slides on felt feet, so must have some slack loosely coiled.
- NA3CW, Chuck:
- desk 90 degrees to the wall for easy access to the back.
- garden velcro: can be snipped to any length you need.
- KC3JAM, Jeff:
- military systems require being able to get behind things.
- WA3VEE, Ron:
- cable management while being able to access and change.
beat the rats’ nest. Are there good systems for cable management?
- KC3OOK, Bill:
- Has anyone used DragonOS / Linux?
- NA3CW, Chuck: Mint, but not Dragon OS.
- Has anyone used DragonOS / Linux?
985 Workbench: 2024-08-05
My Week in Radio
- Mobile APRS is proving to be really short-range
- Couldn’t even spot myself outside at Sam Lewis up on the hill
- Cycled with it, but no traffic
- Needs a real antenna
- Some POTA
- Sam Lewis, US-1418
- found the leading park activator, kn3a, in my spot. :)
- storms rolling in, so called it quits
- watched 20m slam shut: decoding 30 signals to 4
- Susquehanna River, US-4567
- Columbia Riverfront Park that’s open after sunset
- spanned into the next day…again, so had an incomplete and a complete activation.
- Sam Lewis, US-1418
- Got an FT8 contact to Israel with 5W from home: first Asia for me.
- Weekly RTTY Test and FT4 sprint
- Ham radio software may not be the most efficient
fldigileft running but disconnected from radio ran CPU at 95C doing nothing.- GridTracker likes to burn cpu too when left running.
- AB3AP, Mike, on EZ-Hang slingshot: I’ve given up the slingshot and just swing my throw line by hand.
- KB3ILS, Keith: there are scripts online for 3d-modeling any size knob you need.
Questions
- W3JAM, Jeff:
- Does anyone have experience using Drake TR4CW on AM?
- Can you add a noise blanker to this radio?
- Noise blanker would alleviate pulsing noise from electric fence.
- Jeff will be getting the entire manual library on CD, which will have information.
- KC3OOK, Bill:
- How do you connect a NanoVNA to an open wire feed line?
- WA3VEE: Would you need a balun to start getting close to impedance to match the expected 50 ohm?
- W3JAM: Doesn’t matter so much where it’s tuned, since you use it with a tuner anyway.
- NA3CW:
- You don’t want it to be resonant anyway, because being resonant will give you the largest extremes to tune when trying to move to other bands.
- NanoVNA may be limited on the impedance it can read.
- Dipole should be at least as long as half wave + a little
- He extended a wire to get it to tune where it wouldn’t.
- WA3VEE, Ron:
- SOCO connectors carry 208V. When rewiring those connectors,
what’s a good caulk-like sealant that could be used for “potting”
the inside of the plugs?
- Plain bathroom caulk can be conductive.
- Silicon may breakdown at lower voltage than needed too.
- SOCO connectors carry 208V. When rewiring those connectors,
what’s a good caulk-like sealant that could be used for “potting”
the inside of the plugs?