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SPARC

440MHz Repeater now requires CTCSS (PL) Tone

All radios desiring to access the SPARC 440MHz repeater MUST now transmit a 146.2Hz tone to activate the repeater.

The 2M and 220MHz repeaters do NOT require any tone for access. Please direct any questions to repeater trustee Ron, KP2N.

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Keeping Up with SPARC!

Things are always happening at SPARC. But, how do you hear about them?  Maybe you don’t get to make the 6:30 PM nightly 2-meter net as often as you like (147.060 no tone required, + offset). Well, we have additional ways to keep you in the loop.

SPARC Web Site

The first way is this website. The home page of the website, www.sparc-club.org, always has the latest information about the happenings in the club.

Groups.IO Reflector

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You can also stay in touch on the SPARC Groups.IO Group Reflector. “What’s that you say? You say you didn’t know about that?”   There is a great community of folks that share information of interest to SPARC members. We make sure it does not turn into one of those “free-for-alls” where people send information completely unrelated to ham radio.  How do you sign up?  Simply send an email to SPARC-subscribe@groups.io. In fact, it’s so easy, you can just click on this link and your email program will pop up and you click Send to send a message. No need to type anything in the email. Just send that from the email account you want to subscribe and Groups.IO will send you an email to confirm. Reply to that email and you will be signed up. It’s as simple as that.

Slack

SPARC has a Slack workspace. Slack is a real-time messaging application that you can access on your computer or mobile device. It provides a way to communicate with others in a near realtime method to ask questions about various parts of ham radio and club events. While we have an active user community on the SPARC repeater, Slack allows you to stay in touch no matter where you are. To access Slack, you need to request an invitation to our workspace so send your request and the email you wish to use with Slack to slack@sparc-club.org

Facebook

The club also has a FaceBook page. You can find our FaceBook page at   https://www.facebook.com/sparcw4gac

SPARC videos are on our YouTube channel with many recent club videos.

Stay Informed

There are many ways to stay up to date with SPARC. Take advantage of one or more of them to make the most of your membership. And remember there are always monthly meetings, where you can actually meet club members and communicate face-to-face.

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Who will copy the Field Day bulletin?

We still need a volunteer to copy the Field Day Bulletin. This is an easy 100 points.

2015 Field Day Bulletin Schedule
You can copy this from home on Friday night or if you are a purist, from the Field Day site. The radios should be setup by 11:00 AM for the phone bulletin on Saturday if you want to copy it from there.
Again, getting back to the stated purpose of Field Day, imagine we had to setup in the field for a communications emergency. Copy bulletins from “HQ” would be an important step.  Someone would have to take that action to know the schedule and make sure we were tuned in at that time.
Who will do this? Please step up and help us out by taking this activity.

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Field Day Operating Signup

For your review, here is a link to the sign-up sheet for operating at Field Day.

Note we have three stations: CW Only, CW/SSB/PSK and SSB Only.

The CW/SSB/PSK station will be on whatever mode we have the requisite operators. This way we can keep the station busy.

PLEASE NOTE…YOU MAY NOT SIGN UP YET.

I will post this sheet at the antenna setup on Friday morning at 10:00 and when we get to the site on Saturday at 9:00 AM. People that attend either setup can sign up at either of those two times. After that, people can sign up for spots at Field Day on Saturday.

This is done to give a chance to those that are helping to setup either Friday or Saturday a chance to pick operating spots first. Each spot is 1 hour long and unless no one is manning the station, we ask that you only take an hour at a time (although you can operate one hour and log the next hour).

Please think about when you want to operate and if you can attend one of the setup sessions, please do so and sign up for a operating slot.

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Field Day Bonus Points – Chairperson desperately needed

As Field Day gets closer, we still need a person to head up the Bonus Points committee. Again, you DO NOT need to do all these things. You only need to coordinate who is doing them. For example, a satellite contact yields bonus points. Tom, NY4I does that every year—with much help from all— so you only need to check with Tom that he has it covered. Same goes for the NTS messages. Zoltan has helped out in the past sending those. You just need to coordinate this among the parties. You need ZERO technical ability to do any of this, just a desire to step up and take charge. Below I will list the bonus points, but I thought it might be good to understand why we even do bonus points. As you review the list, you will see that many of these involve one of three things: 1) Trying a new or under-utilized mode, 2) Education of hams in tasks involved with some aspect of Emergency Operating, or introducing ham radio to someone new. The second one in particular is always interesting to me as many people insist that Field Day is NOT a contest and its an emergency preparedness exercise. Passing NTS messages and making solar powered contacts are exactly some of the skills you need to perform EmComm successfully—you didn’t think it was all about checking into a 2m net, did you)?

So, here is your chance to lead a project that needs your detailed-oriented nature. You just have to be a planner and not even that technical. What say you…can you help? If you are interested, please contact Tom Schaefer, NY4I or Bob Wanek, N2ESP. I would hate for us to not get these points nor give other members or the public a chance to experience different aspects of ham radio.

Here is the list.

Bonus Points

100% Emergency power – PLANNED
7.3.1 100 points per transmitter classification if all contacts are made only using an emergency power source (maximum 2,000 points). All transmitting equipment at the site must operate from a power source completely independent of the commercial power mains. Available to Class A, B, C, E and F.
Media Publicity – PLANNED
7.3.2 100 bonus points may be earned for attempting to obtain publicity from the local media. A copy of the press release, or a copy of the actual media publicity received (newspaper article, etc.) must be submitted to claim the points. Available to all classes.
Public Location NOT THIS YEAR
7.3.3 100 bonus points for physically locating the Field Day operation in a public place (shopping center, park, school campus, etc.). The intent is for amateur radio to be on display to the public. Available to classes A, B and F.
Public Information Table NEED VOLUNTEER to staff and coordinate supplies, people to staff.
7.3.4 100 bonus points for a Public Information Table at the Field Day site. The purpose is to make appropriate handouts and information available to the visiting public at the site. A copy of a visitor’s log, copies of club handouts or photos is sufficient evidence for claiming this bonus. Available to Classes A, B and F.
Formal message to ARRL SM/SEC Need volunteer to coordinate and get to GOTA station for sending to the SM
7.3.5 100 bonus points for origination of a formal message to the ARRL Section Manager or Section Emergency Coordinator by your group from its site. You should include the club name, number of participants, Field Day location and number of ARES operators involved with your station. The message must be transmitted during the Field Day period and a fully serviced copy of it must be included in your submission, in standard ARRL radiogram, or no credit will be given. The message must leave or enter the Field Day operation via amateur radio RF. The Section Manager message is separate from the messages addressed in Rule 7.3.6 and may not be claimed for bonus points under that rule. Available to all classes.
W1AW Field Day Message Need volunteer to copy this W1AW
7.3.9 100 bonus points for copying the special Field Day bulletin transmitted by W1AW (or K6KPH) during its operating schedule during the Field Day weekend (listed in rules announcement). An accurate copy of the message is required to be included in your Field Day submission. (Note: The Field Day bulletin must be copied via amateur radio. It will not be included in Internet bulletins sent out from Headquarters and will not be posted to Internet BBS sites.) Available to all classes.
Formal messages handled Need volunteer to coordinate with bonus points chair to do this.
7.3.6 10 points for each formal message originated, relayed or received and delivered during the Field Day period, up to a maximum of 100 points (ten messages). Properly serviced copies of each message must be included with the Field Day report. The message to the ARRL SM or SEC under rule 7.3.5 may not be counted in the total of 10 for this bonus. Enter the total number of messages handled in the text box. All messages claimed for bonus points must leave or enter the Field Day operation via amateur radio RF. Available to all classes.
Natural power QSOs completed Ron KP2N plans on doing this – Chair needs to confirm
7.3.8 100 bonus points for Field Day groups making a minimum of five QSOs without using power from commercial mains or a petroleum driven generator. This means an “alternate” energy source of power, such as solar, wind, methane or water. This includes batteries charged by natural means (not dry cells). The natural power transmitter counts as an additional transmitter. If you do not wish to increase your operating category, you should take one of your other transmitters off the air while the natural power transmitter is in operation. A separate list of natural power QSOs should be submitted with your entry. Available to Classes A, B, E and F.
Site Visit by invited elected official – Working on this. Coordinate with Tom NY4I
7.3.11 A 100-point bonus may be claimed if your Field Day site is visited by an elected government official as the result of an invitation issued by your group. Available to all classes.
Site Visit by invited served agency official – Working on this, but Chair has to coordinate with those that are working on this
7.3.12 A 100-point bonus may be claimed if your Field Day site is visited by a representative of an agency served by ARES in your local community (Red Cross, Salvation Army, local Emergency Management, law enforcement, etc.) as the result of an invitation issued by your group. Available to all classes.
Youth Participation – GOTA station is planning this. We obviously need kids for this…Coordinate with Clayton
7.3.15 A 20-point bonus (maximum of 100) may be earned for each participant age 18 or younger at your Field Day operation that completes at least one QSO. Enter the number of youth participants who complete at least one QSO in the text box. For a 1-person Class B station, a 20-point bonus is earned if the operator is age 18 or younger. For a 2-person Class B station, a 20-point bonus is earned for each operator age 18 or younger (maximum of 40 points). This bonus does not allow the total number of participants in Class B to exceed 2. Enter the total number of participants (operators, loggers, set-up crew and visitors) 18 years or younger at your Field Day site in the text box. Available to all classes.
Educational Activity – Need volunteer to do this.
7.3.10 One 100-point bonus may be claimed if your Field Day operation includes a specific educational-related activity. The activity can be diverse and must be related to amateur radio. It must be some type of formal activity. It can be repeated frequently during the Field Day period but only one bonus is earned. Available to Classes A & F entries and available clubs or groups operating from a club station in class D and E with 3 or more participants.

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Adding a Second Receiver and DVR to the Elecraft K3 at the Club Station

On Friday, June 12, four of us met down at the station for lunch and then to work on the K3. The K3 that the club uses is a radio that was used in the WRTC-2014 contest held in New England last summer. As contest radios don’t really need a second receiver or a digital voice recorder (DVR), this K3 was not fitted with these options. As we also like to DX with the radios at SPARC, NY4I procured the parts for the radio to add the second receiver, upgrade to the new K3SYNA synthesizer and add the Digital Voice Recorder (SSB and CW memories).

Adding this kit took about 4 hours using the very well written Elecraft instruction manual. Dave KR4U led the build team with assistance from Tom, NY4I, John KI4UIP and Club President, Bob, N2ESP. We had the radio buttoned up but not tested plus Tom forgot to add the DVR so after taking the radio home for final testing, NY4I ended up taking the sub receiver out two more times to get it to work (I gave Dave some bad instructions on the order of filters). After the source of the issue was located, and a quick test on the trusty HP service monitor, it was time to tackle the DVR. This required removing the front panel of the radio and removing a board. The unfortunate thing is this was the exact same procedure that was used to add part of the second receiver. The moral of the story is when installing two kits at once, make sure you read both sets of instruction FIRST!

After about 2 hours (being extra careful), Tom, NY4I installed the DVR and all checked out well.

You might be asking how this helps the general club member. Besides this being one of the K3s we are using at Field Day, you now have access to world-class radio complete with a fully-independent sub-receiver and DVR. This makes DXing easier as you can also hear the other side of the pile-up. The DVR means you can record your voice and push a button to give your call in a contest. This is also the radio we use in the remote HF station available to SPARC members.

Our hope is that members want to get on the air and operate the station. We normally open the station the Saturday after the club meeting plus for contests. Other times are available—just ask someone. If you haven’t been down to the club station lately, make a point to come down during Field Day and see the setup. If you are a seasoned HF operator or a new general class ham looking to learn, we can help you use the station however you like. It is there to be used and the more the merrier.

KR4U starts work...
KR4U starts work…

 

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The K3 in pieces…

 

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Main receiver filter installation

 

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Sub Receiver Filter Board

 

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Complete view of the sub receiver PC board

 

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New K3SYNA synthesizer

 

 

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