Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Herm Island (EU-114) , October 4-9,2013



The Plan

The operators will be arriving on Guernsey around 14:00 on Friday the 4th of October by fast ferry from Weymouth.

We will be on Herm shortly before sunset and will spend the evening setting up the three stations indoors, the aerials will be erected first thing on Saturday morning.

Operation will continue until the afternoon on Tuesday the 8th October when the stations will be taken down as late as possible ready for departure from Herm on the morning of the 9th.


Herm Island (EU-114)

Herm is the smallest of the Channel Islands that is open to the public and is part of the Guernsey IOTA group of Islands so it comes under EU-114. Although EU-114 isn’t particularly rare, we are hoping that the fact that Herm itself isn’t activated very often will create interest and that people will want to work us.

The WAB square of our site is WV48 and our Maidenhead grid is IN89sl

Our DXpedition starts on Friday the 4th October when we travel to Herm by fast ferry from Weymouth with two cars and all our equipment. We will take everything to Herm by boat and then will set up our stations in the evening and the aerials the following morning. Activity will start on Saturday the 5th.

Operation from Herm will continue for four days until late on the 8th October when we will dismantle the stations ready for departing on the morning of the 9th. We hope to have three stations operating simultaneously.


QSL Policy and Log Search

Please send cards either direct or via the Bureau. If sending direct from within the UK, please include an SASE. From anywhere outside the UK, please include an SAE and $2. Do not send stamps or any currency other than US$. Direct cards received without envelopes or the correct postage will be returned via the bureau. Please do NOT send IRCs.

Direct QSLs to Keith Maton, 41 Bemerton Gardens, Kirby Cross, Essex. CO13 0LQ, United Kingdom.

All QSOs will be uploaded to LoTW when we return from the island.

We are hoping to have an internet connection from the Island of Herm and will upload our logs to ClubLog on a regular basis.


http://martellotowergroup.com/gp0pkt/2013/09/preparation-work-for-herm-2013/

Preparation work for Herm 2013

For the last few months, the team at the Martello Tower Group have been hard at work preparing for our DXpedition to Herm in October 2013 and the time has just slipped away.

We’ve had two large tasks for this year – One of them was to prepare a set of bandpass filters and I’ve documented that on my own personal blog which you can read by clicking here. The other main task was to build our own aerials ready for the trip as opposed to borrowing them again as we did in 2012.

M0YNK decided on an unusual former for our common-mode chokes, or ‘ugly baluns’. Sweet jars. Of course, that meant that as we need four chokes, he had to eat his way through four jars. I think 2E0DBY helped! The style of these chokes means we can carry the radials inside the jar and they just need to be removed, unwound and clipped on to the radial ring. Easy.

Choke balun and radial ring built by M0YNK

The first aerial we tested on the beach near the Martello Tower was the 40m vertical, using a 12m Spiderpole.

40m vertical on the beach near the Martello Tower

Next we set up one of the aerials to be used for 20m and 15m. The construction of these two aerials are exactly the same, being made from old CB aerials with the loading coils removed. They can be used for any of the four bands from 20m through to 12m simply by loosening a jubilee clip and adjusting the length.

M0YNK setting up the 20m vertical

Finally we wanted to get the 80m vertical tested. Last year we knew that it had taken around two hours to put the 18m Spiderpole and 80m vertical up and so we needed to practise.

Our first attempt could have been disastrous as we tried it without any guys attached (they’d been left behind) and as there was a steady breeze that evening, this is what happened.


The 18m Spiderpole with the 80m vertical and no guy lines

It did prove the concept that we’d hoped to use – We could mount the pole in place and then lift it up section by section with people holding the guy ropes. Today we put the aerial up properly and everything went well with our total time spent being about an hour.


The guyed 80m vertical. You can see the sweet jar choke at the base

G0MBA adjusts the 80m vertical for best SWR

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