Wednesday, October 31, 2012

ZL7A (Also ZL1WY/ZL7) Chatham Is. in 2012




This site devoted entirely to Amateur Radio

40 years anniversary Project
ZL7A (Also ZL1WY/ZL7) Chatham Is. in 2012

ZL7A 's Shack in 2010

I am very happy to inform you about my DX trip in 2012.
This time, I will be active from the Chatham Islands (OC-038) between 1 and 9 November. and will operate on 80-6meters CW, SSB and Digi-mode, with an emphasis on 80 and 6metres.
Especially, a beacon will be on 50.117MHz around the clock for the Pacific..
Please call me by all means if any other areas station could catch me anywhere, anytime.

Thank you and looking forward to seeing on the air.

Hiro Miyake ZL7A / ZL1WY / W1VX / JF1OCQ ( Since 1972 )

Special QSL cards

Which do you favorite TYPE 1 or TYPE 2 ?
< This designs are subject to change without notice >

TYPE 1 (ONLY SASE)

This type is folded in half, Double-side printed, Full color


!!! Attention !!!
This card is replied to only SASE request. I can NOT send it via the JA-Bureau.
( JA-Bureau does not accepted Folded- QSL card)

TYPE 2

This is regular size, Both SASE and via Bureau are available.


Operation Detail

Operator ZL7A Hiro C, Miyake
Schedule Nov 1st to Nov 9
Band 80m - 6m
Mode SSB, CW, RTTY, PSK
Equipment Primary : TS-590S + ACOM1000 (400W)
Backup : K2/100 (100W)
Beacon for 6m : FT-100 (100W)
QRG CW SSB RTTY FM & PSK
- - - -
3507 3788 3622 3622
7007 7077 7032 7032
- 7157 - -
10107 - 10141 10141
14027 14170 14087 14087
18077 18127 18101 18101
21027 21270 21087 21087
24897 24937 24921 24921
28027 28470 28087 28087
50117 50117 50300 -
QSL Route Via JF1OCQ Detail on QRZ.com
LoTW Yes, you can
Log search Yes, you can

Any other question or requests are welcome, mail me JF1OCQ at arrl.net

6m 4ele YAGI Looking for any DX stations.
Beaming to North.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

YE2R, Contest Station ORARI Daerah Jawa Tengah

http://www.qrz.com/db/ye2r

YE2R
ORARI Daerah Jawa Tengah Contesting Team
Jawa Tengah
Indonesia 50131
Indonesia
Email: yb2ecg@gmail.com QSL: YB3MM

Dear all DX-er and Contesters, thanks for worked us during contest or pedition operation.

We are the team of YE2R from Orari Central Jawa Region, consisting of many DX-er & Contester from all over Indonesia, and guests from around the world.

2012 - CQWW SSB Contest

Team member (plan) : YB1TJ, YF1AR, YB2BBY, YB2DX, YB2ECG, YB2LSR, YB2TET, YB2TJV, YB2VTO, YB2WB, YC2WBF, YB3KM, YB3MM, YB3PXF, YB4IR, YB0NSI, KR7O, W7NZ
Contest Category : Multi Operator - Multi Transmitter (MM)
Contest Target : #1 Oceania


2012 - CQWW SSB 160 meter Contest



From Klirong Lighthouse, Locator is OI42tf, WLOTA 1660 and also ARLHS IDO-374
YC2FAJ, YC2EZB, YC2CSY, YB3MM, YB2TET, YB2LSR, YB2EO, YB3PXF, YB0AI, YB2TJV
(YB2BBY, YB2VTO, YB2DX are not in the picture)
QSL via YB2DX or YB3MM

2011 - CQWW SSB Contest




(Back row) YB2BBY, YB1AR, YB4IR, YB3KM, YB2DX, YB1HK, YB2TJV, YB3PXF, YB2LSR
(Front row) YB9WZJ, YB3MM, YB2TET, YB2VTO, YB0AI, YB1TJ (YB2ECG is not in the picture)
Contest Results : 1st Place SSB Multi Multi Indonesia, #3 Oceania, #52 World
QSL via YB3MM

2010 - CQWW SSB Contest



(Back row) YB2TJV, YB3MM, YB2LSR, YB2BBY, YB3KM, YB1WR,YC2CGA, YB2DX, YB1TJ
(Front row) YB3PXF, YB2CPO, YB9WZJ (YB2ECG and YB2VTO is not in the picture)
Contest Results : 1st Place SSB Multi Two Indonesia, #4 Oceania, #35 World
QSL via EB7DX or YB3MM

2009 - CQWW SSB Contest




(Back row) YB2LSR, YC2BBY, YB3PXF, YD2DNA, YB2VTO, YC2JVX, YB2TJV, YB2DX, YC2JKG
(Front row) YB2OBL, YB3MM, YB2CPO, YC2KME, YC2PQW, YB2ECG
Contest Results : 1st Place SSB Multi Two Indonesia, #5 Oceania
QSL via EB7DX or YB3MM

2002


YE2R has been used by YB2MTA (now YB3TD) on Karimunjawa Island OC-186 IOTA-pedition on 2002. QSL via EA7FTR.

Equipment (current 2012)

Antenna :
160m : inverted-L with loop receiving
80m : 2 element yagi + rotary dipole
40m : 4 element + 2 element Yagi
20m : 6 element yagi + 4 element Yagi
15m : 7 element + 5 element yagi
10m : 6 element yagi.
Transceiver : IC-7800, IC-7410, TS-930, TS-450, TS-570, FT-2000
Linear amplifier : TL-922 x 2 pcs, Henry 2KD-C, Homebrew 1KW x 3 pcs

YE2R supported by :












http://www.qrz.com/db/ye2r

Monday, October 22, 2012

DXPedition to Ibiza, the story


DXPedition to Ibiza, the story

We are pleased to receive and publish the story of Alessandro, IZ4WNA and his DXpedition Holiday Style of this Summer. Alessio and his friend Giuliano, IZ4WNP were active from Ibiza Island, IOTA EU-004.

It all started when I asked myself why not use my holiday vacation in Ibiza to play a bit of radio and to activate that island? I obtained my hamradio license in the beginning of 2012 and since that I’ve hear lots of stations from EU-004 but none from Ibiza itself. I immediately exposed to my friend Giuliano, IZ4WNP, my idea and he was eager to be active from there as well.

The day before the departure we were shocked by the news of some OMs that encountered some problems with respect to lincensing. Our CEPT license were reported as “CEPT TR61-02″ instead of the needed TR61-01. After few initial moments of literally terror we managed to avoid this problem. The Telecummunication Ministry attached also the TR61-01 document but we almost forgot to have it. Problem fixed and we didn’t have any problem while we were operating in Ibiza.

In order attein to the luggage weight policies of the airline services (max 15kg each) we had to split our equipments into three luggages.One with the personal effects while the other two with the hamradio material comprehendingPCs for the logging programme and the digital modes, interfaces, coax cableas and all the testing material such as wattmeters and SWR meters, power suppliers and dipoles to cover 40, 80, 20, 15 and 10m.

Quite a lot of stuff !!!!!


We took off from Bologna at 10 o’clock and landed in Ibiza at midday after about two hours of flight. Our DXPedition QTH was a wonderful house with lots of room. Indeed, the best peculiarity of such a house was the amazing terrace facing the sea. Such a terrace had enough room to set up our stations and operate from there, enjoying the skyline while operating !


Using both SSB and PSK we managed to collect almost 400 QSOs in somewhat two days of operations. In fact we started on September the 7th and we flew back to Italy on September the 10th.

We tried to operate as much as we could in this first DXpedition. Our great passion and involvment with this hobby allowed us not to give up even in those moments in which we were tired or we had few time to operate.
It has really been a great experience. Only nine months ago we got licensed and now, we were on our very first DXPedition. We really hope to have helped as many hamradio operators as possible to gain a QSO with Ibiza. We’re already dreaming and talking about future plans. Thanks everybody, especially the CENTO DX TEAM for the assistance and the suggestions.

All logs have been updated into LoTW and eQSL, QSL via Bureau to Home Calls.


Welcome ...Babar Island OC-271

http://oc271.blogspot.com/

Welcome ...Babar Island OC-271


CQ ZONE 28 - ITU ZONE 51
DXPEDITION ISLAND ON THE AIR (IOTA) OC-271

BABAR ISLAND - MALUKU BARAT DAYA
MALUKU - INDONESIA

1-8 November 2012 


Joppy, YB8XM and Andy , YC0MVP , has plans to be active from Babar Island OC-271 New IOTA during first week of November 2012.

Name: Babar Islands

Location: 7.45S - 8.33S / 129.42E - 130.17E 

About

Babar Islands (OC-271 New IOTA) in Indonesia 
Babar Islands (OC-271 New IOTA) in Indonesia (YB8)
Joppy, YB8XM and Andy , YC0MVP , has plans to be active from Babar Island OC-271 New IOTA during first week of November 2012.

Name: Babar Islands
Location: 7.45S - 8.33S / 129.42E - 130.17E

Babar Islands
The Babar Islands (Pulau-pulau Babar) are located in Maluku Province, Indonesia between latitudes 7 degrees 31 minutes South to 8 degrees 13 minutes South and from longitudes 129 degrees 30 minutes East to 130 degrees 05 minutes East. Tepa (population 2000 people) is the capitol of the Babar Islands municipality ("Kecamatan Pulau-pulau Babar") actually now reduced in size to encompass only the western half of Babar Island, Wetang Island and Dai Island. The town of Letwurung on the east side of Babar island is the capitol of the new municipality called "East Babar" ("Kecamatan Babar Timor") in the east half of the Babar Islands, consisting of the East half of Babar Island, Marsela Island, Dawera Island and Dawelor Island.

Central island
The islands take their name from the large central island of Babar which is roughly 20 miles across and 60 miles around. Babar Island has a maximum elevation of approximately 750 meters and is lightly covered with sub-tropical montane forest, although the 5 rivers and 2 large year-round springs afford tropical forest in their narrow ravine courses.

Topography
The topography of all the Babar islands is distinctive for their marked stepped appearance, the result of a combination of periodic uplifting of the tectonic plate interacting with the erosive action of the constant ocean waves. Water action on the coral base over the millennia has created many caves and shafts.

Agriculture and fisheries
Rain is plentiful from December to July so corn, plantains, bananas, cassava, various tubers and red rice (unirrigated) grow plentifully. Fish is the main source of protein. Sufficient potable water on Babar Island is provided by year round springs and shallow wells. Coconut oil is important for consumption while the oily meat called copra, is sold. Other items harvested and sold for export are sea shells, sea weed, sea cucumbers, shark fins, live lizards and birds, cattle, cashews, nutmeg, cloves and eucalyptus oil.

Smaller islands
This situation contrasts markedly with the much smaller islands ringing Babar Island. These are low-lying, uplifted reef and limestone (with the exception of Dai Island, which is largely granite), infertile, not heavily forested and lacking in fresh water sources. The more difficult environment leads the indigenous inhabitants to focus more of their energies on fishing and hand-crafts which are then traded for garden produce from Babar Island. The people collect rain water in large above ground cisterns which can last them through the driest time of the year (September to December). When the drought is longer than usual the water in these tanks is exhausted and the people have to walk miles to the few villages with springs or wells, and queue up for a turn to draw a few liters of water. People camp overnight beside the well waiting their turn. The Indonesian government has provided funds for many more collection tanks for rain water, so the situation has improved markedly in the last few years.

Transport
There is no airport or landing strip in the Babar Islands. Small freighters that have contracts to carry passengers service the islands. It is a minimum twelve hour ride to the nearest city with an airport where one can catch a commercial flight to other towns in Maluku being Tual, Larat, Wonreli (Kisar) and Ambon.

People
In comparison to the majority of Indonesians living nearer the political centre of the country, the indigenous Babar Islanders tend to darker epidermal pigmentation, have kinky hair and generally lack the epicanthic eyefold of East Asians.

Religion
Most indigenous Babar Islanders are baptised into the Protestant Church of Maluku (Gereja Protestan Maluku, GPM). The GPM's roots are in the [[Dutch Reformed Church}} started by the Dutch colonists. Due undoubtedly to the aridity of the islands and the lack of natural resources, there has been no mass transmigration from more populous Indonesian areas. In Tepa, there are 3 other denominations with church buildings: a Catholic church, a Seventh-day Adventist church, and a Pentecostal church. There is also a mosque in Tepa that serves the small community of Muslims. All the other towns have one GPM church each, totaling 56 GPM churches in the entire GPM diocese of Babar islands ("Klasis GPM Pulau-pulau Babar"). While these world faiths are represented, there is much hybridization with the preexisting animist beliefs and practices. The traditional dance of Babar is "Seka".

Team

Team Dxpedition IOTA OC-271 Babar Island :


Team Leader - Operator - Joppy Sihasale - YB8XM



Technician - Operator - Andy Sitaniapessy - YC0MVP

QSL Info

KADEK KARIANA SP - YB9BU
P.O. BOX 106
SINGARAJA - BALI ISLAND 81100
Indonesia



DXPEDITION ISLAND ON THE AIR (IOTA) OC-271
BABAR ISLAND - MALUKU BARAT DAYA
MALUKU - INDONESIA
1-8 November 2012

Sponsor





DXPEDITION ISLAND ON THE AIR (IOTA) OC-271
BABAR ISLAND - MALUKU BARAT DAYA
MALUKU - INDONESIA
1-8 November 2012

Dxpedition IOTA OC-271 Sponsor by :

1. Spiderbeam Germany - Con DF4SA www.spiderbeam.com
2. Shu - JN6RZM - Japan
3. Scout Radio 107,7FM - www.scoutradio.net (Live Stream)
4. ORARI DKI Jakarta Lokal KRAMATJATI

Contact Us


DXPEDITION ISLAND ON THE AIR (IOTA) OC-271
BABAR ISLAND - MALUKU BARAT DAYA
MALUKU - INDONESIA
1-8 November 2012





Team Leader :

Ir. JACOB. D.C. SIHASALE (JOPPY) - YB8XM
Jl.Listrik negara - Batu Gajah Atas - RT001 RW003
Ambon City 97127 - Indonesia
e-mail : yb8xm@yahoo.com



Crew :
ROBERT A. SITANIAPESSY, ST - YC0MVP
e-mail : yc0mvp@gmail.com

http://oc271.blogspot.com/

Saturday, October 20, 2012

HEX BEAM, Overall Description

http://www.leoshoemaker.com/files/HEXBeam_by_K4KIO.pdf

HEX BEAM

By K4KIO (k4kio@leoshoemaker.com) - Page revision date 6/2010
By PU7IRR (rossijunior@bol.com.br) - Word edition date 12/2010


This file provides guidelines to build a G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam R.F. antenna for the six amateur radio bands, 20, 17, 15, 12, 10 and 6 meters. This antenna is featured in the March 2009 edition of QST magazine and is a significant improvement over the Hex-Beam design.

The hexagonal beam offers a number of features as follows:
•    Gain and front/back comparable to a two element Yagi.
•    Five bands with low SWR
•    Broad band characteristics
•    Low weight and low wind load
•    Construction from general hardware components
•    Ease of adjustment

If you have been to other sites on construction of the hexagonal beam you might be a bit confused. You see, some sites tell you how to build the “original” hexagonal beam which is patterned after the design of the HEX-BEAM, a trademarked product of Traffie Technologies. The wires for this original design for a single band look from above, like an “M” over a “W”.

For a more full understanding of the technical parameters of the G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam, visit the web site of its inventor, Steve Hunt, G3TXQ. (http://karinya.net/g3txq/hexbeam/)

If you feel you would rather not get into building your own G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam, I can build one for you. See the Hexagonal Beam by K4KIO for sale details here. (http://k4kio.com/)
This  original  design  is a  good antenna  and owners  of the HEX-BEAM  are  quite vocal  about  its performance as were builders of the homebrew version. I used to be one of the homebrew builders and was so enthusiastic that I published a set of guidelines like these to help others build one.

But, things have progressed a little and thanks to the exhaustive work of Steve Hunt, G3TXQ, a slightly different configuration of the hexagonal beam has been discovered. Viewed from above the wires for a single bander look like the sketch to the right.

Which one is better? Well, owners of the original HEX-BEAM are very loyal. But the only competitors in the market are selling only the new broad band hexagonal beam and home brewers are all building that version of the hexagonal beam instead of the original. And here is the reason why.

Overall Description

This is a G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam for 6 - 20 meters. It is just less than 22 feet in diameter and is constructed of six fiberglass tubes and 14 or 16 gauge stranded copper wire. The center post is a five foot piece of fiberglass or PVC. The beam is fed at the top of the center post with 50 ohm coax and weighs about 25 pounds.

The hexagonal beam consists of two elements for each band. The driven element is in the shape of an "M" and the reflector element is wrapped around the four spreaders to the rear of the driver wires. The elements are made of wire instead of tubes used by most Yagi antennas Therefore there is a need for a supporting structure. The supporting structure consists of six flexible fiberglass tubes attached to a base. The tubes are as shown and thus the name hexagonal beam.

The antenna elements are held in place by the base/tube structure, the wires and Kevlar/Dacron cords. All bands of the antenna are fed by a single coax cable. To the right are sketches of how the G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam is configured for a single band. A sketch of the wires of a five band hexagonal beam can be viewed here.




                                               Freq. bands (M):          6, 10, 12,15,17,20
                                               Weight:                         25 lbs 
                                               Diameter:                      22 ft 
                                               Wind Surface Area:    2.5 Sq Ft 




The support structure for the hexagonal beam resembles an umbrella upside down. To the left, wires only for a five band hexagonal beam are shown. The wires for 20 meters are the outermost and 10 meters are the innermost. The gaps between the ends of wires are insulated end spacers which keep the tips of the driver wires and coupling. reflector wires at the specified distance from each other for proper

The driver wires are fed with a single coax from the top with each band's driver wires connected at different vertical positions on the center post (handle of the umbrella).The spokes of the hexagonal beam are flexible tubes that keep tension on the wires while supporting their weight.

Why the G3TXQ Broad Band Hexagonal Beam?


The classic hexagonal beam has been in use for several decades and a commercial version is available for purchase in a variety of configurations; multi-band, mono band, etc. Many, including the author have built home brew versions of the HEX- BEAMR and used them quite successfully. Guidelines for building one are available on other sites for those who prefer to stick with the tried and true.

The classic hexagonal beam, for its compact size, is fairly narrow banded in its front/back and SWR performance. This is one of the trade offs for the compact physical size that makes the classic hexagonal beam so attractive. In late 2007 Steve Hunt, G3TXQ conducted extensive testing and modeling   of   many   variations   of   the   classic hexagonal beam seeking to overcome its narrow banded deficiency without sacrificing the simplicity and small size. The design featured in this G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam is the result of his efforts in this regard. A full explanation of the design is available on Steve's web site. An overall comparison of the new broad band design and the classic design is available. These guidelines are based on my own construction of the G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam.

The New G3TXQ Broad Band Hexagonal Beam vs. the Classic Hexagonal Beam

The original or classic hexagonal beam is the configuration of the Hex-beam manufactured by Traffie Technologies and copied by many homebrewers. The classic hexagonal beam is a proven winner among those who have built one. However, the classic beam has a significant shortcoming that is a result of its compressed configuration. It is rather narrow banded. In fact, if you design your classic hexagonal beam for use on the SSB portion of the larger bands such as 20 or 15 meters it will perform quite well. But you will find that the front to back performance on the CW end of the band is quite mediocre if not downright unacceptable. You can adjust the wires for resonance at the middle of the band but then it will be only average in performance on both the SSB and CW sub bands.

In November 2007, Steve Hunt, G3TXQ, developed a major improvement in the classic hexagonal beam to overcome these bandwidth limitations. The new G3TXQ hexagonal beam is much broader in its performance and as a result will deliver quite good front to back performance as well as low SWR over the entire range of frequencies of the larger bands. Below are charts that illustrate the differences in the classic and broadband hexagonal beams on 20 meters. The only penalty to be paid for this improved performance is a slightly larger diameter of the broad band. The five band classic hexagonal beam for 10, 12, 15, 17, 20 meters is about 19 feet in diameter; the broadband is 22 feet.

This minor difference in size for such a major improvement in performance causes me to recommend the G3TXQ hexagonal beam over the classic. I have modeled both, I have built both, I have tested both and I have used both. And I am convinced that the G3TXQ broad band beam is better. At the urging of the late L.B. Cebik, W4RNL, Steve recently authored an article featuring the broad band hexagonal beam in the December 2007 edition of the ham radio on line antenna magazine, AntenneX.

Below is a comparison of the classic and the broad band hexagonal beams.


Top view of a five band classic hexagonal beam antenna showing wires only with no spreaders or other supporting structure. Diameter is 19 feet
Top view of a five band G3TXQ hexagonal beam antenna showing wires only with no spreaders or other supporting structure. Diameter is 22 feet

GOLD TIP:

Construction of the G3TXQ broad band hexagonal beam is easier than the classic hexagonal beam:
•    No terminals for the reflector on the center post
•    Only two end spacers per band rather than four
•    Reflector, driver and spacers are a single loop making adjustment much simpler
•    Tuning is not as critical because the bandwidth is broader

Data for five band beams on 20 meters at 30 feet above good ground. Azimuthal patterns at 29 degrees elevation. SWR for 50 ohm feed.


The SWR of the G3TXQ hexagonal beam is dramatically better on the low end of the band making it easier to couple the transceiver to the antenna for maximal power transfer.

The forward gain of the G3TXQ hexagonal beam is slightly better than the classic design.

Azimuthal radiation patterns for the classic hexagonal beam and for the G3TXQ hexagonal beam. Note the slightly superior forward gain and the significantly superior front/back performance of the G3TXQ hexagonal beam.
The front/back gain ratio of the G3TXQ hexagonal beam is dramatically better than the classic design. This means that unwanted signals coming into the transceiver from the back of the beam will be much less than with the classic hex beam.

Note: the peak of front/back performance of the classic version occurs at 14.05 MHz whereas the SWR at this same frequency is about 2.2:1, a sub-optimal point on the SWR curve. What this means is that it is necessary to compromise between optimal SWR and best F/B with the classic design. On the other hand, with the broadband version, the front/back performance peaks at the lowest SWR with the result that there is no need to compromise between these two major goals in beam performance.