30/04/2015

KF0CR at OzarkCon 2015

Part of my trip to the USA in April 2015 was attending the QRP Conference in Branson, Missouri, called OzarkCon. I found out about this event by mailing Bill, W4RK for some information on SOTA summits in Missouri (see the report on my SOTA activations here). Bill is the SOTA Manager for Missouri.

The conference always starts on a Friday evening, and ends with a breakfast on Sunday morning. The full program is here : http://www.ozarkcon.com/index.php
And here you can see who else attended : http://www.ozarkcon.com/AttendeeList.php
I had no doubt that  I arrived at the right place on Friday … the parking lot was full of antennas, well … most antennas had a car beneath them, hi.

 

After reporting to the front desk I got my badge, and could enter the dining room.

 
First we had the “Dinner Banquet”, with a typical American dish :
Beef stew, macaroni and cheese, vegetables and a salad on the side ..
Ice tea for drink and a piece of chocolate pie and coffee for dessert …


At my table I was in the good company of Gary W0MNA and Martha W0ERI (see my USA SOTA story), and their granddaughter Casey, amongst others.

 

Other famous people joined us later, like Phil Anderson, W0XI and his xyl.
I had no idea who he was, but as I found out, he was the founder and owner of world famous Kantronics for over 40 years.
 (see a short bio here  : http://www.ozarkcon.com/w0xi/w0xi_2012.htm) .
Also in Europe they are well known for all those packet and multimode  radiomodems  like the KPC3+ or the KAM. Phil sold the company after his retirement, but now runs a webstore specializing in everything “crystal radio” and ultrasound stuff : https://www.midnightscience.net/   

As you can guess from the pictures, most attendees are “of respected age” … to say the least.
Sorry to see that also here QRP and CW does not appeal to the younger generation …

Still on Friday night was the Kit Building Session, this years’ kit was a very easy to build 40m  low pass filter. I did not register for this, since the room in my suitcase was very limited.

 

Other activities were the permanent flea market and QRP projects exhibiton and contest.

Also fun : if you could work the local CW station K0N using only a dummy load , you got their special QSL card. Of course I took the challenge, I set up my KX3 with a dummy antenna in the hallway, and worked K0N in the next room with 599. One minute later I exchanged QSL cards with the operator !

Saturday was a day full of activities … starting off with breakfast, followed by a whole series of presentations to everyones taste … some were interesting, some were rather boring (at least for me).

Between presentations I met some more ham radio “legends” …

I had a long chat with Joe Eisenberg, K0NEB, who gave a presentation himself, on his trip to Friedrichshafen in 2014 (see http://www.ozarkcon.com/k0neb/k0neb.htm) .
He is the Kit Building Editor for CQ Magazine, and makes some very amusing videos on his own YouTube channel about the Dayton Hamvention (biggest hamfest in the world !)

Top of the bill was my meeting Steve the “goat man”, WG0AT.
I had seen Steve in the audience, but had not had a chance to speak to him yet.
Now, there was a lunch break of one and a half hours , and the sun was shining, so I decided to do some ham radio .. I was at a radio conference after all, wasn’t I ?
So I put the KX3 in the trunk of my car, and connected an endfed halfwave for 20/10m and fixed the far end to a tree, height above ground was not more than 2m (6ft).
Still I managed to find a SOTA staion operating from Colorado on 20m.
I called them and yes ! they heard me and I made a short exchange.
And just as I said “thanks for the 59 from Colorado, 73 …” , somebody sneaked up my back , shouting “What ? Colorado ? Can I use your transceiver ? …”  and almost pulled my microphone out of my hand …
Of course it was Steve !
The operator in Colorado was one of his friends, so he was very glad to have a contact with him .. with just 10W and a very low antenna on the parking lot at OzarkCon !

After this QSO I had a nice chat with Steve, he’s a very nice and funny guy.
And of course I couldn’t let him go without tricking him into a “selfie”, hi.

Steve, WG0AT and Luc, KF0CR

So far for my personal experience at OzarkCon 2015, I liked it a lot, and though it’s no big event like Dayton or Friedrichshafen …the atmosphere is great. I may be back one of the years …

There were more activities, but I didn’t stay for the Saturday music or the Sunday breakfast … because I had other plans, and lots of driving on Sunday for 2 SOTA activations in Arkansas. (see my USA SOTA 2015 report elsewhere on this blog).

73 de Luc, KF0CR

KF0CR SOTA Tour - April 2015

In March 2015, I went on a study trip with my students, visiting Washington, DC and New York City. While I was there anyway, this looked like an ideal opportunity to extend my stay with a family visit in Springfield, MO and my first ever SOTA activations in the USA.
As I planned everything, it turned out that I was lucky : I would be in Missouri at the time of the OzarkCon QRP Conference in Branson, MO !
 (read my seperate report on OzarkCon here)

I won’t go into all the “tourist things” we did with the students, but I have to mention just this one thing …


In Washington D.C. we walked by the National Museum of American History, and I thought I saw an interesting antenna … was that a dual-polarisation magnetic loop, mounted on top of an FCC Direction Finding vehicle ? … maybe I could use the idea for my next SOTA-antenna ?
Oh no, wait ! Look again … the antenna is actually a work of art … and the vehicle belongs to an ice cream vendor … and it says “Good Humor” .. yes, very funny !

Now over to my next destination : I arrived in Springfield, MO, on March 28.
Since I travel alone, I booked a small rental car, a Chevrolet Spark.
Not only was it small and cheap, I thought the “spark” was very appropriate for a ham ! (remembering how radio all began … ;-)

At the airport I was told that the Spark was not available, there was a problem with the license expiring in April … so they offered me a free upgrade to this “little” beauty : a Hyundai Sonata. It had all the luxury I could dream of : A/C, cruise control and also free  Sirius satellite radio (see http://www.siriusxm.com/ ) . Nice !

 

For all my radio needs, I adapted a commercial cigar lighter accesory into a dual PowerPole output, it had also a dual USB output, so I could charge my batteries, feed my rigs, my phone and my tablet.
And then it had still a conventional cigar plug left available.

 

Toghether with a mini LiPo-balanced charger (a HobbyTiger BC-4S15D) that works at 9-16V DC input, I could recharge my 5800 mAh LiPo pack while driving from one summit to another.

Now for some real ham radio action !


SOTA or Summits On The Air

I activated 10 different summits in Missouri and Arkansas, on 6 days in April 2015, using my US callsign KF0CR :

Date
Summit
Call
Used
QSOs
Points
Bonus
Points
Total
04/Apr/2015
W0M/ES-002 (Romance Lookout)
KF0CR
40
4
0
18
08/Apr/2015
W0M/ES-001 (Webster County HP)
KF0CR
18
6
0
24
09/Apr/2015
W0M/ES-003 (Pilot Knob)
KF0CR
22
4
0
28
09/Apr/2015
W0M/ES-004 (1270)
KF0CR
6
2
0
30
12/Apr/2015
W5A/BR-006 (Kennedy Mountain)
KF0CR
14
6
0
36
12/Apr/2015
W5A/BR-012 (Whitney Mountain)
KF0CR
19
6
0
42
15/Apr/2015
W0M/SF-002 (Buford Mountain)
KF0CR
22
6
0
48
15/Apr/2015
W0M/SF-011 (Shepherd Mountain)
KF0CR
18
4
0
52
16/Apr/2015
W0M/SF-001 (Taum Sauk Mountain)
KF0CR
11
6
0
58
16/Apr/2015
W0M/SF-010 (Oak Mountain)
KF0CR
14
4
0
62

I started SOTA in 2014 and had only 14 points so far, these 10 activations raised my score with an impressive 48 points to a total of 62. Still far from Mountain Goat but I take my time, hi.

My equipment for his trip was an Elecraft KX3, a 3-cell LiPo battery with a capacity of  5800 mAh, and a link dipole which I constructed and tested just before the trip. I also had a homebrew mini-paddle for some CW, although I am mainly a phone operator. But you never know ...

As a mast I had a 6m telescoping fishing pole, when collapsed it’s only 58cm long, so it fits easily in the side pocket on my backpack. Setting up the pole is very easy using a ground stake, consisting of a 25cm steel pin, and a plastic tubular piece which holds the pole (both items are available in the fishing department at Decathlon (sporting goods store in Europe).
No guy wires were used, except for the two legs of the dipole.

This setup resulted in a fair amount of NA contacts, but some nice DX too: Spain, Poland, Ireland and England. Too bad I didn’t have a chance to work a Belgian station.

Most of the time I was just setting up on the ground (on a large plastic bag, using my folded fleece jacket as a cushion to make things a bit softer …).
If I was lucky, the summit had some concrete pillars left, that were used for a lookout tower, then I used one of those as a “table” (like in the picture below, on W0M/ES-001, Webster High Point).

I think it’s a bit strange that these towers were “fire towers”, but why are they all gone ? Did they burn down ? The fire watchers didn’t do a good job then ?  I’m still a bit puzzled on that subject, hi.

My first activation was on summit W0M/ES-002, with the promising name Romance Lookout. I didn’t find it very romantic though … there were ticks and other bugs … and nothing but rocks and trees, not much else to see. Getting into the activation zone also required some bushwhacking, there is no public path available.
(there is a road to the radio tower on the summit, but that is closed).

Now for this first activation, I tricked my brother-in-law, Leo NM0U, into accompanying me.
I felt a bit safer with someone on my side that lives in the region, and knows all horrible dangers we could encounter …
Below, the two “explorers” , well protected against the sun and the bugs …

Leo, NM0U
Luc, KF0CR

After this first activation, Leo had enough of it .. SOTA was not his cup of tea. But I had become confident enough to do the rest on my own .. seeing that the walks were not too difficult, and those dangers didn’t work out that horrible after all, hi.

On my second activation on W0M/ES-001, Webster County High Point, I got two well-known visitors: Gary,  W0MNA and Martha, W0ERI from Leavenworth,KS !
Gary sent me plenty of mails with answers to all my questions, and all sorts of interesting tips on activating in that region. So now I finally got the pleasure to meet them live !


I had done my activation in the morning, and had my picknick on the summit while they where approaching.

This gave the opportunity to do a  “double duty” on the summit … Gary and Martha called me on 2m from outside the activation zone, and I did the same when I drove off, leaving them to do their activation on the summit.
We didn’t talk too long, since we were to meet again at OzarkCon the next day.
  
Meeting another SOTA activator is also an opportunity to “spy” a little … how do they do it ?
As it turns out, they do it very well !
Being with two people means you can carry some more or some heavier “stuff”.
Gary’s backpack is usually around 10 kg, Martha’s around 5 kg.
What’s in the packs ? … 1 transceiver , a Yaesu FT857D, 2 LiFePo A123 battery packs, each one is around 1,1 kg, an OCF-dipole (most often called a windom antenne in Europe), and of course several accessories. That antenna is a Buckmaster 4 band OCF (see http://hamcall.net/7bandocf.html) , weight another 2 kg. And then of course the usual food & drink, adding even more weight.

I watched Gary throw a rope over a tree branch to pull up the OCF antenna. He’s using a small plastic bottle, halfway filled with gravel and he seemed very good at throwing … I would need some more practice to do that ;-)

The balun in the middle (well, not actually in “the middle”, rather at one third … it’s an Off Center Fed antenna you know ;-) is quite heavy, so they lift it up with their two walking poles, which are actually fishing lure retrieval poles sold by Cabela's Outfitters. They extend to almost 5m, and the two poles form a letter ‘A’ for stability.


And how do you operate one transceiver with two operators ?
Simple ! Each has their own HEIL Traveler-headset, and each has a PTT button, but the microphone signals are coupled in a small box (on the right in the picture), which then feeds the transceiver. They take turns in working each chaser, and so both have a valid activation in the end. Now the most clever trick most chasers don’t know about … Gary lets Martha note all QSO’s in the log, isn’t that handy ! (it’s the same log for both after all …)
Think about it when you work them next time … hi. 

I have made a video with the best pictures from a slideshow about this trip, and it includes a short piece of video where you can see Gary and Martha in action : https://youtu.be/3VgdQnceZGw

I’ll skip a few summits now before this page gets too long. Most summits were quite boring after all, it was quite warm, a steep climb, and I saw more trees and bugs !

One exception : in my opinion, the most beautiful summit on this trip was Kennedy Mountain in Arkansas, W5A/BR-006.
[ added note in 2016: this summit is now closed to the public, very sad ...]

In the next picture a nice view from the very top of the summit.
I did set up my station near that tree on the left, just below the top of the summit. 
The next picture shows me “in action”. I liked this one so much, I used it for my qrz.com page (for KF0CR).

View from Kennedy Mountain, on a rather cold Sunday morning …

Luc, KF0CR activating Kennedy Mountain, W5A/BR-006





























Just a couple of days earlier , this summit had been visited by a whole group of hams, including well known (or should I say legendary) Steve, WG0AT. He made a nice video of their group activation (including some images from OzarkCon). See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXNcC5CkcRs
Really excellent video !

The easiest summit on my trip must have been W5A/BR-012, Whitney Mountain, also in Arkansas. It’s an easy drive-up summit. You can park next to the lodge, carry all your stuff to a large grass field next to the parking space, and enjoy SOTA !
I discovered that the lodge provides open WiFi access, so I could quickly consult the sotawatch website and found 4 other activators and their frequency, but all four were in CW. This was the only time I got out my mini paddle and worked all four S2S !
(for those interested, I posted a picture of the two mini paddles I had with me on the SOTA reflector : https://reflector.sota.org.uk/t/homebrew-micro-paddle-cw-with-paper-clips/10615/6 )

Not all summits were that easy …
Two days before going back to Belgium, I said goodbye to the family and moved to a motel in Ironton, MO for two nights, to do my last four activations. 

Right across the motel, is Sheperd Hill , W0M/SF-011, so that looked easy ! 
Now, when taking the path to the summit, it suddenly gives you a choice … 

What to do … steep or not (less) steep, that’s the question !

Can you guess which path I took ?
Of course, the steep one ! I had to prove that I was "the man", hi … but I should have known better …
Steep was no lie … but with a couple of stops I managed to get to the summit after all and had a good activation. Coming back down, I wisely took the “less steep” path … one more lesson learned !

And of course .. I could not leave Missouri and NOT have been on the highest point in the state … Taum Sauk Mountain.
This is also a very easy summit. Since they get many non-ham visitors, there is a large parking lot, and it’s only a short walk to the actual summit.



Next to the trig point marker is a “rock”  of unknown height, but of course I had to have a picture of myself on this “higher than the highest point”, hi.
  

And with that achievement my SOTA tour 2015 in the USA was over .. I took the plane for Belgium in St. Louis … bye Missouri ... back to Ostend, Belgium.

I hope to be back soon … for more SOTA fun !


73 de Luc, ON7DQ / KF0CR