Showing posts with label Ham Radio Adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ham Radio Adventure. Show all posts

Thursday, September 9, 2021

It's Not Always a Bed of Roses When it Comes to Your Signal Report...


That's not to say there is something wrong when you get a 22 signal report, it's just who wants a 22 (or in the case of CW a 222) , which is the worst acceptable signal report??? Well, I do! Yes, give me all 22's and I'd be a happy girl! Why you might ask. Let me tell you...

First, let me clarify that a signal report for us Ham's consists of 3 things; Readability, Signal Strength and Tone. If we are doing SSB (or phone, aka "talking"), our RST report is two numbers: Readability and Signal Strength. We all buy the best equipment we can afford, ground our stations, put up antennas, and tweak our audio and do all of this to hear and be heard over the air.  59 is the best report, meaning perfectly readable with extremely strong signals. That is the goal. That is perfection!

But what does a 22 signal report mean? Does it mean your equipment is crap and you should throw it all in the nearest dumpster? Absolutely not! A 22 means you worked for it! Yes, it wasn't easy for the other station to hear you and you could barely hear them, but in the end you pulled it out! You deciphered that call sign and they understood you... and that is the REAL goal! In times of emergency, when conditions aren't perfect and all communication is down EXCEPT for Ham Radio, we need to be able to pull it out. We need to be able to relay vital information, we need to be able to work together when conditions aren't ideal. 

In the end, with all the fun we have talking to far off Countries, doing contests, checking into Nets, it's all practice. So, give me those 22's, it's a compliment for both of us! 

73,

Suzanne, N1SUZ

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

QSL from a QSO I never had...

Sometimes when we have a QSO or work a special event, we get a callsign wrong. Sometimes during a special event the event operator is trying to get thru a huge pileup and your QSO may be short and sweet.  You hear the callsign quickly and truly think you got it... well, I worked a special event station recently with young kids who were attending the World Little League Championships in Pa. We weren't rushed, the young man I was talking to was taking his time and getting coached by the Elmer in charge. I recorded the QSO and all the particulars. Then I looked up the Callsign on QRZ to get the QSL information. I noticed that the callsign was from Alabama. Not a red flag because the kids were visiting Pa. So off my QSL card innocently went... fast forward to yesterday, a week after I sent that QSL card... I love getting QSL cards! With delight I opened the envelope... to find not a QSL card, but a letter... 

"Hi Suzanne N1SUZ, I was surprised to get your QSL card in the mail today. I must admit I was doubly surprised because I have not operated in the HF bands since Hurricane Frederick destroyed my antenna system in 1979..."

But a misheard Callsign, and a QSL card sent to the wrong Ham, turned into a friendly Ham related QSO anyway! He told me about how he became Amateur Extra, how he walked away from Ham radio while moving and then raising a family, and how sorry he was he had not saved any of his QSL cards so he could send me one and how he appreciated mine anyway. It was one of the nicest letters I have ever received.

I ended the letter by hoping that someday we actually would have that QSO on the air and wished him 73.


 

Welcome to the Shack...


 It's been a while since I've posted about Ham Radio. I use to have a blog on Wordpress that just disappeared. I only know that I'm still around and still talking on my Kenwood radio.... it use to be a Kenwood TS-480, then a TS-140 and now a TS-590. Not only have my radios changed in the 25 years I've been an Amateur Radio Operator, but the Ham Radio world has changed too! So, here I am... back to talk about my Ham radio adventures... please come along for the ride... 

73,

Suzanne, N1SUZ


CQ POTA, CQ POTA... CQ Parks on the Air!

Parks on the Air® , or POTA for short,  is a program inspired by the ARRL's year long program in 2016 which promoted Ham radio operators...