Enthusiast II
TLDR - Proposing a regular evening meeting time/place (NVIS, 80m) so we can check in from camp with others in our region. Any interest?
OK, so I’ve got the standard issue Baofeng VHF, and it’s fine for the group trip but…I kept thinking: how cool would it be to set up camp, deploy an antenna, and check in with others in the region? This is possible with 40-80m HF frequencies, low power, and simple antennas.
The last time I was in Death Valley and PapaDave was leading a large group 60 miles away over some hills, it would have been pretty cool to check in with them. Or talk tips/advice/whatever from people within the region in general.
The key attributes here: this is *not* the standard home-station, ham general chat, long-distance operating mode. It’s all about nearby (like within a couple hundred miles radius), and primarily for people those who are out in the wilderness (or just want to check in with those people).
There’s quite a bit to figure out, and I am no expert, so consider this just a starting point. I’m planning a trip soon to Big Bear area in SoCal so will be sure to tune in and see if anyone’s around!
The basic parameters I’m thinking:
Time:
This is a tough one. A lot of us will be on the move for a lot of the day, and then pretty busy getting situated. So it seems tough to propose a regular daytime time. Night will probably be more camp-friendly, and a bit more reliable overall. Daytime has some other downsides, but could probably be done.
Since this is NVIS I thought it would make sense to link timing to the specific area. Not sure how much after sunset will be needed for reliability.. maybe more than 1.5h. Alternatively is to set a fixed time for each region and update it through seasons but that sounds tricky.
There may not be anyone there at that time, but the bad should stay open through the evening, so it would be easy to leave the radio on and monitor while doing camp stuff.
Mode:
I think being able to communicate in the immediate area (<100mi) is priority #1. That might sound easy but believe it or not that can be tricky to do reliably. Conditions lately (US-West) require evening frequencies typically <4MHz. Targeting local communications is the realm of NVIS and emergency communications, and is a good skill to have. Coverage may extend 0-300+mi depending on conditions, power, etc. The hardest part is getting that first 50mi.
Get an idea of requirements for NVIS freqs near your location here: https://hamwaves.com/nvis/en/index.html
Frequency: (edit; better freq thanks to KJ7MFV)
3890khz is the current thinking based on availability within the General license band. May need to consider going lower for FoF2 as we head towards winter.
Antenna:
NVIS requires takeoff pretty much straight up, so a vertical isn’t going to work. There are plenty of extremely light, packable, inexpensive options that will work great. A dipole/inverted V with the center up 15-20’ is what I’m planning on. Check out SOTA/POTA for lots of portable options.
Gear Guidance:
I’d like to put together guidance for people getting started that makes it easy to join. Would be best to prove out reliable, simple, and robust options. There are some known-standard rigs and conventions for most of this already. The landscape is changing now so I think the entry-point can be very accessible.
OK, so I’ve got the standard issue Baofeng VHF, and it’s fine for the group trip but…I kept thinking: how cool would it be to set up camp, deploy an antenna, and check in with others in the region? This is possible with 40-80m HF frequencies, low power, and simple antennas.
The last time I was in Death Valley and PapaDave was leading a large group 60 miles away over some hills, it would have been pretty cool to check in with them. Or talk tips/advice/whatever from people within the region in general.
The key attributes here: this is *not* the standard home-station, ham general chat, long-distance operating mode. It’s all about nearby (like within a couple hundred miles radius), and primarily for people those who are out in the wilderness (or just want to check in with those people).
There’s quite a bit to figure out, and I am no expert, so consider this just a starting point. I’m planning a trip soon to Big Bear area in SoCal so will be sure to tune in and see if anyone’s around!
The basic parameters I’m thinking:
- Time: Daily. Local sunset + 1.5h rounded (currently 8:00pm in southern california)
- Mode: SSB, NVIS targeting <300mi
- Frequency: Start at 80m targeting near 3900khz: 3890khz
- Antenna: high launch angle (simple low dipole/efhw/etc.)
- Gear guidance: tbd (see below)
Time:
This is a tough one. A lot of us will be on the move for a lot of the day, and then pretty busy getting situated. So it seems tough to propose a regular daytime time. Night will probably be more camp-friendly, and a bit more reliable overall. Daytime has some other downsides, but could probably be done.
Since this is NVIS I thought it would make sense to link timing to the specific area. Not sure how much after sunset will be needed for reliability.. maybe more than 1.5h. Alternatively is to set a fixed time for each region and update it through seasons but that sounds tricky.
There may not be anyone there at that time, but the bad should stay open through the evening, so it would be easy to leave the radio on and monitor while doing camp stuff.
Mode:
I think being able to communicate in the immediate area (<100mi) is priority #1. That might sound easy but believe it or not that can be tricky to do reliably. Conditions lately (US-West) require evening frequencies typically <4MHz. Targeting local communications is the realm of NVIS and emergency communications, and is a good skill to have. Coverage may extend 0-300+mi depending on conditions, power, etc. The hardest part is getting that first 50mi.
Get an idea of requirements for NVIS freqs near your location here: https://hamwaves.com/nvis/en/index.html
Frequency: (edit; better freq thanks to KJ7MFV)
3890khz is the current thinking based on availability within the General license band. May need to consider going lower for FoF2 as we head towards winter.
Antenna:
NVIS requires takeoff pretty much straight up, so a vertical isn’t going to work. There are plenty of extremely light, packable, inexpensive options that will work great. A dipole/inverted V with the center up 15-20’ is what I’m planning on. Check out SOTA/POTA for lots of portable options.
Gear Guidance:
I’d like to put together guidance for people getting started that makes it easy to join. Would be best to prove out reliable, simple, and robust options. There are some known-standard rigs and conventions for most of this already. The landscape is changing now so I think the entry-point can be very accessible.
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