by William Eric McFadden

Pictures

Description

The Southeast Ohio Radio Adventure Team, consisting of Eric McFadden WD8RIF, Mike Hansgen AA8EB, and John McCutcheon N8XWO, along with guest Len Touth KG8SF, operated from the Athens County Fairground Kiwanis Shelter.

Thursday and Friday were spring-time balmy--gentle breezes and temperatures in the upper 60s. (Was this really February?) Saturday, however, found Mother Nature delivering strong, gusty winds, temps hovering about 35 degrees, and spitting snow.

Mike and I arrived at the site about 10am local time. I had previously purchased a 20' x 40' piece of 4-mil plastic sheeting and had cut it into five 8' x 20' pieces, for it was our plan to wrap the open picnic shelter with plastic. Mike and I fought the wind for the better part of an hour, having the wind tear the plastic from the staples almost as fast as we could insert them. Finally, Mike had to drive to the hardware store to buy a roll of Duct tape, which we used to reinforce the staple points. We were able, finally, to erect the plastic walls, and they served admirably as wind breaks.

Mike and I then installed the 80/40m fan dipole from our Field Day arsenal, tying one end to the halyard of the flag pole, and the other end to a line thrown into a tree. We also threw a line into the tree to support the end of my W3EDP antenna. (I wanted to try it "in the field", in preparation for a trip to France later this year.)

We set up my QRP+ station and Mike's Scout station on the picnic tables, and set the lab-grade digital thermometer on the table. Len arrived, and set up his S&S TAC-1 and LDG QRP Tuner. I hooked up the W3EDP antenna and tuned it to 20m. Len took the 80/40m feedline. Mike waited patiently for an antenna. (Later, he installed the 20m delta loop from the FD arsenal when as-yet-unlicensed Tom Witherspoon arrived to see how crazy QRPers can be.) We decided that we'd operate independently with our own calls. Mike and I quickly discovered that even QRP rigs can't operate on the same band. Len showed the rest of us how it's done as he quickly generate pile-ups on 40m. By the time he left about 4pm, he'd accumulated 33 QSOs. I found 20m to be pretty slow going, and worked 11 QSOs before retiring to allow Mike to use the band. Mike worked 6 QSOs in very short order using my QRP+. (He'd managed to turn the sidetone all the way down in his Scout and couldn't fit the screwdriver in to turn it back up.) Sometime during the course of all this we fired up two kerosene heaters, which managed to keep the drafty plastic-wrapped shelter about 42 degrees, some four degrees warmer than the outside--but a lot less windy!

We decided to drop the antennas before darkness hit, so shortly after Len left we took down the antennas, took down all the plastic, and even removed the several hundred staples.

Lessons:

WD8RIF Score S/P/C: FL, NM, OK, TX, CA, CO, SK

11 QSO points

Multipliers:
x 7 S/P/C
x 4 field location
x 2 alternate power
x 3 temperature multiplier

Points 1848 points

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