ORARC Field Day 2018 (with new venue)

We’re moving venues this year due to some renovations at the usual home of the Field Day, so please take note!

Wauchope High School looking South over Wauchope Township, photo by Owen Wilson Photography

Whilst Wauchope High School lacks ocean views, it’s close to the Hastings River, spacious and should delight our FoxHunt competitors!

Henry VK2ZHE writes:

The ORARC 43rd annual Field Day will be held on Saturday and Sunday the 9th and 10th of June 2018 during the June 2018 Queen’s Birthday Long Weekend.  Visitors and members are cordially invited to attend.

The venue is has been changed as the Tacking Point Surf Life Saving Club Hall is being renovated during June.  The new venue is now the Wauchope High School hall in Nelson Street, Wauchope 2446.  Nelson Street is at the end of Campbell Street which runs off High Street which is the main street running through the Wauchope CBD.  Wauchope is 20 kilometres west from Port Macquarie via the Oxley Highway.  Driving time is approximately 20 minutes.

There will be all the usual Field Day attractions with fox hunts both days, disposals; bring your items to sell, no commission charged, barbeque lunch both days with bacon and egg breakfast available on the Sunday morning.  Sunday is the trading day.  The Field Day dinner is at 6 pm on the Saturday night at the Port Macquarie Golf Club with a menu to suit all tastes.

Click here to view the associated event page.  The field day programme will be added to the event page as it becomes available.  See you on the June long weekend!

Event Reminder: Antenna Shootout tomorrow!

It’s time again for our annual Antenna Shootout!  Bring your Yagis!  Bring your Whips!  Bring your Flower Pots!  Henry VK2ZHE writes:

The annual Antenna Shootout is at the Tuffins Lane Sports Fields on Sunday the 11th of February 2018.  Set up is from 9 am with a bacon and egg breakfast from the barbeque for the early arrivals.  Lunch will be a sausage sizzle.  Tea and coffee and soft drinks from the club’s Communications Caravan.  There will be facilities to test antennas for 6 and 2 metres and 70 centimetres.  Very similar to last year’s shootout except that we aren’t expecting a burst of extreme heat!

2017: Sizzling.

Amateur Radio New Year’s Resolutions

Via Amateur Radio New South Wales’ Facebook page.

Is Amateur Radio on your list of New Year’s Resolutions?

Here are some ideas to consider:

  1. If, by chance, you are not yet licensed, get your license this year.  If you have not yet passed your Standard or Advanced, do it this year.  Having trouble studying or passing?  Contact ARNSW education on education@arnsw.org.au
  2. Try something new, there is something for everyone!  FM repeaters and HF SSB just scratch the surface.  New digital and sound card modes seem to appear weekly.  A year ago, no one had heard of FT-8.  It’s now, by many accounts, the most popular HF Digital mode.  D-Star, DMR, and other digital voice modes are growing by leaps and bounds.  Have you tried 6 Meters yet?  The Magic Band can yield some surprising contacts.  How about SSB or CW on 2 Meters or 70 Centimeters?  Every Antennas are small and easy to construct from hardware store parts.  It doesn’t have to be pretty — an ugly antenna will radiate just as well.  Use your imagination and try something different! If you need ideas, checkout the internet for ideas.  Peter Parker VK3YE has just published an e-book, see vk3ye.com
  3. Do something.  Set an achievable Amateur Radio goal for the year — and then work at it!  Earn DXCC or WAS, maybe on a single band?  Better your contest score by 10%?  Get your CW speed up to 20 WPM?  Reorganize and rewire the shack?  Increase your technical knowledge?  Convert your paper logs to electronic format and start using Logbook of the World?  Try QRP.  SOTA (Summits of the Air), WWFF (World Wide Fauna and Flora).  Enter a Field Day or Contest.  Chase a satellite.
  4. Build something.  There are many simple things to build.  Work up to building your very own transceiver, there are plenty short form or long for project kits available.  Simple projects can also be a great way to teach new hams the basics of soldering and kit-building.  String up that antenna you’ve been thinking about forever and see how it plays.  Download a free antenna modelling program and learn how to use it to design and build your own.  Order a kit and assemble it.  Melt some solder and have fun!  Once you start you’ll be hooked.
  5. Learn something.  Microcontrollers like the Arduino, Raspberry Pi, and PICaxe are quite inexpensive.  With a few LEDs and pushbuttons you can learn simple programming to get started.  There are many useful Ham Radio projects that you can find online.  And if you have an idea for your own gadget, you’ll have a lot of fun learning how to roll your own computer code.
  6. Teach something.  You know how to do things others don’t, but would like to learn.  Are you already familiar with programming microcontrollers?  How about a club project to teach the basics to other members?  Or a demonstration on using Anderson Powerpoles?  Or properly installing coax connectors?
  7. Become an Ambassador for Amateur Radio.  Get just one person (or two, or three) interested in Amateur Radio.  Offer to demonstrate Ham Radio at the Senior Citizens’ centre, Scouts and Guides meetings, your club outside the hobby, or any similar organization.  Groups like that are always looking for an interesting speaker or activity.  A simple but impressive and effective demonstration is to bring an HT and line up some contacts in advance… all they need to do is reply with a quick contact.  Network with others to present the diversity of this hobby.
  8. Get involved!  Join your local Radio Club.  If you already belong, attend the meetings.  Just about every club (not just Radio Clubs) has the same problem — 10% of the people do 90% of the work.  You don’t need to volunteer for everything… select an area that interests you, and help with that.  Even better, suggest an activity and then take the lead in organizing it.  Work with new Amateurs.  Help present a Chapter on the Foundation Weekend.  Something as simple as “I’m going to set up a portable station at the park on Saturday morning, everyone is welcome to come by” can be a great time.  If you make it a BBQ you’ll draw a real crowd.
  9. Stay positive, ignore the negative.  Don’t listen to the cranky old farts who insist that “Ham Radio is dying”.  Participation in contests remains strong, even at the bottom of the sunspot cycle.  Manufacturers continue to introduce new models that we could barely dream of just a few years ago.  Hamfests that are well-organized and well-run are thriving.
  10. Most of all, resolve to have more fun with Ham Radio in 2018!

See You Soon!!

(Adapted from an original newsletter from John Bee, N1GNV)

Event Reminder: First General Meeting of 2018!

Happy new year everyone!

Following on from a lengthy break, we though it may be a good idea to remind all members (and guests alike) that the first Monthly General Meeting of the year is on tomorrow, 6th January at 2pm.

We look forward to seeing members and guests tomorrow at the usual haunt – SES Headquarters in Central Road, Port Macquarie!  Everyone is welcome!

You, here, 2pm, tomorrow.  Photo by Hydro Photographics Port Macquarie.

The WICEN Mid North Coast Region meeting will commence at the closure of the ORARC meeting, typically around 3:30pm.