Aug 30

Hurricane Irene update

We fared well from Irene this weekend at my QTH in Pottstown, PA. There were a number of trees down in and around the area and I was surprised we never lost power. Those to the North and South weren’t so lucky.

Laurie and I prepared as best we could in the days leading up to Irene’s arrival by guying down the hexbeam on the roof, the vertical in the front yard and re-routing the 160m vee in the backyard. We had borrowed generators from two hams in our club would provide some security to my neighbor and myself to power our refrigerators and sump pumps.

I went to sleep around 10pm to the sounds of an EAS warning indicating a tornado watch for Montgomery County, PA and awoke at 2AM on Sunday to the sound of the wind tossing debris against the house. I also found that the movement of the tree snapped the 160m antenna at the insulator and the local Pottstown repeater had been on emergency battery backup. Later in the morning while fixing the 160m antenna between wind gusts, I was pleased to find the 2m antenna stack on the military masts you buy at hamfests was up and my 5 element yagi still aligned on W3OK up north and the hexbeam still at home on the roof.

Yesterday the outcome of the storm’s wrath would be abundantly clear, having received an email from a ham who serves spots to my DX cluster, had lost everything in the hurricane. By everything, he meant everything.

Even though the storms have passed and the sun is shining over the Philadelphia suburbs, there are still a number of residents in the surrounding areas without power and a number of roads are closed, including mine.

For some, the recovery begins.

Aug 10

N3QO – Back on the air!

Spent most of the day getting the MA5B back up on the roof since the move from Allentown to Pottstown. I was graced with hearing EK6TA out of Armenia, my furthest I’ve heard yet. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to work him, but it was nice to know the antenna was at least picking it up. In addition an Italian and Irish station were also propogating to me around 5-6PM. You’ll see the ground wire on the outside station ground bus, this has since been changed out to zero gauge copper. I initially needed some form of ground for the polyphasers to discharge any built up static.

The wire routing will also need to change to separate the beam mount and inside station ground from the transmission and rotor control lines. Although so far I haven’t found any RF hot spots anywhere inside. But then again, at most I’m outputting 100 watts.
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