[HCDX] My first backpack mediumwave miniDXpedition ! (long)
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[HCDX] My first backpack mediumwave miniDXpedition ! (long)
First off, many thanks for all the opinions on portable receivers. I settled
on the Palstar R-30 and quickly found one on eBay ( thanks Rick ! ). At the
same time, I picked up an old Realistic VSC-1000 portable tape recorder for $10
also on eBay.
The more I use it, the more I like the Palstar R-30. I don't notice any front
end overload on MW with my EWE antennas even during the day (my Icom R71a has
a little trouble when the locals run day power), and the selectivity with the
stock filters is more than adequate. My only disappointment is that it's
quite deaf on LW below 500khz. Hopefully someone will come up with a mod for this.
For portable operation, I wrapped the receiver in bubble wrap leaving the
front and back panels accessible. The local American Science and Surplus store
had 4 A-h, 12 volt rechargeable batteries cheap and I'm running one of those
instead of the internal AAA batteries. The radio plus recorder fit easily inside
my day pack, leaving plenty of room for full sized headphones and a spool of
wire. Fully loaded the pack is quite light. Today it weighed 22 lbs because I
had 700 ft of wire and some water pipe that was to be used as a cable winder.
The goal of tonight's test was more equipment oriented: How long will it take
to set up? Will the radio get overloaded? Will I freeze my butt off? So I
only spent 40 minutes listening. I drove to a large local park about 5 miles
from home, walked about a half mile to a secluded grassy field, and set up next
to a tree at the edge of the adjoining woods. Using a rock, I pounded an 18
inch piece of 1/2 inch water pipe on top of which I had a T fitting with two 6
inch pieces of pipe that makes a handy place to put the spool of wire. I took
500 ft of #14 stranded wire with another 200 ft of speaker wire soldered on the
end (yup, it fit on the spool).
The 700 ft of wire just fit across the field, laying on top of some long
grass. I could go longer, but it would cross a gravel access road. I tied the near
end to the tree for fear that some 4wd truck would blast across the field,
snag the wire, and drag away my radio! I had brought a home-brew matching
transformer, but it wasn't working, so I just used the high impedance wire clip on
the radio and that worked fine.
I had no problem at all with overload even with a 5kw directional local 2
miles up the road that really tears me up at home. I had the wire running towards
the Caribbean but wasn't hearing any Cubans at all. RVC Turks and Caicos was
running S9 down on 530khz. Voice of Nevis had a weak carrier on 895khz, I
heard some very rapid SS on 1170khz, and some SS under WSB on 750khz. I worked my
way up the band and stopped on 1620khz when I heard a very strong station
running upbeat reggae type music, I parked here hoping for an ID that I never got
but I'm pretty sure it was WDHP Frederickton, US Virgin Islands ... peaking S9
!! This was at about 0230z.
Here is the clip in Real Audio (8 mins 14 seconds), it's big, 1 mb, but worth
it:
http://members.aol.com/j999w/DX
Any Real Audio player should play it since I used an old version of RA
Encoder to make it. It sounds a little muddy at max signal because the recorder is
getting too much audio from the receiver. I need to fix that. Yet, not bad for
a 12 year old recorder. The only other time I've heard this station it was
very weak with poor copy. I guess these BOGs (Beverage on Ground) really DO work
!!
It took me 15 minutes to set up including walking the wire out, and only 12
minutes to pack up from "radio off" to swinging the pack on my back. The water
pipe cable winder worked well.
More expeditions to follow as time allows.
73,
John Wilke WB9UAI
Milwaukee, WI
Palstar R-30, 700ft BOG
---[Start Commercial]---------------------
World Radio TV Handbook 2003 is out! Order it now!
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0823059677/hardcoredxcom
---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
Hard-Core-DX@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://dallas.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________
THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt