Phasing Line Is a Hit!
Our first episode of The Phasing Line Podcast was a hit. People really seem to love the new style – at least maybe our target demographic does (younger people, sub age 40, who are already a little experienced in ham radio). I’m excited for episode 2 – if we can find the time to record. I want to shoot for a biweekly release date but Marty and I have tumultuous schedules, so that is TBD. I do want to say we are planning an interview with a rising ham, so that will be exciting!
The big takeaway from the first episode was to avoid interruptions, so that will be fixed. Marty and I both think faster than we can speak too, and the fast-paced topic jumping with tons of tangents can be decisive – some like it, some don’t. We’ll be fine tuning the podcast as it goes on.
But it was such a success that it sparked interest in an old podcast I co-hosted, the Youth in Amateur Radio Podcast (YARP). 18-year old Jacob Keogh KDØNVX has taken the lead and re-branded it to The Noisy Key (jealous of that name) which will probably be a round-table similar to ICQ podcast, perhaps a bit more focused on a single or few topics, unlike the unfiltered consciousness which is The Phasing Line. All of which is to be determined as they work bringing the first episode.
Sweepstakes at WØEEE
WØEEE had another clean sweep during the ARRL SSB Sweepstakes. I came down to help educate and train new guys on HF contesting, spending a lot of time on a whiteboard.
Here’s an album. Click on the photos to make them bigger:
All that mattered (aside from getting the sweep) was that everyone had a ton of fun. It was really great how many people showed up, showed interest, logged, and got on the air. We made 227 QSOs in all 83 sections, so we didn’t really shoot for high numbers, and our antenna system got us down, but it was still a lot of fun. I also got to work Marty twice, lol!
We had to break out the amp for the last two sections of the sweep – PAC (pacific, aka Hawaii) and AK (Alaska). They were working huge pileups since they came on very late in the contest. But, we didn’t have an interface with the FT-897…so I had to do it manually, without ALC. Luckily the SB-220 has a soft-key relay that lets you use a simple switch to key the amp instead of 120V – that would have fried everything!
I had to get crafty to pull in Alaska. Still 2 sections left @w0eee @aa0rn #arrlsweepstakes pic.twitter.com/POc7btjwus
— Sterling Coffey (@N0SSC) November 20, 2016
It worked! Not sure how bad the signal was coming out of the amp, but I drove it clean and it seemed to be linear, haha!
WØEEE Score Summary:
Operator(s) : N0SSC, AA0RN, N0SFK, KE0CFK, Alex Hoeft
Band | QSOs | Pts | Sec | Pt/Q |
3.5 | 109 | 218 | 26 | 2 |
7 | 60 | 120 | 25 | 2 |
14 | 52 | 104 | 29 | 2 |
21 | 6 | 12 | 3 | 2 |
Total | 227 | 454 | 83 |
Operator | 80m | 40m | 20m | 15m | Total | Accum |
AA0RN | 57 | 23 | 6 | 86 | 86 | |
ALEX | 3 | 3 | 6 | 92 | ||
KE0CFK | 18 | 6 | 24 | 116 | ||
N0SFR | 10 | 10 | 126 | |||
N0SSC | 24 | 34 | 37 | 6 | 101 | 227 |
Total | 109 | 60 | 52 | 6 | 227 | 227 |
Thanks for reading! I will follow up this with a post detailing some ideas for college clubs to increase activity, and some ideas for contest coordinators to make contests better for school clubs and younger people as well.