Tim, N3TL, we worked several times during my trip.( I just saw your post.... I 
have too have amnesia sometimes  ;)I have your QSL cards and you are in my Log 
from my Trip. I agree with most of what you said but I think you misinterpreted 
my use of the word "sport". I meant it in the context of working the same 
stations over and over again, from a fixed station to another fixed station. A 
satellite in the end  it is just a repeater with the added limit of a small 
working window and the usual Doppler shift. Perhaps we should call it the "art" 
instead of "sport" of working a satellite. I know you have perfected it very 
well and I have enjoyed reading many of your posts as I am locationally 
challenged at home living in an apartment in Chicago. Not conducive to working 
the birds unfortunately....

I checked QRZ.com and many of the stations I worked had similar setups to mine. 
Pretty much an  HT and small antenna: Arrow or Elk. Also it was never my intent 
to hog any of the satellites for the duration of my operations. That would not 
be the spirit of a "True Satelliteer!"  (a quote from WB2OQQ) There were many 
stations who needed EK99 but never managed to get through. I just wanted to 
make a few stations happy for a new one. I had the option of going full power 
but I chose not to on the FM birds. Perhaps I should next time.  I am already 
looking forward to my vacation next year, planned from Hawaii as of now. Now 
that is going to an operational challenge.

Sebastian, W4AS, thanks for your kind words and the opportunity to work you to. 
I sure wish I had your setup. I live in an apartment in Chicago so few 
opportunities to operate from a fixed location. I agree K5D could have done a 
better job in their satellite operations. At minimum a simple rotor and even a 
fixed antenna at 15 degrees with a two radios on all the current satellites 
would have worked better and would have probably provided more operators the 
chance to work K5D. A fulll blown setup with an AZ/EL rotor and doppler 
tracking would have been the perfect setup considering all the other equipment 
that was brought to the K5D DXpedition. It would be interesting to understand 
what planning was done for satellites operations for K5D.  I won't speculate. 
FM satellites may not be the ideal satellites for a DXPedition but not 
everybody has the gear to work the linear brids. I think it comes down to the 
DX operator. FM satellites can be worked on a
 DXpedition. I had some pile ups on numerous passes and I was able to work many 
stations with some discipline and good ears. It takes an operator with 
contesting experience to work a pile up and maintain order. Still it is very 
challenging especially on such operations as K5D. Not sure what to do in the 
future.

I agree with Tim, everybody has their own motivation on the birds. Some go 
after VUCC, some like to ragchew, some like to say good morning or good day to 
their friend a few states over, some like to chase DX, some to work new or a 
new rare gris, some like to be DX or be a in new grid. What ever the motivation 
it is all about having fun with our hobby, but it is also about operational 
excellence.  Sebastian mentioned the many new users who get on the birds and 
don't operate correctly. It is up to all of us to be their elmers online and 
offline and make the new operators > good operators and good operators> better 
operators if our hobby is to survive.

Thank you both for your kind and spirited opinions. Tim, I wish I could work 
you from my house in Spain from EA6 in JM09tb when I am there in October. Seems 
AO7 is just out of reach from the predictions I ran. Sebastian, I agree if 
there is a person who could work Japan on AO-51 it would be Tim, which I know 
is physically impossible. I appreciate all Tim has done and is doing for the 
hobby and the AMSAT community! 

Let's keep having fun and keep our arms open to new operators!

73, 

;) Adrian
AA5UK
ZF2AE & ZF2AE/ZF8





________________________________
From: Sebastian <[email protected]>. 
To: Adrian Engele <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, June 14, 2009 6:38:34 PM
Subject: Re: [amsat-bb] Re: equal time

Adrian, first I would like to thank you for taking the time to operate from a 
DX location, in order to give others a chance to work you!

Next, I think because of the things you have said, and the recent issue with 
the K5D operation, we have learned that attempting to put up a rare country on 
an FM satellite just doesn't work out.  There are simply too many stations on 
AO-51.  Why - because it's easy to do.  SO-50 because of the timer and PL 
tones, is more difficult.  A lot of hams don't realize that FO-29 is back in 
service, let alone AO-27; and AO-27 is only on for about half the pass on the 
USA.  AO-16 has been off the air for months, and hopefully we will get it back 
sometime.  The SSB birds are more difficult since it requires additional 
equipment, as opposed to an HT or two and a small handheld antenna (with the 
exception of Tim who could probably work Japan on AO-51 even though it's not in 
his footprint!)  Tim knows I'm joking.

AO-51 is over used.  And yes there are a lot of people who may not necessarily 
run high power on there, but have large antennas of which I am one of.  I won't 
apologize for having outdoor directional high gain antennas controlled by an 
LVB tracker.  My antennas are from the days of AO-10 & AO-13, and I don't have 
the ability to change to RH, LH circular polarization; I use axial 
polarization.  Yes there are some who are using handheld antennas with roughly 
the same amount of power that I am; but who's going to be heard (even with my 
115 feet of LMR400)?  Then there are those who believe it's a trivial task to 
setup a full duplex HT with a hand held antenna and be heard.  It's not easy.  
I've tried it, and have concluded that it takes a lot of time to learn the 
'tricks of the trade'.  At least once a week, I hear a newcomer on one of the 
birds calling CQ.  And people come back to them, but that newcomer can't hear 
them, because they aren't aware of
 doppler, etc.

Then there are some who use 'high' power, I would say 50+ watts, but perhaps 
they need that power because they are using vertical antennas or eggbeaters, 
with 150 feet of RG-58 Radio Shack coax.  And there are some who either use 
high power, or have defective rigs (or both), and make it difficult for others 
to hear due to their spurious emissions because they want to have more contacts 
than anyone else.

So what's the answer.  Those who aren't active on the birds because they are 
fed up will say we need a HEO.

Those that are active on the birds don't have to say anything.  They already 
know the problem.

I would like for someone to explain to me why they disagree that what we really 
need are more LEOs.

73 de W4AS
Sebastian

On Jun 14, 2009, at 6:03 PM, Adrian Engele wrote:

> As many of you know I operated as ZF2AE from EK99 back in late March and 
> early April during my vacation from Grand Cayman and Little Cayman. I 
> received numerous direct requests to have a sked as EK99 was needed for their 
> VUCC awards. I made a big effort to meet all these requests received prior or 
> during that trip and in most instances I was successful. As a portable, I 
> worked AO-51 and SO-50 with just an Arrow Antenna with an ARR preamp and 5W 
> with my VX7R. I also worked other stations on AO-7, FO-29 and VU52 using the 
> same setup but with my FT857D with 10 Watts instead. Let me tell you setting 
> up as a portable station to work the linear  birds is time consuming and 
> required a big effort everytime. I was on vacation and Hamradio was a 
> secondary activity.
> 
> After my return, I went  through my recordings it was clear that there were 
> many missed opportunities to work certain stations for their requested skeds 
> . Why was this? In most cases, it came down to stations both domestic and 
> international that are NOT LISTENING or not leaving enough space between 
> calls. Also it was clear these same stations were calling the same stations 
> day in and day out. What is the sport in this, working the same stations and 
> the same grids over and over again; especially when a DXpedition is ongoing 
> and others need to work that grid. I had numerous passes where I could not 
> get once into an FM satellite during a planned sked. In some cases, I only 
> managed one or two contacts. It was frustrating to say the least. Out of the 
> 45+ passes I completed during my trip there was only one satellite pass that 
> was disciplined, operators listened, called in order and over 15 contacts 
> were worked in sequence with zero interference and many
 happy
> operators.
> 
> I encourage operators with deluxe satellite stations running power with full 
> computer and rotation tracking to let more modest stations have their fair 
> share of opportunities to get into the satellites. You may disagree with this 
> concept, but I would like to remind the readers the FCC mandates that minimum 
> power should be used to make at all times in to establish a contact.
> 
> During my trip and upon my return, I received countless emails and QSL cards 
> thanking me for activating a new country and a new grid. In the end, that was 
> the biggest satisfaction of the whole DXpedition giving out a new one!
> 
> 73,
> 
> Adrian
> AA5UK
> ZF2AE & ZF2AE/ZF8



      
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