My wife and I took a few days off for a
short vacation to Galveston Island this week ( June 8). It was
mostly a relaxing, family time, but one short period was set aside
for a little radio play I wanted to try out the performance of a
small QRP radio I had just obtained from a friend and I also wanted
to enjoy the beach. The two seemed perfectly compatible as long as
the radio did not dig too deeply into the swimming time in the waves!
Any trip includes some planning, but even the most careful of plans can result in something being left out. The plan for this trip was to try out the little AEA Engineering single band transceiver, not only as a QRP transmitter, but mainly to see how its receiver would work. The radio had been built from a kit by someone else and had ended up in an estate sale. The circuit was originally described in the December 1990 edition of QST magazine by K9AY.
Considering the little radio was just a single band affair, the antenna needed was also simpler. I took the vertical element from my recently taken down 20-meter ground plane. It had been built from salvaged parts from an old Hustler 4BTV vertical. It consists of three sections of inch and a half diameter aluminum tubing stacked together using pieces from the insides of disassembled traps from the original antenna. I used the original base of the 4BTV with its u-bolt clamps to mount it on a four foot long piece of water pipe that I intended to drive into sand at the beach.
Just as an aside, visits to ham fests will often turn up old trap verticals that are often real bargains. I always pick up these when they turn up because even if the traps are old and even ruined, the hardware, including the base and the tubing itself is OK for various antenna projects. Any u-bolts or clamps that might be missing can be picked up at a local hardware store at very reasonable prices. All of my antennas for either hamming or SWL and BCB DX-ing that are more than just wire affairs have all been built from salvaged materials.
Other items taken in the “ kit bag” along with the aluminum tubing for the antenna included pliers, diagonal cutters, a roll of insulated wire, a few short ( 20 feet) pieces of scrap antenna wire and a roll of electrical tape. There was also a 30 foot roll of used RG8X coaxial cable, three short pieces of RG8X with PL 259 connectors on just one end ( the connections to the antenna base used are made with “pigtail leads”-it does not have an SO-239 connector) and a roll of electrical tape. I also took a roll of salvaged plastic rope and three tent pegs in case guying was needed. ( you will notice that there are always a lot of “ salvaged” or used items in my projects...the hobby is by necessity a low budget operation!!! DX-ing need not be an expensive proposition!)
Power for the radio was to be provided by a motorcycle battery. The radio itself had been measured as putting out about 4 watts and on receive, drew very low current. Since the stay at the beach would be relatively short a bigger battery was not deemed necessary. A small, very light weight battery charger was taken to charge the batter in the hotel room at night.
Weight in these kinds of trips is always a consideration as one never knows how far the stuff will need to be carried. In this case, the radio gear was to be carried to the operating position along with the other beach items including cooler with drinks, towels, beach chairs and other items. Since you cannot always be assured of being able to drive up the water's edge, the distance needed for carrying is always unpredictable and usually results in more than one trip being made.
In our case, we were on Galveston Island off the Texas coast. It had already been determined that we would be going to the beach on the east end of the island, an area known as Apfel Beach. This area was relatively far from the built up, business portion of the island, miles east of the Pleasure Pier and other amusement areas. Crowding is not often a problem. We chose to set up in a paid-entry part of the beach rather than the free, public area to avoid noise from loud music being played by some beach goers ( a sore subject for my wife and I...it is difficult to understand why some people have so little consideration for others)
Use of the paid portion of the beach is only $8 per day per car and is very reasonable and there are some restrictions on what can be done there. I was hoping playing quietly with the radios would not be among them. For that reason, we chose to go to the very far end of the beach area well beyond the last of those set up and just before an area restricted for swimming because of rip tides. It was still safe where we were, but just a hundred feet or so down the beach, the flags were up prohibiting swimming.
The disadvantage of the location was that it required a long walk from parking to the water's edge. That meant two round trips in loose sand totaling about a half mile to get everything to our chosen location. Temperatures were in the 90's and there was no shade. We did not have a beach umbrella and this portion of the beach requires any tents or tarp shading to be set up back by the parking line for vehicles.
Driving the water pipe base into the sand turned out to be a tougher job than anticipated. I had not brought a large sledge hammer, but just a smaller hand hammer due to weight considerations. It took considerable pounding and some twisting of the pipe to get it deep enough into the sand to support the vertical element. At this point, it is probably a good idea to advise taking a flat, wooden board along to place on top of the pipe when driving it in the ground, or the end of the pipe will be flared out by the pounding and you might find it difficult to get the u-bolts of the base or the base of the antenna itself to slide down over it.
The vertical element was assembled and tilted up for sliding of the u-bolts of the base down over the pipe and the nuts on the u-bolts tightened. Another suggestion from a lesson learned: It would have been good for me to have taken a small wrench to tighten the u-blots because the pliers I used did not allow for ease of operation under the bracket on the antenna base. It worked out, but took awhile because the nuts could only be turned about a quarter turn at a time because the ends of the pliers were so large. A 7/16's inch box-end wrench would have worked much better. ( planning, planning!)
Things did work out quite well. The antenna base mounting mast was actually in the salt water, negating the need to roll out numerous ground radials. I have learned over the years that salt water at the base of a vertical trumps radials every time!!
At this point the activity had finally attracted the attention of the lifeguard. It would soon be known if the entire operation would be quashed. He came over and just watched a minute as I rolled the coaxial cable from the antenna over to our beach chair area. I told him it was for a radio. He asked if the signals were that weak for music and reminded us that loud noise was not allowed. I then told him it was for listening to short wave radio signals and that there would not be loud noise and that we hoped to hear signals from around the world. I am not sure he really understood, but in a minute he just walked back to his guard tower, looking over his shoulder a few times, probably wondering at the weird things that showed up on his beach!
The moment of truth was soon at hand. The battery was connected, PL-259 screwed into the back of the small radio and it was set up on top of our ice chest as an operating table. It was then that I realized I had left my small headphones back in the hotel room. It was not a fatal error, in that the little radio does have a small built in speaker. There was not a lot of audio, so there was no danger of disturbing nearby swimmers, but it also required having my ear very close to hear the signals over the surf. But not to worry! If that was the worse Murphy's Law had to deliver that afternoon, things would be OK!
We had arrived at the beach about 11 AM Texas time ( 1600 GMT) and had gotten set up in less than an hour! Not too bad!
A quick tune across the 20 meter band showed plenty of signals, may of them quite strong. In the time between 1700-2000 GMT ( with breaks for swims! Priorities, priorities!) the little rig did OK. Several stations made it into the ham log and many more in the SWL log. The small portable key used for cw transmissions was a microswitch mounted on a small board with a knob attached, making it quite small and weighing literally only ounces. The battery outweighed all the gear except the antenna!
In the ham log we entered five stations from Florida...all quite strong over an almost all water path. There were also stations from Tennessee, New York and California. It was not the prime time for DX but still one station each from Italy, Russia ( an R7!), France and the Canary Islands were logged. The EA8 station was particularly loud and was heard working many stations for quite awhile. Numerous other European stations were also heard.
No broadcast stations were logged this trip, as the idea had been to make a quick check of the little QRP rig and the trip was not primarily a DX pedition, but a family outing. A general coverage receiver was not taken on this trip.
The advantages of a beach operation were confirmed once again. The salt water ground is like a S-meter multiplier on receive and almost as good as a linear amplifier on transmit.
Operating portable also has other advantages. Being away from buildings, homes, traffic and power lines meant that the seemingly ever increasing noise floor from electrical power, cable tv leaks and digital noises from computers was totally absent. It was a pleasant break. I would suggest when making such trips even leaving the laptops at home unless you are sure that there is no RF hash associated with their operation. Being out in the open is a real treat in that sense. Logging on paper is a small price to pay for the quiet, and entering the log entries into the computer later is like re-living the experience.
The disadvantages are the need to provide power, the weight of batteries and the possibility that there may have to be some lugging of the equipment by human power. Planning must be careful to make sure you have all you need without making the project one that would require a half dozen hired safari bearers to get it out there. A careful checklist should be made to make sure you don't get to your destination only to find operation is impossible because of a connector, jumper, plug, ( or headphones!) left behind. Antennas might have to be simple but remember the low noise brings signals that would normally be lost in the grass will stand head and shoulders above what little noise might be in your receiver. Signals that might not even budge an S-meter are easily copied.
There are other concerns, particularly with beach operation. You might not want to take your expensive receiver out where salt air, moisture and sand might damage it. That has to be weighed as well.
But all in all, such an operation can be truly rewarding. While this trip was limited by family considerations and a desire not to get totally fried by the sun with no shade available, it was worth the effort and reinforced my desire to make a dedicated radio trip.
Just don't forget the sun screen! ( Alovera helps relieve the pain of the burn!!)
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