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RMVHF+ Home Page
Updated 11/06/2009 wwh
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RMVHF+ BEACON CONSORTIUM Beacon Genesis Dave W6OAL on the formation, purpose and history of the Consortium. "The RMVHF+ Group sometime circa 2004 started tossing around an idea about a beacon for use in determining if ones radio was working and also let it serve as a propagation tool, and a somewhat distant signal source for the tuning of receivers and preamps. Here in Colorado we have a lot of mountain tops but most are on private or Forest Service land. Many of the prime locations are already taken and space on existing towers and in weatherproof facilities are costly. Ken - WØETT- one of the cadre’ of net control stations for RMVHF+ Net mentioned his family cabin, south of Jefferson, CO on a 9500’ hill not far from Terryall Creek and north of Terryall Reservoir might be a candidate. We organized a road trip to the "interior" (of Colorado) to research the facility and its possibilities for use in our endeavor. Our conclusion was that a two meter beacon in the approximate middle of the state of Colorado would not only serve the Front Range but be of service to others around Colorado. It might possibly be able to be heard out of state so that others out of state could be assured that there is really VHF life in that great state surrounded by Utah, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico called Colorado. The beacon consortium was organized of WØETT - site owner and manager, W6OAL - Engineering and procurement, WØAH - advisor. When Doug - WØAH left the area the consortium was a gang of two for sometime. Recently the spot was filled by NØPOH - advisor and photographer." Currently Ken - WØETT, supplies the location for the beacons at his family's cabin located in the South Park Area near Jefferson, CO at 9500’. He also pays the electric bill! The engineering, construction and maintenance is the product of Dave - W6OAL. The South Park beacons operate on 144.282, 222.055, 432.360, 1296.225 using the Ken's WØETT call sign. The newest beacon is on 903.075 (Hear the beacon at NØPOH's QTH DM79op) in Fort Collins under the auspices of consortium member Art - WØBA. This beacon operates under Art's WØBA call sign. These are available to anyone that needs a distant signal source for propagation study or receiver/preamp tune up. The original beacon was the 144.282 beacon that was set up around 2004. As time and resources permitted Dave designed and built the beacons for 222.055, 432.360, 1296.225. Over time Dave has refined various aspects of the beacon transmitters and ID keyer configurations. THE SOUTH PARK SITE On a recent trip up to South Park, Dave reinstalled the rebuilt 222.055 beacon, while Ken winterized the cabin and I was able to take photos of the beacons, antennas and the surrounding horizon looking in the various compass directions from the beacon site.
To view the full size photos in a separate window just click on the thumbnails. The antennas at
South Park are all Olde Antenna Labs big wheels. From the top down a pair
stacked for 1296 (Hear the beacon at NØPOH's
QTH DM79op), followed by the 432
(Hear the beacon at NØPOH's
QTH DM79op), 222
(Hear the beacon at NØPOH's
QTH DM79op)
and 2 meters (Hear the
beacon at NØPOH's
QTH DM79op). The antennas are
omni directional in nature and if you want to learn more you can read
Big Wheel
Antennas. The site affords some excellent scenery and some great
views to the front range and the western slope.
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| To Cheyenne | To Denver | To the Springs | To the West | |
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While up at the site Dave began reconfigured the
"Beacon Cart". He removed an shelve that was no longer needed and began to
Dave W6OAL picks up the history behind the current
beacon hardware and antennas with the first beacon on 144.282
"We have all heard the horror tales of folks using ham
band transceivers as beacons and having miserable luck with them falling apart
as they were not designed to operate in that sort of grueling service. However,
the Colorado 6M beacon uses an IC-551 or several of them over the years and they
too come apart after so many years but Glenn and Karen WØIJR & KAØCDN
respectively have kept the Colorado 6M beacon on the air for at least 26 years
of which I am aware. While a research effort was in progress we went on a search
for a 2M transceiver that we could press into "beacon" service. Jesse - NØSWV
answered the call with a Kenwood TS-271(?). This would serve our purpose for the
time being and then be replaced.The consortium along
with the RMVHF+ membership had questions and concerns, decisions needed to
be made as to what polarization should the antenna system employ and should
it be an omni (vertical or horizontal) or a beam and if a beam in what
direction should it point. We arrived at the conclusion that a horizontally
polarized omni would service the greater amount of people since VHF SSB is
predominately horizontal.
Antennas sometimes
spring forth from the Olde Antenna Lab of Denver on occasion, the Big Wheel;
a proven performer in horizontal omni service was chosen and just happened
to emerge from that facility. An ID'er had been ordered from Dave - WW2R,
his product a PIC device programmed with 'VVV de WØETT/B DM79ch' would
suffice for keying the beacon transmitter for the time being. A 12 volt
battery and small charger were purchased and it was time to make another
trip to the 'Interior' and put our RMVHF+ Two Meter Beacon on the air! A mast was already
adorning the cabin so with 50 feet of ½" Heliax, the Big Wheel was mounted
at about 35 feet. Coax egress into the cabin was via a hole in the wall
which had to be then well filled with "Good Stuff" to keep the critters from
dwelling in the cabins’ interior. A tea table on which the microwave oven
was in residence was commandeered. The rig, battery and charger were set in
place. The rig set to 144.282 MHz (a frequency that was deemed appropriate
via a research of beacons presently on the air in adjoining states). The
ID'er was plugged into the CW port of the rig and hooked to the battery. The
battery hooked to rig and the charger hooked to the battery, I believe the
rig ran about 30 watts. We were in business. We asked that reception reports
be sent to Ken - WØETT so that we could ascertain the usefulness of the
‘beacon’ and who it was servicing. To our liking, reports were coming in
from a multitude of folks along the Front Range. The beacon remained in
operation for about 8 months until it developed a problem, at which time
plans were being formulated for phase II of our beaconing endeavor. Beacon
Engineering made a consorted search effort to find simply transmitter boards
in the 2 meter band that were not going to cost us an arm and a leg.
Hamtronics has been around for many a year and the products from them were
dubious in the early years but as of late the FM transmitter (and receiver)
boards looked pretty nice and were in kit form. Discussions with the owner
of Hamtronics brought forth even more confidence in their products along
with quotes of affordable cost. So, a 2 meter FM transmitter kit was
ordered. The output was two watts and Hamtronics also offered a 30 watt
power class 'C' amp kit and one of those was also ordered. Since the beacon
was going to be operated on CW only, class 'C' was just fine. The
crystal for our beacon frequency, 144.282 MHz, was ordered and would take
about 6 weeks to be delivered. Looking over the board it was soon evident
that the reactance modulator was not going to be needed so those parts were
set aside. A lot of experimentation ensued in an attempt to find a place in
the circuitry that could be broken and the keyer relay or transistor switch
inserted. It is a cardinal sin to attempt to key an oscillator as the
‘chirp’ produced in doing so is so bad that no one would want their call
sign attached to such a noise. How about a multiplier stage? When
accomplished it was found that the note was also fairly bad so that was
abandoned. How about the input to the driver stage of the power amp? That
seemed like a likely spot to break - ah shucks, bleed through as the exciter
stage (oscillator and multipliers were going to have to be working full
time). Well then how about breaking the driver and power amp Vcc (12 volt)
line. This seemed to work just fine except for the fact that locally the
signal could be heard all the time and would be heard even if lead shielding
were employed. A relay was considered to do the keying but after a bit of
consulting with my good friend Tom - KØKHE who suggested, 'Anything
mechanical is prone to fail, and at the most inopportune moment.' A PNP
switch was designed and employed which worked just fine. Then the
‘afterburner’ was built and the exciter/PA being keyed by the WW2R Keyer was
left to run into a dummy load on the bench for weeks. Then the units
(exciter and power amplifier) were packaged up and ready to go. It
eventually found its way to the ‘interior’ and replaced the ailing Kenwood 2
meter transceiver, relieving it of ‘beacon service’." Dave
continues with the next beacon to hit the "interior" 432.360.
“The 2 meter beacon was being enjoyed by
many members of the RMVHF+ Group and non-members alike. We were receiving
suggestions about creating a 70 cm beacon to be used for the same purposes
as the 2M beacon. In that time frame, as we were contemplating a 70 cm
beacon system, Bill - KØRZ was pulling down his 70 cm beacon and offered us
the ‘brick’ oscillator from it, (Frequency West unit oscillator, very
stable). This was taken into consideration in the design. In order to
suppress any harmonics, a cavity filter was created. ‘Brick’ oscillators
operate on a minus voltage in the range of -18 to -24 VDC. We found Jameco
Electronics offered an entire line of DC to DC converters which we purchased
a 12 - 24 VDC model. Both the input and output of these converters floats so
there was no problem obtaining our needed -20 VDC for the heart of this
beacon (the oscillator). The ‘brick’ had an output on the order of +17 dBm
so with even a 6 dB loss through the cavity filter allowed us plenty of
drive to operate a small power amplifier. Our research efforts brought us to
Down East Microwave Inc. (DEMI) and their 25 W, 70 cm, PA. Since the ‘brick’
had previously been used in beacon service the frequency was already
established and 432.360 MHz was where the beacon, frequency-wise was to
reside. Another WW2R ‘keyer’ was purchased for this beacon which keyed the
‘initiate’ line on the DEMI PA and again letting the oscillator run
fulltime. As my old friend Art - WØBA (ex-WA6OYS) got settled into his Fort Collins digs I approached him about having the beacon at his QTH and received an affirmative. So the 33 cm beacon now resides at DN70KM and services the Front Range much more adequately that in the South Park area. The configuration of the beacon from the original has gone through several iterations and may be ripe for another. The obstacle of having a beacon at ones home QTH is that when one wants to use that band the beacon has to be turned off in most cases. Which isn’t much of a hardship but more of a frustration, in that, if one wants to monitor that band they can’t with a beacon blaring away. “Obstacles” but they can be overcome with perseverance so the 33 cm beacon lives and is very welcome to us that frequent the 33 cm band (902.1 MHz USB).At some point in time this beacon may go back out to the South Park area and sport an antenna system that is a bit more directional than the Wheel (omni) antenna. Since most to all of the 33 cm activity is along the Front Range it seems judicious to place as much signal as possible toward the area where the activity is centered. I hope all of you that have used the beacon and those that will in the future find is a useful entity.The 23 cm beacon came along as parts became available and time to do the design and construction materialized. The items we call ‘brick’ oscillators, basically unit oscillators ranging in frequency from 2 GHz to 12 GHz or so are quite prevalent in the electronic surplus market and used more often than not by hams venturing into the more rarified ether (UHF/Microwave bands) and such was the case in the development of the 23 cm RMVHF+ Beacon. The basic oscillator of the ’bricks’ run at around 100 MHz. A very rich comb of harmonics is generated in these oscillators and in our case the 12th harmonic of a 108.0188 MHz crystal was employed placing the beacon output on 1296.2256 MHz. Since as stated the basic oscillator put out a comb we thought it judicious to have our frequency of interest well filtered. A very high “Q” cavity filter with low insertion loss was created at OAL. The oscillator/cavity combination was run on the bench for a couple of weeks to age the crystal and insure stability.Down East Microwave, Inc. has been very good to us and for us in their offerings of VHF/UHF power amplifiers. The low required drive power has made them ideal for our beacon design and construction. And so was the case here with our 23 cm beacon. Their 2330PA (23 cm, 30 W output) fit our bill perfectly as out of the cavity filter we had on the order of +17 dBm (50 mW). The spec on the 2330 was 50 mW for a minimum of 30 W output power. A DEMI 2330PACK was ordered, built, tested and integrated into our 23 cm beacon system. A very nice feature of the DEMI product line of amplifiers is the availability of a key line which allows the amplifier to be keyed externally and allowing a bias point to be set if the amplifier is to be employed in SSB or CW service. Our beacons are all CW and therefore we bias them to cut off or class “C” operation where the key line simply initiated the power amp. This, for us, is an excellent feature as the oscillator runs all the time and is not “CW keyed” as chirp would result. So, the initiate line is keyed with a keyer and produces PA output only when keyed.All the parts were gathered together and secured to a platen (substrate of sorts), taken to the beacon site and placed in operation. The antenna system of the 23 cm beacon is a pair of stacked Wheel antennas. The antenna system is fed with ½” Heliax allowing very little loss between exciter/PA and antenna.The beacons are all powered by a Vicor FlatPAC AC-DC Switcher power supply giving us 12 volts at 30 amps. The FlatPAC is powered from the mains in the community and at present without an UPS. We do however, have an UPS on the Freakin’ Beacon keyer as we found in the past a power glitch would take out the keyer, attached to the FlatPAC, down and beacon operation would cease as the keyer would sometimes not reset itself. Art - WØBA to the rescue - in his stash he had several UPS called NAVPAC’s a product by NEWMAR that when site power was interrupted the NAVPAC would supply 12 V with a 4 AH capacity. The keyer requires very little power so power could be off for days and the keyer would continue to operate; however, we have not experienced power loss at the site for more than a few minutes, an hour at most.Future plans are to remove the beacons from the kitchen tea cart of the Anderson (WØETT) family cabin and install them in a hut on the same property as the cabin, run commercial power to it and employ a more substantial antenna support than the ‘push up’ pole that we now use. Contract negations are afoot with Fred - WAØSIK to do the ‘hut’ construction and the “RMVHF+ Beacon Consortium” will reestablish the beacon operation, hopefully some time in 2010. We anticipate down time of only a few days to a week to reestablish operations. And, this is not the end of the beacon story but a new beginning. We hope all of you will use the services offered by the beacons and continue to send reception reports and offer suggestions how we might improve the service." CU 73 Dave W6OAL |
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