The Foothills Amateur Radio Society participated in the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) 2018 Field Day event on Saturday June 23rd and Sunday June 24th.
This event was open to the public and visitors were welcomed from 11 AM until 9 PM on Saturday, June 23rd. Also on Sunday June 24th from 7 AM until 11 AM. Field Day was an opportunity to see Amateur Radio in action and even participate. Learn about ham radio by participating.
You did not need an amateur radio license, you could register and sign up to operate our Get On The Air station, where our GOTA coach guided you to make your own contacts on air. This was a great way to experience amateur radio without having a license.
You can visit the ARRL's Field Day site.
Here's an Article on the FARS 2007 Field Day from “100 Watts Magazine” a Thai HAM radio magazine. Thanks Nimit, K6XOX.
John L. Gaffey, WS1EA has written a helpful primer for organizing your own Field Day event.
FARS plans operatee in the 3A category, with three HF radio stations on emergency power at a temporary location. We had a total of five operating radio stations:
KA6MZE |
Phil, KA6MZE was our Radio Officer and Captain for Field Day. He was in charge of the overall activity. |
AA6PZ |
Paul, AA6PZ was the captain for the SSB HF station. This station operated SSB Voice on 20/15/10 meters during the day and 40/20 meters at night. |
K6TJ |
Pete, K6TJ was the captain for the HF CW and digital station. This station operated HF CW and digital modes (PSK31/RTTY/etc) on 20/15/10 meters during the day and 40/20 meters at night. |
KJ6LXV |
Rohan, KJ6LXV was the captain for our VHF station. This station operated VHF/UHF voice on 6 meters, 2 meters, and 70cm. |
KA6MZE |
Phil, KA6MZE was the captain for our Low band HF station. This station operated 160/80 Voice and CW mostly at night. We put up a 5/8 wave 160M antenna lifted by a weather balloon. The antenna was raised around sunset, when the winds died down. |
W6VYC |
Dave, W6VYC was the captain of our GOTA (Get On The Air) station. This station operated 20/15/10 meter bands under the watchful eye of our GOTA station captains. The GOTA station was available for anyone who did not have an amateur radio license (or had been an inactive amateur radio operator) to get on the air. Our GOTA station coaches guided our guests as they operated a radio station and make contacts across North America. |
We welcomed visitors from the general public to visit our Amateur Radio Field Day between 11 AM until 9 PM on Saturday, June 23rd. Also on Sunday June 24th from 7 AM until 11 AM.
You did not need a radio license to operate our Get On The Air (GOTA) station. This was a great opportunity to experience amateur radio by doing it. Our control operators guided guests to make their own radio contacts. Those who had held an amateur radio license for less than a year were also eligible to operate the GOTA station.
We used WriteLog logging software on all stations. The logging systems were networked together using a wireless LAN based on DD-WRT running on a set of WRT54G WiFi routers.