Posts Tagged ‘kitbuilding’
Will the mighty Phoenix arise?
OK, by the time you read this, I guess this topic will be old news. The blogosphere and the Twitterverse have been abuzz with the news that “Heathkit is back!”
Channeling my inner Captain Picard, no one would like that “to be so”, more than I. I loved Heathkit and cut my Novice teeth on building their kits. In addition to a ton of Amateur Radio gear, I also constructed various clocks, scanners and other pieces. My stereo system was just about entirely high-end Heathkit. The only parts that weren’t were the speakers and the turntable. And yes, knowing what the age of the average Ham is, I don’t want to see “What’s a turntable?” comments in the comments box! By the time Heathkit was coming to an end, I had qualified for, and was a member of their Master Builder’s Club. All told, I probably built about 25 or 30 pieces of Heathkit equipment for myself and for others.
But let’s not get all excited, running around at 100 MPH with our hair on fire. There’s a lot more to resurrecting the company other than an announcement on a Website and a new survey. This rumor has come up before, with a lot of anticipation and drooling, only to have our hopes dashed on the rocky shores of wishful thinking.
However, I was always of the opinion that if Heathkit could have just held on until the age of the Internet – well ………..wow! Heathkit e-mail reflectors, Heathkit user groups, Heathkit forums. I know that these Internet groups exist in various iterations today; but not for an active Heathkit. It would have been tremendous! (Elecraft squared?) If Heathkit does indeed make like a Phoenix and truly rises from the ashes this time, it will be in large part due to the Internet.
On the other hand, if Heathkit hadn’t demised ……. Whither Elecraft, Sierra, Hendrick’s QRP Kits, Steve Weber, Small Wonder Labs and the myriad other fine kit companies and club kits that are or were out there? Would the “Maker Movement” be doing as well today? Was Heathkit’s demise part of the catalyst for the birth of these companies and the Maker Movement? I am guessing, that in the end, it will prove to be a symbiotic relationship. The aforementioned companies might not have come to see the light of day had Heathkit not gone out of business. On the other hand, Heathkit may owe its reincarnation due to exactly the success of those companies, whose efforts have revitalized the kit business. The “Circle of Life”, as it were.
Whatever happens, if Heathkit does come back as a force, don’t expect that “what was” will necessarily “be”. Heathkit has a lot of credibility and good will in its name, but that only goes so far. Hams are a peculiar breed with outrageous expectations, at times. However Heathkit comes back (if it does at all), it will find the marketplace to be a totally different landscape from when they first left us. They will have to compete and will have to have a good business model. Relying solely on their name alone is not an option.
The good news, is that from the questions on the survey (which I completed yesterday), I think they realize that, to some degree.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Oh man!
And sometimes “the next time” is the next day! That was the case for me and A45XR in Oman. Where I was unsuccessful last night, I scored tonight. Chris in Oman was VERY loud into New Jersey at the very end of 20 Meters – 14.005 MHz. He was 599+ loud. The kind of loud that you know in your gut that if you stick with him (and he doesn’t QRT), you’ll get him in the log. As I was listening to him pick off the stations, I heard him come back to Chris KQ2RP (author of Signal to Noise – KQ2RP), who lives all of 28 miles from me as the crow flies. When I heard Chris A45XR work Chris KQ2RP (hey, that was a 2X Chris QSO!), I really started to feel confident. And I was in the log about 5 -7 minutes later. First time to work Oman and via QRP. Life is good!
BTW, here’s a picture of the insulator I fashioned last night from the pen barrel. Sorry about the photo quality – I tried adjusting the exposure and contrast; but you’ll get the idea.
I received an e-mail from Joel N3GSE over the weekend, informing me that it’s not legal to own a slingshot in New Jersey. Who knew? I had so many as a kid! I could argue (if ever questioned about it) that since it’s attached to an “L” bracket and the projectile is attached via fishing line that it’s technically an “antenna line launcher” and not a sling shot, per se. I’ll have to ask my police officer brother-in-law about it. Another stupid New Jersey law, if you ask me.
But as I was reading the statute (and I re-read it about 3 times to be certain), I saw that there was no mention whatsoever about pneumatic antenna launchers. So I sent away for the following kit from the Joplin Amateur Radio Club:
Bunch o’ stuff
There’s a bunch of stuff I wanted to cover today.
The first is totally unrelated to Ham Radio; but I found it fascinating. Today, the Congressional Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously to Fr. Emil Kapaun, a Catholic priest and Army Chaplain who courageously served our country in WWII and the Korean Conflict. He died a POW at the hands of the Chinese in North Korea. The story of how he conducted himself as a POW and as a leader of men is, to use an overused word, awesome (in the truest sense of the word). After finishing reading the eight part story, all I could think of was “Wow!”. Follow this link for the story about the humble, brave and holy man : http://www.kansas.com/kapaun/
Secondly – this comes from the “I ordered me one” department. The Four State QRP Group introduced a new kit today. I immediately ordered one. It’s called the “Force Link” but is spelled 4S-Link. It is an interface between your radio and computer for the digital modes. All you need in one totally complete kit for $40. You can’t beat that with a stick!
The good and the not so good.
Last night, while hunting in the 80 Meter woods in the QRP-L Fox hunt, I continued to work on my PigRig. I came to the part where I am winding T1, and I guess I had a case of brain flatulence, because I just couldn’t figure out from the instructions, how the center tap was supposed to be done.
Before going to bed (late), I came up here and fired off an e-mail to the Flying Pigs e-mail reflector looking for some enlightenment. When I checked my e-mail this morning, there was an e-mail from the Head Honcho himself, Diz W8DIZ. He explained to me (very patiently) what should have been as obvious as the hand in front of my face.
Thanks, Diz for excellent customer service! And also thanks for being super courteous and patient with someone who seems to have had a “Senior Moment”.
On the other hand, last night I was fortunate to work an SU9 station from Egypt on 40 Meters. I was doing the “happy dance” as this was my first QSO with Egypt – ever. So I dutifully went to QRZ to look up QSL information, only to find that LOTW is not accepted (as it’s too cumbersome and difficult to figure out), that paper QSLs are not really wanted, but if you go to PayPal and enter this particular PayPal address (along with the appropriate “donation”) that a QSL card can be had.
What ?!? I mean, really …… what?
OK, I understand that Egypt is not the most commonly found country on the air; and I’m sure that QSLing is quite the tedious chore (if not a downright pain in the butt). But isn’t that what QSL managers are for? And really, I mean even I can figure out how to use Log of the World. You know, the guy who had trouble figuring out how to wind a simple toroidal transformer? …… Yes, me – even I figured out how to use Log of the World.
I hesitate to use that hackneyed expression, but if I can figure it out – you can figure it out.
Maybe I ought to quit my job, move to a “rare and exotic” locale, get on the air, make a couple hundred QSOs a day, and start charging a few bucks per QSL card.
But then I guess I’d have to figure out how to use PayPal. (Of course, I am being facetious, I already know how to use that. Learned how just around the same time I learned how to use LOTW).
72 de Larry W2LJ
DX today, but not QRP
Turned on the K3’s afterburner to 80 Watts in order to work TX5K on Clipperton and TZ6BB in Mali.
This was the first time I have ever heard Mali on the air. My concern was to just get them in the log. He was very loud on 17 Meters. Afterwards, I did one of those “V-8 forehead slaps”, thinking that he may have been loud enough to work QRP.
I could have tried again at 5 Watts, but somehow it didn’t seem “quite cricket” to try and work them again on the same band so soon.
I heard TX5K again a bit later, and almost as loud on 12 Meters. I tried for a while to break the pileup, but my 5 Watts wasn’t up to it. I will have to try later this week. If conditions keep up like they were today, I should be able to snag them again on 17 Meters via QRP. Patience and persistence will be the key.
I also began working on my PigRig while monitoring the pileups for TX5K. I got all the parts inventoried (yes, everything was there) and got the first few resistors soldered in before I had to step out for a while. Serial #81 is slowly coming to life!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Kit building
While listening to the bands this evening, I finished my NorCal QRP Dummy Load kit that I purchased a few years ago.
100 years ago
Last night, I received an e-mail from Bob W3BBO about an item he saw in The County Hunter News. The article was written by Bob Voss N4CD, and it concerned a book written 100 years ago, entitled “Bert Wilson, Wireless Operator“. The book has been made available through Project Gutenberg.