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Ben Sutton



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January 31, 2006

Relocation, relocation, relocation

Filed under: HAM Radio, Hobbies, Life — Ben @ 5:11 pm

Due to a real life move (Its looking like I will get the keys next week!), I will be shutting down my locally run webserver and moving hosted sites over to a dedicated host. Please excuse any downtime that may occur over the next few days (Most likely when I change the DNS).

January 27, 2006

http://www.planetham.com

Filed under: HAM Radio, Hobbies — Ben @ 4:35 pm

Planet Ham is a website designed to aggregate blogs produced by Amateur Radio enthusiasts. The aim is to provide a central directory of Amateur Radio blogs so that interested browsers can visit subscribers sites and read about the various aspects of the hobby in detail. I believe that the Internet is a great way to share ideas and I hope that this website can help promote this.

The backend of the website is based on PlanetPlanet, which fetches syndication feeds such as RSS and Atom from subscribed blogs. You can author your own blog using a service such as Blogger. Please feel free to contact me for more information.

If you would like your blog to appear on Planet Ham please email me.

January 17, 2006

Pinpointing Amateurs Locations With Google Earth

Filed under: HAM Radio, Hobbies — Ben @ 9:12 pm

Staying on the Google Earth theme, HB9TLK has created a site pinpointing hams that have submitted their long/lat. This is then exported to their Google Earth KMZ file for download. Useful if widely adopted – it would be neat to be talking to someone halfway round the world while exploring their local landmarks.

Check it out: http://www.qslnet.de/member/hb9tlk/hamweb.html

January 14, 2006

EchoLink Nodes Displayed in Google Earth

Filed under: HAM Radio, Hobbies, Voice over IP — Ben @ 11:18 am

This is pretty neat! EchoLink, the voice over IP software for Amateur Radio, now provides a Google Earth KMZ file showing the locations of all the currently connected nodes. As well as that, if you click on a link it shows the frequency. So, if your travelling somewhere you can visually see the links along your route and note them down. Very useful! The file can be found here:

http://www.echolink.org/node_location.kmz

South East UK Google Earth EchoLink Map

January 10, 2006

Automatic Position Reporting System (APRS)

Filed under: HAM Radio, Hobbies — Ben @ 10:27 pm

One of the first modes I tried upon receiving my amateur license was APRS. APRS uses radio to transmit position reports, weather reports and messages between users. To get started I made up a cable for my Kenwood TH-D7 and installed the UI-View software. The Kenwood radio provided a means to receive and transmit APRS data packets via its TNC. Typically the data is transmitted on a 2 metre frequency. In the United Kingdom the APRS frequency is 144.800MHz. Once I had tuned the radio and started UI-View I was able receive position beacons and weather reports from stations across the country. Many APRS maps can be found on the Internet. See the links at the bottom of this article.

APRS basically works like TCP. In my mobile setup the radio is connected to a GPS which provides positioning data. The radio forms this into a packet, assigns it a hop count and transmits on the set frequency. The packet can be received directly or via a local repeater. If a repeater receives the signal, it will decrement the hop count and retransmit. Most APRS repeaters are set to send packets for a maximum of seven hops in the UK. In well networked areas the packet will travel several hundred miles or more. If an area is not so well connected, a repeater can be connected to the Internet. This is how I display my position reports on the Google map to the right.

As well as being fun, APRS also has some serious applications. It can be quickly deployed in an emergency or for public events, such as those supported by RAYNET. The local RAYNET group has made up a compact box containing a TH-D7, a GPS and a battery. This can quicky be positioned on the back of a motorbike or on the seat of a car.

The links below will be useful for anyone wanting to learn a bit more about this mode:
APRS Origin
MB7USK – Good information and exellent UK APRS maps provided by G3OJZ
FindU – Web gateway, find position/weather reports of people using APRS
UI-View – Most useful APRS software for Windows
Xastir – Most useful APRS software for Linux
TinyTrak – Tiny GPS encoder – cost effective way to join in!
TinyTrak Summary – Good summary of the TinyTrak