TRENTON, NJ – April 26, 2010 The May 12th meeting of the Delaware Valley Radio Association will feature a talk on the history of the Lawrenceville AT&T shortwave radio station that was located at what is now part of Mercer County Park Northwest. Developed to facilitate international radio communication, the facility was known to local residents as the “pole farm” due to the numerous wooden antenna supports that appeared to be growing from the ground. Dennis Waters of the Lawrence Historical Society will be making the presentation.
The public is invited to attend. The DVRA meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7:30 PM at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church, 137 West Upper Ferry Road, West Trenton, NJ. The church is located one-quarter mile west of the intersection of routes 634 and 579, and is just south of Mercer County Airport.
With over fifty active members and a fully equipped radio station, the Delaware Valley Radio Association is one of the nation’s oldest radio clubs, having been founded in 1930. Persons interested in learning more about wireless, electronic technology, or Amateur Radio are encouraged to visit the club’s website at www.w2zq.com or attend any regular meeting of the club.
For more information, contact Gary Wilson at 609-890-3370.
The 35th annual Trenton Computer Festival, to be held April 24 -25, will also be the venue for the ARRL New Jersey State Convention!
The 2010 ARRL New Jersey State Convention, sponsored by the Delaware Valley Radio Association (www.w2zq.com), will be held on Sunday, April 25th, at the same venue as the Trenton Computer Festival and admission to one event gets you access to both.
As part of the NJ ARRL Convention, multiple “tracks” of ham radio presentations are scheduled including:
And, of course, there will be many other technical sessions on computers and electronics. See www.tcf-nj.org for them all and the Saturday evening banquet.
There will be a large indoor and outdoor (rain or shine) flea market / vendor area for you to pick up goodies for your shack and your computer. The flea market will host both commercial and non-commercial sellers so if you’d like to convert some of the technical “treasures” in your attic or basement into cash for new rigs (or dinner out) bring them down and pass it on.
In addition we’re offering VE sessions for initial licenses or license upgrades. A ham radio “boot camp” is planned for Saturday for those who are not yet licensed. If you apply yourself, it’s possible to get a Technician class ham license in one day! You can bring along a friend who’s expressed some interest in ham radio and there’s a good chance he or she will be going home a new ham!
The site for the TCF / ARRL NJ State Convention is The College of New Jersey, 2000 Pennington Road, Ewing, NJ. The event runs 10 AM – 4PM both days. Talk-in 146.67 PL131.8. Admission for Sunday only is $10. Two day tickets are $15 at the gate or $12 advance purchase. Indoor Vendor area tables are $150; buy 5 tables and 6th is free. Commercial vendor Flea Market Spots are $70 for 9’x16’ or $100 for tent-sized 14’x16’. Non-commercial Flea Market spots are $35 for both days.
For additional vendor information, email email hidden; JavaScript is required. For Advanced Ticket Sales, go to www.tcf-nj.org. For additional info, email email hidden; JavaScript is required or contact Mark Bespalko, N2KIV at 215-359-7025.
Thanks & 73
Speakers Solicited for the New Jersey ARRL State Convention
Sunday April 25, 2010
For many years, dating back to before World War II, the Delaware Valley Radio Association sponsored a very large hamfest in Trenton that also served as the New Jersey State ARRL Convention. We are happy to announce that we have now joined forces with the popular Trenton Computer Festival to again offer such an event to the hams of New Jersey on Sunday April 25th, 2010 at The College of New Jersey in Ewing, NJ.
The ARRL has designated the Sunday of that event as the ARRL New Jersey State Convention. As a result, a reduced $10 single day Sunday admission will be offered. Of course, persons purchasing the TCF $15 ($12 if purchased in advance at http://www.tcf-nj.org/) entire weekend admissions ticket will be permitted to join in the Amateur Radio related activities on Sunday as well. This should prove a boon to promoting Amateur Radio to tech savvy non-hams as well.
As we all know, hamfests that serve as simple electronic flea markets have suffered ups and downs recently. This non-profit festival runs a whole weekend and has numerous presentations and speakers, commercial electronics vendors, large attendance, and an electronics flea market. Details of past events are at http://www.tcf-nj.org/
We’re now soliciting speakers on radio related topics for the ARRL State Convention on Sunday. We envision having at least three classrooms dedicated solely to Amateur Radio topics, such as contesting, DXing, homebrewing, EmComm, Youth Activities, etc. A VE session is planned as well. Speakers are customarily offered free admission. If you’re interested in making a presentation, please register at http://www.tcf-nj.org/
Finally, a half-price $35 non-commercial, single tailgate selling space will be available to hams. Commercial dealer spaces are $70 for 9′x16′ and $100 for 14′x16′. Each tailgate or dealer space is good for two days and includes one admission ticket. Inquiries on commercial vendor, tailgate and flea market spaces should be sent to email hidden; JavaScript is required
Thanks & 73
Gary Wilson, K2GW
Radio Speaker Coordinator
2010 NJ State ARRL Convention
email hidden; JavaScript is required
“Radio Hams” from Mercer County join in National Deployment
Public Demo of Emergency Communications June 27 – 28
The DVRA’s “hams” will join with thousands of Amateur Radio operators who will be showing off their emergency capabilities June 27-28. Over the past year, the news has been full of reports of ham radio operators providing critical communications during unexpected emergencies in towns across America including the California wildfires, winter storms, tornadoes and other events world-wide. During Hurricane Katrina, Amateur Radio – often called “Ham radio” – was often the ONLY way people could communicate, and hundreds of volunteer “hams” traveled south to save lives and property. When trouble is brewing, Amateur Radio’s people are often the first to provide rescuers with critical information and communications. On the weekend of June 27 – 28, the public will have a chance to meet and talk with Mercer County’s ham radio operators and see for themselves what the Amateur Radio Service is about. Showing the newest digital and satellite capabilities, voice communications and even historical Morse code, hams from across the USA will be holding public demonstrations of emergency communications abilities.
This annual exercise, called “Field Day” is the climax of the week long “Amateur Radio Week” sponsored by the ARRL, the national association for Amateur Radio. Using only emergency power supplies, ham operators will construct emergency stations in parks, shopping malls, schools and back yards around the country. Their slogan, “Ham radio works when other systems don’t! ” is more than just words to the hams as they prove they can send messages in many forms without the use of phone systems, internet or any other infrastructure that can be compromised in a crisis. More than 30,000 amateur radio operators across the country participated in last year’s event.
“We hope that people will come and see for themselves, this is not your grandfather’s radio anymore,” said Mark Bespalko of the DVRA. “The communications that ham radio people can quickly create have saved many lives when other systems failed or were overloaded. And besides that – it’s fun!”
In the Mercer County area, the Delaware Valley Radio Association will be demonstrating Amateur Radio at Soccer Fields 3-9 In Mercer County Central Park on June 27-28. They invite the public to come and see ham radio’s new capabilities and learn how to get their own FCC radio license before the next disaster strikes.
By going to http://www.arrl.org/contests/announcements/fd/locator.php and entering the callsign W2ZQ, a map showing the location of the station can be found.
There are over 650,000 Amateur Radio licensees in the US, and more than 2.5 million around the world. Through the ARRL’s Amateur Radio Emergency Services program, ham volunteers provide emergency communications for thousands of state and local emergency response agencies, all for free.
To learn more about Amateur Radio, go to www.emergency-radio.org. The public is most cordially invited to come, meet and talk with the hams. See what modern Amateur Radio can do. They can even help you get on the air!
A few updates to brag about:
The logo still needs to be fixed, mostly because I need to find a hi-res version of it to scale down (the one that I have doesn’t look decent due to the backgorund in the image).
W2R Special Event
Mar 14-Mar 15, 2009 1400Z-2300Z, Robbinsville, NJ. Robbinsville Twp, NJ, W2R. Robbinsville, NJ 150 Year Anniversary. 14.270 7.200. QSL. Michael Moreken, 55 Sharon Rd, Apt. E-22, Robbinsville, NJ 08691. www.qrz.com/ab2io
We are celebrating the 150 year of Robbinsville. http://www.robbinsville-twp.org/
The town is located about 10 miles East of Trenton, NJ the capital of the state.
We may be on more bands and modes.
++++++++++
Still working out details on location and possible ops.
73,
Mike, AB2IO
The October 8 meeting of the Delaware Valley Radio Association will feature a talk by Doug Dixon on electronic devices to please the techno geek in everyone. Doug is a regular contributor to the Route One Newspaper, an established author in the field of technology, a former Sarnoff and Intel technology lead, and a regular attendee of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. Please check out his site at Manifest Technology.
The public is invited to attend. The DVRA meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7:30 PM at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church, 137 West Upper Ferry Road, West Trenton, NJ. The church is located one-quarter mile west of the intersection of routes 634 and 579, and is just south of Mercer County Airport.
With over a hundred active members and a fully equipped radio station, the Delaware Valley Radio Association is one of the nation’s oldest radio clubs, having been founded in 1931. Persons interested in learning more about wireless electronics or Amateur Radio are encouraged to visit the club’s website at www.w2zq.com or attend any regular meeting of the club.
For more information, contact Tomas M Bagdas at 609-585-2001.
Since September is Back to School month, the DVRA meeting on Wednesday September 10th will feature an assignment for all club members to be prepared to speak for 5 or 10 minutes on “What I Did on my Summer Vacation”. While Ham radio topics are best, things such as travels and DXepeditions are also appropriate. So, the guest speaker is you!
The Delaware Valley Radio Association meets on the 2nd Wednesday of each month at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church 137 West Upper Ferry Road in West Trenton, NJ. Meetings begin at 7:30pm and are open to the public. Refreshments are served following the meeting.
73
Gary Wilson, K2GW
DVRA Program Director
Just to clarify timing, the regular August monthly meeting of the DVRA is held during the club’s Annual Picnic for members and their families. The picnic begins at 6:30 PM (note this is one hour earlier than the actual meeting itself) on Wednesday, Aug 13th. The club provides the hotdogs and hamburgers to grill, but everyone attending should bring a side dish, desert, drinks or picnic supplies (plates, charcoal, etc.) to share. Please e-mail the Club President at email hidden; JavaScript is required with what you are planning to bring so he can coordinate things.
This year the picnic will be held at the pavilion at Ewing Township’s Watson Park, (formerly called Rambling Creek Park) located just off Scotch Road just east of the airport. A covered pavilion, grills and picnic tables are there but you might want to bring a lawn chair if that makes you more comfortable. Although the weather forecast looks good, we can hold the picnic even if it rains due to the large pavilion. This site is easy to reach from I-95.
DIRECTIONS:
Here’s a link to the park location on Google maps.
Talk-in will be available on the 146.67 (PL 131.8) and 442.65 repeaters. See you there!
Thanks
Gary Wilson, K2GW
Program Director
DVRA’s August “Second Saturday” event will be an Open House and Work Party at the Red Cross Amateur Radio Station N2ARC. We’ll be showing off the base station and new satellite communications trailer there, as well as relocating the antenna feed lines within the building to the new radio room that has been created for the station. The activity will run from 9AM until Noon on Saturday August 9.
The Central New Jersey Chapter of the American Red Cross is located at 707 Alexander Road in Princeton Junction just south of US Route One. Gerry Jurrens, N2ARC is leading the event, and can be reached at email hidden; JavaScript is required if there are any questions.
All are welcome to attend. I hope to see you there.
73
Gary Wilson, K2GW
DVRA Program Director