October - 10-70 Repeater Association
Transcription
October - 10-70 Repeater Association
THE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER OF THE FRIENDLY REPEATER W2PQG WWW.10-70.ORG VOLUME XXIII October 2010 NUMBER 7 W2PQG N2SE NX2ND K1VDH As we change seasons we need to focus on change as a club. The club is made up by its membership and we, as the board need your input. So this month I will focus my message on our direction as a club. But first let me reiterate what I said in our summer issue. Field Day was a great success and showcased our dedication to pull off an event. We changed locations at next to the last minutes. We changed our operating class from the original plan. We ultimately showed we can overcome any obstacle in our path no matter when, where, or why that obstacle arrived. As a team this club can pull anything off it desires. The board would like to hear from all the members about what they want; what they expect out of the club. And for the most part what direction the board should focus on improving the club. Over the past few years we have branched out quite a bit; possibly too much? We started as basically as a repeater club that ran monthly informational meetings and field day. Today we have branched out to running several contests a year, public service, and still are running our meetings and obviously 3 repeaters. As our attendance to meetings has dropped off the board needs to know what the membership is looking to get out of a meeting or if we should be having monthly meetings. There have been other ideas; more of a social meeting instead of a formal meeting with a presentation, or bi-monthly meetings, etc. Certain contests got canceled for lack of interest. As we move into a new contest year we need to focus on which contests we are going to run before we get ¾ of the planning done only to find out we have very limited participation. Here the board and the events/planning committee needs your input. It is our goal as the board to streamline the club, let’s focus on what interests everyone, but to do this we need your input. Field Day proved that the membership is dedicated and works well as a team. So, this month’s meeting is going to be a planning meeting. We hope that everyone can attend and make it a successful meeting. BE THERE! 73 Pete K1VDH NEXT MEETING Wed. October 6, 2010 7:30PM Clifton VFW 491 Valley Road Clifton, NJ (973-523-9762) Future Plans for 10-70 Be There ! **Oct. 2nd is EMCOMM day here in Bergen County. BC Races will conduct a SEE (Simulated Emergency Exercise) from 9-10AM on the 146.79 machine, followed by the ARRL ARES SET conducted by hams from Ramsey’s OEM group on the 10-70 machine, followed by NTS activity at 11. For RACES info contact Ron [email protected]. For ARES/NTS info Mike at [email protected]. VE Session 10-70 will have a VE session on Wednesday November 3rd at 6 PM at the VFW. Walk-ins are welcome. For more info contact Bob N2SU at [email protected] 10-70 REPEATER ASSN. INC. 28 Molinari Drive,Wanaque, NJ 07465 www.10-70.org OFFICERS President Vice Pres: Secretary Treasurer: Peter Van Den Houten K1VDH Rocky Moretto KC2HRG Pat Sawey WA2PFS Herbert Van Den Houten N2OPJ COMMITTEES Activities: Pat Sawey WA2PFS Membership: Howie Holden WB2AWQ Awards: Joe Cassadonte W2INS Technical: Howie Holden WB2AWQ Repeater Trustee: Stan Sears Memorial Radio Club (W2PQG) N2SE Callsign Trustee: Howie Holden WB2AWQ NX2ND Callsign Trustee: Bill Stagg KC2BLN Publications: Lou Janicek N2CYY Web Master: Peter Van Den Houten K1VDH PublicityChairman:MikeAdamsWA2MWT Executive Assistant/Historian RichardShafer N2CFD Education Committee: Paul Beshlian KC2CJW Howie Holden WB2AWQ SPECIAL EVENTS COORDINATORS Field Day: Howie Holden WB2AWQ Rocky Moretto KC2HRG Fox Hunts: Howie Holden WB2AWQ VE Liaison Bob Antoniuk N2SU NTS Liaison: Herb VanDen Houten N2OPJ OEM Liaison: Mike Adams WA2MWT USS Ling: Bill Stagg KC2BLN Howie Holden WB2AWQ The 10-70 Repeater Association, Inc. Is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the promotion and enhancement of Amateur Radio. Permission is hereby granted for the reprinting of articles and quotations in this newsletter provided full credit is given to the “1070 Repeater Assn. Newsletter” and the author of the article. Deadline for submissions is the seventh day of the preceding month. Send submissions to: Lou Janicek, N2CYY, A note from the editor ….. Please make an extra effort to attend the November meeting. Important issues regarding future club activities will take place. We want your input and your participation! Lou N2CYY For Immediate Release Contact: Robert R. Tarantula 201-955-2244 [email protected] North Arlington to Conduct Amateur Radio Technician License Radio Classes NORTH ARLINGTON, NJ--Emergency Management Coordinator Mayor Massa announces classes to prepare for the Amateur Radio FCC Technician License will be held at the Knights of Columbus Council Hall, 194 River Road on October 7, 21, 28 and November 3, 10, 24 from 7:00 – 9:00 PM. The course is being offered free of charge to anyone who wishes to obtain the first level license in the Amateur Radio hobby. Pre-registration is required, and due to the materials required for the course, no walk-ins to the class will be permitted. Pre-registration may be completed by phone, or by e-mail, [email protected]. Please call Robert R. Tarantula at 201 955-2244 for more information. Super Ham ?? 36 Lake Street, Ramsey, NJ 07446 or e-mail to [email protected] All material sent to the 10-70 Newsletter becomes the property of the 10-70 Repeater Assn. Inc. Opinions expressed in the newsletter are not necessarily those of the 10-70 Repeater Association, its officers, or editorial staff. Copyright 2010, 10-70 Repeater Association, Inc. Index President’s message License Class update Shortwave Dx’ing WB2AWQ Nevada Odyssey WB2AWQ Contesting by N2SU ECDXA & SKYWARN BC RACES Eyeball Mtg Mystery Shack Ramsey Run Upcoming Events Page 1 Page 2 Pages 3-5 Pages 5-7 Page 7 Page 8 Pages 8-9 Pages 10 Page 11 Page 12 Well maybe that monicker is a bit over the top ……. But it is KD8LIT, Stephen, a close friend of my brother Bob, KD8LIU, who just received his Extra. Both my brother Bob and Stephen, comparatively new hams (less than a year) have both attained their Extra class licenses …. which all started when I got them a Tech licensing manual from Mike Adams of Ramsey OEM ….. that one book has lead to 2 new hams (now both Extras) and to a friend of Stephen’s getting back into the hobby, who is now a General … a well spent $ 19.95, I’d say. Congrats Stephen !!! One of the first stations I found with that radio as WKBW on 1520 Khz, a clear-channel powerhouse 50KW station in Buffalo NY. I liked the station because of it's rock format, and it launched me on a search of the BC band for other stations outside of the NY metro area with rock formats. I kept up with BC DXing through my teens with that radio, and others in the house. When I was assigned to the Naval Communications Station at Guantanamo Bay Cuba, and set up my own ham station there, I continued the BC DX scene, using a Hallicrafters WR-600, a wood-grained version of the then-popular S-120, a 4 tube AC-DC multiband BC/SW radio, which I also used for my ham activities. Howie WB2AWQ SHORTWAVE ISN'T THE ONLY DX AROUND This is actually a subject more closely aligned with Bob N2SU, but I'd like to relate some of my experiences with a favorite facet of mine in radio - AM BCB DX (that's AM broadast band long distance listening). I got my start in AM BCB DX, like so much of my radio experience, courtesy of my Dad, WA2UEJ (SK). When I was about 15, Dad gave me an old Sears Silvertone radio chassis out of a junk console he was given. This radio covered the AM broadcast band and three shortwave bands, used "loctal" style tubes (popular for only a brief time in that period) and had an electromagnetic speaker, which served both as speaker, and as part of the DC power supply filter. That was a common method of power supply filtering in the 30's and 40's. The radio sort of worked, and was the first piece of electronic equipment I had to tinker with all by myself. Seems the main problem with it was due to dirty switches and stuff like that, but I, in my youthful ignorance, decided I'd twiddle with the various RF and IF trimmers and coils. It took me a long time to get things back to working, and I learned a lesson that has stuck with me for near 50 years now, that is, don't tinker with alignments unless you REALLY know what you are doing. In any event, I did get the radio working on the BC band. Because I lived in a room with another sailor, I could not usually operate the ham bands into the late night out of courtesy for my roommate and others in the house. What I could do, however, was listen to the BC band, using headphones. Over the couse of many nights, I logged numerous hours of listening, scanning the BC band from one end to the other. Now, Gitmo is some 400+ miles from the nearest part of the US, so ANY mainland BC station was "DX". Over the course of a year, I logged stations from over 40 states, most of those missing being in the far west. I kept a log, and marked cities listened to on a large US map with colored push pins. I've kept up, sort of, on the BCB DXing, listening often at night from my bed, using a Radio Shack DX-390 portable AM/FM/SW radio. This radio was made by Sangean, one of the better portable radio manufacturers these days, and is comparable to one of their most popular radios. More and more, though, identifying the stations has become increasingly difficult. Also, with the changes to AM station format over the years, many stations going from music formats to talk formats, the listening has become, at least for me, less interesting. Listening for DX BC stations at night was relatively easy, you simply parked on a frequency and listened until you heard a station, or stations, ID. Then you moved on to the next frequency, and listen etc. Back in those days, the FCC rules for station ID were fairly strict, and call signs and city locations came fairly often. These days it's not so cut and dried. Many stations use syndicated and network programming, and remote controlling, so local identifications are not so forthcoming. Combine that with the evolution in station format from music to talk, and BCB DXing is not quite so interesting, but still a neat way to spend some non-ham band time. With the slow shift in formats, my late night listening took on less of a DX nature, and more listening to one station which I enjoyed, WVNJ, right here on top of Skyline Drive. I enjoyed their big-band/30s and 40s music, which occupied most of their air time. Unfortunately, WVNJ's format too succumbed to the shift to talk format, sometime between the period in which my wife was so sick, and recently. For me, hours of talk about how one kind of vitamin or supplement will cure all my ills, or someone's endless political ranting, or religeous programming leaves me cold. Last week (Early June), in desperation, I started at the low end of the band, hunting for some music. (FM is nice, but the challenge of AM is not there for me). I covered one end of the band to the other several times, 10 Khz at a time, listening for music. Found none, until on about the third pass, at 740Khz, I stumbled onto CFZM, "Zoomer Radio" Toronto Canada. This was in the wee hours of the morning, and the show I hit was titled "All-Night Jukebox", a delightful mix of 40's 50s' 60's and 70s music, from Duke Ellington to Paul Simon, Satchmo to The Beach Boys. And no commercials, except for plugs for their own programming periodically! And their library of music seems to be rather extensive. Listening for a week now, I have yet to hear a song repeated. CFZM is a clear-channel, 50KW station, and reception here in NNJ is not too bad in hte evening and early morning hours. There is some selective fading, which reminds one that they are not local, which, for me, adds psychologically to the listening enjoyment. They are also, according to Wikipedia, the only clear channel station in North America with a music oriented format. Talk about a dying breed. But, at least for me, for a while, (I doubt I will be able to receive tnem from Reno NV), my nighttime listening has been rejuvenated. So, if you have an occasional sleepless night, and want something different to do, tune in (quietly) to 740Khz, and relax to the terrific selection of music in the style of days gone by. If you are like me, you won't be disappointed. Enjoy. WB2AWQ Well Howie & Sue are now out in 7 land …….. I’ve peppered Howie with some questions and can share some of his responses ….. “ Well, I probably won't get back on the air for a while yet, we're still unpacking. Plus we are going (I think) to have a pool put in. If so, that may put off running antenna feed lines temporarily. I can't put up anything visible, so antennas either have to be a part of the house (at least to the untrained eye) or hidden along fences, which I have plenty of. I figure I will have lots to write on that subject as I go on. Stealth is the operative word here. Also, I am going to wall in part of the garage, which is a three car job here. That will be storage and my ham shack. I wanna do all of it right, so it may take some time. I also want to investigate some of the local clubs. (Here I asked Howie about what he could see when he looked heavenward …) Stars - well you can see the Andromeda Galaxy (the closest large galaxy to the Milky Way galaxy) with the naked eye, a near impossibility in NJ, and the Milky Way band is visible right down to the mountain tops. In NJ it is usually not visible at all, anywhere. Constellations of course. Big and bold. Nice clear skies, even with the city lights from Reno just a few miles east. Had a coyote in the yard our second night here, about 4 AM or so, so just a little thing to watch out for when one is outside in the dark. It was a bright moonlit night, and I spotted him. I didn't think to get the camera though. Sue is doing OK, sort of. She is suffering from a big case of home-sickness, plus she has to have her arm operated on again. It has not healed well at all, and they are gonna re-orient it, put a permanent plate in, and do a bone graft from her hip. That takes place Sept 22. We're not happy with that situation, but it really needs to be fixed, as she has very little use of it the way it is. Say hi to the gang for me. //HH (Hey gang …… how about shooting Howie & Sue an email ….. [email protected]) A NEVADA ODYSSEY by WB2AWQ Moving across the country is a daunting experience. With a small dog in tow, and the wife with a bum arm after her fall in May, the trip took us 6 days, over 2900 miles. If we had gone direct via Rt 80, the trip would have been only 2700, but we took a slightly northern route, through Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Dakota, and then down into Wyoming and west to Reno. We made only three tourist-type stops, one at the Corn Palace in Mitchell SD, then Wall Drugs (a big tourist trap selleverything group of stores place in Wall SD, which was quite interesting, and over-run with bikers going home from the Sturgis Wisconsin motorcycle meet. Two more faces to put on the mountain……… The bikers at Wall were a friendly, if noisy bunch, fun to be around. And no clowns on the road either. Then we hit Mount Rushmore, a most beautiful and breathtaking place in the black hills of South Dakota. From then on it was just high speed through the back highways of Wyoming, hooking up with Rt 80 in Rawlins WY, through Utah, winding around Salt Lake City, over the Bonneville Salt Flats, then into Nevada on the final leg. From the time we left the black hills, and all the way to Reno, we were in high desert. Some travel tips: If you have a pet, and he/she does not travel serenely, get some tranquilizers from your vet. We had them for our dog Bandit, and they kept him calm, yet never dopey. They were used ONLY for the driving periods. We made sure we stopped every couple of hours for him to pee, get a drink, etc., and when we stopped for the night (at pet-friendly motels, which you should get a list of BEFORE you depart on a journey), we let him sleep in the bed with us. During the day, Bandit stayed in his cage, in the back seat. It had lots of padding for him to bury himself in if he wanted to sleep, and being a metal wire cage, allowed him to see what was going on if he wanted. The cage ensured he would not become a projectile in the event of an accident. We limited ourselves to no more than 600 miles a day, and took our time with meals and rest stops. I did all the driving, and the leisurely pace of meals and stops was most welcome. A GPS is a handy thing to have, but let a passenger attend to it, rather than trying to see it while you are driving. It can be even more distracting than a cell phone. On arrival in Reno, we dropped Bandit off at a local kennel for a few days while we closed on our house. That actually turned into a week because the movers were late. Another story for another time. Okay, since this IS a radio related newsletter, on to the good stuff. I really haven’t had much time to play with antennas. However, I did sneak up two wires – one a dipole along the eaves on one side of the house. That antenna has not been much good, as I haven’t yet been able to find a decent match point for it to a transmitter. The other wire(s) I put up was a dual band dipole on the wood fence separating us from the house hext door. This fence is a little over 6 ft high, and affords near complete privacy from our neighbors. Bear in mind, I am bucking the dreaded CC&R’s here, which forbid outside antennas. Using a roll of #28 isomid enameled wire, I strung a nearly invisible 40 meter dipole on the fence, and ran a length of RG-58 out the garage window to it. After trimming the length (about 3 ft off of it, due mostly to its close proximity to the ground), I hit a guy in Santa Rosa CA, about 250 miles distant. This was about 4 PM local. RST 599. OK, but no surprise given his relatively short distance. A few more tries yielded no QSOs. Bummer. Another short session, in which I paralleled a 20 meter dipole off the 40 meter fence job, yielded KB1CL, near Boston, at 5 PM local on 20 meters. The 20M dipole center sits a little over 6 ft off the ground at the center, but the ends slope down to about 3 ft off the ground. This was to minimize interaction with the 40 meter legs of the antenna. RST on this QSO was only 559 both ways, but not bad considering 20 M was not in really good shape. Then a little later that evening, after 20 had shut down, I dropped back to 40 M, and immediately worked AH6V in Hawaii on the first call, with a 589 RST. OK, now the low-to-the-ground antenna showed it does have some merit. At this point I have no idea how much effect being up 5300 feet has, but it can’t hurt! To make this thing permanent, I am going to run a short length of RG174 mini coax down the fence post, painted the same color as the fence. At ground level, it will transition to a section of buried RG-8X into the shack. My intuition tells me that this will be more than enough to conceal the goings-on from the property Nazis. More important, no TVI on 40, even though the antenna is just 12 ft away from, and parallel to, the satellite cable running into the house. 20 has a little touch of fuzz on the TV, and I can work on that. The first three contacts were all made running just 50 watts with an old Kenwood TS-440S, on a nearground mounted dipole mounted between two houses. The only physically redeeming feature of the antenna is that it is conveniently oriented northsouth, making the pattern east-west, ideal for this area. I’ve devoted perhaps three hours total to ham-related stuff out here, and the results are not so bad. For a quick, low effort antenna system, I am not disappointed. About 2700 miles from Reno to Hawaii says it’s not just vertical radiation. So much for proximity to ground. For sure, nothing like my big, high (70 ft) sloping 120 ft wire back in NJ, but given I’ve really only begun, I am sure better things are on the horizon. GOTA 10-70 !!! GOTA 1070 or Get On the Air 10-70 Get on the air today and say “hello” to someone on 10-70, the “Friendly Repeater”. Be There! As Bob, N2SU sees it: Contesting Now that summer is over (figuratively, at least), it’s now time to get back on the air for the fall season. There are a number of contests that offer a variety of challenges for operators of all abilities and all frequency ranges. The dipole antenna is mounted on the solid fencing between the two houses. Ours is the one on the right. Immediate plans are to wall in one secton of a three-car garage, using one side for storage, and the other side for a 15 ft long ham/work bench. That project begins in just a couple of days. Antennawise, more real experimenting with the surrounding elements may have to wait until we get our pool put in, which should be done in late Novemb er. In the interim, I do intend to do some experimenting with my mobile antennas mounted on a camera tripod, and used only at night and in the back yard to keep the nosies at bay. I’ve used this kind of setup at the Stony Point lighthouse, and at the Ramsey EOC, with reasonable results. Adding a few feet of elevation can only make it better. One more thing – I’ve decided to keep my call sign. Actually never gave any real serious thought to changing it. WB2AWQ is as much a part of me as is my name. After nearly 5 decades, why change? The ARRL September VHF QSO Party, like its June counterpart, attracts the VHF contest crowd, but the propagation characteristics of the bands are different. In June, 6 meters is the star of the show with its propensity for Sporadic E skip, but, in September, 50 MHz takes a backseat to the higher bands. Tropo is the main mode of propagation, and can be found on the bands from 2 meters through 1296 MHz. QSOs of up to 1000 miles are possible, and offer the best bet for domestic DX on the bands above 50 MHz. Mountaintoppers and rovers abound on the bands, and you might be able to pick some new grid squares toward VUCC or states toward WAS. In October and November you can take part in the “granddaddy of them all”, the CQ World Wide contests. October for SSB and November (usually Thanksgiving weekend) for CW. This is the one contest where, quite literally, everybody works everybody. The exchange is wonderfully simple: 59(9) 05 for us in NJ. 05 refers to the CQ Zone in which we are located, and there are 40 of them in the world. Yes, I’ve worked them all, and have over 30 on 40-10, including 39 on 15 (Zone 29). You can work a DXCC in one weekend if propagation cooperates (and it is getting better, slowly but surely). It was a big help for me in working new countries 20 years ago, and there are many webpages and DX bulletins where you can see who is activating what country for the contest weekends. Sometimes, the expedition is to a rare zone within a common country. The best example is Zone 2. The zone consists of Quebec north of 50 degrees latitude, Labrador (VO2) and points north in Nunavut. There is population in Quebec north of 50 degrees, most notably the town of Sept-Illes. This area usually gets a visit from a group of hams who get to be rare DX for a weekend. For U.S. hams, all you have to do is get there and find a place to operate from, and you’re all set, since we have automatic reciprocal licensing with Canada. The other example is Zone 29, which consists of Western Australia (VK6), Northern Territory (VK8) and some VK9 islands. In 39 years of hamming, I have just one Zone 29 QSO, VK6HD on 40 meters in the early 90s. RACES: Amateur Radio and Government: Perfect Together! Carlstadt 9/15/2010 RACES EYEBALL Mtg. Then there are the assorted state QSO parties, regional contests and other operating activities. Whatever your preference, just get on the air and have fun! (Editors note: Bob had submitted this for the Sept. bulletin which unfortunately never made it to press, hence the mention of the Sept. QSO party as an upcoming event). ECDXA & Bergen SKYWARN Tour In early September Joyce KA2ANF and George KC2GLG treated 10-70 members to an interesting & educational tour of the ECDXA & Bergen Skywarn stations. Our thanks for their hospitality. Further information can be found at www.bergenskywarn.org & www.ecdxa.org Members of the expanding Bergen County RACES group got together for an interesting, educational, and fun eyeball meeting through the courtesy of the Carlstadt OEM. Topics included a preview of the upcoming October 2nd RACES SEE (Simulated Emergency Exercise), go kits, N2IYY’s upcoming series of Ham Radio Tech Licensing classes, and the chance to just sit around and chat in person with the people we communicate with over the air twice a month, each & every month, as we practice our messaging and communication procedures. A good time was had by all! ALL Bergen County Races operators are encouraged to participate in the SEE (Simulated Emergency Exercise) on Sat. Oct.2nd from 9-10AM on the 146.79 machine) Mystery Shack ……………….. As I was traveling through various and sundry neighborhoods in Bergen County looking at potential houses to buy…. I spotted the tower below attached to a house, right next to the one I was looking at ….. As you can see the shack is stocked with plenty of equipment …… but conspicuously missing is piece of hardware ….. can you tell me what it is ? (e-mail me at [email protected]) The cherry on the top of the ice cream sundae was this ham’s offer to let me use his tower …. if my wife and I were to purchase his neighbors house …….. The great tilt-over tower, beams, and assorted wire antennas above to the shack, where I am sitting comfortably …….. Who’s shack is Lou sitting in? Unfortunately …. proximity to a tower & a fellow ham were not high up on my wife’s real estate checklist ….. thus the hunt for a new QTH …. continues ……. Ham Radio & Ramsey OEM Always good together … 2010 Annual Ramsey Run Once again the hams of Ramsey’s OEM provided communications support during Ramsey’s annual Ramsey Run. Bob, Lou(N2CYY), Dominick ….. once again at the start/finish line of the Ramsey Run(s) Mike Adams & crew (You’ll notice that the Halpins (3 of them no less .. show up en’masse) at the mere site of a camera (of course the Adam’s were close with 2) ……. or was it perhaps really the donuts in the other room …….) On the Air RACES drills …….. The bi-monthly Bergen County RACES drill is held on the local 146.79 machine. The Drill starts at 7:45PM for enrolled Bergen County RACES officers/operators on the 2nd & 4th Wed. of each month. 10-70 members looking to get involved with Bergen County RACES must do so through their town/borough OEM. If you need contact info for the right person in your town, please e-mail Ron [email protected] This is a directed net for members of Bergen County RACES, please contact Ron Bosco @ [email protected] for more information about Upcoming Events VE Session : 10-70 will have a VE session on Runners dashing across the 5k race starting line as the gun goes off. Wednesday November 3rd at 6 PM at the VFW. Walk-ins are welcome. For more info contact Bob N2SU at [email protected]. Bergen County SEE & SET WANT ADS: ALL Bergen County Races operators are encouraged to participate in the SEE (Simulated Emergency Exercise) on Sat. Oct.2nd from 9-10AM on the 146.79 machine). Followed ARES & NTS activity on the 10-70 repeater from 10-12. Looking for Uniden BC-560/590 schematic or unit, working or not. Larry, [email protected] Update on the Mystery Patch ….. Advertising Hi Larry, Per your request for information on the patch. I have 2 and would donate one to the club if desired for the clubs archives or records. The call sign WR2AMI was the clubs. There was a time when the repeaters had repeater callsigns designated by the WR prefix. The AMI suffix was selected as it means friend in French. Hope that helps, 73, Bob K2TK ex KN2TKR & K2TKR SELLING STUFF IN the 10-70 Bulletin Accumulated too much stuff in the shack, XYL threatening either you or the gear with banishment ?? …. we will list ham related stuff, you want to sell. Send your classifieds to me, [email protected] with your name, e-mail address, what you’re selling, and what you’re asking. (10-70 is in no way responsible for the accuracy, condition, etc. of what’s being sold.) Advanced Specialties AMATEUR RADIO EQUIPMENT & ACCESSORIES • SCANNERS ANLI • ALINCO • COMET • UNIDEN • YAESU (201)-VHF-2067 114 Essex Street, Lodi, NJ 07644 Orders/Quotes 1-800-926-9HAM www.advancedspecialt ies.net Closed Sunday & Monday (Tell John, you saw his ad in the 10-70 Bulletin)