Author: Trevor Black

  • October Update

    Walk for HD

    Thanks to WU0G, N0MIJ, KC0GP, KG0CX, KD0OPH for helping with the event this year. We had a successful event with only 1 call for a lost walker. I suggested a couple ideas for next years event to the coordinators and they look forward to working with us again next year. (Approx. 24 man hours)

    Missouri Days

    Thanks to WU0G, KC0NOX, KB0RPJ, AC0OK for their help for this event. APRS was used to track operators as they traveled around the fairgrounds. 4 calls for assistance were handled and new plans were made for next years event. (Approx. 40 man hours.)

  • Team Hope Walk for HD October 12th 2013

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    Here is the flyer for the walk this year. Our group has provided communications for this event over the past 6 years and look forward to assisting again this year. If you are available to help please contact [email protected]. You don’t have to be a member of the group to assist or even have a ham license. This is a great way to get your feet wet in communications support.

     

     

     

  • Special Guest Speaker at August Meeting

    Reminder that the NWMO ARES® Group will have it’s meeting on August 10th 9 am at the Cameron Police Department. This month we will have a guest speaker, Maxine Thompson, talk to us about her experiences as a ham operator and a member of the “YL Society”. Maxine came by our Field Day setup this year with her call logs and pamphlet on the “YL Society” and told us about her Field Day experiences using Boat Anchor radios for their setup.

    Everyone is invited to attend, and as always our meetings are open to the public and other amateur radio groups.

  • Field Day at Plattsburg Fire Station June 22nd 10am – June 23rd 2pm

    Print

    For additional information contact:

    Trevor Black KC0QLU

    568 NW 305th Plattsburg, MO 64477

    816-783-3608

    [email protected]

    “Who ya’ gonna call? Clinton County Radio Hams!”

    Public Demo of Emergency Communications June 22-23

    Plattsburg, MO

    – Despite the Internet, cell phones, email and modern communications, every year whole regions find themselves in the dark. Tornadoes, fires, storms, ice and even the occasional cutting of fiber optic cables leave people without the means to communicate. In these cases, the one consistent service that has never failed has been Amateur Radio. These radio operators, often called “hams” provide backup communications for everything from the American Red Cross to FEMA and even for the International Space Station.

    Clinton County “hams” will join with thousands of other Amateur Radio operators showing their emergency capabilities this weekend. 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. When trouble is brewing, Amateur Radio’s people are often the first to provide rescuers with critical information and communications.

    This weekend, June 22-23 at the Plattsburg Fire Station, the public will have a chance to meet and talk with the Northwest Missouri ARES® ham radio operators and see for themselves what the Amateur Radio Service is about as hams across the USA will be holding public demonstrations of emergency communications abilities. Beginning at Noon Saturday and ending at Noon on Sunday, you are invited to stop by anytime day or overnight to see the demonstration.

    This annual event, 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 backyards around the country. Their slogan, “When All Else Fails, Ham Radio Works” 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 35,000 amateur radio operators across the country participated in last year’s event. “The fastest way to turn a crisis into a total disaster is to lose communications,” said Allen Pitts of the ARRL. “From the earthquake and tsunami in Japan to tornadoes in Missouri, ham radio provided the most reliable communication networks in the first critical hours of the events. Because ham radios are not dependent on the Internet, cell towers or other infrastructure, they work when nothing else is available.We need nothing between us but air.”

    In the Plattsburg area, the Northwest Missouri ARES® Group will be demonstrating Amateur Radio atthe Plattsburg Fire Protection District on Bush Street behind ShopKo. 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. Amateur Radio is growing in the US. There are now over 700,000 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 both emergency communications for thousands of state and local emergency response agencies and non-emergency community services too, 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!  

  • Plattsburg Repeater On-line

    The Plattsburg 2M 146.895 machine is back online after replacing the Voice chip in the controller. Thanks to ARCOM for sending the part free of charge!

  • Shriner’s Hambash 2013

    Shriner’s Hambash 2013

    525304_608718942473468_220081199_nCan you spot anyone you know?  Hambash was held last Saturday at the Ararat Shrine in Kansas City. A good number of hams from NW Missouri were in attendance. A good time was had by all.