Tri-States Amateur Radio Club Photo Gallery

Tri-States Amateur Radio Club
Most viewed
21E971CF-EED4-47F7-94E3-67BEB1686EDC.JPG
20 views
25DE3F22-6A40-48F3-8459-A43C08BF4ACD.JPG
20 views
37FF1685-69B0-4B26-B9DD-5A1DB1774240.JPG
20 views
58F8BCC3-3435-4A19-A072-750EF59DE429.JPG
20 views
3561C8C7-2129-446F-9F61-F63942163CBD.JPG
20 views
5562D2D5-5210-404D-AE87-FBC242D55EBF.JPG
20 views
IMG_9479.jpeg
20 views
Matt.JPG
POTA 2022-07-28, Cloudland Canyon State Park K-216920 viewsAllen KN4FKS had 25 contacts on 40 meters with 9 Park to Park contacts. John KB4QXI had 64 contacts on 20 meters with 9 P2P’s. He had 3 DX contacts, Chile, Alaska, and Canada. He also was hunted by W1AW the ARRL HQ station. Ed KM6UTC activated for the first time and had 12 contacts on 40 m with 1 P2P. Welcome to the dark side… Matt AB4MH had about 30 contacts on 40 meters before a storm came up and prompted an early QRT.
IMG_5837.jpeg
20 views
IMG_4902.JPG
20 viewsPOTA 01-12-2023 - Crockford-Pigeon Mtn. WMA K-3742. Tony WA4TW was on 20 meters and made 82 contacts, 24 P2P, 7 Canadians, and 1 Maritime Mobile, a 30 ft. sailboat on the Mississippi River. Allen KN4FKS handled logging. John KB4QXI was on 40 meters and made 37 contacts with 3 P2P. Operating was tough with the ever increasing lightning crashes on both bands. Before the storm hit we shut down operations, disconnected coax and laid down the vertical antenna. We enjoyed a long lunch while the storm passed over. The wind blew, and the rain came down in buckets but we were high and dry inside the check station. The power stayed on the entire time as we kept a watch on the storm. We got back on the air after the storm passed but the bands were still noisy. I'm glad to report, no one overslept, no gear was left at home, and all batteries were fully charged.
IMG_4900.JPG
20 viewsPOTA 01-12-2023 - Crockford-Pigeon Mtn. WMA K-3742. Tony WA4TW was on 20 meters and made 82 contacts, 24 P2P, 7 Canadians, and 1 Maritime Mobile, a 30 ft. sailboat on the Mississippi River. Allen KN4FKS handled logging. John KB4QXI was on 40 meters and made 37 contacts with 3 P2P. Operating was tough with the ever increasing lightning crashes on both bands. Before the storm hit we shut down operations, disconnected coax and laid down the vertical antenna. We enjoyed a long lunch while the storm passed over. The wind blew, and the rain came down in buckets but we were high and dry inside the check station. The power stayed on the entire time as we kept a watch on the storm. We got back on the air after the storm passed but the bands were still noisy. I'm glad to report, no one overslept, no gear was left at home, and all batteries were fully charged.
IMG_1038.jpeg
20 views
2208 files on 184 page(s) 99