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- TECEQPT Version 1. 3 3/1/92
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- EQUIPMENT
- [Category: TEC]
-
- EQUIPMENT LIABILITY
-
- 1. QUESTION: WHAT RECOURSE DO I HAVE IF ANY OF MY EQUIPMENT IS
- DAMAGED OR LOST ON A RACES MISSION?
- ANSWER: An official answer to this question is pending from the
- Director of State OES. To date, it has been understood and
- accepted that the volunteer is solely responsible for his
- property used when his volunteer services are accepted by a local
- government or the C.A.P. The volunteer may seek relief through
- his insurance company and/or a casualty loss in his tax returns
- filed with the IRS. Any volunteer seeking relief for an
- out-of-pocket expense or loss should address their concerns to
- the local government agency to which they are a part. If they are
- concerned in this area they should probably obtain their local
- government's policy or position in this matter before continuing
- as a volunteer.
- 2. QUESTION: What if a local government commandeers a volunteer's
- equipment or property, such as appropriating a private vehicle?
- ANSWER: Submit a claim to that government.
- 3. QUESTION: If I don't get satisfaction from my
- government, can I go to the next highest jurisdiction?
- ANSWER: No. If you are with a city RACES, for example, you are
- serving only that city jurisdiction--even if city, county and/or
- State RACES may be involved with the same mission. Volunteers
- cannot serve more than one jurisdiction at any given time. This
- latter point may be the least understood by many volunteers and
- should be emphasized by all State, county and city OES
- personnel--both paid and volunteer staff. (RB 87-1)
-
- EQUIPMENT FOR EMERGENCY RESPONDERS
- There are some items that should be carried in the field or out
- to a highway if an incident takes place and we are called out to
- provide communications. There are certain items that need to be
- carried at all times on one's person and other items that should
- be immediately available.
- Our state safety orders require anyone working on or near a
- highway wear a safety vest, hard hat, safety glasses, and shoes
- or boots of sturdy design. The footwear should have traction type
- soles for solid footing on slick, uneven surfaces such as mud,
- snow, grass, and pine needles. One trade name, for example, is
- "Vibram", sometimes called "waffle stompers".
- OTHER ITEMS TO CARRY OR WEAR:
- Clothing to suit the weather or climate. If you wear eyeglasses
- be sure to carry an extra pair. Wear an accurate, rugged, and
- easy to read wrist watch. If you have a handheld transceiver
- carry a battery pack that will hold double A alkaline batteries.
- Nicad battery packs need charging often and usually take hours
- and require 110 volts AC. Double A alkaline batteries are usually
- readily available and only take a few minutes to change. Keep
- your nicad pack with you for backup. Keep it in a container by
- itself or cover its terminals with tape; if they short out it can
- burn or explode. Carry a speaker mike that can be clipped to your
- clothing where it can be easily heard and reached. Boom mikes
- work well if you like them but never, NEVER use VOX. If you are
- in a noisy environment they can key your transmitter and you may
- not know it. This could cripple communications and be potentially
- embarrassing. Carry a police whistle. These are good attention
- getters and could be used in many ways. The handiest place for it
- is on a chain around your neck and placed under your shirt or
- blouse out of the way.
- Carry a note book and pencil. Keeping a log or diary of events is
- very important. It makes interesting reading after an event and
- if you must write a report it is a great help to have the dates
- and times of important happenings. If the incident lasts for many
- days, as they have in the past, the days seem to run together and
- to recall from memory might prove difficult. If you must handle
- written messages, use a different notebook for this chore. I
- carry a small three inch by five inch personal notebook for the
- diary and a regular size note book for the written messages.
- Carry a small flashlight. I use the Mini-Maglite type that use
- double A alkaline batteries. These flashlights are very rugged
- and have a spare lamp in their base. If the spare lamp is needed
- make sure you replace it as soon as possible. If you are on
- medication be sure to have an ample supply.
- Carry more than you think you will need. Inform the person or
- persons in charge if you have a health problem and if you require
- special medication. You may want to carry a camera. I carry a
- small 35 mm camera. It has a sliding lens cover that locks the
- shutter, a built in electronic flash and another feature that
- should prove invaluable: a clock that will stamp the day, month
- and year or the time of day on the negative so that it will
- appear on the prints.
- You may wonder how big your pockets will have to be to carry
- these things. I use a fanny pack or, as some people call it, a
- belly pack. It is basically a belt with a pouch attached and made
- of nylon. Mine has three compartments -- a large central
- compartment that will hold my camera, speaker mike, boom mike,
- spare rubber duck antenna, and other miscellaneous items. It has
- outer compartment, which is smaller that the central compartment,
- I use for my spare batteries and battery pack. The inner
- compartment is next to the belt and is ideal for your diary or
- small note book. All compartments have zippers. They can be
- bought for less than ten dollars. Always have drinking water
- available with a reserve supply in your vehicle or other storage
- area at your site.
- THINGS TO HAVE AVAILABLE:
- Always carry a warm jacket in your vehicle. Even in the
- summertime it can get quite cool at higher elevations. Carry
- plenty of clothing. A good rule is to carry twice as many changes
- of clothing as you think you will need. Carry a blanket or,
- better yet, a sleeping bag. Carry food that does not need
- refrigeration. I carry granola bars and canned pork and beans. Be
- sure to have a can opener.
- Carry matches. I don't smoke and have been caught out needing a
- campfire, only to find I didn't have any matches. A muzzle
- loading pistol was used to start a fire to dry my wet clothes and
- cold body on one of my outings. I carry a tool kit with a supply
- of connectors and terminals. If you use cables to connect any of
- your gear you should have spare cabling or the parts and
- equipment to make field repairs. I carry some solder and a
- propane powered soldering iron. This has saved the day on several
- disasters. I am sure that you can add to my list. The intention
- of this article is to give you suggestions and make you think of
- things you will need when you respond to an incident. You can be
- called on to supply mutual aid communications for other agencies.
- Be flexible. To borrow a concept from the Boy Scouts, "Be
- Prepared." (By Les Ballinger, WA6EQQ, and concluded with this
- part.) RB 174-91 to 177-91
- (About the author: Les is a veteran emergency services responder
- in planning, setting up, and operating temporary communications
- in the field for emergency services, forestry, the Red Cross and
- other agencies. He is a recognized expert in field response and
- all facets of Amateur Radio communications. He is employed by the
- California Department of Transportation and is the State OES HQ
- Auxiliary Radio Services station manager. )
-
- EMP DEVICES
- FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) has available two
- four-page pamphlets that should be of interest to technical
- communications and electronics people. These are available from
- your FEMA regional office.
- CPC (Civil Preparedness Circular) 88-3. Subject: Electromagnetic
- Pulse Protection Grounding Recommendations. Synopsis: Provides
- recommendations for EMP grounding systems. The recommendations
- provide a trade-off between the cost to achieve a very low
- resistance and the result minimum EMP grounding required.
- Grounding is critical in the protection of communications and
- electronic equipment.
- CPC 88-4. Subject: Coaxial Type EMP Protection Devices. Synopsis:
- The widespread use of solid state electronic communications
- equipment in recent years, with their inherent weakness to
- damaging transient electrical pulses, has stimulated the
- electronics industry to develop and market a large variety of
- improved transient protection devices. These devices provide full
- protection of communications equipment from damaging voltage and
- current transients generated by lightning and electromagnetic
- pulses. The suitability of these new devices for low cost
- protection of communications equipment is reviewed. RB65-89
-
- PORTABLE REPEATERS
- Question raised at a recent RACES seminar was "Is it advisable to
- develop portable repeaters?" The answer is "Of course!"
- Transportable repeaters can be used to replace damaged repeaters
- or, more frequently, used to augment existing repeaters by
- filling in back country or remote areas not now served by
- repeaters. Particularly to support hand-held radios. High power
- is not important in transportable repeaters. Even two to five
- watts power output is adequate. The cavities required to separate
- the receive and transmit frequencies are usually the most
- expensive item. RB 86-16.
-
- RUBBER DUCK ANTENNAS
- Rubber duck antennas on hand-held radios are a severe compromise
- on efficiency. On the plus side is their short size and flexible
- forgiveness to brutish handling. On the negative side is their
- terrible radiation inefficiency, probably worse than many of you
- expected. When did you last replace your helical spring antenna
- we call the rubber duck? On testing a hundred or so portable
- radios that had been out on the fire lines for a few weeks we
- found a typical 60 percent failure rate. Most of the antennas
- looked fine. The only way you can detect an invisible rubber duck
- failure is by measuring the microvolts per meter with a
- calibrated receiver over a measured range under controlled
- conditions, such as done routinely by the Boise Interagency Fire
- Center. Since this is difficult for most to do, it might not be a
- bad idea to replace rubber ducks as a matter or course when they
- show signs of wear or if they are a year old. You might want to
- consider using a telescopic antenna under non-violent conditions
- to vastly improve the range of your hand-held. The National
- Bureau of Standards ran some tests that proved what we had long
- suspected.
-
- The efficiency of a hand-held is dependent upon how much antenna
- it has and how good the ground plane. Most portables have very
- poor ground planes; the more metal the better. Also the more
- antenna the better. Hence the rubber duck is a woeful but often
- necessary compromise. But if a portable is not going to be
- subjected to the abuse of fireground or street cop utility, you
- should consider the telescopic quarter-wave antenna if range is
- important. Compare the figures and discussion that follows. Be
- aware that the telescopic antenna is nowhere as rugged as the
- rubber duck but it will talk circles around it. You might say
- that the quarter wave whip is to the rubber duck what a 106 inch
- CB quarter wave whip is to a 36 inch whip on a base loaded coil
- to compromise range for low garages. Our reference antenna in the
- Public Safety high band and 2-meter Amateur radio measurements
- below is a quarter-wave telescopic antenna, extended, and held at
- face level: One-quarter wavelength extended and at face level = 0
- dB One-quarter wavelength collapsed and worn at belt level =
- -40dB Rubber duck held at face level = -5dB Rubber duck worn at
- belt level = -20dB Translated, this means that a 5-watt hand-held
- with a rubber duck worn on the belt has an effective radiated
- power not of 5 watts but only .05 watt. Held at face level the
- radio has an ERP of 1.6 watt. 15dB is quite a difference!
-
- In the previous two messages we gave you facts and figures of the
- quarter-wave telescopic versus the rubber duck for Public Safety
- VHF Highband and 2-Meter Amateur handhelds. The 40 dB down for
- the nested telescopic relates to those commercial models where
- the telescopic disappears within the radio. Such an antenna won't
- break when it's nested but it won't receive worth a whoop either.
- In those radios where the collapsed quarter wave is external to
- the radio they break very easily. For that reason we recommend
- the style that has a spring at the base. The spring makes it very
- forgiving of elbows and other bum raps. We have not researched or
- measured five-eighth wave antennas because they are too long for
- most public safety use and because they typically require too
- many telescopic sections. The more sections the more chance of
- troubles. Few people take the time to correctly telescope any
- hand-held antenna. They should never be whacked down with the
- palm of the hand on top and push. They should be pulled down with
- the thumb and first two fingers.
- If you are interested in the figures for 450 MHz, using the table
- in the last message, they are respectively 0dB, 30dB, 5dB, and
- 30dB. One more reference for the technically inclined--the loss
- of a telescopic antenna compared to half-wave dipole: VHF -5dBd
- and UHF -20 dBd. Telescopic antennas should be changed at least
- annually and whenever they become the slightest bit loose. Any
- looseness can mean a poor RF connection inside the antenna where
- you can't see it or fix it. Simply change it.
- RB 86 -23/25.
-
- GROUNDING SYSTEM
- Scientists working on a U.S. Army grounding analysis project have
- shown that grounding with the standard 6-foot metal rod, or even
- several rods, is often unsafe and more often inadequate for good
- low noise communications. They have found that a better ground
- can be established by stapling a 100-foot length of standard
- 1/8-inch stranded steel wire to the earth every 4 inches with
- 6-inch pegs. A 3 pound hammer (in lieu of the 10 pound
- sledgehammer sued on ground rods) should be sufficient to drive
- in the pegs. Tests at all sites in the country show the surface
- wire to be from 35% to 95% more efficient than the 6-foot
- grounding rod. (Courtesy of WORLDRADIO and the Sacramento Amateur
- Radio Club's "Mike and Key) RB 27-88
-
- PHOTOCOPIERS
- A photocopiers bright light contains ultraviolet rays which can
- damatge the eyes retinas and perhaps cause cataracts. Also the
- rays may produce ozine, a lung irritant. Solution: keep the
- copier in a large, well-ventilated area. Close the
- radiation-proof cover when you use the copier. Shut your eyes and
- look away if the item you are copying is too big for the cover to
- close over it. (SGD) WILLIAM MURRAY, Radiation Section Chief,
- National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati,
- Ohio. RB 86-36
-
- PORTABLE RADIO TIP
- Sometimes portable radios have to be placed on the floor, the
- seat or the dashboards of cars. Then they go scooting off turning
- corners. One method of retarding their unwanted movement is to
- take an old bicycle inner tube and cut off some one inch wide
- cross sections. Slip it around your radio or its carry case and
- the rubber will now greatly retard slipping and sliding.
- You may wish to put some paper between this oversized rubber band
- and your radio to prevent discoloration or the rubber migrating
- into the plastic.
- Never leave a portable on the dash or anywhere lying in the
- direct summer sun. Even professional portables can drift off
- frequency when subjected to such heat. RB 86-44
-
- PORTABLE RADIO BATTERIES
- On protracted emergencies, such as wildfires or an earthquake,
- there may be no A-C power to recharge your portable radio nicad
- battery. Do you have a spare nicad battery and a D-C charger, or
- throw away battery packs for your portable radio? You will often
- be expected to use your portable where your mobile cannot go.
- RB 85-9
-