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- This article appeared in The Cincinnati Enquirer 'HAM CALL' column
- December 28, 1986
-
- Reprinted with permission.
-
- Bill Ake, WD8PRH, has put repeater systems into another dimension and
- redefined the term 'local' communications.
- He can answer any question about his complicated, $75,000 system except
- why does he do it.
- Repeaters are retransmission stations that take weak signals, usually
- from automobile or handheld radios, and send out a much more powerful
- signal usually intelligible 30 to 50 miles away. Telephone capabilities
- and radio bulletin boards also are part of repeater systems, which have
- simplified local communications among amateur radio operators.
- But Ake, of the Fairfield Amateur Radio Association (FARA) built and
- designed a system with 14 remote receiver sites that extends local
- automobile and handheld communications from Greater Cincinnati to
- Indianapolis, Lexington, Ky., Louisville and Columbus, Ohio. Perhaps
- 80 repeaters operate in that coverage area, but Bill's wide-area
- system on 145.19 is the talk of each city.
- To put this in perspective, the Washington-Baltimore system has eight
- remote sites, Philadelphia-New York has but 10 and information about
- other such systems is unavailable if such systems exist.
- The FARA system has an ingredient, which Ake designed, that the others
- do not have. Each remote receiver site has its own individual
- identifying letter (in Morse code). When an Indianapolis ham is
- conversing with a colleague in Dayton (through the Fairfield system)
- each transmission from Indianapolis identifies with an "I" and the
- Dayton station identifies with a "V" for Vandalia, the remote site
- just north of that city.
- The system began in August, 1983, with a Fairfield transmitting site
- and four remote receivers. This month, a second city transmitter,
- at Columbus (Ohio), was permanently linked and Indianapolis
- as a transmitting site is scheduled to be the third. The number of
- remote receiver sites will top off at 16 when current plans are completed.
- Few people appreciate how complicated the 1-9 system is. Each remote
- site has a receiver on 145.19 input, a transmitter in the 440 band
- to link with Fairfield, an audio coupler board, a remote delay board,
- a power supply and a feedline and antenna system. Seven electronic
- systems at each of the 14 locations- all require normal maintenance
- and repair. Some are as far as 95 miles away.
- Even a driven man like Bill Ake admits a system of this magnitude
- cannot be completed alone. Numerous FARA members have contributed
- money, time and equipment. But three hams who stand out are
- Jack Meyers, W3RU, (who moved from the area last year);
- Harlan (Hoot) Gibson, KD8ZW, Colerain Township; and Bob Pearson, NK8T,
- Loveland. Mike Seyers, Of Combined Tower Technology, has contributed
- antenna and tower service that can only be described as a labor of love.
- But why? "A number of us saw a need to communicate among the major
- cities in the Tristate," Ake said, "and, of course, in the case of a
- major emergency, this equipment is in place ready to serve."
- Ake's files contain letters from civic groups, public service
- organizations, civilian authorities(federal and local) and businesses;
- all of whom saw the same need and helped out.
-
-
- Copyright 1986
- Cincinnati Enquirer/Joe Phillips, K8QOE
- Reprinted with permission
-
- If you have any replies or comments, I would be glad to forward
- them to Bill, WD8PRH or Joe, K8QOE.
-
- You can leave replies in Easyplex to me Tim Uckotter 75526,1327
- or via packet radio:
- KA4BCD @ KD9PU
-