Hurricane Prep and a Little Project

About this time of year, I get a little antsy. This is the peak of the hurricane season. At this time, I tend to go over my gear and see of I can improve it. I practice Kaizen. It is the Japanese process of small continuous improvement. I learned this from my days in manufacturing. Each year I look at my gear and see what I can do to make it better.

My first improvement is with antennas. I have been a Chameleon Antenna user for years and I have been collecting bits and bobs as needed to make the antennas I think will do me the most good. This year I built their Tactical Delta Loop (CHA TDL). I already had their Micro Transformer and 1 – 17′ Stainless Steel Whip. All I needed was another 17′ Stainless Steel Whip and their Hub Kit. Sometimes when you deploy or even do a POTA activation, there my not be enough clearance (horizontal or vertical) to put the best antenna. The TDL gives me a good sized, free standing antenna that does not take up a lot of space. It is slightly directional giving me a little gain when operating at low power.

My next project was building a desk to fit in the back of my truck. I often activate parks for POTA alone and when nature calls, I do not like to leave my expensive radios on a park bench. I sketched a plan on a piece of paper and went to the shed to see what wood I had. I had enough scraps to build what I wanted to include a desktop I used in the cab of the truck. Part of the project was to try a new to me technology – pocket hole joinery. I stopped at my local Home Depot and picked up a Kreg jig. My first step was to cut the pieces to length and then assemble it.

I let it sit for a couple of hours and then took it out for the paint job. Bcause of the dissimilar woods I went with paint instead of stain.

I got creative and decided to camouflage it a little. After I let the paint dry I attached the top.

The hole in the foreground is for a coffee cup holder. I didn’t like the plastic ones I had so a quick look on Amazon netted me a stainless steel one. When operating portable it is very easy to knock over your drink onto your log, computer, or radio. Ask me how I know.

One last little bit is I added L-track connectors to the bottom of the desktop on each end.

I have L-track on my truck bed and using cargo straps with L-track connectors, it is easy for me to cinch the desk down to keep it from moving in the bed.

I have a low camping seat that easily allows me to slide under the table. The bottom of the desk top is approx. 17″ off of the ground. There is plenty of room for my legs. Now I can go to a park and all I need to do to secure my radios is flip up the tailgate and lock the camper top. The windows on the top slide open and have bug screens. I just have to add a small fan for the hot days, but for now, fall is approaching and cooler days are ahead. 73- de Scott

Hurricane Season 2025

NOAA has released their 2025 hurricane season (01 June to 30 November) prediction. they are calling for an above average season with 13-19 named storms and 6-10 to reach hurricane strength. Of those hurricanes, 3-5 are predicted to become major hurricanes.

As we learned last year, coastal states are not the only ones vulnerable to the havoc a hurricane can bring. Now might be a good time to break out the portable gear and give it a shakedown. Turn on those go-boxes and feed those portable antennas. Make sure everything is in working order. Take your gear out and go at least 20 miles from home. Why 20 miles? It’s a distance that is too far to go back home and retrieve a forgotten part or replace a broken piece of kit. Field Day (winter and summer) are good events to try your gear. Only if you use the same gear you would bring for EmComm and use the same power levels. The lesson here is don’t wait to get ready, get ready now. I try to keep myself prepared to deploy in 4 hours or less.

You can’t plan for everything that may go wrong. You can however, minimize the chance of failure by ensuring your gear is in the best possible condition. Remember Proper Planing and Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance (7P’s). Be THE guy, not THAT guy. 73 de Scott

I’ve Been Busy

Today is the second day of hurricane season for the United States. According to Colorado State University, this may be a busy season. For most of CONUS (CONtinental United States), hurricanes have little effect. For those of us on the eastern seaboard and gulf coast, it is time to keep a weather eye out.

It should be a time of preparation. Procuring materials to stormproof homes, purchase/maintain generators and check on fuel supplies, check the pantries for food and water storage, and ensure there are adequate medication and first aid supplies. In addition to this, is there enough cash on hand as with no power, there is no credit; cash is king. There is always the question of; should I stay or should I go? This is often a tough decision and the wrong choice could be fatal. If you are going, do you have a place to go? During Hurricane Michael, I was returning to Georgia from Virginia the weekend before the storm, there was storm related traffic up in Tennessee, people looking for a place to stay.

Even though I live in northwest Georgia, I can still be affected by a storm. High winds, heavy rains, tornadoes, flooding and power outages occur as a hurricane winds down as it travels inland.

Part of my preps, besides food, and water, etc., is making sure my communications gear is in order. Most of my gear gets used at least weekly with some of my portable gear getting use monthly. As I have said in past posts, my FunComm gear is mostly the same as my EmComm gear. I check to see that my radios are working and that my portable antennas are in good working order. I pull out my laptop and make sure all of my radio apps and OS are up to date and working. I especially check to make sure I can send/receive on my main digital modes. For EmComm I rely mainly on Winlink, PSK31, Contestia, and CW. I get on the air and send emails, check into nets, etc. I am also a Net Control Station for Phone and Digital, and I run those nets on a monthly basis. During a disaster is the wrong time to find out something doesn’t work. Been there, done that. And yes, sometimes, even though you checked, checked, and double checked, things can still go wrong, but at least you can reduce the probability.

My vehicles get serviced regularly, and I go over my little camper before each trip. My generators are checked and run on a regular basis. I also go through my Flee bag. I check to make sure everything in it is in working order, that there are no expired, expiration dates, and the clothes I have tucked in there still fit. Too big is okay, too small is not.

With all my gear squared away, I turn to me. Have I had a check-up recently? Are my meds current to my needs?, is there anything I need to get fixed before I deploy somewhere? From here I move to my skill sets. Can I use the apps/radios I need? Sometimes a big update happens that changes the app enough I may have to relearn it. Can I still copy CW? CW is not widely used, but it makes a pretty good backup when everything else is going to pot.

How is my fieldcraft? Can I cook and eat in the field, can I purify water, start a fire, clean myself, apply first aid, make repairs, navigate; can I improvise, adapt, and overcome?

Some of this is annual and some of it is on going. I should never let my skills and gear degrade to a point where they are no longer usable. It is bad voodoo to try to learn/relearn a skill during or on the way to a disaster.

How about you? Don’t wait until the last minute. It’s no fun waiting in a long line to get something you could have gotten a few months ago for half the price. And then to add insult to injury, the guy in front of you buys the last one. Be ready, do it now! Embrace the coming storm with a cup of coffee and the knowledge you have done everything you could to be ready. Or, you could be driving around white-knuckled in a panic trying to buy the same things everything else who has waited is trying to buy. I’ve done both and I like the first option much better. Think straight and stay safe. 73 de Scott