My photo
Eastbourne, East Sussex, United Kingdom
I'm a network technician by day, college lecturer by night, and do web design for fun.

Tuesday, 19 January 2010

Honey, I'm Hooooooome!!!

Checked the Ofcom website at lunchtime - and they've re-instated my licence! :-) Whoop whoop! Same old callsign, new 3-page licence and 20 pages of T&Cs to print out.

Time to get myself a new hoodie printed methinks!

A bright future?

I'm back on the committee at the radio club for the first time in some years, and while I went to the meeting with some trepidation - I came out of it smiling. While there are a number of new faces, some of which weren't even members when I was last about, the Chairman outlined a very positive way forward for the coming year and everyone seems pretty keen to work together to restore the club to its glory days.

As I'd requested before the meeting, I was given 5 minutes or so (which, with discussion, turned into a bit more than that!) to bring everyone up-to-date with my current skill-set and outline what I felt I could bring to the table as a returning member of SARS, and as a member of the committee. Some of my ideas invoked discussion and we went rather over the 5 minutes - but it was almost all positive (including my proposal that we consider moving the club magazine over to a more blind-compliant digital format from the one it's currently presented in) so I'm now pretty optimistic about the coming year.

I was also able to make a number of offers and suggestions with regards to some of the other matters discussed, such as sourcing QSL cards, club publicity, and filling the vacant October slot on the club meeting/talks list. I've also offered to donate one of my very old laptops to the club once I've decommissioned it as a server. It's got a floppy drive and a serial port, and so should be great for all their old software used for contest logging etc. I have to check however whether it has a DVD drive, as one of the other things they'd need it for is for showing videos at meetings. I'm sure I can sort something out!

All that said and done - I came out of the meeting feeling like I'd returned to a big group of old friends, which was lovely. I think we could be in for a good year as far as SARS is concerned, and I'm really hoping that we can do a lot to expand our membership this year. Our treasurer also happens to be the membership secretary for my local branch of RAYNET - and gladly took my forms and subs before I left. It certainly looks like we could have good times ahead!

Thursday, 14 January 2010

Methinks it is webware time

I went on an SQL course back in May-ish 2009, and have been looking for a project to make good use of it on. I've messed about a bit with creating a "caught/seen/failed" Pokédex, but haven't done anything really useful so far.

So - with getting back on the air (and subject to whatever the rules are now - should be made available to me at the same time as my licence is re-instated) I'm thinking that I might write myself some logging webware which also generates RSS feeds, stats, and so on. I'd then test it out for a bit, maybe put out a Beta, then release it for free (or ad-supported) download.

I'm going to start off with basic call-logging, then hopefully build in other tables to take care of callsign-locating etc. and additional queries for "busiest day of the week", "busiest time of day" and the like. Anyone interested or want to suggest any features? :-)

It's on it's way!

I'm sitting here with a big grin on my face at the moment. I've just got off the phone with Ofcom again (who must be getting sick of me already!), they've confirmed that they've received my paper application and that my licence should be re-issued by early next week! I can also keep an eye on their website, where it will appear in the listings on my account and I can print it out as soon as it has been approved.

With my licence re-issue now being processed and the Icom batteries appearing to charge pretty well - I'm a happy bunny today :-)

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

And now? We wait...

This is the most frustrating part - I've had the form, turned it around, and sent it back to Ofcom. The weather won't be helping with the postal service nor the staffing levels at Ofcom, and so now all I can do is wait. Their estimate over the phone was 'a week from posting', whereas their website says to allow two weeks. I'm not mouthing off about the admin or anything like that - I'm just keen to get back on the air!

I posted the form back first-class on Monday afternoon. I'd hoped that it would have arrived on Tuesday - but I called today (Weds) and the woman said that they've no record of it yet, although it could possibly be with the colleague who's off today. While I was a little disappointed, I'm not worried yet. :-)

In other news, I've recovered a couple of handheld radios out of some drawers at my Dad's QTH - one of which was the Icom he used to lend me to use while I was out with RAYNET. I helped at the move of the Belle Toute Lighthouse with that little set! I say "little set" - by today's standards the thing is a brick - but it's a brick which brings back a lot of memories for me. Good times :-)

I'm trickle charging the 2 battery packs (which barely made my multimeter flicker when I checked them) and I'm investigating the 3rd, which is marked up as a dud needing refurb. Through the course of this evening, the primary unit has gone from 0.2v to about 3½v - so by morning I hope to have it registering a lot closer to 12v. I'd like to bung the secondary pack on charge in the morning - but as I'm teaching (web design), I figured it'd be safer to wait until I got back and to do it overnight, same as the primary.

I'm really hoping that the batteries hold a charge well enough on the Icom! The tiny set (different unit) has a proprietry battery which is very difficult to get hold of nowadays, so I'm having to run it off an old phone charger until we can source a new battery.

Monday, 11 January 2010

Progress!

My form from Ofcom arrived at work today, and I did my best with it while eating my lunch. As they forewarned me, it was a bit awkward to fill out for a reinstatement - especially for someone who lapsed when the licencing structure was rather different - however I think I managed to complete it well enough. It does at least have some spaces for you to add in phone/email information so that they can contact you in case of any queries.

Having had a first look through my various folders of paperwork at home, I was rather worried that my full RAE pass certificates had gone missing and I could only find my Novice certificates. City & Guilds charge £20 for replacing lost certificates, and £34 for finding them in the first place - £54 I could well do without spending. I phoned Ofcom to ask whether this would be a problem, and they said that I only needed to include a copy of something with my name, address and my old callsign on it, and confirmed that a photocopy of an old callbook entry would be sufficient. I printed one off, highlighted my entry and stapled it to the back of the form.

I also got an email back from Dick G4KAR, my old RAYNET controller who said that he'd be pleased to have me back, and that he'd get the forms sent out to me presently. The SARS committee meeting has been put back a week due to the adverse weather - but all in all, I'm making a rather speedier return to the hobby than I could ever have hoped at this time last week!!!

Evening edit:
My RAYNET application forms were in my email inbox shortly after I got home! I love this hobby. People get things done around here :-)

Sunday, 10 January 2010

Return to RAYNET?


I was a member of RAYNET for about 5 years as a teenaged operator. I have many happy memories, from my first event somewhere down a dirt-track manning a checkpoint for a fun run - to being sat underneath Hailsham Leisure Centre on Christmas morning, logging for the group controller while we helped to evacuate the residents of the flooded Pevensey Bay.

What made me think about this, is that the Southdown Amateur Radio Society committee meeting has been postponed due to roads being closed around a large part of Eastboune, and RAYNET are assisting with the transport of patients between hospitals in 4x4s due to the conditions. When I heard this, my mind instantly brought back all of those memories of events and callouts past - and I looked into what I would need to do to rejoin.

According to the RAYNET website (http://raynet-uk.net/), Dick Jeffries G4KAR is still the Controller for my local unit, and he's an ace bloke with a great team I was proud to be a part of. Now, as an adult (and hopefully soon to be driving) I can start to repay some of the support they all gave me as a young'un - and get out there doing something to help. It's only £7.20 a year and they do so much good as an organisation - so why not :-)

Saturday, 9 January 2010

Getting back in the saddle...

I'd been 'away' from amateur radio for a while - initially due to leaving home and going into a job with ridiculous hours and very little pay. I had neither the time nor money to be an Amateur for some time, and once I'd let my licence lapse, I figured it'd be the devil's own job to get it back.

Now having 3 good jobs rather than 1 awful one, my hours are less and my pay-cheques more. :-) With my father (M1APT) having passed away in August, and his kit now being more readily available - it seemed as good a time as any to get back into the hobby. The club (Southdown Amateur Radio Society) had given myself and my family great support following my father's death, and having gone to a group meeting to say hello and thank you - I found myself nominated to be on the committee! After a few moments thought, I realised that it would enable me to give something back to the club which had been so supportive right back from my being a young amateur (I achieved my Novice licence at the age of 10, and my M1 at 13).

I phoned the RSGB on Monday and asked what I had to do to get my licence reinstated. They were very helpful and referred me to Ofcom - who were even more helpful! All I had to do was give them my name and address over the phone (I gave them my work address) and they would send the "new licence" form out to me the same day. I would have to fill it in as much as I could, enclose a one-off £20 payment, a photocopy of something which proved I had my callsign (eg. photocopy of a callbook page) and send it all off to them, after which they would be able to reinstate my licence, for life, within a week of posting!

Sadly, the adverse weather has resulted in the post being held up - so I have not yet received the form. It seems however, that getting my licence back is going to be easier than I had dared to hope! I'd advise any amateurs who's licences had lapsed back when you had to renew them every year, to get their callsigns back as it involves so little effort and cost to do so.