The National Weather Service has forecast that Hurricane Ida is expected to be a dangerous major hurricane when it reaches the US Gulf Coast on Sunday. ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio®, urges radio amateurs in, and just outside of, affected areas to prepare themselves and their property for a potential emergency.
At 1710 UTC on Friday, August 27, messages from the NWS National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida indicated the “risk of life-threatening storm surge inundation is increasing along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama” and that “Ida is expected to be a dangerous major hurricane when it reaches the northern Gulf Coast on Sunday, and the risk of hurricane-force winds continues to increase, especially along portions of the Louisiana coast, including metropolitan New Orleans.”
Amateur Radio Emergency Service® (ARES®) volunteers are encouraged to follow the latest news and information from their local Emergency Coordinator (EC) or Section Emergency Coordinator (SEC). ARRL Section websites can be found by visiting www.arrl.org/sections. Local Amateur Radio repeaters are often an additional source of good information.
Anyone in the path of a storm should heed all local evacuation orders. Review FEMA’s Emergency Supply Checklist and Family Emergency Plan. Radio amateurs are also encouraged to follow these tips:
- Ensure the safety of yourself and your family before volunteering. Additionally, radio amateurs should never self-deploy. Follow the lead of your EC and SEC.
- Charge batteries and have a supply of additional batteries on hand.
- Gather emergency lighting and flashlights.
- If you have a generator, test it. Make sure you have a supply of fuel.
- If you have a ham radio Go-Kit, review its contents.
- Monitor your local repeater for SKYWARN and other emergency nets.
- Keep frequencies clear which are designated for emergency communications.
“Sunday will be 16 years to the day when Hurricane Katrina devastated a large part of the Gulf Coast,” said ARRL CEO David Minster, NA2AA. “In the wake of that disaster, upward of 1,000 trained Amateur Radio volunteers provided emergency communications for served agencies. The American Red Cross, The Salvation Army, the U.S. Coast Guard, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency all called on volunteer Amateur Radio operators to provide communications because of damage, loss, and overwhelmed telephone, cell, and public safety communications facilities.” In Congressional testimony on ham radio’s response to Hurricane Katrina, then ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP (SK) stated, “The United States absolutely can rely on the Amateur Radio Service. Amateur Radio provides immediate, high-quality communications that work every time, When All Else Fails®
SOURCE:ARRL
Antenna
Bird Technologies AT-500 Antenna Tester
Bird Technologies The AT-500, Antenna Tester provides a cost-effective, fast, graphical way of determining the quality of mobile and base stati… Read more
NVIS: Near Vertical Incidence Skywave [ PodCast ]
Sometimes the best direction to send your signal is straight up! Near vertical incidence skywave, or NVIS, is a skywave radio-wave propagation path… Read more
GB HF Quad 3 el / 3 band
Details GB HF Quad 3elm 3band 10-15-20m Turning:3,80m (12,4ft) Boom:5,50m (18ft) Fiberglass rod:4,00m Gain:9db F/B:20/25db F/S:20/30db VSWR:1:1:1 on R… Read more
Antenna beam 2 elements 80m (Monobander)
Frequency: (3,500 MHz – 3,830 MHz) Number of elements per band: 2 Gain [dBd]: 3.9 Front-back ratio [dB]: 18 A switching system that enables oper… Read more
40/20/10 Meter Fan Dipole Attic Antenna by KD2GOE
40/20/10 Meter Fan Dipole Attic Antenna by KD2GOE Read Full Article on http://www.worldwidedx.com : Read more
Review
Flex-6400M and Flex-6600M Preview from the Dayton Hamvention 2017 [ VIDEO ]
Flex-6400M and Flex-6600M Read more
Debut of the Hytera AR482G DMR HT : Ham Radio 2.0: Episode 14
This is a new DMR HT from Hytera made for the Amateur Radio Community. In this episode I will show the menu of the radio and the CPS software, and key… Read more
Measures The Loss In Coax Connectors and 100 Feet of RG8X by W6LG
Jim W6LG uses a signal generator and a panadapter to measure the loss in 30 coax connectors at 14 and 52 mhz down to a fraction of a db. You might be… Read more
Pluto Plus SDR – An Adalm Pluto Upgrade?
Here we take a look at the Pluto+ which has all the features the original Adalm Pluto should of had. Description: Pluto+ is a software-defined radio p… Read more
Equipment
LRN Precision LD-11 QRP Transceiver
LRN Precision LD-11 Transceiver Others state “extra”, We INCLUDE as STANDARD The HOTTEST new QRP Multimode HF+6M Transceiver on the marke… Read more
ACOM Company Tour. HF power amplifier production
ACOM Company Tour. HF power amplifier production – ACOM 1010, ACOM 1000, ACOM 700S, ACOM 1200S, ACOM 1010, ACOM 1500, ACOM 2100 and ACOM 2000A. Read more
How to Build A 130 Watt Dummy Load for HF Ham Radio
In this video I go through the building of a paint can dummy load that a ham radio operator may require for testing and tu… Read more
New ! Band decoder with another TRX control output for Arduino
Allows you to read the frequency or band data from your transceiver and switch output relay(s) by the defined rules . Another feature allows you to se… Read more
Elecraft KX2 – Manual , DataSheet and Block Diagram
Elecraft KX2 An 80-10 m SSB/CW/Data station that fits in your pocket! Our KX2 “stealth” transceiver can go wherever your imagination takes you. Thank… Read more
The post Radio Amateurs Prepare for Potentially Catastrophic Storm this Weekend appeared first on QRZ NOW – Ham Radio News.