Sunday, December 22, 2013

VY1JA(Canada) on 17m CW!!!

VY1JA(Canada) on 17m CW!!!

QSL image for VY1JA
VY1JA Canada flag Canada 
J. 'Jay' Allen
BOX 20117, MILE 9.5 MAYO RD.
WHITEHORSE, YT Y1A 7A2
Canada

[+] Mailing label
Lookups:   30652 Database Subscriber
Email: Use mouse to view.. QSL: N3SL, BUT JA ONLY TO JA3JM

20131222 0914UTC 18072kHz VY1JA
Date : 22/Dec/2013 0914UTC
Freq : 18072kHz CW
Rig  : SDR(PI4THT)
ANT  : Mini-Whip(PAØRDT)
PC recording



Lookups30652 (33011)
QRZ AdminVY1JA
Last Update2011-01-28 00:01:06
Latitude60.936430 (60° 56' 11'' N)
Longitude-135.164567 (135° 9' 52'' W)
Grid SquareCP20kw
Geo SourceUser supplied
Bearing33.5° NNE (from JJ5IZX)
Distance4255.6 mi (6848.8 km)
Long Path20601.2 mi (33154.4 km)
Sunrise18:12:31 UTC
Sunset23:45:30 UTC
CQ Zone1
QSL InfoN3SL, BUT JA ONLY TO JA3JM
QSL by Mail?No (e.g. Will this ham QSL by Postal Mail?)
QSL by eQSL?No (e.g. Will this ham QSL with eQSL?)
Uses LOTW?No (e.g. Does this ham use ARRL's LOTW ?)
Admin For(2) VY0JA VY1JA
Other
Callsigns
AliasComment
N8JAPrevious callsign
Apply for a new Vanity callsign...

I was introduced to radio at the age of 9, when my father brought a college text on basic radio theory home to satisfy my curiosity. The theory was a challenge, but with the radio text and an early ARRL handbook, I learned the basics, and was fixing tube type radios through age 14 when I met John Davidson, now K8JD. John, was not just receiving signals, he was transmitting them. He had a simple crystal controlled tube type transmitter, built on an RG Dunn cigar box.
Not long after, I was reviewing the morse code which I had learned from an instructor at Boy Scout Troop 2 in Southfield, Michigan. The code came back and I was soon sitting in the FCC office in Detroit, Michigan writing a novice examination.
John and I studied while I waited for my Novice license to arrive. By the time I held WN8CAL in my young hand, we were ready to take our general class examinations. As WA8CAL and WA8AFS, we both began study for our Extra class examinations, and were ready at the earliest testing we could arrange after our minimum time was up. We both passed and received nothing for our efforts, except a certificate. (There were no added privelages back then for taking the 20 wpm code test or Extra Theory.)
The recession in 1974 Detroit, found me as a non-working man with a family. I had been unemployed for 13 months, and besides driving my lovely wife, Ann, nuts by just being around too much, I was beginning to loose my self esteem. I had to do something. I followed work to Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada where I worked as an electrician, and later an instructor at Saskathewan Technical Institute, while Ann and I developed a 54 head dairy farm. I became an electrical contractor and ran a backhoe and trenching service. You would think with a name like Success Electric that VE5DB had it made, but a strain of mastitis hit our herd that would not respond to antibiotics. We lost it all, and started over in Alberta, call VE6DN. I worked for a really excellent contractor, RD Electric. When the owner,Clarence, ran out of work, I had to tell him to lay me off. He just did not have the heart to do it. I finally got the pink slip, filled it out and gave it to him to sign. People like him are hard to find. From there, I found work with Alberta Power, the local power utility.
Eventually I took a transfer to Yukon and VY1JA was on the air. Retired for 3 years but now un-retired an commuting for work in northern Alberta, there is no looking back for Ann and me. We love Yukon for its fine people and beautiful setting.
IF you are or know an old timer who operated in the early 60's on 80 or 40 meter CW and can find a contact in your log from WN8CAL or WA8CAL in your log please send me a QSL for the wall.  I do not collect cards, but that card would be special.
Rev: VY1JA - 2001/10/11 04:21:00
Last modified: 2011-08-28 04:28:51, 2899 bytes cached

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