ARRL DX Contest, CW, 2011 Call: PJ4A Operator(s): RD3A Station: PJ4G Class: SOAB HP QTH: Bonaire, Neth Ant. Operating Time (hrs): 47.4 Summary: Band QSOs Mults ——————- 160: 326 55 80: 882 58 40: 1378 59 20: 1568 59 15: 1547 59 10: 1519 58 ——————- Total: 7220 348 Total Score = 7537680 Club: Comments: YAESU FT-1000MP MARK-V AL-1200, 1KW ANTENNAS: 160-Inv L 80- Delta Loop 2-ele 40- Yagi 2-ele 20/15/10- C31XR. Thanks to Noah, K2NG/PJ4G. QSLs for PJ4A go via K4BAI

Winners of Space App Competition announced
The AMSAT-UK FUNcube team are among the winners in a competition to fly an Android App on the amateur radio Smartphone satellite STRaND-1 due for launch next year. Space technology experts from Surrey Satellite Technology (SSTL) and the Surrey Space
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Ispica, gli studenti del Curcio in collegamento con gli astronauti
La diretta dell'evento sarà trasmessa in streaming sul canale AMSAT Italia di LiveStream all'indirizzo http://www.livestream.com/amsat_italia a partire dalle ore 11 (ora locale). Alle ore 13,03 gli studenti si metteranno in contatto con gli astronauti
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Radioamatori. Honor Roll a Giovanni Casiraro IT9PKO
L'instancabile radioamatore modicano, già vincitore dei più ambiti e prestigiosi diplomi (awards) del mondo radiantistico, come DXCC, WAZ, WAS, ecc…, di recente è stato insignito, da parte dell'ARRL (l'Associazione Radioamatoriale Statunitense),
Read more on Ondaiblea (Blog)

These are ham radio shacks that I have taken from qrz.com and eham.net Music from ocremix. MUSIC: OA – Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney ‘This Feeling’ OC ReMix – ocremix.org DOWNLOAD ocremix.org
Video Rating: 4 / 5

This video shows you how to set up the Radio control feature in the Ham Radio Deluxe Software. I am using an Icom IC-718 in this video.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Ham Radio Deluxe – Connected FT100D – 7mhz Japan. 2008.01.13 – 11:03 am

DX News from the ARRL
Activity is on 20 and 17 meters using SSB with some RTTY and PSK31. QSL to YB9WZJ. North American RTTY Sprint, YLRL DX/NA YL Anniversary Contest, SARL 80-Meter SSB QSO Party, NCCC Sprint, Makrothen RTTY Contest, Oceania DX CW Contest,
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Members keep radio active
Bundaberg Amateur Radio Club president Rusty McGrath is gearing up for the club's 50th anniversary get-together today. THE airwaves have come a long way since the Bundaberg Amateur Radio Club's humble beginnings, operating out of the Red Cross Rooms in
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Decatur man gets a king to ham it up
Veteran ham operator Lloyd K. Barnett talks frequently to other amateur radio operators from around the world, so he can't recall every name. That's why he maintains four 30-inch-long trays crammed with QSL cards (confirmation or receipt of a call) in
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WD9EWK working HO-68 in FM from outside the 2010 AMSAT Space Symposium in Elk Grove Village, Illinois (grid EN62aa), on 9 October 2010 at approximately 1750 UTC. Thanks to Adrian AA5UK for recording this and providing me the video file.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

clips taken from the discussion about how to work amsats or ham radio satellites

What’s this? great Drake ham radio gear

Image by Giorgio Brida
Drake radio gear @ ham radio flea market ARI Torino

Home Depot to host safety and preparedness event
event from 9 am to 2 pm Saturday, featuring representatives from the Warrenton fire and police departments, Medix Ambulance Service, Clatsop County Emergency Management Services, American Red Cross, US Coast Guard Auxiliary and ham radio operators.
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Economic crisis hits Portuguese amateur radio repeaters
Portugal's amateur radio and EchoLink repeaters would appear to be the latest casualties of the current economic crisis. The economy crisis consequences are worst and worst everyday in Portugal and have made its first victims at ham radio.
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qso jt65
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Ham or amateur radio as a hobby involves some hard work in the form of getting licensed, and acquiring knowledge of the technical details. The hobby itself starts in the first step by one getting the ham device. Selection of a good ham radio is best done under the guidance of a person who knows about the radios well. More than that, one must know the local laws and rules with respect to the ham operation.

Getting to know your ham:
It is important to know about hams and, to know about your own ham as soon as you feel the urge to buy / assemble one. If you want to know about the ham, then again, internet, books and other hobbyists are all good places to start with. If you know no technical details of the electronics but find yourself fascinated by the idea, then it is time to learn a bit of jargon in the field.

So, if you do not know something, you should come out and seek answers either from those who might know or from resources like the library or the internet. One must spend some time and effort to learn about the hobby that one wants to pursue. Just a wish is not a good enough reason to pursue a hobby. One needs more than just a wish to be able to pursue an activity as a hobby. So, recognition of the hobby and the right kind of activity that suits you is important.

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Ham operation can be taxing and sometimes it can be tiring in spite of the modern equipment that does the scanning on its own. It is like the astrophysicist searching for some communications from aliens. If that idea grabs your attention, then this hobby will be to your liking since the activity is virtually the same, except for the helpful fact that we know there is someone who exists for sure, and one gets more than just “radio signals of unknown nature”. You get interaction from real people, from out there in the world, who live in flesh and blood as you do.

Your choice of equipment depends on how involved you are, and what your budget is that you can afford to invest in a ham equipment. There are good stores out there that sell ham radio at a reasonable cost. Again, as usual, it’s wise to chat with those who are ham radio operators, and also to visit and know the prices from various shops that sell ham radios to be able to select the best deal.

The cost of the radio equipment that can connect to longer distances will be higher than the ones that have a lesser range. Moreover, the recent advancements like digital voice transmission and such can be more costly than the simple Morse code wireless telegraphing model.

Getting licensed is the next hurtle. The amateur radio operator license exam does not require Morse code proficiency any more as it is has been allowed to be dropped as agreed in 2003 in the World Radiocommunication Conference in Geneva. The test will include the knowledge of ham etiquette, the communication laws that apply internationally as well as in your region and such. Once licensed, one is free to use the allotted bandwidths and is allowed to change or modify the equipment within the limits imposed by “spurious standards”.

So…what are you waiting for? Go get a ham and get your license: get going!

Everything on keeping track of your nausea can be found at the Nausea After Eating website. Visit the Sternum Pain website to find information on causes of sternum pain. Drop by the Healthy Heart Rate website to read about recovery heart rate.

Radiosport as a term is sometimes used as two separate words, or as a single word. It refers to the use of amateur radio equipment or the “ham”, in short, as a part of playing some sort of game. It might be group event or a single person event. It can involve other competitors in real time like a race or like a performance or achievement over a given time frame.

The contests are usually sponsored events, and can last anywhere between a few hours and 2 days, the world wide contests being two days usually. It can be local in a specific region, or may involve traveling a long distance. It can be a cumulative contest taking place over many weekends, or a sprint contest which lasts only a few hours. The rules are specific for the event and they include which stations (which regions) may participate and the like.

This is usually called radiosports. This can be any of the following.

Dx-Contest: This is when stations are to make two way contact with as many stations as possible over the longest distance possible. This is called the International DX-Contest today. Awards may be given for the following accomplishments. The “Worked All States Award” if the entrants make contact with someone from every state in the USA. The “Worked All continents Award” is given for making contact with someone from every continent. “Worked All Zones Award” is the same concept with time zones. Other awards include the DX Century Club award, and the UHF/VHF Century Club award.

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Another event is an Amateur Radio Direction finding using radios. A specific number of transmitters needs to be found from a specific region in a map before reaching the end line. This relies on the athletic ability of the ham operator as well as some direction finding skill with radios.

Fox Oaring or Bunny hunting: This is similar to the previous contest but involves more short range equipment of the hams, and so it relies more on the direction finding skills of the contestant rather than the athletic ability. It’s more technical in nature than the previous contest, and the radio can detect signals only 100 meters or so away, so the contestant must locate the transmitter hidden in an area of 200 meter radius.

A more severely restricted game than the Fox Oaring is the Radio orienting contest in compact areas. This requires very high technical skills.

There is another form of the amateur radio direction finding, or bunny hunting, that utilizes transportation with vehicles over long distances. The hams have to travel in their vehicles to the specific region and find the transmitter. Whoever finds the transmitter first and reaches the finish line is the winner. A variation is that the one to find a specific number of transmitters hidden in different places first is the winner. This relies on the traveling skill, orientation skill and the equipment efficiency too.

These events are called ARDF contests, which is short for Amateur Radio Direction Finding Contests. Contests or radiosports are just a part of the hobby activity. Entering contests is not a requirement, but there are many who pursue this almost obsessively, and collect winning certificates by the dozen in fact. On the other extreme are those that are equally passionate about being a ham, but do so purely for communication and satisfaction. The significant thing about hams that needs to be mentioned here is that the hams can and do make regular contact with space stations. Many astronauts are licensed amateur radio operators and use their radios for educational purpose as well as an emergency backup.

So what was once spanning a small region locally in the beginning now has penetrated into space! What was once only Morse code based has now evolved into greater variations involving voice, digital transmission and so on. It is exciting to see how much radio transmission has changed in recent years.

More Amateur Radio Articles

Check out these RTTY images:

Noises, Bleeping Noises

Image by psd
The office is being filled with Space 1999 beeping noises thanks to @9600 and his carrier detection ..

D44AC-YL2KL again Crazy CW?

Image by yl2kf

DXpedition to Tuvalu
Activity will be on all HF bands, 160-6 meters using CW, SSB, RTTY and PSK31. They expect to have at least 3 stations on the air with a dedicated station set up on 6 meters running in an interrupted beacon mode. QSL Manager is the Pacific DXers,
Read more on Southgate Amateur Radio Club

3D2R Rotuma DXpedition
They will be active as 3D2R on all bands from 160-2 meters, including the 60m and 6m, using CW, SSB and RTTY. They will also be active on PSK, SSTV and EME. Special attention will be made to work stations from Europe and Africa during those periods
Read more on Southgate Amateur Radio Club

ODXG Dxpedition to Vanuatu
At this time we plan to operate up to 4 stations on bands from 160m through 10m, SSB, CW and RTTY/PSK31. Equipment will consist of 3 Kenwood TS-480HX's running 200w barefoot and a Elecraft K3, also barefoot. Antennas will be Verticals mounted on the
Read more on Southgate Amateur Radio Club

Check out these ham radio images:

Antenna elements, 1

Image by buba69
Ham Radio Antenna tower, US tower with motor and base. Tower is 23 feet in down position 39 feet in the up position.

Antenna is a Crushcraft 3 element 4 band antenna, 10, 15, 20 and 40 meters.

Rotator is a HAM rotator

Tower #4

Image by buba69
Ham Radio Antenna tower, US tower with motor and base. Tower is 23 feet in down position 39 feet in the up position.

Antenna is a Crushcraft 3 element 4 band antenna, 10, 15, 20 and 40 meters.

Rotator is a HAM rotator

Tower #3

Image by buba69
Ham Radio Antenna tower, US tower with motor and base. Tower is 23 feet in down position 39 feet in the up position.

Antenna is a Crushcraft 3 element 4 band antenna, 10, 15, 20 and 40 meters.

Rotator is a HAM rotator

Market Reef DXpedition – latest
And after all, we had succeeded with 2600 QSOs in CQWW RTTY, after terrible beginning. See log search and more on OJ0X at QRZ.com We were ready to start at 00:00z but with the first CQ the computer crashed and after restart microham did not work again.
Read more on Southgate Amateur Radio Club

Yaesu VX-3R VHF/UHF DualBand Handheld Amateur HAM Radio Tranceiver!

  • Receives 0.5-999Mhz AM/FMN/FMW, Transmits 144-148 & 430-450Mhz VHF/UHF FM.
  • Output is 1.5W Vhf, 1W UHF – Includes LiOn Batt, Antenna & Charger.
  • 1000ch AlphaNumeric memories, ctcss/dcs, Scanning & more!
  • Super Micro size of only 1.9 x 3.2 x 0.9 inches (excluding top knob & antenna)

Super micro sized Yaesu VX-3R Amateur Ham Radio transceiver handheld.
Transmits the 2 meter & 70cm Amateur Ham bands (1.5w/1w), & receives 0.5-999Mhz (less cell).
Features 1,000 AlphaNumeric scanning memory channels, ARTS, WIRES, ctcss/dcs (PL & DPL).
With an Optional Yaesu DC Adapter, Power output increases to 3W/2W.
Transmits VHF/UHF Amateur radio bands, & receive shortwave, police, CB, Aircraft, Marine, Weather Fire/EMS & more!
Compatible with the following Optional avail

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Hello World: A Life in Ham Radio

To an outsider, the world of ham radio is one of basement transmitters, clunky microphones, Morse code, and crackly, possibly clandestine, worldwide communications, a world both mysterious and geeky. But the real story is a lot more interesting: indeed, there are more than two million operators worldwide, including people like Walter Cronkite and Priscilla Presley. Gandhi had a ham radio, as do Marlon Brando and Juan Carlos, king of Spain.
Hello World takes us on a seventy-year odyssey throug

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Stealth Amateur Radio: Operate From Anywhere

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Handheld Deluxe VHF/UHF Dualband Amateur Radio 2M/440 Transceiver with Twin Display 5W TYT TH-UVF1

  • Receives 136-174Mhz & 390-520Mhz. Transmits 144-148Mhz & 430-450Mhz. 5W/4W output w/1W low setting.
  • 128 AlphaNumeric memory channels, 87-108Mhz FM Broadcast Band receive too!
  • PL & DPL (ctcss/dcs), with tone scan, Multiple step rates, English Voice Prompts, 3 Color selectable Backlit LCD, Backlit keypad.
  • Includes Drop-in AC Desktop Quick charger, 1500mA LiOn HiCap BatteryPack, 12vdc charger cable, antenna, carry strap!
  • Super Low Price Complete Package Deal!

New TH-UVF1A Dual Band, Dual Display, Dual Standby VHF-UHF 2M/440 deluxe Amateur Handheld Ham radio Transceiver!
* It Features a receive range of 87-108 FM Broadcast, plus 136-174Mhz & 390-520Mhz!
* Transmits full Ham Bands of 144-148Mhz & 430-450Mhz.
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Direct Keypad entry, VOX, Tone Scan, Voice prompts, FCC Approved.
* 3 selectable colors for the BackLit LCD display!
** Complete Super Radio Package deal includes 120v Drop-in Desktop Rapid charger w/ 2 color l.e.d indica

List Price: $ 189.99

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In building the ham radio 40/80 meter inverted v antenna I ran into a slight set back. My SWR readings were very high and I first thought my antenna or cable to be bad. Fearing the worst I found the problem. A short circuit in the SO-239 connector in my MFJ-259B Antenna Analyzer. This is how I repaired it.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

In order to learn more about ham radio satellites, TCP/IP networking, stepper motor control, open-source Linux, and socket programming, I decided to build a simple prototype of a satellite Az/El tracker. Stefan HB9ZEM/KG4SDI
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Golden classics of yesteryear: A super collection of rigs, circuits & keys from amateur radio’s romantic past

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This video is a short beginning tutorial for XDX and Dx Clusters we even try a little Telnet.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Construction and naming

With Germany launching their Bremen and Europa into service, the British did not want to be left out in the ship building race. White Star Line began construction on their 60,000 ton Oceanic in 1928, while Cunard planned a 75,000 ton unnamed ship of their own.

Construction on the ship, then known only as “Hull Number 534”, began in December 1930 on the River Clyde by the John Brown & Company Shipbuilding and Engineering shipyard at Clydebank Scotland. Work was halted in December 1931 due to the Great Depression and Cunard applied to the British Government for a loan to complete 534. The loan was granted, with enough money to complete the Queen Mary and to build a running mate, Hull No. 552 which would become the Queen Elizabeth. One condition of the loan was that Cunard would merge with the White Star Line, which was Cunard’s chief British rival at the time and which had already been forced by the Depression to cancel construction on its Oceanic. Both lines agreed and the merger was completed in April 1934. Work on the Queen Mary resumed immediately and she was launched on 26 September 1934. Completion ultimately took 3 years and cost 3 million pounds sterling in total. Much of the ship’s interior was designed and constructed by the Bromsgrove Guild.

The ship was named after Queen Mary, the consort of King George V. Until her launch the name she was to be given was kept a closely guarded secret. Legend has it that Cunard intended to name the ship “Victoria”, in keeping with company tradition of giving its ships names ending in “ia”. However, when company representatives asked the King’s permission to name the ocean liner after Britain’s “greatest queen”, he said his wife, Queen Mary, would be delighted. And so, the legend goes, the delegation had of course no other choice but to report that No. 534 would be called RMS Queen Mary. This story was denied by company officials, and traditionally the names of sovereigns have only been used for capital ships of the Royal Navy. Some support for the story was provided by Washington Post editor Felix Morley, who sailed as a guest of the Cunard Line on the 1936 maiden voyage of the Queen Mary. In his 1979 autobiography, For the Record, Morley wrote that he was placed at table with Sir Percy Bates, chairman of the Cunard Line. Bates told him the story of the naming of the ship “on condition you won’t print it during my lifetime.” The name Queen Mary could also have been decided upon as a compromise between Cunard and the White Star Line, with which Cunard had recently merged, both lines had tradition of using names either ending in “ic” with White Star and “ia” with Cunard.

History (1934-1939)

Queen Mary 1936

There was already a Clyde turbine steamer named Queen Mary, so Cunard White Star reached agreement with the owners that the existing steamer would be renamed TS Queen Mary II, and in 1934 the new liner was launched by Queen Mary as RMS Queen Mary. On her way down the slipway, the Queen Mary was slowed by eighteen drag chains, which checked the liner’s progress into the Clyde, a portion of which had been widened to accommodate the launch.

When she sailed on her maiden voyage from Southampton, England on 27 May 1936, she was commanded by Sir Edgar T. Britten, who had been the master designate for Cunard White Star whilst the ship was under construction at the John Brown shipyard. The Queen Mary had a gross tonnage (GT) of 80,774 tons; her rival, Normandie, which originally grossed 79,280 tonnes, had been modified the preceding winter to increase her size to 83,243 GT (an enclosed tourist lounge was built on the aft boat deck on the area where the game court was), and therefore kept the title of the largest ocean liner. The Queen Mary sailed at high speeds for most of her maiden voyage to New York until heavy fog forced a reduction of speed on the final day of the crossing.

The Observation Bar lounge. The windows were once part of the enclosed Promenade Deck turnaround; the lounge was extended forward after 1967.

The Queen Mary’s design was criticized for being too traditional, especially when the Normandie’s hull was revolutionary with a clipper shaped, streamlined bow. Except for her cruiser stern, she seemed to be simply an enlarged version of her Cunard predecessors from the pre World War I era. Her interior design, while mostly Art Deco, still seemed restrained and conservative when compared to the ultramodern French liner. However, the Queen Mary proved to be the more popular vessel than its larger rival, in terms of passengers carried.

In August 1936, Queen Mary captured the Blue Riband from Normandie, with average speeds of 30.14 knots (55.82 km/h) westbound and 30.63 knots eastbound. Normandie was refitted with a new set of propellors in 1937 and reclaimed the honour, but in 1938 Queen Mary took back the Blue Riband in both directions with average speeds of 30.99 knots (57.39 km/h) westbound and 31.69 knots eastbound, records which stood until lost to the SS United States in 1952.

Interior

The First Class dining room map on the Queen Mary, which tracked the ship’s progress across the Atlantic Ocean.

Onboard amenities on the Queen Mary varied according to class, with First Class passengers accorded the most space and luxury. Among facilities available on board the Queen Mary, the liner featured an indoor swimming pool, salon, ship’s library, children’s nursery, outdoor paddle tennis court, and ship’s kennel. The largest room was the first class dining room (grand salon), which spanned three stories in height and was anchored by wide columns. The indoor swimming pool facility also spanned over two decks in height.

The first class dining room featured a large map of the transatlantic crossing, with twin tracks symbolizing the winter/spring route (further south to avoid icebergs) and the summer/autumn route. During each crossing, a motorized model of the Queen Mary would indicate the vessel’s progress en route.

The First Class dining room on the Queen Mary, also known as the Grand Salon.

As an alternative to the first class dining room, the Queen Mary featured a separate Verandah Grill on the Sun Deck at the upper aft of the ship. The Verandah Grill was an exclusive la carte restaurant with a capacity of approximately eighty passengers, and was converted to the Starlight Club at night. Irish writer and broadcaster, Brian Cleeve spent several months as a commis waiter on the ship in 1938, after he ran away from school. Also on board was the Observation Bar, an Art Deco styled lounge, with wide ocean views.

Woods from different regions of the British Empire were used in her public rooms and staterooms. Accommodations ranged from fully equipped, luxurious first class staterooms to modest and cramped third class cabins. Artists commissioned by Cunard in 1933 for works of art in the interior include Edward Wadsworth and A. Duncan Carse.

World War II

Arriving in New York Harbor, 20 June 1945, with thousands of U.S. troops.

In late August 1939, the Queen Mary was on a return run from New York to Southampton. The international situation led to her being escorted by the battlecruiser HMS Hood. She arrived safely, and set out again for New York on 1 September. By the time she arrived, the Second World War had started and she was ordered to remain in port until further notice alongside the Normandie. In 1940 the Queen Mary and the Normandie were joined in New York by Queen Mary’s new running mate Queen Elizabeth, fresh from her secret dash from Clydebank. The three largest liners in the world sat idle for some time until the Allied commanders decided that all three ships could be used as troopships (unfortunately, the Normandie would be destroyed by fire during her troopship conversion). The Queen Mary left New York for Sydney, where she, along with several other liners, was converted into a troopship to carry Australian and New Zealand soldiers to the United Kingdom. In the conversion, her hull, superstructure and funnels were painted navy grey. Inside, stateroom furniture and decoration were removed and replaced with triple-tiered wooden bunks (which would later be replaced by standee bunks). Six miles of carpet, 220 cases of china, crystal and silver service, tapestries and paintings were removed and stored in warehouses for the duration of the war. The woodwork in the staterooms, the first-class dining room and other public areas were covered with leather. Eventually joined in troop service by the Queen Elizabeth, the two ships were the largest and fastest troopships involved in the war, often carrying as many as 15,000 men in a single voyage, and often travelling out of convoy and without escort. Their high speed meant that it was difficult for U boats to catch them.

On 2 October 1942, Queen Mary accidentally sank one of her escorts, slicing through the light cruiser HMS Curacoa off the Irish coast, with the loss of 338 lives. Due to the constant danger of being attacked by U-Boats, on board the Queen Mary Captain C. Gordon Illingworth was under strict orders not to stop for any reason, the Royal Navy destroyers accompanying the Queen were ordered to stay on course and not rescue any survivors.

The forward section of the Queen Mary was fitted with new big windows and anti-aircraft guns seen here in Long Beach.

In December 1942, the Queen Mary was carrying 16,082 American troops from New York to Great Britain, a standing record for the most passengers ever transported on one vessel. While 700 miles from Scotland during a gale, she was suddenly hit broadside by a rogue wave that may have reached a height of 28 metres (92 ft). An account of this crossing can be found in Walter Ford Carter’s book, No Greater Sacrifice, No Greater Love. Carter’s father, Dr. Norval Carter, part of the 110th Station Hospital on board at the time, wrote that at one point the Queen Mary “damned near capsized… One moment the top deck was at its usual height and then, swoom! Down, over, and forward she would pitch.” It was calculated later that the ship tilted 52 degrees, and would have capsized had she rolled another 3 degrees. The incident inspired Paul Gallico to write his story, The Poseidon Adventure, which was later made into a film by the same name, using the Queen Mary as a stand-in for the SS Poseidon.

During the war, the Queen Mary carried British Prime Minister Winston Churchill across the Atlantic for meetings with fellow Allied forces officials on several occasions, he would be listed on the passenger manifest as “Colonel Warden” and insisted that the lifeboat assigned to him be fitted with a .303 machine gun so that he could “resist capture at all costs”.

After World War II

The Queen Mary in Southampton, June 1956

From September 1946 to July 1947, Queen Mary was refitted for passenger service, adding air conditioning and upgrading her berth configuration to 711 first class, 707 cabin class and 577 tourist class passengers. Following refit, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth dominated the transatlantic passenger trade as Cunard White Star’s two ship weekly express service through the latter half of the 1940s and well into the 1950s. They proved highly profitable for Cunard. But in 1958, the first transatlantic flight by a jet began a completely new era of competition for the Cunard Queens. On some voyages, winters especially, Queen Mary sailed into harbour with more crew than passengers. (But she and her sister Queen Elizabeth still averaged over 1000 passengers per crossing into the middle 1960s.) By 1965, the entire Cunard fleet was leaving a trail of red ink. Hoping to continue financing their still under construction Queen Elizabeth 2, Cunard mortgaged the majority of the fleet. Finally, under a combination of age, lack of public interest, inefficiency in a new market, and the damaging after effects of the national seamen’s strike, Cunard announced that both the Queen Mary and the Queen Elizabeth would be retired from service (the Elizabeth would leave service one year later) and were to be sold off. Many offers were submitted, but it was Long Beach, California who beat the Japanese scrap merchants. And so, Queen Mary was retired from service in 1967, while her running mate Queen Elizabeth was withdrawn in 1968. RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 took over the transatlantic route in 1969.

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The Queen Mary in Long Beach

The Queen Mary from the Northern side of Long Beach harbor

After her retirement in 1967, she steamed to Long Beach, California, where she is permanently moored as a tourist attraction. From 1983 to 1993, the Queen Mary was accompanied by Howard Hughes’ Spruce Goose, which was located in a large dome nearby (the dome is now used by Carnival Cruise Lines as a ship terminal, and formerly as a soundstage).

Since drilling had started for oil in Long Beach Harbor, some of the revenue had been set aside in the “Tidelands Oil Fund.” Some of this money was allocated in 1958 for the future purchase of a maritime museum for Long Beach.

Conversion

When the Queen Mary was bought by Long Beach, they decided that the ship would be an iconic host and not for preserving her as an ocean liner. It had been decided to clear almost every area of the ship below C deck (called R deck after 1950 to lessen passenger confusion all the restaurants were on “R” deck) to make way for the museum. This would increase museum space to 400,000 square feet. It required removal of all the boiler rooms, the forward engine room, both turbo generator rooms, the ship stabilisers and the water softening plant. The ship’s now empty fuel tanks were then filled with local mud which would keep the ship’s centre of gravity and draft at the correct levels, as these critical factors had been affected by the removal of all various components and structure. Only the aft engine room and “shaft alley”, at the stern of the ship, would be spared from the cutter’s torch. Remaining space would be used for storage or office space. One problem that arose during the conversion was a dispute between land based and maritime unions over conversion jobs. The United States Coast Guard had final say; the Queen Mary was deemed a building, since most of her propellers had been removed and her machinery gutted. The ship was also repainted with its red water level paint a slightly higher than its old one. During the conversion the funnels were removed as it was the only practical way to lift out the the scrap materials from the engine and boiler rooms, subsiquently it was found that the funnels were held together with over thirty coats of paint and that they had to be replaced with new replica items.

A passageway in First Class accommodation, now part of the onboard hotel

With all of the lower decks nearly gutted from R deck and down, Diner’s Club, the initial lessee of the ship, was to convert the remainder of the vessel into a hotel. Diner’s Club Queen Mary dissolved and vacated the ship in 1970 after their parent company, Diner’s Club International was sold, and a change in corporate direction was mandated amidst the conversion process. Specialty Restaurants, a Los Angeles based company that focused on theme based restaurants, would take over as master lessee the following year.

During this conversion, the plan was to convert most of her first and second class cabins on A and B decks only into hotel rooms, and convert the main lounges and dining rooms into banquet spaces. On Promenade Deck, the starboard promenade deck would be enclosed to feature an upscale restaurant and cafe called Lord Nelson’s and Lady Hamilton’s themed like early 19th century sailing ships. The famed and elegant Observation Bar was redecorated as a western themed bar.

The Queen Mary’s bridge, now open to visitors

The smaller first class public rooms such as the Drawing Room, Library, Lecture Room and the Music studio would be stripped of most of their fittings and converted over to retail space, heavily expanding the retail presence on the ship. Two more shopping malls were built on the Sun Deck in separate spaces previously used for first class cabins and engineer’s quarters.

A post war feature of the ship, the first class cinema, was removed for kitchen space for the new Promenade deck dining venues. The first class lounge and smoking room were reconfigured and converted into banquet space, while the second class smoking room would be subdivided into a wedding chapel and office space. On Sun Deck, the elegant Verandah Grill would be gutted and converted into a fast food eatery, while a new upscale dining venue would be created directly above it on Sports Deck in space once used for crew quarters. The second class lounges would be expanded to the sides of the ship and used for banqueting. On R deck, the first class dining room was reconfigured and subdivided into two banquet venues, the Royal Salon and the Windsor Room. The second class dining room would be subdivided into kitchen storage and a crew mess hall, while the third class dining room would initially be used as storage and crew space. Also on R deck, the first class Turkish bath complex, the 1930s equivalent to a spa, would be removed. The second class pool would be removed and its space initially used for office space, while the first class swimming pool would be used for hotel guests. Combined with modern safety codes, and the structural soundness of the area directly below, the swimming pool is no longer in use.

No crew cabins remain intact aboard the ship today. She now serves as a hotel, museum, tourist attraction, and for rent site for events, but her financial results have been mixed.

The Queen Mary as a tourist attraction

On 8 May 1971, the Queen Mary opened its doors to tourists. Initially, only portions of the ship were open to the public as Specialty Restaurants had yet to open its dining venues or the hotel. As a result, the ship was only open on weekends. In December of that year, Jacques Cousteau’s Museum of the Sea opened, with only a quarter of the planned exhibits built. Within the decade, Cousteau’s museum closed due to low ticket sales and the deaths of many of the fish that were housed in the museum. In November of the following year, the hotel opened its initial 150 guest rooms. Hyatt operated the hotel from 1974 to 1980, when the Jack Wrather Corporation signed a 66-year lease with the city of Long Beach to operate the entire property. Wrather was taken over by the Walt Disney Company in 1988, Wrather owned the Disneyland Hotel, which Disney had been trying to buy for 30 years; the Queen Mary was thus an afterthought and was never marketed as a Disney property.

First Class accommodations on the Queen Mary, converted into a present-day hotel room with modern curtains, bedding and amenities surrounded by original wood paneling, portholes and light fixtures.

Through the late eighties and early nineties, the Queen Mary continued to struggle financially. During the Disney years, Disney planned to develop a theme park on the remaining land. This theme park eventually opened a decade later in Japan as DisneySea, with a recreated oceanliner resembling the Queen Mary as its centerpiece. Hotel Queen Mary closed in 1992 when Disney gave up the lease on the ship to focus on what would become Disney’s California Adventure. The tourist attraction remained open for another two months, but by the end of 1992, the Queen Mary completely closed its doors to tourists and visitors.

In February 1993, under the direction of President and C.E.O. Joseph F. Prevratil, RMS Foundation, Inc began a five-year lease with the city of Long Beach to act as the operators of the property. Later that month, the tourist attraction reopened completely, while the hotel reopened in March. In 1995, RMS’s lease was extended to twenty years while the extent of the lease was reduced to simply operation of the ship itself. A new company, Queen’s Seaport Development, Inc. (QSDI) came into existence in 1995 controlling the real estate adjacent to the vessel. In 1998, the City of Long Beach extended the QSDI lease to 66 years. In 2005, QSDI sought Chapter 11 protection due to a rent credit dispute with the City. In 2006, the bankruptcy court requested bids from parties interesting in taking over the lease from QSDI. The minimum required opening bid was M. The operation of the ship, by RMS, remained independent of the bankruptcy. In Summer 2007, the Queen Mary’s lease was sold to a group named “Save the Queen” managed by Hostmark Hospitality Group, who planned to develop the land adjacent to the Queen Mary, and upgrade, renovate, and restore the Queen Mary. During the time of their management, staterooms were updated with Ipod docking stations and flatscreen TV’s, the ships three funnels were repainted their original Cunard Red color, as well as the ships waterline area, The portside Promenade Deck’s planking was restored and refinished, as well as work on other parts of the ship, many lifeboats were repaired and patched, and the ships kitchens were renovated with new equipment.

In late September 2009, the Queen Mary’s management was taken over by Delaware North Companies, who plan to continue restoration, and renovation of the ship and its property, and work to revitalize and enhance one of the grandest ocean liners of all time.

In 2004, the Queen Mary and Stargazer Productions added Tibbies Great American Cabaret to the space previously occupied by the ship’s bank and wireless telegraph room. Stargazer Productions and the Queen Mary transformed the space into a working dinner theater complete with stage, lights, sound, and scullery.

Meeting of the Queens

On 23 February 2006, the RMS Queen Mary 2 saluted her predecessor as it made its port of call in Los Angeles Harbor, while on a cruise to Mexico. The event was covered heavily by local and international media.

Ship’s horn

The salute itself was carried out with the Queen Mary blowing her one working air horn in response to the Queen Mary 2 blowing her combination of two brand new horns pointing forward and an original 1932 Queen Mary horn (donated by the City of Long Beach) aimed aft. The Queen Mary originally had three whistles tuned to 55 Hz, a frequency chosen because it was low enough that the extremely loud sound of it would not be painful to human ears. Modern IMO regulations specify ships’ horn frequencies to be in the range 70200 Hz for vessels that are over 200 metres (660 ft) in length. Traditionally, the lower the frequency, the larger the ship. The Queen Mary 2, being 345 metres (1,130 ft) long, was given the lowest possible frequency (70 Hz) for her regulation whistles, in addition to the refurbished 55 Hz whistle on permanent loan. 55 Hz is the lower bass “A” note found an octave up from the lowest note of a piano keyboard. The air-driven Tyfon whistle can be heard at least ten miles away.

W6RO

Queen Mary’s wireless radio room

The Queen Mary’s original, professionally manned wireless radio room was destroyed once the ship arrived in Long Beach. In its place an amateur radio room was created one deck above the original radio reception room with some of the discarded original radio equipment used for display purposes only. The amateur radio station with the call sign W6RO (“Whiskey Six Romeo Oscar”) relies on volunteers from a local amateur radio club. They are present most of the time the ship is open to the public, and the radios can also be used by other licensed amateur radio operators.

In honor of his over forty years of dedication to W6RO and the Queen Mary, in November 2007 the Queen Mary Wireless Room was renamed The Nate Brightman Radio Room. This was announced on 28 October 2007 at Mr. Brightman’s 90th birthday party by Joseph Prevratil, President and CEO of the Queen Mary.

Paranormal

The Queen Mary at night, with spotlight on the Soviet submarine B-427

Ghosts were reported on board only after permanently docked in California. Many areas are rumored to be haunted. Reports of hearing little children crying in the nursery room, actually used as the third-class playroom, and a mysterious splash noise in the drained first-class swimming pool are cited. In 1966, 18-year-old engineer John Pedder was crushed by a watertight door in the engine room during a fire drill, and his ghost is said to haunt the ship. There is also said to be the spirit of a young girl named Jackie who was murdered in the pool room haunts the first class pool onboard the ship. It is also said that men screaming and the sound of metal crushing against metal can be heard belowdecks at the extreme front end of the bow. Those who have heard this believe it to be the screams of the sailors aboard the HMS Curacoa at the moment the destroyer was split in half by the liner.
The Queen Mary operates daily paranormal themed tours, some of which have theatrics applied for dramatic effect. The ship maintains a haunted maze and expands to multiple mazes during the Halloween season.

The Queen Mary has been the subject of numerous professional paranormal investigations by printed publications like Beyond Investigation Magazine, nationally televised shows like Ghost Hunters, The Othersiders, and radio’s Coast to Coast AM. The UK paranormal television program, Most Haunted, investigated the ship in a special two-part episode.

On screen

Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (February 2010)

In its permanent berth in Long Beach, the Queen Mary has been used as a filming location for numerous films, television episodes, and commercials. Some examples are:

Assault on a Queen (1966)

The Poseidon Adventure (1972). Some of the Poseidon ship scenes were filmed on board the Queen Mary. A 26-foot long miniature of the ship was used in special effects shots.

Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1979)

The Gumball Rally (1976). The pier in Long Beach where the ship is located was the finish line for the cross-country race.

S.O.S. Titanic (1979), in which the Queen Mary doubled for her ill-fated predecessor.

Goliath Awaits (1981), About an ocean liner named the Goliath being sunk during World War II and the survivors forming an underwater society.

Someone to Watch Over Me (1987), The murder at the beginning of the film was filmed in the First Class swimming pool area of the Queen Mary.

Toyota’s advertisement for Celica All-trac Turbo in the 1991 Long Beach Grand Prix featured the Queen Mary, with the tagline, “On 14 April, we’re going streaking in front of the Queen.”

Murder, She Wrote (1989), Episode entitled “The Grand Old Lady” takes place on the Queen Mary in 1947.

Bold and the Beautiful (1989)
Tidal Wave: No Escape (1997). Harve Presnell destroys the Queen Mary with an artificial tsunami.

“Triangle,” an episode of The X-Files, featured the Queen Mary as the fictional Queen Anne.

Pearl Harbor (2001).

Escape from L.A. (1996).

Being John Malkovich (1999), parts of the movie were shot on board.

Fiona Apple’s “O’ Sailor” video.

Most Haunted (2005).

The Amazing Race 7 (2005). The starting line for the 7th season.

Airwolf episode “Desperate Monday”.

“Development Arrested”, series finale of Arrested Development (2006).

The ship was used as the home for the finalists of reality TV show Last Comic Standing in the fourth season (2006).

National Lampoon’s Dorm Daze 2 (2006).

The 2007 Cold Case episode World’s End.

The Queen Mary was one location the TAPS crew investigated for hauntings during the second season of the TV series Ghost Hunters.

The Queen Mary was the site of Vincent Chase’s Birthday in the episode “Less Than 30”, of the 3rd Season of Entourage (TV Series).

The Queen Mary is featured on a 2007 Jonas Brothers music video, where they perform their single SOS on the ocean liner.

Portrayed the German liner SS Bremen in the 1983 mini-series The Winds of War based on the 1971 novel by Herman Wouk.

An episode of Quantum Leap took place on the Queen Mary.

The 1997 romantic comedy Out to Sea (with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau) used the Queen Mary as filming location.

The Queen Mary was the set of “The Search for the Next Elvira”, where many hopeful young women contended to be the next “Mistress of the Dark”.

Miss America: Countdown to the Crown (2009), a reality competition show; part of the precompetition for the Miss America 2009 pagent.

An episode of New York Goes to Work used the Queen Mary as a filming location (2009).

The Othersiders (2009), The team investigated here for paranormal activity.

Legally Blondes (2008).

In popular culture

This “In popular culture” section may contain minor or trivial references. Please reorganize this content to explain the subject’s impact on popular culture rather than simply listing appearances, and remove trivia references. (February 2010)

The album title for Apologies to the Queen Mary by Wolf Parade references an incident on the ship in which the band was involved.

Most of the series finale of Arrested Development takes place on the ship.

The music video of the Jonas Brothers song SOS was filmed aboard the Queen Mary.

A season one episode of Moonlight features the Queen Mary as the location of a murder of a stalked Hollywood star.

The Queen Mary is referenced in episode 7 of the ABC Family series The Middleman, “The Cursed Tuba Contingency”. One of the episode’s villains has a ship which he boasts is “three feet longer than the Queen Mary, and eighty-six feet longer than the Titanic.” In reality, the Queen Mary (at 965 feet perpendiculars) really is eighty-three feet longer than the Titanic (at 882 feet).

In the book The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, the Queen Mary plays a major part as the start of Edward’s Journey. Edward, a china rabbit, is on the Queen Mary with his owner, a little girl named Abileine. Two boys accidentily throw Edward overboard, and the rabbit starts out on his journey. The Queen Mary is referenced in the text and in a painting in the book.

In Tim Powers’s book Expiration Date, the Queen Mary plays a significant part, related to the supernatural legends above.

See also

“It’s Men that Count”; late 1930s promotional poster for the Cunard Line

RMS Mauretania (1938)

RMS Queen Elizabeth

RMS Queen Elizabeth 2

MS Queen Elizabeth

RMS Queen Mary 2

MS Queen Victoria

References

Notes

^ Royal Lady – The Queen Mary Reigns in Long Beach

^ The Bromsgrove Guild – an illustrated history, The Bromsgrove Society

^ a b c Maxtone-Graham, John. The Only Way to Cross. New York: Collier Books, 1972, p. 288

^ “Chains brake liner at launching”. Popular Science. 1934-12. http://books.google.com/books?id=uigDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA20&lpg=PA20#v=onepage&q=&f=false. Retrieved 2009-11-02. 

^ Atlantic Liners: RMS Queen Mary

^ ocean-liners.com SS Normandie

^ Bruce, Jim, Faithful Servant: A Memoir of Brian Cleeve Lulu, 2007, ISBN 978-1-84753-064-6, (pp.50-55)

^ Modern art takes to the waves

^ The Historic Queen Mary – RMS Foundation, Inc.

^ Levi, Ran. “The Wave That Changed Science”. The Future of Things. http://thefutureofthings.com/column/1005/the-wave-that-changed-science.html. Retrieved 2009-11-02. 

^ Lavery, Brian. Churchill Goes to War: Winston’s Wartime Journeys. Naval Institute Press, 2007, p. 213.

^ OceanLiners.com. RMS Queen Mary

^ Harvey, Clive (2008). R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth-The Ultimate Ship. Carmania Press. ISBN 9780954366681. 

^ The Queen Mary. The Queen Mary’s History

^ Long Beach Report. A REPORT ON THE QUEENSWAY BAY DEVELOPMENT PLAN AND THE LONG BEACH TIDE AND SUBMERGED LANDS. State Lands Commission, April 2001

^ Tibbies Cabaret. History. Retrieved on August 8, 2009.

^ USATODAY.com – Queen Mary 2 to meet original Queen Mary in Long Beach harbor

^ ‘Queen Mary’s horn (MP3) – PortCities Southampton

^ The Funnels and Whistles

^ Welcome to kockum sonics: Tyfon IMO regulations

^ “The voice of the Queen Mary can be heard ten miles away” (JPG image)

^ W6RO – Associated Radio Amateurs of Long Beach

^ Human Touch Draws Ham Radio Buffs, Gazettes Newspaper

^ The wireless installation on RMS Queen Mary

^ Chisholm, Charlyn Keating. “Haunted Hotel – Queen Mary Hotel in Long Beach, California”. About.com. http://hotels.about.com/od/hauntedhotelsatoz/p/hau_queenmary.htm. Retrieved 2008-11-25. 

^ Winer, Richard, Ghost Ships

^ Queen Mary – Attractions at Night QueenMary.com

^ Queen Mary’s Shipwreck – Annual Halloween fest

^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VUZK-D5czs&feature=related

Bibliography

The Cunard White Star Quadruple-screw North Atlantic Liner, Queen Mary. – Bonanza Books, 289 p., 1979. – ISBN 0517279290. Largely a reprint of a special edition of “The Shipbuilder and Marine Engine-builder” from 1936.

Cunard Line, Ltd., John Brown and Company archives.

Clydebank Central Library Clydebank, Scotland.

Roberts, Andrew, Masters and Commanders: How four titans won the war in the West, 1941-1945, Harper Collins e-Books, London

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: RMS Queen Mary

Website of current commercial operator (Event listings as well as Facts & History section)

Queen Mary Alternative Visions (Describes the construction and conversion of the Queen Mary and advocates its partial restoration)

Time Magazine: The Queen; 11 August 1947

The Great Ocean Liners: RMS Queen Mary

Clydebank Restoration Trust

RMS Queen Mary at Chris’ Cunard Page (The Last Great Atlantic Fleet)

Coordinates: 334511 1181123 / 33.7531N 118.1898W / 33.7531; -118.1898

Records

Preceded by

Normandie

Holder of the Blue Riband (Westbound)

1936 1937

Succeeded by

Normandie

Atlantic Eastbound Record

1936 1937

Holder of the Blue Riband (Westbound)

1938 1952

Succeeded by

United States

Atlantic Eastbound Record

1938 1952

v  d  e

Cunard ships

Current Fleet

RMS Queen Mary 2 (2004)   MS Queen Victoria (2007)

Planned

MS Queen Elizabeth (2010)

Former Ships

RMS Britannia (1840)   RMS Persia (1856)   SS Abyssinia (1870)   SS Servia (1881)   RMS Etruria (1884)   RMS Umbria (1884)   RMS Campania (1892)   RMS Lucania (1893)   SS Ivernia (1899)   RMS Carpathia (1903)   RMS Carmania (1905)   RMS Caronia (1905)   RMS Lusitania (1907)   RMS Mauretania (1907)   RMS Franconia (1910)   RMS Ascania (1911)   RMS Albania (1911)   RMS Ausonia (1911)   RMS Laconia (1912)   RMS Alaunia (1913) (1913)   RMS Aquitania (1913)   SS Orduna (1914)   SS Empire Barracuda (1918)   RMS Albania (1920)   RMS Antonia (1921)   RMS Ausonia (1921)   RMS Scythia (1921)   RMS Andania (1922)   RMS Berengaria (1922)   RMS Laconia (1922)   RMS Lancastria (1922)   RMS Majestic (1922)   RMS Ascania (1923)   RMS Aurania (1924)   SS Letitia (1924)   RMS Alaunia (1925)   RMS Carinthia (1925)   SS Laurentic (1927)   RMS Britannic (1929)   RMS Georgic (1934)   RMS Olympic (1934)   RMS Queen Mary (1936)   RMS Mauretania (1939)   SS Pasteur (1939)  MV Empire Audacity (1939)   RMS Queen Elizabeth (1940)   SS Empire Battleaxe (1943)   SS Empire Broadsword (1943)   SS Valacia (1943)   RMS Media (1947)   RMS Caronia (1949)   RMS Saxonia (1954)   RMS Ivernia (1955)   RMS Carinthia (1956)   RMS Sylvania (1957)   RMS Alaunia (1960)   RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 (1967)   MS Cunard Adventurer (1971)   MS Cunard Ambassador (1972)   MS Cunard Countess (1975)   MS Cunard Princess (1976)   MS Sagafjord (1983)   MS Caronia (1983)   MS Royal Viking Sun (1994)

v  d  e

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

Keeper of the Register  History of the National Register of Historic Places  Property types  Historic district  Contributing property

List of entries

National Park Service  National Historic Landmarks  National Battlefields  National Historic Sites  National Historical Parks  National Memorials  National Monuments

Categories: Art Deco ships | Blue Riband holders | Clyde-built ships | Landmarks in Los Angeles, California | Ocean liners | Museum ships in California | Passenger ships of the United Kingdom | National Register of Historic Places in California | Rogue wave incidents | Ships of Scotland | Ships of the Cunard Line | Ships on the National Register of Historic Places | Steamships | Visitor attractions in Long Beach, California | Troop ships of the United Kingdom | 1934 ships | Museums in Long Beach, California | Haunted attractions | Paranormal placesHidden categories: Articles with trivia sections from February 2010 | All articles with trivia sections

I am Frbiz Site writer, reports some information about door shoe rack , wooden storage chest.

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demo www.youtube.com All of my antennas are fed with 75 ohm catv cable I have 15 antennas some are multibanders, some are home brewed. The loop is 3/4″ catv self supporting 20′ long tunned for 1.900 with 400pf + or – capacitors at center conductor and is center fed. The outer sheild of loop has a 2″ cut out in shield at the 10′ mark and both halfs are joined to the sheild to shield of coax. You must use a preamp. I use an mfj tuneable preamp but have found the preamps in my 756 work well also. These loops can be put an a rotor and used to null noise or find noise and signals. Thanks for looking. I found all this info in old ARRL antenna books. Except for the 3/4 inch hardline Sincerely, John De ka1klo