Category Archives: Uncategorized

Elections

Next meeting is annual elections. All members with valid license can run. please email the club if you like to be President, VP, or Secretary. Don is stepping down as President this term.

We will continue working on the official club radio Aka the Jeff Box. This radio will be used on all club events as the talk-in radio. please bring any Ideas, bling, parts, & accessories. currently we have power supply, and the radio. We need a case, and accessories. The club radio is a Chi-Com copy of a FT-8800R. Please email us for your ideas or bring it to the meeting to make the radio station work.

Nov 20th Fusion & WIRES-X

This is the big meeting for anyone interested in Fusion, WIRES-X, or on our repeaters upgrade information.

We’re going to be having Mr. Yaesu Fusion Guy come to visit us. Please watch his current video https://youtu.be/JPhY5YY8-dQ

We are setting up for you.

We have eliminated November’s business meeting to next month to accommodate the maximum amount time to John’s presentation. We will start at 7pm sharp. Location is moved to the Augsburg Room from the Ruth Johnson Room at the community center to add more space. (Same as our Field Day Room.)

Will our planning to talk about basics of C4FM, WIRES-X, & quick comparison of DR-1X to DR-2X.

7000 Nicollet Ave November 20th, 7-9pm

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We will post here if a weather event or we need to cancel meeting!!

RARC asks all to keep posted on this website before visiting our next meeting for all updates.

Get-On-The-Fusion

Oct 9th at the Richfield Community Center we are talking on Yeasu’s Fusion WiRES-X Rooms. Setup starts at 6pm and ends at 9pm in the Ruth Johnson Room. This is to Talk on the Richfield’s Repeater 145.390 and talk around the world using the WiRES-X Rooms to link along the way. Some rooms are The DARC (28439) Room, MnWis (21493), America’s Link (21080), Texas Nexus (21636) and many more.

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This event is free to all interested, and is an indoor event.

How to connect to Rooms using a FTM-7250/3200DR

How to connect to Rooms using a FT-70DR

How to connect to Rooms using a FTM-100DR

How to connect to Rooms using FTM-400DR & FT-1/2/3DR

Finding a room number HamOperator.com

RARC August meeting notes

A presentation by Erik NY9D regarding the digital communication systems used for the Twin Cities Marathon. Info at www.14567.org.

Volunteers are needed for this event in October, 2019.

Discuss Burnsville fire muster, September 2019, volunteers needed.

Banner design was discussed, a design was approved.

Solder session update.

Discuss preparations for Pennfest 2019.

There will be an all call on the UHF repeater net on Thursday, September 19th. All club members and friends please make an effort to join us.

Respectfully submitted

Paul KE0QXV

RARC Secretary

New Banner for displaying on club events

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______________________________________________ Approved Design _____________________________________________________

______________________________________________ Not approved Design ________________________________________________

Sept 15th

Pennfest is coming.

We need to have people on the air and on location. We are going to be sharing our location with Richfield CERT van again, and we will need supplies please email w0rrc.rarc@gmail.com to see how you can help.

Chairman is Matt N0TNL.

Help Wanted!

Our transportation committee is always looking for new drivers to help other members get two meetings and activities.

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Net Community is also looking for new net controllers it is fun, easy, and scripts are available.

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Looking for a members to help set-up our October Get On The Air Event.

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We always appreciate members using, and listening to our repeaters daily. Our goal have someone always ready to answer the call. We have a great radio system free to all and needs to be used.

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Anyone wants to get there license or an upgrade let’s help everyone everytime.

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Other events needing hams to help are Twin Cities Marathon, & Burnsville fire muster.

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Please email: w0rrc.rarc@gmail.com for more information.

Again, this is our club and we can make a difference to all.

73 KC0TJ Don

Twin Cities Marathon

The 2019 Medtronic Twin Cities Marathon Weekend is fast approaching, so mark your calendars for

*             Sunday, October 6  (Marathon & Medtronic TC 10 Mile

If you wish to volunteer for the 2019 race medical team (Sunday), please register online by September 22.  Early registration ensures you are on the team and have a secured position. We are staffing the marathon and the 10 mile as independent races to allow shorter shifts, but you can sign up for both races. We are using the RaceSafe platform for medical volunteer registration again this year so if you registered last year, you will just update changes in your status for this year. For those of you who are new, you will need to access the website and download the app to your phone as outlined below. The volunteer list will be available for other Twin Cities In Motion events so it will be easy for you to volunteer if you choose to do so. If you are not available for this year’s race, but wish to remain on the list for future years, please register and you will appear on our lists for future events.

We are still in the planning stages and always looking for suggestions to improve our medical team.

Race Day Logistics: The medical section coordinators will be setting up race day assignments by September 22, so please register as soon as possible. You will get an email with your assignment, report times, and a map of the location as soon as we make assignments. If you would like to remain in your previous post, please note where you have worked in past years and we will do our best to make this happen. If you have a medical license and you enter it in the registration process, you will automatically be in our  medical liability plan.

To Register in RaceSafe please complete the following steps:

1. Create an account or Login by going to the event specific links below for Sunday (marathon & 10 mile) Sunday (marathon and ten mile)

Medtronic Twin Cities Marathon & Medtronic TC 10 Mile

https://tcmevents.iracesafe.com/registration/volunteer?race_id=496

Please note there are 10 mile shifts and marathon shifts.

If you have an existing RaceSafe login, please click the link above to get to RaceSafe and then click the login link. Your login is your email. Hopefully, you remember your password.

If you are signing up for the first time, click on the link above and fill in the requested information. You will receive an authentication email at the email you provide with an activation link that you must click on to create an account.

2. Please go through the registration wizard and fill out all mandatory fields. If you are a provider without a license, please type in “unlicensed” or “none”. For those with existing accounts please update your profile in the dashboard if your information has changed since your last volunteer experience.

Select the event you are volunteering for from the dashboard and choose the correct volunteer position that applies to you. They have been divided up to make the check-in process on race day quicker and easier.

In the “Comment section”: If you have worked medical before, please enter your past medical assignments and your qualifications here. If you have foreign language skills, please include that here.

Complete the registration process by watching the videos. You will receive a confirmation email afterwards confirming your registration is complete.

Physical Therapists will receive final assignments from Kelly Roberts Lane.

3. Download RaceSafe on the Apple App Store or Google Play if you don’t have it already. If you do have it make sure you update the app (there have been some updates over the past year).

If you are registering for both days, please go back to your dashboard and add the second day to your events, repeating the same steps as before. You will not have to download the app a second time.

4. After “Account Creation” and “RaceSafe app download,” please go through all the training slides and click “I have completed the training.” This only takes around 10 minutes. Be sure to click “I have completed the training” on the last slide.

Success! Now, on race day you will be able to access the app from your Apple or Android phone/tablet to do your part in keeping participants safe.

If you have any problems signing up, please contact support@iracesafe.com

We will use the following categories to make assignments. The sign-up includes locations like finish line or course; and “are you working with a group list”:

* National Ski Patrol OEC Course Teams

* Communications Teams

* Ramsey County/UMN Med Reserve Corps

* MATA ATC Finish Chute Triage Team

* National Mountain Bike Patrol Teams

* EMT Osseo/SLP Triage Teams

* EMT Independent

* Paramedic

* IHCC (Inver Hills) Student Association Triage Team * Regions Critical Care and Arrest Teams * Red Cross EMT/First Responders * RaceGuards

During the sign up, please specify your role from the following categories (found under “background” in your user profile):

* MD/DO Staff

* MD/DO Fellow – licensed

* MD/DO Resident – licensed

* MD/DO Resident – non licensed

* Medical Student Year 1, 2

* Medical Student Year 3, 4

* RN licensed

* RN Student

* Physical Therapist – licensed

* Physical Therapy – student

* Nurse Practitioner – licensed

* Nurse Practitioner – student

* Podiatry

* Physician Assistant – licensed

* Physician Assistant – student

* EMT

* Athletic Trainer

* Athletic Trainer – student

* Pre-med student

* Communications Volunteer

* Adult Volunteer

* High School Volunteer

Repeater updates

We have replaced the antenna on our VHF repeater AKA 5.39 we like people to give reports of it’s improvement. Email w0rrc.rarc@gmail.com. Please compare to our UHF repeater AKA .475. This testing should only be on FM mode and not on C4FM. Digital mode will give a false reading.

73 KC0TJ Don

Important discussion…

How To Coordinate With Your Two-Way Radios For Major Events. An Opinion Article.

Recently, our group worked at three very large annual public events.

What was very obvious right from the start, was that no one gave a thought about coordinating two-way radio communications. Yep, not one thought.

Here are some of the problems that were encountered:

1) All different radio types where the owner had no clue how to operate it other than to; turn the power switch on and to use the push-to-talk button.

Remedy – Learn your radio! Don’t expect others to show you how to operate your own radio while out in the field during the actual event. It’s time consuming and a major waste of other people’s time. Learn your own radio.

2) All different radio bands being used at the event. Example; Amateur 2 Meters, Amateur 440 MHz, Commercial VHF Hi-Band and Commercial UHF.

Remedy – Bring at least two radios to the event. One for VHF Hi-Band (140 MHz – 170 MHz) and One for UHF (400 MHz – 470 MHz. If you have a dual band radio, all the better. This way you are flexible depending on what band the event is using for communications. Also; know the radio frequencies being used before hand at the event.

3) Radios that weren’t field programmable. Example, Motorola and other commercial radios.

Remedy – If your going to show up at an event with radios that aren’t keyboard programmable or are commercial radios, then carry a small computer or have some way to program them out in the field. Don’t expect other agencies or personnel to configure their radios to your now ‘brick radio’. Can’t configure your radio out in the field, then leave it home as it’s worthless during a major event.

4) Radios that were field programmable, but the operators have No Clue How To Program Them Without The Use Of A Computer.

Remedy – You should know how to program your radio without the use of a computer. Read the radio manual and practice programming out in the field without the use of the manual.

5) People yacking on their radios way too much, as though they wanted to hear themselves talk.

Remedy – No single transmission should last more than 10-15 seconds in length. Leave 4-5 second pauses between each transmission. If your transmitting more than 10-15 times during a 1 hour period, your talking way too much. Stay off the radio unless it’s absolutely necessary.

6) Incident Command. Some using it, some not.

Not enough personnel to effectively use it correctly. Something to be said for just using Plain English Communications.

Remedy – Get everyone on the same page. Either use Incident Command Structure or Don’t. Get everyone your working with on the same page and don’t have two different communications structures going at the same time.

7) Some people having loads and loads of certifications but never actually putting them to the test out in the field by actually using that knowledge during a major event. This was a huge problem…

Remedy – Train/Work with other groups out in the field as much as you can. Use what you know and have been taught with that certification you received. Book work means nothing unless you actually use it.

8) People having radio knowledge but no medical knowledge and visa-versa, but being located in a First Aid Tent.

Remedy – Be of more value. >>> Cross Train to do multiple jobs if possible, as your more valuable that way to other agencies and organizations.

9) Some using repeaters and others using simplex.

Remedy – Unless absolutely necessary, use simplex. You don’t need the entire world listening in to your communications at the event. It just invites hackers and jammers to cause problems with your radio communications. If the event activity is being held within a square mile, use simplex. If you need to get a hold of someone further away, then switch to a repeater temporarily to communicate with them or the dispatcher who is off-site from the event. ONLY use a repeater during a wide coverage event including multiple cities or involving long distances between two-way radio units.

On the bright side.

** Luckily, we carried enough extra radios to lend to the other agencies and operators so that everyone could communicate on the same frequencies and bands. But, this creates another problem if the radios get damaged or walk-away after the event. It can get expensive to replace radios.

It all comes back to the operator and ‘their’ responsibility to have good operating radio equipment, well charged radio batteries, knowledge of their radios, how it works and how to program them. Most of all, ‘common sense’ and ‘plain english language, no codes’ when communicating on those radios during an event.

Just my opinion from working hundreds of general public events and working with public safety organizations at events.

Dan W0EIB.

Corrections, Additions, or Comments all appreciated.

We all learn from sharing what we know 🙂

Sub Notes by Don KC0TJ..

This definitely bothers me to see these challenges on an event day. As Pres & a member of RARC I have made a pledge to help all members to learn radio basics & radio programming every meeting & during most activities. This article is from a dear friend of mine and his personal experiences. I wish that all members of RARC set some time to ask me or other members to be more prepared for the what ifs events and activities. Our experiences will make the hobby grow by being involved in drills, events, and by asking questions to our members and Elmer’s. This is also is why Sept 19th RARC’S net is an “All call Net” to be more prepared and be better then the article above. We also support club events like Field Day, GOTA, and 4th Wednesday events to help practice and share our craft. Again, this is why we are a club is to help other groups and events with our hobby.

Last note.. This article has nothing related to any of our members at Dan’s events, but is to encourage our members to get involved by learning from others.

73 KC0TJ Don