Recently it occurred to me that I havenāt been using HF in my shack for much longer than Iād care to admit. Over the years Iāve spoken about my shack and how itās set-up, more on that shortly. I effectively went off-air when I decommissioned the computer that was running tools like āfldigiā and āWSJT-Xā. Mainly because it was too slow, for example, taking a good minute to launch a copy of Firefox.
After that I repurposed my HF antenna for use with my ultra low power WSPR beacon experiments and essentially ceased being a functional HF station.
Thereās other forces at work, which Iāll get to, but before I do, in discussion with a fellow amateur we discovered that my desire to get back on-air on HF is essentially the same journey that a new amateur might make and the idea was hatched to document the process and share it with you.
In the past youāve heard me say that the answer to most questions associated with amateur radio is: āit dependsā.
As a new, or returning amateur, this might not be very helpful if you donāt know what it depends on, so, Iām going to attempt to describe the process of determining how to get to the answers required to make a station.
Now, before I start Iād like to talk about money. Iām raising this upfront because your access to a budget determines many of the choices that are open to you. You could interpret that to mean that you need money and while that helps, itās not universally true, in fact Iād go so far as to say that you could get on-air and make noise using nothing more than a mobile phone and an internet connection, which truth be told is pretty much the minimum requirement to enjoy my thoughts, so perhaps thatās the base requirement.
That said, even if you donāt have access to that, thereās other options that weāll no doubt explore together, so keep that in mind.
I think that the very first thing to consider is what you think of when you hear the term āamateur radioā. Iāve said it before and Iāll say it again. Amateur Radio is a great many things to different people. For some it means a hand-held radio and chatting with mates on the local repeater, for others it means a full blown HF contest station with multiple antennas and radios, with integrated logging in a dedicated building. For others it means logging into a remote WebSDR and listening to the bands, decoding interesting signals, and license permitting, transmitting remotely across the internet.
In other words, the āamateur radioā experience is unique to you. What you get from it is dependent on you and nobody else. As an aside, thatās also true for licensing.
If you have a ābeginnersā license, like my Foundation license, then itās entirely up to you to decide if and when you add extra privileges. āFoundations of Amateur Radioā, well, its predecessor, āWhat use is an F-call?ā emerged specifically in response to amateurs around me who continued to, letās be kind and call it āencourageā me to āupgradeā to a ārealā license. Fifteen years on, Iām still a Foundation ābeginnerā and thus far I have yet to run out of things to do or talk about, so keep that in mind.
I think that covers the disclaimers, no doubt more will occur to me as we continue on this journey.
For the first decade or so of having a license, most of my activity was done in my car, a mobile shack of sorts. I didnāt have access to a space where I could set-up a radio without running the risk of someone tripping over coax, or a landlord complaining within an hour of me erecting a temporary vertical. In other words, my mobile shack was born from necessity. It was helpful in exploring the limitless variation of operating positions, as-in locations and their impact on propagation, antenna performance, local interference, and plenty of other lessons.
So, even if you donāt have a permanent space to operate, thereās plenty of amateur radio to go round.
When I finally moved to a place where I had space, I started the process of putting together my shack. Initially it was pretty much integrated with my home-office. This sort of worked, but both the office and the shack suffered from this combination, so my first observation is that, in my experience, setting aside a dedicated space for a shack is a good idea.
Now, right now, as I am telling you that, to the bottom right of my computer screen is the head of my Yaesu FT-857d, connected to a āRemoteRigā, a pair of devices that replace the serial cable between the head and the radio with a network connection.
The RemoteRig is connected to a WiFi router, which runs a dedicated wireless connection across the room to the WiFi router thatās connected to the radio, sitting on whatās left of my shack. Itās how I run the weekly F-troop net. Itās sitting there because I need to be able to access my computer to make log entries and track whoās next in the round-robin discussion, and as I said, Iāve decommissioned my shack computer.
Which brings me to the second point.
Setting up a shack doesnāt happen in isolation. Youāre likely to have existing infrastructure of some sort. It might be a fixed location for power points, it might be a previously drilled hole for incoming coax, it might be a bolted bench, whatever it is, itās something that you need to take into account.
Itās also something that you need to consider in terms of feasibility. Just because something is the way it is today, doesnāt mean that it has to stay the same for the next decade. Iāve previously discussed the evolution of my shack, based on a 35 year old wooden IKEA trestle table, all of 1.2 square meters, complete with holes from taking it around Australia for several years in the back of a van. Itās currently got a wire mesh shelving unit on top and a pegboard strapped to the back. The legs are adorned with power boards and as I said, the head of my radio is on the other side of the room.
This all to say that building a shack doesnāt happen in isolation. The local environment will determine whatās possible and whatās not. Iām not here to tell you what to do, Iām here to help you figure out what a shack looks like in your environment.
Note that Iāve not talked in any way about what equipment to get, what, if any, antenna to install or what else is required. These are all part of the āit dependsā and Iāll talk about that soon.
Iām Onno VK6FLAB

