This is all KN4CRD needs to work portable digital (and a radio of course). |
I've been interested a lot in working portable digital. But there are some things to overcome. You need a light and small economical computer with GPS device to sync the time, you need enough electrical power, you need a place to hide for the sun and rain.
A large crack in the touchscreen... |
Sync the time with GPS device should be no problem these days. I've been experimenting with it before and it worked, however with the bleutooth device I use now the sync software does lock after some time. The one you see on the photo should be better I guess. They cost about €7,75 including shipping via AliExpress.
Electrical power...I guess you better read posts about that on OH8STN Julian's site. Julian is using foldable solar panels to get power from the sun. He developed his own battery with the use of separate Life4PO cells. It's just how far you will go in buying these things. Most important is the weight. I've been using a 7Ah SLAB, it's cheap but is relatively big and heavy. Building a LifeP4PO pack might be not that expensive but a foldable solarpanel is. It's just what you want to invest. I came across a Einhell cc-js12 Li-Ion 12Ah pack with 12v, 5V and...19V output. The 12Ah is overrated and I guess at 5V, the manual says the battery capacity is 41Wh. The Ft-817 does need 1A average, sometimes more depending modes (2,2A@5W TX carrier) I expect it to hold about 2-3 hours. With the laptop connected hopefully 1 hour. The battery and radio are considered the heaviest weight on your portable pack you really have to take care of them being as light but as rugged as possible.
If solarpanels will be cheaper I'll invest in one. Till then I will manage and hope I don't have to use it in a emergency situation but just for the hobby.
Then another issue, a shelter. Ever tried to read a tablet or laptop screen in the sun? And everyone knows electronics can't stand rain/water. You need a place with shadow, you need a place that is dry. And preferable in winter you need a place that is warm enough to operate your gear. Well, I guess that's the biggest investment you need to do if you want to run portable over the whole year. If you like to know more about it you really should take a look at OH8STN's site.
2 comments:
Great article! One thing is for sure, this kind of portable operating is becoming much easier with time. Battery development is happening at very fast rates now, and the move to digital modes means there is no necessity for high power and big antennas.
On the time synchronisation question, my Raspberry Pi 3B+ makes its connection to the wider world via my mobile phone's WiFi hotspot function. After many days of testing, I found the Raspberry Pi maintains the kind of time error (0.1-0.2s) that you usually get when using Dimension 4 on a PC. In other words, it is more than accurate enough without any GPS or special time sync. I think the Rasperry Pi must be syncing from the internet frequently by default. Of course, it is different if there is no mobile phone signal!
Hello John, probabely Linux has a built in time sync? Just like apple OS. Windows has this as well but is not working most of the time. I sync my laptop with my iphone wifi connection as well as spotting to PSK reporter and Hamspots. Though in the field a GPS could be a good backup indeed when there is no mobile phone coverage. This article is written as a first post about decreasing the weight of my portable station. 73, Bas
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