
The next southern California radio-orienteering practice session will be announced soon. Experts will be on hand to get you started with your own equipment or with loaner gear. Events are scheduled regularly in southern California. For earliest notification of these events, you can join the southern California ARDF mailing list. If you live elsewhere, click to get contacts for other North America ARDF sessions This Homing In site also has results and photos of previous southern California radio-orienteering events, including the Santa Barbara session on February 2.
The 2008 USA ARDF Championships will take place May 8 through 10 near Bastrop, Texas, 30 miles southeast of Austin. (Note the one-day change from the original announcement. This is one week before the Dayton Hamvention.) Plan to attend and compete against radio-orienteers from all over USA on two meters and 80 meters. You might win a position on ARDF Team USA, which will travel to Korea in September for the ARDF World Championships. Event Co-chairs are Ken and Jen Harker, WM5R and W5JEN. Courses will be open to anyone, with or without a ham license. Registration is now open. Read the announcement in this site, with links to registration and additional details.
Ham operators and scanner enthusiasts are supporting wildlife researchers by monitoring and tracking the radio tag signals of endangered or threatened species. If you live in an eastern state, your help is needed now for a study of Loggerhead Shrikes. With your scanner or wide-coverage multi-mode ham receiver, you could tune for these radio-tagged birds from the comfort of your home. This site tells all about this and other projects, and there are additional pages here about equipment for wildlife tracking, monitoring techniques, and signal identification.
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The Winter 2008 issue of CQ VHF Magazine is now being distributed to subscribers and ham radio stores. My Homing In column in this issue tells how hams in San Luis Obispo, California used RDF to rescue a physically fit but confused Alzheimer's patient who biked over 16 miles from home. You will also learn how Ukrainian radio-orienteers won seven gold medals at the last ARDF World Championships and you'll get pointers about the next USA ARDF Championships. Some ham stores still have the Fall 2007 issue, in which my Homing In column is all about the 2007 USA and IARU Region 2 ARDF Championships near Lake Tahoe last September. Learn what the winners used to find those elusive foxes in the woods. There's also some news about personal rescue beacons on the aircraft and family radio bands. My regular ARDF Update features can be found on the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) Web site. I welcome your input for future articles, so please continue to send me your news of mobile and on-foot transmitter hunt activities.
Korean Amateur Radio League (KARL) will host the Fourteenth ARDF World Championships, September 2 through 7, 2008. The site will be near Hwaseong City in the midwest region of South Korea. Approximately 30 countries are expected to participate, including the USA. Each country may have up to three persons per age/gender category on its team. Team USA positions will be filled based on performance in recent ARDF events, but there will be room for inexperienced foxhunters in some categories. If you want to be on Team USA to travel to these Championships, please declare your interest. Get the details here.
Start making plans for your participation in the eleventh CQ Worldwide Foxhunting Weekend (CQ WW FW), May 10-11, 2008. This annual event, formerly called the National Foxhunting Weekend, is an ideal time for ham clubs and non-club groups around the country to enjoy this fast-growing sport. Read the announcement at this site and watch for my articles in the April and May 2008 issues of CQ Magazine. Whether you choose mobile T-hunting or on-foot radio-orienteering, be sure to get out of the shack and have an outdoor adventure during the CQ WW FW.
The Agrelo DFjr Doppler RDF set has been out of production for over eight years, but there is still a great deal of interest in it. DFjr was the first inexpensive plug-and-play Doppler set designed for interface to computer mapping systems and APRS. For those who own or are considering buying a used DFjr, a new page on this site has a downloadable manual, my 73 Magazine review, antenna system improvements, and frequently asked questions about this product.
The Seventh USA ARDF Championships took place September 14 - 16, 2007 near South Lake Tahoe on the California/Nevada border. These national championships were combined with the Fourth IARU Region 2 ARDF Championships. Sponsors were the Santa Barbara Amateur Radio Club and Los Angeles Orienteering Club. Competitors came from as far away as Germany and Australia. Complete results are in this site as well as dozens of photos.
Transmitter hunting was a prominent part of the 2007 ARRL Southwestern Division Convention, September 7 - 9 at the Marriott Hotel in Torrance, California. In addition to presentations on RDF by Jay Thompson W6JAY and Joe Moell KØOV, there were two hunt opportunities. On Friday evening, Scott Bovitz N6MI and Don Lewis KF6GQ hid two transmitters for a mobile T-hunt, which was won by Dave Balgie N6MJN. Then on Sunday afternoon, there was an all-on-foot hunt for both beginners and experts, with prizes. Thanks to the Fullerton Radio Club for sponsoring these events.
Homing In is also the title of my regular column on RDF that ran for 15 years in 73 Amateur Radio Today magazine and is now in CQ VHF magazine. At this Homing In site, you will find more about these columns, plus RDF articles that I have written for other publications, including Monitoring Times, CQ VHF and QST magazines. There is also information about my comprehensive book on the subject.
Radio direction finding is used to find sources of interference to any
form of wireless electronic communications, including broadcast and two-way
radio, television, and telephones. It is also used to track missing or stolen
cars and other property. Search and rescue workers use it to find persons in
distress. Emergency Locator Transmitters in downed aircraft are tracked with
RDF techniques.
Most of the information at this site pertains to RDF equipment and techniques for Amateur Radio (ham) operators. Hams use RDF to track jamming stations and stolen equipment, but more often, they use it just for fun. Hidden transmitter hunting has been done by hams for about fifty years and it is a growing activity. T-hunting refers specifically to hunts involving hams driving in RDF-equipped vehicles. A mobile T-hunt is best described as hide-and-seek for all ages with radio gear. When you set out on a T-hunt, you never know where you'll end up, and you have no idea what you're going to find. No form of ham radio contesting is more fun! Mobile T-hunting is done in cities and towns all over the USA, and elsewhere in the world. Depending on the frequency band and the nature of the hunt, the hunters use loop, yagi, quad, doppler and time-difference-of-arrival RDF antenna systems mounted on their vehicles. Click here for for general information about mobile T-hunting or click here for beginner-level T-hunts in southern California.
Mobile T-hunting is called foxhunting in some parts of the USA, but everywhere else in the world, the terms "foxhunting" and ARDF refer to another kind of RDF contest, done completely on foot in large woods and parks. It's a map-and-compass sport similar to orienteering, with about a half-dozen "fox" transmitters to find in a period of two hours or so. Someday this sport, which is also called foxtailing, fox-teering and radio-orienteering, may become an Olympic event. Meanwhile, it's a fun-filled activity for your hamfests and Scout Jamborees. Try it, and you may find yourself at the next annual national USA ARDF Championships. You might even become a member of ARDF Team USA, which has competed in five foxhunting World Championships. Click here for for general information about radio-orienteering or click here for beginner-level ARDF events in southern California.
Keep reading---you will find lots more about foxhunting, T-hunting, and other uses of RDF at this site.
This is an archived page of the "Homing In" Web site from February 2008. It is out of date because the site has moved to a different server to eliminate AOL's advertising. Click here for the latest version of this page. Please bookmark www.homingin.com to access the "Homing In" site in the future. Thanks for visiting!
Getting Started -- The basics
RDF Topics in Print -- Read all about it
Home-built RDF Projects -- Inexpensive and educational
Commercial RDF Equipment -- Getting the most from it
Follow-up and Support -- for readers of THRDFS and Homing In
Championship Radiosports -- Taking on the world
Results, stories and photos of ARDF and ROCA sessions, large and small
Volunteer Opportunities -- Use your RDF skills to help researchers and protect wildlife
Other resources
Spending a few minutes at this Homing In site will give you a jump-start into the world of transmitter hunting. After that, you can find out how to get involved in mobile T-hunts in your area by visiting local T-hunt/foxhunt web sites and contacting nearby Homing In Correspondents listed on the links page. You'll find manufacturers and suppliers of RDF gear there, too.
Who is KØOV? A registered professional electronic engineer and an active Amateur Radio enthusiast since age 11, Joe Moell KØOV has over 35 years of experience designing radio-frequency circuits and systems for broadcast, communications, and radar, ranging from near-DC through microwave frequencies. He has designed new devices for radio direction finding and has written about RDF and other topics for almost every ham radio publication in the USA. In February 1998, he was appointed by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) as the USA's first ARDF Coordinator, to promote international-style foxhunting and to organize Team USA for international ARDF competitions. He also conducts the annual CQ Worldwide Foxhunting Weekend.
Joe collaborated with Tom Curlee WB6UZZ to write TRANSMITTER HUNTING---Radio Direction Finding Simplified, a comprehensive text on RDF, and has written over 210 published articles on the subject, including his monthly Homing In columns that ran for 15 years in 73 Magazine and now appear in the quarterly CQ VHF Magazine. As a Technical Advisor to ARRL Headquarters, he authored a new chapter on RDF for The ARRL Handbook, and has made more than 100 presentations on transmitter hunting to clubs, conventions, classes and seminars. As time permits, he is available for private engineering consulting.
Joe and April (WA6OPS) Moell are graduates of the University of Nebraska. They have served as Course Marshals and Jurors at international foxhunting championships. When not hunting hidden transmitters or writing about it, they teach ham radio licensing courses and help support the emergency communications needs of the hospitals in their county.
Having problems browsing here? No pages are "under construction," but there have been glitches in the AOL server. If you get an AOL message "Cannot locate..." when attempting to link to a page at this site, please send e-mail to me, stating which page you could not access. Also please report any stale links you encounter or any problems in displaying these pages. They are designed to look good and load rapidly on any browser version and at any screen resolution. They're printer-friendly, too. No annoying frames, fancy backgrounds, pop-ups, animations, background music, tickers, cookies or banner ads here --- just an abundance of original and useful information, suitable for all ages. If you see an "AOL Hometown" banner ad at the top of this page, CLICK HERE to get rid of it. My privacy policy is very simple: I don't collect any identifiable information about you when you surf here. If you send me an e-mail inquiry or buy a book, I won't give your e-mail address or other information to anyone else without your permission.
Although not about RDF, another great ham place to browse is the Hospital Disaster Support Communications System (HDSCS) site. There you will learn how volunteer Amateur Radio operators can be an important backup communications resource for hospitals, if the hams are well organized and trained. The eighty members of the HDSCS in Orange County, California have served over 30 hospitals in over 100 communications emergencies during the past 27 years. We have rapidly responded following earthquakes, wildfires, floods, power outages and internal switchboard failures. If you think that your local ARES® or RACES group is presently serving all of the disaster communications needs of your community, you may consider taking on a new mission after seeing this site.
Surfing suggestion: For a quick start into the world of RDF and mobile hidden transmitter hunting, jump to Let's Go T-Hunting.
Please note that this Web site is built and maintained independently by Joe Moell. It is not sponsored by or affiliated with CQ Publications, 73 Amateur Radio Today, Wayne Green Enterprises, TAB/McGraw-Hill, ARRL, or any other commercial or non-commercial entity. All content is protected by applicable intellectual property laws.
Entire site Copyright © 2008 Joseph D. Moell. Text, photos and original graphics may not be served or reproduced elsewhere without permission.
Contact info:
Joe Moell
PO Box 2508
Fullerton, CA 92837
This page updated 23 February 2008
This is an archived page of the "Homing In" Web site from February 2008. It is out of date because the site has moved to a different server to eliminate AOL's banner advertising. Click here for the latest version of this page. Please bookmark www.homingin.com to access the "Homing In" site in the future. Thanks for visiting!