That makes two of us. I think you have to be a project procrastinator to be a good ham these days. I have a lot of them waiting on me too. Can’t wait to watch. I am going to start creating videos myself here soon.
You're scaring me ! I'm just starting to set mine up. I want to power mine with solar. Love the old school Yaesu ! Am I going to end up like this ? Will it ever end ?
Wow: behind the scenes of Ham 2.0 . I love the fact that you are honest,and we are privy to you finally getting your plans off the ground,and into the air. You're a busy guy posting first class videos,and information while attending Ham Fests,and all. I like that your shack has a gambrell roof givng you more headroom which is key for your studio production needs,and better for Mr.8,and Mr.10. I passed my General Class due to you reposting a Texas radio clubs video class,so I want to take this time to personally "Thank You!". Remember: watched paint never dries🤣. Keep up the great work👍. 73's KC1-JRL .
Very nice review of your Shack. Love the solar idea. One suggestion you may already know, the more equipment you can run on 12 volts DC the more efficient your solar will be. Anything you run thru an inverter will have some loss due to the inverter. Probably tough to run your base stations and computers on 12 volts, but your mobiles and HT chargers should be fairly simple. 12 V LED lighting is pretty easy also. Good stuff. I'm just getting into Ham, but I've been tinkering for the last 4 or 5 years with a small solar system for my outdoor deck lighting and I even have an RV fan I can run under my deck roof. The only thing I can't run is my fish pond pump with needs a 2500 GPH pump which I haven't found in a 12 volt pump, so it's still running from regular 120 VAC. Keep up the great content and God Bless!
Appreciate your help to this Noob of HAM Radio, I am just north of ya in OK. Looking forward to the Green country Ham fest, Gonna study till then and maybe pick a rig set up .
Wow....thats impressive. I have just a couple radios. Having so many options would be pretty cool. Im pretty new to HAM. Got my Tech earlier this year, General in July, and Extra in August. Just got my first HF rig about a week and a half ago
Very cool setup. I've watched your UA-cam stuff for a few years now and met you at a ham workshop in Irving a while back. As a Galveston beach guy since I was a kid, I love it when you operate down there. I'm guessing your family owns that beach house on the west end of the island. I think you did a video from the deck as well as on the beach, plus at the state park. Way cool!
Jason, if you were to build the shack again, what size would you make it?? I'm building one that is going to be 12 x 20. Should be enough room for two to operate.
The thing I can say is only use that ground rod for anything out there that's 12VDC. Anything on 120VAC should be grounded at the house. Multiple ground paths can be deadly ! My favorite cigar,,, Hose Jenner, Hoya De Monterey Excalibur, close 2nd,,, the little Partagas #4 !!! Wild Turkey 101 on the rocks !
I was always wondering where you were doing your UA-cam broadcasts. It was very entertaining. Thanks!.... it's was also nice to see your "studio" setup. THANKS FOR SHARING!
Great idea to combine what you personally need to accomplish as a Ham Radio Operator as well as helping to advance the Radio Art at the same time. Thank you for sharing Jason!
I have four 8' 5/8" copper ground rods at my home station, with a fifth one going in at the antenna soon. Grounding is #2 solid copper from my service ground to the fifth ground rod and HF TX antenna. We used Cadweld #90 weld material to bond the #2 to the ground rods and also ran three runs from the #2 solid up to the panel box, which has 14 PolyPhasers in it, along with SG-230 control wires.
Nice to see the rest of the shack we haven’t seen before. Would also really like a quick tour of your mobile shack in the truck or whatever vehicle your mobiles are in.
Jason looks great. Lots of work to do. I find that everything takes so much longer than you think. Looking at all the power wiring, you may want to have a smoke alarm that you can hear in the house. A fire extinguisher nearby would be good too. Your station will get out when you get the beam up! 73, Randy
Several years ago I was going to get a 12"x12" or larger weatherproof enclosure with door or lid and place the Cooper plate in back then mount the Lightning Arrestors down the center of the plate. Have coax running from the arrestors inside the enclosure to female connectors outside the enclosure. Set up for several antennas. Each arrestor would be grounded to the cooper plate and to ground rods along with plate grounding to ground rods. Never got around to getting multiple antennas to do it.
My head is swimming... This is impressive and to biggest thing I got out of that is mast idea for the main antenna, using the chain link fence poles, cigar lounge and the beer fridge... COOL!! I just got my call sign the end of March 2022, and have been watching your videos, and others, for great ideas on a hobby I put off for years, due to fear of electronics and pure laziness.Thanks for this channel and one of these days I will understand this radio knowledge and maybe actually hear you over the air waves. 73, KN6TMF (yes, I applied for my vanity already), Gerry.
I live in the mountains and realize I need a fixed setup because the HT is useless. Maybe I'll learn something here. Maybe I can find me an Elmer and offer a lovely mountain vacation, free beer, and great food in exchange for help. JK, but I do need help!
I did not go through all the comments so if this is a repeat... Need to put your ground rod almost all the way in the ground especially if it is dry where you are. I would make the fence rail mast like a flag pole so you can easily change out antennas. Thank you for this, The building I was eyeballing was about this size but now I think I will go bigger.....
Just had an idea. I'm working Saturdays and Sundays at MicroCenter and the Boy Scouts are having a fundraiser in front of the store. If you have contacts in Richardson or North Dallas, they may be able to set up a portable station, with Raspberry Pi, etc. to interest youngsters in ham radio.
You might take a look at some of the RV channels and watch how they installed solar. There are the common low amp solar panels, and the newer high voltage high amp solar panels that exploit the rapid charging of lithium batteries. Channels I would recommend of the subject are Nomadic Fanatic, and Campervan Kevin. For room considerations you can get external storage racks for the batteries and inverter.
Hi Jason, Why not an EndFed Antenna for multi bands on HF? I used a 9:1 with a random (~53') wire that worked great for 6-40 without a tuner, my old IC756 would tune 80, after I managed WAS on 10-80 I added to it and 160m SWR was sweet and I worked and confirned all states on 160 as well. later I added a 40m EFHW pointed in a different direction and the pair for contesting still. Going with the Hex Beam should be a good deal, but the End Fed wires go up so fast and easy! 73 de NE5B
This is great! It's a cool set-up and it's brilliant to carry that extra power out there because many overlook that point and just bury a 12-2 UF 20a cable and think they're in good shape. No! A shed or barn needs large conductors buried in in pvc conduit and a sub panel. So looking-forward to more vids from the "Shack."
Another idea is to mount a cooper grounding bar with insulated stand off to the wall inside the shack. There you could ground each radio to that bar and a ground wire running from that bar to the outside to a new (unused) ground rod for radios only ground.
So number one good Job making Electra a star. Number two include dog in more video's don't know if it will work for HAMs, but dogs included in videos drive views and subscriptions for a lot of UA-camrs
@@HamRadio2 On the RV video's I listed for solar, you will notice either a cat or dog, they will tell you the views are much higher when the pets are there. Now for me not so much, but but being a GSD guy. I suspected being a shepherd she didn't let you get far. Now getting her in the avatar and intro....
Also, is there a neat way to get coax from inside the house to outside (backyard)? Thinking of HF End Fed EFHW-4010P 200W 40-10m / Ham Antenna NO TUNER NEEDED!! / 63 ft long for antenna. I like simple.
I like your shack ! I'm wondering if you have enough HT's tho, I only saw 20 or 30, your a lil short in that area lol. Anxious to see you get it all together.
Great video. I'm actually in the process of researching how to ground an antenna, so I can erect my first ham radio antenna. I ran across the lightening arrestors and was wondering how I was suppose to install them. Thanks.
You need the ground rod 8 feet in the ground. The top of the ground dryers out and won’t conduct, but deeper is better. Run a flat strap into the shack and make it your main ground radios amps act. Be sure to isolate it from the electrical ground.
Nice shack Jason. I'm about to get some HF gearand I need to install a couple of grounding rods and bond them to my existing house ground. Live in an HOA, so my permanent antennas will be in the attic. Thanks for posting! Bob, KI5HXQ
Sounds like you have a good plan for the shack. It'll be great to see it progress on video. And your idea to first work on wiring and cabling bringing it to one ingress point (with proper grounding and lightening protection) is spot on.
I just found this video…. You show an 8 foot copper rod next to the shed. All of your ground connections need to be bonded (connected) together! When the electrician ran power out to the shed / shack, I doubt he drove a separate ground rod at the shed and that’s because he’s already bonded or tied to ground at the main panel / ground rod by the fireplace / in the garage. You don’t want multiple separate paths to ground.
I’ve been wanting to do the same thing, but my concern is security. Have you thought of an alarm system for the door that sets off an alarm inside the house? Using a buried cable, of course. Oh, and your shack needs more boat anchors, one isn't enough!
Wish motorola software wasn't hard to get. I been wanting to pick up some mcs2000 to use but can't get the software. I do use the software for the cdm1250 radios. I would think they almost get programmed the same way. (Different software of course). I do know for sure on the cdm series you have to put the transmit and receive in yourself. And then add a tone to the transmitt side and not the receive side. Hopefully that's helps you out Jason.
Nice, but I cannot see myself plowing through snow in 8 degree weather to a separate shack. :) Midwestern weather can be...unkind. Keep up the good work.
If you never got that MCS2K taken care of, I can refer you to a buddy. He's done multiple big "M" radios for me in the past couple of years, including some reprogramming at my part time job. If interested, gimme a shout.
Do Your Electrical first. Are U using a sub-panel in the shack? .. derived grounds.. plant a delta.. one corner as close to the SE as possible. 6-8 ft triangle, 5/8 rod. Cadweld
Hi again Jason. So many cool ideas. It would okay to stop making videos for a while in order to get your radio shack in a premo condition. Now is a good time with solar cycle 25 just starting up. In 3-5 years from now low band DX will be amazing and you will want to be ready for it. Don’t be shy about asking for local help although I understand the pride involved in ‘getting it done’ yourself. 73 WD9ABG
Looks good! I’d move your deer to the other side of the shack and put both photo lights on either side of the doorway up at the ceiling. This would give you more headroom, and give your shack a larger feel. The lights should work just fine at that distance since it’s a small space. Start using that old gear too😁 Looking good. Dave Km6myf
Have had an ICOM 9700 and a power supply sitting in a box somewhere for the past two years (we are in our third house; Louisiana; go figure). I am now on a meager pension, and have no idea what to do for an antenna. Also, do you really have to ground your station? Not everyone does, although I used to in my past life. 73, KB5AVP
Looks great! You may find the hex works on 2m, I've read elsewhere folks having success with that. On the dipole, just a suggestion.....make it as long as you can and feed it with 450 ohm ladder line to a balun just outside the shack, then short coax into the shack. It'll tune on just about everything! Have fun adn stay safe! de Cliff W3KKO
I’ve been watching your channel a few months now. You helped me get my tech license with your videos on that. With this new aspect of videos of your shack and what you’re planning on doing I’ll definitely be watching them all. Thanks 73 KN6KOE
Jason, it’s refreshing to see that everyone has the same issue in terms of using space efficiently. Great to see what is behind the camera sometimes.
Yep
HA! You almost said casting couch. Love it. Thx for the insight
Killer Ham Shack! I wish I had the yard space to put one up. Showed my wife this video and her comment was "So, that's why you want to move to TX!"
LOL thanks Craig
That makes two of us. I think you have to be a project procrastinator to be a good ham these days. I have a lot of them waiting on me too. Can’t wait to watch. I am going to start creating videos myself here soon.
Good Lordy this is a newbie’s (like me) dream. Tons of toys laying around!
wow! thanks for sharing! Nice setup!
Thanks for watching!
You're scaring me ! I'm just starting to set mine up. I want to power mine with solar. Love the old school Yaesu ! Am I going to end up like this ? Will it ever end ?
Nope. It'll never end
Wow: behind the scenes of Ham 2.0 .
I love the fact that you are honest,and we are privy to you finally getting your plans off the ground,and into the air.
You're a busy guy posting first class videos,and information while attending Ham Fests,and all.
I like that your shack has a gambrell roof givng you more headroom which is key for your studio production needs,and better for Mr.8,and Mr.10.
I passed my General Class due to you reposting a Texas radio clubs video class,so I want to take this time to personally "Thank You!".
Remember: watched paint never dries🤣.
Keep up the great work👍.
73's KC1-JRL .
Thanks
Very nice review of your Shack. Love the solar idea. One suggestion you may already know, the more equipment you can run on 12 volts DC the more efficient your solar will be. Anything you run thru an inverter will have some loss due to the inverter. Probably tough to run your base stations and computers on 12 volts, but your mobiles and HT chargers should be fairly simple. 12 V LED lighting is pretty easy also. Good stuff. I'm just getting into Ham, but I've been tinkering for the last 4 or 5 years with a small solar system for my outdoor deck lighting and I even have an RV fan I can run under my deck roof. The only thing I can't run is my fish pond pump with needs a 2500 GPH pump which I haven't found in a 12 volt pump, so it's still running from regular 120 VAC. Keep up the great content and God Bless!
Appreciate your help to this Noob of HAM Radio, I am just north of ya in OK. Looking forward to the Green country Ham fest, Gonna study till then and maybe pick a rig set up .
Wow....thats impressive. I have just a couple radios. Having so many options would be pretty cool.
Im pretty new to HAM. Got my Tech earlier this year, General in July, and Extra in August. Just got my first HF rig about a week and a half ago
Welcome aboard!
Very cool setup. I've watched your UA-cam stuff for a few years now and met you at a ham workshop in Irving a while back.
As a Galveston beach guy since I was a kid, I love it when you operate down there. I'm guessing your family owns that beach house on the west end of the island. I think you did a video from the deck as well as on the beach, plus at the state park. Way cool!
Thanks! We own a vacation rental down there and we get down to the house in the off season when it's not rented
Jason, if you were to build the shack again, what size would you make it?? I'm building one that is going to be 12 x 20. Should be enough room for two to operate.
The thing I can say is only use that ground rod for anything out there that's 12VDC. Anything on 120VAC should be grounded at the house. Multiple ground paths can be deadly ! My favorite cigar,,, Hose Jenner, Hoya De Monterey Excalibur, close 2nd,,, the little Partagas #4 !!! Wild Turkey 101 on the rocks !
I was always wondering where you were doing your UA-cam broadcasts. It was very entertaining. Thanks!.... it's was also nice to see your "studio" setup. THANKS FOR SHARING!
Great idea to combine what you personally need to accomplish as a Ham Radio Operator as well as helping to advance the Radio Art at the same time. Thank you for sharing Jason!
Thanks
I have four 8' 5/8" copper ground rods at my home station, with a fifth one going in at the antenna soon. Grounding is #2 solid copper from my service ground to the fifth ground rod and HF TX antenna. We used Cadweld #90 weld material to bond the #2 to the ground rods and also ran three runs from the #2 solid up to the panel box, which has 14 PolyPhasers in it, along with SG-230 control wires.
Nice to see the rest of the shack we haven’t seen before. Would also really like a quick tour of your mobile shack in the truck or whatever vehicle your mobiles are in.
Jason looks great. Lots of work to do. I find that everything takes so much longer than you think. Looking at all the power wiring, you may want to have a smoke alarm that you can hear in the house. A fire extinguisher nearby would be good too. Your station will get out when you get the beam up! 73, Randy
Hey Randy, thanks for stopping by!
Several years ago I was going to get a 12"x12" or larger weatherproof enclosure with door or lid and place the Cooper plate in back then mount the Lightning Arrestors down the center of the plate. Have coax running from the arrestors inside the enclosure to female connectors outside the enclosure. Set up for several antennas. Each arrestor would be grounded to the cooper plate and to ground rods along with plate grounding to ground rods. Never got around to getting multiple antennas to do it.
Thank you for this. I have been asked to do something similar for my club meeting. Great stuff 73 stay well.
My head is swimming... This is impressive and to biggest thing I got out of that is mast idea for the main antenna, using the chain link fence poles, cigar lounge and the beer fridge... COOL!! I just got my call sign the end of March 2022, and have been watching your videos, and others, for great ideas on a hobby I put off for years, due to fear of electronics and pure laziness.Thanks for this channel and one of these days I will understand this radio knowledge and maybe actually hear you over the air waves. 73, KN6TMF (yes, I applied for my vanity already), Gerry.
I live in the mountains and realize I need a fixed setup because the HT is useless. Maybe I'll learn something here. Maybe I can find me an Elmer and offer a lovely mountain vacation, free beer, and great food in exchange for help. JK, but I do need help!
I did not go through all the comments so if this is a repeat... Need to put your ground rod almost all the way in the ground especially if it is dry where you are. I would make the fence rail mast like a flag pole so you can easily change out antennas. Thank you for this, The building I was eyeballing was about this size but now I think I will go bigger.....
I already have a pulley system on the fencepost so I can easily change antennas. It works well
Can't wait to watch. New to the channel but I like what I've seen so far. I came here from H.R.C.C. Keep up the good work.👍
Welcome aboard!
Late to the party but thanks for sharing your Shack! I always wondered what your studio looked like!
73
-Mike N5AQM
Thanks for the tour Jason.
Great shack/studio your set is great
Just had an idea. I'm working Saturdays and Sundays at MicroCenter and the Boy Scouts are having a fundraiser in front of the store. If you have contacts in Richardson or North Dallas, they may be able to set up a portable station, with Raspberry Pi, etc. to interest youngsters in ham radio.
That is a good idea
Hi Jason. It would be a good idea to secure the coax to the mast of the 20M dipole. WD9ABG
I had that done for a while, but I keep changing the antenna
You might take a look at some of the RV channels and watch how they installed solar. There are the common low amp solar panels, and the newer high voltage high amp solar panels that exploit the rapid charging of lithium batteries. Channels I would recommend of the subject are Nomadic Fanatic, and Campervan Kevin. For room considerations you can get external storage racks for the batteries and inverter.
Thanks for the suggestion
I would love to have a shack like that. Im confined to our furnace room lol
At least you're in the house. I'm in the garage. Lol.
Hi Jason,
Why not an EndFed Antenna for multi bands on HF? I used a 9:1 with a random (~53') wire that worked great for 6-40 without a tuner, my old IC756 would tune 80, after I managed WAS on 10-80 I added to it and 160m SWR was sweet and I worked and confirned all states on 160 as well.
later I added a 40m EFHW pointed in a different direction and the pair for contesting still.
Going with the Hex Beam should be a good deal, but the End Fed wires go up so fast and easy!
73 de NE5B
That's a nice setup. 👌
Great vid. Need more vids like these.
Thanks! Will do!
This is great! It's a cool set-up and it's brilliant to carry that extra power out there because many overlook that point and just bury a 12-2 UF 20a cable and think they're in good shape. No! A shed or barn needs large conductors buried in in pvc conduit and a sub panel. So looking-forward to more vids from the "Shack."
Consider a mono band 20 meter ground mounted vertical with radials. You'll be glad you did.
Awesome setup
Another idea is to mount a cooper grounding bar with insulated stand off to the wall inside the shack. There you could ground each radio to that bar and a ground wire running from that bar to the outside to a new (unused) ground rod for radios only ground.
A few suggestions, cable management and labeling, apc battery back ups. Very nice shack. Keep it up.
Great suggestion!
Great video and I learned a lot. First shack I've seen. So interesting as this stuff is not in the books. Thanks.
So number one good Job making Electra a star. Number two include dog in more video's don't know if it will work for HAMs, but dogs included in videos drive views and subscriptions for a lot of UA-camrs
Great plan. She's with me in almost all of my POTA videos
@@HamRadio2 On the RV video's I listed for solar, you will notice either a cat or dog, they will tell you the views are much higher when the pets are there. Now for me not so much, but but being a GSD guy. I suspected being a shepherd she didn't let you get far.
Now getting her in the avatar and intro....
Man what a cool set up. I never knew that’s where you shot the videos.
I need to get my update video completed because I have made some changes since this one was recorded.
Also, is there a neat way to get coax from inside the house to outside (backyard)? Thinking of HF End Fed EFHW-4010P 200W 40-10m / Ham Antenna NO TUNER NEEDED!! / 63 ft long for antenna. I like simple.
Excellent!
I like your shack ! I'm wondering if you have enough HT's tho, I only saw 20 or 30, your a lil short in that area lol. Anxious to see you get it all together.
Finally get to see the neighborhood
Shack plans sound great, Jason. 73s, de N5DHT
thanks Jaison nice studio fantastic 73 from kb2uew
Great video. I'm actually in the process of researching how to ground an antenna, so I can erect my first ham radio antenna. I ran across the lightening arrestors and was wondering how I was suppose to install them. Thanks.
You need the ground rod 8 feet in the ground. The top of the ground dryers out and won’t conduct, but deeper is better. Run a flat strap into the shack and make it your main ground radios amps act. Be sure to isolate it from the electrical ground.
Done
Nice shack Jason. I'm about to get some HF gearand I need to install a couple of grounding rods and bond them to my existing house ground. Live in an HOA, so my permanent antennas will be in the attic. Thanks for posting! Bob, KI5HXQ
Sounds like you have a good plan for the shack. It'll be great to see it progress on video. And your idea to first work on wiring and cabling bringing it to one ingress point (with proper grounding and lightening protection) is spot on.
"I got an 8 foot copper rod, stake, thingy...you know, the stick thing man!" (Damn, Joe Biden.... sound it out!) LOL.
Pssst - ground rod.
LOL
LOL!!! This made me laugh pretty good.
I just found this video…. You show an 8 foot copper rod next to the shed. All of your ground connections need to be bonded (connected) together! When the electrician ran power out to the shed / shack, I doubt he drove a separate ground rod at the shed and that’s because he’s already bonded or tied to ground at the main panel / ground rod by the fireplace / in the garage. You don’t want multiple separate paths to ground.
How about consider an EFHW 80-10, or 40-10, it gets 10,15,20, 40 and or 80m. Very good all rounder for the size. Can either buy or build.
Right now I have an OCF dipole which gives me about 7 bands
@@HamRadio2 Yes, very good way to go. Good work.
What gimbal stablizer are you using? I'm considering the Ikan.
Zhiyun
I’ve been wanting to do the same thing, but my concern is security. Have you thought of an alarm system for the door that sets off an alarm inside the house? Using a buried cable, of course.
Oh, and your shack needs more boat anchors, one isn't enough!
There is a security system and camera, I just didn't show that
Good to hear, now get some more boat anchors! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
LOL. I have a couple
im really looking forward to following this feed. it my help me in my development.
Thats very similar to my shack and antenna set up. My Antenna 40 meter dipole
Nice area...many opportunities
Do you know how to factory reset a tyt md-390?
Just write a blank codeplug to it
Looking forward to the video. Been a fan since before getting licensed.
I’m excited to see how it turns out. Also really interested in the solar setup
Looks good Jason 73
Enjoyed the tour Jason I see we are a lot alike we want to do it all.73 WW5N
Awesome video!!
I would gut the shack, and then make vids on putting things back together. Each vid would be a how-to and lessons learned.
That isn't a bad idea at all...
I am helping my first a dipole and I would like to know for a 40 m dipole do I need 10 m on each side or 5 m on each side to total 10 m
You can do a Center Fed or Off Center Fed, either one. I would recommend an OCF because then it will tune multiple bands
Wish motorola software wasn't hard to get. I been wanting to pick up some mcs2000 to use but can't get the software. I do use the software for the cdm1250 radios. I would think they almost get programmed the same way. (Different software of course). I do know for sure on the cdm series you have to put the transmit and receive in yourself. And then add a tone to the transmitt side and not the receive side. Hopefully that's helps you out Jason.
Hi Jason.
I notice you filmed this on July 1. Did you make much progress during the summer?
Yes I did. I'm pretty much ready to film another segment
I've got a 10x12 shack that I will be insulating. You have so much stuff in there it doesn't look like a 10x15.
Is that steel cased ammo I see?
Probably
Great video! I would like to learn more about the options to feed the various coax cables into a ham shack.
I may have missed it but what size is your building? I’m looking at doing one that’s 8x12
10x15
Looking forward to hearing more about 2m ssb . Enjoyed this one.
Those mcs2000s are tricky to get down to 2m if i remember right. I think you have to hexedit the codeplug.
Jason pulls off all these antennae, because he's the HOA president, 😂.
What is the vent called you ran the LMR through?
It's just an outside outlet cover that you can find at Home Depot
Thanks for sharing another perspective or example. I appreciate letting me into your shack. 73 de Bill K0WHW @Bill-HRT
Thanks for watching!
Nice set b up so far
Looks good work in progress.
When you get it the way you want.I am sure you want a antenna farm. 73
Nice, but I cannot see myself plowing through snow in 8 degree weather to a separate shack. :) Midwestern weather can be...unkind. Keep up the good work.
Then to sit in a freezer, and talk to guys on the radio....Yeah, No! LOL
If you never got that MCS2K taken care of, I can refer you to a buddy. He's done multiple big "M" radios for me in the past couple of years, including some reprogramming at my part time job. If interested, gimme a shout.
Love it
Do Your Electrical first. Are U using a sub-panel in the shack? .. derived grounds.. plant a delta.. one corner as close to the SE as possible. 6-8 ft triangle, 5/8 rod. Cadweld
Did that when the shack was built a few years ago.
Do you have HOA?
Nope
Hi again Jason. So many cool ideas. It would okay to stop making videos for a while in order to get your radio shack in a premo condition. Now is a good time with solar cycle 25 just starting up. In 3-5 years from now low band DX will be amazing and you will want to be ready for it. Don’t be shy about asking for local help although I understand the pride involved in ‘getting it done’ yourself. 73 WD9ABG
Nice shack. I hope you get back to enjoying contacts on the air even if it lessens the videos we get to see.
Looks good!
I’d move your deer to the other side of the shack and put both photo lights on either side of the doorway up at the ceiling. This would give you more headroom, and give your shack a larger feel. The lights should work just fine at that distance since it’s a small space. Start using that old gear too😁
Looking good.
Dave
Km6myf
What soundboard is that?
How much will the rest of the videos cost to view once you have finished?
$0. All my videos are free on UA-cam
Maybe built another small shed to store things you are not working on for a while. You have a nice setup, but a little crowded. HTH
Have had an ICOM 9700 and a power supply sitting in a box somewhere for the past two years (we are in our third house; Louisiana; go figure). I am now on a meager pension, and have no idea what to do for an antenna. Also, do you really have to ground your station? Not everyone does, although I used to in my past life. 73, KB5AVP
Why don't you put that tn07 vertical up as an extra antenna
I've done that several times. I like to take that one on POTA often though, so I don't leave it setup.
Cool I been looking at one for here at home to use it think it would work good
You could try that 80 meter sloper I just can't remember the site right now
that was interesting 😊
Your ground rod is copper clad steel, the best way to drive it down is with a hammer drill. You need a safe full of guns in your man cave.🎙73's kd9oam
Damn that there back burner, I thought it was just me G4XKH
Supercool 😎 EMP-shield that shack and you’re in business for the apocalypse ✊
That's a great idea. I want to get some prices for doing that soon
Looks great! You may find the hex works on 2m, I've read elsewhere folks having success with that. On the dipole, just a suggestion.....make it as long as you can and feed it with 450 ohm ladder line to a balun just outside the shack, then short coax into the shack. It'll tune on just about everything! Have fun adn stay safe! de Cliff W3KKO
I was watching the reflection in your glasses incase some one trys to sneak up on me.
I’ve been watching your channel a few months now. You helped me get my tech license with your videos on that. With this new aspect of videos of your shack and what you’re planning on doing I’ll definitely be watching them all. Thanks 73 KN6KOE
Thanks