[aprssig] Airborne APRS
Scott Miller
scott at opentrac.org
Fri Oct 28 11:30:25 EDT 2005
I haven't done this specifically, but I've operated from a 172 before. I'd
suggest a Kenwood TH-D7A handheld - that should be all you need to receive
and decode a position. If permanently-mounted antennas aren't an option, a
rubber duck stuck to the inside of the window with a suction cup might work.
Eventually the plane had permanent antennas installed, but I can't remember
what type.
Scott
N1VG
----- Original Message -----
From: "William McKeehan" <mckeehan at mckeehan.homeip.net>
To: <aprssig at lists.tapr.org>
Sent: Friday, October 28, 2005 8:22 AM
Subject: [aprssig] Airborne APRS
> In participating in some balloon chases where we had difficulty finding
> the
> ballon once it landed, some of the guys thought it would be nice to fly an
> airplane over the area with an APRS station on board the airplane, thus
> giving
> it line-of-site with the low power balloon beacon and getting a position.
>
> The guys have a pilot/airplane, but we are wondering how to setup the APRS
> station in the airplane. The plane will generally be a Cessna 172 - a
> high-wing monoplane.
>
> Has anyone on this list tried this? How did you position the antenna? What
> type of antenna did you use?
>
> Thanks for any ideas/input.
> --
> William McKeehan
> KI4HDU
> Internet: mckeehan at mckeehan.homeip.net
> http://mckeehan.homeip.net
>
> _______________________________________________
> aprssig mailing list
> aprssig at lists.tapr.org
> https://lists.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig
>
More information about the aprssig
mailing list