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Ham Radio during expedition
The first ham during expedition
Radio is the only way to keep in touch
with the modern world from the remotest of the places. The first ham radio operator to
cooperate in an expedition was American Radio Relay League member Don Mix (Callsign 1TS).
With his radio equipment in tow he accompanied Donald B. MacMillan to the Arctic on the
Schooner Bowdoin in 1923.
Source: ARRL Handbook, 1993
Ham radio during 'Kon-Tiki'
expedition
Extraordinary explorer and naturalist Thor
Heyerdahl in the year 1947 during his famous 'Kon-Tiki'
voyage through the Pacific Ocean used amateur radio equipments to communicate
from his small reft on the high sea. Throughout the voyage, Thor along with the five
member crew collected mateorological and oceanographic data and sent them to the USA via
ham radio stations scattered around the globe. In fact the crew kept in touch with the
outside world through ham radio stations only. It was the sole sign of their being present
in the modern world. Even nowadays when the professional communication system is getting
hundred percent reliable, navigators are found to use ham radio equipments, because ham
radio has got its own advantages too!
Source: Science Reporter, May
1988, pp 290
Ham Radio Operation during 1983-84
Indian Antarctic Expedition
During the third Indian expedition (1983-84)
to Antarctica, the Indian Amateur Radio Station VU2IF/Maritime Mobile-3 became
operational from the expedition ship "Finnpolaris" on 4th December, 1983. The
station was operated by radio amateur Dr. Ashutosh Singh, VU2IF, the farther figure of
Delhi hams and an active worker of Amateur Radio Association, New Delhi.
Source: Department of Ocean
Development, Technical publication No. 3, p-265-266.
Ham radio operation
during the "Samudra" Expedition
The Indian Naval Sailing Vessel 'Samudra'
added another chapter to Naval Maritime history when it touched the shores of Gulf in
1991. INSV-Samudra, the 13 metre long and 17 year old fibre glass yatch started its
expedition on September 21, 1991 from Cochin and sailed upto Muscat (Oman) and Abbas
(Iran). The speciality of the expedition was that all the seven crew members were
amateur radio operators and the yatch was skippered by S.B. Anand (VU2SBA). They
were in touch with their families and their HQ via ham radio.
Ham radio operation during polar
expedition
In 1988, members of a joint Soviet/Canadian
expedition crossed the North Pole on skis. Amateur Radio Operators provided daily
communications, and OSCAR 11 (Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio) satellite's
"Talking Computer" relayed position information to the expedition team every 100
minutes !
Source: ARRL Handbook, 1993
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