
AARC
is the largest Ham Radio Club in
the state with more than 300 members. AARC invites
anyone with an interest in amateur radio or public
service to come out and visit us. We have various working groups
in the evenings several times a month. Give the station a call
prior to coming out to make sure there will be someone there. The
AARC
is dedicated to public service and public safety. The Club
provides emergency communicaions and training to any group or
civil authority. Arrangements can be made for a tour of the
station just let activities@kl7aa.net know what your group wants to see
or do.
Dues are a meager $12 a year, those dues includes a newsletter via
email or directly from the AARC webpages.
COMING SOON! PAYPAL PAYMENT
OPTION!
You
can
join the club at any
of our monthly meetings, or by calling
AARC at 345-0719 anytime.
Current Temp in Anchorage
Next
General Membership
Meeting will be on June 7th at the APU Campus starting at 7pm.
AARC
meetings are held the first Friday of each month at
7:00 PM.
Our
meetings are located in the Carr-Gottstein building at
Alaska Pacific
University, 4101 University Drive, Anchorage, Alaska.
New
and
prospective hams as well as the general public are
always invited
to
join us!
Where is the clubhouse?
Pictures
of the station are in the Photo's
Gallery.
Elecraft
K3 and a Yaesu
MK-V FT-1000MP
|
Cushcraft
3-element yagi
|
ACOM
A2000 1.5kw
linear amp
|
MicroHAM MicroKeyer II PC interface
|
Ham Radio Deluxe, Digital Master 780, MultiPSK, WSJT.
|
10,
15 and 20 meters. 40
and 80 meters in near future |
Modes:
SSB phone, CW, Slow Scan TV. |
PSK,
MFSK, RTTY, Olivia, Feld-Hell, Domino, Throb, JT65, etc. |
Echolink,
IRLP.
SKYPE, APRS |
Future
modes: HF ALE, Winlink |
Alaska
Earthquake Information Center |
Alaska
Firewatch |
Alaska
High Wind Warnings and Threats |
QSL:
Direct or Log of the World
The
KL7AA station is
available for training in VHF or HF operations.
Learn
from
an
experienced operator about
propagation, voice and
morse code as
well
as best practices and legal operation. The station
is fully
integrated
with a PC and
soundcard interface to operate in most
digital modes.
There are many
contests to
participate in
even if all you want to do is give
out a KL7
contact to someone.
Alaskan contacts are sought after all over the
world. The
club station is quite capable and has great ears.
Club operators have
made many QSO's on all
modes on all
continents. Recent Activities have seen
SSTV
QSO with New Zealand,
hearing a Fallujah Iraq operator on
PSK,
a 15 meter
contact to
Peru during
the CW WW Phone Contest. Common contacts are made
to the
lower 48
and the Carribean, Canada, Japan,
Korea, Taiwan, China,
Russia and most Pacfic
Islands.
Jamboree on the Air JOTA 2012 at KL7AA
 
 

Questions? Contact AARC, or any of the area ham clubs for
help.

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