Welcome to Homing In

All About Radio Direction Finding (RDF)

www.homingin.com

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Provided by Joe Moell, ham radio callsign KØOV. (That's K-zero-O-V)

Mobile T-Hunting | ARDF/Radio-O | NFW/CQWWFW | Local Events | Wildlife Tracking | Projects
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Latest RDF News Headlines

SBARCTHRDFS coverRegistration is now open for the Seventh USA ARDF Championships, which take place September 14 - 16, 2007 near South Lake Tahoe on the California/Nevada border. This year's USA championships are being combined with the Fourth IARU Region 2 ARDF Championships. Sponsors are the Santa Barbara Amateur Radio Club and Los Angeles Orienteering Club. The courses will be open to anyone at any foxhunting skill level, with or without a ham radio license. The June wildfire did not cause significant damage to the course areas. Click for the full announcement and registration form. The early registration discount deadline has been extended to July 31.

Radio-OResults and photos of the July 14 on-foot foxhunting practice/demonstration session at Craig Regional Park will be posted to this site soon. The next events are tentatively scheduled for Saturday, August 11, 2007 near Santa Barbara and Saturday, August 18 near Topanga. Watch this site for details as they are announced. For earliest notification of these sessions, join the southern California ARDF mailing list. If you live elsewhere, click to get contacts for other North America ARDF sessions

Latest CQ-VHFThe Spring 2007 issue of CQ VHF Magazine is now available in ham radio stores. My Homing In column in this issue tells the story of a radio foxhunt for a real fox. Well, it really looks like one anyway. There's also information about new personal rescue beacons that are about to come on the market, and how you can track them. Some ham stores still have the Winter 2007 issue, in which my Homing In column covers a variety of instances of RDF making news in the mainstream media, including coverage of ham radio hunts for hidden transmitters and high-altitude balloons. It also explains the technologies that make Enhanced 911 wireless caller location possible. 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.

ShrikeCQ VHF Spring 2007Ham 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 will be needed this fall 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 these and other projects, and there are additional pages here about equipment for wildlife tracking, monitoring techniques, and signal identification.

CQThe tenth annual CQ Worldwide Foxhunting Weekend (CQ WW FW) was May 12 - 13, 2007 but if your club didn't hold a hunt then, it's not too late! Start the fun now by reading the announcement at this site and my articles in the April and May 2007 issues of CQ Amateur Radio Magazine. It has more Foxhunting Weekend news, plus hunt stories and photos from last year. If your hunt is over, the next thing to do (besides planning another hunt, of course) is to send the results and photos to me for the follow-up article. Get the report form here. To see how Foxhunting Weekend was celebrated in Orange County, California, click here.

Championships logoBulgarian Federation of Radio Amateurs (BFRA) hosted the 13th ARDF World Championships, September 12-17, 2006. The location was Primorsko on the Black Sea Coast. Each country was allowed up to three persons per age/gender category on its team. USA's 13 team members were selected based on performances in recent ARDF events. USA received its first ever World Championships medal at this event. Click here for complete Team USA results and more news about our participation in these championships.

There are over 90 additional fact-filled pages in this site, including techniques and projects for radio direction finding. For the Table of Contents and site search, click or scroll down.

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What's "Homing In?"

Homing In refers to the process of tracking down the source of a radio or other electromagnetic signal using radio direction finding (RDF) equipment.

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.

Start of a mobile T-huntRadio 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.

Start of an on-foot hamfest huntMobile 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.

What's at the Homing In Site?

Find your topic of interest below in the complete Table of Contents (or as some call it, the Site Map). Or you can Click here for the Site Search page.

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.

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Joe MoellWho 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 200 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.

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G-RatedHaving 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 90 communications emergencies during the past 25 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.

 

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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 © 2007 Joseph D. Moell. Text, photos and original graphics may not be served or reproduced elsewhere without permission.

Any BrowserContact info:
Joe Moell
PO Box 2508
Fullerton, CA 92837
k0ov@homingin.com

This page updated 15 July 2007

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Mobile T-Hunting | ARDF/Radio-O | NFW/CQWWFW | Local Events | Wildlife Tracking | Projects
Index | About | News | Results | FAQs | Book | Mail Lists | Links | Search | Contact