The big guns of the USS Iowa. |
This week I am in Long Beach, California again for a conference and it was an ideal opportunity to visit the famous battleship USS Iowa in nearby San Pedro, which has an amateur radio station with the callsign NI6BB.
USS Iowa (BB-61) is a floating maritime museum that is well worth the visit. It has a rich history that spreads from World War Two, through the Korean conflict in the 50s, and the cold war before it finally became a museum in 2012.
US Navy veteran Jerry Johnson with one of the 110lb powder sacks. |
The USS Iowa discone-cage HF antenna, complete with plastic owl! |
Anyway, back to the radio, the radio room on the Iowa is well equipped with a Kenwood radio for HF.
On the bow of Iowa is the discone-cage antenna. Fed at the top it is a discone providing coverage from approximately 10 to 30 MHz with a VSWR below 3:1. The antenna has a plastic owl on it to stop pigeons resting - but they ignore it apparently!
Ron Frank N3HI let me operate some 20m SSB from the ship, as I have G0KYA/AB8ZV UK full and US Extra Class licences, and I worked a few stations including Washington State and Ohio. One was a “nearly” as I couldn’t quite get his full call before he faded away, which was a shame. HF conditions weren’t brilliant.
There were one or two loud stations on CW, which they often work, and Ron says they tend to operate a lot of digital too, including FT8.
Anyway, my thanks to Ron for letting me play for an hour and giving me some detailed history of the USS Iowa. If you are ever in the Long Beach/San Pedro area go and visit. It is truly fantastic.
My thanks to Ron Frank, N3HI. |
If you are interested in some of my other historic radio visits you can read about: