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Eric, K3NA |
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Name:
Eric Scace
Call:
K3NA
Nationality:
American
3B9 Responsibilities:
Team member |
DXpedition Experience:
FO0XX Clipperton Is.
VK9ML Mellish Rf.
YK0A Syria
3D2XX Rotuma
ZA1A Albania
AH3C/KH5J Jarvis Is.
Lord Howe Is., Norfolk Is.,
Significant Operations:
Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, Curacao, ITU Geneva, Puerto Rica, Israel,
Seychelles, PRChina, Australia, Aland Is., France, Spain, Canada, Finland,
Sweden, Switzerland, European Russia.
Other Calls:
WN2CAL, WA2CAL, WB3AJQ
Club Memberships:
Yankee Clipper Contest Club
Potomac Valley Radio Club
Home Page: www.k3na.org
About Eric:
At age 12 Eric found two books of interest on his father's bookshelf: "A
Pilot's Guide to the Weather" and the 1948 edition of the "Radio Amateurs
Handbook". But railroads were a childhood interest so it was another few
years before he built a battery powered, two-tube regenerative receiver from
the Handbook on a piece of plywood. Mr. and Mrs. Carter, the backyard
neighbors, took pity and sold him a National NC-250 25th anniversary
receiver with bandspread ham bands for a price that a kid could afford. A
few months later a local ham across Lake Skaneateles gave Eric his Novice
exam. The examiner was also a MARS operator with a basement full of teletype
machines. Some endless weeks later Eric's first license arrived: WN2CAL. He
fired up a Knight T-60 crystal-controlled transmitter on 40m. A few months
later he won his first contest: CW Sweepstakes Novice Western New York, with
a full-time 24-hour effort totaling few dozen hard-earned QSOs. (Try
explaining contest rules at 5 wpm...)
After sitting for his General class exam and receiving WA2CAL, Eric spent
free hours after high school on CW traffic nets and chasing the odd CW DX
station. Howie Mann W2FR spent many hours coaching Eric on the ins and outs
of DXing, traffic handling, and contesting. Eventually Eric became qualified
as an Official Relay Station and operated Transcontinental Corps schedules.
He continued to interfere with his elderly neighbor's old TV and AM radio,
to their great delight as they were retired railroad telegraph operators!
"The code's far better music than that trash rock and roll you hear these
days..."
Intrigued by those teletype machines he had seen at the local weather
station and his Novice examiner's home, in 1967 he joined the Navy-Marine
Corps MARS program (a military radio network employing ham operator
volunteers and which used 100 wpm RTTY extensively for message handling). He
built terminal units and learned to repair, disassemble and reassemble
Teletype and Kleinschmidt machines. At Cornell University his dormitory room
was stuffed with radio and Teletype gear; a 200m long wire suspended between
his window and the top of a nearby 12 story building served as an antenna.
The Navy awarded him the first civilian Radioman Master Chief rating, and
shortly thereafter he was promoted to Senior Chief. He also passed
examinations for the Speedkey (CW) and Teletype certificates.
Eric received a B.Sc. in Atmospheric Physics in 1974 (partially financed
through fees earned by repairing the campus' laboratory computer teletype
consoles) and, after a year of graduate study (with a minor in
architecture), wandered off to work at the National Weather Service
headquarters. His communications experience quickly sidetracked him away
from tornado and hurricane forecasting research and into data networking. In
addition to system software development, during the 1970s and 1980s Eric
participated in or chaired many national and international committees which
set standards for packet-switching, internet, ISDN and signaling systems.
After stints in product management and international sales management at
Telenet, Sprint and Alcatel, in 1995 Eric joined a small, commercial
internet service provider, UUNet Technologies, as vice president,
international development. This was just at the start of the internet
explosion, during which Eric's team built a multi-billion dollar
international internet business through which 40% of today's traffic passes.
He retired in 2000 but does occasional consulting work on
telecommunications/high tech management problems and mergers/acquisitions.
Along the way the DXpedition bug bit, beginning with a Potomac Valley Radio
Club contest DXpedition to PJ2 and an invitation to the multi-year
Clipperton Island odyssey of FO0XX. Over the years Eric worked his DX mentor
W2FR from many exotic locations, a very satisfying closing of the circle
between student and teacher.
Besides DXpeditioning, contesting, and random CW chit-chat with friends,
Eric has done extensive antenna modeling, developing new analysis tools.
Currently he is in the midst of a series of articles in the "National
Contest Journal" applying these tools to Yagi stacks; see
www.ncjweb.com/bonus.php.
After five years in Moscow, Eric and his wife Mary Yntema moved to
Charlestown Massachusetts. He has a modest city apartment station about 100m
from the birthplace of Samuel F. B. Morse. For contests Eric joins the team
at W1KM's QTH.
Other interests include sailing (occasional big boat cruising; and racing
his Tornado catamaran, an Olympic class racing machine), bicycling, travel,
parties, live jazz and other late-at-night big city activities of which Mom
might not approve.
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Operators |
DK7YY, Falk
DL7AKC, Jens
EI5DI, Paul
F5VHN, Robert
G0MRF, Dave
G0OPB, Tony
G3BJ, Don
G3IZD, Ivan
G3NHL, Chris
G3NUG,
Neville
G3RAU, Derek
G3SED, Mike
G3WKL, John
G3WGV, John
G3XTT, Don
G4FRE, Dave
G4IUF, Mike
G4JKS, Hilary
G4KIU, Nigel
G4TSH, Justin
G4VXE, Tim
GU4YOX, Bob
JA1RJU, Kazu san
JH4RHF, Jun san
K3NA, Eric
KF7E, Jim
M0FRE, Meg
M0GMT, Danny
N7CQQ, John
NK7C, Pat
W3EF
3B9FR, Robert
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Support Team |
G3WRO, Keith
G4ZFE, Richard
JA3AER, Taizo san
W3WL, Wes
BRS32525, Bob |
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