w***@yahoo.com
2014-05-10 16:19:12 UTC
During field day a few of those operating may have heard the call sign
KH6SP from the island of Oahu in Hawaii. The call sign is
held by the US Navy Morale, Welfare and Recreation committee and
presently, is not directly associated a club at Pearl Harbor.
There are a number of people in the local Hawaii area that would like
to bring the original club back to life but there is little
information about the club in it's previous form.
If anyone out there could supply us with information regarding the club
Carleton or Brett Collars.
Thanks in advance,
Robert Carleton
Well, this reply may be a bit tardy (your query was posted in 1993 and it's now 2014).KH6SP from the island of Oahu in Hawaii. The call sign is
held by the US Navy Morale, Welfare and Recreation committee and
presently, is not directly associated a club at Pearl Harbor.
There are a number of people in the local Hawaii area that would like
to bring the original club back to life but there is little
information about the club in it's previous form.
If anyone out there could supply us with information regarding the club
Carleton or Brett Collars.
Thanks in advance,
Robert Carleton
I was stationed at CINCPACFLT in '67 and gained access to KH6SP in my spare time. A few of us (K5LTH (now W5LE), WB6BNQ, and K7TKX) operated the station heavily, running phone patch traffic for submariners on Guam and Marines in VietNam to their families in the US. The station at that time was a Collins S-Line and 30S1 Linear. Previous members left us with a big 4 element tri-band Quad. The station was located in a WWII era wooden building at the edge of the harbor. WB6BNQ and I ran the Typhoon Sara (Wake Island) relief operation from that building.
In late '67, I became CHOP at KH6SP as my full time assignment. We were told that the station would need to be moved to another location, a VERY HEAVY DUTY blockhouse on the other side of the Submarine Base, it had been constructed a few months after the Pearl Harbor attack to protect some 12KV switchgear, we moved into the second floor. The tower and Quad were moved as a unit by a large crane and placed on the roof of the blockhouse.
We were able to improve the station, adding RTTY capability and hosted a terminal on the Pacific Tsunami Network. We maintained a heavy schedule of military phone patch traffic on MARS channels and Amateur phone patching for folks on the smaller Pacific Islands and Antarctica. We had daily schedules with Guam and Okinawa on MARS RTTY cutting long tapes of Heath/Welfare messages that we relayed to CONUS MARS stations for further distribution. I continued as CHOP for a year before my enlistment expired and passed control to Les, W5LE.
-Mike-
WA6ZTY