rlwm211
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specs for the shelters
Thanks for the compliment. The S250 is mounted on a civilian trailer that is built to milspecs. A single axle, with brakes rated for 5500 pounds, weighs almost 1300 without the shelter on it. VERY HEAVY DUTY and has leveling jacks on the rear corners and sits 22 inches off the ground to the deck. Victory Industrial products is the manufacturer and the frame is a beast made from 2x6 square tube welded at 90 degrees to 2x4 square tubing making an L. All wall thicknesses are .25. The deck is diamond plate and is 4x10. The fenders are wide enough for the shelter to fit between, but the jacks on the back are exactly 48" apart, so the S250 had to be dropped in between the fenders instead of slid in.
You would not think a single axle trailer with the shelter on it would be heavy, but when I tow it with the deuce I know it is back there. I added a class IV receiver to the rear frame of the deuce and use a drop hitch of 6 inches to level the trailer behind the deuce.
I was extremely comfortable in the S280 shelter overnight this past weekend and look forward to camping again this weekend. I may omit hauling the trailer as I can operate from the shelter on the deuce if I want to.
I use an Icom 706 for hf and close range FM work. Antennas include a G5RV 102' and a T2FD folded dipole. I have 24 of the fiberglass poles and have various adaters I have made to mount antennas to them. The shelters on the deuce and the comm trailer have through bulkhead connectors for antennas so they are watertight and if closed up are still pretty EMP resistant.
You may find our "jump radios" interesting. We make these "jump radios" out of fat 50 ammo cans. Many of the 2 meter and 440 radios are 5.5 inches wide and fit inside the can accross the narrow portion. We add a 7-10 amp hour gel cell and a power supply to charge the battery when connected to shore power. The antenna runs through the can and allows the use of a 1/4 wave extendable antenna, or connection to a vehicle or mast mounted antenna. In my jump radio, I have two 7.2 amp hour batteries and a Kantronics TNC along with the power supply. These are waterproof when done and allow at least 4-6 hours of operation on a charge, oftentimes a lot more. MY 2 meter is an alinco DR 1200.
The batteries in the deuce shelter and on the comm trailer are Avialtion batteries for Business jets. They are replaced on a time basis and are still good when they are removed. They are originally 24 volts and a couple of jumper wires and the removal of one buss bar allows them to operate at 12 volts. The enclosures are waterproof and spill proof and are very tough aluminum. I estimate I have about 120 amp hours on each rig. That makes 240 amp hours total of reserve power for operations which is quite a bit. I have a 24 to 12 volt 35 amp inverter to install in the cab of the deuce to allow charging of the batteries from the truck power system. I also have a surplus aircraft 24 to 12 volt inverter rated at 55 amps continuous that I need to find a
use for that, which I am sure I will eventually find. Both the shelter on the deuce and the shelter on the trailer have smart battery charger/maintainers that are connected to the power buss so when the rigs are connected to 120 volts ac they are charging and are therefore always ready to go.
I have been lucky to have contacts in the avialtion industry as it has some neat equipment and accessories that are very useful in communications and military vehicle accessories.
73's
RL
W2WHT
Thanks for the compliment. The S250 is mounted on a civilian trailer that is built to milspecs. A single axle, with brakes rated for 5500 pounds, weighs almost 1300 without the shelter on it. VERY HEAVY DUTY and has leveling jacks on the rear corners and sits 22 inches off the ground to the deck. Victory Industrial products is the manufacturer and the frame is a beast made from 2x6 square tube welded at 90 degrees to 2x4 square tubing making an L. All wall thicknesses are .25. The deck is diamond plate and is 4x10. The fenders are wide enough for the shelter to fit between, but the jacks on the back are exactly 48" apart, so the S250 had to be dropped in between the fenders instead of slid in.
You would not think a single axle trailer with the shelter on it would be heavy, but when I tow it with the deuce I know it is back there. I added a class IV receiver to the rear frame of the deuce and use a drop hitch of 6 inches to level the trailer behind the deuce.
I was extremely comfortable in the S280 shelter overnight this past weekend and look forward to camping again this weekend. I may omit hauling the trailer as I can operate from the shelter on the deuce if I want to.
I use an Icom 706 for hf and close range FM work. Antennas include a G5RV 102' and a T2FD folded dipole. I have 24 of the fiberglass poles and have various adaters I have made to mount antennas to them. The shelters on the deuce and the comm trailer have through bulkhead connectors for antennas so they are watertight and if closed up are still pretty EMP resistant.
You may find our "jump radios" interesting. We make these "jump radios" out of fat 50 ammo cans. Many of the 2 meter and 440 radios are 5.5 inches wide and fit inside the can accross the narrow portion. We add a 7-10 amp hour gel cell and a power supply to charge the battery when connected to shore power. The antenna runs through the can and allows the use of a 1/4 wave extendable antenna, or connection to a vehicle or mast mounted antenna. In my jump radio, I have two 7.2 amp hour batteries and a Kantronics TNC along with the power supply. These are waterproof when done and allow at least 4-6 hours of operation on a charge, oftentimes a lot more. MY 2 meter is an alinco DR 1200.
The batteries in the deuce shelter and on the comm trailer are Avialtion batteries for Business jets. They are replaced on a time basis and are still good when they are removed. They are originally 24 volts and a couple of jumper wires and the removal of one buss bar allows them to operate at 12 volts. The enclosures are waterproof and spill proof and are very tough aluminum. I estimate I have about 120 amp hours on each rig. That makes 240 amp hours total of reserve power for operations which is quite a bit. I have a 24 to 12 volt 35 amp inverter to install in the cab of the deuce to allow charging of the batteries from the truck power system. I also have a surplus aircraft 24 to 12 volt inverter rated at 55 amps continuous that I need to find a
use for that, which I am sure I will eventually find. Both the shelter on the deuce and the shelter on the trailer have smart battery charger/maintainers that are connected to the power buss so when the rigs are connected to 120 volts ac they are charging and are therefore always ready to go.
I have been lucky to have contacts in the avialtion industry as it has some neat equipment and accessories that are very useful in communications and military vehicle accessories.
73's
RL
W2WHT
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