[aprssig] WRAP-UP MISSOULA MARATHON APRS SUPPORT
Lance Homer k7lqh at thehomerfamily.comTue Jul 10 17:22:57 UTC 2012
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Like the others are saying, great report! I've helped with a few events like yours, but we've never employed APRS. Your report sure makes me want to try it at the next event I'm involved with. I appreciate you sharing with us. 73, Lance K7LQH On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 9:47 AM, David Dobbins <ddobbins at gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Group, > > Greetings from Missoula, Montana. The Missoula Marathon was held this > past weekend. There were 5000+ runners/walkers/handicappers participating. > The Hellgate Amateur Radio Club, led by Elmer WG7P, did a great job > directing efforts of the 25+ volunteers who provided voice communications > and APRS support to the race. We had communicators at most of the 17 AID > Stations along the two routes, which included a Full Marathon (26.2 miles) > and Half Marathon (13.1 miles). As the three lead male and female runners > passed each AID Station the assigned communicator would radio in the bib > numbers and time of crossing to Jerry N7GE (also an avid APRSr) at the > finish line. I manned the APRS finish line station, monitoring the trackers > we had following three lead males and female runners, and two "tail end > charlie" trackers bringing up the rear of the races. Both Jerry and I took > turns radio'ing the leader updates to Eric NZ7S at the FINISH line crossing > where the announcers broadcast the info over their PA system. > The trackers consisted of two Byonics MT-AIO "yellow box" units mounted > on bicycles, a Byonics MT-RTG mounted in the half-marathon pace car, three > Kenwood D7/D72's, and an Arduino tracker neatly mounted on a bob-trailer > behind the tail-end charlie bike. We ID'd the trackers with tactical > callsigns (MSLA*) and entered owner callsigns at the end of the status text > comment, set them for 30 second updates with various offsets to reduce > packet collisions. Battery life well exceeded our needs on all the > trackers. The finish line station ran UI-View with two area specific maps > generated with Precision Maps v9, one showing the entire race routes, and > the other focused on the final four AID stations. The AID stations were > generated as objects on UI-View, and were periodically announced onto the > APRS-IS as MSOAID*. As my TH-D72 was being used as a tracker, the UI-View > station relied on APRS-IS input only. A projector and screen displayed the > race picture for others to see from our location just below the finish line > in Caras Park. > The trackers and FINISH line station worked great, although there were > some gaps in coverage and other technical difficulties along for the ride. > It was nothing we couldn't deal with, and overall a very successful > mission. This was the first occasion for using APRS at the Missoula > Marathon, and race officials were very impressed. I've done about a dozen > or more races, marathons, triathons and Ironman events over the years, so > bring some experience with me to the Hellgate club as I'm summering in > Montana to escape the heat of Tucson. Makes sense, right? > We had a debrief last night at the monthly HARC meeting, and along with > increasing the number of trackers to cover the three leading males and > leading females of each race, we intend to place a tracker with the 5 hour > PACER runner, and perhaps with one or more of the SAG vehicles. We also > talked about coordinating some other communication updates including > "tweeting" the BIB numbers when they pass the AID stations, so others can > stay aware, and using several iPhones or Android smartphones to broadcast > streaming video to UStream and link it with a map of the associated APRS > tracker. I have that capability now, using my Android Bionic and mobile > tracker to the web page at http://k7gps.weebly.com, but it could easily > have been adapted to U2APRS or APRS OpenTracker running on a smartphone and > the UStream video simultaneously. Oh the possibilities are limitless. > There's another communications-related activity I'd like to expand for > next year, that is in the "lost and found" arena. We had several people > wanting to drop off lost and found items, or in two cases looking for > separated parties, one of which was a runner/walker in the event, who > should have, but had not yet crossed the finish line. We took the bib > number, name and description of those folks and radio'd an attempt to > locate to our people along the course, but unfortunately never made contact > with the other parties. On the TV news later that night I heard a report of > one runner who collapsed mid-way between aid stations, where we didn't have > any communicators, was administered CPR and rushed to the hospital. His age > and physical description matched those of the person we were looking for. > We'll try harder next time to get the bib number of those who are > administered first-aid along the course, and get that info to > communications-central, so when concerned parties come looking we can > provide them with at least some information, or which hospital they were > transported to. > Regards, Dave K7GPS > > _______________________________________________ > aprssig mailing list > aprssig at tapr.org > https://www.tapr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/aprssig > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://www.tapr.org/pipermail/aprssig/attachments/20120710/74ff605c/attachment.htm>
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