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dovenet / HAM Radio / Amateur Radio Serves in Large Utah Bike Race

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o Amateur Radio Serves in Large Utah Bike RaceARRL de WD1CKS

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Amateur Radio Serves in Large Utah Bike Race

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From: arrl.de.wd1cks@VERT/WLARB (ARRL de WD1CKS)
To: QST
Subject: Amateur Radio Serves in Large Utah Bike Race
Message-ID: <6504B3CE.7618.dove-ham@wd1cks.org>
Date: Fri, 15 Sep 2023 19:43:10 +0000
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 by: ARRL de WD1CKS - Fri, 15 Sep 2023 19:43 UTC

09/15/2023

 On September 9, 2023, the Bridgerland Amateur Radio Club[1] (BARC) in northern
Utah provided amateur radio communications support during LoToJa[2], the
longest 1-day USA Cycling (USAC)-sanctioned bicycle race in America. The LoToJa
course consists of 200 miles of rough, mountainous terrain. BARC was prepared
for the challenge and had been training and working on their communications
plans for more than 3 decades.

The club's involvement with LoToJa began in 1991, when the race had 200 riders
and 14 amateur radio operators. This year's event had 1,700 riders and 120
amateur radio operators, including 35 cars with amateur radio operators along
for the ride. Amateur radio was engaged in every aspect of the race from start
to finish thanks to assistance of operators from Ogden, Davis County, and Salt
Lake City, as well as Idaho, Wyoming, and Maryland.

Section Manager of the ARRL Utah Section Pat Malan, N7PAT, said that BARC
members evaluate their operating skills and equipment, which is the best form
of preparation for emergency communications. "It's a tremendous effort and
dedication from everyone," Malan said.

Youth Coordinator for the ARRL Utah Section and former BARC President Kevin
Reeve, N7RXE, said the teams deployed two mountaintop portable repeaters (using
batteries and solar power), three portable digipeaters, and a portable IGate
throughout the racecourse, in addition to setting up four command and net
control centers. Reeve explained, "This provided continuous audio and an
Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS) for the 35 cars covering the entire
event."

Reeve went on to say that this year, a family needed to contact one of the
riders because of an emergency. He stated, "There was no cell phone coverage,
but we were able to locate the cyclist in about 5 minutes, then reunite them
with their family in 15 minutes."   BARC also provided emergency communications
for at least two other large-scale cycling events this year, including the
Little Red Riding Hood event that had 3,500 women cyclists and 70 ham radio
operators, and the Cache Gran Fondo event that had 1,500 cyclists.

BARC was founded in 1976 by Jeff Jacobsen, WA7MBL; Bob Wood, WA7MXZ, and Bill
Neville, WA7KMF (SK), and it exists for the training and fellowship of amateur
radio operators. The club currently has 227 members.

[1] https://barconline.org/
[2] https://lotoja.com/About

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