Troy Bungard

2025 Auburn Hamfest scheduled for July 19, 2025 9am – 2pm

Screenshot 2025-01-14 at 10.49.06 AM
For more information click the links below:
Driving Directions
Contact us for more information
Reserve Tables:
Click here to reserve tables.
Raffle Tickets and Outdoor Space Reservation

Click here to purchase raffle tickets or reserve outdoor space

Hamfest Flyer:
Name Downloads Version Owner Last Modified Rating
Name Downloads Version Owner Last Modified Rating
16 downloads 1.0 Troy Bungard 13-01-2025 19:54
405 downloads 1.0 Ritchie Short 22-03-2022 1:06
2025 Auburn Hamfest

The 2025 Northeastern Indiana Amature Radio Association. Auburn Indiana Hamfest is scheduled for Saturday July 19, 2025 from 9am to 2pm. Come join us for the fellowship and fun.

  • Setup time 7:00 am to 9:00 am
  • Free Admission 
  • Free Parking
  • Free Museum

New this year – VE Testing at 10:00 AM

Raffle Prizes (Tickets $5.00 each or Buy 2, get 1 free!):

  • 1st – XIEGU G90 HF 20w SSB/CW/AM/FM
  • 2nd – C3 Electronics Band Pass Filter
    (C3 Electronics is an Auburn Hamfest Vendor)
  • 3rd – Yaesu FT65 software – Full Access
  • 4th – $50.00 DX Engineering Gift Certificate
Talk-In: 147.015 PL Tone 141.3

Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum
1600 Wayne Street
Auburn, IN 46706

 Sponsored by
Dekalb-County-Logo_RED-White
DeKalb County Visitors Bureau

2025 Auburn Hamfest scheduled for July 19, 2025 9am – 2pm Read More »

SKCC K3Y January Event (2025)

SKCC K3Y January Event
For the past 18 years, the Straight Key Century Club has designated January as their special celebration month. Members all over the world sign up to operate as a K3Y station. Last year there were more than 250 different K3Y stations and there were over 50,000 qso’s made by those stations! This year’s event begins at 0000utc on January 2nd. For us, here in Fort Wayne, it will begin Wednesday (January1) night at 7pm local time. Each K3Y station will have a portable designator such as K3Y/1, K3Y/9, K3Y/AS, K3Y/EU etc depending on their call area. Local operators will operate as K3Y/9. The K3Y stations will give a true signal report, their location, name, home call, and SKCC number. If you make contact with a K3Y station, send a true signal report, your state, your name, and your SKCC number or “NONE” if you don’t have a number. This is an all mechanical key event so keyers and computer generated cw are not used. The special K3Y link/page on the SKCC website is loaded with K3Y info and will tell you who is operating along with keeping track of your contacts . . . yes, once you contact a K3Y station and he submits his log, that contact will appear on the K3Y log search and individual stats. This is always a fun event and, if you want to learn more and participate with fellow FWRC members . . .K3Y/9 W9TE Special Event January 11/12


Multi Station at N8KR QTH
So come on by from 7am -9pm Saturday, January 11. You can watch, listen, operate, visit with other members, ask questions, play with a variety of keys . . . if your cw is rusty, sit with a seasoned operator at a station and work together to make contacts. Food and drink and fellowship . . . all around our favorite hobby. Ken’s shack is in a room in the back of the garage and is quite roomy. If you decide to come, there will be a special SKCC SIGN with a garage door opener attached. Push the button, the door will open and come on in! There’s plenty of room! ALSO: the station will be available all Sunday afternoon if you would like to operate one of Ken’s stations.
N8KR Location: 8526 Fox Home Dr. New, Haven, IN – Fox Home is 2 blocks south of Maysville between Long and Landon Roads: accessible from Long Road. (Three blocks from Golden Years)

SKCC K3Y January Event (2025) Read More »

2024 Auburn, Indiana Hamfest

Photographs taken during the 2024 Auburn, Indiana Hamfest. 

2024 Auburn, Indiana Hamfest

2024 Auburn, Indiana Hamfest Read More »

Darrell Smith (KD8SIR) Silent Key

Darrell Smith Obituary

Darrell Smith, 74 years of Hicksville, passed away Wednesday, November 27, 2024, in the emergency room at Promedica Defiance Hospital, Defiance, Ohio. Darrell was born on September 1, 1950, in Wauseon, Ohio, the son of the late Harold and Barbara (Brown) Smith. He was a 1968 graduate of Swanton High School. Darrell served our country in the United States Army until his honorable discharge in 1977. He married Deborah Vold, on February 15, 1980, in Napoleon, Ohio, and she survives. Darrell was a Prison Guard at the Marion Correctional Institution for over 20 years. Prior to this, Darrell was a Police Officer for the Village of Ottawa, Ohio. He also worked as Head of Security and Safety for the Columbus Athletic Club and the Toledo Athletic Club. He was a member of the Hicksville American Legion Post 223 and the Sherwood VFW Post 5665, and the Indiana Ham Radio Club. Darrell enjoyed his Ham Radio Club and was an avid Military History Buff. 

Surviving is his wife, Deborah of Hicksville; four children, Cory (Farrah) Smith of Batavia, Ohio, Kylee Smith of Marion, Ohio, Alexandra Smith of Hicksville, and Gabriel Smith, also of Hicksville; eight siblings, Gregory Smith of Delta, Ohio, RoxAnn Durant of Swanton, Ohio, Randy Smith of Delta, Ohio, Rochelle (George) VanDenBerghe of Liberty Center, Ohio, Gwen (Steve) Shein of Burlington, Ontario, Canada, Stacey Smith of Toledo, Ohio, Cheryl Kleinfelter of Delta, Ohio and Andy Smith of Delta, Ohio.  He was preceded in death by his parents and one brother, Paul Dean Smith.

Visitation for Darrell Smith will be held on Tuesday, December 3, 2024, from 10:00 – 12:00 p.m. in the Oberlin-Turnbull funeral Home, 706 North Main Street, Hicksville, where funeral services will begin at 12:00 p.m. with Pastor Kevin Doseck, officiating. Military Gravesite Honors will be accorded by a combined honor guard of the Hicksville American Legion Post 223, Sherwood VFW Post 5665, and Farmer American Legion Post 137. Entombment will follow in Riverview Memory Gardens, Defiance, Ohio.

Memorial contributions can be directly to the Hicksville American Legion Post 223.

Condolences may be sent to the family or memories may be shared at www.oberlinturnbull.com.

SK_Darrell_Smith

Darrell Smith (KD8SIR) Silent Key Read More »

W9OU Repeater Etiquette

A Reminder to all on Repeater usage and Control:

Repeater Etiquette:
The following information is a simple guide to courteous operation on repeaters. If you operate using these simple
guidelines, you will make it more enjoyable for everyone operating on repeaters, and you will also set a good
example for others. It never hurts to review the guidelines (and new hams may not be familiar with these
guidelines) to make sure you are being a responsible amateur radio operator. Remember, repeaters are a public
service, and general courtesy is expected of all amateur radio operators.

  •  Take the time to listen to a repeater before you talk.
  •  Transmit your call sign when you first come on the air. Make sure you ID once every 10 minutes, but there
    is no need to identify too often. (47CFR § 97.119.a)
  • Do not inject a comment into a conversation without saying your call sign. Part 97 of the Code of Federal
    Regulations, which governs our operations as amateur radio operators, requires that you identify with your
    callsign. (47 CFR § 97.119.a) Transmitting comments without identifying yourself is
    prohibited. Interrupting is no more polite on the radio than in the real world.
  • Do not monopolize the repeater. Simplex may be more appropriate for lengthy conversations. Keep in
    mind that repeaters are a shared resource and are to be available to a large community of users. A good
    operating practice is to use simplex for long conversations (rag chewing) if possible.
  • Our repeaters normally have a 3 minute “timeout” setting. The 3-minute length is meant as a maximum
    length, not a suggested length. It is considered good etiquette to keep your transmission length shorter than
    this.
  • Some topics are like land mines – Religion, Politics, Sex, etc. Do not discuss these subjects over the air! It
    can be more interesting than discussing what you ate for lunch last Wednesday, or the weather conditions
    you experienced two days ago, or how bad your bunions are troubling you, but “land mine” conversations
    can sometimes descend into a shouting match and can cause people to become upset (even those listening
    and not part of the conversation).
  • Do not belittle, berate, defame or speak ill of others….period. This includes individuals, groups, nations,
    aspect of the hobby, etc. Using words such as idiot, stupid, hate monger, etc. in reference to any person,
    entity or group should not be tolerated.
  • Even ‘mild’ obscenities are not good operating practice. This includes suggestive phrases, and suggestive
    phonetics. (47 CFR §97.113.a.4).
  • Give a pause before keying the mic and speaking. Don’t start speaking as you key the mic. Repeaters have a
    short delay before transmitting. If you start speaking too soon, your first few words may not be
    heard. Make sure you have finished speaking before you un-key the mic.
  • Pause periodically to see if anyone else would either like to join the conversation or use the repeater for a
    quick call that is not part of the ongoing conversation.
  • When identifying, please say your call sign slowly and clearly. Call signs that are rattled off too fast can
    make the call sign totally unintelligible.
  • Don’t forget that the FCC prohibits the transmission or retransmission of music (and almost anything else
    that is received over the airwaves; for specifics, see (47 CFR § 97.113.a.4). If you have a radio turned on (this
    is especially common for many mobile stations), make sure that it’s turned down before you transmit.
  • When using “comment” or “break” to be recognized and you are acknowledged by net control or the folks
    using the frequency, then be sure to identify with your call sign.

§97.119 Station identification.
(a) Each amateur station, except a space station or telecommand station, must transmit its assigned
call sign on its transmitting channel at the end of each communication, and at least every 10 minutes
during a communication, for the purpose of clearly making the source of the transmissions from the
station known to those receiving the transmissions. No station may transmit unidentified communications
or signals, or transmit as the station call sign, any call sign not authorized to the station.
(b) The call sign must be transmitted with an emission authorized for the transmitting channel in one
of the following ways:
(1) By a CW emission. When keyed by an automatic device used only for identification, the speed
must not exceed 20 words per minute;
(2) By a phone emission in the English language. Use of a phonetic alphabet as an aid for correct
station identification is encouraged;
(3) By a RTTY emission using a specified digital code when all or part of the communications are
transmitted by a RTTY or data emission;
(4) By an image emission conforming to the applicable transmission standards, either color or
monochrome, of §73.682(a) of the FCC Rules when all or part of the communications are transmitted in
the same image emission
(c) One or more indicators may be included with the call sign. Each indicator must be separated
from the call sign by the slant mark (/) or by any suitable word that denotes the slant mark. If an indicator
is self-assigned, it must be included before, after, or both before and after, the call sign. No self-assigned
indicator may conflict with any other indicator specified by the FCC Rules or with any prefix assigned to
another country.
(d) When transmitting in conjunction with an event of special significance, a station may substitute
for its assigned call sign a special event call sign as shown for that station for that period of time on the
common data base coordinated, maintained and disseminated by the special event call sign data base
coordinators. Additionally, the station must transmit its assigned call sign at least once per hour during
such transmissions.
(e) When the operator license class held by the control operator exceeds that of the station licensee,
an indicator consisting of the call sign assigned to the control operator’s station must be included after the
call sign.
(f) When the control operator is a person who is exercising the rights and privileges authorized by
§97.9(b) of this part, an indicator must be included after the call sign as follows:
(1) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice Class to Technical
Class: KT;
(2) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice or Technician to
General Class: AG;
(3) For a control operator who has requested a license modification from Novice, Technician,
General, or Advanced Class to Amateur Extra Class: AE.
(g) When the station is transmitting under the authority of §97.107 of this part, an indicator
consisting of the appropriate letter-numeral designating the station location must be included before the
call sign that was issued to the station by the country granting the license. For an amateur service license
granted by the Government of Canada, however, the indicator must be included after the call sign. At
least once during each intercommunication, the identification announcement must include the
geographical location as nearly as possible by city and state, commonwealth or possession.
[54 FR 25857, June 20, 1989, as amended at 54 FR 39535, Sept. 27, 1989; 55 FR 30457, July 26, 1990; 56 FR 28,
Jan. 2, 1991; 62 FR 17567, Apr. 10, 1997; 63 FR 68980, Dec. 14, 1998; 64 FR 51471, Sept. 23, 1999; 66 FR 20752,
Apr. 25, 2001; 75 FR 78171, Dec. 15, 2010]
A repeater trustee is responsible for the proper operation of their assigned repeaters. A repeater trustee is also
responsible for:
 Ensuring that the club station license is operated in the club’s best interests
 Following all FCC rules
 Designating control operators
 Determining who can use the club license

W9OU Repeater Etiquette Read More »

Amateur Extra License class training October 8th – November 14th, 2024

The Northeastern Indiana Amateur Radio Association
will have a training class for the Amateur Extra Class License
starting on October 8th. The classes are on Tuesday and
nights Thursday from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM at the Comfort.
Suite. The address is 1137 W 15th St, in Auburn Indiana.
The class is free however we use the Gordon West book
for the class. The books can be purchased on the internet
from R & L, Giga Parts and DX Engineering or used books
as well. 

A testing session will be on November 16th at Comfort Suite from 6:00 PM to 8.00 PM.
The testing session is open for any new or upgrade license
tests. The testing session needs to have applicants register
at HamStudy.org. Cost for the test is $14.00. If you
pass the FCC will want $35.00. You will need your FRN
login and password and a CORES login and password to
pay the fee.

Amateur Extra License class training October 8th – November 14th, 2024 Read More »