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Re: Topband: VE1ZZ has passed on - Very Very Sad news! (Long)

To: <topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: Topband: VE1ZZ has passed on - Very Very Sad news! (Long)
From: "Peter Voelpel" <dj7ww@t-online.de>
Date: Sat, 20 Oct 2018 11:58:27 +0200
List-post: <mailto:topband@contesting.com>
I am very sorry to read that Jack passed away, thats a very sad news.
I will never forget, when I operated CQ160 SSB in 2013 it was 20:30 local time 
when he called in, I could not believe his S7 signal at his full daylight.
The next station from North America came in at 23:30 and was much weaker.

R.I.P Jack

73
Peter

-----Original Message-----
From: Topband [mailto:topband-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of k1zm--- via 
Topband
Sent: Freitag, 19. Oktober 2018 19:10
To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Topband: VE1ZZ has passed on - Very Very Sad news! (Long)

Hello Gang


I am truly saddened to have to pass along the contents of an email I just 
received from Carl Leahy who was one of Jack Leahy,  VE1ZZ's sons.


It is short and sweet - but I will add some personal comments after sharing his 
note to me.


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=





 Carl Leahy carl.leahy1@gmail.comHide

To
k1zm k1zm@aol.com



Jeff, our family wanted you to know that dad passed away last evening. If you 
could let the people in the ham world know we would really appreciate it. It 
was a very big part of his life . He had just been talking about you and the 
book you gave him a few years ago..


Carl Leahy
Signing off for VE1ZZ 😞




++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


A few comments from my memory now follow - as best I recall them:


VE1ZZ was not only a personal friend to many of us - he was probably one of the 
finest Topband Dx'ers ever to have lived.  He goes back to not long after W1BB 
came back on the band at the end of WW!! - and was one of the strongest signals 
I have ever witnessed on Topband.  His signal was almost LEGENDARY all over the 
world.  EU stations used to say  - "He is almost as loud when he calls in Asian 
pileups as the EU callers are over here"...and that says it all!


Jack Leahy was personally responsible for my migrating to VY2ZM and was here at 
my home twice - once is 2002 and once in 2012.  I last visited him and Opal 
(his XYL) in August of 2014 with Mike OE6MBG who wanted to meet Jack and see 
his QTH .


When I finally had the time after building my house here on PEI  to visit Jack 
which was probably in July of 2003 or 2004, at first blush his place did not 
make a huge impression on me because it had only a short triangular portion of 
land at the road in the Head of Jeddore NE of Halifax - and the land rose 
rapidly behind his home.  One initially wondered "How does he get out so well 
from here down at the road?"


The answer came shortly thereafter - Jack took me out behind the house - and we 
climbed that hill - up and up and up for something like a MILE - it was a pizza 
slice in shape and very wide at the top of the hill in the woods - with only 
about 100 feet (if that) at the road front side of the parcel.


Some distance up the hill was Jack's 160m 4sq array - which was made of ROHN 6 
tower - that was sitting on 18 wheeler truck tires as base insulators.  The 
towers were not tall - perhaps 55 feet or so and the rest of each radiator was 
wire - so it was really a WIRE inverted L 4sq.  Jack was the "ultimate 
scavenger" and his radials were all 1-2" diameter pieces of HARDLINE!!!  
Hundreds of them all over the hillside  I think he had a friend in CATV or at 
his local dump - but he got most of it for next to nothing he said.


From that point of his land, he could reach around the HILLTOP on 160m to 
acquire  a clear shot to EU and the South was wide open and to the SW was also 
clear looking over the water.  Looking straight up the hill was probably 
blocked to some degree - but often this does not matter all that much on 
Topband.


The day I was there was shortly after Jack had managed to communicate across 
the pond on what I think was 600m - I may be wrong about the frequency - but 
the antenna he used to make the SLOW SLOW SPEED CW contact was something out of 
this world!


It started about 1/3 of the way up the hill - and ran all the way to the rear 
of the property to near the furthest reaches of his land - and this was a LONG 
LONG LONG walk to get there - through some land that I recall was swampy.  It 
had to have been at least 3000 feet long.


Part way up the hill, Jack had built a small shelter in which he placed the 
BIGGEST homebrew loading coil I have ever seen. It was about 4 feet tall and 
about 8 feet in diameter and wrapped around some kind of coil form he had 
created.


Jack explained that it took him awhile to resonate the system to his desired 
operating QRG - and this was done by taking a pair of alligator clips and 
through trial and error he tapped the coil he made - trying to use a DC ammeter 
to find the point of peak current into the system - which he explained seemed 
to indicate the system was reasonably matched.


His was among the first to work across the pond with that antenna - just one of 
his many achievements.


When I was in the US Navy stationed at Bremerhaven, Germany I used to listen to 
Jack and W1BB on 160m.  W1BB would sit around 1801, KV4FZ often was around 1803 
and Jack was down at the low end as well - calling CQ listening QSX up at 
around 1825-1830 in what was then known as the "DX Window".


Jack had a huge signal even then - using equipment that was popular in that 
era.  I recall a Hammarlund HQ 160 Rx or something close to that model - there 
is a photo of that station from the late 1950's in my book "Dx'ing on the Edge."


Jack's More Recent Station  - Inside


When I first visited Jack in 2003/2004, it was in his old house - not the newer 
one he built further up the hill some years later.  The station was vintage 
(much like my own on Cape Cod) - and Jack used a TS830 driving a HB amp to 
something around a KW DC input.  Jack's operating table gave me a chuckle 
because there was only about 4 inches of space between the front panel of the 
radio and the edge of the table.  Jack was a "leftie" and placed his paddle 
parallel to the front of the TS830 and did his best to keep his forearm on the 
table while he sent.


Jack's keying system triggered a bunch of interconnected relays as he operated 
and he had quite a number of vintage antenna switches which selected his many 
Rx antennas.


After visiting his shack, Jack later showed me around other parts of the rest 
of the house - and I recall several rooms CHOCK FULL of stuff most of us would 
die for.  One room was full of EIMAC xmitting tubes - 4-400's, some 304TL's, 
some 4-1000A's etc


Another room had shelves loaded with vacuum relays and vacuum variables he had 
collected over the years.  Not one or two - but something like a 100 of them.  
There were also rotary inductors for HB design and many other things that made 
me drool.

I think I remember a third room full of vintage ham radio gear as well.  Older 
stuff he had used previously over the years I guess.


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


I will relate one story about Jack when I was operating at 7O6T over in Yemen 
in 2012 I think it was.  I was calling CQ arond 1823kHz waiting for SS to occur 
in NA - and this bone crushing signal came at me that almost blew me out of my 
chair.  You can listen to this clip on my VY2ZM website - and you will see what 
I mean.


I told Jack that I was operating in the snippet - and later asked him to please 
tell me when OTHER NA stations were calling.  I said, please do NOT tell me the 
calls - just tell me that USA stations are now hearing me and calling me.  Jack 
did as I asked and about 15 mins later a very weak in the noise caller was Dave 
Patten, NN1N who was probably 3-4 S units down from Jack's signal.  Dave's 
station is first rate - but there is something truly magical about operating 
from the Maritimes along oceanfront property.  It is just how things work - 
Jack had what I call the "front door" to the NE path and it often shows up as 
it did that evening at 7O6T.


Here's how to listen to what I heard:


1) Go to http://www,vy2zm.com
2) Select the sound bites tab
3) Click on Sound Bite #4 and play VE1ZZ - Booming.
4) If you also wish to hear NN1N's piece look further down the list to hear the 
difference in signal levels.


JACK's last years


I last spoke with Jack in the summer of 2016.  He told me he then had COPD and 
that his amp needed repairs and that his antennas were largely broken.  I had 
heard him sparingly in 2015 and probably not at all in 2016 - and that 
explained why.




JACK's 160m DXCC Achievements:


For many years JACK  held the #2 position WORLD in the Topband DXCC rankings.  
He finished his legendary Topband career at 334 countries confirmed at position 
#6 in the current rankings.  This is only a HANDFUL of entities below that 
necessary to have qualified for DXCC HONOR ROLL - single band 160M.  His mild, 
unassuming manner was also the measure of the man.  He would stop DX'ing and 
work ANYONE who called him - which says alot as well.  His was a special person 
and I have always admired him and what he managed to do in HAM RADIO.


Not only did he make DXCC on 160m - in the summers he got me hooked on 6M and 
he had a 6M DXCC as well - just to keep himself occupied during the summer 
doldrums on 160M.


I will close now and stop reminiscing about Jack - but I think it is altogether 
fitting that we stop and pause a moment to remember this fine 160M operator and 
gentleman and what he achieved on the band we all love to operate.  He will 
always occupy a special place in our memories of Topband!


73 and thanks for the bandwidth.  


JEFF  K1ZM/VY2ZM


Email:   K1ZM@aol.com






Jeff Briggs
DXing on the Edge: The Thrill of 160 Meters 
Available worldwide through BookBaby, Array Solutions, DX Engineering, Royal 
Society of Great Britain, & Amazon
































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