Diary #35

Two Trips and Big Success, in Alaska

Part 2

 

The second phase of our trips to Alaska involved site surveying and then installing a wireless network to link three Data Loggers in the Caribou Peak, Poker Flats area, about 40 miles north of Fairbanks.

Terrain between University of Fairbanks and Caribou Peak area

In this case, while the three data loggers are within 3 miles of each other, the set of them are a long way from Fairbanks and the University - whose campus is on the far west of Fairbanks. With the intervening hill masses between, it would be difficult and costly to try and link the set all the way to Fairbanks. But the Principle Investigator, Larry Hinzman would like to be able to fetch the data through the Internet.

So in one of our previous trips to the area, we learned that the closest facility to the Caribou Peak area with its own connections to the University, was the Poker Flats Rocket Range - a NASA/University facility which launches research rockets into the Aurora Borealis zones. The on-site director of the facility, Ed Heath, generously offered to let us set up radios at the Block House - from which there is a 4 mile line of sight to Caribou Peak to the north. And we could use the grid power, shelf space for our radio, and put a Yagi antenna on the roof of the Block House with corresponding antenna cables.

Before driving out to the site for the first day's installation work in a UaF truck driven by Byron Roys, a technical assistant assigned by Larry Hinzman to support us, and learn how to install such radios, we picked up larger Solar Panels than we have used before. 85 Watt Panels. We started the work in the Block House.

The Rocket Range is linked, both voice and data, to the University by Microwave on towers. And since it is part of the University we could get IP addresses we need from them.

Rear entrance to the Block House

Because the Rocket Range has the Internet connection, we were able to design the wireless network so that the 'Base Station' Freewave Radio would be in the Block House plugged into wall power, with a 15 foot LMR400 antenna cable running up through a conduit to the roof (which has an earth-grass mat on it to absorb rocket gasses) and up an already existing antenna pole. We attached the Yagi antenna, pointed at Caribou Peak to the pole, which has other small antennas on it.

Inside the Block House in the Launch Room, we then configured all four radios, and a novel device from Campbell Scientific, which is called an NL100. The NL100 is an interface, requiring 12 volts of power, which can take a serial cable and serial data from the Base radio in one end, convert it to an IP data stream, and provide a 10base T Ethernet connection out the other end. Which device can then be connected by Ethernet cable to the Ethernet Hub in the Launch Room where all the IP connections are. By getting a dedicated IP number from the Rocket Range network administrator then, as far as the world wide Internet was concerned, its just another IP connection.

Then the serial cable from the rear of the FreeWave or other serial radio plugs into the NL100. When further configured with not only the IP address, but also a 'Port' number (giving a degree of security to the link), the NL100 then bridges the serial data flow from the data loggers/radios to the Internet. Anyone running Campbell's PCW208 3.2 software on a Windows machine connected to the Internet , when completely configured then can connect to the data loggers in turn, and download or observe the data from all the sensors.

Freewave Radio next to NL100 on top of launch device, close to Ethernet hub

The first order of business was to configure the four FreeWave DRG115 Radios to support the following network architecture.

  • Master DRG115 and NL100 at the Blockhouse. Wirelessly linked to the Caribou Peak Slave/Repeater radio 4 miles away, and through the NL100 to the Internet.

  • Slave/Repeater DRG115 on Caribou Peak, which has a CR10X data logger - named CARIBOUP. Which radio could both fetch data from the logger there, and relay to either radio at the sites in the low ground.

  • Slave DRG115 at C4MET CR10X data logger site near the Burn Area down in one valley. About 2 miles from Caribou Peak.

  • Slave DRG115 at CRREL12M CR23X data logger site near Poker Creek. About 3 miles from Caribou Peak.

A CR10X data logger connected via a RS232 9 pin cable, to a 9 pin to 25 pin interface , CS/IO to RS232 interface and thence via 9 pin cable into the Freewave DRG115 radio.

The PCW208 3.2 software on a test laptop had to be configured at the 'SOC1' level (Ethernet into NL100) with the serial numbers of each radio - which act as data logger identifiers (because the data loggers have no IDs in them) and with special dial strings that fool the serial wireless network to behave like a cell phone.

Once these tasks were done, Mike Willett, Byron Roys, and Tom Williams set out for Caribou Peak on 4 wheel ATVs while I stayed at the Block House to run test connections to the data logger through the laptop software.

One ATV hauling a trailer with the solar panels and batteries

Mike and Byron

After 40 minutes of travel up the mountain, the field team installed, on the large frame holding the Caribou Peak weather station and data logger, the solar panel, omni antenna, and cables.

On Caribou Peak

The Freewave Radio in the Caribou Peak waterproof box with the CR10X data logger and associated wiring

 

Success #1

As soon as the team completed the connections and attachment, requiring about an hour and a half, using our Motorola voice radios to coordinate I connected successfully to the Caribou Peak data logger via the radios and through the NL100 Ethernet connected to my laptop and the configured PCW208 software. Both I and the team on Caribou Peak saw a solid - green carrier detect light - connection. Which with the clean 4 mile line of sight path and short antenna cables (which can give 4 dB of loss per hundred feet) was expected. But it was critical that the solid link went from Yagi to omni, for the Caribou Peak radio had to talk to two other radios not in the path of the Yagi directional antenna feed. Then the team came down the mountain and back up a shallow valley to the location of the C4MET station. Having on a previous trip done a handheld radio/antenna check to the top of Caribou Peak we knew the radios would connect.

It took most of the rest of the day to install a Yagi high on the 40 foot tower, make the cable with connectors, and waterproof them, and install the large solar panels, and encase the radio and battery.

Sensors atop the tower at C4MET location.

The base of the C4MET tower. Vertical solar panels

Throughout the installations in the Poker Flats area, we used separate solar panels, and separate batteries from those already in place. There were several reasons for this. First of all, the radio draws more power than the data loggers. Secondly we did not want to jeopardize the data logger need for power in the most severe weather when the site may not be reachable. Thirdly we wanted to validate Mike's calculation of power need, given the far north latitude where the sun will be weak low in the sky, and the temperature can drop below -50 degrees.

We tested the C4MET radio/data logger link through the relay radio and everything worked properly.

This completed the first of two days, with two of the three remote data loggers accessible from the Internet.

Next day, we returned to the Rocket Station from Fairbanks and completed the job on the 3d site.

The ATVs ready to go again

The CRREL12M site differed from the others in that it has more sensors attached, and operates on a newer CR23X Campbell data logger.

Mike Willett turned over the complete installation at this site to both Byron Roys and Tom Williams whom he tutored through the first two installations.

Bryon Roys up the tower, affixing the Yagi

The battery box is nothing more than an insulated cooler - heat from the batteries can help

The very busy waterproof box for the data logger, the radio, and all the connectors

It took a little longer for the less experienced members to complete the installation, but it worked perfectly when they were done.

Mike Willett, while they were doing the work, narrated some of the installation details not covered above. That narration and short videos are at:

Short Videos

After our entire team returned to the lower 48, I was able to access all the data loggers through the Internet repeatedly, showing, at least under the prevailing weather conditions that we had a robust link to the remote data loggers in central Alaska. And the data could be accessed as often as desired, interactively, at any time.

About a month later, Larry Hinzman's staff was able to take the final step - interface the PC208W software to a generic Web Server interface. So anyone in the world with a web browser can now see the data by accessing the following URL.

http://www.uaf.edu/water/projects/cpcrw/metdata/cpcrw-hourly.html

 

With that final step, and only the monitoring of how reliable the network is under the coming harsh central Alaskan weather conditions, this Model is complete. It can be replicated anywhere there are Campbell Data loggers and a Net connection with 1 to 10 or more miles.

 

Previous

Next