The Cave
Radio & Electronics Group
- To order or renew a journal subscription, please use our
Subscription Form.
- The UK-based Cave Radio & Electronics Group (CREG) is a
Special Interest Group of the British Cave Research Association. We are
probably the world's leading organisation of its kind. Our aims are "to
encourage the development and use of radio communication and other electronic
and computer equipment in caving and related activities".
- Our group was established in 1988. In December 2017, just prior to our 30th anniversary, we published our 100th journal.
Our latest journal, issue 127, was published in September 2024. Our followers include cavers,
radio amateurs, electronic engineers, academics and industrial organisations.
- Our Journal:
We publish a regular Journal (ISSN 1361-4800) that provides a forum for people
to discuss ideas and to exchange information. Our
journal page has a list of contents of
each issue, plus download links. There is also a search engine and info about
paper subscriptions and the availability of back-issues.
- CREG news: You can catch up on recent news by
visiting our News Forum. If you would
like to receive news items by email you can sign up to the
CREG-Announce e-list.
- Contacts: See the Special
Interest Groups heading in the list of BCRA
contacts.
- Questions and Answers: Over the last 36 years, and
127 journals, we have published information on many topics related to cave
radio and electronics. You can search our
journals online or you can try asking a question in our
forum.
- Field Meetings: We organise regular informal field
meetings, usually in the spring and the autumn. Sometimes, these will coincide
with BCRA science meetings. Search for
field
meet in our journals. (In the past, we have organised an annual
Cave Technology Symposium, but that is not a
regular event).
- The HeyPhone was designed by John Hey in 2001, with
the support of CREG. Technically, it is a standard design of single-sideband
radio, usually operating at 87kHz USB. Although it can be used with tuned
induction loop antennas, it is usually operated with earthed electrodes
separated by 25m to 100m. Our HeyPhone page contains
'blueprints' but please note that this design is no longer supported by CREG
and it has largely been superceded by more recent designs that are described in
our journal – search for
micro
heyphone or
nicola,
for example.
- Speleonics was a similar publication to ours in the
USA, from the Communications
& Electronics Section of the USA's National Speleological Society
(NSS), which was published from 1985–2013 (29 issues). It was also the name of the Section's discussion forum (a Mailman list). However, at the time of writing (October 2022) we are unsure if the Section still exists, as neither the web pages nor the mailing list are accessible. Archived copies of Speleonics are still available on the CREG web site, together with an index and table of contents.
- Volunteers are the mainstay of CREG. If there
is anything you would like to do for CREG, please get in touch. We always welcome
articles, photos and letters for our journal. Our editorial team can even convert your rough notes and sketches into a fully-fledged article.
British Cave Research Association (UK
registered charity 267828). Registered Office: Old Methodist Chapel,
Great Hucklow, BUXTON, SK17 8RG
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