Anthony Hoffman’s move to Antarctica was completely unplanned. One day he was Senior Hardware Design Engineer with Tait Communications’ custom integration team in Christchurch, the next he had signed up as Communications Engineer at New Zealand’s scientific research station in Antarctica.
He is currently working his third 13-month stint on the ice. In this article he shares the triumphs and challenges of managing multiple communications networks in one of the harshest environments on the planet.
My very-abrupt shift in career came about in 2010. Initially, when I was presented with the Antarctic position, it did not sound at all appealing, working in the cold and dark for months on end. Until they mentioned free food and cheap beer!
In what now seems like a blur, I found myself in a new home here at Scott Base on Ross Island in Antarctica, right next door to the American McMurdo Station and with an active volcano, Mt. Erebus in the neighborhood.
Scott Base is operated by Antarctica New Zealand and while I’m not employed by this government entity, I share some responsibilities with their staff. This includes doing duty as fire crew, kitchen hand, bartender, plus offering my technical skill-set to others on base, including the electrician and science technician. (Prior to deployment, Antarctica New Zealand provides two-weeks of intensive Antarctic awareness training and firefighting.) Other responsibilities that come my way include repairing all things electronic, and of course DJ duties for our FM radio station.
The majority of my daily work is with two-way radio as this is our primary form of communications. With no cellular network, reliable radio communications are crucial to operations and safety.
The telephone and satellite network infrastructure is a mixture of modern analog and digital equipment which usually requires little attention, but the ability to fault-find is essential if and when it fails. The satellite link delivers more than ten off-continent telephone circuits and a number of leased data circuits, ranging in speeds from 32kB/sec to 1.5MB/sec which provide email, internet and other services. When a problem arises, it can be challenging to restore essential communications quickly.
Over summer, the scientists often need training and support with unfamiliar communications equipment. They also have specialist electronic equipment that invariably breaks at some point and needs urgent repairs.
In winter we’re left with a skeleton crew, between 10 and 14 staff. The long dark haul from March to October is when we maintain, upgrade and keep things working. I’ve completed many hardware and software projects over past winters, including telemetry systems to remotely monitor and control radio sites, technical documentation and general improvements. There are no flights between March and August, so careful planning is required to get all parts pre-ordered and delivered before that final flight in March. You can’t possibly plan for every eventuality, so you become very good at improvising and making do with what you’ve got.
I’m often asked if I’ll do another season.
Certainly it is interesting work, but what keeps me returning most of all, is the great people I have the pleasure of working with. They’re all handpicked for their skillsets, their ability to work together as a team, and to live together as a family.
This article is taken from Connection Magazine, Issue 6. Connection is a collection of educational and thought-leading articles focusing on critical communications, wireless and radio technology.