An instrument of the Maidenhead Locator System (named after the town outside London where it was first conceived by a meeting of European VHF managers in 1980), a grid square measures 1° latitude by 2° longitude and measures approximately 70 × 100 miles in the continental US. A grid square is indicated by two letters (the field) and two numbers (the square), as in FN31, the grid square within which W1AW, ARRL's Maxim Memorial Station, resides.
Each subsquare is designated by the addition of two letters after the grid square, as FN44IG. These more precise locators are used as part of the exchange in the 10-GHz contest. They measure 2.5 minutes latitude by 5 minutes longitude, roughly corresponding to 3 × 4 miles in the continental US.
The Lab Notes column in April 1994 QST covered grid squares in particular and geographical coordinates in general.
How you go about finding your latitude and longitude depends to some extent
on whether you want to know your 4-digit grid square or your 6-digit grid
square. Finding a 6-digit grid square requires considerably more precision in
latitude and longitude. The 4-digit grid squares covers a pretty big area, while the 6-digit grid square
is fairly small. The actual size of a grid square depends
on the particular location, as the 1° of longitude represents
different distances at different latitudes; longitude lines are closer
together at the Earth's poles than at the equator.
The first step, then, is finding your latitude and longitude as accurately
and precisely as
you can. There are several common methods for doing so:
These maps usually include two coordinate systems to define location. One
system uses latitude and longitude-- this is what we want. The other system
is the universal transverse mercator (UTM) system that consists of
squares 1 kilometer on a side. For finding your grid square, use only the
latitude and longitude system.
An online topo map is available at
the U.S. Census Bureau website.
To obtain the 7.5-minute map that covers your location, you need to
determine the reference code, map name and state. You'll find this
information in the map index for your area. Contact USGS for information
about pricing and
how to order topo maps.
Many outdoor, sporting-goods and camping stores also sell USGS 7.5-minute
maps. Check your local Yellow Pages.
Once you've determined your latitude and longitude, you can use that
information to find your grid square. Again, there are several ways to do
this.
You can determine your grid square by entering your geographical coordinates into a computer program. Several such programs are available for the PC:
ARRL Amateur Radio Map of North
America -- 27 x 39 inches. Large, colorful wall map features current geographic
detail and labels, grid squares, call sign prefixes, boundaries and more.
ARRL Grid Locator for North America
-- Size 11" x 17"
The ARRL World Grid Locator Atlas
-- Containing all 32,400 Maidenhead Locator Squares.
Finding Your Latitude and Longitude
A utility for converting between decimal degrees and degrees, minutes, and seconds. The page also has a link to convert between NAD83 / WGS84 coordinate system and the older NAD27 coordinate system used by the FCC for broadcast authorizations.
From Lat/Lon to Grid Square
PC Programs for Grid Locator Calculations
Available from ARRL
Page last modified: 11:32 AM, 07 Jul 2008 ET
Page author: hq@arrl.org
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