• Amateur Radio Newsline (A)

    From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Mar 5 09:18:44 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2262 for Friday March 5 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2262, with a release date of Friday,
    March 5, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Wyoming students finally get their space QSOs. A
    solar panel promises more energy for Earth -- and a new video tells the
    story of a classic broadcast transmitter's rescue. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2262 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    ***

    WYOMING STUDENTS GET QSO WITH ISS AT LAST

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with the story of a promise fulfilled: In
    the language of space, Perseverence isn't just the name of a rover on
    Mars. It's a quality that paid off among students in Wyoming who - after
    a failed attempt in January - finally got their QSO with the International Space Station. Here's Mike Askins, KE5CXP, with the details.

    MIKE: Students at Wyoming's Newcastle High School were flying high, at
    least in spirit, on Monday, March 1st. Their amateur radio contact with
    ISS Commander Mike Hopkins, KF5LJG, was a success at last, after their
    first try failed as a result of technical troubles with the U.S. astronauts' radio. With that radio down for repairs, the QSO took place via the
    Russians' 2-meter rig instead and the students' questions rolled in fast, making the most of their precious 10-minute window for contact.

    After hearing how bok choy and mustard is grown in space, how astronauts gently toss a football around for amusement and how a microgravity
    environment can cause fluid in the ears, the students wrapped things up
    by saying 73.

    The contact, accomplished with the help of a multi-point telebridge
    network, was a triumph for the high school as much as the ARISS program:
    It marked the first time in the ARISS program's 20-year history, that it
    has organized a QSO with students in Wyoming.

    To hear the QSO, visit the YouTube site that appears in the printed
    version of this week's script.

    [FOR PRINT ONLY, DO NOT READ:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2EYvX27Ujo]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mike Askins, KE5CXP.

    DON/ANCHOR: In the meantime, ARISS chair Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, announced
    that efforts were under way to identify the issue that caused the radio
    to fail in January, and a team is working with NASA and the European
    Space Agency on a solution.

    (ARISS, YOUTUBE)

    **

    SPACEWALKING AMATEURS PREP FOR POWER UPGRADE

    DON/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, big things have been happening OUTSIDE the ISS,
    too. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, picks up the story from here.

    PAUL: For two amateur radio operators aboard the International Space
    Station, it was their moment in the sun. Literally. NASA flight engineers
    Kate Rubins, KG5FYJ, and Victor Glover, KI5BKC, took the first moves
    toward a power upgrade for the space station, during a seven-hour and four-minute spacewalk to outfit the new solar arrays with modification
    kits.

    If the view for observers was a little more spectacular than usual,
    consider that Rubins' helmet held a high definition video camera for the
    first time and was streaming the action live. Videos had been taken
    previously using a helmet cam, of course, but only with standard
    definition.

    NASA was quick to point out that the present solar arrays on the ISS are working fine but they're degrading and are approaching the end of their
    useful life. The spacewalk was designed to prepare for the installation
    of new solar arrays which are expected to be sent to the ISS aboard a
    SpaceX vehicle starting in June.

    Meanwhile, there is still work to be done. NASA officials said that the upgrade is to be completed by Friday March 5th, with Rubins returning accompanied by another amateur radio operator: Japan Aerospace
    Exploration Agency astronaut Soichi Noguchi, KD5TVP.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (CNN, SPACE.COM)

    **

    RF INTERFERENCE REPORTS DRAW RAPID RESPONSE FROM OFCOM

    DON/ANCHOR: In the UK, the telecommunications regulator recently
    delivered a rapid response to a report of radio interference - but this
    wasn't exactly an amateur radio crisis. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, explains.

    JEREMY: It took barely a half-hour as Ofcom, the telecommunications
    regulator in the UK, responded swiftly to an urgent report of widespread
    RF interference, calling it a high priority case. Even the local police
    got involved and awaited the arrival of a spectrum engineer dispatched
    from Ofcom's Spectrum Management Centre, which operates around the clock.

    The crisis at hand wasn't jammed signals reported by radio operators but
    the failure of shoppers at a Hertfordshire superstore to use their key
    fobs to unlock their vehicles in the car park. Because the key fobs use
    radio spectrum at very low power they are subject to interference issues
    the same as other radio equipment.

    Using his spectrum analyser, the engineer was unable to pinpoint the
    source of the interference, which could have been simply lightbulbs or a malfunctioning doorbell. The situation had already resolved itself by the
    time he arrived.

    Hams in the UK should report any and all interference to Ofcom, via the
    web address given in the text version of this report at
    arnewsline.org.... even if their vehicle's key fob is working fine.

    [PRINT ONLY: Don't read out:
    https://ofcomforms.secure.force.com/formentry/ ]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (SOUTHGATE, OFCOM)
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  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 11 23:02:09 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2263, for Friday, March 12, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2263, with a release date of
    Friday, March 12, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A digital amateur TV experiment soars in
    Australia. Big changes for ham tests in France -- and hams
    troubleshoot an inoperable radio on the Space Station. All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2263, comes
    your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    EXPERIMENTERS LAUNCH AN EYE IN THE SKY

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with the story of a long-awaited accomplishment: a successful high-flying experiment conducted by a
    group of innovative amateurs in Australia. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has
    that story.

    GRAHAM: Members of the Amateur Radio Experimenters Group in Adelaide,
    Australia are celebrating the much anticipated launch of Horus 55, a high-altitude balloon sent aloft on the morning of March 7th with a
    digital amateur radio TV transmitter as its payload. As the balloon
    soared skyward, after a brief launch delay due to rain, it relayed
    its TV signal to YouTube in a livestream that was broadcast worldwide.

    The TV transmitter payload, which was the main experiment, required
    extensive testing before launch day, especially with regard to its
    tolerance for low temperatures. It utilised a Raspberry Pi Zero W
    which captured and compressed video for the modulation of a 445 MHz
    DVB-S transmission generated by a LimeSDR Mini.

    Team members Mark, VK5QI, Matt, VK5ZM, Pete, VK5KX, and Grant, VK5GR,
    shared the triumph of the project. According to the AREG website, the challenges included devising a transmitter system that could provide
    sufficient signal and still withstand the thin atmosphere at high
    altitudes. There was also the small detail of getting the signal from
    the high-performance receive system uploaded to the internet.

    Shortly into the one-hour flight, signal reports arrived from
    receiving stations from around the region, including Ian, VK5ZD, near
    Kapunda, and Joe, VK5EI, in Adelaide.

    Horus 55 also carried an experimental LoRaWAN tracking payload
    transmitted position data into TTN, the Things Network, which has
    receiver stations across Australia. It too was a success, according
    to the AREG website. Built by Liam, VK5LJG, its performance exceeded expectations.

    To watch the experiment unfold and soar, visit the YouTube site that
    appears in the script of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    [FOR PRINT: DO NOT READ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vYcVRWrdhs]

    (AREG)

    **

    ARISS RADIO TROUBLESHOOTING CONTINUES

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: As Newsline went to production, astronauts aboard the International Space Station were preparing for two spacewalks to
    troubleshoot and restore the full functionality of the Columbus
    Interoperable Radio System for ham radio contacts. Technical issues -
    what ARISS is calling a "radio anomaly" - turned up on January 28th
    after a failed radio contact with students in Wyoming.

    At a press conference on Wednesday, March 10th, ARISS' Frank Bauer,
    KA3HDO, and Oliver Amend, DG6BCE, outlined in detail how the
    investigation identified three probable areas where the failure may
    have occurred, including a break in one of the cables, trouble with
    one of the connectors or improper alignment of the connector with the
    system itself. Michael Hopkins, KF5LJG, and Victor Glover, KI5BK,
    were scheduled to continue the troubleshooting outside the ISS on
    Saturday, March 13th, and Sunday March 14 - work that was to include reinstalling the cable that had been swapped out during the January
    27th spacewalk.

    Frank said that if there were still problems after the weekend, there
    were other options to investigate, including another possibly suspect
    cable or the radio itself.

    (ARISS)

    **

    FRANCE OVERHAULS AMATEUR RADIO TESTING

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Regulators in France have announced major modifications
    to the nation's amateur radio exam. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has the details.

    ED: There are big changes in amateur radio testing in France. The
    government's official journal has released an outline of the changes,
    which were eight years in the making. France's radio exam contains 40 questions, with a total time limit of 45 minutes, combining technical
    theory with rules and regulations. The material in France's only level
    of Amateur radio licence is compatible with CEPT HAREC full licence requirements, and a recent addition to the syllabus are questions on
    digital signal processing.

    Candidates need to get at least half of the questions correct in both
    the technical theory segment and the rules and regulations segment
    before they can attain a pass.

    The changes do not take effect for another three months.

    Meanwhile in the Netherlands, radio exams are returning for the first
    time since November of last year. The Radio Exams Foundation is
    permitting the tests to go forward. News reports say there is a backlog
    of about 200 candidates waiting. We wish them all luck.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (SOUTHGATE)
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    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Mar 19 00:15:06 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2264, for Friday, March 19, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2264 with a release date of Friday,
    March 19, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. ARISS is back on the air from the Columbus module. Hams activate during a record storm in Colorado -- and there's optimism for two major radio events later this year. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2264 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    NEIL/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with good news for U.S. astronauts aboard the International Space Station: their amateur radio came back on
    the air just in time to keep a date with some youngsters in Australia.
    Paul Braun, WD9GCO tells us more.

    PAUL: The return to service of the ARISS Columbus radio was especially good news to school children in Adelaide, Australia who were able to keep their date with astronaut Shannon Walker, KD5DXB, on March 17th. During a
    spacewalk with Victor Glover, KI5BKC, just a few days earlier, astronaut
    Mike Hopkins, KF5LJG, restored the cabling outside the ISS to its original configuration. A test of the equipment in Packet Mode, as the ISS passed
    over the West Coast of the United States, was a success: The signals were almost immediately heard in Idaho, Utah and California – and later in South America and the Middle East. The radio had been out of service since a malfunction was detected in late January just as the ISS attempted a QSO
    with students in Wyoming.

    Fortunately, hams were able to conduct subsequent ARISS contacts with
    schools using the cosmonauts' radio in the Service Module, thanks to Sergey Samburov, RV3DR.

    Now that the radio's antenna connection is fixed, the grateful students at Goodwood Primary School have become the first phone contacts made with the newly reconnected Columbus module radio. Next up will be students at the Oakwood School in Morgan Hill, California on Monday, March 22nd; and then,
    two days later, it's back to Down Under with students at the School of Information Technology & Mathematical Sciences, in Mawson Lakes, South Australia.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (FRANK BAUER KA3HDO, DAVID JORDAN AA4KN, ROSALIE WHITE K1STO)

    **

    TIME-KEEPING BROADCAST SYSTEM GETTING UPGRADE

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Don't worry, time isn't going to stand still anytime soon but
    it is definitely going to be undergoing an upgrade. Well, maybe not time itself but the time-keeping broadcast system of WWVB, the radio station of
    the National Institute of Standards and Technology near Fort Collins, Colorado. An announcement on its webpage reports that because of work begun
    on March 9th, the transmitter may be operating on a single antenna at about
    30 kW of radiated power for periods of several days. There may even be occasional outages. The web page notes: [quote] Periods of reduced power operation lasting longer than 30 minutes will be logged on the WWVB Antenna Configuration and Power web page, and any outage longer than five minutes' duration will be recorded on the WWVB Outage web page." [endquote]

    Don't worry: The upgrade being undertaken is designed to improve the reliability of the signal, so things are bound to get better by March 31st when the upgrade is expected to be finished.

    (NIST website)

    **

    ARES TEAM DIGS IN DURING COLORADO BLIZZARD

    NEIL/ANCHOR: A record snowstorm hit Colorado and one local ARES team was
    able to dig in and help. Here's Amanda Alden, K1DDN, with those details.

    AMANDA: Members of Arapahoe County ARES were deployed and ready for a snowstorm in Colorado that was declared Denver's fourth largest since 1881
    -- and the second-largest ever in March. After spending Saturday, March
    13th on standby, 19 hams went into action the next morning, providing
    reports on weather and road conditions even as the snow continued unabated.

    Mike Curta, KD0UFO, the severe weather coordinator for the ARES group, said that nearly 28 inches of snow fell in a little more than 24 hours and winds kicked up to 40 miles per hour. By Monday, March 15th, the hams had logged more than 260 hours working in support of the county sheriff's department
    as well as the city of Aurora. They assisted local agencies as officials
    got busy handling numerous storm-related crises, including the rescue of
    as many as 200 people who were left trapped in their cars.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Amanda Alden, K1DDN.

    (MIKE CURTA KD0UFO)
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    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 25 19:28:03 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2265, for Friday, March 26, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2265, with a release date of Friday,
    March 26, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A leader in the shortwave radio community dies in
    a fire. A first time Dxpedition is in the works -- and our April Fool's correspondent, Pierre Pullinmyleg, is back. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2265, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    SHORTWAVE-LISTENING LEADER GEORGE ZELLER DIES IN FIRE

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week marking the tragic death of a well-known
    member of the shortwave-listening community. Stephen Kinford, N8WB, tells
    us about this leader among radio hobbyists.

    STEPHEN: The world of shortwave-listening enthusiasts has lost one of its
    long time leaders tragically in a house fire in Cleveland, Ohio.

    Cleveland.com said the victim was George Zeller. George was a radio
    hobbyist since the early 1960s and spent decades reporting on hundreds of pirate radio operators and other shortwave stations. His column had an
    active following in "The Journal," the monthly publication of the North American Short Wave Association. He was a contributing editor to a number
    of other radio publications and was a longtime contributor to the
    publication of the Association of Clandestine Radio Enthusiasts. George
    was also a popular host of the pirate radio forum at the annual Winter
    SWL Fest since its early years.

    His reputation earned him an induction into the North American Pirate
    Radio Hall of Fame in 2011. His personal website, georgezeller.com, gives
    the details of what he considered his best QSL verification letter in all
    his years of radio listening: It was a confirmation from the FCC that
    he'd copied the enforcement action on the air of WHBH radio in February
    of 1990.

    By profession, George was an economist, who carefully watched his home
    state's financial health, and was quoted often in the mainstream media.
    His other love was sports, particularly baseball and football. According
    to the Cleveland.com website, the fire department determined that the
    blaze was set off by an overloaded extension cord. George Zeller was 71
    years old.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Stephen Kinford, N8WB.

    (SWLReport, THE FREE RADIO NET WEBSITE, CLEVELAND.COM)

    **

    FCC GRANTS CONTINUED ACCESS BETWEEN 3.3 - 3.45 GHz

    JIM/ANCHOR: There's good news for hams who enjoy operations on the
    frequencies between 3.3 and 3.45 GHz. Amateur radio operators may
    continue using this segment of the band indefinitely. The FCC's
    announcement this month is seen by many, including the ARRL, as an
    alternative to ham radio's removal from the entire band. It also adds
    50 more MHz than the FCC's original proposal for amateurs' secondary operations on the band.

    Meanwhile, auctions seeking commercial 5G buyers have begun for
    frequencies between 3.45 and 3.55 GHZ and amateurs have been told to
    cease secondary operation in the 3.45 – 3.50 GHz band 90 days after
    public notice is given that the auction has closed, and licensing has commenced. The FCC has identified 3.45 GHZ as the frequency at which the
    band will be split. Hams will continue to operate in the band's lower frequencies while the FCC reviews whether or not to reallocate that part
    of the spectrum later.

    (FCC, ARRL)

    **

    HAMS IN UK GET PREVIEW OF NEW LICENSE DOCUMENT

    JIM/ANCHOR: The amateur radio license is getting a new look in the UK,
    and hams there are getting a sneak peek. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, tells us
    more.

    JEREMY: Hams in the UK can get a preview of what the new amateur radio
    licence will look like by visiting the website of Ofcom. It is available
    there in draft form and comments are being accepted until the 18th of
    April. The new licence will become effective on the 18th of May, and
    contains a number of changes, including details about Electromagnetic
    Field exposure compliance.

    The EMF wording has been somewhat controversial among some amateurs,
    who consider its inclusion unnecessary. Ofcom has also opted to delete
    the reference to the old Full Reciprocal licence that was abolished in
    2016.

    See the printed version of this script at arnewsline.org to find the URL
    where you can download a PDF of the draft licence, or to submit your
    comments.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    [FOR PRINT, DO NOT READ: New draft licence

    https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0015/214116/emf-draft- amateur-licence-terms-and-conditions.pdf

    Comment submissions:

    https://ofcomforms.secure.force.com/formentry/SitesFormLicensingEMFEnquiry]

    (OFCOM)
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  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 1 19:43:11 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2266, for Friday, April 2, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2266, with a release date of Friday,
    April 2, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The UK prepares to resume in-person license exams.
    A worldwide balloon launch marks the equinox -- and the "Last Man Standing" special event goes out with a bang. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2266, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    ARCTIC DXPEDITION PACKS UP BENEATH NORTHERN LIGHTS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to a frozen Arctic island, where the rewards of a physically grueling DXpedition included something even more
    than the thousands of contacts logged by the team. Graham Kemp, VK4BB,
    brings us that story.

    GRAHAM: The RI0Q (R EYE ZERO Q) DXPeditioners have arrived back on the mainland following a challenging but successful activation of the rare
    Arctic IOTA, AS-152. The island, named Bol'shoy Begichev (BEG-i-chev) after its discoverer Nikifor Begichev in 1908, held many discoveries for the team during their one-week activation. Challenges included making a large part
    of the trip by snowmobile. Once they arrived on March 20th, they remained constantly vigilant for polar bears, wolves and incoming blizzards
    especially as they were setting up for operations.

    By March 26th, as the activation was winding down, they were able to enter into their online diary that they'd logged 6,913 QSOs representing more
    than 4,000 unique callsigns.

    Their departure came just as a blizzard was supposed to come blasting in. There was one event they did not miss, however, nor did they want to miss
    it — because it was spectacular. DXworld-net reported on its Twitter feed
    on March 27th: [quote] "The RI0Q team are already back on the mainland. As they left the island, the Northern Lights started to show. Looks like they left at the right time!" [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (DXWORLD-NET, RI0Q DIARY)

    **

    'LAST MAN STANDING' TRIBUTE WRAPS UP ACTIVATION

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Congratulations to the activators of the "Last Man Standing" special event which went QRT on Wednesday March 30th. Starting on March
    24th, the team logged more than 85,000 QSOs, contacting 1,850 counties in
    50 states and 138 countries. There were 134 contacts using moonbounce;
    and yes, there were pileups. The multi-mode effort was also a multi-media
    one, featuring livestreaming of operators as they navigated pileups. Coordinated by Lou Maggio, NO2C, and Salli Rosato, K2RYD, of the Great
    South Bay Amateur Radio Club, and the show's executive producer, John
    Amodeo, AA6JA, it was an experience many of the dozens of operators in
    both the US and Canada said will remain with them even as the studio
    goes dark after the show's final day of production. "Last Man Standing" featured Tim Allen, KK6OTD, as Mike Baxter KA0XTT, and was celebrated
    for putting amateur radio in a positive light in the public eye.

    **

    IN-PERSON EXAMS TO RESUME IN UK

    NEIL/ANCHOR: In the UK, the Radio Society of Great Britain has resumed
    booking in-person exams. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, gives us those details.

    JEREMY: Examiners in the UK have begun planning the resumption of exams for amateur radio candidates wishing to sit them in a club setting with in-
    person invigilation.

    With this in mind, the Radio Society of Great Britain said it anticipates bookings for the in-person exams from club examination secretaries once the government has lifted all COVID-19 restrictions in their part of the UK.
    The booking process is expected to be more streamlined than previously. The remote invigilations, which began last year during the pandemic lockdown,
    will continue as an option.

    Mandatory practical assessments at Foundation level will remain suspended until a review led by the Examinations Standards Committee and Exam and Syllabus Review Group can determine their long-term future, clarifying
    whether they should continue and, if so, in what form.

    In yet another sign of post-COVID life in the UK, the RSGB Contest
    Committee began accepting portable entries in contests from stations in England, provided the stations strictly follow local COVID measures.
    England dropped its "Stay at Home" restriction on the 29th March, meaning portable operations can resume. The RSGB cautions however, that portable multi-operator entries must comprise people from the same households
    because vans, cars and tents are considered indoor environments and indoor mixing of households is still prohibited.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    NEIL/ANCHOR: In other business that has caught Newsline's attention: Paul Devlin, G1SMP, the joint winner with the Radio Society of Great Britain of
    the 2020 Amateur Radio Newsline International Newsmaker of the year award
    for the "Get on the air to care" public campaign, is standing for election
    as a director of the RSGB board at the upcoming AGM in April. As there are
    two nominees for two positions, I think we can say Paul will be elected and
    we at Newsline would like to be the first to congratulate Paul and wish him well in his new role.

    (RSGB)
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  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 8 23:35:18 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2267, for Friday, April 9, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2267, with a release date of Friday,
    April 9, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Get ready to work Bouvet Island later this year. Antarctica gets an unexpected activation -- and a renowned hexbeam creator becomes a Silent Key. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2267 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    PAIR OF DX GROUPS SET EYES ON BOUVET ISLAND

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a big DXpedition update - and you
    know that has to mean Bouvet Island. But - TWO DXpeditions? John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us the details.

    JOHN: The date is set - December 15th of this year - for the Rebel DX
    Group to depart Cape Town, South Africa for Bouvet Island and the Three Y
    Zero Eye (3Y0I) activation. The team said it is as ready as ever, following the cancellation of their 2019 DXpedition when they were within sight of
    the remote island and turned back during a cyclone for safety reasons. The team of eight, led by Polish DXpeditioner Dom, 3Z9DX, expects to be on
    Bouvet for as many as 30 days and will operate eight stations on 160
    through 6 metres, using CW, SSB, FT4/FT8, RTTY and operations through the Qatar-Oscar 100 satellite. The team has continued to appeal for donations
    to meet its remaining need for $32,000.

    Meanwhile, the Intrepid-DX Group has announced that they will be activating the island as well using the call sign Three Y Zero Jay (3Y0J). Their 20-
    day stay on the island is set for January 2023. The team's immediate goal
    is to continue fundraising to meet their budget of $764,000 before their planned trip aboard the MV Braveheart.

    The Rebel DX Group, in response to the other team's announcement, said in a press release: [quote] "We would like to wish the recently announced 3Y0J Bouvet DXpedition all the best for a successful activity in 2023. There is enough space for even 3 more activities from Three Y Zero land. We know how much detailed planning goes into a project like this and cross fingers for them." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (INTREPID DX WEBSITE)

    **

    ANTARCTIC ASSIGNMENT EVOLVES INTO DXPEDITION

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Occasionally there's a DXpedition that didn't start out quite
    so ambitiously. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has this story about one ham whose activation of Antarctica just grew from its humble beginnings.

    GRAHAM: For Paul Daniels, VK2PAD, this was the Antarctic DXpedition that,
    well ... just sort of happened. An instrument electrician and trades supervisor, Paul was assigned to work at Casey Station in Antarctica where
    he expects to be for the next nine months or so. Of course, he brought his radios and lots of wire for some antennas. Initially, he just wanted to
    chat with people on the air: that's what he told Newsline. A conversation
    with the Australian World Wide Flora & Fauna manager changed all that.
    Being a SOTA activator, he was game for adventure, and he was convinced to activate the WWFF park he was in, as well as the continent.

    He's using the callsign VK0PD, and trying his best on HF, including two
    bands new to him: 17 and 24 metres.

    Paul told Newsline: [quote] "Somehow this quickly morphed into what feels
    like being a rare contest station. My usual style is halfway between a
    quick QSO and a ragchew. I like to get to know people and make friends, so this fast-paced action is not a familiar thing for me." [endquote] The activation has shown Paul that the peaks of SOTA summits have got nothing
    on the peaks of massive pileups for a coveted DX location. Email him if
    you want to learn more about his availability. His email address is in the printed version of this week's Newsline script.

    VK0PD only operates on the weekends but is eager to - what else? - break
    the ice.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    FOR PRINT ONLY: Paul's email is exile06_1980@hotmail.com

    **

    ANOTHER 'FIRST' FOR HAMS ON THE ISS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Commercial spaceflight logged another first on Monday, April
    5th, as the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft undocked from the forward port
    and moved to the zenith port of the ISS with the crew of four amateur radio operators aboard. The complex maneuver was the first of its kind undertaken
    by a commercial crew and it makes way for the next Crew Dragon spacecraft's docking at the ISS later this month. On board Crew Dragon "Resilience"
    during the undocking were NASA's Mike Hopkins, KF5LJG, Victor Glover,
    KI5BKC, Shannon Walker, KD5DXB, and JAXA's Soichi Noguchi, KD5TVP. The relocation was carried live on NASA TV.

    The new four-member crew will consist of NASA's Shane Kimbrough, KE5HOD,
    and Megan McArthur, JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, KE5DNI, and Thomas Pesquet, KG5FYG, from the European Space Agency.

    (SPACENEWS.COM, NASA, AMSAT)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 15 22:39:30 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2268 for Friday, April 16, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2268 with a release date of
    Friday, April 16, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Volcanic eruptions stir hams on St. Vincent
    to activate. The FCC sets deadlines for RF exposure assessments --
    and receiving the QSL of a lifetime. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2268 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    ISLAND HAMS ON ALERT AMID VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week comes from the Caribbean.
    Just weeks after receiving an emergency supply of batteries to
    assist with communications during a volcanic disaster, hams in St.
    Vincent and the Grenadines are now facing that exact scenario. Randy
    Sly, W4XJ, has that story.

    RANDY: St. Vincent islanders knew the eruptions were coming. The La
    Soufriere volcano had been dormant for 42 years on the Caribbean
    island until Friday, April 9th. As the volcanic unrest began and the
    pace of evacuations quickened, local hams maintained daily contact
    with regional disaster agencies.

    Carlos Alberto Santamaria, CO2JC, the IARU's Region 2 Emergency
    Coordinator, told Newsline in an email that hams throughout the
    region have been on the air around the clock, mainly using HF
    frequencies on 80 and 40 meters. Hams are also in contact with the
    Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency.

    Winston Jeffery, J88AZ, is maintaining an Echolink gateway on 2
    meters while another VHF repeater is being used for domestic
    communications. As Newsline reported just a few weeks ago, hams
    living in the Red Zone were given emergency batteries at the request
    of Donald De Riggs, J88CD, director of the Rainbow Radio
    League/Youlou Radio Movement amateur radio club.

    Ash is also blanketing the nearby island of Barbados. According to a
    report on CNBC, the West Indies Seismic Center said eruptions could
    continue for weeks or months.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    (CNBC, Carlos Alberto Santamaria CO2JC, The Daily DX)

    **

    FCC REQUIRES RF EXPOSURE EVALUATIONS STARTING MAY 3

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Starting May 3rd, hams and many other radio users in
    the US are being required to evaluate human exposure to RF at their
    stations. The April 2nd public notice from the FCC does not change
    any RF exposure limits but sets a deadline for such evaluations at
    stations that are new or have added or modified their existing
    antennas or power. Amateurs will need to determine if their existing
    stations retain the same exemptions they had under the old rules.
    Hams who have already performed these evaluations needn't repeat
    them, unless changes have been made to their stations.

    The FCC has set a two-year period in which to conduct the exposure
    assessment. A free downloadable booklet about RF exposure, and other
    details about RF safety are available at the ARRL website.. Details
    about the FCC's policy on human RF exposure are available at the
    agency's website. See the printed version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org for links to both web pages.

    FOR PRINT ONLY, DO NOT READ:

    http://www.arrl.org/rf-exposure

    https://www.fcc.gov/general/fcc-policy-human-exposure

    (ARRL, FCC)

    **

    TENNESSEE REPEATER SYSTEM AIDS STRICKEN HIKER

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A linked repeater system in Tennessee provided a communications lifeline for a woman hiking in a national park. Kevin
    Trotman, N5PRE, brings us that story.

    KEVIN: A woman in distress while hiking with a group inside the
    Great Smoky Mountain National Park was brought to safety late on
    Sunday night, April 11th, with the help of communications over the
    W4KEV repeater system in Tennessee. With no cellular service
    available in the park, hiker Timothy Luttrell, KA9EBJ, used his HT
    to hit the repeater in Gatlinburg which was linked to one in
    Knoxville, which was being monitored by David Manuel, W5DJR. Timothy
    told David that a woman in the hiking party had suffered exhaustion
    and possibly dehydration and needed assistance. David notified
    Emergency Medical Service as well as a medic who was part of the
    park search team to help assess her condition via a series of
    questions. Meanwhile, phone calls were placed to the hiker's family.
    With questions relayed over the repeater, the medic determined the
    woman was stable enough to accompany the other hikers as they
    continued slowly down the trail, maintaining contact when possible. Arrangements were made for the hikers to meet with search and rescue
    officers in a parking area - and ultimately for the woman's safe
    pickup by her family.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (KEVIN DUPLANTIS W4KEV)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri May 14 08:40:56 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2272 for Friday May 14, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2272, with a release date of
    Friday, May 14, 2021 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams bring compassion and critical supplies to COVID-ravaged India. A solar probe unlocks mysteries of a planet's
    ionosphere -- and a shipboard amateur delivers some very rare grid
    squares. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2272, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    INDIAN HAMS ASSIST WITH SUPPLIES TO COVID PATIENTS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week is a tale of compassion and
    community service arising out of a landscape in India ravaged by the
    deadly pandemic. John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us those details.

    JOHN: As COVID-19 continues to devastate India, amateur radio
    operators in West Bengal are helping health care workers and patients
    by providing a network of support. Club secretary Ambarish Nag Biswas,
    VU2JFA, told Newsline that the West Bengal Radio Club and the students
    of the Indian Academy of Communication and Disaster Management are
    providing access to food as well as to lifesaving medicines, plasma
    and oxygen, assisting the neediest with admission into health care
    facilities. The academy is an amateur radio training institute headed
    by Rinku Nag Biswas, VU2JFB. He said other hams in these two groups
    are also arranging for mental health support to be provided online for
    those who need it. Meanwhile, club members Arnab Roy Chowdhury VU3JWN,
    Arub Bhattacharya (Botta-Charr-Ya) VU3ZIB, Debdutta (deb-DUTTA)
    Mukherjee (Mook-Er-Gee), VU3JXA, and Jayanta (Jiy-YONTA) Baidya (BYE-
    DEE-YA), VU3YJB, have been working around the clock, even as two other
    members of the club became stricken with COVID and are now receiving treatment. Ambarish Nag Biswas told Newsline: "We are happy to help
    people in this crisis period. We believe 'ham' stands for Help Always Mankind.' "

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (AMBARISH NAG BISWAS VU2JFA)

    **

    BRAZILIAN AMATEURS SEEK EQUIPMENT TAX EXEMPTION

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In Brazil, hams are renewing their efforts to have
    taxes eliminated on amateur radio equipment, as we hear from Jeremy
    Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: Brazil's national amateur radio society has intensified its
    ongoing efforts to have ham radio equipment declared exempt from
    import tax and the tax on industrialized products. The exemption being
    sought by the Liga de Amadores Brasileiros de Râídio Emissåo would be
    granted to any qualified amateur radio operator and participant in
    Rener, the National Amateur Radio Emergency Network or member of
    Sindec, the National Civil Defense System.

    The bill was introduced in 2009 but there has been no action on it
    since 2018 when it was given to lawmakers in the Finance and Taxation Committee. LABRE is asking hams in Brazil to push for a renewal of the
    effort to get parliamentarians to vote on the measure. LABRE is
    collecting signatures on a petition on its website to send to the
    National Congress.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (SOUTHGATE, LABRE)

    **

    DEBRIS FROM CHINESE ROCKET SCATTERS IN INDIAN OCEAN

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Although China successfully launched the first module
    for that nation's space station, the mission launcher re-entered
    Earth's atmosphere along an uncontrolled path. We hear more about its
    fate from Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    JASON: The uncontrolled low orbit of a Chinese Long March rocket ended
    in a flare of light over the Arabian Peninsula before the rocket
    plunged into the Indian Ocean near the Maldives. The dramatic re-entry
    into Earth's atmosphere came late on Saturday May 8th, quieting
    nervous speculation that the space debris from the empty core of the
    Long March 5B would land in a populated region. The Chinese space
    agency said much of the rocket was consumed during re-entry. At 22
    tons, it was considered one of the largest objects to re-enter the
    atmosphere with an uncontrolled trajectory. Its path had been followed
    by the US Space Command's Space-Track Project and European Space
    Surveillance and Tracking. There had been concern that the rocket's
    fate might have been similar to that of the first Long March 5B.
    During a similar uncontrolled re-entry in May of last year, debris
    from that rocket fell in an area of Ivory Coast in Africa where it
    damaged several buildings.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (WASHINGTON POST, CNN, REUTERS)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri May 28 11:14:46 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2274 for Friday May 28, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2274, with a release date of Friday,
    May 28, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams mobilize in search for preteen boy. There
    are six new inductees in the CQ Hall of Fame -- and Bletchley Park is reopening. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2274 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    INDIANA HAMS MOBILIZE IN SEARCH FOR YOUNG BOY

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with an account of amateur radio responsiveness in a human drama that turned to tragedy: a sweeping search
    for a missing 12-year-old boy with autism which ended with the discovery
    of his body in the Little Calumet River. Members of the Amateur Radio Association of Newton County, Indiana, were among the hundreds of
    volunteers aiding the search for Kyrin Carter, the Missouri youth who was
    last seen on May 15th leaving the Indiana hotel where his family had been staying. Club president Mike Swiader [pronounced: SWAYDER], KA9E, told Newsline that the hams provided VHF digital communications and GPS for
    the northwest Indiana's K9 search and rescue teams, serving as their communications branch. Working inside the association's mobile
    communications unit, the hams logged coordinates from the teams while
    they were deployed, providing digital tracking to help create a search
    map. Meanwhile, other searchers were deployed on foot, on horseback, by helicopter and by boat and were joined by the FBI and police from Indiana
    and nearby Illinois. On Monday, May 24th, the body of the little boy was
    found in the river, and dive teams pulled him out.

    By then, Mike said, the hams' team had been demobilized because the
    nature of the search had changed. They learned of the boy's death through their liaison to local law enforcement.

    (MIKE SWIADER KA9E, NW INDIANA TIMES)

    **

    HAMS INVITED TO JOIN IN HONORING WORLD WAR II HERO

    JIM/ANCHOR: Hams are being invited to help honor the last surviving
    recipient of the most prestigious military award given after World War
    II. Kevin Trotman, N5PRE, tells us how.

    KEVIN: Not everyone has a United States Navy warship commissioned in
    their honor but Hershel "Woody" Williams, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran and Medal of Honor recipient was present in Norfolk, Virginia for just such a ceremony last year.

    This year, amateur radio operators are planning a unique gesture of their
    own at a birthday reception for Woody. Woody, the nation's last surviving recipient of the Medal of Honor from World War II, turns 98 on October
    2nd.

    Donna Snow, W5SML, known for the American reality TV show "Texas Flip N
    Move," has begun collecting QSL cards and birthday greetings to be
    presented to him at the reception in Texas on October 13th.

    Woody received the Medal for bravery during the Battle of Iwo Jima. He continues his service through the Woody Williams Foundation, which
    assists Gold Star Families, people whose family members have lost their
    lives in service to their country..

    Amateur radio operators who want to help honor Woody can send a QSL card
    with their wishes to the address at the bottom of Donna's page on
    QRZ.com. Donna also writes: [quote] "Don't worry about sending too many,
    I have BIG trailers!" [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    Jim: Woody is from right here in West Virginia, I'm proud to say.

    (REX KING W5EAK, QRZ)

    **

    SENDING A MESSAGE TO SAMUEL F.B. MORSE

    JIM/ANCHOR: If you could contact Samuel F.B. Morse, what would you tell
    him? Newsline's Randy Sly, W4XJ, posed that question to mark an important anniversary.

    RANDY: On May 24, 1844, Samuel F.B. Morse sent the first telegraph
    message from Washington, DC to Alfred Vail in Baltimore, Maryland. In
    addition to helping invent the telegraph, Morse also developed the code
    he sent.

    Today, the preservation of Morse Code has been left primarily in the
    hands of amateur radio operators. On this anniversary, Amateur Radio
    Newsline asked a few hams what they would say to Samuel Morse if he were
    alive today.

    Howard Bernstein, WB2UZE, co-founder of the Long Island CW Club said:
    "Thank you so much for having the forethought and vision to create one of
    the most internationally beneficial modes of communication still in use
    177 years later."

    Steve Szabo, WB4OMM, of the North American QRP CW Club said: "No one
    could have envisioned the future communications technology that you originated. I'm in awe that low power Morse Code using a simple
    transceiver and a wire can span the globe."

    Finally, Stew Rolfe, GW0ETF, President of the CW Operators Club said:
    "Well Sam, I bet you never thought your simple code would be heard across
    the airwaves well into the 21st century, kept alive and lovingly cared
    for by a bunch of hobbyists in pretty much every country of the world!"

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I’m Randy Sly, W4XJ. Thank you, Mr. Morse for giving us the original digital mode.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jul 22 19:33:16 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2282, for Friday, July 23, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2282 with a release date of Friday,
    July 23, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio at the ready in flooded parts of
    Europe. Radio responds to Cuba's humanitarian crisis - and the FCC OKs an experimental station on 40 MHz. All this and more, as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2282 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS AT THE READY AFTER WESTERN EUROPE FLOODING

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to Europe where nations in the
    western part of the continent have suffered disastrous flooding. As
    Newsline went to production, amateur radio operators were on alert and awaiting word on possible deployment. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, tells us more.

    ED: As record rainfall and some of the worst flooding in decades
    devastated an area in the west of Europe, amateur radio operators stood
    by to help. As the death toll rose and the search continued for those missing,Germany took the worst hit. Belgium, Luxembourg and the
    Netherlands suffered, with Belgium holding a national day of mourning on
    July 21st. In part of Belgium where water submerged an antenna vital for crisis communication, hams stepped up to volunteer in three provinces.

    Meanwhile as the European Civil Protection mechanism was activated, the
    Dutch Amateur Radio Emergency Service, the Belgian Amateur Radio
    Emergency Service and the emergency communications unit of the DARC,
    awaited word as to whether additional communications help would be
    needed.

    Greg Mossop, G0DUB, emergency communications coordinator in IARU Region
    1, told Newsline in a recent email that Germany's deployment of soldiers
    to assist in relief efforts bolstered the Technisches Hilfswerk, the
    nation's Civil Protection organisation which had thousands of volunteers working to remedy the physical damage.

    Greg told Newsline that the situation continued to evolve as bursting
    rivers damaged power and communications networks along with bridges. An
    update on the IARU Region 1 website said [quote] "This emergency will
    last for some time as infrastructure is repaired and the threat from
    damaged dams and more rainfall is reduced." [endquote] Meanwhile, in
    Germany's southeast, water flowing down from the Alps stirred mudslides
    and overflowing rivers, causing yet another disaster area. Casualties
    were reported to be less than those affected in the northwest.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (IARU REGION 1, GREG MOSSOP G0DUB, BBC)

    **

    INDIAN AMATEURS HELPING WITH DISASTER RESPONSE TRAINING

    PAUL/ANCHOR: In India, amateurs are helping train additional volunteers
    to respond to their region's disasters. John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us
    up to date.

    JOHN: A new educational partnership has been formed between civil defence officials in coastal West Bengal, India and amateurs in the West Bengal
    Radio Club. Hoping to improve communications and emergency response
    following intense cyclones and other disasters in remote regions,
    officials have asked for training from the Indian Academy of
    Communication, the ham club's educational wing. Going online with the
    Google Meet platform, hams will train a total of more than 90 civil
    defence volunteers. Posupoti Mondal, VU3ODQ, will lead the instruction
    under the guidance of the academy's secretary Rinku Nag Biswas, VU2JFB.

    Officials decided that ham radio training is essential for civil defence volunteers after previous efforts by the West Bengal Club proved
    invaluable in earlier disasters.

    West Bengal club secretary Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, said eventually
    there will be more than 90 students.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (AMBARISH NAG BISWAS VU2JFA, MILLENNIUM POST)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Aug 13 02:21:42 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2285, for Friday, August 13, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2285 with a release date of
    Friday, August 13, 2021 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams step up to help in California's deadly
    Dixie Fire. Amateur radio catches a ride on the Perseids meteor shower
    -- and a World War II veteran gets IN the air. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2285 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BREAKING NEWS: HAMS RESPOND AS ALGERIAN FIRE GROWS

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with breaking news. As Newsline went to production on August 12th, hams from the Algerian National Society ARA
    had begun assisting with emergency communications as deadly forest
    fires swept through the northern region. The International Amateur
    Radio Union Region 1 reported that at least 65 lives were claimed by
    the blaze raging in the town of Ouacif (wa-SEEF) in the Province of
    Tizi Ouzou (Tee Zee OO ZOO). Operating on 7.110 MHz, 3.650 MHz and
    14.300 MHz, hams were establishing communications between the mobile
    station in Ouacif and the crisis centre in Tamda. Watch Newsline's
    Twitter feed and Facebook page for updates.

    (GREG MOSSOP G0DUB, IARU, REGION1 )

    **

    CALIFORNIA AMATEURS STEP UP DURING DEADLY DIXIE FIRE

    JIM/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, in the US, in Northern California, nearly one
    month after its flames began, the Dixie Fire has become the second
    largest wildfire in the state's history. One group of radio amateurs
    stepped up to keep the lines of communication open for local
    firefighters when communications failed. Randy Sly, W4XJ, has that
    story.

    RANDY: With the Dixie Fire knocking out communications, wiping one town
    off the map, and forcing thousands in northern California to evacuate,
    a group of amateur radio operators helped emergency responders continue
    to get the word out. The Lake Almanor [PRONOUNCE: Al-muh-noor]
    Emergency Radio Net was on the air trading realtime information with
    one another and neighbors. Hams were monitoring 7.199 MHz and
    conducting their emergency net on 147.420 simplex. They also jumped in
    to help the Peninsula Fire Department troubleshoot their problems when
    the main firehouse radio failed, along with repeater issues. Mark
    Burnham, K6FEJ, one of the net's members, said that modified 2-meter
    radios had to be installed in the fire chief's vehicle for backup and
    at the firehouse crew's quarters. Mark said the Yaesu radio was
    modified by Ron, NB6X, to operate on fire department frequencies and a
    12-volt power supply and J-pole were added outside the building. The
    hams also set up a scanner on the main fire frequency near the
    firefighters' sleeping quarters so they would be able to hear calls.
    Another member of the net, Dale, KM6BQY, remained in the mandatory
    evacuation zone, because he is also involved in search and rescue work.

    By the middle of the second week of August, the Dixie Fire was declared
    the largest wildfire burning in the United States. It had already
    destroyed nearly 500,000 acres and was only 21 percent contained.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    (NPR, NBC, MARK BURNHAM K6FEJ)

    **

    CATCHING A RADIO RIDE ON THE PERSEIDS

    JIM/ANCHOR: If you haven't tried meteor scatter, now's the time. The
    Perseid Meteor shower is here. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, spoke to someone
    who's having a whole lot of fun with them right now.

    PAUL: One of the hottest topics in amateur radio today is the digital
    mode developed by Dr. Joe Taylor K1JT, that is, FT8 and its relatives.
    But the upcoming Perseid meteor shower should bring the mode's origins
    into focus as Dr. Taylor originally developed it specifically to work moonbounce and something called meteor scatter. Mike White, K7ULS, from
    Utah is an experienced moonbounce and meteor-scatter operator. I asked
    him about this facet of the hobby. He said that the object is to bounce
    the signal off of the ionized trail that a meteor leaves. I asked what
    bands are used the most to work that and he told me:

    WHITE:  Six meters is the easiest, and then two meters is the next
    hardest one. But with the upcoming Perseids meteor scatter shower on
    the 12th through the 13th you should have at least one hundred meteors
    per hour.

    PAUL: I asked White about the other VHF and UHF choices, but he
    confirmed that while the others can work, the size of the antenna and
    the power required goes up quite a bit. As far as six meters goes:

    WHITE: Yeah, it's the best option. You can use as small as a three-
    element Yagi.

    PAUL: I then asked White about what kind of antenna setup he used. He explained:

    WHITE: I use an elevation system on my antenna because I don't have big
    towers here. I actually have everything mounted on the back of an RV
    trailer. I just tilt it up into the meteor stream, and away we go.

    PAUL: I can vouch for that. I had to work our interview in between
    rounds of EME or moonbounce activity over several days.

    White said that if conditions are right, you can often work a station
    up to 900 miles away bouncing the signal off of the meteor trails.

    So, this weekend, you may want to just crane your neck skyward and
    watch the meteors as they pass by, or you may want to fire up the radio
    and the computer and point your antenna skyward and try your luck with
    meteor scatter.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Aug 27 08:30:37 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2287, for Friday, August 27, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2287, with a release date of
    Friday, August 27, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A dispute over a medical device and suspected
    RFI. NASA plans a radio telescope on the moon -- and in New York, a
    special event station marks the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2287, comes
    your way, right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    DISPUTE OVER SUSPECTED RFI AND INSULIN PUMP

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week involves suspected RF interference
    that appears to be affecting a medical device. But does this point to
    ham radio? Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, explores that question.

    RALPH: A ham radio operator in Florida is off the air, following a
    challenge by a neighbor in his retirement community, that his amateur
    radio station is causing life-threatening interference to the wireless communications in her insulin pump.

    According to a report by WFTV Channel 9 Orlando, an independent
    consultant hired by the residential community known as On Top of the
    World, near Ocala, Florida, believes that RF from the ham station
    "could have produced" interference with the pump's delivery of measured
    insulin doses.

    WFTV reported that the woman, Michelle Smith, is a Type 1 diabetic,
    who claims that David Birge, WB9UYK, had put her health at risk by
    operating his station.

    David is now off the air in compliance with the community board's order
    to him. It remains unclear, however, whether the consultant's findings definitively proved that RFI was a factor. In 2019, the US Food and
    Drug Administration issued an alert that some models of insulin pumps
    with unencrypted wireless connectivity had cybersecurity flaws that
    left them vulnerable to hacking that could modify the settings.

    Eric Koester, KA0YWN, an electrical design engineer in Minnesota, who
    is not involved in the Florida dispute, told Newsline in an email, that
    he has been familiar with RF emissions testing and RF immunity testing
    since 1995. He said that the more subtle kind of changes Michelle Smith reported seeing in her insulin pump are inconsistent with the larger
    scale reactions he has seen documented in devices compromised by RF interference.

    Meanwhile, the WFTV report noted that the Florida community's board of directors has already modified its regulations on antennas in a way
    that would permit operations by licensed radio amateurs living there.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.

    (WFTV, FDA, ERIC KOESTER KA0YWN)

    **

    NASA MAKING PLANS FOR A 'LUNAR ARECIBO' DISH

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Radio astronomers' beloved Arecibo dish is no more - at
    least not in Puerto Rico. But how about a replacement that's....not
    of this earth? Kent Peterson, KC0GDY, explains.

    KENT: How do you top Arecibo, the iconic radio telescope that collapsed
    last December, leading to its dismantling?

    You build one similar to it - and you do it on the far side of the moon.

    The Lunar Crater Radio Telescope is just a concept for now, but in
    theory, its massive dish would be capable of detecting those radio
    waves that eluded even the best of the telescopes here on earth. Better
    yet, that reception wouldn't be competing against the atmospheric
    interference that challenge earth-based telescopes. The lunar telescope
    would be able to more clearly detect radio waves above 10 metres, which
    were inaccessible to the Arecibo dish.

    Joseph Lazio, one of the NASA radio astronomers on the lunar radio
    telescope project, was quoted on the Business Insider website as
    saying [quote] "With a sufficiently large radio telescope off Earth,
    we could track the processes that would have led to the formation of
    the first stars, maybe even find clues to the nature of dark matter."
    He made his remarks in a press release about the project, which is
    still considered very preliminary. This past spring, NASA awarded
    $500,000 for further research and development on the telescope, which
    will be designed to rest inside a lunar crater on the far side of the
    moon.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (BUSINESS INSIDER, EARTH SKY)

    **

    AMSAT SPACE SYMPOSIUM ACCEPTING REGISTRATIONS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: AMSAT's 39th space symposium and annual general meeting
    is now accepting registrations for the event, which is taking place
    Friday, October 29th through Sunday October 31st, in Bloomington,
    Minnesota. Students are also invited to register. AMSAT is issuing
    a call for papers by presenters. Last year's event was held virtually,
    but this year's symposium is to take place at the Crowne Plaza hotel
    at Minneapolis International Airport.

    See the link to the registration website in the printed version of this newscast at arnewsline.org

    https://launch.amsat.org/Events

    To submit a paper, see details that are in this week's newscast script.

    https://www.amsat.org/2021-amsat-symposium-proceedings-call-for-papers

    (AMSAT)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Sep 2 19:49:50 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2288 for Friday, September 3rd, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2288, with a release date of Friday, September 3rd, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. US hams respond to a devastating hurricane in the
    Gulf region. Solar storms are called a threat to the internet - and the Newsline team suffers a personal loss. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2288, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    US HAMS STEP IN AS HURRICANE SWEEPS GULF REGION

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with Hurricane Ida. The storm battered the state of Louisiana, and the Gulf region in the US -- and hams were ready. Here's Randy Sly, W4XJ, with that report.

    RANDY: As Hurricane Ida approached the shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday morning, August 29, amateur radio operators were already active
    with the Hurricane Watch Net (HWN), VOIP Hurricane Net, and local
    emergency nets in the affected areas.

    It was the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, when this new contender headed inland near Grand Isle, Louisiana. With winds over 148 mph at
    landfall, Ida devastated areas of Louisiana and Mississippi, before
    moving north and east, dumping torrential rains as it went. This Category
    4 hurricane left four people dead, and millions of utility customers
    without power.

    Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, net manager of Hurricane Watch Net, told Amateur
    Radio Newsline that weather models warned him this storm would be
    serious. The net was active for 26 hours, with 47 reporting stations.
    More than 120 reports were sent to the National Hurricane Center through WX4NHC. According to Rob Macedo (Mah-see-doh), KD1CY, director of
    operations for the VOIP Hurricane Net, the net provided the hurricane
    center with additional details as hams checked in with traffic from
    weather stations, social media outlets, public safety outlets and
    contacts in the affected areas.

    Amateur radio and government also worked hand-in-hand as FEMA declared Channels 1 and 2 on 60 meters available for interoperability as late as September 6th if needed. As before, the FCC authorized a higher symbol
    rate than the 300-baud limit for hams' hurricane-related transmissions.

    If you would like to volunteer to help the American Red Cross, or any of
    the amateur radio groups mentioned in this report, please see contact information in the printed version of this week's newscast on our
    website, arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    For the American Red Cross, Contact Steve Irving, DST Lead, Louisiana
    Region, Cell: (225) 933-4993, steve.irving2@redcross.org.

    For the Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency
    Preparedness, Auxiliary Communications Support and Amateur Radio Station WB5LHS, matthew.anderson3@redcross.org

    For the Hurricane Watch Net (www.hwn.org), Bobby Graves, KB5HAV - Net
    Manager, kb5hav@hwn.org

    For the VOIP Hurricane Net, Rob Macedo, KD1CY - Director of Operations rmacedo@rcn.com

    **

    SOLAR STORMS CALLED THREAT TO INTERNET

    JIM/ANCHOR: Most of us know what solar storms can do to our plans for DX
    or even a friendly ragchew when they mess with the earth's geomagnetic
    field. Well, according to one California researcher, internet-users could
    soon be sharing our pain. Here's Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, to explain.

    RALPH: If you rely on the internet as much as you rely on your amateur
    radio, you may have twice as many reasons for being wary of space
    weather, according to a California professor. Sangeetha [Son-Geeta] Abdu [Ab-Doo] Jyothi [Joe-Tee], a computer scientist as the University of California, Irvine, believes that major solar storms are capable of compromising the internet's global infrastructure -- and probably will.

    It's not that a coronal mass ejection can disable the fibre optic cables
    that form the foundation of the internet. They can't: Those cables remain unaffected and local internet service would remain intact. But, the
    researcher said, a global network of undersea communications cables that
    boost the internet's international signals -- the equivalent of
    repeaters -- would suffer directly from electromagnetic fluctuations
    brought on by severe solar eruptions. In a recently released research
    paper, the professor speculated that this could knock nations off the internet, isolating them for as long as several weeks. The professor
    presented her findings in a paper in late August at a conference held virtually by the Association for Computer Machinery. She noted that astrophysicists say there is a likelihood of between 1.6 percent and 12 percent that a strong enough storm of this sort will occur within the
    next decade.

    For many, her findings describe a future version of the Carrington Event,
    a geomagnetic storm in September of 1859, that damaged the earth's ozone layer, and disrupted telegraph lines around the world.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.

    (FROM JENNY TUPPER, the DAILY MAIL, ACM SIGCOMM)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Sep 9 21:27:43 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2289, for Friday, September 10th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2289 with a release date of
    Friday, September 10th, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A rocket explosion destroys two European
    satellites. Hams help safeguard animals in a California wildfire --
    and have you ever logged a contact with a hot-air balloon? All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2289, comes your
    way, right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    RADIO OPERATORS SUPPORT WILDFIRE ANIMAL RESCUE

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with an update on the wildfires
    plaguing the US West Coast. In California, the Caldor Fire hasn't
    just left its impact on residents and business owners in the more
    than 200,000 acres it has destroyed: The animals who live there are
    suffering as well. Amateur radio operators are stepping in to help
    these victims of this historic blaze too. Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB,
    has the details.

    RALPH: As flames of the Caldor Fire began sweeping perilously close
    to their homes starting in mid-August, residents were quickly
    evacuated to safety, often having to leave behind their pets and
    livestock. That's where hams in the El Dorado County Amateur Radio
    club and members of its Neighborhood Radio Watch program have
    stepped in. They've been providing radio communications support to
    those who have not forgotten the animals. According to Alan
    Thompson, W6WN, the club's public information officer, radio
    operators have been assisting the South County Large Animal Rescue
    Group, El Dorado County Animal Services and the various emergency
    response agencies around California. The organizations are
    conducting welfare checks throughout the fire-damaged county,
    looking after animals who are sheltering in place—or facilitating a
    rescue when necessary. The hams themselves are getting support too:
    They're being joined by volunteers in the club's Neighborhood Radio
    Watch program, area residents using inexpensive General Mobile Radio
    Service, or GMRS, radios.

    Alan wrote to Newsline: [quote] "We desperately love our animal
    companions." [endquote] The club reminds people in the affected
    areas to contact El Dorado County Animal Services or the shelter if
    they have animals they are concerned about. You'll find the phone
    numbers in the printed script of this week's newscast at
    arnewsline.org.

    [PRINT ONLY, do not read: Western slope: 530-621-5795; the shelter: 530-621-7631; South Tahoe area: 530-573-7925]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.

    (ALAN THOMPSON W6WN)

    **

    GENESIS SATELLITES DESTROYED IN EXPLOSION

    DON/ANCHOR: Two European-built amateur radio satellites were
    destroyed in an explosion during their rocket's first test flight.
    Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has details.

    ED: The pair of AMSAT-EA Genesis satellites that were aboard the
    first test flight of Firefly Aerospace's Alpha launch vehicle were
    destroyed when the rocket, fueled by kerosene, launched from the
    Vandenberg Air Force Base north west of Los Angeles—and then
    exploded. The blast blew apart the GENESIS-L and GENESIS-N
    satellites that had been built in collaboration with the Universidad
    Europea and ICAI. The satellites were outfitted for amateur
    communications using Amplitude Shift Keying and CW. Earliest reports
    on Twitter described what happened two and a half minutes after
    lift-off, saying the vehicle [quote] "appeared to lose control and
    tumble moments before the fiery explosion." [end quote]. According
    to a report on SpaceNews, the lift-off occurred only after a first
    launch attempt was made an hour earlier but was aborted in the final
    seconds of the countdown. The two digital repeater satellites were
    among several on board the rocket built by Texas-based Firefly
    Aerospace. Firefly tweeted [quote] "Alpha experienced an anomaly
    during first stage ascent that resulted in the loss of the vehicle."
    [end quote] The company was previously known as Firefly Space
    Systems before entering bankruptcy, which it emerged from in 2017
    with new owners.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (TWITTER; SPACENEWS, AMSAT)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 17 03:56:37 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2290 for Friday, September 17th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2290 with a release date of
    Friday, September 17th, 2021 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Tokyo's ham fair is cancelled because of
    COVID. A special event station marks a birthday for a Voice of
    America station -- and 1,000 new parks join the POTA program. All
    this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2290 comes
    your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    COVID SPURS CANCELLATION OF TOKYO HAM FAIR

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week is the cancellation of Tokyo
    Ham Fair 2021, the world's largest ham radio event. Yoshinori
    Takao, JG1KTC, chairman of the Japan Amateur Radio League,
    announced that JARL had been committed to holding the ham fair as
    planned on October 2nd and 3rd using extreme preventative measures
    against COVID-19 but new waves of infection made it necessary to
    call everything off. He expressed hope for better chances in 2022.
    The 2020 ham fair was also called off due to the pandemic.
    According to the JARL website, more than 42,000 people attended
    the fair in 2019 over the course of two days.

    (JARL)

    **

    IARU REGION 3 OPTS FOR VIRTUAL CONFERENCE

    NEIL/ANCHOR: The IARU Region 3 is also responding to the pandemic
    —by holding its first digital regional conference. Jason Daniels,
    VK2LAW, brings us that story.

    JASON: The IARU Region 3 Conference kicks off on September 20th
    and for its hosting organisation, RAST, it was supposed to be
    three days of business and fellowship in Bangkok, Thailand. It
    will instead be held digitally: a first for Region 3, but a
    necessary response to the extraordinary circumstances of the
    COVID-19 pandemic. RAST's president, Jack Hantongkom, HS1FVL,
    writes on the conference website: [quote] "We are excited about
    the opportunities of holding an innovative virtual conference."
    [endquote] As such, the member societies will still meet in
    working groups to deal with technical, operational and policy
    matters, typical of any such conference except that this, the 18th
    regional conference, will take place on the Zoom platform. The
    tentative list of participants on the conference website includes
    attendees from ORARI, the Indonesian amateur radio society; the
    Chinese Taipei Amateur Radio League; the Chinese Radio Amateurs
    Club; the American Radio Relay League and the Malaysian Amateur
    Radio Transmitters Society, among others. Jack writes further:
    [quote] "This conference will bring us together at what is a very
    difficult time for us all. " [endquote]

    For full details of the conference go to the URL given in this
    weeks script at arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    [FOR PRINT ONLY, DO NOT READ: https://www.iarur3conf2021.org/ ]

    (IARU REGION 3)

    **

    AMSAT SYMPOSIUM MOVES FROM HOTEL INTO VIRTUAL MODE

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, in the US, AMSAT has also announced a
    change in plans for its 2021 Space Symposium and Annual Meeting.
    Originally scheduled to take place at the Crowne Plaza hotel in
    Bloomington, Minnesota, it will instead be held on Zoom on
    Saturday, October 30th from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Central Time. The
    program will be a mix of live Q&A sessions and pre-recorded video
    segments. Registration is required through the AMSAT member
    portal. AMSAT plans to make the event available for public viewing
    later on its YouTube channel. AMSAT announced the changes, citing
    concerns about safety during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    (AMSAT)

    **

    SPACEX RECOVERY VESSELS NAMED FOR 'BOB AND DOUG'

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Remember Bob and Doug? No, not the fictional McKenzie
    brothers, but the NASA astronauts. SpaceX is remembering them and
    Paul Braun, WD9GCO, tells us how.

    PAUL: In August of 2020, Bob Behnken, KE5GGX, and Doug Hurley,
    became the first astronauts launched aboard a crew Dragon
    spacecraft in a historic commercial flight. This year, Bob and
    Doug were to play key roles in the splash-down stage of another
    history-making mission called Inspiration4. Well....at least their
    namesakes were ready: Two vessels in SpaceX's recovery fleet
    were named for the pair, in a nod to last year's mission which
    helped signal a new era in spaceflight. The ships bearing their
    names became part of the recovery fleet for Inspiration4, which
    -- with a crew of four private citizens aboard -- marked the
    world's first all-civilian space flight.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (NASA, SPACE.COM)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 24 01:31:43 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2291, for Friday, September 24th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2291, with a release date of
    Friday, September 24th, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hospitalized children talk to the ISS via ham
    radio. Researchers call for new regulations for satellites -- and
    youthful SOTA activators in Romania have a meeting with meteors. All
    this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2291 comes your
    way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HOSPITALIZED CHILDREN CONTACT ISS VIA HAM RADIO

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a story that shows the power
    that amateur radio can have in the lives of children, especially those
    who have been hospitalized for serious illness. Kevin Trotman, N5PRE,
    brings us that report.

    KEVIN: It was a remarkable 10 minutes that students and patients at the Children's National Hospital in Washington, D.C., are not likely to
    forget: a question-and-answer exchange on Tuesday, September 21st,
    between an ISS astronaut and the young patients in the pediatric acute
    care hospital in America's capital city.

    According to Bob Koepke, AA6TB, the event's technical mentor, the ARISS contact was arranged with Seacrest Studios, the educational space
    inside the hospital to continue patients' education while they are
    receiving treatment there. The space and communications component is coordinated with the help of the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, NASA
    and the local Alexandria Amateur Radio Club. Bob said the hospital's
    proposal for the ISS contact had been accepted in March of 2020 but
    concerns for COVID safety changed the shape of the event. Instead of
    using an on-site amateur radio station for the contact, it would rely
    instead on a multi-point telebridge with Claudio Ariotti, IK1SLD, in
    Italy, eliminating the need for a large gathering of people. The
    patients stayed in their rooms, connecting to the action via an iPad
    and the help of a hospital staffer.

    JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, KE5DNI, was ready and fielded 16
    questions, using the callsign OR4ISS, during the 10-minute pass. More
    than 1,300 students and patients from kindergarten to 12th grade
    enjoyed the event, along with 500 parents and 400 professionals. A
    recording of the contact is available on YouTube at the link that
    appears in this week's Newsline script at arnewsline.org

    Meanwhile, the application period begins on October 1st for proposals
    for ARISS contacts in 2022.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    FOR PRINT, DO NOT READ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKDjGxmcE-Y

    (ARISS, BOB KOEPKE, AA6TB)

    **

    RESEARCHER BLAMES SATELLITES FOR NIGHT SKY 'POLLUTION'

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Look! Up in the sky! That is, if you can. Light
    pollution is becoming an issue and researchers in Canada have what they
    hope is a solution. With that story, here's Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    ANDY: A Canadian astronomer is urging that international regulations be established to set limits on permissible levels of satellite brightness. Samantha Lawler of the University of Regina (ruh-JYE-nuh) in Saskatchewan
    said the ever-increasing population of communications satellites, such as
    those launched by SpaceX's Starlink, generate the kind of light pollution
    that hampers astronomers' research. The scientist was part of a team that included researchers from the University of British Columbia and the
    University of Toronto who studied the optical brightness of thousands
    of satellites, including those in so-called megaconstellations.

    The team concluded that in the not-too-distant future one in every 15
    points of light in the sky will actually be a satellite. The research
    team also expressed concern about the crowding of satellites in orbit, increasing the possibility of more collisions.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (GLOBAL NEWS, SOUTHGATE, CJWW RADIO)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Oct 8 05:09:03 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2293, for Friday, October 8th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2293 with a release date of Friday, October 8th, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A breakthrough in licensing for several British islands and territories in the South Atlantic. In the US, the Appalachian Trail comes alive with amateur radio - ham radio gets a supporting role in
    a new short film. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report
    Number 2293, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    NEW CALLSIGN PREFIX SETTLES FALKLANDS ISLAND DILEMMA

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with report of a development that spells
    good news for DXpeditioners and chasers: At long last a new callsign
    prefix has evolved out of a long-simmering issue over licensed operations
    in the former Falkland Islands Dependencies. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, brings
    us that report.

    JIM: Ofcom, the communications regulator in the UK, has agreed to use of a
    new prefix for the former Falkland Islands Dependencies, which had been mistakenly omitted from the Falkland Islands Communications Ordinance in
    2017. The prefix Victor Papa Zero, VP0, has been assigned to these territories, and the Falkland Islands Communications Regulator, which was
    part of the discussions with Ofcom, is to administer these licenses on
    behalf of the governments of the British Antarctic Territory and South
    Georgia and South Sandwich Islands. The prefix will also apply to the
    British sector of the Antarctic mainland, including the Antarctic
    Peninsula and nearby islands as well as the South Orkney and South
    Shetland Islands. This brings welcome news to DXpeditioners and others who have been unable to use VP8 licenses in these former dependencies for
    years. The new call signs will only be issued with three-letter suffixes.

    Hams assigned VP8 call signs under the old Falkland Islands Communications Ordinance will remain valid until the licenses require revalidation. At
    that time, they will be reassigned a VP0 call sign.

    Hams may coment on the draft of this policy until the 18th of October, Falklands Island Time. Follow the link that appears in the script for this week's newscast at arnewsline.org.

    [FOR PRINT, DO NOT READ: www.gov.gs/amateur-radio-licences-policy- consultation/]

    (above URL all on one line)

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (OHIO PENN DX, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    WEST BENGAL HAMS ASSIST MOTHERS OF NEWBORNS

    JIM/ANCHOR: In India, West Bengal hams turned their efforts recently to aiding two displaced mothers of newborn babies. John Williams, VK4JJW, has more.

    JOHN: Relying on their amateur radio skills and the vast network of connections that enables members to reconnect missing persons with their families, members of India's West Bengal Radio Club came to the
    asssistance of two women shortly after they had given birth.

    According to a report in the Sujanya News, a woman who was in the advanced stages of pregnancy was taken to Diamond Harbour Super Specialty Hospital
    in West Bengal by police who found her at the local railway station and noticed she appeared to be mentally challenged. The child was born on September 10th, and according to the news account her family was located
    in Punjab after police requested intervention by the amateur radio club. Ambarish Nag Biswas, secretary of the club, said the connection was made
    with the help of Satnam Singh Birdi, VU2COR, in Punjab state. According to
    the newspaper story the woman's brother told the hams she had been missing
    for more than two months and that her husband also appeared to be
    suffering from mental illness. The brother made the trip to the hospital, accompanied by other relatives, to retrieve the woman and her newborn
    baby.

    In another more challenging case, however, the fate of another mother and
    her newborn child at that same hospital is less certain. The West Bengal
    hams learned that the woman, who also appeared to be mentally challenged,
    is a widow and the mother of two older children who are now being cared
    for by neighbours. Ambarish Nag Biswas told the newspaper that no one has stepped forward to bring the woman home, claiming her pregnancy was the
    result of sexual assault, and a stigma to her family.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (SUJANYA NEWS, WEST BENGAL RADIO CLUB)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Nov 11 22:11:43 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2298 for Friday, November 12th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2298, with a release date of Friday, November 12th, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams in Japan homebrew their own virtual hamfest.
    A popular digital amateur TV magazine halts publication -- and QSL cards
    are racing their way to you from the Indianapolis Speedway.

    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2298, comes
    your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BREAKING NEWS: DAYTON HAMVENTION IS A 'GO'

    STEPHEN: We begin this week with breaking news.

    Dayton Hamvention 2022 is not just going to be a premier hamfest but a reunion, as organizers prepare for the first gathering at the Xenia
    Fairground and Expo Center in Ohio after two years of cancellations. Hamvention's general chairman Rick Allnut, WS8G, told Newsline in a phone interview that committees have been meeting and volunteers are committed
    to making up for the time lost to pandemic cancellations.

    Hamvention will be happening on Friday May 20th through Sunday May 22nd,
    with an international reception scheduled on Thursday May 19th. Rick said
    the registration site is already taking bookings from vendors and inside exhibitors and individual visitors can already buy their tickets. All
    details are available on the hamvention.org website. RIck said: "Tickets
    are all printed and ready to go."

    **

    HAMS IN JAPAN HOMEBREW THEIR OWN FEST

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Hams have always believed that if you really want
    something, sometimes it's better to build it yourself. Nowhere is that
    more evident lately than in Japan, where radio operators were
    disappointed once again this year by cancellation of that nation's major
    radio event. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us more.

    GRAHAM: Never mind that the Tokyo Ham Fair was cancelled again this year
    by the Japan Amateur Radio League because of COVID-19 precautions. The
    Virtual Ham Festa 2021 has taken its place thanks to the creativity of a
    group of independent dedicated radio amateurs. Scheduled speakers
    included Shiro Sakai, JH4PHW, explaining the best practices for using
    eQSL, and Yuki Shimizu We, JO2ASQ, explaining amateur satellite communications. One of the biggest topics on the agenda was the
    resurgence of CW.

    A true homebrew project built on the Zoom platform, the November 13th
    hamfest was designed with a Main Stage for seminars and live
    presentations. Other features included booths and a space for eyeball
    QSOs. The organising committee was headed by Taka, 7K1BIB, who said that
    like all major ham radio events, an on-the-air component was also a big
    part of the plan: As a social experiment an international FT8 QSO Party
    was to take place on 40 metres in parallel to the virtual event.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (TAKA 7K1BIB, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    THE NATURE OF EXCITEMENT FOR SLOVENIA'S WWFF

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The World Wide Flora & Fauna program has welcomed S5FF
    - Slovenia - and hams there are eager to share the excitement. Ed
    Durrant, DD5LP, brings us up to date.

    ED: Radio operators in Slovenia held a quiet but well-earned celebration during the first full weekend in November as they marked their nation's arrival as a registered region in the Worldwide Flora & Fauna programme.
    It was the culmination of two months of intense effort by a team of hams including Mike Gregoric, S55GX, who said the team members are all
    experienced SOTA, IOTA and World Castles Award activators. Mike, who has
    been a ham since 1995, told Newsline that he realized this past summer
    that Slovenia needed to organize and become part of the awards programme,
    which would require adding a national log manager and coordinators. WWFF
    vice chairman Manfred Meier, DF6EX, and member administrator Luk
    Waterschoot, ON4BB, encouraged the Slovenian team's efforts. Mike, who
    serves as coordinator, told Newsline that the team pulled all the
    essential ingredients together, a web page, an S5 logo and the definition
    of all the new activation areas. Mike said that there are now 191 such
    sites - and the numbers are growing.

    Some other possibilities are growing too: Mike hopes Slovenia's
    participation will encourage more portable operations and even boost
    amateur radio tourism from abroad. He told Newsline: [quote] "Everyone
    can make nature their shack." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (MIKE GREGORIC, S55G; MANFRED MEIER, DF6EX, WWFF WEB PAGE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Dec 3 02:19:44 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2301 for Friday December 3rd, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2301 with a release date of Friday, December 3rd, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio marks 100 years of signals crossing the ocean. A well-known author and podcaster becomes a Silent Key -- and we announce the winner of the 2021 Amateur Radio Newsline International
    Newsmaker of the Year award. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2301, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    AMATEUR RADIO'S 100 YEARS OF TRANSATLANTIC SIGNALS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: We begin this week by marking a turning point in amateur
    radio history: the first transatlantic communications on the amateur
    portion of the spectrum 100 years ago this month. A video from the Antique Wireless Museum in New York celebrates the one-century-mark of what the
    museum is calling "The Triumph of the Amateurs," which began with the
    first test on Dec. 11 1921. Jack Parker, W8ISH, picks up the story from
    here.

    JACK: A dramatic video released recently by the Antique Wireless Museum
    tells how hams conceived of a historic test in 1921 that showed the world
    that the shortwave spectrum below 200 meters was anything but useless when
    it came to sending messages across the ocean. This was the now-famous Transatlantic Test Project. In a one-hour video, Ed Gable, K2MP, and Mark Erdle, AE2EA, tell how the amateur spirit of experimentation put ham
    station 1BCG on the air with a tube-based transmitter on 1.3 MHz. The CW transmission from Connecticut by the Radio Club of America was
    successfully copied in Scotland.

    As hams prepare to re-enact that day on its anniversary using a replica of
    the original transmitter, hams everywhere can learn all about the moments
    that made history on 160 meters. Find a link to the YouTube video in the
    text version of this week's newscast on our website arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (FOR PRINT ONLY, DO NOT READ:
    LINK: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zt_M5VVsR1Q )

    (YOUTUBE, ANTIQUE WIRELESS MUSEUM)

    **

    RADIO CAROLINE SEEKS REPORTS ON NEW TRANSMITTER

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Who doesn't love the thought of a better, more powerful transmitter? You don't even have to be a ham: In the UK, an upgrade has
    been made at Radio Caroline, a once-notorious pirate radio station,
    leaving the station feeling loud and proud. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, picks up
    the story from here.

    JEREMY: If you can hear the new, high-power signal of Radio Caroline on
    648 KHz AM, you can thank its new 25 kW transmitter, a Harris DX25U which
    is a nice step up from the station's older 10 kW Nautel model.

    The station manager, Peter Moore, writes on the Southgate Amateur Radio
    News website that the station is keen to know how much further its signals
    are reaching these days. He asks for reception reports to be sent to help
    the crew achieve even more improvements. You can find a link to the
    reception report at radiocaroline.co.uk

    Peter said: [quote] "Now the new transmitter is in service covering a much larger area than before, we hope to reconnect with more of our listeners
    from the past." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (RADIO CAROLINE, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    CYCLING HAMS HELP RAISE FUNDS TO BEAT CANCER

    NEIL/ANCHOR: All hams know that public service is a big part of what we do
    — but it isn't always done holding a radio, as we hear from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: When the Great Cycle Challenge rolled out in October to raise
    funds to find cures for childhood cancers, the Bendigo Amateur Radio and Electronics Club was ready for this monthlong bicycle-based event. This
    time, however, members weren't stationed along any particular route, as
    hams often are during one-day events; they were on the road themselves throughout the month, pedaling more than 600 kilometres toward their
    financial destination. The club reports that the BAREC Pedal Radio Group's efforts helped raise nearly AU $1,400.00 for the cause, adding their total
    to the national fundraising total of more than $6.9 million.

    Of course, that's not to say there wasn't some kind of radio involved.
    BAREC pedal group member Graeme Knight, VK3GRK, said afterward in a press release: [quote] "Some of our radio club members enjoy bike riding, and
    some of us even use radios to keep in touch with others while out riding." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (BAREC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Dec 17 08:37:04 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2303, for Friday, December 17th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2303, with a release date of
    Friday, December 17th, 2021 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams on alert during deadly US tornadoes.
    Radio re-enacts historic transmissions - and everyone's on the air
    this holiday season: even Santa. All this and more as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2303, comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    CENTRAL US TORNADOES BRING HAMS INTO ACTION

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with deadly tornadoes that
    devastated homes and lives recently in Kentucky and nearby states.
    Randy Sly, W4XJ, shares those developments.

    RANDY: SKYWARN nets were activated across much of the central
    United States from Friday evening into early Saturday, December 10th
    and 11th, as a tornado outbreak of unprecedented proportion tore
    through Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri,
    Ohio, and Tennessee.

    Christine Weilgos (Well-gus), Warning Coordination Meteorologist for
    the National Weather Service in Paducah, Kentucky, which covers one
    of the hardest hit areas, reported that their SKYWARN desk was manned
    by two local amateurs, Garry Wheatley, KD4GCY, and Jeff Estes, KM4LDP.
    The SKYWARN linked repeater system across Arkansas was also active
    throughout the night.

    At least 50 tornado reports were received by the NWS during the
    evening. Of the four strongest tornadoes reported in western Kentucky,
    the largest was tracked for over 200 miles on the ground. At least 88
    people are known to have perished across five states. The highest
    impact was in Kentucky, where the death toll stands at 74, with an age
    span from 2 months to 98 years of age. There are reports that
    approximately 100 people are still unaccounted for. Early estimates of
    damages and economic losses have ranged into the billions of dollars.

    ARES and other amateur emergency resources across the area are still
    ready to go, should additional communications support be needed.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    **

    AMATEURS MARK 2 MARCONI ANNIVERSARIES

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Radio operators on both sides of the Atlantic marked
    two big moments in radio history as Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, tells us.

    JEREMY: The two Marconi anniversary activations had everything but
    Guglielmo Marconi himself. Members of the Marconi Radio Club of
    Newfoundland and the Poldhu Amateur Radio Club in Cornwall, England
    paid tribute to Marconi's first experimental radio transmission across
    the Atlantic. The Newfoundland amateurs contacted the Poldhu radio
    operators marking December 12th, 1901, the day Marconi first heard a transatlantic transmission, Morse Code for the letter "s," sent from
    Cornwall to Cabot Tower in Canada.

    There was even more excitement, however, the previous day in Ardrossan, Scotland. Amateurs there received a duplicate of a message sent 100
    years earlier from the US on amateur radio frequencies in the shortwave spectrum.

    Shortly after the re-enactment of the December 11th, 1921 transmission
    got under way in Connecticut, however, the replica of the 1BCG
    transmitter failed and went off the air. The replica, built for the
    75th anniversary of the transatlantic tests, had been restored earlier
    this year by the Antique Wireless Association in Bloomfield, New York.

    The association's Mark Erdle, AE2EA, told Newsline in an email that
    that the transmitter suffered a plate choke failure. He said the
    association hopes to get it back on the air by February of 2022.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (QRZ.COM, MARK ERDLE AE2EA)

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In case you missed this test re-enactment, up until
    December 26th you can still work UK stations using a "/2ZE" (Slash
    Two - ZED -E) suffix on their normal call signs. Until the end of
    December, the special event stations GB2ZE (G B 2 ZED E) and GS2ZE
    (G S 2 ZED E) will be on-air to celebrate Paul Godley's achievements
    back in 1921.

    (RSGB)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Dec 23 20:43:20 2021
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2304, for Friday, December 24th, 2021

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2304 with a release date of Friday, December 24th, 2021, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A first-time activation of a South Pacific Island.
    A solar probe 'touches' the sun -- and Newsline's annual Christmas card to
    our listeners. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2304 comes your way right now.

    ***

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    NEW IOTA ACTIVATED BY TEAM FROM INDIA

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with a group of adventurous DXpeditioners. They have succeeded in activating a new Island on the Air in the South Pacific, in a quest worthy of the 19th century science fiction masterwork, "Mysterious Island" by Jules Verne. Here's Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: It is not science fiction, but radio fact, that the Manic Monkeys
    team of radio operators made a 600 kilometre journey this month from Bangalore, India to Sao Jorge Island, designated AS-177 by IOTA, activating the remote island for the first time. They had gone in search of the
    fictional Lincoln Island that appears in Jules Verne's classic novels but
    the adventuresome hams with the callsign AT7SJ were also in search of QSOs. Between December 3rd and December 6th, they logged 1,600 such contacts on
    SSB, CW and FT-8, while camped in difficult terrain, according to team
    leader Madhu Prasad, VU3NPI. Madhu told Newsline of other discoveries:
    [quote] "The island had mysterious propagation conditions: the signals
    would go up and down like the tide and mysteriously close abruptly on all bands with S9 noise." [endquote]

    Madhu said that the team had been landlocked in India for two years by the pandemic and were still grieving the loss of the team's Elmer, Dev, VU2DEV,
    to cardiac arrest. Now they can proudly add this uninhabited, thickly forested, island to their earlier activations of St. Mary's Island AS-096
    and Danushkodi Island AS-173.

    Madhu told Newsline that the team unfortunately did not find mysterious Lincoln Island, nor did they locate the Aquaphone, the fictional wireless device used by Jules Verne's protagonist, Capt. Nemo. They're leaving that quest - and Lincoln Island - for 2022.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (MADHU PRASAD, VU3NPI)

    **

    NASA SOLAR PROBE 'TOUCHES' THE SUN

    DON/ANCHOR: With Solar Cycle 25 upon us, who isn't even a little bit
    obsessed with the sun? So this news from NASA is well-timed, as we hear
    from Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.

    NEIL: NASA has announced a milestone moment in the life of the Parker Solar Probe: this year it reached the corona of the sun, a move into the solar atmosphere that is expected to yield more - and more detailed - insights
    into space weather. The US space agency is commenting only now on the achievement, which happened last spring, three years after the probe's
    launch, following the publication of a recent paper in the Physical Review Letter, which discussed the latest chapter of the Parker probe's journey.
    NASA said the probe's entry into the super-hot corona meant it was [quote] "flying into the eye of a storm." [endquote] Once there, it studied solar
    wind and examined magnetic patterns known as "switchbacks" which have their origins on the surface of the sun itself.

    The paper's lead author, Justin Kasper, was quoted by National Public
    Radio, as saying that entry into the corona lasted for several hours and
    was an expected and much-anticipated occurrence. The probe, which is built
    to tolerate more than 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, is expected to re-enter the corona in January of 2022.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.

    (NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO, SPACE.COM)

    **

    OPEN SOURCE WORKSHOP AVAILABLE ON YOUTUBE

    DON/ANCHOR: YouTube once again provides an opportunity for those who missed
    an amateur radio event. This one's on Open Source CubeSats. Here's Ed
    Durrant, DD5LP.

    ED: If you missed a chance to attend the Open Source CubeSat Workshop held virtually on December 9th and 10th, you can still view the two days of presentations by visiting the Libre Space Foundation Channel on YouTube.
    This virtual workshop held on Zoom was its fifth iteration since its launch four years ago in Germany.

    The opening remarks by Artur Scholz, DO4ALS, of the Open Source CubeSat Workshop Committee, stressed the importance of open-source CubeSats as a
    means of conducting small space missions. Developers and mission operators attended the online sessions to collaborate, compare notes and build community. As with previous sessions, attendees participated as members of research institutes, businesses, learning institutes or as individuals.

    See the link to the two days of presentations in the text version of this week's script at arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    [FOR PRINT: DO NOT READ, https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCzrYL9QmZiR7vmiQBZYV9E2WGyDmiC3m]

    (AMSAT, YOUTUBE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jan 20 21:44:58 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2308, for Friday, January 21st, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2308, with a release date of
    Friday, January 21st, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Disaster and a communications blackout in
    Tonga. Preserving DX access on remote central Pacific Islands --
    and an online museum with some very old and very rare QSL cards.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2308
    comes your way right now.

    **

    DISASTER CUTS TONGA'S COMMUNICATIONS WITH REST OF WORLD

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a developing story. As
    Newsline went to production, relief and communication efforts were
    coming slowly to the island nation of Tonga, which was left cut off
    from the rest of the world after two consecutive natural disasters.
    Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, fills us in.

    JIM MEACHEN: The eruption of an underwater volcano triggered a
    deadly tsunami that devastated the nation of Tonga, throwing the
    Pacific island chain into a communications blackout. While military
    relief efforts struggled to bring clean water and basic supplies
    from Australia and New Zealand to residents, Tonga's apparent lack
    of active amateur radio operators spelled silence on those
    frequencies. As Newsline went to production amateurs in New Zealand
    who are also active first responders awaited word on what help was
    needed - by radio or other means. Don Wallace, ZL2TLL, a director
    of IARU Region 3, told Newsline in an email he and Andrew Bate,
    ZL1SU, manager of the New Zealand Red Cross IT & Telecom Emergency
    Response Unit, were among those awaiting word on whether they would
    be deployed. Don said the Red Cross itself was already providing
    aid. In a public posting on Facebook, Mark Hanrahan, VK4DMH,
    president of the Gold Coast Amateur Radio Society VK4WIG, said the
    only communications available from Tonga appeared to be via a few
    satellite phones, which were proving unreliable.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (BBC, DON WALLACE ZL2TLL; ANDREW BATE, ZL1SU, FACEBOOK)

    **

    RESEARCHERS BUILD WORLD'S SMALLEST ANTENNA USING DNA

    PAUL/ANCHOR: While we hams work with conductive metal wire when we
    set out to build the best antenna for our purposes, a group of
    researchers in Canada used something else: DNA. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH,
    has that story.

    JEREMY: Researchers in chemistry at the University of Montreal have
    created what they call the world's tiniest antenna, one they have
    engineered using DNA to let them study structural changes that
    occur within proteins.

    This nanoantenna uses light instead of the radio frequencies we
    hams are so accustomed to. Researcher Scott Harroun said in a
    report [quote]: "The DNA-based nanoantennas can be synthesised with
    different lengths and flexibilities to optimize their function."
    [endquote]

    He added later: [quote]"By carefully tuning the nanoantenna design,
    we have created a five nanometre-long antenna that produces a
    distinct signal when the protein is performing its biological
    function." [endquote]

    The researchers reported their findings recently in the journal
    Nature Methods. They compared the fluorescent nanoantenna's
    performance to that of a repeater: It receives light in one
    wavelength and transmits back at another, depending on what
    behaviour it detects in the protein.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (TECHEXPLORIST.COM)

    **

    ISRAELI STUDENTS' SATELLITES ENTER ORBIT

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Students in Israel recently experienced the thrill of
    seeing amateur radio satellites of their own design....sent into
    space! Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, has more on that story.

    JASON: Eight satellites designed and built by students throughout
    Israel were sent into space on January 13th aboard SpaceX's FALCON
    launcher. The eight satellites, Tevel 1 through 8, have amateur
    radio FM transponders and beacon transmitters, all operating on the
    same frequency. They entered their planned orbits about 90 minutes
    after departing the launcher. The beacon transmissions can be heard
    on 436.400 MHz. The FM transponders are using an uplink frequency
    of 145.970 MHz and a downlink frequency of 436.400 MHz. The mission
    also carried AMSAT-EA's HADES and EASAT-2 satellites. HADES is
    using the callsign AM6SAT and EASAT-2 is using the callsign AM5SAT.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

    (OBSERVATORIAL.COM, AMSAT)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jan 27 19:50:59 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2309, for Friday, January 28th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2309 with a release date of Friday, January 28th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. There's progress in restoring some of Tonga's communications. Researchers create a new transistor that uses sound
    waves - and hams in the UK prepare for the Queen's platinum jubilee. All
    this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2309, comes your
    way right now.

    **

    PROGRESS IN RESTORING TONGA'S COMMUNICATIONS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the struggling
    island nation of Tonga, which is still cut off from the world following back-to-back natural disasters. Hams continue to keep a watchful eye.
    Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, picks up the story from here.

    JIM: Efforts have been ongoing to restore communications to Tonga, where
    an undersea volcano left a vital fibre-optic cable broken beneath the
    ocean, isolating the island nation. According to a BBC report, 2G
    wireless service has been set up on the archipelago's main island with
    the help of a satellite dish from the University of the South Pacific.
    Other than the intermittent service of satellite phones, however,
    outside contact has been limited as the country struggles with a
    contaminated water supply and other concerns brought on by a subsequent tsunami.

    Tonga apparently has no active amateur radio operators and hams in the immediate Pacific region have reported that the amateur HF bands are
    presently unusable. Some marine VHF bands are said to be active. Hayden Honeywood, VK7HH, is among those amateurs using YouTube and other social
    media channels to provide updates whenever possible. One of Hayden's
    most recent accounts came from Roly, ZL1BQD, whose friend in Tonga
    operates a 1-kilowatt broadcast radio station at 91.3 FM. The station
    was unaffected by the tsunami and is carrying public service messages.

    0Meanwhile, New Zealand's ministry of foreign affairs estimate it will
    take at least a month, if not more, before the cable can be fixed.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (HAYDEN HONEYWOOD VK7HH, BBC)

    **

    FAA SETTLES INTERFERENCE ISSUE WITH MAJORITY OF AIRCRAFT

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The US FAA has made major progress on the issue of interference between 5G transmissions and airline altimeters. Kent
    Peterson, KC0DGY, brings us this update.

    KENT: For some models of Boeing, Airbus and Embraer aircraft, radio interference isn't just an annoyance; it has the potential for deadly consequences. That was at the root of the US Federal Aviation
    Administration's concern about 5G cell phone signals, which use the same C-band spectrum as some of the airliners' altimeters.

    The FAA said planes landing in low-visibility conditions risked
    interference from mobile phones, naming Verizon and AT&T as two of the carriers. Now, in a dramatic turnaround of its position, the FAA has
    said that more than three-quarters of planes have altimeters that can
    filter out 5G transmissions and are in the clear. Some telecom and
    consumer advocates, such as attorney Harold Feld, publicly criticized
    the FAA for taking too long to evaluate altimeters after the FCC
    approved the cellular carriers' use of the C-band in 2020.

    According to an article on the ArsTechnica website, the FAA only began
    vetting the altimeters in February 2021 once the FCC had auctioned off
    the spectrum to the carriers. The ArsTechnica article said that in 40
    other countries where C-band spectrum is in use for cellular service,
    there have been no reports of 5G causing trouble with altimeters.

    In the US the FCC standards place a 200 MHz guard band between the
    cellular carriers and the frequencies used by the altimeters.

    More approvals are expected soon.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (ARS TECHNICA)

    **

    PORTUGAL CRACKS DOWN ON RADIO INTERFERENCE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, the Portuguese communications regulator
    cracked down late last year on what it called abuse and interference on
    a number of frequencies, including maritime mobile and amateur bands.
    IARU Region 1 reported that ANACOM, the Portuguese Communications
    Authority, in partnership with the Maritime Police, sought to verify the proper and legal use of radios by conducting inspections on vessels
    between the ports of Caminha and Peniche. According to the report, unauthorized use of frequencies was the most common violation. The
    report indicated that such practices, in addition to being illegal, can
    cause interference, especially to radios being used for emergency
    response. ANACOM noted in the report that it was leaving the matter of sanctions to the Maritime Police.

    (SOUTHGATE, IARU REGION 1)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Feb 4 11:23:45 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2310, for Friday, February 4th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2310 with a release date of Friday, February 4th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Radio adventure in the sea north of Russia. Japan reaches out to young amateurs -- and hams honor one of America's best-
    known presidents. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report
    Number 2310, comes your way right now.

    **

    PLANS ARE ON ICE (AND SNOW) FOR RUSSIAN ISLAND ACTIVATION

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a tale of adventure. While many of
    us in the Northern Hemisphere may be bitterly complaining about winter's
    bite, here are some amateurs who are actively seeking out the most wintry
    of winters -- north of Russia. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has the details.

    JEREMY: It is little more than a month before a team of six adventurers
    from the Russian Robinson Club departs for Rykachev Island in the Kara
    Sea. The island, which is number AS-104 in the Islands on the Air awards scheme, bears the name of the late Russian meteorologist who was devoted
    to the study of Russia's northern seas. The team departs on March 3rd,
    and will travel to their activation site by snowmobile, setting up camp,
    and using the call sign R150WS. The call sign is a nod to the 150 years
    that have elapsed since Rykachev Mikhail Alexandrovich and other
    scientists founded the Russian weather service. According to a Twitter
    posting by Andy, EU7A, the team may also try to operate enroute from
    Isachenko Island, IOTA number AS-050. If they are successful, they will
    be active there as RI0BI. This adventure is the sixth in the club's
    series of "Legends of the Arctic" DXpeditions. According to the club's
    website, they are also planning a video documentary similar to those
    created on previous Dxpeditions.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (RUSSIAN ROBINSON CLUB, OHIO PENN DX)

    **

    CARIBBEAN ISLAND HAMS MARK 27 YEARS SINCE CLUB'S FOUNDING

    DON/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, in the much warmer Caribbean, amateurs are
    marking nearly three decades of success for their club in Saint
    Vincent and the Grenadines. John Williams, VK4JJW, has that report.

    JOHN: The view of Mount St. Andrews could not have been more perfect
    for members of the Youlou Radio Movement in Saint Vincent and the
    Grenadines. On January 22nd, members of the ham radio organisation
    and their families gathered within view of that important summit to
    mark 27 years since the group was founded atop that peak -- 2,000 feet
    above sea level -- by five amateurs. Known originally as the Rainbow
    Radio League, its purpose remains the same today: providing a team of volunteers available for disaster communications by radio. Sean
    Patterson, J88CU, one of the original five, spoke at the recent
    celebration, sharing the story of the hams' first portable operation
    as a formal group in 1995. The anniversary celebration, included the
    induction of two honoured guests - Ira Harris, VP2EIH, from Anguilla,
    and Donald Howe, 9Z4FV, from Trinidad - as Youlou members. The next day,
    the celebration continued as some of the hams visited Mary Barnard,
    J88AM, and Martin Barnard, J88AA, to thank the two longtime hams for
    their years of personal assistance to Youlou. Moving forward, the
    group's next step is to consider a name change to the Youlou Amateur
    Radio Association, and make plans for several SOTA and POTA activations
    this year.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (SOUTHGATE, YOULOU RADIO MOVEMENT, SEARCHLIGHT NEWSPAPER)

    **

    STRAIGHT KEY MONTH MARKS 16TH YEAR OF SPECIAL EVENT

    DON/ANCHOR: CW enthusiasts: Were you busy with your straight key for
    the first few weeks of the year? You're likely in the log for a very
    successful event by the Straight Key Century Club. Randy Sly, W4XJ,
    is here to tell us more.

    RANDY: "The Party's Over," says the welcoming message on the Straight
    Key Century Club website. That means that January's Straight Key Month,
    the club's 16th annual event, ended in a flurry of final contacts fast approaching a total of almost 50,000, according to their website. In
    addition to congratulating all club members who signed up to be operators
    for this special event, the club also thanked Justin, KF0GZB, for
    submitting the design that is being featured in this year's Straight
    Key Month QSL card. The event also marked the 16th anniversary of the
    Straight Key Century Club, which encouraged all operators to celebrate
    the original tools of the early days of radiotelegraphy by using straight
    keys, bugs or cootie keys during their shifts on the air. Official
    stations operated in all 13 US regional call areas. Separate stations
    were on the air from six IARU continental regions along with those in
    Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ, operating this year as
    K3Y/0.

    (SKCC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Feb 11 05:30:37 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2311, for Friday, February 11th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2311, with a release date of Friday, February 11th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A peak moment for a SOTA activator in Argentina. A preeminent microphone company changes hands -- and an APRS pioneer becomes
    a Silent Key. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2311, comes your way right now.

    **

    ONE HAM'S HF RADIO 'FIRST' ON HIGHEST PEAK IN THE AMERICAS

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with the story of a ham who has
    just achieved a peak experience atop another peak - this one in South
    America. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, tells us about him.

    ED: An Argentine amateur radio operator has accomplished the first HF activation of the highest peak in the Summits On the Air programme,
    fulfilling a long-standing goal. On January 10th, Diego Lizarraga, LU9MZO, operated from Aconcagua (Pron:a.kon.ta.gwa), which at nearly 7,000 metres
    high and is also the highest peak in the Americas. This is the first time
    any amateur radio operator has made contacts from Aconcagua using one of
    the HF bands (the previous and first activation in 2019 was executed using
    2 metres FM). According to reports, he spent an hour and a half on the air using 40 metres and found time as well to work some stations on VHF and
    UHF. His total for the day was 64 contacts, with 15 of them on HF. He was heard as far away as Buenos Aires, San Luis (Pron:San Luise), Mendoza provinces in Argentina as well as into Chile. His dream of operating from there on HF had been a few years in the planning and the timing worked out well for him. As he descended from the peak to a base camp some 4300
    metres below, snow had already begun to fall. On January 12th, he returned
    to the entry of Aconcagua Park where he was cheered on by friends and relatives.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (SOTA, THE YL BEAM)

    **

    PROMINENT US MIC COMPANY HEIL SOUND IS SOLD

    JIM/ANCHOR: In the United States, Heil Sound, which has been run by Bob
    Heil, K9EID, and his wife, Sarah, for decades, has been sold. The Heils announced the purchase of the well-known professional microphone company
    by Ash Levitt and Steve Warford. Ash, the company's president and CEO, and Steve, director of operations, are veterans of the business, having worked with Bob since they were teenagers. Bob will remain with the company as founder and CEO emeritus, continuing to do product design for the amateur radio market. Heil Sound has been in business since 1966.

    (HEIL SOUND)

    **

    INDIA'S NEWEST HAMS PREP FOR DISASTER

    JIM/ANCHOR: In India, a group of newly licensed hams is about to prep for
    the worst with a mock disaster drill. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has those
    details.

    GRAHAM: Civil defense volunteer Dipak Giri is awaiting his new call sign
    and a new assignment. He was recently among the more than two dozen
    volunteers who successfully completed the three-month amateur radio
    training course online with the Indian Academy of Communication and
    Disaster Management in West Bengal. Rinku Nag Biswas, VU2JFB. secretary of
    the academy, is proud of all the graduates, who like Dipak, now face their next challenge: a mock disaster drill that will be held in March by the
    local government to test their capabilities in handling real-life crises.
    In a real disaster, such as a tornado, earthquake or cyclone, they would
    be the first responders in an area near the Sundarbon Forest which has no internet or mobile phone service. According to Ambarish Nag Biswas,
    VU2JFA, many of the academy's students received their field training
    during January's Ganga Sagar Mela, a religious pilgrimage that draws
    thousands to West Bengal from across India. Ambarish Nag Biswas is
    secretary of the West Bengal Radio Club whose hams have traditionally
    provided emergency communication during this massive gathering.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (WEST BENGAL RADIO CLUB)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Feb 17 21:30:13 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2312, for Friday, February 18th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2312, with a release date of Friday, February 18th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Police identify the body of an Australian
    amateur. New insights into an RFI mystery -- and there's still time for a contact with Pluto...the special event, that is. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2312 comes your way right now.

    **

    AUSTRALIAN HAM'S BODY IDENTIFIED IN DOUBLE MURDER

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with the tragic conclusion to a missing persons story reported here on Newsline on two years ago. The
    bodies of an amateur radio operator and his companion have been
    positively identified. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, brings us that story.

    GRAHAM: Russell Hill, VK3VZP, and Carol Clay, disappeared two years ago
    in the Victorian bushland where the two had gone camping. The last
    message heard from Russell was on March 20th of 2020 when he made a QSO
    on one of the HF bands, reporting his location at Wonnangatta Valley in
    the Victorian Alps. No one heard from them again. One day later, campers discovered the radio operator's vehicle, and the couple's campsite
    destroyed by fire.

    Forensic testing has now confirmed the identity of remains found last
    November as those of the radio ham and his friend. A pilot who worked for Jetstar Airways -- and who had been camping nearby -- was arrested last November and charged with two counts of murder. The pilot, Greg Lynn, 55,
    is due in court in May.

    Police have described the couple's disappearance as one of their most high-profile cases.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (THE NEW DAILY, SKYNEWS.COM)

    **

    RFI ISSUES TIED TO PLANES' OLDER ALTIMETERS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: A further look into airliners' RFI problems following the
    recent launch of 5G service by US cellphone carriers has turned up an interesting technical finding. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, has that update.

    KENT: Despite a protective guard band to separate frequencies used by cellphone carriers and airliners, signals from newly deployed 5G wireless service in the US are still capable of compromising commercial airplane
    safety in aircraft using older altimeters lacking filters, an expert
    witness told US lawmakers in Washington, DC. Dennis Roberson (ROE-BURR-
    SON) told a subcommittee in the US House of Representatives that older
    radio altimeters lack filters that prevent that kind of risky signal
    conflict that can interfere with critical navigation, especially during landing. His testimony came following airlines' decision to ground or
    redirect some of their flights scheduled to land in airports near 5G
    cellphone towers. Carriers including AT&T and Verizon now operate on the C-band spectrum between 3.7 and 3.98 GHz. Altimeters are designed to
    operate on frequencies between 4.2 GHz and 4.4 Ghz. Roberson said this
    kind of interference is not believed to have been a factor in any crashes
    but the potential does exist because older altimeters are capable of
    picking up transmissions outside of their assigned band, such as those
    used by 5G service. He said that a guard band provided a "large cushion" between the carriers' and the altimeters' allocations on the spectrum,
    but nonetheless, without filters in place on the altimeters, signal
    conflicts could still occur.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (URGENTCOMM)

    **

    SILENT KEY: HAMVENTION VOLUNTEER GREGORY DEAN, N9NWO

    PAUL/ANCHOR: This year's Hamvention will be going forward in Xenia, Ohio without one of its dedicated volunteers. He became a Silent Key this
    month, as we hear from Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    KEVIN: A well-respected volunteer at the annual Hamvention in Xenia has
    become a Silent Key. Greg Dean, N9NWO, died on February 5th in a
    Lafayette, Indiana hospital. According to QRZ.COM, Greg was a veteran of
    the US Army National Guard and Army Reserve with tours in Desert Storm, Bosnia, the Gulf War and Afghanistan. Licensed since 1968, he belonged to
    the Quarter Century Wireless Association and the Straight Key Century
    Club. Friends posted on his Facebook page, praising his volunteer work at Hamvention and the regular help he provided with QSLs for the W9IMS
    event.

    Greg was 71.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (QRZ, FACEBOOK, HIPPENSTEEL FUNERAL SERVICE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Feb 25 08:45:02 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2313 for Friday February 25th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2313, with a release date of Friday, February 25th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ukraine bans ham radio before Russian invasion.
    An amateur in Pennsylvania faces criminal charges -- and a historic
    Marconi hut goes digital in England. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2313, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    UKRAINE BANS AMATEUR RADIO AS PART OF STATE OF EMERGENCY

    NEIL/ANCHOR: A decree by Ukrainian officials imposing a state of
    emergency, including a ban on amateur radio operation, took effect on Thursday, February 24th. Officials had announced the previous day that
    they would do so in anticipation of a Russian military invasion. The
    decree can last as long as 30 days, with an option to be extended.

    The International Amateur Radio Union was monitoring the events. Greg
    Mossop, G0DUB, IARU Region 1's emergency communications coordinator, told Newsline in an email [quote] "The events in Ukraine are obviously fast
    moving and although there were early reports of telecommunications
    failures it appears these may have been due to the volume of calls on the networks. Webcams in the area are functioning and people do seem to be
    able to make calls. Sadly, the Ukrainian National Society has reported
    that a ban on the operation of amateur stations in Ukraine has been put
    in place for 30 days commencing February 24th. IARU Region 1 and its
    member societies are monitoring the situation closely but remind all
    amateur radio operators they must follow their national laws and
    regulations." [endquote]

    The US news website Politico quoted Oleksiy Danilov, Secretary of
    Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, describing the actions
    as [quote] "preventive measures to keep calm in the country." [endquote]

    The declaration is not in effect in the political subdivisions of eastern Donetsk and Luhansk, which have been occupied by Russian-backed
    separatists since 2014.

    (GREG MOSSOP, G0DUB; IARU REGION 1; POLITICO)

    **

    PENNSYLVANIA HAM CHARGED WITH FALSE INFORMATION, BOMB THREATS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: In the United States, a ham faces serious criminal charges
    for on-the-air activities. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, has that story.

    SEL: An amateur radio operator in Erie, Pennsylvania has been charged
    with transmitting false weather emergencies on the radio and making bomb threats, according to published reports.

    The Erie Times-News identified the ham as Richard L. Wagner, whose call
    sign is listed as N3BWG on QRZ.COM. The newspaper said that Erie County detectives charged him with reporting bogus weather emergencies while on
    the air and with making threats against other hams who told him to stop.
    The news report said that a criminal complaint was filed on Monday,
    February 14th, alleging that between the 19th of December and February
    13th, he went on air with threats to bomb public buildings, including the
    city police station and the county courthouse.

    There were no details about any involvement in the case by the US Federal Communications Commission.

    A preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 3rd.

    (ERIE NEWS-TIMES)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 3 21:11:53 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2314, for Friday, March 4th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2314, with a release date of Friday, March 4th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Medium and shortwave carry messages into embattled Ukraine. A transatlantic triumph for a replica transmitter - and what
    lengths would you go to with a portable antenna? All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2314, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    MEDIUM and SHORTWAVE CARRY MESSAGES TO EMBATTLED UKRAINE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the medium wave and shortwave bands, where broadcasters are responding to the ongoing crisis
    in Ukraine. Kevin Trotman, N5PRE, brings us those details.

    KEVIN: With amateur radio banned in Ukraine following the Russian
    invasion, broadcasts on the medium wave radio frequencies have taken on increasing importance in the past week. In the US, the Miami, Florida commercial shortwave station WRMI has been carrying broadcasts six days a
    week of Radio Ukraine International, the official overseas service of
    Ukraine radio on 510 kHz. There are no Friday broadcasts. The schedule can
    be found on the website at wrmi dot net.

    There are also reports that the BBC World Service has begun carrying
    shortwave broadcasts directed towards Ukraine. According to the website hfunderground dot com, those broadcasts began on February 24th, covering
    news events.

    In Italy, the NEXUS International Broadcasting Association, an apolitical, global organization, announced on its website that it has increased its transmitter power on 1323 kHz medium wave into Central and Southern Europe
    and has a good reach into the area of conflict as well as Poland, Romania, Belarus and Western Russia. A note on the website says: [quote] "We have increased our special news coverage, adding repeats of the most
    informative and inspirational programs in English to support displaced
    people and cover the latest events in Ukraine and nearby countries."
    [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (WRMI, HFUNDERGROUND, SWLING POST, NEXUS-IBA)

    **

    IARU REGION 1 EMERGENCY TEST TAPS INTO SATELLITE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In an environment of global challenges, emergency communication becomes even more critical. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, tells us
    about an international exercise that succeeded recently in sharpening ham radio's preparedness.

    JEREMY: IARU Region 1 conducted its first test of the newest tool in its emergency communications toolbox on the 26th of February. Stations representing 14 countries around the region included use of the
    geostationary satellite QO-100 as part of their response to a simulated
    global emergency. There were 22 stations in all demonstrating how the
    amateur radio community can be effective, passing messages despite the inevitable language barriers and equipment failures. According to Greg
    Mossop, G0DUB, the IARU's emergency communications coordinator, the
    exercise was a success, underscoring how amateur radio stations can
    respond across a region that stretches from South Africa north through to Europe and into the United Kingdom. The next test is planned for October.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (GREG MOSSOP, G0DUB)

    **

    HAMS IN EMCOMM GROUP FEAR NEW FEE WILL HAMPER OPERATION

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A proposed fee to be levied on communications equipment in federal forests is a major concern for one group of hams in Michigan. Christian Cudnik, K0STH, has that story.

    CHRISTIAN: Hams in Michigan who provide emergency communications have told local officials that because they rely on the use of a tower located
    inside a national forest, they may now face a new fee of $1,400 to
    operate. According to a report in the Manistee News, the Manistee County Amateur Radio Operators Club received notice from the US Forest Service
    that there might be a fee for their use of the tower. Forest Service
    officials announced in December that they have proposed such fees for any communications users, including cellular phone providers, maintaining permanent equipment on Forest Service land.

    The agency has reopened the public comment period on the proposal through March 31st. Comments can be posted online at federalregister dot gov (federalregister.gov)

    The American Radio Relay League has filed comments asking for hams radio operators to be exempt from the fee.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Christian Cudnik, K0STH.

    (MANISTEE NEWS)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 10 22:24:52 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2315 for Friday March 11th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2315 with a release date of Friday,
    March 11th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A look at receivers' role in rejecting RFI. A
    ham is killed in war-torn Ukraine -- and Hawaii needs amateurs for a
    statewide emergency drill. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline,
    Report Number 2315, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    FCC TO STUDY RECEIVERS' ROLE IN REJECTING RFI

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story is about the ongoing issue of RFI that
    plagues us all. In the US, the head of the FCC recently announced a new approach to studying it, as Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, tells us.

    SKEETER: The chairwoman of the US Federal Communications Commission has pledged that the agency will take a closer look at the role receivers
    play in rejecting the increasing levels of RF interference. Speaking at
    the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain on March 1st, Chairwoman
    Jessica Rosenworcel said that until now, most discussions of RFI have
    focused predominantly on transmitters, with rules put in place regarding transmitter performance to remove RFI. She said this approach was being rethought at the FCC, adding [quote] "wireless communications only
    exists when transmitters are connected to receivers. Both are vital.
    Both matter. And going forward policymakers need to consider both
    transmitting and receiving. Not just the former at the expense of the
    latter." [endquote]

    She said she expected to move forward on an inquiry into receiver
    performance next month. The goal is to explore regulations, guidelines
    and incentives for better performance on specific frequencies or across
    all bands. She said she is seeking [quote] "a more transparent and
    predictable radiofrequency environment for all spectrum users - new and
    old." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5ASH.

    (FCC)

    **

    HAMS AFFECTED BY WEST BENGAL INTERNET OUTAGES

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Hams in the Indian state of West Bengal are adapting to the temporarily intermittent use of internet-assisted radio modes. Jim
    Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the details.

    JIM: Hams throughout West Bengal state in India are experiencing limited access to Echolink and other internet-assisted amateur radio services
    through the 16th of March. The hams are among hundreds of others
    affected after the state government announced the restrictions to
    contain what they called illegal activities on the internet. News
    reports gave no specific details beyond the announcement itself. The
    report on the India TV News website quoted an official in the Home and
    Hill Affairs Department in announcing that [quote] "The government has received intelligence reports that unlawful activities can be carried in certain areas over internet transmissions and voice over internet
    telephony and hence restrictions are being imposed on the use of the internet." [endquote]

    Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, secretary of the West Bengal Radio Club,
    told Newsline that daytime use of the internet is off limits, but there
    is still access in the evenings. He said everyone in West Bengal state
    has been affected.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (AMBARISH NAG BISWAS VU2JFA, INDIA TV NEWS)

    **

    SILENT KEY: IVAN LYSENKO UR8GX, POPULAR DXER

    NEIL/ANCHOR: The global amateur community has been rocked by the tragic
    death of a well-known ham in Ukraine. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, tells us about
    him.

    JEREMY: A popular DXer and CW enthusiast known for his expeditions with
    his fellow hams in the Ukraine has become a Silent Key. DXWorld.net has reported that Ivan Lysenko, UR8GX, was killed in his home city of
    Kherson amid the fighting following its invasion by Russian troops.
    Ivan's many adventures included the expedition in the summer of 2019 to
    the Kalanchakskiye Islands for the IOTA contest. He participated with
    fellow members of the Ukrainian Radioclub Sputnik UR6GWZ. Ivan also
    served as the QSL manager for UR1G, the callsign for the club's team of operators. His death was reported on the Facebook page of DXWorld.net, prompting hams from around the world to post their condolences and
    remember their QSOs with him, particularly his many DX contacts.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (DXWORLD.NET, FACEBOOK, QRZ.COM)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Mar 18 10:57:14 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2316 for Friday, March 18th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2316, with a release date of Friday, March 18th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A push for shortwave broadcasts to a war zone.
    COVID cancels a youth ham camp in Germany -- and Hamvention announces its award-winners. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2316 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    GRASSROOTS PUSH TO BEAM SHORTWAVE TO RUSSIA, UKRAINE

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: Our top story this week focuses on the war between Russia
    and Ukraine and a grassroots push in the United States to keep the people
    of both countries informed via shortwave radio. Dave Parks, WB8ODF, has
    that report.

    DAVE: Voice of America news programming may soon be beaming from the
    United States to overseas listeners via shortwave - most particularly
    Russia and Ukraine - through a citizen-based effort known as Shortwaves
    for Freedom.

    The US Agency for Global Media, the umbrella under which VOA and Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty operate, is not involved in any of these planned transmissions. Instead, Shortwaves for Freedom is making use of the fact
    that VOA programming is public domain and easily downloadable from the
    VOA website for transmission over the air. According to a report on Washington, DC-based political news website, The Hill, Miami Radio International in Florida has already agreed to transmit the broadcasts.
    The Hill's story said that Shortwaves for Freedom is receiving technical assistance from Gerhard Straub, who retired as director of broadcast technologies at the VOA's parent agency.

    The general manager of Miami Radio International told The Hill that his
    radio station is already transmitting the VOA program "Flashpoint
    Ukraine," which is in English. The same news report said there are plans
    to add programming in Ukrainian and expand the broadcasts.

    Voice of America was originally part of the United States State
    Department. In 1947, VOA commenced shortwave transmissions of Russian-
    language programming into what was then the Soviet Union.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Dave Parks, WB8ODF.

    (THE HILL, POLITICO)

    **

    NASA: US ASTRONAUT, RUSSIANS TO RETURN TO EARTH TOGETHER

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: High above the Earth, a US astronaut who's been active in numerous amateur radio contacts, will share the return trip to Earth with
    two Russian cosmonauts. We hear more from Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    KENT: Despite terrestrial tensions dividing the nations, US astronaut Mark Vande Hei, KG5GNP, is preparing to return to Earth from the International Space Station this month with two cosmonauts on board a Russian Soyuz spacecraft. The scheduled landing in Kazakhstan on March 30th is being
    planned in cooperation with the Russian space agency Rocosmos. According
    to several news reports, the three crew members' return comes amid
    fiercely growing tensions between the two countries - tensions that have reportedly spilled over into the space program, particularly with the head
    of Russia's space agency, Dmitri Rogozin, being a longtime supporter of Russian president Vladimir Putin. However, despite the fact that SpaceX vehicles are now being used for travel to and from the ISS, NASA confirmed
    on Monday, March 14th that plans continue to go forward for the three men
    to return to the Earth together.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (CNN, ABC NEWS)

    **

    COVID PRECAUTIONS CANCEL FRIEDRICHSHAFEN HAM CAMP

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: Citing caution over the continued pandemic, organizers
    have cancelled the annual ham camp that was scheduled to be held in
    Germany for young amateurs this summer. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has that story.

    ED: The young amateurs who had hoped to attend "Ham Camp" during Ham Radio Friedrichshafen this coming June will have to wait another year. Although
    Ham Radio Friedrichshafen, Europe's largest ham radio event, is still
    taking place on June 24th through the 26th, organizers have said the
    logistics of housing more than 100 youngsters and supervisors in close quarters during the same weekend would prove risky under COVID-19
    conditions. The IARU Region 1 Youth Working Group wrote on the IARU
    website that the organizers said their decision was not taken lightly and
    is based on the need to protect participants of minor age and under supervision. The camp is expected to be held in 2023.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (IARU REGION 1)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Mar 25 00:21:10 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2317 for Friday March 25th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2317 with a release date of Friday,
    March 25th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. China's space station makes room for amateur
    radio. Russia and Belarus are suspended from CEPT -- and hams help other
    hams after Australia's wide-ranging flood damage. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2317 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    CHINA'S SPACE STATION TO PUT HAMS IN ORBIT

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the space station that
    China is building, module by module. The latest word is that one of
    those modules will have room for amateur radio. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has
    those details.

    JIM: China's Tiangong space station, which is being constructed in low
    Earth orbit following the launch of its first module last May, is
    expected to have room for astronauts, experiments and now, amateur
    radio. The IARU's satellite frequency coordination panel reports that it received an application on March 8th for an amateur radio payload to be
    on board. The station is being proposed by the Chinese Radio Amateurs
    Club in cooperation with the Aerospace System Engineering Research
    Institute of Shanghai and the Harbin Institute of Technology. Previous
    news reports have noted that the Chinese Manned Space Agency plans to
    have three astronauts on board continuously for a minimum of 10 years.
    One module will house the astronauts; the space station expects to use
    the remaining two of its three modules to host scientific experiments of researchers from all nations of the UN.

    The amateur radio station is applying to use portions of the VHF/UHF
    amateur radio band and will consist of communications by voice,
    repeater, AFSK digipeater and SSTV or other digital imaging modes. Not
    unlike the radios on board the International Space Station, the ham
    radios on the Chinese space station are intended for a variety of uses, including contacts with students to inspire careers in science,
    technology, engineering and math. According to the application, the
    payload would launch in the third quarter of this year.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (SPACE.COM, AMSAT-UK)

    **

    EUROPEAN CONFERENCE SUSPENDS RUSSIAN, BELARUSIAN MEMBERSHIP

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Hams from Belarus and the Russian Federation are feeling
    the impact after their nations' memberships were suspended from the
    European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has an update.

    ED: The European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications
    Administrations has indefinitely suspended the membership of Belarus
    and the Russian Federation, in a sweeping action that has an impact on
    amateur radio operators. An agreement within the conference, known as
    CEPT, grants amateur radio privileges to qualifying hams traveling
    between signatory countries without the need to obtain additional
    permits or licences. The CEPT was formed to foster cooperation among its member nations with regards to postal and electronic communications.

    The suspension, which comes in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine,
    took effect on the 18th of March. The Russian Federation joined CEPT in
    1994. Belarus became a member in 2003.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    **

    SILENT KEY: GILES READ, G1MFG, RSGB's TECHNICAL EDITOR

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The Radio Society of Great Britain has suffered a great
    loss with the death of one of its key team members. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH,
    has that story.

    JEREMY: Giles Read, G1MFG, had been the technical editor for RadCom
    magazine, the widely read publication sent free every month to Society
    members throughout the world. The Society announced that Giles, who had
    been diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer just days earlier,
    became a Silent Key on Friday, March 18th. No further details were
    immediately available. We here at Amateur Radio Newsline extend our condolences to his family and friends.

    The Society will be posting additional details about Giles on its
    website at rsgb.org/sk

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (RSGB)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 31 20:54:18 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2318, for Friday, April 1st, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2318, with a release date of Friday,
    April 1st, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A DXpeditioner and humanitarian becomes a Silent
    Key. Radio triumph atop the Caribbean's highest point -- and special
    report from Newsline's April Fool's Day correspondent, Pierre Pullinmyleg.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2318, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    SILENT KEY: YASUO "ZORRO" MIYAZAWA, JH1AJT, DXPEDITIONER AND HUMANITARIAN

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with news of the death of a beloved DXpeditioner who touched the world in more ways than by radio. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has that story.

    ED: Hams around the world are grieving the death of the noted DXpeditioner
    and humanitarian known as Zorro, JH1AJT. Zorro, whose name was Yasuo
    Miyazawa, { pronounced Ya Su oh Me ah za wa } became a Silent Key at 72
    years of age on March 22nd. He had been diagnosed with cancer. Known as
    much for his optimistic outlook on life and his generous heart, Zorro was
    a key part of DXpeditions in Yemen, Laos, Ethiopia, and Bhutan, to name a
    few. In 2015, Zorro received the Intrepid Spirit Award from the Intrepid
    DX Group for his achievements in Eritrea, Myanmar, and Bangladesh. His
    many humanitarian efforts include the establishment of a prep school in
    Japan that specializes in the education of students with special needs,
    and his gifts of thousands of dollars to programmes in Myanmar to serve
    the nation's medical and educational needs. Zorro also created and endowed
    the Humanitarian Aid Fund of the International DX Association.

    A statement from one of that association's directors, Ralph Fedor, K0IR, lauded Zorro as a skilled operator who mentored and encouraged less experienced operators. The statement also praised him for his humanity.
    The statement said [quote] "Through his schools and his humanitarian
    trips in Asia and Africa he brought a better life to all of those he
    touched." [endquote] The statement went on to add: [quote] "The world
    lost a great man...he was truly a brother to us all." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (INTREPID DX GROUP, OHIO PENN DX, PAUL EWINGX N6PSE, RALPH FEDOR, K0IR)

    **

    SHORTWAVE STATION SENDS MUSIC, MESSAGES TO COMFORT UKRAINE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Shortwave radio signals coming from the United States
    have been sending comfort in the form of music and recorded messages of
    hope to people in Ukraine and Russia. We hear those details from Skeeter
    Nash, N5ASH.

    SKEETER: Using the power of a 100,000-watt shortwave transmitter in
    Tennessee, two radio amateurs are using the additional power of rock and
    roll to send some upbeat moments to the people of Ukraine and Russia.

    Ted and Holly Randall, WB8PUM, and KG4WXV, operate short-wave AM
    Broadcast station WTWW located in a warehouse building from their nearby
    home. The transmitter is overseen by the couple's son, David, KG4WXW.

    Music isn't the only thing the couple has been transmitting. They are broadcasting recorded messages left by callers to the radio station
    carrying messages of hope and encouragement to be received on the small shortwave receivers many of the Ukrainian listeners have. Ted Randall
    told the local TV station WVLT: [quote] "These people are listening in bunkers. They are listening in shelters and those little radios, that's
    the type of radio they are listening on." [endquote]

    As a ham, Ted also recognizes that radio's power goes beyond any mere measurement in wattage. He told the TV station: [quote] "If we can touch
    lives through radio, then that’s our responsibility.” [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5ASH.

    (WVLT-TV, SOUTHGATE, NBC PHILADELPHIA)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 7 21:08:50 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2319, for Friday, April 8th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2319 with a release date of Friday,
    April 8th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Two hams face criminal charges in the US and
    France. The FCC clarifies its new license fees -- and get ready for
    World Amateur Radio Day. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2319, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    FRENCH AMATEUR SENTENCED FOR ON-AIR THREATS

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with two stories about amateur radio
    operators charged with using their licenses for criminal purposes. The
    first story comes to us from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, and concerns a radio
    amateur in France.

    JEREMY: A French radio amateur was found guilty of making threats,
    insults and homophobic remarks on the air, has been sentenced to a year
    in prison suspended for two years and put on probation, according to
    various reports in the French media. He was also ordered off the air and
    to pay a fine of Æ5,000, and further pay compensation to two plaintiffs.

    The ham, who is 65 years old, was identified only as "Gérard" in the
    news reports. His callsign, which he had apparently used on the air to identify himself, was not provided. The court of Versailles sentenced
    him on Monday the 28th of March. The complaints against him included
    both death threats and a false report of someone's death. He had been
    arrested a number of times, going back to late 2020 when his radio
    equipment was seized. But according to news reports, he then went on to purchase yet more radios.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (OUEST FRANCE, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    PENNSYLVANIA AMATEUR FACES NEW CRIMINAL CHARGES

    JIM/ANCHOR: Meanwhile in the United States, a ham charged earlier this
    year with using the airwaves for criminal activity is back in the news
    with new charges filed against him. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, has the details.

    SEL: Richard Wagner - the Erie, Pennsylvania radio amateur charged with
    making bomb threats and bogus weather reports over the air late last
    year and earlier this year - faces new charges of again using the
    airwaves for criminal purposes. According to a report in the ERIE TIMES-
    NEWS, detectives in Erie County filed charges on Tuesday, March 29th,
    saying the radio amateur used emergency frequencies in late March to
    make threats against witnesses, victims and a judge who had presided
    over his earlier criminal cases. Richard Wagner's callsign is listed as N-3-B-W-G on Q-R-Zed-dot-com.

    Meanwhile, all but two of the 37 criminal charges in those earlier cases
    had been dropped on March 3rd and the bond money holding him in prison
    was substantially reduced.

    In the latest development, detectives claim that Wagner made the new threatening transmissions over frequencies used by the county Emergency Management office and the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency. He
    was arrested and placed in Erie County Prison on $175,000 bond, and now
    faces charges of bomb threats and retaliation against a prosecutor or
    judicial official.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    (ERIE TIMES-NEWS)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Apr 15 08:17:44 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2320, for Friday, April 15th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2320 with a release date of Friday,
    April 15th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. New software for the world's largest radio
    telescope. Young hams start thinking about amateur radio camp - and the amateur community gives advice to one YL in these troubling times. All
    this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2320, comes your
    way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    SOFTWARE PROJECT TO GUIDE WORLD'S LARGEST RADIO TELESCOPE

    NEIL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a story that doesn't get much
    bigger than this: the world's largest radio telescope, an array of
    antennas and dishes that spans the hemispheres, is getting software to
    help in its operation. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, picks up the developments
    from here.

    JEREMY: Prototype software for the world's biggest radio telescope will
    be built by a group of universities and labs in the UK with money just released by the UK government's Science & Technology Facilities Council (SFTC). The software for the Square Kilometre Array, or SKA, will direct
    the telescope's gaze at the sky, translate its signals into data and
    diagnose issues. BBC news reported that on Monday, the 11th of April,
    the Council released 15 million pounds, the equivalent of more than
    $19.5 million in US currency for the work that will involve teams at
    Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester universities as well as those at the
    STFC's own labs in Edinburgh, Daresbury, and Harwell.

    The SKA is an array of 197 dishes and 130,000 antennas in both Australia
    and South Africa, and the software will allow astronomers to interpret
    what is received by the SKA, at an intensely high resolution and it is a
    most sensitive radio signal receiving device.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (BBC)

    **

    GET READY FOR WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Events, on and off the air, are marking the global
    celebration that is World Amateur Radio Day on the 18th of April, the
    date the IARU was founded. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has that roundup.

    JIM: April 18th will be a day of pile-ups and celebration for hams
    around the world marking World Amateur Radio Day. In Denmark, hams are activating the callsign 5P0WARD. They are also making special awards
    available for contacts with stations having different suffix extensions.
    This year's global celebration also marks the return of the TEN-TEC
    Legacy Nets, which will be posting operating schedules on their
    groups.io page. A Clean Sweep endorsement is available for check-ins on
    all three bands. The South African Radio League will be issuing a commemorative certificate to radio amateurs who make QSOs on April 18th
    and submit a log sheet. In India, meanwhile, more than 65 new license
    holders are expected at a VHF/UHF disaster operations workshop cohosted
    by the West Bengal Radio Club and the Indian Academy of Communication
    and Disaster Management. Attendees will build antennas and use them
    afterwards in a fox hunt. Also don't forget the World Amateur Radio Day VOIP/Echolink Net. Using the callsign W2W, the 16-hour global net starts
    at 9 a.m. US Eastern Daylight Time on April 18th on the ROC-HAM Echolink Conference node 531091. A special QSL card will be available to hams who
    send a stamped self-addressed envelope. Details are available at r o c
    hyphen h a m dot net (www.roc-ham.net)

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY WEBSITE)

    **

    DX MARATHON IN SEARCH OF NEW MANAGER

    NEIL/ANCHOR: CQ magazine's popular DX Marathon is looking for a new
    manager to help things run smoothly. Jack Parker, W8ISH, asks: Could
    this be you?

    JACK: It is time to pass the torch for the CQ magazine DX Marathon and
    its longtime manager, John, K9EL, is looking for a successor. John has
    been at the helm of the contest since its creation in 2005 is hoping to
    find someone who can infuse the competition with a fresh look, and new
    tools to encourage this pursuit of DX. In a special statement on the DX Marathon website, he wrote that the marathon has reached a turning point
    and many of the processes that have supported it all these years need to migrate away from being handled manually. He wrote: [quote] "In summary,
    the DX Marathon needs a fresh look, some updated tools, and some serious
    work on evaluating submitted logs." [endquote] This is John's final year managing the marathon. The search is on for an individual or group to
    carry this popular contest forward. For additional details, visit dxmarathon.com

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (DXMARATHON)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Apr 22 07:57:46 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2321 for Friday April 22nd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2321 with a release date of Friday,
    April 22nd, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio's solo crossing of the Pacific.
    Amateur radio gatherings prepare in Germany, Australia and Dayton, Ohio
    -- and special event stations mark a moon-landing anniversary. All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2321 comes your way
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    HAM RADIO GOES SOLO ON THE HIGH SEAS OF THE PACIFIC

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with a story of ham radio
    and high adventure on the open seas. Japan's most well-known yachtsman,
    an octogenarian adventurer, is hoping to become the oldest person to
    cross the Pacific Ocean alone - with a radio, of course. Jim Meachen,
    ZL2BHF, catches us up on his journey.

    JIM: In 1962, Kenichi Horie became the first man to cross the Pacific
    Ocean alone, nonstop. He was 23 when he ended his journey from Japan 94
    days later, docking his yacht in the US city of San Francisco. Now at
    the age of 83, the seasoned sailor is on his way - and ahead of schedule
    - to becoming the oldest person to cross that ocean again. Sixty years
    later, he is making the trip in reverse. He left San Francisco on March
    26th on a yacht measuring 19 feet, or 5.8 metres, stocked with food,
    water, a satellite phone and his preferred method of communication, an
    amateur radio. Although no call sign was listed for him on QRZ.com,
    Southgate Amateur Radio News reported it as JR3JJE. According to a
    report in the Asahi Shimbun, the prospect of a contact with him had
    amateurs back home in Japan adding extra large antennas in the hopes of scoring some big DX. According to news reports, propagation has been
    something of a challenge for most. There's still time for a QSO,
    however: Kenichi was spotted near Hawaii on April 17th -- and he doesn't expect to arrive home until early June.

    Track his progress on a map you'll find on his website. The address
    appears in the text version of this week's newscast script at
    arnewsline.org

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: furuno.com/special/jp/horie-challenge/ ]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (THE ASAHI SHIMBUN, US NATIONAL PARK SERVICE, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    TESLA CENTER HOSTS WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY FORUM

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: The next best thing to talking ON radio is to talk ABOUT
    radio - and that's how one group of hams marked World Amateur Radio Day.
    Jim Damron, N8TMW, has that report.

    JIM: A celebration of all things wireless, from Marconi and Tesla to
    modern times, graced the screens of viewers on YouTube and Facebook as
    the Tesla Science Center on Long Island, New York marked World Amateur
    Radio Day, Monday April 18th. For nearly an hour and a half three
    active, prominent amateurs on different life paths shared their personal experiences and their hopes for radio's future with viewers and program
    host, Marc Alessi, the center's executive director. Ed Wilson, N2XDD,
    vice president of the Suffolk County Radio Club; Ted Rappaport, N9NB, developer of 5G wireless communications; and Major League Baseball
    legend Joe Rudi, NK7U, described why they prized radio for its emergency capabilities, its role as a spark for experimentation and for the
    environment it creates to educate the next generation.

    The Tesla Science Center is named for inventor Nikola Tesla, whose lab
    was once located there. The center has been giving special priority to promoting the vast still-untapped potential of radio. Ed told Newsline
    that he is helping jump-start an amateur radio group based at the center
    with a focus on attracting younger operators.

    Beyond the hams' personal stories of rescue by radio and their hopes for future projects, they shared their enthusiasm for getting more people on
    the air. When Marc Alessi noted he is not presently a ham, Ed quickly
    jumped in to say [quote] "Not yet Marc, not yet." [endquote]

    To view the recorded program on YouTube, use the link that appears in
    this week's text version of the newscast on our website arnewsline.org

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Damron, N8TMW.

    [FOR PRINT, DO NOT READ: https://youtu.be/d0JdUKWRot4]

    (YOUTUBE, GROUPS.IO)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 28 22:36:46 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2322, for Friday, April 29nd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2322, with a release date of Friday,
    April 29th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. An earthquake in Bosnia brings rapid radio
    response. The FCC takes a fresh look at receiver interference -- and a ham radio workshop in India covers the basics. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2322 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE


    **

    BOSNIA'S EARTHQUAKE BRINGS RAPID RADIO RESPONSE

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a deadly earthquake in the Balkans -
    and a rapid response from area amateurs. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has that
    report.

    ED: Hams responded quickly in Bosnia-Herzegovina following a deadly
    earthquake with a magnitude of 5.7 that struck late on Friday, April 22nd.
    As hundreds fled their homes, one person was reported dead and at least
    three others were injured, according to some news reports. IARU Region 1 Emergency Communications Coordinator Greg Mossop, G0DUB, reported that
    within minutes, the Association of Radio Amateurs of Bosnia and
    Herzegovina activated its emergency communications service and hams were mobilised. E70ARA established digital connections between Sarajevo and
    Zenica using Winlink and also set up a network using UHF and VHF repeaters including portable cross-band equipment. On HF, digital and voice modes
    were being used on 80m and 40m.

    Meanwhile, ongoing reports on the situation were sent via Winlink using
    the IARU message format. The emergency networks stayed in place until the danger from aftershocks had passed.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (IARU REGION 1, SOUTHGATE, ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    **

    FCC SEEKS COMMENT ON IMPROVING RECEIVERS' REJECTION OF RFI

    DON/ANCHOR: In the US, regulators are looking at ways to improve radio receivers' rejection of RFI. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, brings us up to date.

    SEL: The US Federal Communications Commission is asking for public input
    on ways to achieve RF interference immunity in receivers of radio signals.
    In a notice of inquiry adopted this month, the FCC has committed itself to explore options for improvement in this area. The commissioners are
    seeking comment on such things as recent technical advancements in the
    design of receivers; better ways to assess and rate receiver performance parameters; and insights into industry standards for these measurements
    that may have been created by the IEEE (I Triple E), ANSI, 3GPP and other standardization organizations.

    Until now, most FCC spectrum management efforts have concentrated on regulations governing transmitter performance. The FCC said in a press
    release that its goal is [quote] "to lay the foundation for future actions that could help create a more transparent and predictable radio frequency environment for all spectrum users." [endquote] The commission has
    expressed its concern most recently as new wireless services are added
    around the United States, making it all the more critical that service receivers already in place are capable of rejecting signals from outside
    their intended frequency band. One such ongoing case involves the Federal Aviation Administration's attempts to prevent 5G wireless transmitter
    towers from interfering with airplane navigation systems.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    (FCC)

    **

    FCC CRACKS DOWN ON 'HAZARDOUS' DRONE TRANSMITTERS

    DON/ANCHOR: In other actions by the same agency, commissioners are
    cracking down on what they say are drone transmitters that pose a hazard.
    Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, picks up the story from here.

    KENT: The US Federal Communications Commission is claiming that public
    safety could be imperiled by the operation of unauthorized drone
    transmitters and is seeking more than $3-million in combined fines from
    the devices' distributor. The agency's complaint, filed in US District
    Court in Portland, Oregon, charges that at least 65 models of the
    transmitter were never FCC certified. Certification would have ensured its
    RF signals did not interfere with the Federal Aviation Administration's aeronautical radar systems or any government transmissions. The FCC's
    civil complaint against the distributor, Hobby King, states that at least
    15 of the transmitters [quote] "created a threat to public safety."
    [endquote]

    The FCC also said that the devices do not serve a legitimate amateur radio purpose.

    According to a report posted on the Oregon Live website, Hobby King has
    told the FCC that it believed no marketing rules exist specifically for
    this kind of equipment, which is capable of transmitting on amateur and non-amateur frequencies. The FCC countered, however, that its rules forbid radio frequency devices to be sold without first being labeled and
    authorized, consistent with its rules.

    The agency is asking for $2.8-million from Hobby King for its violations.
    It is also seeking an additional $39,278 plus interest for Hobby King's failure to respond to earlier orders. Hobby King has stated that a
    required response from the company would have violated its Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (OREGONLIVE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri May 6 08:35:44 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2323, for Friday, May 6th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2323 with a release date of Friday,
    May 6th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio assists in a human-trafficking rescue. Testing continues for wireless transmission of electrical power -- and
    Belgium studies the feasibility of a new amateur band. All this and more,
    as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2323, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    HAM RADIO ASSISTS IN HUMAN-TRAFFICKING RESCUE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a harrowing tale of abduction that
    ended with amateur radio assistance. According to the United Nations
    Office on Drugs and Crime, human trafficking is on the rise in South Asia.
    In India, one woman was rescued from that fate thanks to amateur radio.
    Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, brings us that story.

    JIM: Amateur radio operators in West Bengal, India, helped police locate
    and rescue a woman who told them she had been abducted and tortured as
    part of a human trafficking operation. News accounts in The Times of India
    and The Hindu newspaper both reported that the woman, who is in her 20s
    and from Bangladesh, had arrived for a visit in Kolkata when she was
    forcibly taken to a train station for transport. The news reports did not
    say how she found her way to a telephone but said that she contacted her brother, an amateur radio operator in Bangladesh. Members of the West
    Bengal Radio Club then received a call from the woman's family. Ambarish
    Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, of the radio club, said that police in Pendurthi (pen- DOOR-Tee) in Andhra Pradesh state were called. Other hams, including those with the National Institute of Amateur Radio, aided the search for her. A member of the Dolphin Amateur Radio Repeater Club, who was not identified
    in news reports, told The Hindu newspaper that the woman was soon located
    and following her rescue May 2nd through a window, police took a man and
    woman into custody. Ambarish Nag Biswas said another ham, Sai Likhit,
    VU3EFN, accompanied the young woman to the police station.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (THE HINDU, THE TIMES OF INDIA)

    **

    NEW TEST OF WIRELESS POWER TRANSFER CALLED A SUCCESS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, in the United States, military researchers' latest test of wireless power transfer over microwave frequencies has been called
    a success. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, brings us the update.

    KENT: The still-experimental practice of beaming power over microwave frequencies to transfer electrical power using so-called "ground bounce"
    has completed its most successful test to date. The United States Naval Research Laboratory recently completed a trial in which 1.6 kilowatts of
    power was transmitted terrestrially using a 10-GHz beam over a distance of
    1 kilometer, or six tenths of a mile. This kind of point-to-point transfer
    of electrical power is an emerging technology that is becoming increasingly favorable for scientists looking to expand its application. An IEEE (I
    Triple E) paper published late last year said the use of the ground-based transmitter is part of ongoing exploration that researchers hope will eventually open the door to space-to-earth wireless transmission of power. Scientists believe that limiting the frequencies in use to those below
    10GHz will lessen the loss of power during transmission.

    Paul Jaffe, KJ4IKI, the project lead, said in an April 20th press release
    that the systems have been developed keeping safety limits in mind for
    animals and people.

    The 10 GHz band is already well-used by the amateur radio community on a secondary basis. Amateurs may operate between 10 and 10.5 GHz with amateur satellites operating at frequencies between 10.45 GHz and 10.5 GHz.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (US NAVAL RESEARCH LABORATORY, IEEE)

    **

    BIG RESPONSE TO LATEST AUSTRALIAN BALLOON LAUNCH

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Ham radio experimenters in Australia have reported great
    success with their latest balloon launch, despite a last-minute adjustment
    to their gameplan. Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, has more.

    JASON: There was a slight change in plans for the high-altitude balloon
    launch in Australia by Project Horus, a part of the South Australia-based Amateur Radio Experimenters Group. The weather balloon had a successful
    launch on Sunday the 1st of May, but this was a telemetry-only trip. The imagery portion of the flight was postponed for another weekend. According
    to the AREG website, the forecast and the expected cloud cover did not
    make for ideal conditions for imagery. The experimenters' group said the flight's goal was to provide receivers in the Central South Australia
    region with a chance to receive the telemetry using the "Horus-GUI"
    software. The balloon carried a single 70cm beacon on board.

    The experimenters' group noted on their website: [quote] "Every piece of telemetry data is valuable to the flight tracking and recovery teams." [endquote]

    Despite the adjustment in plans, organisers proclaimed the flight a
    success. An enthusiastic Mark Jessop, VK5QI, the lead member of Project
    Horus, announced on Twitter: [quote] "Great to see so many stations receiving!" [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (AREG)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 12 19:18:24 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2324 for Friday May 13th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2324 with a release date of Friday,
    May 13th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Illegal use of amateur radio suspected in Japan. Brazil gets pro-active on solar panel RFI -- and pioneering pilot Amelia Earhart is honored on both sides of the Atlantic. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2324, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART HERE

    **

    REPORT: HAM RADIO USED ILLEGALLY ON TOUR BOAT THAT SANK

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Japan where a report
    about a fatal tour boat accident says the operator may have made use of amateur radio illegally. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, takes up the story from
    here.

    JIM: A Japanese tour boat that sank last month, killing 11 of the 26
    people on board, was making use of amateur radio illegally as one of its
    main communications methods, according to a report in one of Japan's
    main daily newspapers. Japan's Radio Act forbids the use of amateur
    radio for profit-making purposes but according to a report on the
    Mainichi Shimbun news site, the Yazu I tour boat relied often on ham
    radio to communicate with the office, other tour operators and other
    ships.

    The boat sank on April 23 off the Shiretoko Peninsula of Hokkaido in the northern Japanese waters. The news account said that it was believed
    that the captain of the boat was unable to get a signal on his mobile
    phone and the onboard satellite phone was broken. The news report said
    that another cellphone was used to summon help but did not identify who
    it belonged to.

    The report did not say what kind of distress led to the boat's sinking,
    nor did it say whether anyone also used amateur radio that day to summon
    help.

    Anyone found guilty of violation of the Radio Act faces a possibility of
    as much as one year in prison or a fine of 1 million yen, the equivalent
    of $7,700 in US currency.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (MAINICHI SHIMBUN, WASHINGTON POST)

    **

    BRAZIL PASSES REGULATION LIMITING SOLAR PANEL RFI

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Brazilian lawmakers have passed a tough new law limiting RF interference from solar panels. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us the
    details.

    JEREMY: Brazil took an important step in the containment of solar panel
    RFI by adopting new regulations and requirements that took effect on the
    2nd of May. The ordinance governs the generation, conditioning and
    storing of electricity in photovoltaic systems. The move by Brazil's
    National Institute of Metrology and Quality was hailed by amateur radio operators, including members of the Spectrum Management and Defense
    Group of The Liga de Amadores Brasileiros de Rádio Emissão or LABRE, the Brazilian national amateur group. The Brazilian organisation provided
    guidance and feedback to the national institute with the help of the electromagnetic compatibility coordinator of the IARU and the ARRL.

    A statement in English translation on the LABRE website praises the new regulation which exceeds the language of its 2011 version by providing
    this kind of RFI protection for the first time. In translation into
    English, LABRE praised the measure, calling it [quote] "an effective
    advance in the protection of radiocommunications in Brazil against interference generated by photovoltaic systems." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (SOUTHGATE, LABRE)

    **

    SILENT KEY: AMATEUR NEWS WEEKLY CREATOR PHIL THOMAS, W8RMJ

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Amateur Radio Newsline has lost a friend, a supporter and a colleague: Phil Thomas, W8RMJ, has become a Silent Key. Jack Parker,
    W8ISH, tells us about him.

    JACK: Members of the Germantown Amateur Radio Society in Ohio learned of
    the death of Phil Thomas, W8RMJ, in an email from the club's president, Phyllis Moyer, KE8CPM. According to the note, Phil became a Silent Key
    on Thursday night, May 5th. Phil was known more widely in the Ohio- Kentucky-Indiana area as the creator of Amateur News Weekly, a regional
    news report bringing local hams updates about amateur radio activities. Although he had put production of the newscast on hold recently because
    of health issues, he had hoped to restart the reports when his condition improved. Listeners to Amateur Radio Newsline were also familiar with
    Phil's voice: He was an occasional contributor to our weekly global
    newscast.

    Phil was first licensed in 1980 and later took the callsign of his late father, Clem. Phil and wife, Rilda, N8LJB, were licensed at the same
    time. Phil was a cofounder of the Germantown Amateur Radio Society and
    had been active in the MidCars Amateur Radio Service. The MidCars
    website lists him as one of the net's regular service control operators.

    At the time of his death he had been looking forward to attending
    Hamvention later this month. Phil was 70 years old.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jack Parker, W8ISH.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 19 21:12:53 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2325, for Friday, May 20th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2325, with a release date of Friday,
    May 20th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The US military expands its use of HF. Get ready
    for a hurricane readiness test -- and a new challenge for entry level
    hams in the UK. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report
    Number 2325, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    US MILITARY EXPLORES WIDER USE OF HF IN INDO-PACIFIC

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: Our top story this week puts HF radio in the spotlight
    with some new recognition for its increased importance in national
    defense. In the United States, the military is exploring ways to expand
    its use of the HF bands in one region of the world. Kevin Trotman, N5PRE,
    has that report.

    KEVIN: HF radio is making a comeback for the United States military,
    which has been struggling with reliable means of over-the-horizon communication in the Indo-Pacific. That massive region's communications
    needs are served largely by undersea fiber cables and satellites, both of which are deemed vulnerable to both deliberate and accidental damage. The
    U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency is eyeing HF as a reliable backup should an interruption occur in either of the other two delivery modes.

    Officials acknowledge that HF's slower data transmission rate and the military's use of a smaller bandwidth would not make HF ideal for
    fulltime connectivity but it is nonetheless a viable alternative when no
    other option exists.

    According to an article in Signal, a publication of the nonprofit AFCEA, testing is already underway in the part of the Pacific that includes
    Malaysia, Australia, Fiji and Singapore. The Indo-Pacific Command's
    relief network has been testing HF out as part of its humanitarian
    assistance and disaster relief work, using a transmitter in Oahu.

    Meanwhile, a combat communications squadron of the United States Air
    Force, based in Guam, is working with the single sideband shortwave transmitters of the Air Force High Frequency Global Communications System
    for voice communications.

    Elsewhere, modes used in the annual Pacific Endeavor interoperability
    exercise are being widened to include newer HF technologies for basic
    data communications. One official told the Signal website that these
    actions are being taken to expand the mode's reliability.

    Beyond compensating for satellite and fiber optic vulnerability,
    officials say they also look forward to the next generation of HF
    technology which will allow higher speeds and wideband transmission,
    making full-motion video possible for surveillance, airborne intelligence
    and related activities from the air.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (THE AFCEA SIGNAL)

    **

    AMATEURS IN US PREP FOR HURRICANE READINESS TEST

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: If you live in a hurricane-prone part of the United
    States - or you are interested in being of assistance, this next report
    from Sel Embee, KB3TZD, is for you.

    SEL: The National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida and the VoIP
    Hurricane Net will be conducting a test on May 28th that is designed to
    let amateurs everywhere evaluate their shack's storm-readiness.
    Propagation permitting, the Hurricane Watch Net W-X-4-N-H-C will be on
    the air on 7-decimal-268 MHz and 14-decimal-325 MHz from 1300 UTC to 2100
    UTC. Postings on the spotting networks will indicate if operators need to
    QSY. The VoIP Hurricane Net will be active from 2000 UTC to 2100 UTC on I-R-L-P Node 9219 and EchoLink Conference Node 7203.

    Atlantic hurricane season begins on the United States' East Coast on June
    1st and continues through November 30th. During the test, operators will exchange signal reports, location information, and basic weather data.

    W-X-4-N-H-C will also be on the air on VHF, UHF, 2- and 30-meter APRS,
    and Winlink with the email address w x 4 n h c at winlink dot org (wx4nhc@winlink.org) The subject line must contain stroke stroke W L Two
    K ("//WL2K"). Contacts will also be made on Florida's Statewide Amateur
    Radio Network, the SARNet.

    QSL cards will be available from Julio Ripoll, W-D-4-R.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Sel Embee, K-B-3-T-Zed-D.

    (WX4NHC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 26 19:45:36 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2326, for Friday, May 27th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2326, with a release date of Friday,
    May 27th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hamvention returns to Xena and so do the hams. Amateurs make contact with China's Mars Mission -- and CQ magazine
    welcomes this year's Hall of Fame inductees. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2326, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMVENTION RETURNS TO XENIA AFTER TWO-YEAR ABSENCE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: This week's newscast offers expanded coverage of the
    first Hamvention to be held in the United States after two years of
    pandemic cancellations. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, was among those there - and
    he gives us a wrap-up of the weekend.

    PAUL: Thousands of hams once again converged on the Greene County
    Fairgrounds in Xenia, Ohio as Hamvention returned after a two-year
    absence due to COVID-19. Judging by reports from attendees, people were definitely ready to come back. The weather was typical for Hamvention,
    and a storm did come through late on Saturday, but anyone who's been to Hamvention knows that rain is nothing unusual.

    The Hamvention committee, along with all of the volunteers from the
    Dayton Amateur Radio Association, planned a full schedule of events and
    forums that were well-attended. The vendor buildings were fairly full,
    with a few noticeable vendors from years past absent, but those that did
    set up had, by all accounts, a good amount of traffic.

    The legendary Hamvention flea market did seem slower than in recent years according to eyewitnesses. However, with the threat of storms and the still-uncertain COVID conditions, coupled with higher-than usual gas
    prices, it didn't seem out of line.

    There were also many offsite events, including open houses at DARA and
    the National Voice Of America Museum of Broadcasting.

    Our congratulations to the Hamvention Committee and all of the DARA
    volunteers on a job well done. It was good to see Hamvention return, and
    we at Newsline hope to return to Hamvention next year.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO, reporting from Xenia, Ohio.

    **

    CQ MAGAZINE INDUCTS 2022 HALL OF FAME MEMBERS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The annual Dayton contest dinner held during the
    Hamvention weekend on May 21st saw the induction of two new members into
    the CQ Contest Hall of Fame. Recipient David Pascoe, KM3T, is well-known
    for his championships and record scores as well as his charitable work as
    a volunteer pilot for those with medical needs. Craig Thompson, K9CT, developer of the North American Collegiate Championship program, was the
    other recipient, recognized for his work with Contest University and
    numerous other initiatives. CQ's Amateur Radio Hall of Fame added seven
    new names, three of whom are Silent Keys. They are the late jazz pianist Robert Ringwald, K6YBV; Franklin Antonio, N6NKF, philanthropist and
    cofounder of chipmaker Qualcomm; and Wolf Harranth, OE1WHC/OE3WHC, Radio Austria International broadcast journalist. The other inductees are R.
    Scott Wright, K0MD, Mayo Clinic physician leading the team developing
    COVID-19 treatment with convalescent plasma; Peter Marks, AB3XC, the
    physician leading the team at the US Food and Drug Administation
    overseeing COVID-19 vaccines, treatment and testing; Les Kramer, WA3SGZ, developer of prosthetic devices for lower limbs and Roy Lewallan, W7EL,
    author of the EZNEC antenna modelling software that has set standards for
    ham radio antenna design.

    (SOUTHGATE, CQ MAGAZINE)

    **

    A NEW CHAPTER FOR LIBRARIES ON THE AIR

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Elsewhere in Ohio, amateurs have been gearing up to
    activate a place known mostly for offering study and quiet contemplation:
    the local public library. Jack Parker, W8ISH, tells us about this
    upcoming event.

    JACK: Now here's one for the books - in this case, the library books as
    well as the log books. It's an activation by the Western Reserve Amateur
    Radio Club called Libraries on the Air. It's happening on Saturday, June
    18th at the Youngstown Public Library Main Branch in Ohio. This first-
    time activation is inspired in part by the working relationship the hams already have with the county library system, which has been hosting the
    club's holding workshops, license classes and testing sessions.

    Just like any popular library book, this event has started to go into circulation. Amanda Farone, KC3GFU, the club's secretary, told Newsline
    that a club in Missouri plans to participate on the same day and activate
    one of their local libraries. There's also been interest from a club in Kentucky. Amanda told Newsline: [quote] "We would love for this to go nationwide at some point and get as many libraries activated as
    possible." [endquote]

    Amanda said the event is being run in a style similar to Parks on the Air
    but for now, paper logs and Excel-type spreadsheets are being accepted
    until a logging software can be developed in time for next year's event. Amanda said that if the event gains enough traction, the club's
    activation can expand beyond the main branch to all 11 libraries in the county. Hams will be on the air from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. local time. You
    won't need to carry a library card, but keep those QSL cards handy.

    For additional details, send an email to libraries o t a at gmail.com (librariesota@gmail.com)

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (AMANDA FARONE, KC3GFU)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jun 2 21:19:02 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2327 for Friday June 3rd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2327, with a release date of Friday,
    June 3rd, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. RFI rears its head, even on the dark side of the
    moon. Australia approves remote-testing for kids seeking ham licenses -
    and get ready for Youth on the Air camp. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2327 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    MOON'S DARK SIDE NO REFUGE FROM RFI

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with the question: Just how far
    would you be willing to go to get away from RFI? Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells
    us of one far-reaching attempt to do so -- that, unfortunately, didn't go
    far enough.

    GRAHAM: There were high hopes for the radio telescope aboard China's
    Chang'e 4 lander when it touched down on the dark side of the moon three
    years ago. Chinese scientists believed that such a remote, unilluminated location would be free of radio noise because the moon is a shield against
    RFI from the Earth. They were wrong about the absence of noise altogether, however: The low-frequency radio spectrometer on board the lander's relay satellite cannot do its work to unlock the mysteries of the universe until another mystery is solved: How to block the noise from the moon lander's
    own radio emissions. Knowing early on that these emissions would pose an issue, scientists took preventive measures but they apparently have not succeeded. One of the causes is apparently the electromagnetic leakage
    from the lander's power source. According to an academic paper cited in
    the South China Morning Post, the lander's noises are two to three times greater than the signals that the radio telescope had hoped to observe and even block the strongest pulses emitted by the sun.

    Researchers are now studying a mathematical solution that they hope will
    boost the sensitivity of the radio telescope, which is designed to receive frequencies under 30 MHz.

    As an aside, according to Chinese mythology their Goddess of the Moon
    bears the name "CHANG'E

    For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST)

    **

    HAM RADIO CANDIDATES 18 AND YOUNGER CAN TEST REMOTELY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Good news for the youngest ham radio candidates in Australia. Remote testing has been approved. Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, shares the
    details.

    JASON: In a reversal of their earlier policy, the Australian Communications
    and Media Authority and the Australian Maritime College have announced
    they will permit amateur radio candidates under the age of 18 to sit an
    exam session remotely. Online sessions for these younger candidates had previously been prohibited, even as those older than 18 were able to
    complete their exams in this manner to comply with health concerns during
    the COVID-19 pandemic. The changes are being allowed under certain
    conditions, including the requirement that a parent or guardian be
    present in the room while the test is under way. Remote exams are
    conducted by AMC Level 3 assessors.

    The Wireless Institute of Australia praised the decision, calling it a big
    win for everyone.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (WIA)

    **

    STRAIGHT KEY NIGHT COMES TO NEw ZEALAND

    PAUL/ANCHOR: CW enthusiasts in New Zealand are getting ready to turn back time, turn off the amps and put everything but their straight keys into storage for the night. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, tells us what's going on.

    JIM: If you're in New Zealand, set aside the second Sunday in June and be
    in the shack between 8 and 9 p.m. local time. Winter Straight Key Night
    will be going strong - at least as strong as the 100-watt limit - and
    amateurs will be paying tribute to sending code the old-fashioned way.
    Listen for radio operators calling CQ SKN or just SKN. The exchange will
    be RST, Location, Name, Key, Transmitter and Power.

    Straight Key Night is being held with the support of the New Zealand Morse Code Telegraph Key Directory. Remember, it's a casual event and there
    won't be any certificates awarded. There will be lots of QSOs, however,
    and a whole lot of nostalgia.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (NZART)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jun 10 14:09:39 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2328 for Friday June 10th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2328 with a release date of Friday,
    June 10th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A big leap for parachute mobile. The BBC visits Marconi's original test site -- and when is a QSL card more than that? All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2328, comes your
    way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAM CHARGED WITH INTERFERENCE FACES RECORD FINE

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with breaking news. An Idaho amateur
    radio operator is facing a record fine of its kind from the Federal Communications Commission for what the agency said was deliberate
    interference with aircraft battling a 1,000-acre wildfire.

    The agency's notice of apparent liability, issued June 8th, called the proposed $34,000 fine the largest known for this charge of endangering
    public safety. The "Johnson Fire" raged last year near Elk River on
    national forest land where the US Forest Service and the Idaho Department
    of Lands were trying to contain it.

    According to Radio World Magazine, Jason Frawley, WA7CQ, told the FCC he
    was attempting to help the firefighters. The FCC's statement, however,
    claims that the eight unauthorized transmissions were received on
    government frequencies from someone who identified himself as "Comm Tech."
    The FCC said Frawley holds eight microwave licenses, one business radio license, and is the owner of a company called Leader Communications.

    According to the FCC, Frawley has said he was attempting to help by
    providing additional details to guide firefighters. The FCC said that
    the communication, however, still constituted interference and awaits Frawley's response before taking further action.

    (RADIO WORLD MAGAZINE)

    **

    PARACHUTE MOBILE OPERATOR TAKES BIG LEAP FOR NEWCOMERS

    JIM/ANCHOR: Now, here's an imaginative leap. Literally. It isn't always
    easy for new ops to take that big leap into HF operations as a Technician class operator in the US. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, tells us about one ham in Indiana, who took that leap with them.

    ANDY: Carlos Felix, KD9OLN, has spent 12 years as a skydiver in Indiana
    and three of those years as a skydiving ham on the air. He started jumping from a plane holding an HT making 2m activations and progressed later to a small mobile rig with more power. This year, however, Carlos landed - or rather he leaped - into operating parachute mobile on 10m, specifically on 28.419MHz. He said his first attempt last month didn't work out because of
    a damaged feedline. Carlos more than made up for it on Friday, June 3rd,
    by jumping twice from 13,000 feet, calling CQ parachute mobile. Among
    those answering his call was someone taking a big leap of their own while keeping both feet on the ground: a Technician class operator making a first-time contact on HF. Carlos said that's the whole point. He chose the
    10m band to give Technicians a taste of HF and encourage them to go
    forward to the next level. Many of his other HF jumps have used
    frequencies on 20m where Technicians have no privileges.

    He said he couldn't do it without the support of the TOADS and Ham Radio Clubhouse Discord groups, who help coordinate and hold the frequency for
    him. It also helps that Carlos is a skydiving instructor and is qualified
    to teach tandem and accelerated free-fall. Mainly, though, he is just a
    ham taking a leap of faith, so that others will too.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (CARLOS FELIX, KD9OLN)

    JIM/ANCHOR: Carlos later told Newsline he logged a total of nine QSOs
    during the June 3rd jump. The farthest distance was in southeast Georgia,
    a contact with KN4MMA. Well done!

    **

    BBC HIGHLIGHTS PORTABLE OPERATION WHERE MARCONI TEST OCCURRED

    JIM/ANCHOR: Television viewers in the UK got a chance to experience the portable side of amateur radio thanks to a BBC program visiting the island where Marconi's first test occurred over water. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has
    those details.

    JEREMY: On Flat Holm, an island in the UK's Bristol Channel, a BBC camera
    team found an amateur radio operator busy with an afternoon of contacts.
    The choice of location is not insignificant: The island is the first site where Marconi conducted tests of wireless communication over bodies of
    water.

    Significant too was that the presenters of the popular BBC One TV show "Countryfile," covering Island life, should show a particular interest.
    The cameras watched as Ben Lloyd GW4BML made contact with other Summits on
    the Air operators activating hills elsewhere in England, Scotland and
    Wales. Ben's contacts, however, may have had a wider reach than just
    across the amateur bands.

    This was a proud moment for SOTA to be in mainstream media: Ham radio held
    the spotlight in a popular national TV programme broadcast on Sunday 5th
    June, the episode is available for on-demand viewing for the next 11
    months on the BBC's iPlayer website.

    Unfortunately, while Mr. Marconi's later tests succeeded in crossing the ocean, this programme cannot. Programmes on the BBC iPlayer are only
    capable of being seen by viewers in the UK.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (ESSEX HAM, ARN CORRESPONDENT)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jun 17 09:05:57 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2329 for Friday June 17th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2329, with a release date of Friday,
    June 17th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams help reunite a family in India. A disaster
    drill goes forward in Washington State -- and German amateurs roll out a national emergency-response plan. All this and more, as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2329, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    DISASTER-RESPONSE PROGRAM DEBUTS IN GERMANY

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with disaster preparedness. As the world focuses increasingly on changing weather and geologic hazards, a disaster-response program with wide-ranging potential has made its debut
    in Germany. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, brings us the details.

    ED: Germany's amateur radio community is launching a wide-ranging
    programme of disaster response. The pilot project is being led by the
    German Amateur Radio Club, the DARC, in cooperation with Notfunk
    Bodensee, a Lake Constance radio response group. The need for broader and improved response was underscored recently by the devastating floods in
    the Ahr Valley. The new network has started to be rolled out near Lake Constance in Markdorf, where a donated emergency communications vehicle
    is being put into service. Organisers say that the effective radio
    response during the 1999 avalanche in Galtür proved to be a good model
    for Germany's amateur radio response but in the intervening years, communications capability has progressed even more. The initiative is
    expected to expand next into Ravensburg and Lindau. Greater detail will
    be unveiled at Ham Radio Friedrichschafen on Friday, June 24th.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    **

    HAMS PLAY PROMINENT ROLE IN WASHINGTON STATE EMERGENCY DRILL

    DON/ANCHOR: Meanwhile in the US, a disaster drill switched formats and reported some rewarding results. The Cascadia Rising prepareness exercise
    in the Pacific Northwest region tests emergency response by government, business and volunteers in the face of an earthquake and subsequent
    tsunami. This year's exercise, however, was unprecedented: With the
    region's resources stretched from historic wildfires, periods of intense
    rain and the ongoing pandemic, organizers opted to hold this year's
    Cascadia Rising as a discussion-based drill. It was conducted virtually
    on Microsoft Teams rather than as the customary simulation of previous
    years. Robert Sabarese, assessment and exercise programs supervisor with
    the Washington State Emergency Management Division, told Newsline that
    during the drill, which ran from June 13th to 16th, amateur radio emerged
    with even greater potential for deeper involvement. He said there was new clarity in how hams can be further deployed beyond their critical early
    roles aiding transportation and resource-delivery to disaster victims.

    (ROBERT SABARESE)

    **

    WEST BENGAL HAMS REUNITE FAMILY AFTER 2 YEARS

    DON/ANCHOR: In West Bengal, India, a hospitalized woman was reunited with
    her family in Bangladesh nearly two and a half years after falling ill
    and becoming separated from them - and amateur radio provided the vital connection. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has that story.

    JIM: When authorities contacted members of the West Bengal Radio Club in
    India several months ago to assist a hospitalised woman in the city of Jhargram, the hams knew they would have to accomplish something they'd
    done so many times before: reunite a family with a missing member.
    According to a news report in the Millennium Post, a woman who was found
    by the side of the road 30 months earlier was found to be suffering from
    a mental condition and was hospitalised to begin a lengthy course of treatment. She was unable to provide information on the whereabouts of
    any family members. Local officials reached out to the radio amateurs and asked them to get involved. After eight months of searching, they finally located the woman's brother in Bangladesh. The woman confirmed that she
    knew him and expressed a desire to return home. This month, three of the
    hams who were able to accompany her to the border of the two countries to reunite with her brother. Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, the club's
    secretary, identified the hams as Nirmalendu Mahato, VU3IQW, Parimal Roy, VU3ZIM, and Sujata (soo-JOTTA) Goswami (Ghos-WAMMI), VU3XBR.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (MILLENNIUM POST)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jun 23 19:29:20 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2330 for Friday June 24th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2330, with a release date of Friday,
    June 24th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio reaches out to low-income youngsters.
    The World Radiosport Team Championship gets an important gift -- and
    Kansas amateurs have a high-altitude balloon with a mission. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2330, comes your way right
    now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BRINGING AMATEUR RADIO TO A MORE DIVERSE COMMUNITY

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a look at a special project that
    is creating amateur radio opportunities for a more diverse community of enthusiasts, starting with the very youngest among them. We hear from
    Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, how this initiative is putting ham radio - and science - into the hands of children of color in lower-income
    neighborhoods.

    RALPH: Get ready for Jasmine and Jose, two school kids who fell in love
    with amateur radio after visiting a family friend who's a ham. Now the
    friends want to build a simple radio of their own. While these two
    children are fictional characters in a book that tells their story in
    both Spanish and English, the magnetic - or should we perhaps say electromagnetic? - draw of kids to amateur radio is very real. That's why
    the science educators at the California-based nonprofit group, Science is Elementary, is preparing to publish this tale of the youngsters' amateur
    radio journey as a book in their new series. "Jasmine and Jose Build a
    Radio" is geared to 7-year-old readers and will be produced with
    accompanying kits for 2,240 youngsters. The project is being funded with
    a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications. The grant will include publication of companion readers for adults and will cover the costs of school-based activities in which the kids build radios of their own. The
    books and kits will be provided free to youngsters attending school in low-income communities in the San Francisco Bay area. If you don't live
    in the region, take heart: Everyone else will be able to download the
    book and the adult reading companion for free as PDFs.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.

    (DAN ROMANCHIK, KB6NU)

    **

    CARRIERS DELAY PART OF 5G ROLLOUT AFTER INTERFERENCE CONCERNS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Concerns about radio interference have prompted two US wireless carriers to delay part of the rollout of their 5G service. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY brings us that report.

    KENT: Despite findings from the Federal Communications Commission that 5G wireless service poses no risks to aircraft sharing different parts of
    the same C-band, two major US cellular carriers have announced they are delaying their 5G rollout near airports with regional carriers. The
    Federal Aviation Administration announced on June 17th that Verizon and
    AT&T have agreed to postpone parts of the rollout to enable airlines to
    assess whether their altimeters are free from interference and undertake
    any necessary upgrades. Aviation experts have said that some altimeters, particularly those used by regional aircraft, could be vulnerable to interference without a retrofit of RF filters on existing altimeters or installation of newer ones. The agreement delays the completion of the
    rollout until July of 2023. An article in Aviation Today said that a
    number of altimeter manufacturers are presently working on the
    development and testing of filters and installation kits.

    The trade group, Airlines for America, criticized the agreement for
    setting what it called an "arbitrary deadline" and expressed concern over
    what might happen if the altimeter modifications were not available by
    July of next year. The CEO of the trade group, Nicholas Calio, told the
    FAA's acting administrator Billy Nolen that he considered the agreement a [quote] "rushed approach to avionics modifications amid pressure from the telecommunications companies." [endquote]

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS, AVIATION TODAY)

    **

    WRTC ORGANIZERS DONATE EQUIPMENT FOR NEXT YEAR'S EVENT

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The spirit of "paying it forward" is alive and well among organizers of the World Radiosport Team Championship - and Ed Durrant,
    DD5LP, has this story about a gift to help with next year's big event.

    ED: Operating tips and the wisdom of experience aren't the only things
    being dispensed at the Contest Forum during HAM RADIO in Friedrichshafen, Germany starting on the 24th. Organisers of 2018's World Radiosport Team Championship will be at the forum on June 25th to present funds and
    important equipment for use during the world championship to take place
    in July of 2023 in Bologna, Italy. The gift will include 70 kits of
    emergency and monitoring equipment that had been used during WRTC 2018 in Germany. Each kit has a DCF77 radio-controlled clock, power sensor for
    two radios, an SCC score-collecting computer and a Nokia cell phone. The donation from the 2018 event will be presented by WRTC 2018 president
    Chris, DL1MGB.

    Writing on the WRTC 2022 reflector, committee member Claudio Veroli,
    I4VEQ, thanked the benefactors from the German event, calling the
    donation "a huge help to the organisation of WRTC 2022."

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (WRTC 2022 REFLECTOR)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 1 19:20:43 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2331, for Friday, July 1, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2331, with a release date of
    Friday, July 1, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams gather for Field Day in North America
    and for Friedrichshafen in Germany. A special event honors an
    amateur radio humanitarian -- and look, up in the air, it's Kite
    POTA! All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2331, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    AMATEURS IN US, CANADA, GET OUTDOORS FOR FIELD DAY

    NEIL/ANCHOR: We begin this week remembering Field Day. From the
    Ramona Outback Amateur Radio Society in California to the Great
    South Bay Amateur Radio Club in New York, and all points in between,
    plus in Canada, the ARRL Field Day lit up the bands on June 25th and
    26th. As always, Field Day put amateur radio on display to the
    public as visitors everywhere stopped by where clubs and individuals
    were operating outdoors, curious to learn about the equipment and
    the antennas, or to watch Morse Code and phone operators in action.

    In central Florida, the Lake Monroe Amateur Radio Society got an
    extra boost from the efforts of a station set up for use by club
    members who are blind, specifically to make as many CW contacts as
    possible. The ARRL noted on its website that operators could receive
    100 bonus points simply by sharing their details in posts on the
    ARRL Field Day Facebook Group or elsewhere on all social media by
    using the hashtag #ARRLFD.

    Regardless of the score, for everyone everywhere, it was a day for
    learning, and for fellowship.

    The ARRL had set a deadline for logs to be submitted by July 26th so
    watch for the results.

    (WESH CHANNEL 2, RAMONA SENTINEL, ARRL WEBSITE)

    **

    HAM RADIO EXPO RETURNS TO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN

    NEIL/ANCHOR: In Europe, Ham Radio Expo made a triumphant return, and Newsline's Ed Durrant, DD5LP, was there.

    ED: Last weekend saw the 45th Ham Radio Expo in Friedrichshafen, the
    first after three years of lockdowns and two cancelled events. All
    were eager to get back to the "Neue Messe" in Friedrichshafen on
    Lake Constance in the south of Germany.

    Turnout was expected to be around 10,000 compared to just under
    14,000 in 2019. After the effects of the pandemic and with the
    current inflation levels this is not a bad showing. While the main
    hall seemed a little less full than normal due to the stands of
    Kenwood and Yaesu not being there along with the large WIMO
    retailer, the flea market in its two Zeppelin-sized halls was fuller
    than in 2019.

    Talking with dealers and manufacturers, I learned they were all glad
    to have, it seems, come through the pandemic. Several, however,
    said it was close and another lockdown would have meant the end of
    their businesses. Many are worried about parts supply and while most
    have stockpiled components, their stock is dwindling.

    Talking with the national societies and the IARU, I learned there is
    concern on how we will keep our band allocations especially in the
    microwave frequencies and a need is seen to have the hobby change
    and be open to new technologies and possibilities to attract more
    people.

    There were positive notes too: The Austrian national society's
    president, Michael Zwingl, OE3MZC, was very enthusiastic over
    several new projects.

    An institute will be a platform for hams, makers and professionals
    to work together on new technology projects in Austria.

    WRAN, will supply a way for access from 6 metres, 2 metres and 70
    centimetres into the Europe-wide HamNet, which is a 2.4 and 5 GHz
    ham radio high-speed RF data network.

    A Lora-based network linking low power IOT devices using the QO-100
    satellite will enable data communications between devices across a
    third of the world's surface.

    Overall, there was a very positive feel at HAM RADIO 2022 and as
    this year's motto said, it was indeed "A reunion with friends."

    On Amateur Radio Newsline, we can only bring you a brief overview of
    the event. For a more detailed report with interviews take a listen
    to our friends at ICQPodcast.com for their coverage.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed, DD5LP.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 8 10:28:03 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2332 for Friday July 8, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2332 with a release date of Friday,
    July 8, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The amateur radio world loses two prominent
    innovators in India. The Hawaiian islands prep for a disaster drill --
    and commercial CW is revived for one special night. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2332 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAM KNOWN AS 'INDIAN MARCONI' BECOMES SILENT KEY

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week's newscast reporting on two major losses
    in the amateur radio community in India. These are losses that are being
    felt around the world as well. The first Silent Key is the man known to
    many as "The Indian Marconi." Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us about his
    life.

    GRAHAM: Rama Mohan Rao, VU2RM, was a radio pioneer in India, celebrated
    for the many first throughout his long life. According to an announcement
    by the Institute of Amateur Radio in Kerala, the retired communications engineer became a Silent Key on June 29th following cardiac arrest while hospitalised with a lung infection. The institute recalled that Rama
    Mohan Rao was one of a handful of amateurs to hold a licence in India's earliest days of amateur radio. Although he was known for a wide array of homebrew equipment including many used in satellite communications, hams remember him best as the first Indian amateur to build a SSB tranceiver
    that put affordable equipment in the hands of those unable to pay for
    more expensive rigs. The transceiver, the RM96, was built using locally available components. Homebrew was his calling and according to his QRZ
    page, he was one of the first hams to work the OSCAR satellites using all homebrew equipment.

    A fan of 6-metre operation, he was the first Indian amateur to operate on
    the band in 1959. He had also been an adventurous DXpeditioner and his
    travels took him to the Andaman Islands in 1960 as part of the first
    DXpeition there, where the team used all homebrew equipment and antennas.

    The institute in Kerala recalled the nickname given him: "The Indian
    Marconi."

    Rama Mohan Rao was 91.

    (QRZ.COM, INSTITUTE OF AMATEUR RADIO IN KERALA)

    **

    SILENT KEY: SATELLITE INNOVATOR GURUDATTA PANDA VU3GDP

    DON/ANCHOR: A tragic accident has claimed the life of a young innovator
    in India, known for his work with satellite communications. We hear more
    from Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    JIM: Gurudatta Panda, VU3GDP, an engineer who helped launch India into a prominent status in space communications, has become a Silent Key.
    According to several reports, Gurudatta was killed in a tragic traffic accident on June 26th. The young engineer was best known for constructing small satellites, many of which were deployed to assist with communications during natural disasters. Most notable was the ExseedSat CubeSat, created
    with an eight-member development team that included cofounder Ashhar
    Farhan, VU2ESE, in Hyderabad, India. The 10-centimetre satellite had an
    APRS digipeater and an amateur radio FM transponder and was India's first private satellite, launched in December 2018 by the US-based SpaceX
    company. AMSAT designated it VO-96.

    Gurudatta also advocated young people's involvement in amateur radio.
    Active in disaster communications and disaster drills, Gurudatta assisted
    with many major operations including the 2013 cyclone in the Ganjam
    district in India.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (FACEBOOK, ARRL, AMSAT-UK)

    **

    EXPERIMENTAL TRANSCEIVER NEEDS NO BATTERIES

    DON/ANCHOR: A laboratory in Tokyo is the scene of some innovative work on
    a transceiver that doesn't rely on batteries. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY,
    brings us the details.

    KENT: Researchers in Japan are working on the prototype of a transceiver
    that is able to receive power wirelessly at the same time it sends and receives data, according to a report in the IEEE Spectrum.

    Scientists at the Tokyo Institute of Technology believe the 64-element millimeter-wave-band phased-array transceiver could become the first of
    its kind that no longer is dependent on cables, plugs or batteries.

    The IEEE Spectrum article said Atsushi Shirane delivered the research
    results in June at an IEEE symposium in Honolulu, Hawaii. He said that
    the transceiver, which has a 64-element phased array of antennas on its
    front side, is capable of short transmission distances and is able to
    receive power from a fixed direction. It also contains a circuit board on
    the back where four RF integrated circuit chips are wired into one of
    four quadrants containing the antennas.

    Shirane said the initial goal is for the transceiver to be used in 5G
    service. He told the Spectrum [quote] "We aim to expand the technology as
    a batteryless 5G relay transceiver to extend the service area coverage of millimeter-wave 5G communications." [endquote] He said after DC power generation is increased, scientists hope to find a way for the
    transceiver to be used with battery-free devices tied to the Internet of Things.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (FROM IEEE SPECTRUM)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jul 14 20:00:53 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2333, for Friday, July 15, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2333, with a release date of Friday,
    July 15, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The James Webb Space Telescope sends its first
    images. Indonesia prepares to send its first ham radio satellite into space
    -- and meet our Young Ham of the Year for 2022. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2333 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    WEBB TELESCOPE SENDS FIRST IMAGES TO EARTH

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with one of the most groundbreaking radio transmissions ever to reach the Earth from space. We hear those details
    from Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    PAUL: July 11th was a huge day for fans of space, astronomy, and science in general as NASA revealed the first images from the James Webb Space
    Telescope. The first deep-field image released to the public, the highest-resolution infrared view of the universe to date, shows a cluster
    of distant galaxies so dense that they act as a gravitational lens to
    magnify even more distant galaxies. Given the time it takes the light to travel, the photo also shows some of the oldest objects ever observed.

    The Webb telescope, which has been in development since 1996, differs from
    the Hubble, which it is meant to replace. It's designed to see farther into the infrared spectrum and can capture objects far dimmer than Hubble can
    see. The 21-foot-diameter main mirror is mounted on a space platform which places it clear of infrared interference from Earth's atmosphere.

    NASA has promised even more amazing imagery in the coming days. While the telescope is not tied directly to amateur radio, it does use radio to
    transmit the data back to Earth, and we here at Newsline can't resist an exciting space story.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (CNN, NASA)

    **

    INDONESIA READY FOR LAUNCH OF ITS FIRST HAM RADIO SATELLITE

    JIM/ANCHOR: There's some other big news involving space - this time from Indonesia. We have those details from Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    JASON: After six years in development, Indonesia's Surya Satellite-1 - the nation's first satellite - has begun the first leg of its journey into
    space: shipment to the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA. In
    October of this year the amateur radio cubesat, which has an APRS
    digipeater on board, will be launched from Japan for its journey to the International Space Station. The ISS will release the satellite into orbit
    in November.

    It was developed by students at Surya University, and had support of the Satellite Technology Research Center at the country's National Research and Innovation Agency. Experts at the Aeronautics and Space Research
    Organization in Indonesia heralded the satellite as a pioneer of nano satellites for Indonesia and expressed hope it would inspire other
    Indonesian universities to complete similar projects.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (SOUTHGATE, ORARI, UN OFFICE FOR OUTER SPACE AFFAIRS)

    **

    SWISS AUTHORITIES GRANT EXEMPTION TO HOMEBREW TRANSMITTERS

    JIM/ANCHOR: Back home on Earth, authorities in Switzerland have just given some good news to hams who enjoy building their own transceivers. Ed
    Durrant, DD5LP, has more on that story.

    ED: It is now official: The European CE certification requirement for
    amateur radio built homebrew transmitters has been removed in Switzerland. Although this has been the accepted practice in the country for some time,
    a recent publication by Swiss regulator Ofcom has formally declared the exemption acceptable and legal. Exemptions are also granted for commercial equipment that is modified for personal home use. Kits to build
    transmitters may also be imported for amateurs' own personal use. Imported radios for amateurs even those that do not possess an European CE certification mark are allowed.

    The hams remain responsible to ensure that all of their equipment complies with regulations governing spurious emissions.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (USKA, SOUTHGATE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 22 08:48:22 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2334 for Friday, July 22, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2334, with a release date of Friday,
    July 22, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Young DXers return from Curacao as record-
    breakers. The Webb telescope sustains damage considered unfixable -- and
    an Ohio ham gives a museum the gift of home-brew. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2334, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    YOUTH DX ADVENTURE TEAM BREAKS RECORD

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a story of celebration. Young
    teammates from the Dave Kalter Memorial Youth DX Adventure are back home
    from Curacao, and feeling victorious. Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, has more.

    NEIL: The Dave Kalter Memorial Youth DX Adventure team is back home after making 8,216 contacts over a long weekend in Curacao, breaking their
    previous record of 6,583. Team members Candace, KE8MMS; T.J., KO4FFA;
    and Brennan, K6BFL, worked through the pileups on SSB and CW, despite
    being without an internet connection and the ability to do digital modes
    due to technical difficulties. Candace tells us about one of her
    favorite parts of the trip.

    CANDACE: ...but I really enjoyed meeting everyone... it's really nice
    seeing more youth in ham radio, just 'cause back where I am at home I
    really don't know a lot of youth. And then, just getting to know
    everybody, and the weather out here is absolutely gorgeous. The view is beautiful.

    NEIL: Co-Leader Jim Storms, AB8YK, reported that once the travel
    difficulties were over, the operation otherwise ran smoothly and that
    they have another fabulous group of young operators. Their PJ2Y
    operation was hosted by the PJ2T Caribbean Contest Consortium. Jim also mentioned that the expenses are considerably higher this year compared to previous trips. If you'd like to donate, or know a young person to
    recommend for next year, or to see the QSL information, see their website
    at qsl.net/n6jrl . For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.

    PAUL/ANCHOR: If you'd like to hear more details about the trip, tune in
    to Neil's full interview on Ham Talk Live! Episode number 301.

    **

    WEBB TELESCOPE SUSTAINS UNCORRECTABLE DAMAGE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The James Webb Space Telescope, which recently transmitted
    its first color images to us here on Earth, has suffered serious damage following a micrometeoroid strike. Scientists said in a recent report
    that the impact sustained in late May may have disrupted the space
    telescope's operation more than first believed. The scientists wrote that
    they believe that the problems are not correctable. Their biggest concern
    is the longterm effect on the primary mirror, which scientists believe
    will be degraded as a result of the meteoroid strike.

    (SPACE.COM, FORBES)

    **

    GRANT SUPPORTS SATELLITE PROJECT IN SPAIN

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Amateur radio satellite enthusiasts in Spain got some good
    news recently that will benefit a project built with the help of
    university students. For details we turn to Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: A nonprofit organisation in Spain known for providing grants for projects involving the arts and sport has made an unusual gift in support
    of an amateur radio satellite project. The group, known as the Salvatore
    009 Association, is providing funds to help cover development costs and
    launch of the satellite in early 2023. The satellite is known as URESAT-1
    and it is an initiative of the Uni├│n de Radioaficionados Españoles,
    Spain's national amateur radio society. The project is being managed by AMSAT-EA with support from businesses involved in the space industry and
    a number of university students.

    According to a post on the AMSAT-UK website,the satellite is likely to
    have an FM voice repeater, support for FSK communications and some type
    of on-board experiment, such as an SSDV-capable camera. It is also
    supposed to carry a project that will permit hams to play chess against
    the satellite's on-board computer using FSK frames.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (AMSAT-UK, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    GRANT WILL HELP EXPAND NETWORK SERVING ALABAMA HEALTHCARE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: An expanded WinLink network will be built soon in Alabama to serve health care and emergency response agencies throughout the state
    with the help of funding from Amateur Radio Digital Communications. The planned expansion is the project of the Healthcare Community Amateur
    Radio Club, KK4BSK, comprising hams who volunteer or are employed in health-related agencies and participate in drills, public events and
    realtime disasters. The purchase and installation of new fixed stations
    will fill the gaps that now exist in the WinLink network. According to an announcement on the ARDC website, a grant for $126,564 will fund the
    purchase and installation of portable stations. A grant for $72,382 will
    be used for fixed stations.

    (ARDC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 29 10:59:33 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2335, for Friday, July 29, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2335, with a release date of Friday,
    July 29, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Russia announces its withdrawal from the ISS.
    Proposed new requirements in Brazil stir controversy -- and in the UK
    there'll be a new fast track to a full license. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2335, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    RUSSIA TO WITHDRAW FROM ISS FLIGHTS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the International
    Space Station. We hear from Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    PAUL: The Russian space agency, Roscosmos, had announced that the
    nation's cosmonauts will no longer participate on any ISS flights after
    2024. News of a possible broken partnership had observers questioning how
    the operation of the ISS would continue without Russia's participation.
    NASA officials said, however, that despite the July 26th announcement,
    the US space agency had not yet received any formal declaration of intent
    from Russia.

    Cosmonauts have joined astronauts from many other nations as part of the
    team in orbit conducting important research and making contacts through Amateur Radio on the International Space Station. The ISS was intended to
    stay operational until 2030. Roscosmos' new director-general, Yuri
    Borisov, said that Russia hopes to focus now on establishing an orbiting station of its own.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS, REUTERS, SPACENEWS)

    **

    BRAZIL REGULATOR PROPOSES MANDATORY LOTW FOR UPGRADES

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: There's controversy in Brazil over proposed amateur regulations that include mandatory use of Logbook of the World for
    upgrades. That report comes to us from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: In a move being opposed by Brazil's national amateur radio
    society, use of the ARRL's Logbook of the World would become mandatory
    for any radio amateurs in that country who are seeking licence upgrades, according to an online report. Brazil's national amateur radio society,
    Liga de Amadores Brasileiros de Rádio Emissâo, announced that the
    national regulator ANATEL proposes that hams wishing to advance to a
    Class A or Class B licence from a Class C, would be required to confirm
    QSOs by using LoTW. This proposal is designed as one component in an alternative being considered to replace the CW test. It is being called
    the experience test and it mandates that LoTW be used to document
    contacts that prove the upgrade applicant has sufficient experience to
    warrant the change in licence class. Separately, applicants would also
    have to fulfill the experience requirement by showing participation in
    courses and radio-related activities.

    The proposed use of the free online QSO authentication service has drawn
    some controversy: In an online statement, LABRE claims its use would constitute outsourcing to a foreign entity because the service is
    provided by the American Radio Relay League. LABRE also believes this
    proposed mandate puts applicants at a disadvantage if they do not engage
    in contesting or DXing.

    ANATEL has been seeking written comments and plans to schedule a public hearing on the proposal.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (LABRE, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    OBSERVATORY'S RADIO CURRICULUM FOR MINORITIES GETS ARDC GRANT

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The National Radio Astronomy Observatory, part of the US National Science Foundation, is launching a program in January that is designed to provide amateur radio training and education on the electromagnetic spectrum to members of the LGBTQIA, Black, indigenous and people of color communities.

    The two-year program, known as Exploring the Electromagnetic Spectrum,
    has received a grant of $315,123 from Amateur Radio Digital
    Communications to support its mission to serve minority students who are underrepresented in the sciences. Students will be introduced to radio technology and will work toward their technician and general class
    amateur radio licenses.

    The observatory's director Tony Beasley released a statement saying:
    [quote] "Amateur radio continues to be incredibly important to the nation
    and global communications, and NRAO is excited to be working with ARDC to bring a new generation and diverse communities to the field." [endquote]

    (ARDC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Aug 4 20:59:14 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2336, for Friday, August 5th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2336, with a release date of
    Friday, August 5th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams respond to deadly floods in
    Kentucky. Amateurs in Canada get new frequencies on 60 metres --
    And YLs pay tribute to a telegraphy pioneer. All this and more,
    as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2336 comes your way,
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS RESPOND TO DEADLY FLOODS IN KENTUCKY

    DON/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to Kentucky, where parts of
    the state have been hit by deadly floods. Randy Sly, W4XJ, brings
    us up to date.

    RANDY: The last week of July found amateur radio operators on
    alert in Eastern Kentucky as a trail of thunderstorms brought
    flooding that left at least 37 people dead. Jack Hedges, KY4TPR,
    told Amateur Radio Newsline that he and a team of hams operated
    on ARES frequencies from the State Emergency Operations Center in
    Frankfort. He was assisted by Mike Swigert, KE4YRI, Dennis Lutz,
    W2QN, Patrick Compton, KF4FMZ, and Odis Carroll, W4IOD, who
    served as an official relay station for the EOC.

    Woody Hartlove, KO4UMQ, Harlan County EC and SKYWARN Coordinator,
    reported that SKYWARN was activated for the Jackson Weather
    Forecast Office three times in his area due to flash flooding. He
    and another ham were also deployed with the Red Cross to provide communications for their disaster action teams.

    In addition to causing loss of life, the flood wreaked havoc on
    the electric service, waterlines and roads. As flood waters
    recede, residents in many areas of Eastern Kentucky continue to
    remain stranded due to the destruction of scores of small bridges
    linking roadways.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    ***

    NY ELECTRONICS MARKETER FACES NEARLY $700,000 FCC FINE

    DON/ANCHOR: A Brooklyn, New York marketer of wireless microphones
    has been fined nearly $700,000 by the US Federal Communications
    Commission for what the agency said is a decade-long practice of
    selling these devices, which are not RF-compliant. The FCC said
    that 32 microphones sold by Sound Around failed to comply with
    FCC requirements governing emissions power and use of the
    spectrum, rules that protect against harmful interference to
    other spectrum users. The FCC has rejected the business'
    assertion that the dollar amount of the proposed fine was too
    high, that a decade of warnings and notices sent by the FCC was
    insufficient and that photos of the company's marketing websites
    did not provide proof that the item was available for purchase.
    According to a press release from the FCC, the US Department of
    Justice will be given the case to handle if Sound Around fails to
    pay the fine.

    (FCC)

    **

    AMATEURS IN CANADA GAIN EXPANDED ACCESS ON 60M


    DON/ANCHOR: In Canada, amateurs have new privileges on 60 meters.
    Kevin Trotman, N5PRE, has those details.

    KEVIN: Amateurs in Canada have been granted a new band for
    operating in an official update from Innovation Science and
    Economic Development Canada. The announcement on July 28th said
    that hams in that country are now able to use the worldwide
    allocation on 60m that spans 15 kHz between 5351.5 and 5366.5
    kHz. The band fits between the existing Canadian amateur
    channelised privileges at 5332, 5348, 5373 and 5405 kHz and gives
    hams secondary user privileges to transmit at a maximum of 100
    watts and a bandwidth of no more than 2.8 kHz on a non-
    interference basis.

    This is Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    **

    ILLINOIS CLUB GETS GRANT FOR ORIENTEERING PROJECT

    DON/ANCHOR: Radio orienteering is about to get a whole lot more
    popular in the US state of Illinois, and Andy Morrison, K9AWM,
    tells us why.

    ANDY: An amateur radio club in Illinois has received funds to
    support an array of radio orienteering events they will be
    hosting to share the activities with outdoor enthusiasts,
    youngsters and members of the public. This will also be designed
    to serve as a hoped-for gateway to amateur radio. The grant given
    to the Sangamon Valley Radio Club from Amateur Radio Digital
    Communications will underwrite the club's costs for supply of
    low-power transmitters, controllers, handheld directional radio
    receivers, compasses, maps and related items for the fox-hunting
    activities.

    According to a press release from the ARDC, the club's experience
    will extend even farther into the community: After a number of
    events, club members will create a list of equipment other clubs
    would need to start activities of their own that sharpen people's direction-finding skills. The club will also offer other clubs
    guidance. ARDC said in its press release [quote]: "While the
    sport is very popular in Europe, as well as parts of Asia, growth
    in the United States and Canada has been slow." [endquote]. The
    Sagamon club will begin its activities here in the US with Scout
    groups and the Civil Air Patrol, starting this summer and
    continuing into the fall. More events are planned in 2023.

    This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (ARDC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Aug 11 20:22:02 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2337, for Friday, August 12th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2337 with a release date of
    Friday August 12th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. An amateur satellite built by Indian
    schoolgirls suffers a failed deployment. A South African ham
    offers a rare chance for an EME contact with Angola -- and ooops,
    that James Webb telescope image isn't what it seems. All this and
    more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2337, comes your
    way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    STUDENTS' AMATEUR SATELLITE SUFFERS FAILED LAUNCH

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week was supposed to be a success
    story for India's new satellite launch vehicle, which had on
    board a small ham radio satellite built by schoolchildren.
    Something went wrong in its deployment, however, as Graham Kemp,
    VK4BB tells us.

    GRAHAM: Failure and disappointment marked the debut of India's
    Small Satellite Launch Vehicle which lifted off on Saturday
    August 6th only to deploy two satellites into the wrong orbits.
    One of the satellites was a much-anticipated project built by 750
    schoolgirls in India as part of SpaceKidz India. It carried an
    amateur radio payload.

    The Indian space agency said that the satellites were sent into
    an elliptical orbit instead of the intended circular orbit 356
    kilometres, or 221 miles, above the Earth. The elliptical orbit
    meant that at some point the satellites' orbits would come as
    close to earth as 76 km, or 47 miles.

    Officials from the ISRO said the error was caused by a sensor
    failure that could not be detected in time. Five hours after
    liftoff, the mission was declared a failure.

    The maiden voyage of the launcher was a much-celebrated event
    which also commemorated India's 75th year of independence.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (SPACE.COM, THE HINDU)

    **

    ANGOLA DXPEDITION PROMISES AMATEURS THE MOON

    NEIL/ANCHOR: The activation of Angola using EME this month has
    been years in the planning for one South African amateur. It's
    expected to be a major first. Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, tells us
    what's in store.

    JASON: Going on the air as D2TX from Angola as a portable EME
    operator is expected to be an unprecedented experience. Bernie,
    ZS4TX, told Newsline in an email that he is unaware of any of the
    popular EME bands having been used to activate Angola, as he is
    doing on 2 metres between the 12th and 16th of August. It's a
    long road trip - more than 2800 kilometres over the course of
    four days. The final 220 kilometres is on dirt roads and will
    take six hours. Bernie said the advantage is road travel means
    the station will be able to use a larger-than-usual array of 2-
    by-18 element M2 Yagi antennas. Bernie also said that stations
    with a 12-element Yagi, 250 watts and a decent low-noise
    amplifier can likely work him and that recent developments in
    digital modes available from WSJTX may make it possible for even
    the most modest stations. With a couple of moon passes, Bernie
    hopes to be able to work 300 or so stations.

    Licensed since the age of 17, Bernie learned about 2-metre EME
    from Hal, ZS6WB, and Chris, ZS6EZ, in the early '90s when he and
    Chris worked Dave, W5UN, on CW EME from Botswana during a VHF
    expedition trip. He later worked W5UN from Lesotho for one of his
    last entities for the first 2M DXCC award ever issued.

    Bernie urges EME enthusiasts to listen for him. He said [quote]
    "Use this opportunity. It may be a very long time before Angola
    is activated again. It could be the chance of a lifetime."
    [endquote]

    This is Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    NEIL/ANCHOR: If you are new to working EME, there is some helpful
    guidance on W7GJ's website, including detailed instructions on
    how to set up your station and make contacts. Find the link in
    the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: http://www.bigskyspaces.com/w7gj/emetips.htm ]

    (BERNIE VAN DER WALT ZS4TX)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Aug 19 15:37:17 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2338 for Friday, August 19th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2338, with a release date of
    Friday, August 19th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The International Space Station operates voice repeater and APRS at the same time. Young hams take an inaugural
    activity global -- and an 8-year-old girl in England has a dream QSO.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2338, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    ARISS OPERATES ON VOICE REPEATER, APRS AT SAME TIME

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story of the week looks skyward. There is a bit
    of celebration going on inside the International Space Station, where
    the ARISS Voice Repeater and digital APRS communications are operating simultaneously. It is a big development, as we hear from Neil Rapp,
    WB9VPG.

    NEIL: It's taken the ARISS teams from Russia and the US several weeks
    of collaboration to prepare the Service Module radio for APRS
    operations but APRS packet operation is now happening at the same time
    as transmissions on the space station's voice repeater. According to an
    ARISS press release Sergey Samburov, RV3DR, was the team lead
    coordinating with mission control to get the service module radio ready
    for APRS. Voice repeater transmissions are being made with a JVC
    Kenwood D710GA in the Columbus module. The same model radio is being
    used for APRS packet operation in the service module. Packet operations
    are on 145.825 MHz.

    The call sign in the Columbus Module is NA1SS. The Service Module radio
    is using RS0ISS. Both radios will be operating full-time except when
    ARISS is making contacts with schools, or during dockings, undockings
    and EVAs.

    Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, ARISS international chairman called the
    development [quote] "a key element of our ARISS 2.0 initiative,
    providing interactive capabilities 24/7 that inspire, engage and
    educate youth and lifelong learners — especially life-long learning in
    ham radio operations.” [endquote]

    This is Neil Rapp WB9VPG.

    (ARISS)

    **

    INAUGURAL EVENT FOR WORLDWIDE YOUNG AMATEUR CLUB

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Get ready for an inaugural event by a group of young
    radio amateurs who are launching it globally next month. Sel Embee,
    KB3 T Zed D, has the details.

    SEL: The Young Amateurs Radio Club, which was founded in 2017 on a
    server of the Discord app, has grown to be an international gathering
    of younger operators that is recognized by the FCC as an amateur radio
    club.

    Using the call sign WY4RC, operators from all 10 US call zones will be
    on the air from September 1st through the 15th, inviting hams to accept
    the challenge of working all Young Amateur Radio Club zones. This is
    the club's inaugural "worked all zones" event and organizers are
    looking for young operators or other clubs who would like to join them
    on the air, activating the callsign in September. The callsign will be
    WY4RC with a stroke mark, followed by the operator's region. Operators
    must use a minimum of 20 watts during the event.

    Visit the website y a r c dot world (yarc.world) and click on the link
    to "events" for additional details.

    This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    (YOUNG AMATEURS RADIO CLUB)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Aug 25 18:04:43 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2339 for Friday, August 26th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2339, with a release date of Friday, August 26th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Experts call a national emergency alert system vulnerable to hackers. Students in Romania return from a four-day SOTA
    outing -- and Amateur Radio Newsline goes to Huntsville, Alabama to present its Young Ham of the Year Award. All this and more, as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2339, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    US EMERGENCY BROADCAST NETWORK DEEMED VULNERABLE TO HACKERS

    JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week is about a word of warning experts have issued to the US Emergency Broadcast Network, calling it vulnerable to hackers. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, brings us those details.

    ANDY: The United States' national broadcast network which transmits child abduction alerts and severe weather warnings - is becoming increasingly vulnerable to fake alerts from hackers unless state and local governments
    fix security weaknesses in devices that connect to that system.

    That was the warning delivered recently by the nation's Department of
    Homeland Security, which repeated its cautionary message about the US Emergency Alert System at a recent session of DEFCON, a major hacking conference held in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Homeland security officials said that ongoing vulnerabilities in the encoder/decoder devices enable hackers to transmit the bogus warnings over radio and TV stations. Cybersecurity researcher Ken Pyle, who is credited
    with discovering the vulnerability, told reporters recently that without a necessary software update for these devices, hackers can pre-empt broadcast signals, exploit web servers and disrupt the legitimate system. He said the problem has existed for several years and has gone uncorrected.

    Reporting on this issue, Cable News Network asked the Federal
    Communications Commission for a tally of how many devices are running the vulnerable software. The FCC had no immediate response.

    This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (CNN, ARSTECHNICA)

    **

    NEWSLINE PRESENTS YOUNG HAM OF THE YEAR AWARD IN HUNTSVILLE

    JIM/ANCHOR: The Huntsville, Alabama Hamfest is history now, and Newsline
    was happy to be there to meet with this year's Young Ham of the Year Award. Don Wilbanks, AE5DW, tells us all about it.

    DON: "Good afternoon everyone, it is a little after two o'clock on
    Saturday at Huntsville, that means it is time for the Young Ham of the Year Award. My name is Don Wilbanks, AE5DW, I'll be presenting the Young Ham of
    the Year this afternoon to Audrey McElroy, KM4BUN. We're so proud of her,
    and first off I want to say that after two years of being away, it is so
    good to be back at Huntsville, Alabama at the hamfest!"

    That was how the first in-person Young Ham of the Year presentation in two years began Saturday, August 20th on the main stage at the Huntsville
    Hamfest. I read off a short list of the many accomplishments that earned Audrey this honor and then the floor was hers.

    "Hello everybody, I am so happy to be here! Huntsville Hamfest is
    definitely my favorite place to be! I'm sure a lot of you can agree. I'm
    very honored to receive this award! My brother and I have worked in
    amateur radio for many years now but I can't not thank the people who
    helped me throughout this. Of course, my parents Tom McElroy and Janet McElroy, along with others like Carole Perry, WB2MGP, Bill Brown who is
    right there, WB8ELK, and tons of other people who have been mentors to me
    and helpers to me because if it wasn't for them I wouldn't be able to do
    the things I'm able to do. And so I hope in the future I can continue
    pushing for bringing more youth into amateur radio as well as bring more
    women into STEM and the wonderful world of amateur radio. So, thank you
    all again."

    Representatives from CQ Communications, Yaesu USA, Heil Sound, RadioWavz Antennas and GigaParts had remarks and gifts for Audrey. Of course, we mentioned the last two honorees, Christopher Brault, KD8YVJ, from 2020, and Faith Hannah Lea, KD3Z, from 2021 who were presented their awards virtually online. Sadly, neither could attend live this year due to prior school commitments.

    All of us at Newsline, including our awards committee and judges wants to congratulate Audrey. She is a shining example of why Bill Pasternak was so committed to honoring the amazing young people in this hobby and service.
    She carries the torch high.

    If you would like to hear the entire, unedited presentation audio you can
    find it on our Extra page at arnewsline.org.

    Speaking for our Young Ham of the Year committee chairman Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, and our panel of judges, we can't wait for next year! See you there.

    I'm Don Wilbanks, AE5DW.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 2 09:16:59 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2340, for Friday, September 2nd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2340, with a release date of Friday, September 2nd, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Cambodian equipment rules challenge amateurs
    there. Plans are in the works to re-enact historic transatlantic HF
    tests -- and get ready to celebrate Route 66, America's so-called "Mother Road." All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2340,
    comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    EQUIPMENT RULES CHALLENGE CAMBODIAN AMATEURS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week concerns regulations that are having
    an impact on whether amateur stations can stay on the air in Cambodia.
    Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, brings us those details.

    JIM: Amateurs in Cambodia are struggling to comply with recent government regulations that they believe may prevent amateurs from being able to
    renew their operating certificates. The rules, passed in 2020, state that certificates will only be renewed for amateurs whose transceivers have
    been granted the approval of the Cambodian Ministry of Post and Telecommunications by proving they meet government-set standards for operating, safety and health. The approval is known as a TA.

    According to a post in the QRZ.com forums from Dave Taylor,
    XU7AKG/ZL3AIK, hams believe the additional layer of security placed on amateurs in 2020 will have the effect of banning their equipment. Dave's
    post said that because the process of approval appears to be complex,
    current efforts are focusing on just one model of transceiver for now:
    getting the proper documents for the Yaesu FT-891.

    Dave reports that, in the meantime, hams living in Cambodia and those
    visiting and wishing to get on the air have been unable to renew their Cambodia Amateur Certificates.

    This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

    (QRZ)

    **

    IARU RAMPING UP ADVOCACY OF AMATEUR USE OF 23CM BAND

    NEIL/ANCHOR: The IARU is intensifying its advocacy of amateur use of the
    23cm band, in preparation for next year's World Radiocommunication
    Conference. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, has the latest developments.

    ED: In advance of next year's World Radiocommunication Conference in
    Dubai, the International Amateur Radio Union is preparing for one
    especially critical item on the agenda: defence of hams' use of the 23cm
    band, where EME and Amateur TV operations are popular. Discussion next
    year is expected to centre on amateur coexistence with the radio
    navigation satellite service, or RNSS, on those frequencies. The IARU
    already presented its case at the EME conference held in Prague in
    August, advocating for continued amateur use.

    Barry Lewis, G4SJH, chairman of Region 1's Spectrum and Regulatory
    Liaison Committee, reports on the Region 1 website that the IARU
    acknowledges that compromises will likely have to be made but negotiators
    are committed to finding a way to retain amateur presence on the band.
    Further studies are expected to take place in early September when
    technical details will be explored more deeply.

    WRC-23 is scheduled to take place between the 20th of November and the
    15th of December of 2023.

    I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (SOUTHGATE, IARU REGION 1)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 9 16:52:36 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2341, for Friday, September 9th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2341, with a release date of Friday, September 9th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Radio waves bring remarkable images from the
    James Webb telescope. Romanian students embark on a first-time satellite challenge -- and statistics from Brazil provide encouraging news for
    amateurs. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2341 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    WEBB TELESCOPE TRANSMITS DIRECT IMAGES OF EXOPLANET

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story comes to us from space. Radio waves have transmitted something remarkable to astronomers here on Earth -- long-
    awaited imagery from outside our solar system. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, has
    more on that story.

    KENT: The James Webb Space Telescope's first direct image of a planet
    outside of our solar system has been transmitted to scientists, offering promise for deeper research into exoplanets. NASA reported that
    astronomers received the image of the planet in orbit around a star
    estimated to be 385 light-years from Earth. The image was taken with a near-infrared camera and the Mid-Infrared Instrument, which each focus on different portions of the infrared spectrum.

    There have been only a few dozen direct imaging of exoplanets such as
    this one. Astronomers have identified over 5,000 exoplanets, but only by
    an indirect method of observing starlight dimming as the planet passes in front of the star they are observing.

    NASA expressed hope that these new infrared images will be a gateway to
    deeper study of exoplanets.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (NASA, SPACE.COM)

    **

    SATELLITE WILL BE FIRST OF ITS KIND FOR ROMANIAN STUDENTS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Construction is to begin in Madrid on a small ham satellite
    that will be a "first" for the Romanian teenagers who designed it. Ed
    Durrant, DD5LP, gives us a closer look.

    ED: AMSAT-EA is giving its support to a small amateur radio satellite
    designed by students in Romania, a project considered the first of its
    kind for Romanian students. Known as the ROM-2 mission, the satellite,
    built with the support of the Romanian organisation ROMSpace, is to be assembled in Madrid at the AMSAT-EA facilities. AMSAT-EA, which has
    registered the satellite internationally, will be responsible for the satellite once it has entered orbit.

    The satellite's maintenance data will be transmitted via CW. The
    satellite will fulfill its mission to take photographs with a 2 MegaPixel camera and transmit them to hams who will be able to retransmit them from their own stations using the SSDV protocol. They will use the frequency
    of 436.235 MHz. SSDV packets will be transmitted from the satellite
    using GFSK.

    The students attend the International Computing High School in Bucharest
    and are between the ages of 15 and 18.

    This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (AMSAT-EA)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 16 11:09:26 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2342 for Friday, September 16th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2342, with a release date of Friday, September 16th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Some US satellites may face stricter disposal
    rules soon. Researchers work to make smaller antennas with bigger
    performance - and German regulators look to add a new class of amateur license. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2342, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    US FCC SEEKS STRICTER DISPOSAL PLAN FOR SATELLITES

    DON/ANCHOR: The US Federal Communications Commission wants to put
    domestic satellites on notice - at least, some of them - regarding their eviction from space once the satellites no longer function. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, explains.

    KENT: In an effort to clean up space junk in low Earth orbit, the FCC hopes
    to act this month in setting a deadline that would require dead non- geostationary satellites to be removed from space within five years. The proposal shortens the period established by NASA guidelines setting a 25-
    year period, which is voluntary, for such satellite disposal.

    The new regulation, if approved, would not apply to any domestic satellites already in orbit. It would also give some breathing room to organizations whose satellite launches have already been approved so those groups can
    have a disposal plan in place before the launch date.

    The FCC is proposing a two-year grandfathering period that would begin on Sept. 29, the day the FCC has scheduled its vote. In response to NASA's concerns about the potential impact on CubeSats, the FCC said it intended
    to grant waivers on a case-by-case basis.

    FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said in a post on Twitter [quote] "Our space economy is moving fast. For it to continue to grow, we need to do
    more to clean up after ourselves so space innovation can continue to
    expand." [endquote]

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (ENGADGET, TWITTER)

    **

    SMALLER ANTENNAS, BIGGER PERFORMANCE

    DON/ANCHOR: Just how small can a small antenna be? Researchers in the US
    are studying that challenge now, hoping to accomplish an antenna that
    offers economy in space without compromising performance. Neil Rapp,
    WB9VPG, gives us the details.

    NEIL: A United States agency has begun tackling a longstanding challenge
    that comes with the use of electrically small antennas. While these
    antennas are space-saving assets that are noticeably shorter than the wavelengths of the signals they handle, the antennas themselves have significant limitations. As they get smaller, they lose bandwidth and radiation efficiency. These antennas have been in use for many decades and
    can be found, for instance, on satellites.

    Researchers with the US Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity agency have begun a four-year project to surpass these kinds of
    limitations. The initiative is called the Effective Quantitative Antenna Limits for Performance program.

    Program manager Paul Kolb told the IEEE Spectrum magazine that within three years, the teams must show that they have an actual antenna with a 6-dB
    gain in performance over existing electrically small antennas. The ultimate goal is to establish a 10-decibel gain in antenna performance in the HF and UHF bands. Kolb told the spectrum that in the last year of the project, researchers will be required to produce an antenna with the sought-after
    10-db gain.

    The teams are being required to validate all results with independent labs. Kolb said such antennas aren't likely to become viable for the commercial market.

    This is Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.

    (IEEE SPECTRUM)

    **

    REPEATER DEDICATED TO 6 WHO DIED ON 9/11

    DON/ANCHOR: While much of the United States marked Sunday, Sept. 11th, in solemn public ceremonies remembering the terror attacks of 2001, the New England Emergency Communications Network dedicated a new digital repeater
    site in memory of six broadcast engineers who died that day in New York
    City. Jim Damron, N8TMW, has that story.

    JIM: The New England Emergency Communications Network, which links 90
    amateur radio service repeaters in the northeastern United States, brought
    a new digital repeater on the air on Sunday, September 11th. The date is
    not insignificant. As he put the 2-meter repeater into full-time operation
    on the air, Andrew, N1MYY, read a statement acknowledging the anniversary
    of the terror attacks. A broadcast engineer himself, Andrew dedicated the repeater to the six broadcast engineers who died that day when the World
    Trade Center was destroyed. They were Donald DiFranco of WABC-TV; Bob
    Pattison and Isaias [eye-say-us] Rivera, both of WCBS, and three hams who became Silent Keys that day: Steven Jacobsen, N2SJ, of WPIX-TV; William Steckman, WA2ACW, of WNBC; and Rod Coppola, KA2KET, of WNET-TV.

    The repeater's full-time operation now adds to the network's strength for public service and emergency preparedness in the region.

    This is Jim Damron, N8TMW.

    (ANDREW DENONCOUR N1MYY; NYRADIOWORLD, SOUTHGATE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 23 08:10:09 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2343 for Friday September 23rd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2343 with a release date of Friday, September 23rd, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams respond as Hurricane Fiona bears down.
    China prepares to launch another ham radio satellite -- and Youth on the
    Air camp heads to Canada in 2023. All this and more as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2343 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS AID IN EFFORTS AFTER HURRICANE FIONA

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week is Hurricane Fiona, which brought devastation to the islands of the Caribbean. Amateur radio operators
    were part of the team responding to the vast needs of the region.

    RANDY: As Hurricane Fiona ravaged the region, amateur radio operators
    were hard at work in areas of the Eastern Caribbean and Western
    Atlantic. Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, and the Turks and Caicos islands, suffered severe flooding, catastrophic wind damage and major
    power outages as the storm, which grew to Category 4, made its way
    toward Bermuda. In addition to local communications support, the
    Hurricane Watch Net was activated and Salvation Army Team Emergency
    Radio Network was handling health and welfare traffic.

    William Planas-Montes, NP3WP, ARES section emergency coordinator for
    Puerto Rico reported that around 45 ham radio operators were working
    with different government municipalities and ARES personnel were setting
    up equipment in anticipation of additional activity.

    Jason Tremblay, VE3JXT, emergency coordinator for the Bermuda area of
    IARU Region 2, told AR Newsline that, at the time of this report,
    planning was still underway by their executive team for that area.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ

    **

    SWITZERLAND AMATEURS SHARPEN THEIR RADIO READINESS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Disaster preparedness, even when there is no immediate
    disaster, is also a big part of amateur radio. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, tells
    us how hams in Switzerland worked recently with their radio teammates to polish their skills.

    ED: Hundreds of hams, citizens band operators and owners of private
    mobile radios teamed up throughout Liechtenstein and Switzerland in a wide-ranging emergency-response drill on Saturday, September 18th. The fictional scenario was similar to the simulated regional power shortage
    that played out three times before. The radio event has come to be known
    as the Swiss Emergency Contest but it is less of a true competition than
    a measure of readiness if all or part of the power grid fails. Hams in
    the Union of Swiss short wave Amateurs, the USKA, have taken the lead in
    this effort.

    Only days earlier, at its board of directors meeting, the leadership
    announced it was developing an operating framework for hams and those
    using other types of radios to assist during blackouts and power
    shortages when communication during emergencies takes even higher
    priority.

    The latest exercise employed a variety of equipment and modes and used
    such alternate power sources as solar panels and batteries.

    This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (BERNARD WEHRLI, HB9ALH; USKA)

    **

    CHINA PREPS NEXT AMATEUR RADIO SATELLITE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: China is preparing to send a new ham radio satellite into
    orbit in the next few weeks. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the details.

    JIM: The CAS-10 amateur radio satellite is set to go into space from
    China's Wenchang Satellite Launch Center in early November, where it
    will be sent to the Tiangong Space Station aboard the Tianzhou-5 cargo spacecraft. The satellite, which carries a V/U linear transponder, will
    become operational sometime after its deployment from the space station
    around the 15th of December. The transponder is expected to operate all
    day throughout the satellite's lifetime, using a VHF uplink and UHF
    downlink with a 30 kHz bandwidth. CAS-10 is also equipped with a camera.
    Hams will be able to send DTMF commands to download photos taken by the
    camera and stored in the satellite's flash memory. Satellite telemetry
    data will be sent via Morse Code.

    For additional details and frequencies, visit the AMSAT-UK link in the
    text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: http://www.amsatuk.me.uk/iaru/finished_detail.php?serialnum=858 ]

    I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (AMSAT-UK, SOUTHGATE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Sep 30 09:29:25 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2344, for Friday, September 30th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2344, with a release date of Friday, September 30th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams take to the airwaves for Hurricane Ian. A
    new report offers insights into the collapse of the Arecibo radio
    telescope -- and radio rides along for a bicycle climb up an iconic
    mountain. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2344, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS MUSTER SUPPORT DURING HURRICANE IAN

    JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week looks at amateur radio's response as
    a life-threatening hurricane brought destruction in the southern United States. Randy Sly, W4XJ, brings us those details.

    RANDY: As Hurricane Fiona left Canada's Maritime provinces as a tropical depression, another hurricane was beginning to form in the Caribbean
    tracking toward western Cuba, the Cayman Islands and the western shores
    of Florida. The handoff between the two storms gave little time to relax
    for amateur radio operators working with the Hurricane Watch Net, VoIP
    Net, Salvation Army Emergency Radio Network, and emergency communications groups, such as ARES.

    By the time Ian reached the Florida coast near Fort Myers, it was a
    Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 155 miles per hour. This catastrophic storm caused significant damage along with storm surge, torrential rains, flooding, power outages, and spin-up tornadoes.

    Bobby Graves, manager of the Hurricane Watch Net, said that the net would remain in full emergency mode to assist with any emergency, medical, or priority traffic as well as working with SATERN, the Salvation Army's
    network, to help in handling any outgoing health and welfare traffic. The
    net was to remain active after Ian's downgrade so hams could assist with post-storm reports for the National Hurricane Center. The FCC has also
    adopted a 60-day waiver that permitted hams to use a higher symbol rate
    for data transmissions - above the legal limit of 300 baud -- when
    assisting Hurricane Ian traffic.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    **

    REPORT PINPOINTS FACTORS IN ARECIBO COLLAPSE

    JIM/ANCHOR: A new report has pinpointed some contributing causes behind
    the collapse of what was once the largest radio telescope in the world.
    Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, brings us up to date.

    KENT: Engineers have identified a number of key factors that led to the
    2020 collapse of the Arecibo Telescope, once the world's largest radio telescope. A forensic examination by the New York-based firm Thornton Tomasetti identified issues that included design of the cable system with relatively low safety factors for gravity loads as well as the force of naturally occurring events in the environment. Those included Hurricane
    Maria in 2017 and the January 2020 earthquake tremors in Puerto Rico
    where the telescope was located. The report said that despite having a hurricane-resistant design, Arecibo's cable system had already led it to suffer stress under its own weight whenever storms hit. The engineers recommended higher safety factors for cable systems under such
    conditions.

    Although the investigators said they found the telescope to be generally
    well maintained, they did note in their report that they found that
    moisture had intruded, paint had degraded and individual wires had broken within the cable system.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (THORNTON TOMASETTI, NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION)

    **

    AMATEURS HELP WITH REUNION ACROSS BORDERS

    JIM/ANCHOR: A family in Bangladesh has been reunited with a long-missing relative, thanks to hams on both sides of the border with India. Graham
    Kemp, VK4BB, gives us the rest of this story.

    GRAHAM: It took 12 years and, ultimately, two groups of amateur radio operators to return a man to his home and his family in Bangladesh. The reunion took place on September 21st, allowing the man to leave the
    state-run home in Kolkata where he had been following a lengthy hospitalization. His family reported that he had gone missing a dozen
    years ago. He had apparently crossed the border into West Bengal.

    Press accounts in the Millennium Post and other media outlets described
    the 27-year-old man as mentally challenged and thus unable to provide information about his origins either to hospital personnel or later to
    those at the state home. Authorities at the home contacted the West
    Bengal Radio Club. Club secretary Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, visited
    the man and determined he was from Bangladesh. He reached out for help to
    Anup Bhowmick [ANOOP BOWMICK], S21TV, secretary of the Amateur Radio
    Society of Bangladesh. The two clubs arranged for a video call between
    the man and his family and after that, details were worked out for his
    return home.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (MILLENNIUM POST, AMBARISH NAG BISWAS, VU2JFA)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Oct 6 19:44:37 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2345, for Friday, October 7th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2345, with a release date of Friday, October 7th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Two hams are added to next year's Starliner-1
    launch. Sweden honors a noted tech entrepreneur -- and the International Telecommunication Union marks a 'first' in leadership. All this and more,
    as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2345 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    TWO MORE HAMS TO BE ABOARD FOR STARLINER'S 1st FLIGHT

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with the US space program, which has selected two more amateur radio operators to be on board the maiden
    voyage of the Boeing Starliner-1 next year as part of the agency's
    Commercial Crew Program. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, reports.

    PAUL: Two amateur radio operators were recently chosen to return to the International Space Station but this time they expect to arrive there
    aboard the first flight of NASA's new Boeing Starliner-1.

    Astronaut Scott Tingle, KG5NZA, will be its commander, and Mike Fincke,
    KE5AIT, of NASA, will serve as the Starliner's pilot. They will join
    Jeanette Epps, KF5QNU, who will be aboard as mission specialist. NASA
    assigned her in August 2020 to join the crew.

    There is no launch date yet for Starliner-1. It must complete NASA's
    Boeing Crew Flight Test, which ensures the spacecraft can fly crewed
    missions to the ISS on a regular basis. This is part of NASA's Commercial
    Crew Program.

    The first test flight is scheduled for early 2023.

    I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (NASA)

    **

    SWEDISH AMATEUR TO RECEIVE GOLD MEDAL

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: High honors are being conferred upon an amateur radio
    operator from Sweden who is well-known for the advances he has made in
    growing the internet. We have those details from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: Congratulations to Swedish tech entrepreneur Peter Löthberg, SM4KEL/W4KEL, whose work in helping the internet get an early foothold
    and grow in Sweden has won him a gold medal from the Royal Swedish
    Academy of Engineering Sciences.

    King Gustaf is to present the medal to him next month.

    Dubbed an "internet guru" by Wired Dot Com (WIRED.COM) in 2007, he has
    given much sought-after advice to industry giants such as Cisco and
    Sprint.

    With this gold medal, Peter joins the ranks of scores of similarly
    decorated academy innovators.

    The academy (also known as the IVA) says on its website that its vision
    is "Technology in the service of humanity," in the belief that technical
    and economic science can make a positive contribution to society.

    I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (IVA, SOUTHGATE)

    **

    GET READY FOR SCOUTING'S JOTA-JOTI EVENT

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: If you're involved in Scouting, or know someone who is,
    you know that October is a big month on the Scout calendar. Bill Stearns, NE4RD, tells us what's happening in just a few days.

    BILL: Jamboree-on-the-Air and Jamboree-on-the-Internet (JOTA-JOTI) is the worldΓÇÖs largest Scout event taking place on the internet and over the airwaves. Held every year in October, the event connects millions of
    young people around the world for a full weekend of online activities
    that promote friendship and global citizenship. In 2022, JOTA-JOTI takes
    place from 14 to 16 October. For the JOTA side of the event, Scouts and
    Guides all over the world connect with each other by means of amateur
    radio. Short-wave and digital radio signals carry their voices to
    virtually any corner of the world. It's the sheer excitement of having a
    live conversation with a fellow Scout or Guide at some other place in the world that attracts so many young people to this event.

    Event planning information or resources can be found on the K2BSA website
    at K2BSA.net.

    Register your station today at jotajoti.info and check out the virtual campsite where you can find lots of activities for this travel-free
    jamboree.

    For the K2BSA Amateur Radio Association, this is Bill Stearns, NE4RD.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Oct 13 22:54:23 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2346, for Friday, October 14th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2346, with a release date of
    Friday, October 14th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A never-before contact with Antarctica - from
    space! Lessons learned from Hurricane Ian -- and hams in Australia go bicycle-mobile for charity. All this and more, as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2346, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART


    **

    ISS LOGS A QSO WITH STUDENTS IN ANTARCTICA

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Who among us hasn't wanted to work Antarctica? Who among
    us has succeeded so far? Well now you can add to that list the name of astronaut Kjell Lindgren, KO5MOS. John Williams, VK4JJW, opens this
    week's newscast with that report.

    JOHN: Kjell [pronounced CHELL] Lindgren, KO5MOS, can enter Antarctica
    into the log of contacts for him and the ISS. This was the ultimate DX
    from space, in fact, as the US astronaut held a scheduled question-and-
    answer session on Friday, October 7th, with students living on the
    Esperanza Antarctic base, an Argentine research station on the frozen continent. For the contact, the astronaut used the callsign OR4ISS.
    This unprecedented ARISS contact was accomplished with the help of
    ON4ISS, AMSAT Belgium, which provided a Telebridge. According to
    various websites, there are 16 students enrolled in the school and they
    range in age of 3 to 21. The school, which has two teachers, was
    established in 1978,

    One student, apparently feeling a kinship about the relatively remote locations on both sides of the QSO, asked the astronaut: [quote] "An Icebreaker ship brought us here. How did you get to the International
    Space Station?" [endquote] Acknowledging the similiarity of their
    desolate environments, the astronaut said [quote] "you are explorers in
    your own right." [endquote] He also accepted the students' invitation
    to visit someday. The best followup to this kind of first-time DX would naturally be an eyeball QSO to remember.

    This is John Williams, VK4JJW.

    NEIL/ANCHOR: To hear the QSO between the ISS and the Antarctic base
    students, follow the link in the text version of this week's script at arnewsline.org

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jprWFFaLUBc ]

    (AMSAT ARGENTINA, YOUTUBE)

    **

    APPLY NOW FOR CONTACTS WITH ASTRONAUTS IN 2023

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Is there a contact with the ISS in your future? The window
    of opportunity is still open and Paul Braun, WD9GCO, tells you how to
    help make it happen.

    PAUL: If you've ever wanted a radio contact with someone aboard the International Space Station, and haven't had one yet, 2023 might just
    be your year. Teachers and other educators have until November 13th to
    submit a proposal to ARISS for a scheduled contact that would be set up between July 1st and December 31st of next year. ARISS is looking for educational institutions with a formal curriculum that could easily
    integrate this kind of space-related amateur radio communication.

    The contacts usually last 10 minutes, and take place as a question-and-
    answer format between the students and the astronauts.

    For additional details, follow the ARISS link in the text version of
    this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    [FOR PRINT ONLY:

    https://ariss-usa.org/hosting-an-ariss-contact-in-the-usa/ ]

    This is Paul Braun, WD9GCO.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Oct 21 08:59:37 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2347 for Friday, October 21st, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2347, with a release date of
    Friday, October 21st, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. An emerging science and technology center gets
    a major financial boost. A new book takes a deeper look at QSL cards --
    and some surprises for Halloween, as the holiday approaches. All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2347, comes your way
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BOOST FOR MAKING TESLA LAB A GLOBAL SCIENCE CENTER

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week's report with news that the former
    laboratory of inventor Nikola Tesla has received major funding to
    further its development into a major science and technology center.
    Kevin Trotman, N5PRE, has that story.

    KEVIN: Designed by the noted architect Stanford White at the turn of
    the previous century and a welcoming place today for scientists,
    historians and amater radio operators, the former laboratory of 20th
    century innovator Nikola Tesla has been chosen to receive a $500,000
    grant from the National Parks Service and the National Endowment of the
    Arts. The funds will be used to help pay for restoration of the Long
    Island, New York property and transform it into a museum and educational science center honoring the spirit of Tesla's groundbreaking work.

    Known as Wardenclyffe Lab, it became the home to many of Tesla's
    discoveries in radio and other aspects of technology. He had created
    the Long Island lab as a kind of "radio city" with the goal of
    transmitting electricity and information wirelessly. The site was
    especially well-known for a transmitter tower that was 187 feet high
    above ground and reached 120 feet below ground level. That tower is
    long since gone.

    This is Tesla's only surviving laboratory and it is a landmark, having
    been added to the US National Historic Register in 2018. Amateur radio
    has an active interest in the property as well and the site recently
    hosted the 75th anniversary celebration and special event station of
    the Suffolk County Radio Club.

    I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (LONG ISLAND BUSINESS.COM)

    **

    BOOK SHOWCASES QSL CARDS' DESIGN AND TYPOGRAPHY

    JIM/ANCHOR: If you enjoy sending and receiving QSL cards, you're not
    alone. This next story from Jack Parker, W8ISH, celebrates the art of
    those still-popular cards.

    JACK: The legacy of Charles Hellman, W2RP, continues. At the time
    Charlie became a Silent Key in 2017, the 106-year-old New York amateur
    was considered the oldest amateur in the US and likely the longest
    licensed. Active almost right up to the year he died, Charlie amassed a collection of QSL cards that, so many years later, is now carrying a
    different message to the world, one about graphic design and
    communication between people.

    One hundred fifty cards in Charlie's collection, which were later
    purchased by a designer visiting a local antique shop, are now the
    subject of a soon-to-be published book on typography and graphics. Its
    title: "QSL: Do you Confirm Receipt of My Transmission?" The
    collection's owner, Roger Bova, made the cards available to Standards
    Manual, an independent publisher in Brooklyn, New York that specializes
    in books about design history. The book features the simple, bold
    design of the card from RBØHZ, confirming a 1986 contact on 20m, SSB.
    In contrast, there is a whimsical, cartoonish card from DM3EJ for a
    1979 SSB contact on 10m. Many of the pages are full and rich and
    colorful.

    The publisher's cofounder, Jesse Reed, told PrintMag.com in a recent
    interview that the cards are as much a study in design as in
    communication in the age before the internet took hold. They are
    presented, in the book, in chronological order.

    No doubt Charlie, a retired New York City educator, might be pleased to
    know he is still providing a means for people everywhere to expand
    their knowledge.

    This is Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (STANDARDS MANUAL, PRINTMAG.COM, QCWA)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Oct 28 02:08:58 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2348, for Friday, October 28th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2348, with a release date of
    Friday, October 28th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams respond as a cyclone ravages parts of
    Bangladesh. An Australian club revives a flood aid program -- and
    Silent Keys get a tribute event courtesy of amateurs in Poland. All
    this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2348, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    DEADLY CYCLONE SLAMS BANGLADESH

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a developing story. As Newsline
    went to production, a deadly cyclone had enveloped parts of Bangladesh
    where the death toll continued to rise, according to reports from
    Reuters and other news sources. Mass evacuations preceded the arrival
    of Cyclone Sitrang and while there are not yet any published reports
    offering details of amateur radio assistance, Newsline learned
    informally that some stations in the country were attempting to help
    via VHF radio, as power was lost. At production time, Newsline was
    still awaiting details from the IARU and other organizations. We hope
    to have more details in our next newscast about the cyclone response.

    (REUTERS, AMBARISH NAG BISWAS, VU2JFA)

    **

    AUSTRALIAN HAM CLUB REVIVES AID FUND

    PAUL/ANCHOR: As devastating flood conditions persist in parts of
    Australia, particularly Victoria and much of New South Wales, one
    amateur radio club is reviving an outreach initiative begun during
    floods that hit at the start of this year. Graham Kemp, VK4BB,
    tells us about the effort.

    GRAHAM: The North East Victoria Amateur Radio Club, which responded
    with financial support when historic floods ravaged so many towns
    earlier this year, has revived its funding initiative as parts of
    Victoria and New South Wales battle new flood conditions. Begun in
    early 2022 as the brainchild of committee members Gary Reeve, VK2XF,
    and Matt Bilston VK3VS, this emergency-response effort shows that
    not all amateur assistance is necessarily accomplished with radios
    alone.

    Club secretary Frank Scott, VK2BFC, told Newsline that the earlier
    initiative began with $2,000 from the club and quickly grew to more
    than $3,000 with donations from inidividual amateurs and other
    clubs. As before, the club is asking members of the community who
    have had losses in the current flooding to apply to the club for an
    e-gift card that can be taken to supermarkets or other retail
    outlets to replace some of what was lost. Community members are
    being encouraged to apply for the cards, which are valued at an
    average of $100.

    He said that the club is also prepared to work directly with hams
    who lost equipment or towers in the flood to help them replace what
    is needed and re-establish their stations. Because many hams also
    belong to the local emergency services, the club saw this as an
    extension of its public service mission.

    Frank said that after seeing the destruction from the latest wave
    of flood water, club members decided that the most appropriate
    response was to conduct the assistance programme once again.

    He told Newsline, "As we say 'When floods happen, we rise above
    them as a ham community.'"

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (WIA, FRANK SCOTT VK2BFC)

    **

    LATEST HAARP EXPERIMENT TO INCORPORATE HAMS' INPUT

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Researchers in Alaska will soon be sifting through the
    results of some major atmospheric experiments - ones that included
    input from hams around the world. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, brings us
    those details.

    SEL: Following an intense 10-day period of experiments that were to
    be concluded by Friday, October 28th, scientists at the High-
    frequency Active Auroral Research Program plan to be studying their
    results along with observations from participating amateur radio
    operators.

    Hams had been invited to monitor daily transmissions that included
    HF ocean scatter, interactions between satellites and the
    ionosphere, moon bounce and an unprecedented attempt to bounce a
    signal off of Jupiter. The scientists were also exploring possible
    reasons behind the airglow phenomenon known as Strong Thermal
    Emission Velocity Enhancement, or by the acronym STEVE, and testing
    whether radio transmissions could be used to measure the interiors
    of near-Earth asteroids.

    The program manager, Jessica Matthews, called the research the most
    diverse to ever take place at the Alaska facility and contained the
    highest number of experiments to date. She said researchers were
    relying on citizen scientists around the world. The research was
    funded by a $9.3-million grant from the National Science
    Foundation.

    Participating hams were able to file their reports electronically
    to the lab, making them eligible for QSL cards.

    This is Sel Embee, K-B-3-T-Zed-D.

    (ALASKA NATIVE NEWS, HF UNDERGROUND)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Nov 4 01:09:36 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2349, for Friday, November 4th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2349, with a release date of Friday, November 4th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams on alert during the Philippine's latest
    cyclone. Bouvet Island Dxpeditioners announce their pilot team -- and a
    New York club looks at people who wrote the book - or books - on ham
    radio. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2349,
    comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS AT THE READY IN PHILIPPINE CYCLONE

    DON/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the Philippines where a radio group called Ham Radio Emergency Operations was preparing for the region's
    latest cyclone. John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us up to date.

    JOHN: A tropical cyclone delivered deadly flooding and landslides in the Philippines in late October, as dozens died and thousands of others
    sought shelter. Romy Isidro, DU1SMQ, chairman of the National Traffic
    System in the Philippines, said that Ham Radio Emergency Operations, or
    HERO, began monitoring emergency frequencies and awaiting further instructions.

    Romy said that reports from cities and provinces indicated that much of
    the traffic over emergency frequencies were from the various localities
    for flooding, commercial electricity, impassable roads, destroyed bridges
    and requests for ambulance aid. When a wall collapsed, an amateur radio operator in Central Luzon, in Region 3, volunteered to relay word of that
    to the nearest Disaster Risk Reduction Office, which was already
    monitoring the emergency frequencies.

    Romy said however that most of casualties and fatalities were reported in
    very poor regions of the Philippines where the lack of HF radios can complicate emergency communication. Offers of aid to the hardest-hit
    provinces came in from the United States, China, Japan, and Australia.

    This is John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (ROMY ISIDRO, DU1SMQ; REUTERS)

    **

    PILOTS SELECTED FOR 2023 BOUVET ACTIVATION

    DON/ANCHOR: As the time draws closer for the Bouvet Island activation,
    new members of the team are being put into place as pilots. We have that update from Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    JIM: In preparation for the Three Y Zero Jay (3Y0J) DXpedition to Bouvet Island in early 2023, the team has announced the addition of pilots.
    These hams provide a critical role as intermediaries between the
    DXpedition team and the DX chasers. They will be keeping an eye on
    propagation in their designated parts of the world to help facilitate contacts. The chief pilot and pilot for Europe is Morten, LA3MHA; North America's East Coast will be covered by Steve, N2AJ. The West Coast of
    North America will have Rich, KE1B, as pilot. South America's pilot will
    be Siso, HK3W. Hams in VK/ZL/OC will have Lee, VK3GK, as pilot; and in
    Asia and Japan, hams will rely on Champ, E21EIC.

    The team expects to activate from the sub-Antarctic island between
    January 13th and February 28th.

    This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (OHIO PENN DX, FACEBOOK)

    **

    SILENT KEY: PORTABLE OP PROPONENT JANKO SLIVKA OM3WZ/OM3WCF

    DON/ANCHOR: Hams in the radio community in the Slovak Republic have lost
    a leader and a friend. We hear about him from Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    ED: Hams in the Slovak Republic are grieving the loss of a respected
    leader: Janko Slivka OM3WZ/OM3WCF, the former president of the Radio Club OM3VSZ, who has become a Silent Key. His death was announced on a number
    of online ham radio forums and on Facebook. The club's current president, Vlado Ludrovsky, OM3TWM, remembered him as a radio operator who combined
    his love of amateur radio with his love of outdoor sports, including
    cycling and marathon running. He also noted that Janko was an
    enthusiastic CW operator.

    No further details were available.

    I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (FACEBOOK, CQ.SK website)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Nov 11 13:16:03 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2350, for Friday, November 11th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2350, with a release date of Friday, November 11th to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Climate change raises ham radio's profile in Mozambique. The transistor celebrates its 75th year -- and a pioneering YL becomes a Silent Key. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2350, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    CLIMATE CHANGE SPURS MOZAMBIQUE TO FOCUS ON HAM RADIO

    JIM/ANCHOR: The United Nations Climate Change Conference may be under way
    in Egypt, but a series of climate talks held earlier among African nations
    has already made a big difference - a difference that lands amateur radio
    in a more prominent role as climate grows ever more unpredictable. Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, brings us up to date.

    JASON: The climate talks that took place among African nations earlier this year in Mozambique have paved the way to something unprecedented in that nation: Mozambique's first ham radio station earmarked specifically for disaster response. Following several seasons of deadly winds and floods battering the country, its leaders are now giving highest priority to formalizing disaster-risk reduction measures such as this. The need for resilient telecommunications is at the top of the list.

    A prototype emergency ham radio station has been launched in the capital
    city of Maputo, set up by the National Institute of Communications, or
    INCM. The station has the support of the Emergency Telecommunications
    Cluster, the World Food Programme's Technology division in Mozambique and
    the National Institute for Disaster Risk Management and Reduction. There
    are plans to add stations in Tete (tay tay), Niassa (Nee Ossa), Pemba and other provinces.

    Sudhir Kumar, the telecommunications cluster's preparedness officer, told
    the Mirage News: [quote] "Together, we assessed the needs and drafted a national action plan for telecommunications preparedness in Mozambique."

    A dozen radio operators have been trained as hams and have received
    licenses. Radio operators throughout the country are also being encouraged
    to participate.

    Kumar said that additional volunteers are likely to come from the young
    people who comprise more than half Mozambique's population. A workshop is planned soon at a major communications technology institute in Maputo.

    This is Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (MIRAGE NEWS)

    **

    SILENT KEY: ELLEN WHITE, W1YL, PIONEERING YL

    JIM/ANCHOR: The worldwide ham community, and most especially those in the Connecticut offices of the ARRL are mourning the loss of an amateur radio leader. We hear more about her from Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    KEVIN: Ellen White, W1YL, spent more than three-quarters of her life
    involved in amateur radio and was known the world over for her expertise
    and advocacy. Ellen became a Silent Key in Florida on Sunday, November 6th.

    The ARRL posted an obituary on its website, noting that Ellen's 25 years
    with the league included her stint as deputy communications manager and
    later, editor of the column, "How's DX," for QST, the league's magazine.
    She had been a ham since 1946 and over the years. she became a well-known presence globally. In 2019, she received the Russian E.T. Krenkel Medal, an honor bestowed upon groups and individuals who have contributed much to amateur radio. She had been a broadcast station engineer by profession and
    as an amateur, she developed a fondness for contests.

    The Florida Contest Group considered her its "founding grandmother," and
    she is pictured on its home page beside her fellow club members. Ellen was
    95.

    This is Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (ARRL)

    **

    TAKING A CLOSER LOOK AT TRANSISTORS AFTER 75 YEARS

    JIM/ANCHOR: Unless you're a boat anchor enthusiast, chances are you owe a
    lot of your amateur radio success to the transistors that are the heart and soul of your rig and other station equipment. The IEEE's (Eye Triple E's) Electron Devices Society has set aside much of the coming year to mark the transistor's 75th anniversary. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, tells us what's in store.

    KENT: Considered by many to be the foundation of the electronics industry,
    the transistor was created at Bell Labs in New Jersey in 1947, sidelining vacuum tubes for most users of electronics. Its development garnered the
    1956 Nobel Prize in physics for the trio who created it and now, so many
    years later, its recognition is taking on new life, starting next month.

    The IEEE's Electron Devices Society will be holding a series of meetings and conferences into 2023, devoted to the transistor and so many of the devices
    it inspired and made possible. The first program is the IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting to be held on December 3rd through the 7th in San Francisco.

    There will also be plenty of written material to read about the transistor
    in the coming year. Society members are writing a book about how it was developed and the EDS newsletter and IEEE Spectrum will be publishing technical articles about the transistor in the months ahead.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (IEEE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Nov 25 02:40:20 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2352 for Friday, November 25th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2352, with a release date of Friday, November 25th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ham radio reunites a family after a 23-year
    absence. Imagine a micro-sized battery with a lifespan of almost two
    decades -- and when is a QSL card also a thank-you card?

    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2352, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS REUNITE LOST FATHER WITH SONS AFTER 23 YEARS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with the tale of a poignant reunion
    between an octogenarian in India, and the grieving family, who had
    presumed he had died after a deadly cyclone that claimed thousands
    of lives 23 years ago. That reunion happened with the help of amateur
    radio. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has that remarkable story.

    GRAHAM: After a super cyclone flattened the coast of Odisha in India
    in 1999, Kritichandra (Kritty-Chondra) Baral (Bah-RAHL) lost his
    family and his memory - the latter possibly from some kind of trauma. Meanwhile, never learning for certain the fate of their patriarch, his
    sons presumed their father was one of the thousands who lost their
    lives in that natural disaster. The man survived, however, and lived
    as a vagrant on the streets of a city in Andhra Pradesh, existing for
    years on handouts and people's generosity. Ten years ago, he was taken
    in by a group known as the Missionaries of Charity after one of his
    benefactors discovered his health had deteriorated, and asked that he
    be accepted into their care.

    The charity's ongoing efforts to locate his family failed until Nov. 19,
    when they contacted the West Bengal Radio Club, which has extensive
    experience in assisting with reunions of missing persons and their
    families. The hams had helped the charity before, and the group was
    hopeful that the radio amateurs would succeed where the charity had not. Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, the club's secretary, said after some time,
    the amateur radio club was able to locate the man's sons. He told various Indian news media outlets that two of the sons: [quote] "were dumbstruck
    when they saw their father's photograph, and then started weeping. They
    are a well-to-do family, and said their father went missing after the
    cyclone and was presumed dead." [endquote]

    In videos shared with Newsline by Ambarish Nag Biswas, the family can be
    seen with their father at the Missionaries of Charity residence. They are overcome by emotion, hugging one another for the first time in more than
    two decades.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (AMBARISH NAG BISWAS, VU2JFA; GULF NEWS)

    **

    BIG PROMISE FROM ULTRA-TINY BATTERY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Battery technology continues to change, and the latest
    evolution announced recently is a super-small rechargeable "micro-battery"
    with a high tolerance for variations in temperature - and a lifespan of
    between one and two decades. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, tells us about this
    new development, and what scientists are saying about it.

    KENT: A company in France believes it has come up with the latest solution
    to provide battery power for micro-power devices. The company, ITEN, has developed an ultra-small rechargeable lithium battery. At first glance,
    the surface-mount solid-state battery might easily be mistaken for an SMD
    chip, as its housing is only slightly larger than the battery's own
    dimensions of 3.2 by 2.5 mm. They are, of course, not chips: These
    batteries have a capacity of between 0.1 mAh and 0.5 mAh. They were found capable of tolerating temperatures between minus 40 degrees Celsius, or
    minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit, all the way to 85 degrees Celsius, or 185
    degrees Fahrenheit.

    Their ability to deliver peak currents make them especially useful for
    powering RF transmissions such as Bluetooth, Sigfox, and LTE, to deliver packets of data via sensors. The website, CNX software, also sees the
    batteries as being useful for sensor data loggers, beacons and backup
    power supplies for microcontrollers.

    The solid-state technology is considered another plus, contributing
    toward a usable lifespan of between 10 and 20 years. The company has
    said the batteries are also fast-charging.

    The website, Hackaday, poses the following challenge: [quote] "We'd be particularly interested to learn about their temperature sensitivity
    when it comes to soldering, as we've taken to heart the warnings about soldering to more traditional lithium cells." [endquote]

    The website noted that there are apparently some evaluation kits
    available directly from the company in France.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (ITEN.COM, HACKADAY, CNX-SOFTWARE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Dec 1 18:54:18 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2353 for Friday, December 2nd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2353, with a release date of Friday, December 2nd, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A troubled orbit detours a project to put
    amateur radio on the moon. It's almost time for the 12 Days of Christmas Special Event - and a happy ending for the producer of a ham radio documentary. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2353, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    ORBIT TROUBLES FOR AMATEUR RADIO MOON LANDER

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week in space, where a troubled orbit has detoured a Japanese amateur radio project that was heralded as the
    world's smallest moon lander. Jason Daniels, VK2LAW, brings us that
    report.

    JASON: OMOTENASHI, developed by the JAXA Ham Radio Club in Japan,
    carried the promise of putting amateur radio on the moon's surface when
    it launched on November 16th from Kennedy Space Center in the US. Now
    the chance to transmit a beacon in the amateur radio 70cm band from a
    lunar QTH has been put into question.

    The CubeSat was a secondary payload aboard NASA's Artemis 1 mission. In English translation from Japanese, the ham radio club's website for
    JAXA, Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency, reports that orbital errors
    have resulted in an unstable radio signal for its communications. The
    website also reports that the solar cells face away from the sun, making
    it problematic to charge OMOTENASHI's batteries.

    Having missed the chance for a moon landing, organisers are regrouping.
    The website reports that data from OMOTENASHI will be analysed to
    unearth a possible cause of what happened. The report said that the team believed that the axis of rotation is stable and that the spacecraft
    will get sunlight when the direction of the sun changes. They expect
    that will happen next March.

    This is Jason Daniels, VK2LAW.

    (JAXA AMATEUR RADIO CLUB)

    **

    HOMEBREW CUBESATS ARE A 'FIRST' FOR LAUNCH IN INDIA

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Indian radio amateurs and space enthusiasts had a proud
    moment when a rocket launch for an ocean-monitoring satellite had a pair
    of homegrown amateur radio CubeSats along for the ride. Here's Jim
    Meachen, ZL2BHF, with details.

    JIM: Members of the Star Fleet Amateur Radio Club, National Institute
    for Amateur Radio, Indian Institute of Hams, West Bengal Radio Club and
    the Indian Academy of Communication and Disaster Management were among
    the hundreds of amateurs across India watching eagerly on Saturday,
    November 26th as an Indian Space Research Organisation mission lifted
    off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre. Although the primary payload
    was an ocean observation satellite, the varied secondary payload also
    included two satellites that Indian news media were praising as the
    nation's first homegrown amateur satellites to be launched aboard an
    Indian space vehicle.

    The nanosatellites had been built in Hyderabad (Hy-Dra-Bod) by Druva
    Space, founded by four radio amateurs 10 years ago. The CubeSats have a combined mass of 1.45 kilograms and each is no larger than 10 by 10 by 5 centimeters. Hams will be able to use their store-and-forward messaging system.

    Dhruva's CEO Sanjay Nekkanti AB3OE / VU3ISS told one news outlet that
    this mission was extremely important to those who designed and built
    the satellites and said the hams will be testing them out following
    their deployment into low earth orbit. Sanjay said [quote] "This is a
    way for us to give back to the ecosystem." [endquote] He said he hoped
    the mission would also encourage more people to get involved in amateur
    radio and the sciences.

    This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (THE PRINT, REPUBLIC WORLD, NASA SPACEFLIGHT.COM)

    **

    SWITZERLAND PREPARES FOR SHUTDOWN OF FM RADIO

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Just as the nature and the technology of amateur radio
    keeps evolving so too is the landscape changing for broadcast FM. Jeremy
    Boot, G4NJH, has that story.

    JEREMY: Switzerland is preparing for the shutdown of its FM radio
    services as Swiss listeners join the ranks of those in Norway and in the
    UK who now tune into DAB+

    The nation's switchover from FM/analogue to DAB+/digital radio was the
    subject of discussion at the recent WorldDAB Summit, a digital radio
    industry forum held in London in early November. Norway's P4 radio led
    the charge in that nation more than five years ago, embracing the
    multiple channels from one transmitter, a lower cost way to keep station programming on the air.

    Switzerland's move comes just as the broadcast licences for the nation's
    radio stations expire at the end of 2024. Broadcasters see the switch as
    a way to save money while increasing the reach and the variety of the programme content. There will be no simulcasting on FM and digital.

    In a report in Radio World magazine, Swiss broadcaster Nicola Bomio said
    he was worried that the change would cost the stations listenership.
    Others said they wondered whether listeners living on the border with
    France would simply tune in to stations there.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (RADIO WORLD MAGAZINE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Dec 9 07:40:57 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2354, for Friday, December 9th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2354, with a release date of
    Friday, December 9th, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A young amateur's balloon makes an incredible
    journey. A new record is set for the lowest ham band in Australia --
    and meet the receipient of Newsline's International Newsmaker of the
    Year Award for 2022. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2354, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    A SOUTH POLE 'FIRST' FOR AMATEUR RADIO BALLOON

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week asks: When is a transmitting
    error not really an error but a triumph? When those transmissions
    are coming from an amateur radio high altitude balloon that became
    the first of its kind to come so close to the South Pole. Kevin
    Trotman, N5PRE, has that story.

    KEVIN: When the high altitude balloon transmitting KM4ZIA, the
    amateur radio call sign of 15-year-old Jack McElroy, was launched
    recently in Antarctica, it became part of atmospheric work being
    done by University of Alabama researcher, Todd McKinney KN4TPG.
    Instead of just helping build mathematical models of the atmosphere,
    however, Jack's balloon soon embarked on a incredible journey. A
    little more than a week later, its navigational equipment began to
    spit out a series of error messages on 20 meters. One observer in
    the US, however, realized that nothing was really wrong. He knew, in
    fact, that something remarkable was happening. Family friend and
    high-altitude balloon expert, Bill Brown, WB8ELK, knew Jack's solar-
    powered balloon was a short distance from the South Pole. Mapping
    systems could no longer determine its position from data being sent
    on 20 meters because of the densely spaced lines of longitude there
    at the end of the Earth.

    Jack's father, Tom McElroy, W4SDR, told Newsline in a phone
    interview: [quote] "This is the closest any amateur radio balloon
    has come to the South Pole." [endquote] Tom said Bill phoned the
    family home in Georgia that morning from Huntsville, Alabama, on
    December 1st, and said Jack's balloon had literally gone off the
    map. Tom broke the news to an astonished Jack on the way to school.
    He said Jack had quite a story for his science teacher that day.

    For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    NEIL/ANCHOR: You can track Jack's balloon at aprs.fi, using his call
    sign KM4ZIA. This isn't Jack's first balloon, either. He has
    launched several over the years, including two years at Youth on the
    Air Camp, in a team effort with his sister, Audrey McElroy, KM4BUN,
    who is this year's 2022 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the Year.

    **

    STAMP COLLECTING GETS HOLIDAY SPIRIT FROM HAMS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: The charitable spirit of amateur radio has always
    extended past direct involvement with radio activity. Here in the
    US, one club in Pennsylvania is looking for amateurs' assistance in
    a project that members have been committed to for a number of years.
    Sel Embee, KB3TZD, gives us those details.

    SEL: If you're starting to receive holiday cards from friends or
    eagerly awaiting the arrival of QSL cards from those treasured DX
    contacts, members of the Holmesburg Amateur Radio Club, WM3PEN, in Philadelphia are asking one more thing of you: Save those stamps.
    Hams in the Pennsylvania club support the "Stamps for the Wounded"
    program, which accepts donations of stamps from around the world for
    use in occupational therapy programs in convalescent centers and
    hospitals where veterans are receiving treatment.

    Although the everyday United States "Forever Flag" stamp is not
    needed for this program, all other stamps are welcome. Stamps should
    have at least a quarter-inch margin around them and should not be
    removed from the original envelopes on which they are sent. The hams
    in this club have been longtime supporters of the program, which was established in 1942 to encourage stamp collecting among the nation's
    military veterans who were at various stages of recovery. The
    program has more details on its website at stampsforthewounded dot
    org (stampsforthewounded.org). That's "stampsforthewounded" - one
    word, dot org.

    If you wish to donate stamps to help the club in their efforts, you
    can send them to Rich Shivers, K3UJ. You'll find his address in the
    text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org.

    This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: Rich Shivers, K3UJ, 9029 Eastview Rd.,
    Philadelphia, PA 19152, USA ]

    (HARC newsletter)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Dec 23 00:40:21 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2356, for Friday, December 23rd, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2356, with a release date of Friday, December 23rd, 2022, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams prep for severe winter weather in the US.
    Make plans for Ham Radio University -- and finally a Santa watch roundup
    and our annual Christmas card to you. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2356, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    SKYWARN OPS PREP FOR SEVERE WEATHER SEASON

    JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a report that acknowledges the severe weather now sweeping through much of the United States. For the radio volunteers of SKYWARN, there is no rest. Randy Sly, W4XJ, explains what
    comes next.

    RANDY: For SKYWARN Amateur Radio volunteers, there's no time off now that tornado and hurricane season is over. On December 10th, more than 1900 operators and 38 National Weather Service offices took part in a one-day operation called SKYWARN Recognition Day, or SRD, where stations contact
    as many of those offices as possible. Now, it's already time for winter weather reporting.

    In fact, Rob Macedo, KD1CY, one of the coordinators for SRD, didn’t even have time to finish compiling his reports before he was activated for a coastal storm last week that brought over 20" of snow in the Berkshire Mountain region of New England and rainfall of as much as 3 to 4.5" in southern New England.

    Ken Graham, director of the National Weather Service, who is also a ham
    radio operator with the callsign WX4KEG, sent a special video message to SKYWARN Recognition Day participants, thanking them for participating and
    for their involvement in SKYWARN reporting.

    Those reports, whether snow, tornado damage or other information, he
    said, have greatly helped the National Weather Service over the years.
    The link to the video message can be found in the text version of this
    report at ARNewline.org.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    [for print only, do not read:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HME-JjlEL8]

    **

    SPACE WEATHER CENTER TO HALT LOCAL MESSAGES

    JIM/ANCHOR: The United States government's Space Weather Prediction
    Center has proposed eliminating the recorded WWV geophysical alert
    message available from its local Colorado phone number, 303-497-3235.
    Callers to that number have been hearing the announcement about its discontinuation, which takes effect on January 15th, 2023.

    There are, however, numerous other ways to continue receiving this information. Robert Steenburgh, AD0IU, acting lead of the Space Weather Forecast Office, told Newsline that the messages are available via subscription service on their website under the Forecasts and Summaries category. He said subscribers can get these messages sent automatically
    every three hours when they are updated. The website appears in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    Rob also told Newsline that the recording is a duplicate of the message already available from WWV via telephone at (303) 499-7111 for WWV in Colorado, and (808) 335-4363 for WWVH in Hawaii at 18 minutes past every
    hour. He said the information is also available at the primary website of
    the center. That link also appears in the text version of this week's newscast.

    Comments on this change can be submitted to the Space Weather Prediction Center at the website spaceweather.gov under the feedback tab.

    [TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE MESSAGE: https://pss.swpc.noaa.gov ]

    [PRIMARY WEBSITE: https://www.spaceweather.gov/products/geophysical-alert-wwv-text ]

    (ROBERT STEENBURGH, AD0IU)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Dec 30 06:10:42 2022
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2357 for Friday, December 30th, 2022

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2357, with a release date of
    Friday, December 30th, 2022 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams in Switzerland get use of the 4m band.
    Amateur ranks grow on Prince Edward Island, Canada -- and get ready
    to jump into the DX Ultra-Marathon. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2357, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    SWISS AMATEURS GRANTED ACCESS TO 4M BAND

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with good news for the new year.
    Starting on the first of January, hams in Switzerland will be allowed
    to operate on the 4m band using all commonplace simplex modes. The
    Swiss amateur radio association USKA reported recently that their communications authorities have granted approval to hams holding HB9
    licenses for a maximum operating power of 25 watts ERP. Hams may
    operate only on freqencies between 70 MHz and 70.0375 MHz. They also
    have permission for the range between 70.1125 and 70.5000MHz.

    Relays and Echolink gateways will not be permitted on the band, and
    any stations being operated via remote-control must get permission
    from the Regulator, OFCOM-CH.

    (DARC, FEDERAL NETWORK AGENCY)

    **

    TEMPORARY AUTHORIZATIONS RENEWED IN GERMANY

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: There is also good news for hams in Germany as temporary authorisations for certain bands have been renewed for another year.
    Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has the details.

    JEREMY: In Germany, the Federal Network Agency, BNetZA, has extended temporary allocations for amateur operation in part of the160 metre,
    the 6 and 4 metre and 13 and 6 centimetre bands. These permissions were
    to have expired at the end of this year, but are now granted anew until
    the 31st of December 2023. According to a Google translation of the announcement in the agency Gazette, 6 m band operation is allowed in the
    50 to 50.4 MHz frequency range. Class A licence holders may use a maximum
    of 750 watts PEP and Class E licence holders can transmit with a maximum
    of 100 W PEP with operation only permitted using horizontal polarisation.
    For the frequency range between 50.4 and 52 MHz, only 25 watts PEP is
    allowed, but contest operation is permitted.

    On the 4m band, operation is granted up to 25w ERP using horizontal polarisation by Class A licence holders and on frequencies between 70.150
    and 70.210 MHz. At the top end of 160 metres, Class both A and E licence holders may use their permitted maximum transmission power, operating at weekends within the frequencies 1.85 and 2.00 MHz. Contest operation on
    160m is only allowed on these frequencies and at the weekend.

    Finally, holders of licence Class E are given access to the 13 and 6 cm
    bands, from 2320 to 2450 MHz and 5650 to 5850 MHz with a maximum power of
    5 W PEP so that they can take part in the Hamnet Mesh data network

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (FEDERAL NETWORK AGENCY)

    **

    HAM RANKS INCREASE ON PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AFTER STORMS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In one Canadian province, hams have noticed that the aftereffects of the past storm season haven't all been bad. Sel Embee,
    K B 3 T Zed D, is here to tell us about one big change for the better.

    SEL: There are a lot of happy radio operators on Prince Edward Island
    lately. Hams in this province of Atlantic Canada have discovered their
    ranks are growing.

    According to a report by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, tropical
    storm Fiona and the COVID-19 pandemic have created an environment that
    has led island residents to discover the appeal of radio communications. Prince Edward Island, also known among island chasers as IOTA Number
    NA-029, has become a place to nurture new amateurs, according to members
    of the Charlottetown Amateur Radio Club.

    The club's president, Bill McMaster, VY2WM, told the CBC that the group's membership has grown especially after amateur radio's profile grew during tropical storm Fiona this past September. At the time of the storm, local operators were helping with emergency response through the CANWARN
    emergency communications network, joining the ongoing nets, providing
    status reports and weather updates.

    Organizers told the CBC that the hams on the island expect to have another training program for license candidates by springtime.

    This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    (CBC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jan 6 06:35:57 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2358, for Friday, January 6th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2358, with a release date of Friday, January 6th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. There are two more callsigns to listen for from
    Bouvet Island. Smartphones are gaining increased satellite capability --
    hams in Ohio get an exemption from a new distracted-driving law. All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2358, comes your way
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BOUVET DXPEDITION ADDS TWO MORE CALLSIGNS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a Bouvet Island Dxpedition update.
    As if the 3Y0J team itself weren't generating enough buzz in the ham radiosphere, two additional callsigns are expected to be on the air from
    that coveted DX location. John Williams, VK4JJW, gives us those details.

    JOHN: The long-awaited Bouvet Island Dxpedition team has a new twist to
    its plans. Two Norwegian radio operators who are part of the Dxpedition
    team intend to operate from the island under their own calls for a
    limited time. It is intended to happen toward the end of the 3Y0J team's expected 22-day activation late this month. The development was reported
    on January 1st on the website DX-WORLD.NET, which gave confirmation from
    Ken, LA7GIA, co-leader of the main Bouvet activation. Ken said that this
    would be the first time any Norwegian with an LB callsign activated from Bouvet. The gameplan is apparently to have the 3Y0J pilot stations inform eager DX hunters when the pair get on the air. Be listening for the
    callsigns used by Gjermund, 3Y/LB5GI, and Erwann, 3Y/LB1QI.

    This is John Williams, VK4JJW.

    (DX-WORLD.NET, 3YØJ WEBSITE)

    **

    NEW SMARTPHONE MODELS GAIN SATELLITE ACCESS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: In this new year, sat-phone users and amateur radio
    operators won't be the only ones who can bounce radio signals off
    satellites. Here's Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, with that story.

    KENT: Some smartphones are gaining a new capability in the new year:
    direct satellite access. Text-messaging that uses satellite
    communications will be possible for some consumers using Hauwei and Apple devices, according to a recent report in the IEEE Spectrum. While Apple
    and Hauwei expect to use older satellites that are already in orbit by
    putting new chips in their flagship handsets, new low-Earth-orbit
    satellite networks are also being built. Those are in the works from
    startup companies Lynk Global and AST SpaceMobile, which hope to provide service to 5G phones in areas without terrestrial coverage.

    Observers note that this satellite functionality on smartphones will not include the ability to make phone calls or to stream data but its added capacity of texting will provide another means of calling for help in an emergency in regions where the caller has a clear view to the sky.

    Working in partnership with Globalstar, Apple devices have offered a
    service called Emergency SOS via satellite since last November. Huawei
    however has not yet announced the date of its rollout. Meanwhile, Lynk
    Global expects to begin operations in the new year and AST SpaceMobile
    expects to launch five of its satellites later this year.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (IEEE SPECTRUM)

    **

    STRAIGHT KEY MONTH GETS GOING FOR SKCC

    PAUL/ANCHOR: It's not just a new year, it's Straight Key Month, according
    to the calendar of the Straight Key Century Club. Randy Sly, W4XJ, keys
    in on the action for us.

    RANDY: With the ARRL's Straight Key Night, a January 1st event, already
    in the books, the Straight Key Century Club is keeping the fun going for
    CW operators around the world through to the end of the month. On January
    2nd, operators who are club members began calling CQ with various
    callsigns starting with K3Y from the 10 US call areas, as K3Y/0, through K3Y/9. Outside of the continental United States, club members are calling
    as K3Y/KH6, KL7 and KP4.

    Across six continents, operators will be on the air with stations for the special event, You will hear them calling "CQ SKM," using their own
    callsigns. These are stations in Africa, Asia, Europe, North America,
    Oceania and South America.

    This annual event celebrates the founding of the SKCC in 2006 and pays
    tribute to the earliest telegraphy keys - the straight key, the bug and
    the sideswiper, also known as the cootie.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Feb 3 02:12:59 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2362, for Friday, February 3rd, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2362 with a release date of Friday, February 3rd, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A ham club honors a combat casualty from the
    Vietnam War. Artificial intelligence gets on the air -- and it's time at
    last to chase the Bouvet Island DXpedition! All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2362, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    GET READY TO WORK BOUVET ISLAND 3Y0J

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to Bouvet Island. DX chasers - your
    ship has come in. That would be the sailing yacht known as the Marama,
    which inspite of windy, rainy conditions, stood by while a Zodiac made a difficult but successful landing on Bouvet Island with the 3Y0J team. As Newsline went to production, the team was setting up. Now it's time to
    start listening for signals from the second most wanted DXCC entity. In addition to the main 3Y0J station, you may want to listen for limited operation of four additional callsigns - 3Y7GIA, 3Y7THA, 3Y/LB5GI and
    3Y/LB1Q. For updates, see QR-Zed dot com and DX-world.net.

    (DX-WORLD.NET, 3Y0J WEBSITE)

    **

    FCC DEBUTS MAP, DATABASE OF PIRACY ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: In the United States, the Federal Communications Commission
    has finally put a piracy enforcement resource online that the agency says
    is late because of delays in funding. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, brings us
    that story.

    KENT: A database and map displaying pirate radio enforcement actions
    taken by the FCC has gone live as part of an overall response to the
    Pirate Act passed by Congress.

    The database shows the agency's actions over the past three years
    following the act's passage and includes consent decrees, landlord notice letters and the $10,000 forfeiture associated with pirate operations. The
    FCC said that it was delayed until now in implementing the Pirate Act
    because of funding delays and challeges posed by the pandemic. The
    funding covers the cost of other actions, including enforcement sweeps
    and in-person investigations. To comply with that mandate, the agency
    needs to hire additional field agents and buy a half-dozen mobile direction-finding vehicles . Although the FCC has already posted openings
    for five agents and a field counsel, its purchase of six mobile- direction-finding vehicles has been delayed, because much of the funding remains delayed.

    Implementation of the Pirate Act was expected to cost $11-million,
    according to the Congressional Budget Office. Funds were not provided
    until last March and only $5-million was available to the FCC at the
    time. The Pirate Act mandates enforcement sweeps in the top five markets.
    The act also strengthened the agency's enforcement abillity, permitting
    it to take action against those landlords and managers who permit pirate operations on their properties.

    For a link to the map and database, see the text version of this newscast
    at arnewsline.org

    [DO NOT READ: https://opendata.fcc.gov/stories/s/wgq8-eb5c ]

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (RADIO WORLD, FCC)

    **

    AMERICAN LEGION RADIO CLUB HONORS COMBAT CASUALTY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: A ham radio club in one South Carolina town is honoring a
    Vietnam War combat casualty by ensuring his name is never forgotten. We
    hear those details from Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    KEVIN: In the combat jungles of Vietnam, he was a link to the outside
    world for his fellow Marine infantrymen. William Hunter Kilburn of Aiken, South Carolina, was a radio telephone operator carrying a radio and an
    antenna for vital communications. In May of 1970 another Marine tripped a
    wire attached to a Viet Cong booby trap and the Aiken High School
    graduate, who had been walking behind him, was killed.

    His hometown remembers him well but even more than that the American
    Legion Radio Club, W4RTO, has chosen to honor him. The ham club,
    established at the post less than a year ago, now carries the Marine's
    name. There is a plaque at the post's headquarters identifying the site
    as the home of Private First Class William H. Kilburn Post 26 American
    Legion Radio Club. On January 24th, the club members also approved
    William Kilburn as an honorary member. The military had earlier awarded
    him a medal posthumously for combat valor. Now he serves as an
    inspiration in his home community where club members help youngsters
    study to get their radio license and where many members are looking for
    ways to deepen their own commitment to service in their own way.

    From Aiken, South Carolina, this is Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (NEWSBREAK AIKEN)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Feb 9 19:35:44 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2363, for Friday, February 10th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2363, with a release date of Friday, February 10th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams step in as tremors rock Turkey and Syria. A
    tough beginning on Bouvet Island -- and one radio repeater devotes itself
    to America's big football weekend. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2363, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    AMATEUR RADIO RESPONDS TO QUAKE IN TURKEY, SYRIA

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a developing story. A 7.8 magnitude earthquake shook southern Turkey, northern Syria and neighboring regions on Monday, February 6th. As the death and casualty counts continued to rise
    amid aftershocks, hams deepened their involvement in emergency response. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, gives us the details Newsline had at production time:

    JEREMY: With the death toll well into the thousands and many more injured
    in the massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake that shook the region along the borders of Syria and Turkey, Aziz Sasa, TA1E, president of IARU member
    society TRAC, arrived at the disaster area shortly after 6th February. He assisted with frequency coordination for the teams carrying out search operations. Aziz has been in touch with the IARU region's emergency communications coordinator Greg Mossop, G0DUB, who provided additional
    details to Newsline. Radio has played a pivotal role here on many levels.

    Other nations have also responded. Search and rescue teams from Georgia and Bosnia-Herzegovina arrived with hams among the group. Romania's team had no amateurs in theirs but was making use of communications equipment supplied
    by one of its amateur radio emergency groups. The Turkish emergency communications group was on VHF and UHF frequencies but also making use of 3.777 and 7.092 MHz as needed.

    Little was known at the time of writing about the level of response in
    Syria. Newsline will continue to follow this developing story.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (IARU, GREG MOSSOP, G0DUB)

    **

    BOUVET ISLAND IS ON THE AIR

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Troublesome weather conditions plagued the Bouvet Island DXpedition 3Y0J (Three Why Zero Jay) during its first days on the air, but
    the camp came through the high winds of February 8th without issues after
    it was secured. One member wrote on dx-world.net that it was [quote] "the most extreme expedition I've been to." [endquote]. There were also reports
    of the callsign being pirated so those who believe they have worked the
    island will only know for sure from the team's uploaded logs on the weekend
    of February 10th. While doing the uploads on the boat, they will re-stock their essential food to enable them to continue the DXpedition for another week. The team has added two streams of FT8 in fox-hound mode. Chasers were advised to not work the team on FT8 if they already logged a contact on CW
    or SSB. The West Coast pilot station, Rich KE1B, said that the team has
    scaled back its expectations in response to its current challenges.
    Operators had intended to log 200,000 QSOs from the island but according to Rich [quote] "the team will be lucky to get 20,000 QSOs instead." [endquote]

    (DX-WORLD.NET, 3Y0J.NO)

    **

    SILENT KEY: ORLANDO'S RAYMOND PAUL RICHARD, W4RPR

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: As Orlando Hamcation was about to get under way in Florida
    on Friday, Feb. 10th, the ham radio community there was grieving one of its leaders and top organizers. We hear those details from Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    JACK: Raymond Paul Richard, W4RPR, of Ocala, Florida, grew up in Michigan where he became an active amateur radio operator at the age of 14. A
    generous donor and life member of the ARRL, he belonged to its Maxim
    Society, a group whose membership comprises ARRL benefactors. At the time
    of his death on January 30th at age 65, Ray was serving as advance ticket chairman for Hamcation, which is also the ARRL's Southeastern Division Convention.

    He was active in the Orlando Amateur Radio Club and had previously served
    as its membership chairman. His range of work on behalf of the club earned
    him the group's KB4UT Wayne Nelson Amateur of the Year award in 2019. The award is named for the club's former president who became a Silent Key in 2001.

    This is Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (ORLANDO SENTINEL, ARRL NEWSLETTER)
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Feb 17 14:00:36 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2364, for Friday, February 17th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2364, with a release date of Friday, February 17th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Goodbye, Bouvet Island. A wake-up call for
    weather preparedness in Texas -- and Brazil says goodbye to a noted DXer
    and DXpeditioner. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report
    Number 2364, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BREAKING NEWS: AMATEUR BALLOON'S FATE A MYSTERY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with the latest chapter in the story of mystery balloons being shot down over North America by US military
    planes. The first and most famous, of course, was a suspected Chinese spy balloon. The audio of the Air Force pilots' communications was recorded successfully by an aviation enthusiast and radio buff during the downing
    of the balloon.

    However, as Newsline went to production, questions were being raised
    about the whereabouts of an amateur radio balloon with the callsign
    K9YO-15 launched last October by a group known as the Northern Illinois Bottlecap Balloon Brigade. Unconfirmed reports say the 32-inch sphere
    carrying a 10-gram payload may be the same one that was shot down over
    the Canadian Yukon. Lightweight and relatively inexpensive to build, its payload, with a solar panel package and a tracker in the middle,
    transmitted APRS telemetry on HF at very low power.

    Cary Willis, KD9ITO, a member of the group, said the balloon has been
    declared missing in action and is considered lost.

    According to a post on the website RTL-SDR.COM, a memo from the US
    Pentagon said an object was shot down over Canada that appeared to be a
    "small metallic balloon with a tethered payload." [endquote] The
    description closely fits that of K9YO-15.

    Cary told Newsline in an email: [quote] "I suppose anything is possible." [endquote] He said FBI agents visited the balloon program's website and
    spent time with members of the group on a conference call. Cary said:
    [quote] "I shared that besides having fun, we're here to teach others how
    to build and launch Pico Balloons legally, following the Code of Federal Regulations relating to balloons." [endquote] He said he told others on
    the balloon team that they should be proud of the project and what it has accomplished.

    He added [quote] "Personally, I believe that if we were shot down, what a wonderful way to end our flight." [endquote]

    (RTL-SDR.COM, CARY WILLIS, KD9ITO)

    **

    DXPEDITIONERS LEAVE BOUVET ISLAND

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We move next to Bouvet Island, where the 3Y0J DXpedition is history, as we hear from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: Goodbye-Bouvet Island. Goodbye from the DXpedition team Three Why
    Zero Jay, which departed on Tuesday, February 14th after striking down
    camp. Goodbye too to the chasers who, whether they were disappointed or
    not, have turned to other pursuits. As Newsline went to production, team leader Ken LA7GIA announced that with all equipment and team members on
    board, the sail would commence onwards to Cape Town, South Africa, where
    they expected to arrive on or about the 23rd of February. There was a possibility of /MM operation while enroute. Team members do not have
    access to the log, which will be handled by QSL Manager M0OXO.

    I'm Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (DX-WORLD.NET)

    **

    WAKE-UP CALL FOR WEATHER PREPAREDNESS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The tragic death of an older man in fast-moving flood waters prompted emergency responders in Texas to review their weather spotting
    and communications strategies. Randy Sly, W4XJ, explains what they did.

    RANDY: In late January, Hunt and Rockwell counties in North Texas
    received a "wake-up call", when an elderly man died after his SUV was
    swept away by flood waters. In the wake of that deadly flooding, Bianca Garcia, from the National Weather Service, held Skywarn training in the
    city of Greenville, at the invitation of the Hunt County Office of
    Homeland Security/Emergency Management and the Greenville Fire-Rescue Department. The seminar covered the various threats posed by severe thunderstorms, severe weather safety and storm reporting. Even with radar
    and satellite imaging, Garcia emphasized the import role spotters play.
    She told the audience, "You guys are presenting that special set of human
    eyes for us on the ground."

    Many of the attendees were members of the Sabine Valley Amateur Radio Association, which provides trained spotters to the National Weather
    Service and emergency management agencies. Following the meeting, a three-night course was also offered on how to become an amateur radio operator. The wake-up call was heeded and those North Texas counties are
    now more storm ready.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Mar 23 22:03:01 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2369 for Friday March 24th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2369, with a release date of Friday, March 24th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Fire destroys an important lifesaving repeater in Oklahoma. The Dayton amateur radio community loses a leader -- and a
    victory atop an Australian summit for one young operator. All this and
    more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2369, comes your way right
    now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    FIRE DESTROYS VITAL REPEATER IN SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA

    NEIL/ANCHOR: A vital repeater in southern Oklahoma has literally gone up
    in smoke, leaving a region without an important emergency communications resource. Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, has that story.

    RALPH: Fire has destroyed the W5BLW repeater in southern Oklahoma, taking
    down a critically important resource for SKYWARN, the Red Cross and local emergency operations in five counties of the region. According to Vance
    Smith, KE5BAL, of the Ardmore Amateur Radio Club, it will be a slow road
    back for the repeater, which stood for more than 16 years.

    Vance told Newsline that the repeater was consumed by a controlled burn
    that went the wrong way on the private ranch property where the repeater
    stood. By the time the damage was noticed on the mountaintop, it was too
    late.

    Now the scrambling - and the hard work - begins so that emergency communications can resume when needed.

    Vance said he has an old repeater that can be put up temporarily on
    another site, but it will be a while before a full power repeater will
    be back in action at the site on top of Arbuckle Mountain. He told
    Newsline [quote] "We have a lot of work to do up at the site. We are
    going to need a tower climber to do work up top, and along the side of
    the tower." [endquote]

    The Ardmore Amateur Radio Club repeater bears the name and callsign of
    Ardmore club member Charles M. Dibrell who became a Silent Key in 1998.
    He had been a licensed ham since 1929.

    Vance told Newsline: [quote] "This is a very important piece of radio equipment for southern Oklahoma."[endquote]

    This is Ralph Squilllace, KK6ITB.

    (VANCE SMITH, KE5BAL; QRZ: LLOYD COLSTON, KC5FM)

    **

    FCC SEEKS GUIDELINES FOR CELLPHONE SATELLITE OPTION

    NEIL/ANCHOR: A recent move by the FCC means that increasing numbers of smartphone users may discover what hams already know: that when there's
    no terrestrial service, additional coverage is readily available from satellites. Dave Parks, WB8ODF, has the details.

    DAVE: Smartphones may soon have a direct connection to satellites when necessary, following a move by the US Federal Communications Commission
    to set out guidelines for such service. While space-based connections
    are already a reality on a limited basis with Apple phones and are in
    the works for T-Mobile, SpaceX, Qualcomm and Iridium, guidelines are
    still needed to sort out the rules for broader implementation. A recent
    draft document by the FCC seeks to explore this kind of supplemental
    service and how it would work.

    The FCC said in a news release that this would require agency
    authorization for terrestrial-based providers, so they could provide
    licensed operation on a part of the spectrum reserved for them. Phones
    would switch to the satellite signal when no other signal is available.

    This is Dave Parks, WB8ODF.

    (TECH CRUNCH)

    **

    SILENT KEY: HAMVENTION'S RON CRAMER, KD8ENJ

    NEIL/ANCHOR: A leader in the Dayton, Ohio amateur radio community, and
    a force in the annual Dayton Hamvention, has become a Silent Key. We
    hear more from Patrick Clark, K8TAC.

    PATRICK: Amateurs in Dayton, Ohio and beyond often looked to Ron Cramer, KD8ENJ, for leadership. He was the vice president of the Dayton Amateur
    Radio Association, which he had one time serve as president, and he was
    general chairman of Dayton Hamvention. Ron became a Silent Key on Saturday, March 11th, after a brief illness.

    His skills at organizing and leading especially came to the forefront as
    part of the group that worked to provide Hamvention with a smooth
    transition to the Greene County Fairgrounds after more than five decades
    at Hara Arena.

    In a message on the ARRL website, DARA president Jack Gerbs, WB8SCT,
    described Ron as [quote] "a hardworking, dedicated, wonderful person who
    had a positive impact on everyone he encountered. His only fault was, he
    would never say no." [endquote]

    Ron Cramer was 75.

    This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.

    (DAYTON DAILY NEWS, ARRL)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Apr 14 12:45:40 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2372, for Friday, April 14th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2372, with a release date of Friday,
    April 14th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. US-made vacuum tubes prepare to make a comeback.
    NASA names a trio of hams for the next Artemis mission -- and meet a YL
    who is Poland's youngest SOTA operator. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2372 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    VACUUM TUBE-MAKING ON THE COMEBACK IN THE US

    DON/ANCHOR: American-made vacuum tubes are poised to make a comeback onto
    the market this summer. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, tells us what's been going
    on.

    KENT: As the rising cost of vacuum tubes manufactured mostly in China and Russia increasingly cramps audiophiles, musicians and others seeking a particular audio quality, one factory in the US southeast is preparing to bring tube-manufacturing back home.

    With assembly line workers getting down to business inside his Western Electric plant in Rossville, Georgia, entrepreneur Charles Whitener
    expects to restore American-made vacuum tubes to the worldwide market in
    just a few months. According to reports on such websites as wired.com and audioexpress.com, Whitener's goal is to resume production of the single-
    ended triode tube known as the 300B, a design that dates back to 1938.
    His plant, known as the Rossville Works, is home to the Western Electric vacuum tube brand which Whitener bought in 1995 from AT&T.

    This summer he expects to introduce a reimagined version of the audio
    vacuum tube known as the 12AX7, a dual triode tube commonly found in amplifiers for guitars. According to Wired.com, it will be the first US-
    made tube in decades and it is expected to be followed by numerous other US-made models. The Wired.com report said: [quote] "If all goes to plan,
    the US could once again dominate vacuum tube manufacturing." [endquote]

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (WIRED, AUDIOXPRESS.COM, HACKADAY)

    **

    THREE HAMS CHOSEN FOR ARTEMIS MOON MISSION

    DON/ANCHOR: The next NASA radio amateurs in space are preparing to be
    part of a four-person team flying near the moon for the first time in
    more than 50 years. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, tells us who they are.

    ANDY: NASA and the Canadian Space Agency have announced the members of
    the Artemis II crew comprising NASA's first crewed mission to establish a presence near the moon next year. Three members of the four-person team
    are amateur radio operators: commander Reid Wiseman, KF5LKT, pilot Victor Glover, KI5BKC, and mission specialist Jeremy Hansen, KF5LKU. The other mission specialist is Christina Hammock Koch. The mission is scheduled
    for November of 2024. The previous mission, Artemis I, was not crewed.

    This will be a flight test lasting about 10 days and will validate the life-support systems of the Orion spacecraft, along with other
    demonstrations.

    Unlike his fellow crew members, Hansen is making his first trip into
    space. He is a Canadian citizen and is the first Canadian to train
    astronaut candidates from both Canada and the US.

    This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (NASA, AMSAT NEWS SERVICE)

    **

    GET ON THE AIR FOR WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY

    DON/ANCHOR: It's the QSO Party to end all other QSO parties: World
    Amateur Radio Day, April 18th, the day amateurs participate in a global celebration of the founding of the International Amateur Radio Union. Be listening on HF as the IARU and its member societies get on the air with special events through the 25th of April. There will be more than 50
    special event stations around the world with callsigns ending in W A R D,
    for World Amateur Radio Day. They include TM98WARD, 9Y4WARD, OT23WARD and
    a host of others.

    Here in the States and over in the UK, the ROC-HAM Radio Network is contributing to the festivities by hosting a 12-hour birthday net. Listen
    for John, W2JLD, and Dave, GW8SZL, who will be marking the occasion on
    the VOIP/ECHOLINK *ROC-HAM* Conference node #531091, as well as various Allstar Nodes, the DMR TGIF Talk Group 2585 and Extended Freedom SIP
    Portal 2585. John will be on the air during that time too, operating on
    10, 20, and 40 metres, using the callsign W2W.

    For more details, visit IARU.org.

    (IARU, QRZ.COM)
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Apr 21 08:34:28 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2373, for Friday, April 21st, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2373 with a release date of Friday,
    April 21st, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. In the US, the FCC commits itself to managing satellites more effectively. Two losses hit the World Radiosport Team Championship -- and Nokia and NASA look at putting wireless on the moon.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2373, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    FCC COMMITS TO IMPROVING SATELLITE MANAGEMENT

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to Washington, D.C., where two new
    FCC offices are taking a closer look at how to better handle all those satellites in orbit high above our planet. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, brings
    us up to date.

    ANDY: Hoping to get a better handle on regulating satellites and reducing
    the effects of orbital debris, the US Federal Communications Commission
    has added two new departments under its umbrella: the Space Bureau and
    the Office of International Affairs. The move replaces the agency's International Bureau, which handled licensing and regulation of satellite programs and international telecommunications.

    The FCC's announcement did not specify what impact, if any, this move
    would have on amateur radio satellites.

    FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said at an opening event for the new departments that they would [quote] "promote long-term technical capacity
    to address satellite policies and approve our coordination with other
    agencies on all of these issues." [endquote]

    The departments are expected to coordinate their efforts in such areas as
    the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference. The conference will take
    place in Dubai starting on November 20th.

    This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (FCC, NEXTGOV.COM)

    **

    AGENCY SEEKS STRATEGY FOR REPURPOSING SPECTRUM

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Another US government agency is taking a look at whether
    some frequencies need to be reallocated as more and more wireless devices
    get on the air. Stephen Kinford, N8WB, brings us that story.

    STEPHEN: In the United States, an increasing appetite for spectrum from wireless services has spurred the National Telecommunications and
    Information Administration to find at least 1,500 MHz of the radio
    spectrum to meet that demand.

    The NTIA is looking for input from the public to identify which bands
    could be repurposed under this new spectrum strategy. The agency said on
    its website that the strategy is [quote] "a government-wide approach to maximizing the potential of our nation's spectrum resources." [endquote]
    The NTIA shares spectrum-allocation duties with the Federal
    Communications Commission.

    In the United States, hams already share many UHF and microwave bands
    with government users.

    To learn more, follow the link in the text version of this week's
    Newsline script.

    This is Stephen Kinford, N8WB.

    [FOR PRINT ONLY: https://ntia.gov/issues/national-spectrum-strategy ]

    (NTIA, AMATEUR RADIO WEEKLY)

    **

    NOKIA AND NASA TO PUT WIRELESS SERVICE ON THE MOON

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, a whole new wireless network of sorts is being
    looked at - for the moon! Let's hear more from Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    KENT: An LTE/4G network destined for the moon is expected to launch on
    board a SpaceX rocket later this year, according to plans from the
    Finnish telecommunications giant Nokia. According to reports on CNBC,
    it's part of a partnership with NASA that envisions the creation of the
    first colony on the lunar surface.

    A message on Nokia's webpage states that the network will be designed to support the transmitting of telemetry, biometrics, and sensing
    applications and will also be available for HD video and robotics. Nokia states that the high-bandwidth network will be a vital tool in NASA's
    plan for so-called "sustainable exploration" of the moon.

    NASA chose the Finnish telecommunications company in 2020, announcing
    Nokia's role in the Artemis lunar program to return a human presence to
    the moon -- this time for extended operations by the end of the decade. According to the Nokia website, the network will include an LTE Base
    Station with integrated Evolved Packet Core functionalities, LTE User Equipment and RF antennas. The system will have hardware redundancy and through its software, the capacity for remote operation.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (NOKIA, CNBC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Apr 27 22:08:26 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2374, for Friday, April 28th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2374, with a release date of Friday,
    April 28th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The FCC's new Space Bureau releases its first set
    of rules for satellites. ARRL members: Look for a possible hike in dues
    soon -- and a new micro-supercapacitor could be a game changer. All this
    and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2374, comes your way,
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    NEW SATELLITE BUREAU PRODUCES SPECTRUM RULES

    PAUL/ANCHOR: A newly created bureau of the FCC has just produced its
    first set of rules governing satellites. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, tells us what
    this means.

    SEL: Just days after the US Federal Communications Commission announced
    the creation of its new Space Bureau on April 11th, the fledgling
    department has already adopted new rules for spectrum-sharing among
    satellites in non-geostationary orbit. The rules require operators with licenses for these satellites to avoid interference with one another. According to a report on the spacenews.com website, future licensees must demonstrate how they will coordinate with their predecessors and protect
    them from interference.

    The FCC is asking licensees to coordinate their systems [quote] "in good faith," [endquote] meaning that they are expected to share information,
    even with competitors in the marketplace.

    The regulator will be looking for comments from the public.

    This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.

    (SPACENEWS.COM)

    **

    ARRL INVITES COMMENTS ON INCREASE IN DUES

    PAUL/ANCHOR: If you are a member of the ARRL, it's time to let them know
    what you think about their proposal to increase membership dues. Patrick Clark, K8TAC, tells us how to get your message across.

    PATRICK: The ARRL is making an online survey available starting on May
    1st, inviting all league members to share their thoughts on membership benefits and the prospect of higher dues. In delivering his message in
    the April issue of the ARRL magazine QST, CEO David Minster NA2AA
    stressed the importance of participation by every ARRL member.

    Before members can do so, however, they also need to review their
    accounts on the league website to ensure it is still valid. On May 1st
    you will be able to share your thoughts when the survey goes live. Please
    see the text version of our newscast at arnewsline.org for a link you can follow for more details.

    The ARRL encourages members who are having difficulty with their log-in process to call the league at 860-594-0200 or send an email to membership@arrl.org

    This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.

    [DO NOT READ: https://www.arrl.org/dues-survey ]

    (ARRL)

    **

    UAE ASTRONAUT HAS 1ST QSO IN NEW EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Students enjoyed an amateur radio contact with an ISS
    astronaut who, like them, is from the United Arab Emirates. It was a
    "first" for a new educational program. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, shares the details.

    JIM MEACHEN: Twenty-five students from a number of schools in the United
    Arab Emirates got a chance to connect over amateur radio with ISS mission specialist Sultan Al Neyadi, KI5VTV. The call on April 18th was the first
    of 10 scheduled educational sessions being arranged with the
    communications engineer by the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre in Dubai
    and the Emirates Literature Foundation in collaboration with the Emirates Amateur Radio Society.

    It was the first ham radio contact through this programme for the
    astronaut, who is the second from the United Arab Emirates. As the ISS
    passed over the region, the call utilised the Centre's ground station to
    make the contact.

    Like the international ham radio programme known as Amateur Radio on the International Space Station, or ARISS, ELF in Space provides a window
    into life aboard the space station and the various challenges and
    projects undertaken by those on board. Perhaps just as importantly for
    some, it also provides an amateur radio experience.

    This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (GULF NEWS, EMIRATES NEWS AGENCY)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 4 18:05:56 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2375, for Friday, May 5th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2375, with a release date of Friday,
    May 5th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams in Australia have only another month to weigh
    in on a new class license. The FCC proposes changes to the 60 metre band
    -- and a controversial bill about RF emissions has hams in Maine worried.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2375, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    PLAN TO STUDY 5G IN MAINE WORRIES STATE'S AMATEURS

    JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the state of Maine, where
    hams are expressing concern over a telecommunications bill that proposes a study on radio frequency emissions. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, has an update.

    ANDY: Ham radio operators in the state of Maine are keeping an eye on a
    bill in which lawmakers call for a study of radio frequency radiation emissions and the environmental impact of 5G technology. The bill is
    stalled for now in the Committee on Energy, Utilities and Technology but according to a recent story in the Maine Monitor, hams in the state are concerned that such a study of 5G holds the potential for unintended restrictions of frequencies shared by amateur radio operators. Phil
    Duggan, N1EP, the ARRL section manager for Maine, told Newsline in an
    email that amateurs are seeking wording to be added to the bill that
    exempts amateur radio and public safety communications. Phil said that
    ARRL New England Division Director Fred Kemmerer, AB1OC, had advised hams
    to be on the alert as anti-5G bills are introduced in a number of state legislatures, with wording that could impact ham radio.

    The bill in Maine, introduced by Republican lawmaker Tracy Quint, targets
    the telecommunications industry specifically and its language does not
    mention amateur radio. Hams nonetheless have submitted written testimony protesting the bill, noting that hams are already required to conduct evaluations of their radio frequency radiation in compliance with FCC regulations that ensure safety.

    This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.

    (NEWS CENTER MAINE, MAINE MONITOR)

    **

    FCC PROPOSES CHANGES TO 60 METER BAND

    JIM/ANCHOR: The US Federal Communications Commission has changes planned
    for the 60m band and wants to hear from you. Patrick Clark, K8TAC, tells
    us more.

    PATRICK: Following the lead set at the World Radiocommunications
    Conference in 2015 and adopted most recently by Canadian regulators, the
    US Federal Communications Commission has proposed changes to the 60m band
    that would allocate 15 kHz of contiguous bandwidth between 5351.5 and
    5366.5 kHz for amateur radio on a secondary basis.

    US General, Advanced and Extra Hams presently have five channels available
    to them between 5332 and 5405 kHz - also on a secondary basis - with an effective radiated power limit of 100 W PEP The proposed new bandwidth
    would set a limit of 15 watts EIRP.

    The FCC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking was released on April 21st and
    aligns itself with terms advocated for by the ARRL.

    The band's primary user in the US is the federal government.

    The National Telecommunications and Information Administration favors
    adoption of the new proposed bandwidth, with hams losing the ability to
    use four of the five permitted channels. The remaining channel would be included within the new contiguous portion of the 60m band.

    The ARRL, however, previously asked the FCC to keep the four 60-meter
    channels that fall outside the new band and to retain the 100w power
    limit.

    The notice is to be published in the Federal Register in May and comments
    from the public are due no later than 60 days after the notice appears.

    This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.

    (FCC, ARRL)

    **

    AUSTRALIAN REGULATOR MOVES AHEAD ON NEW CLASS LICENSE

    JIM/ANCHOR: The Australian communications regulator is moving ahead with a proposed new class license. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us what's involved.

    GRAHAM: Amateurs with a VK license have until Thursday the 1st of June to
    have their say on proposed changes by the Australian Communications and
    Media Authority that would create a class license with considerations for
    a staged implementation of higher power authorization. The ACMA states on
    its website that intends to implement the proposed class licensing arrangements starting on the 1st of July and expects to give the amateur community ample notice before this change comes into effect.

    The ACMA also says that the revised class license proposal was created by incorporating suggestions from representative bodies, amateur radio clubs
    and individual amateurs.

    The Wireless Institute of Australia does not support this change, however, saying it could only support the change on a "no disadvantage" basis.

    On May 1st, the ACMA website published submissions from the public that
    were not made anonymously.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    JIM/ANCHOR: Amateur satellite and SHF enthusiasts in Australia can expect
    to lose all or part of the 9cm band under another proposal by the
    Australian Communications and Media Authority. The regulator has been
    looking at the frequencies between 3.4 GHz and 3.6 GHz for possible use in long-term earth station protection zones. As with other ACMA proposals,
    the deadline for public comment to the regulator is July 1st.

    (ACMA)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri May 12 00:02:02 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2376, for Friday, May 12th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2376, with a release date of Friday,
    May 12th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams in the Caribbean gear up for storm season. Amateurs help a woman in India reconnect with her family -- and the ARRL offers US hams assistance in evaluating their RF emissions. All this and
    more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2376 comes your way right
    now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    CARIBBEAN REGION HAMS GEAR UP FOR STORM SEASON

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the Caribbean, where hams await
    the storm season ahead with formal training and an emerging disaster
    response network. John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us those details.

    JOHN: With the approach of this year's hurricane season in the Caribbean region, emergency training exercises have got underway again for amateurs
    in the Youlou Radio Movement/Rainbow Radio League in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

    As always, amateurs will be relying largely on HF communications because
    the mountainous terrain of the islands in the region provides challenges
    for successful VHF signal paths. Youlou has been in the process of growing
    its emergency network and now has 10 stations based on the main island, including one near the airport.

    The league's director, Donald de Riggs, J88CD, told local media outlets
    that the hams are closer than ever to creating the island-wide HF
    emergency network they have long envisioned. They are also looking to
    support a more robust maritime rescue and air response network for
    disasters throughout the region.

    New equipment has been donated and one of their biggest benefactors has
    been Australia-based Barrett Communications. The most recent of three shipments from that company arrived in February, bringing SDR transceivers
    and sturdy antennas, hopefully capable of surviving the coming season of storms.

    This is John Willliams, VK4JJW.

    (THE VINCENTIAN, AIR FORCE TECHNOLOGY)

    **

    WEST BENGAL AMATEURS RECONNECT FAMILY AFTER 10 YEARS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: It took 10 years for a woman in India to find her way back
    to the family she left behind when she married. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, tells
    us how hams assisted her in her journey.

    JIM: An early marriage and separation from her family kept Rubina Begum
    apart from her family in Bengal for more than a decade. With the help of police and the West Bengal Radio Club, the relatives have found one
    another again.

    According to reports in the Times of India and the Millennium Post, the National Commission for Women, a government entity that advocates for
    women, had been trying to assist her in tracing the family she had lost
    touch with after marrying into a Kashmiri family at the age of 14. The
    media reports said that the woman, who is now 24 years old, was originally brought to the Baramulla sector in Jammu and Kashmir to be married because
    her father was unable to bear the expense of raising four children at
    home.

    The woman's brother, Hassan Ali Sheikh, told the Times of India that in
    the ensuing years they believed she was lost to them forever. But he spoke with her, at long last, on Wednesday, May 3rd, after the women's
    commission contacted state police who reached out to the hams in West
    Bengal. The club has a long track record of facilitating such reunions.
    After contacting the woman with the phone number provided, club secretary Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, reached out to a colleague proficient in
    Hindi and Kashmiri and details of her story finally emerged. Her brother
    is expected to travel and bring her home to Bengal soon to be with the
    family she has missed so much.

    This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (TIMES OF INDIA, MILLENNIUM POST)

    **

    ARRL OFFERS ASSISTANCE TO HAMS FOR RF COMPLIANCE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: If you haven't already checked your station to evaluate
    its compliance on RF exposure, the ARRL is offering some help. Dave Parks, WB8ODF, has that story.

    DAVE: The ARRL has reminded amateurs in the United States that it is
    making its resources available to help licensees comply with FCC rules on
    RF exposure limits. Those limits went into effect in 2021 and a two-year transition period was granted to permit hams to conduct evaluations and
    make necessary changes for stations that do not conform to the exposure
    rules.

    The ARRL issued its reminder to hams just as the transition period ended
    on May 3rd. Hams are not exempt from conducting such evaluations even if
    they transmit at very low power.

    The league's resources include a video about RF exposure and evaluation;
    an RF exposure calculator and an RF safety section excerpted from the ARRL Handbook.

    Perhaps most importantly, the league is encouraging all hams to make use
    of these resources whether or not they belong to the ARRL or have
    established a website account.

    Visit arrl.org for more details.

    This is Dave Parks, WB8ODF.

    (ARRL)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 18 19:01:46 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2377, for Friday, May 19th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2377, with a release date of Friday,
    May 19th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. US hams prep for hurricane season. Getting a
    stubborn folding antenna to unfold - in space! And an early net marks
    24,000 mornings of check-ins. All this and more, as Amateur Radio
    Newsline Report Number 2377, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMVENTION IS HAPPENING IN XENIA, OHIO

    DON/ANCHOR: As Newsline went to production, hams from all over the world
    were converging on a busy fairground in the US state of Ohio for
    Hamvention. Be sure to listen to our newscast next Friday, May 26th, for
    a Hamvention wrap up.

    **

    IT'S ONLY A TEST (FOR NOW) AT THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER

    DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with - what else? - the weather. It's
    storm season in many parts of the world and here in parts of the United States, amateurs are checking their hurricane season preparedness. We
    hear more about that from Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    RANDY: It's that time of year again, when amateurs check out their
    equipment, and get ready for a new season of storms and storm-related activity. This is especially important for such stations as WX4NHC at the National Hurricane Center in Florida. Their annual on-the-air
    communications test will take place on Saturday, May 27 from 9 a.m. until
    5 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time.

    Assistant Amateur Radio Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4R, says that the
    purpose of the event is to test the station’s equipment and antennas as
    well as operators' home equipment prior to the 2023 Hurricane Season
    which runs from June 1st through November 30th.

    The station will be operating on HF, VHF and UHF, including 2 and 30-
    meter APRS and Winlink.

    Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, net manager of the Hurricane Watch Net, told AR
    Newsline that they will be active during that time, on or near their
    standard frequencies of 14.325 and 7.268 MHz, depending on propagation.
    The VoIP Hurricane Net will activate that day too from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time.

    Look for WX4NHC on the air or posted on DX Cluster. For more information,
    you can visit wx4nhc.org.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    **

    SILENT KEY: PETER STUART, PA3EPX, FORMER VERON BOARD MEMBER

    DON/ANCHOR: A ham who helped build enthusiasm for homebrew and other
    amateur radio practices in The Netherlands has become a Silent Key. We
    hear more details about him from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: Peter Stuart, PA3EPX, was well-known for his enthusiasm and
    creative spirit within the leadership and membership of VERON, the Dutch amateur radio society. Peter, who first became active in VERON at the end
    of the 1970s, became a Silent Key on the 16th of April.

    He was remembered by colleagues as an advocate for teaching fox hunting
    and for his service on the VERON board as its secretary. An avid do-it- yourselfer, he was also a proponent of homebrew equipment and he
    encouraged others to build a variety of projects including an ATV
    transmitter.

    Peter was 71.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (VERON)

    **

    JUPITER SPACECRAFT RESOLVES ANTENNA ISSUES

    DON/ANCHOR: There's antenna work..........and then there's antenna work.
    If your antenna is a folding antenna that won't unfold - and it's out in
    space - you're gonna need to do a little more than just climb up the
    tower to fix it. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us what happened.

    GRAHAM: With the launch last month of the European Space Agency's JUICE mission - short for Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer - hopes were high for its antenna, which had been folded up inside the spacecraft ready for its
    eventual full deployment. The 16-metre-long antenna, known as RIME - for
    Radar for Icy Moons Exploration - was to completely unfold in its first
    week after the launch date and it did - that is, all but one final part.

    According to various media accounts, a variety of remedies were tried
    without success until the flight control team finally freed the remaining
    part by delivering a shock that moved a tiny stuck pin that had left the antenna section jammed in its folded position. The shock came via a
    device known as a nonexplosive actuator that was located inside the
    bracket. What happened was disruptive enough to shake things up.

    May 12th brought freedom as the stuck part became unstuck.

    Now the antenna should be ready for an even bigger challenge - the moons around the giant planet Jupiter. The mission will use the antenna to
    study those icy moons as far down as 9 km, analysing both the surface and subsurface. What unfolds there may possibly deliver some shocks of its
    own.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY, DIGITAL TRENDS)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu May 25 21:52:28 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2378, for Friday, May 26th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2378 with a release date of Friday,
    May 26th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Deadly floods ravage a region in Italy. Hamvention 2023 is just a memory now -- and a tragic antenna accident claims a noted contester's life. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report
    Number 2378, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    FLOODS RAVAGE REGION OF ITALY HOSTING WRTC

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Italy where deadly floods
    in one region have displaced and disrupted lives and the economy. This is
    to be the location of the World Radiosport Team Championship later this summer, as we hear from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: Besieged by flooding that displaced more than 36,000 people and
    killed at least 14, Italy's Emilia-Romagna region has received some
    limited support from amateur radio. Greg Mossop, G0DUB, emergency communications coordinator for IARU Region 1, told Newsline that hams made
    use of local VHF repeaters to resume communications within affected towns until mobile and landline phone networks could be put back into service.
    He said the failures were not severe enough for local authorities to ask regional ham radio emergency networks to activate. Hams did remain on
    standby, ready to use HF, VHF and digital voice if necessary.

    Greg said the IARU received the information from Alberto Barbera IK1YLO
    (Eye Kay Won Why El Oh) of the RNRE radio communications network. Alberto
    said the affected area asked for additional support from other countries
    in the region to provide extra pumping capacity and those teams made use
    of VHF/UHF commercial communications supported by Starlink satellite terminals.

    Separately, organisers of the World Radiosport Team Championship, to be
    held this summer in Bologna - in this flood-impacted region -- were
    keeping an eye on the challenging conditions. Luca Aliprandi, IK2NCJ, who handles media and communications for the event, said on the WRTC Groups.io list that if some sites for WRTC are unusable, competitor stations may
    need to be relocated farther north of Bologna. He wrote [quote] "Our will
    and dedication to organising WRTC2022 will be stronger than any adversity." [endquote]

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (GREG MOSSOP, G0DUB, IARU REGION 1)

    **

    ACMA, COLLEGE END RELATIONSHIP FOR AMATEUR LICENSING

    NEIL/ANCHOR: As Newsline went to production, the Australian Maritime
    College announced that it was severing its relationship with the
    Australian regulator for providing amateur licensee services. The college
    and the Australian Communications and Media Authority will go their
    separate ways in February 2024. Before the college's selection in 2019, services such as exams and callsign recommendations were provided through
    the Wireless Institute of Australia. The ACMA is to take the role of call
    sign allocation and examination syllabus control "in-house" to go with the licensing role which it already fulfills -- and to do this under the new
    class license framework. The ACMA said it would release a consultation on
    the new accreditation scheme this coming August at the same time as the
    new class licensing arrangements take effect.

    (ACMA)

    **

    FCC TO REVISIT SPECTRUM ALLOCATIONS

    NEIL/ANCHOR: In the US, the FCC has a busy June ahead of itself: It's
    taking a second and perhaps a third look at spectrum allocations -- and there's a new candidate nominated to join them, as we hear from Paul
    Braun, WD9GCO.

    PAUL: In June, the US Federal Communications Commission will revisit ways
    the radio spectrum can be utilized more efficiently and study the propose testing of a few uses on part of the 42 GHz band in the so-called
    "greenfield spectrum." Greenfield spectrum refers to the part of the
    spectrum that is unutilized. The FCC's focus has been intensifying on this along with other parts of the spectrum because of the growing demand for
    its use by emerging wireless services -- and limited places to authorize
    their operation.

    FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced this plan in the commission's June agenda, posting her message on the agency website on May 17th. She
    said the 42 GHZ band was an apt place for conducting experiments with
    various spectrum-access models because of the absence of licensed users
    there.

    Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden has nominated a longtime telecom lawyer
    for the government, to join the FCC. Anna Gomez must still be confirmed by
    the Senate. The president's previous nominee, Gigi Sohn, withdrew from consideration several months earlier.

    This is Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (FCC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jun 1 20:28:58 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2379, for Friday, June 2nd, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2379, with a release date of
    Friday, June 2nd, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The Rockall Island DXpedition is on the air
    and rocking! A supernova sends a message to earth by radio -- and one
    CW enthusiast goes from pounding the brass to winning it. All this,
    and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2379, comes your way
    right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    ROCKALL DXPEDITION ACTIVATES IN NORTH ATLANTIC

    JIM/ANCHOR: The big challenge is on!! Our top story takes us to the uninhabitable granite islet in the North Atlantic Ocean known as
    Rockall Island, which is being activated by two amateur radio
    operators. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, takes us there.

    ED: As Newsline went to production, two hams were on the air, and the competition for contacts was predictably intense. It's a challenge
    for chasers around the world. For the hams, the challenge is even
    bigger: Emil Bergman, DL8JJ, and Nobby Styles, G0VJF, hope to break
    the record of a 46-day stay on the rock set in 2014. The pair, and
    their expedition leader, Cam Cameron, plan to stay on the rock for
    as long as 50 or 60 days and raise £50,000 for charity. This coveted
    DX is designated IOTA Number EU-189 and is a most-wanted location. Be
    listening for MM0UKI - and cross your fingers that they are listening
    for you!

    This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (ROCKALL EXPEDITION WEBSITE, MARK FELTON PRODUCTIONS, QRZ)

    **

    RADIO WAVES CARRY MESSAGE FROM A SUPERNOVA

    JIM/ANCHOR: Radio waves have been known to carry some important messages
    over the years, but one recent message, received by a research team, led
    by scientists at Stockholm University, contained a cosmic message. Here's
    Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, with that story.

    RALPH: Scientists have picked up radio waves revealing the presence of
    an unusual type of supernova, a thermonuclear supernova, the kind used
    by researchers to measure the expansion of our universe. Not long after
    the supernova's discovery, scientists at the W.M. Keck Observatory in
    Hawaii detected helium emissions, another significant marker.

    According to Sci Tech Daily, the discovery of this type of supernova,
    known as Type 1a (ONE A), is the first to be accomplished via radio
    waves. The presence of helium emissions is seen as evidence that an
    exploding compact white dwarf star had pulled helium from the outer
    layer of a companion star - the donor star - while the supernova was
    being triggered. That material is more commonly hydrogen.

    The discovery is an accomplishment on another level too, according to researcher Erik Kool of the Stockholm team. He told the Journal Nature
    that astronomers have been trying to accomplish this kind of detection
    by radio for decades.

    This is Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.

    (SCI TECH DAILY, SCIENCE NEWS, NATURE)

    **

    HURRICANE WATCH NET NEEDS VOLUNTEERS

    JIM/ANCHOR: In some parts of the US, where it's nearly hurricane season,
    it's also the season for volunteering to look out for them, as we hear
    from Randy Sly, W4XJ.

    RANDY: For 59 straight seasons, the Hurricane Watch Net has been
    activating for any hurricanes that make landfall, as well as helping
    those in any affected areas before, during, and after a hurricane.
    Just ahead of this year's season, the word is going out in the Southern
    and Eastern United States and the Caribbean - the HWN needs you! They
    are looking for more people who can get on the air from the areas hit
    by the storms.

    Net manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, quickly offered cautionary words,
    telling AR Newsline, "Of course, priority number one for anyone is to
    do all you can to protect your property, home, family, and yourself.
    It's always safety first." However, if hams are safe at home, or in
    a storm shelter, where a portable station can be set up, the net would
    like to hear from them. Every piece of weather data, measured or
    estimated, is considered to be important information by the forecasters
    at the National Hurricane Center.

    The Hurricane Watch Net covers the Caribbean, Central America, Eastern
    Mexico, Eastern Canada, as well as the US Atlantic and Gulf Coast States.
    Hams normally operate on 14.325 MHz by day, and 7.268 MHz by night. In
    addition to taking storm reports, they also stand ready to relay any
    emergency or health and welfare traffic, as well as relaying the latest information about storms in English and Spanish.

    For more information about the Hurricane Watch Net, please visit their
    website, www.hwn.org (www.hwn.org).

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jun 8 22:22:28 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2380, for Friday, June 9th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2380, with a release date of Friday,
    June 9th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The World Radiosport Team Championship is going forward despite floods. Hamvention organizers report "record" crowds for
    Xenia -- and amateur radio comes to a key region within India's protected wilderness. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number
    2380, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    WRTC TO GO FORWARD IN ITALY DESPITE FLOODS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: There's some encouraging news from the flood-stricken
    region in Italy where the World Radiosport Team Championship is to be
    held next month. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us the latest report.

    JEREMY: Despite flood damages that have devastated Italy's Emilia Romagna region, the World Radiosport Team Championship will go forward in July, organisers have said. Luca Aliprandi, IK2NCJ, the WRTC's spokesman, said
    the organising committee has found replacement sites for stations whose original operating locations near Bologna have become unusable. In all,
    the region has suffered losses costing in excess of 5 billion euros, organisers said.

    Reporting on the WRTC's reflector, Luca said that the committee hopes to
    have 100 percent of the replacement sites tested and approved well in
    advance of the event. He said that the site organiser, Claudio, I4VEQ,
    was optimistic, citing the new locations' low noise levels. Some of the
    sites have already granted permission for antennas to be installed to
    enable the setup teams to do field practice.

    Organisers have also begun seeking additional funds because of the extra
    costs incurred after the flooding. He said he expected the result of all
    these efforts to produce [quote] "an unforgettable and successful competition." [endquote]

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (WRTC2022 REFLECTOR)

    **

    "RECORD" ATTENDANCE AT HAMVENTION 2023

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, Hamvention organizers are calling this year's
    crowd a "record attendance" since the move to Xenia. Just a handful of
    weeks after Hamvention, the tally shows 33,861 people were at the Greene County Fairgrounds in Ohio, a total number topping last year's by more
    than 2,000. Hamvention's media chair, James Gifford, KD8APT, released the numbers, saying that the total surpasses the previous attendance record
    at the fairgrounds, set before the pandemic, at 32,472. Hamvention will
    be held again next year on May 17th, 18th and 19th. Save the dates!

    **

    NEW MOMENTUM TO KEEP AM BROADCAST RADIO IN US CARS

    STEPHEN: The struggle to keep AM broadcast radio in cars in the US
    continues. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, has an update.

    KENT: The move to retain AM broadcast service in vehicles sold in the US gained even more momentum recently as state broadcasting associations
    passed a resolution of support that underscored AM's role in carrying emergency messages from the federal government during a national crisis;
    its ability to carry other messages during extreme weather events and
    AM's robust nature among underrepresented communities, such as minorities
    and individuals who do not speak English. The association represents all
    50 of the US states as well as Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico and it
    supports the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act, a bipartisan bill passed
    recently in Congress.

    Although many manufacturers of electric cars claim RF interference to be
    an issue between AM broacast radio and the vehicles' electronic systems,
    Ford Motor Company recently reversed its decision to do away with the
    service in its Ford and Lincoln vehicles.

    In a related move the National Association of Farm Broadcasting has also launched a website advocating for the retention of AM service,
    reiterating the importance AM has in rural communities.

    This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.

    (RADIO WORLD)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jun 16 02:36:00 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2381, for Friday, June 16th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2381, with a release date of Friday,
    June 16th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. A youth DXpedition sets its sights on Guyana. Satellites get in the act on Field Day -- and ham radio aids in a
    dramatic rescue in Idaho. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2381, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    YOUNG DXPEDITIONERS SET SIGHTS ON GUYANA

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Guyana - that's the
    location a young quartet of DXpeditioners has its collective eye on. We
    hear about their plans from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: Their trip has been years in the making and now, with the travel precautions of the pandemic behind them, a team of DXpeditioners -- all
    in their 20s -- is finally free to travel to their destination: Guyana.
    Four friends, Jamie, M0SDV, Philipp, DK6SP, Tomi, HA8RT, and Sven, DJ4MX,
    are young: Sven is 21, team co-leader Jamie is 22; Tomi is 24 and co-
    leader Philipp is 25.

    Their youth hasn't stopped them from becoming veteran DXpeditioners.
    Jamie told Newsline: "We have been fortunate enough to visit some amazing locations worldwide." Now they putting together their plan to operate in Guyana between the 14th and the 24th of next February, operating CW, SSB,
    FT8, and RTTY, on the HF bands.

    They have not yet been assigned a callsign.

    The Northern California DX Foundation said it has given the team a $5,000 grant as a way of encouraging the next generation of adventuring
    amateurs.

    Jamie said that the group's website will be updated regularly to keep DX hunters apprised and, of course, to encourage others to support the activation.

    See the text version of this week's newscast on our website,
    arnewsline.org, to find a link to the DXpedition. The team will also be releasing a separate website dedicated to the DXpedition itself and will communicate with chasers via social media.

    [DO NOT READ: www.8R-2024.com]

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (GUYANA DXPEDITION WEBSITE, JAMIE MØSDV)

    **

    HAM RADIO PLAYS PIVOTAL ROLE IN SEATTLE DRILL

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Residents in the city of Seattle take the notion of being neighborly quite seriously. So seriously, in fact, that they regularly
    hold disaster drills to practice ways to help one another out. Of course,
    it involves amateur radio. Here's Jack Parker, W8ISH, with a report on
    the latest exercise, which was held on June 11th.

    JACK: The disaster scenario in the city of Seattle, Washington, was
    simulated but there was nothing fictional about the scene of neighbor
    helping neighbor. On June 11th, the city's Emergency Communication Hubs rehearsed the all-important coordinated response that everyone would have
    in the event of a citywide power outage -- from neighbors to local authorities.

    The exercise was called Power Down. Twenty-five hams from the Auxiliary Communications Service of Amateurs were dispatched to transmit messages
    using voice and digital modes, such as Winlink and Fldigi. The hams
    worked at one of the city's 10 participating hubs, at rally points for
    city workers, or in the radio room of the city's Emergency Operations
    Center. Many of the hams were asked to move between the various locations
    to help balance out resources. Most of the hams communicated via nets
    using repeaters that have power generators on site.

    According to Susanna Cunningham, WB7CON, the public information officer
    for the ACS, the exercise was a successful demonstration of cooperation
    but unearthed some challenges: There were coverage issues with repeaters
    that are used less frequently -- and hams making use of Winlink did not
    always succeed in getting all the ICS forms submitted from the Hubs to
    their targeted locations. Susanne said that these issues and others will
    be evaluated at the July meeting of the ACS on July 8th.

    This is Jack Parker, W8ISH.

    (SUSANNA CUNNINGHAM, WB7CON)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jun 23 06:17:50 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2382 for Friday, June 23rd, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2382, with a release date of Friday,
    June 23rd, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams get on the air as a cyclone hits India; the
    FCC's systems go back online -- and get ready to chase the 13 Colonies
    Special Event stations. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2382, comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    HAMS MOBILIZE TO ASSIST DURING CYCLONE BIPARJOY

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to India where hams played a
    crucial role in public safety and communication as a cyclone enveloped
    the region. More on that from Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    JIM: Amateur radio operators in western India were deployed and kept on
    high alert as Cyclone Biparjoy closed in on the western shore near the
    port of Jakhau on Thursday, June 15th, tearing roofs off houses, and
    leaving thousands without power.

    Local news reports from the Indian state of Gujarat said that the state's Disaster Management Authority responded to power outages and other damage
    by deploying six ham radio teams, two of them in the district near the
    port of Jakhau, as well as a number of mobile units. Pakistan and India
    had already moved an estimated 173,000 people to shelters in preparation
    for the storm's arrival.

    The deadly cyclone killed at least two people in India before weakening
    and heading toward Pakistan's southern coastal areas. The name of the
    Cyclone - Biparjoy (Bipper Joy) - means "disaster" in Bengali.

    This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS, TIMES OF INDIA)

    **

    FCC REPORTS ITS ULS BACK ONLINE

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In the United States, the FCC reported an end to the long shutdown of some of its systems, much to the relief of hams and others
    needing to file documents. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, brings us that report.

    PAUL: The Federal Communications Commission's nearly month-long outage of
    its Universal Licensing System and related systems has ended. The systems
    came back on line, on a limited basis, on Wednesday, June 21st. A public announcement by the FCC alerted users to the remaining unavailability of
    the systems' query download function, which permits search results to be
    saved as text files.

    The shutdown put the brakes on amateur radio filings and other FCC applications that were facing immediate deadlines, causing widespread frustration and much wider speculation as to the cause behind the
    shutdown. The FCC's public announcement did not address the cause and
    despite repeated requests from Amateur Radio Newsline to clarify what had occurred, the agency referred only to the announcement on its website.
    The announcement cited [quote] "technical issues." [endquote] It was not possible to determine specifically where those issues occurred - or why
    they occurred - and whether there had been a security breach or if any presumed built-in redundancies failed to operate properly.

    The FCC said it has provided deadline extensions for filings that were affected by the shutdown and that it expects high traffic on its systems
    in the days to come. Those ULS applications that were impacted will not
    need to pay waiver fees, seek waivers, or provide any special attachments.

    The FCC said that the deadline extensions and other relief measures only
    apply to those filings between the outage period of June 9th to June
    29th.

    This is Paul Braun, WD9GCO.

    (FCC)

    **

    WRTC GAINS SUPPORT FROM ITALIAN OFFICIALS

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The World Radiosport Team Championship, which is about to
    open shortly near Bologna, Italy, has gained the official patronage and support of the Ministry of Enterprises and the Made in Italy initiative.
    The competition is being held in a region of Italy known as an economic
    engine because of the strength of its business ventures in technology and craftsmanship. This recognition adds a much-needed boost, following the devastating floods that swept through the region, challenging the
    organizers of the event which takes place July 4th through July 11th.

    (WRTC 2022 REFLECTOR)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jun 30 14:24:47 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2383, for Friday, June 30th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2383, with a release date of
    Friday, June 30th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Ofcom proposes sweeping license changes in the
    UK. The QSO of a lifetime makes one ham's Field Day unforgettable --
    and meet Amateur Radio Newsline's Young Ham of the Year for 2023.
    All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2383, comes
    your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    OFCOM PROPOSES SWEEPING CHANGES FOR UK LICENSES

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the UK, where Ofcom is
    proposing a major overhaul of amateur radio licensing and
    operations. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us those details.

    JEREMY: Stating it wants to provide amateurs in the UK with greater
    access to licences while delivering greater operating freedom, the communications regulator Ofcom is proposing sweeping changes to its
    ham radio licence framework.

    None of these changes affects the frequencies or bands amateurs
    can use but it does increase the maximum permitted power for
    transmitting across the three classes of licence. The proposed
    maximum allowances are 20 watts for Foundation; 100 watts for
    Intermediate in most bands and 1,000 watts for Full licence
    holders who are operating where ham radio has a primary
    allocation. Ofcom is also proposing low power airborne
    transmission on some bands.

    Beacons, repeaters and gateways would no longer require a Notice
    of Variation in most cases -- the holders of a Foundation licence
    would be permitted on the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. Foundation
    licence holders would also be allowed to build their own
    equipment.

    In another change, hams advancing to a higher class of licence
    would be required to surrender their lower-level licence and call
    sign, holding only a single personal licence. This requirement
    would not apply to clubs.

    This is just a sample of what Ofcom is suggesting. The regulator
    is seeking feedback and has set a deadline of the 4th September
    for comment. For a link to the document please see the text
    version of this week's newscast script at arnewsline.org

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    [FOR PRINT ONLY:

    https://www.ofcom.org.uk/consultations-and-statements/category-2/ updating-amateur-radio-licensing-framework ]

    (above URL all on one line)

    (OFCOM, AMATEUR RADIO DAILY)

    **

    OH BABY! WHAT A GREAT FIELD DAY!

    NEIL/ANCHOR: So you think you had a great Field Day? Sorry....but
    no matter how amazing a time you had, no matter how many QSOs you
    and your club logged, it can never compare to the experience of
    one amateur in Alabama who helped organize his club's big weekend.
    Jim Damron, N8TMW, tells us more.

    JIM: Patrick Nagle, N4GLE, was ready. Field Day weekend couldn't
    come soon enough for this member of the Muscle Shoals Amateur
    Radio Club. Patrick has been part of the organizing committee for
    the club's Field Day for the past three years and everyone was
    ready to put the club callsign, W4JNB, on the air.

    This year, Rhett Allen Nagle was also ready. In fact, on June 23,
    2023, just as Field Day prep was under way, he was so ready that
    he was born. With the doctor's help, Rhett's mother, Kaitlyn
    Hendrix Nagle, brought him into this world, and into Patrick's
    arms.

    Patrick told Newsline that he and his wife had hoped for Rhett's
    birth to take place a few days after Field Day but the doctor
    wasn't available on their chosen date of June 26th. So June 23rd
    it was going to be! Holding strong at the Field Day site was
    brand-new grandfather, Papa Roy Nagle, KI4UX, who kept things
    running smoothly, and stayed in touch with his son.

    The happy new father may have been away from the club's operating
    site this year, but he told Newsline he knows he had the best QSO
    of Field Day weekend. While it may not have been made over the
    air, he said that all those eyeball QSOs with his new son included
    plenty of snuggles.

    This is Jim Damron, N8TMW.

    NEIL/ANCHOR: Newsline offers the Nagle family all the best. We
    can't wait to hear that Rhett has received his callsign.

    (PATRICK NAGLE, N4GLE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 7 07:23:21 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2384, for Friday, July 7th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2384, with a release date of Friday,
    July 7th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Gains in attendance at Europe's largest hamfest.
    Sri Lanka loses a respected member of the amateur community -- and there
    are big plans ahead for radio at Scout camps. All this and more, as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2384 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    GAIN IN ATTENDANCE AT HAM RADIO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Germany. With Ham
    Radio Friedrichshafen (Pron: Freed Ricks Harfen) completing two weeks
    ago, the attendance figures have been announced and there's some good
    news. Over to our European Correspondent Ed Durrant, DD5LP, who attended.

    ED: This year's attendance at Ham Radio, Europe's largest Hamfest, was up
    by 10% to 11,100 and the number of traders by 15% compared to last year, despite predictions that Hamfests may suffer due to the increase in
    online sales during and following the pandemic.

    It was clear there was an increase in the number of people both at the
    indoor flea market halls and in the main trader and exhibitor hall.
    While there were no new major radio announcements -- other than we
    already know of from Hamvention -- it was good to see Kenwood back with a stall but a shame that only Yaesu's agents represented them. ICOM was
    there with their usual impressive large display area and competing in
    size was a new company to the amateur radio market - Aaronia a
    manufacturer of high quality test equipment.

    All in all, it was a very uplifting event.

    Just as important was the announcement that the required legislative
    document had just been signed to implement the new German entry level "N class" amateur radio licence. The regulations will come into force on the
    21st of June 2024, the week before next years "Ham Radio" event between
    the 28th and 30th and indeed the very first examinations for this new
    class of licence will take place at "HAM RADIO 2024." The new licence
    will allow access to 70cm, 2m and 10m running a maximum of 10 watts and
    will conform to CEPT specifications for an entry level licence.

    This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    **

    FCC SEEKS INPUT ON COMMERCIAL USE OF HF SPECTRUM

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Following years of experimental use of the frequencies
    between 2 and 25 MHz - a range the FCC considers underutilized - members
    of the Shortwave Modernization Coalition have asked the agency for rule changes that would permit fixed, long-distance, time-sensitive
    transmission of data by commercial entities. The FCC is requesting public comment on the proposed rule change, which the Commission said would not
    have an impact on that part of the spectrum used exclusively by amateur
    radio, maritime or aeronautical services.

    A rule change would make the frequencies available to regular commercial operations. At present only 61 of the 21,507 active licenses for
    frequencies between 2 and 25 MHz are for industrial and business use, according to the FCC.

    The businesses seeking access have relied until now on satellite, fiber, microwave and millimeter wave wireless transmissions.

    Shortwave Management Coalition members, who include such entities as
    companies in the financial markets, believe a rule change could widen
    access to other industries such as mining, petroleum and manufacturing.

    Comments are due to the FCC within the month.

    (FCC, SWLING POST)

    **

    FCC TO CONSIDER KEEPING FM6 RADIO FOR LOW-POWER TV

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In other action in Washington, it is shaping up to be a
    busy month for the Federal Communications Commission, which is
    considering whether low power analog TV stations that have a Channel 6 allocation can continue to broadcast analog FM radio. Kevin Trotman,
    N5PRE, tells us what's behind the issue.

    KEVIN: In a small number of US markets, FM broadcast audio has long been available from TV stations making use of a subcarrier 250 kHz from the
    top of the Channel 6 frequencies. At the FCC's open meeting on July 20th,
    the FCC will look at an option it favors: permitting these low-power TV stations to continue this practice as a supplementary service even after
    the TV stations' conversion to digital.

    The FCC believes that preserving the operations for those 13 low-power stations would benefit the public interest, noting as well that there is
    no record of TV interference with the adjacent FM channels, known as FM6 stations. The FCC wrote in a fact sheet on its website that it has not received complaints with credible evidence showing anything to the
    contrary.

    FM6 radio is permitted to operate only on 87.75 MHz and the service may
    only be offered within the low-power TV station's coverage area and on a non-interference basis.

    This is Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.

    (FCC)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Fri Jul 14 12:58:49 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2385 for Friday July 14th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2385, with a release date of
    Friday, July 14th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. The World Radiosport Team Championship heads to
    the UK. Campers prepare for Youth on the Air camp in Canada -- and
    calling QRZ among a universe of UFOs. All this and more, as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2385 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    UK CHOSEN TO HOST WRTC 2026

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the World Radiosport Team
    Championship. The prestigious international competition wrapped up in
    Italy on July 9th and the winners were announced -- including the venue selected to host the competition in 2026. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us
    that report.

    JEREMY: The World Radiosport Team Championship - a high profile
    competition often viewed as the Olympics of amateur radio - has
    declared the United Kingdom the winner in the selection process to be
    host site for the next international contest. The English counties of
    Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Suffolk - all in East Anglia - were selected
    by the Sanctioning Committee to serve as home to the 50 operating
    locations for the competing two-person teams.

    In an interview with ICQ Podcast presenter/technical editor Martin
    Butler, M1MRB, WRTC 2026 President Mark Haynes, M0DXR, said organisers
    are going to rely heavily on amateur volunteers throughout the UK to
    provide technical help and support during setup and operation.

    Meanwhile, as WRTC 2022 concluded, the top three winning pairs - among
    the other victorious operators - were identified as UW7LL and VE3DZ for
    first place; DJ5MW and DL1IAO, second place; and 9A7DX along with 9A3LG, third. For a full list of winners and their scores, visit the WRTC 2022 website at wrtc2022 dot it (wrtc2022.it).

    Newsline would also like to congratulate our colleagues at the ICQ
    Podcast, which has been chosen as a media partner, providing updates as
    the organising progress goes forward. The announcement was made on the podcast's website on 10th July by its founding editor, Colin Butler,
    M6BOY.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (ICQ PODCAST, WRTC 2022, WRTC 2026)

    **

    STUDY CONFIRMS EMISSIONS FROM SATELLITE CONSTELLATIONS

    PAUL/ANCHOR: According to a new study, those tiny low-earth orbit
    satellites may be delivering something unwanted and much less attractive
    than broadband internet access. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the details.

    JIM: Large satellite constellations that provide detailed Earth imagery
    as well as broadband internet access to some regions have been shown to
    emit unintended electromagnetic radiation that may prove a challenge to radioastronomers' research. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for
    Radio Astronomy in Germany report that interfering signals appear to
    come from the electronics on board a number of SpaceX satellites.
    Writing in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, the researchers said
    they made the discovery using the facility's Low Frequency Array
    telescope. They drew their conclusions after observing 68 of the
    satellites in low earth orbit.

    The report's lead author, Federico Di Vruno, said [quote] "This study represents the latest effort to better understand satellite
    constellations' impact on radio astronomy." [endquote] The scientist
    said that the most recent observations confirm there is a measurable
    existence of the radiation.

    This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.

    (PHYS.ORG)

    **

    SILENT KEY: RUSSIAN ROBINSON CLUB'S GEORGE CHLIYANTS, UY5XE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The DX community is grieving the loss of an influential
    amateur who helped organize and promote DXpeditions in the polar
    regions. We hear more about him from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: George Giorgiy Chliyants, UY5XE, was a friend and an advocate to
    many. A number of reports say that George recently became a Silent Key.
    He has clearly left his mark: In 1993, while attending the IOTA
    convention in Spain, George encouraged the creation of what became the
    Russian Robinson Club, a group of adventurous amateurs who would come to operate out of particularly challenging locales in the polar regions.
    He later became QSL manager for many of the Russian expeditions in bot
    h the Antarctic and the Arctic. He had also served as the president of
    the UDXC and vice president of the Robinson club. One of his DXpeditions
    was EM20YU, in which he activated the Chernobyl exclusion zone in 2006
    with Boris, UT7UT.

    Licenced in 1966, he was an active ham whose contesting activity had won
    him many awards and plaques. He was also a published author and had been
    a correspondent for a number of amateur radio magazines, including Radio
    and RadioMir, both in Moscow and RadioHobby, in Kyiv.

    George was 75.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (WORLDWIDE ANTARCTIC PROGRAM, UT7UT.COM, UY5XE HOMEPAGE)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jul 20 17:32:25 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2386, for Friday, July 21st, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2386, with a release date of Friday,
    July 21st, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Changes in band access await hams in Australia. A much-loved electronics supplier is closing after 50 years -- and a ham
    marks a DXCC achievement of two lifetimes. All this and more as Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2386 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    BAND-ACCESS CHANGES AWAIT AUSTRALIAN AMATEURS

    JIM/ANCHOR: There are gains and losses for amateurs in Australia, as the nation's regulator moves ahead with proposed changes to spectrum access. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has that story.

    GRAHAM: Advanced amateurs in Australia and overseas equivalents will be
    losing their access to frequencies between 3.4 and 3.6 GHz, which have been identified for reallocation to commercial interests and for use by earth station protection zones. While proposing those changes, the Australian Communications and Media Authority is expanding standard amateurs and
    overseas equivalents access to frequencies between 50 and 52 MHz, in
    addition to the current 52 to 54 MHz. These modifications are contained in
    the Radiocommunications Licence Conditions Omnibus Amendment Instrument
    2023, Number 1.

    The ACMA took its action following the submission of public comments to the consultation. The regulator said it received only six such comments, with
    the majority supporting the changes.

    This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.

    (ACMA)

    **

    RSGB VIDEO EXPLAINS SWEEPING CHANGES AT OFCOM

    JIM/ANCHOR: Meanwhile in the UK, hams are getting some help in
    understanding the changes that Ofcom has in the works. We have those
    details from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    JEREMY: As Ofcom undertakes the first sweeping changes in ham radio
    licensing and call sign policy in 25 years, the Radio Society of Great
    Britain has been hoping to make things simpler. The society is offering guidance on this consultation through a variety of materials that include a newly released video by Murray Niman, G6JYB, the society's spectrum and licensing expert.

    The RSGB is hoping that clubs will share the video at their meetings and assist hams in understanding the work underway. The video can be found on
    the RSGB's YouTube channel or on the consultation web page of the society
    at the link found in the text version of this week's newscast.

    The regulator is seeking feedback and has set a deadline of the 4th
    September for comment.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    [DO NOT READ: rsgb.org/licencereview ]

    **

    SILENT KEY: COMPUTER HACKER KEVIN MITNICK, N6NHG

    JIM/ANCHOR: A computer hacker who was once on the FBI's "most-wanted" list
    - and who described himself as possessing the world's most expensive
    amateur radio license, has become a Silent Key. Here's Sel Embee, KB3TZD,
    to tell us about him.

    SEL: Kevin Mitnick, N6NHG, whose computer-hacking skills landed him a
    federal prison term with hundreds of supporters pressing for his freedom,
    has become a Silent Key. Kevin died on Sunday, July 16th, of pancreatic cancer.

    According to several online obituaries, by the time he was 16 years old,
    Kevin had already sharpened his software skills, gaining unauthorized
    access to computer systems. Ultimately, it was his illegal download of software from Digital Equipment Corporation in the 1980s that led to a
    massive manhunt, his conviction and five-year prison term.

    Having become a ham radio operator at the age of 13, he wished to return to the air once he was released from prison and spent more than $16,000 in
    legal fees to petition the FCC for a license renewal. He succeeded, saying afterward that, as a result, he possessed the most expensive amateur radio license in the world.

    Kevin was 59.

    This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to All on Thu Jul 27 18:37:08 2023
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2387, for Friday, July 28th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2387, with a release date of Friday,
    July 28th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams call QRZ to help a flood-damaged region of
    Italy. Dangerous conditions cancel a second activation on Rockall -- and a successful orbit for CubeSATS from the Philippines. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2387 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **

    CALLING QRZ TO RESTORE FLOOD-DAMAGED EMILIA-ROMAGNA

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Italy's flood-devastated region of Emilia-Romagna faces a
    long period of reconstruction and hams are involved in providing their own kind of support. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us the details.

    JEREMY: Although some hams may be more familiar with the Emilia-Romagna
    region of northern Italy as the host of the recent World Radiosport Team Championship, it is actually now in the amateur radio spotlight for another reason. Remember the callsign 1A0C (One Ay Zero C). Hams will be calling
    QRZ until the 2nd of August to focus attention on the charitable work being done there by the Italian Relief Corps of the Order of Malta, focusing on
    the badly damaged Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. The historic deadly
    floods in May displaced thousands of families, destroyed communities and threatened to wreck many local industries. A multinational team of amateurs will be on the air from the radio station at the Magistral Villa on the Aventine Hill. The Order of Malta's humanitarian projects are known
    throughout the world, assisting 120 nations with medical, social and humanitarian needs. The operators include Fernando EA5C, Simone IK5RUN, Jun JH4RHF, Dmitry RA9USU and others.

    At the time Newsline was being produced, the team's website was under construction. Visit the QRZ.com page of 1A0C for updates.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (425 DX BULLETIN, QRZ, ORDER OF MALTA)

    **

    A TRIBUTE TO BELOVED SOTA SILENT KEY

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: SOTA activators are planning an international tribute to recall the treasured friendship of a ham who became a Silent Key last year.
    Ed Durrant, DD5LP, gives us the details.

    ED: From his shack in Poland, Jarek SP9MA, is leading the way among his
    fellow SOTA supporters. He has issued a call to all friends of the beloved
    ham known as Guru who became a Silent Key in March of 2022. Jarek wrote on
    the SOTA reflector that he will begin using the callsign SP59GURU on
    January 11th of next year, which would have been Guru's 59th birthday. The callsign will remain active through to March 11th, the anniversary of his death. The loss of Jose-Antonio Gurutzarri Jauregi EA2IF to cancer rocked
    the SOTA community last year, most especially in Europe, where his
    commitment to radio on the summits began in his native Spain in 2013.

    Jarek has put out a call to SOTA activators worldwide to join him in this special event activation and to start making plans now, well in advance of January.

    Though there will be no diplomas or awards for QSOs, Jarek believes the contact itself will provide a memorable moment. In that way, Guru, who left his mark also as a top contester and CW operator, will get another moment
    with his SOTA brothers and sisters.

    Or, as Jarek wrote on the SOTA reflector: [quote] "I just think that as
    many hearts as possible would connect with the Guru at that time."
    [endquote]

    This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.

    (SOTA REFLECTOR)

    **

    DANGEROUS CONDITIONS CANCEL REPEAT ROCKALL ACTIVATION

    STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Radios and other equipment remain on Rockall Island, where
    a second attempted activation has failed. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us up
    to date.

    JEREMY: A second - and very brief - activation of the remote granite islet known as Rockall was called off after hazardous conditions in the North Atlantic had forced the team to return to the mainland.

    Cam Cameron, Emil Bergmann, DL8JJ, and Nobby, G0VJG, set sail on the 16th
    of July, only to turn back three days later after making several passes at Rockall. The hams were hoping to have a second activation - three hours of
    CW and SSB - during their return trip.

    The trio was traveling to recover radio equipment left there during the
    June activation of MM0UKI. Emil and Nobby had called QRZ for several days before their departure, leaving Cam on Rockall. In a challenge to benefit charity, Cam was hoping to break the previous 45-day stay record set in
    2014. He had called for rescue in late June after 32 days of exhaustion and hypothermia.

    Describing the team's failed attempt to return, Emil wrote on the Rockall DXpedition's Facebook page: [quote] "Nature has said NO. We reach[ed] the Rockall without difficulty, but the waves [were] extremely high. That's the way of life." [endquote]

    Don't be discouraged: The team plans another recovery attempt.

    This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.

    (FACEBOOK, DX-WORLD.NET)
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)