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date: 2017-03-09 19:05:00
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[Attachment(s) from James KB7TBT included below]


Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2054 for Friday, March 10, 2017

Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2054 with a release date of Friday, 
March 10, 2017 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. A ham in Maine tracks down some unconventional 
interference. A Morse Code operator is honored for her service in World 
War II -- and a Hurricane Watch Net founder becomes a Silent Key. All 
this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2054 comes your way right 
now.

**
BILLBOARD CART

**
SHEDDING LIGHT ON AN RFI ISSUE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our report begins this week with an RFI detective story. 
We've all experienced interference on the bands - but one ham in Maine 
followed its trail and found a rather unconventional source. Amateur 
Radio Newsline's Kent Peterson KC-ZERO-DGY (KC0DGY) spoke to him.

ROGER: It first started about three years ago I have a pan adapter and 
was looking at the 160 meter band which is the band I operate most. I 
noticed down at the end of the band was a strange looking signal down 
there and wondered what heck was that? Then later on as the season went 
on this signal gradually kept increasing.

KENT That's Roger Johnson N1RJ of Limington Maine talking about his 
discovery of RFI on his favorite ham band.

ROGER I went on the web and found out it was pretty much the signature 
of a switched mode power supply. I found out this was probably a  a grow 
light. Since these grow light ballasts operate at power levels up to 
thousand watts.  A lot of them are ordered from the far east and have 
fake FCC compliance stickers, so there's no filtering built into these 
things at all.

KENT Johnson's hunt for the interference was on.

ROGER I started to do some DFing I made a SDR receiver and started 
driving around until I found the guy. I went up and talked with him. A 
nice young guy who was astonished to find out he was creating 
interference to someone a mile away. He showed me all around his grow 
operation, he has a marijuana grow license and he's very proud of his 
operation. I got to thinking about that, I don't want to report him to 
the FCC because they'll issue him to cease and desist order, he'll have 
30 days solve the problem or or shut down.  How is he going to solve the 
problem he's not an RF guy?   He bought these ballasts in good faith, 
but they have a false FCC sticker on them. If he goes out and buys new 
ballasts, there is nothing assuring him he'll not get another batch of 
bad ballasts.  He's providing a service and he's doing it honestly and 
complying with Maine law.

KENT Johnson estimated this guy could be looking at an additional 
thousand dollar expense to filter his ballasts. He went on to tell me he 
proposed legislation to get the state to ban ballasts that produced 
interference. His suggestion was for out-of-compliance ballasts to be 
refunded or replaced with a units that doesn'tܬ1/2t produce noise, but 
that proposal died in the Maine Senate. Johnson pointed out the FCC had 
about 300 field engineers back in 1960, today that number now sits at 43.

ROGER: What are the chances getting a field engineer to drive five or 
six hundred miles on a complaint some ham has to interference complaint 
from grow lights?  I think it is nil.

ROGER:  With Maine and more and more states legalizing these grow of 
marijuana  I can see these small time guy these are going to spring up 
like mad. These things legally cannot be imported since they don't meet 
the rules for conducted radiated interference. But no one is minding the 
store, They're bringing in these things by the thousands if these grow 
operations take off.   It is going to get a lot worse before it gets 
better.   If they just keep issuing letters to these offenders, they're 
going to run out of stationery pretty soon because there's going to be 
too many of them.

Reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Kent Peterson KC0DGY

**
WWV: THE DAY THAT TIME STOOD STILL

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Daylight Saving Time, which starts Sunday, March 12, 
confuses lots of people - at least temporarily. But radio station WWV 
had another issues recently with keeping. Here's Newsline's Neil Rapp 
WB9VPG.

NEIL's REPORT: Radio Station WWV, operated by the United States National 
Institute of Standards and Technology, continually transmits the current 
time on several frequencies from just outside Fort Collins, Colorado.  
If you tuned into WWV recently, and it seems they disappeared... well, 
it wasn't another David Copperfield TV special.  WWV was off the air 
recently for installation of a 250 kVA backup generator. Matt Deutch, 
N0RGT is the chief engineer at WWV, and explains what took place.

MATT: We've had the same diesel generator to back up WWV since 1967, 68 
something like that, and it worked wonderfully for us, but over the 
years it has slowly started to accumulate its problems.  And the 
reliability was in question.  It was having trouble starting sometimes 
especially when we needed it, and so the division scraped together some 
money and said let's get a new generator.  So we've installed a new 
generator.  The testing isn't done quite yet.  We're still in the midst 
of... Cummins is gonna test it... but we've run it.  We have a new 
automatic transfer switch, and we're hoping to do a load test next week 
and transfer it onto the building also and make sure everything works okay.

NEIL: Matt further explains what took place instead of the expected two 
days of service outage that was anticipated.

MATT: That was to pull the new cable through the conduit... put in new 
conduit and pull cable through it, and reconnect it to the distribution 
panel.  So it was just for safety measure for the workers to work on 
that equipment.  And it went a lot faster than we thought it would, 
which is good.  And so, we just had two short outages instead of the day 
long outages like we had anticipated.

NEIL: So for the couple of weeks until the testing is complete, WWV is 
running without a backup generator.  And ironically, that's exactly the 
time that an unexpected outage took place.

MATT: We did have one outage that was unscheduled.  We need the 
generator about once every five years.  And, we did have a snow storm 
last week, and one of our outages was unplanned.  We didn't have a 
backup generator, and sure enough we lost power.  We were off the air 
for about two hours without a backup generator.

NEIL: The generator will be fully functional soon, and WWV will be back 
to being all time, all the time.  And it sure was fun to call WWV and 
ask, "What time is it?"  But alas, it's happened many times before.

Reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG in 
Bloomington, Indiana.

**
A MEDAL FOR HER MORSE CODE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A 90-year-old former Morse Code operator in the UK has 
just been honored for her World War 2 service, as we learn from 
Newsline's Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

JEREMY: A World War II wireless operator who used her Morse Code skills 
transmitting coded messages between India and England has been awarded a 
war medal recognising her service. Diana O'Brien is now 90 years old. 
She was 17 and her name was Diana Ballantyne when she joined the First 
Aid Nursing Yeomanry in 1944. She'd decided to help the war effort even 
more by learning Morse Code and working as a wireless operator.

She trained at Henley-on-Thames and Bletchley Park but was eventually 
posted to India, where she worked in Delhi and then Calcutta, 
transmitting coded messages back to England, supporting troops behind 
enemy lines in Burma. She returned to the UK in October of 1945 and 
eventually married and settled in the Lake District.

The Mayor of Shrewsbury, where Diana has lived since 2015, presented her 
recently with the campaign War Medal 1939-1945.

Her family told the Westmorland Gazette that her spirit for public 
service stayed with her even after the war. Before moving into a 
residential care home, she volunteered for a number of local 
organisations, including the Women's Royal Voluntary Service, the League 
of Friends at Westmorland County Hospital, the Red Cross, the Victoria 
League and the Women's Institute.

And yes, her family says, she still remembers Morse Code.

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

(THE WESTMORLAND GAZETTE)

***
BREAK HERE:

Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including W4GS, 
the Grand Strand Amateur Radio Club in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on 
Sundays at 8 p.m.

**

NOMINATE YOUR "YOUNG HAM OF THE YEAR"

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: This is another reminder that the nomination period has 
opened for Amateur Radio Newsline's Bill Pasternak Memorial Young Ham of 
the Year Award. We accept nominations through May 31. Candidates must be 
18 or younger and be a resident of the United States, its possessions or 
any Canadian province. Find application forms on our website 
arnewsline.org under the "YHOTY" tab. The award will be presented on 
August 19th at the Huntsville Hamfest in Huntsville, Alabama.

**

SHE'S A SCHOLAR - AND A TOP HAM

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Ham radio may have just helped launch the physics career 
of one Indiana teenager. Here's Newsline's Neil Rapp WB9VPG.

NEIL: Maria Lysandrou, KD9BUS, is one of 150 students nationally to be 
named a Coca-Cola Scholar.  Maria was selected from over 86,000 
applicants. The scholarship program focused mostly on community 
involvement, which included her music -- and of course ham radio.  The 
senior at Bloomington High School South in Bloomington, Indiana, who is 
the president of the Amateur Radio Club, plans to study physics next 
year... partially due to her involvement in the school's ham radio 
program.  Maria explains how ham radio played a role in landing this 
$20,000 scholarship.

MARIA: For some of the essays, they were just mainly about leadership 
and how you've been a leader throughout your community... and one of my 
communities was that I talked about ham radio. So, I talked about how 
I'm a woman in science, and how I go to my research lab and I'm one of 
the only people in my astrophysics research lab.  I'm the only woman in 
my research lab, and it makes me want to continue to pursue science 
because I want to merge that gender gap in science, especially in 
physics. And so, I talked about ham radio and how during contests I'm 
like one of the only women on air, and how I went to the Dayton 
Hamvention.  Mr. Rapp invited me to the Dayton Hamvention, and he 
contacted the people there, and I actually talked at the educator 
forum... at the teachers' forum.  And I talked about how to get more 
women in science and more women in ham radio specifically. And so, I 
talked about how I hope to, in my future, to be a leader in ham radio 
and be a leader for women in ham radio especially younger women.

NEIL: Maria will be making her college selection soon, as she puts the 
finishing touches on AP Chemistry.

Basking in the sunlight radiating off of Maria, I'm Mr. Rapp, WB9VPG 
reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline.

**

K2BSA ACTIVATIONS IN LOUISIANA AND OHIO

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Radio Scouts are back on the air with more activations 
this week, as we hear from Newsline's Bill Stearns NE4RD.

BILL'S REPORT: This week in Radio Scouting we have 2 activations of the 
K2BSA callsign in LA and OH, 2 activations from Scout Camps on the Air, 
and we're eight months out to Jamboree On The Air.

Michael Nolan, KD5MLD, will be the control operator for the K2BSA 
portable 5 station at the Istrouma Area Council Centennial at Airline 
Highway Parish Park in Baton Rouge, LA, on March 23rd to 26th.  Michael 
will be operating on Friday evening from 6pm until 10pm central, on 3905 
(+ or - 5k) and on Saturday during the day from 8am to 4pm central on 
7225, (+ or - 5k) or 14270 (+ or - 5k), depending on band conditions.  
There will be demonstrations of CW and other digital modalities during 
the celebration. Those frequencies will primarily be in the 40 & 20 
meter band plans.  Code will be around 10 to 13 wpm.  They are expecting 
around 5000 scouts to attend this event.

John Baddour, KC8KI, will the control operator for the K2BSA portable 8 
station at the Radio Merit Badge Midway Classes at Lorain County Joint 
Vocational School in Oberlin, OH, on March 25th.  John will be working 
with scouts on their Radio Merit Badge and will most likely be on VHF 
and possibly HF for the on-air component of the program.

Gary Hinton, AC7R, will be the control operator for KJ7BSA at the Mesa 
District Varsity Scout Mongollon Mountainman Rendezvous at Camp Geronimo 
in Payson, AZ, on March 18th.  Gary will have scouts on the air on HF, 
VHF, and UHF.  Scouts will also be doing a Fox Hunt.

Chuck McBride, WS5ADV, will be the control operator for WS5BSA at the 
Webelos Woods for Sooner District of the Last Frontier Council at John 
Nichols Scout Camp in Oklahoma City, OK, on March 25th. Chuck will have 
a FT-817 QRP rig on 17 and 20 meters on a half-wave dipole antenna.  
This group will also be monitoring VHF and UHF.

We're eight months out for JOTA, so hopefully you've been following our 
countdown suggestions on our website.  This month you should be 
contacting your local clubs for support and personnel, and get on the 
agenda at a club meeting to inform the members of what JOTA is and how 
they can help.  Now is also the time to register your event on the 
JOTA-JOTI registration system, last year this was a slightly complicated 
process.  So, the earlier the better to get started on that!  Also, try 
to look for events on the scout calendars where you can do a 
demostration station.

For more information on K2BSA and radio scouting, please visit 
http://www.k2bsa.net/.

For Amateur Radio Newsline and the K2BSA Amateur Radio Association, this 
is Bill Stearns NE4RD.

**
HURRICANE WATCH NET'S DON KAY K0IND, SK

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A founding member of the Hurricane Watch Net has become 
a Silent Key, as we hear from Newsline's Mike Askins KE5CXP.

MIKE's REPORT: The Hurricane Watch Net has lost one of its original 
members, U.S. Air Force Col. Don Kay K0IND. He became a Silent Key on 
March 1 following a three-year battle with lung cancer.

Don, a native of Detroit, Michigan, and a graduate of the U.S. Naval 
Academy, served in the Air Force after attending Basic Flight School and 
later became an All Weather Pilot. Don's military service lasted from 
1946 until 1977 and included 175 combat missions, including more than 
610 hours in Vietnam, where he was with the Vietnam Defense Campaign and 
Air Campaign from April 1965 to March 1966.

He was known to many as a devoted ham and Elmer and qualified for his 
amateur radio license in the early 1950s while stationed in Colorado 
Springs, Colorado. He is considered a co-founder of the Hurricane Watch 
Net, which he joined in 1965 as one of the original members. He was 
assistant net manager for 23 years and later, net manager for four, 
ending in 1992. He even designed the Hurricane Watch Net logo in the 
early 1980s.

Don Kay was involved with the Maritime Mobile Service Net and Air Force 
MARS, working as well with the Medical Amateur Radio Conference, where 
he helped missionaries and doctors running phone patches in the 
Caribbean and Central America.

Through his assistance in the Jonestown Massacre in Guyana in 1978 and 
the Grenada conflict in 1983. Don was added to the Congressional Record 
in recognition of his work by Sen. Barry Goldwater K7UGA, now a Silent Key.

Don Kay was 89.

For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Mike Askins KE5CXP

(BOBBY GRAVES KB5HAV, HWN NET MANAGER)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, the F6KOP expedition team is in the Ivory Coast 
operating as TU7C through March 19th. They will be active on all HF 
bands CW, SSB and Digital. Send QSL cards to F1ULQ or the Web page OQRS.

Listen on all bands, from 160 through 10 meters, for a multi-national 
team operating from Niger as 5U5R until March 20th. They are operating 
on SSB, CW and RTTY. Send QSL cards to EA5RM.

Also through March 20th, be listening for the "Echo India" DXPedition 
team operating from Nepal as 9N7EI. The team is operating as many as 
five stations continuously over their nine-day period in Nepal and can 
be heard on all bands and modes, 80 meters through 10 meters. They are 
working 40 kilometers outside Kathmandu about 6,000-feet above sea 
level. The group's QSL manager is M-ZERO-OXO.

(IRISH RADIO TRANSMITTERS SOCIETY)


**

KICKER: FOLLOW THE 'MORSE CODE BRICK ROAD'


STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our final story is all about how Morse Code has gotten 
underfoot - literally - on two college campuses. Here's Newsline's Paul 
Braun WD9GCO.

PAUL'S REPORT: To those hams who thought learning Morse Code was hard - 
possibly even harder than a brick - meet artist Jackie Ferrara whose 
works feature Morse Code numbers and letters that actually ARE bricks. 
The colorful objects, set into walkways and walls, spell out words in 
Morse Code in at least two public spaces Jackie redesigned and 
redefined: a walkway at the University of Rochester in upstate New York 
and a memorial rooftop garden at Tufts University in Massachusetts.

In Rochester, her patterned walkways outside the Memorial Art Gallery 
spell out the gallery's name and the name of the school in red and dark 
brick dots and dashes. At Tufts University, Code was used to spell out 
the name of a young man who killed himself in 2003 during his sophomore 
year. The library rooftop garden is now dressed in planters, decorative 
mosaic brick, a sundial - as well as the student's name spelled out in 
Morse.

More recently, Jackie's Code-infused creations turned up on the walls of 
a New York City art gallery exhibit in a collection of line drawings. 
Here, Morse Code was used to spell out titles of films the artist has 
collected over time.

It's not clear whether Jackie Ferrara has actually memorized - or can 
even copy - Code, or has ever used a bug or even a straight key. But her 
career has been long and it has also been successful, so clearly she's 
getting her message across somehow, one brick at a time.

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

(NY ARTBEAT, TUFTS UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER)

**

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Alan Labs; Amateur News Weekly; the ARRL; 
Hap Holly and the Rain Report; Hurricane Watch Net; Irish Radio 
Transmitters Society; NY Art Beat; Ohio-Penn DX Bulletin; QRZ.COM; 
Southgate Amateur Radio News; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; Tufts 
University; University of Rochester; Westmorland Gazette; WTWW 
Shortwave; and you ourlisteners, that's all from the Amateur Radio 
Newsline. Please send emails to our address at newsline@arnewsline.org. 
More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline's only official 
website located at www.arnewsline.org.

For now, with Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT, at the news desk in New York, 
and our news team worldwide, I'm Stephen Kinford N8WB in Wadsworth, Ohio 
saying 73 and as always we thank you for listening.

Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2017. All rights reserved.


***

As a Service to the HAM Radio Community and HAM Operators all over the world,
this Amateur Radio Newline(tm) message has been gated from the internet and
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enjoyed it!

Please address all comments and questions to the ARNewsletter editor as
described in this posting. If you have any specific questions related to the
actual posting of this message, you may address them to
hamfdn(at)wpusa.dynip.com.

Thank you and good day!

-73- ARNTE-0.1.0-OS2 build 42
(text/plain utf-8 quoted-printable)


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