Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2062 for Friday, May 5, 2017
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2062 with a release date of Friday,
May 5 2017 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. There's a tragedy in India - and hams respond.
Morse Code's ruled unnecessary in Taiwan -- and in Ohio, the Voice of
America Museum opens its doors for Hamvention. All this and more as
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2062 comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
HAMS AID RESCUE ON THE RIVER
NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week is the report of a sudden -- and
tragic -- collapse of a jetty on a riverfront in India bustling with
commuters. Local hams rushed to the scene to assist with the rescue
efforts, as we hear from Amateur Radio Newsline' Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
JEREMY's REPORT: Hams in West Bengal responded to a dramatic rescue
effort on a riverfront outside Kolkata, India after an aging wooden
jetty in disrepair collapsed, sending at least four people to their
death and injuring more than a dozen. The jetty, which was in disrepair,
was crowded with more than 150 commuters, including school children, at
the time of its collapse in the Hooghly River about 22 miles north of
Kolkata on April 26. The commuters were waiting for boats to ferry them
to jetties on the opposite bank.
As local fishermen took their boats out into the water to pull victims
from the water, and others dived in, members of the West Bengal Radio
Club arrived on the scene with their 2-meter handheld transceivers and
using EchoLink, contacted the club station VU2MQT 15 kilometers away to
assist in the rescue effort. Rinku Nag Biswas VU2JFB was at the club
station and able to relay information. The EchoLink station utilized the
KM6EOM repeater of the Wanderers Amateur Radio Club in Los Angeles,
California after contacting its custodian Greg KI6GIG.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
(HINDUSTAN TIMES, SOUTHGATE)
**
WHAT, NO MORE MORSE?
NEIL/ANCHOR: Morse Code has become history once again. It's no longer a
requirement for amateurs seeking their license in Taiwan. Here's more
from Amateur Radio Newsline's John Williams VK4JJW.
JOHN'S REPORT: Following the lead taken by so many other nations,
Taiwan's National Communications Commission is preparing to do away with
the Morse Code requirement for amateur licensees in that nation.
The change, which is contained in a recent amendment, has already been
approved but won't take effect immediately because the amendment must
first be presented for public view for two months.
The NCC's frequency and resources department deputy director Chen
Chun-mu told the Taipei Times that in addition to dropping the code
requirement, the amendment also extends the lifetime of an amateur
license from five years to 10 and allows hams with expiring licenses to
begin the renewal process as many as five months before the expiration
date. Presently hams in Taiwan can only do this one month before
expiration.
Commission data reflects that 42,900 licenses have been issued by the
NCC for qualified operators between 2012 and 2016.
Morse Code became an optional part of global amateur radio after the
World Radiocommunication Conference of 2003 when the International
Telecommunications Union gave nations the right to decide individually
whether Code proficiency would remain part of their licensing
qualifications.
In the U.S. the FCC did away with the Morse Code requirement for the
Technician class entry level license in 1991 and a change that took
effect in 2007 eliminated the FCC code requirement from licenses
altogether. Poland, Italy, the Netherlands, Australia and the UK also
number among the many nations no longer requiring Morse.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams VK4JJW.
(THE TAIPEI TIMES, RADIO SOCIETY OF GREAT BRITAIN)
**
MALTA, UAE GET ON 60 METERS
NEIL/ANCHOR: Been on 60 meters lately? Well listen up, you might hear
some newcomers, as Amateur Radio Newsline's Jim Meachen ZL2BHF tells us.
JIM'S REPORT: It's getting a little bit busier on the air these days
between 5351.5 kHz and 5366.5 kHz as hams in Malta and the United Arab
Emirates get the green light to get on the band. The Malta
Communications Authority's new national plan gives amateurs there access
to the 60 meter band on a secondary basis. The maximum power permitted
is 15w EIRP. Likewise, hams in the UAE are permitted to a maximum power
of 15w EIRP. Malta and the UAE join a number of nations that have been
enjoying privileges on 60 meters, including hams in the U.S. who were
given access by the FCC in 2012 for the band's use on a channelized
basis. Eight channels have also been available for hams in Israel since
2013 for General and Extra class licensees. The Cayman Islands, the
Dominican Republic and Greenland are among those nations also having
access using channelized operation.
Since the agreement at the World Radiocommunication Conference in 2015
many countries who are new to the band are adopting the 15KHz band
rather than channels along with the 15 watts effective isotropic
radiated power limit.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen ZL2BHF
**
K2BSA ON THE AIR IN OREGON AND CALIFORNIA
NEIL/ANCHOR: The K2BSA call sign is going camping again this week and
will also be part of a net. Here are the details from Amateur Radio
Newsline's Bill Stearns NE4RD.
BILL'S REPORT: This week in Radio Scouting we have 2 activations of the
K2BSA callsign, 1 activation from Scout Camps on the Air, a Scouters
Net, and more.
Russ Mickiewicz, N7QR, will be the control operator for K2BSA/7 at the
Sunset Trails District Camporee in Rainier, OR, on Saturday May 6th.
This is the annual Camporee for the Sunset District of the Cascade
Pacific Council which consists of Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts of the west
Portland Oregon area. Russ will have about 200 boys who will compete in
patrols including various skills such as knot tying, tomahawk throwing,
fire starting, canoe portaging among others. One of the stops will be
the amateur radio station where they will hear about the station and get
points by answering questions and get bonus points for talking on the
air. Russ will have scouts on the air from 9am to 4pm PST probably
starting out on 14.290 MHz. With the 7 area QSO party going on, there
should be plenty of local activity, and hopefully contest participants
will give this group some room.
Ray Dzek, N6DZK, will be the control operator for K2BSA/6 at the
Scout-o-Rama for the Silicon Valley Monterey Bay Council at Historic
Park in San Jose, CA on Saturday May 13th. Ray will have a 100' tower
with a Yaesu FT-991 into a Hex Beam. They will be on the air from 10am
to 4pm PST on 40, 20, or 15 meters depending on band conditions.
Stephen Shearer, WB3LGC, will be the control operator for KB3NCC at the
Henson Scout Reservation in Rhodesdale, MD, on Friday May 5th through
the 6th. Stephen will be running 15 watts or less on 40/20 PSK on
Friday and then joining into the state QSO parties on voice and CW in
the 10-10 contest for Saturday.
The Radio Scouting Net will be on Thursday May 11th at 9pm Central on
Echolink *JOTA-365*. If you are interested in talking with some
veterans of Radio Scouting, this is a great opportunity to have an
informal discussion during the net.
Hamvention is approaching rapidly, and the K2BSA group will be present
in building 2 in Booth 2205. Please consider a visit to the booth to
learn more about what you can do to get involved in radio scouting like
getting scouts to your field day event and learn about our upcoming
events like National Jamboree and Jamboree on the Air.
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.
**
STILL SEEKING YHOTY NOMINATIONS
NEIL/ANCHOR: One more reminder that the deadline approaches to nominate
a candidate for Amateur Radio Newsline's Bill Pasternak Memorial Young
Ham of the Year Award. Do you know someone 18 or younger who
particularly impresses you? This is Amateur Radio Newsline's commitment
to honoring young talented radio operators. Find application forms on
our website at arnewsline.org under the "YHOTY" tab. Nominations close
May 31 -- that's later this month!
Also be listening on Tuesday May 9 at 8 p.m. Central Time as Amateur
Radio Newsline's Don Wilbanks AE5DW joins Ted Randall WB8PUM on the QSO
Radio Show, heard live on WTWW 5085 kHz.
**
BREAK HERE:
Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the
Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana (OH-KY-IN) Amateur Radio Society repeater, 146.670
MHz, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
**
VOA MUSEUM, A HAMVENTION 'PLUS'
NEIL/ANCHOR: It's May and Hamvention is coming! And not more than an
hour's drive from Dayton Hamvention is another popular gathering spot
for amateurs: the National Voice of America Museum of Broadcasting
located at the site of VOA's Bethany Relay Station in West Chester
Township. If you're going to Hamvention and you're free after 5 p.m.,
check it out. Amateur Radio Newsline's Mike Akins KE5CXP has the details.
MIKE: It's not quite quite Hamvention after dark but the VOA Museum is
still offering some incredible nightlife for amateurs visiting Ohio
starting May 19th. Although the Bethany Relay Station stopped operating
in 1994 and its towers have long since come down, its doors will be open
to amateurs who'll want to experience its rich history in global radio.
The museum's executive director, Jack Dominic, said there's plenty to
see - and do.
JACK: If you think about it, it is kind of a must-see for someone who
hasnÂ’t been here before. If you are interested in ham radio, you are
interested in shortwave and this facility is arguiably the most
significant shortwave presence in the whole United States. At one time,
six of the world's highest-power shortwave transmitters were located here.
MIKE: Take a tour and see one of the transmitters, a 1960 vintage
Collins rig, visit the control room and see the antenna-switching matrix
that once allowed transmissions to be aimed directly at Europe, North
Africa and South America. The museum also contains equipment from Robert
L. Drake's personal amateur radio collection. Museum board member Gary
West K8DEV says yes, bring your license and you can even get on the air!
GARY: We have a club station here, the West Chester Amateur Radio
Association. We are here in West Chester Township and WC8VOA is our call
sign. We have got six operating stations and we do encourage people to
get on the air when they are here. If they are interested, just let us
know.
MIKE: The open house promises to be a celebration of wireless. Admission
is $5 and the doors are open on May 19th and May 20th until 9 p.m. For
Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mike Askins KE5CXP.
**
NETS OF NOTE: THE AIR FORCE FLYERS CLUB NET
NEIL/ANCHOR: We bring you another installment in our occasional series,
Nets of Note. This one has real historical significance - and it's
high-flying too. Here's Amateur Radio Newsline's Paul Braun WD9GCO.
PAUL'S REPORT: This week's "Net of Note" is a very special one with a
lot of American history tied in. I spoke with group member Jon
Stromsland, WA6LJS, about what makes their net special:
JON: It's called the Air Force Flyers Club Net and it's a historic and
patriotic group of airmen from all wars and all branches of the military
- Air Force, Navy, Coast Guard - who served as pilots, air crew, ground
crew, missle crew and we've even got air traffic controllers in the net.
The net was started in 1989 by WA7IFX who's since become a silent key.
Some of the original members are silent keys now, but the ones that
started it were basically World War II pilots. The first member, Van
Nordstrom was a B-17 gunner.
We have the distinction of having the youngest fighter ace in history
there - we had November Three Golf Tango Tango, Dale Karger was his name
- and he was 19 years old when he flew P-51's and he had eleven kills.
PAUL: This "net of note" has definitely had some "members of note," many
of which were notable outside of the ham radio world:
JON: We also have some historic people that were in the net. People have
heard of General Curtis LeMay - he was called the Father of Strategic
Air Command, and in 1961 General LeMay was the Chief of Staff of the
United States Air Force. He was also a ham radio operator and in 1957 he
established single-sideband as the standard for high-frequency
communications for SAC bombers.
PAUL: They have even had one former U.S. Senator:
JON: Barry Goldwater, who IÕm sure everybodyÕs heard of, he used to
check into the net way back when and he did phone patches for the troops
back in the early 60Õs
PAUL: Membership has fallen off in recent years, according to
Stromsland, but still remains very active:
JON: At one point, we had over 500 members and a lot of the old-time
members of course, have become silent keys, but currently we have about
69 active members.
PAUL: I asked Stromsland where you can find the net:
JON: The net meets on 20 meters every day, seven days a week, on 14.290
at 1530 Zulu. And then on Tuesdays only, we have a 40 meter net that
comes on right after the 20 meter net closes on 7.181 in the morning and
on Tuesday in the evening at 7pm Pacific time we meet on 7.278.
PAUL: While you have to be either active military or a veteran in order
to join the net, anyone is welcome to check into the net and join in the
discussion. And, as always, we here at Amateur Radio Newsline thank all
our military, past and present, for your service.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO.
NEIL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, if you know of a net with an interesting story
to tell, email us at newsline at arnewsline.org and we might just
feature it in our occasional series Nets of Note.
**
THE WORLD OF DX
In the world of DX, we have a few CW operators who'll be calling QRZ.
You have a few more days to listen for S79J operating from Mahe Island
in the Seychelles Islands. The callsign is being used by Ivan LZ1PJ
until the 10th of May. Listen for S79J operating in CW on the HF bands
and on 6m. QSL to the home call.
Martin MW0BRO is operating from Qatar as A7/MW0BRO through the 18th of
May. He is transmitting from the Qatar Amateur Radio Society club
station in Doha. Listen for him operating in CW on 80 through 10m. QSL
to his home call.
Gab HB9TSW is operating as Z68BG from Slatina Air Base in Pristina,
Kosovo until the 23rd of May. He will use CW on 40m to 10m. QSOs with
Kosovo do not count for the DXCC Award at the present time.
On Saint Martin Island, John K9EL is operating as FS/K9EL on SSB, CW and
RTTY through the 15th of May. Listen for him on 80 meters through 6
meters. Send QSL cards via the home call, OQRS, LoTW and eQSL.
(DXCOFFEE, IRISH RADIO TRANSMITTERS SOCIETY)
**
KICKER: SKY HIGH TOY STORY
NEIL/ANCHOR: Finally, we end this newscast with the tale of a modest
project in Australia that wasn't so modest after all -- finding a way to
get kids interested in space travel and radio tracking with the help of
a small animal. Well, OK, a plush toy small animal. Let's hear more from
Amateur Radio Newsline's Graham Kemp VK4BB.
GRAHAM: Can an echidna fly? Well, if you're a spiny anteater named
Anstey and you're in the company of the Amateur Radio Experimenters
Group in Adelaide, South Australia, you can not only fly, you can soar.
That was the fate of Anstey, a plush toy echidna who got a trip into
space with the help of the radio amateurs group, including Mark Jessop
VK5QI. Anstey went up into the sky via a high-altitude balloon - one of
many the amateur group has launched over the years - as a way of
grabbing the attention of young South Australians at the Tea Tree Gully
library at the end of last year. The plush toy is the library's mascot
and she became a mascot with a mission.
Anstey was sent up to a height of about 23 miles from a sports field in
the Adelaide Hills and was tracked via radio to a somewhat soft landing
a few days later in a wheat field about 75 miles from where she had been
launched.Mark said she was buried in the tops of the wheat and wasn't
visible until they literally stumbled upon her. The journey took the
little plush toy into air temperatures estimated to be minus 68 degrees
Fahrenheit.
The library, however, had a good warming feeling about the whole matter.
ABC News Australia picked up on the story recently, as did other media.
Now the celebrity echidna is back at the library for another appearance.
On May 8, younsters will visit the library, learn about the journey,
meet the well-traveled toy and celebrate the first echidna in space.
Likely she won't be the last.
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Graham Kemp VK4BB.
(ABC NEWS AUSTRALIA)
**
NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to ABC News Australia; Alan Labs; Amateur
News Weekly; the ARRL; Chelmsford Weekly News; ;CQ Magazine; DX Coffee;
Hap Holly and the Rain Report; the Hindustan Times; the IARU; Irish
Radio Transmitters Society; the K2BSA Amateur Radio Association; the
Radio Society of Great Britain; Southgate Amateur Radio News; the Taipei
Times; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; WTWW Shortwave; and you our
listeners, 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 Neil Rapp WB9VPG in Bloomington Indiana
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
posted to you by Waldo's Place USA, fidonet node 1:3634/12. We hope you
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)
* Origin: (1:3634/12)
|