Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2121 with a release date of Friday,
June 22, 2018 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. A pioneer in CW keying becomes a Silent Key. The
Technician class license exams in the U.S. are about to get new
questions -- and we look ahead at the Ducie Island DXpedition. All this
and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2121 comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
MAKING THE ROUNDS FOR DUCIE ISLAND
NEIL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with an update on the Ducie Island
DXpedition which sets off in late October. Excitement is building - and
progress is too. For that update we turn to Jason Daniels VK2LAW.
JASON: The Ducie Island DXpedition team continues to gather momentum
toward its operations as VP6D on October 20th through November 3rd.
The newest member of the pilot team is 15-year-old Mason Matrazzo
KM4SII, who made his debut DXPedition last year at age 14 operating from
Iceland. He is heading to Curacao next month as PJ2/KM4SII. The
DXpedition team has been making the rounds, attending at Dayton
Hamvention and the International DX Convention in Visalia (Viz-AIL-yah)
California in the U.S. and Friedrichshafen (FREED RICK'S Harfen) in
Germany to talk up the trip and meet with corporate sponsors.
They also continue with their fundraising to help defray personal
expenses of the team members themselves. For more information about this
much-awaited South Pacific DXpedition or to help support it visit vp6d.com
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Jason Daniels VK2LAW.
(SOUTHGATE)
**
FIELD DAY: SMALL VOICES, BIG DREAMS
NEIL/ANCHOR: Remember your first Field Day? Whether it was long ago - or
just last year - one group of hams in California is hoping you'll make
this year's Field Day memorable for some young first-timers. Don
Wilbanks AE5DW tells us more.
DON: Field Day has been in everyone's sights for quite some time now --
but for one group of youngsters in California, it marks their
long-awaited first Field Day and a first opportunity to operate on HF.
Members of Scout Troop 44 and Cub Scout Pack 458 are operating side by
side with the San Mateo Amateur Radio Club using the club call sign
W6UQ. In addition they will be running their own small-scale Field Day
operation as KZ6BSA. Donn Lovell K8DLL, whose son 14-year-old Connor
K7CBL, will be among those radio Scouts, said that the youngsters will
have their own miniature Field Day with simplex contacts on 2 meters and
70 cm. He also said they will get some practice air time, just for fun,
using FRS/GMRS radios and later, repeaters. Donn told Newsline the
Scouts' hope that even with all the QRN and pileups that are sure be
happening, hams will be listening for those squeaky little voices out
there calling "CQ Field Day."
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Don Wilbanks AE5DW.
**
FIELD DAY GREETINGS FROM GERMANY
NEIL/ANCHOR: In an apparent show of solidarity with Field Day
participants in the U.S., the Mighty KBC, as it is known in Germany,
plans to transmit greetings in MFSK64 in the hopes it will be heard by
amateurs throughout North America. The transmission by the 100 kW HF
broadcast transmitter is set for the 24th of June sometime around 0130
UTC. This is to occur during the weekly "Giant Jukebox" broadcast of the
Mighty KBC on 9925 kHz. Naturally, reception reports are encouraged.
Hams should email them to themightykbc@gmail.com.
**
FINAL PREPARATION FOR 'WORLD CUP RADIO' AT WRTC
NEIL/ANCHOR: Calling all sports fans! Er....we mean radio contesting
fans. If you're following the final weeks until the World Radiosport
Team Championship, our good sport Ed Durrant DD5LP is here to help you
make sense of it.
ED: They're all preparing, theyre all training, now they're all packing!
From all parts of the world, the contestants for WRTC 2018 in Germany
are getting ready to come to Wittenberg for the Amateur Radio World Cup!
It's been a hard-fought effort over the last few years to qualify by
being at the top of major contest tables but now it's less than 4 weeks
until they can "prove their metal" competing against the best in the
world on a level playing field.
Amateur radio again shows no respect for politics with two-person teams
not only from single countries but across countries who were at one time
enemies. Russians working alongside Americans, parts of the old
Yugoslavia working together on the radio, old feelings lost in the magic
of radio competition.
There are young and old and some in between. From New Zealand there is a
father-and-daughter team, there's three youth teams including one with a
U.S. and a Chilean ham, one with a Ukrainian and Romanian ham and one
with a Hungarian and a German ham. Of course, there are the well-known
"old hands" taking part as well.
Unfortunately, this time no contestants qualified from the UK or
Australia. Perhaps they'll have to make do with winning the Soccer World
Cup final which takes place on the same day as the WRTC!
For a full list of contestants and their biographies go to WRTC2018
(dot) DE and click on "competition" followed by "participants."
One thing is for sure, no matter who wins on July 15th, all competitors,
helpers and visitors are looking forward to having a great time
together, no matter what else is happening in the world!
STOP PRESS - this just in: Using two 300 Kilowatt transmitters from
Europe Radio DARC will broadcast just before the start of the
competition, a WRTC special program across Europe on 6,070 kHz and to
North America on 13,860 kHz on Saturday the 14th at 1100 UTC for an hour.
For Amateur Radio Newsline this has been Ed Durrant DD5LP.
**
SILENT KEY: KEYER-CHIP PIONEER JACK CURTIS K6KU
NEIL/ANCHOR: CW enthusiasts are no stranger to the name Jack Curtis or
his eponymous Curtis Morse Keyer Chip. The man who gave hams a new way
to key Morse Code has become a Silent Key. Here's Andy Morrison K9AWM
with more.
ANDY: The radio amateur who revolutionized CW keyers with the use of an
IC chip has become a Silent Key. Jack Curtis K6KU - formerly W3NSJ - was
the father of the Curtis Morse Keyer chip, reshaping the way keying
could be done with the use of memory. His first chip, known as the 8043,
was released in 1973 followed by a series of others, ending with a
20-pin chip in 1986. The 20-pin chip incorporated A or B iambic modes
and output for a speed meter.
His chips found their way from commercial keyers into commercial amateur
rigs and were popular in homebrew projects as well. The Pennsylvania
native, an electrical engineer, worked for Sperry Rand and later Corning
Glass, after serving in the Navy. His side business, Curtis Electro
Devices, was founded to market his Morse Code iambic keyer and later
provided memory chips for the emerging cellular industry. The company
closed in 2000.
At the time of his death on June 4 he was a resident of Granite Bay,
California. Jack Curtis was 87.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Andy Morrison K9AWM
(ARRL)
**
DISASTER DRILL, BUT WHERE ARE ALL THE HAMS?
NEIL/ANCHOR: What if someone held a disaster drill and nobody came? Well
it didn't happen that way exactly in India recently, but the turnout
among amateurs turned out to be a challenge. Here's Jeremy Boot G4NJH
with details.
JEREMY: A mock disaster drill held in Uttar Pradesh, India by the
National Disaster Management Authority turned out to have one challenge
that was real: finding amateur radio operators. The exercise in Lucknow
focused on the state's 23 flood-prone districts. It relied on the
readiness of of the state police, along with the National Disaster
Response Force. On the website of the Amateur Radio Club of Lucknow,
Pandit VU2DCT wrote that he turned out to be the sole amateur taking
part in the exercise. It appears that no hams reside in any of the
districts where the drill was scheduled.
Pandit, who is secretary of the ham radio club, wrote that he was able
to provide his fellow participants with an oral presentation on amateur
radio. He posted a hopeful observation too that most of the dignitaries
present at the day's exercise showed an interest in what ham radio can do.
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
**
BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including
the Spokane, Washington UHF Repeater of K7TMF and K7MMA on Fridays at 5
p.m. Pacific Time.
**
NEW QUESTION POOL FOR TECHNICIAN CLASS EXAM
NEIL/ANCHOR: In the U.S., the question pool is changing for the
Technician Class license exam as of July 1st. Every three years the
questions are changed, modified, and brought up to date by the National
Conference of Volunteer Exam Coordinators. So as of July 1, you can
consider all the old license test preparation materials like manuals,
online practice tests, Power Point presentations and such to be
outdated. Approximately 60 of the Technician license questions were
replaced. Most of the questions focus on the same concepts but wording
changes will bring the material up to date. If you are part of a
Volunteer Exam team, you must use the new exams starting on July 1st.
So VEs, be sure to change out those tests. And if youre studying with
old books, be aware that some of those questions will change while the
topics, for the most part, wont. If youve been studying with the old
books, June 30 is your last chance to take the test before the big change.
**
GET YOUR FEET WET WITH 'BEACHES ON THE AIR'
NEIL/ANCHOR: Now here's an awards program that will have you wishing for
an endless summer. Mike Askins KE5CXP is our man on the beach for this
story.
MIKE: While some people bring suntan lotion and a surfboard - or maybe
just a good book -- to the beach, others wouldn't be seen on the shore
without their rig and an antenna. Because a beach day can also be a ham
radio day, the program known as Beaches on the Air is encouraging hams
to operate portable and qualify for awards as activators. Chasers - the
hams who contact them - can also compete for honors.
The idea took root in a conversation in 2013 between Diego EC1CW and his
friend Ernesto EA1LQ, a fellow ham and SOTA activator. Diego told
Newsline that the awards scheme really took off sometime after December
of 2015 when he chose the windy Atlantic coastline of the Spanish beach
at Riazor (ree-ah-Zore) for the first activations. Beaches on the Air
was on the map at last. International users now call CQ from the shore
in Greece, Bulgaria, Spain, Croatia, Portugal, the UK and elsewhere
around the world.
In fact, just a few weeks after Diego's first activations, Vlado, Z35M,
an amateur in Macedonia, requested that the program include the beaches
there. A ham for nearly 35 years, Vlado is a big proponent of portable
operations and a frequent activator. BOTA covers not only sea-side
beaches but also those on inland lakes and rivers. A full list of the
approved sites and the awards that can be earned is at beachesontheair.com.
So with summer arriving in some parts of the world, be listening as hams
on the beach catch a wave - a radio wave, that is.
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Mike Askins KE5CXP.
(DIEGO VARELA EC1CW)
**
IN AUSTRALIA, GETTING KIDS WIRED OVER ELECTRONICS
NEIL/ANCHOR: Some school kids in Australia are getting ready to have a
summer of solder and circuit boards. Robert Broomhead VK3DN has more on
these special summer workshops.
ROBERT: What do crickets, frogs and grasshoppers have to do with ham
radio? Everything, if you ask the organizers of the School Holiday
Electronics Workshops being offered for school kids in July. The Bendigo
Amateur Radio and Electronics Club has organized the workshops in
Castlemaine to help grow the next generation of engineers and, of
course, radio amateurs as well. In sessions geared to beginners age 7
and older, students will learn the basics of electrical circuitry and
get to build a solar-powered grasshopper of their own. The workshop for
students 10 and older will teach the basics of soldering. Those students
will get a homebrew cricket or frog. The club is also planning a third
workshop for returning students who already have been through the basics
in previous workshops. For information about fees and schedule, contact
the club via email at secretary at barec dot net dot au
(secretary@barec.net.au)
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Robert Broomhead VK3DN
(BAREC)
**
WORLD OF DX
In the world of DX, you can work Haru JA1XGI operating as H44XG from
Honiara in the Solomon Islands through the 27th of June. He will be on
40 10m mainly on CW, with perhaps some FT8.
Bodo DF8DX is operating from Taiwan from June 24th to the 30th. He will
be using the BW/DF8DX call sign on the HF bands. QSLs go via his home
call. He will upload logs to Logbook of The World.
Be listening for the call sign TM65EU being used by three French
amateurs on the air from three islands off the French coast. They can be
heard on June 22nd and June 23rd. Their QSL manager is F4ELK.
You have a chance to work Antonio, EA5RM, operating as CP1XRM from
Bolivia until July 10th. He is in Bolivia as an NGO volunteer but is on
the air during his free time on 40-10 meters using SSB and the Digital
modes. He may also be on 60 meters. QSL via EA5RM.
**
KICKER FROM GRAHAM ON WKRP
NEIL/ANCHOR: We end this week with a story about radio waves that truly
know no bounds - not even inside the walls of a high-security prison.
From Australia, here's Graham Kemp VK4BB.
GRAHAM: There's something to be said for the power of radio, even if in
this case it's not amateur radio - and even if, in this case, it's radio
produced inside a remote high-security prison.
The inmates here call their service the West Kimberley Regional Prison
Radio Hour - or WKRP. No, not *that* WKRP, the name of the radio station
in that wildly popular American TV series of some years ago based in
Cincinnati. This is radio programming that gives details on prison
happenings. When it was launched last year it was envisaged as a
bulletin service of sorts for simple updates but now the program is
heard outside the Western Australian prison's prison walls on community
stations. If you've ever had "mic fright" as a ham, you have something
in common with the inmates here who received expert coaching from
Rebekah O'Meara and encouragement from producer Brad Spring of Derby
Aboriginal Media Corporation.
Now the hourlong weekly show is heard through the National Indigenous
Radio Service. The audience isn't a captive one but the program's
announcers are, at least until their time served is over.
Hams can relate, no? There's nothing better than getting the word out -
no matter what walls you may be behind - and knowing others really hear
you.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Graham Kemp VK4BB.
(RADIOINFO.COM.AU, ABC)
**
NEIL/ANCHOR: Finally, some terrific news on a personal note: Dr. Tamitha
Skov, aka The Space Weather Woman, has come through on her promise to
get a Ham licence. She's currently waiting on her vanity call sign, but
all of us here at ARNewsline welcome her to our great hobby that she has
been supporting already for a few years with her propagation reports,
that are keenly followed on her website, twitter and on Ham Nation.
**
NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to ABC; Alan Labs; Amateur News Weekly; the
ARRL; BBC; Bendigo Amateur Radio and Electronics Club; CQ Magazine;
Diego Varela EC1CW; DX World; Hap Holly and the Rain Report; Ohio-Penn
DX Bulletin; QRZNOW.COM, RadioInfo.Com Australia; Southgate Amateur
Radio News; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; Wireless Institute of
Australia; 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 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 2018. All rights reserved.
--
73
James-KB7TBT
www.arnewsline.org
www.ylsystem.org
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