• Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2349 for Friday November 4th, 2022

    From Amateur Radio Newsline@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 4 08:00:10 2022
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    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)

    **
    OHIO PENN DX BULLETIN HALTS PUBLICATION

    DON/ANCHOR: DXers and others interested in chasing special callsigns
    have learned that an important resource for more than three decades is
    ceasing publication. Jack Parker W8ISH has that story.

    JACK: After 31 years of publishing the free Ohio Penn DX Bulletin, Tedd Mirgliotta KB8NW, is calling it quits. Tedd, the president of the
    Northern Ohio DX Association, has made this free resource available on
    the internet and packet clusters around the world. He announced that
    the edition of October 31st, 2022 was to be the final bulletin. The
    bulletin's webmaster, John Papay, K8YSE, said on the website that the
    archived issues of the bulletin will continue to be available on the
    EIDX Network, papays.com. John said that readers enjoyed it as an email
    or on the list servers. He said that thousands of readers saw it on the
    website as well. He wrote: [quote] "What I found surprising is that
    people will not only read the current OPDX, but they will read back
    issues by the hundreds as well. What a great resource it has [become]
    and will still be." [endquote]

    John encouraged people to email Tedd to thank him for his years of
    DXpedition reports, propagation updates and other relevant information.
    The email address is kb8nw@arrl.net.

    This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

    (OHIO PENN DX BULLETIN)

    **
    "RETIRED REPEATER" LIVES ON IN COLORADO

    DON/ANCHOR: Where do old repeaters go when they retire? In the case of
    one very old repeater in California, that would be the Colorado
    Rockies. Ralph Squillace KK6ITB shares this story, which was told
    recently on the website eham.net:

    RALPH: In the early 1960s, before the area had frequency coordination
    groups and standards for repeater offsets, a privately owned repeater
    went up on a place called Contractors Point, high above San Fernando in southern California. The W6AQY solid-state repeater, which operated on
    VHF FM, relied on the parts of a Motorola walkie-talkie that it was
    built from.

    On the website, eham.net, Paul, W0RW, said he helped install it on the mountaintop long ago with Jim, W6UJX, and Jim's father, facing the
    challenge of putting a 30-foot telephone pole in a trench in that rocky
    soil. The repeater itself was protected from the elements inside a
    waterproof Motorola truck mount box and its batteries needed changing
    every three months.

    He said that the transmitter had an output of about 20 watts ERP and
    used a three-element beam turned toward Los Angeles and it served all
    of southern California successfully for much of that decade. It was
    finally taken out of service in 1969 and after some refurbishment moved
    to Colorado where it was put back to work -- this time as WR0ACR. A half-century later, it is still doing its job - but like most retirees,
    it is on standby service for much of the time.

    This is Ralph Squillace KK6ITB.

    (EHAM.NET)

    **
    POTA QSOs INCREASE BY NEARLY 30 PERCENT

    DON/ANCHOR: With the past few weeks bringing great weather for outdoor activations, Parks on the Air QSOs have grown. Matt Heere N3NWV brings
    us the latest statistics.

    MATT: Hi All. I'm Matt, N3NWV here with your October 2022 POTA stats
    and news update. October included the fall "Support Your Parks" weekend
    event and the stats show a big jump from last month.

    We had 15,781 activations by 2,808 activators from 5.483 parks.
    Forty-seven DXCC entities were represented this month and we reached a
    total of 706,846 QSOs, a month-over-month increase of 29% .

    Congratulations to all of our category leaders for October, and as
    always a big thanks for everyone who participates in the POTA program.

    Speaking of participating, our "Park a Day" Bailey-Sprott list hasn't
    changed notably this month. We still have five activators and two
    dozen hunters on track for pressing the POTA button every day in 2022.
    Good luck to all now that we're down to the final two months of
    theyear.

    The October 15 and 16 "Support Your Parks" weekend was a huge success, generating over 100,000 QSOs. Nearly 11 hundred activators got to over
    15 hundred parks, and worked over 15,000 hunters. All in all, 34 DXCC
    entities participated in the weekend in one way or another.

    That wraps it up for this month. Seven-three and POTA on!

    (POTA)

    **
    INTERNATIONAL NEWSMAKER AWARD TO BE ANNOUNCED

    DON/ANCHOR: We remind our listeners that in a little more than one
    month, we will be announcing this year's recipient of the Amateur Radio Newsline International Newsmaker of the Year Award. We began this award
    in 2019 as a way of honoring individuals, groups or formal clubs whose
    actions and contributions show the world the value that amateur radio
    brings to society. Recipients are chosen by the editorial staff of
    Amateur Radio Newsline. All past recipients have shown themselves to
    adhere to the high standards of selflessness and community service
    which ham radio is known for and have also helped garner recognition
    and a higher profile for ham radio in the mainstream media. Be
    listening in early December when we announce the recipient who has not
    only made headlines but made a difference too.

    **
    BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
    Radio Newsline heard on bulletin stations around the world, including
    the K4LYL repeater in Bedford Virginia on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10
    a.m. and 10 p.m. local time.

    **
    GERMAN AMATEURS AWAIT NEW 'N' OPERATOR CLASS

    DON/ANCHOR: Hams in Germany are awaiting a decision by the nation's
    regulator to add a third class of amateur radio license by early next
    year. Ed Durrant DD5LP tells us what that could mean.

    ED: Germany's proposed new "N" class entry-level licence could be in
    place as early as January the 1st of 2023. The possible addition,
    announced earlier this year, is being reviewed by the German regulator,
    BNetZa, as a way to add a third licence class to the existing E, Novice
    and A, Full, licence classes. A change in the regulations would give
    the N class operators call signs with the prefix DN and the current DN callsigns, which are used for training purposes under supervision of a
    licensed ham, would be cancelled on December 31st of this year, to be
    replaced by the use of a DN/ prefix .

    The new entry level "N" class will grant privileges to use the 2 metre
    and 70 centimetre bands with up to 10 watts EIRP. The operator will be
    allowed to build and operate home made equipment as long as it conforms
    to the regulations. It is possible that usage of the 10 metre band may
    also be added to the class N licence at the end of 2023.

    The content of the licence exam syllabi will also be changed to make
    them "cumulative" with the ability, it is hoped, to allow the taking of
    the class N, class E and class A exams in sequence to get to a full
    licence in one day of testing. The class N exam will cover all legal regulations, operational rules and a limited amount of technical
    knowledge questions. The class E and A exams will then only cover
    additional, more technical theory questions, building on the knowledge
    of the previous level or levels.

    This is Ed Durrant DD5LP.

    **
    HAMS IN KOLKATA SOLVE RF ISSUE FOR POLICE RADIOS

    DON/ANCHOR: When you have a radio interference problem, who better to
    turn to than an amateur radio operator? That's just what police
    officials in one part of India thought when their handheld radios were
    knocked out of service by holiday lights. Graham Kemp VK4BB brings us
    the details.

    GRAHAM: A group of major Hindu festivals were coming up on the autumn
    calendar, starting on Sunday October 30th, and police officials in West
    Bengal, India, were once again struggling with their radios. Something
    was causing havoc with their handhelds during the autumn Hindu
    festivals and it appeared that VHF radio communication was again going
    to be nearly impossible for crowd control and security.

    This year, police took their radio dilemma to some local radio amateurs
    in the West Bengal Radio Club. According to a report by the Indo Asian
    News Service, the hams conducted a variety of tests on the officers'
    radios. Ultimately, they noticed the interference peaked when signals
    had to pass through areas where traditional holiday lights were being
    used to decorate Kolkata's parks and gardens during the festive season.
    With the help of physicist Pasupati (posso potty) Mandal (mon dall),
    VU3ODQ, a club member, the hams determined the interference came from
    the strings of LEDs manufactured in China, which used cheaper
    components. According to Dipak (dee pock) Chakraborty (chock rah boar
    tee), VU3OKT, when they were illuminated, the LEDs emitted a noise on a frequency very close to the one the police radios were using.

    The hams recommended replacing the Chinese LEDs with ones manufactured
    in India, which had different components that did not seem to cause the
    same issue. According to Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, that seemed to
    have solved the problem in time for the festivals.

    This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

    (INDO-ASIAN NEWS SERVICE)

    **
    INDIA LAUNCHES FIRST GROUP OF COMMERCIAL SATELLITES

    DON/ANCHOR: India has launched its first group of commercial
    satellites. Jeremy Boot G4NJH explains what comes next.

    JEREMY: The Indian Space Research Organisation is celebrating the
    launch into orbit of 36 internet satellites from the London-based
    company, OneWeb. The launch on Sunday, October 23rd coincided with the
    Indian Festival of Lights, known as Diwali. An Indian GSLV Mark III
    rocket was substituted for the Russian Soyuz originally planned for the operation before the Ukraine invasion earlier this year.

    This was the second flight for the Indian rocket but its first
    commercial multi-satellite mission. The flight was overseen by the
    ISRO's commercial division, New Space India Limited.

    According to a BBC report, the latest launches mean that OneWeb, which
    is partly owned by the British government, is almost three-quarters of
    the way to having its first-generation satellite constellation achieve
    global coverage. The rollout is expected to be completed by the middle
    of 2023.

    This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (BBC, SPACE.COM)

    **

    WORLD OF DX

    This week's World of DX looks at the various contacts you can make
    during the CQWW CW contest taking place on November 26th and 27th. They
    include Henning, OZ1BII (OH ZED ONE BEE EYE EYE) who will be on the air
    from Pristina, Kosovo as Z68EE during the contest. Listen for Henning
    on all HF bands.QSL via LoTW, OQRS.

    A Slovenian team will be active as TK0C in Corsica during the CQWW CW
    contest. Before and after the contest, listen for the various team
    members using their personal calls with the TK/ prefix. QSL via LoTW,
    eQSL or S50C.

    Be listening for Doug, VA3DF, and Anthony, VE3RZ, operating from Grand
    Turk during the contest using the call sign as VP5Y. QSL via M0URX.
    Outside the contest, both Doug and Anthony will be operating mainly on
    CW on 160-10m. They will be using the callsigns VP5/VA3DF and VP5/VE3RZ

    Listen for the call sign HQ9X from Roatan Island, Honduras, IOTA number
    NA-057, during the contest. The call will be used by team members K1TR,
    K1XM, KQ1F, SM7IUN and W1UE. QSL via KQ1F, LoTW.


    (DX-WORLD.NET)

    **

    KICKER: GETTING A BETTER READ ON RADIO, PAGE BY PAGE

    DON/ANCHOR: Finally, if listening to radio and talking on radio isn't
    quite enough for you, consider joining a book club that also lets you
    read all about radio. Let Randy Sly W4XJ be your guide.

    RANDY: To amateur radio operators, a lengthy conversation on the air is
    called a "rag chew" and most "rag chews" are about... you guessed it...
    ham radio. So when Russell Calabrese, KR2NZ, established a book club
    for members of the Long Island CW Club, the topic was... you guessed
    it... ham radio, but with a twist! Meeting approximately every six
    weeks on Sundays at 6 p.m. Eastern time, the book club digs into the interesting world of amateur radio through fiction, non-fiction,
    technical and historical books. For example, the current book is "200
    Meters and Down" by Clifton DeSoto, which covers the strides and
    setbacks that were present when radio pioneers were establishing the
    amateur radio service during its early years.

    Interested readers can join anytime. The meeting times and information
    are posted on the LICW calendar at longislandcwclub.org. Asked what is
    next for the book club, Russell said he has added a "movie club"
    aspect, featuring films and documentaries with a connection to... you
    guessed it... ham radio.

    I'm Randy Sly, W4XJ


    (LICW)

    **
    NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA; the ARRL;
    BBC; CQ Magazine; David Behar K7DB; DX-World.net; Facebook; Indo-Asian
    News Service; Long Island CW Club; Ohio Penn DX; QRZ.com; Reuters; Romy
    Isidro DU1SMQ; Space.com; shortwaveradio.de; Wireless Institute of
    Australia; and you our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio
    Newsline. We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio Newsline is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for its
    continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our
    website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also
    remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a
    5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn Eve
    Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our news team
    worldwide, I'm Don Wilbanks AE5DW in Picayune, Mississippi saying 73.
    As always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is
    Copyright 2022. All rights reserved.

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