XPost: rec.radio.amateur.misc, rec.radio.amateur.policy, rec.radio.info
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)
**
HAMVENTION 2023 GETS NEW GENERAL CHAIRMAN
DON/ANCHOR: With Hamvention 2022 now just a memory, planning is already
under way for next year. Congratulations to Jim Storms, AB8YK, on being
named general chairman of Hamvention for 2023. The Dayton Amateur Radio Association announced Jim's new responsibility on Friday, July 1st. Jim
has served as vice president of DARA for three years and has been an
officer for several other local amateur radio clubs. He is a co-leader
for the Dave Kalter Youth DX Adventure program, which he helped found.
Jim has been Hamvention's chairman of advance registration since 2017.
The DARA board also announced that Brian Markland, N8UDQ, will serve as Hamvention's assistant general chairman.
(DARA)
**
FIRST 'HAMCAMPTION' SET FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA
DON/ANCHOR: You've heard of Hamvention and Hamcation but are you ready
for HamCamption?? If your QTH is Down Under, it is coming your way!
Here's John Williams VK4JJW.
JOHN: Darren VK6EK has big hopes for Mayanup HamCamption, a weekend
getaway for recreation and radio. It is the fruit of a discussion
Darren had with Rob VK6LD, president of the Southern Electronics Group
VK6SR in Western Australia and it becomes reality on September 10th and
11th at the sports ground in Mayanup. Darren said that with its
dipole-friendly trees as well as bathrooms and a shed facility, it is
an ideal location for this first try at a radio camping event. More of
a social outing than a field day, it will present an opportunity for socialising with like-minded hams and still present plenty of
opportunity for radio. There may even be a little fox hunting. Darren
plans to run an FT8 station on 20 metres during the day and 40 metres
at night. There is a 70cm repeater about 9 kilometres away from the
grounds and it will be connected to the club's Allstar Node 42482.
Darren said the informal event is expected to be an ideal warmup for
Perth Tech, a camper-friendly symposium being held in October at the Gidgegannup Sport and Recreation Centre. He told Newsline that if all
goes well, HamCamption may return to the Mayanup grounds next May when
the weather is still a bit warmer and drier. The club will just need to schedule their time around the horse and pony clubs who also have their
own equestrian version of field day there.
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm John Williams VK4JJW.
(DARREN VK6EK)
**
NET IS REVIVED FOR ADVANCED CLASS HAMS
DON/ANCHOR: The A-13 Net is back on the air and it's going back - way
back - to its roots. The net, which is being organizd by the Advanced
Class Preservation Society, returns to 20m on Monday, July 11th.
Instead of being a formal net, it's going back to being the general
roundtable it had been at the very start. Be listening for Scott W5URX
to kick things off at 1700 UTC on 14.213 MHz.
Participants are holders of an Advanced Class license issued by the
United States FCC. The agency stopped issuing these licenses in the
year 2000 but they are renewable.
Editor Paul Buescher, N8HHG, writes about the revival of the net in the
most recent A-13 Newsletter, saying [quote] "We will give this a try
and see how it works out. Please consider joining in the net and
listen for future net days and times." [endquote]
According to the newsletter, the preservation society has 315 members
in 50 states and two US territories.
(A-13 GROUP NEWSLETTER, LLOYD COLSTON KC5FM)
**
BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including
the KD2SL repeater in Syracuse, New York on Mondays at 8 p.m. after the Fireside Chat Net.
**
DISASTER EXERCISE SET FOR HAWAIIAN ISLANDS
DON/ANCHOR: Hams throughout Hawaii are getting ready for a disaster
drill that needs as many participants as possible. We hear more from
Kevin Trotman N5PRE.
KEVIN: To help hams in Hawaii ensure that they can be prepared when
hurricanes or other disasters strike the islands, Hawaii ARES is
conducting a disaster exercise on Saturday the 16th of July. Amateurs
who volunteer to participate will make use of their radios as well as
their computers to send messages in a variety of ways. That will
include the use of Winlink to transmit emails with simulated hurricane
reports. Other messages will also simulate reports from area Red Cross
shelters and will provide field situation and damage reports.
Michael Miller KH6ML appeared on a recent KITV newscast in Hawaii to
share the details and ask for all licensed amateurs to get involved.
Hams who participate in SKYWARN, CERT and other emergency response
programs are welcome, as are those who may not be involved in RACES,
ARES or any club. In this statewide exercise, the hams will follow the standardized Incident Command System that is in use throughout the
United States. The exercise presumes that each of the Hawaiian islands
has lost internet, cell phone service and electrical power as a result
of a hurricane.
For details on how to get involved visit the website hawaiiares.net
For Amateur Radio Newsline I'm Kevin Trotman N5PRE.
(HAWAIIARES.NET, KITV HAWAII)
**
TRADITIONAL CW CELEBRATED DURING 'NIGHT OF NIGHTS'
DON/ANCHOR: Listen up: Commercial Morse Code is about to return to the
air, if only for a night. Randy Sly W4XJ explains.
RANDY: In the early years of the 20th century, there was nothing more reassuring for a lonely radio officer on a storm-tossed ship than the
response of a coastal station to their call. The last of these Morse
messages was sent on July 12, 1999. On that date, the founders of the
Maritime Radio Historical Society established their organization with
the specific goal of returning coast station KPH to the air as a means
to honor the men and women who made the profession of radiotelegrapher
one of honor and skill. On July 12, 2022, the MRHS will hold its 23rd
annual Night of Nights, commemorating the tradition of commercial Morse
code once thought dead.
Each July 12th, since the year 2000, transmitters are brought online
for this special event from the original Marconi/RCA transmission site
in Bolinas, California. KPH and KFS will be operating on assigned
commercial frequencies while K6KPH will be operating on several HF
amateur radio bands. For operational times, frequencies and QSL
information, please check the Maritime Radio Historical Society website
at radiomarine.org.
(MARITIME RADIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY)
Newsline's Randy Sly, W4XJ reporting.
**
POTA OPERATORS UPLOAD OWN LOGS
DON/ANCHOR: Hams active in Parks on the Air received upbeat news on the
POTA website recently: From 1200 UTC on July 1st activators have been
able to upload their own logs rather than rely on regional volunteer coordinators to do so. Hams logging onto the POTA site should now see a
menu option called "My Log Uploads." The feature became active on July
1st, following a period of successful beta testing. Posting on the
website QRPer, Thomas Witherspoon, K4SWL, said the option was a welcome
change for activators.
The system update comes just in time for the POTA Annual Support Your
Parks Plaque Event on the 16th and 17th of July where there will be
shields to be won for various classes of operation.
(POTA)
**
WORLD OF DX
In the World of DX, there is still time to work Elvira, IV3FSG, on the
air as 5X3R from Uganda until July 13th. She is operating on 80-10
meters using SSB, RTTY and PSK31. QSL via IK2DUW, direct, by the
Bureau, ClubLog or LoTW.
Be listening for the call sign CO9GNN from Cuba, where a number of
operators will be marking a special event, the 333rd anniversary of the founding of Santa Clara City, Cuba, which is IOTA NA-015. They will be
on most of the HF bands and on 2 meters using SSB and the Digital
modes. Digital diplomas are available. Contact Ernesto by email at
ernesto c o 6 i d at gmail dot com (
ernestoco6id@gmail.com)
A special event station in New Zealand is marking the 90th anniversary
of the New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters Southland Branch
37. They will be using the call sign ZL90GQ throughout July. For
details about the special award available and for details on how to
QSL, visit their QRZ.com page.
Listen for John, N9EAJ, operating as N9EAJ/P from Okaloosa Island,
which is IOTA reference NA-142, between July 24 and 31st. John will be
on 40-10 meters using SSB and a little CW. You may hear him during the
Radio Society of Great Britain's IOTA Contest on July 30th and 31st.
QSL via N9EAJ direct or ClubLog's OQRS.
The exact details and dates are yet to be determined by Gilbert,
4F2KWT, for a DXpedition that will be operating from the Spratly
Islands with the call sign DX0NE sometime between August 1st and
December 31st, 2022. There will be four operators and it will be a
month-long activation on the HF bands using CW, SSB, and FT8. QSL via
4F2KWT, ClubLog or LoTW.
(OHIO PENN DX)
**
'HAM TALK LIVE' MARKS 300TH EPISODE
We'd also like to take a moment to celebrate with a member of the
Newsline family, Neil Rapp WB9VPG, on having completed Episode Number
300 of his podcast "Ham Talk Live," on July 5th. Neil is a Newsline
anchor and correspondent and a host of this lively talk show about one
of our favorite subjects. Congratulations Neil!
**
KICKER: HOPING TO SPY INTEREST IN REVIVING AN OLD NET
DON/ANCHOR: Finally, a popular CW net that went silent two decades ago
has found its voice in one amateur who is looking to revive it. He is
looking for hams with MK 123 transceivers or any spy radio equipment
-including homebrew. We end this week with Jeremy Boot G4NJH, who
shares some of the intrigue.
JEREMY: Colin F5VHZ remembers the great days of the Spy Set Net that
attracted hams at the Bletchley Park Radio Club GB2BP. Back then the
rig of choice was mainly the MK 123 radio. The hams held CW nets,
special events and even a bit of chat. Colin recently posted on the QRZ
forums that he hopes to find like-minded amateurs who will join him
once again in calling "CQ, CQ CQ Spy Set Net," adding their call sign.
Any CW speed is welcome. Colin's love of history and old radios dates
back to his home-brewed crystal projects as a child and a memorable
visit in 1964 to the British Science Museum where he saw a World War II
radio transmitting text from China's Chairman Mao in RTTY. He got his
licence as F1HIC when he moved to France, then returned to the UK in
the 80s, becoming G1YEB. He joined the Bletchley Park radio club and
after passing the CW test he became M5AET. He was part of the first Spy
Set Net operating mainly on 3.514 and 7.028 MHz. The net fell silent
over the years but Colin told Newsline: [quote] "I have decided to try
and kickstart the old Spy Set Net back into action." [endquote] Of
course, it will be on the old frequencies.
With a nod to a little espionage history, Colin adds a final thought:
"You can make up and send your own 'secret' message as in World War II,
like a string of messages: Thomas's bike has a puncture, Mary has found
a blue rose, there are owls in the woods tonight, etcetera." [endquote]
It's all a bit of fun and yes, even a little intrigue. Colin hopes he
spies others who are interested. His email is in the text version of
this week's newscast at arnewsline.org
For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
[FOR PRINT ONLY: Colin's email is
f5vhz@gmail.com]
**
NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to the A-13 GROUP NEWSLETTER; AMSAT-UK;
ARRL; CQ Magazine; Darren VK6EK; David Behar K7DB; Facebook;
HawaiiARES.net; Institute of Amateur Radio in Kerala; KITV HAWAII;
Lloyd Colston KC5FM; Maritime Radio Histocial Society; Ohio Penn DX;
QRZ.com; Southgate Amateur Radio News; shortwaveradio.de; 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.
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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