- 
Amateur Radio Newsline (A)
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Mar 23 22:03:01 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2369 for Friday March 24th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2369, with a release date of Friday,  March 24th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Fire destroys an important lifesaving repeater in  Oklahoma. The Dayton amateur radio community loses a leader -- and a
victory atop an Australian summit for one young operator. All this and
more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2369, comes your way right
now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
FIRE DESTROYS VITAL REPEATER IN SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA
NEIL/ANCHOR: A vital repeater in southern Oklahoma has literally gone up
in smoke, leaving a region without an important emergency communications  resource. Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, has that story.
RALPH: Fire has destroyed the W5BLW repeater in southern Oklahoma, taking 
down a critically important resource for SKYWARN, the Red Cross and local  emergency operations in five counties of the region. According to Vance 
Smith, KE5BAL, of the Ardmore Amateur Radio Club, it will be a slow road
back for the repeater, which stood for more than 16 years.
Vance told Newsline that the repeater was consumed by a controlled burn
that went the wrong way on the private ranch property where the repeater
stood. By the time the damage was noticed on the mountaintop, it was too
late.
Now the scrambling - and the hard work - begins so that emergency  communications can resume when needed. 
Vance said he has an old repeater that can be put up temporarily on
another site, but it will be a while before a full power repeater will
be back in action at the site on top of Arbuckle Mountain. He told
Newsline [quote] "We have a lot of work to do up at the site. We are
going to need a tower climber to do work up top, and along the side of
the tower." [endquote]
The Ardmore Amateur Radio Club repeater bears the name and callsign of 
Ardmore club member Charles M. Dibrell who became a Silent Key in 1998.
He had been a licensed ham since 1929.
Vance told Newsline: [quote] "This is a very important piece of radio  equipment for southern Oklahoma."[endquote] 
This is Ralph Squilllace, KK6ITB.
(VANCE SMITH, KE5BAL; QRZ: LLOYD COLSTON, KC5FM)
**
FCC SEEKS GUIDELINES FOR CELLPHONE SATELLITE OPTION
NEIL/ANCHOR: A recent move by the FCC means that increasing numbers of  smartphone users may discover what hams already know: that when there's
no terrestrial service, additional coverage is readily available from  satellites. Dave Parks, WB8ODF, has the details.
DAVE: Smartphones may soon have a direct connection to satellites when  necessary, following a move by the US Federal Communications Commission
to set out guidelines for such service. While space-based connections
are already a reality on a limited basis with Apple phones and are in
the works for T-Mobile, SpaceX, Qualcomm and Iridium, guidelines are
still needed to sort out the rules for broader implementation. A recent
draft document by the FCC seeks to explore this kind of supplemental
service and how it would work.
The FCC said in a news release that this would require agency
authorization for terrestrial-based providers, so they could provide
licensed operation on a part of the spectrum reserved for them. Phones
would switch to the satellite signal when no other signal is available.
This is Dave Parks, WB8ODF.
(TECH CRUNCH)
**
SILENT KEY: HAMVENTION'S RON CRAMER, KD8ENJ
NEIL/ANCHOR: A leader in the Dayton, Ohio amateur radio community, and
a force in the annual Dayton Hamvention, has become a Silent Key. We
hear more from Patrick Clark, K8TAC.
PATRICK: Amateurs in Dayton, Ohio and beyond often looked to Ron Cramer,  KD8ENJ, for leadership. He was the vice president of the Dayton Amateur
Radio Association, which he had one time serve as president, and he was
general chairman of Dayton Hamvention. Ron became a Silent Key on Saturday, March 11th, after a brief illness.
His skills at organizing and leading especially came to the forefront as
part of the group that worked to provide Hamvention with a smooth
transition to the Greene County Fairgrounds after more than five decades
at Hara Arena.
In a message on the ARRL website, DARA president Jack Gerbs, WB8SCT, 
described Ron as [quote] "a hardworking, dedicated, wonderful person who
had a positive impact on everyone he encountered. His only fault was, he
would never say no." [endquote]
Ron Cramer was 75.
This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.
(DAYTON DAILY NEWS, ARRL)
--- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
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From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Apr 14 12:45:40 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2372, for Friday, April 14th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2372, with a release date of Friday,
April 14th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. US-made vacuum tubes prepare to make a comeback. 
NASA names a trio of hams for the next Artemis mission -- and meet a YL 
who is Poland's youngest SOTA operator. All this and more, as Amateur 
Radio Newsline Report Number 2372 comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
VACUUM TUBE-MAKING ON THE COMEBACK IN THE US
DON/ANCHOR: American-made vacuum tubes are poised to make a comeback onto 
the market this summer. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, tells us what's been going 
on.
KENT: As the rising cost of vacuum tubes manufactured mostly in China and  Russia increasingly cramps audiophiles, musicians and others seeking a  particular audio quality, one factory in the US southeast is preparing to  bring tube-manufacturing back home.
With assembly line workers getting down to business inside his Western  Electric plant in Rossville, Georgia, entrepreneur Charles Whitener 
expects to restore American-made vacuum tubes to the worldwide market in 
just a few months. According to reports on such websites as wired.com and  audioexpress.com, Whitener's goal is to resume production of the single-
ended triode tube known as the 300B, a design that dates back to 1938. 
His plant, known as the Rossville Works, is home to the Western Electric  vacuum tube brand which Whitener bought in 1995 from AT&T.
This summer he expects to introduce a reimagined version of the audio 
vacuum tube known as the 12AX7, a dual triode tube commonly found in  amplifiers for guitars. According to Wired.com, it will be the first US-
made tube in decades and it is expected to be followed by numerous other  US-made models. The Wired.com report said: [quote] "If all goes to plan, 
the US could once again dominate vacuum tube manufacturing." [endquote]
This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.
(WIRED, AUDIOXPRESS.COM, HACKADAY)
**
THREE HAMS CHOSEN FOR ARTEMIS MOON MISSION
DON/ANCHOR: The next NASA radio amateurs in space are preparing to be 
part of a four-person team flying near the moon for the first time in 
more than 50 years. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, tells us who they are.
ANDY: NASA and the Canadian Space Agency have announced the members of 
the Artemis II crew comprising NASA's first crewed mission to establish a  presence near the moon next year. Three members of the four-person team 
are amateur radio operators: commander Reid Wiseman, KF5LKT, pilot Victor  Glover, KI5BKC, and mission specialist Jeremy Hansen, KF5LKU. The other  mission specialist is Christina Hammock Koch. The mission is scheduled 
for November of 2024. The previous mission, Artemis I, was not crewed.
This will be a flight test lasting about 10 days and will validate the  life-support systems of the Orion spacecraft, along with other 
demonstrations.
Unlike his fellow crew members, Hansen is making his first trip into 
space. He is a Canadian citizen and is the first Canadian to train 
astronaut candidates from both Canada and the US.
This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.
(NASA, AMSAT NEWS SERVICE)
**
GET ON THE AIR FOR WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY
DON/ANCHOR: It's the QSO Party to end all other QSO parties: World 
Amateur Radio Day, April 18th, the day amateurs participate in a global  celebration of the founding of the International Amateur Radio Union. Be  listening on HF as the IARU and its member societies get on the air with  special events through the 25th of April. There will be more than 50 
special event stations around the world with callsigns ending in W A R D, 
for World Amateur Radio Day. They include TM98WARD, 9Y4WARD, OT23WARD and 
a host of others.
Here in the States and over in the UK, the ROC-HAM Radio Network is  contributing to the festivities by hosting a 12-hour birthday net. Listen 
for John, W2JLD, and Dave, GW8SZL, who will be marking the occasion on 
the VOIP/ECHOLINK *ROC-HAM* Conference node #531091, as well as various  Allstar Nodes, the DMR TGIF Talk Group 2585 and Extended Freedom SIP 
Portal 2585. John will be on the air during that time too, operating on 
10, 20, and 40 metres, using the callsign W2W.
For more details, visit IARU.org.
(IARU, QRZ.COM)
--- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Apr 21 08:34:28 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2373, for Friday, April 21st, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2373 with a release date of Friday,
April 21st, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. In the US, the FCC commits itself to managing  satellites more effectively. Two losses hit the World Radiosport Team  Championship -- and Nokia and NASA look at putting wireless on the moon. 
All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2373, comes 
your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
FCC COMMITS TO IMPROVING SATELLITE MANAGEMENT
NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to Washington, D.C., where two new 
FCC offices are taking a closer look at how to better handle all those  satellites in orbit high above our planet. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, brings 
us up to date.
ANDY: Hoping to get a better handle on regulating satellites and reducing 
the effects of orbital debris, the US Federal Communications Commission 
has added two new departments under its umbrella: the Space Bureau and 
the Office of International Affairs. The move replaces the agency's  International Bureau, which handled licensing and regulation of satellite  programs and international telecommunications.
The FCC's announcement did not specify what impact, if any, this move 
would have on amateur radio satellites.
FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said at an opening event for the new  departments that they would [quote] "promote long-term technical capacity 
to address satellite policies and approve our coordination with other 
agencies on all of these issues." [endquote]
The departments are expected to coordinate their efforts in such areas as 
the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference. The conference will take 
place in Dubai starting on November 20th.
This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.
(FCC, NEXTGOV.COM)
**
AGENCY SEEKS STRATEGY FOR REPURPOSING SPECTRUM
NEIL/ANCHOR: Another US government agency is taking a look at whether 
some frequencies need to be reallocated as more and more wireless devices 
get on the air. Stephen Kinford, N8WB, brings us that story.
STEPHEN: In the United States, an increasing appetite for spectrum from  wireless services has spurred the National Telecommunications and 
Information Administration to find at least 1,500 MHz of the radio 
spectrum to meet that demand.
The NTIA is looking for input from the public to identify which bands 
could be repurposed under this new spectrum strategy. The agency said on 
its website that the strategy is [quote] "a government-wide approach to  maximizing the potential of our nation's spectrum resources." [endquote] 
The NTIA shares spectrum-allocation duties with the Federal 
Communications Commission.
In the United States, hams already share many UHF and microwave bands 
with government users.
To learn more, follow the link in the text version of this week's 
Newsline script.
This is Stephen Kinford, N8WB.
[FOR PRINT ONLY: 
https://ntia.gov/issues/national-spectrum-strategy ]
(NTIA, AMATEUR RADIO WEEKLY)
**
NOKIA AND NASA TO PUT WIRELESS SERVICE ON THE MOON
NEIL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, a whole new wireless network of sorts is being 
looked at - for the moon! Let's hear more from Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.
KENT: An LTE/4G network destined for the moon is expected to launch on 
board a SpaceX rocket later this year, according to plans from the 
Finnish telecommunications giant Nokia. According to reports on CNBC, 
it's part of a partnership with NASA that envisions the creation of the 
first colony on the lunar surface.
A message on Nokia's webpage states that the network will be designed to  support the transmitting of telemetry, biometrics, and sensing 
applications and will also be available for HD video and robotics. Nokia  states that the high-bandwidth network will be a vital tool in NASA's 
plan for so-called "sustainable exploration" of the moon.
NASA chose the Finnish telecommunications company in 2020, announcing 
Nokia's role in the Artemis lunar program to return a human presence to 
the moon -- this time for extended operations by the end of the decade.  According to the Nokia website, the network will include an LTE Base 
Station with integrated Evolved Packet Core functionalities, LTE User  Equipment and RF antennas. The system will have hardware redundancy and  through its software, the capacity for remote operation.
This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.
(NOKIA, CNBC)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Apr 27 22:08:26 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2374, for Friday, April 28th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2374, with a release date of Friday,
April 28th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. The FCC's new Space Bureau releases its first set 
of rules for satellites. ARRL members: Look for a possible hike in dues 
soon -- and a new micro-supercapacitor could be a game changer. All this 
and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2374, comes your way,
right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
NEW SATELLITE BUREAU PRODUCES SPECTRUM RULES
PAUL/ANCHOR: A newly created bureau of the FCC has just produced its 
first set of rules governing satellites. Sel Embee, KB3TZD, tells us what
this means.
SEL: Just days after the US Federal Communications Commission announced 
the creation of its new Space Bureau on April 11th, the fledgling 
department has already adopted new rules for spectrum-sharing among 
satellites in non-geostationary orbit. The rules require operators with  licenses for these satellites to avoid interference with one another.  According to a report on the spacenews.com website, future licensees must  demonstrate how they will coordinate with their predecessors and protect 
them from interference.
The FCC is asking licensees to coordinate their systems [quote] "in good  faith," [endquote] meaning that they are expected to share information, 
even with competitors in the marketplace.
The regulator will be looking for comments from the public.
This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.
(SPACENEWS.COM)
**
ARRL INVITES COMMENTS ON INCREASE IN DUES
PAUL/ANCHOR: If you are a member of the ARRL, it's time to let them know 
what you think about their proposal to increase membership dues. Patrick  Clark, K8TAC, tells us how to get your message across.
PATRICK: The ARRL is making an online survey available starting on May 
1st, inviting all league members to share their thoughts on membership  benefits and the prospect of higher dues. In delivering his message in 
the April issue of the ARRL magazine QST, CEO David Minster NA2AA
stressed the importance of participation by every ARRL member.
Before members can do so, however, they also need to review their 
accounts on the league website to ensure it is still valid. On May 1st 
you will be able to share your thoughts when the survey goes live. Please 
see the text version of our newscast at arnewsline.org for a link you can  follow for more details.
The ARRL encourages members who are having difficulty with their log-in  process to call the league at 860-594-0200 or send an email to  
membership@arrl.org
This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.
[DO NOT READ:  
https://www.arrl.org/dues-survey  ]
(ARRL)
**
UAE ASTRONAUT HAS 1ST QSO IN NEW EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM
PAUL/ANCHOR: Students enjoyed an amateur radio contact with an ISS 
astronaut who, like them, is from the United Arab Emirates. It was a 
"first" for a new educational program. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, shares the  details.
JIM MEACHEN: Twenty-five students from a number of schools in the United 
Arab Emirates got a chance to connect over amateur radio with ISS mission  specialist Sultan Al Neyadi, KI5VTV. The call on April 18th was the first 
of 10 scheduled educational sessions being arranged with the 
communications engineer by the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre in Dubai 
and the Emirates Literature Foundation in collaboration with the Emirates  Amateur Radio Society.
It was the first ham radio contact through this programme for the 
astronaut, who is the second from the United Arab Emirates. As the ISS 
passed over the region, the call utilised the Centre's ground station to 
make the contact.
Like the international ham radio programme known as Amateur Radio on the  International Space Station, or ARISS, ELF in Space provides a window 
into life aboard the space station and the various challenges and 
projects undertaken by those on board. Perhaps just as importantly for 
some, it also provides an amateur radio experience.
This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.
(GULF NEWS, EMIRATES NEWS AGENCY)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
 
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From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu May  4 18:05:56 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2375, for Friday, May 5th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2375, with a release date of Friday, 
May 5th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Hams in Australia have only another month to weigh 
in on a new class license. The FCC proposes changes to the 60 metre band 
-- and a controversial bill about RF emissions has hams in Maine worried. 
All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2375, comes 
your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
PLAN TO STUDY 5G IN MAINE WORRIES STATE'S AMATEURS
JIM/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to the state of Maine, where 
hams are expressing concern over a telecommunications bill that proposes a  study on radio frequency emissions. Andy Morrison, K9AWM, has an update.
ANDY: Ham radio operators in the state of Maine are keeping an eye on a 
bill in which lawmakers call for a study of radio frequency radiation  emissions and the environmental impact of 5G technology. The bill is 
stalled for now in the Committee on Energy, Utilities and Technology but  according to a recent story in the Maine Monitor, hams in the state are  concerned that such a study of 5G holds the potential for unintended  restrictions of frequencies shared by amateur radio operators. Phil 
Duggan, N1EP, the ARRL section manager for Maine, told Newsline in an 
email that amateurs are seeking wording to be added to the bill that 
exempts amateur radio and public safety communications. Phil said that 
ARRL New England Division Director Fred Kemmerer, AB1OC, had advised hams 
to be on the alert as anti-5G bills are introduced in a number of state  legislatures, with wording that could impact ham radio.
The bill in Maine, introduced by Republican lawmaker Tracy Quint, targets 
the telecommunications industry specifically and its language does not 
mention amateur radio. Hams nonetheless have submitted written testimony  protesting the bill, noting that hams are already required to conduct  evaluations of their radio frequency radiation in compliance with FCC  regulations that ensure safety.
This is Andy Morrison, K9AWM.
(NEWS CENTER MAINE, MAINE MONITOR)
**
FCC PROPOSES CHANGES TO 60 METER BAND
JIM/ANCHOR: The US Federal Communications Commission has changes planned 
for the 60m band and wants to hear from you. Patrick Clark, K8TAC, tells 
us more.
PATRICK: Following the lead set at the World Radiocommunications 
Conference in 2015 and adopted most recently by Canadian regulators, the 
US Federal Communications Commission has proposed changes to the 60m band 
that would allocate 15 kHz of contiguous bandwidth between 5351.5 and 
5366.5 kHz for amateur radio on a secondary basis.
US General, Advanced and Extra Hams presently have five channels available 
to them between 5332 and 5405 kHz - also on a secondary basis - with an  effective radiated power limit of 100 W PEP The proposed new bandwidth 
would set a limit of 15 watts EIRP.
The FCC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking was released on April 21st and 
aligns itself with terms advocated for by the ARRL.
The band's primary user in the US is the federal government.
The National Telecommunications and Information Administration favors 
adoption of the new proposed bandwidth, with hams losing the ability to 
use four of the five permitted channels. The remaining channel would be  included within the new contiguous portion of the 60m band.
The ARRL, however, previously asked the FCC to keep the four 60-meter 
channels that fall outside the new band and to retain the 100w power 
limit.
The notice is to be published in the Federal Register in May and comments 
from the public are due no later than 60 days after the notice appears.
This is Patrick Clark, K8TAC.
(FCC, ARRL)
**
AUSTRALIAN REGULATOR MOVES AHEAD ON NEW CLASS LICENSE
JIM/ANCHOR: The Australian communications regulator is moving ahead with a  proposed new class license. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us what's involved.
GRAHAM: Amateurs with a VK license have until Thursday the 1st of June to 
have their say on proposed changes by the Australian Communications and 
Media Authority that would create a class license with considerations for 
a staged implementation of higher power authorization. The ACMA states on 
its website that intends to implement the proposed class licensing  arrangements starting on the 1st of July and expects to give the amateur  community ample notice before this change comes into effect.
The ACMA also says that the revised class license proposal was created by  incorporating suggestions from representative bodies, amateur radio clubs 
and individual amateurs.
The Wireless Institute of Australia does not support this change, however,  saying it could only support the change on a "no disadvantage" basis.
On May 1st, the ACMA website published submissions from the public that 
were not made anonymously.
This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
JIM/ANCHOR: Amateur satellite and SHF enthusiasts in Australia can expect 
to lose all or part of the 9cm band under another proposal by the 
Australian Communications and Media Authority. The regulator has been 
looking at the frequencies between 3.4 GHz and 3.6 GHz for possible use in  long-term earth station protection zones. As with other ACMA proposals, 
the deadline for public comment to the regulator is July 1st.
(ACMA)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri May 12 00:02:02 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2376, for Friday, May 12th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2376, with a release date of Friday,
May 12th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Hams in the Caribbean gear up for storm season.  Amateurs help a woman in India reconnect with her family -- and the ARRL  offers US hams assistance in evaluating their RF emissions. All this and 
more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2376 comes your way right 
now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
CARIBBEAN REGION HAMS GEAR UP FOR STORM SEASON
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the Caribbean, where hams await 
the storm season ahead with formal training and an emerging disaster 
response network. John Williams, VK4JJW, brings us those details.
JOHN: With the approach of this year's hurricane season in the Caribbean  region, emergency training exercises have got underway again for amateurs 
in the Youlou Radio Movement/Rainbow Radio League in St. Vincent and the  Grenadines.
As always, amateurs will be relying largely on HF communications because 
the mountainous terrain of the islands in the region provides challenges 
for successful VHF signal paths. Youlou has been in the process of growing 
its emergency network and now has 10 stations based on the main island,  including one near the airport.
The league's director, Donald de Riggs, J88CD, told local media outlets 
that the hams are closer than ever to creating the island-wide HF 
emergency network they have long envisioned. They are also looking to 
support a more robust maritime rescue and air response network for 
disasters throughout the region.
New equipment has been donated and one of their biggest benefactors has 
been Australia-based Barrett Communications. The most recent of three  shipments from that company arrived in February, bringing SDR transceivers 
and sturdy antennas, hopefully capable of surviving the coming season of  storms.
This is John Willliams, VK4JJW.
(THE VINCENTIAN, AIR FORCE TECHNOLOGY)
**
WEST BENGAL AMATEURS RECONNECT FAMILY AFTER 10 YEARS
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: It took 10 years for a woman in India to find her way back 
to the family she left behind when she married. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, tells 
us how hams assisted her in her journey.
JIM: An early marriage and separation from her family kept Rubina Begum 
apart from her family in Bengal for more than a decade. With the help of  police and the West Bengal Radio Club, the relatives have found one 
another again.
According to reports in the Times of India and the Millennium Post, the  National Commission for Women, a government entity that advocates for 
women, had been trying to assist her in tracing the family she had lost 
touch with after marrying into a Kashmiri family at the age of 14. The 
media reports said that the woman, who is now 24 years old, was originally  brought to the Baramulla sector in Jammu and Kashmir to be married because 
her father was unable to bear the expense of raising four children at 
home.
The woman's brother, Hassan Ali Sheikh, told the Times of India that in 
the ensuing years they believed she was lost to them forever. But he spoke  with her, at long last, on Wednesday, May 3rd, after the women's 
commission contacted state police who reached out to the hams in West 
Bengal. The club has a long track record of facilitating such reunions. 
After contacting the woman with the phone number provided, club secretary  Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, reached out to a colleague proficient in 
Hindi and Kashmiri and details of her story finally emerged. Her brother 
is expected to travel and bring her home to Bengal soon to be with the 
family she has missed so much.
This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.
(TIMES OF INDIA, MILLENNIUM POST)
**
ARRL OFFERS ASSISTANCE TO HAMS FOR RF COMPLIANCE
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: If you haven't already checked your station to evaluate 
its compliance on RF exposure, the ARRL is offering some help. Dave Parks, WB8ODF, has that story.
DAVE: The ARRL has reminded amateurs in the United States that it is 
making its resources available to help licensees comply with FCC rules on 
RF exposure limits. Those limits went into effect in 2021 and a two-year  transition period was granted to permit hams to conduct evaluations and 
make necessary changes for stations that do not conform to the exposure 
rules.
The ARRL issued its reminder to hams just as the transition period ended 
on May 3rd. Hams are not exempt from conducting such evaluations even if 
they transmit at very low power.
The league's resources include a video about RF exposure and evaluation; 
an RF exposure calculator and an RF safety section excerpted from the ARRL  Handbook.
Perhaps most importantly, the league is encouraging all hams to make use 
of these resources whether or not they belong to the ARRL or have 
established a website account.
Visit arrl.org for more details.
This is Dave Parks, WB8ODF.
(ARRL)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu May 25 21:52:28 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2378, for Friday, May 26th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2378 with a release date of Friday,
May 26th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Deadly floods ravage a region in Italy. Hamvention  2023 is just a memory now -- and a tragic antenna accident claims a noted  contester's life. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report 
Number 2378, comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
FLOODS RAVAGE REGION OF ITALY HOSTING WRTC
NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Italy where deadly floods 
in one region have displaced and disrupted lives and the economy. This is 
to be the location of the World Radiosport Team Championship later this  summer, as we hear from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
GRAHAM: Besieged by flooding that displaced more than 36,000 people and 
killed at least 14, Italy's Emilia-Romagna region has received some 
limited support from amateur radio. Greg Mossop, G0DUB, emergency  communications coordinator for IARU Region 1, told Newsline that hams made 
use of local VHF repeaters to resume communications within affected towns  until mobile and landline phone networks could be put back into service. 
He said the failures were not severe enough for local authorities to ask  regional ham radio emergency networks to activate. Hams did remain on 
standby, ready to use HF, VHF and digital voice if necessary.
Greg said the IARU received the information from Alberto Barbera IK1YLO 
(Eye Kay Won Why El Oh) of the RNRE radio communications network. Alberto 
said the affected area asked for additional support from other countries 
in the region to provide extra pumping capacity and those teams made use 
of VHF/UHF commercial communications supported by Starlink satellite  terminals.
Separately, organisers of the World Radiosport Team Championship, to be 
held this summer in Bologna - in this flood-impacted region -- were 
keeping an eye on the challenging conditions. Luca Aliprandi, IK2NCJ, who  handles media and communications for the event, said on the WRTC Groups.io  list that if some sites for WRTC are unusable, competitor stations may 
need to be relocated farther north of Bologna. He wrote [quote] "Our will 
and dedication to organising WRTC2022 will be stronger than any adversity." [endquote]
This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
(GREG MOSSOP, G0DUB, IARU REGION 1)
**
ACMA, COLLEGE END RELATIONSHIP FOR AMATEUR LICENSING
NEIL/ANCHOR: As Newsline went to production, the Australian Maritime 
College announced that it was severing its relationship with the 
Australian regulator for providing amateur licensee services. The college 
and the Australian Communications and Media Authority will go their 
separate ways in February 2024. Before the college's selection in 2019,  services such as exams and callsign recommendations were provided through 
the Wireless Institute of Australia. The ACMA is to take the role of call 
sign allocation and examination syllabus control "in-house" to go with the  licensing role which it already fulfills -- and to do this under the new 
class license framework. The ACMA said it would release a consultation on 
the new accreditation scheme this coming August at the same time as the 
new class licensing arrangements take effect.
(ACMA)
**
FCC TO REVISIT SPECTRUM ALLOCATIONS
NEIL/ANCHOR: In the US, the FCC has a busy June ahead of itself: It's 
taking a second and perhaps a third look at spectrum allocations -- and  there's a new candidate nominated to join them, as we hear from Paul 
Braun, WD9GCO.
PAUL: In June, the US Federal Communications Commission will revisit ways 
the radio spectrum can be utilized more efficiently and study the propose  testing of a few uses on part of the 42 GHz band in the so-called 
"greenfield spectrum." Greenfield spectrum refers to the part of the 
spectrum that is unutilized. The FCC's focus has been intensifying on this  along with other parts of the spectrum because of the growing demand for 
its use by emerging wireless services -- and limited places to authorize 
their operation.
FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced this plan in the commission's  June agenda, posting her message on the agency website on May 17th. She 
said the 42 GHZ band was an apt place for conducting experiments with 
various spectrum-access models because of the absence of licensed users 
there.
Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden has nominated a longtime telecom lawyer 
for the government, to join the FCC. Anna Gomez must still be confirmed by 
the Senate. The president's previous nominee, Gigi Sohn, withdrew from  consideration several months earlier.
This is Paul Braun, WD9GCO.
(FCC)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Jun  1 20:28:58 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2379, for Friday, June 2nd, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2379, with a release date of
Friday, June 2nd, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. The Rockall Island DXpedition is on the air
and rocking! A supernova sends a message to earth by radio -- and one
CW enthusiast goes from pounding the brass to winning it. All this,
and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2379, comes your way
right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
ROCKALL DXPEDITION ACTIVATES IN NORTH ATLANTIC
JIM/ANCHOR: The big challenge is on!! Our top story takes us to the uninhabitable granite islet in the North Atlantic Ocean known as
Rockall Island, which is being activated by two amateur radio
operators. Ed Durrant, DD5LP, takes us there.
ED: As Newsline went to production, two hams were on the air, and the competition for contacts was predictably intense. It's a challenge
for chasers around the world. For the hams, the challenge is even
bigger: Emil Bergman, DL8JJ, and Nobby Styles, G0VJF, hope to break
the record of a 46-day stay on the rock set in 2014. The pair, and
their expedition leader, Cam Cameron, plan to stay on the rock for
as long as 50 or 60 days and raise £50,000 for charity. This coveted
DX is designated IOTA Number EU-189 and is a most-wanted location. Be
listening for MM0UKI - and cross your fingers that they are listening
for you!
This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.
(ROCKALL EXPEDITION WEBSITE, MARK FELTON PRODUCTIONS, QRZ)
**
RADIO WAVES CARRY MESSAGE FROM A SUPERNOVA
JIM/ANCHOR: Radio waves have been known to carry some important messages
over the years, but one recent message, received by a research team, led
by scientists at Stockholm University, contained a cosmic message. Here's
Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, with that story.
RALPH: Scientists have picked up radio waves revealing the presence of
an unusual type of supernova, a thermonuclear supernova, the kind used
by researchers to measure the expansion of our universe. Not long after
the supernova's discovery, scientists at the W.M. Keck Observatory in
Hawaii detected helium emissions, another significant marker.
According to Sci Tech Daily, the discovery of this type of supernova,
known as Type 1a (ONE A), is the first to be accomplished via radio
waves. The presence of helium emissions is seen as evidence that an
exploding compact white dwarf star had pulled helium from the outer
layer of a companion star - the donor star - while the supernova was
being triggered. That material is more commonly hydrogen.
The discovery is an accomplishment on another level too, according to researcher Erik Kool of the Stockholm team. He told the Journal Nature
that astronomers have been trying to accomplish this kind of detection
by radio for decades.
This is Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB.
(SCI TECH DAILY, SCIENCE NEWS, NATURE)
**
HURRICANE WATCH NET NEEDS VOLUNTEERS
JIM/ANCHOR: In some parts of the US, where it's nearly hurricane season,
it's also the season for volunteering to look out for them, as we hear
from Randy Sly, W4XJ.
RANDY: For 59 straight seasons, the Hurricane Watch Net has been
activating for any hurricanes that make landfall, as well as helping
those in any affected areas before, during, and after a hurricane.
Just ahead of this year's season, the word is going out in the Southern
and Eastern United States and the Caribbean - the HWN needs you! They
are looking for more people who can get on the air from the areas hit
by the storms.
Net manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, quickly offered cautionary words,
telling AR Newsline, "Of course, priority number one for anyone is to
do all you can to protect your property, home, family, and yourself.
It's always safety first." However, if hams are safe at home, or in
a storm shelter, where a portable station can be set up, the net would
like to hear from them. Every piece of weather data, measured or
estimated, is considered to be important information by the forecasters
at the National Hurricane Center.
The Hurricane Watch Net covers the Caribbean, Central America, Eastern
Mexico, Eastern Canada, as well as the US Atlantic and Gulf Coast States.
Hams normally operate on 14.325 MHz by day, and 7.268 MHz by night. In
addition to taking storm reports, they also stand ready to relay any
emergency or health and welfare traffic, as well as relaying the latest information about storms in English and Spanish.
For more information about the Hurricane Watch Net, please visit their
website, www.hwn.org (www.hwn.org).
This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Jun  8 22:22:28 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2380, for Friday, June 9th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2380, with a release date of Friday,
June 9th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. The World Radiosport Team Championship is going  forward despite floods. Hamvention organizers report "record" crowds for 
Xenia -- and amateur radio comes to a key region within India's protected  wilderness. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 
2380, comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
WRTC TO GO FORWARD IN ITALY DESPITE FLOODS
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: There's some encouraging news from the flood-stricken 
region in Italy where the World Radiosport Team Championship is to be 
held next month. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us the latest report.
JEREMY: Despite flood damages that have devastated Italy's Emilia Romagna  region, the World Radiosport Team Championship will go forward in July,  organisers have said. Luca Aliprandi, IK2NCJ, the WRTC's spokesman, said 
the organising committee has found replacement sites for stations whose  original operating locations near Bologna have become unusable. In all, 
the region has suffered losses costing in excess of 5 billion euros,  organisers said.
Reporting on the WRTC's reflector, Luca said that the committee hopes to 
have 100 percent of the replacement sites tested and approved well in 
advance of the event. He said that the site organiser, Claudio, I4VEQ, 
was optimistic, citing the new locations' low noise levels. Some of the 
sites have already granted permission for antennas to be installed to 
enable the setup teams to do field practice. 
Organisers have also begun seeking additional funds because of the extra 
costs incurred after the flooding. He said he expected the result of all 
these efforts to produce [quote] "an unforgettable and successful  competition." [endquote]
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(WRTC2022 REFLECTOR)
**
"RECORD" ATTENDANCE AT HAMVENTION 2023
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, Hamvention organizers are calling this year's 
crowd a "record attendance" since the move to Xenia. Just a handful of 
weeks after Hamvention, the tally shows 33,861 people were at the Greene  County Fairgrounds in Ohio, a total number topping last year's by more 
than 2,000. Hamvention's media chair, James Gifford, KD8APT, released the  numbers, saying that the total surpasses the previous attendance record 
at the fairgrounds, set before the pandemic, at 32,472. Hamvention will 
be held again next year on May 17th, 18th and 19th. Save the dates!
**
NEW MOMENTUM TO KEEP AM BROADCAST RADIO IN US CARS
STEPHEN: The struggle to keep AM broadcast radio in cars in the US 
continues. Kent Peterson, KC0DGY, has an update.
KENT: The move to retain AM broadcast service in vehicles sold in the US  gained even more momentum recently as state broadcasting associations 
passed a resolution of support that underscored AM's role in carrying  emergency messages from the federal government during a national crisis; 
its ability to carry other messages during extreme weather events and 
AM's robust nature among underrepresented communities, such as minorities 
and individuals who do not speak English. The association represents all 
50 of the US states as well as Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico and it 
supports the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act, a bipartisan bill passed 
recently in Congress.
Although many manufacturers of electric cars claim RF interference to be 
an issue between AM broacast radio and the vehicles' electronic systems, 
Ford Motor Company recently reversed its decision to do away with the 
service in its Ford and Lincoln vehicles.
In a related move the National Association of Farm Broadcasting has also  launched a website advocating for the retention of AM service, 
reiterating the importance AM has in rural communities.
This is Kent Peterson, KC0DGY.
(RADIO WORLD)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu May 18 19:01:46 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2377, for Friday, May 19th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2377, with a release date of Friday,
May 19th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. US hams prep for hurricane season. Getting a 
stubborn folding antenna to unfold - in space! And an early net marks 
24,000 mornings of check-ins. All this and more, as Amateur Radio 
Newsline Report Number 2377, comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
HAMVENTION IS HAPPENING IN XENIA, OHIO
DON/ANCHOR: As Newsline went to production, hams from all over the world 
were converging on a busy fairground in the US state of Ohio for 
Hamvention. Be sure to listen to our newscast next Friday, May 26th, for 
a Hamvention wrap up.
**
IT'S ONLY A TEST (FOR NOW) AT THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER
DON/ANCHOR: We begin this week with - what else? - the weather. It's 
storm season in many parts of the world and here in parts of the United  States, amateurs are checking their hurricane season preparedness. We 
hear more about that from Randy Sly, W4XJ.
RANDY: It's that time of year again, when amateurs check out their 
equipment, and get ready for a new season of storms and storm-related  activity. This is especially important for such stations as WX4NHC at the  National Hurricane Center in Florida. Their annual on-the-air 
communications test will take place on Saturday, May 27 from 9 a.m. until 
5 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time.
Assistant Amateur Radio Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4R, says that the 
purpose of the event is to test the station’s equipment and antennas as 
well as operators' home equipment prior to the 2023 Hurricane Season 
which runs from June 1st through November 30th.
The station will be operating on HF, VHF and UHF, including 2 and 30-
meter APRS and Winlink.
Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, net manager of the Hurricane Watch Net, told AR 
Newsline that they will be active during that time, on or near their 
standard frequencies of 14.325 and 7.268 MHz, depending on propagation. 
The VoIP Hurricane Net will activate that day too from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.  Eastern Daylight Time.
Look for WX4NHC on the air or posted on DX Cluster. For more information, 
you can visit wx4nhc.org.
This is Randy Sly, W4XJ.
**
SILENT KEY: PETER STUART, PA3EPX, FORMER VERON BOARD MEMBER
DON/ANCHOR: A ham who helped build enthusiasm for homebrew and other 
amateur radio practices in The Netherlands has become a Silent Key. We 
hear more details about him from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
JEREMY: Peter Stuart, PA3EPX, was well-known for his enthusiasm and 
creative spirit within the leadership and membership of VERON, the Dutch  amateur radio society. Peter, who first became active in VERON at the end 
of the 1970s, became a Silent Key on the 16th of April.
He was remembered by colleagues as an advocate for teaching fox hunting 
and for his service on the VERON board as its secretary. An avid do-it- yourselfer, he was also a proponent of homebrew equipment and he 
encouraged others to build a variety of projects including an ATV 
transmitter.
Peter was 71.
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(VERON)
**
JUPITER SPACECRAFT RESOLVES ANTENNA ISSUES
DON/ANCHOR: There's antenna work..........and then there's antenna work. 
If your antenna is a folding antenna that won't unfold - and it's out in 
space - you're gonna need to do a little more than just climb up the 
tower to fix it. Graham Kemp, VK4BB, tells us what happened.
GRAHAM: With the launch last month of the European Space Agency's JUICE  mission - short for Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer - hopes were high for its  antenna, which had been folded up inside the spacecraft ready for its 
eventual full deployment. The 16-metre-long antenna, known as RIME - for 
Radar for Icy Moons Exploration - was to completely unfold in its first 
week after the launch date and it did - that is, all but one final part.
According to various media accounts, a variety of remedies were tried 
without success until the flight control team finally freed the remaining 
part by delivering a shock that moved a tiny stuck pin that had left the  antenna section jammed in its folded position. The shock came via a 
device known as a nonexplosive actuator that was located inside the 
bracket. What happened was disruptive enough to shake things up.
May 12th brought freedom as the stuck part became unstuck.
Now the antenna should be ready for an even bigger challenge - the moons  around the giant planet Jupiter. The mission will use the antenna to 
study those icy moons as far down as 9 km, analysing both the surface and  subsurface. What unfolds there may possibly deliver some shocks of its 
own.
This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
(EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY, DIGITAL TRENDS)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Jun 16 02:36:00 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2381, for Friday, June 16th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2381, with a release date of Friday,
June 16th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. A youth DXpedition sets its sights on Guyana.  Satellites get in the act on Field Day -- and ham radio aids in a 
dramatic rescue in Idaho. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline 
Report Number 2381, comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
YOUNG DXPEDITIONERS SET SIGHTS ON GUYANA
PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Guyana - that's the 
location a young quartet of DXpeditioners has its collective eye on. We 
hear about their plans from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
JEREMY: Their trip has been years in the making and now, with the travel  precautions of the pandemic behind them, a team of DXpeditioners -- all 
in their 20s -- is finally free to travel to their destination: Guyana. 
Four friends, Jamie, M0SDV, Philipp, DK6SP, Tomi, HA8RT, and Sven, DJ4MX, 
are young: Sven is 21, team co-leader Jamie is 22; Tomi is 24 and co-
leader Philipp is 25.
Their youth hasn't stopped them from becoming veteran DXpeditioners. 
Jamie told Newsline: "We have been fortunate enough to visit some amazing  locations worldwide." Now they putting together their plan to operate in  Guyana between the 14th and the 24th of next February, operating CW, SSB, 
FT8, and RTTY, on the HF bands.
They have not yet been assigned a callsign.
The Northern California DX Foundation said it has given the team a $5,000  grant as a way of encouraging the next generation of adventuring 
amateurs. 
Jamie said that the group's website will be updated regularly to keep DX  hunters apprised and, of course, to encourage others to support the  activation.
See the text version of this week's newscast on our website, 
arnewsline.org, to find a link to the DXpedition. The team will also be  releasing a separate website dedicated to the DXpedition itself and will  communicate with chasers via social media.
[DO NOT READ: www.8R-2024.com]
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(GUYANA DXPEDITION WEBSITE, JAMIE MØSDV)
**
HAM RADIO PLAYS PIVOTAL ROLE IN SEATTLE DRILL
PAUL/ANCHOR: Residents in the city of Seattle take the notion of being  neighborly quite seriously. So seriously, in fact, that they regularly 
hold disaster drills to practice ways to help one another out. Of course, 
it involves amateur radio. Here's Jack Parker, W8ISH, with a report on 
the latest exercise, which was held on June 11th.
JACK: The disaster scenario in the city of Seattle, Washington, was 
simulated but there was nothing fictional about the scene of neighbor 
helping neighbor. On June 11th, the city's Emergency Communication Hubs  rehearsed the all-important coordinated response that everyone would have 
in the event of a citywide power outage -- from neighbors to local  authorities.
The exercise was called Power Down. Twenty-five hams from the Auxiliary  Communications Service of Amateurs were dispatched to transmit messages 
using voice and digital modes, such as Winlink and Fldigi. The hams 
worked at one of the city's 10 participating hubs, at rally points for 
city workers, or in the radio room of the city's Emergency Operations 
Center. Many of the hams were asked to move between the various locations 
to help balance out resources. Most of the hams communicated via nets 
using repeaters that have power generators on site.
According to Susanna Cunningham, WB7CON, the public information officer 
for the ACS, the exercise was a successful demonstration of cooperation 
but unearthed some challenges: There were coverage issues with repeaters 
that are used less frequently -- and hams making use of Winlink did not 
always succeed in getting all the ICS forms submitted from the Hubs to 
their targeted locations. Susanne said that these issues and others will 
be evaluated at the July meeting of the ACS on July 8th.
This is Jack Parker, W8ISH.
(SUSANNA CUNNINGHAM, WB7CON)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Jun 23 06:17:50 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2382 for Friday, June 23rd, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2382, with a release date of Friday,
June 23rd, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Hams get on the air as a cyclone hits India; the 
FCC's systems go back online -- and get ready to chase the 13 Colonies 
Special Event stations. All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline 
Report Number 2382, comes your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
HAMS MOBILIZE TO ASSIST DURING CYCLONE BIPARJOY
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to India where hams played a 
crucial role in public safety and communication as a cyclone enveloped 
the region. More on that from Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.
JIM: Amateur radio operators in western India were deployed and kept on 
high alert as Cyclone Biparjoy closed in on the western shore near the 
port of Jakhau on Thursday, June 15th, tearing roofs off houses, and 
leaving thousands without power.
Local news reports from the Indian state of Gujarat said that the state's  Disaster Management Authority responded to power outages and other damage 
by deploying six ham radio teams, two of them in the district near the 
port of Jakhau, as well as a number of mobile units. Pakistan and India 
had already moved an estimated 173,000 people to shelters in preparation 
for the storm's arrival.
The deadly cyclone killed at least two people in India before weakening 
and heading toward Pakistan's southern coastal areas. The name of the 
Cyclone - Biparjoy (Bipper Joy) - means "disaster" in Bengali.
This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, TIMES OF INDIA)
**
FCC REPORTS ITS ULS BACK ONLINE
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In the United States, the FCC reported an end to the long  shutdown of some of its systems, much to the relief of hams and others 
needing to file documents. Paul Braun, WD9GCO, brings us that report.
PAUL: The Federal Communications Commission's nearly month-long outage of 
its Universal Licensing System and related systems has ended. The systems 
came back on line, on a limited basis, on Wednesday, June 21st. A public  announcement by the FCC alerted users to the remaining unavailability of 
the systems' query download function, which permits search results to be 
saved as text files.
The shutdown put the brakes on amateur radio filings and other FCC  applications that were facing immediate deadlines, causing widespread  frustration and much wider speculation as to the cause behind the 
shutdown. The FCC's public announcement did not address the cause and 
despite repeated requests from Amateur Radio Newsline to clarify what had  occurred, the agency referred only to the announcement on its website. 
The announcement cited [quote] "technical issues." [endquote] It was not  possible to determine specifically where those issues occurred - or why 
they occurred - and whether there had been a security breach or if any  presumed built-in redundancies failed to operate properly.
The FCC said it has provided deadline extensions for filings that were  affected by the shutdown and that it expects high traffic on its systems 
in the days to come. Those ULS applications that were impacted will not 
need to pay waiver fees, seek waivers, or provide any special attachments.
The FCC said that the deadline extensions and other relief measures only 
apply to those filings between the outage period of June 9th to June 
29th.
This is Paul Braun, WD9GCO.
(FCC)
**
WRTC GAINS SUPPORT FROM ITALIAN OFFICIALS
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The World Radiosport Team Championship, which is about to 
open shortly near Bologna, Italy, has gained the official patronage and  support of the Ministry of Enterprises and the Made in Italy initiative. 
The competition is being held in a region of Italy known as an economic 
engine because of the strength of its business ventures in technology and  craftsmanship. This recognition adds a much-needed boost, following the  devastating floods that swept through the region, challenging the 
organizers of the event which takes place July 4th through July 11th.
(WRTC 2022 REFLECTOR)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Jun 30 14:24:47 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2383, for Friday, June 30th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2383, with a release date of 
Friday, June 30th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Ofcom proposes sweeping license changes in the
UK. The QSO of a lifetime makes one ham's Field Day unforgettable --
and meet Amateur Radio Newsline's Young Ham of the Year for 2023.
All this and more, as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2383, comes
your way right now.
**
BILLBOARD CART
**
OFCOM PROPOSES SWEEPING CHANGES FOR UK LICENSES
NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the UK, where Ofcom is 
proposing a major overhaul of amateur radio licensing and 
operations. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us those details.
JEREMY: Stating it wants to provide amateurs in the UK with greater
access to licences while delivering greater operating freedom, the communications regulator Ofcom is proposing sweeping changes to its
ham radio licence framework.
None of these changes affects the frequencies or bands amateurs 
can use but it does increase the maximum permitted power for 
transmitting across the three classes of licence. The proposed 
maximum allowances are 20 watts for Foundation; 100 watts for 
Intermediate in most bands and 1,000 watts for Full licence 
holders who are operating where ham radio has a primary
allocation. Ofcom is also proposing low power airborne
transmission on some bands.
Beacons, repeaters and gateways would no longer require a Notice 
of Variation in most cases -- the holders of a Foundation licence 
would be permitted on the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. Foundation 
licence holders would also be allowed to build their own 
equipment.
In another change, hams advancing to a higher class of licence 
would be required to surrender their lower-level licence and call 
sign, holding only a single personal licence. This requirement 
would not apply to clubs.
This is just a sample of what Ofcom is suggesting. The regulator 
is seeking feedback and has set a deadline of the 4th September 
for comment. For a link to the document please see the text 
version of this week's newscast script at arnewsline.org
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
[FOR PRINT ONLY: 
https://www.ofcom.org.uk/consultations-and-statements/category-2/ updating-amateur-radio-licensing-framework ]
(above URL all on one line)
(OFCOM, AMATEUR RADIO DAILY)
**
OH BABY! WHAT A GREAT FIELD DAY!
NEIL/ANCHOR: So you think you had a great Field Day? Sorry....but 
no matter how amazing a time you had, no matter how many QSOs you 
and your club logged, it can never compare to the experience of 
one amateur in Alabama who helped organize his club's big weekend. 
Jim Damron, N8TMW, tells us more.
JIM: Patrick Nagle, N4GLE, was ready. Field Day weekend couldn't 
come soon enough for this member of the Muscle Shoals Amateur 
Radio Club. Patrick has been part of the organizing committee for 
the club's Field Day for the past three years and everyone was 
ready to put the club callsign, W4JNB, on the air.
This year, Rhett Allen Nagle was also ready. In fact, on June 23, 
2023, just as Field Day prep was under way, he was so ready that 
he was born. With the doctor's help, Rhett's mother, Kaitlyn 
Hendrix Nagle, brought him into this world, and into Patrick's 
arms.
Patrick told Newsline that he and his wife had hoped for Rhett's 
birth to take place a few days after Field Day but the doctor 
wasn't available on their chosen date of June 26th. So June 23rd 
it was going to be! Holding strong at the Field Day site was 
brand-new grandfather, Papa Roy Nagle, KI4UX, who kept things 
running smoothly, and stayed in touch with his son.
The happy new father may have been away from the club's operating 
site this year, but he told Newsline he knows he had the best QSO 
of Field Day weekend. While it may not have been made over the 
air, he said that all those eyeball QSOs with his new son included 
plenty of snuggles.
This is Jim Damron, N8TMW.
NEIL/ANCHOR: Newsline offers the Nagle family all the best. We 
can't wait to hear that Rhett has received his callsign.
(PATRICK NAGLE, N4GLE)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
 
- 
From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Jul  7 07:23:21 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2384, for Friday, July 7th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2384, with a release date of Friday,
July 7th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Gains in attendance at Europe's largest hamfest. 
Sri Lanka loses a respected member of the amateur community -- and there 
are big plans ahead for radio at Scout camps. All this and more, as 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2384 comes your way right now.
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BILLBOARD CART
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GAIN IN ATTENDANCE AT HAM RADIO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to Germany. With Ham 
Radio Friedrichshafen (Pron: Freed Ricks Harfen) completing two weeks 
ago, the attendance figures have been announced and there's some good 
news. Over to our European Correspondent Ed Durrant, DD5LP, who attended.
ED: This year's attendance at Ham Radio, Europe's largest Hamfest, was up 
by 10% to 11,100 and the number of traders by 15% compared to last year,  despite predictions that Hamfests may suffer due to the increase in 
online sales during and following the pandemic.
It was clear there was an increase in the number of people both at the 
indoor flea market halls and in the main trader and exhibitor hall. 
While there were no new major radio announcements -- other than we 
already know of from Hamvention -- it was good to see Kenwood back with a  stall but a shame that only Yaesu's agents represented them. ICOM was 
there with their usual impressive large display area and competing in 
size was a new company to the amateur radio market - Aaronia a 
manufacturer of high quality test equipment.
All in all, it was a very uplifting event.
Just as important was the announcement that the required legislative 
document had just been signed to implement the new German entry level "N  class" amateur radio licence. The regulations will come into force on the 
21st of June 2024, the week before next years "Ham Radio" event between 
the 28th and 30th and indeed the very first examinations for this new 
class of licence will take place at "HAM RADIO 2024." The new licence 
will allow access to 70cm, 2m and 10m running a maximum of 10 watts and 
will conform to CEPT specifications for an entry level licence. 
This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.
**
FCC SEEKS INPUT ON COMMERCIAL USE OF HF SPECTRUM
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Following years of experimental use of the frequencies 
between 2 and 25 MHz - a range the FCC considers underutilized - members 
of the Shortwave Modernization Coalition have asked the agency for rule  changes that would permit fixed, long-distance, time-sensitive 
transmission of data by commercial entities. The FCC is requesting public  comment on the proposed rule change, which the Commission said would not 
have an impact on that part of the spectrum used exclusively by amateur 
radio, maritime or aeronautical services.
A rule change would make the frequencies available to regular commercial  operations. At present only 61 of the 21,507 active licenses for 
frequencies between 2 and 25 MHz are for industrial and business use,  according to the FCC.
The businesses seeking access have relied until now on satellite, fiber,  microwave and millimeter wave wireless transmissions.
Shortwave Management Coalition members, who include such entities as 
companies in the financial markets, believe a rule change could widen 
access to other industries such as mining, petroleum and manufacturing.
Comments are due to the FCC within the month.
(FCC, SWLING POST)
**
FCC TO CONSIDER KEEPING FM6 RADIO FOR LOW-POWER TV
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In other action in Washington, it is shaping up to be a 
busy month for the Federal Communications Commission, which is 
considering whether low power analog TV stations that have a Channel 6  allocation can continue to broadcast analog FM radio. Kevin Trotman,
N5PRE, tells us what's behind the issue.
KEVIN: In a small number of US markets, FM broadcast audio has long been  available from TV stations making use of a subcarrier 250 kHz from the 
top of the Channel 6 frequencies. At the FCC's open meeting on July 20th, 
the FCC will look at an option it favors: permitting these low-power TV  stations to continue this practice as a supplementary service even after 
the TV stations' conversion to digital.
The FCC believes that preserving the operations for those 13 low-power  stations would benefit the public interest, noting as well that there is 
no record of TV interference with the adjacent FM channels, known as FM6  stations. The FCC wrote in a fact sheet on its website that it has not  received complaints with credible evidence showing anything to the 
contrary.
FM6 radio is permitted to operate only on 87.75 MHz and the service may 
only be offered within the low-power TV station's coverage area and on a  non-interference basis.
This is Kevin Trotman, N5PRE.
(FCC)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
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From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Fri Jul 14 12:58:49 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2385 for Friday July 14th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2385, with a release date of 
Friday, July 14th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. The World Radiosport Team Championship heads to 
the UK. Campers prepare for Youth on the Air camp in Canada -- and 
calling QRZ among a universe of UFOs. All this and more, as Amateur 
Radio Newsline Report Number 2385 comes your way right now.
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BILLBOARD CART
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UK CHOSEN TO HOST WRTC 2026
PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the World Radiosport Team 
Championship. The prestigious international competition wrapped up in 
Italy on July 9th and the winners were announced -- including the venue  selected to host the competition in 2026. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us 
that report.
JEREMY: The World Radiosport Team Championship - a high profile 
competition often viewed as the Olympics of amateur radio - has 
declared the United Kingdom the winner in the selection process to be 
host site for the next international contest. The English counties of 
Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Suffolk - all in East Anglia - were selected 
by the Sanctioning Committee to serve as home to the 50 operating 
locations for the competing two-person teams.
In an interview with ICQ Podcast presenter/technical editor Martin 
Butler, M1MRB, WRTC 2026 President Mark Haynes, M0DXR, said organisers 
are going to rely heavily on amateur volunteers throughout the UK to 
provide technical help and support during setup and operation.
Meanwhile, as WRTC 2022 concluded, the top three winning pairs - among 
the other victorious operators - were identified as UW7LL and VE3DZ for 
first place; DJ5MW and DL1IAO, second place; and 9A7DX along with 9A3LG,  third. For a full list of winners and their scores, visit the WRTC 2022  website at wrtc2022 dot it (wrtc2022.it).
Newsline would also like to congratulate our colleagues at the ICQ 
Podcast, which has been chosen as a media partner, providing updates as 
the organising progress goes forward. The announcement was made on the  podcast's website on 10th July by its founding editor, Colin Butler, 
M6BOY.
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(ICQ PODCAST, WRTC 2022, WRTC 2026)
**
STUDY CONFIRMS EMISSIONS FROM SATELLITE CONSTELLATIONS
PAUL/ANCHOR: According to a new study, those tiny low-earth orbit 
satellites may be delivering something unwanted and much less attractive 
than broadband internet access. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the details.
JIM: Large satellite constellations that provide detailed Earth imagery 
as well as broadband internet access to some regions have been shown to 
emit unintended electromagnetic radiation that may prove a challenge to  radioastronomers' research. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for 
Radio Astronomy in Germany report that interfering signals appear to 
come from the electronics on board a number of SpaceX satellites. 
Writing in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, the researchers said 
they made the discovery using the facility's Low Frequency Array 
telescope. They drew their conclusions after observing 68 of the 
satellites in low earth orbit.
The report's lead author, Federico Di Vruno, said [quote] "This study  represents the latest effort to better understand satellite 
constellations' impact on radio astronomy." [endquote] The scientist 
said that the most recent observations confirm there is a measurable 
existence of the radiation.
This is Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.
(PHYS.ORG)
**
SILENT KEY: RUSSIAN ROBINSON CLUB'S GEORGE CHLIYANTS, UY5XE
PAUL/ANCHOR: The DX community is grieving the loss of an influential 
amateur who helped organize and promote DXpeditions in the polar 
regions. We hear more about him from Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
GRAHAM: George Giorgiy Chliyants, UY5XE, was a friend and an advocate to 
many. A number of reports say that George recently became a Silent Key. 
He has clearly left his mark: In 1993, while attending the IOTA 
convention in Spain, George encouraged the creation of what became the 
Russian Robinson Club, a group of adventurous amateurs who would come to  operate out of particularly challenging locales in the polar regions. 
He later became QSL manager for many of the Russian expeditions in bot
h the Antarctic and the Arctic. He had also served as the president of 
the UDXC and vice president of the Robinson club. One of his DXpeditions 
was EM20YU, in which he activated the Chernobyl exclusion zone in 2006 
with Boris, UT7UT.
Licenced in 1966, he was an active ham whose contesting activity had won 
him many awards and plaques. He was also a published author and had been 
a correspondent for a number of amateur radio magazines, including Radio 
and RadioMir, both in Moscow and RadioHobby, in Kyiv.
George was 75.
This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
(WORLDWIDE ANTARCTIC PROGRAM, UT7UT.COM, UY5XE HOMEPAGE)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
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From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Jul 20 17:32:25 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2386, for Friday, July 21st, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2386, with a release date of Friday,
July 21st, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Changes in band access await hams in Australia. A  much-loved electronics supplier is closing after 50 years -- and a ham 
marks a DXCC achievement of two lifetimes. All this and more as Amateur 
Radio Newsline Report Number 2386 comes your way right now.
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BILLBOARD CART
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BAND-ACCESS CHANGES AWAIT AUSTRALIAN AMATEURS 
JIM/ANCHOR: There are gains and losses for amateurs in Australia, as the  nation's regulator moves ahead with proposed changes to spectrum access.  Graham Kemp, VK4BB, has that story.
GRAHAM: Advanced amateurs in Australia and overseas equivalents will be 
losing their access to frequencies between 3.4 and 3.6 GHz, which have been  identified for reallocation to commercial interests and for use by earth  station protection zones. While proposing those changes, the Australian  Communications and Media Authority is expanding standard amateurs and 
overseas equivalents access to frequencies between 50 and 52 MHz, in 
addition to the current 52 to 54 MHz. These modifications are contained in 
the Radiocommunications Licence Conditions Omnibus Amendment Instrument 
2023, Number 1.
 
The ACMA took its action following the submission of public comments to the  consultation. The regulator said it received only six such comments, with 
the majority supporting the changes.
This is Graham Kemp, VK4BB.
(ACMA)
**
RSGB VIDEO EXPLAINS SWEEPING CHANGES AT OFCOM
JIM/ANCHOR: Meanwhile in the UK, hams are getting some help in 
understanding the changes that Ofcom has in the works. We have those 
details from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
JEREMY: As Ofcom undertakes the first sweeping changes in ham radio 
licensing and call sign policy in 25 years, the Radio Society of Great 
Britain has been hoping to make things simpler. The society is offering  guidance on this consultation through a variety of materials that include a  newly released video by Murray Niman, G6JYB, the society's spectrum and  licensing expert.
The RSGB is hoping that clubs will share the video at their meetings and  assist hams in understanding the work underway. The video can be found on 
the RSGB's YouTube channel or on the consultation web page of the society 
at the link found in the text version of this week's newscast.
The regulator is seeking feedback and has set a deadline of the 4th 
September for comment.
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
[DO NOT READ: rsgb.org/licencereview ]
**
SILENT KEY: COMPUTER HACKER KEVIN MITNICK, N6NHG
JIM/ANCHOR: A computer hacker who was once on the FBI's "most-wanted" list 
- and who described himself as possessing the world's most expensive 
amateur radio license, has become a Silent Key. Here's Sel Embee, KB3TZD,
to tell us about him.
SEL: Kevin Mitnick, N6NHG, whose computer-hacking skills landed him a 
federal prison term with hundreds of supporters pressing for his freedom, 
has become a Silent Key. Kevin died on Sunday, July 16th, of pancreatic  cancer.
According to several online obituaries, by the time he was 16 years old, 
Kevin had already sharpened his software skills, gaining unauthorized 
access to computer systems. Ultimately, it was his illegal download of  software from Digital Equipment Corporation in the 1980s that led to a 
massive manhunt, his conviction and five-year prison term.
Having become a ham radio operator at the age of 13, he wished to return to  the air once he was released from prison and spent more than $16,000 in 
legal fees to petition the FCC for a license renewal. He succeeded, saying  afterward that, as a result, he possessed the most expensive amateur radio  license in the world.
Kevin was 59.
This is Sel Embee, KB3TZD.
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)
 
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From 
Daryl Stout@618:250/33 to 
All on Thu Jul 27 18:37:08 2023
 
 
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2387, for Friday, July 28th, 2023
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2387, with a release date of Friday,
July 28th, 2023, to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.
The following is a QST. Hams call QRZ to help a flood-damaged region of 
Italy. Dangerous conditions cancel a second activation on Rockall -- and a  successful orbit for CubeSATS from the Philippines. All this and more, as  Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2387 comes your way right now.
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BILLBOARD CART
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CALLING QRZ TO RESTORE FLOOD-DAMAGED EMILIA-ROMAGNA 
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Italy's flood-devastated region of Emilia-Romagna faces a 
long period of reconstruction and hams are involved in providing their own  kind of support. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us the details.
JEREMY: Although some hams may be more familiar with the Emilia-Romagna 
region of northern Italy as the host of the recent World Radiosport Team  Championship, it is actually now in the amateur radio spotlight for another  reason. Remember the callsign 1A0C (One Ay Zero C). Hams will be calling 
QRZ until the 2nd of August to focus attention on the charitable work being  done there by the Italian Relief Corps of the Order of Malta, focusing on 
the badly damaged Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. The historic deadly 
floods in May displaced thousands of families, destroyed communities and  threatened to wreck many local industries. A multinational team of amateurs  will be on the air from the radio station at the Magistral Villa on the  Aventine Hill. The Order of Malta's humanitarian projects are known 
throughout the world, assisting 120 nations with medical, social and  humanitarian needs. The operators include Fernando EA5C, Simone IK5RUN, Jun  JH4RHF, Dmitry RA9USU and others.
At the time Newsline was being produced, the team's website was under  construction. Visit the QRZ.com page of 1A0C for updates.
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(425 DX BULLETIN, QRZ, ORDER OF MALTA)
**
A TRIBUTE TO BELOVED SOTA SILENT KEY
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: SOTA activators are planning an international tribute to  recall the treasured friendship of a ham who became a Silent Key last year. 
Ed Durrant, DD5LP, gives us the details.
ED: From his shack in Poland, Jarek SP9MA, is leading the way among his 
fellow SOTA supporters. He has issued a call to all friends of the beloved 
ham known as Guru who became a Silent Key in March of 2022. Jarek wrote on 
the SOTA reflector that he will begin using the callsign SP59GURU on 
January 11th of next year, which would have been Guru's 59th birthday. The  callsign will remain active through to March 11th, the anniversary of his  death. The loss of Jose-Antonio Gurutzarri Jauregi EA2IF to cancer rocked 
the SOTA community last year, most especially in Europe, where his 
commitment to radio on the summits began in his native Spain in 2013.
Jarek has put out a call to SOTA activators worldwide to join him in this  special event activation and to start making plans now, well in advance of  January.
Though there will be no diplomas or awards for QSOs, Jarek believes the  contact itself will provide a memorable moment. In that way, Guru, who left  his mark also as a top contester and CW operator, will get another moment 
with his SOTA brothers and sisters.
Or, as Jarek wrote on the SOTA reflector: [quote] "I just think that as 
many hearts as possible would connect with the Guru at that time." 
[endquote]
This is Ed Durrant, DD5LP.
(SOTA REFLECTOR)
**
DANGEROUS CONDITIONS CANCEL REPEAT ROCKALL ACTIVATION
STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Radios and other equipment remain on Rockall Island, where 
a second attempted activation has failed. Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, brings us up 
to date.
JEREMY: A second - and very brief - activation of the remote granite islet  known as Rockall was called off after hazardous conditions in the North  Atlantic had forced the team to return to the mainland.
Cam Cameron, Emil Bergmann, DL8JJ, and Nobby, G0VJG, set sail on the 16th 
of July, only to turn back three days later after making several passes at  Rockall. The hams were hoping to have a second activation - three hours of 
CW and SSB - during their return trip.
The trio was traveling to recover radio equipment left there during the 
June activation of MM0UKI. Emil and Nobby had called QRZ for several days  before their departure, leaving Cam on Rockall. In a challenge to benefit  charity, Cam was hoping to break the previous 45-day stay record set in 
2014. He had called for rescue in late June after 32 days of exhaustion and  hypothermia.
Describing the team's failed attempt to return, Emil wrote on the Rockall  DXpedition's Facebook page: [quote] "Nature has said NO. We reach[ed] the  Rockall without difficulty, but the waves [were] extremely high. That's the  way of life." [endquote]
 
Don't be discouraged: The team plans another recovery attempt.
This is Jeremy Boot, G4NJH.
(FACEBOOK, DX-WORLD.NET)
--- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32
 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (618:250/33)