Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1837 - October 26 2012 Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1837 with a release date of October 26 2012 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a Q-S-T. New Zealand hams will have to wait a while longer to gain full access to 6 meters; Germany's national ham radio society says no to a new pan- European B-P-L standard; thethe Hurricane Watch Net activates for hurricane Sandy; G-R-E quits the scanner business and a well known British soprano will be the next space tourist to visit the International Space Station. Find out who on Amateur Radio NewslineT report number 1837 coming your way right now. (Billboard Cart Here) ** RESTRUCTURING: CLOSURE OF TV CHANNEL 1 AND ZL ACCESS TO 6 METERS UPDATE Changes will be coming to the 6 meter band down-under, but not as quickly as some hams in New Zealand had hoped for. Amateur Radio Newsline's Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, reports: -- Amateurs across New Zealand may have to wait a bit longer to get full access to the 6 meter band. As previously reported, 50 to 51 MHz down-under is to be returned to amateur radio once all Channel 1 television has ceased using the spectrum and the current management right for this band expires. What may not be known by some hams is that the last New Zealand channel 1 television transmitter is not due to close down until November 2013. After that, the management right under which it operates does not expire until August 2015. Because of this, the New Zealand national amateur radio society, NZART, is working with the nations Radio Spectrum Management on arrangements for the period between when all the Channel 1 transmitters are turned off and their management right expires. In the meantime any New Zealand amateur in an area where TV channel 1 is no longer operating can apply for a permit to operate on the band. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, down-under in Nelson, New Zealand -- As we go to air, not exact date when all New Zealand hams will have 6 meter access is known. (NZART) ** RADIO LAW: DARC TO OPPOSE NEWLY PROPOSED EUROPEAN PLT STANDARD Germany's national amateur radio society, the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club, or DARC will be asking the Deutsche Commission for Electrical, Electronic & Information Technologies to oppose a new pan-European draft Power Line Transmission standard. PLT is what Europe call Broadband over Powerline or BPL. During its October 22nd meeting, the DARC Board discussed the pros and cons of the proposed draft standard. While it said that it recognizes the new draft provided for some non- binding commitments for notching out of certain frequencies in the amateur bands, it also noted that it fears the future ambitions of the manufacturers of other PLC products in the direction of higher limits for the emission of harmful electromagnetic or EMC interference. This could lead to a weakening of the previous limits in other European EMC standards. To be clear, this new standard concerns the devices that people install in their homes to run data over their house wiring. It has nothing to do with PLC or BPL that is carried over the over company power networks. (Southgate, DJ0QN) ** RADIO LAW: SARL TAKES UP ZONING REGULATIONS WITH THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN Its not just hams in the United States that are having problems erecting towers and keeping them up. And a case in South Africa points graphically this out. Amateur Radio Newsline's Norm Seeley, KI7UP, is here with the details: -- Recently South African Radio League President, Rassie Erasmus, ZS1YT and Legal advisor. Johan Marais, ZS1JM, met with a delegation of the Cape Town Metro Council. This, to intervene in a notice received by a society member stating that he requires approval in terms of the Environmental Act & City of Cape Town Zoning regulations for his antenna which is less than 15 meters in height. It was quickly learned that the council had received a complaint from a neighbor, which was most probably RF related. Rather than investigate the matter the Council simply elected to notify the ham that his antenna has not been approved and that it intend taking steps to either have him remove the tower or to apply for the necessary permits. But the South African Radio League delegation was right on top of this one. It pointed out that amateur radio antennas fewer than 15 meters of are exempt under the provisions of the National Environmental Management Act of 1998. Based on this it was agreed that the process will be suspended pending the Council consulting with its legal advisors. The South African Radio League will then be afforded further opportunities to discuss the issues once feedback has been received from the Council's legal department. For the Amateur Radio Newsline. I'm Norm Seeley, KI7UP, in Scottsdale, Arizona. -- The South African Radio League will be keeping the qorld of amateur radio up0dated on this one. (SARL) ** RESCUE RADIO: HURRICANE WATCH NET ACTIVATED FOR HURRICANE SANDY The United States-based Hurricane Watch Net has been activated for Hurricane Sandy. Net operations began at 11:00 UTC on Wednesday, October 24th on 14.325 MHz to observe and report conditions surrounding the storm to the National Hurricane Center. Sandy is expected to develop into what forecasters are calling a volatile hurricane as tropical storm Sandy merges with a powerful cold front charging towards the East Coast late the weekend of October 27th and 28th. As Sandy progresses the Hurricane Watch Net will be looking for condition reports from stations located in the affected areas. Hams in the places affected by this storm should be prepared to operate from a place of safety. Net organizers say that they appreciate the consideration of all amateur operators in keeping the frequency of 14.325 MHz clear, and listening for possible relays. Operation on lower frequencies such as 40 or 80 meters will be considered depending on propagation during evening and night hours. For information on the storm and the Hurricane Watch Net, go to www.hwn.org on the World Wide Web. (HWN) ** RESCUE RADIO: UK ESSEX COUNTY RAYNET CALLED OUT IN FLOOD WATCH Ham radio is called out in the UK as rising waters along riverbanks put several towns on emergency alert. The Radio Society of Great Britain reports that at 18:00 UTC on Sunday, October 14th, the Emergency Planning Officer from the Maldon District Council requested Essex RAYNET to be placed on standby. This in response to flood alerts issued by the Environment Agency. At 20.00 members were mobilized and deployed to the riverbanks at Heybridge Basin, Fulbridge and the Hythe in Maldon. This was in preparation for the high tide and possible tidal surge due at quarter to one in the morning. Thankfully, the high tide hit without any significant incident. RAYNET volunteers were able to stand down shortly afterward. More information is on the Web at www.essexraynet.co.uk. (GB2RS) ** HAM RADIO NEAR SPACE: PICO HAM BALLOON MAKES TREK FROM UK TO SWEDEN PicoAtlas VII, a single foil balloon launched by James Coxon, M6JCX, on Saturday, October 20th from Suffolk in the UK has landed some 1050 kilometers or 650 miles to the East in Sweden. PicoAtlas VII carried a GPS receiver and a miniature transmitter running only 10 milliwatts output sending RTTY on 434.301 MHz USB. The telemetry data from the balloon transmitter could be decoded using the free software at dl- fldigi. This program can decode many different amateur radio digital modes and can be downloaded for Windows, Mac and Ubuntu Linux at tinyurl.com/8zlo437. An increasing number of radio amateurs are experimenting with ultra light balloon payloads, typically weighing less than 100 grams. Balloons such as these do not go to high altitudes. Instead they float between 3,500 and 6,000 meters which roughly equates to 9000 to 20,000 feet for an extended period of time. During the 19 hour flight this balloon successfully crossed the North Sea before landing in central Sweden. We will have more ham radio space related news later on in this weeks report. (Southgate) ** HAM RADIO NEAR SPACE: MAY LAUNCH AND OCTOBER RECOVERY OF HIGH ALTITUDE BALLOON PAYLOAD An amateur radio balloon project launched last May finally ended this month with the recovery of the payload. Members of AMSAT-LU, had launched a high altitude balloon on 19th May from La Pampa, Argentina. The payload included a 70cm to 2m 4 watt FM repeater, live SSTV, an HF beacon and two video cameras. During the 4 hour flight, over 200 stations made contacts through the repeater. Unfortunately, while the flight was deemed to be a complete success the balloon came down in an isolated and flooded area. It was finally recovered from the mud on October 6th by a 4 by 4 off-road adventure group. The good news is that all flight data was retrieved. This included over 6 hours of video from the two cameras. Details can be found at www.uk.amsat.org. (GB2RS ** BREAK 1 From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including the W1JLI Memorial repeater serving Walpole, Massachusetts. (5 sec pause here) ** RADIO BUSINESS: GRE QUITS THE SCANNER BUSINESS BUR ALINCO NOT AFFECTED GRE, the radio manufacturer which also represents Alinco here in the United States, has ceased all manufacture of scanner radios. The good news is that Alinco product sales and service will continue. Amateur Radio Newsline's Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, has the details: -- The news was a bit of a shock to the GRE group in Belmont, California - word from Japan earlier this month that the GRE personnel in Asia and the United States were being dismissed and scanner operations were being discontinued. It was October 16th when the official word was released by GRE-employed U.S. managers of the shutdown in Japan. But there was a pledge to keep the California office open because of its distribution affiliation with Alinco. Michael Herbert, WB6JKV, a service technician and engineer for GRE's Belmont office, officially confirmed for Amateur Radio Newsline that things are still go for Alinco. "GRE America will continue to market, service and support Alinco's radio products without any interruption," Herbert says. "So, for us amateurs, it will be business as usual." And, Herbert continues: "No worries for warranty repairs. We have a great parts supply. We have a direct line with the factory and they are really eager to go forward with us and proceed." Herbert says he's not authorized to say much more. However, he says GRE is waiting on Alinco's new SDR, 100 watt HF radio due for delivery by Christmas. And, is expecting to distribute the new 900 megahertz /220 megahertz mobile radio about Dayton time next May. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, in Philadelphia. -- The bottom line. If you own or are planning to purchase an Alinco brand piece of radio gear you have nothing to worry about. However at airtime the future of GRE manufactured scanner radios is unknown. (ARNewslineT) ** RESCUE RADIO: ISABELLA COUNTY MICHIGAN WANTS RADIO AMATEURS An Emergency Management Director in Michigan, is seeking the assistance of the local ham radio community. This to be ready to provide solid emergency communications assistance in time of crisis. Isabella County's Marc Griffis is actively recruiting licensed ham radio operators to help out in a variety of situations including training exercises. According to Griffis, there are more than fifty ham radio operators in Isabella County and he wants those who are interested to attend a Community Emergency Response Team training meeting. Griffis says there is a potential in Isabella County for emergency management to call upon those with expertise in ham radio operation, and he wants them to be prepared for any situation. Examples of the types of assistance Griffis is referring to include assisting in the coordination of search and rescue perimeters. Also, communications between shelters and in other situations where other forms of communication have failed. Isabella County is a located in central Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the population was 63,351. Its county seat is Mt. Pleasant. (Michigan Morning Sun) ** ENFORCEMENT: UNLICENSED IOWA BROADCASTER ISSUED $10000 NAL It's rare that you hear of an unlicensed broadcaster in Iowa, but it apparently has happened. This with word that the FCC has issued a $10,000 Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture to Thomas Costa for allegedly operating an unlicensed radio transmitter on the frequency 87.9 MHz in Iowa City. Amateur Radio Newsline's Bruce Tennant, K6PZW, reports: -- This past September 17th agents from the Enforcement Bureau's Kansas City Office used direction finding to locate the source of radio frequency transmissions on the frequency 87.9 MHz to a transmitting antenna mounted on a chimney of a residence in Iowa City. The agents determined that the signal exceeded the limits for operation under Part 15 of the Commission's rules and therefore required a license. The Commission's records showed that no authorization was issued to anyone for operation of an FM broadcast station at or near this address. On September 18th agents from the Kansas City Office again used direction finding and confirmed that the station was still in operation. The agents, this time accompanied by the property owner, inspected the unlicensed station's antenna and transmitter. The latter was located in a locked basement room. It turned out that the station was automated with a computer providing audio to a non-certified FM transmitter. The property owner stated that one Thomas Costa rented the basement room housing the station. Later that day, the agents interviewed Costa. At that time he admitted that he rented the basement room and installed the radio station equipment but denied operating it. Rather he claimed that several unnamed individuals owned the equipment and gave him rent money each month which he, in turn, gave to the property owner. Costa also asserted that the alleged operators of the station did not provide him with their names or contact information in order to protect him and them from the FCC. He also stated that he was told by the unnamed operators that he could expect the Commission to inspect the station at some point and order him to cease operation. Now in issuing the $10,000 N-A-L the FCC says that the record evidence in this case is sufficient to establish that Costa violated Section 301 of the Communications Act. Also that Costa can be said to have "operated" the unlicensed radio station because the evidence shows that he exercised control over the general conduct or management of it despite his claim that other individuals, who he refused to identify, were actually the operators. In this regard, Costa admitted that he rented and paid the monthly rental for the locked room housing the unlicensed station, and that he installed the station equipment. Further, during the interview with the FCC agents, Costa mentioned that he was warned about the unlawfulness of the operation by unnamed individuals, who told him that he could expect the Commission to inspect the station and order him to cease operations at some point. Assuming the statement to be true, it appears that, in spite of the warning, Costa nonetheless allowed the station to continue to operate in the basement room. The FCC says that these facts indicate that Costa consciously operated and/or otherwise was involved in the general conduct or management of the unauthorized station. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bruce Tennant, K6PZW, in Los Angeles. -- Costa was given the customary 30 days to pay the proposed fine or to file an appeal. (FCC) ** RADIO LAW: BBG ACCUSES SYRIA OF JAMMING SATELLITE SIGNALS (Print version only) The United States Broadcasting Board of Governors and several other international broadcasters believe jamming of their satellite signals last week came from Syria. According to an announcement from the board, the interference has disrupted satellite transmissions in Europe and the Middle East. Specifically, the jamming hit satellites operated by Eutelsat, a European satellite operator, and affecting TV and radio programs reaching millions of households. The board noted that the jamming started when Eutelsat announced it would terminate transmission of 19 channels belonging to Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting. Several international broadcasters also criticized the jamming, citing disruption of broadcasts from Russia through Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East. Here in the United States, the Broadcasting Board of Governors said signals of Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks were affected. According to the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an earlier round of jamming this month was traced directly to Iran. (RW) ** RADIO ON THE WEB: SOUTHGATE NEWS OPENS AMATEUR RADIO TODAY DISCUSSION BOARD Great Britain's Southgate Amateur Radio News has launched a new amateur radio forum discussion board. Called the Ham Radio Today the forum contains lots of amateur radio news stories, plus sections for special interest groups. While geared mainly toward Europe and IARU Region 1, the board offers subjects of interest to hams world-wide including specialty areas to discuss 5 MHz operation, ham radio satellites EME operations and reports from several of the worlds best known propagation experts. Registration is free and only takes a minute. You'll find the new forum board at www.hamradiotoday.com (Southgate) ** RADIO EDUCATION: ARRL GRANT RETURNS HAM RADIO TO MISSOURI SCHOOL Thanks to a dedicated teacher and a grant from the American Radio Relay League, ham radio is back at a suburban Saint Louis, Missouri school. STL Today reports that a new amateur radio club has been created at St. Charles High School, in St. Charles County. The club was started by science teacher Ellen Zerr, KD0PES, after the ARRL recently awarded nearly $2,000 to the school. Zerr used the grant to buy radio gear and antennas for the station. The last time the school had an active amateur radio club was way back in the 1960's. You can read the full story at tinyurl.com/new-missouri-club (STL Today) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: ANOKA COUNTY ARC CELEBRATES THE HALLOWEEN CAPITOL OF THE WORLD (Print Version Only) Turning to the social scene, since 1920 the City of Anoka, Minnesota, has hosted some major Halloween festivities, earning the reputation of "The Halloween Capitol of the World". To commemorate this years festivities the Anoka County Radio Club will operate a special event station W0YFZ from Anoka High School parking lot on Saturday, October 27th from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. local time. Visitors are welcome to come observe the special event Haloween station. More about this operation is on the web at tinyurl.com/anoka-halloween- event (KB1UOG) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: 14 YEAR OLD MAKES DIGITAL DXCC The ARRL report that 14 year old radio amateur Tom Jose, VU3TMO, has just achieved his Digital DXCC award. First licensed when he was 13 years old in December of 2011, VU3TMO is a 3rd generation ham operator in his family along with his parents. VU3TMO is a member of India's National Institute of Amateur Radio and the Dayton Amateur Radio Association. He is reported to be one of the youngest hams in his nation. (ARRL, Southgate) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: ARRL MEDIA AND PUBLIC RELATIONS MANAGER ALLEN PITTS, W1AGP, RETIRES After more than eight years as the ARRL Media and Public Relations Manager, Allen Pitts, W1AGP, has retired. During his tenure, Pitts was responsible for developing public relations campaigns that featured the many facets of the Amateur Radio Service. The first of these was the simple but very effective Hello Radio campaign in 2006 that highlighted the fun and friendships of ham radio. That was followed by Emergency Radio, which built on the ARRL and the Amateur Radio Service's response during Hurricane Katrina. Next was his We Do That - Radio in 2008 showcased the technologies used in Amateur Radio. Pitts rounded out his career by spearheading the 2011 with the Do It Yourself or DIY campaign aimed at recruiting members of the burgeoning maker and hacker community to expand their horizons through becoming amateur radio operators. While W1AGP has retired from day to day work at ARRL headquarters, he has not severed his ties with the national society. The ARRL is currently seeking a new Media and Public Relations Manager. In the interim, Pitts has agreed to continue on a very limited part-time basis during the selection process to find a successor. He also hopes to be able to work as a consultant on the League's Centennial projects, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the ARRL. (ARRL) ** BREAK 2 This is ham radio news for today's radio amateur. From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links to the world from our only official website at www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services of the following radio amateur: (5 sec pause here) ** WORLDBEAT: OPERATOR NEEDED FOR 2013 AMERICAN SAMOA DXPEDITION Are you interested in going to American Samoa on a DXpedition? If yes, listen up. Bill Worthman, N6MW, and Jim Colletto, N6TQ. will be active stroke KH8 from a hotel in Tutuila between March 19th and the 28th of next year. Their location on the island will be well south of the Pago Pago harbor area to avoid as much mountain low angle cut off as possible. According to their website, they have an opening for one more operator to go along on this operation. For more details and updates, visit n6mw.jimdo.com on the World Wide Web. (OPDX) ** WORLDBEAT: DARC SEEKS NOMINATIONS FOR ANNUAL HORKHEIMER PRIZE Nominations are being invited by the German national amateur radio society, the DARC, for the prestigious Horkheimer Prize. The prize consists of an etched glass trophy and a monetary prize for non-personal use. The money is to be spent for the promotion of amateur radio however the recipient chooses. The prize can be awarded to one or more persons or institutions. Any member of an amateur radio society in the International Amateur Radio Union is eligible, and self proposals are permitted. Nominations must be submitted to DARC by March 28, 2013, and the prize itself will be awarded at the opening of next year's Ham Radio convention in Friedrichshafen. More information in the German language is on-line at www.darc.de (DARC, GB2RS) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: FUNCUBE-2 A STEP CLOSER TO LAUNCH The highly publicized Funcube satellite has taken another step toward becoming a reality. This with work that AMSAT- UK has delivered a set of completed Funcube 2 subsystem boards to Clyde Space Ltd in Glasgow. The handover took place on October 19th. The boards represent the Funcube- 2 subsystem that will become a part of the UKube-1 spacecraft. Three circuit boards make up the spacecraft. One is for command, control and telemetry. An RF Board that houses the command receiver, telemetry transmitter and linear transponder and a third board contains the 400 milliwatt VHF amplifier and sensors. Funcube-2 will provide a 435 to 145 MHz linear transponder for amateur radio SSB and CW communications and telemetry for school students around the world. Its host, the UKube-1 spacecraft is expected to be launched on a Soyuz-2 launcher from the Baikonur Cosmodrome launch facility in Kazakhstan in March 2013. (AMSAT-UK) ** RADIO FROM SPACE: NEW EXOPLANET DISCOVERED ONLY 24 TRILLION MILES AWAY Scientists using visual and radio telescope data have discovered the closest planet outside our Solar System. One that is orbiting a sun-like star about 24 trillion miles away from Earth. According to astronomers at the European Southern Observatory the so-called exoplanet has about the same mass as Earth but it circles its star much closer than Earth does the sun, The exoplanet which is described as a planet outside our Solar System is outside the "habitable zone" for possible life because of hot and rocky conditions Temperatures on its surface could reach some 2,200 degrees and the surface is likely to be lava. Scientists discovered the planet while monitoring stars in Alpha Centauri, a neighboring star system, only about four light years away. That system is peppered with stars orbiting one another, making the hunt for planets difficult, astronomers explained. This is now the closest of more than 840 confirmed exoplanets. This according to research published in the British science journal Nature. (Nature) ** DX In DX, DF7NX is currently operational from Bolivia as CP8MW. He is active on HF Bands mostly operating CW. QSL as directed on the air. LU3XEM, LU3XEI, LU1XBF, LU5VAT and LU7DSY will be active from Penguin Island November 2nd to the 4th as LTZ0. They will be operational on 80 through 10 ethers using CW, SSB and PSK 31. QSL this operation via LU7DSY DF7NX is currently operational from Bolivia as CP8MW. He is active on the High Frequency bands mostly using CW. QSL via his home call, either direct or via the bureau. JR1MLT has been heard on the air from Singapore as 9V1KK. He is reportedly active on all of the High Frequency bands using various modes. QSL direct only via JH1ILX. N5ZO will be active from Ascension Island through October 30th as ZD8O. He plans to operate the CQ WW DX SSB Contest in Single Operator All Band category. If you make contact, QSL via OH0XX ND9M will be active from Diego Garcia Island through November 4th under the callsign VQ92JC. He also plans to operate the CQ World Wide DX SSB Contest while at that location. If you work him please QSL via home call. Lastly, ZS3Oh is currently on the air from Botswana as A22LL. He is reported to be active on HF Bands mostly using CW. QSL via home call. (Above from various DX news sources) ** THAT FINAL ITEM: BRITISH SOPRANO SARAH BRIGHTMAN TO BE THE NEXT VISITOR TO THE ISS The British songstress who created the role of Christine Daae (pron "Die Aye") in Sir Andrew Lloyd Webbers musical stage classic The Phantom of the Opera will be the next space tourist to visit the International Space Station. Amateur Radio Newsline's Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, has the details: -- On Wednesday, October 10th it was announced in Moscow that world famous soprano Sarah Brightman had passed the required mental and physical examinations to permit her fly to the ISS. And in a video of the press conference made public by the Russian Space Agency Roscosmos, and the singer herself, Brightman described how as a child she was inspired by the Apollo 11 landing on the moon. -- Brightman: "When I look back, my minds eye brings me to a rush of images from all of the incredible things that I have been privileged to experience in my life. But if I keep tracking back, my thoughts eventually come to rest on a flickering TV screen in 1969. There as a small and incredulous child I watched a man bound gently from the steps of a rocket ship and land on the surface of the moon. "This really was an adventure. It was something miraculous. "For me it was an epiphany. From that moment I began looking into the future. I began to dream about what life might hold in store for me and of what I could accomplish." -- During her comments, Brightman said the trip would serve as a way to promote environmental awareness and to encourage women's education by helping to close the gender gap in the sciences. For this she has called on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, better known as UNESCO, to join with her to make it happen: -- Brightman: "There are two key areas that we have identified which unify my personal passions, UNESCO's objectives and my spaceflight. Both are inexplicably linked and both relate to issues of sustainability." -- After completing an upcoming world tour to promote her new album appropriately called Dream Chaser, Brightman will undertake six months of training at Star City in Moscow in preparation for her mission to the International Space Station. Once on-orbit she is expected to take part in several educational ventures as just mentioned but it is not yet known if she will obtain an amateur radio license or has any plans to make any ham radio contacts from the ISS. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, in the Newsroom in Los Angeles. -- This is not Sarah Brightman's first venture into the area of science education. Earlier this year in conjunction with Virgin Galactic she launched the Brightman STEM Scholarship program. STEM is an acronym for the words science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Her program is designed to help young women in the United States to pursue STEM education across their four year college careers. (Roscosmos, Southgate, others) ** NEWSCAST CLOSE With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, the CGC Communicator, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio Penn DX Bulletin, Radio Netherlands, Roscosmos, Rain, the RSGB, the Southgate News, TWiT-TV and Australia's WIA News, that's all from the Amateur Radio NewslineT. Our e-mail address is newsline (at) arnewsline (dot) org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline'sT only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. You can also write to us or support us at Amateur Radio NewslineT, 28197 Robin Avenue, Santa Clarita California, 91350 For now, with Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, at the editors' desk, I'm Jeff Clark, K8JAC, saying 73 and we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio NewslineT is Copyright 2012. All rights reserved.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1837 - October 26 2012
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Friday, October 19, 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1836 - October 19 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1836 - October 19 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1836 with a release date of October 19 2012 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a QST. A case to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court could limit or curtail your ability to resell your personal property including used ham radio gear; the Department of Homeland Security to provide emergency communications training at Hamvention 2013; ham radio gets new responsibilities from Army MARS; the FCC asks assistance in tracking down cellphone and GPS jamming devices. We will look into that and more on Amateur Radio NewslineT report number 1836 coming your way right now. (Billboard Cart Here) ** LEGAL WRANGLING: SUPREME ASKED TO RULE THAT PUBLIC HAS NO RIGHT TO RESELL OWNED GOODS How would you feel if there was a law that kept you from selling or even giving away a piece of ham gear or anything else you think you own without first getting permission from the original manufacturer? Sound crazy? Well this is a legal precedent that the United States Supreme Court has been asked to rule on as we hear from Amateur Radio Newsline's Mark Abramowicz, NT3V: -- Imagine, if you possibly can, the Dayton Hamvention, the Orlando Hamcation or the Huntsville Hamfest with no flea market. Or, what about ham gear disappearing altogether from eBay or Craigslist. Some fear this could be a real possibility, depending on how the U.S. Supreme Court rules in a case that could impact a nearly 104-year-old doctrine recognized by the high court that allows us to resell items without fear of a copyright holder coming after us. The doctrine essentially says the copyright holder had control only over the first sale. But a case decided last year in the U.S. Court of Appeals in the Second Circuit in New York has the potential to re-set that doctrine. The case involves a man from Thailand who came to the United States in 1997 to enroll in Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. The student found that the same textbooks they were asking him to buy in the book store could be had for much less in Thailand. The man asked his relatives there to help him buy the books and send them back overseas to him in New York. Later, the man got some entrepreneurial spirit and court documents in the case show he decided to start selling textbooks on eBay. There's some dispute as to how much the man made on the sales. So, the publisher of the books objects and brings a suit against him. The publisher admits it was charging less for books sold overseas, but it claims the man was guilty of copyright infringement. But the man counters his sales are covered by that first-sale practice. The federal appeals court in New York upheld a lower court decision saying, no, that doctrine only applies to stuff produced in the United States and not to anything made overseas. That court's ruling, in the view of some constitutional scholars, could now throw into jeopardy the whole idea of what you buy at flea markets, or yard sales and on-line sales of used goods. Polk Wagner, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School here in Philadelphia, isn't ready to push the panic just yet with that conclusion. Wagner says in this case, it's about copyrights... "So the question here that the Supreme Court has got to wrestle with is to try and figure out how these two provisions of the copyright act - one that says that you can't import anything that's copyrighted without the permission of the copyright owner and also one that says lawful owners of books are allowed to do what they want with the copies of the books that they purchase," Wagner says. He says there's a bit of conflict here... "So, the legal question is how those two provisions of the Copyright Act work together or don't as the case may be," Wagner says. "Courts have wrestled with this for the last 5 or 10 years and have not reached any satisfactory conclusions. So, hence, the Supreme Court is going to take it up." eBay has filed a brief on the issue warning that the Second Circuit's ruling would have significant consequences for trade and ecommerce. And, in a broader reach, the company says it could hurt small businesses and consumers and cost jobs in the U.S. Wagner, the University of Pennsylvania law professor, says there's another area and it may involve patents. For example, he says in cases involving ham gear, it's legal to buy overseas and import the gear. And, there's nothing under the patent laws that prevents you from reselling the gear. However, Wagner says there's another matter and it has to do with software that may be included or needed to operate the gear. And, while most companies or software developers will sell you a license to use their software, it's not the same thing as selling you a book. And, while Wagner says that's not at issue here it eventually it could be sorted out by the courts in the future. Stay tuned. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, in Philadelphia. -- The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on the case on October 29th. If it does rule with the appellate court, it's likely that the matter would be brought to Congress to force a change in law. However that could take months if not years or even decades. Until then, consumers, including ham radio operators would be stuck between a rock and a hard place when trying to resell their belongings without breaking the law. (Marketwatch, other published reports) ** RESCUE RADIO: DHS TO TEAM UP WITH DAYTON HAMVENTION ON EMCOMM TRAINING Department of Homeland Security's Office of Emergency Communications is teaming up with the folks in Dayton to provide free emergency communications training in conjunction with Hamvention 2013. Amateur Radio Newsline's George Bowen, W2XBS, reports: -- The Department of Homeland Security's Office of Emergency Communications will be on hand at the next Dayton Hamvention. This to conduct its nationally recognized NIMS/ICS compliant Auxiliary Emergency Communications course. The course itself focuses on a number of important aspects of emergency communications. These include auxiliary communications interoperability, emergency operation center etiquette, on-the-air etiquette, FCC rules and regulations, auxiliary communications training and planning, certification and accreditation to mention only a few. The objective of the training is intended to supplement and standardize an operator's basic knowledge of emergency amateur radio communications in a public safety context. This Office of Emergency Communications workshop is designed for auxiliary emergency communicators who volunteer to provide backup emergency radio communications support to public safety and emergency response professionals and their agencies. Typically this includes amateur radio communicators from groups such as MARS, ARES, RACES, SATERN and the like. The course will actually be held just prior to Hamvention, but still in the Dayton area and as part of Hamvention 2013. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm George Bowen, W2XBS, st the North-East Bureau in Albany, New York. -- Details on any pre-required training for this free course is on-line at www.hamvention.org. Information on for registering for this special free course will be posted at the same site in the near future. (Hamvention.org) ** ARMY MARS: MORE RESPONSIBILITY FOR HAM RADIO VOLUNTEERS Stephen G. Klinefelter, Chief of the Arrmy's Military Affiliate Radio System better known as Army MARS has announced a major leadership realignment. This, at a conference of the auxiliary's Region Directors held Sept. 12th to the 14th in Dallas, Texas. Under the new terms, volunteer ham radio operators have assumed day-to-day management responsibility previously exercised from the MARS headquarters at Ft Huachuca, Arizona. Each of the auxiliary's 11 regions will be under command of its director. Together the 11 directors will form a policy-making Governance Executive Board for the auxiliary as a whole. This is a striking revision of the military's traditional top-down chain of command. It was symbolically activated at the first national leadership conference in the Military Auxiliary Radio System's 87-year-history. Army MARS reports to the Network Enterprise Technology Command which manages Army computer networks and communications systems worldwide. Chief Klinefelter, who retired as a full colonel in the Signal Corps after 31 years, returned to the Network Enterprise Technology Command as a senior civilian employee and is Deputy Operations Officer G3. He added the MARS post last spring. An in-depth article on the changes to Army Mars authored by those involved is on the Web at www.eham.net/articles/29106. (Army MARS, QRZ.com) ** BREAK 1 From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including the K4LJP repeater serving West Palm Beach, Florida. (5 sec pause here) ** ENFORCEMENT: FCC SAYS THAT UNREGULATED PART 15 DEVICES INTERFERING WITH AVIATION WEATHER SYSTEM The FCC has acted to curb interference to aviation Terminal Doppler Weather Radars Systems coming from unlicensed Part 15 devices. Amateur Radio Newsline's Norm Seeley, KI7UP reports: -- The FCC's Enforcement Bureau recently took action against several companies for operating devices that caused interference to Terminal Doppler Weather Radars maintained by the Federal Aviation Administration. Terminal Doppler Weather Radars systems operating in the 5600 to 5650 MHz band are used by the FAA to obtain quantitative measurements for gust fronts, wind shear, microbursts, and similar information. Investigations have been conducted by the FCC, the FAA, and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in several areas of the United States and Puerto Rico. These have revealed that much of the interference stems from wireless devices sharing the same band as Terminal Doppler Weather Radars systems, and operating outdoors in the vicinity of airports at high elevations that are line-of-sight to the radar installations. Also that most are operating inconsistent with the FCC Part 15 Rules. The Enforcement Bureau and the FAA are continuing to investigate additional areas where interference is reported to Terminal Doppler Weather Radars systems. The FCC says that it will continue to take appropriate enforcement action as necessary. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Norm Seeley, KI7UP, in Scottsdale, Arizona. -- More information on this matter is available in FCC release DA 12-459 released on September 27th and FCC Enforcement Asdvisory 2012-07 released on the same date. (FCC) ** ENFORCEMENT: FCC CREATES TOLL FREE NUMBER TO REPORT CELLPHONE AND GPS JAMMING The FCC wants your help in locating anyone who is using a cellular telephone or GPS jamming device and to do this the Commission's Enforcement Bureau has launched a dedicated jammer tip line at 1-855-55-NOJAM or 1-855-556-6526. This, to make it easier for the public to report the use or sale of illegal cell phone, GPS or other signal jammers. As has been said many times before, it is against the law to use, import, advertise, sell or ship a cellular telephone or GPS jammer or any other type of device that blocks, jams or interferes with authorized communications, whether on private or public property. As such, members of the public are being asked to call the FCC's toll free Jammer Tip Line immediately if you are aware of the ongoing use of a cell, GPS, or other signal jammer. Also please call if an employer operates a jammer in a workplace; you observe a jammer in operation at a school or college; you observe an advertisement for a jammer at a local store or you observe a jammer being operated on your local bus, train or other mass transit system. One warning. This number is only for use to report cellphone or GPS jamming devices. Please do not call it to report that your favorite repeater is being jammed or that your QSO on 20 meters is being interfered with. Those matters will not be handled on this telephone line and will be of no interest to those taking cellphone or GPS jamming device calls. Once again, the number where to report the use of cellphone or GPS jamming is 1-855-55-NOJAM or 1-855-556-6526. And calling that number is toll free. (FCC) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: K6H - HAM RADIO CELEBRATES HOLLYWOOD FROM CBS STUDIO CENTER STAGE 9 Ham Radio Celebrates Hollywood will be a special event operation held on Sunday, October 28th from 1600 to 2000 hours U-T-C. Sponsored by Southern California's PAPA repeater system, the event using the callsign K-6-H will originate from the Stage 9 of the CBS Studio Center facility in Studio City, California. The historic Studio Center has been the production facility for such hit programs as Will and Grace, That 70's Show, Malcolm in the Middle, Spin City, Just Shoot Me, and 3rd Rock From the Sun. Nine seasons of Seinfeld were filmed on Stage 9 except for the first four episodes, which were shot at at another facility. Stage 9 is currently the home of ABC TV's Last Man Standing, starring Tim Allen. As such, several of the hams who work on Last Man Standing will be hand to host the PAPA operators. A number of R-F and non-RF paths will be available to contact the stage 9 commemorative operation. These include HF, VHF, UHF, D-STAR, Echolink and IRLP. The operation will also be monitoring the Broadcast Employees Amateur Radio Society ABC and Disney interconnected amateur repeater system. This links W2ABC in Manhattan, New York, WD4WDW in Orlando, Florida and WB6AJE in Los Angeles. The BEARS system can be accessed on Echolink at WD4WDW-R. A schedule of operating times and frequencies will be published on the PAPA website at www.papasys.com. To facilitate contacts during the event, operators will blog in real-time at www.facebook.com/KA0XTT and on @NN6JA on Twitter. A special, limited edition QSL card will be issued to all confirmed contacts during this fun national event. (NN6JA) ** EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: ALL DIGITAL AM HD TESTING ON ITS WAY Information is surfacing regarding NAB Radio Technology Committee plans to test all-digital AM H-D Radio technology on an existing full carrier AM radio station. The committee has been meeting since last November to discuss technical options for the revitalization of AM. Testing would quantify both indoor and outdoor coverage. In general, the goal is to verify whether the station coverage and robustness are improved with an all-digital signal in both day and night transmission. Also to quantify any change. There's little technical data in the public arena for all-digital AM operation. Glynn Walden is CBS Radio Senior Vice President of Engineering. He said during the fall NAB Radio Show that a test station has been chosen with testing likely to begin right after the presidential elections. Walden and other committee members declined to identify the facility but some believe it will be a CBS station in an area that could be characterized as a medium sized market. You can read more about this AM broadcast digital experiment on-line at tinyurl.com/all-digital-am. (CGC, RW) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: 2012 AMSAT SPACE SYMPOSIUM REMINDER And a reminder that the 2012 AMSAT Space Symposium will be held on Friday, October 26th through Sunday, October 28th at the Holiday Inn Hotel at Orlando-International Airport. Downloadable paper registration forms in MS-Word and PDF formats are available at tinyurl.com/amsat-2012-reg. The Symposium Schedule web page has been updated with links to find more information about the planned activities. You can find it in cyberspace at tinyurl.com/symposium-program. More on the overall event is at www.amsat.org (AMSAT) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: RAC COLLECTING CLUB MEMBER BIOS FOR 2012 MEMBERSHIP DIRECTORY If you are a member of the Radio Club of America, please listen up. RCA is in the process of collecting data for the organizations 2012 Membership Directory that will include biographies. If you are a club member who has not yet done so, please go to tinyurl.com/rca-survey-2012 and fill out the online form. Also, please be certain to keep all biographical information on the form as space is limited. (RCA) ** AWARDS: CQ INTRODUCES 40 CQ ZONES ON 160 PLAQUE CQ has announced the availability of a special plaque for those who have achieved contact to all 40 CQ zones on 160 meters. This is considered the most difficult of all amateur radio awards to earn and because of this the Worked All Zones 160 Meter Plaque recognizes that receiving it as one of the elite Top Band DXers. If you believe you qualify, please contact W-A-Z Award Manager Floyd Gerald, N5FG, by e-mail to n5fg (at) cq-amateur-radio (dot) com for further details. (CQ via Facebook) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: DX SUMMIT APP Some names in the news. Kevin Schutz has released a freeware application he calls code.google.com/p/dxer/. Its primary purpose is gather information from DX Summit. Schutz says that with this data and his application, you can easily find out if you already have made a contact or not with that country. More is on-line at the shortcut of tinyurl.com/dx-summit-app. (Via e-mail) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: W2ML ORAL HISTORY VIDEO RELEASED And Steve Mendelsohn W2ML, who passed away earlier this year, was an extremely active, enthusiastic member of the ham radio community. Among other things, he was an ARRL Vice-President and ran the ham radio communications for the New York Marathon. Professionally he was a broadcast engineer for CBS and ABC, and did frequency coordination for the National Football League spending 13 years as the Game Day Coordinator for the New York Jets. Then tragedy struck as he was diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer and given only a short time to live. Knowing that he had a vibrant story to tell, his lifelong friend Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, interviewed Steve at the 2011 Pacificon hamfest. Steve was the conventions guest of honor and it gave them what would be a final opportunity to video record an oral history of Steve's life. Steve Mendelsohn passed away early in the morning of May 23rd. It was decided that the anniversary of the date of the interview would be apropos for its public release. As such it's now available at two locations. Gary Pearce, KN4AQ, who edited the production, has it available at his HamRadioNow website at tinyurl.com/w2ml- video. It's also on YouTube at tinyurl.com/w2ml-life-story. Even if you knew W2ML, and many hams did, you may yet learn a few things you did not know. If you didn't, then take this rare opportunity to hear the story of someone that many call a true trendsetter in the hobby and whose legacy will remain with us for decades to come. (ARNewslineT) ** BREAK 2 This is ham radio news for today's radio amateur. From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links to the world from our only official website at www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services of the following radio amateur: (5 sec pause here) ** WORLDBEAT: QATAR TO HOST FIRST MIDDLE EAST HAM RADIO FESTIVAL The city of Doha will host the Qatar's first International Festival for Amateur Radio in December. This according to H E Abdullah bin Hamad Al Attiyah, who is the Chairman of the Administrative Control and Transparency Authority and the vice-chairman of the US Amateur Radio Society. Al Attiyah, who is also chairperson of the board of directors of the Qatar Amateur Radio Society says that the festival will include a contest between amateur radio operators from all over the world. About 100 hams from across the globe will be invited to the festival to take part in the competition. The Qatar Amateur Radio Society will also establish five amateur radio stations in different parts of Doha during the festival, including the society's office and the festival venue itself. Announcement of an exact date for this event is expected to be announced shortly. The festival is being dubbed as the first of its kind in Middle East and will take place in conjunction with the Qatar National Day celebrations. Doha is the capital city of the state of Qatar and is located on the coast of the Persian Gulf. (The Peninsula) ** WORLDBEAT: INDIA TO ADD 839 NEW FM BROADCASAT STATIONS India's public service broadcaster, Prasar Bharati Broadcasting, plans to soon set up 839 new FM stations in 290 cities in that nation. According to India's Secretary of the Union Information Broadcasting Ministry, these new radio stations will be a part of the country's expanding private sector. The regions of Jammu and Kashmir are to be the focal points for what is being termed as this new broadcasting initiative. (Hindu Business Line, The Statesman, RW) ** WORLDBEAT: HOW SOLAR STORMS CREATE THE NORTHERN LIGHTS The British Broadcasting Corporation has released a short video that explains in laymen's terms how solar storms affected the Earth's magnetic field to create the Aurora Borealis. The news story features Professor Dag Lorentzen who uses a simple diagram drawn in the snow to explain how this phenomenon of nature takes place. The story was taped in Svalbard and you can see it on line at tinyurl.com/bbc- aurora-story. (Southgate, BBC) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: HAMS ASKED TO HELP FIND MISSING F1 CUBESAT An article published on the AMSAT-UK website reports that the F Space team at the F-P-T University in Viet Nam are requesting Amateur Radio operators continue to listen for their F-1 CubeSat. The mini satellite went missing shortly after it was deployed from the International Space Station on October 4 but never heard on Earth. F 1 was expected to begin transmitting beacon alternatively on its main and backup channels 30 minutes after deployment. Its operating frequencies are on 437.485 MHz while in daylight and 145.980 in satellite darkness. More information and guide to download F-1 telemetry decoder can be found at tinyurl.com/f1-info. Decoded data can be submitted on using a File Transfer Protocol client to thuvt (at) fpt (dot) edu Dot)vn. Audio recordings are highly appreciated. (F1 Cubesat Team) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: ISRAELI GPS CUBESAT BEING BUILT Israel is planning to launch a student built ham radio microsat. The Space Duchifat-1 is an experimental and educational CubeSat being developed and built by students at the Space Laboratory of the Herzliya Science Centre. The CubeSat will carry an APRS digipeater operating on 145.825 MHz and a UHF/VHF 1200 bps B-P-S-K transceiver that can provide a CW beacon and an FM to DSB transponder. The main mission of the satellite is to transmit real-time information via packet radio from a Low Earth Orbit using the Automatic Position Reporting System protocol. The satellite will allow remote traveler's to access the bird for worldwide position, status reporting and messaging. This using simple handheld or mobile radios with omni- directional whip antennas. The project is directed by Dr. Ana Heller with support from the Herzliya city municipality and the Israeli Amateur Radio Club. At this moment no launch date or orbit details are available. (ANS) ** ON THE AIR: SAQ TO TRANSMIT ON UNITED NATIONS DAY On the air, word that the Alexander Association will activate the giant SAQ radio-wave alternator on Wednesday, October 24th. This, in recognition of United Nations Day. Transmissions will begin at about 10:10 UTC, and a special commemorative message will be sent at 10:30 UTC using CW on 17.2 kHz. Unfortunately, reports from the transmission cannot be confirmed by QSL card. The Alexander Association is a group of European radio enthusiasts who preserve and demonstrate the old ultra long wave Alexanderson electro-mechanical transmitter located at Grimeton, Sweden. The site houses the only working Alexanderson rotating alternator radio transmitter in the world and is classified as a World Heritage Site. More on the transmitter is at the society Website at www.alexander.n.se (Association Alexander) ** ON THE AIR: CELEBRATING 150 YEARS OF THE PACIFIC RAILWAY ACT And the Union Pacific Amateur Radio Club will sponsor Special Event UP150 on December 1st. The operation commemorates the 150 years since President Abraham Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act of 1862 and directed the Union Pacific and the Central Pacific to construct a transcontinental railroad. The event will use the call sign WOUPR. It will begin at 6am Central and end at 8 pm Pacific. Many present and past Union Pacific employees are expected to operate during that time frame in hope of talking with you. A special QSL will be available. More information is on-line at www.pocatelloarc.org/uprr. (Union Pacific ARC) ** DX In DX, F1NGP will be active stroke FG from Saint Francois Island in Guadeloupe through October 26th. He will be operational on 40 through 10 meters on CW , SSB , RTTY QSL via his home call. G3RWF who was expected to be active this month from Uganda 5X1NH has announced that his trip is now postponed. No reason was given. WJ2O will be operational as 8P9DF from St. Philip, Barbados between November 21st and the 28th. Activity will be on all HF bands using mainly CW and as an entry in the CQ World Wide DX CW Contest on November 24th and 25th. Outside of the contest, he will be on 30, 17 and 12 meters. QSL via WJ2O. HB9OAU will be on the air from the Maldives as 8Q7AU between November 26th and December 11th. Activity will be holiday style on 80 through 10 meters SSB only. QSL via his home callsign, direct or by the Bureau. N3IQ will be operational as C6AQQ from Nassau's Providence Island between October 25th to the 31st. Activity will be mostly on the lower bands. QSL via N3IQ, direct, via the bureau or electronically using Logbook of the WQorld or eQSL. Lastly, ZL1LC planning to be operational from the Chatham Islands hrom March 21st to the 27th of 2013 as Zed-L-7-L-C. He planning to be active PSK only. No times, frequencies or QSL route have yet been announced. Above from various DX news sources) ** THAT FINAL ITEM: WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO THE PRINCIPALITY OF SEALAND And finally this week, do you remember Sealand? That's the self-proclaimed principality that also once claimed to be a DXCC entity. Well its still there but changes are in the wind. Amateur Radio Newsline's Cheryl Lasik, K9BIK, takes a look back into recent history: -- Sealand is a former United Kingdom anti-aircraft tower legally known as Roughs Tower. Its located in the North Sea some 7 nautical miles off the shore of Suffolk, England. In 1967 the tower was occupied by a retired army major named Paddy Roy Bates along with his family in 1967. On September 2nd of that year Major Bates declared the fort an independent sovereign state from the UK and renamed it Sealand. He went on to establish Sealand as a nation in 1975. Sealand had its own constitution, flag, national anthem, stamps, passports and currency. There were even a few DXpeditions to Sealand. This included a operation by a group of German DX'ersin 1982 using Sealand's self proclaimed and unofficial callsign prefix of S-1-A. Later, in 2000 there was the Dutch-lead 1SLA1 operation, but neither of these was awarded DXCC status. Now comes word that Major Bates passed away on October 9th, in a senior care home Essex England at the age of 91. This, after a long battle with Alzheimer's. But the Sealand saga is far from over. His wife Joan is now expected to take over the rule of the self proclaimed nation. Also, with Sealand is managed by the Bates family as if it were a recognised sovereign entity, and they are its hereditary royal rulers. Bates son is known as "His Royal Highness Prince Michael." He has also been referred to as the "Prince Regent" by the Bates family since 1999. In this role, he apparently serves as Sealand's acting "Head of State" and also its "Head of Government". Also, at a micro nations conference hosted by the University of Sunderland in 2004, Sealand was represented by Michael Bates' son James, who was referred to as "Prince Royal James". Butr whomever takes on the leadership of Sealand, one thing is fairly certain. Mounting a DXpedition to Sealand in the hope of establisghing it as a new DXCC entity, woyuld likely be a very expensive waste of time. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Cheryl Lasik, K9BIK, in Zion, Illinois. -- According a Wikipedia, the Sealand News says that a movie about Sealand is currently in development and scheduled to be released in 2013. More about this interesting location is on-line at www.sealandgov.org and also at wikipedia.com. (OPDX, Wikipedia) ** NEWSCAST CLOSE With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, the CGC Communicator, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio Penn DX Bulletin, Radio Netherlands, Rain, the RSGB, the Southgate News, TWiT-TV and Australia's W-I-A News, that's all from the Amateur Radio NewslineT. Our e-mail address is newsline(at) arnewsline (dot) org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline'sT only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. You can also write to us or support us at Amateur Radio NewslineT, 28197 Robin Avenue, Santa Clarita California, 91350 Before we go, a quick word of congratulations to Amateur Radio Newsline's Heather Butera-Howell who is now Heather Embee. Heather and her new husband Jason Embee were married last weekend in Pennsylvania. Please join with us in wishing Heather and Jason many, many years of happiness and all good things together. For now, with Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, at the editors' desk, I'm Don Wilbanks, AE5DW, in southern Mississippi, saying 73 and we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio NewslineT is Copyright 2012. All rights reserved.
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Friday, October 12, 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1835 - October 12 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1835 with a release date of October 12 2012 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a Q-S-T. The FCC released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking aimed at changing the Amateur Radio licensing rules and lots more; the R-S-G-B replies to UK telecommunications regulator Ofcom on the future of 143 to 156 MHz; hams in Sweden effectively loose access to the 2300 MHz band and a ham radio operators success in gaining approval for a 65 foot tower leaves neighbors very unhappy. Find out the details are on Amateur Radio NewslineT report number 1835 coming your way right now. (Billboard Cart Here) ** RESTRUCTURING: FCC PROPOSES MULTIPLE CHANGES INN THE PART 97 AMATEUR SERVICE RULES The FCC has put forth a series of suggested Part 97 rules changes which when taken as a whole literally redefine many aspects of the United States Amateur Radio Service. Amateur Radio Newsline's Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, takes a look at what the regulatory agency sees in ham radio's future: -- It's not a done deal by any stretch, but the FCC has put a few proposals out there for public comment and it's interested in hearing from you. The Notice of Proposed Rule Making or NPRM can be divided into a few basic categories - exam credit for expired licenses and grace periods for expired licenses, a change in the number of volunteer examiners needed for a valid testing session, and emissions and experimentation by amateurs. Rich Moseson, W2VU, is editor of CQ Magazine, and Amateur Radio Newsline called upon him for his take on the proposals. Let's begin with one that could have the biggest impact, the proposal to give examination credits for anyone who held a license that expired, thereby eliminating the need for re- testing for someone who has an expired license. Moseson says he wholeheartedly endorses the idea of being able to recover a license a ham once held. He says right now, the current FCC rules are scattered on this.... "If you held a particular type of license at a particular time then there's no limit on being able to get it back without re-testing," Moseson explains. "But if you held a higher class license or a lower class license or the same license at a different time and it's expired and beyond the grace period, then you can't get it back without re-testing. "So, the current rules make no sense." Moseson says he's uncertain how many hams are out there who let their licenses lapse years ago, but he suggests the FCC recognizes they should be allowed to get back in without putting an undue burden on them. Controversial? Maybe, for some. But Moseson says he believes it's a win-win for the hobby... "I don't think that we've been greatly damaged from having the ability to re-gain licenses once held without additional testing on the license classes that are permitted," Moseson says. "And, I don't think there will be any great hazard to the hobby. In fact, I think there will be benefit to the hobby of letting people whose licenses have expired return if their interest has returned as well." If that doesn't quite sit well with you, Moseson suggests considering this: "There's really very little difference between this and what goes on if you maintain your license," Moseson says. "There are no activity requirements. So, as long as you renew your license every 10 years now, you can be licensed continually without taking a test even if you haven't been on the air in 30 years. "And, if you want to come back on the air - as long as you've maintained your license - then you just turn on the radio. Well, if you've let your license lapse, there's really not much difference. "So, if you've passed the test for a license, if you've held that license before, and you want to get back into ham radio, let's welcome you back with open arms and not make you have to take your test again when other people don't have to take that test again." Now, on to the proposal to have only two volunteer examiners at a testing session. Moseson says he feels a little uncomfortable with that idea, although the FCC suggests it will open up more exam opportunities and make it easier for people to get a ham license.... "I think that a minimum of three people is important at first glance," Moseson says. "I would be open to looking at the comments from other people. But from my personal experience, I think it's good to have a minimum of three people because it just reduces the possibility of any kind of shenanigans to a much lower level. "And, that was the reason for putting in the three-examiner requirement to begin with and I think that's still valid." There's also the idea of remote testing sessions - that is using the technology for VEs to observe an exam session. The FCC's rationale is colleges and businesses use teleconferencing and maybe it's time to explore that option. Moseson says timing might be right... "Yes, the technology needs to be acknowledged," Moseson say. "I don't think we should necessarily just jump right into it. I would suggest a pilot program first to see how well it works out and then take it from there." Moseson says he's encouraged by the proposal looking at the modes for amateur radio transmissions. He says there are too many restrictions and limitations on hams which can stifle rather than encourage experimentation. He says the FCC is wise to look at the issue, especially considering the area of TDMA or Time Division Multiple Access technology for amateur radio. "I think that the more that we can do with them as hams, in addition to what the commercial world is doing, the better off we'll all be because that competition is a fact of life," Moseson says. "You know, you look at our microwave bands which are really where a lot of the future is going to be - 2.4 Ghz, 5.8 Ghz - these bands are already shared. "And if we can make better use of that sharing so that we can do what we want to do without bothering the other people and without having them bother us then that's great we can all get by very well." Moseson says he still hasn't had a chance to go through the entire NPRM. He intends to study it and encourages hams to take the initiative and digest it before commenting... "Well, I would encourage people to download the NPRM from the FCC website and read the whole thing, particularly before sending in comments to the FCC on it," Moseson says. "I've seen too many people in other situations send in comments on an NPRM based on a summary and they haven't read the whole thing and they come off looking uninformed." For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mark Abramowicz, NT3V in Philadelphia. -- WT Docket No. 12-121 is expected to draw a lot of discussion in ham radio circles and we will have more on it in upcoming Amateur Radio Newsline reports. (FCC) ** RESTRUCTURING: RSGB, BATC AND AMSAT-UK REPLY TO OFCOM ON HF SPECTRUM Meantime, across the Atlantic, the Radio Society of Great Britain in concert with the British Amateur Radio Club and AMSAT-UK, has submitted a response to telecommunications regulastor Ofcom's Consultation or Notice of Inquiry on the future use of VHF spectrum from 143 to 156 MHz. This being the bandspace that was formally used by the British Home Office. According to the R-S-G-B, the unique nature of this spectrum, and the fact that it surrounds the existing 2 meter amateur radio band, suggested a creative response. One the R-S-G-B stated that would need to be competitive with the likely responses from Business Radio users. No details of the actual text of the response are known as we go to air. (RSGB) ** RESTRUCTURING: SWEDEN HAM COMMUNITY LOOSES 2300 MHZ BAND Swedish radio amateurs have basically lost the 2300 MHz band although they have gained some spectrum at 1.8 MHz. The Swedish Amateur Radio Society, the S-S-A, reports the loss of the 2300 MHz band with effect from October 1st. And while 2400 to 2450 MHz is still allocated for amateur radio operation the power there is limited to just 100 milliwatts at the antenna. However there is good news down lower in frequency. Sweden used to have "Top Band" allocations of 1810 to 1850 kHz at max 1 kW and 1930 to 2000 kHz with a maximum of 10 Watts out. As of October 1st this changed to 1810 to 1850 kHz at 1 kW and 1850 to 2000 kHz with a maximum of 10 watts. Power output is measured at the antenna. (SSA) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: FOUR CUBESATS DEPLOYED FROM ISS Radio amateurs around the world have been listening for signals from the four new amateur radio CubeSats that were deployed from the International Space Station on Thursday, October 4th. FITSat-1 has a CW beacon on 437.250MHz, 1200 bps AX.25 packet radio on 437.445MHz and a high-speed data transmitter on 5840.0MHz. F-1 has the callsign is XV1VN and the communications subsystem is built around two Yaesu VX-3R amateur radio handheld transceivers. One will transmit 1200 bps packet radio every 30 seconds on 145.980MHz while in darkness. The other will operate only in sunlight sending a 20 second FM transmission of a CW tone on 437.485MHz followed by a 60 second gap. TechEdSat carries a 1200 bps packet radio transmitter on 437.465MHz. WE-WISH transmits CW and 1200 bps packet radio on 437.505MHz. Due to the effects of Doppler shift the 70cm downlink frequencies will vary by +/- 10 kHz during an 8 minute pass. Each could have a life-time of 4 or 5 months before they burn-up on reentry into the Earth's atmosphere. (AMSAT, GB2RS) ** BREAK 1 From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including the W-Zero-B-Zed-N repeater of the Newton Amateur Radio Club serving Newton, Kansas. (5 sec pause here) ** ENFORCEMENT: FCC REFUSES TO RECONSIDER $10000 NAL The operator of an unlicensed radio station in Florida will have to pay a $10,000 fine. This after the FCC turns down his petition for reconsideration where he failed to prove he could not afford to pay. We have more in this report: -- The FCC has refused to reconsider a $10,000 fine issued to Neal Davis of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. In its September 28th release the regulatory agency stated that Davis appeal of the forfeiture order did not meet the criteria set out by the agency in regard to providing proof that such a fine would prove to be a financial hardship. In his Petition, Davis did not deny that he operated an unlicensed radio station and therefore violated Section 301 of the Communications Act. Rather, he urged the cancellation of the forfeiture based on an inability to pay claim. Specifically he asserted that he is currently unemployed and has no income but Davis did not provide any financial or other form of documentation to corroborate his asserted financial status. In the absence of any supporting financial or other reliable documentation, the FCC says it has no basis by which to evaluate Davis's inability to pay claim and are constrained by the limited record before it. As such the FCC has denied the Petition and affirmed the Forfeiture Order. -- Davis was given the customary 30 days to pay the fine. If he fails to do so the matter could be turned over to the Department of Justice for further action. (FCC) ** ENFORCEMENT: WIRELESS CAMERA IN PALM TREE INTERFERES WITH FAA RADAR The FCC has issued a Notice of Violation to the Redondo Beach Marina in Redondo Beach, California. This, for operating an unlicensed wireless video surveillance camera that was found to be causing interference to an FAA Radar system. After receiving a complaint from the Federal Aviation Administration concerning interference to their 1240 to 1300 MHz band radar in San Pedro, California the Los Angeles FCC Office dispatched agents to investigate the matter. The agents used direction finding to locate a radio signal on 1282 MHz emanating from a wireless camera mounted on a Palm tree in the parking lot of Redondo Beach Marina. When AC power to the camera was disconnected, the interference ceased. Based on this finding, a cease and desist notice was issued telling the Marina that use of the wireless camera must stop immediately. And in its September 20th letter to the Redondo Beach Marina it was warned that operation of radio transmitting equipment without a valid radio station authorization constitutes a violation of the Federal laws and could subject the operator of this illegal operation to severe penalties. (FCC) ** HELPING YOUTH: AMATEUR RADIO SUPPLIES ANNOUNCES YOUTH GIVEAWAY Amateur Radio Supplies of Haverhill, Massachusetts, has announced a new biannual giveaway. This to promote youth in amateur radio DXing and contesting. Beginning January 1st of 2013, the company says that it will give a complete high frequency station to the selected applicant. The gear to be presented will include Alinco DX- SR8T/E 160 through 6 meter all mode transceiver with a 30 amp power supply, an L-D-G antenna tuner, a choice of an all band G5RV or HyGain DX-77A Vertical plus just about all the accessories to put it all on the air. Applicants from any country under the age of 21 are invited to provide brief answers to the following three questions. These are how often are you able to operate on the HF bands? Where do you typically operate from and how do you intend to use the equipment provided in the give-away. Send your answers along with your name, callsign, and license class using the form at www.amateurradiosupplies.com/youth-s/222.htm. Nominations will also be accepted. For more information please e-mail Randy Rowe at randy (at) amateurradiosupplies (dot) com. Amateur Radio Supplies is a new company that provides a full line of gear, including antennas, transceivers, coax, antenna wires and countless station accessories. (Michelle Garrett - Project Manager - Amateur Radio Supplies) ** SWL NEWS: MORE TV WATCHERS OPTING OR FREE OVER THE AIR PROGRMMING As cable bills rise and the United States economy remains weak, more Americans are watching television using good old fashioned antennas. According to the research firm GfK Media, nearly 18 percent of all US households with television sets are watching broadcasts delivered for free over the air. This is up from 15 percent of homes last year according to research the firm. Translated into numbers, that means 20.7 million homes, or roughly 54 million consumers, now get channels over the air instead of paying a monthly cable or satellite bill. According to the study, 6 percent of TV households, or 6.9 million homes, canceled their cable service at some point in the past and now rely on free broadcasts. GfK's report also found that 16 percent of households downgraded TV service in the business year through March, while only 11 percent of TV households said they had increased service. The report also found that people using Web-connected TV increased to 34 million households, or 29 percent. That's almost double the previous year's 16 percent. More is on- line at tinyurl.com/9z4ffj5 (Published News Reports) ** SWL NEWS: CANADIAN AM STATIONS LEAVING THE AIR More AM stations are leaving the medium wave AM broadcast band in Canada than are coming on the air, This is according to the trade publication Radio World that says since 2009, some sixteen Canadian AM broadcasters have gone off the air as several have moved to the FM band and companies closed the least profitable stations. But in this case more seems better from a profit standpoint. According to the research firm Statistics Canada, the moves have allowed AM operating revenues to grow by 1.1% in 2011, to 311 million Canadian dollars. A quick search of the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission site shows 727 commercial licensed radio stations, not broken down by service. That compares to 4,754 commercial licensed AM and 6,568 FM broadcast entities in the United States according to FCC figures for the most recent quarter. (RW) ** NAMES IN THE NEW: CHANGES AT CQ AVERTISING DEPARMENT Some names in the news. CQ Communications has announced the appointments of Charlie Payne, ex- WN2AKC, and Jon Kummer, WA2OJK, to the company's advertising department. Payne and Kummer succeed Chip Margelli, K7JA, who has reportedly resigned to pursue other opportunities in the amateur radio industry. According to a press release from CQ, the company's parting with K7JA was completely amicable, and Margelli still is ironing out details of his next adventure in the amateur radio industry. Meantime, for those in need of contact information, Charlie Payne may be reached by e-mail at Charlie (at) cqcomm (dot) com. Jon Kummer's e-mail is jon (at) cqcomm (dot) com. (CQ) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: PETER LAKE ZL2AZ NAMED IARU R3 CHAIRMAN Peter Lake, ZL2AZ, of Wellington, New Zealand, has been elected as the Chairman of IARU Region 3. He replaces Michael Owen, VK3KI, who passed away unexpectedly last month. Owen, who was also President of the Wireless Institute of Australia, had served as Region 3 Chairman since 2006. (IARU-R3) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: RADIO AMATEUR FILES SDR PATENT And Software Defined Radio is coming of age in the world of amateur radio. This with word that Tao Wang, KB3KSR, has filed a patent for a General-purpose software defined radio platform. The patent disclosure describes Wang's invention as a flexible, compact size, low power consumption, low cost, high performance software defined radio platform. One that can be used in different areas, including industrial applications, amateur radio, and academic research. In its present form, Wang's unit is a processing platform that packs a complete computer inside a pocket size enclosure. The invention makes use of a graphic user interface and touch screen LCD display for interaction with those who are utilizing it. (Southgate) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: HAM-JAM 2012 LWRENCEVILLE GA NOVEMBER 10 On the social scene, HamJam 2012 will take place on Saturday, November 10th at the Georgia Gwinnett College Student Center, in Lawrenceville, Georgia. The event is open to all radio amateurs and admission is free. Gerald Youngblood, K5SDR the C-E-O and President of FlexRadio Systems, will speak on the future of amateur radio while Doug Grant, K1DG will do a presentation on Contesting Ethics and the World Radio Team Championships. More information on the web at www.hamjam.info (SEDXC) ** HAM HPPENINGS: FREE CQ WW UPDATE WEBINAR WITH K5ZD The World Wide Radio Operators Foundation will be sponsoring an open Webinar on Sunday, October 21st at 19:00 UTC titled CQ World Wide Update 2012. Hosted by Randy Thompson, K5ZD, the on-line gathering will provide an update on the status of the contest including new rules for 2012, log entry tips, fair play, and various other topics of interest. Questions will be taken following the presentation. Registration for this free event is on-line at tinyurl.com/cq-ww-webinar. (WWROF) ** BREAK 2 This is ham radio news for today's radio amateur. From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links to the world from our only official website at www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services of the following radio amateur: (5 sec pause here) ** CHANGING OF THE GUARD: SID T. MAY ET3SID/AB3OZ/G4CTQ, SK The changing of the guard in ham radio continues with word of the passing of Sid T. May, who held the callsigns ET3SID, AB3OZ and G4CTQ. May was the chairman of the Ethiopian Amateur Radio Society and credited with setting up the first amateur radio club of Ethiopia in 1993. He had also been teaching amateur radio courses to Ethiopian students for more than 15 years and was also a volunteer examiner who administered both U-K and United States amateur exams in Ethiopia. (Southgate) ** INTRUDER REPORT: CHINESE OTH RADAR GAIN HRASSING 40 METERS The IARU Monitoring System newsletter reports that Radio Hargeisa is operating on 7.120 MHz and that Chinese surveillance radar in the amateur radio 40 meter band is now stronger than ever before According to the report, the pesky Chinese Over the Horizon Radar had left the 40 meter band for few weeks. But now its reported back with a very strong burst system. One that is at least 10 kHz wide and has an almost S9 signal, world- wide. IARU Regions 1 and 3 are reported to be severely affected by it. More about both of these situations is on-line at tinyurl.com/china-radar-again. (IRUMS) ** EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: DISSOLVABLE BIO-MED ELECTRONICS Ultra-thin electronics that dissolve inside the body have been devised by scientists in the US and could be used for a range of medical roles. According to research published in the journal Science the components are made of silicon and magnesium oxide and placed in a protective layer of silk. Once their job has been completed these devices can simply melt away with the speed of melting is controlled by silk. The technology has already been used to heat a wound to keep it free from infection by bacteria. More is on-line at tinyurl.com/melting-electronics. (BBC) ** WORLDBEAT: UK AUTO MANUFACTURERS NOT SUPPORTING DIGITAL RADIO BROADCASTING The United Kingdom's government mandated switchover date for digital radio may need to be extended several years. This following a new survey of car manufacturers that reveals at least half are steering clear of the new entertainment technology. As part of its Digital Britain vision, the UK Department for Culture, Media and Sport named 2015 as the deadline for turning off its ageing but very popular analogue radio network, in favor of one based on digital standards. The move would mean the majority of today's in-car tuners as well as home radio sets would cease to function overnight. But new findings from Auto Express Magazine suggest the switchover could now be delayed until 2017 or later. This after a survey of 24 mainstream car manufacturers by the publication has revealed that 50 percent do not offer any digital radio units for their model range, even as an optional extra. Also, almost 60 per cent of new vehicles registered this in the U.K. this year came with no option for the installation of a digital radio receiver. (Auto Express, Southgate) ** WORDBEAT: BELEGIUM HAMS ASSIST IN NEW FREE WIFI SYSTM The Belgian national society the U-B-A reports on the involvement of radio amateurs in getting free WiFi in the city of Geraardsbergen. The UBA says that O6RY and ON3FDS worked with the city officials to bring about the new WiFi service and in the process generated some valuable public relations for the amateur radio in that nation. More about this story is on-line at tinyurl.com/ham-radio-wifi (Southgate) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: EQUISAT HAM-SAT TO CARRY OPTICAL BEAON Students at the Brown University are developing an amateur radio satellite called EQUiSat that will carry an interesting optical beacon. The bird will use a Xenon Flash Tube that should be visible to the unaided eye of observers on Earth. A radio beacon is planned to operate in the 435 to 438 MHz range. Launch is hoped for in the 2015 time frame into an orbit of about 300 kilometers. That should give the satellite a life-time of a couple of months. (EQUiSat, Southgate) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: BUAA-SAT PLANNED FOTR 2014 LAUNCH BUAA-SAT is a micro-satellite project developed by the students of Beijing University carries an amateur radio 435 and 145 MHz FM voice transponder. Plans call for it to be launched into a 600 by 800 kilometer Sun Synchronous Orbit in late 2014. Its primary missions are to study the application of components used in the onboard electronic system, to demonstrate the coil-able mast deployment mechanism and to carry out imaging using three CMOS cameras. More is on-line at http://sat.buaa.edu.cn/ (AMSAT-UK) ** ON THE AIR: SAGA INTERNATIONAL BALLOON FESTIVAL On the air, please listen out for special event callsign 8-J- 6-B-A-L to be aired on all bands and modes between through November 5th in celebration of the 2012 Saga International Balloon Fiesta. This is an Asian maximum grade Hot Air Balloon International Festival in Saga City, Japan. More information is on-line at www (dot) sibf (dot) jp slash e. QSL via the JARL bureau. (Southgate) ** DX In DX, word that ON4AFU will be on the air from Ko Butang Island October 26th to November 4th as HS0ZJF stroke 9. He will be active on High Frequency bands on CW only. QSL via ON4AFU 7L4DXT and K1GI will be operational from Sint Maarten Island from November 18th to the 24th as PJ7XK and PJ7I respectively. They will be active on 160 through 10 meters on CW, SSB and some Digital modes. QSL PJ7XK via 7L4DXT and PJ7I via JG2BRI KI5SF reports that he will be operational portable KH6 from about 0100 UTC October 26th to 10:00 UTC October 27th. Listen out for him on 160 through 6 meters except for 60 meters on SSB and CW. QSL to KI5SF. A group of operators from Switzerland will be active from Aitutaki Island in the Cook Island chain from November 12th to the 30th using the call signs E51C, E51ABS, E51BZD and E51CHX. Listen out for them on 80 through 10 meters using CW, SSB, and PSK. QSL this operation via HB9BXU JA7HMZ and JA7EPO will be active from Pohnpei Island from November 23rd to the 28 as V63DX and V63EPO. They also plan to operate in CQ World Wide DX CW Contest on November 24th and 25th as V6A. QSL V63DX via JA7HMZ, V63EOP via JA7EPO and V6A via JA7HMZ. JH1EAQ will be active from Palau in CQ World Wide DX SSB Contest On October 27th and 28th as T88EB. QSL via home call only. Lastly, looking to the future comes word that G3SWH and G3RTE will be active from Guadalcanal Island in the Solomon Islands from February 18th to the 28th of 2013. The callsign to be used will be H44KW operating on 80 through 10 meters using CW only. QSL via G3SWH direct or via the bureau. ** THAT FINAL ITEM: BIG ANTENNA WIN DOWN-UNDER ANGERS NEIGHNORS And finally this week, a New Zealand ham has won a major tower and antenna victory but his neighbors are far from happy with the city council's decision. This, even before the antenna system is erected. Amateur Radio Newsline's Jim Meachen, Zed-L-2-B-H-F, reports from down-under: -- Pyes Pa, New Zealand residents concerned about the proposed installation of a 20 meter high radio antenna are disappointed that the Tauranga City Council won't fight a legal battle on their behalf. Residents of Veda Glen have petitioned the city council to appeal an Environment Court decision which allows amateur radio enthusiasts to erect radio masts up to 20 meters or 65 feet high. They say a radio antenna proposed by a neighbor would be an eyesore, create wind noise and devalue their properties. While Councilors seemed to sympathize with the residents' plight they also said that based on their legal advice, an appeal to the High Court would be pointless. The council had previously tried to restrict private radio masts to a maximum height of 9 meters or about 30 feet. However an appeal to the Environment Court by the Tauranga Emergency Communications Group and the New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters saw the maximum height raised to the 20 meter maximum. Council senior policy planner Campbell Larking told councilors approximately $100,000 New Zealand dollars had been spent fighting the case in the Environment Court, and he estimated an appeal to the High Court would cost another $50,000. Also that a High Court ruling would not be binding and the matter would simply be sent back to the same Environment Court judge to re-consider. A resolution proposed by Councilor Murray Guy, which sought to launch an investigation into Environment Court and City Plan processes in order to enhance community consultation did not find enough support and failed. The bottom line is that the unnamed ham can put up his 65 foot high mast along with the antenna that will sit on top of it. It's unknown when that installation will be completed. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, in Nelson, New Zealand. -- Outside the chambers, the residents said a legal challenge was outside their reach and they were disappointed the council had backed away from fighting the case on their behalf. (bayofplentytimes.co.nz) ** NEWSCAST CLOSE With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, the CGC Communicator, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio Penn DX Bulletin, Radio Netherlands, Rain, the RSGB, the Southgate News, TWiT-TV and Australia's W-I-A News, that's all from the Amateur Radio NewslineT. Our e-mail address is newsline (at) arnewsline (dot) org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline'sT only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. You can also write to us or support us at Amateur Radio NewslineT, 28197 Robin Avenue, Santa Clarita California, 91350 For now, with Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, at the editors' desk, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, near Houston Texas saying 73 and we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio NewslineT is Copyright 2012. All rights
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Friday, October 5, 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1833 - September 28 2012
Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1833 with a release date of September 28 2012 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a QST. Dedicated Cubesat downlinks to be discussed at WRC 2018; Ofcom lifts spectrum restrictions imposed because of London Summer Olympics; Kosovo takes to the ham radio airwaves and the results of the World Radio Direction Finding competition. Find out the details are on Amateur Radio NewslineT report number 1833 coming your way right now. (Billboard Cart Here) ** HAM RADIO IN SPACE: DEDICATED CUBESAT DOWNLINKS FOR DISCUSSION AT WRC-18 IARU Secretary Rod Stafford, W6ROD, reports that the International Amateur Radio Union's Administrative Council will meet in the next 45 days to address the agenda items for the 2015 World Radiocommunication Conference. Planning for the dedicated spectrum for university research cubesats will begin at that gathering, but the actual allocation of frequencies may not occur until the 2018 World Radiocommunication Conference. In an article posted on the ARRL web, Stafford noted, "A lot of radio amateurs are aware of the increasing use of amateur spectrum by small satellites, mainly by universities. It is becoming an increasingly difficult situation to accommodate the number of small, non-commercial satellites within the amateur bands. These education-based satellites do not really fit within the definition of the Amateur Radio Service, but have been accommodated there. According to W6ROD, these small birds are categorized as nano-satellites weighing between 1 to 10 kilogram and pico- satellites weighing less than 1 kilogram. The International Telecommunications Union is trying to deal with this issue in an orderly manner and a `preliminary' WRC-18 agenda item is to consider whether these satellite operations can be accommodated in an already crowded radio spectrum is being researched. Stafford concludes by noting that as these issues develop, the IARU will keep its Member-Societies, such as the ARRL, aware of developments with an eye to building the best strategy to deal with those agenda items in a way that is most favorable to the Amateur Radio Service. You can read the full article, including many other IARU agenda items at tinyurl.com/looking-at-tinysats. (ANS, ARRL) ** RESCUE RADIO: UK PARISHES ABANDONING EMCOMM SYSTEM FOR CELLPHONES AND RAYNET An emergency radio system that has provided a lifeline to Heathfield in the United Kingdom for 25 years is to be scrapped and to be replaced by cellular telephones. But users of the ageing service have criticized the decision to rely on patchy mobile phone service in an emergency. Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, has the details: -- That's right Jim. It is supposed to go away and here's why. The radio system was created back in 1987 after what has been called the Great Storm. Six parishes still have the gear in service to use emergency situations. But the district council now wants to abolish them because they are too expensive to maintain. The council pays 3,600 British Pounds a year to maintain the radio gear and a repeater that they are used through. Parish councilor Bob Wood who has one of the old radios. He says that while thee gear my be old and possibly inadequate for what they want, that doing away with them is silly. He notes that mobile phone networks can only hold a certain number of calls at a time if an emergency happens. But according to Jim van den Bos, of the District Council, the Wealden emergency radio network radio equipment is now old, less reliable and more difficult to repair. He says that last year a survey of parishes was conducted asking which had been active in the network over the past three years. Out of the 15 who took part, only seven were in favor of continuing. So what will happen when the old emergency radio system falls silent? According to van den Bos it will likely be ham radio that will be used to augment the cellular network. In a statement he said that the council supports local members of a network of amateur radio users called RAYNET who are willing to respond in an emergency. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, in the newsroom in Los Angeles. -- RAYNET in the UK would be quite similar to a combined RACES and ARES here in the United States. (Sussix Courier, Northcliff Media, Southgate) ** RADIO LAW: OFCOM LIFTS TEMPORARY SPECTRUM RESTRICTIONS ON UHF AND SHF BANDS USED FOR OLYMPICS UK telecommunications regulator Ofcom has announced that as of midnight on September 23rd, temporary operating restrictions on parts of the 70 centimeter and several microwave bands have come to an end. The restrictions on spectrum usage by British radio amateurs had been put in place to permit use of several spectral parcels in relation to the now conceded 2012 London Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games. (RSGB) ** BREAKING DX NEWS: KOSOVO NOW OFFICIALLY ON THE AIR The Republic of Kosovo is now officially on the air. Station Z-60-K near Pristina commenced amateur radio operation shortly after 1700 UTC on September 17th. The call had been issued to the club station of the Amateur Radio Association of Kosovo. For this operation QSL via G3TXF or using ClubLog. It has to be noted that as Kosovo is not yet a member of the United Nations nor does it have an assigned callsign block allocated by the International Telecommunications Union, it does not meet the established requirements of the ARRL's DXCC program at this time. However CQ has recognized Kosovo as a separate entity for its award and contest programs since 2007. More is on line at www.art-ks.org (DXNL, CQ Newsroom) ** DX SPECIAL: AZORES 9 ISLANDS HUNT SEPT 29 - 30 While short notice, all nine of the Azores islands will be operational from 12:00 UTC on Saturday, September 29th through 12:00 UTC on Sunday September 30th. This a part of the Azores 9 Islands Hunt operating event. Callsigns to be used are CU1ARM from Santa Maria; CU2ARA from San Miguel; CU3URA on Terceira; CU4ARG from Graciosa; CU5AM on Sao Jorge; CU6GRP on Pico; CU7CRA from Faial; CU8ARF on Flores and CU9AC operating on Corvo. Operations on CW will be from 7.000 to 7.015, 14.050 to 14.065 and 18.080 to 18.090 MHz. SSB phone operations will be found on 7.175 to 7.195, 14.250 to 14. 275 and 18.120 through 18.135 MHz. But that's not all. Those holding a QSO with at least 5 different islands will have a corresponding number of tickets placed into a lottery for a free trip to the Azores. Additionally, the first 25 operators making QSOs with all 9 islands will be eligible for a second lottery. All QSOs will be confirmed through the bureau network with special full-color cards. Direct QSL requests via CU2CE. More information on this activation and trip give-away is on- line at azores-islands-hunt.com. And we will have more DX related news at the end of this weeks Amateur Radio Newsline report. (OH2BH) ** BREAK 1 From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including the Dirty Dozen Club Net in Des Moines Iowa. (5 sec pause here) ** ENFORCEMENT: YET ANOTHER FLORIDA UNLICENSED BROADCASTER BUSTED BY THE FCC From the seemingly never ending Florida unlicensed radio station scene comes word that the FCC's Miami Office has issued yet another Notice of Apparent Liability to Monetary Forfeiture. This time the recipient of a proposed $10,000 fine is Burt Byng of Miami who the regulatory agency claims operating an unlicensed radio transmitter on the frequency 107.1 MHz. Amateur Radio Newsline's Bruce Tennant, K6PZW, reports: -- By way of background, this past February 9th agents from the Enforcement Bureau's Miami Office T-hunted the source of a signal on the 107.1 MHz to a transmitting antenna mounted on the roof of a commercial property in Miami. The agents determined that the signals on 107.1 MHz exceeded the limits for operation under Part 15 of the Commission's rules and therefore required a license. While monitoring the transmission, the agents also heard the station identify itself on the air as "WEROC Radio." Commission records showed that no authorization was issued to Burt Byng or to anyone else for operation of an FM broadcast station at or near this address. On the same date, agents from the Miami Office, accompanied by the property owner, inspected the unlicensed station's antenna and transmitter located on the rooftop of the commercial building. According to information provided by the property owner, a company called J & B Enterprise US, Inc. was the tenant of the particular area where the transmitting equipment was located. The property owner provided a copy of Burt Byng's driver's license and identified him as the individual who rented the rooftop space. According to Florida records, Byng is the President of an inactive business named "J & B Enterprises US, Inc." While researching the matter the agents also discovered that Mr. Byng registered the domain name, ww.werocradio.com, a webpage for "WEROC Radio." The agents also noticed that the phone number listed in the domain registration was the same phone number listed on in the information provided by the property owner. In issuing the $10,000 NAL the FCC says that it finds that the record evidence in this case is sufficient to establish that Burt Byng violated Section 301 of the Act by operating radio transmission equipment without the required Commission authorization. As such he is liable for the proposed fine. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bruce Tennant, K6PZW, in Los Angeles --. As is usual, Byng was given the customary 30 days to pay the $10,000 NAL or to file an appeal. (FCC) ** RADIO LAW: FCC EXTENDS COMMENTARY DEADLINE ON MD DOCKET 12- 201 The public as well as concerned industries have been given more time to tell the FCC what they think of the agency's process for collecting regulatory fees as outlined in MD Docket 12-201. Originally, comments on commission proposals to reform the way in which it evaluates the regulatory fees for the industries it regulates were due by September 17th. While that date has passed, the agency has announced that the new commentary cutoff date is October 9th, with reply comments due by October 23rd. The FCC also says that it would also like to receive comments on a recent report from the Government Accountability Office. That report is titled "The Federal Communications Commission Regulatory Fee Process Needs to Be Updated." In that document the Accountability Office observes, among other things, that the commission's regulatory fee, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposes some fundamental changes to FCC's regulatory fee program that relate to many of the concerns raised in its report. (FCC, RW) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: LAST MAN STANDING K6T SPECIAL EVENT CANCELLED The highly publicized Last Man Standing K6T operating event will not take place. This according to the television shows Producer John Amodeo, NN6JA. The thank you to the ham radio community had been slated to happen on Sunday, October 28th. According to Amodeo the decision to cancel was based on concerns about a possible violation of FCC Regulation 97.113(a)(3). For those not aware, this rule bars any communications using ham radio in which the station licensee or control operator has a pecuniary interest. It also precludes any communications on behalf of an employer. In making the announcement Amodeo notes that while everyone involved with the planned operation are very disappointed with the cancellation of what would have a fun, one of a kind event, that as a licensed radio amateur and producer of broadcast programs, compliance with FCC rules must take precedence. Special event station K6T would have worked hams from around world on HF, VHF, UHF, D-STAR and IRLP. While that's not going to take place the good news is that the ham station that is a part of the set of Last Man Standing will remain and continue to be a part of the shows ongoing plot line. (NN6JA) ** PUBLIC SERVICE: HAM RADIO AT THE USAF MARATHON David Crawford, KF4KWW, reports that over fifty amateur radio operators from all over the greater Dayton, Ohio. area and coming from as far away as Detroit, Michigan, recently converged on Wright Patterson Air Force Base. This, support the 2012 United States Air Force Marathon held on Saturday, September 15th. Ham radio operators provided emergency and logistic communications between the race director and his staff. They also assisted with communications to the hydration stations positioned throughout the course. The United States Air Force Marathon is described as a world class event with over 15000 participants registered and another estimated 15000 volunteers and spectators in attendance. Amateur radio operators were indispensable in communicating information on runner's locations and status, weather heat indexes settings, severe weather notifications and logistic issues. Robert Aguiar is the marathon Race Director. He says that the senior base leaders of the event have come rely on the communication skills of the amateur radios operators and use them a as a vital resource. He adds that this race would be extremely difficult if not impossible to accomplish without their support and dedication. More about this event is on- line at www.usafmarathon.com. (KF4KWW) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: AMATEUR RADIO TO ASSIST AT VK NATIONAL FUN FLIGHT DAY 2012 Amateur Radio will once again be a part of Australia's National Fun Flight Day this coming November 4th. Amateur Radio Newsline's Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the details: -- National Fun Flight Day is an event staged by Australian flying clubs to provide pleasure flights for children and families touched by adversity. Amateur radio began its association with this event back in 2011. Thats when the Victoria-based Midland Amateur Radio Club and its station VK3CMZ were invited to participate in the National FunFlight Day by the Bendigo Flying Club. The Midland Club was more than happy to oblige and an operating High Frequency, VHF and UHF station was set up at the event site. A handheld in a plane also provided communication back to children on the ground. The operation was deemed a major success and the Midland Committee saw it as a worthwhile national amateur radio event. So it then approached the FunFlight manager regarding other amateur clubs' participation. The result of the meeting was very positive and contact information has now been provided to participating flying clubs so that they can contact their nearest amateur radio club. For the amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, in Nelson, New Zealand. -- More event information on this fun in the sky event down- under is on-line at www.funflight.org. (Midland Amateur Radio Club) ** WITH ARNEWSLINE: ARNEWSLINE FACEBOOK PAGES BREAKS 1000 BARRIER The Amateur Radio Newsline fan page on Facebook has just passed the 1000 subscriber point. In fact, as we go to air, the number of members subscribed stands at 1004. The page is managed for Amateur Radio Newsline by James Pastorfield, KB7TBT, who devotes a lot of time and energy to it. So as we pass the 1000 mark and hopefully head toward 2000 or more, we want to pause to thank KB7TBT for his volunteerism in making the page possible and to all of you who contribute to it. If you are on Facebook but have not yet joined the Amateur Radio Newsline family, you can find us there at by simply typing Amateur Radio Newsline in the blue Facebook search line. We would love to have you there with us. (ARNewslineT) ** NAMES IN THE NEWS: BILL TYNAN W3XO TO RECEIVE RCA BARRY GOLDWATER AWARD The Radio Club of America has announced that former AMSAT North America President Bill Tynan, W3XO, is to be the recipient of its 2012 Barry Goldwater Amateur Radio Award. The award recognizes Tynan's lifelong service to the public through amateur radio. The award will be presented to W3XO at the club's annual awards banquet in New York on November 16th. ARRL Chief Executive Officer Dave Sumner, K1ZZ, will be the keynote speaker at the event. (RCA, W2RS) ** BREAK 2 This is ham radio news for today's radio amateur. From the United States of America, We are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links to the world from our only official website at www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services of the following radio amateur: (5 sec pause here) ** THE CHANGING OF THE GUARD: WIA PRESIDENT MICHAEL OWEN, VK3SI - S.K. The changing of the guard in our service continues. This, with the sad news that Michael Owen, VK3KI, the Chairman of Region III of the International Amateur Radio Union and President of the Wireless Institute of Australia has became a Silent Key. Owen's sudden passing came after suffering what is only being described as a medical condition at his home on Saturday, September the 22nd. During his many volunteer years, Owen, who was age 75 at the time of his passing, participated in many IARU committees and had been a member of the IARU Observer Team at a number of World Radiocommunication Conferences. He served as IARU Vice President from 1989 to 1999 and is perhaps best remembered for his work on a package of revisions to the international Radio Regulations. These were specific to the Amateur Radio and Amateur Satellite services and presented at the 2003 World Radiocommunications Conference. Michael Owen, VK3KI, is survived by his wife Nan, and his two daughters. His funeral was to be held on Friday, September 28th at St Andrews Anglican Church in Brighton. Australia. Condolence messages can be sent via the Wireless Institute of Australia by e-mail to condolences (at) WIA (dot) org (dot) au or direct to the surviving family members at PO Box 2042, Bayswater, Victoria 3153 Australia. (WIA, VK6POP) ** WORLDBEAT: NEW FOCUS FOR RADIO NETHERLANDS WORLDWIDE The Board of Supervisors of Radio Netherlands Worldwide has appointed William Valkenburg as editor-in-chief. This, effective January 1st of 2013. According to the announcement, Valkenburg will set out the new course for the organization with the recently appointed director general Robert Zaal. The broadcaster will focus on free speech in countries where press freedom is limited and Valkenburg will take responsibility for journalism within the organization. As of 2013, Radio Netherlands Worldwide's main focus will be on Africa, and the Arab World, as well as countries such as China, Cuba and Venezuela. (RW) ** WORLDBEAT: FRENCH POLYNESIA GETS BROADBAND ACCESS Another remote area of the world is now on-line. Amateur Radio Newsline's Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, has the details: -- High speed Internet access has come to the islands of the South Pacific. This with word that OmniAccess has expanded its network coverage in the remote French Polynesian islands. The news follows the company's investment into the opening of a high-capacity network on the Intelsat 18 satellite that first became operational in November 2011. This provides the capacity to enable enhanced broadband internet coverage and network services via Ku-band coverage platform to that isolated part of the world. As a result, for the first time private yachts, charter yachts and commercial vessels cruising in the region can now benefit from high quality uninterrupted broadband connectivity via the new high speed service. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, reporting. -- More on this new service can be found by going to www.noonsite.com and using the search engine at that website. (noonsite.com via K4CPX) ** EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: DARC AND GERMAN NSI COLLABORATE ON FIELD STRENGTH ARTICLE The National Standards Institute of Germany in cooperation with the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club have jointly authored an article on the calibration of field strength monitors that has been published in the publication Advances in Radio Science'. The article covers a detailed description of a possible calibration setup including uncertainty calculations. You can download an abstract and the full article at tinyurl.com/field-strength-monitors. (DARC) ** HAM HAPPENINGS: WESTERN STATES VHF/UHF WEAK SIGNAL NET ON SUNDAYS The Western States VHF/UHF Weak Signal 75m Net meets every Sunday on 3.920 MHz at 17:30 Pacific Daylight Time. This net is a wide ranging discussion dealing with all aspects of VHF to microwave building, contesting, and operating. More about this weekly gathering is on-line at www.weaksig.net (N8DEZ) ** DX In DX, G0VJG will be operational stroke 3A from Monaco between October 1st and the 5th. His activity will be on the High Frequency bands using 100 watts on SSB only. QSL via G4DFI. A multi-national team is on the air from Conway Reef in the South Pacific Ocean. They plan to be there through October 5th using the callsign will be 3D2C. Their QSL manager is YT1AD. DL7VSN will be active from Tanzania through October 13th. His operation will be from two locations using the 5H1HS from Zanzibar Island and 5H1HS/3 from Lazy Lagoon Island. Activity is expected on 160 through 10 meters using mainly CW and RTTY. QSL via his home callsign. More about his operation is on-line at Visit his Web page at www.qsl.net/dl7vsn Lastly word that DJ7RJ who was expected to be active stroke FR from Reunion Island between September 26th and October 21st, has announced he had to cancel his trip. No reason for the cancellation was given. (Above from various DX news sources) ** THAT FINAL ITEM: And finally this week, hidden transmitter hunters held their world championships this month and hams from the USA came home with more medals than ever. Amateur Radio Newsline's Joe Moell, K0OV, the details. -- Every two years, on-foot hidden transmitter hunters get together to see who is best in the world. The Sixteenth World Championships of Amateur Radio Direction Finding, or ARDF, took place at a ski resort in the mountains of central Serbia. In these big forests, about 330 foxhunters from 33 countries searched for transmitters on two meters and 80 meters using direction finding gear, maps, and compasses, but no GPS. USA was represented by nine men and four women from six states. They ranged in age from 27 to 71. In previous world championships, USA has won no more than two medals, and no golds. But this year, the team members packed thirteen medals into their suitcases, including four golds. Standing on the medal podium and hearing the Star-Spangled Banner the most times was Bob Cooley KF6VSE of Pleasanton, California. He won two golds in the division for men over age 70 in the World Cup competition for individuals and another gold for his two-meter run during the main ARDF competitions. Also winning a playing of our national anthem was Vadim Afonkin KB1RLI of Newton, Massachusetts, who was this year's Team Captain. His gold medal was in the 80-meter ARDF competition. Other Team USA members on the podium included Jay Hennigan WB6RDV of Goleta, California, who was a silver medalist on 80 meters. Winning bronze in their divisions on that band were Alla Mezhevaya of Loves Park, Illinois, Ruth Bromer WB4QZG of Raleigh, North Carolina and Karla Leach KC7BLA of Bozeman, Montana. Team USA members earned their right to go to Serbia by medaling in the USA ARDF Championships this June at Mt. Laguna, California and in earlier US championships. You can read more about Team USA and the ARDF World Championships at www.homingin.com. There are plenty of photos, plus links to the complete results. That's homingin, as one word, homingin.com. From southern California, where ARDF activities take place all year long, this is Joe Moell, K0OV, for the Amateur Radio Newsline. -- Again, more information is on-line at www.homingin.com. And "homingin" is spelled as one word. (K0OV) ** NEWSCAST CLOSE With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, the CGC Communicator, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio Penn DX Bulletin, Radio Netherlands, Rain, the RSGB, the Southgate News, TWiT-TV and Australia's WIA News, that's all from the Amateur Radio NewslineT. Our e-mail address is newsline(at) arnewsline (dot) org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline'sT only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. And a reminder to those of you who still receive these newscasts over our 661-296-2407 dial in line rater than downloading the MP3 file from our website. Of late we have noticed a major decline in the number of those calling into it and as such we are giving consideration to discontinuing it by years end. But before we do, we want to know how many people are actually using it. If you are one of those who call in each week on the phone, please send us a note telling us who you are and the reason you are using telephone access rather than simply downloading the newscast from the Internet. Our address is the Amateur Radio Newsline, 28197 Robin Avenue, Saugus California, 91350. Or, as we said, you can e- mail us at newsline (at) arnewsline (dot) org. We look forward to hearing from you. For now, with Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, at the editors' desk, I'm Jim Damron, N8TMW, saying 73 from Charleston, West Virginia. And, as always, we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio NewslineT is Copyright 2012. All rights reserved.
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