WEDNESDAY
EDITION:
Coffee and donut day
at the weekly club
gathering this
morning.....Hamfesters
help train
Storm Spotters....
A Portable
Electronics
Workstation
You don’t see
them as often as you
used to, but it used
to be common to see
“electronics
trainers” which were
usually a collection
of components and
simple equipment
combined with a
breadboard, often in
a little suitcase.
We think [Pro
Maker_101’s]portable
electronics
workstationis
in the same kind of
spirit, and it looks
pretty nice.
The device uses a
3D printed case and
a custom PC board.
There are a number
of components,
although no
breadboard. There is
a breakout board for
Raspberry Pi GPIO,
though. So you could
use the screw
terminals to connect
to an external
breadboard. We were
thinking you could
almost mount one as
a sort of lid so it
would open up like a
book with the
breadboard on one
side and the
electronics on the
other. Maybe version
two?
One thing we
never saw on the old
units? An HDMI
flat-screen display!
We doubt you’d make
one exactly like
this, of course, but
that’s part of the
charm. You can mix
and match exactly
what you want and
make the prototyping
station of your
dreams. Throw in a
small portable
soldering iron, a
handheld scopemeter,
and you can hack
anywhere.
CAARA Prez launches
balloon yesterday,
its flying high at
40,000 feet
The straight line is
the night time when
the solar panels are
not producing juice
for the transmitter
TUESDAY
EDITION: Track the
balloon with u as it
heads for Africa.....
Brandon's son
holding the half
inflated blloon, it
will expand as it
gets high above
earth....he used
hydrogen...
Transmitter and
solar collector
resting on carrying
case.....
Keep Bears at
Bay with the Crackle
of 280,000 Volts
You might be better
off to put your head
between your legs
and kiss your ass
goodbye....
Bears! Are they
scared of massive
arcs that rip
through the air,
making a lot of
noise in the
process? [Jay] from
thePlasma
Channelsure
hopes so,because
that’s how his bear
deterrent works!
[Jay] calls it theBear
Blaster 5000.
Right from the drop,
this thing looks
like some crazy
weapon out ofHalo. That’s
because it throws
huge arcs at 280,000
volts. The basic
concept behind it is
simple enough—a
battery drives a
circuit which
generates (kinda)
low voltage AC. This
is fed to the two
voltage multipliers
which are set up
with opposite
polarity to create
the greatest
possible potential
difference between
the two electrodes
they feed. The meaty
combination is able
to arc across
electrodes spaced
over four inches
apart. It’s all
wrapped up in a
super-cool 3D
printed housing that
really shows off the
voltage multiplier
banks.
Given its
resemblance to a
stun gun, you might
think the idea is to
jab an attacking
bear with it. But
the reality is, if
the bear is close
enough that you
could press this
device against it,
you’re already
lunch. [Jay]
explains that it’s
more about scaring
the animal off with
the noise and light
it produces. We’d
certainly take a few
steps back if we
heard this thing
fire off in the
woods.
[Jay] does a great
job of explaining
how the whole setup
works, as well as
showing off its raw
ability tospark.We’ve
seen some great
builds from [Jay]
before, too,like
this beefy custom
flyback transformer.
Marathon
Monday: My
friend Debbie Tupper
from Rockport is
running her 19th and
last marathon today,
go Deb!.....I wonder
what possesses a guy
to
study this shit?.....A
study published in
2022 revealed a
tenuous but
plausible link
between
picking your nose
and increasing the
risk of developing
dementia.
And there’s a
little bit of
everything here,
from orbital
mechanics and
fetching the
two-line elements
(TLE) from the web,
to writing the code
to translate that
into the tabletop
machine’s coordinate
system. It looks
like [Farid] hadn’t
done much 3D CAD
before, so he got a
chance to stretch
those muscles too.
Finally, it served
as an introduction
to
resource-constrained
programming: “This
was the first time
I’ve had to think
about the size of a
compiled binary –
the most frustrating
part was figuring
out that using a C++
stringstream was
adding too much code
to my binary.”
[Farid] is
learning a lot here,
and you might too.
For instance, using
pencil lead
(graphite) as a
lubricant on sliding
3D-printed parts is
new to us, but makes
sense. We’ll have to
try that out.
And while this is
a simple desktop
tracker, with alotmore
mechanical design,
the same basics
could be put to real
use for pointing a
receiver dish. Of
course, who says you
need fancy motors
and computers to
point a satellite
dish anyway? If you
work on your arm
muscles a bit,you
could become the
satellite pointer.
Somewhere between
9,500 and 9,900
years ago, three
Scandinavian
teenagers were
hanging out,
chewing gum after
a meal.
Specifically, they
were chewing pitch
or tar made from the
bark of birch trees.
Many millennia
removed,
archaeologists
analyzed the spit
out wads and
discovered what the
teens had recently
eaten (red fox,
hazelnut, deer, and
apple), as well as
the state of their
oral health (poor).
The findings were
published in the
journal Scientific
Reports in
2024. It’s among
the earliest known
examples of chewing
gum in the
archaeological
record, but it’s far
from the only one.
Humans have
been gnawing on
rubbery bits of
indigestible gunk
for a long, long
time. Gum chewing
independently arose
across different
cultures and regions
at different times,
says Jennifer
Mathews, an
anthropologist at
Trinity University
in San Antonio,
Texas. In Mexico,
for instance, Mayans
and later Aztecs
chewed chicle, a
substance derived
from the milky latex
of the tropical
sapodilla tree.
Chicle ultimately
led to the creation
and commodification
of the modern
chewing gum we know
today, as described
in Mathews’ 2009
book, Chicle:
The Chewing Gum of
the Americas, From
the Ancient Maya to
William Wrigley.
Aztecs also chewed
natural bitumen,
a petroleum-based
material similar to
asphalt that often
washes up on
shorelines,
sometimes on its own
and sometimes mixed
with chicle. It was
a central enough
part of Aztec
culture that they
wrote up rules for
it. It was
considered uncouth
for anyone besides
young children or
elderly women to
chew it publicly,
says Mathews.
Elsewhere, people
chewed on gums
derived from plants
like mastic in
ancient Greece–which
became the root of
the
word mastication–terebinth
resin in Central
Asia, or spruce gum
among Indigenous
Americans.
“They’re using
what they have in
their environment to
fix a problem,” says
Mathews. Clearly, as
it showed up so many
times in so many
places, gum served a
need.
Why we chew
In the absence of
toothpaste and
dentists, people
found their own ways
to keep their mouths
feeling as hygienic
as possible. Chewing
gum filled in some
of those gaps and
its primary purpose
across cultures was
to clean the teeth,
freshen the breath,
and boost oral
health, Mathews
explains. Mastic and
chicle alike are
commonly described
as having pleasant,
sweet, and piney or
woodsy flavors–
probably a
preferable smell and
taste to whatever
bits of food might
linger between the
teeth after meals.
Today, sugar free
gum canoffer
some smile benefits,
according to the
American Dental
Association (though
overdo it andyou
could end up witha
jaw disorder).
EASTER
EDITION: We
have a Tech-in-a-
Day course today at
the CAARA clubhoue,
it looks like ten
are signed up....
Inside a Fake
WiFi Repeater
Over the years we
have seen a lot of
fake electronics,
ranging from fake
power saving devices
that you plug into
an outlet, to fake
car ECU optimizers
that you stick into
the OBD port. These
are all similar in
that they fake
functionality while
happily lighting up
a LED or two to
indicate that
they’re doing
‘something’. Less
expected here was
that we’d be seeing
fake WiFi repeaters,
but recently [Big
Clive] got his hands
on one and undertookthe
arduous task of
reverse-engineering
it.
The simple
cardboard box which
it comes in claims
that it’s a 2.4 GHz
unit that operates
at 300 Mbps, which
would be quite
expected for the
price. [Clive]
obtained a real
working WiFi
repeater previously
that did boast
similar
specifications and
did indeed work. The
dead giveaway that
it is a fake are the
clearly fake
antennae, along with
the fact that once
you plug it in, no
new WiFi network
pops up or anything
else.
Inside the case –
which looks very
similar to the
genuine repeater –
there is just a
small PCB attached
to the USB
connector. On the
PCB are a 20 Ohm
resistor and a blue
LED, which means
that the LED is
being completely
overdriven as well
and is likely to die
quite rapidly.
Considering that a
WiFi repeater is
supposed to require
a setup procedure,
it’s possible that
these fake repeaters
target an audience
which does not quite
understand what
these devices are
supposed to do, but
they can also catch
more informed buyers
unaware who thought
they were buying
some of the cheap
real ones. Caveat
emptor, indeed.
HAMS GAIN EXEMPTION
IN IOWA'S
DISTRACTED-DRiVING
LAW
JIM/ANCHOR: Our top
story this week is
about the
distracted-driving
law in states around
the US that
prohibits drivers
from sending text
messages or
performing other
functions with a
handheld device.
Iowa has just become
the 31st state to
add language to
their law exempting
licensed hams from
those restrictions.
Dave Parks WB8ODF
tells us what that
means.
DAVE: Amateur radio
operators in Iowa
have won an
exemption to the
state's new
distracted-driving
law that takes
effect on the 1st of
July. The governor
signed the bill into
law on the 2nd of
April after both the
state House and
Senate passed it
overwhelmingly. It
bans drivers from
using mobile phones
or any wireless
device while behind
the wheel unless it
is in hands-free or
voice-activated
mode. The bill,
which was five years
in the making,
exempts licensed
hams who are using
two-way radios. Iowa
joins 30 other
states, including
New York, Arizona
and Minnesota, in
granting hams
permission to
operate their radios
while driving.
This is Dave Parks
WB8ODF.
(DES MOINES
REGISTER; KCCI DES
MOINES; ARRL)
**
REGULATOR SEEKS
COMMENT ON
AUSTRALIA'S
CLASS-LICENSE
CONDITIONS
JIM/ANCHOR: In
Australia, the
communications
regulator is looking
for input on some
minor changes in
language affecting
the nation's new
amateur Class
License, as we hear
from Graham Kemp
VK4BB.
GRAHAM: The
Radiocommunications
Licence Conditions
Determination 2015,
which provides
conditions on the
use of amateur radio
assigned and
non-assigned
licences, is being
reviewed by The
Australian
Communications and
Media Authority
before it expires on
1 October 2025.
While many amateurs
now operate under
the
Radiocommunications
Class Licence 2023,
existing
non-assigned amateur
licences will
continue to exist
and operate under
the conditions of
the 2015 Amateur LCD
until they expire.
The authority's goal
is to fine-tune the
language of the LCD
so it aligns with
the new amateur
Class Licence.
Although the ACMA is
seeking comments
from the public, the
authority stresses
that this review is
not considering
major changes, such
as amateur access to
bands, but a list of
simple
recommendations that
are now available
for viewing in draft
form.
Comments are due no
later than Monday
the 26th of May at 5
p.m. AEST.
To see the draft
document, follow the
link in the text
version of this
week's newscast at
arnewsline.org
**
SILENT KEY: BOB FAY,
WBØNPN, EMERGENCY
RESPONDER AND MENTOR
JIM/ANCHOR: Hams in
Ohio are mourning
the loss of a
friend, a mentor and
a familiar face to
visitors at the
Voice of America
Museum. We learn
about him from Neil
Rapp WB9VPG.
NEIL: If you've ever
been to the Voice of
America Museum in
West Chester, Ohio,
it's possible you
met Bob Fay, WBØNPN.
He was an active
member and past
officer of the West
Chester Amateur
Radio Association
which has its shack
inside the museum.
Bob became a Silent
Key on the 5th of
April.
First licensed in
1973, Bob was
especially devoted
to public service
and emergency
communications in
different states
through the years.
He had been active
in Hamilton County
Ohio ARES as well as
Lake County Illinois
RACES and was a
special deputy
sheriff for the
Hennepin County,
Minnesota Mobile
Amateur Radio Corps.
He had also been
deeply involved in
emergency
communications in
Riverside and Los
Angeles counties in
California.
His long tenure as a
ham deepened his
appreciation for
radio and he
especially loved
sharing his
enthusiasm and
expertise with the
next generation. A
proud moment for him
was his receipt of
an Elmer Award in
2016 from
Christopher Brault,
KD8YVJ - now KK8C --
after Chris became
the 2015 recipient
of the Hiram Percy
Maxim Award from the
ARRL.
Bob was 89.
This is Neil Rapp
WB9VPG.
(JOCELYN BRAULT,
KD8VRX, QRZ.COM)
**
SILENT KEY: SHIRLEY
HARDSTAFF, VK7HSC,
INNOVATOR AND
ADVOCATE
JIM/ANCHOR: Hams in
Australia -
especially the
close-knit community
of YLs in Tasmania -
are grieving after
one of their own has
become a Silent Key.
They describe as a
leader, an innovator
and inspiring force,
as we hear from John
Williams VK4JJW.
JOHN: Remembered for
her leadership and
her personal touch
as president of the
North West Tasmania
Amateur Radio Club,
Shirley Hardstaff
VK7HSC, had been
immersed in amateur
radio since the
first day she got
her licence.
A familiar face to
many in the
Australian Ladies
Amateur Radio
Association, or
ALARA, and at many
gatherings in
Tasmania, Shirley
became a Silent Key
on the 5th of April.
Her friends recalled
her as someone with
a leadership style
that brought a
personal touch to YL
meet-ups, placing
less of an emphasis
on business and
committee
formalities and more
focus on social
interaction. In
2019, she organised
and funded the
Bi-Monthly Chat and
Show which was held
at the Penguin Rec
Centre and later the
Ulverstone Rec
Centre, until 2021.
Her on-air presence
embraced traditional
HF as well as other
modes, including
Echolink, DMR, IRLP
and SSTV. She often
served as stand-in
net control for the
Mount Duncan Net and
a big supporter of
the Scouting event
Jamboree on the Air.
Shirley, who was the
VK7 representative
to ALARA from 2010
to 2014, was elected
president of the
North West Tasmania
Amateur Radio Club
in 2010. She stepped
down in 2023. She
and her late
husband, Max, VK7KY,
were widely known
for their travels
and were familiar
faces at ham radio
events around
Tasmania.
Shirley was 83.
This is John
Williams VK4JJW.
(NORMA O'HARE,
VK2YL, ANNE LANDERS,
VK7BYL)
**
ZERO RETRIES
NEWSLETTER HOSTING
INAUGURAL CONFERENCE
JIM/ANCHOR: The Zero
Retries newsletter,
which offers readers
articles on
technology and
innovation in ham
radio, is branching
out to host its
first digital
conference later
this year. It will
be held in
Washington State. We
have details from
George Zafiropoulos
KJ6VU.
GEORGE: September
will be a big month
for technology and
innovation in
amateur radio – and
at the inaugural
Zero Retries Digital
Conference, many of
the articles readers
have enjoyed in the
newsletter will come
to life: Those
attending can expect
to hear about the
IP400 Networking
Project, and see
demonstrations of
the M17 Digital
Voice/Data system
and the MMDVM-TNC
data system.
Conference manager
Tina Stroh KD7WSF
expects to put out
requests for
presenters very soon
and will make a
sign-up sheet
available online.
The conference will
be held on the 13th
of September at the
Edward D. Hansen
Conference Center in
Everett, Washington.
The Hansen
conference center
will be transformed
into a kind of
epicenter of digital
innovation at that
time. The Zero
Retries conference
is taking place just
as GRCon 2025 wraps
up. GRCon is the
annual conference
for the GNU Radio
project and
community, That
conference runs from
Monday September 8th
through to Friday
September 12th.
Although the two
events share the
same venue, they are
not connected to one
another.
Invitations to the
Zero Retries
conference are
expected to be sent
out shortly.
This is George
Zafiropoulos KJ6VU.
(ZERO RETRIES)
**
BIG WELCOME FOR
YOUNGSTERS AT
HAMVENTION ON MAY
17TH
JIM/ANCHOR: If you
are a high school
student, or even
younger, the easiest
way to attend
Hamvention is to
simply show up on
Saturday the 17th of
May at the Greene
County Fair and Expo
Center. Admission is
free that day for
youngsters. Young
visitors who want an
experience that's
designed just for
them are also able
to attend the Youth
Rally, a special
day-long program
designed to offer
students a variety
of hands-on
experiences in
amateur radio. It is
led by Steve
Goodgame, K5ATA, the
ARRL's education and
learning manager.
Students get to take
part in a short
on-air sprint,
contact a parachute
mobile radio
operator and learn
about satellite
communications.
Youngsters are
encouraged to bring
a 2-meter HT if they
have one.
Unlike admission to
the fairgrounds,
advance registration
is recommended for
the Youth Rally and
costs $20.
(ARRL)
**
NOMINATE OUR NEXT
YOUNG HAM OF THE
YEAR
JIM/ANCHOR: Each
year, the Amateur
Radio Newsline Bill
Pasternak Memorial
Young Ham of the
Year Award receives
nominations of
promising young hams
who truly impress
our judges. It is
time once again to
give them an
opportunity at the
recognition they
deserve. Consider
nominating an
amateur radio
operator 18 years of
age or younger here
in the continental
United States.
Consider someone who
has talent, promise
and a commitment to
the spirit of ham
radio. Find
application forms on
our website
arnewsline.org under
the "YHOTY" tab. We
are accepting
nominations through
May 31st.
**
FIRST YOTA JUNIOR
CAMP
JIM/ANCHOR: The
application period
is open for Youth on
the Air Junior Camp,
which is makiNg its
debut this year for
amateur radio
operators under the
age of 15.
Applicants must have
a valid US ham radio
license and will be
expected to attend
with a parent or
guardian who needn't
have a license
themselves. This is
a three-day version
of the YOTA region
wide camps for older
youngsters and is
modeled after the
Kids on the Air
program in IARU
Region 1. It will
take place in July
at the Voice of
America Museum in
West Chester, Ohio.
For details visit
yota.org.
**
HAM RADIO TAKES 1ST
JOURNEY ON FLORIDA
TRAIL EVENT
JIM/ANCHOR: In the
US, a recent 10-mile
hike along one
section of the
Florida Scenic Trail
became a journey of
discovery, not
necessarily for the
hikers who know the
trail well - but for
the activity’s
organizers. They
learned the value
that amateur radio
can bring to the
experience for
everyone. Jack
Parker W8ISH tells
us more about it.
JACK: A group known
as the Tropical
Trekkers has been
celebrating the
anniversary of a
10-mile stretch of
the Florida Scenic
Trail since it was
opened to hikers 7
years ago. With
mobile phones in
hand, the organizers
have traditionally
tracked the
celebration's hikers
with as much
accuracy as
intermittent
cellular service
would allow. That
is, until this year.
In late March, seven
amateur radio
operators were
dispatched to
checkpoints every 3
or so miles along
the trail and used
VHF simplex to
ensure that no
hikers became lost,
injured or in need
of assistance during
this annual event.
Mike Gormley,
WA8VEC, a longtime
trail supporter,
told Newsline that
the presence of
radio was a natural
for the trail event
- and he was
relieved when his
offer to bring a
team of volunteers
was accepted.
Mike has known the
needs of trail life
well. For years he
has been known as
“Water Boy” for his
regular placement
and replenishment of
fresh water jugs
along a 30-mile
stretch of trail
during hiking
season. So far this
year, he has already
distributed 195
gallons.
He also volunteers
with the Tropical
Trekkers, his
chapter of the
Florida Trail
Association, to help
with the physical
maintenance of 70
miles of trail.
Nine months before
this year's event,
Mike and his team of
radio volunteers -
some of whom are
also part of ARES or
activate POTA -
started developing
written forms and a
protocol for
tracking the hikers’
whereabouts. On the
day of the hike,
they even provided
return shuttle
service for those
who finished at the
far end of the
trail.
This is not the
journey's end,
however. The team
has been invited
back and is already
planning for next
year. Mike said that
perhaps next time
they’ll make use of
Winlink too.
This is Jack Parker
W8ISH.
(MIKE GORMLEY,
WA8VEC)
**
RSGB HONORS 2 FROM
HAMSCI FOR
PROPAGATION STUDIES
JIM/ANCHOR: The
Radio Society of
Great Britain has
recognized
achievements of two
key members of the
US-based citizen
science
investigation team,
HamSCI. Jeremy Boot
G4NJH tells us more.
JEREMY:
Congratulations to
Nathaniel Frissell,
W2NAF, and Gwyn
Griffiths, G3ZIL,
whose studies of
ionospheric
propagation with Ham
Radio Science
Citizen
Investigation, or
HamSCI, has been
honoured by the
Radio Society of
Great Britain.
The Les Barclay
Memorial Award has
been given to
Nathaniel for
HamSCI's
contributions in
elevating amateur
radio-based citizen
science to a higher
profile. The award
is being given to
him by the RSGB
Propagation Studies
Committee. He is the
founder of HamSCI.
Gwyn is the author
of a series of
articles published
in several issues of
the RSGB magazine,
RadCom, in 2024. She
has been recognised
through the
society's
Wortley-Talbot
Trophy which
recognises in
particular her
article, "Height of
Reflections at HF,"
that appeared in the
August 2024 magazine
issue. She is a
longtime member of
the HamSCI
community.
This is Jeremy Boot
G4NJH.
(HAMSCI)
**
WORLD OF DX
In the World of DX,
Andy, G7SQW, is
operating as
EJ/G7SQW from
Arranmore Island,
IOTA number EU-121,
on the 19th and 20th
of April. Andy will
be on the HF bands
using SSB and the
digital modes. See
QRZ.com for QSL
details.
Members of the Rede
dos Emissores
Portugueses will be
activating three
callsigns marking
World Amateur Radio
Day between the 18th
and 24th of April.
Listen for CR1IARU
from the Azores,
IOTA number EU-175,
CR3IARU from
Madeira, IOTA number
AF-014 and CR5IARU
from mainland
Portugal. QSLs via
CT1REP.
Peter, PD1RP, is
celebrating the 80th
anniversary since
the end of the
German occupation of
the Netherlands
during World War II.
He is on the air as
PD80FREE until the
30th of June. All
QSOs will be
confirmed
automatically via
the bureau.
(425 DX BULLETIN)
**
KICKER: THE SUMMIT
OF EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
JIM/ANCHOR:
Emergency
preparedness comes
in many shapes. It
can be an organized
drill, a regularly
scheduled net or, as
three hams in
California recently
found out, it can be
as simple as leaving
your 2-meter rig on
and monitoring it.
Ralph Squillace
brings us this
week's final story -
a tale of rescue
following serious
injury on a
snow-encrusted SOTA
summit..
RALPH: Greg
Davidson, KF6CNS,
recalls sitting in
his garage with a
friend in late March
when a call for help
came over on the
2-meter simplex
calling frequency.
Vincent LeVeque
KF6FLJ had been
hoping for a day of
SOTA on Mt.
Williamson in the
Angeles National
Forest when his hike
ended in a 150-foot
slide down the
hillside and a
bone-breaking crash
into a tree. Vincent
had dropped his
mobile phone; his
emergency beacon had
little power
remaining - but he
was able to call for
help on his handy
talkie. Greg
received that call
50 miles away thanks
to a large
commercial antenna
at home. His
immediate telephone
outreach eventually
led him to Will
Richards KJ6JJB,
operations leader of
county sheriff's
Montrose Search &
Rescue. Will
dispatched a
helicopter and
stayed on the phone
with Greg who was
maintaining radio
contact with
Vincent. Pinning
down the location's
coordinates
precisely posed a
challenge for the
helicopter but
Vincent was soon
spotted, his bright
orange windbreaker
standing out against
the snow.
Vincent told
Newsline he was
airlifted to the
nearest trauma
center for surgery
on his femur and he
is now recovering.
He said Greg's
attentiveness to the
calling frequency
that day may well
have saved his life.
Will quickly noted,
however, that
Vincent himself did
some emergency
preparedness too:
the dashboard of his
parked car held a
map of his intended
hiking route -- and
another option to
track him down. He
said that both
Vincent and Greg
"did everything
right."
FRIDAY
EDITION: TRUMP
SOLVES
EGG PROBLEM......Ten-year-old
Lee Allen, a
fifth-grade student
at
Gentry Intermediate
School with a mind
to remember
technical details,
earned his amateur
radio technician
class license,
receiving his
official FCC license
and call sign,
KJ5KXW, on April
15....Brit
soldiers tune radio
waves to
fry drone swarms
for pennies....
Teardown of
Casio Credit
Card-Sized Radio
These days we
don’t get too fussed
about miniaturized
electronics, not
when you can put an
entire processor and
analog circuitry on
a chip the size of a
grain of sand.
Things were quite
different back in
the 1980s, with the
idea of a credit
card-sized radio
almost preposterous.
This didn’t stop the
engineers over at
Casio from having a
go at this and many
other nutty ideas,
with [Matt] from Techmoan having
a go at taking
one of these
miniaturized marvels
apart.
On the chopping
block is the FM
stereo device that
was featured ina
previous episode.
Out of the four
credit card-sized
radios in that
video, the one with
the rechargeable
battery (obviously)
had ceased to work,
so it was the
obvious choice for a
teardown. This
mostly meant peeling
off the glued-on top
and bottom, after
which the circuitry
became visible.
In addition to
the battery with a
heavily corroded
contact, the thin
PCB contains a grand
total of three ICs
in addition to the
analog circuitry.
These were
identified by
[Spritetm] as an
AM/FM tuner system
IC (TA7792), an FM
PLL MPX (TA7766AF)
and a headphone
amplifier (TA7767F),
all of them
manufactured by
Toshiba.
Although [Matt]
reckons this was a
destructive
teardown, we’re
looking forward to
the repair video
where a fresh cell
is soldered in and
the case glued back
together.
THURSDAY
EDITION:
Sunny and brisk here
on Cape Ann....
Could the
airship be the
answer to
sustainable air
travel – or is it
all a load of hot
air?
Amid talk of
sustainable
aviation fuel
and electric
flights, there's
another form of
air travel
currently being
mooted as a
green
alternative to
flying: the
airship.
Technically,
the airshipisall
a load of hot
air: a typically
cigar-shaped,
self-propelled
aircraft made of
a vast balloon
filled with
nearly
weightless
lifting gases,
featuring an
attached car or
gondola for
carrying
passengers, crew
and cargo. If it
conjures up a
black-and-white
image of the
past, you're
right – airships
were popular at
the beginning of
the 20th Century
before the rise
of aviation as
we know it. And
now, they're
making a
comeback.
Modern
technological
advances, paired
with a need to
develop the
aviation
industry as it
struggles slowly
towards net
zero, have led
aeronautical
engineers to
re-examine the
airship. New
materials –
including new
forms of
ultralight nylon
– developed
since its heyday
have made a new
type of aircraft
possible.
Replacing
flammable
hydrogen with
helium has
allowed for
safer
development and
aims to avoid a
repeat of the
Hindenburg
disaster, the
luxury German
airship that
exploded live on
film in 1937.
The new advances
and stronger
aviation
standards mean
that really the
only thing these
new airships
have in common
with the
Hindenburg is
their shape and
the fact that
they're using a
gas lighter than
air.
Though an
airship, which
typically flies
at around
100-130km/h,
won't ever reach
the speeds of a
jet plane, they
are being talked
about as forms
of slow travel
like cruise
ships and night
trains, where
the experience
makes up for the
speed. Airships
fly at a lower
altitude than a
plane, with
unpressurised
cabins where you
can open and
look out of the
window, making
it more
comfortable for
passengers. The
large balloon
also takes far
less energy to
power – and
potentially
could operate
with electric
engines powering
liftoff and
steering, making
them a
zero-carbon
emitting form of
air transport.
"It's good
that we are
testing
different ideas
and innovations,
as exploring
various
solutions is key
to improving
aviation and
making it more
sustainable in
the future,"
said leading
aviation expert
Thomas Thessen,
adjunct
professor at the
University of
Aalborg and
chief analyst at
Scandinavian
Airlines. "The
biggest
advantage I can
see is that they
can stay in the
air for a long
time, and their
ability to fly
vertically up."
anywhere that
has a flat space
large enough for
them, which could be
somewhere as simple
as a field,
providing there is
something to tether
it to. This also
means that they can
help rescue people
people in the event
of natural
disasters, where
internet and
telephony may be
knocked out.
The world's
largest
aircraft, the
LTA Pathfinder
1, is currently
being tested in
Silicon Valley,
California. The
124.5m by 20m
new age zeppelin
is equivalent in
size to fourGoodyear
blimpsand
longer than
three Boeing
737s.LTA–
which stands for
"Lighter Than
Air" – is one of
a handful of
airship
manufacturers
around the world
currently poised
to enter the
aviation market.
Founded by
Sergey Brin,
former president
of Alphabet,
Google's parent
company, the
company believes
that
next-generation
airshipscan
reduce the
carbon footprint
of aviationby
using the helium
inside the
balloon to do
the lifting,
rather than a
carbon-emitting
jet engine, and
using far
smaller engines
for thrust.
Applications for
their airship
include more
efficient cargo
transport from
point to point
(rather than
port to port);
and humanitarian
aid, where the
airship can
support relief
efforts by
delivering
supplies even if
runways, roads
and ports are
damaged.
They are not
alone: French
companyFlying
Whalesis
also currently
developing
airships for
cargo use,
aiming to reduce
the
environmental
impact of cargo
transport; while
British firmHybrid
Air Vehicles
(HAV)are
focused on how a
hybrid airship –
using electric
engines as well
as helium – can
unlock a
zero-emission
form of air
travel.
The New England QSO
Party on May 3rd and
4th is a great time
to check out antenna
systems and offers a
moderately paced
opportunity to work
new states and
countries. You'll
find a wide variety
of participants,
from newcomers to
experienced
contesters, all
interested in making
contacts with New
England stations.
Our goal is to get
every one of the
counties in New
England on the air
so we hope you will
encourage your
members to join in
the fun! Even if you
can join the fun for
a couple of hours,
we'd appreciate it!Will
you be QRV? Let us
know with a message
toinfo@neqp.org
The
New England QSO
Party is 20 hours
long overall, in two
sections with a
civilized break for
sleep on Saturday
night. It runs from
4 pm Saturday until
1 am Sunday, then 9
am Sunday until 8 pm
Sunday. Operate on
CW, SSB and/or
digital modes on
80-40-20-15-10
meters. For each
QSO you'll give your
callsign, a signal
report and your
county/state. Top
scorers can earn a
plaque and everyone
who sends in a log
with 25 QSOs or more
will get a
certificate. The
goal is to work
stations anywhere in
the world - and
their goal is to
work New England
stations, so you'll
be very popular!
Hello ARRL
Public Information
Volunteers,
You are invited
to join members of
the ARRL Public
Relations Committee
as we host a live,
interactive,
workshop to help
your club get ready
for2025
ARRL Field Day.
The event will be
live on Zoom
Wednesday, April 23,
2025, at 8:30 PM
EDT.
How to build
a social media
strategy to
engage members
of your local
community.
Press
releases and
media strategy
to get the news
to help you
promote the
event.
Tips for
doing great
interviews and
media hits.
Getting a
proclamation
from your local
officials.
Building
your club’s
visual asset
library to help
promote next
year (and
throughout the
year)
Much more!
You’ll have a
chance to get your
questions answered
by veteran PR
experts from around
the ham radio
community.If
you can’t join us
for the live event,
a replay will be
posted after.
If you haven’t
already, please
download the2025
ARRL Field Day
Public Relations Kit[PDF].
It will give you a
toolkit to get
started – including
a press release
template that you
can use for your
activation.
We’re seeing a
lot of lift for ham
radio from this
month’s ARRL Ham
Radio Open House
program, let’s
continue that
momentum into the
largest amateur
radio event – ARRL
Field Day!
The sun is our
planet’s source of
natural
illumination, and
though we’ve
mastered making
artificial light
sources, it remains
extremely difficult
to copy our nearby
star. As if matching
the intensity wasn’t
enough, its spectral
quality,
collimation, and
atmospheric
scattering make it
an special
challenge. [Victor
Poughon]has
given it a go though,
using a bank of LEDs
and an interesting
lens system.
We’re used to
lenses being
something that can
be bought
off-the-shelf, but
this design eschews
that convenience by
having the lenses
manufactured and
polished as an
array, by JLC. The
scattering is taken
care of by a sheet
of inkjet printer
film, and the LEDs
are mounted on a set
of custom PCBs.
The result is
certainly a very
bright light, and
one whose
collimation delivers
a sun-like effect of
coming from a great
distance. It may not
be as bright as the
real thing, but it’s
certainly something
close. If you’d like
something to compare
it to,it’s
not the first such
light we’ve featured.
WEDNESDAY
EDITION: I
love this hobby, it
takes he place of
work!....Nearfest
tickets available at
HRO in Salem, it's
just around the
corner....
EMAIL:
Hi Jon..
I read the full
text of the
comments that
the FCC invited
regarding
streamlining and
reimagining FCC
rules as related
to Amateur
Radio. It
occurs to me
that the ARRL's
proposals are
emblematic of
what's been
going on in
society in
general and with
the ARRL in
recent decades.
We have
abandoned the
idea of
"incentive".
Recall
"Incentive
Licensing" which
the League
pushed back a
half century
ago. The idea
was that if one
works and
studies harder
and demonstrates
proficiency more
privileges would
be conveyed.
The ARRL's
latest proposal
is all about
giving more
privilege to
those who just
show up, a
participation
trophy of
sorts. Novices
and Techs used
to have to put
in some effort
to get more
frequencies or
modes. Now
Newington wants
to just hand it
out like candy.
I see nothing
for the Extra
Class folks who
have at least
achieved
something.
Wouldn't it be
swell if Extras
only could have
enhanced phone
allocations on
40 meters to
snag the DX that
hangs out below
7125 khz.
Instead, the
ARRL proposes
throwing the
Extras out of
3600 to 3625.
Perhaps Extras
only could
legally run more
than 1500 watts
output, although
I admit that
would be
difficult to
enforce.
Wouldn't it be
nice if Extras
had a 30 minute
ID interval
instead of 10
minutes. It
works in Canada
and their world
hasn't fallen
apart yet.
The point is
that the ARRL
seems intent on
giving stuff
away to folks
who show little
inclination to
upgrade
themselves, as
easy as that is
with our current
exam content.
They must be a
bunch of
Democrats down
there in
Newington.
73 de Norm
W1ITT
Heath’s First
Amateur Radio Kits
Heath’s first Ham
rig, the AT-1
transmitter, was
introduced for
Christmas of 1951 at
$29.50. That’s
equivalent to about
$390.00 today, which
is still a
low-priced piece of
amateur radio
equipment as things
go. The AT-1 was a
pretty simple radio.
There was a 6AG7
oscillator and a 6L6
amplifier. Of course
you needed a
rectifier, and that
was the 5U4,
developing a few
hundred volts for
the 6L6 amplifier
and 6AG7 crystal
oscillator. The
radio covered 80,
40, 20 and 10
meters. It was CW
only, with a
whopping 12 to 16
watts of output
power. It had a
socket on the back
for a VFO. As you
can see from the
photograph below,
the main source of
frequency control
was a crystal,
housed in the old
FT-243 style case.
The AT-1 was a very
popular product, and
its sales certainly
sent a message
within Heath
Company: Ham radio
equipment was going
to be a big market
for kits.
Heath’s next move
in amateur radio
products was to
start introducing
various accessories:
the VF-1 VFO, built
around a 6AU6,
appeared in 1952. It
was very popular. I
had one of them as ayoung
high school student.
The AC-1 antenna
coupler (the first
of the Heathkit
antenna tuners),
consisted ofa
coil with switched
taps and a variable
capacitor, and it
used a neon bulb as
a tuning indicator.
It sold for a
whopping $14.50, so
it made a great
little Christmas
present. Heath also
offered a grid-dip
meter called the
GD-1. That was one
of the first kits
that I owned, and I
still have it
somewhere. The GD-1
went from 2 to 250megacycles,
and it would go down
to 350 KHz, whoops,
kilocycles as it was
called in that time,
with optional
accessory coils. It
used a 6AF4 or a
6T4, and I suspect
the tube that was
shipped in the kit
depended on
inventory on hand.
In the first two
years, Heath sold
more than 15,000 of
those little
grid-dip meters.
Very quickly, Heath
realized thattest
equipment for the
Ham marketwas
going to be a very
good product line.
The tube-based
grid-dip meter was
replaced in 1960 by
a grid dipper that
used a tunnel diode.
Clearly, some of
these Ham products
lasted a long time,
considering that the
original grid-dip
meter lasted eight
years.
Another big and
very, very
well-known
transmitter kit was
the DX-100, which
Heath introduced in
1955. It sold for
$189. I didn’t do a
long-term pricing on
that one, but it’s
got to be up there
in the many, many
hundreds of
equivalent dollars.
It covered 160
through 10 meters,
including 11 meters.
It boasted 100 watts
on AM, and 120 watts
on CW. This radio
represents a very
early use of dual
6146 final output
tubes. Heath
pioneered that area.
Heath was
beginning to do some
pretty innovative
circuit design in
the mid-1950s. The
DX-100 had built-in
VFOs and four
crystal positions.
It also weighed a
hundred pounds. That
was unbelievably
heavy when you think
of today’s modern
transceivers. The
original DX-100 had
a copper-plated
steel chassis. Later
Heath introduced an
upgraded version
with a couple of
changes. The
copper-clad chassis
became a
plated-steel
chassis.The
number of crystal
positions was
reduced to one, and
I think that one
crystal may have
been internal to the
unit because it was
becoming very clear
that Hams wanted a
VFO.
By 1956, one
Heath flyer had 22
pages of products,
and Heath was
mailing three or
four flyers a year.
By now, at least two
pages of each flyer
were devoted to
amateur radio. The
key product, the
DX-100, was the big
headliner. Heath had
also introduced a
receiver, the AR-3.
The VF-1 VFO was
still a big seller.
You couldn’t put an
AC-1 antenna tuner
on the DX-100
because it could not
handle the DX-100’s
output power.
The DX-35
transmitter was
aimed at novices.
That was my first
commercial
transmitter. It was
crystal-controlled,
selling for $56, but
you could connect aVFO
to it. It was a good
novice transmitter.
The AM-1 was an
antenna meter, which
allowed you to
measure antenna
impedance. You could
put the QF-1
Q-Multiplier on a
receiver, which
allowed you to
sharpen the tuning
or null interfering
signals. And, of
course, there was
the GD-1 grid dip
meter, which went
through several
small design
variations.
Heath offered
nine amateur radio
products and 42 test
equipment kits in
1956. The real focus
was on service
instruments at that
time. Black and
white TVs based on
vacuum tubes were
going into
everyone’s home, and
their reliability
wasquestionable
at best, so there
was a huge need for
lots of test
equipment. Many
people were running
small service shops,
especially part
time, out of their
homes and basements,
and they all needed
test equipment.
Twisting
Magnetism to Control
Electron Flow
If you ever
wished electrons
would just behave,
this one’s for you.
A team from Tohoku,
Osaka, and
Manchester
Universities has
cracked openan
interesting
phenomenon in the
chiral helimagnet
α-EuP3: they’ve
induced one-way
electron flow
without bringing
diodes into play.
Their findings arepublishedin
the Proceedings of
the National Academy
of Sciences.
The twist in this
is quite literal. By
coaxing europium
atoms into a chiral
magnetic spiral, the
researchers found
they could generate
rectification:
current that prefers
one direction over
another. Think of it
as adding a one-way
street in your
circuit, but based
on magnetic
chirality rather
than semiconductors.
When the material
flips to an achiral
(ferromagnetic)
state, the one-way
effect vanishes. No
asymmetry, no
preferential flow.
They’ve essentially
toggled the electron
highway signs with
an external magnetic
field. This elegant
control over band
asymmetry might lead
to low-power,
high-speed data
storage based on
magnetic chirality.
If you are
curious how all this
ties back to quantum
theory, you can
trace the roots of
chiral electron flow
back tothe
early days of
quantum
electrodynamics–
when physicists
first started
untangling how
particles and fields
really interact.
There’s a whole
world of weird
physics waiting for
us. In the field of
chemistry, chirality
has been covered by
Hackaday,
foreshadowing the
lesser favorable
ways of use.Read
up on the articleand
share with us what
you think.
TUESDAY
EDITION:
Times sure have
changed in
Boston....
Gerson
Strassberg,
WA2JXX invented
this item which
no
self-respecting
geek would have
been without.
Now, you could
probably only
find one on
e-bay.
Who is it?
Answer: Plastic
Pocket Protector
It's been
years since
I've seen a
plastic
pocket
protector,
but it was
designed to
slip into
your shirt
pocket and
hold your
ink pens.
Geek fashion
dictated
that you not
only have a
plastic
pocket
protector,
but also
have
multiple
pens tucked
into it.
ARRL Files
Comments Responding
to FCC Request for
Input
ARRL The
National
Association for
Amateur Radio®
filed comments
[PDF]with
the Federal
Communications
Commission in
response to its
request for
public input on
alleviating
unnecessary
regulatory
burdens by
deleting or
modifying rules,In
the Matter of
Delete, Delete,
Delete.Implementing
ARRL’s
suggestions
would promote
and protect the
art, science,
and enjoyment of
amateur radio,
and enhance the
development of
the next
generation of
radio amateurs.
In response
to ARRL’s
request, over
200 members
submitted
suggestions that
were reviewed
when considering
what rules
should be
deleted or
modified. ARRL
will continue to
engage with
members and
advocate for the
Amateur Radio
Service.
In its
filing, ARRL
asked the FCC to
delete or amend
the following
rules:
Delete the LF
and VHF/UHF
Symbol (Baud)
Rate and
Bandwidth
Limitations.
ARRL supports
the deletion of
these
restrictions as
proposed by the
Commission in
late 2023. Doing
so would enhance
Amateur
experimentation
with digital
technologies.
Update and
Modernize Entry
Level Technician
Class License
Privileges.
ARRL
reiterated its
earlier proposal
for extending
additional
limited
privileges for
Technician class
operators.
Adopting its
proposal would
provide new
licensees an
introductory
window to HF
data and phone
communications
that are at the
core of the
Amateur Radio
experience and
serve to
incentivize the
next generation
of technical
leaders just as
Novice CW HF
privileges did
for earlier
generations of
operators.
Modernize
80/75 Meter
Subband
Divisions.
ARRL
requested action
on an earlier
proposal that
would make more
efficient and
intense use of
the 80/75 meter
band. Changes in
technology and
modes since band
usage was last
addressed have
resulted in
overcrowding in
one band segment
that would be
alleviated by
adoption of
ARRL’s
proposal.
Delete and
Replace Obsolete
Digital Code
Limitations.
ARRL also
asked the FCC
remove
provisions that
refer to digital
codes that today
are obsolete and
permit Radio
Amateurs to
experiment
freely with new
digital codes,
so long as such
codes are
publicly
documented and
decodable over
the air.
Implement
Changes to Third
Party Rules
Adopted
Internationally
at WRC-03.
Although the
United States
fully supported
changes to the
ITU Radio
Regulations in
2003 that
removed a treaty
requirement for
third-party
messages, there
is no record of
this change
having been
considered and
the FCC’s rules
were never
conformed to the
new provision.
Being the only
nation known to
continue to
require a formal
treaty for such
purposes has
resulted in no
new such
treaties for
since the treaty
changed more
than two decades
ago. Thus ARRL
asked the FCC to
Implement rules
that are
consistent with
those
internationally
agreed to align
with the rest of
the world.
Delete
Amplifier Drive
Limitation.
ARRL
requested that
the Commission
act favorably on
a pending
proposal to
remove limits HF
amplifier gain
that add to
Amateur
equipment cost
and impede use
of new efficient
amplifier
technology.
Remove
Non-current
Personal
Information in
Amateur ULS
records.
ARRL
requested that
the FCC complete
a rule making in
which it
proposed that
only current
licensee
information to
be visible in
the public (ULS)
database. Right
now, if an
amateur changes
their address to
a Post Office
Box to shield
their home
address, the
previous address
remains visible.
ARRL advocates
for protecting
the privacy of
radio amateurs.
Delete
Obsolete
Identification
Requirement for
Special Call
Signs
Users of
special event
call signs are
required to
identify with
the FCC-issued
responsible call
sign at least
once each hour.This
can be
confusing,
especially on
data and CW
modes. ARRL
proposed
reliance on the
web-based
database that
clearly
identifies each
special event
call sign and
authorized
period of use.
Delete
Obsolete Paper
License
Replacement
Provision
The FCC no
longer mails
physical copies
of amateur radio
licenses, so
ARRL suggested
deleting the
rule that
provides for
sending paper
replacements as
obsolete.
TheFCC
notice[PDF]
generated a lot
of interest
among radio
amateurs, with
hundreds of
Amateurs
submitting
comments
directly to the
FCC as well as
responding to
ARRL’s request
for suggestions.
The FCC
deadline for
filing reply
comments is
April 28, 2025.
Extended Hours
for Voice of America
Museum During
Hamvention
Editor's Note:I
highly recommend
taking the time to
stop by the museum
on the way into
Hamvention.
Wonderful
collections and
exhibits, and great
insight into VOA
history.
The following
press release is
from the National
Voice of America
Museum of
Broadcasting:
Admission is
$10.00 at the door.
Our Amateur Radio
station WC8VOA will
be on the air to
operate. The museum
is a short drive
from Hamvention down
either Interstate 75
or Route 42 from
Xenia. GPS use
Crosley Blvd. New
exhibits include a
dedicated room for
vintage Amateur
Radio and shortwave
equipment. See the
first transmitter
for the VOA from
1942. Amateur Radio
shack with state of
the art equipment
from Yaesu, Icom and
Elecraft. Docents
and ARS operators
will be available to
enhance your visit
to the museum. The
museum has recently
undergone a major
renovation with many
upgrades to our
galleries including
a newly paved
parking lot.
For further
information you can
visit us atvoamuseum.orgorwc8voa.orgon
the web. You can
also find us on
Facebook at National
Voice of America
Museum of
Broadcasting. Our
regular hours are
Saturdays and
Sundays 1:00 until
4:00 PM.
We are located at
8070 Tylersville
Road, West Chester,
Ohio 45069. Phone at
513-777-0027.
MONDAY
EDITION:
Sunny start here on
the isle, we haven't
seen sun in days....South
Korea has a
statutory workweek
of 52 hours, which
might be
insufficient for
Samsung as its
rivals are outpacing
it in the
semiconductor race
because the
technology giant
became the first
company in the
region to receive
approval from the
government to
increase its weekly
working hours to 64.
This extension will
be applied to the
firm’s R&D staff
focused on chip
making, with the
change expected to
propel Samsung’s
competitiveness in
the industry.
ARTICLE...
For immediate
release
At its meeting on
March 27, 2025, the
Board of Directors
of Radio Amateurs of
Canada voted
unanimously to
cancel RAC’s plans
to operate a booth
at Hamvention
(Dayton) in Xenia,
Ohio in May. This
decision was not
taken lightly and
was made with deep
regret as our
members and
volunteers always
look forward to
attending this
significant
international
event.
Lors de sa
réunion du 27 mars
2025, le Conseil
d’administration de
Radio Amateurs du
Canada a voté à
l’unanimité
l’annulation du
projet de RAC de
tenir un kiosque à
la “Hamvention”
(Dayton) organisée
en mai à Xenia, en
Ohio. Cette décision
n’a pas été prise à
la légère et a été
rendue avec un
profond regret, car
nos membres et
bénévoles ont
toujours hâte
d’assister à cet
important événement
international.
The relationship
between Canada and
the United States
has become
increasingly
strained due to
recent trade
disputes and tariffs
imposed by the US
government. Adding
to these challenges,
controversial
remarks from US
leaders, including
suggestions of
Canada becoming the
51st state, have
heightened concerns
about Canadian
sovereignty.
Les relations
entre le Canada et
les États-Unis sont
de plus en plus
tendues en raison
des récents
différends
commerciaux et des
tarifs douaniers
imposés par le
gouvernement
américain. En plus
de ces défis, les
remarques
controversées faites
par divers
dirigeants
américains, au
nombre desquelles
les suggestions
selon lesquelles le
Canada deviendrait
le 51eÉtat,
ont accru les
inquiétudes
concernant la
souveraineté
canadienne.
For Canadians,
these tensions have
had tangible impacts
and there has been a
decline in
cross-border travel
and tourism.
Pour les
Canadiens, ces
tensions ont eu des
répercussions
tangibles et se sont
notamment traduites
par une réduction
des voyages
transfrontaliers et
du tourisme.
It is a complex
and evolving
situation, but it is
our hope that we
will be able to
return to Hamvention
in future years and
we hope that
Canadian Amateurs
who do attend the
event will have a
safe and enjoyable
experience.
Il s’agit là
d’une situation
complexe et
susceptible
d’évoluer d’heure en
heure, mais nous
espérons que nous
pourrons retourner à
la “Hamvention” dans
les années à venir,
et que les amateurs
canadiens qui
assisteront à cet
événement vivront
une expérience
agréable en toute
sérénité.
Allan Boyd,
VE3AJB/VE3EM
RAC President /
Président de RAC
Effort to Save
Marconi Towers in
Canada – Public
Invited to Vote on
Project
There’s an
effort underway
to save some of
Marconi’s
original towers,
and anonline
poll is open for
people to voteon
it being a
restoration
project through
the “Next Great
Save” project
from the
National Trust
for Canada.
Some of
Marconi’s first
messages were
received and
transmitted
using the Battle
Harbour Marconi
Towers, thought
to be the last
of their kind
standing in
North America.
News of Admiral
Robert Peary’s
1909 North Pole
expedition was
transmitted by
these towers.
After 100 years,
the twin towers
are in need of
repair.
To honor 150
years since
Marconi’s birth,
there are a
number of events
planned around
the world to
observe
Marconi’s
birthday and
International
Marconi Day.
In the United
States, from the
Port of
Baltimore,
Maryland, the
Nuclear Ship
Savannah Amateur
Radio Club will
operate K3S on
April 26 from
1330 - 2100Z.
Check spotting
networks for
frequency. See
QRZ.com info for
Savannah Awardqrz.com/db/k3s.
A QSL card is
available by
contacting Ulis
Fleming, 980
Patuxent Rd,
Odenton, MD
21113.
TheGreat
South Bay
Amateur Radio
Clubin
Babylon, New
York, will
operate W2GSB
from the Babylon
Village
Historical
Society Museum
for Marconi Day
on April 26,
1300 - 2030Z.
Frequencies
include 28.340,
21.250, 14.246,
and 7.245 MHZ.
WEEKEND
EDITION: The club
has its meeting
today with plans to
organize Field
Day.....Nearfest is
in the horizon as
well, New Englands
best hamfest....
RTL-SDR with
Only a Browser
Surely by now
you’ve at least
heard of RTL-SDR — a
software project
that let’s cheap TV
tuner dongles work
as a
software-defined
radios. A number of
projects and tools
have spun off the
original effort, but
in his latest video,
[Tech Minds] shows
off a particularly
unique take. It’s aWeb
browser-based radio
applicationthat
uses WebUSB, so it
doesn’t require the
installation of any
application
software. You can
see the program
operating in the
video below.
There are a few
things you should
know. First, you
need the correct USB
drivers for your
RTL-SDR. Second,
your browser must
support WebUSB, of
course. Practically,
that means you need
a Chromium-type
browser. You may
have to configure
your system to allow
raw access to the
USB port, too.
Watching the
video, you can see
that it works quite
well. According to
the comments, it
will work with a
phone, too, which is
an interesting idea.
The actualWeb
applicationis
available as open
source. It isn’t
going to compete
with a full-fledged
SDR program, but it
looked surprisingly
complete.
These devices
have grown from a
curiosity to a major
part of radio
hackingover
the years.
Firefox users can’t
use WebUSB — well,
notdirectly,
anyway.
Amateur Radio
Newsline Report
MOUNT ATHOS CONTACTS
DEEMED VALID TOWARD
DXCC
SKEETER/ANCHOR: Our
top story brings us
the resolution of a
question that had
been simmering since
the Mt. Athos
DXpedition team
terminated its
activation suddenly
this past January
amid controversy. If
you contacted the
team, there is some
good news for you,
as we hear from Jim
Damron N8TMW.
JIM: The DXCC Desk
of the ARRL has
determined that
contacts made with
the SV1GA/A team at
Mt. Athos this past
January meet the
criteria for
counting toward the
DXCC award program.
The ARRL made the
announcement on its
website on Friday,
the 4th of April. DX
chasers had been
waiting to hear
whether their QSOs
counted ever since
the team's planned
10-day operation was
quickly and
unexpectedly halted
amid controversy.
Local authorities
challenged whether
the hams had
obtained the
appropriate
permission to be
there.
Mt. Athos, an
autonomous region
governed by the
monastic community
in northeastern
Greece, is a World
Heritage Site and
28th on the ClubLog
Most Wanted List.
The ARRL ended its
announcement by
saying: [quote] "Any
future operations by
this team from Mt.
Athos will require
additional
documentation for
securing
accreditation for
DXCC credit."
[endquote]
This is Jim Damron
N8TMW.
(ARRL)
**
HAMS INVITED TO
MONITOR METEOR
SCATTER EVENTS
SKEETER/ANCHOR:
There will be April
showers - meteor
showers, that is -
and volunteers are
needed to monitor an
event this month
that is known as the
Lyrids shower. Andy
Morrison K9AWM has
the details
ANDY: This is a big
year for
meteor-scatter
experiments to be
conducted by HamSCI
during the Perseids
showers in August
and the Geminids
showers in December.
For hams who are
hoping to
participate in
either or both of
the Meteor Scatter
QSO Parties taking
place during those
events, there is
important work to be
done this month.
The citizen science
research group is
encouraging
operators to get
ready by setting up
your equipment now
in time for the
Lyrids shower, which
will be peaking on
the 21st and 22nd of
April. The days
before and after
those dates are also
expected to provide
good opportunities
to take advantage of
meteor scatter.
Radio operators may
participate either
actively by calling
CQ or passively, by
monitoring and
reporting.
Operators may use
MSK144 within the
WSJT-X software on
both 10 and 6
metres. SWLs and
hams may also
participate
passively by
monitoring via PSK
Reporter to send in
their findings.
Details about
HamSCI’s plans for
the meteor-scatter
investigations can
be found at the link
that appears in the
text version of this
week’s newscast at
arnewsline.org
This is Andy
Morrison K9AWM.
DO NOT READ
hamsci.org/msqp-poster
(HAMSCI)
**
HAMS WEIGH IN ON FCC
INVITATION FOR
REGULATION COMMENTS
SKEETER/ANCHOR: With
Friday, April 11th,
as its deadline for
initial comments,
the US Federal
Communications
Commission will
begin reviewing
public suggestions
on what regulations
to cut to reduce
unnecessary agency
burdens -
regulations covering
everything from
commercial
broadcasting to
consumer wireless
devices to satellite
operation. Outside
the commercial
sector, ham radio
operators have
weighed in too, as
we hear from Paul
Braun WD9GCO.
PAUL: Suggestions
varied widely among
hams who responded
to the FCC’s
invitation – but for
the most part there
appeared to be a
strong call for
continued regulation
of amateur radio
with no changes to
the three-tier
license system or
testing. Some hams
did request changes
- either that the
license system be
streamlined - or
simply be
eliminated.
The spectrum
appeared to be a
major concern, as
some hams pressed
the FCC to retain
amateur privileges
on the current
bands. The FCC has
set April 28th as
the deadline for
reply comments. All
filings on the FCC
website should be
made in reference to
Docket Number
25-133.
This is Paul Braun
WD9GCO.
(FCC, RADIO WORLD)
**
'MUD MOSEY' IS A
RAIN OR SHINE EVENT
SKEETER/ANCHOR:
Using the
communications style
of a tactical net, a
team of hams in
Pennsylvania has
become a reliable
source of
reassurance at an
event known as a
"Mud Mosey." Travis
Lisk N3ILS explains.
TRAVIS: The forecast
for Saturday, April
12th is irrelevant.
Under gray skies or
sun, the second
annual Great Marsh
Mud Mosey and Mud
Walk moves forward
in Pennsylvania.
As Tom Costello,
KC3TMT, told
Newsline: [quote]
“It’s rain or shine,
that’s why they call
it the Mud Mosey.”
[endquote]
Tom is at the helm
of a collection of
hams from Remote
Communications and
Command – or RCOMM
for short. This is
the second year they
are serving as
communications
support for this
fundraiser, which
benefits the Great
Marsh Institute, a
700-acre natural and
scientific
environment and
ChesCo Search Dogs,
a nonprofit group
that works with
search and rescue
operations.
The job for the team
of 15 amateurs at
the Mud Mosey is to
keep the line of
communications open
on 2-meter simplex
through a modified
tactical net for the
benefit of the 80 to
100 runners or
walkers on the
5-kilometer path.
The trail – like the
event name suggests
– can get more than
a little bit down
and dirty, even for
the more mellow
participants who
tackle their shorter
route as a 1-mile
walk. Tom said that
next year's
operations may be
conducted with the
addition of a mobile
repeater.
The day is serious
business but in a
light,
family-friendly
party atmosphere.
The Mud Mosey hour
passes quickly and
then the focus turns
to the search-dog
demonstrations, the
DJ and the food and
beverage trucks.
That makes it all –
hopefully – more
fun-packed than
mud-packed.
This is Travis Lisk
N3ILS.
(TOM COSTELLO,
KC3TMT)
**
HAM RADIO NEWS
PRESENTER RETIRES AT
101
SKEETER/ANCHOR: From
time to time, we
here at Newsline
like to acknowledge
some of our
colleagues in
amateur radio media,
people who - like us
- work to keep hams
around the world
informed. One of
them is retiring
from the GB2RS
newscast in the UK
at the age of 101 -
and we are about to
learn more about him
from Jeremy Boot
G4NJH.
JEREMY: Happy
birthday and happy
retirement to Peter
Valentine, GØNQZ,
who upon reaching
the age of 101 on
the 12th of April,
has decided to take
things a little
easier…..but only
just a little. Peter
is still an active
radio ham and
participant in
regular nets,
including the HF
nets of the
International Short
Wave League and the
Radio Amateurs Old
Timers’ Association.
Peter has to his
credit an enviable
record as a
presenter for the
Radio Society of
Great Britain’s
GB2RS report. Best
wishes and see you
on the air, Peter!
This is Jeremy Boot
G4NJH.
(RSGB)
**
NOMINATE OUR NEXT
YOUNG HAM OF THE
YEAR
SKEETER/ANCHOR: Each
year, the Amateur
Radio Newsline Bill
Pasternak Memorial
Young Ham of the
Year Award receives
nominations of
promising young hams
who truly impress
our judges. It is
time once again to
give them an
opportunity at the
recognition they
deserve. Consider
nominating an
amateur radio
operator 18 years of
age or younger here
in the continental
United States.
Consider someone who
has talent, promise
and a commitment to
the spirit of ham
radio. Find
application forms on
our website
arnewsline.org under
the "YHOTY" tab. We
are accepting
nominations through
May 31st.
**
THE WORLD IS MARKING
WORLD AMATEUR RADIO
DAY
SKEETER/ANCHOR: Hams
around the globe are
marking World
Amateur Radio Day on
April 18th and ham
radio clubs and
other groups have
been devoting a day
- or even the whole
month - to a variety
of activities to
celebrate the 100th
year since the
founding of the
International
Amateur Radio Union
in Paris, France.
The IARU has
declared the theme
of this year's
celebration -
"Entering the Next
Century of Amateur
Radio Communications
and Innovation."
Although the theme
of the anniversary
is forward-looking
the IARU urged hams
to appreciate the
gains made in
previous decades
too. A message on
its webpage noted
that this is [quote]
"a time to reflect
on our
achievements."
[endquote]
Member societies in
each region of the
IARU will be marking
the occasion in a
variety of ways.
Some are hosting
open houses to
demonstrate amateur
radio to the public;
others have already
been on the air this
month activating
special event
stations with
callsigns ending in
the suffix "W A R
D." In Canada, the
mayor of the capital
city of Ottawa has
issued the first
municipal
proclamation ever of
Amateur Radio Day,
as the Ottawa
Amateur Radio Club
and West Carleton
Disaster Relief
present
demonstrations for
the public at
several locations
**
MONTANA CLUB GIVES
HAM RADIO BOOKS TO
REGIONAL LIBRARIES
SKEETER/ANCHOR: Avid
readers might argue
that the best books
are the ones with a
happy, or at least a
pleasantly
unexpected ending. A
number of public
libraries in Montana
just received a new
collection of
donated books that
contain no endings
at all - just
beginnings that hold
promise. Ralph
Squillace KK6ITB
picks up the story
from here.
RALPH: The
possibilities are
endless in amateur
radio and so are the
new books in the
newest collection on
the shelves of the
Great Falls Public
Library and other
public libraries in
Montana. The books
were donated by the
Great Falls Masonic
Amateur Radio Club,
which received a
grant from the ARRL
to provide library
patrons with study
guides for the
Technician, General
and Amateur Extra
exams administered
by the FCC.
John Ross, KD7HKF,
the club's vice
president, said the
Great Falls
library's bookmobile
will also carry a
set of the books.
The ARRL grant has
also funded
collections of books
for Montana's
Cascade Library,
Fairfield Library
and the library at
the Malmstrom Air
Force Base.
Meanwhile, the
library and the club
have agreed that ham
radio orientation
sessions will be
held at the Great
Falls library if
enough community
members are inspired
to learn even more.
The relationship
between amateur
radio clubs and
libraries in the US
is a strong one.
Previous such gifts
of books have
occurred at other
libraries around the
US, including the
Jackson Amateur
Radio Club, which
donated books last
year to the Madison
County Library
System in
Mississippi and the
Cowley County
Amateur Radio Club,
which made a similar
donation earlier
this year to the
Arkansas City Public
Library.
This is Ralph
Squillace KK6ITB.
(GREAT FALLS MASONIC
RADIO CLUB, ARRL)
**
THIS BATTERY LOOKS
GOOD ON PAPER
BECAUSE IT'S PAPER
SKEETER/ANCHOR:
Whoever said that in
this electronic age
we are becoming a
paperless world
obviously hasn't
been introduced to
some of the newest
technology in
batteries. Several
of these highly
portable sources of
energy are still
experimental. They
do boast of being
environmentally
friendly -- and all
make use of paper as
a key ingredient.
Kent Peterson KCØDGY
tells us about them.
KENT: Researchers
are developing
batteries that are
made partially of
paper and the
results have been
showing varying
degrees of promise,
though none of them
appear ready yet for
portable ham radio.
In France, a company
called BeFC is
pioneering what it
considers to be a
single-use,
eco-friendly
alternative to the
small button battery
that is fully
compostable when the
user is done with
it. More of a
paper-based
bioenzymatic fuel
cell than an actual
battery, it releases
energy when moisture
is released and
comes into contact
with the sugar and
enzymes that are
infused into a layer
of paper between the
unit's carbon
electrodes.
Generating only .75
(point seven five)
volts, it still has
a long way to go
before it can power
more than perhaps a
sensor or medical
device someday.
In Singapore,
researchers at the
startup company,
Flint, claim that
they have a
rechargeable
battery-in-the-works
that will ultimately
replace lithium
batteries for use in
grid storage and
electric-vehicle
power. Like the
French battery, it
too is designed to
be compostable and
it makes use of the
cellulose in paper
for the transfer of
ions.
Ten years ago,
researchers in the
US, at Binghamton
University in
upstate New York,
developed what they
called "microbial
paper-based
batteries," that is,
they derive their
power from
bacteria's
metabolism. Like its
French counterpart,
however, the output
has been deemed too
low for practical
use.
So the research
continues. To
scientists, for now,
it all looks good on
paper.
This is Kent
Peterson KCØDGY.
(YOUTUBE,
NEWATLAS.COM,
BINGHAMTON.EDU)
**
WORLD OF DX
In the World of DX,
Nobu,JAØJHQ, is on
the air as T88PB
from Koror, IOTA
number OC-ØØ9, Palau
on the 11th through
to the 13th of
April. Nobu is also
participating in the
CW portion of the
Japan International
DX Contest that
weekend. See QRZ.com
for QSL details.
Two special
callsigns are being
activated to mark
special occasions
for hams in Cyprus.
The callsigns
5B5ØCARS and
5B100IARU will be on
the air to mark the
50th anniversary of
the Cyprus Amateur
Radio Society and
the Centenary of the
International
Amateur Radio
Society,
respectively.
Activity is expected
on the 15th and the
18th of April and
again on the 25th
and 26th of April.
The hams are also
celebrating the 75th
anniversary of IARU
Region 1. See
QRZ.com for QSL and
certificate details.
Listen for Luke,
ZS6LUK, using the
callsign A25LUK on
the air from
Botswana until the
30th of April. Luke
is operating SSB,
FT8 and JS8Call on
40, 30, 20 and 10
metres. See QRZ.com
for QSL details.
Markus, DJ4EL, is on
the air holiday
style as IF9/DJ4EL,
from the Egadi
Islands, IOTA number
EU-Ø54, from the
13th through to the
23rd of April.
Markus will operate
SSB on 40-10 metres
from SOTA and POTA
sites on the islands
of Favignana,
Levanzo and
Marettimo. See
QRZ.com for QSL
details.
(425 DX BULLETIN)
**
KICKER: HAMS' STEADY
CLIMB TO SUCCESS FOR
FM RADIO STATION
SKEETER/ANCHOR: Who
understands the pain
of not being able to
get on the air
better than an
amateur radio
operator? So when a
small community
broadcast station in
Australia developed
an issue that
hampered their
ability to transmit,
some local hams came
in to help them
troubleshoot. Graham
Kemp VK4BB has our
final story for this
week.
GRAHAM: The friendly
voice of WAY-FM,
along with its news
and music, had been
silent for too long.
The Christian-based,
listener-supported
community station
needed even more
support - in this
case, amateur radio
support - to get
back on the air. The
problem was twofold,
both with the 10
metre high base link
antenna and at the
broadcaster's remote
transmitter station.
The cause wasn't
completely clear
though until Hayden,
VK7HH, and his
friend Nicholas
hiked up a rugged
mountain 1100 metres
above sea level in
Tasmania on the 29th
of March, repaired
the solar powered,
FM-Band transmitter
station by
installing a
temporary,
self-built, antenna
and got the station
back on the air.
Hayden told Newsline
in an email that all
they had to do was
swap the feed lines
over to another set
of antennas for the
studio-transmitter
link to the remote
site and install the
temporary main
transmitter antenna.
The existing
antennas were
showing a bad SWR
resulting in the
transmitter folding
back the power to
protect itself.
The two-hour drive
up - and another
1.5-hours back -
plus the 3-km hike
afterward up steep
slopes was well
worth the effort.
A Hacker’s
Approach to All
Things Antenna
When your homebrew
Yagi antenna only
sort-of works, or
when your WiFicantenna
seems moody on rainy
days, we can assure
you: it is not only
you. You can stop
doubting yourself
once and for all
after you’ve watched
theTech
101: Antennas
webinar by [Dr.
Jonathan Chisum].
[Jonathan] breaks it
all down in a way
that makes you want
to rip out your old
antenna and start
fresh. It goes
further than
textbook theory;
it’s the kind of
knowledge defense
techs use forrealelectronic
warfare. And since
it’s out there in
bite-sized chunks,
we hackers can
easily put it to
good use.
The key takeaway is
thatantenna
size matters.
Basically, it’s all
about wavelength,
and [Jonathan]
hammers home how
tuning antenna
dimensions to your
target frequency
makes or breaks your
signal. Whether
you’re into omnis
(for example, for
360-degree drone
control) or
laser-focused
directional antennas
for secret backyard
links, this is juicy
stuff.
If you’re serious
about getting intoRF
hacking, watch
this webinar. Then
dig upthat
Yagi build, and
be sure to send us
your best antenna
hacks.
Interesting ARRL Ham
Radio Open House
Locations
ARRL Ham Radio
Open Housesare
happening all
over the western
hemisphere, and
more dates are
being added each
week. Throughout
the entire month
of April, radio
clubs, schools,
and even museums
are opening
their doors to
help introduce
the public to
amateur radio.
They will show
of their ham
radio stations,
demonstrating
the technology
and innovation
enjoyed by radio
amateurs today.
Some of the
open houses will
take place on
April 18, World
Amateur Radio
Day, which this
year marks 100
years since the
International
Amateur Radio
Union was
founded in
Paris, France.
There are
some interesting
sites hosting
ARRL Ham Radio
Open House
events. The
Vintage Radio
and
Communications
Museum, W1VCM,
in Windsor,
Connecticut,
will welcome
guests to theirs
on April 18.The
museumis
host to exhibits
that show off
the developments
in
communications
through the
decades, from
the 1800s to the
late 20th
century. Many of
the volunteers
at the museum
are active hams
and are able to
relay how
foundational
evolution of
gear and
technology was
for the modern,
digital, amateur
radio landscape.
New England
Sci-Tech in
Natick,
Massachusetts,
W1STR, is alsohosting
an open houseon
April 18. This
maker space
workshop and
science center
engages young
people with
outreach
programs and
gets members of
the public
hands-on with
many science,
technology,
engineering, and
mathematics
(STEM) projects.
They have an
active amateur
radio club among
all the
excitement.
On the other
end of North
America, the
Arctic Amateur
Radio
Experimenters,
KL7EX, will be
hosting an Open
House in
Fairbanks,
Alaska.
Find a site
near you, or
list your club’s
ARRL Ham Radio
Open House atwww.arrl.org/Open-House.
Effort to Save
Marconi Towers in
Canada – Public
Invited to Vote on
Project
There’s an
effort underway
to save some of
Marconi’s
original towers,
and anonline
poll is open for
people to voteon
it being a
restoration
project through
the “Next Great
Save” project
from the
National Trust
for Canada.
Some of
Marconi’s first
messages were
received and
transmitted
using the Battle
Harbour Marconi
Towers, thought
to be the last
of their kind
standing in
North America.
News of Admiral
Robert Peary’s
1909 North Pole
expedition was
transmitted by
these towers.
After 100 years,
the twin towers
are in need of
repair.
To honor 150
years since
Marconi’s birth,
there are a
number of events
planned around
the world to
observe
Marconi’s
birthday and
International
Marconi Day.
In the United
States, from the
Port of
Baltimore,
Maryland, the
Nuclear Ship
Savannah Amateur
Radio Club will
operate K3S on
April 26 from
1330 - 2100Z.
Check spotting
networks for
frequency. See
QRZ.com info for
Savannah Awardqrz.com/db/k3s.
A QSL card is
available by
contacting Ulis
Fleming, 980
Patuxent Rd,
Odenton, MD
21113.
TheGreat
South Bay
Amateur Radio
Clubin
Babylon, New
York, will
operate W2GSB
from the Babylon
Village
Historical
Society Museum
for Marconi Day
on April 26,
1300 - 2030Z.
Frequencies
include 28.340,
21.250, 14.246,
and 7.245 MHZ.
Which Browser
Should I Use In
2025?
Over the
history of the Web,
we have seen several
major shifts in
browsing software.
If you’re old enough
to have used NCSA
Mosaic or any of the
other early
browsers, you
probably welcomed
the arrival of
Netscape Navigator,
and rued its decline
in the face of
Internet Explorer.
As Mozilla and then
Firefox rose from
Netscape’s corpse
the domination by
Microsoft seemed
inevitable, but then
along came Safari
and then Chrome. For
a glorious while
there was genuine
competition between
browser
heavyweights, but
over the last decade
we’ve arrived at a
point where Chrome
and its associated
Google domination is
the only game in
town. Other players
are small, and the
people behind
Firefox seem
hell-bent on fleeing
to the Dark Side,
so where should we
turn? Is there a
privacy-centric open
source browser that
follows web
standards and
doesn’t come with
any unfortunate
baggage in the room?
It’s time to find
out.
It’s All In The
Engine
If you look at
the breadth of
standards which a
modern web browser
has to support, it’s
clear that writing a
web browser is a
Herculean task. Many
browsers take the
route of not trying
to implement
everything, for
example minimalist
browsers such as Dillo or NetSurf concentrate
only on rendering
web pages. For the
purposes of this
piece we’re looking
at full-fat browsers
capable of being a
daily driver though,
and for that a
browser needs some
very capable
software. Many
development teams
are not capable of
writing such a
browser engine, and
thus use one
developed for
another browser.
Despite there being
many names on the
table then, peering
under the hood there
are surprisingly few
options. The Apple Webkit and
Google Blink family
of browsers
dominate, followed
by Mozilla Gecko and
its Goanna fork,
and then by
promising bit-part
players such as Servo,
or the Ladybird browser’s
LibWeb. Having so
much of the web’s
browser software
dominated by Apple
and Google is not an
ideal situation, but
it’s where we find
ourselves.
So Where Did
Hackaday Land?
Over the course
of writing for
Hackaday it’s
inevitable that a
bunch of different
browsers will find
their way on to my
bench. Some of them
like Ladybird or
Servo I would love
the chance to use as
my daily driver, but
they simply aren’t
mature enough for my
needs. Others such
as Brave have too
much of a whiff of
controversy around
them for someone
seeking a quiet life
of open-source
obscurity. As I
write this I have a
preposterous number
of browsers
installed on my
machine, and if
there’s one thing
which the experience
has taught me it’s
that they are much
more the same than I
expected. In three
decades our
expectation of a
browser has
homogenised to the
extent that I’m hard
pressed to tell
between them. How do
I pick one, without
blindly throwing a
dart at a corkboard
covered in browser
logos?
In the end, I
looked for two
candidates, one each
from the Firefox and
Apple/Google orbits.
I tried them all,
and settled on
LibreWolf from the
former, and Vivaldi
from the latter.LibreWolfbecause
it’s done a fine job
of making Firefox
without it being
Firefox, andVivaldibecause
its influence from
the early Opera
versions gave it a
tiny bit of
individuality
missing in the
others. I set up
both with my usual
Hackaday bookmarks,
tabs, and shortcuts,
changed the search
engine to the
EU-basedQwant.
I’m ready to go,
with a bit more
control over how my
data is shared with
the world once more.
A refugee from
the early Web
writes…
It’s a fairly
regular occurrence,
that I will Do a
Linux Thing in my
hackerspace, only to
have one of my
younger friends
point out a much
newer and better
tool than the one I
know, which I
probably learned to
use some time in the
mid-1990s. I’ve fond
looking at web
browsers to be in
some respects a
similar experience
even if the browsers
are much closer to
each other than I
expected, because
for a couple of
decades now I’ve
been a Firefox user
simply because
Firefox was the
plucky upstart
open-source browser.
Mozilla’s previous
attempts to take
Netscape 6 and make
it the only piece of
Internet software
you needed were
horribly bloated,
and Firefox, or
“Phoenix” as it
launched, was an
easy choice. Just asmy
operating system
journeytaught
me about software
complacency a couple
of years ago, so
I’ve now had the
same awakening in
the browser. The Web
will never look the
same again.
THURSDAY
EDITION:
Local ham Jim-K1TT
launched a balloon
this morning from
Rockport and it is
out over the
Atlantic at 11,000
feet last I tracked
it. Link is
Spot Search
Dashboard - Traquito.....expand
the screen over the
ocean by Boston and
you will see a
trail, it transmits
every so many
minutes, click on
the circle and it
tells altitude,
temp, and wind
speeds. It uses WSPR
to track on 20
meters...
RAC Votes to
Cancel Attendance at
Hamvention
Radio Amateurs of
Canada(RAC),
the national
association for
amateur radio in
Canada, has voted to
cancel plans to
attend and operate a
booth atHamventionin
Ohio. The
organization cited
heightened tensions
between Canada and
the United States as
contributing to its
decision.
The
relationship
between Canada
and the United
States has
become
increasingly
strained due to
recent trade
disputes and
tariffs imposed
by the US
government.
Adding to these
challenges,
controversial
remarks from US
leaders,
including
suggestions of
Canada becoming
the 51st state,
have heightened
concerns about
Canadian
sovereignty.
RAC hopes to
return to Hamvention
in the future.
WEDNESDAY
EDITION:
Sunny and cold and a
good showing of hams
at the club this
morning for coffee
and donuts....
The ARRL
Repeater Directory®
— 2025 Edition Now
Powered by
RepeaterBook
ARRL is
excited to
announce that
the new 2025
edition of The
ARRL Repeater
Directory®
is now powered
by RepeaterBook,
amateur radio's
worldwide
repeater
database.
“This
collaboration
ensures that
amateur radio
operators across
the country have
access to one of
the most
comprehensive
and up-to-date
collections of
repeater
information
available,” said
Garrett Dow,
KD6KPC, of
RepeaterBook.
Dow
points out that
a paper book is
an invaluable
resource When
All Else Fails®.
“In emergencies,
reliable
communication
can make all the
difference.
RepeaterBook
data in The
Repeater
Directory helps
ensure that
first
responders,
ARES® teams, and
everyday hams
have fast access
to the most
accurate
repeater info
when it matters
most,” he said.
For
decades, The
ARRL Repeater
Directory has
been an
invaluable
source for
locating
repeater
frequencies
while traveling.
It includes
“crowdsourced”
listings
contributed to
RepeaterBook by
users, repeater
owners, and
volunteer
frequency
coordinators.
This means more
listings updated
more often.
New hams often
use the Repeater
Directory to
find local
repeaters to use
after purchasing
a new handheld
radio. Public
service
volunteers often
keep a copy
nearby or in
their emergency
go-kit.
So
What is a
Supercomputer
Anyway?
Over the decades
there have been many
denominations coined
to classify computer
systems, usually
when they got used
in different fields
or technological
improvements caused
significant shifts.
While the very first
electronic computers
were very limited
and often not
programmable, they
would soon morph
into something that
we’d recognize today
as a computer,
starting with World
War 2’s Colossus and
ENIAC, which saw use
with cryptanalysis
and military weapons
programs,
respectively.
The first
commercial digital
electronic computer
wouldn’t appear
until 1951, however,
in the form of theFerranti
Mark 1. These
4.5 ton systems
mostly found their
way to universities
and kin, where
they’d find welcome
use in engineering,
architecture and
scientific
calculations. This
became the focus of
new computer
systems, effectively
the equivalent of a
scientific
calculator. Until
the invention of the
transistor, the idea
of a computer being
anything but a
hulking, room-sized
monstrosity was
preposterous.
A few decades
later, more computer
power could be
crammed into less
space than ever
before including
ever higher density
storage. Computers
were even found in
toys, and amidst a
whirlwind of mini-,
micro-, super-,
home-, minisuper-
and mainframe
computer systems,
one could be excused
for asking the
question: what even
is a supercomputer?
Today’s
Supercomputers
Perhaps a fair
way to classify
supercomputers
is that the
‘supercomputer’
aspect is a highlytime-limited
property. During
the 1940s, Colossus
and ENIAC were
without question the
supercomputers of
their era, while
1976’s Cray-1 wiped
the floor with
everything that came
before, yet all of
these are archaic
curiosities next to
today’s top two
supercomputers. Both
theEl
Capitanand
Frontier
supercomputers are
exascale (1+
exaFLOPS in double
precision IEEE 754
calculations) level
machines, based
around commodity
x86_64 CPUs in a
massively parallel
configuration.
Taking up 700 m2of
floor space at the
Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
(LLNL) and drawing
30 MW of power, El
Capitan’s 43,808 AMD
EPYC CPUs are paired
with the same number
ofAMD
Instinct MI300Aaccelerators,
each containing 24
Zen 4 cores plus
CDNA3 GPU and 128 GB
of HBM3 RAM. Unlike
the monolithic
ENIAC, El Capitan’s
11,136 nodes,
containing four
MI300As each, rely
on a number of
high-speed
interconnects to
distribute computing
work across all
cores.
At LLNL, El
Capitan is used for
effectively the same
top secret
government things as
ENIAC was, while
Frontier at Oak
Ridge National
Laboratory (ORNL)
was the fastest
supercomputer before
El Capitan came
online about three
years later.
Although currently
LLNL and ORNL have
the fastest
supercomputers,
there are many more
of these systems in
use around the
world, even for
innocent scientific
research.
Looking at the
current list of
supercomputers, such
astoday’s
Top 9, it’s
clear that not only
can supercomputers
perform a lot more
operations per
second, they also
are invariably
massively parallel
computing clusters.
This wasn’t a change
that was made
easily, as parallel
computing comes with
a whole stack of
complications and
problems.
The Parallel
Computing Shift
The first
massively
parallel computer
was theILLIAC
IV,
conceptualized by
Daniel Slotnick in
1952 and first
successfully put
into operation in
1975 when it was
connected to
ARPANET. Although
only one quadrant
was fully
constructed, it
produced 50 MFLOPS
compared to the
Cray-1’s 160 MFLOPS
a year later.
Despite the immense
construction costs
and spotty
operational history,
it provided a most
useful testbed for
developing parallel
computation methods
and algorithms until
the system was
decommissioned in
1981.
There was a lot
of pushback against
the idea of
massively parallel
computation,
however, with
Seymour Cray
famously comparing
the idea of using
many parallel vector
processors instead
of a single large
one akin to ‘plowing
a field with 1024
chickens instead of
two oxen’.
Ultimately there
is only so far you
can scale a singular
vector processor, of
course, while
parallel computing
promised much better
scaling, as well as
the use of commodity
hardware. A good
example of this is a
so-calledBeowulf
cluster, named
after the original
1994 parallel
computer built by
Thomas Sterling and
Donald Becker at
NASA. This can use
plain desktop
computers, wired
together using for
example Ethernet and
with open source
libraries like Open
MPI enabling
massively parallel
computing without a
lot of effort.
Not only does
this approach enable
the assembly of a
‘supercomputer’
using cheap-ish,
off-the-shelf
components, it’s
also effectively the
approach used for
LLNL’s El Capitan,
just with not very
cheap hardware, and
not very cheap
interconnect
hardware, but still
cheaper than if one
were to try to build
a monolithic vector
processor with the
same raw processing
power after taking
the messaging
overhead of a
cluster into
account.
Mini And Maxi
One way to look
at supercomputers is
that it’s not about
the scale, but what
you do with it. Much
like how government,
large businesses and
universities would
end up with ‘Big
Iron’ in the form of
mainframes and
supercomputers,
there was a big
market forminicomputerstoo.
Here ‘mini’ meant
something like a
PDP-11 that’d
comfortably fit in
the corner of an
average room at an
office or
university.
The high-end
versions of
minicomputers were
called ‘superminicomputer‘,
which is not to be
confused withminisupercomputer,
which is another
class entirely.
During the 1980s
there was a brief
surge in this latter
class of
supercomputers that
were designed to
bring solid vector
computing and
similar
supercomputer feats
down to a size and
price tag that might
entice departments
and other customers
who’d otherwise not
even begin to
consider such an
investment.
The manufacturers
of these
‘budget-sized
supercomputers’ were
generally not the
typical big computer
manufacturers, but
instead smaller
companies and
start-ups likeFloating
Point Systems(later
acquired by Cray)
who sold array
processors and
similar parallel,
vector computing
hardware.
Recently David
Lovett (AKA Mr.
Usagi Electric)embarked
on a questto
recover and
reverse-engineer as
much FPS hardware as
possible, with one
of the goals being
to build a full
minisupercomputer
system as companies
and universities
might have used them
in the 1980s. This
would involve
attaching such an
array processor to a
PDP-11/44 system.
Speed Versus
Reliability
Amidst all of
these definitions,
the distinction
between a mainframe
and a supercomputer
is much easier and
more straightforward
at least. Amainframeis
a computer system
that’s designed for
bulk data processing
with as much
built-in reliability
and redundancy as
the price tag allows
for. A modern
example isIBM’s
Z-seriesof
mainframes, with the
‘Z’ standing for
‘zero downtime’.
These kind of
systems are used by
financial
institutions and
anywhere else where
downtime is counted
in millions of
dollars going up in
(literal) flames
every second.
This means
hot-swappable
processor modules,
hot-swappable and
redundant power
supplies, not to
mention hot spares
and a strong focus
on fault tolerant
computing. All of
these features are
less relevant for a
supercomputer, where
raw performance is
the defining factor
when running
days-long
simulations and when
other ways to detect
flaws exist without
requiring
hardware-level
redundancy.
Considering the
brief lifespan of
supercomputers
(currently in the
order of a few
years) compared to
mainframes (decades)
and the many years
that the
microcomputers which
we have on our desks
can last, the life
of a supercomputer
seems like that of a
bright and very
brief flame, indeed.
TUESDAY
EDITION:
All quiet here on
the island...
Special Event to
Honor the Victims of
9-11
It was 25 years
ago but We Do
Remember You as if
it was yesterday and
always will.
Special Event to
Honor the Victims of
9-11: New York City
Shanksville PA. and
Washington D.C.
Begin:September
06, 2025 00:01 GMT /
7:00 PM Central time
End:Thursday
September 12, 2025
23:59 GMT / 6:59 PM
Central time
Many members of
the Alabama Contest
Group will activate
K4A for the fifth
year. This year’s
event will be called
“9-11 We Do
Remember.” We will
operate all modes
SSB, FT8, CW, and
RTTY. We will try to
be on all bands 160
through 10 meters,
including WARC
bands.
This year a new
special QSL and
certificate “We Do
Remember” theme will
be available.
To those who
contact K4A on 3
bands using any
combination of
bands/modes we will
offer a full color
glossy certificate
on heavy paper which
will be mailed in a
full size Manila
envelope all postage
paid by the Alabama
Contest Group, even
if you are DX.
If you qualify
for the certificate
send your QSL to
WA1FCN. Put each QSO
information on your
QSL. We request a
$3.00 donation to
help cover cost of
Special Event.
Or, for our QSL
only (no
certificate), send
your QSL and your
SASE to Bob Sarnecki
NF7D.
Hacking a
Heavyweight Philco
Radio
There’s something
magical about the
clunk of a heavy
1950s portable radio
– the solid thunk of
Bakelite, the warm
hum of tubes glowing
to life. This is
exactly why [Ken’s
Lab] took onthe
restoration of a
Philco 52-664, a
portable AC/DC radio
originally sold for
$45 in 1953 (a small
fortune back then!).
Despite its beat-up
exterior and faulty
guts, [Ken]
methodically
restored it to
working condition.
His video details
every crackling
capacitor and crusty
resistor he
replaced, and it’s
pure catnip for any
hacker with a soft
spot for analog
tech. Does the name
Philco ring a bell?
Lately, we did cover
the restoration ofa
1958 Philco Predicta
television.
What sets this
radio hack apart? To
begin with, [Ken]
kept the restoration
authentic,
repurposing original
capacitor cans and
using
era-appropriate
materials – right
down to boiling out
old electrolytics in
his wife’s discarded
cooking pot. But, he
went further.
Lacking the space
for modern
components, [Ken]
fabbed up a custom
mounting solution
from stiff
styrofoam,
fibreboard, and
all-purpose glue. He
even re-routed the
B-wiring with
creative terminal
hacks. It’s a
masterclass in
patience, precision,
and resourcefulness.
If this tickles
your inner tinkerer,
don’t miss out onthe
full video. It’s
like stepping into a
time machine.
MONDAY
EDITON: A
good weekend for me
watching college
basketball, Duke
lost and UConn women
won....Thought
you'd like to share
this safety hazard
on your web site,
Greg W1ECB
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8YdOG9biKU
MFJ Repairs
Please note that we
are severely
backlogged at the
moment, a lack of
techs and parts
problems on repairs.
Expect three month
delays in some
cases/product type.
Send unit, letter of
explanation and a
copy of your
in-warranty purchase
receipt to: MFJ
Enterprises, Inc.,
Repair Department,
300 Industrial Park
Road, Starkville, MS
39759.
MFJ charges $22.00
Fedex Home Delivery
for repairs over 30
days from purchase
date. If new
defective, under
thirty days, return
shipping will be
covered.
If out-of-warranty,
you will be charged
$80 labor per hour
plus parts and
return shipping.
Please put all
pertinent contact
information in your
letter of
explanation.
Cell phone, house
phone, email address
are all important
information to have
so we can contact
you regarding your
repair.
300
Comments Submitted
in response to In Re
Delete, Delete,
Delete
RadioWorld
reports close to 300
comments filed in
response to the
recent FCC Public
Notice,In
Re: Delete Delete
Delete(PDF).
Responses related to
amateur radio vary
from keeping the
status quo to
eliminating amateur
radio licensing
completely.
A number of the
comments received so
far have focused on
amateur radio and
the fear that ham
radio could be at
risk. The possible
loss of spectrum is
among the concern
Hams have until
April 11th to file
comments related to
thepublic
notice. Reply
comments will be
accepted until April
28th. The ARRL is
alsoexpected
to file commentstaking
into consideration
feedback from its
members.
ARRL DXCC
Statement on Mount
Athos Operation
SV1GA/A
The
ARRL DXCC Desk
has determined
that the
operation by a
DXpedition team
from Mount Athos
meets the DXCC award
program’s
accreditation
criteria.
Contacts with
the team, which
operated in
January 2025
using the call
sign SV1GA/A,
will therefore
count toward
DXCC.
Additionally,
due to actions
taken by local
authorities that
resulted in the
early
termination of
the operation,
any future
operations by
this team from
Mt. Athos will
require
additional
documentation
for securing
accreditation
for DXCC credit.
Mount
Athos is an
autonomous
region of
northeastern
Greece, governed
by the monastic
community, and
is an entity on
the DXCC List.
Tennessee Hams
Rise Up: Amateur
Radio Gains Traction
After Deadly
Tornadoes
As Tennessee
communities begin
recovery efforts
following the
devastating tornado
outbreak on April
2–3, 2025, which
resulted in at least
seven fatalities and
widespread
destruction, a
renewed interest in
amateur
radio—commonly known
as ham radio—is
emerging across the
Volunteer State.
The storms
produced multiple
tornadoes, including
an EF-3 in McNairy
County that severely
impacted the town of
Selmer (Action
News 5). The
Tennessee Emergency
Management Agency
(TEMA) reported
extensive damage in
Fayette, Hardeman,
and McNairy counties
(Tennessee.gov).
At the height of the
storms, more than
300,000 customers
were without power
statewide (AP
News).
In the aftermath,
the Amateur Radio
Emergency Service
(ARES) played a
critical role when
conventional
communication
systems failed. ARES
volunteers relayed
emergency messages
between local
officials and
hard-hit
communities. This
mirrors the response
following Hurricane
Helene in 2024, when
ARES operators
provided over 1,000
hours of emergency
communications in
areas where cell
towers were down (ARRL.org).
The public has
taken notice. In
Kingsport, the
Tri-Cities Amateur
Radio Club reported
an increase in
licensing inquiries,
while the
Chattanooga Amateur
Radio Club is
offering a “Ham 101”
session to meet
growing interest. In
Knoxville and
Bristol, local clubs
are also fielding
calls from newcomers
interested in
emergency radio use.
FRIDAY
EDITION:
Only one month to
Near-fest
in NH, the best New
England ham activity
for years in its new
location of
course....
The Capacitor
Plague of the Early
2000s
Somewhere
between the period
of 1999 and 2007 a
plague swept through
the world,
devastating lives
and businesses.
Identified by a
scourge of
electrolytic
capacitors violently
exploding or
splurging their
liquid electrolyte
guts all over the
PCB, it led to a lot
of finger pointing
and accusations of
stolen electrolyte
formulas. In a recent
video by
[Asianometry] this
story is summarized.
The bad
electrolyte in the
faulty capacitors
lacked a suitable
depolarizer, which
resulted in more gas
being produced,
ultimately leading
to build-up of
pressure and the
capacitor ultimately
failing in a way
that could be rather
benign if the scored
top worked as vent,
or violently if not.
Other critical
elements in the
electrolyte are
passivators, to
protect the
aluminium against
the electrolyte’s
effects. Although
often blamed on a
single employee
stealing an
(incomplete) Rubycon
electrolyte formula,
the video questions
this narrative, as
the problem was too
widespread.
More likely it
coincided with the
introduction of
low-ESR electrolytic
capacitors, along
with computers
becoming
increasingly more
power-hungry, and
thus stressing the
capacitors in a much
warmer environment
than in the early
1990s. Combine this
with the presence of
counterfeit
capacitors in the
market and the truth
of what happened to
cause the Capacitor
Plague probably
involves a bit from
each column, a
narrative thatseems
to be the general
consensus.
This is at Sun
'n fun in Lakeland
FL towing a1946
Grumman Mallard.
Kriss-KA1GJU at the
airshow
THURSDAY
EDITION: If
China declares war,
these ham radio
enthusiasts could be
crucial...Russian
women 'only marrying
soldiers to claim
HUGE payout when
they're killed on
frontline'.....Teacher
goes above and
beyond for a biology
lesson by wearing an
anatomically correct
suit
Solar-Powered
E-Reader With No
Buttons
Modern e-readers
such as the Amazon
Kindle are
incredible pieces of
engineering, but
that doesn’t mean
there’s no room for
improvement. A
device custom-built
to your own
specifications is
always going to
provide a more
satisfying
experience than
something purchased
off the shelf.That’s
why [fel88] put
together this custom
e-readerwhich
offers a number of
unique features,
such as a solar
panel on the back
and button-free
operation.
One issue with
modern e-readers, at
least as [fel88]
sees it, is that
they have a lot of
unnecessary
features. This
project removes most
of them, stripping
down the device to
its core
functionality: a
straightforward menu
for selecting books
and gesture-sensing
for navigating the
menu as well as
changing the pages.
The only physical
input on the device
is a small reed
switch to turn the
device on. A 3D
printed case holds
the e-ink display
and encloses the
inner workings,
driven by an Arduino
Mega 2560 and
powered by three
lithium-ion
capacitors (LICs)
and a small solar
panel.
By dropping all
of the unnecessary
features, the device
doesn’t need to
waste energy with
things like WiFi or
Bluetooth and can
get around 880 pages
on a single charge,
not counting any
extra energy coming
in through the solar
panel while it’s
operating. The LICs
will also
theoretically
improve its life
cycle as well. If
you’re still stuck
with a paperweight
when you formerly
had a working
e-reader, though,there
are plenty of ways
to bring old devices
back to lifeas
well.
Understanding
the Basics of APRS
and How to Get
Started in APRS
Over the weekend, I
got the chance to go
to the Chattanooga
Hamfest where
the focus this year
was “Preparedness
Through
Communications &
Self-Reliance”. I
was caught off guard
(camera not setup
very good for
recording) and
pleasantly surprised
with the
presentation on APRS
given by Kenny Witt,
KC4OJS and Bill
Lewis, KM4KMO. This
was a very
informative
presentation (see
video below). More
video clips on that
presentation and
another coming out
soon.
1. What is APRS?
APRS stands for
Automatic Packet
Reporting System. It
is a system that has
been used by amateur
radio operators to
transmit real-time
data about their
position, speed and
direction. If you
desire more can be
sent and received,
like weather,
messages and
emergency
information.
A basic station
consist of a capable
transceiver that is
mounted in a vehicle
and used to transmit
the information over
VHF. This allows it
to be tracked on a
map in near-real
time.
2. What do you
need to get started
with APRS?
**For basic
operation, an
amateur radio
operator who wants
to use APRS just
needs a capable
radio and antenna.
Some APRS capable
mobile transceivers
(I am not
recommending these,
do your own research
and please watch the
video below) are:
The radio is used
to transmit and
receive the APRS
signal.
For anyone
wanting a more
sophisticated and
fully functional
station you'll need
more than just a
radio and antenna.
To build a fully
capable APRS station
you'll need a
laptop, sound card
and transceiver. It
can be done very
inexpensively. More
on that later.
3. Where can you
find a map of the
world's current
active stations?
The aprs map is a
collection of all
the active stations
with their call
signs and location.
You can find an aprs
map online. Go toAPRS.fi.
4. How do I find
my own position on
the map?
In this section,
we will explore how
to useAPRS.fito
find your location
on map.
For Hams that use
APRS this is a very
common task, but
most people may not
know how to do this.
So, how do we useAPRS.fito
find our position on
a map?
5. What is
an example of useful
data that can be
provided by an APRS
station?
An example of useful
data that can be
provided by an APRS
station is the
location of an
accident or the
location of an
emergency shelter.
APRS stations
transmit data over a
radio network. They
are popular among
amateur radio
enthusiasts as they
provide a way to
share information
about their location
and status with
others who may be
nearby. The station
transmits
information about
its location, speed,
heading, and
altitude.. You can
also find out more
on theirwebsite.
WEDNESDAY
EDITION: I
found sme LMR400 and
made the jumper I
needed for the
duplexer Y
connection, all is
well.....Coffee and
donuts at the
club this
morning...Review of
the
Shack Master 600
power supply
Dwingeloo to
Venus: Report of a
Successful Bounce
Radio waves travel
fast, and they can
bounce, too. If you
are able to operate
a 25-meter dish, a
transmitter, a solid
software-defined
radio, and an atomic
clock, the answer
is: yes, they can go
all the way to Venus
and back. On March
22, 2025, the
Dwingeloo telescope
in the Netherlands
successfully pulled
off an
Earth-Venus-Earth
(EVE) bounce, making
them the second
group of amateurs
ever to do so. The
full breakdown of
this feat is
availablein
their write-up here.
Bouncing signals off
planets isn’t new.
NASA has been at it
since the 1960s –
butamateur
radio astronomers
have far fewer toys
to play with.
Before Dwingeloo’s
success, AMSAT-DL
achieved the only
known amateur EVE
bounce back in 2009.
This time, the
Dwingeloo team
transmitted a
278-second tone at
1299.5 MHz, with the
round trip to Venus
taking about 280
seconds. Stockert’s
radio telescope in
Germany also picked
up the returning
echo, stronger than
Dwingeloo’s own, due
to its more
sensitive receiving
setup.
Post-processing
wasn’t easy either.
Doppler shift
corrections had to
be applied, and the
received signal was
split into 1 Hz
frequency bins. The
resulting detections
clocked in at 5.4
sigma for Dwingeloo
alone, 8.5 sigma for
Stockert’s
recording, and 9.2
sigma when combining
both datasets. A
clear signal, loud
and proud, straight
from Venus’ surface.
The experiment was
cut short when
Dwingeloo’s
transmitter started
failing after four
successful bounces.
More complex signal
modulations will
have to wait for the
next Venus
conjunction in
October 2026. Until
then, you can readour
previously published
articleon
achievements of the
Dwingeloo telescope.
TUESDAY
EDITION:
Anyone out in NH
have a few feet of
RG214 doubleshielded
cable I can buy. I
need a new jumper
for the duplexer on
2 meters, thought I
had some but can't
find it....
The robot that
captures Cold War
radio stations via
wi-fi
A desk companion
that intercepts and
plays encrypted
radio
communications—once
popular during the
Cold War era but
still in use today.
Small and
colorful, Cipherling
is a gadget designed
for radio
enthusiasts.
Using a Wi-Fi
internet connection,
this mini robot can
pick up number
stations scattered
around the world and
play their
transmissions.
Number stations
are encrypted radio
broadcasts that have
fascinated amateur
radio operators,
historians, and
espionage
enthusiasts for
decades. Their
operation is both
simple and
mysterious: a
synthetic or human
voice recites long
strings of numbers,
letters, or sounds,
often accompanied by
musical cues.
A 2-hour
interview with
ARRL CEO David
Minster, NA2AA,
is available on
The DX Mentor
Podcast, hosted
by Bill Salyers,
AJ8B. Minster
was elected by
the ARRL Board
of Directors as
CEO in 2020, and
has led the
association’s
operations
since.
The DX Mentor
can be found on
your favorite
podcast
platform, and
on YouTube.
Caribe Wave 2025
Tsunami Exercise in
Puerto Rico
By:
Angel Santana,
WP3GW
Amateur
radio operators
in Puerto Rico
participated in
the Caribe Wave
2025 Tsunami
exercise on
March 20.
The
event is an
annual tsunami
exercise,
designed to
validate and
advance tsunami
preparedness
efforts in the
Caribbean and
adjacent
regions. The
National Oceanic
and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA)
and the United
Nations
Educational,
Scientific and
Cultural
Organization
(UNESCO)
International
Tsunami
Information
Center (CTIC)
served as
exercise
coordinators.
In
Puerto Rico, the
exercise was
coordinated by
the Puerto
Rico Seismic
Network (PRSN)
in conjunction
with NOAA and
the Puerto Rico
Emergency
Management
Bureau (PREMB).
Prior to the
event, a meeting
was held between
PRSN
representatives,
ARRL Section
Emergency
Coordinator
Emmanuel Cruz,
NP4D, and
regional
emergency
coordinators to
delineate a plan
to disseminate
all messages
directly by PRSN
personnel to the
local amateur
radio packet BBS
systems and then
retransmit them
via voice on all
radio services
including GMRS,
FRS, MURS, CB,
and amateur
radio.
The
scenario chosen
for Caribe Wave
2025 was a
tsunami
generated by a
magnitude 8.5
earthquake
located
approximately
168 miles off
the coast of
Portugal, with
the expected
tsunami wave
arriving 8 hours
later. The
exercise started
at 11 AM EST
with an alert on
radio and TV
stations made by
the Emergency
Alert System
(EAS). Some
cellphone
companies also
sent the tsunami
alert, and all
systems stated
very clearly
that it was a
test.
As the
PRSN began to
receive the
tsunami alert
bulletins, sent
thru the KP4NTS
and KP4DOG
packet nodes,
the information
was sent to
different
coordinated
amateur radio
frequencies for
emergency events
on VHF, 40
meters and
5403.5 MHz
island-wide.
ARRL Puerto Rico
Section Manager
Carmen Greene,
KP4QVQ, was
stationed at the
Zone 5 PREMB
office in
Mayagúez to
follow how the
bulletins were
sent thru
various amateur
radio outlets.
The exercise for
the amateur
radio part
concluded at 1
PM.
Siren
systems were
also tested,
evacuation
drills were
practiced on
coastal cities,
and some amateur
radio groups
formed special
nets to gather
information on
how they
received the
advisory alert.
For more
information on
the Caribe Wave
exercises,
visit www.tsunamizone.org .
MONDAY
EDITION: I
spent some time
playing with the LDG
AT1000 pro2 auto
tuner over the
weekend. It works
fine but is one
noisy tuner while
finding the lowest
swr. I find it a lot
noisier and not as
quick as my MFJ 986.
I suppose with the
memory it will learn
the frequencies I
use the most and
proved an instant
tune like the MFJ
does. I bought it
used from QRZ
classified for $400
and so far I guess I
m satisfied. I do
have a few other LDG
tuners for low power
that I am very
satisfied with. That
leave my reliable
manual Palstar 2K on
the block, no more
manual tuners in the
shack, the Palstar
tuner is a beauty
but it takes a
little time going
from band to band
with the crank
inductor but it will
tune anything.....
Did Yankees'
physicist-designed
'torpedo' bats play
role in 9-HR power
surge vs. Brewers?
The New York
Yankees teed off on
the Milwaukee
Brewers at will
Saturday, with some
interesting
equipment.
Apparently, the
Yankees have crafted
a new sort of bat
that reallocates
some of the wood
lower down on the
barrel, putting more
mass in the area
that actually
strikes the ball. It
basically makes the
end of the bat more
shaped like a
bowling pin.
ARTICLE
AMSAT-OSCAR 7:
the Ham Satellite
That Refused to Die
When the
AMSAT-OSCAR 7 (AO-7)
amateur radio
satellite was
launched in 1974,
its expected
lifespan was about
five years. The
plucky little
satellite made it to
1981 when a battery
failure caused it to
be written off as
dead. Then, in 2002
it came back to
life. The prevailing
theory being that
one of the cells in
the satellites NiCd
battery pack, in an
extremely rare
event, shorted open
— thus allowing the
satellite to run
(intermittently) off
its solar panels.
In a recent video by
[Ben]on
theAE4JC
Amateur RadioYouTube
channel goes over
the construction ofAO-7,
its operation, death
and subsequent
revival are covered,
as well as a recentQSO(direct
contact).
The battery is
made up of
multiple
individual
cells.
The solar panels
covering this
satellite provided a
grand total of 14
watts at maximum
illumination, which
later dropped to 10
watts, making for a
pretty small power
budget. The entire
satellite was
assembled in a
‘clean room’
consisting of a
sectioned off part
of a basement, with
components produced
by enthusiasts
associated withAMSATaround
the world. Onboard
are two radio
transponders: Mode A
at 2 meters and Mode
B at 10 meters, as
well as four
beacons, three of
which are active due
to an international
treaty affecting the
13 cm beacon.
Positioned in a
geocentric LEO
(1,447 – 1,465 km)
orbit, it’s quite
amazing that after
50 years it’s still
mostly operational.
Most of this is due
to how the satellite
smartly uses the
Earth’s magnetic
field for alignment
with magnets as well
as the impact of
photons to maintain
its spin. This
passive control
combined with the
relatively high
altitude should
allow AO-7 to
function pretty much
indefinitely while
the PV panels keep
producing enough
power. All because a
NiCd battery failed
in a very unusual
way.
WEEKEND
EDITION: Received my
LDG 1000 auto tuner
today and will box
up my Palstar 2K, I
am done with manual
tuning on all my
radios...
Fram2Ham SpaceX
SSTV Event Starts
March 31st
Scheduled to
launch on Monday
March 31st, a SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket will
carry theFram2
missionto
space. Comprised of
four astronauts, the
mission is designed
to take a polar
orbit around Earth
for a 3-5 day
period. During that
time, astronaut and
amateur radio
operator Rabea Rogge
(LB9NJ/KD3AID) will
betransmitting
SSTV imagesfrom
the Dragon
spacecraft between
435 and 438 MHz. (A
simulation conducted
from the
International Space
Station in February
occurred on 437.550
MHz utilizing mode
PD-120.)
Fram2Ham is
an experimental
radio
competition open
to high school
and university
ages. Rogge will
send pictures of
three
geographical
locations via an
onboard ham
radio, but
here’s the
twist: they’ll
be cut into
pieces and mixed
up! Participants
will receive
only fragments
of the locations
and need to
guess where on
Earth they are
and what their
role in polar
history was.
We know your
favorite ham radio
club will always be
the Wireless Society
of Southern Maine,
but if you live
outside the area, or
if you just want to
explore some others,
here's a listing of
Amateur Radio Clubs
in Maine and New
Hampshire:
Scheduled to
launch on Monday
March 31st, a SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket will
carry theFram2
missionto
space. Comprised of
four astronauts, the
mission is designed
to take a polar
orbit around Earth
for a 3-5 day
period. During that
time, astronaut and
amateur radio
operator Rabea Rogge
(LB9NJ/KD3AID) will
betransmitting
SSTV imagesfrom
the Dragon
spacecraft between
435 and 438 MHz. (A
simulation conducted
from the
International Space
Station in February
occurred on 437.550
MHz utilizing mode
PD-120.)
Fram2Ham is
an experimental
radio
competition open
to high school
and university
ages. Rogge will
send pictures of
three
geographical
locations via an
onboard ham
radio, but
here’s the
twist: they’ll
be cut into
pieces and mixed
up! Participants
will receive
only fragments
of the locations
and need to
guess where on
Earth they are
and what their
role in polar
history was.
PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top
story this week is a
first for a radio
telescope in the
Netherlands which
succeeded in
bouncing amateur
radio signals off
Venus - the latest
such achievement by
scientists around
the world. Stephen
Kinford N8WB brings
us this update.
STEPHEN: Amateur
radio signals that
were bounced off
Venus some 26
million miles away,
have returned to
Earth where they
were picked up by
the Dwingeloo Radio
Telescope, PI9RD, in
the Netherlands,
according to news
reports on the 25th
of March.
The achievement -
the second of its
kind in Europe -
means that amateur
radio signals
covered a distance
that is more than
100 times greater
than those that are
traveled by
Earth-Moon-Earth, or
moon-bounce signals.
Scientists’
fascination with
using Venus-bounce
dates back several
decades when radar
was bounced off the
planet from the
Massachusetts
Institute of
Technology here in
the United States.
Much later, radar
from the Arecibo
[ARRA SEE BO]
Observatory in
Puerto Rico was
bounced off Venus
and the signal's
return to Earth was
picked up by the
Green Bank Telescope
in West Virginia.
The radar trace was
used to create
imagery of the
planet's surface.
It was a German
observatory that
achieved what is
considered a first
for Europe using
amateur radio waves:
A team from AMSAT-DL
achieved bounce and
successful reception
16 years ago at the
ground station at
the Bochum
observatory sending
a CW signal. Until
the Dwingeloo
Venus-bounce, this
was the only such
achievement to date
of its kind.
Meanwhile, in the
US, a California
not-for-profit
group, the Open
Research Institute,
has begun a project
as well involving
Earth-Venus-Earth
experimentation. ORI
asks interested hams
to contact them via
their website,
openresearch dot
institute. That’s
openresearch - one
word - dot
institute.
(openresearch.institute)
This is Stephen
Kinford N8WB.
(ORI, DWINGELOO
OBSERVATORY, AMATEUR
RADIO DAILY,
SPACE.COM, AMSAT-DL)
**
OFCOM PROPOSES
DIRECT
SMARTPHONE-SATELLITE
CONNECTIONS
PAUL/ANCHOR:
Smartphone users in
the UK could soon be
able to connect
wirelessly to
satellites under a
proposal being
considered by that
nation's regulator,
as we learn from
Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
JEREMY: The UK is
poised to have the
first European
telecommunications
system that enables
standard smartphones
to send and receive
signals from space.
The system, known as
"direct-to-device"
technology, connects
smartphones
wirelessly to
satellites. A
similar permission
was recently
authorised in the US
by the Federal
Communications
Commission.
The UK regulator,
Ofcom, is proposing
to allocate radio
frequencies for use
in the UK,
especially for rural
and other currently
underserved
communication
network areas and is
inviting comments
from the public
until 20th of May.
Ofcom believes that
this could both
facilitate sending
texts and internet
connections during
outages, and that
access would be
allowed to the
mobile airwaves for
two-way
communications
between smartphones
and satellite
operators' networks.
If approved, service
could begin to roll
out later this year.
There has already
been a promising
field test of the
technology in
January, under a
trial licence issued
to Vodafone, who,
using a standard
smartphone,
completed the first
satellite video call
from a remote part
of Wales currently
without standard
mobile network
coverage.
This is Jeremy Boot
G4NJH.
(OFCOM, YAHOO
FINANCE)
**
HAMS REACH OUT TO
BOOST AUTISM
AWARENESS
PAUL/ANCHOR: Autism
spectrum disorder is
often misunderstood
-- but an
international effort
is going on the air
starting on April
2nd to change all
that. We have those
details from Jack
Parker W8ISH.
JACK: The call for
autism awareness
will be heard around
the world during the
week of April 2nd
through to April
8th. Hams will be
calling "CQ Special
Event Autism
Awareness Week,"
encouraging
inclusion and
awareness of the
autism spectrum
disorder.
This event is being
organized for the
third year by James
Gallo, KB2FMH, who
believes the best
impact the
activation can have
is its engagement of
other operators in
ragchews or short
chats about their
experiences with
autism. James says
that because this is
not a contest, the
real prize is the
experience of
meaningful contact
and conversation -
spreading the word
that it's OK to be
different.
During last year's
event, that message
traveled far and
wide. According to
the QRZ.com page for
W2A, operators
around the world
logged 17,129 QSOs,
with signals
traveling nearly 83
million miles.
In the US, listen
for the callsign
W2A. Listen for
other stations
around the world,
including GB2AA,
8A2AAW, S76A,
VO1BIG/VE3 and 7A2M.
Visit the QRZ.com
page for W2A to see
which callsigns are
participating and to
learn more about the
autism spectrum
disorder, which is
an
often-misunderstood
diagnosis - or may
go altogether
undiagnosed.
This is Jack Parker
W8ISH.
(QRZ.COM, JAMES
GALLO, KB2FMH)
**
VOICE OF AMERICA
MUSEUM REASSURES
VISITORS
PAUL/ANCHOR:
Although the US
administration is
making cuts to the
parent agency of
Voice of America and
other international
news services, the
Voice of America
Museum in West
Chester, Ohio is
assuring visitors
that it is not
affected by these
government
decisions. The
museum is a
standalone
not-for-profit
entity that relies
on support from the
public - not federal
funding.
The museum's
executive director,
Jack Dominic,
released a statement
reassuring concerned
hams and other
callers that the
museum will continue
to tell the story of
the Voice of
America, even as the
news agency itself
goes silent. As
always, the museum
looks forward to
seeing hams from
around the world
during Hamvention
this coming May.
Museum hours during
Hamvention will be
from noon to 9 p.m.
on Thursday, Friday
and Saturday -
that's May 15th
through to May 17th
- and on Sunday, May
18th, from noon to 5
p.m. Admission is
$10 at the door.
Amateur radio
station WC8VOA will
be on the air so
bring a copy of your
license.
(JACK DOMINIC, VOA
MUSEUM)
**
A CW EVENT TURNS THE
CALENDAR BACK TO
1935
PAUL/ANCHOR: Many of
us are familiar with
the
twice-a-year-ritual
of turning the
clocks ahead or
rolling them back
but … how about
turning the calendar
back, say, 90 years?
Andy Morrison K9AWM
tells us why some CW
ops simply can’t
wait to do that.
ANDY: It’s time to
put away your
software-defined rig
and enjoy being
behind the times -
way behind the
times. The George
Batterson 1935 QSO
Party will devote
two weekends in
April to rigs that
were either
manufactured or home
brewed in 1935 or
before. CW ops will
be looking to make
QSOs on the weekends
of April 5th through
7th and April 12th
through 14th to
honor the Silent Key
George Batterson,
W2GB, who was one of
the original
founders of the
Antique Wireless
Association based in
upstate New York.
The CW ops are
hoping for contacts
with as many other
1935-era stations as
possible on 160, 80,
40 and 20 meters –
and they expect
that, like the rigs
themselves, the
experience will be a
classic.
This is Andy
Morrison K9AWM.
**
HAMS AID ELDERLY
WIDOW LOST FOR 2
MONTHS
PAUL/ANCHOR: An
annual religious
pilgrimage in India
ended with an
additional but
unintended journey
for an 80-year-old
widow who is unable
to speak - that is,
until a group of
hams helped her find
her way home
recently. Jim
Meachen ZL2BHF has
that story.
JIM: The Hindu
pilgrimage known as
the Gangasagar Mela
left an 80-year-old
participant lost and
alone at the end of
the event this past
January. She had
become separated
from the group she
had traveled with
from her home state.
Unable to speak, she
was eventually taken
to the local police
station where
officers assumed she
was ill and
transported her to
the district
hospital.
That’s when another
group - an amateur
radio organisation
known as the West
Bengal Radio Club -
was called in by
police to solve the
mystery of where she
was from. The club’s
members are widely
known for their
robust
communications
network which has
assisted scores of
displaced persons
over the years.
Using amateur radio
and other means, the
club circulated
information about
the woman - and sent
her photograph to
amateur clubs around
the country. Within
a few hours, the
response came back
that the woman was
from the state of
Uttar Pradesh and
had traveled to the
annual pilgrimage by
train with a group
from the district of
Ballia. The hams
learned that during
the past two months,
several people from
Ballia had returned
to West Bengal to
look for her but
without success.
The hams provided
the missing pieces
to the puzzle and
according to
Ambarish Nag Biswas,
VU2JFA, secretary of
the radio club, the
police in her home
district have since
been directed by the
local magistrate to
bring her safely
home.
This is Jim Meachen
ZL2BHF.
(SOCIAL NEWS XYZ,
AMBARISH NAG BISWAS,
VU2JFA)
**
SPECIAL EVENT IS
TRIBUTE TO
DXPEDITIONER ZORRO,
JH1AJT/SK
PAUL/ANCHOR: In
Fiji, a team of hams
has been honoring a
friend and fellow
DXpeditioner who
left a lasting
legacy. We hear more
from Jason Daniels
VK2LAW.
JASON: The DXer,
DXpeditioner and
humanitarian known
as Zorro, JH1AJT,
left enduring
footprints on the
planet where so many
entities in Asia and
Africa spelled
adventure for him on
his activations. His
legacy reflects his
commitment beyond
merely calling QRZ
from those locales.
His many
humanitarian works
include the
establishment of the
Foundation for
Global Children in
2010. He also gave
an endowment to the
INDEXA’s
Humanitarian Aid
Fund. Zorro sought
to improve the lives
of people wherever
his travels took
him, especially
children.
When he became a
Silent Key in March
of 2022 at the age
of 72, his death
from cancer left a
void that his
friends continue to
fill in the same
spirit with which
Zorro lived his
life. The special
event station,
3D2AJT, has been on
the air from Fiji
since the 16th of
March to honor Zorro
and will continue
through the end of
April, with
operators using CW,
SSB, FT4, FT8 and
VARAC. Four-page QSL
cards will be
available after the
activation,
featuring a
collection of photos
from Zorro’s life,
and the statement
from him: [quote] “I
shall go wherever I
am needed and I
shall do whatever
needs to be done.”
[Endquote]
Three years after
his passing, Zorro -
Yasuo Miyazawa -
continues to be
remembered with this
memorial activation,
even as his other
good works carry on
as well.
For more details,
see the QRZ.com page
for 3D2AJT.
**
WORLD OF DX
In the World of DX,
listen for the
callsign 4KØT on the
air from the Khizi
Mountains of
Azerbaijan on the
29th and 30th of
March. The team will
be using SSB and FT8
on 80-10 meters. See
QRZ.com for QSL
details.
Dave, G4OSY, is
using the callsign
8P9EI from Barbados,
IOTA number NA-021,
through to the 6th
of April. Dave can
be found on CW and
SSB on 40-10 metres.
QSL to his home
callsigns.
Listen for Alex,
K6VHF, who is
calling QRZ as
K6VHF/HR9 from
Roatan Island, IOTA
Number NA-Ø57, in
Honduras from the
30th of March
through to the 6th
of April. Alex is
using mainly the
digital modes on
80-6 metres. See
QRZ.com for QSL
details.
THURSDAY
EDITION: Anything
you would like to
post, send it to me
at
K1TP@yahoo.com....
pictures of your
shack, antenna farm,
whatever....Since I
started filling up
the bird feeders,
the squirrels hae
been doing their
best to get to the
feed. I can report
their are two less
of the little rats
in my area thanks to
the Ruger revolver
with 22 shorts.
Facts about the
invasive little
shits...
Certain species
of ground squirrels
hibernate
undergroundwithout
any food or waterfor
up to eight months
of the year. It’s a
super-extreme
survival strategy,
enabled by a
complicated cascade
of physiological
processes, some of
which we understand
and many of which
scientists are still
trying to figure
out. Helping them
along is funding and
interest from heavy
hitters in the
research world like
NASA, the European
Space agency, and
private aerospace
companies,
because–since the
1960’s–those with
their eyes on the
stars have wondered
if human hibernation
could enable us to
travel farther and
more safely in
space.
Hibernation isn’t
just a long nap.
It’s closer to death
than sleep. While in
hibernation torpor,
ground squirrels’
endure up to a 95
percent reduction in
their metabolic
rate. Their heart
and respiration
rates drop to a few
beats and breaths
per minute. Their
brain waves go flat.
Their body
temperatures plummet
to near freezing for
some species (or
even below freezing
for Arctic ground
squirrels).
Yet amid all of
this, the squirrels
stay pretty healthy:
maintaining muscle
mass, reversing
pre-hibernation
diabetes,
experiencing organ
regeneration,
stalling aging, and
undergoing
physiological shifts
that can ward off
things like
radiation damage.
For these reasons
and more, scientists
have been studying
if we can harness
the power of
squirrel hibernation
for ourselves. It
could help propel us
to outer reaches of
the galaxy. Even if
it doesn’t, it’s
poised to fuel some
big Earth-bound
biomedical advances.
Listen to learn more
about
squirrel-sicles, the
challenges of
long-distance space
travel, and the
ultimate in
restorative rest
What’s Wrong
With This Antenna
Tuner?
[Tech Minds]
built one of thosecheap
automatic antenna
tunersyou
see everywhere —
this one scaled up
to 350 watt
capability. The kit
is mostly built, but
you do have to add
the connectors and a
few other stray
bits. You can see
how he did it in the
video below.
What was very
interesting,
however, was that it
wasn’t able to do a
very good job tuning
a wire antenna
across the ham
bands, and he asks
for your help on
what he should try
to make things
better.
It did seem to
work in some cases,
and changing the
length of the wire
changed the results,
so we would guess
some of it might be
a resonance on the
antenna wire.
However, you would
guess it could do a
little better. It is
well known that if a
wire is one of a
number of certain
lengths, it will
have extremely high
impedence in
multiple ham bands
and be challenging
to tune. So random
wires need to not be
exactly random. You
have to avoid those
lengths.
In addition, we
were surprised there
wasn’t more RF
protection on the
power lines. We
would probably have
suggested winding
some coax to act as
a shield choke, RF
beads, and even
extra bypass
capacitors.
Another possible
problem is that the
diodes in these
units are often not
the best. [PU1OWL]
talks about that inanother
videoand
bypasses some of the
power lines against
RF, too.
If you have any
advice, we are sure
he’d love to hear
it. As [PU1OWL]
points out, atuner
like thiscan’t
be any better than
its SWR measurement
mechanism. Of
course, all of these
tuners take a few
watts to light them
up. You can,
however, tune with
virtually no powerwith
a VNA.
TheDwingeloo
Radio Telescopehassuccessfully
bounceda
radio signal off
Venus and back to
Earth. Transmitting
at 1299.5 MHz,
operators
transmitted a 278
second long tone.
While Dwingeloo
received its own
signal, theStockert
Radio Telescopelocated
in Germany also
received the same
signal.
The data
analysis
consists of
correcting the
received data
for both the
expected Doppler
shift and the
rate of change
of this Doppler
shift due to the
rotations and
relative motions
of Earth and
Venus. After
channelizing the
received signal
in 1 Hz
frequency bins,
the echo of the
transmitted
signal should
fall exactly in
the predicted
bin.
Dwingeloo is
planning another
Venus bounce in
October 2026.
On March 29thLAX
Northeastwill
partner with several
regional ARES groups
to conduct atsunami
exerciseutilizing
Winlink.
This Tsunami
Exercise
encourages
operators to
send amateur
radio messages
to tactical
address TSUNAMI
duringTsunami
Preparedness
Week. The
exercise
encourages radio
operators to
improve their
all-hazards
preparedness and
practice radio
operations. This
exercise is a
volunteer
effort.
All amateur radio
operators are
invited to
participate.
WEDNESDAY
EDITION: Later,
going for coffee and
donuts at the club
TUESDAY
EDITION:
The sun is finally
out and a 36 degree
windfree day has
arrived..
A Simple Antenna
that is
Omnidirectional,
Directional
and NVIS?
Our winter
weather may have a
few weeks to run
yet, but a
relatively warm
spell gave me the
opportunity to get
out into the Big
Blue Sky Shack to
try out another
antenna idea. Destination:
MacGregor Point
Provincial Park on
the Ontario shore of
mighty Lake Huron.
The shore ice still
stretched quite a
long way out onto
the lake in the
direction of
Michigan, about 100
miles away and a
cold wind was
blowing in off the
lake. Not perfect
weather for outdoor
operations – but
good enough.
Purpose: to find
out whether a simple
idea could turn a
humble vertical whip
antenna into
something more
versatile. Could
this be used as a
directional antenna
to focus a signal
into a desired
target area? Could
it even be used as a
cloud burner to
shoot a Near
Vertical Incidence
Skywave (NVIS)
signal straight up
to the F2 layer for
strong local
coverage? I decided
to find out.
The antenna was
actually not quite a
simple vertical, but
close. It was the
Ham Radio Outside
the Box Coil-Loaded
End-Fed Half-Wave
(CLEFHW). Its
advantage over a
quarter-wave
vertical is that no
separate
counterpoise wire is
required – just a
short length (about
18 inches) of coax
terminated in a 1:1
unun.
This was also the
first outing for a
new ham-made radio
backpack. The radio
is a QRP Labs QMX
(low band), built
into a steel 30cal
ammo box along with
a Talentcell 3000mAh
Li-Ion battery, Drox
buck converter (to
keep the voltage
down to 12 volts –
the QMX gets unhappy
with excessive
supply voltage). The
Putikeeg paddle key
has strong magnets
on its base that
lock it into place
on the steel ammo
box which keeps my
keying from getting
too erratic!
A second
identical ammo box
sits below the first
one and contains all
the spare parts that
might be needed
during an outdoor
ops session (standby
battery, spare
cables, connectors
etc).
Both boxes sit on
a custom aluminum
frame, secured by
1-inch webbing
straps. The whole
pack is carried by
means of a set of
2-inch webbing
shoulder and waist
straps. In use the
radio and key sit at
just the right
height when the
operator is perched
on a camping stool
so no table is
needed.
Why the military
look?
Well, a couple of
reasons there.
First, I actually
like the appearance
of military style
radio gear. Probably
nostalgia because I
was first introduced
to ham radio in the
1960s and the first
“amateur” radio I
saw was a converted
WW2 surplus No.19
Wireless Set. But
second, and more
importantly, the
military and I have
similar objectives –
we both need rugged
gear that can
withstand the rigors
of rough handling
out in the field.
Snow, mud, wind and
rain all be damned –
comms must continue
regardless <smile>.
The canvas
parachute bag at the
front contains a
selection of coax
cables, as well as
other wire antenna
options.
The radio box at
the top can be
sealed by replacing
the detachable lid.
It has a rubber
gasket to keep out
the elements when
the radio is not in
use.
The radio box can
be removed from the
pack frame quickly
and easily. I keep a
wire bail for picnic
table operation,
although that luxury
is a rare occurrence
for me.
Orienting the
antenna
The whip and
loading coil are
attached to the pack
frame by means of an
aluminum bracket
with a 3/8×24 to
SO-239 adapter. I
wish they made a
3/8×24 to BNC
adapter; instead I
made up a short
cable with a PL-259
on one end and a BNC
on the other.
The bracket is
the secret to the
antenna’s
versatility. As you
can see in the
picture, the pack
frame has curved
shoulders. By
mounting the bracket
on the straight
portion of the pack
frame, the whip
remains vertical and
vertical whip
antennas have an
omnidirectional
radiation pattern.
Now, if the
bracket is mounted
on the curved
shoulder of the pack
frame the whip
becomes oriented at
an angle. As we
shall explore in a
moment, this creates
a major lobe in the
radiation pattern in
a direction away
from where the whip
is pointing.
But doesn’t the
weight of a leaning
18.5ft whip cause
the whole pack to
topple? Actually no.
It was discovered
that the weight of
the two steel ammo
boxes and contents
are sufficient to
counteract any
potential
gravitational
instability. In fact
during the field
trial on the shore
of Lake Huron the
whole pack remained
entirely stable,
which is vital for
this operator who
cannot operate a set
of paddles properly
unless they are very
securely mounted.
It is not
necessary to set the
antenna bracket too
high on the curve of
the pack frame
because the whip
itself is quite
flexible which
enhances the lean
angle.
To operate in
NVIS mode all we
have to do is raise
the bracket a little
higher on the curve
of the pack frame so
that the top section
of the whip lays
almost horizontal a
few feet above the
ground. This method
has been used on
vehicles by the
military so I have
to credit them as
the originator of
the idea. It
probably won’t
perform as well as a
low dipole, but it
benefits from being
self-supporting and
quick to deploy.
How did the
directional antenna
perform?
The Huron shore
trial tested the
directional
properties of the
antenna. The wind
coming off the lake
was a little too
cold for a long
operating session
and besides I had to
find a small corner
of the operating
area that was
sheltered and clear
of snow and the vast
expanse of thick mud
created by the early
spring thaw. So, the
test was focused on
checking the
performance of the
whip oriented as a
sloper. A sloper is
a simple,
well-established way
of getting
directionality out
of an antenna, but
is usually achieved
with a wire antenna.
This unique version
of that method gets
the same effect with
an entirely
self-contained whip
antenna in a rapid
deployment portable
radio pack.
A simple antenna
such as this could
not be expected to
rival a Yagi-Uda
beam but it does
exhibit a very
pronounced
directional
radiation pattern as
EZNEC reveals in
detail.
The elevation
pattern shows a
strong low angle
lobe in the
direction opposite
to the lean of the
whip. This should
produce good DX
results when the
propagation
conditions are
favorable.
If we look at
the azimuth
propagation we can
see that it is
almost
omnidirectional at
low angles. The
front/back is only
about 2dB which is
less than half an
S-unit.
The real power of
this antenna
orientation can be
seen when we examine
the azimuth
propagation at
higher angles. In
the third image we
can see the
radiation pattern at
60 degrees
elevation. The
front/back is now at
around 13dB which is
approximately 2
S-units.
60 degrees
elevation is almost
in NVIS territory
and should provide
excellent
propagation over
quite a wide area.
NB:For
simplicity, these
results were modeled
using a full-length
EFHW on 20m. If
anybody wishes to
model the exact
configuration please
note that the base
loading coil is 6.6
microhenries and the
whip is 18.5ft long.
I chose not to go
this route because
the curve of a
sloping telescopic
whip is
unpredictable
(especially in the
wind).
Could a puny 3.5
watt signal into a
compromised whip
antenna cut the
mustard? On the
principle that you
can work DX with a
wet noodle on the
right day, then yes.
Propagation
conditions were
moderate with a
K-index of 3 on the
day of the trial,
but among my other
contacts I did work
a station in North
Dakota (from my QTH
is southern
Ontario). That’s a
distance of a little
less than 2000km;
not outstanding but
encouraging.
Have Li-ion
Batteries Gone Too
Far?
he proliferation
of affordable
lithium batteries
has made modern life
convenient in a way
we could only
imagine in the 80s
when everything was
powered by squadrons
of AAs, or has it?
[Ian Bogost] ponders
whethersticking
a lithium in every
new deviceis
really the best
idea.
There’s no doubt,
that for some
applications,lithium-based
chemistriesare
a
critically-enabling
technology.
NiMH-based EVs of
the 1990s suffered
short range and slow
recharge times which
made them only
useful as commuter
cars, but is a
flashlight really
better with lithium
than with a
replaceable cell?
When household
electronics are
treated as
disposable, and
Right to Repair is
only a glimmer in
the eye of some
legislators, a
worn-out cell in a
rarely-used device
might destine it to
the trash bin,
especially for the
less technically
inclined.
[Bogost] decries
“the misconception
that rechargeables
are always better,”
although we wonder
why his article
completely fails to
mention the
existence of
rechargeable NiMH
AAs and AAAs which
are loads better
than their forebears
in the 90s. Perhaps
even more
relevantly,
standardized pouch
and cylindrical
lithium cells are
available like the
venerable 18650
which we know many
makers prefer due to
their easy-to-obtain
nature. Regardless,
we can certainly
agree with the
author that easy to
source and replace
batteries are few
and far between in
many consumer
electronics these
days. Perhapsnew
EU regulationswill
help?
Once you’veselected
a batteryfor
your project, don’t
forget tomanage
itif
it’s a Li-ion cell.
With great power
density, comes great
responsibility.
Meshtastic Adds
Wireless
Connectivity to
Possum Trap
Perhaps every
gardener to attempt
to grow a tomato,
lettuce, or bean has
had to contend with
animals trying to
enjoy the food
before the gardener
themselves can,
whether it’s a
groundhog, rabbit,
mouse, crow, or even
iguana. There are
numerous ways to
discourage these
mischievous animals
from foraging the
garden beds
including traps, but
these devices have
their downsides as
well. False alarms
can be a problem as
well as trapping
animals that will be
overly aggravated to
be inside the trap
(like skunks) and
while the latter
problem can’t easily
be solved by
technology,the
former can with the
help of Meshtastic.
[Norman Jester]’s
problem was an
errant possum, but
these nocturnal
animals generally
come out while
humans are asleep,
and other nighttime
animals like rats
can activate the
trap and then
escape. To help with
this, a Meshtastic
node was added to
the San Diego mesh
using a 3.5mm audio
jack as a detector.
When the trap is
activated, the
closing door yanks a
plug out of the
jack, alerting the
node that the trap
has been closed. If
it’s a false alarm
the trap can be
easily and quickly
reset, and if a
possum has found its
way in then it can
be transported to a
more suitable home
the next day.
It’s worth noting
that American
possums (distinct
from theAustralian
animalsof
the same name)are
an
often-misunderstood
animal that
generally do more
good than harm.
They help to control
Lyme disease, eat a
lot of waste that
other animals won’t,
don’t spread rabies,
and don’t cause
nearly as much
disruption to human
life as other
animals like feral
cats or raccoons.
But if one is
upsetting a garden
or another type of
animal is causing a
disturbance, this
Meshtastic solution
does help solve some
of the problems with
live traps. For
smaller animals,
though,take
a look at this
Arudino-powered trap
instead.
MONDAY
EDITION:
Elementary
School Makes Radio
Contact Astronaut
Aboard the
International Space
Station (Florida)
On December 17,
2024, at 1:49 p.m.
EST, students at
Sally Ride
Elementary School in
Orlando, Florida,
made live radio
contact with NASA
astronaut Commander
Sunita Williams
aboard the
International Space
Station (ISS).
The ISS is an
orbiting science
laboratory about 250
miles above Earth.
It travels at 17,500
miles per hour which
is about five miles
per second.
The ISS is about
the size of a
six-bedroom house.
It has sleeping
rooms, science labs,
bathrooms, and
places to exercise.
Astronauts from
different space
agencies conduct
research and
experiments on the
station. Using
amateur radio
technology, students
at Sally Ride
Elementary took
turns asking
Commander Williams
questions.
“When Sunita
Williams started
talking, my brain
was like, ‘Oh my
God, I’m talking to
an astronaut!'” said
Darian Rodriguez,
10, a fourth-grade
student at Sally
Ride Elementary. “It
was amazing.
Everyone at the
event was really
friendly, especially
Sunita Williams. It
was really fun to
hear her talk and
learn about life in
space.”
Skywarn Youth Netis
operating a special
event under callsignN0A.
The event aims to
educate hams about
severe weather
awareness. N0A will
be active on HF
across 80m, 40m,
20m, 17m, 15m, 12m,
and 10m and will
utilize both SSB and
FT8 modes. The event
runs March 17-31,
2025.
Each spring,
National Weather
Service Forecast
Offices hold
Severe Weather
Awareness weeks
in their
respective
regions to
educate the
public about the
dangers of
severe weather
and the
importance of
being prepared.
Our goal with
this special
event station is
to do the same
within the
amateur radio
community.
Contests are an
excellent way to
boost your skills,
test your station’s
capability and add
to your totals if
you’re working
towards DXCC or WAS,
or their five-band
equivalents.
The CQ WPX contest
is a few weeks away.
Like most contests,
the objective is to
maximize your score,
but the WPX has a
twist: each new
prefix is a
score-multiplier.
To maximize your
score, collect as
many new prefixes as
possible.
Here are a few
quick definitions
and highlights from
anold(2016)
set of WPX rules:
PREFIX:The
letter/numeral
combination which
forms the first part
of the amateur call.
Examples: N8, W8,
WD8, HG1, HG19, KC2,
OE2, OE25, LY1000,
etc. Any difference
in the numbering,
lettering, or order
of same shall count
as a separate
prefix.
PREFIX
MULTIPLIERS:The
prefix multiplier is
the number of valid
prefixes worked.
Each PREFIX is
counted only once
regardless of the
band or number of
times the same
prefix is worked.
SCORING:The
final score is the
result of the total
QSO points
multiplied by the
number of different
prefixes worked.
If your call sign
has a rare prefix,
this may result in
you being a highly
sought-after station
in the WPX contest.
A unique prefix has
the potential to add
significantly to
your score.
Call
sign - enter
the prefix
of interest
- e.g. NX9.
No need
for
'wildcards'
like*,
%,or?
Service
Group
From the
drop-down
menu, selectAmateur;
This
includes
both
standard
issue (HA)
and vanity
(HV) call
signs.
Go down the
page a bit and
findLicense
Detail.
Look at
the first
category,Status
SelectActive
This
will
eliminate
all
cancelled,
expired, or
other
non-active
call signs.
(4) Click theSEARCHbutton,
located at the top
or bottom of the
screen. (NOTE:
don’t use the
geosearch button.)
Results will show
how many active
(currently licensed)
US amateur radio
operators hold that
prefix. That's it;
your tax dollars at
work.
For fun, let’s
look up the US
license prefix NX9.
The FCC site shows
only 27 active US
amateur radio
operators with that
prefix. Remember, a
unique prefix is a
score-multiplier;
NX9 will be popular
in this contest!
HAMS YOU MIGHT KNOW- ALIVE
AND SK
K1TP-
Jon....Editor of As The World
Turns....
WB1ABC-
Ari..Bought an amp and now we
can here him on 75 meters,
worships his wife, obsessed with
Id'ing N1BOW-Phil...Retired
broadcast engineer, confused and
gullible, cheap, only uses
singl ply toilet paper KB1OWO-
Larry...Handsome Fellow
,only cuts lawn in August, plows
snow the rest in Jackman, Maine W1GEK-
Big Mike....Nearfest Cook, big
motor home, electronics software
engineer ... AA1SB-
Neil...Living large traveling
the country with his
girlfriend...loves CW N1YX-
Igor....peddles quality Russian
keys, software engineer K1BGH...Art.....Restores
cars and radio gear, nice fella... N1XW.....Mike-easy
going, Harley riding kind of
guy! K1JEK-Joe...Easy going, can
be found at most ham flea market
...Cobra Antenna builder.. KA1GJU-
Kriss- Tower climbing pilot who
cooks on the side at
Hosstrader's... W1GWU-Bob....one
of the Hosstrader's original
organizers, 75 meter regular,
Tech Wizard!!! K1PV-
Roger....75 meter regular, easy
going guy... W1XER...Scott....easy
going guy, loves to split
cordwood and hunt... KB1VX-
Barry- the picture says it all,
he loves food! KC1BBU-
Bob....the Mud Duck from the
Cape Cod Canal, making a lot of
noise. W1STS- Scott...philosopher,
hat connoisseur,
KB1JXU-
Matthew...75 meter regular...our
token liberal Democrat out of
Florida K1PEK-Steve..Founder
of Davis-RF....my best friend
from high school K9AEN-John...Easy
going ham found at all the ham
fests K1BQT.....Rick....very
talented ham, loves his
politics, has designed gear for
MFJ... W1KQ- Jim- Retired
Air Force
Controller...told quite a few
pilots where to go! N1OOL-Jeff-
The 3936 master plumber and
ragchewer... K1BRS-Bruce-
Computer Tech of 3936...multi
talented kidney stone passing
ham... K1BGH- Arthur, Cape Cod,
construction company/ice cream
shop, hard working man.... W1VAK-
Ed, Cape Cod, lots of experience
in all areas, once was a Jacques
Cousteus body guard.... K1BNH-
Bill- Used to work for a bottled
gas company-we think he has been
around nitrous oxide to long W1HHO- Cal...3941
group K1MPM-
Pete...3941
group WA1JFX-
Russell...3941
SILENT KEYS
Silet Key
KA1BXB-Don...Regular
on 3900 mornings....just
don't
mention
politics
to
him,
please! Silent Key
N1IOM- 3910 colorful
regular Silent Key
WS1D-
Warren- "Windy" - Bullnet Silent Key
KMIG-Rick....75
Meter Regular....teaches the
future of mankind, it's scary! Silent
Key
Neil
-K1YPM
.....a
true
gentleman Silent Key
K1BXI- John.........Dr.
Linux....fine amateur radio op
....wealth of experience... Silent KeyVA2GJB-
Graham...one of the good 14313
guys back in the day. Silent Key
K1BHV-
David...PITA Silent Key
W1JSH-
Mort...Air Force man Silent Key
K1MAN--Glen....PITA
Silent KeyKB1CJG-"Cobby"-
Low key gent can be found on
many of the 75 meter
nets......... Silent KeyWB1AAZ-
Mike, Antrim, NH, auto parts
truck driver-retired Silent KeyWB1DVD-
Gil....Gilly..Gilmore.....easy
going, computer parts selling,
New England Ham.. Silent Key
W1OKQ-
Jack....3936 Wheeling and
Dealing......keeping the boys on
there toes.... Silent Key
W1TCS-
Terry....75 meter
regular, wealth of electronic
knowledge... Silent Key
WIPNR-
Mack....DXCC Master, worked them
all!.. 3864 regular for many
years... Silent Key
WILIM- Hu....SK at 92... 3864
regular for many years... Silent Key
N1SIE-
Dave....Loves to fly Silent Key:N1WBD-
Big Bob- Tallest ham, at 6'10",
of the 3864 group Silent Key:
W1FSK-Steve....Navy
Pilot, HRO Salesman, has owned
every radio ever built! Silent Key:
W4NTI-Vietnam
Dan....far from easy going cw
and ssb op on 14275/313 Silent Key:K1FUB-Bill-
Loved ham radio....