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EHAM QTH QRZ ARRL HRO ICOM KENWOOD YAESU ELBO ROOM COMMENTS
WEDNESDAY EDITION: Simple day today, radio club from 10-12, followed by lunch at the Elks, and then pickup a pupu platter to snack on tonight....maybe checkin to the 4pm Elbo Net on 3928 ....On a side note, just how stupid is NE Patriots star Stefan Diggs? Facing strangulation and asault charges, what timing! Building a Low-Cost Satellite TrackerLooking up at the sky just after sunset or just before sunrise will reveal a fairly staggering amount of satellites orbiting overhead, from tiny cubesats to the International Space Station. Of course these satellites are always around, and even though you’ll need specific conditions to view them with the naked eye, with the right radio antenna and only a few dollars in electronics you can see exactly which ones are flying by at any time. [Josh] aka [Ham Radio Crash Course] is demonstrating this build on his channel and showing every step needed to get something like this working. The first part is finding the correct LoRa module, which will be the bulk of the cost of this project. Unlike those used for most Meshtastic nodes, this one needs to be built for the 433 MHz band. The software running on this module is from TinyGS, which we have featured here before, and which allows a quick and easy setup to listen in to these types of satellites. This build goes much further into detail on building the antenna, though, and also covers some other ancillary tasks like mounting it somewhere outdoors. With all of that out of the way, though, the setup is able to track hundreds of satellites on very little hardware, as well as display information about each of them. We’d always favor a build that lets us gather data like this directly over using something like a satellite tracking app, although those do have their place. And of course, with slightly more compute and a more directed antenna there is all kinds of other data beaming down that we can listen in on as well, although that’s not always the intent. Lizard Wireless Station celebrates 125 years of world‑changing radio historyThe National Trust is marking the 125th anniversary of the Lizard Wireless Station — the clifftop site that helped transform global communication — with a month of special on‑air activity and public openings throughout January.
The historic building, perched above the Atlantic at Britain’s most southerly point, first opened on January 1 1901, becoming one of the world’s earliest commercial wireless telegraphy stations and enabling ships up to 80 miles away to communicate with land for the first time. Just weeks later, on January 23 1901, the station achieved a groundbreaking feat: receiving a wireless signal sent from St Catherine’s Point on the Isle of Wight — conclusive proof that radio waves could follow the curvature of the Earth. The breakthrough paved the way for Guglielmo Marconi’s landmark transatlantic transmission from Poldhu later that same year, establishing the foundations of long‑distance radio communication. Today, the site remains a living piece of radio history. Cared for by the National Trust and run by dedicated volunteers, the station still operates as an amateur radio hub, connecting visitors and radio enthusiasts with the very landscape where pioneering experiments once took place. During the anniversary month, the station’s original call sign will return to the airwaves, and visitors will be welcomed inside for rare behind‑the‑scenes tours. Since 2017, the station’s amateur radio operations have been overseen by Geoff Bate, who stepped into the role after retiring in 2016. Geoff, who describes the station as a unique blend of 'location, history and people,' says meeting visitors and sharing its story remains one of the highlights of his work. His duties range from equipment maintenance to managing access to masts and aerials, as well as helping amateur radio operators who travel specifically to broadcast from the historic site. Inside, one room has been recreated to show what the equipment would have looked like during Marconi’s era, while others display radio artefacts and house the modern amateur station still in active use.
TUESDAY EDITION: New Years' Resolutions...none here....Big project of the day, hookup a Blink video doorbell I got for xmas, I never had a doorbell on this house..... Space-π to transmit SSTV images via UMKA-1 (RS40S) CubeSatAMSAT-Francophone has posted information about an SSTV event sponsored by Space-π. The event will transmit SSTV images from the UMKA-1 (RS40S) CubeSat and run December 28th through the later portion of January. Transmitted images will include children’s drawings with additional imagery to follow early in January. Those looking to receive images can point their antennas at the UMKA-1 (RS40S) CubeSat and tune their receivers to 437.625 MHz. SSTV images are expected to be transmitted in the Robot 36 format. Source: AMSAT-Francophone Build A High Voltage Supply For Vacuum Tube Work
If you work on simple digital projects, just about any bench supply will offer the voltage and current you’re looking for. However, if you’re working with valves, you’ll often find yourself needing much higher voltages that can be tricky to source. [Chappy Happy] has shared a design for a simple HV power supply that should prove useful to vacuum tube enthusiasts. The build is fairly basic in nature, lacing together some commonly available parts to generate the necessary voltages for working with common vacuum tubes from a 12 volt DC input. Inside the supply is a UC3843A DC boost converter, set up to output high voltage up to around 300 volts DC, with a ripple filter added for good measure. The output can be adjusted with a knob, with a voltmeter on the front panel. There’s also a 12-volt output, and a LM2596 step down converter to produce 6.3 volts for the filament supply. The whole project is built in an old Heathkit project box, and he demonstrates the supply with a simple single-tube amplifier. If you find yourself regularly whipping up tube circuits, you might like to have something like this on your workbench. Or, you might even consider cooking up your own tubes from scratch if you’re more adventurous like that. Video after the break. Blog – Hackaday Read More
MONDAY EDITION: Hidden gems you can find at Harbor Freight for ham radio.... EMAIL:
Hi Jon.....
If I try
arrl.org with
Firefox browser,
it won't let me
in saying that
the "secure
certificate" is
expired or
revoked. I had
downloaded the
Vivaldi browser
mentioned on
your site and it
lets me look at
it OK.. I
played with
Vivaldi a bit
and it seems
worthwhile and,
as they say,
like Firefox
used to be in
the good old
days.
I would think
those boys down
there in CT
would be a bit
more adept at
keeping kosher
with their
site...
73 de Norm W1ITT
Jon,
Jim Heath
has passed.
This video
was posted
today.
73,
Greg W1ECB
aka
"Hollywood"
What an amazing bit of kit. And it will connect to Wireshark too? OH MY Keep your phone in airplane mode, and your key fobs in the microwave. Everythings getting so tiny and I need glasses.
If this
trend
keeps
up,
we'll
ALL soon
look
like Roy
Orbison!
Charles club commemorates first radio transmission 125 years ago“C-Q, C-Q, C-Q November 3 Victor, November 3 Victor Special Events station from Cobb Island, Maryland. C-Q, C-Q, C-Q this is November 3 Victor.” Sounds of digital communications and trying to make contact with other amateur radio operators could be heard around Cobb Island last week on Dec. 23 during a special event. Members of the Charles County Amateur Radio Club met at Very House and Fisherman’s Field on Cobb Island to commemorate the first transmission radio 125 years ago when Reginald Fessenden had the idea to put human voice on the air instead of using Morse code. The spark gap transmitter used by Fessenden had a morse transmitter so they could hear the dots and dashes, Jeff Humbert, member of the Charles County Amateur Radio Club, said. “Voice was a big step to be able to transfer your voice,” he said. “He lived to see the radio broadcast of the 1930s.” On Dec. 23, 1900, Fessenden’s message was “One, two, three, four. Is it snowing where you are, Mr. Thiessen?” Thiessen responded, “Yes.” Fessenden spent a few years on Cobb Island with his associates and built “all sorts of various contraptions” until they succeeded, Bob Curran, president of the Charles County Amateur Radio Club, told Southern Maryland News. “No one could even talk on the radio until he figured out how to do it,” he said. “It happened in our backyard.” Last week, Curran set up a TV transmitter to send video from Very House to Fisherman’s Field while digital communications, the same way a cellphone “talks” to a cellphone tower, came from a digital radio model. On the digital radio model at the Very House, Bill Luyster, a member of the Charles County Amateur Radio Club, made contact with two amateur radio operators the morning of the event. Then around 11 a.m., his computer lit up red, signifying operators were making contact with him. One of the callers was from Italy. Another was from Russia or Ukraine and two were from somewhere in the United States, according to the local club members. A yellow bar on the computer is the transmitter Luyster uses to contact potential callers and green is when operators call “C-Q,” which is when they call any station that is on the same frequency and sending digital signals. The club has a QSL card, like a postcard that commemorates events, that callers receive that include information about the radio transmission that can be used to help them get amateur radio awards, Jeff Humbert said. It used to be the only way to send information, but now it can be sent through a computer. During Fessenden’s time, there were only two houses nearby, Pam Humbert, member of the Charles County Amateur Radio Club, said. Fessenden got supplies from Washington, D.C. It was easily accessible, but still isolated. “At the time [it] was new technology,” Pam Humbert said. “He wanted to keep it secret for a while.” Fessenden made it possible for amateur radio operators to participate in the club’s events like "Parks on the Air," which makes radio contacts from different state national parks, or operate their own stations at home. “These are the kind of things amateurs do to occupy their time,” Luyster said. “It’s just a hobby.” In the words of an amateur radio operator: “7-3.” Or in plain language: “thank you, good bye.”
Any Old TV Can Be A Clock With ArduinoIf you’ve got an old black and white TV, it’s probably not useful for much. There are precious few analog broadcasters left in the world and black and white isn’t that fun to watch, anyway. However, with a little work, you could repurpose that old tube as a clock, as [mircemk] demonstrates. The build is based around an Arduino Nano R3. This isn’t a particularly powerful microcontroller board, but it’s good enough to run the classic TVOut library. This library lets you generate composite video on an Atmel AVR microcontroller with an absolute minimum of supporting circuitry. [mircemk] paired the Arduino with a DS3231 real-time clock, and whipped up code to display the time and date on the composite video output. He then also demonstrates how to hack the signal into an old TV that doesn’t have a specific input for composite signals. You’ll note the headline says “any old TV can be a clock,” and that’s for good reason. Newer TVs tend to eschew the classic composite video input, so the TVOut library won’t be any good if you’re trying to get a display up on your modern-era flatscreen. In any case, we’ve seen the TVOut library put to good use before, too. Video after the break. Blog – Hackaday Read More
WEEKEND EDITION: The coating to 1 inch turned out to be 4 inches of light fluff, I could probably use the leaf blower to clear the deck and wlkways.... Learn about the hams on 3928: Art- K1BGH, a hell of a nice guy, talented too! I was first licensed in 1956 as KN1BGH , took my test from Bob Strid W1RUU. Back in those days the wheels of the government spun very slowly, It took a long four months to get my novice license in the mail! I ran 5 watts with a home brew 6l6 oscillator and a Hallicrafters Sky Buddy and a folded dipole abt 15 feet off the ground. It was magical, I would race home from school to get on the radio! Turn the tides of time forward, After spending 31 years commercial fishing, away from home for a week at a time, helping my bride raise three wonderful kids, decided to retire from fishing and along with that came the desire to get back into ham radio. I started with the novice call KA1COJ , then N1HPQ as a general, KD1AL as a Advanced then got my old call back K1BGH. Later got my extra . Now enjoy rag chewing with friends on 75 meters and enjoy working dxon 80 meters . Now in semi-retirement helping my bride with her landscape business and helping my daughter-in law with her seasonal cafe and my seasonal icecream shop and keeping up to speed with my five grandchildren...Phew Retirement !!!! My other loves in my life besides my Bride, are our Island Home on Chebeague Island and my passion about Model A Fords. the one I am working on now is a 1931 hot rod that was neglected for years it is now at a stage where it is road worthy, FUN ! So Long Firefox, Hello VivaldiIt’s been twenty-three years since the day Phoenix was released, the web browser that eventually became Firefox. I downloaded it on the first day and installed it on my trusty HP Omnibook 800 laptop, and until this year I’ve used it ever since. Yet after all this time, I’m ready to abandon it for another browser. In the previous article in this series I went into my concerns over the direction being taken by Mozilla with respect to their inclusion of AI features and my worries about privacy in Firefox, and I explained why a plurality of browser engines is important for the Web. Now it’s time to follow me on my search for a replacement, and you may be surprised by one aspect of my eventual choice. Happily for my own purposes, there are a range of Firefox alternatives which fulfill my browser needs without AI cruft and while allowing me to be a little more at peace with my data security and privacy. There’s Chromium of course even if it’s still way too close to Google for my liking, and there are a host of open-source WebKit and Blink based browsers too numerous to name here. In the Gecko world that should be an easier jump for a Firefox escapee there are also several choices, for example LibreWolf, and Waterfox. In terms of other browser engines there’s the extremely promising but still early in development Ladybird, and the more mature Servo, which though it is available as a no-frills browser, bills itself as an embedded browser engine. I have not considered some other projects that are either lightweight browser engines, or ones not under significant active development. Over this summer and autumn then I have tried a huge number of different browsers. Every month or so I build the latest Ladybird and Servo; while I am hugely pleased to see progress they’re both still too buggy for my purposes. Servo is lightning-fast but sometimes likes to get stuck in mobile view, while Ladybird is really showing what it’s going to be but remains for now slow-as-treacle. These are ones to watch, and support. I gave LibreWolf and Waterfox the most attention over the summer, both of which after the experience I’d describe as like Firefox but with mildly annoying bugs. The inability to video conference reliably is a show-stopper in my line of work, and since my eyesight is no longer what it once was I like my browsers to remember when I have zoomed in on a tab. Meanwhile Waterfox on Android is a great mobile browser, right up until it needs to open a link in another app, and fails. I’m used to the quirks of open-source software after 30+ years experimenting with Linux, but when it comes to productivity I can’t let my software disrupt the flow of Hackaday articles. It might surprise you after all this open-source enthusiasm then, to see the browser I’ve ended up comfortable with. Vivaldi may be driven by the open-source Blink engine from Chromium and Chrome, but its proprietary front end doesn’t have an open-source licence. It’s freeware, or free-as-in-beer, and I think the only such software I use. Why, I hear you ask? It’s an effort to produce a browser like Opera used to be in the old days, it’s European which is a significant consideration when it comes to data protection law, and it has (so far) maintained a commitment to privacy while not being evil in the Google motto sense. It’s quick, I like its interface once the garish coloured default theme has been turned off, and above all, it Just Works. I have my browser back, and I can get on with writing. Should they turn evil I can dump them without a second thought, and hope by then Ladybird has matured enough to suit my needs. It may not be a trend many of us particularly like, but here in 2025 there’s a sense that the browser has reduced our computers almost to the status of a terminal. It’s thus perhaps the most important piece of software on the device, and in that light I hope you can understand some of the concerns levelled in this series. If you’re reading this from Firefox HQ I’d implore you to follow my advice and go back to what made Firefox so great back in the day, but for the rest of you I’d like to canvass your views on my choice of a worthy replacement. As always, the comments are waiting.
Amateur Radio
Newsline Report
FRIDAY EDITION: I hope all had a great holiday, I sure did....enjoying the 4 grandkids is the whole deal and that of being blessed with a great family, xyl, and good health!....3927 hams- please send a picture of your shack and I will post it! Learn about the hams on 3928: Shout out to Russell- W1JFX in WALDOBORO, ME. Russell has been licensed since the 1960's and has built his share of ham gear over the years. Currently running a loop antenna, Icom 7300 onto a AL-80b. Waldoboro is centrally located along the pristine coast of Lincoln County, Maine. Incorporated in 1773, it soon developed a reputation as a ship building and port facility from the banks of the scenic Medomak River. The town's strong agricultural and fishing legacy continues today. Waldoboro is consistently the largest soft-shell clam landing in the State of Maine. Our farming heritage has been renewed by enthusiasm for traditional natural fiber production, cheesemaking, farm brewing, fermentation, soapmaking, and other lost agrarian arts. Waldoboro is becoming a popular destination with miles of beautiful river frontage, a thriving arts community, and a vast historical interest in its past as a German settlement. From the shores of our pristine Medomak River to our farms come home to Waldoboro! A Holographic Seven-Segment Clock
Seven-segment displays are one of the most ho-hum ways to display the time. They were cool for a little bit in the 70s, but by now, they’re a little bit old hat. That is, unless you get weird with it. This holographic seven-segment clock from [mosivers] qualifies neatly in that category. The first step was to make the holographic segment displays, because they’re not really something you can just buy off the shelf. [mosivers] achieved this by using a kit from LitiHolo, which enables you to create holograms by shooting a laser at special holographic film. Only, a few upgrades were made to use the kit with a nicer red diode laser that [mosivers] had on hand for better performance. The seven-segment layouts were carefully recorded on to the film to form the basic numerals of the clock, such that illuminating the films from different angles would light different segments of the numeral. It’s quite involved, but it’s explained well in the build video. As for the timekeeping side of things, an ESP32 was used, setup to query a network time server to stay accurate. The microcontroller then commands a series of LEDs to light up as needed to illuminate the relevant segments of the holographic film to show the time. Ultimately, [mosivers] built a cool clock with a look you won’t find anywhere else. It’s a lot more work than just wiring up some classic seven-segment LEDs, but we think the result is worth it. If you fancy other weird seven-segment builds, though, we’ve got plenty of others in the till.
XMAS EDITION: EMAIL: From the marble man...
Twas the night
before christmas
and all through
the Kramas's
house
Not a creature
was stirring not
even a one- eyed
mouse
He calls
upstairs to
Linda the Tec
Linda come down
here. my shack
is a wreck..
His Cobra
antenna hangs
high in the air
The next day he
looks up and now
it's not there
So he climbs up
the tower
you know Joe he
needs more
Power;;
He calls big
Dave down at HRO
Dave come up
here please my
grass won't
grow
Mean time
Linda's outside
liming the lawn
Joe's taking his
new Amp down to
the pawn
So Joe goes down
to the cellar to
check on the
well
He lifts off the
cover and what
the helL
There is a one-
eyed mouse
floating deep
down inside
Linda comes down
to look and Joe
tries to hide
The stocking
were hung by the
super clean
Pellet stove
And Joe's
looking out for
the newest
Amazon Trove
Merry X-mas
to all the guys
on 3.928 even
you Mike
XMAS EVE EDITION: Merry Xmas to all my readers, even the no-coders....no snow! U.S. and Venezuela Jam Caribbean GPS Signals to Thwart Attacks, Raising Flight Hazard
Military
brinkmanship
between
President Trump
and Nicolás
Maduro of
Venezuela has
led to an
increase in
electronic
warfare in the
region.
An escalating standoff between the United States and Venezuela has led both countries’ militaries to jam satellite navigation signals in the Caribbean to guard against a potential attack, data show, putting air and sea traffic in the region at greater risk of a collision or accident. At least some of the U.S. warships that have deployed to the Caribbean in recent months have been jamming GPS signals in their vicinity, according to an analysis of data provided by Stanford University and a U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational matters. The Trump administration says the warships, which include the Navy’s most modern aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, are targeting drug trafficking to the United States orchestrated by the Venezuelan government. Read more – NY Times: https://bit.ly/3Nf7DUp How Israel’s amateur radio operators used quiet diplomacy, saved lives on Oct. 7 – opinion
In a world where
trust has become
a scarce
resource,
amateur radio
operators offer
something
different: human
communication
that connects
people around
the world who
share the same
passion.
In a digital age in which screens shape reality and algorithms steer public opinion, there exists another arena, quiet and largely unnoticed, where a very different kind of communication takes place. It is a world in which private individuals, enthusiasts, connect countries, break down barriers and build bridges that at times precede official policy. Many are unaware of the depth of the diplomatic and human contribution made by amateur radio operators worldwide. As early as the 1960s and 1970s, rare moments of openness were recorded. At a time when Israeli amateur radio operators were legally prohibited from communicating with Arab countries, one voice nonetheless broke through: that of a Jordanian radio amateur bearing the unique call sign JY1, King Hussein. Hussein, an avid radio enthusiast, operated a station from the royal palace and at times from London. His contacts with Israeli radio amateurs were exceptional. He did not limit himself to brief, formal exchanges, known as QSOs, but held long, friendly conversations marked by genuine human curiosity. This was an unusual phenomenon at the time. Years later, following the signing of the peace treaty, King Hussein invited Israeli amateur radio operators for an official visit to Amman and presented them with gifts as mementos. Read more – Jerusalem Post: https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-880631 Lockerbie 1988: amateur radio volunteers’ pivotal communication in disaster response remembered in 2025hirty-seven years after the devastating Lockerbie bombing, the extraordinary efforts of amateur radio enthusiasts who provided a crucial communication lifeline amid the chaos continue to resonate. As the world reflects in 2025, their vital role underscores the enduring importance of volunteerism and resilient communication networks in times of crisis. On December 21, 1988, the small Scottish town of Lockerbie became the site of an international tragedy when Pan Am Flight 103 exploded, scattering debris and claiming 270 lives. The immediate aftermath plunged the area into disarray, overwhelming local infrastructure and conventional communication systems. In the face of unprecedented destruction, a unique group emerged to bridge the communication gap. Amateur radio operators, often called “hams,” swiftly mobilized, transforming their hobby into an indispensable emergency service, connecting first responders and coordinating relief efforts when other means failed. Read more – Mix Vale: https://bit.ly/3MQjVTc
$300..... TUESDAY EDITION: Talking heads say coating to 1 inch, more up north where can do something with it, like ski....not much ham news to post.... How does AllStarLink actually work, I askedI asked the Claude AI “how does AllStarLink actually work?” The long-but-understandable response seems pretty good to me. Find it at https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/87ecadbe-a4ab-4b5d-9045-fd55dc2c533d Following are a few excerpts from Claude’s long (but good) response. There is a lot more at the link and if you are interested in learning more about AllStarLink, it’s worth reviewing. From Claude: What Is AllStarLink?AllStarLink is a network system that connects amateur radio repeaters, remote base stations, and hotspots worldwide using Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP). Think of it as a phone system for radios—instead of dialing phone numbers, you “dial” node numbers to connect different radio systems across the internet. Core ArchitectureThe Foundation: Asterisk + app_rptAllStarLink is built on two key components: Asterisk PBX – An open-source phone system (Private Branch Exchange) that handles audio routing and call management. Asterisk is essentially a sophisticated audio switching system that was designed for telephone systems. app_rpt – A custom application written specifically for Asterisk that transforms it into a repeater controller. This is the “secret sauce” that makes Asterisk understand how to work with radios instead of just phones. Node ArchitectureWhat Is a Node?A node is the basic building block of AllStarLink. Each node consists of:
MONDAY EDITION: Weather experts are predicting a coating to 1 inch for Tuesday, the same as the last storm that I got 5 inches of powdery snow. Plow will be mounted and ready for action this time around, fooled me once!.... I read that Glock is no longer going to make handguns for the public. Their patents have run out and so many other co's are imitating theirs, and cheaper. Glock will continue to supply mil and police. Obsolete Part 97 Rules to be Deleted February 10, 2026The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in October 2025 adopted a Report and Order to delete almost 400 obsolete rules pertaining to its wireless services. As previously reported by ARRL, among the deletions were four in Part 97 that govern the Amateur Radio Service. ARRL reports that the notice of the Report and Order has now been published in the Federal Register. Unless an objection is raised by January 2 that the Commission finds to deserve its consideration, the following four Part 97 provisions will be deleted as of February 10, 2026:
4. § 97.521(b) and Appendix 2. This rule and appendix relate to obsolete VEC regions.
Have you looked behind your ham desk lately? An Introduction to DC Motor Technology[Thinking Techie] takes us back to basics in a recent video explaining how magnets, coils, brushed DC motors, and brushless DC motors work. If this is on your “to learn” list, or you just want a refresher, you can watch the video below. It’ll be ten minutes well-spent. The video covers the whole technology stack behind the humble DC motor in its various incarnations. Starting with basic magnetic effects, it then proceeds through 2-wire brushed DC motors and finally into 3-wire brushless DC motors (BLDC motors). It’s worth knowing that the 3-wires in a BLDC motor are for three power phases; they are not, as in an RC servo, positive, negative, and signal leads. But, confusingly, the BLDC motors in your PC fans do have positive, negative, and signal pins. But that’s because, like an RC servo, the fans have controllers built into the case. Thanks to [Keith Olson] for writing in about this one. If you’d like to go deeper into BLDC controller tech, check out Take A Ride Through The Development Of A Custom BLDC Motor Controller and Moteus Open Source BLDC Controller Gets Major Upgrade.
WEEKEND EDITION: The new Elbo Room news girl....A casket company offering a new energy drink, AWAKE. You have to be shitting me.....This should get you in the xmas mood...
Up to $25,000 at Stake in New ARRL Student Coding CompetitionPre-registration is now open for a Student Coding Competition, a new national challenge sponsored by ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio®. The project is designed to engage young radio amateurs in shaping the future of amateur radio through software development. Open to ARRL-member amateur radio operators aged 21 and younger, the competition will invite students to design a mobile app that supports ARRL and the amateur radio community. Cash awards totaling up to $25,000 will be presented to one or more winning entries. The competition officially begins on January 1, 2026, when complete rules and application specifications will be released at coding.arrl.org. Participants are reminded not to start coding yet — entries must follow the published requirements. Project submissions will be due by March 31, 2026. Entries will be judged on how well they meet the specifications, user interface design and usability, code quality and stability, and the inclusion of extra features. Adult ARRL members are encouraged to help spread the word and support the next generation of amateur radio innovators. ARRL Student Membership is free for full-time students aged 21 and younger, removing a key barrier to participation. Young hams, educators, and mentors are encouraged to pre-register now at coding.arrl.org to receive updates as additional details become available and to prepare for this exciting opportunity to contribute lasting tools to amateur radio. Only in Scotland:A man drove at excessive speeds to evade police officers after he was caught using a sex toy in the back of his car. Mehboob Mohammed, 53, was initially spotted by witnesses in Glasgow’s Castlemilk on August 23, 2023. Mohammed was found half-naked with his phone propped up as he committed a sex act on himself. He was reported to the police, who later found him in a state of panic. Mohammed went on to drive at excessive speeds, go on the wrong side of the road and went through a red light as officers pursued him to East Kilbride, Lanarkshire. Mohammed pled guilty on Tuesday at Glasgow Sheriff Court to a charge of public indecency. He also admitted assaulting two police officers, dangerous driving and failing to appear at a court hearing. The court heard that the witnesses’ attention was drawn to Mohammed’s Honda Civic vehicle on a residential street.
Amateur Radio
Newsline Report FRIDAY EDITION: 50 MPH gusts today should test the antennas today, lots of rain to boot.... Apocalypse: Survivable Low-Frequency Communication SystemIn the global game of nuclear brinksmanship, secrets are the coin of the realm. This was especially true during the Cold War, when each side fielded armies of spies to ferret out what the other guy was up to, what their capabilities were, and how they planned to put them into action should the time come. Vast amounts of blood and treasure were expended, and as distasteful as the whole thing may be, at least it kept armageddon at bay. But secrets sometimes work at cross-purposes to one’s goals, especially when one of those goals is deterrence. The whole idea behind mutually assured destruction, or MAD, was the certain knowledge that swift retaliation would follow any attempt at a nuclear first strike. That meant each side had to have confidence in the deadliness of the other’s capabilities, not only in terms of their warheads and their delivery platforms, but also in the systems that controlled and directed their use. One tiny gap in the systems used to transmit launch orders could spell the difference between atomic annihilation and at least the semblance of peace. During the height of the Cold War, the aptly named Survivable Low-Frequency Communication System was a key part of the United States’ nuclear deterrence. Along with GWEN, HFGCS, and ERCS, SLFCS was part of the alphabet soup of radio systems designed to make sure the bombs got dropped, one way or another. The hams have a saying: “When all else fails, there’s amateur radio.” It’s true, but it comes with a huge caveat, since hams rely on the ionosphere to bounce their high-frequency (HF) signals around the world. Without that layer of charged particles, their signals would just shoot off into space instead of traveling around the world. For the most part, the ionosphere is a reliable partner in amateur radio’s long-distance communications networks, to the point that Cold War military planners incorporated HF links into their nuclear communications systems. But since at least the Operation Argus and Operation Hardtack tests in 1958, the United States had known about the effect of high-altitude nuclear explosions on the ionosphere. Further exploration of these effects through the Starfish Prime tests in 1962 revealed just how vulnerable the ionosphere is to direct attack, and how easy it would be to disrupt HF communications networks. The vulnerability of the ionosphere to attack was very much in the minds of U.S. Air Force commanders during the initial design sessions that would eventually lead to SLFCS. They envisioned a system based on the propagation characteristics of the EM spectrum at lower frequencies, in the low-frequency (LF) and very-low-frequency (VLF) bands. While wavelengths in the HF part of the spectrum are usually measured in meters, LF and VLF waves are better measured in kilometers, ranging between 1 and 100 kilometers. At these wavelengths, radio behaves very differently than they do further up the dial. For LF signals (30 to 300 kHz), the primary mode of propagation is via ground waves, in which signals induce currents in the Earth’s surface. These currents tend to hug the surface, bending with its curvature and propagating long distances. For VLF signals (3 to 30 kHz), Earth-ionosphere waveguide propagation dominates. Thanks to their enormous wavelengths, which are comparable to the typical altitude of the lowest, or D-layer, of the ionosphere, the waves “see” the space between the ground and the ionosphere as a waveguide, which forms a low-loss path that efficiently guides them around the globe. Critically for the survivability aspect of SLFCS, both of these modes are relatively immune to the ionospheric effects of a nuclear blast. That’s true even for VLF, which would seem to rely on an undisturbed ionosphere to form the “roof” of the necessary waveguide, but the disruption caused by even a large blast is much smaller than their wavelengths, rendering any changes to the ionosphere mostly invisible to them. Big SticksDespite the favorable propagation modes of LF and VLF for a communications system designed to survive a nuclear exchange, those long wavelengths pose some challenges. Chief among these is the physical size of the antennas necessary for these wavelengths. In general, antenna size is proportional to wavelength, which makes the antennas for LF and VLF quite large, at least on the transmitting side. For SLFCS, two transmission sites were used, one at Silver Creek, Nebraska, and another in the middle of the Mojave Desert in Hawes, California. Since ground wave propagation requires a vertically polarized signal, each of these sites had a guyed mast radiator antenna 1,226 feet (373 meters) tall. While the masts and guy wire systems were as reinforced as possible, there’s only so much that can be done to make a structure like that resist a nuke. Still, these structures were rated for a “moderate” nuclear blast within a 10-mile (16-km) radius. That would seem to belie the “survivable” goal of the system, since even at the time SLFCS came online in the late 1960s, Soviet ICBM accuracy was well within that limit. But the paradox is resolved by the fact that SLFCS was intended only as a backup method of getting launch orders through to ICBM launch facilities, to be used to launch a counterattack after an initial exchange that hit other, more valuable targets (such as the missile silos themselves), leaving the ionosphere in tatters. The other challenge of LF/VLF communications is the inherently low data transfer rates at these frequencies. LF and VLF signals only have perhaps a kilohertz to as few as a few hertz of bandwidth available, meaning that they can only encode data at the rate of a few tens of bits per second. Such low data rates preclude everything but the most basic modulation, such as frequency-shift keying (FSK) or its more spectrally efficient cousin, minimum-shift keying (MSK). SLFCS transmitters were also capable of sending plain old continuous wave (CW) modulation, allowing operators to bang out Morse messages in a pinch. When all else fails, indeed. No matter which modulation method was used, the idea behind SLFCS was to trade communications speed and information density for absolute reliability under the worst possible conditions. To that end, SLFCS was only intended to transmit Emergency Action Messages (EAMs), brief alphanumeric strings that encoded specific instructions for missile commanders in their underground launch facilities. Buried LoopsWhile the transmitting side of the SLFCS equation was paradoxically vulnerable, the receiving end of the equation was anything but. These missile alert facilities (MAFs), sprinkled across the upper Midwest, consisted of ten launch facilities with a single Minuteman III ICBM in an underground silo, along with one underground launch control center, or LCC. Above ground, the LCC sports a veritable antenna farm representing almost the entire RF spectrum, plus a few buried surprises, such as the very cool HFGCS antenna silos, which can explosively deploy any of six monopole antennas up from below ground to receive EAMs after the LCC has gotten its inevitable nuking. The other subterranean radio surprise at LCCs is the buried SLFCS antenna. The buried antenna takes advantage of the induced Earth currents in ground wave propagation, and despite the general tendency for LF antennas to be large is actually quite compact. The antennas were a magnetic loop design, with miles of wire wrapped around circular semi-rigid forms about 1.5 meters in diameter. Each antenna consisted of two loops mounted orthogonally, giving the antenna a globe-like appearance. Each loop of the antenna was coated with resin to waterproof and stiffen the somewhat floppy structure a bit before burying it in a pit inside the LCC perimeter fence. Few examples of the antenna exist above ground today, since most were abandoned in place when SLFCS was decommissioned in the mid-1980s. One SLFCS antenna was recently recovered, though, and is currently on display at the Titan Missile Museum in Arizona. Sign of the TimesLike many Cold War projects, the original scope of SLFCS was never fully realized. The earliest plans called for around 20 transmit/receive stations, plus airplanes equipped with trailing wire antennas over a mile long, and more than 300 receive-only sites across the United States and in allied countries. But by the time plans worked their way through the procurement process, technology had advanced enough that military planners were confident that they had the right mix of communications modes for the job. In the end, only the Nebraska and California transmit/receive sites were put into service, and even the airborne transmitters idea was shelved thanks to excessive drag caused by that long trailing wire. Still, the SLFCS towers and the buried loop antennas stayed in service until the mid-1980s, and the concept of LF and VLF as a robust backup for strategic comms lives on with the Air Force’s Minimum Essential Emergency Communications Network. THURSDAY EDITION:3927 follows in the footsteps of 7200 last night. Tom-N1FM was in gloves off mode last night on someone for calling him a liar, interesting frequency with Bruce the blabbering channel master very quiet for a change. Bruce is an expert on religion, guns, politics, and most anything you bring up- he sounds like Don Knots when he gets wound up...What ever happened to Donnie Dumbass on 14313 and the Canadian Cuckoo? Donnie used to stop in and aggravate everyone on 3927, maybe Riley gave him a stern warning to stay away? Let's not forget 3919, always a good laugh but at least no swearing or carrying on... Check out this online magazine....In this edition you will find:
EMAIL:
Hi Jon... Most
of the scary
stories about
solar events and
earth effects
have the tabloid
flavor, but this
one from The
Hill makes a bit
of sense. Not
that we can do a
damn thing about
it either way...
Hoping Santa is
good to you..
Norm W1ITT
Morse Code for ChinaIt is well known that pictographic languages that use Hanzi, like Mandarin, are difficult to work with for computer input and output devices. After all, each character is a tiny picture that represents an entire word, not just a sound. But did you ever wonder how China used telegraphy? We’ll admit, we had not thought about that until we ran into [Julesy]’s video on the subject that you can watch below.
There are about 50,000 symbols, so having a bunch of dots and dashes wasn’t really practical. Even if you designed it, who could learn it? Turns out, like most languages, you only need about 10,000 words to communicate. A telegraph company in Denmark hired an astronomer who knew some Chinese and tasked him with developing the code. In a straightforward way, he decided to encode each word from a dictionary of up to 10,000 with a unique four-digit number. A French expat took the prototype code list and expanded it to 6,899 words, producing “the new telegraph codebook.” The numbers were just randomly assigned. Imagine if you wanted to say “The dog is hungry” by writing “4949 1022 3348 9429.” Not to mention, as [Julesy] points out, the numbers were long driving up the cost of telegrams. It took a Chinese delegate of what would eventually become the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) to come up with a method by which four-digit codes would count as a single Chinese character. So, for example, 1367 0604 6643 0932 were four Chinese characters meaning: “Problem at home. Return immediately.” Languages like Mandarin make typewriters tough, but not impossible. IBM’s had 5,400 characters and also used a four-digit code. Sadly, though, they were not the same codes, so knowing Chinese Morse wouldn’t help you get a job as a typist. Blog – Hackaday Read More
WEDNESDAY EDITION: I bought an Icom 7300 many years ago when it was on sale for a decent price and have used it on 75 meters ssb and digital modes with a little 811 amp. It has been a very reliable radio with the shortcomings of not being able to plug a monitor in to it. The new Icom 7300 MKII has the hdmi outlet for a screen which solves that issue for me, of course I will not upgrade for what it would cost me. I did buy a Yaesu 710 which provided the hdmi port to allow a monitor to be connected directly. Both of these radios are just backup rigs for my main station, an Icom 7600 and Acom amplifier. I prefer the 7300 for operation because I find it easier to maneuver the menu structure than that of the 710, I never cared for the Yaesu menu system. I guess mypoint is if someone asked me if they should buy a new 7300MKII or a 710, I would sit them down at the club and let them try each radio. I think if I only had the money to buy only one radio, the Yaesu 710 is a better bargain than the new Icom 7300MKII...but the Icom 7300MKII would be my choice. Harley-Davidson's Sales Have Tanked, How Much Longer Can It SurviveNow that that's clear, how did Q3 2024 Harley-Davidson Motor Company Motorcycle Shipments go? Not great. In Q3 of 2024, it shipped 27,500 motorcycles, which means it's down 39 percent as compared to the 45,300 it shipped in Q3 of 2023. American Public Media Settles With FCC Over False EAS TonesA program that aired on more than 500 U.S. noncommercial radio stations in 2023 contained Emergency Alert System tones in the absence of a real emergency, according to the FCC. American Public Media Group, the distributor of the program, agreed to a consent decree with the commission’s Enforcement Bureau on Dec. 10. APMG, the parent of American Public Media, a creator and distributor of programming to public radio stations across the U.S., will be making a voluntary contribution of $86,400 to the U.S. Treasury Department as a result of the transmission of EAS tones during a “BBC Witness History” program on tornado chasing. The commission’s rules forbid the use of EAS tones on the air outside actual emergencies or coordinated tests. “Unauthorized use of the EAS tones thus presents a substantial threat to public safety,” the FCC said in its notice on the consent decree. Read more – RadioWorld: https://bit.ly/48SAS6J Investigating Soldering Iron Phantom VoltageJust because you are paranoid doesn’t mean people aren’t out to get you. Do you think your soldering iron is after you? Well, [nanofix] asks (and answers): Is My Soldering Iron Dangerous? He has a look at his cheap FNIRSI soldering station and measures a “phantom voltage” of nearly 50 volts AC across the tip of his iron and earth ground. He explains that this phantom voltage is a very weak power source able to provide only negligible measures of current; indeed, he measures the short circuit current as 0.041 milliamps, or 41 microamps, which is negligible and certainly not damaging to people or components. He pops open his soldering iron power supply (being careful to discharge the high voltage capacitor) and has a look at the switched mode power supply, with a close look at the optocoupler and Y-class capacitor, which bridge the high voltage and low voltage sides of the circuit board. The Y-class capacitor is a special type of safety capacitor designed to fail open rather than fail short. The Y-class capacitor is there to remove high-frequency noise. Indeed, it is this capacitor that is the cause of the phantom voltage on the iron tip. He continues by explaining that you can install a 1M resistor across some pads on the high-voltage side of the board if you really want to get rid of the phantom voltage on your iron, but he emphasizes that this isn’t really necessary. And to finish, he demonstrates that a sensitive MOSFET isn’t damaged at all when it’s connected to the phantom voltage. It is perhaps worth noting that there is a difference between phantom voltage (as seen above with negligible power) and phantom power. Phantom power can deliver non-negligible amounts of power and is often used in microphones. DXLook Introduces Real-Time D-RAP Visualization for HF Absorption EventsDXLook has released a new D-RAP (D-Region Absorption Prediction) view that helps amateur radio operators understand and visualize HF absorption caused by solar X-ray flares in real time. D-region absorption is a major cause of sudden daytime HF blackouts, particularly on lower-frequency bands. DXLook’s new D-RAP view presents existing D-region absorption data in a band-aware, geographic format, allowing operators to visually assess where and on which HF bands absorption may be occurring at a given moment. The D-RAP view is primarily driven by official data from the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center, using the global “frequency for 1 dB absorption” product based on GOES satellite X-ray measurements. This dataset identifies, for each region of the Earth, the highest HF frequency expected to experience significant D-layer absorption at the current time. When NOAA data is unavailable or becomes outdated, DXLook automatically switches to a physics-based fallback model derived from real-time solar position calculations. The system clearly indicates when calculated data is being used instead of measured NOAA data, ensuring transparency for users. Absorption regions are displayed as smooth, color-coded zones aligned with amateur HF bands, allowing operators to quickly assess which frequencies may be degraded. The D-RAP view integrates with DXLook’s existing MUF, spot, and propagation tools, helping users understand the full operating window between D-layer absorption at lower frequencies and ionospheric refraction limits at higher ones. The new D-RAP view is especially useful for contest operators, DXers, and emergency communications groups assessing HF reliability during solar events, as well as for operators trying to understand sudden short-wave fadeouts during daylight hours. The D-RAP view is now live and available to all users at https://dxlook.com. About DXLook Source: DXLook TUESDAY EDITION: 23 degrees to start the day...about time to start selling these again...
This is a
topic that
has caused a
lot of
confusion.
Since 2022,
self-spotting
has been
permitted in
all ARRL
contests,
even when
operating in
the
“Unassisted”
category,
because
self-spotting
is not
considered
“spotting
assistance.”
This is
clearly
stated in
item 6 of
the HF
Contesting
Guidelines
at the
following
link:
https://www.arrl.org/hf-contesting-guidelines
.
In addition,
the former
ARRL
Director of
Operations,
W5OV (may he
rest in
peace),
confirmed
this in the
ARRL
Contesting
Group in
December
2022. Here
is the link
to that
discussion:
https://groups.arrl.org/.../self_spotting_and_arrl/95716202
.
I believe
the current
ARRL contest
committee
should be
clearer in
its rules.
Although
this is
clearly
explained in
the
Contesting
Guidelines,
the same
information
should also
be
explicitly
included in
the rules of
each
individual
contest.
Even as we
approach
2026, there
is still a
great deal
of confusion
regarding
self-spotting
in the
No-Assisted
category.
I am sharing
this solely
for the
benefit of
all
contesters.
73.
EMAIL:
Jon,
This just one
small spec of
what the Major
did. Most of us
remember him for
regeneration,
superhets, and
FM.
I wonder how
many locals
remember
W1XOJ.......
Edwin
Howard Armstrong
was born
on December 18,
1890, in Chelsea, New
York City
W1XOJ signed on from Asnebumskit (Paxton MA) in 1939, the result of a partnership between Yankee Network owner John Shepard and FM inventor Edwin Howard Armstrong to explore the potential of inter-city FM networking. Programs were fed from the Yankee studios in Boston to Asnebumskit, and were picked up from there at stations on Mount Washington, N.H. and in Meriden, Connecticut. Other programs were picked up at Meriden from Armstrong's W2XMN in Alpine, N.J. and carried through Asnebumskit to Mount Washington. In 1941, W1XOJ became commercial outlet W43B, with 300 kW ERP (50 kW TPO) on 44.3, as a sister to Boston's WNAC NASA May Have Lost the MAVEN Mars OrbiterWhen the orbit of NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) spacecraft took it behind the Red Planet on December 6th, ground controllers expected a temporary loss of signal (LoS). Unfortunately, the Deep Space Network hasn’t heard from the science orbiter since. Engineers are currently trying to troubleshoot this issue, but without a sign of life from the stricken spacecraft, there are precious few options. As noted by [Stephen Clark] over at ArsTechnica this is a pretty big deal. Even though MAVEN was launched in November of 2013, it’s a spring chicken compared to the other Mars orbiters. The two other US orbiters: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) and Mars Odyssey, are significantly older by around a decade. Of the two ESA orbiters, Mars Express and ExoMars, the latter is fairly new (2016) and could at least be a partial backup for MAVEN’s communication relay functionality with the ground-based units, in particular the two active rovers. ExoMars has a less ideal orbit for large data transfers, which would hamper scientific research. With neither the Chinese nor UAE orbiters capable of serving as a relay, this puts the burden on a potential replacement orbiter, such as the suggested Mars Telecommunications Orbiter, which was cancelled in 2005. Even if contact with MAVEN is restored, it would only have fuel for a few more years. This makes a replacement essential if we wish to keep doing ground-based science missions on Mars, as well as any potential manned missions. Testing Whether Fast Charging Kills Smartphone Batteries, and Other MythsWith batteries being such an integral part of smartphones, it’s little wonder that extending the period between charging and battery replacement has led to many theories and outright myths about what may affect the lifespan of these lithium-ion batteries. To bust some of them, [HTX Studio] over on YouTube has spent the past two years torturing both themselves and a myriad of both iOS and Android phones to tease out some real-life data. After a few false starts with smaller experiments, they settled on an experimental setup involving 40 phones to investigate two claims: first, whether fast charging is worse than slow charging, and second, whether limiting charging to 80% of a battery’s capacity will increase its lifespan. This latter group effectively uses only 50% of the capacity, by discharging down to 30% before recharging. A single control phone was left alone without forced charge-discharge cycles. After 500 charge cycles and 167 days, these three groups (fast, slow, 50%) were examined for remaining battery capacity. As one can see in the above graphic for the Android group and the similar one for iOS in the video, the results are basically what you expect. Li-ion batteries age over time (‘calendar aging’), with temperature and state-of-charge (SoC) affecting the speed of this aging process, as can be seen in the SoC graph from an earlier article that we featured on built-in batteries. It seems that keeping the battery as cool as possible and the SoC as low as possible, along with the number of charge-discharge cycles, will extend its lifespan, but Li-ion batteries are doomed to a very finite lifespan on account of their basic chemistry. This makes these smartphone charging myths both true, but less relevant than one might assume, as over the lifespan of something like a smartphone, it won’t make a massive difference. MONDAY EDITION: Coating to 1 inch my ass, I have 6+ inches of white fluff and I didn't bother to hook up the plow yesterday. Once the truck is warmed up I will hookup the plow and clear the 165 foot driveway. It looks like we will be having a real winter this season! ....It was a learning lesson for the young NE Patriots yesterday, they did a pretty good job overall, it was a tough loss.... Joe Walsh On Alcohol, Ham Radio And The Eagles/James Gang Connection
Rock & Roll Hall
Of Famer Joe
Walsh has led a
full life. Here
Walsh opens up
about his former
days of abusing
alcohol,
differences
playing in The
Eagles and James
Gang and his
passion for ham
radio.
STORY
FCC Allocates 60-Meter World-Wide Amateur Band Approved at WRC-15; Continues Amateur Use of Four Additional 60-Meter Channels, and Updates 420 MHz Coordination InformationThe Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on December 9, 2025, released a long-awaited Report and Order adopting a new amateur radio spectrum allocation in the 60-meter band that was approved for world-wide use on a secondary basis in the WRC-15 (World Radiocommunication Conference 2015) Final Acts. The Commission also agreed with a petition from ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio® to continue to allow amateur operations on four existing 60-meter channels outside the international allocation with a full 100 watts. The new rules will go into effect 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, when amateurs may then begin using the allocation. Specifically, the Commission allocated 5351.5 - 5366.5 kHz (60 meters) to the amateur service on a secondary basis with a permitted power of 9.15 watts ERP. The Commission also authorized amateurs to continue using four existing channels outside of the 5351.5 - 5366.5 kHz band centered on 5332, 5348, 5373, and 5405 kHz on a secondary basis with a permitted power of 100 watts ERP. There are no antenna restrictions but antenna gain must be used to calculate ERP. The 60-meter allocation is available to amateurs holding a General Class or above license. The maximum permissible signal bandwidth is 2.8 kHz. Amateurs are cautioned that this allocation is strictly on a secondary basis, and amateurs must avoid interfering with non-amateur stations using this spectrum. This obligation includes the responsibility to monitor for such stations using appropriate receiver bandwidths. The FCC emphasized that “allowing amateur operations in this band while fully protecting incumbent primary Federal operations is our priority, and even intermittent interference in this band could jeopardize important Federal operations.” The Commission left open ARRL’s 2017 Petition for Rulemaking to implement this WRC allocation (RM-11785), stating that “we expect the Commission may address any necessary power adjustments for the new 15 kilohertz international allocation in that proceeding.” ARRL will be observing operations in the new band to evaluate the effect of the 9.15-watt limit and already has been monitoring the regulations and experiences of amateurs in other countries. Finally, in the same Report and Order, the FCC updated 420 - 450 MHz coordination and contact information for geographic areas where the peak envelope power (PEP) of amateur stations operating is generally limited to 50 watts. There was no substantive change to the areas covered by the power limitation.
WEEKEND EDITION: Too damn cold in NH, I will stick to the coast and be happy....Big game for NE Patriots against the Buffalo Bills, I am afraid it will be a week of reckoning for the young Patriots. Unfortunately, I think the Bills will prevail but I sure hope I am wrong..... Failed 3D Printed Part Brings Down Small PlaneBack in March, a small aircraft in the UK lost engine power while coming in for a landing and crashed. The aircraft was a total loss, but thankfully, the pilot suffered only minor injuries. According to the recently released report by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch, we now know a failed 3D printed part is to blame.
The part in question is a plastic air induction elbow — a curved duct that forms part of the engine’s air intake system. The collapsed part you see in the image above had an air filter attached to its front (towards the left in the image), which had detached and fallen off. Heat from the engine caused the part to soften and collapse, which in turn greatly reduced intake airflow, and therefore available power
While the cause of the incident is evident enough, there are still some unknowns regarding the part itself. The fact that it was 3D printed isn’t an issue. Additive manufacturing is used effectively in the aviation industry all the time, and it seems the owner of the aircraft purchased the part at an airshow in the USA with no reason to believe anything was awry. So what happened? The part in question is normally made from laminated fiberglass and epoxy, with a glass transition of 84° C. Glass transition is the temperature at which a material begins to soften, and is usually far below the material’s actual melting point. When a part is heated at or beyond its glass transition, it doesn’t melt but is no longer “solid” in the normal sense, and may not even be able to support its own weight. It’s the reason some folks pack parts in powdered salt to support them before annealing. The printed part the owner purchased and installed was understood to be made from CF-ABS, or ABS with carbon fiber. ABS has a glass transition of around 100° C, which should have been plenty for this application. However, the investigation tested two samples taken from the failed part and measured the glass temperature at 52.8°C and 54.0°C, respectively. That’s a far cry from what was expected, and led to part failure from the heat of the engine. The actual composition of the part in question has not been confirmed, but it sure seems likely that whatever it was made from, it wasn’t ABS. The Light Aircraft Association (LAA) plans to circulate an alert to inspectors regarding 3D printed parts, and the possibility they aren’t made from what they claim to be. SAQ Grimeton to Transmit CW Message Christmas Eve
Transmission Schedule
E-QSL reports may be submitted online. Japan’s Forgotten Analog HDTV Standard Was Well Ahead Of Its TimeWhen we talk about HDTV, we’re typically talking about any one of a number of standards from when television made the paradigm switch from analog to digital transmission. At the dawn of the new millenium, high-definition TV was a step-change for the medium, perhaps the biggest leap forward since color transmissions began in the middle of the 20th century. However, a higher-resolution television format did indeed exist well before the TV world went digital. Over in Japan, television engineers had developed an analog HD format that promised quality far beyond regular old NTSC and PAL transmissions. All this, decades before flat screens and digital TV were ever seen in consumer households! ResolutionJapan’s efforts to develop a better standard of analog television were pursued by the Science and Technical Research Laboratories of NHK, the national public broadcaster. Starting in the 1970s, research and development focused on how to deliver a higher-quality television signal, as well as how to best capture, store, and display it. ARTICLE
Amateur Radio
Newsline Report FRIDAY EDITION: Annual Wellness Check this morning. They will will want to know if I feel safe living with my wife, how many times I have fallen down this year, if I feel suicidal, and try to remember these three words. How Joe Walsh Used a Signature Guitar to Pay Homage to the Man Who “Saved Him” During a Lonely Summer in New York CityGuitarists have been personalizing their instruments since time immemorial, whether with an embossed leather guitar strap, pearly fretboard inlay that spells out the performer’s name, or a guitar with plenty of body and electronic modifications that make the ax completely distinct. But far fewer musicians can boast a personalized guitar that spells out their name in Morse code. Eagles guitarist and prolific solo artist Joe Walsh is one of them, though. In addition to being one of the most well-known guitarists of 20th-century rock ‘n’ roll, Walsh is also a lifelong ham radio operator. Even today, his amateur license with the Federal Communications Commission is active through 2031 under the call sign WB6ACU. The “Rocky Mountain Way” singer’s signature Alliance series with Duesenberg guitars pays tribute to this decades-long passion by spelling out Walsh’s name in Morse code along the fretboard. And although it’s Walsh’s name that appears on his signature guitar, it’s also inadvertently paying homage to a different man named Jim. The Man Who Helped “Save” Joe Walsh One Lonely SummerWhen Joe Walsh was around 11 years old, he experienced something no kid ever wants to experience: his family moved him from his hometown of Columbus, Ohio, to the bustling metropolis of New York City, hundreds of miles away from his friends and all that was familiar to him, at the start of summer break. While this might seem like the logical move from an adult perspective, it’s practically torturous for a kid who, without school being in session, has far fewer opportunities to make friends. Unsurprisingly, Walsh spent most of the summer alone. But all that alone time gave him plenty of time to observe his apartment building, which he noticed had a massive antenna on the roof. “Every time I looked up at it, it was pointing a different direction,” Walsh said in a 2014 interview on the This Week in Tech podcast. “So, after a while, I followed the wires down to a window, traced that to a door, and knocked on the door. It was K2IEY. His name was Jim, and he was a ham. He invited me in and sat me down in his little shack, and he had a KWM1 transceiver, and he talked to the world on it. I was amazed. That was my first real friend in New York.” “Jim kind of saved me that summer,” Walsh continued, “and became a lifelong friend.” Thanks to Jim, ham radio also became a lifelong passion Walsh would pursue between, you know, being an internationally renowned rock star. In December 2025, Julien’s Auctions announced they were hosting the first-ever auction from Joe Walsh, which includes the prototype of his signature guitar, complete with Morse code inlays. And while Walsh might be parting with his first ax that harkens back to his ham radio operator roots, he’s certainly not signing off the air. In fact, Walsh has made a point to continue the tradition that Jim taught him all those years ago in New York City. “Every once in a while, somebody comes and knocks at my door and says, ‘What’s that thing on your roof?’” Walsh said in a Julien’s Auctions items preview. “I say, ‘Come on in. Been waiting for you.’ ‘Cause that’s what we do.” FCC Allocates 60-Meter World-Wide Amateur Band Approved at WRC-15; Continues Amateur Use of Four Additional 60-Meter Channels, and Updates 420 MHz Coordination InformationThe Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on December 9, 2025, released a long-awaited Report and Order adopting a new amateur radio spectrum allocation in the 60-meter band that was approved for world-wide use on a secondary basis in the WRC-15 (World Radiocommunication Conference 2015) Final Acts. The Commission also agreed with a petition from ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio® to continue to allow amateur operations on four existing 60-meter channels outside the international allocation with a full 100 watts. The new rules will go into effect 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, when amateurs may then begin using the allocation. Specifically, the Commission allocated 5351.5 - 5366.5 kHz (60 meters) to the amateur service on a secondary basis with a permitted power of 9.15 watts ERP. The Commission also authorized amateurs to continue using four existing channels outside of the 5351.5 - 5366.5 kHz band centered on 5332, 5348, 5373, and 5405 kHz on a secondary basis with a permitted power of 100 watts ERP. There are no antenna restrictions but antenna gain must be used to calculate ERP. The 60-meter allocation is available to amateurs holding a General Class or above license. The maximum permissible signal bandwidth is 2.8 kHz. Amateurs are cautioned that this allocation is strictly on a secondary basis, and amateurs must avoid interfering with non-amateur stations using this spectrum. This obligation includes the responsibility to monitor for such stations using appropriate receiver bandwidths. The FCC emphasized that “allowing amateur operations in this band while fully protecting incumbent primary Federal operations is our priority, and even intermittent interference in this band could jeopardize important Federal operations.” The Commission left open ARRL’s 2017 Petition for Rulemaking to implement this WRC allocation (RM-11785), stating that “we expect the Commission may address any necessary power adjustments for the new 15 kilohertz international allocation in that proceeding.” ARRL will be observing operations in the new band to evaluate the effect of the 9.15-watt limit and already has been monitoring the regulations and experiences of amateurs in other countries. Finally, in the same Report and Order, the FCC updated 420 - 450 MHz coordination and contact information for geographic areas where the peak envelope power (PEP) of amateur stations operating is generally limited to 50 watts. There was no substantive change to the areas covered by the power limitation. Lithium-Ion Batteries: WHY They Demand RespectThis summer, we saw the WHY (What Hackers Yearn) event happen in Netherlands, of course, with a badge to match. Many badges these days embrace the QWERTY computer aesthetic, which I’m personally genuinely happy about. This one used 18650 batteries for power, in a dual parallel cell configuration… Oh snap, that’s my favourite LiIon cell in my favourite configuration, too! Surely, nothing bad could happen? Whoops. That one almost caught me by surprise, I have to shamefully admit. I just genuinely love 18650 cells, in all glory they bring to hardware hacking, and my excitement must’ve blindsided me. They’re the closest possible entity to a “LiIon battery module”, surprisingly easy to find in most corners of this planet, cheap to acquire in large quantities, easy to interface to your projects, and packing a huge amount of power. It’s a perfect cell for many applications I and many other hackers hold dear. Sadly, the 18650 cells were a bad choice for the WHY badge, for multiple reasons at once. If you’re considering building a 18650-based project, or even a product, let me show you what exactly made these cells a bad fit, and how you might be able to work around those limitations on your own journey. There’s plenty of technical factors, but I will tell you about the social factors, because these create the real dealbreaker here. The main social factor can be boiled down to this – a 18650-powered WHY badge can start a fire through being touched by a 5 cent coin, a keychain, or a metal zipper of someone’s jacket. This is not a dealbreaker for an individual hacker who’s conscious of the risk, though it’s certainly an unwise choice. For three thousand participants? You have no chance. A 18650 cell is like a bigger sister to an AA battery – power at your fingertips, just, you’re playing with heaps more power. You can take a 18650 cell and have it power a small yet nimble robot on wheels, or an ultra powerful flashlight, or a handheld radio packing quite a transmit power punch. You can release its power on accident, too, and that gets nasty quick. Short-circuiting a 18650 cell is a surprisingly straightforward way to melt metal, and by extent, start a small fire. It’s also not that hard to short-circuit a 18650 cell, especially and specifically unprotected ones. This is a big part of why consumer oriented gadgets use AAs instead of 18650s – it’s perhaps less powerful, sure, but it’s also a significantly less dangerous cell. The Instructions, They Do Nothing!WHY sold a little over 3700 tickets. I would not expect 100% attendance, but I’m comfortable saying it must’ve been around three thousand people. Sadly, “three thousand people” is far beyond the point when you can hope to give people handling instructions for something as easy to mishandle as LiIon cells, even for a nominally hacker audience. Of course, you can try and give people instructions. You can talk to each badge recipient individually, release booklets demonstrating what to do and not to do with a 18650 cell, add silkscreen instructions for a just-in-place reminder, or maybe have them sign a release form, though it’s unlikely that kind of trick would be legal in the EU. Sadly, WHY organizers never came close to doing any of these things. It also wouldn’t really matter if they did. These instructions will always, inevitably be outright ignored by a sizeable percentage of users. Handling unprotected batteries requires cautiousness and some helper equipment. You can’t hope to transplant the cautiousness, at most you can try and issue the equipment. Which equipment? A small storage cases for the cells (must have when transporting them!), as well as a case for the badge, at the very least; to my knowledge, the WHY didn’t issue either of these stock. An ESD bag doesn’t qualify if it doesn’t permanently cover the badge’s back, because any temporary protection is nullified by a budding hacker getting tired of carrying two 18650 cells on their neck, and throwing the badge into the tent without looking. Where does it land? Hopefully not onto something metal. You can build a badge or any sort of other device using unprotected 18650s, which expects the end user to handle them, like the WHY badge does, and it will be more or less safe as long as the end user is yourself, with 18650 handling experience that I’m sure is to match. Giving it to a friend, caseless? You can talk to your friend and explain 18650 handling basics to them, sure, but you’re still running some degree of risk. My hunch is, your friend could very well refuse such a gift outright. Giving it to a hundred people? You’re essentially playing with fire at someone else’s house. Just Why Did That Happen?Hackaday has traditionally used AA cells for our badges, which has definitely help us mostly avoid any Lithium-related issues. Most other conferences have been using pouch cells, which traditionally come with short-circuit protection and don’t threaten to ignite stuff from contact with a piece of metal. 18650 cells are not even cheaper at scale – they’re nice, sure, I wrote as much, but those nice things are quickly negated by the whole “firestarter” thing. On the other hand, 18650 cells do work for a hacker or a small team of hackers skilled enough to stay cautious, and it also works well at scale when the cell is permanently encased within the shell, like in most powerbanks and laptops. It fails as soon as you expect people to plug batteries in and out, or carry them separately. Respecting Lithium-Ion batteries means being aware of their shortcomings, and for 18650 cells, that means you should avoid having people manually handle them at scale. Here’s the kicker about the WHY badge situation. I was confused by the WHY badge switching to 18650 cells this year, away from overcurrent-protected pouch cells, which were used by previous iterations of WHY (MCH, SHA) without an issue in sight. So, I’ve asked around, and what I got from multiple sources is – the 18650 usage decision was pushed top-down, with little regard for physical safety. Sadly, this makes sense – it’s how we saw it implemented, too HAMS YOU MIGHT KNOW- ALIVE AND SK K1TP-
Jon....Editor of As The World
Turns....
SILENT KEYS Silet Key
KA1BXB-Don...Regular
on 3900 mornings....just
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please!
wednesday
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