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G4APL  > NEWS     06.02.22 08:31l 230 Lines 10109 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 6 Feb 2022
Path: IW8PGT<I3XTY<I0OJJ<EA2RCF<SR1BSZ<IW0QNL<ON0AR<DB0RES<DB0ERF<DK0WUE<
      GB7CIP
Sent: 220206/0724Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO #:60080 [Caterham Surrey GBR]
From: G4APL@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO
To  : NEWS@EU


GB2RS Main News for Sunday the 6th of February 2022

The news headlines:

* Ofcom authorises /70 for Platinum Jubilee
* New RadCom Plus published
* New Southern Fusion group

Following a request by the RSGB, Ofcom has indicated that stations 
wishing to retain their usual Regional Secondary Locator to identify 
their DXCC entity may use the suffix /70 to celebrate the Queen's 
Platinum Jubilee. It is also permitted to use the /70 suffix with the 
GQ/MQ/2Q prefix if desired. The RSGB would like to thank Ofcom for 
its support of the Queen's Jubilee Celebrations.

RadCom Plus is the RSGB's online journal for the technically-minded 
radio amateur. The winter edition of RadCom Plus is now available to 
RSGB Members. There are four varied articles in this edition. You can 
read about high-loss RF taps for extracting samples of signals from 
your transmitter at levels suitable for display on test instruments 
such as spectrum analysers. There is the first part of a two-part 
series on experiments in the 30THz band, or long-wave infra-red. The 
third article is on long-standing observations of long-delayed 
echoes. Finally, there is an article on experiments with DIY remote 
operations. Go to rsgb.org/radcom-plus where you can read previous 
editions as well as the latest one.

Owners of Yaesu C4FM transceivers may be interested to learn of a new 
Wires-X room called Southern Fusion, currently room 41893. It is 
focussed primarily on repeater and gateway users in southern England 
and, of course, Wires-X users anywhere on the planet. RF access is 
available via a growing number of C4FM repeaters. These include GB7IV 
in Southampton, GB7CM in Blandford, GB7IE in Plymouth, GB7TM in 
Ipswich plus Gateways in Reading, Hastings and Ringwood. The room 
also hosts a regular Sunday morning one-hour net at 1100UTC.

The latest edition of RadCom Basics is now available. There are new 
topics and follow-on articles to help newcomers and those looking to 
brush-up their knowledge. You can read about a useful DC voltmeter, 
try some simple experimentation with antennas and equipment as well 
as learn more about the DX Century Club and the RSGB's UK Activity 
Contests. RSGB Members can read previous editions of RadCom Basics by 
going to rsgb.org/radcom-basics. 

It has been reported that a person has been prosecuted for racial 
harassment over the air. Details of the conviction can be found in an 
entry on the 2nd of February on the Sussex Police website at 
sussex.police.uk/news. The RSGB will be raising this with Ofcom. 
Anyone experiencing similar on-air harassment is encouraged to report 
the matter initially to the RSGB OAS Coordinator via the form on the 
OAS pages of our website at rsgb.org/oas 

The RSGB 2022 Band Plans have been published online. In response to 
feedback, the Excel version is now tabbed by frequency but the 
alternative viewer still uses wavelengths for those who prefer the 
information in that format. You can see them on the Society's website 
at rsgb.org/bandplans

In December 2021 and January 2022, a clandestine radio station 
appeared on 3.5 and 7MHz. The broadcasts were unusually in USB and 
could be heard throughout Europe. The IARU Monitoring System, aided 
by DARC Intruder Monitoring, were able to determine the approximate 
location of these transmissions. The German and Italian authorities 
were then able to have them stopped.


And now for details of rallies and events 

If you are travelling to Florida in the USA in the near future, you 
may care to visit the 75th Orlando HamCation. It will take place 
between the 11th and 13th of February at the Central Florida 
Fairgrounds and Expo Park.

Looking ahead to the 20th of February, the Radioactive Fair will take 
place at Nantwich Civic Hall. You can find out more at 
radioactivefair.co.uk.

Please let us know your rally and event news as soon as possible. 
Send details to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk and we'll publicise your event 
for free in RadCom, on GB2RS, and online. 


Now the DX news

Henry, LU4DXU will be active as 8Q7AH from the Maldives, AS-013, 
between the 8th and 15th of February. He will operate SSB and FT8 on 
all bands. QSL direct to LU4DXU. 

John, AD8J will be active as HR9/AD8J from Guanaja Island [pronounced 
Gwa-nah-ha], IOTA reference NA-057, in Honduras between the 12th and 
26th of February. He will operate CW and FT8 with some SSB on the 10 
to 80m bands. QSL via Logbook of The World or direct to AD8J.

Jean-Gabriel, F4CIX has been active as FW1JG from Wallis Island, 
OC-054, and expects to remain there for two years or more. He 
operates SSB and FT8 on the 20, 15 and 10m bands. QSL via Logbook of 
The World, or direct to his Wallis address.


Now the Special Event news

TM19AAW will be on the air from the 7th to the 22nd of February to 
celebrate the 19th Antarctic Activity Week. All information on this 
event is on QRZ.com under TM19AAW. Operation will be from Mācon in 
the east of France, JN26JH, on the 10 to 40m bands. QSL via F8DVD.

Members of the Kuwait Amateur Radio Society will be active as 9K9NLD 
throughout February. The special callsign celebrates both Kuwait 
National Day on the 25th and Liberation Day on the 26th.


Now the contest news

When operating in any contests, please keep yourself and fellow 
amateurs safe by following all relevant pandemic-related government 
rules. 

Today, the 6th, the 432MHz AFS contest runs from 0900-1300UTC. Using 
all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number and your 
6-character locator.

On Monday the 80m Club Championship runs from 2000 to 2130UTC. Using 
SSB only the exchange is signal report and serial number.

Tuesday sees the 432MHz FM Activity Contest take place from 1900 to 
1955. It is followed by the all-mode 432MHz UK Activity Contest from 
2000 to 2230UTC. The exchange for both is signal report, serial 
number and locator.

Staying with the 432MHz band, on Wednesday it is the 432MHz FT8 
Activity Contest from 1900 to 2100UTC. The exchange is your report 
and 4-character locator. A serial number is not required.

The 50MHz UK Activity Contest takes place on Thursday from 2000 to 
2230UTC. Using all modes the exchange is signal report, serial number 
and locator.

On Saturday the 12th, the 1st 1.8MHz Contest runs from 1900 to 
2300UTC. It is CW only and the exchange is signal report and serial 
number.

Next weekend the CQ WW RTTY WPX contest runs for 48 hours from 
0000UTC on the 12th to 2359UTC on the 13th. Using the 3.5 to 28MHz 
bands where contests are permitted, the exchange is signal report and 
serial number.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA, and G4BAO 
on Friday the 4th of February 2022.

We had another topsy-turvy week, with lots of good sunspots, but 
coronal mass ejections or CMEs taking their toll on the ionosphere as 
well. While the solar flux index did a little better than predicted, 
with numbers in the 120-130 range, there was bad news on the 
solar-terrestrial front. 

The Kp index was regularly hitting four and even five on Thursday, 
thanks to CMEs, which depressed MUFs considerably. But things could 
have been a lot worse. NASA issued a major storm warning after the 
CME on the 29th of January, with newspapers predicting that visible 
aurora would be seen across the UK. But, in the end, this amounted to 
very little and the warning was cancelled. 

Despite all this geomagnetic activity there were pearls to be found. 
Contacts with Hong Kong, China and Australia were all reported by 
members of the 10 metre UK Net Facebook group. As Jack, G8DX wrote on 
the group: "What an end to the month. ZL, JA, XV, BY, BV, HS, YB on 
FT8 and 30-plus VKs on phone and a few on CW."

And bear in mind that this solar cycle has got a lot further to go, 
with a predicted sunspot number of more than 100 at its peak in 
2025/2026. To give you some idea of what that means, this week it was 
65.

Next week there may be some good news. NOAA predicts that the solar 
flux index could rise to 125, and perhaps even higher. As always, we 
can probably expect unsettled geomagnetic conditions, with the Kp 
index predicted to hit four on the 10th.

As always, keep an eye on solarham.com for a more accurate day-to-day 
update as things can change very quickly.

In terms of propagation highlights, look for openings to Sydney, 
Australia on 10 metres around 8-10am. Short-path openings to Perth 
may peak a little later.


And now the VHF and up propagation news.

The present spell of unsettled weather is likely to continue for a 
while, into the first part of next week, but before that, there are 
signs of the next high building over southern areas. This will bring 
a return of Tropo conditions to many areas, although a further low 
will track across northern Britain towards the end of the week. 

As we hinted last week, the high pressure produced some good Tropo DX 
down across Biscay to Spain and France on 2m through to 23cm. The 
situation next week is looking similar, so a good week to get some CW 
and SSB onto 70cm for the UK Activity Contest on Tuesday and see what 
happens on Thursday for the 6m UKAC.

The other modes to check are, like last week, the pre-dawn random 
meteor scatter options plus a chance aurora in view of the unsettled 
solar-terrestrial conditions at the moment.

Moon declination is positive and rising all week, so Moon windows are 
long and peak Moon elevation high. Path losses are also high as we 
approach apogee on Friday. 

For VHF EMEers, 144MHz sky noise is low to moderate throughout the 
week, peaking at 500 Kelvin on Friday. 

And that's all from the propagation team this week.


And that's the end of the main news for this week prepared by the
Radio Society of Great Britain.  Items for inclusion in subsequent
bulletins can be emailed to  radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk to arrive by
10:00 on the Thursday before transmission.


Our thanks to Andy G4TNU for providing this RSGB feed.
--
g4apl@gb7cip.ampr.org g4apl@gb7cip.#32.gbr.euro
https://www.theskywaves.net http://gb7cip.ampr.org


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