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IR0EQ > DX 15.06.21 14:32l 328 Lines 18707 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: CQ Newsroom: 2023 Bouvet DXpedition Cancelled
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CQ Newsroom
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2023 Bouvet DXpedition Cancelled
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:20 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/2023-bouvet-dxpedition-cancelled.html
The 3Y0J DXpedition to Bouvet Island planned for 2023 (see June issue DX
column) has been cancelled.
According to organizers Paul Ewing, N6PSE, and Kenneth Opskar, LA7GIA, the
change in plans resulted from the recent sale of the ship RV Braveheart, on
which the group planned sail to the remote island in the Southern Ocean.
In an announcement to the DX community on June 13, Ewing and Opskar said
that the economic fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic prompted owner and
captain Nigel Jolly, K6NRJ, to sell the vessel, which had transported
numerous DXpeditions to and from their destinations. As a result of the
sale, the group's contract was cancelled and its deposit was refunded. The
announcement also said that the group had stopped accepting donations and
was beginning the process of refunding 100% of all donations already
made. "We will continue to research other ships," the statement
concluded, "and possibly find another suitable vessel for a future project."
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A Kickstart for Cycle 25?
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:18 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/a-kickstart-for-cycle-25.html
Solar physicist Scott
McIntosh (Nat'l
Center for Atmos-
pheric Research photo)
The solar scientist who's been bucking the tide of pessimism from most of
his colleagues and predicting a huge sunspot cycle (see News Bytes, Sept.
2020 issue) continues to see lots and lots of spots in the future.
According to spaceweather.com, Scott McIntosh of the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Colorado, along with colleague Bob Leamon of the
University of Maryland/Baltimore County, are predicting that a "terminator
event," in which oppositely charged magnetic fields collide near the sun's
equator and annihilate each other, will be occurring soon. This is a normal
occurrence between solar cycles, they say, but the key to predicting the
strength of the new cycle lies in the timing between terminator events –
the longer the time between them, the weaker the new cycle will be. They
are predicting a short 10 years between the previous terminator event and
the upcoming one, and McIntosh says, "If the Terminator Event happens soon,
as we expect, new Solar Cycle 25 could have a magnitude that rivals the top
few since record-keeping began." Asked about the fact that most other solar
scientists feel the new cycle will be a weak one, like its processor,
McIntosh replied, "What can I say? We're heretics!"
///////////////////////////////////////////
NOAA: Expect Another Active Hurricane Season
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:15 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/noaa-expect-another-active-hurricane.html
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is predicting
another above-average hurricane season in the Atlantic and Caribbean this
year, but does not expect a repeat of last year's season in which the
number of named storms exceeded the letters in alphabet. NOAA's Climate
Prediction Center says we should expect 13-20 named storms, of which 6-10
will develop into hurricanes and 3-5 will become major hurricanes, with
sustained winds of 111 miles per hour or greater.
Hurricane season officially began on June 1 and runs through November 30,
but the season's first named storm, Ana, developed in late May. The center
is also predicting a near- or below-normal season in the central Pacific.
///////////////////////////////////////////
A Tale of Two SATERNs
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:11 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/a-tale-of-two-saterns.html
Among hams, SATERN has long been an acronym for the Salvation Army Team
Emergency Radio Network. Now, according to the ARRL, it also stands for
Strategic Auxiliary Team Emergency Readiness Net, a new group organized by
former Salvation Army SATERN manager Lee Glassman, WA5LEE. To make matters
even more confusing, the "new SATERN" holds daily nets on 14.265 MHz, the
frequency formerly used by the original SATERN for its daily nets, which
have now been moved to 14.325 MHz on a reduced 3-day-a-week schedule. Logo
of the "new" SATERN - Strategic
Auxiliary Team Emergency Readiness Net
Salvation Army SATERN National Committee Chair Michele Heaver told ARRL
that her organization considers the new SATERN to be a "breakaway" group,
does not support it and has no association with it. Glassman reportedly
took the action because of "a conflict of ideals," including increased
credentialing requirements and background checks being imposed by The
Salvation Army on net members, and because it stopped holding daily nets on
14.265. He said his new group used the same acronym and frequency because
they were already familiar to net participants.
///////////////////////////////////////////
Latest WSJT-X Release Includes New Q65 Mode
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:07 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/latest-wsjt-x-release-includes-new-q65.html
WSJT-X Q65 screen
(from WSJT website)
A new version (2.4.0) of WSJT-X, the software suite that includes FT8 and
other digital protocols, has introduced a new mode, Q65. According to the
release notes, it is designed to accommodate fast-fading signals and paths
with Doppler shifts of more than a few Hertz. "Q65 is particularly
effective," the notes say, "for tropospheric scatter, rain scatter,
ionospheric scatter, TEP (trans-equatorial propagation) and EME
(Earth-Moon-Earth) on VHF and higher bands." It uses the same message
formats and sequencing as those used in FST4, FT4, FT8 and MSK144. Q65 is
one of 11 total modes included in the latest WSJT-X package. For more
information or to download the free software, visit
<https://tinyurl.com/nzcmxywm>.
///////////////////////////////////////////
"Oh, the Humanity!" - CQ DX Editor at Center of New Hindenburg
Documentary
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 02:04 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/oh-humanity-cq-dx-editor-at-center-of.html
The crash of the Hindenburg on May 6, 1937.
N2OO's uncle, Harold Schenck, shot film of
the disaster from a different angle. (US
Information Agency photo, via National
Archives)
One of the most famous air disasters in history was the May 6, 1937 crash
of the Hindenburg airship as it prepared to land in Lakehurst, New Jersey.
WLS (Chicago) radio reporter Herbert Morrison was on the scene recording
the landing when the ship burst into flames and crashed to the ground,
leading to his famous quote, "Oh, the humanity!" The source of the spark
that ignited the hydrogen gas that carried the Hindenburg had not been
determined in the nearly 85 years that have passed since the disaster.
Enter CQ DX Editor Bob Schenck, N2OO, and airship expert Dan Grossman, whom
Bob met while operating a special event station , W2H/75, at a 75th
anniversary observance in Lakehurst in 2012. It seems that back in 1937,
Bob's mom and his uncle were at Lakehurst to watch the Hindenburg's
arrival, and Uncle Harold was filming the landing. He was in a different
spot than all the newsreel cameramen and had a different perspective on the
airship as it approached. According to Bob, his uncle offered to share the
film with investigators at the time, but no one was interested. Skip ahead
75 years and Dan Grossman was very interested. Now, Bob, and Uncle Harold's
film, are the centerpieces of a PBS "Nova" documentary, "Hindenburg; The
New Evidence." The program aired on May 19 but is available online at
<https://tinyurl.com/3fhphy7w>. There's enough science and technology
involved to keep most hams interested. And the secret word is: capacitor.
(Tnx to N2OO and NL7XM)
///////////////////////////////////////////
SuperDARN Radars Identified as QRM Source on HF
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:54 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/superdarn-radars-identified-as-qrm.html
SuperDARN radar site in Saskatchewan
(Photo by Daryl Mitchell via
Wikimedia Commons)
The ARRL Letter reports that the SuperDARN ionospheric research radar
network has been identified by the International Amateur Radio Union's
Region 1 Monitoring Service as a source of interference on 14.210 MHz and
possibly other frequencies. This is in addition to over-the-horizon radars,
mostly based in Russia and China, that have long been sources of QRM on the
HF ham bands. SuperDARN stands for Super Dual Auroral Radar Network, which
operates 35 HF radars in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. They
operate continuously to track the motion of charged particles in the
ionosphere and help scientists better predict space weather hazards, such
as geomagnetic storms.
///////////////////////////////////////////
ARDC is Busy With Major Grants
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:40 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/ardc-is-busy-with-major-grants.html
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Amateur Radio Digital Communications, or ARDC, administers the
AMPRNet (44) internet domain and recently came into lots of money as a
result of selling off a portion of that domain that it determined it was
unlikely ever to be used by hams. In 2019, it began making grants for
various projects and programs involving amateur radio and/or digital
communications. It recently made its largest grant ever as well as its
first international grant. The organization donated $1.6 million in May to
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to help save its iconic
radome and large dish antenna it protects from removal as part of roof
renovations on the building where it sits. The dish is used by the MIT
Radio Society, W1MX, for moonbounce and other microwave communications, as
well as radioastronomy. Plans are being developed for additional uses by
the university and the club. A separate ARDC grant to the Deutscher Amateur
Radio Club (DARC, Germany's national ham radio organization), will help
in "boosting and securing European HAMNET expansion by providing sponsored
hardware for radio links to make use of the AMPRNet IP space in Europe,"
according to ARDC. It is the group's first grant to an organization outside
the United States. HAMNET is a high-speed digital network using amateur
radio microwave bands.
///////////////////////////////////////////
Recognition for Slow Speed CW Net
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:35 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/recognition-for-slow-speed-cw-net.html
The K1USN Radio Club in Massachusetts has won the 2021 CWOps Award for
Advancing the Art of CW, in recognition of its weekly SST, or Slow Speed
[con]Test, net. The Morse code promotion group said the net "provides a
place for new and unpracticed CW operators to gather and operate at relaxed
speeds in a friendly and encouraging manner that helps them continue to
improve their CW skills." K1USN is a club made up of civilian, former and
current military radio hobbyists. Information on its SST net may be found
at <www.k1usn.com/sst.html>. CWOps is an organization made up of hams who
can send and receive Morse code at speeds of at least 25 words per minute.
It sponsors the CW Academy, scholarships, the above award and many on-air
activities. For more information, visit <https://cwops.org/>.
///////////////////////////////////////////
ARRL Staff Changes
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:32 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/arrl-staff-changes.html
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Several staff changes have been announced by the ARRL as a result
of the recent retirements of long-time staffers and an ongoing
reorganization of the Field Services Department, which administers the
League's volunteer organization along with elected Section Managers.
Regulatory Information Manager Dan Henderson, N1ND, retired in early June
after nearly 23 years on the ARRL staff. He is being replaced by Field
Services Manager Bart Jahnke, W9JJ, who is retaining responsibility for
contest management. The new Field Services Manager is Mike Walters, W8ZY,
who comes to the position from the volunteer post of Connecticut Section
Emergency Coordinator.Finally, Norm Fusaro, W3IZ, has retired from his job
as ARRL Operations Manager and has been replaced by well-known contester
(and former CQ World Wide DX Contest co-director) Bob Naumann, W5OV.
Naumann most recently worked in sales for DX Engineering. On the topic of
retirements, former ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, has announced
his retirement as of December from another longtime post, as General
Counsel for the Society of Broadcast Engineers (SBE). Imlay has worked with
that organization since 1980, according to RadioWorld, which says his
roster of other clients has included JVC Kenwood, NASCAR, the National
Football League and Goodyear. Imlay served as Counsel and General Counsel
for the ARRL from 1982 to 2018. He was recently inducted into the CQ
Amateur Radio Hall of Fame (see announcement below and article in July
issue).
///////////////////////////////////////////
Milestones: W1OUN, YV5AM, SKs
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:26 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/milestones-w1oun-yv5am-sks.html
Gordon Pettengill, W1OUN, a physicist, radio-astronomer and former director
of the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, became a Silent Key in May at
age 95. According to the ARRL Letter, Pettengill joined the staff at
Arecibo when the facility opened in 1963 and became director in 1968. He
was the principal investigator on two missions to Venus and helped make the
Arecibo dish available to hams for moonbounce work. Former IARU
(International Amateur Radio Union) Region 2 President Reinaldo Leandro,
YV5AM, also passed away in May. He was 79. A Venezuelan lawyer and
diplomat, Leandro was posted to a variety of countries around the world
during his 36-year career. He held various posts in the IARU Region 2
organization (representing the Americas) and served as its president from
2007-2019. According to the Region 2 website, he also was part of the IARU
delegation to World Radiocommunication Conferences (WRCs) in 2008 and 2011.
///////////////////////////////////////////
K7UGA Featured in YouTube Documentary
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:24 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/k7uga-featured-in-youtube-documentary.html
The late Senator Barry Goldwater,
K7UGA (CQ file photo)
The Arizona Historical Society recently streamed a documentary, "The
Senator Was a Ham: Barry Goldwater and Amateur Radio," in a Zoom
presentation that remains available on YouTube. According to Air Force
MARS, the film focuses on the thousands of phone patches made via K7UGA
during the Vietnam War. Goldwater had a network of volunteer operators
staffing his station when he wasn't there to operate in person. "The
senator from amateur radio" represented Arizona in the U.S. Senate from
1953-64 and again from 1969-87. He was the Republican Party nominee for
president in 1964. The program may be viewed at
<https://youtu.be/tufY6s8KJBc>.
///////////////////////////////////////////
Equipment Delays and Shortages Persist
Posted: 14 Jun 2021 01:18 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2021/06/equipment-delays-and-shortages-persist.html
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