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G4APL  > NEWS     09.09.19 20:06l 281 Lines 13837 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News  - 1 Sep 2019
Path: IW8PGT<HB9ON<IW2OHX<I0BLC<UA6ADV<CX2SA<OZ5BBS<ON0AR<GB7CIP
Sent: 190901/0735Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO #:19748 [Caterham Surrey GBR]
From: G4APL@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO
To  : NEWS@EU


GB2RS Main News for Sunday 1st September 2019

The news headlines:

* Good news for the two metre band
* More positive news from CEPT ahead of WRC-19
* Syllabus 2019 mock exams

The past week has seen CEPT meet in Turkey, where it finalised its 
positions on a wide range of WRC-19 Agenda Items, including proposals 
for WRC-23. So let's look at the matters that interest radio 
amateurs. At 144MHz, after a major effort, the 144 to 146MHz 
frequency range was successfully withdrawn from the French WRC-23 
aeronautical proposal. This hot topic had been the subject of 
detailed submissions by the IARU, France and Germany. This excellent 
result for amateur radio occurred in parallel to a number of other 
proposals being adopted to support aeronautical interests. There's 
more positive news at 50MHz. CEPT confirmed its common position for 
an overall 50 to 52MHz secondary allocation for IARU Region 1. 

Following requests from both the RSGB and the UK Six Metre Group to 
Ofcom, we are pleased to announce that the UK has signed an optional 
footnote in the CEPT proposal for national Primary status in the 50 
to 50.5MHz segment, along with a number of other countries. In most 
microwave bands it is pleasing to report that the CEPT positions 
adopted should result in no further regulatory change to the amateur 
5GHz Secondary and 47GHz Primary allocations, as well as innovative 
UK usage above 275GHz. However, for the 23cm band, following intense 
discussions, a WRC-23 proposal was considered necessary to ensure the 
protection of new satellite navigation systems such as Galileo from 
amateur emissions in the 1240 to 1300MHz range. The draft Resolution 
that would guide such studies excludes the removal of the existing 
amateur Secondary allocations. Commenting on the overall outcome, 
IARU Region 1 President Don Beattie, G3BJ praised the IARU team of 
volunteers and their contributions; and was pleased that regulators 
had recognised the strength of the amateur case. The RSGB will 
shortly add further details and copies of key papers to its online 
focus pages at www.rsgb.org/wrc-19. The October edition of RadCom 
will also feature further information as the process now moves 
towards the final stage at the World Radio Conference this autumn.

In preparation for Syllabus 2019, which comes into effect this 
Sunday, 1 September the RSGB has added to the range of documents for 
tutors and candidates. Foundation, Intermediate and Full licence mock 
exam papers are now available from the Society's website. They 
include a new handy syllabus reference column to help candidates 
check the appropriate part of the syllabus if they need further 
revision on specific questions. You'll find all of these documents on 
the special Syllabus 2019 part of the RSGB website, 
www.rsgb.org/mock-exams. The Syllabus Full Specification document has 
been updated with a few minor changes that are shown in the Change 
Log at the end. Additional supporting materials will be released 
soon, including documents that will provide sample questions for 
every syllabus item in each of the exams. 

Hot on the heels of August's Youngsters On The Air summer camp in 
Bulgaria, IARU Region 1 YOTA will be running a winter camp in the 
Netherlands from the 12th to the 15th of December. We've secured five 
places at the camp for RSGB Members who are aged 16 to 25. The camp, 
which will take place in a forest setting, promises to be lots of 
fun, and will include a variety of workshops and activities. The RSGB 
will cover the majority of the cost of the event, with attendees 
contributing GBP 50. To apply to take part, please contact Board 
Director Mark Jones, G0MGX, via email to g0mgx<at>rsgb.org.uk. The 
closing date for applications is the 30th of September. Find out more 
at www.rsgb.org/yota

The RSGB Convention takes place in Milton Keynes from the 11th to the 
13th of October. The provisional programme of lectures and workshops 
is now online at www.rsgb.org/convention. The Buildathon on Saturday 
evening includes food and also the SMD Sudden 2, a 40m direct 
conversion receiver, made and supplied by Kanga Products UK. All 
necessary equipment will be provided, along with a team to assist you 
through the build. For more info, to book your Buildathon place, for 
weekend packages or day tickets, go to www.rsgb.org/convention. Early 
Bird discounts end at midnight tonight, the 1st of September. 

With over 60,000 visitors to the RSGB National Radio Centre at 
Bletchley Park so far in 2019, we are looking to recruit new 
volunteers to engage with the public and give radio demonstrations. 
If you're interested in becoming an NRC volunteer you should be 
passionate about meeting people, feel confident explaining the hobby, 
as well as operating the NRC's radio station, GB3RS. You must be a 
licensed amateur, an RSGB Member and be prepared to work a minimum of 
one or preferably two days per month. You will be joining a team of 
enthusiastic, friendly and dedicated volunteers and full training 
will be given. Travel expenses are paid to volunteers living within 
reasonable travelling distance and NRC volunteers enjoy numerous 
benefits associated with volunteering at Bletchley Park. Please email 
nrc.support<at>rsgb.org.uk for further information.


And now for the details of rallies and events for the coming week 

Today, the 1st of September, the Telford Hamfest and G-QRP Convention 
takes place at Harper Adams University, near Telford, TF10 8NB. See 
www.telfordhamfest.org.uk for more information.

Next Sunday, the 7th of September, the Caister Lifeboat Rally will be 
held at Caister Lifeboat station, Tan Lane, Caister on Sea, Norfolk 
NR30 5DJ. Access is via the car park in Beach Road. Doors open from 
9.30am. There will be a raffle and the onsite café and museum will 
also be open. A special event station will be on the air. Details 
from Zane, M1BFI on 0771 121 4790.

Please send details of your 2020 rally and event plans as soon as 
possible to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk. 


And now the DX news from 425 DX News and other sources

Laurent, F8BBL will be active as TK19IOTA between the 6th and the 
22nd of September. He plans to operate from IOTA groups EU-014, which 
is the main island of Corsica, EU-100, which is Cerbicales, EU-104, 
which is Sanguinaires and EU-164, which is Lavezzi. He operates 
mainly CW. QSL via F8BBL either direct or via the bureau and Logbook 
of The World.

Yuri, N3QQ, Cezar, VE3LYC, Sandro, VE7NY and Adrian, KO8SCA will be 
active as K7TRI from Tillamook Rock, IOTA reference NA-211, between 
the 6th and the 9th of September. They will operate CW and SSB on the 
40 to 17m bands with two stations active around the clock. QSL via 
Club Log's OQRS, or via VE3LYC. 

Members of the Russian Robinson Club will activate Sledge Island in 
Alaska, NA-120, until the 2nd of September. The callsign will be 
KL7RRC/P. QSL info is via Club Log OQRS.


Now the special event news 

Today, the 1st of September, the Radio Club of Binche will activate 
ON44WAR to commemorate the sacrifice of the Belgian Resistance in 
WWII, especially those of the Refuge B 40 in Waudrez. On the hour, 
for 30 minutes, a Whaddon MK VII Paraset will be used to make CW 
transmissions on the 7MHz band. The following half hour will be SSB 
transmissions on the 7MHz band. QSL via ON7RY; more information is at 
www.on7ry.be

During the month of September, Dutch special event stations PA75PARA, 
PA75BTF and PA75OMG will be on the air to commemorate the 75 years 
since British, American and Polish airborne forces tried to capture 
the river bridges at Arnhem and Nijmegen. PA75OMG will be active from 
12 to 22 September. PA75SODS will be on the air to commemorate the 
75th anniversary of the Battle of the Schelde.

Please send special event details to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk as early 
as possible so we can give you free publicity. It is a licensing 
condition that stations using a UK special event callsign must be 
open to the public. 


Now the contest news

The UK and Ireland Contest Club DX contest ends its 24 hour run at 
1200UTC today, the 1st of September. Using the 3.5 to 28MHz contest 
bands, the exchange is signal report, serial number and District code.

On Monday the Pioneer FT4 Series runs from 1900 to 2000UTC, using FT4 
only on the 3.5MHz band. The exchange is signal report followed by 
your 4-character locator. Do read the rules carefully for this new 
contest.

On Tuesday the 144MHz FM Activity Contest runs from 1800 to 18550UTC, 
using FM only. The exchange is signal report, serial number and 
locator. At the same time, the Machine Generated Mode 144MHz Activity 
Contest takes place, exchanging your report and 4-character locator. 
From 1900 to 2130UTC it's the 144MHz UK Activity Contest, using all 
modes. The exchange is signal report, serial number and locator.

On Wednesday the UK EI Contest Club 80m event runs from 2000 to 
2100UTC. Using SSB only, the exchange is your 4-character locator.

On Saturday the CWops CW Open Contest runs from 0000UTC to 2359UTC. 
Using the 1.8 to 28MHz contest bands, the exchange is serial number 
and name. The contest has three 4-hour sessions.

Next weekend is the RSGB SSB Field Day. Running from 1300UTC on the 
7th to 1300UTC on the 8th, it uses the 3.5 to 28MHz contest bands. 
The exchange is signal report and serial number.

Also next weekend is the 144MHz Trophy contest, this time running 
from 1400UTC on the 7th to 1400UTC on the 8th. Using all modes, the 
exchange is signal report, serial number and locator.

Another contest over next weekend is the All Asian DX contest. It 
runs from 0000UTC on the 7th to 2359UTC on the 8th. Using SSB only on 
the 1.8 to 28MHz contest bands, the exchange is signal report and 
your age. YL operators may send 00.

In a busy weekend of contests, the IARU Region 1 Field Day runs from 
1300UTC on the 7th to 1300UTC on the 8th. Using SSB only on the 3.5 
to 28MHz contest bands, the exchange is signal report and serial 
number.

Finally for contests over the full weekend, it's the IARU 144MHz 
contest. This runs from 1400UTC on the 7th to 1400UTC on the 8th. 
Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number and 
locator.

There are two contests on next Sunday only. The 5th 144MHz Backpacker 
contest runs from 1100 to 1500UTC. Using all modes the exchange is 
signal report, serial number and locator.

Running from 1000UTC to 1400UTC next Sunday is the Worked All Britain 
2m QRO Phone Contest. Using SSB and FM, the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and WAB square.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA & G4BAO on 
Friday the 30th of August.

The past week was characterised by a low solar flux index and 
relatively-calm geomagnetic conditions. There were reports of 
numerous Sporadic-E openings this week that livened up the 10m band. 
On Thursday these spread from Serbia through to Germany, Finland and 
Norway and were probably caused by a strong jet stream, which can be 
seen on the Met Office 300millibar charts.

The Space Weather Services Bureau of Meteorology in Australia has 
been reporting that its T index, which can be best thought of as an 
"equivalent sunspot number", has been hovering around zero after 
weeks of being very negative. This suggests that maximum usable 
frequencies may be up to 20% better than we have been experiencing, 
partly due to quieter geomagnetic conditions and partly due to the 
seasonal change. Nevertheless, the Chilton ionosonde has been 
recording daytime F2 critical frequencies of about 4.3 to 4.7MHz, 
giving a maximum usable frequency over a 3,000km path of between 14 
and 18MHz.

Next week NOAA predicts a solar flux index of 67, but a large 
T-shaped coronal hole on the Sun threatens to push the K index up to 
six late on Saturday 31st or Sunday 1st as solar matter hits the 
Earth's magnetic field. This may result in depressed HF conditions 
after an initial enhancement. These should settle by Tuesday or 
Wednesday, leaving the rest of the week with a K index of two or 
three and potentially better conditions.


And now the VHF and up propagation news.

The last week brought some welcome late season Sporadic-E to many 
parts of the UK, even reaching 2m on one occasion. This was an 
unusually-widespread opening geographically, with most areas from 
Scandinavia round to Portugal being worked. Sporadic-E is possible 
into early September, so be sure to check the various blogs and 
clusters for activity. You haven't got much time left to bag those 
missing squares!

The coming week will see unsettled weather generally with some 
showers or spells of rain, especially in the north. This may give a 
few opportunities for rain scatter. The south will be closer to high 
pressure over the continent and has the best chance of tapping into 
some Tropo conditions, although it's not really a strong option until 
near the end of the week, when high pressure builds in from the 
Atlantic.

The Moon is past perigee and declination goes negative again tonight, 
reaching minimum a week today. The EME week will be characterised by 
shortening Moon windows and rising path losses. There are no major 
meteor showers this week so stick with the usual pre-dawn enhancement 
for the best meteor scatter conditions.

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
http://www.theskywaves.net http://gb7cip.ampr.org


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