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PY2BIL > ARNR     16.02.24 13:16l 382 Lines 17801 Bytes #280 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2416 for Friday February 16th,
Path: IW8PGT<LU4ECL<VK2RZ<W0ARP<PY2BIL<PY2BIL
Sent: 240216/0813 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.2.061  $:79921PY2BIL
From: PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2416 for Friday February 16th, 2024

Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2416 with a release date of Friday 
February 16th, 2024 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. Hams in South Carolina rally for antenna rights. 
Australia prepares for its new licensing arrangements -- a simplex net 
provides a safety net in Hawaii. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline 
Report Number 2416 comes your way right now.

**
BILLBOARD CART

**
PROPOSED LAW WOULD PROTECT HAM ANTENNAS IN SOUTH CAROLINA

PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week in South Carolina, where hams are planning 
to rally on the 21st of February for a bill that would remove private land 
restrictions for some amateur radio antennas. This is one state of many 
throughout the US where such restrictions are a paramount concern. Kevin 
Trotman N5PRE has that report.

KEVIN: A rally is planned at the State House in Columbia, South Carolina, as 
a show of support for the Amateur Radio Antenna Protection act, which eight 
Republican lawmakers are introducing into session that day. The bill is 
designed to ensure amateur radio operators' rights to install antennas that 
let them get on the air effectively. According to an email sent to amateurs 
in the state from E. Gordon Mooneyhan, W4EGM, of the ARRL's South Carolina 
Section, a strong presence by radio operators will go a long way toward 
making several points in favor of the measure's passage. Calling ham radio a 
[quote] "incubator for education, exploration and experimentation within the 
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics fields," Gordon also noted 
that active hams have provided some 6,000 hours of volunteer community 
service during the past two years. He said that although most log periodic 
antennas and satellites used for TV reception over the air are more 
obtrusive, Homeowners Associations, or HOAs, have imposed restrictions that 
bar even the simplest amateur radio antennas, providing an obstacle to 
short- and long-range emergency communications.

The widespread concern about HOAs and amateur radio in many states 
throughout the US has led to introduction of the Amateur Radio Parity Act, 
which would provide antenna protection on the federal level. The US Congress 
has not yet acted on the bill, which is opposed by many HOAs.

This is Kevin Trotman N5PRE.

(E.GORDON MOONEYHAM, W4EGM; CONGRESS.GOV)

**
LAWMAKERS SEEK FEDERAL PROTECTION FOR HAM RADIO ANTENNAS

PAUL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., a new effort to grant sweeping 
protection across the country was introduced in the US Senate. The 
bipartisan measure would mandate that private homeowners associations accept 
the installation of outdoor ham radio antennas. The Amateur Radio Emergency 
Preparedness Act of 2024 was presented by Senator Roger Wicker, a 
Mississippi Republican, and Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut 
Democrat. The measure underscores the value of ham radio's lifesaving 
potential during natural disasters and other emergencies such as the 
hurricanes that are common in both of the sponsoring lawmakers' home states.

(WICKER.SENATE.GOV)

**

NEW LICENSE PROCEDURES TAKING EFFECT IN AUSTRALIA

PAUL/ANCHOR: A new way of handling and issuing amateur radio licenses is 
about to take effect in Australia. John Williams VK4JJW tells us what's 
changing - and what's not.

JOHN: A new era in amateur radio licences dawns in Australia on the 19th of 
February as the Australian Communications and Media Authority implements the 
new Class Licence arrangements. The transition from apparatus licences 
requires no action for most hams but holders of recently renewed amateur 
apparatus licences may be eligible for a pro-rated refund upon surrender of 
those licences. The changes include the administration of examination 
services by the ACMA and a new accreditation process for examiners that is 
intended to increase the availability of assessors to those wishing to sit 
the exams. That process includes working with volunteer assessors who 
previously supported from the Australian Maritime College to bring them on 
board with the new ACMA arrangements. The college's services to the ACMA do 
not extend past the 18th of February.

The Overseas Amateurs Visiting Australia Class Licence is to be available to 
those amateurs whose licence is conformant with the HAREC standard under 
CEPT arrangements. Operators from overseas whose licences are not HAREC 
compliant may be eligible, upon application, to operate under an amateur 
class licence for 365 days if they meet certain qualifications.

The arrangements have been designed to minimise the cost of licences for ham 
radio operators and to reduce the regulatory burden on the ACMA. Repeater 
and beacon licensing remains unchanged as apparatus licences.

This is John Williams VK4JJW.

(ACMA, WIA)

**
EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY SEEKS HAM INPUT ON PROPOSED SATELLITE PAYLOAD

PAUL/ANCHOR: Satellite partners in Europe will soon be reaching out to hams 
for suggestions for the next payload in geostationary orbit. We have those 
details from Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

JEREMY: The European Space Agency expects to engage in  dialogue soon with 
amateur radio operators about a proposal for a geostationary satellite 
payload that would serve as a follow-up to QO-100. The ESA, the IARU and 
various members of the AMSAT community began pursuing the concept last year. 
At the recent FOSDEM 2024, held on the first weekend of February in 
Brussels, the ESA's Frank Zeppenfeldt, PDØAP, announced that ESA's satellite 
communications group is now actively seeking the ham community's input, 
especially from those operators familiar with SDRs.

The Es'hail-2/Qatar-QO-100 satellite was launched in November 2018, carrying 
the first amateur radio transponders to be in geostationary orbit.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(AMATEUR RADIO DAILY, FOSDEM)

**
LIFETIME AWARD FOR 50 YEARS OF RADIO COMMITMENT

PAUL/ANCHOR: Congratulations to Jose [PRON: JOES] Jacob, VU2JOS, who 
received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the North Bengal Amateur Radio 
Society for 50 years of involvement in radio that included broadcast DXing 
and later, amateur radio. The award was presented to him on the 13th of 
February, which was World Radio Day. Licensed since 1985, he has 
participated in nearly a dozen DXpeditions by the National Institute of 
Amateur Radio.

(NORTH BENGAL AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY, QRZ.COM)

**
SILENT KEY: CQ DX HALL OF FAMER BOB ALLPHIN, K4UEE

PAUL/ANCHOR: An accomplished DXpeditioner and veteran contester has become a 
Silent Key. We hear about him from Jack Parker W8ISH.

JACK: When it came to contesting or participating in DXpeditions, Bob 
Allphin [PRON: ALL FIN], KN4UEE, could often be found at the center of 
activity. He had been involved in DXpeditions that traveled to most of the 
DXCC top 10 most wanted locations. He was also a CQ DX Hall of Famer and a 
competitor in two World Radiosport Championships.

Bob became a Silent Key on the 10th of February at his home in Georgia of 
kidney failure and Merkle Cell carcinoma.

According to a posting on DX World, Bob's participation in 10 major 
DXpeditions over the years helped the team log more than 1.25 million QSOS, 
many of them from rare locations. He was also an avid contester, qualifying 
for the WRTC events in 1996 and 2000. Thirty-eight of his Dxpeditions during 
the mid-80s and into the early 200s were for contesting. He also held the 
callsign VU3RQA and was a member of the VU7RG Lakshadweep DXpedition 
organized by the National Institute of Amateur Radio in India.

Bob was a member of the First CLass Operators Club and the Southeastern DX 
Club Hall of Fame. At the time of his death Bob served as president of the 
KP1-5 Project, which advocates for the use by amateur radio of the 
environmentally sensitive Navassa and Desecheo islands by coordinating 
efforts with the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Bob was 79.
 
This is Jack Parker W8ISH.

(DX-WORLD)

**
SILENT KEY: DMR's TGIF FOUNDER MITCH SAVAGE, EA7KDO

PAUL/ANCHOR: One of the founders of the DMR Network known as TGIF has become 
a Silent Key. A notice posted on the network website reports that Mitch 
Savage, EA7KDO, died on the 6th of February. No other details were given. 
The TGIF net that was held on Friday, February 9th was dedicated to him.

Mitch wrote on his page on QRZ.com that he got his amateur radio license in 
1964 and was an active ham, gravitating into digital radio starting in 2016. 
He was most active on DMR, Fusion D-Star, P25, NXDN and WiresX. He relocated 
to Spain from Texas in 2017 and in October 2018 he became one of the 
founding fathers of the TGIF Network, which grew out of a net the group 
originally held on a Brandmeister Talk Group.

A message on the TGIF site said: [quote] "Mitch leaves behind a remarkable 
contribution to ham radio and beyond." [endquote]

(QRZ.COM, TGIF)

**

BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the North 
Coast Amateur Radio Club's N8NC repeater in northeast Ohio on Sundays at 8 
p.m. local time during the Weekly Information Net.

**
HIGH MARKS FOR PROTOTYPE ANTENNA SYSTEM AND SATELLITES

PAUL/ANCHOR: An antenna system has received high marks for its ability to 
communicate with large numbers of satellites around the clock. Dave Parks 
WB8ODF gives us those details.

DAVE: Tests of a digital phased array antenna system in Fairbanks, Alaska, 
showed it to be capable of handling more than 300 satellite contacts daily - 
and doing it around the clock, according to the company that developed it. 
In reporting the results on the 7th of February of its three months of 
testing, L3Harris Technologies said that the prototype system also 
demonstrated the ability to handle as many as eight contacts at the same 
time.

L3Harris senior scientist Brian Haman later issued a statement saying that 
the company was very pleased with the results.

L3Harris has said that this kind of technology will prove especially useful 
in helping to achieve simultaneous horizon-to-horizon communications. It is 
also able to reduce any RFI it locates. L3Harris developed the array in 
response to government and commercial customers' needs to reach 
constellations in different orbital planes as well as large constellations 
in low-Earth orbit.

The research and development was done in agreement with the National Oceanic 
and Atmospheric Administration's Satellite and Information Service to 
develop a means of collecting data from an increasing number of satellites 
in a cost-effective way.

This is Dave Parks WB8ODF.

(SPACENEWS.COM)

**
SIMPLEX RADIO NET SEEN AS SAFETY NET IN HAWAII

PAUL/ANCHOR: Amateurs in Hawaii are rediscovering the power of simplex, 
especially when they need to rely on making connections in an emergency. 
Graham Kemp VK4BB tells us how they're accomplishing this.

GRAHAM: It's just for practice - and it's just for fellowship too - but a 
monthly meetup of hams on the Hawaiian island of Oahu holds greater 
potential than just the regular check-ins and discussions of local news 
events. This is the Leeward Simplex Radio Net and it grew from a ragchew 
into a net after the radio operators realized their on-air activity 
presented a great opportunity to keep the community, county and state 
connected during a crisis on the island without relying on repeaters. Stacy 
Holbrook, KH6OWL, one of the net control operators, told Newsline that 
during a recent impromptu Friday night net, one station made a 26-mile 
contact to the north shore of the island - an important connection that 
could prove vital in passing traffic and information in emergencies.

The next Leeward simplex net will be held on Friday, the 23rd of February. 
Stacy and the other net control operators, Todd, KH6TOD, and Allan, WH6GRO, 
are hoping to see the number of participants grow so everyone is prepared in 
an emergency.

The hams believe in simplex so much that they participate in a separate net 
using WINLINK to send emails or messages from their computers over the radio 
digitally without relying on external power or the internet. The next 
scheduled simplex WINLINK net will be on Sunday, February 18th and the 
operators will practice sending safe-at-home messages.

Stacy told Newsline that these small nets play a big role in making this 
island more resilient. He said that a heavily populated place like Hawaii, 
with such an isolated location in the middle of the Pacific, must always be 
prepared.

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

(STACY HOLBROOK KH6OWL)

**
W. VIRGINIA FIRST RESPONDERS ORGANIZE NEW HAM CLUB

PAUL/ANCHOR: Sometimes an emergency response plan isn't complete without 
amateur radio. Recognizing this, a number of first-responders in West 
Virginia are looking to change things. Patrick Clark K8TAC has that report.

PATRICK: When emergencies happen, the Upshur County Department of Homeland 
Security and Emergency Management and Upshur County Community Emergency 
Response Team are at the ready. Now, however, they're looking to become even 
more responsive by adding amateur radio to their resources. The groups 
recently announced a new effort to create a club that would include amateur 
radio operators and others with an interest in ham radio. In an announcement 
made jointly on social media, they opened the door to anyone living in 
Upshur and surrounding counties. The group's first meeting will be held on 
the 21st of February at the Buckhannon Public Safety Complex. An amateur 
radio license is not required to join the new club, which will provide 
classes, hold public events and provide training in emergency 
communications. The club organizers hope to affiliate eventually with the 
ARRL and Amateur Radio Emergency Services.

This is Patrick Clark K8TAC.

(FACEBOOK)

**

WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, be listening for Bernard, DL2GAC, who is operating as 
H44MS in the Solomon Islands until the end of April. He is on HF, using SSB 
and FT8. QSL via Club Log's OQRS.

Listen for Borut, S53BV, on the air holiday style as 5R8BV from Nosy Be, 
IOTA Number AF-057, Madagascar, from the 17th of February until the 3rd of 
March. He is operating on 80 and 40 metres using CW and SSB.  QSL via Club 
Log's OQRS, or direct to home call.

David, OK6DJ, will be on the air from the 20th to the 27th of February from 
Mauritius Island, IOTA Number AF-049. He is using the callsign 3B8/OK6DJ. 
QSL via Club Log's OQRS.

Listen for Sylvia, OM4AYL, who is on Pemba Island, IOTA Number AF-063, 
Tanzania, using the callsign 5H4AYL. Sylvia will be on the air from the 18th 
to the 28th of February on 80 through 10 metres using SSB, CW and FT8.  For 
QSL details visit QRZ.com.

(425 DX BULLETIN) 

**
HAMS TEST ORIGINAL VOICE MODE IN AM RALLY

PAUL/ANCHOR: We end this week by sharing an event the evokes nostalgia - and 
good warm sound on the air. If you took part in this year's AM Rally, the 
annual celebration of the original ham radio voice mode, you were not alone, 
as we hear from Sel Embee KB3TZD.

SEL: There was a strong showing among hams who took part in the operating 
event known as the AM Rally on February 3rd through the 5th. For some 
operators, it celebrated the special fondness they have for the voice mode 
that predates single sideband. Other operators were curious to see how their 
homebrew, tube, military or modern rigs would perform and many ended up 
making their first AM contacts.

Organizers said weekend participation was strong on 20, 40 and 75 metres. 
Clark N1BCG, one of the organizers, said he heard one AM contact from the UK 
on 10 metres. Extra excitement was generated by the participation of W1AW, 
the station at the headquarters of the ARRL in Connecticut. 

Hams were encouraged to log contacts but it wasn't required. Friendly 
ragchew and good memories were, of course, mandatory.

This is Sel Embee KB3TZD.

(CLARK BURGARD, N1BCG)

**
DO YOU HAIKU?

Don't forget the Amateur Radio Newsline haiku challenge. If you're not too 
busy tuning your antennas or chasing the latest DXpedition, pick up a pencil 
and share your experience by sending an original haiku to us here at 
Newsline. Use the entry form on our website, arnewsline.org and please 
follow the rules for writing your three-line haiku -- sorry but we cannot 
accept any entries that aren't written in traditional haiku form.

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to the Australian Communications and Media 
Authority; Amateur Radio Daily; ARRL; Clark Burgard, N1BCG; CQ Magazine; 
David Behar K7DB; DXWorld; E. Gordon Mooneyham, W4EGM; 425DXNews; FOSDEM; 
North Bengal Amateur Radio Society; QRZ.com; shortwaveradio.de; 
Spacenews.com; Stacy Holbrook, KH6OWL; TGIF Network; Wireless Institute of 
Australia; Worldwide DX; YouTube; and you our listeners, that's all from the 
Amateur Radio Newsline.  We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio Newsline 
is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for its 
continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our website at 
arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also remind our 
listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a 5-star rating 
wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn Eve Murray KD2GUT at the 
news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide, I'm Paul Braun WD9GCO in 
Valparaiso Indiana saying 73. As always we thank you for listening. Amateur 
Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2024. All rights reserved.



73 de Bill, PY2BIL
PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 16-fev-2024 08:13 E. South America Standard Time





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