2015-02-16

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

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QSO Today Podcast - Ep 29 - Ward Silver - N0AX

Posted: 15 Feb 2015 10:44 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...X&goto=newpost

Ward Silver, N0AX, author of the QST magazine column, “Hands-On Radio”,

editor of ARRL Handbook for Radio Communications, and author of many books

on ham radio joins Eric, 4Z1UG, in his QSO Today. In the podcast, Ward

describes his ham radio beginnings and his amateur radio journey that

includes his authoring many books and articles on ham radio. He also offers

practical advice to new and returning hams.

Join Ward and Eric by clicking on one of the links below.

Show Notes: http://www.qsotoday.com/podcasts/n0ax

Podcast Link: http://goo.gl/NAUDKk

iTunes Store: http://goo.gl/CvLNmV

Stitcher: http://goo.gl/uhf1XZ

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AmateurLogic 75: Building a DV3000 Raspberry Pi D-Star Hotspot

Posted: 14 Feb 2015 10:09 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...t&goto=newpost

AmateurLogic 75: DV3000 Raspberry Pi Hot Spot, is now available for

download.

al_ep75.png

Building the Northwest Digital Radio DV3000 D-Star Hot Spot. A new device

with new capabilities. Capital City Hamfest Go Kit competition, JLO and Don

Wilbanks. Peter installs Cinnamon Linux.

1:15:05 of ALTV Fun

Download

YouTube

Attached Images

al_ep75.png

(96.0 KB)

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Experimental Licenses Reveals Interesting HF Data Comm Experiments

Posted: 14 Feb 2015 02:53 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...s&goto=newpost

If you thought BPL was a potential nightmare, check out this report!

http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/...riments/274152

Permission to operate in the 80, 60, 40, 30 and 20 meter ham bands with

signals of 5 kHz to 1 MHZ (!) bandwidth and power levels of 6 - 122 watts.

With REAL antennas, not power lines.

The ARRL has already responded. See their web site for details.

73 de John - WØPV

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Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) Report 1952 February 13 2015

Posted: 13 Feb 2015 12:49 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...5&goto=newpost

Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) Report 1952 – February 13 2015

Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1952 with

a release date of Friday, February 13th, 2015 to follow in

5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. Ham radio responds as a

volcano erupts in Guatemala; a Super High Frequency band

could face reallocation here in the United States; the K1N

Nevassa Island DXpedition winds down; AMSAT-UK puts out first

call for speakers for its 2015 Space Colloquium; the FCC

renews the only United States 4 meter experimental beacon

permit and a fascinating discovery about the new Raspberry Pi

2 pico computer. All this and more on Amateur Radio

Newsline report number 1952 coming your way right now.

(Billboard Cart Here)

**

RESUE RADIO: HAMS RESPOND TO VOLCANO ERUPTION

IN GUATEMALA

Disaster relief services with assistance from

radio amateurs is providing emergency communications in the

wake of the erupting Fuego Volcano in the Republic of

Guatemala. HereÂ’s Fred Vobbe W8HDU...

[Fred:] The largest eruption in three years

took place on Saturday, February 7th and sent a cloud of ash

skyward that forced the closure of the La Aurora

International Airport. Tourists who were hiking on the

volcano and those living in nearby villages had to be

evacuated.

The Club of Amateur Radio of Guatemala

activated emergency station TG0AA on 7.118 MHz. According to

a report to IARU Region 2 Emergency Communications

Coordinator Cesar Pio Santos, HR2P, TG0AA has established a

network with reporting stations located in neighboring Costa

Rica, Mexico, Honduras, Cuba and Venezuela. All are involved

in the post eruption communication effort. A 2 meter repeater

on 147.015 MHz is also in use.

The Fuego volcano sits on the border of the

Guatemalan states of Escuintla, Sacatepequez and

Chimaltenango at a height of 12,346 feet above sea level.

David de Leon is a spokesman for Guatamala's national

disaster preparedness office. He says authorities had already

been put area on alert of the possibility of such an eruption

and had issued instructions urging people to take shelter,

wear masks, cover water tanks and be aware of evacuation

routes. Local experts expect the emergency to ease to allow a

clean-up of the area to begin. For the Amateur Radio

Newsline, IÂ’m Fred Vobbe W8HDU in Lima, Ohio. (VK3PC, other

published news reports)

**

RESTRUCTURING: AMATEUR SUPER HIGH FREQUENCY

BAND COULD FACE UNWANTED CHANGE

A super high frequency ham radio band here in

the United States could be in peril due to spectrum needed

for vehicular radar systems.

Skeeter: ]The FCC is seeking comment on issues

involving expanded use of various radar applications in the

76 to 81 GHz band which Amateur Radio shares with other

services.

The band--from 77.5 to 78 GHz--is allocated to

the Amateur and Amateur Satellite services on a primary

basis, and to the Radio Astronomy and Space Research services

on a secondary basis. Among many issues, the FCC seeks

comment on the possibility of reallocating the Amateur Radio

and Amateur Satellite services from 76 to 81 GHz, and it asks

for suggestions on alternative spectrum that it might

make available in this general region.

The FCC Notice of Proposed Rule Making and

Report and Order is in response to a Petition for Rulemaking

designated RM-11666 that was filed in 2012 by Robert Bosch

LLC. Two petitions for reconsideration of the CommissionÂ’s

2012 Report and Order addressing vehicular radar systems in

the 76 to 77 GHz band were incorporated at earlier

proceedings.

[Jim:] ThatÂ’s NewslineÂ’s Skeeter

Nash N5ASH. In its summary the FCC says that its goal is to

adopt rules that address amateur use, including Amateur

Satellite use, within the 76 to 81 GHz band in a

comprehensive and consistent manner. An in-depth look at this

situation is on the ARRL website at tinyurl.com/n9aw83y

(ARRL, FCC)

**

INTERNATIONAL: IARU ANNOUNCES REGION 3 MEETING

IN INDONESIA

Region 3 of the International Amateur Radio

Union has sent formal invitations to member societies to be

represented at its 16th I-A-R-U Triennial Conference. The

gathering will take place October 12th to the 16th in Bali,

Indonesia. An agenda is expected to contain matters and

developments of interest to all amateur radio operators as

well as reports from directors, societies and coordinators.

This year's host is the Organisasi Amatir Radio of

Indonesia. (WIA)

**

INTERNATIONAL: WORLD AMATEUR RADIO DAY APRIL

18TH

The theme of World Amateur Radio Day 2015 will

be the International Telecommunications Union and the

International Amateur Radio Union Celebrating 150 Years of

Advancing the Telecommunication Art.

Each year on April 18th radio amateurs

celebrate World Amateur Radio Day, which happens to be the

date way back in 1925 when the International Amateur Radio

Union was founded. As such World Amateur Radio Day activities

and special events are an opportunity to spread the word

about what radio amateurs are doing in the 21st century.

And as this is considered to be one of amateur

radio's most important annual events, several IARU member

societies and associated clubs are expected to sponsor

special event stations on the weekend to mark the

occasion. (IARU)

**

DX: NEVASSA ISLAND K1N WINDING DOWN

By the time many of you hear this, the long

awaited K1N Nevassa Island DXpedition will be QRTÂ…

[Don:] Wolf Harranth, OE1WHC from the Amateur

Radio Section of the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation sent

Ohio Penn DX Newsletter a press release based on a satellite

phone interview with co team leader Glenn Johnson,

W-zero-G-J .

In short, Johnson says that the K1N will begin

winding down on Friday, February 13th. The team will start by

sending their unneeded supplies back to Jamaica. On Saturday,

the 14th K-one-N operations will still be on the air, but

some of the personnel will begin to leave the island. All

radio equipment will remain on the island until daybreak

Sunday, when operations will go QRT.

In other developments, on February 10th Johnson

posted to the DXpedition website that the operation was

approaching 96,000 QSO's and hoped to pass the 100,000 point

later that day. Also that the fierce pile-ups were

continuing with what he called walls of European stations

that are being worked each day until the bands close. He

also thanked the world wide ham community for its

cooperation while working in certain propagation windows,

especially to Japan. For the Amateur Radio Newsline, IÂ’m Don

Wilbanks AE5DW in New Orleans.

[Jim:] The latest information including QSL

routing is on the web at navassadx.com and we will have a

final round-up on this story in next weeks Amateur radio

Newsline report. (OPDX, navassadx.com)

**

DX UP FRONT: GRENEDA BY J38NN AND J38MM IN MAY

In DX up-front, W6NN and KE1B will be operating

as J38NN and J38MM, respectively, from Grenada between May

23rd and the 31st. Activity will probably be holiday-style

using a single station with 100w watts and a Buddipole

antenna system on 40 through 10 including 30, 17 and 12

meters using CW, SSB and RTTY. If they have Internet access,

they will probably upload logs to ClubLog on a daily basis.

QSLs go via their home callsigns as listed on QRZ.com or via

by the bureau. Electronic QSL's are via Logbook of the World

and eQSL. (OPDX)

**

DX UP FRONT: K6W WAKE ISLAND SEPTEMBER 4 - 19

Down the calendar a bit, AG6IP will be active

as K6W on Wake Island between September 4th and the 19th. His

operation is to celebrate the 70th anniversary and memorial

of the “End Battle of Wake Island.” His operation will be on

80 through 6 meters SSB. Look for more details including QSL

routing as it gets closer to the beginning of the

operation. (OPDX)

**

BREAK 1

Time for you to identify your

station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin

stations around the world including the Sequoia Amateur Radio

Group repeater serving Lake Isabella, California.

(5 sec pause here)

**

RADIO LAW: FCC PROPOSES TO RETURN HAM TO TECH

PRIVELEGES AFTER VEC ERROR DISCOVRED

The FCC has proposed to modify the license of

Brent D. Cullen, KD0YLM, to show Technician Class operator

privileges due to a data filing error made by the

administering VEC.

On December 3, 2014, the American Radio Relay

League Volunteer Examiner Coordinator sent an electronic data

file to the Commission requesting that CullenÂ’s operator

license for amateur station KD0YLM be modified to upgrade

from Technician Class to General Class amateur radio operator

privileges. Based on this application, the Commission granted

Cullen a General Class amateur service operator license on

December 3, 2014.

But in correspondence dated this past January

16, the ARRL notified the Commission that there was an error

in the December 3, 2014 data file and that an applicant

other than Cullen had qualified for a General Class

operator license. The ARRL noted that a correction was

filed, resulting in the other unnamed licensee receiving

the operator license for which he had qualified, but

that CullenÂ’s operator privileges had not been returned

to Technician Class operator privileges. As such

Cullen appears to be currently authorized to operate with

General Class operator privileges due to an error made during

the application process. Now the FCC says it wants to

correct that clerical mistake. (FCC)

**

REGULATORY: FCC ASKS FUNDING FOR NEW

HEADQUARTERS

The FCC says that it may have to move to a new

headquarters in the Washington, DC, area and that it needs

funding to make this happen. This came to light when the

administration asked for $388,000,000 for Fiscal Year 2016 in

the President's budget, which is what the FCC had

proposed.

That amount is up from the more than 375

million dollars it asked for in Fiscal Year 2015 and is

attributable almost entirely the what the FCC says it needs

to either move to a new headquarters or re-stacking the

current space given the expiration of its lease. Doing either

should save the FCC $119 million over 15 years, the agency

says.

The FCC's budget is entirely covered by

regulatory fees, in addition to which the commission will be

generating billions for the treasury through its ongoing

spectrum auctions. (Published news reports)

**

HAM HAPPENINGS: NEW AMATEUR RADIO ROUND TABLE

WEBCAST FROM W5KUB.COM

Amateur Radio Round Table is a new series of

Internet-distributed webcasts being produced by Tom Medlin,

W5KUB, and available on-line over W5KUB.com. The webcast will

be held Tuesday nights at 8:00 PM Central Time which

correlates to 0200 UTC Wednesdays.

According to Tom, Amateur Radio Round Table

will be an informal discussion of all aspects of ham radio

with the intent of allowing viewers to watch or be a guest

via Skype or Google Hangout.

To simply view the webcast you need only take

your web browser to w5kub.com and sign in. If you wish to be

an active participant you will first need to send an e-mail

to tom (at) w5kub.com so he can provide you with the

information needed to join the show.

Once again that's the Amateur Radio Round Table

every Tuesday night at 8 P.M. Central U.S time on w5kub.com.

Tom adds that he hopes to see you there. (W5KUB)

**

HAM CELEBRATIONS: LIMARC AT 50 SEEKS

INFORMATION ON ITS W2VL CALL

LIMARC, the Long Island Mobile

Amateur Radio Club, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this

year. As part of that celebration it is trying to learn the

story of how and why its primary club callsign, W2VL, came

about.

While speculation is that it may have been a

memorial for one of the early or founding club members, there

is no direct memory of this.

If you were around the New York City or Long

Island area in the early to mid 1960's and have knowledge of

who may have previously held the W2VL callsign, please send a

note to Lew Malchick by e-mail to N2RQ (at) arrl (dot) net.

Or you can write to him at his home address found on

QRZ.com. (N2RQ)

**

HAM HAPPENINGS: SECOND CALL FOR SPEAKERS FOR

41ST EASTERN VHF-UHF/MICROWAVE CONFERENCE

The 41st Eastern VHF/UHF/Microwave Conference

has issued a second call for speakers and presentation papers

for the gathering and publication in the conference

proceedings. Topics can include, but are not limited to,

operating, contesting, construction, homebrewing, and

microwaves. Also sought is a session leader to discuss 6

meter operations.

The meeting is sponsored by the

North East Weak Signal Group, will take place April 17th to

the 19th in Manchester, Connecticut. Presenters and

those submitting papers for publication are asked to

first contact Paul Wade, W1GHZ, before March 18th. His

e-mail is w1ghz (dot) q (at) gmail (dot) com. (More

information is on line at
www.newsvhf.com.) (W1GHZ)

**

HAM HAPPENINGS: AMSAT-UK COLLOQUIUM 2015 PUTS

OUT FIRST CALL FOR SPEAKERS

While its still many months away, a first call

for speakers has been issued for the AMSAT-UK Colloquium 2015.

Authors are also being invited to submit papers

for subsequent publishing on the AMSAT-UK web site. Topics to

cover can include but are not limited to micro-satellites,

CubeSats, Nanosats, space and other associated activities.

This years event will be held from Saturday,

July 25 to Sunday, July 26 at the Holiday Inn at Guildford in

the United Kingdom. Submissions of papers should be sent only

to G4DPZ, via e-mail to dave at g4dpz dot me dot uk. Full

information is on the web at tinyurl.com/colloquium-2015

(AMSAT-UK, ANS)

**

HAM HAPPENINGS: HAMTECH 2015 IN INDIA MARCH 6 -

7

HAMTECH 2015, an international Conference on

amateur radio communications will be held at Port Blair,

Andaman and Nicobar, India on March 6th and 7th. This

gathering will be followed by a DXpedition running through

March 18th. These events are being sponsored by India's

National Institute of Amateur Radio with its objective to

promote the hobby within the ham community and to a public

audience.

The discussions at this convention will address

various topics including the promotion of amateur radio in

general along with, High Frequency and VHF communications,

Dxpeditions, Digital operations, and numerous other topics.

There is also an open forum to discuss on disaster management

particularly the experiences lessons learned in recent

natural calamities. A brochure of Hamtech 2015 is available

at tinyurl.com/hamtech-2015 (VU2MYH)

**

NAMES IN TE NEWS: PHILLIP ROSARIO NAMED TO FC

ENFORCEMENT BUREAU

Some names in the news. The Federal

Communications CommissionÂ’s Enforcement Bureau has announced

that Phillip Rosario has been named Deputy Bureau Chief,

overseeing consumer protection issues for the Bureau. Mr.

Rosario is a graduate of the Georgetown University Law Center

and has an undergraduate degree in economics from the

University of Maryland, College Park. He was most recently

Department Head of the Consumer Protection Department at the

Connecticut Attorney GeneralÂ’s Office. (FCC)

**

PROPAGATION: FCC RENEWS ONLY US 4 METER

EXPERIMENTAL BEACON PERMIT

A beacon on the 4 meter band will continue to

be heard across the pond...

[Skeeter:] Brian Justin, WA1ZMS reports that

the Experimental License for the WG2XPN one-way beacon

operation on 70.005MHz has been renewed until May 1st of

2017. As such, it gives the only 4 meter North American

beacon a chance to be heard in Europe for another 2 years.

WG2XPN runs 3 kilowatts of Effective Radiated

Power from United States Grid Square FM Oh 7 fm in Virginia,

beaming East across the Atlantic Ocean. WA1ZMS says that

thanks go out to both the FCC and the Society of Broadcast

Engineers for their continued support of this project as the

spectrum in which WG2XPN operates is still reserved for use

by telecasters, and no United States 4 meter ham band appears

possible in the near future. For the Amateur Radio Newsline,

IÂ’m Skeeter Nash N5ASH in Topeka, Kansas.

[Jim:] WA1ZMS also wants to remind European 4

meter operators to point their beams west during the E skip

season and give a long listen on 70.005MHz. He says that you

might just hear something not usually heard. (WA1ZMS)

**

EDUCATION: STUDENTS IN INDIA LEARN ABOUT HAM

RADIO

The Department of Electronics and Communication

of India's Vardhaman College regularly sends its students to

that nationÂ’s National Institute of Amateur Radio to learn

more about ham radio communications.

A group of 55 students along with 3 teachers

visited the institute on January 31st. There they were

introduced to various aspects of amateur radio by Ram Mohan,

VU2MYH. They were also shown the workings of Pactor and a

Buddypole antenna. The tour concluded with a visit to the

Radio Museum located on the campus.

This educational program is being coordinated

by Srinivas Gedela, VU3SXL. (NAIR)

**

BREAK 2

This is ham radio news for today's

radio amateur. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links

to the world from our only official website at
www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the volunteer services

of the following radio amateur:

(5 sec pause here)

**

EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: PUTTING THE INTERNET INTO

EARTH ORBIT

Space exploration company Virgin Galactic and

chip-maker Qualcomm have announced their backing of a venture

called OneWeb. Their idea is to put 648 satellites in orbit

about 750 miles above Earth's surface, where the RF round

trip time is just a few thousands of a second, Both companies

say that this is an apropos altitude for any online

application.

But the two companies are not alone. Not to be

outdone, SpaceX immediately announced its own plan to do the

same, but upping the numbers by building and launching

4000 satellites to a similar altitude.

While some form of radio communications might

seem to be the obvious form of connection between Earthbound

users and a satellite system, other systems are also under

consideration. This includes a possible optical

communications infrastructure.

No matter what is decided, the concept makes

for an interesting expansion of high speed Internet access.

An in-depth article on these proposals and other ideas can be

found in an article in New Scientist magazine. Its on the web

at tinyurl.com/mqjbgpv (New Scientist, Southgate)

**

EMERGING TECHNOLOGY: NEW PHONE PROCESSOR CHIP

ANNOUNCED

Chip designer ARM Holdings PLC, has

unveiled new technology for mobile devices that it says will

be much faster while using less energy. The company, whose

designs are built into more than 95% of smartphones, says

more than 10 companies have licensed its new Cortex A-72

processor design. The new technology is expected to be used

in phones delivered to customers in 2016.

ARM, based in Cambridge, England, says the new

processor design is 3.5 times as fast as the ARM technology

used in most smartphones sold in 2014. The company expects

most chips based on the design to be manufactured using an

advanced production process from the Taiwan

Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. (ARM)

**

HAM RADIO IN SPACE: IRAN LAUNCHES 4TH HAM RADIO

PAYLOD

PA0DLO reports that the Iranian Fajr satellite

has an amateur radio band telemetry downlink on 437.538 MHz.

PA0DLO says that the bird also carries a camera for Earth

observations and should have and a command uplink in the 144

to146 MHz amateur radio band.

The Iranian satellite Fajr or ‘Dawn’ was

launched on February 2nd at 08:50 UTC from the Imam Khomeini

Space Center. The 50 kilogram bird was carried to space on a

Safir launcher into an initial orbit of 223 km by 470 km with

an inclination of 55.5°.

This is IranÂ’s fourth satellite and has

propulsion in the form of a cold gas thruster. Presumably the

thruster will be used to circularize the orbit at around 470

km which may give it a lifetime of over a year. (AMSAT)

**

HAM RADIO IN SPACE: NO US ARISS OPERATIONS NOV

5 TO DEC 6

From November 5th to December 6th there will be

no United States operational segment hams on board the

International Space Station. Because of this, any school

contacts during this period will be conducted by the ARISS

Russia team.

Also, ARISS is always happy to receive listener

reports for these contacts and thanks everyone for their

assistance. Feel free to send your reports to aj9n (at) amsat

(dot) org or aj9n (at) aol (dot) com. (ARISS, AJ9N)

**

SWL CORNER: END OF BBC WORLD SERVICE ON 1323 KHZ

BBC World Service Eastern Mediterranean English

language operation will end medium wave radio services on

1323 kHz on April 25th. The region affected includes Israel,

much of Lebanon, Cyprus and southern Turkey. Audiences in the

region will be able to listen to BBC World Service English

service 24 hours day through the direct-to-home Eutelsat 13

satellite or over the internet at

BBCWorldservice.com (BBC)

**

ON THE AIR: ROTARY CELEBRATES ITS 110TH BIRTHDAY

The service organization Rotary International

will be celebrating its founding 110 years ago with ham radio

operators taking part by using the special event callsign

VI110ROTARY that will be heard from Australia for three

months.

Rotarians of Amateur Radio or ROAR

will launch the special callsign from New South Wales Central

Coast on Sunday, February 22nd possibly using a new software

defined radio. Suggested operating frequencies include 7 dot

118, 14 dot 295.2 and 21 dot 295 MHz and these will be on

from various locations around Australia during the course of

the operation.

The Rotary International fellowship and amateur

radio have a long-standing and very cordial relationship.

According to Jim Linton, VK3PC, similar events may also be

planned in other countries as well. (VK3PC)

**

ON THE AIR: RC70YC COMMEMORATE 70 YEARS SINCE

THE YALTA CONFERENCE

Look for special events station

RC70YC to be operating through February 22nd to commemorate

the 70th anniversary of the Yalta Conference, which was held

between February 4th and the 11th, 1945.

The Yalta Conference—sometimes called the

Crimea Conference—was the World War II meeting of the heads

of government of the United States, the United Kingdom and

the Soviet Union, for the purpose of discussing Europe's

post-war reorganization. The conference convened in the

Livadia Palace near Yalta in Crimea.

Now RC70YC is on the air celebrating this

historic gathering. If you make contact QSL via the Oh QRS on

ClubLog or direct via K2PF. A special free award will be

available. Details can be found on QRZ.com (OPDX)

**

DX

In DX, SM6CPY will be on the air as 99X0PY from

Kigali Rwanda through March 2nd. Operations will definitely

be on 20 through 10 meters with the possibly of some signals

on 160 and 40 meters as well. QSL direct to his home callsign

or via the bureau.

H8PHT will be active between March 11th and the

15th as AH0KT from the rental shack on Saipan in the Northern

Mariana Island. Activity will be on the High Frequency bands

and 6 meters using CW, SSB, the Digital modes. He also plans

to try 10 meter AM and FM on 29 dot 600 MHz only. QSL via his

home callsign.

Three operators from Poland will activate

Kathmandu, Nepal between March 18th and the 30th. The

callsign will be announced later. Operators mentioned are

SP2FUD, SP9FIH and SQ9CNN. The operations actual call will be

announced at a later date at 9n dot dxpeditions dot org.

DK5ON will be active stroke A6 from the United

Arab Emerates between March 18th and the 27th. His operation

will be on 40 through 10 meters using CW, SSB, RTTY and

PSK31. QSL via his home callsign, direct or by the bureau.

LU1FM, will be operational as 5-J-zero-B from

San Andres Island between March 21st and April 4th. Activity

will be on 160 through 6 meters using SSB and the digital

modes. He also plans to participate in CQ World Wide WPX SSB

Contest on March 28th and 29th. QSL via his home callsign.

Last but by no means least, F5RAV, will be

active as as C5LT from Kololi in The Gambia between October

20th to the 27th. Operations will be on 40 through 10 meters

using SSB, RTTY and possibly CW. QSL direct only via F5RAV.

(This weeks DX news courtesy of the Ohio Penn

DX Newsletter)

**

THAT FINAL ITEM: NEW RASPBERRY PI 2 CAN REBOOT

IF EPOSED TO XENON CAMERA FLASH

And finally this week it appears that the

latest version of Raspberry Pi's mini computer appears to be

camera shy. At least the Raspberry Pi 2 does not like the

spurt of high intensity light from Xenon camera flashes and

may reboot itself when exposed to it. With more, here is

Heather Embee KB3TZDÂ…

[Heather:] The glitch is a result of the

photoelectric effect phenomenon. Raspberry Pi creator Eben

Upton admitted to the BBC that he had not been aware that the

Raspberry Pi 2 would be sensitive to camera flashes, but that

he was not too upset about it. Rather, he termed it an

unintentional educational bonus and an interesting

demonstration of the photoelectric effect.

According to the the Southgate News, it was

Essex radio amateur Peter Onion, G0DZB, who discovered the

Raspberry Pi 2 reboots when photographed using a Xenon flash.

The reason seems to be that a chip on the board is not

light-resistant. The simple fix appears to be covering the

offending integrated circuit with something like Blu Tak. Blu

Tak is a reusable pressure-sensitive putty-like adhesive

commonly used to attach lightweight objects such as posters

or sheets of paper to walls or other dry surfaces; but it

also seems to have the ability to block out a flash of Xenon

light. For Newsline, IÂ’m Heather Embee KB3TZD in

Warwick, Pennsylvania.

[Jim:] The company that created the Raspberry

Pi2 says that it has has received in excess of 300,000 orders

for the new $35 device since its launch two weeks ago. More

about this story is on the web at

tinyurl.com/raspberry-pi-reboot (Southgate, BBC)

**

NEWSCAST CLOSE

With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the

ARRL, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio Penn DX Bulletin,

Rain, the RSGB, the South African Radio League, the

Southgate News, TwiT-TV, Australia's WIA News and you

our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio

Newsline. Our e-mail address is newsline (at) arnewsline

(dot) org. More information is available at Amateur

Radio Newsline's only official website located

at www.arnewsline.org. You can also write to us or

support us at Amateur Radio Newsline, 28197 Robin Avenue, Santa

Clarita California, 91350.

For now, for producer Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF in

Los Angeles and our news team world wide, I'm Jim Davis,

W2JKD, saying 73 and as always we thank you for listening.

Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2015. All

rights reserved.

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New live Ham radio program

Posted: 12 Feb 2015 06:53 PM PST
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...m&goto=newpost

W5KUB.COM has been doing webcasts of major ham events for over 13 years

now. With a following of about 50,000 hams in about 150 countries.

W5KUB.COM is now doing a live weekly ham radio webcast every Tuesday night

at 8:00 PM central (0200 Wed) The show is called Amateur Radio Roundtable

and we have special guests each week covering a wide range of topics.

During the last half of the show, we allow any viewer to come into our

webcast remotely and be on the show. We are also looking for anyone who

wants to schedule maybe 10-20 minutes on the show and give a discussion,

presentation, etc. We are looking for all subjects, DXing, homebrewing,

vhf-uhf, arduino, rasberry PI, antennas, etc . We will put you on the show

using skype. If you are interested send email to w5kub. Im good in qrz

lookup. Thanks, Tom

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