2015-03-05

Weekly news from the WIA:

MP3 edition of news available at: http://www.wia-files.com/podcast/wianews-2015-03-08.mp3 Text edition:

March, 08 - VK NATIONAL NEWS BROADCAST ON VK1WIA

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THE BEST NEWS YOU'LL GET ALL WEEK

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NATIONAL NEWS FOR WEEK COMMENCING March 08 2015.

IN OUR 20TH YEAR OF NON STOP NEWS

ANZAC Centenary callsigns deadline

WIA JOHN MOYLE FIELD DAY

NASA DOWN UNDA

MeerKat? - It's Simples!

THESE STORIES AND MORE IN THIS EDITION OF NEWS FROM THE WIRELESS INSTITUTE

OF AUSTRALIA 2015 AND FOR WEEK OF March 8th.,.

ANZAC Centenary callsigns deadline

All applications for the commemorative ANZAC suffixed callsigns issued by

the WIA must be made fairly soon and certainly finalised before the end of

March.

The WIA Board has a deadline of March 31 for its ANZAC callsigns, with

applications accepted online and filled in using the correct UTC day or days.

The callsign applications are only for up to a week at a time.

If seeking an ANZAC callsign read the requirements and obligations which

include eQSLing, logging and award eligibility.

This information will not only be of interest to ANZAC stations, but they

can mention them frequently on air and refer to the WIA website for full

further detail.

ANZAC callsign bookings have been good and where overlaps in proposed dates

have occurred, the majority of groups are showing consideration and have

been flexible enough to adapt.

Also a number of other clubs and individuals are to use the alternative AX

callsign prefix, available this year for up to 48 hours.

Following WIA representations the ACMA in recognition that this is the

Centenary of ANZAC, will allow for the use of AX on Saturday and Sunday

April 25 and 26.

The WIA recommends that if AX is used then a QSL card with that callsign

be used to satisfy the many prefix and commemorative event hunters.

VI8ANZAC proves to be very popular

The Darwin Amateur Radio Club (DARC) has completed its activation of the

VI8ANZAC callsign as part of the re-actment of the journey by Albert

Chalmers Borella to enlist in WWI.

He went from Tennant Creek to Darwin, then to a sign-up point in

Townsville in Queensland. Albert Borella served at Gallipoli in 1915, the

Western Front in France and Belgium, and is the only person from the

Northern Territory to be awarded the Victoria Cross.

DARC President Gary Gibson VK8GN reports that VI8ANZAC was put to air by

10 operators scattered across Darwin, keeping it on air until midnight

local time during the activation from February the 20th to March the 3rd,

using both SSB and CW.

There was a concentration on 40m, 20m, 15m and 10m. The callsign was

greeted with plenty of interest on the bands. The total number of contacts

was more than 1,000 with the QRZ.com hits about 7,500.

There is a series of VK state and territory callsigns for ANZAC 100

prefixed VI, have a state numeral and the ANZAC prefix.

A reminder that a cut-off for completiion of applications for the

commemorative ANZAC callsigns is March the 31st. Please see the details above

or on the WIA website www.wia.org.au

The major activity kicks off on ANZAC Day - keep listening to the VK1WIA

broadcast for more information on this WIA activity.

(Jim Linton VK3PC)

NASA DOWN UNDA

NASA has upgraded the Australian facility housing antennae that captured

signals from the first Moon landing and still helps to track the Voyager

missions.

The Tidbinbilla Deep Space Tracking Station already houses Deep Space Stations

(DSS) 34, 43, 45 and DSS 46. The latter is a 26 metre antenna that received

the first video of Neil Armstrong walking on the Moon, a feat it achieved at

the nearby, but since-abandoned, Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station, before

being moved to Tidbinbilla.

DSS 45 was constructed for Voyager 2's encounter with Uranus.

DSS 34 was last year used to track the European Space Agency's Rosetta and

Philae as they approached Comet 67/P

The new DSS 35, commissioned last week, is a 43-metre, US$55m antenna said to

offer "the latest in Beam Waveguide technology" in order to track probes

billions of kilometres from earth.

Oh and those heading to Canberra May 9-10 for the WIA AGM, the Tidbinbilla

facility is just a pleasant 45km drive from Canberra.

theregister.co.uk/2015/03/03/nasa_upgrades_rosettta_voyager_and_moon_landing_tr acker/

WHILST ON NASA, NASA Moon Bounce Signal Heard

Last week in WIA National News we told you how NASA's Jet Propulsion

Laboratory (JPL) had decided to bounce a signal off the moon, it had

listeners all right, including at Mildura in north-west Victoria!

On Tuesday March 3 between 0600 to 0900 UTC, the JPL tested its Lunar

Ranging Experiment. With JPL using 20 kilowatts into a 34-metre antenna,

it was suggested that reception of the reflected signal would be possible

on a basic receiving antenna.

This inspired Noel Ferguson VK3FI in Mildura, who decided to have a

listen. As his three metre dish was out of service, he decided to try an

old "grid pack" pay TV antenna to pick up the reflection on 2115 MHz.

The initial noise floor was about strength five. The reflected signal

first appeared as the moon rose over the tree line at about 0820 UTC, with

the moon's distance at that time about four hundred and three thousand

kilometers from earth.

Signals in Mildura peaked at strength seven using the FT847 as an IF on

164 MHz. Noel VK3FI reports that reception continued through to 0900 UTC,

when the JPL test was terminated. Well done on getting that signal.

(Jim Linton VK3PC)

WIA BOARD TALK

President Phil Wait VK2ASD

Vice President Chris Platt VK5CP

Secretary David Williams VK3RU

Treasurer John Longayroux VK3PZ

Some major work has been carried out to tidy up the WIA Bayswater factory

space behind the WIA Office. This work included the QSL collection area.

The WIA, thanks to the work of Ken Matchett VK3TL - Silent Key, has the

2nd largest historic QSL collection in the world. This is a collection of QSL

cards that have been donated by Radio Amateurs and Short-Wave Listeners from

both Australia and overseas, the aim of which is to preserve the history of

Amateur Radio. QSL cards also have an archival value in that old QSLs, through

their description of radio equipment and comments made by our Radio Amateurs,

can depict the fascinating world of amateur radio in its early days.

Members of the WIA have reason to be proud of their WIA QSL Collection, as it

contains some of the rarest archival material in the world. The QSL of

Reinhartz 1XAM of the USA, and De Loy of France is in the collection. It was

this amateur radio transmission between these two experimenters in November

1923 that bridged the Atlantic for the first time. The QSLs of Frank Bell

Z4AA and Cecil Goyder G2SZ are also in the collection. These experimenters

made the first two-way amateur radio contact between New Zealand and England

in 1924.

The Collection has also an excellent range of post WW1 QSLs such as rare DX,

IOTA, DOK, Prefix and USA County QSLs, in addition to a thematic collection

and a pictorial collection containing some of the World's most attractively

designed QSLs.

Extensive discussions with Wolf Harranth, OE1WHC, DOCUMENTARY ARCHIVE RADIO

COMMUNICATIONS in Austria have taken place. Wolf had provided to the WIA

approximately 50,000 QSL cards which have been integrated into our collection.

These cards filled gaps in the WIA's collection. Wolf and his research team

provide a service to Amateur Radio by documenting historic aspects of both

amateur and commercial radio operations. The Austrian collection of QSL cards

is the largest repository for historic QSL cards in the world. The WIA has

links to this group and continues to provide them with important historic

Amateur Radio information.

The WIA Board are currently seeking a permanent curator for the historic QSL

Collection and will be seeking expressions of interest as soon as the factory

tidy up is completed.

DISCUSSION POINT

What use is an F-call?

When you first start as an Amateur, you get on air, you have a wander up and

down the bands and you have access to so many frequencies that you don't know

where to start. If you talk to other Amateurs you'll learn that the bands have

more and lesser levels of activity at different parts of the band.

For example, the 10m band SSB runs from 28.3 until 29.1, a wide range to play

in. When you play around longer you'll notice that most of the activity is

around 28.5. Of course as contests hit the airwaves, you'll find the band

full of people all over the place, but normally on a day-to-day basis, you'll

find them clustered around various frequencies.

As you start, you're likely to start calling CQ. As an F-call with low power

this can be rewarding, but only for the very lucky and patient. More success

happens if you find yourself on or around QRP calling frequencies, but overall

if you're like me, you're likely to spend less time calling CQ.

After a while I found myself hunting for strong stations and calling my

callsign when they asked for it. That is, strong stations calling CQ or CQ DX.

Initially, I'd find a strong station and call back. I'd spend quite a bit of

time doing that, sometimes making a contact, often giving up in frustration.

I'm learning as time goes by that I spend more time listening and less time

calling. This is a good thing, for your voice, for your battery and for the

bands.

What I'm now doing is locating strong stations and listening to their QSOs.

If you hear a station 5/9 and they tell the other station they're talking to

that they're running 2 kW, you're unlikely to be able to get to them. It's not

impossible, just not probable. If on the other hand you hear a station saying

that they're running 100 Watt, you're much more likely to talk to them if

they're 5/9 at your station.

The more you listen, the more you're going to hear rude and silly behaviour,

calling partial calls indiscriminately, tuning up on the calling frequency,

asking for the DX station's callsign, you name it, I've heard it all.

My observation is that the more experienced you are, the less you'll transmit

and the more you'll listen.

I'm Onno VK6FLAB

SILENT KEY
http://www.wia.org.au/members/broadcast/about/

Silent Keys are best sent to AR Magazine and your local state or club news

rather than this WIA National News Service.

INTERNATIONAL NEWS With thanks to IARU, RSGB, SARL, Southgate AR Club, ARRL,

Amateur Radio Newsline, NZART and the WW sources of the WIA.

SA portion of the SKA will be ready for science by mid-2017, 'simples.'

It had been reported last year that due to a strike by the National Union of

Metalworkers of South Africa, among other reasons, the construction of

the Square Kilometer Array MeerKAT dishes had been delayed.

But now it would appear the manufacturer has given SKA a schedule saying they

will "catch up."

South African company Stratosat, in a joint venture with US firm General

Dynamics Satcom, won the largest tender in the MeerKAT construction,

a R632-million tender bid for antenna positioners. About 75% of the MeerKAT

has to be made locally in South Africa.

All 64 dishes of MeerKAT, which will be incorporated into phase one of the

SKA in 2018, are expected to be completed at the end of next year, and ready

for science by mid-2017. The 2016 manufacturing deadline would put the

MeerKAT back on track to meet its deadlines prior to the strike delay.

The papers of a telecommunications legend, Pat Hawker G3VA are being auctioned

March 18, the papers are from the period 1936-2008.

Hawker was one of the legends of amateur radio, but it is claimed that he

'literally helped shape the world we live in today'. [His] 'service to his

country, the radio and television industry and to amateur radio may never be

equalled'.

During WWII he was a leading figure at Bletchley Park, and afterwards played

a leading role in the development of both radio and television.

Chiswick Auctions Lot 185
http://www.the-saleroom.com/en-us/au...9-a44c00ef5950

Richard Ford Manuscripts
www.richardfordmanuscripts.co.uk/catalogue/14025

Two astronauts have completed upgrades to the ISS in a picture perfect

spacewalk. Barry Wilmore and Terry Virts (The ULTIMATE Cableguys?) journeyed

outside the station once more to complete their third and final spacewalk.

The upgrades to the station will allow new International Docking Adapters

(IDAs) to be installed later this year. Once installed, the new IDAs will be

complete and ready for testing and operations. Commercial space craft from

SpaceX and Boeing are expected to dock with the ISS starting in 2017.

The astronauts breezed through their planned assignments by first installing

booms with an antenna arrays. These are needed for communications between the

ISS and the future spacecraft. The team also installed nearly 122 meters of

cable.

Social media went into meltdown earlier this week when hundreds of users on

Facebook, Twitter and several Thai language forums reported seeing a UFO.

Sightings were mainly reported from the Bangkok area, it wasn't long before

doomsday scenarios were being bandied about.

Things then went to a whole new level of hysteria when video footage emerged

that had been captured by YouTube user K.Jane on her dashcam as she headed

home from work.

The Thai Astronomical Society joined the discussion and attempted to quash

all the speculation by explaining the unique phenomenon witnessed was a

flare from an iridium satellite. It was explained that it happens when an

antenna from one of these satellites reflects sunlight directly down at Earth.

When it does, it creates a quickly moving illuminated spot on Earth's surface.

Such a logical explanation should have been the end of the matter but it was

only just the beginning, despite the Astronomical Society sharing information

for stargazers earlier in the day that a flare would be visible, the

non-believers were on a roll and continued with their wild and often crazy

theories late into the night.

stickboybangkok.com/news/satellite-flare-over-thailand-march-2nd-2015/

================================================== ===========================

ARNEWSLINE

RADIO POLITICS IN THAILAND HAS HAMS CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE

A Bangkok newspaper says access to a pair of VHF bands by ham radio operators

in Thailand seems in a state of flux.

The Nation newspaper reports that a subcommittee on reforming the broadcasting

and telecommunications industries wants the regulator to retain its

independence and authority to allocate frequencies. According to the chairman

of the subcommittee known as the Pana Panel, this needs the support of the

National Legislative Assembly.

The Pana panel is part of the mass communications committee of the

government-appointed National Reform Council. It recently approved segments

of draft digital economy bills which revise the powers of the National

Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission or N-B-T-C. The proposals could

have an effect on ham operators in Thailand. Under the bill, a proposed

National Digital Economy committee to be chaired by the Prime Minister would

determine which frequencies are for security, public or commercial use. Only

those for commercial use would be managed by the National Broadcasting and

Telecommunications Council. And that has not set well with the N-B-T-C. A

source within the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Council said

the downgrading of its role stems from its conflict with the Army regarding

the allocation of an additional band at 50 to 54 MHz and 146 to 148 MHz to

ham radio operators. Thai hams already had access to spectrum from 144 to 146

MHz as the nation's 2 meter band.

The new regulations for this proposed change were published in the Royal

Gazette last July. The Thai Army had already been using the 50 to 54 MHz band

for emergencies but the N-B-T-C did not invite it to the public hearing to

discuss the change. This prompted the Army to rush a letter to the N-B-T-C

opposing the move. The Army then sent another letter to regulators who

promised to look into the matter.

As all this was happening, the N-B-T-C prepared to allocate the new band

from 146 to 148 MHz for amateur radio and reassign the 50 to 54 MHz band

for the military. These changes correspond to its review of the frequency

plan every two years. However, before it could do anything to improve the

plan, the telecommunications ministry proposed the bill which would limit

the N-B-T-C's ability to apportion the country's airwaves.

And caught in the middle of this dispute are the nation's ham radio operators

who are now waiting out the political tug-of-war between the National

Broadcasting and Telecommunications Council and the Thai military. You can

read the entire story on-nine at tinyurl.com/pja8ld6

MARCH ISSUE OF AMERICAN LEGION MAGAZINE TO FEATURE AMATEUR RADIO:

The March 2015 edition of American Legion Magazine will include a feature

article about the hobby of amateur radio.

Written by best-selling author Don Keith, N4KC, the article explains how

ham radio remains exciting, important, and relevant, even after one-hundred

years of existence and so much technological change. It also reminds American

Legion members about their organization's own club-The American Legion Amateur

Radio Club or TALARC-as well as how its members can get their licenses,

establish club stations at more of the 14,000 posts around the country, and

more. The Legion has an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security

for assistance during emergencies and the article talks about how amateur

radio meshes well with that effort.

American Legion Magazine is distributed to the veterans' organization's

2.3 million members as well as through other outlets. TALARC now has more

than 2,000 members. Regular on-air nets are held for Legion members who are

also hams. The club station, K9TAL at American Legion Headquarters in

Indianapolis, Indiana, also hosts regular operating events.

For Newsline, I'm Skeeter Nash N5ASH in Topeka, Kansas.

To learn more about how the American Legion is integrating amateur radio

into its organization and for its members, visit www.legion.org/hamradio

================================================== ===========================

RSGB

Ron Huntsman, G3KBR from Cambridge is one of the last surviving members of

the production team who televised the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann - one of

the Nazi architects of the Holocaust. Ron set up hidden TV cameras in the

court room and fed the cables across the street suspended by a catenary wire

to a rather rapidly-built TV recording studio in a nearby building.

The trial and G3KBR's technical role were featured in the 90-minute drama,

"The Eichmann Show" screened recently on BBC2.

Huntsman and his team sat glued to the trial proceedings for four months and

at one point he was summoned into the glass dock to sort out Eichmann's faulty

headphones. The encounter that left Ron shaking for some time because, as he

puts it, he "-must have sensed the evil in the man".

Ron was recently interviewed on BBC Look East and Radio Cambridgeshire about

his involvement in enabling a global TV audience to hear, for the first time,

shocking un-edited testimony from survivors.

Who and Where are our broadcast stations?
http://www.wia.org.au/members/broadcast/where/

OPERATIONAL NEWS.

John Moyle Memorial Field Day 2015.

This year the contest will occur over the weekend of Saturday the 21st to

Sunday the 22nd March, the duration of the contest will be from UTC 0100 on

the Saturday to 0059 UTC on Sunday.

Now is the time to complete your planning for the field day contest as there

are only a couple of weeks to go before the event.

Denis, VK4AE, WIA coordinator for the John Moyle Memorial Field Day joins us.

"Considerable discussion has developed this year about what is the definition

of a 'portable station'. The particular rule has not changed in all of the

years that I have been running the contest, so I for one am surprised by the

confusion. Perhaps there is some deliberate misinformation being spread on

the bands?

The rule in question simply states that :- "A portable station comprises

field equipment operating from a power source, e.g. batteries, portable

generator, solar power, wind power, independent of any permanent facilities,

which is not the normal location of any amateur station."

This seems pretty clear and uncomplicated. However, much of the discussion

seems to centre on the query that if some lucky amateur has a large property

can a club station then set up a portable station down the paddock from the

house? Or if a club wishes to erect a tent beside the local fire station to

operate a portable station is this suitable?

The intent of the rule is to encourage clubs or individuals to transport

equipment to places that an amateur station does not normally operate from

and then set up and operate a radio station. In fact a number of stations

in the past have set up a portable station in the local park in the shelter

shed or down the back paddock remote from the house. The place does not have

to be some really remote location; in fact the more visible the station is

to the general public the better it is for the hobby.

So as long as the power supply conditions are met then a portable station can

effectively set up anywhere. (The permanent comment refers to the radio

station arrangement not the shelter structure.)

Best of luck to all in the field day and I look forward to working a few of

you on the day and most of all receiving your log entry after the event we

known as:-

John Moyle Memorial Field Day 21st-22nd March from UTC 0100 Sat to 0059 Sun."

More contesting news, who can forget that it's Tablelands Radio Group's

AM and CW on ANZAC Day 25 April

Harry Angel sprint 80 metres May 2.

Trans-Tasman contest 18th July from 0800utc

10-10 INTERNATIONAL SUMMER CONTEST Aug 1 - 2

Remembrance Day Contest August 15 and 16

Oceania DX contest Voice First full weekend in October

Oceania DX contest Continuous Wave Second full weekend in October.

AWARDS

New Zealand National System Award 2015

This year the theme of the award is the ANZAC Centenary.

This is for ZL's and it's to do with ANZAC100

Operate on The National System, from locations as close as possible to a

War Memorial.

The award runs from dawn on ANZAC Day Saturday 25th April until sunset

Sunday 24th May and MUST include a contact with ZL2WA.

www.nzhistory.net.nz/map/memorials-register-map
www.vhf.org.nz
www.nzart.org.nz

SPECIAL EVENT STATIONS, DX, BEACON REPEATER AND NET ADVICE

Station K 5 B will be in operation on March 22nd.

This operation will be for the 26th Annual Bataan Memorial Death March

Marathon event and held at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

The event honours the victims and survivors of the Bataan Death March that

took place in the Philippines during World War II and will operate from

several different locations in the Las Cruces area.

More information is available on the web at www.bataanmarch.com

( WB4AEJ via ARNewsLine )

A Uruguay DX Group will be operating from the Red Cross Headquarters in

St. Maarten as PJ 7 C through March 9th with 2 stations running 500 watts

into 3 elements plus 1/4 wave verticals on lower bands.

Modes will be CW and SSB, and on 80 through 10 meters.

QSL via the operations manager EB 7 DX.

Active will be D 44 TEG from Sao Tiago Island March 15th to the 27th.

Operations will be on 40 through 10 meters CW only.

QSL via his home callsign, HB 9 EBT.

N L 8 F will be active stroke HP in Panama through March 9th.

Operations will be on the High Frequency bands only.

QSL via K 8 NA

PJ 4 F from Bonaire until March 15th on the various HF bands.

QSL via M 0 URX.

WIRELESS WEATHER

Monthly 10cm Flux figures, as of the 26th of February.

March:-

minimum 105, average 126, maximum 135 peaking from the 6th to the 11th.

April:-

minimum 120, average 126, maximum 135 peaking from the 2nd to the 6th.

And to give some perspective, last month, Feb we had

a minimum of 110, average 130, maximum was 154 peaking from 1st to the 10th.

(Noel Kaarsberg, VK2FUL via VK2WI News)

WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- ARDF

10th IARU Region 3 ARDF Championships held in JA, 6th till 12th of September.

WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- FEMALES IN RADIO

ALARA - AUSTRALIAN LADIES AR ASSOCIATION
http://alara.org.au

Net is held each Mondays on 3.570± MHz, commencing at 1030 UTC.

(1000utc during daylight saving)

Saturday week last saw a good role up of ALARA and friends of ALARA meeting at

a Brisbane Bayside cafe to say hello to Tex and Lyn Battle (VK4SWE) down

from Sweers Island, by way of Europe!

Lyn is the VK4 ALARA Representative.

​ 14 attended on a sunny warmish morning and much thanks go to Col VK4CC for

arranging everything and also to him for kindly providing hot Chips and

Calamari for everyone out of his own pocket !

Bambi says she hopes there are more 'Eye-Ball' QSOs in the future.

Already Bambi runs a "Ladies Chillout and Chatter" where they get together

3~4 times a month to do exact that!

"Life they say begins at Forty, so why not mark ALARA's 40th Birthday by

attending their very special 40th Birthday Lunch.

This Gala Event is being held at the Novotel Hotel Glen Waverley Melbourne

July 25th at 12noon until 4pm

All YL's and of course their OM's are welcome to attend the cost is $56-00

Please e-mail Jean Fisher VK3VIP Alara's president for full details
"

WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- FINAL FRONTIER

Live Broadcast of Space Launch System Booster Test Firing

NASA is building the largest solid propellant rocket booster in the world!

NASA will test this booster, designated Qualification Motor-1, or QM-1, on

March 11, scheduled for 11:30 a.m. EDT.

QM-1 is a five-segment solid propellant booster that will help power the Space

Launch System. The two-minute, full-duration static test is a huge milestone

for the SLS Program and will qualify the booster design for high-temperature

conditions.

NASA's Space Launch System will be used to help send humans to deep space

destinations like an asteroid and Mars.

The test will be broadcast on NASA-TV and streamed at
www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html

(amsat-na)

US Astronaut Michael Fincke, KE5AIT recently renewed his Amateur Radio license

through until 2025. KE5AIT served on ISS Expedition 9 from April 18th to

October 23rd of 2004 as well as Expedition 18 that began on October 12, 2008

and ended April 8th 2009. His last venture into space was on the STS-134

flight of the space shuttle Endeavor. That mission ran May 16th to June 1st,

2011 and delivered the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and an ExPRESS Logistics

Carrier to the International Space Station. As such, at 381.6 days, KE5AIT

currently holds the American record for the most time in space.

WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- IOTA
http://rsgbiota.org

AS-118

Members of the Kuwait Amateur Radio Society will be active as 9 K 2 F

from Failaka Island between March 11-16th on the HF bands.

QSL via 9 K 2 HN.

WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- RADIO SCOUTING
http://www.scouts.com.au
http://www.scout.org/jota
http://www.international.scouts.com.au

CALLING FREQUENCIES

Please QSY off the calling frequency after establishing communication.

Australian voice calling frequencies:

3.650, 7.090, 14.190, 21.190, 28.590, 52.160

World CW calling frequencies:

3.570, 7.030, 14.060, 18.080, 21.140, 24.910, 28.180, 50.160

World voice calling frequencies:

3.690 & 3.940 MHz, 7.090 & 7.190, 14.290, 18.140, 21.360,

24.960, 28.390, 50.160

Calling frequencies for Slow Scan TV (SSTV):

3.630, 7.033, 14.227

Calling Frequencies for PSK31

14.070

A BROWNIE took to the airwaves to speak to girls in the Scouting movement

on World Thinking Day. Kathryn Sipple, seven, of the 17th Leigh Brownies,

is the great grand-daughter of amateur radio antenna designer Gordon

"Dicky" Bird and sent greetings to 15 Guides and Brownies in South Ockendon.

As the youngest member of the Essex Ham radio club, she broadcast the messages

under the guidance of her parents, both of whom are licensed radio amateurs.

She also completed her first electronics project at the weekend, at Southend's

Raspberry Jam technology event, where the team from Essex Ham was

demonstrating how to send and receive radio messages to and from the

International Space Station.

(eHam)

SOCIAL SCENE 2015

March 15 VK7 Meet the Voice barbecue at Ross.( http://meetthevoice.org/ )

March 21 VK3 Dstar Users Group 9am Woodend RSL Anslow St.

March 29 VK3 EMDRC Hamfest

April 5 VK2 Urunga Radio Convention ( )

April 11 VK4 REDFest (Redcliffe Radio Club Event)

April 12 VK6 HARG swap meet 10am Lesmurdie Hall 96 Gladys Road.

18 WW World Amateur Radio Day

April 25 VK3 ANZAC Day Radio Afternoon Ballarat Showgrounds ( vk3fmpb )

May 1-3 VK4 Clairview Gathering contact RADAR's VK4ACC 04 2963 2815

May 9 VK4 BARCFEST Salvation Army Hall Calamvale

May 9-10 VK WIA AGM Canberra

June 6-7 VK2 Queens Birthday 40th annual Oxley Region Field Day

June 6-7 VK5 51st South East Radio Group Convention / Australian

Foxhunting Championship

July 1 VK4 Caboolture Hamfest

July 11-12 VK3 GippsTech 2015

July 18 VK3 Gippsland gate Radio & Electronics Club Hamfest @ Cranbourne

July 25 VK3 ALARA's 40th Birthday Lunch, Novotel Glen Waverley.

Sept 12 VK4 SUNFEST Woombye

Sept 25-27 VK4 CHARC AGM Weekend Camp Fairbairn near Emerald

Oct 2-5 VK4 Cardwell Gathering, Beachcomber Motel and Tourist Park

Oct 25 VK4 Gold Coast Hamfest Broadbeach

Nov VK3 QRP By the Bay details from VK3YE held 2nd Saturday

Submitting news items

If you would like to submit news items for inclusion in the

VK1WIA broadcasts, please email your item in text to

and don't JUST send url's links but take the time to pen YOUR contribution.

To submit audio read "how to submit items" in the weekly news page on
http://www.wia.org.au/members/broadcast/contribute/

Remember the sooner you submit material the more the likelihood of it being

broadcast in the very next edition of WIA National News. Each item will only

be broadcast once, if you want a couple of mentions, please submit different

slants to keep your event 'fresh 'and always if the news room is to read your

item write in the 3rd person.

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WIANews - we've reported...YOU decide.

TWITTER http://twitter.com/VK1WIA

Societies and Club News Letter Editors can EXCHANGE a feed prior to

the actual broadcast date, e-mail

Call-backs follow the RF editions, but also for text readers you may

lodge a quick reply to let us know you read it, who knows, you might

even get a "cheerio call".

Thanks to our dedicated band of broadcast volunteers who utilize their time

and equipment in bringing you this weekly broadcast.

Who and where are they? http://www.wia.org.au/members/broadcast/where/

The purpose of "WIANews" is to rapidly provide news of interest to

active amateurs residing in Australia and the globe.

We strongly encourage membership in the Wireless Institute of Australia

and participation in the activities of local clubs. Opinions expressed in

"WIANews" are those of the writers who submit material and do not necessarily

reflect those of the rebroadcasters, nor the National WIA, but are broadcast

in the spirit in which they were submitted."

Material may be reproduced in whole or in part, in any form, a credit to

WIANews wouldn't go astray...

Who listens to radio? A weekly 'tally sheet' is sent to all rebroadcasters

and interested listeners, to get your free copy send a blank email to:-

Put the word subscribe in the title or subject field

How do I join this National News List? (subscribe for an automatic weekly feed.)

Email to

from the email account that you wish the emails to go to.

How do I leave this National News List? (unsubscribe your weekly feed)

Open mail program which sends mail from the address you want to unsubscribe.

Send mail to the list unsubscribe address

You will be sent a confirmation mail and must follow the instructions given

in that mail to complete the unsubscription.

Once your unsubscription has been processed, you will probably

receive another message confirming your unsubscription from the list,

and at that point you should stop receiving messages.

National News compiled by VK4BB on behalf of the National WIA.

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