Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2000, February 26, 2016 Amateur Radio Newsline Report number 2000 with a release date of Friday, February 26, 2016 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1. The following is a QST. The FCC seeks input on possible license and band changes. Texas hams go fox-hunting. A historic transmitter gets a new home. And in a special extended newsline segment, we go back to our radio roots with Robert Sudock, WB6FDF, who was there at the beginning. All this and more in Amateur Radio Newsline's Milestone Report 2000 coming your way right now. (Billboard Cart Here and Intro) ** FCC SEEKS COMMENTS ON LIFETIME LICENSES, 80/75 METER CHANGES If you have thoughts on the ARRL's petition for the FCC to make changes to 80 and 75 meters, now is the time to share them. Or if you want to weigh in a proposal that the FCC issue lifetime amateur radio licenses, take care of that now too. On the bands, the ARRL has asked the commission to fix what it calls a shortfall in available spectrum for RTTY and data, following the bands' reapportionment by the FCC a decade ago. The ARRL would like to see the boundary shifted between the 75 meter phone/image subband and the 80 meter RTTY/data subband - a proposal that the league's Board of Directors adopted as policy in July of last year. The ARRL would like the phone/image subband to extend from 3650 kHz to 4000 kHz and the RTTY/data subband to extend from 3500 kHz to 3650 kHz. The ARRL would also like 3600 kHz to 3650 kHz made available for General and Advanced Class licensees - as it had been before 2006. The FCC is also considering a request made last year for lifetime licenses to replace the 10-year term. In his petition, Mark F. Krotz, N7MK, of Mesa, Arizona, pointed out that the General Radiotelephone Operator License sets a precedent because it is already valid for a lifetime. Using the FCC’s Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), select RM11759 for the 80 and 75 meter issue, and RM11760 for the lifetime license issue. Let your voice be heard. (ARRL) ** FOX-HUNTING, TEXAS-STYLE DON: At one ranch in Texas, the hunt is on, and it's begun a little earlier than usual this year. Amateur Radio Newsline's Mike Askins, KE5CXP, rounds up the details for us: MIKE: The scene will be the Parrie Haynes C5 Youth Ranch and Equestrian Center just outside Killeen, Texas, and the competition will be nothing short of intense. This is, after all, a national championship. But if you're thinking "Texas Rodeo," guess again. Radio amateurs will be trying to lasso something a little smaller and more elusive than a calf or bull during the four days of contesting in April. The Amateur Radio Direction Finding championships will be getting under way, taking on-foot foxhunting to a new level. This year's schedule is different: Customarily, competitors face off in late summer or early fall, but the shift to a spring event became necessary so that the best of the best could be selected for Team USA members to compete in the World Championships in Bulgaria in September. The competition will not only accommodate all skill levels, but offer an optional training day on Wednesday, April 6, on an 80-meter short course before the event kicks off. The championships will then get underway on Thursday, April 7 and conclude Sunday, April 10. Opening day will also have hams facing off on a combination of radio-direction finding on 80 meters and classic orienteering, an activity known as foxoring. Yes, there will be food: An awards banquet will be held on Saturday night. Lead organizers are Jennifer Harker, W5JEN and Kenneth Harker, WM5R, medal-winners who represented the U.S. at the World Championships previously. The competition is being sponsored by the Austin Orienteering Club and Texas ARDF. For more details, visit the Texas ARDF site, www.texasardf.org. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mike Askins, KE5CXP,in Shawnee, Oklahoma. (TEXAS ARDF) ** HELP WITH ARES REPORT FORMS ARES Emergency Coordinators, District Emergency Coordinators and Section Emergency Coordinators are being encouraged by the ARRL to participate in a free webinar on March 1, offering instruction on how ARES report forms are filled out, submitted and how the information is used. The training webinar begins at 8 PM Eastern Time but will also be recorded and made available online. Section, District and Local emergency coordinators are all advised to take advantage of the opportunity. According to Mike Corey, KI1U, the ARRL's Emergency Preparedness Manager, this is the first time this webinar is being offered. As many as 500 participants can take the online instruction. Find a live link to the GoToWebinar registration form by visiting the ARRL website, or contact Mike Corey for more details at ki1u@arrl.org (MIKE COREY, KI1U) ** MAKING WAVES? NO, DISCOVERING THEM DON: A recently announced discovery that illuminates Einstein's Theory of Relativity turned out to be relative, as well, to the work of one radio amateur in the 1970s. Here's Amateur Radio Newsline's Paul Braun, WD9GCO, with the details: PAUL: A worldwide team of physicists could not have been happier earlier this month when their discovery made global news: they had captured the sound of the collision of two black holes, a billion light-years away,in space. The finding of the Ligo Project, reported in the New York Times and other media, fulfilled Albert Einstein's prediction, a century earlier, that gravitational waves do indeed exist. Einstein would not be surprised, of course, and neither would other scientists who had long pursued this theory of his with their own imaginations and antennas. One of those scientists from years ago turns out to be a radio astronomer - and radio amateur - Joseph H. Taylor Jr., K1JT. Taylor was awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physics with colleague, Russell Hulse, for discovering and interpreting the electromagnetic radiation emissions from a pulsar, giving new insights into gravitational waves. Their discovery, made at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1978, was one of many leading to this most recent revelation. The executive director of the Ligo Project, professor David Reitze, told the media this month: [QUOTE] "It's the first time the universe has spoken to us through gravitational waves. Up until now, we've been deaf." As any ham would add, good copy is everything, even with a black hole: it's all about the power of antennas and reception, after all. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Paul Braun, WD9GCO, in Valparaiso, Indiana. (THE NEW YORK TIMES, BBC.COM) ** NY's TRAIL RELAY IN PURSUIT OF HAMS In New York, it's time to warm up for the Paumanok Pursuit, a 70K trail run and relay on Long Island, New York, that navigates from Rocky Point, east to Hampton Bays. Since the relay teams aren't setting off for their destination until April 3, the real pursuit right now is for amateur radio support. The event, which follows the Paumanok Path through five towns, is a benefit for the Greenbelt Trail Conference and its work to keep Long Island trails, such as this one, safe and well-maintained. It typically draws individual runners as well as relay teams of two to five, covering five legs of the race, in varying distances. Long Island hams or GMRS operators are needed to keep things safe throughout the courses. The race starts at 7 a.m. and concludes around 3 p.m. with a party to celebrate a job well done. In a recent email to Long Island Hams, Matthew Berman, KC2YDT, advised amateur radio volunteers: QUOTE "This is a great opportunity to exercise our verbal skills, new technologies and cross-communication interoperability of various radio spectrums." ENDQUOTE The event will be managed using the ICS Special Event management model, he said, but this is not an ARES event. Interested? Please write him for more details or to put your name on the list. His email address is kc2ydt@arrl.net (MATTHEW BERMAN, KC2YDT) ** BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana (OH-KY-IN) Amateur Radio Society repeater, 146.670 MHz, in Cincinnati, Ohio. ** ONE HAM'S LOW-POWER LEGACY DON: A low-power transmitter donated from a Silent Key's estate is adding some high-power interest to the ARRL's Historical Collection. Let's hear more from Amateur Radio Newsline's Skeeter Nash, N5ASH: SKEETER: It's not just a collector's item; it's a piece of radio history. It's a flea-powered transistorized ham transmitter that was used in a transatlantic contact in 1956. And now it's set to be displayed in the ARRL's Historical Collection in Connecticut, a donation from the estate of Silent Key Gus Fallgren, who was licensed as W1OGU when he built the transmitter with two fellow Raytheon engineers. On Sept. 18, 1956, the 78 mW transmitter was showing off some low-power, battery-powered prowess, achieving a 3,800-mile contact on 20 meters. Fallgren himself was at the key, transmitting into a 3-element, wide-spaced Yagi. His signal report of 339 signal came all the way from OZ7BO in Copenhagen, Denmark. As built by Fallgren and his colleagues, Al “Hank” Hankinson, W1OSF, and Dick Wright, W1UBC, the transmitter was designed to run two Raytheon 2N113 transistors - and it was the first to run such transistors on 20 meters. The trio had taken up the challenge of trying to achieve Worked All Continents status with it. The donation made from his estate, by Andy Stewart, KB1OIQ, includes the original transmitter and a 7.013.4 kc crystal as well as the Vibroplex bug used for the contact, among other things. The ARRL will display it along with the bug, station log, and the issue of Radio and Television News that featured a story about the transmitter - and Gus Fallgren on the cover. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Skeeter Nash, N5ASH, in Topeka, Kansas. (ARRL) ** SHINING A LIGHT ON UK BEACONS' FUTURE DON: What's up next for a small group of 5MHz beacons in the UK? The Radio Society of Great Britain wants hams to tell them what they think. Amateur Radio Newsline's Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, has the details: JEREMY: The Radio Society of Great Britain is looking for input on the future of its 5MHz beacons, which began operating in mid-2003, as part of a propagation experiment on the band. Data has been recorded from the beacons' reception reports and will be used to help determine the next stage of their use. The radio society has now opened up a consultation on the beacons, particularly in light of technical difficulties and site challenges the beacons have faced. The trio began operations with the call signs GB3RAL, GB3WES and GB3ORK. More than 1.5 million propagation records are now stored in a database, collected over the course of the experiment. The data are being analyzed by Marcus, G0IJZ, and findings have been published in RadCom magazine, as well as presented at conferences. The beacons' licenses are up for renewal in 2017. For comments, visit the Radio Society of Great Britain website, and navigate to the 5MHz Beacon forum. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH, in Nottingham, the UK. (RADIO SOCIETY OF GREAT BRITAIN) ** MEMORABLE MICROWAVE MOMENT Another kind of meaningful radio contact in the UK has been reported: In fact, the two hams, Chris G0FDZ/P and Roger G8CUB/P, likely won't forget Friday, Feb. 19, for a long time to come. They've reported on the UK Microwave Yahoo Group that they completed the first UK amateur radio contact on the 241 GHz band that day at 1500 UTC. The microwave contact was made in locator square JO01EP. The distance was 30 meters and the CW signals were 559 and 589. The next issue of the UK Microwave Group's newsletter, "Scatterpoint," is expected to carry more details. (SOUTHGATE AMATEUR RADIO NEWS) ** SOUTH AFRICA'S LICENSE FEES GOING UP In South Africa, it's going to cost more to get on the air. Starting April 1, the annual amateur license fee will rise to 126 Rand. The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa, ICASA, is giving hams the option of renewing for a five-year license, which costs 525 Rand, as a way to guard against additional increases later on. Hams wishing to renew for the five-year period are being advised to send an email along with payment details and request to convert to a five-year license. Those emails should be sent to DKuhrau@icasa.org.za ICASA told the South African Radio League that the billing process is getting under way and license-holder can expect their invoices in the next few weeks. For more details, visit www.sarl.org.za (SOUTHGATE AMATEUR RADIO NEWS, SOUTH AFRICAN RADIO LEAGUE) ** ACTION IN THE ANTARCTIC Looking even further south, ham activity is alive and well in Antarctica. And if conditions permit, the 13th Antarctic Activity Week could shape up to be a big one. The Worldwide Antarctic Program reports that as many as 37 stations could be on the air through Sunday, Feb. 28, when the event winds down. But because conditions in the Antarctic are known to be changeable - if not challenging - check the website for an updated list of call signs and QSL managers. Visit www.waponline.it - if you can't chase penguins, you can at least chase some good DX. (WORLDWIDE ANTARCTIC PROGRAM) ** WORLD OF DX DXpeditioner and low-power contester Olivier, ON4EI, will operate EI8GQB in Ireland from Feb. 27 through March 30, taking on the call sign EI1A during the ARRL International DX SSB, Russian DX and CQ WW WPX contest. Send QSLs only via LOTW or via QSL MANAGER: PA3249 (direct or bureau). Ismo, OH2IS, is operating from Antigua through March 4, mainly on CW with the callsign V26IS. QSL via his home call or ClubLog OQRS. Thaire, W2APF, is active as V47JR from Nevis Island in the Caribbean through March 1. Find him operating CW or SSB. Be listening for special event station, ZV451RIO, through March 6. The station is marking the 41st anniversary of the foundation of Rio de Janeiro. QSLs go via PY1AA. (IRISH RADIO TRANSMITTERS SOCIETY) ** BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the KB9WSL repeater in Rochester, Indiana. ** SPECIAL SEGMENT: ON OUR 2000TH NEWSCAST, WE LOOK BACK DON: As we wrap up Newsline report #2000, let's go back to the earliest recording I could find of Newsline, report #1162 from November 1999: [1162 - 0:46] The late Roy Neal, K6DUE. Roy wasn't just involved with amateur radio news. Roy was NBC's national space correspondant covering the landing of Apollo 11 on the moon, the Apollo 13 crisis and many other aerospace stories. Roy was instrumental in getting amateur radio into space. But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let's start where all good stories start, at the beginning. I had the privilege of speaking with Robert Sudock, WB6FDF about the beginnings of Newsline. Hello Bob: [001 - 3:42] So that's how it all began. Westlink morphed into Amateur Radio Newsline and it was Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF who took the concept from just a way to get the word out about the 220 linked repeaters and made it into a truly professional newscast about amateur radio that today is heard around the globe. One more pause for station identification. Next up; we take you inside KTTV television in Los Angeles. [BREAK 4]: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including WC8VOA, the West Chester Amateur Radio Association’s repeater, in West Chester, Ohio. Now back to our chat with Bob Sudock. Bill Pasternak didn't create this thing called Newsline alone, nobody could. It is truly one of those right place - right time stories where everything just kind of fell together. Bill was at the right place, with the right people at just the right time, and he took full advantage of the situation. [002 - 4:49] That covers a lot but there is still one mystery to solve: [003 - 0:38] Of course, we've just scratched the surface, but if you'd like to hear more of Bob Sudock and me chatting, reminiscing and telling some untold stories about Bill you can hear more of our little trip down memory lane on the Extra page at the Newsline website. It runs 32 minutes and I promise you'll hear more things you never knew about Newsline and Bill Pasternak. Next week, report # 2001. The news never sleeps. ** NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Alan Labs; the ARRL; Matthew Berman, KC2YDT; BBC.COM; Mike Corey, KI1U; CQ Magazine; The FCC; Hap Holly and the RAIN Report; The Irish Radio Transmitters Society; The New York Times; Radio Society of Great Britain; Robert Sudock, WB6FDF; South African Radio League, Southgate Amateur Radio News; Texas Amateur Radio Direction Finding; TWIT TV; Worldwide Antarctic Program and you our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline. Our email address is newsline@arnewsline.org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline's only official website located at www.arnewsline.org. For now, with Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT, at the news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide and for everyone who has ever worked on Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Don Wilbanks, AE5DW in Picayune, MS, and I think it's only fitting that Robert has the last word. Mr Sudock, would you like to put the wraps on Newsline #2000? [ROBERT SUDOCK]: It would be my pleasure to say "73 and thank you for listening." Amateur Radio Newsline is Copyright 2016, and all rights are reserved.