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TWIAR News Feed
/////////////////////////////////////////// SpaceX launch ham radio transceiver to ISS Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:40 PM PST http://bit.ly/2kTmjWH The CRS-10 mission carrying vital amateur radio equipment to the International Space Station launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 at 1439 UT on Sunday, February 19 Frank Bauer KA3HDO, ARISS International Chair and AMSAT-NA V.P. for Human Spaceflight Programs writes: Included as part of today's successful launch of the SpaceX Dragon vehicle to ISS is an ARISS Ericsson 2 meter VHF radio. This radio will replace the Ericsson radio that failed a few months ago. The VHF radio is used for school group contacts and amateur packet radio in the Columbus module. Once the Dragon vehicle is berthed to ISS, the Ericsson will be unstowed and, at some point, installed in Columbus, replacing the UHF radio that is now supporting APRS packet and some school contacts. /////////////////////////////////////////// Ham radio enthusiasts on the air in times of disaster (Oregon) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:38 PM PST http://bit.ly/2l2eqyU Curt Hadley plugged into the world of amateur radio five years ago as part of his strategy to be better prepared in emergencies. The capability of transmitting and receiving broadcasts with modest equipment had him hooked. Ham radios, he says, are often the only means of communication during a catastrophic event. Employing wireless transmitters and a wide frequency spectrum, ham radio operators are able to establish vital communication between emergency teams and the public using their own equipment, knowledge, skills and training. /////////////////////////////////////////// The FCC wants you to be able to listen to FM radio from your smartphone Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:32 PM PST http://bit.ly/2lgMVEn Millions of Americans use their smartphones every day to stream music from services such as Pandora or Spotify. Others use mobile devices to access podcasts or radio shows. These applications don’t work without a connection to WiFi or mobile data. But what if you could listen to that same content on your phone by turning to an old-school technology: FM radio? That’s what the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission has just proposed. Unbeknown to many consumers, most smartphones actually come with FM radio receivers already built in. But good luck trying to get a signal from your local station, because these antennas are largely inactive. “As of last fall, only about 44 percent of the top-selling smartphones in the United States have activated FM chips,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said at an industry conference Thursday. “By comparison, in Mexico that number is about 80 percent.” /////////////////////////////////////////// Radio-heads give Bhubaneswar a peep into airwaves from the past (India) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:30 PM PST http://bit.ly/2m6sKYe I'd sit alone and watch your light/My only friend through teenage nights/And everything I had to know/I heard it on my radio/You gave them all those old time stars/Through wars of worlds invaded by Mars/You made 'em laugh, you made 'em cry/You made us feel like we could fly./Radio. It was in 1984 that Queen performed Radio Ga Ga. Then Indira Gandhi was still India's Prime Minister, Diego Maradona had not left England and the world in a daze, the Berlin wall had not yet fallen and cable TV had not made its way into this part of the world. In between frequent power outages and flickering shows on Doordarshan, it was the radio that would keep us company. Through good times and bad, through night and day, our world would revolve around the rectangular box with an antenna - our eyes and ears to the outside, as it burst forth in waves, long, short and medium. /////////////////////////////////////////// Amateur radio society upgrading Smokey repeater (British Columbia) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:28 PM PST http://bit.ly/2m6lxHw The Smokey amateur radio repeater site located 15 kilometers north of Williams Lake is receiving some much-needed upgrades, said Cariboo Chilcotin Amateur Radio Society president Dr. Mike Smialowski. “As soon as you drive west out of Williams Lake and go over the hill and underneath the telephone lines you have no cell service,” Smialowski said. “Last summer a person got lost south of Charlotte Lake and the only repeater that would get into the area was our amateur radio repeater.” Funding for the equipment came from the Cariboo Regional District (CRD) in the amount of $1,500 and the Williams Lake Log Haulers Association who donated $2,500. /////////////////////////////////////////// Louie the cat can operate a ham radio, seriously (Illinois) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:17 PM PST http://bit.ly/2kGkv89 Name: Louie Age: 15 Breed: Domestic shorthair My people and place of residence: Don and Billie Kerouac, of rural Kankakee A little bit about me: I was rescued from a local shelter when I was about 12 weeks old. I enjoy bird watching from my house in the country. Since I was 9, I have needed to take medicine every eight hours. It's sometimes necessary to remind my humans ... they think I have a built-in kitty clock! Of course, I require a treat afterward! Favorite toy: Anything with catnip in it! /////////////////////////////////////////// India lofts a record 104 spacecraft on a single rocket Posted: 20 Feb 2017 08:17 PM PST http://bit.ly/2kGeI2v An Indian rocket deployed 104 spacecraft into orbit 300 miles above Earth on Tuesday, the largest pack of satellites ever launched on a single booster. The satellites from India, the United States, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Israel, Kazakhstan and the United Arab Emirates will take pictures of planet Earth, monitor the environment, validate new technologies, and serve as tools in the education and training of future aerospace engineers. The smooth flight notched 38 straight successful missions for the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, India’s workhorse launcher, and nearly tripled the record for the most spacecraft ever sent into orbit on one rocket, besting a mark set by a Russian-Ukrainian Dnepr booster in 2014. “This remarkable feat by ISRO (the Indian Space Research Organization) is yet another proud moment for our space scientific community and the nation,” Indian prime minister Narendra Modi tweeted. “India salutes our scientists.” /////////////////////////////////////////// Five Ways to Communicate Secretly While Afloat Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:55 PM PST http://bit.ly/2lgBRqY Communicating is always good, right? Well, not always. Like when you find out too late that you’re on speaker phone after sharing a saucy thought with your significant other, or when you cringe after accidently pressing “reply all” with a cheeky office email. Let’s face it. Much of the time, you don’t really want to share with the entire world — just with a close friend or two. Nowhere does this apply more than among boating anglers, who often form so-called “code” groups — tightly knit cliques that quietly share up-to-the-minute information on where and when prize game fish such as king mackerel, striped bass, marlin or tuna are biting. /////////////////////////////////////////// Radio is Africa's most influential information outlet - UNESCO survey Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:55 PM PST http://bit.ly/2kSRzVM Every February 13th is marked as World Radio Day. An international day instituted by the United Nation General Assembly, since 2011 to celebrate radio as a major form of free expression across the world. 2017’s World Radio Day is under the theme “Radio is you”, (as per) it aims to remind the world that radio would be nothing without the audience and that the audience is actually each of us. This year United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO’s aim is to promote communication to find “greater solutions” to the planet’s problems. /////////////////////////////////////////// Ham radio club calling members around the world, even outer space (West Virginia) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:55 PM PST http://bit.ly/2lpaQA2 It was Saturday morning, but Johnny Borich of Bluefield and his son Jaiden were cramming for a test; if they passed, they would join the ranks of ham radio operators speaking to others across the world and even in outer space. Members of the East River Amateur Radio Club gathered Saturday for breakfast at the Valley Country Restaurant on Blue Prince Road. The club meets there every Saturday morning, but they were moving a little faster than usual that day. Some new members had to be at the Mercer County 911 center by 9 a.m. to take a licensing test. Johnny and Jaiden Borich were doing some last-minute studying. /////////////////////////////////////////// via HACKADAY: How To Receive Pictures From Spaaace! Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:41 PM PST http://ift.tt/2kkjEtr The International Space Station, or ISS, has been in orbit in its various forms now for almost twenty years. During that time many of us will have stood outside on a clear night and seen it pass overhead, as the largest man-made object in space it is clearly visible without a telescope. Most ISS-watchers will know that the station carries a number of amateur radio payloads. There are voice contacts when for example astronauts talk to schools, there are digital modes, and sometimes as is happening at the moment for passes within range of Moscow (on Feb. 14, 11:25-16:30 UTC) the station transmits slow scan television, or SSTV. You might think that receiving SSTV would be hard work and require expensive equipment, but given the advent of ubiquitous mobile and tablet computing alongside dirt-cheap RTL-SDRs it is now surprisingly accessible. An Android phone can run the SDRTouch software defined radio app as well as the Robot36 SSTV decoder, and given a suitable antenna the pictures can be received and decoded relatively easily. The radio must receive 145.8MHz wideband FM and the decoder must be set to the PD120 PD180 mode (Thanks [M5AKA] for the update), and here at least the apps are run on separate Android devices. It is possible to receive the signal using extremely basic antennas, but for best results something with a little gain should be used. The antenna of choice here is a handheld [HB9CV] 2-element beam. /////////////////////////////////////////// ARES Volunteers Support Evacuation, Shelters, in Wake of Oroville Dam Crisis Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:41 PM PST http://ift.tt/2kQjt7T [UPDATE: 2017-02-14 @ 2312: Authorities have now lifted a mandatory evacuation order issued over the weekend to residents who could have been affected by catastrophic flooding from failure of the Oroville Dam emergency spillway. Residents may now return to their homes but have been advised to remain vigilant, should the situation again become critical. The Red Cross shelter in Chico will remain open through a predicted storm.] Sacramento Valley ARES Section Emergency Coordinator Greg Kruckewitt, KG6SJT, reports that Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES®) volunteers are now actively involved in supporting communication for the evacuation and sheltering of nearly 200,000 people living below the damaged Oroville Dam in rural California. The dam, on the Feather River east of Oroville, is the tallest in the US. Following a period of heavy rain, a section of the earthfill-embankment dam’s spillway eroded, and authorities issued an evacuation order for residents living below the dam, in case it should fail. Crews have been attempting to fill the eroded area with rock transported by helicopter. /////////////////////////////////////////// via HACKADAY: Worlds Thinnest Morse Code Touch Paddle Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:41 PM PST http://ift.tt/2m72oo2 Morse code enthusiasts can be picky about their paddles. After all, they are the interface between the man and the machine, and experienced telegraphers can recognize each other by their “hands”. So even though [Edgar] started out on a cheap, clicky paddle, it wouldn’t be long before he made a better one of his own. And in the process, he also made what we think is probably the thinnest paddle out there, being a single sheet of FR4 PCB material and a button cell battery. This would be perfect for a pocketable QRP (low-power) rig. Check it out in action in the video below. There’s not much to a Morse code paddle. It could, of course, be as simple as two switches — one for “dit” and one for “dah”. You could make one out of a paperclip. [Edgar]’s version replaces the switches with capacitive sensing, done by the ATtiny4 on board. Because this was an entry in the 1kB challenge, he prioritized code size over features, and got it down to a ridiculous 126 bytes! Even so, it has deluxe features like autorepeat. We’d have to dig into the code to see if it’s iambic. /////////////////////////////////////////// Radio should promote culture, tradition: Anu Kapoor (India) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:41 PM PST http://bit.ly/2lFVR7i Radio should promote our culture, tradition, customs and spread inspiring thoughts, said veteran Bollywood artist and popular Radio Presenter Anu Kapoor at an inaugural function of International Radio Fair held here yesterday. As sweet voice, interesting topic and good thoughts hold the attention of listeners, the Radio Presenter should speak the language of love, he said attending the event as the Chief Guest. Attending the event organised by Outreach and chaired by Prasar Bharati NBM Director Dipak Samantray at Exhibition Ground, former All India Radio news anchor Akhil Mittal said that the identity of the radio station is its voice. The true meaning of radio is entertainment, outreach, discussion, counterviews; provide information and getting feedbacks from listeners. /////////////////////////////////////////// via HACKADAY: A Lightweight Two Metre Carbon Fibre Yagi Antenna Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lJEe31 If you’ve ever cast your eye towards the rooftops, you’ll be familiar with the Yagi antenna. A dipole radiator with a reflector and a series of passive director elements in front of it, you’ll find them in all fields of radio including in a lot of cases the TV antenna on your rooftop. In the world of amateur radio they are used extensively, both in fixed and portable situations. One of their most portable uses comes from the amateur satellite community, who at the most basic level use handheld Yagi antennas to manually track passing satellites. As you can imagine, holding up an antenna for the pass of a satellite can be a test for your muscles, so a lot of effort has gone into making Yagis for this application that are as lightweight as possible. /////////////////////////////////////////// HAARP Experiments to Get Under Way on February 20 UTC, Reports Invited Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lwq4Wn On February 20 (UTC), Alaska’s High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) will launch its first scientific research campaign since the facility was taken over by the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) Geophysical Institute 18 months ago. UAF Space Physics Group Assistant Research Professor Chris Fallen, KL3WX, reports that he will be ready to go starting Monday, February 20, at 0330 UTC (Sunday, February 19, in US times zones). His campaign will run through February 23 (transmissions will start 1 hour later on February 22 UTC). Fallen plans to start and stop each experiment block with an audio broadcast, transmitting AM carriers at 2.8 and 3.3 MHz, with the resulting skywave signal — the “Luxembourg Effect” — being a mix of both frequencies. He told ARRL that he will transmit a short, simple piece of music, composed locally, specifically to help demonstrate the Luxembourg effect. Transmissions to create radio-induced airglow or “aurora” that potentially can be photographed from nearly anywhere in Alaska will take place afterward; Fallen said on February 18 that he wasn't quite ready to announce precise frequencies for that experiment. /////////////////////////////////////////// via HACKADAY: An Electronic 90V Anode Battery Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lAXcMz One of the miracle technological gadgets of the 1950s and 1960s was the transistor radio. Something that can be had for a few dollars today, but which in its day represented the last word in futuristic sophistication. Of course, it’s worth remembering that portable radios were nothing new when the transistor appeared. There had been tube radios in small attaché cases, but they had never really caught the imagination in the same way. They were bulky, like all tube radios they had to warm up, and they required a pair of hefty batteries to work. If you have a portable tube radio today, the chances are you won’t be able to use it. The low voltage heater battery can easily be substituted with a modern equivalent, but the 90V anode batteries are long out of production. Your best bet is to build an inverter, and if you’re at a loss for where to start then [Ronald Dekker] has gone through a significant design exercise to produce a variety of routes to achieve that goal. It’s a page that’s a few years old, but still a fascinating read. /////////////////////////////////////////// via the RSGB: RSGB publishes Band Plans Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lqXSUS The RSGB has published the 2017 Band Plans in RadCom and online. These consolidate earlier changes made in June 2016 and just add one important change with respect to UK usage of 5MHz. For the 60m band a new footnote has been added that states that internal UK-only contacts should now be conducted outside of the new WRC-15 range in line with the IARU Region 1 band plan for that narrow segment. Full details can be found at rsgb.org/bandplans. /////////////////////////////////////////// FCC Invites Comments on ARRL Petition to Allocate New 5 MHz Band Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2kXuBzX The FCC has invited comments on the ARRL’s January 12 Petition for Rule Making to allocate a new, contiguous secondary band at 5 MHz to the Amateur Service. The League also asked the Commission to keep four of the current five 60-meter channels — one would be within the new band — as well as the current operating rules, including the 100 W PEP effective radiated power (ERP) limit. The federal government is the primary user of the 5 MHz spectrum. The FCC has designated the League’s Petition as RM-11785 and put it on public notice. Comments are due Monday, March 20. ARRL plans to file comments in support of its petition. The proposed ARRL action would implement a portion of the Final Acts of World Radiocommunication Conference 2015 (WRC-15) that provided for a secondary international allocation of 5,351.5 to 5,366.5 kHz to the Amateur Service; that band includes 5,358.5 KHz, one of the existing 5 MHz channels in the US. The FCC has not yet acted to implement other portions of the WRC-15 Final Acts. /////////////////////////////////////////// Field Day 2017 Packet is Now Available Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lQ5WyY The Field Day 2017 packet now is available from the ARRL website. Field Day 2017 is June 24-25 — always the fourth full weekend in June. There have been no significant rule changes from 2016. The Field Day packet contains everything you or your club will need to succeed in June, including explanations, FAQs, articles from experts, and even a log page template, if you log on paper for FD. For more information on Field Day, contact the ARRL Contest Branch. /////////////////////////////////////////// Campus Ham Radio Clubs Encouraged to Boost Vitality through Innovation Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lQcbD1 ARRL Public Relations Committee Chairman Scott Westerman, W9WSW, believes collegiate Amateur Radio clubs need to blow away the dust and cobwebs and modernize, in order to attract new members. He urges college and university ham radio clubs to seek common technological ground with younger generations, in order to attract new Amateur Radio licensees. “We really need to be thinking in terms of…state-of-the-art technology, because that’s what ‘the kids’ are looking for nowadays,” Westerman told ARRL Marketing Manager Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R, during a brief interview at the 2017 Orlando HamCation February 10-12, which hosted this year’s ARRL Southeastern Division Convention. “The big challenge is how to get them away from their cellphones.” Westerman, a Michigan State University (MSU) alumnus and executive director of the MSU Alumni Association, recalled his own student days, when MSU Amateur Radio Club (MSUARC) station W8SH had a Collins S-Line for a station. Founded in 1919, the MSUARC is one of the oldest collegiate ham clubs in the US. /////////////////////////////////////////// via HACKADAY: LTSpice for Radio Amateurs (and Others) Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2lkg82f We don’t think [VK4FFAB] did himself a favor by calling his seven-part LTSpice tutorial LTSpice for Radio Amateurs. Sure, the posts do focus on radio frequency analysis, but these days lots of people are involved in radio work that aren’t necessarily hams. Either way, if you are interested in simulating RF amplifiers and filters, you ought to check these posts out. Of course, the first few cover simple things like voltage dividers just to get your feet wet. The final part even covers a double-balanced mixer with some transformers, so there’s quite a range of material. We like LTSpice. It is powerful, easy to use, runs with Linux (using WINE), and the price is right. Since it is popular, there are also plenty of examples and tutorials, including this one. /////////////////////////////////////////// HAARP Signals Widely Copied, Experiments to Continue Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2kFRNEi Many listeners were able to copy signals from Alaska’s High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) early on February 20 (UTC). The facility has begun its first scientific research campaign since being taken over by the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) Geophysical Institute 18 months ago. UAF Space Physics Group Assistant Research Professor Chris Fallen, KL3WX, said the Twitter and e-mail feedback from his first evening’s run has been “fantastic.” Fallen will fire up the powerful HAARP transmitters again on February 21 starting at 0300 UTC (the evening of February 20 in US time zones) with a few tweaks. “I may adjust the frequency to 2.83 MHz and 3.33 MHz, but generally it will be 2.8-ish and 3.3-ish either way,” he told ARRL. /////////////////////////////////////////// "Mysterious Foghorn" is Chinese Over-the-Horizon Burst Radar Posted: 20 Feb 2017 07:10 PM PST http://ift.tt/2kCMVvv The International Amateur Radio Union Region 1 (IARU-R1) Monitoring System (IARUMS) newsletter reports a mysterious “foghorn” — a Chinese over-the-horizon (OTH) burst radar — is operating in Amateur Radio bands. “We observed the mysterious foghorn on 7, 10, and 14 MHz,” the newsletter recounted. “This is a Chinese OTH radar, which is often jumping, and sounding like a foghorn.” The signal is frequency modulation on pulse (FMOP) with 66.66 sweeps-per-second bursts. Other intruders reported by the IARUMS include a Russian frequency-shift- keying (FSK) signal from Kaliningrad on 7,193 kHz, and a Russian FSK signal on 7,193 kHz (50 baud, 200 Hz shift). German telecommunications authorities have filed another complaint. |
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