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eHam.net News
/////////////////////////////////////////// Bellbrook Man (W8LLY) Named District Emergency Coordinator: Posted: 20 Dec 2016 04:19 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/38278 BELLBROOK -- Bellbrook resident Fred Stone has been appointed the district emergency coordinator (DEC) for District 3 of the Ohio Section of the Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES). Stone, whose amateur radio call sign is W8LLY, will coordinate ARES activities in Champaign, Clark, Darke, Greene, Logan, Miami, Montgomery and Preble counties. Stone had served as an assistant district emergency coordinator under Bob Rhoades, whom he replaces. Rhoades, who had served in a variety of local, district and state emergency service positions, died in an automobile accident in November. ARES consists of licensed amateurs who have voluntarily registered their qualifications and equipment, with their local ARES leadership, for auxiliary communication support in the public service when disaster strikes. District 3 has more than 300 active amateur radio operators participating in ARES. All ARES positions are strictly voluntary, complying with the FCC requirement that amateur radio operators not receive any pay for their services. /////////////////////////////////////////// WIA Members to Decide Composition of the Next Board: Posted: 20 Dec 2016 04:18 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/38277 Following the resignation of two directors, WIA members are to decide the composition of the seven-member Board through the annual election process now under way. In the ordinary course of events, Phil Wait VK2ASD would have another year as a Director, but has agreed to end his term to enable the membership to decide all positions. On Sunday 18 December, Directors Paul Simmonds VK5PAS and Andrew Smith VK6AS tendered their resignations. In addition, Treasurer Chris Hendry VK3PAT and Assistant Treasurer Jeff Tubbenhauer VK5IU, also tendered their resignations. Remaining Directors Phil Wait VK2ASD, Fred Swainston VK3DAC, Ewan McLeod VK4ERM, Roger Harrison VK2ZRH, and Robert Broomhead VK3DN, will vacate their positions on the Board at the next AGM. Your Board is fully committed to the principle that the future leadership of the WIA shall be determined through the transparent and democratic process, whereby people are encouraged to offer themselves as candidates with selection process by way of a members' votes. Allowing Board members to select and adopt short-term replacement board members to fill the vacancies resulting from resignations is something the current Board is opposed. /////////////////////////////////////////// DARPA Aims for Personal Mobile ULF Radio for Transmitting Devices: Posted: 20 Dec 2016 04:17 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/38276 A DARPA project could enable radio to be transmitted through water and rock. Radio frequency signals hit veritable and literal walls when they encounter materials like water, soil, and stone, which can block or otherwise ruin those radio signals. This is why scuba buddies rely on sign language and there are radio-dead zones inside tunnels and caves. With his newly announced A Mechanically Based Antenna (AMEBA) effort, program manager Troy Olsson of DARPA's Microsystems Technology Office is betting on a little-exploited aspect of electromagnetic physics that could expand wireless communication and data transfer into undersea, underground, and other settings where such capabilities essentially have been absent. The basis for these potential new abilities are ultra-low-frequency (ULF) electromagnetic waves, ones between hundreds of hertz and 3 kilohertz (KHz), which can penetrate some distance into media like water, soil, rock, metal, and building materials. A nearby band of very-low-frequency (VLF) signals (3 KHz to 30 KHz) opens additional communications possibilities because for these wavelengths the atmospheric corridor between the Earth's surface and the ionosphere -- the highest and electric-charge-rich portion of the upper atmosphere -- behaves like a radio waveguide in which the signals can propagate halfway around the planet. "If we are successful, scuba divers would be able to use a ULF channel for low bit-rate communications, like text messages, to communicate with each other or with nearby submarines, ships, relay buoys, UAVs, and ground-based assets, Through-ground communication with people in deep bunkers, mines, or caves could also become possible," Olsson said. And because of that atmospheric waveguide effect, VLF systems might ultimately enable direct soldier-to-soldier text and voice communication across continents and oceans. |
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