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EHAM QTH QRZ ARRL HRO ICOM KENWOOD YAESU ELBO ROOM COMMENTS
Here we are at the hamfest in Ohio...nothing changes,,,, WEEKEND EDITION: 63 and sunny, a stretch of sunny weather in the forecast....band conditions on 75 have been strained the last few days, solar flares.....More than 30,000 people are descending on the Greene County Fair and Expo Center in Xenia this weekend for Dayton Hamvention 2026: the world's largest gathering of amateur radio enthusiasts. And if you think the crowd is comprised of a bunch of retired old men reminiscing about a hobby long past it's prime, think again. "It's radio. It’s cool," said Carsten Glasbrenner, 13, of Brooksville, Fla., who is spending the weekend listening to satellites passing thousands of miles overhead. "You learn a heck of a lot." Glasbrenner has been involved with amateur radio "since I was born" and represents the future of what the decades-old hobby is all about. Dayton Hamvention has been bringing together those who participate in the hobby and those who make living working with the latest technology since 1952. Hamvention returns to Miami Valley for 2026 (Ohio)The largest amateur radio convention in the world, the Hamvention, is coming back for another year in the Miami Valley beginning on Friday, May 15. According to Hazel Everetts, the assistant general chairperson, over 35 different committees handle the different entities of the show, involving over 600 volunteers. However, she also said that while it sounds like it’s a big deal, it’s just fun for her. Everetts is the second-in-command for the entire production of Hamvention. Next year, she’ll be the first-ever female general chairperson, and her plan is to keep growing. Read more – WDTN: https://bit.ly/4uXdM8B Annual Hamvention kicks off Friday, bringing large economic boost to community (Ohio)
Thousands of amateur ham-radio enthusiasts are gathering at the Greene County Fair and Convention Center for the 74th annual Dayton Hamvention. The event, recognized as the world’s largest amateur ham radio gathering, will begin on Friday morning and conclude on Sunday afternoon. The convention is expected to bring a substantial economic boost to the Miami Valley region. Read more – WHIO: https://bit.ly/4dwse0c Amateur Radio Newsline Report
FRIDAY EDITION: Interesting link I got from Bart and Cal on solar controllers....
EMAIL:
Jon,
I'm watching
this weeks live
lunch gathering
of broadcast
engineers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmphROpZXhA
At the start of
the show, Barry
Mishkind (host)
mentioned an
article from his
company page.
The article
describes the
hacking threat
from USB
connected
devices. https://www.thebdr.net/beware-of-killer-thumb-drives/
I thought this
important enough
to share with
the readers of
"As The World
Turns".
Stay safe, and
I'm glad your
XYL is back
home.
Best 73,
Greg Weremey
W1ECB
Passive Radar ExplainedIt is an old trope in submarine movies. A sonar operator strains to hear things in the ocean but dares not “ping” for fear of giving away the boat’s location. Radar has a similar problem. If you want to find an airplane, for example, you typically send a signal out and wait for it to bounce off the airplane. The downside is that the airplane now knows exactly where your antenna is and, these days, may be carrying missiles to home in on it. In a recent post, [Jehan] explains how radar, like sonar, can be passive. Even if you aren’t worried about a radar-homing missile taking out your antenna, passive radar has other advantages. You don’t need an expensive transmitter or antenna, a simple SDR can pull it off. You don’t need a license for the frequencies you want to use, either. You are just listening. The key is that radar uses two different effects. One is how long it takes for the echo to return. The other is how much the Doppler effect shifts the frequency. Suppose you are using an FM radio station as a passive radar “exciter.” You can pick up the signal directly and also detect the same signal bouncing off the target. You can compare these two and determine the delay added by the reflection and the Doppler shift. This does have one limitation. In a regular radar installation, you know that a certain signal delay means the target is somewhere on a circle a fixed distance from your antenna. With passive radar, you wind up with an ellipse instead of a circle. You can’t “scan” a passive signal like you do an active one, either. But all is not lost. Similar to stellar navigation, you just need to get multiple ellipses by using different broadcast stations. With two stations, you’ll probably narrow the position down to two points where the ellipses intersect. Three different fixes are often enough to get a particular point. Build your own? Of course. Don’t forget that the best transmitter to use might not be on the ground. Title image from the post sourced from https://github.com/30hours/3lips. Our Calculations, You’ll Love the FlapulatorOh sure, you’ve got calculators. There’s that phone program of course, and the one that comes with your OS, and the TI-86 and possibly RPN numbers you’ve had since high school. But what you don’t have is a Flapulator, at least not until you build one. Possibly the be-all, end-all of physical calculating devices, the Flapulator does its calculating live on a split-flap display. It’s kind of slow and the accuracy is questionable, but the tactility is oh, so good. This baby boasts a 6-digit display, where the decimal point and negative sign each require one digit. Inside is a Raspberry Pi Pico, which can calculate for around 4 hours on a full charge. But the coolest part (aside from the split-flap display, naturally) has got to be the 24-key, hand-wired mechanical keyboard. There’s also a couple of LEDs that light up to keep track of the current mathematical operation. The story behind this one is kind of interesting. [Applepie1928] found out that one of their favorite mathematician-comedian-pi-lovers who is known for signing calculators was coming to town. With four weeks to whip something up, this was, amazingly, the result. Check it out in action after the break. Need something that’s a whole other kind of fancy? Here’s an open-source graphing calculator. THURSDAY EDITION: The queen is home and life is good again... Hamvention expects crowds of 30,000XENIA — Ham radio enthusiasts will be headed to the Greene County Fairgrounds and Expo Center next weekend to take part in a three-day Hamvention event themed “Radio Adventure.” Thousands will descend on the Fairgrounds, 120 Fairground Road, to check out the world’s largest amateur radio convention, with over 30,000 visitors expected. “There will be 350 booths set up by 162 vendors with radios, electronics, antennas, accessories, switches, cables, batteries, books, apparel, and many other amateur radio and electronics-related products,” said Michael Kalter, Hamvention spokesperson. “Outside there will be a huge flea market with 1,300 spaces with just about everything you can imagine,” he added. “There will be speakers who will address the crowd on topics such as Ham Radio Science, Digital Radio, Morse Code, Women Building Community through Amateur Radio and many other subjects”, he added. Hours are Friday and Saturday (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) and Sunday (9 a.m. to 1 p.m.). A three-day ticket is $30.00 and can be purchased at the main gate and Sunday is free. For more information on tickets/parking, visit hamvention.org. You’ve Seen the Chip Shortage and the Memory Shortage, Now Prepare For The PCB ShortageIt’s nice to hide away in our little corner of the internet and talk tech, safely away from the turmoil of world events. Sometimes though, geopolitics intrude even into our space, and Reuters are here reporting on a new concern that will probably affect many Hackaday readers. Conflict in the Gulf of Arabia, and in particular raids on Saudi petrochemical plants, is threatening PCB production far away in China. Most of us probably have a mental image of tankers sailing through the Strait of Hormuz laden with Gulf crude, off to be processed by refineries somewhere else in the world. Certainly a load of oil takes just that route, but for the Saudis and other oil-producing nations in the region, it also makes economic sense to site petrochemical industries at source. They export the much more valuable refined products, among which is the polymer resin used in PCB production. The Reuters report says that consequent to this and a rise in copper prices, the cost of a PCB in China has risen by 40%. Naturally this doesn’t sound like good news. Here at Hackaday, when it comes to component shortages this isn’t our first rodeo. We’re in the middle of a memory shortage due to AI companies, and the COVID-era chip shortage is still fresh in our minds. Unfortunately, this type of thing as been a regular of the technology world for decades. Here we are with another one, and should we be worried? In the short term it’s certainly a concern as the Gulf conflict is still searching for an end to its uneasy stalemate, but remembering previous shortages we think that global industry will adapt and expand other sources where necessary. Just as with the similar IC encapsulation resin shortage back in the ’90s, it may eventually be the panic more than the shortage which becomes responsible for the price hikes. We’ve taken an abstract look at global electronic supply chains before. WEDNESDAY EDITION: Another day at the hospital visiting the yl...... TUESDAY EDITION: It is bright and sunny but a tad chilly here in Rockport. I am hoping that Dawn is being discharged this morning if all goes right. .... STEM On and Off the Air... a way to get kids invoved in ham radioThe Garden School Amateur Radio Club in Jackson Heights, New York, K2GSG, was started in September 2016 as a way to implement the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) standard at the school. Currently, the Club has 13 members ranging from 4th graders to 12th graders and is an Affiliated Club of ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio®. Well, last week they got a big su… Read more American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources – Read More Learn More About SDRThe Boston Software Defined Radio User Group, SDR-Boston, is hosting the New England Workshop for Software Defined Radio 2026 (NEWSDR), June 4 - 5, at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) in Worcester, Massachusetts. The primary goal of this workshop is to provide a forum that enables software defined radio (SDR) enthusiasts to get together, collaborate, and introduce SDR concepts to those interested in furthering their knowledge of SDR capabilities and available resources. NEWSDR 2026 welcomes experienced SDR enthusiasts as well as individuals who are interested in getting started with SDR. John Swoboda, Ph.D., Geospace Research Scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Haystack Observatory, said the two-day event is open to all amateur radio operators who want to learn more about SDR. “This an opportunity...to explore more opportunities...using SDR, how it works, and the advantages of SDR technology,” said Swoboda. “You don’t have to quit using the tactile touch of tuning a transceiver or give up tubes. SDR still has all of those familiar functions.” The keynote speaker this year is ARRL Member Gregory Charvat, N8ZRY. A radar expert in his professional life, he operates SSB equipment that he has designed/built from scratch and vintage gear that he has restored. His work has been featured in QST magazine, on Hackaday, and many other publications. Charvat is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). His YouTube channel is Gregory Charvat - YouTube. NEWSDR 2026 will be held at WPI, 100 Institute Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. The main event is scheduled for Friday June 5, 2026, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Eastern). Tutorials are scheduled Thursday June 4, 5:00 – 9:00 PM (Eastern). Attendance is free, but advance registration is required. Visit newsdr.org/workshops/newsdr-2026/. MONDAY EDITION: Ok, trying to get back in a schedule here...do the page, visit Dawn at the hospital, and get home and maybe catch the 4pm net... NH Chronicle: The State's last RadioShack, and students going hands on with Ham RadiosWednesday, May 13th Tonight, students go hands-on with Ham radios, and a stop at the State's last remaining RadioShack.Plus,Post-Failure Autopsy and Analysis of an LFP Battery
Recently [Kerry Wong] had one of his Cyclenbatt LiFePO4 batteries die after only a few dozen cycles, with a normal voltage still present on the terminals. One of the symptoms was that as soon as you try to charge it, the voltage goes up very rapidly to above 14 V due to what appears to be high internal resistance, and vice versa for discharging. In addition, the Bluetooth feature of the BMS appeared to have died as well, making non-invasive diagnostics somewhat tricky. ![]() After gently cutting open the plastic case, [Kerry] was greeted by the happily blinking blue LED of the Bluetooth module and deepening the mystery. Overall the build quality looks to be pretty good, with no loose cables as seen with certain other LFP batteries. Cell voltages measured normal, with no significant imbalance. Next was measuring the internal resistance, which showed a clear issue. One of the cells was reading over 3 Ohms, whereas the others were in the milli-Ohm range. This would definitely explain the issues with charging and discharging, with a single bad cell causing most of the issues. Of course, why the Bluetooth feature failed remains a mystery, and there’s still a lingering question on whether the BMS practiced proper balancing between the cells, as this can also cause issues over time MOTHER'S DAY EDITION: My wife is still hospitalized, it is damn weird being alone in the house. She has extreme diverticulosis with complications from her lung disease and Myasthenia Gravis. Doctors will revaluate again on Monday.Continued IV therapy for pain releif and antibiotics. WEDNESDAY EDITION: Coffee at the club this morning Project Looks to Tackle the Mystery of E-SkipWhen the calendar turns to May, I must confess, I can feel it in my bones. It is a sense of excitement that, even after avidly listening to long-distance signals on the FM radio band for 21 years, I still enjoy each year: the dawn of another Sporadic-E season. But while the month of May is a guidepost, when exactly the skip will begin in earnest is anyone’s guess. In the prolific E-Skip season of 2021, for example, an opening of more than 30 minutes in length with a maximum usable frequency into the FM broadcast band took place on May 8 here in New Jersey, kicking off a very active month. Read more – RadioWorld: https://bit.ly/4waHSqr The Smallest Dialup ISP is a Raspberry Pi and a Prison Phone
There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more than one. Some of those have survived broadband, but none of them were as small as [Jeff Geerling]’s Pi ISP — a tiny dialup ISP built so his Aunt’s old G3 MacBook can get online at 36kbps, as God and [Robert Khan] intended. Hardware-wise, the Raspberry Pi is at one end of the chain, and your retrocomputer at another. In between, you’ll have a USB modem plugged into the Pi, and a device called a “two-way line simulator” to create a dial tone for that plain-old-telephone goodness. [Jeff] notes that these were commonly used in prisons for the phones that visitors use to talk to inmates. Of course, since these devices are designed strictly for voice transmissions, which POTS was built for, you’re not going to get over 36 kbps, and that’s even with high-quality gear. The cheaper options might drop you down to 28k… just like with an ISP back in the day. ‘You get what you pay for’ is very rarely false. Now, you can use this technology to just connect two computers together — as we’ve featured previously — but [Jeff] has gone the extra mile to put together, via Ansible, an easy-to-install software package that will let the Raspberry Pi act just like your ISP’s servers once did, and connect you to that series of tubes once called the World Wide Web. Of course, the World Wide Web isn’t built for dial-up anymore, so you’re going to be waiting… a while. Hackaday’s front page isn’t especially heavy, weighing about 4MB at the time of this writing, but that’s 15 minutes of load time, and you still aren’t reading the articles. You also won’t be able to access much on old machines that can’t do HTTPS, but [Jeff] thought of that and bundles [rdmark]’s MacProxyClassic to translate the modern web into HTML tags that Netscape can understand and serve them over HTTP. You’ll still be waiting for our modern bloat, but perhaps not quite so long. If you want the “authentic” dial-up experience, you’ll need to see the lightweight webpages of Yesteryear, and MacProxyClassic contains a Wayback Machine extension for that purpose. We featured a similar project a while back that did that, but without all the joys of dial-up. Now get off the computer, we’re expecting a call! TUESDAY EDITION: It looks like another balmy day on the island, time to think about the boat....
Hi Jon...
A correction:
You were at
Hosstraders at
Hopkinton NH,
not NearFest,
when the Old Man
fell off the
mountain. Bob
W1GWU announced
it.
I stopped by
NearFest on
Friday until
about noon and
saw a few good
old friends.
I'm pretty sure
that some of the
stuff for sale
in the flea
market was on
the tailgates at
the first
Hosstraders back
in '73 in
Seabrook. My
only purchase
was a
pepper-burger
from the food
wagon. Hamfests
have changed
over the decades
as you noted
previously. I
used to have 40
to 45 actual
commercial
vendors in the
buildings and
gate was over
5000 for years
on end. As much
as I like online
shopping, it was
the internet
that started the
decline in
vendors. A few
told me that
they made more
money over the
weekend on their
websites than
they did
trucking all
their stuff up
the road,
staying in a
motel, and
paying the help
overtime. Yup,
it's different.
Sometimes it
sucks getting
old.
73 de Norm
W1ITT
Free ARRL Events App Now Live for 2026 Dayton Hamvention®Make the most of your time at Dayton Hamvention® with the free ARRL Events app. Hamvention is the world's largest annual gathering of radio amateurs, and will be held May 15 – 17 in Xenia, Ohio. There is a lot to do and see. Use the ARRL Events app to make sure you don’t miss a beat and plan out your visit now. The ARRL events app is produced by ARRL The National Association® for Amateur Radio in partnership with Dayton Hamvention. The app includes Hamvention’s full program, so you can browse and schedule forums, preview the extensive list of exhibitors, and find affiliated events. During the event, attendees can use other app features to follow the hourly prize drawings conducted by the Dayton Hamvention Prize Committee and browse building and site maps. Those going are also encouraged to tap on the MyProfile icon in the app to add their name and call sign, email address, and any additional information they would like to share with other Hamvention guests. The MyBadge icon displays a QR code of your event badge that can be scanned by another attendee or exhibitor using the Scan Badge icon – instantly connecting shared contact information with other hams at the event. The app is available for Apple and Android smart devices. You may also access the web browser version, which is optimized for nearly any browser or other type of mobile device. Download the app at www.tripbuildermedia.com/apps/arrl (or use the web version). For more information about 2026 Hamvention, visit hamvention.org. FCC Approves Limited Emergency Use of 70 cm Band by AST SpaceMobile Satellites Outside the USOn April 21, 2026, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted AST SpaceMobile limited authorization when not over the United States to use five 50-kHz channels in the 430–440 MHz secondary amateur band for emergency Telemetry, Tracking, and Control (TT&C) operations for its planned satellite constellation (DA-26-391 Docket No. 25-201). The authorization applies only for communication with five specified earth stations, each located well outside of the United States and for which the foreign administration with jurisdiction also must separately authorize the communications. More than 2,500 comments were filed during the proceeding including filings from ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio® and other member societies of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU), AMSAT, and individual radio amateurs worldwide. After considering the filed comments, the FCC narrowed the requested authorization to emergency TT&C only and further provided that: Use of these frequencies is permitted only in emergencies when no other spectrum is available Each emergency event is limited to no more than 24 hours Transmissions are restricted to five specific center frequencies (430.5, 432.3, 434.1, 435.9, and 439.5 MHz), each with no more than 50 kHz bandwidth In an April 29, 2026 statement, the IARU expressed concern with the FCC’s use of Article 4.4 of the ITU Radio Regulations, which allows administrations to authorize non-standard frequency use under certain conditions. The IARU stated that other frequency bands allocated for satellite TT&C should have been used instead of amateur spectrum and encouraged amateurs to report any interference to their national regulators. ARRL filed comments (see ARRL News) in July (PDF) and August 2025 (PDF) opposing the application, arguing that: The request represented an unprecedented use of secondary amateur spectrum for an unallocated use by a large commercial satellite constellation Such operations could cause harmful interference, particularly to amateur satellites in the 435–438 MHz subband The FCC should avoid authorizing non-allocated uses that could impact primary allocations for amateur services in other countries. While the FCC ultimately granted the authorization, it imposed the above significant limitations in response to these concerns that reduce the likelihood of interference. In the US, reports of suspected interference to amateur spectrum can be shared with the ARRL Regulatory Information Manager, email reginfo@arrl.org. ARRL will oppose any similar unallocated uses of spectrum used by amateurs that might cause harmful interference to amateur services and in particular will monitor this situation. MONDAY EDITION:57 and sunny to start the day off. ...Sunday was the anniversary (2003) of the Old Man on the Mountain, NH crumbling apart, I was at Nearfest when they announced it over the loud speakers... It stood 40 feet tall and 25 feet wide, perched 1,200 feet above Profile Lake WEEKEND EDITION: It will be interesting to hear how the attendance was at Nearfest, it seems all the hamfests are dwindling in size, it must be that we are getting older and we are trying to get rid of shit and not buy more! It is really a social event for most but it's a two hour drive from here, I just don't have the get up and go I used to have... Fediverse Meet-up at Hamvention 2026Members of the Fediverse are invited to join fellow users at Hamvention 2026. An informal meet-up will take place Saturday, May 16th at 11:00 AM. We'll meet in front of booth 1506 in Building 1, aka the Maxim building. Thanks to KB6NU for helping to organize! (Booth 1506 is home to Zero Retries and DLARC. Thanks to Steve and Kay for allowing the use of their booth as a rendezvous point!) I'll be at the meet-up with stickers. Hope to see you there! What is the Fediverse and how does it relate to ham radio? The Fediverse is a collection of social networking sites that communicate with one another in a decentralized way. It's an open source alternative to centralized social networks such as Facebook and X. There are several ham radio themed Fediverse instances with thriving communities of radio amateurs: HAMS YOU MIGHT KNOW- ALIVE AND SK K1TP-
Jon....Editor of As The World
Turns....
SILENT KEYS Silet Key
KA1BXB-Don...Regular
on 3900 mornings....just
don't
mention
politics
to
him,
please!
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