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EHAM QTH QRZ ARRL HRO ICOM KENWOOD YAESU ELBO ROOM WEDNESDAY EDITION: Nearfest starts for some today....camping open today in the afternoon and you can camp within the fairgrounds, that is a big change and will only happen this time and not in the fall. The hamfest starts tomorrow and ends on Friday at noon.
Coming soon
to a radio
near you. .
.
Contest
Summary
See the
"Contests"
section
below for
complete
contest
information.
CWops Test
(CWT)
RSGB 80m
Club
Championship,
Data
April 26
NCCC FT4
Sprint
Weekly RTTY
Test
NCCC Sprint
K1USN Slow
Speed Test
April 27
10-10
International
Spring
Contest,
Digital
SP DX RTTY
Contest
UK/EI DX
Contest, CW
Helvetia
Contest
Florida QSO
Party
April 28
UA1DZ
Memorial Cup
BARTG Sprint
75
.
April 29
K1USN Slow
Speed Test
QCX
Challenge
ICWC Medium
Speed Test
OK1WC
Memorial
(MWC)
QCX
Challenge
RSGB FT4
Contest
April 30
Worldwide
Sideband
Activity
Contest
QCX
Challenge
ICWC Medium
Speed Test
ZL Sprint
May 1
Phone Weekly
Test
A1Club AWT
AGCW QRP/QRP
Party
CWops Test
(CWT)
VHF-UHF FT8
Activity
Contest
Mini-Test 40
Mini-Test 80
May 2
Walk for the
Bacon QRP
Contest
CWops Test
(CWT)
CWops Test
(CWT)
NRAU 10m
Activity
Contest
SKCC Sprint
Europe
May 3
NCCC FT4
Sprint
Weekly RTTY
Test
NCCC Sprint
K1USN Slow
Speed Test
May 4
10-10
International
Spring
Contest, CW
RCC Cup
SBMS 2.3 GHz
and Up
Contest and
Club
Challenge
Microwave
Spring
Sprint
ARI
International
DX Contest
F9AA Cup,
PSK
7th Call
Area QSO
Party
Indiana QSO
Party
Delaware QSO
Party
New England
QSO Party
MIE 33
Contest
.
May 5
WAB 7 MHz
Phone.
May 6
K1USN Slow
Speed Test
ICWC Medium
Speed Test
OK1WC
Memorial
(MWC)
May 7
ARS Spartan
Sprint
Worldwide
Sideband
Activity
Contest
ICWC Medium
Speed Test
May 8
Phone Weekly
Test
A1Club AWT
CWops Test
(CWT)
VHF-UHF FT8
Activity
Contest
Mini-Test 40
Mini-Test 80
The
special event
amateur radio
station GB6WW
will be working
from Glasgow,
Scotland
from
1st to 28th May,
2024 as a
poignant tribute
to commemorate
the end of World
War II. This
event is not
just about
celebrating
victory but also
remembering the
sacrifices made
and the lessons
learned from one
of the darkest
periods in human
history. Amateur
radio has a
long-standing
tradition of
bringing people
together from
across the
globe, and GB6WW
embodies this
spirit by
connecting
individuals
through the
airwaves to
reflect on peace
and freedom.
Website : https://unicomradio.com/gb6ww-2024/The award is provided as a high-quality PDF file, which recipients can download and print at their convenience. This format allows for a personal and immediate way to receive and display the award.
Mountain View ES Gets Spaced Out in Connection with ISS AstronautIt's not every day that elementary students get to ask questions to a real-life astronaut, especially when that astronaut is 250 miles above the surface of Earth. Nearly one dozen Mountain View Elementary students got this rare privilege in the culmination of a year-long process and persistence from the school and their STEM teacher, Dr. Cassondra Zielinski. "This was a first for the Cobb County School District and a very rare event," said Dr. Z with a smile. "We were one of eleven schools chosen in the entire United States. This was a direct contact, which means we connected with the ISS with onsite radio equipment rather than a telebridge to bounce through." The International Space Station is orbiting high above and traveling more than 17,000 miles an hour. Connecting with the ISS takes a lot of planning and coordination. It lasts for a mere ten minutes as the space station rushes across North America in range of the amateur radio equipment and antenna that was temporarily set up at the school.
The exciting event is known as ARISS, or Amateur Radio on the International Space Station. The goals of the ARISS program include providing an educational opportunity for students, teachers, and the general public to learn about space exploration, space technologies, and satellite communications, as well as giving the ISS crew a way to directly interact with those on the ground. ARISS conducts 60-100 of these special amateur radio contacts each year between students around the globe and crew members with ham radio licenses aboard the ISS. Mountain View students have been involved in many cross-curricular projects and activities that include achieving World Space Week Champions after designing a self-sustaining space settlement, designing several mission patches, working with bluShift Aerospace on a hot/cold engine test, and working with MaxIQ Space on a Suborbital Launch Test in conjunction with the University of Kwa Zulu-Natal in South Africa. In preparation for the ARISS contact, students tracked the ISS during ARISS/SSTV broadcasts, decoding seven images. The school was supported by the Cherokee Amateur Radio Society, North Fulton Amateur Radio League, Cobb County Library System, bluShift Aerospace, and Cobb EMC. NASA Astronaut Dr. Jeanette Epps was successfully contacted onboard the ISS around 1:48 PM and answered questions from selected Mountain View students until around 1:58 PM. While 20 students were on stage dressed in orange NASA shirts, only 11 were able to ask their questions before Astronaut Epps and the ISS zoomed out of radio range over South America.
Questions ranged from what it's like to live and work in space to technology aboard the ISS to what it will be like to return home to Earth. Thanks to the tireless work of the ground crew and radio operators at Mountain View, Dr. Epps' answers came through loud and clear for every student, staff, and special guest assembled in the school's gymnasium. The ARISS event was the latest in Dr. Z's lessons about space and NASA. The school's "Launchapalooza" event is a favorite for Mountain View students, as well as launching satellites to help collect data about burning biofuel. "We've put a satellite into space on a rocket in South Africa, and now we have this [the ARISS event]. Our students have worked so hard, more than you could imagine. I've heard more times than once that they're too young and they can't handle it. I guarantee you they handled it," Dr. Z said proudly about her dedicated STEM students. After the ten-minute connection with Dr. Epps and the ISS was over, the entire room cheered and applauded for the once-in-a-lifetime experience. Mountain View Principal Dr. Katie Derman thanked Dr. Z, the radio operators, and all the students for their hard work and a job well done. "You have done so well representing our school," said Dr. Derman as the room still buzzed with excitement. "When we first connected with Astronaut Epps, that moment was just amazing."
Dr. Derman also recognized PTA and Foundation leaders in the audience for their continued assistance and encouragement. "Our community has done so much to support our programs, including STEM, and we appreciate you all very much!" Congratulations, and excellent job, Mountain View! All of your hard work and preparation paid off in a big way and gave everyone who attended an experience they will cherish forever. Thank you, Dr. Derman, Dr. Zielinski, and Dr. Epps, for making this unique opportunity an exceptional one for Mountain View and Cobb Schools! TUESDAY EDITION: Weather still looking good for Thursday and Friday at Nearfest ham fest....my son and famaily went to Hilton Head with a bunch of friendsfor vacation week. One of his friends got bit by a copperhead while they walking down the street. She spent two days in the hospital being treated....you never know! The club has 3- 35 amp Astron linear power supplies that need repair. They are not tht hard to repair and fairly easy to troulbe shoot. Pass transistors, bridge rectifier or the chip on the regulator board are usually the culprit. If it blows fuses, usually the bridge rectifier or sometimes a bad capacitor....wonky voltage, the regulator board....I just can't get motivated and changing the bridge rectifiers are a PITA... Pennsylvania Trolley Museum to ‘dial back the decades’ in vintage communications weekendThe Pennsylvania Trolley Museum will be hosting its first-ever vintage communications weekend. On May 4 and 5, visitors will have the opportunity to immerse themselves in the rich history of communications technology. The weekend will showcase how communication has evolved, with antique telephones, telegraphs, typewriters, phonographs, radios, printing presses and other devices that have shaped how we connect with one another. Long-distance amateur radio operators can take part in the event by working the weekend’s special event station. Visitors will have the opportunity to try their hand at sending Morse code messages, listening to radio broadcasts from antique radios, and even making a souvenir on a printing press. MONDAY EDITION: We spent time at the repeater site this morning and replaced rhe 440 repeater amplifier power supply with an Astron linear 70 amp unit, hopefully this will end the problem with 30 amp switching supplies that can't handle the continous duty cycle and fail....I can see another 70 amper being ordered from HRO, Salem, NH soon for the 2 meter amplifier when we get the new antenna up at the site...
If you read the December 1970 issue of Mechanix Illustrated, you’d be treated to [Len Buckwalter]’s crystal radio build. He called out Modern Radio Labs as the supplier for parts. That company, run by [Elmer Osterhoudt], got so many inquiries that he produced a kit, the #74 crystal set. [Michael Simpson] found an unopened kit on eBay and — after a bidding war, took possession of the kit. The kit looked totally untouched. The crystal detector was still in the box, and there were period-appropriate newspaper wrappings. The kit itself isn’t that remarkable, but it is a classic. An oatmeal box serves as a coil form. There’s a capacitor, a crystal detector, and headphones. The original cost of the parts was $7, but we imagine the eBay auction exceeded that by a large amount. If the name [Len Buckwalter] sounds familiar, he was quite prolific in magazines like Electronics Illustrated and also wrote several books about transistors. [Michael] also shows off his innovative coil winder made from plastic cups and a coat hanger.
via Blog –
Hackaday https://hackaday.com/2024/04/19/crystal-radio-kit-from-the-1970s/
WEEKEND EDITION: We are installing the two meter Henry amplifier to the 2 meter repeater system this morning. It just came back from Henry for a repair and will get us back up to 90 watts out.....as soon as we complete the new antenna install...
QST de W1AW
Amateur Radio
Newsline Report
FRIDAY EDITION: Lot's of questions about nearfest due to the changed days, camping, tickets. etc. on the 3833 New England group yesterday. Luckily, Joe, K1JEK, who was sandbagging (like me) had the answers as he is the guy in charge of camping, etc. for Nearfest. First of all the event is running on Thursday all day and Friday until noon, it usually is held Friday and Saturday, but due to a scheduling conflict, the spring fest days are different. 1. You need ticketes to get into the fest early at 7am Thursday morning, if you have no ticket you wait in line like in the past and get in later. 2. If you arrive for camping Wednesday night, you will camp INSIDE the fest area and not in the parking lot! No ticket, no problem, they will track you down in the morning for the money....MORE good news... Windows 11 is receiving some flak for its reportedly poor show in terms of the performance of the OS on the desktop, where some interface elements are running pretty sluggishly – or even getting to a ‘comically bad’ state of affairs as one user describes it. This isn’t just any user, but an ex-Microsoft employee, Andy Young, who was a senior software engineer at the company for 13 years, and shared some observations (noticed by Neowin) about Windows 11 performance on X (formerly Twitter). STORY Going the extra mile: the radio operators who connect all 26.2 miles of the Boston Marathon (Massachusetts)Early in the morning April 15, thousands of volunteers and athletes began to check-in and start the race that constitutes one of the biggest days in sports: the Boston Marathon. Among them were a cadre of unseen — but vital — amateur radio operators who kept a constant loop of communications for the duration of the race. More than 9,000 volunteers support the Boston Marathon every year “working in all areas including packet stuffing, medical … start line, finish line and everything in between,” according to the Boston Athletic Association, or BAA, website. Of those 9,000, around 300 are amateur radio volunteers, a position that requires a license from the Federal Communications Commission. The volunteers are responsible for maintaining constant radio communications, connecting all points of the course with a main radio hub, Boston Fire, EMS and police. Fifteen members of NU Wireless, Northeastern’s amateur radio club, will be represented among the volunteers, said Garrett Compston, a third-year computer science and music combined major at Northeastern and president of NU Wireless. Many Northeastern students run in and volunteer for the marathon every year, but it was Marty Sullaway, a fourth-year electrical and computer engineering combined major, who first recruited people from Northeastern to be amateur radio operators. Read more – The Huntington News: https://bit.ly/49DIp7X RADIO ACTIVE HAMS 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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