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   rec.radio.amateur.misc      Amateur radio practices, contests, event      23,971 messages   

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   Message 23,873 of 23,971   
   Amateur Radio Newsline to All   
   Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2495 for F   
   22 Aug 25 11:20:52   
   
   [continued from previous message]   
      
   prohibits the use of fossil fuels. Renato expects his activation to   
   rely entirely on an EcoFlow power bank system and solar panels. He will   
   be providing updated information about his activation when it becomes   
   available.   
      
   (DX WORLD, 425 DX BULLETIN)   
      
   **   
      
   KICKER: FOR THIS EXPLORER, 15 WAS THE AGE OF DISCOVERY   
      
   NEIL/ANCHOR: A teenager chasing DX might not be a big deal these days   
   -but 100 years ago this month, an Iowa 15-year-old logged a contact   
   that would eventually shape the future of radio communications and its   
   technology. Jim Davis W2JKD has our final story this week.   
      
   JIM: High up in attic room in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, young Arthur Collins   
   often got a view of the world from the other end of his 20-meter radio   
   signal. On the 3rd of August, 1925, those high-frequency transmissions   
   brought the frozen landscape of Greenland into sharp focus for him:   
   Arthur made contact via CW with the Arctic Expedition undertaken on   
   behalf of the US Navy by explorer Donald MacMillan. Their exchange of   
   CW messages ultimately traveled so much farther, in a way, because the   
   shortwave signals from Arthur's 1,000-watt homebrew transmitter   
   accomplished what the Navy's longwave transmissions, lacking the   
   ability for skip, could not. Media attention followed, of course, and   
   the teenager's smarts with radio technology soon became well-known.   
      
   Like MacMillan, Arthur Collins himself was an explorer and his new   
   paths across - and above - the world were shaped with increasingly   
   shorter radio waves. The young inventor became a pioneer, pushing that   
   early technology in inventive ways. He was barely a decade away from   
   becoming a businessman and seeing the rise of Collins Radio, Rockwell   
   Collins and Collins Aerospace.   
      
   The Collins Aerospace Museum in Cedar Rapids has been celebrating him   
   all month on the 100th anniversary of that MacMillan contact,   
   displaying artifacts, documents and photographs that capture his   
   decades of discovery that began when he was a young explorer. The   
   museum features a replica of the attic space that was his laboratory   
   and radio shack where it all began. The replica room was created by   
   Arthur A. Collins Legacy Association with help from students at the   
   Cedar Rapids Metro High School. Like young Arthur Collins, no doubt   
   many of these teenagers are already on course to make some cutting-edge   
   discoveries of their own.   
      
   This is Jim Davis, W2JKD.   
      
   (COLLINS AEROSPACE MUSEUM, THE GAZETTE)   
      
   **   
      
   It's now even easier to send in your ham radio haikus to us here at   
   Newsline! Visit our website at arnewsline.org and as you compose your   
   ode to your favorite online activity, we will help you use the correct   
   number of syllables to make an authentic haiku. Submit your work and   
   then sit back and wait to hear whether you are the winner of this   
   week's challenge. The winner gets a shout-out on our website, where   
   everyone can find the winning haiku.   
      
   NEWSCAST CLOSE   
      
   With thanks to Amateur News Daily; Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA;  AMSAT   
   News Service; ARDxpeditions; Canadian Space Agency; CNBC; Collins   
   Aerospace Museum; Corporation for Public Broadcasting; David Behar   
   K7DB; DXNews; 425DX Bulletin; FCC; The Gazette; HamCation;   
   LightReading.com; Radio Society of Great Britain; Rune, LA7THA;   
   SatNews; shortwaveradio.de; Statesman; Wireless Institute of Australia;   
   YouTube; and you our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio   
   Newsline.  We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio Newsline is an   
   all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for its   
   continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our   
   website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also   
   remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a   
   5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us.   
      
   For now, with Caryn Eve Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and   
   our news team worldwide, I'm Neil Rapp WB9VPG in Union Kentucky saying   
   73. As always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is   
   Copyright 2025. Amateur Radio Newsline retains ownership of its   
   material even when retransmitted elsewhere. All rights are reserved.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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