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|    rec.radio.amateur.misc    |    Amateur radio practices, contests, event    |    23,971 messages    |
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|    Message 23,939 of 23,971    |
|    National News Broadcast Email List to All    |
|    2025 NOVEMBER 23 WIA NATIONAL NEWS BROAD    |
|    20 Nov 25 19:49:52    |
      [continued from previous message]              DX-WORLD, eHam, Hackaday, IARU, IRTS, NEWSLINE, NZART, RAC,       Radioworld.com, RSGB, SARL and the World Wide sources of WIA.              The National Association of Amateur Radio in the USA, ARRL, reports that       the FCC has extended the filing deadline to March 5, 2026, for amateur       radio licenses that otherwise were due to expire from October 1, 2025,       to March 5, 2026.              The news follows the recent reopening of the federal government on       November 13, following a lengthy 43-day shutdown.              Since reopening, many federal agencies, including the FCC, have resumed       activities, though reducing backlogs and rebounding to full operations       may take some time. This includes continued delays in filing amateur       radio license applications.              Community generosity works in both directions, as one amateur radio club in       Wisconsin found out recently, so, it was a special privilege for the              Fond du Lac Amateur Radio Club in Wisconsin USA to be on the receivingend       recently.                     The Moraine Park Technical College donated five laptops to assist the club       with its work in amateur radio education, license testing and emergency       communications, including its Field Day operations.                     The donations kept club member Lloyd Vandervort N9RPU hard at work setting up       the club logging programs,                     Dave McCumber, N9WQ, club president, issued a statement saying that the       additional computing power will "strengthen our ability to teach, train and       support both new and experienced radio operators throughout the region."                     INSIGHTS INTO LOSS OF ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY              What happens when a material loses its ability to conduct electricity --       seemingly for no reason? Researchers have been working to solve that mystery       and they think they've figured it out, as we hear from Kent Peterson KCDGY       over at the Newsline studios.                     It's uncommon but when it happens, as it does in the quantum realm,       scientists have previously been left shrugging their shoulders. Now when       material that had been capable of conducting electricity loses that property,       becoming an insulator, they're nodding their heads in recognition instead.                     As explained in a recent paper published in Physical Review Letters, an       international team of researchers working at the DESY Institute in Germany       made their discovery while working with a compound of the rare earth metals:       tellurium, selenium and thulium. They found that the compound lost its       inherent conductivity because of what researchers described as a "particle       dance" involving a group of particles called polarons (POLE A RONS) --       quasiparticles which can combine and behave as one particle instead of       several. The polarons can spur activity between electrons and the nearby       atoms, impeding the flow of electricity by slowing it down and eventually       halting it altogether.                     The researchers wrote that their findings show "that the properties of a       material cannot be explained by its chemical composition alone."                     The scientists concluded that their findings about polarons may ultimately       lead to development of new types of matter or the ability to alter some       materials' optical, magnetic or electrical properties.                     This is Kent Peterson KCDGY.              RSGB BUILDING OUR FUTURE.-              The RSGB National Radio Centre at Bletchley Park is hosting another of its       popular Build Your Own Radio workshops. Morning and afternoon sessions              are being held today, Sunday, 23 November and offer young people aged       between 12 and 18 years the opportunity to learn more about amateur radio and       electronics.                     The workshops will use simple tools for participants to build their own VHF       FM broadcast receiver, which they can take home with them.              A great initiative.              WRTC 2026 in the UK wont just be a contestits set to offer a more       immersive way to follow the action.              James Cribbs NWRL, founder and CEO of the World Radio League speaking on       Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio, has revealed the WRL team are building a custom       real-time QSO tracking and analytics system designed to echo the clarity       and drama of eSports coverage.              What began as a conversation at Dayton has become a ground-up rethinking       of how the wider world can watch and engage with radio sport. For       competitors, that means non-intrusive Raspberry Pi loggers feeding live       data without touching their main setups. For the audience, it means live       scoreboards, propagation maps, and real-time band-change alerts.              The systems first testduring IARU 2025was promising.              Then a full trial during CQWW Phone from the M6T superstation.              For WRL, WRTC is more than just a technical challenge; Cribbs sees it as       the platforms coming-of-agemoving from a beginner-friendly tool to a       robust, contest-grade infrastructure. And, the long-term goal is bigger       than any one event: its about legacy, youth outreach, and strengthening       the future of amateur radio.              youtube.com/watch?v=BRtVO7LnoXE       -------------------------------------------------------------------              OPERATIONAL NEWS - A FELIX VK4FUQ PRESENTATION       --------------       --------------              What ever happened to DXpedition H40WA?              Well sometimes, DXers believe that DXpeditions are profitable. Rarely is       that the case.              My case in point:              The H40WA Team paid a fully refundable $11K+ USD Customs bond to their       Solomon Island shipping company. The team allege that that bond was later       stolen by the shipping company and was never refunded. The Solomon Island       Government (Customs & Police) appeared to be completely unhelpful in       recovering this massive customs bond and it remains in the hands of the       shipping company.              One comment made to the Co-Leader of the H40WA team, Paul N6PSE was by       our own Grant Willis VK5GR who said, and I quote " Things like that have       always been my worst nightmares when trying to take teams and gear into       some countries.              It makes me very selective about where I will attempt DXpeditions to       these days. Even my small Pacific expeditions cost up to $15k AUD each       to execute and that was almost always self-funded - with not more than       $3k ever being raised in return from sponsorships (that was A3)."              So when YOIU work a rare one, a rare DXpedition, give thought to its       "back story".              facebook.com/people/The-Intrepid-DX-Group/100064781196182/              (intrepid-dx group)              ----------------------              NOVEMBER 29-30              The CQ WW is the largest Amateur Radio competition in the world.              Over 35,000 participants take to the airwaves and the last weekend of       November is the CQ WORLD WIDE CW TEST.              The goal is making as many contacts with as many different DXCC entities       and CQ Zones as possible.              Starts: Zero hundred hours UTC Saturday.              End 2359 UTC Sunday.       ---------------              YOTA Contests December              The Fishers Ghost Amateur Radio Club are hosting the inaugural       VK YOTA CONTEST, the entire month of December.       yota.fgarc.org.au/              Then just 3 days from the end of what we call the VK YOTA CONTEST comes       ROUND 3 of the YOTA contest organized by the IARU R1 Youth Working Group       in cooperation with the Hungarian Amateur Radio Society.              DECEMBER 29.              A great way to gain extra contacts for the VK Contest organised by       Fishers Ghost AR Club.              yotacontest.mrasz.org              --------------       --------------       NOW CONTEST WISE:- 2026       --------------       ---------------              1st January 2026 NZART Centenary 100 QSO Challenge              You are invited to kick off the NZART Centenary year in style with a fun,       on-air event. Can you make 100 contacts in 24 hours?              1101 31 December 2025 UTC, i.e. 0001 NZDT 1st January 2026 to              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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