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|    WIANEWS for WEEK COMMENCING FEBRUARY 16     |
|    13 Feb 25 18:09:58    |
      [continued from previous message]              Radio and Electronics Club. The problem was finding a way to utilise the       Amateur resources.              The first step was to establish a reliable radio repeater able to provide       communications throughout the area and to amateur operators in Cairns to       the East, Mareeba to the West. Given the nature of the geography and       vegetation, UHF CB was not considered suitable and mid band VHF operating       around 70MHz was chosen, emulating the way the Army uses radio in similar       environments. With the support of the Royal Flying Doctor Service a       repeater was installed in their radio hut at Mt Haren, just out of Kuranda       and the highest point in the area.              A bulk buy of second hand Simoco SRM900 E0 radio was made and these were       then resold, at cost, to volunteers in the area and amateurs in the radio       clubs. Amateur purchasers had the capability to make suitable antennas and       the Kuranda Mens Club voluntarily manufactured flower pot antennas for the       radios purchased by locals.              The volunteers, who then became the go-to points for locals needing       assistance, could pass requests to amateurs who had facilities to       communicate outside the area and thus ensure the messages reached the       appropriate authorities. Additionally, the Mareeba Shire Council, which       supports the project and has given some hardware for the antenna mounting,       added a radio to the network allowing messages to be passed to their       Disaster Management group and for condition reports to be requested from       the volunteers.              The final part of the network was to set up a means for locals to pass       their requests to the radio volunteers: for these short-range       communications UHF CB was ideal and this was backed up by publishing the       address of volunteers who could be contacted directly.       Information about the network was then disseminated by social media and an       article in the Kuranda Paper.              Fortunately, although we have had heavy monsoon rain, the perfect storm       has not arisen so far this year but we are now prepared for the next time       it hits the area.              As an aside, the Kuranda Range Road (part of Highway 1), which provides       access to Cairns and further North/South for Kuranda, Mareeba and beyond       was so severely damaged by Cyclone Jasper and the rains that it is still,       14 months later, limited to one lane in many parts, subjected to frequent       closures for repair work and expected to take at least another 24 months       for it to be fully operational again.              Although Amateur Radio is the key to success for this network, it is       probably unique in the integration of UHF CB, VHF Land Mobile and Amateur       radio to achieve the overall goal.              A final note.              The equipment used at the repeater site comprises a Motorola MX800       (rebadged Spectra) VHF Mid Band Repeater with an alternative of two       SRM9000 radios connected back-to-back on site ready to be operational if       the Motorola fails. Power is supplied by a GME 30 Amp Power Supply with       battery fall-back to a 138 Amp Hour AGM battery. The antenna, a flower pot       at about six metres giving omni-directional coverage, is fed via a       Telewave TPRD-0754 Pass/Reject Duplexer.              Im Howard, VK4BS for WIA NATIONAL NEWS.       ------------------------------------------------------------*       INTERNATIONAL NEWS is with thanks to ARRL, DX-WORLD, eHam, Hackaday,       IARU, ICQPodcast, IRTS, NEWSLINE, NZART, RAC, Radioworld.com, RSGB,       SARL and the World Wide sources of the WIA.       World Radio Day, February 13th, was adopted in 2012 by the United Nations to       acknowledge radio's role in people's lives everywhere. Although the focus is       usually on broadcast radio services, amateur radio will be involved in some       events around the world. This year's theme is "Radio and Climate Change." One       of the many international events involved the Shanghai              Coast Radio Station XSG, which maintains a Global Maritime Distress and       Safety System as well as Morse code telegraph services.              The station hosted a two-day Cross band Event in which the radio station       communicated via CW with amateur radio operators, with each side       transmitting on their authorized frequencies while monitoring the other       party's frequencies. The event ran from 00:00 UTC on the 12th of February       to 00:00 UTC the next day, World Radio Day.       3521.3-3526.3kHz       7021.3-7026.3kHz       10121.3-10126.3kHz       14021.3-14026.3kHz       21021.3-21026.3kHz              Amateur Ham Radio operators have picked up suspicious late-night radio       signals in coded Bengali, Urdu and Arabic along the Indo-Bangladesh border       in South Bengal over the last two months, raising concerns about possible       extremist activities, officials said.              The development comes amidst ongoing unrest in Bangladesh and growing       anti-India rhetoric in the neighbouring country. The incident first came       to light in December last when Ham radio operators detected unauthorized       communications in code from Basirhat and Bongaon as well as from the       Sunderbanss.              Ham radio operators alerted the Ministry of Communications, which       forwarded the matter to the International Monitoring Station in Kolkata       for further investigation.              According to Ambarish Nag Biswas, secretary of the West Bengal Radio Club,       the transmissions follow an unusual pattern. "The global norm among       Ham radio users is that if a third party enters an ongoing communication,       they must identify themselves using a radio identification code or       call sign. But in these cases, whenever we asked for identification,       the signals went silent.              AUSTRIAN SHORTWAVE SITE DISMANTLED              What was once radio history in Austria is now, as expected, reduced to       rubble.              The historic short-wave radio transmitting site at Moosbrunn, Austria,       has been dismantled. The Austrian newspaper, Der Standard, reports that       the demolition in late January marks the end of a long episode in       broadcast history. The destruction was described in the newspaper as       [quote] "a precise, targeted explosion." [endquote]              The facility, built during the Cold War Era, had once been home to       Radio Austria International. After Radio Austria went off the air in 2003,       the transmitter was used by international broadcasters such as       Radio D.A.R.C. a programme produced by the German national amateur radio       society. After the closure of the Moosbrunn site at the end of December       2024, Radio D.A.R.C. moved to the short-wave station in England, which has       been carrying it since January.       (text version only)       A 10,000-dollar grant from the Frankford Radio Club will support the       development of a contest dashboard by University of Scranton students       and physics faculty members that will be used by students and amateur       radio operators including some who have served as citizen scientists       for space research projects led by Scranton physics professor       Nathaniel Frissell, Ph.D.              Through the project, Dr. Frissell hopes the University's W3USR Amateur       Radio Club members, present and future, will become active radio       contesters. "The amateur radio contesters are one of the most enthusiastic       subset of ham radio operators, and participants span a range of ages from       teenagers to over 90," said Ray Sokola, past president of the 100 plus       year old Frankford Radio Club.              In addition to expanding interest in ham radio and radio contesting,       Ray hopes the grant will continue the tradition of scientific       contributions made by amateur radio operators over the past century.              The Argentine Radio Club is hosting its first international gathering of       female radio amateurs. The meeting is taking place from March 6th through              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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