• Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2484 for Friday, June 6th, 2025

    From newsline@newsline@arnewsline.org (Amateur Radio Newsline) to rec.radio.amateur.moderated,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.info on Fri Jun 6 09:00:04 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.radio.amateur.misc

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2484 for Friday, June 6th, 2025 Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2484 with a release date of Friday, June
    6th, 2025 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1

    2 FCC COMMISSIONERS LEAVING AGENCY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a developing story. As Newsline
    went to production, the FCC prepared for the departure of two
    commissioners. Commissioner Nathan Simington announced on Wednesday,
    June 4th, that he was leaving the post he has held since 2020 following
    his appointment by President Donald Trump. His announcement follows an
    earlier one from Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, a Democrat, that he
    would leave the FCC. Both departures were scheduled to happen by June
    6th, meaning that with one other seat already left vacant, the
    president and US Senate must now fill three spots. Until then, the FCC
    will temporarily have one Republican and one Democratic commissioner
    each. Neither man's statement gave reasons for the departure.

    (REUTERS, FCC) The following is a QST. A major antenna maker
    discontinues its production for ham radio. NOAA's Weather Radio
    stations go off the air for upgrades -- and new leadership for the
    popular 13 Colonies special event in the US. All this and more as
    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2484 comes your way right now.

    **
    BILLBOARD CART

    **
    STEPP-IR TO END AMATEUR ANTENNA PRODUCTION

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The popular amateur radio antennas manufactured by SteppIR
    are being discontinued. The company announced that it is halting their production this summer. Jim Damron N8TMW has the details.

    JIM: SteppIR has announced that it is stopping production of all
    amateur radio and other consumer antennas starting in August. The
    company's statement, which appears on its website, said that it would
    continue to honor all product warranties and provide technical support
    as needed.

    The company said: [quote] "Given our long history of impact and
    innovation we don't take this decision lightly but have decided that it
    is necessary for our ongoing operations and to make sure we can
    continue to efficiently provide our existing customers with product
    support services." [endquote]

    All antenna and spare-parts orders will be fulfilled by the company
    through to the end of August. After the 31st of the month, SteppIR will
    sell spare parts as long as the inventory permits.

    Based in Washington state, the company has been well-known in the
    amateur radio community since 2001. SteppIR produces a variety of
    mechanically adjusted, remotely tuned, frequency optimized HF/VHF Yagi, Vertical and Dipole antenna systems which serve military, commercial,
    emergency communications and consumer markets.

    This is Jim Damron N8TMW.

    (STEPP-IR)

    **
    WEATHER RADIO STATIONS GO OFF AIR FOR UPDATES

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is in
    the process of temporarily taking its radio stations off the air for
    scheduled updates - and Randy Sly W4XJ tells us what to expect.

    RANDY: As some parts of the United States enter hurricane season, which officially began on June 1st, the National Weather Service is
    continuing with its nationwide update of their Advanced Weather
    Interactive Processing System. The system is used for weather data
    processing and communications, two functions that are especially
    critical during storms and other weather-related emergencies.

    The upgrades will be taking more than 1,000 radio stations of the
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration off the air, on a
    rolling basis, for 2 to 3 days in a scheduled roll-out for their 122
    Weather Forecast Offices. Broadcasters and ham radio groups have
    expressed concern about not having access to these emergency stations
    during those periods.

    NOAA Weather Radio, known as the "Voice of the National Weather
    Service," is a nationwide network of radio stations broadcasting
    continuous weather information directly from the nearest Weather
    Forecast office. These stations broadcast official Weather Service
    warnings, watches, forecasts and other hazard information 24 hours a
    day, 7 days a week.

    The NWS is using social media and other means to inform citizens in the affected areas when their stations will be out of service. They are
    also encouraging citizens to rely on alternate sources for weather
    warnings during the outage, including local TV and radio, weather apps,
    and NWS websites.

    This is Randy Sly, W4XJ

    **
    DXPEDITION TEAM RETURNS TO SABLE ISLAND

    PAUL/ANCHOR: The Sable Island DXpedition team is heading back there
    next year - and they'll have company. John Williams VK4JJW has that
    report.

    JOHN: The CY0S team of DXpeditioners will be returning to Sable Island
    in 2026. The operators announced in a press release that Parks Canada
    -Sable Island has invited them to return next March and has approved
    their plans for a 10- to 12-day DXpedition. As they set up to operate
    on this remote island in Atlantic Canada, they'll have some welcome
    company: operators from the CY9C DXpedition team who had activated St.
    Paul Island in 2024. The CY9C operators knew that year that their
    successful activation on St. Paul was likely to be the last for a long
    time on that challenging, environmentally sensitive landscape. Like
    Sable Island, St. Paul Island is considered one of the more difficult DXpedition destinations in North America. Windswept Sable Island is
    perhaps best known for its population of wild horses.

    Team leaders for Sable Island will be Murray WA4DAN and Glenn W0GJ. A
    website has already been set up at CY0S.com by webmaster Chaz W4GKF.

    This is John Williams VK4JJW.

    (425 DX BULLETIN, DX WORLD)

    **
    FCC PROPOSES $25,000 FINE AGAINST CB OPERATOR

    PAUL/ANCHOR: A Citizens Band operator is facing a fine after the FCC
    charged him with a series of operating violations. We hear more from
    Kevin Trotman N5PRE.

    KEVIN: An Illinois man faces a $25,000 penalty from the FCC for
    unauthorized operation of a Citizens Band radio. The agency announced
    its decision on May 30th, 2025, two years to the day after it issued a
    Notice of Apparent Liability against Jayme John Leon. The agency's
    Enforcement Bureau said that he repeatedly voided his operating
    authority by sending [quote] "nonverbal, indecipherable sound effects
    over long periods" [endquote], causing malicious interference and
    engaging in one-way transmissions. According to the FCC document, Leon
    did not file a response to the 2023 Notice of Liability.

    Citizens Band radio is not a licensed service in the United States.
    Operators retain the privilege of using CB by agreeing to comply with
    relevant regulations stipulated in the Communications Act of 1934.

    This is Kevin Trotman N5PRE.

    (FCC, THE ROCKFORD SCANNER)


    PAUL/ANCHOR: Meanwhile, the Australian Communications and Media
    Authority has proposed that reported abuses of Citizens Band
    regulations that are deemed serious should be referred to the police
    for further investigation. Citizens Band operators are covered by a
    class license in Australia under the Radiocommunications Act. The
    current regulations are set to sunset on the 1st of October. Public
    comment is being accepted through the 15th of July.

    (ACMA)

    **
    NASA's 'SPOT THE STATION' WEBSITE BEING DISCONTINUED

    PAUL/ANCHOR: NASA will no longer operate its "Spot the Station" website
    for fans of the International Space Station. Sel Embee KB3TZD explains.


    SEL: If you like to keep tabs on the International Space Station and
    you've been doing so via NASA's Spot the Station website, you will need
    to change your space-station viewing strategy starting the 12th of
    June. NASA will be discontinuing the website as of that date and will
    no longer display opportunities for sightings on their site. Subscribed
    users who have been receiving text and email notifications linking them
    to the website will no longer have this option either.

    The announcement on the website now directs ISS watchers to instead
    download NASA's official "Spot the Station" mobile app onto their Apple
    or Android smartphones. The "Spot the Station" app expands notification
    of viewing opportunities in the United States and across the globe, as
    well as providing additional capabilities to improve user experiences.

    This is Sel Embee, K-B-3-T-Zed-D.

    (NASA.GOV)
    **
    SPECIAL EVENT STATION MARKS 65th ANNIVERSARY OF CANADIAN TRAIL

    PAUL/ANCHOR; Throughout the month of June, hams are celebrating an
    important hiking trail in New Brunswick, Canada. Travis Lisk N3ILS has
    those details.

    TRAVIS: There's a lot of history stretching along the distance of
    nearly 60-kilometres, or 36 miles, that define Canada's Dobson Trail, a pre-eminent hiking trail in New Brunswick. The nation's longest trail
    to be maintained by volunteers, it is amply populated with a number of
    sites in the World Wide Flora & Fauna programme. The trail is the first
    part of the Fundy Footpath in Atlantic Canada.

    Named for the outdoorsman Art Dobson who led the volunteers as they
    carved out and built the trail by hand, it marks its 65th anniversary
    this year. Throughout June, special event station VC9DT will be on the
    air celebrating by calling CQ. The Atlantic Coast DX and Contest Group,
    VE9ACC, and the Canadian chapter of World Wide Flora & Fauna will be
    activating the special callsign on different locations along the trail
    and on various bands using SSB and FT8/FT4.

    Details - and more about the trail's history - can be found on the
    QRZ.com page for VC9DT.

    This is Travis Lisk N3ILS.

    (QRZ.COM)

    **
    BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
    Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world including
    the N9IAA repeater system from Southern Michigan through Northern
    Indiana to the South Side of Chicago, on 146.685 on Thursday evenings
    at 8:30PM Central.

    **
    BROADCAST HONORS ARMSTRONG'S DEMO OF FM RADIO

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Be listening on June 19th for a special FM radio broadcast celebrating Edwin Armstrong's development of FM radio. Kent Peterson
    KC0DGY tells us about the special programming that's planned.

    KENT: The callsign W2XMN is etched in cement atop the doorway of the
    small brick transmitter building in New Jersey, not far from the radio
    tower where history's first FM broadcasts began in 1938. Those steady transmissions became a reality only three years after engineer and
    inventor Edwin Armstrong had given a public demonstration at an
    engineering conference, showing that frequency modulation radio could
    deliver static-free sound, graced with a remarkable fidelity that was previously unheard of.

    FM broadcasting will return temporarily to W2XMN's original VHF
    low-band frequency, 42.8 MHz, beginning at noon on Thursday the 19th of
    June. The northern New Jersey tower once used by W2XMN will broadcast a
    repeat of programming first aired in 2005 to commemorate Armstrong's
    successful FM demonstration in 1935. The content includes interviews
    wth Armstrong's niece, Jeanne Hammond, and with Tom Lewis, author of
    the book, "Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio."

    According to a report on the RadioWorld.com website, a restored
    Phasitron transmitter will be running 250 watts of power into a
    vertical antenna.

    The structure known as the Alpine Tower is still in use today. Radio
    station WFDU, the public radio station licensed to Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey, is on the air at 89.1 -- FM, of course.

    This is Kent Peterson KC0DGY.

    (RADIO WORLD)

    **
    LEADERSHIP CHANGE FOR 13 COLONIES SPECIAL EVENT

    PAUL/ANCHOR: One of the season's most popular HF operating events here
    in the US is honoring its founder as he steps away from 16 years at its
    helm. Mark Abramowicz NT3V has the details...

    MARK: If you haven't heard of the 13 Colonies Special Event or heard
    stations calling in the annual activity between July 1 and July 8, you
    have missed a unique opportunity to celebrate the history of the US and
    mark the American Revolution.

    Ken Villone, KU2US, who conceived the idea of activating stations in
    the 13 original colonies, is going into semi-retirement.

    Villone is passing on the responsibility for event coordination to Tony
    James N4ATJ, of McAdenville, North Carolina, long-time 13 Colonies
    coordinator for his home state's K2J station, Villone will remain
    involved as the New York state coordinator for K2A.

    Bob Josuweit, WA3PZO, who joined Villone more than a dozen years ago in
    his passion to promote American history via an amateur radio special
    event, is helping to ensure a smooth transition.

    Josuweit is coordinator for WM3PEN, a bonus station that recognizes Philadelphia's role as the birthplace of the Declaration of
    Independence.

    Josuweit said that in its first year, the event recorded some 12,000
    QSOs. That grew to a breathtaking 292,426 contacts in 2024. It also
    attracted operators who now run bonus stations in Great Britain GB13COL
    and France TM13COL, recognizing the role the two countries played in
    America's war for independence.

    This year's 13 Colonies certificate will recognize the work Villone has
    done to make the event so popular. Villone, however, shared a different perspective on why the event is such a success. In an email sent
    recently to all hams involved, he wrote: [quote] "I just only started
    this event and I tried to keep it going. But it was you folks who also
    through your participation and dedication managing your states and
    special bonus stations (Philadelphia, England and France) that made
    this whole thing work!" [endquote]

    To find out more about the 13 Colonies Special Event, go to the text
    version of this story at arnewsline-dot-o-r-g and click on the
    linkthere.

    This is Mark Abramowicz NT3V

    [DO NOT READ: http://www.13colonies.us/ ]

    (13 COLONIES SPECIAL EVENT)

    **
    JUNE IS AMATEUR RADIO MONTH IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: It has been a productive year so far for amateur radio
    operators in New Hampshire. A memorandum of understanding between the
    state and New Hampshire-ARES has designated emergency operators as the
    sole providers of ham radio communication support to the state's
    Department of Safety, Division of Emergency Services and Communication.
    Ham radio's important role to the community has since been underscored
    by a recent proclamation from the governor's office declaring June as
    Amateur Radio Month in New Hampshire. New Hampshire joins Hawaii in
    this formal gesture of appreciation for the hams in their state.

    (QRZ.COM)

    **
    WORLD OF DX

    In the World of DX, Emil, DL8JJ will be using the callsign EA5/DL8JJ
    from Penyeta del Moro, IOTA number EU-151, between the 7th and 9th of
    June. Listen for him on 40 through 10 metres where he will be using CW
    and SSB. QSL via M0OXO's OQRS.

    Listen for Bo, OZ1DJJ using the callsign OX3LX from Greenland, IOTA
    number NA-018, where he will operate holiday style from two locations.
    He will be at gridsquare GP47pa from the 5th through to the 9th of June
    and at gridsquare GP44de from the 10th through to the 22nd. See QRZ.com
    for other details.

    Special callsign PA2025NATO is on the air throughout June to mark the
    NATO Summit being hosted by the Netherlands for the first time on the
    weekend of June 24th. QSL details and other information is on QRZ.com

    Domenico, IK1MNF, is using the callsign IK1MNF/IA5 from Isola d'Elba,
    IOTA Number EU-028 from early June until the end of September. Listen
    for Domenico on 20-6 metres where he will be using SSB most of the
    time. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

    (425 DX BULLETIN)

    **
    KICKER: KOSOVO DXPEDITION DID NOT GO UN-"HERD"

    PAUL/ANCHOR: A recent joint DXPedition to Kosovo was much anticipated
    -after a series of postponements and delays. What was NOT anticipated,
    however, were some of the contacts the two operators had toward the activation's end. Jim Meachen ZL2BHF wraps up this week's newscast by
    giving us those details.

    JIM: Anne OH2YL and Marko OH2LG were finally ready for that
    long-awaited 10 days of intense operating deep in the Balkans as Z68YL
    and Z68OM, respectively. The contacts came in exhilarating waves as the
    pair operated from May 20th through to the 30th. Then, just days before
    the big finish, the two operators were confronted with a pileup like
    noother:

    Cows. A herd of at least 50 of them, rampaging through the antennas and
    messing with the guy wires. A blog post written by Jari OH6BG, said
    that [quote] "The guy wires were given the ride of their life,"
    [endquote] As for the feedlines, well, the cows' teeth took the word
    "feedline" quite literally. The feedlines for the end-fed half-wave
    wire antenna and the 6-metre dipole were both chewed through.

    With some repair work and a new vertical antenna, the operators were
    soon back in business. By the time they went QRT, despite high winds,
    QRM and bovine intervention, they managed to work their way to a total
    of just fewer than 10,000 QSOs.

    Resilient, determined and resourceful, they would not be cowed.....in
    Kow-sovo.

    This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

    (DX WORLD)

    **
    A good QSO can be like poetry - sometimes! So why not write a haiku
    about amateur radio and join the Newsline haiku challenge? It's as easy
    as writing a QSL card. We can only accept the correct haiku format
    -that is, a three-line verse with five syllables in the first line,
    seven in the second and five in the third. Submit your work on our
    website at arnewsline.org - each week's winner gets a shout-out on our
    website, where everyone can find the winning haiku.

    NEWSCAST CLOSE

    With thanks to Amateur News Daily; AMSAT News Service; ARISS; David
    Behar K7DB; DX World; FCC; NASA.gov; NOAA; Radio World; Radio Society
    of Great Britain; Rockford Scanner; Shortwaveradio.de; Stepp-IR;
    Thirteen Colonies Special event; Wireless Institute of Australia; 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
    Paul Braun WD9GCO in Valparaiso Indiana saying 73. As always we thank
    you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2025. All
    rights reserved.

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