• Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2486 for Friday, June 20th, 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 20 09:00:04 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.radio.amateur.misc

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2486 for Friday, June 20th, 2025 Amateur
    Radio Newsline Report Number 2486 with a release date of Friday, June
    20th, 2025 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1

    The following is a QST. Scientists find radio waves with upward
    propagation. A DXpedition honors a Silent Key -- and Newsline pays
    tribute to cofounder Bill Pasternak WA6ITF, 10 years after his passing.
    All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2486 comes
    your way right now.

    **
    BILLBOARD CART

    **
    RADIO SIGNALS HAVE 'UPWARD PROPAGATION' THROUGH ICE, STONE

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: We begin this week with a scientific discovery about
    radio waves that researchers say defies the laws of physics. These
    signals didn't come from somewhere above - but from deep down below the
    surface of the earth. Kevin Trotman, N5PRE, tells us about this
    so-called "upward propagation."

    KEVIN: Radio signals picked up by a NASA high-altitude balloon have
    been leaving scientists baffled. The balloon, part of NASA's experiment
    known as Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna, or ANITA, was floating
    40 kilometres above the continent, in search of neutrinos and other
    particles when its sensitive radio antennas unexpectedly picked up
    signals that were coming from someplace below - way below - the
    Antarctic's frozen surface. Physicists say that for that kind of
    reception to occur the radio waves would have had to have penetrated
    6,000 to 7,000 kilometres, or 3,700 to 4,300 miles, of solid ice and
    stone.

    Although the balloon project has since been retired, researchers
    continue to study these unexplained transmissions and recently
    published their findings in the journal, Physical Review Letters. The researchers say that by all models of physics, the signals should have
    been absorbed by the rock and gone undetected.

    Scientists know that these are not neutrinos - the particles that they
    had expected - but are still trying to narrow down what kind of radio
    signals they're dealing with. Meanwhile, with the ANITA project
    retired, the next instruments to have a go at the mystery will be on
    board a work in progress: A Pennsylvania State University team is
    building something bigger and, they hope, better: The Payload for
    Ultrahigh Energy Observation mission.

    This is Kevin Trotman N5PRE

    (GIZMODO, NEWSWEEK)

    **''
    ISLAND DXPEDITION WILL BE TRIBUTE TO SILENT KEY

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: For one ham in the US, a return to a favorite
    DXpedition spot in the North Atlantic will have another purpose this
    year. It will serve as a tribute to a friend for whom that island was
    home. Andy Morrison K9AWM brings us that story,

    ANDY: For Eric Williams, KV1J, his planned trip to St. Pierre &
    Miquelon Island, IOTA Number NA-032, is for a solo activation-- but
    even as he calls CQ as FP/KV1J starting on the 28th of June, Eric will
    not be totally alone. He will carry the memory of a local amateur who
    was his friend, Jean-Pierre Carrere, FP5CJ. Jean-Pierre, who was known
    in the ham community as a welcoming, helpful and personable radio
    operator, especially to visitors, became a Silent Key last September.

    Eric will remain on the air through to the 14th of July and will
    participate in the IARU HF World Championship on the 12th and 13th of
    July. It is his 17th trip to the island in the North Atlantic, not far
    from Newfoundland.

    This is Andy Morrison K9AWM.

    (QRZ.COM)

    **
    TEEN CW CHAMP TRIES TO TOP OWN WORLD RECORD

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: Here's one for the record books. A teenager from
    Romania is preparing to beat the world record he set last year for
    speed in copying callsigns sent in CW. It's set to happen this month in Germany, as we hear from Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    JEREMY: Ham Radio 2025 at Messe Friedrichshafen, Germany, will have
    plenty to offer international visitors when the three-day event opens
    on the 27th of June. One scheduled event in particular is likely to
    draw a crowd as it showcases the achievement of Ianis Scutaru, YO8YNS,
    who set the world record in callsign receiving in Morse Code last year.

    In a demonstration sponsored by the Romanian Federation of Amateur
    Radio, Ianis will attempt to beat that record before a panel of judges
    from Guinness World Records and the IARU. It forms part of a larger
    exhibit by the Romanian amateur radio group which is demonstrating
    high-speed telegraphy as its centerpiece.

    In case you were wondering, at the age of 13, Ianis won a gold medal at
    the 20th IARU High Speed Telegraphy World Championship with a
    record-setting maximum copy speed of 1,126 characters per minute - an equivalent just exceeding 225 words per minute.

    This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (LUCIAN YO8SLC)

    **
    CHICAGO RACE PUTS HAMS ON THE RUN

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: This month, hams in the heart of Chicago showed a good
    bit of heart themselves during a popular half-marathon. Jen DeSalvo,
    W9TXJ, takes us there.

    CAREY PINKOWSKI: We've seen a lot of things over the years with the ham operators. They're the most dependable way of communication.

    JEN: For three and a half decades, Carey Pinkowski has been the race
    director of the Bank of America Chicago Marathon, and in that time, he
    has watched his race grow from just a few thousand runners to over fifty-thousand finishers in 2024.

    CAREY: At the marathon last year, we had close to 2,000 medical
    volunteers...

    JEN: And of those, about 150 amateur radio operators coordinating
    medical treatment and transport. The partnership began in 2008 after a dangerous October heat wave cut the 2007 event short. On a course with
    all asphalt and no shade, water became scarce, and communication was
    lacking.

    CAREY: We didn't have cell phones!

    JEN: Runner Kate Saccany, Kilo-Eight-Sierra-Lima-Foxtrot (K8SLF), was a participant in the Chicago Marathon that year, and like many hams, she
    was trained in emergency communications. It was after that event that
    she, Pinkowski, and other amateur radio operators devised a plan to put
    hams on the run. Sixty-eight hams helped out that first year in 2008,
    and since that time...

    CAREY: They participate in our planning meetings and our operational
    design of things. A lot of it's geared toward emergency or crisis communications.

    JEN: And it's not just for the 26.2-mile race in October. On Sunday,
    June 1st, 40 hams assisted medical teams for the Bank of America 13.1,
    the half-marathon version. For their primary repeater, volunteer hams
    used a Yaesu DR-2X in analog mode with a "pace" of 25 watts off the
    rooftop of Chicago's Historic Mount Sinai Hospital. The backup repeater
    had an inverted antenna mag mount and a world-class view, as it was
    housed atop Chicago's tallest skyscraper, the Willis Tower, in the ABC
    Chicago WLS-TV transmitter suite.

    These special ham teams aren't unique to Chicago. They also assemble
    for other World Marathon Majors such as Boston and New York. They play
    an important role at the Marine Corps Marathon and several others
    across the globe.

    So, when distance runners are in need of a hero,

    CAREY: It's the ham operators that are there to save the day.

    JEN: In Chicago, I'm Jen DeSalvo, W9TXJ

    **
    HAMS JUST WANT TO HAVE FUN

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: Let's face it: amateur radio can be hard work,
    especially lately with the sun sending some geomagnetic storms our way.
    Still, it's June and for many of us that signals a chance to have a
    little more fun in spite of it all. Geri Goodrich, KF5KRN, offers us a
    few options -- in a few modes.

    GERI: Young hams around the world have once again declared this "Meme Appreciation Month," even though this activity actually runs through to
    the 15th of August. From Hungary to the Philippines, Canada and
    Austria, the popular activity of sharing icons and text is spelled out
    in the operators' clever callsigns used specifically for this event.
    Most participants use FT8 and SSTV.

    Meanwhile, CW operators in the Straight Key Century Club have just
    wrapped up another round of the monthly RandomGram exercise, decoding
    randomly generated letter and number combinations. The 24-hour event
    began on Thursday, June 19th.

    Finally, there's Hamword, in which amateurs sharpen their skills using
    Winlink by playing a game based on the wildly popular mainstream
    word-based guessing game - Wordle. This is the third year participants
    will be transmitting five-letter words to the HAMWORD station. It's a
    lively, highly competitive activity in which results are posted on a leaderboard.

    For technical requirements and rules, see the websites in the text
    version of this week's Newsline script.

    Don't forget that hams just WANNA have FUN!

    This is Geri Goodrich, KF5KRN.

    [DON'T READ: mememonth.ca skccgroup.com hambooks.org/hamword ]

    **

    BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
    Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including
    WA5AIR, the Texas Link System which carries Newsline on seven repeaters
    on Wednesdays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. local time.

    **

    THREE CHARGED WITH THEFT OF RADIO STATION'S COPPER WIRING

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: There's been a setback for yet another broadcast radio
    station that has been hit by copper-wire theft. Sel Embee KB3TZD brings
    us the latest.

    SEL: Three men were arrested in Memphis, Tennessee, and charged with
    the theft of copper wiring from a local AM radio station, temporarily
    knocking it off the air.

    Radio Ambiente, WGSF 1030 AM, the city's first Hispanic radio station
    which had been broadcasting for 30 years, went silent on Sunday, May
    18th. The station, which serves a regional audience, was able to return
    to the air this month after the FCC granted a license for its use of
    the on-site translator at 101.5 FM.

    According to news reports, the station's owner discovered copper wiring
    and copper components were stolen after he visited the transmitter
    towers to determine the source of the problem. Police said the
    transmitter building had been broken into. Copper wiring that ran
    underground to the radio towers had been cut - the copper cables and
    other components were missing. The station's owner, Sergio Butron, told
    local media that it appeared the thieves gained access after breaking
    through a chain-link fence and several locks. An engineer at the
    station said replacing the equipment will cost an estimated $170,000 on
    top of engineering fees.

    Police report that three suspects were arrested less than a half-mile
    from the transmitter towers. The men were found with the stolen copper
    cables in front of a nearby house.

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

    (RADIO WORLD, WREG MEMPHIS)


    **

    GRANT HELPS ADVANCE ALBERTA GROUP'S IP400 DIGITAL PROJECT

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: The Alberta Digital Radio Communications Society has
    learned it can proceed with its IP400 Project by autumn, thanks to a
    grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications that will permit the
    hiring of necessary technical personnel.

    Many amateurs got a preview of IP400 at Hamvention in Xenia, Ohio. The
    data communications system was demonstrated using Raspberry Pi Zero H A
    T transceivers. "H A T" stands for Hardware Attached On Top. The
    system's goal is to deliver over-the-air data speeds of at least 100
    kilobytes per second, a speed that far exceeds that of most current
    amateur radio data systems. According to the IP400 website, the project
    first aims to present an assembled node to developers, experimenters
    and others for testing.

    (ARDC, IP400 WEBSITE)

    **
    WRTC ANNOUNCES WINNERS IN SPONSORED-TEAM BIDDING

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: The World Radiosport Team Championship isn't taking
    place until next year but this season, there was a bit of competition
    before the big competition - and now there are two winners. Jason
    Daniels VK2LAW tells us who they are.

    JASON: Organisers of the World Radiosport Team Championship have
    announced that two teams of seasoned DXpeditioners and contesters are
    going to the 2026 competition in the UK after placing the winning bids
    to secure a place in the running. All other competitors in this
    international Olympic-style radio event qualify by virtue of their
    contest records but these two sponsored teams -- one headed by Adrian,
    KO8SCA, and the other by Cezary, SP5Y -- secured spots as winning
    bidders in an auction. The minimum bid was 20,000 US dollars.

    The opportunity to purchase spots in the competition is a way of
    helping the event with its substantial budget. All teams are bound by
    the same operating rules.

    This is Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

    (WRTC LIST)

    **

    WORLD OF DX

    In the World of DX, HA8PX, HA8LLH and YO5OED [Y OH 5 OH E D] will be
    active as TC0MAR from Marmara Island, IOTA number AS-201, from June
    30th through to July 5th. Listen on 30, 20, 17 and 15 metres where the operators will be using CW, SSB and FT8. They may also be operating
    their personal callsigns with the TC0 prefix. QSL via their homecalls.

    Michel, F5LRL will be on the air holiday style as CN2DX in Morocco from
    the 25th of June through to the 30th of August using CW, SSB and FT8.
    Look for Michel on 40-6 metres, QSL via his home call.

    Listen for the callsign TM5RE from Re Island, IOTA number EU-032, in
    the Bay of Biscay until the 22nd of June. It is being activated by the
    team of F2VX, F4WEO and F9IE holiday style using SSB, CW, FT4 and FT8.
    QSL via LoTW.

    Eric, GM5RDX and Graham, 2M0IJU are using the callsigns J38DX and
    J38LD, respectively, from Grenada, IOTA number NA-024, from the 5th
    through to the 13th of July, operating mainly SSB with some FT8 on
    80-10 metres. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

    (425 DX BULLETIN)

    **
    KICKER: REMEMBERING NEWSLINE'S BILL PASTERNAK, WA6ITF/SK

    SKEETER/ANCHOR: We leave you this week with these final thoughts:
    Anniversaries aren't always for celebrating - and what follows here is
    one of those examples. Ten years ago, on June 12th, 2015, Newsline lost
    its cofounder, producer, writer - and friend, Bill Pasternak WA6ITF. We
    thought it appropriate that Jim Davis, W2JKD, one of Bill's original
    team members for 36 years, rejoin us this week to mark this very
    personal occasion for Newsline. Jim?

    JIM: I first met Bill Pasternak in the early 1970s on a very popular
    2-meter repeater while I was working as a DJ in New York City. We
    quickly discovered we shared many hobbies and interests. Bill was
    deeply interested in broadcasting and was also an accomplished
    multi-engine pilot. He and Sharon were newlyweds at the time, and my
    family enjoyed spending time with them at many social events organized
    by our local ham radio group.

    But, as is typical in broadcasting, our careers took us in different
    directions and to different cities. Maybe it was karma, but both Bill
    and I eventually landed in Los Angelesā-"he had secured a job at the
    Fox TV station, and I joined KHJ Radio. It was wonderful to reconnect
    with my old friend.

    Bill was incredibly ambitious. He had more hobbies than fingers and
    toes! He shared with me his vision of creating a newscast for the
    amateur radio community. In 1977, he brought that vision to life with
    the launch of the WestLink Amateur Radio News. Bill invited me to be
    one of the presenters. Little did I know that would be the start of a
    36-year journey with what would eventually become Amateur Radio
    Newsline.

    Over the next three decades, my career took me to many citiesā-"Dallas, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles (again), Charleston, West Virginia,
    Daytona Beach, Grand Rapids, Long Branch, New Jersey, back to Daytona,
    then Sarasota, and finally Vero Beach. I had Mayflower Van Lines on
    speed dial!

    In those early days during the '70s, Bill would gather the news, write
    a script, and call me on the phone (remember when long-distance was expensive?). He'd read the script aloud, and I'd type it as he spoke.
    Once finished, I'd head to a production studio to record and edit the
    script. Then I'd drive to the post office to air mail a 7-inch reel of
    tape to Los Angeles. Bill would splice in the actualities and transfer
    the final version to a 20-minute cartridge tape. That tape machine was
    set to auto-answer the phone line at Bill Ornstein's home, distributing
    the news to the ham community.

    As technology evolved, so did we. In 1981, Bill and I each bought
    Commodore 64 computers. With the addition of a telephone handset modem,
    we reduced the scripting process from hours to minutes. Reels of tape
    gave way to cassettes, and a decade later, digital audio revolutionized
    how Amateur Radio Newsline was shared on the Internet. While the
    delivery systems changed, one thing remained constant: our friendship
    and Bill's unwavering commitment to this project.

    This week marks the 10th anniversary of Bill's passing. His legacy
    continues to resonate throughout the amateur radio community. Bill was
    a deeply spiritual man, and I believe he would be honored to know that
    the Amateur Radio Newslineteam continues to deliver this weekly missive
    with the same passion and purpose he instilled in it from the
    beginning.

    They say we are known by the company we keep, and in Bill's case, his
    presence and contributions to our hobby are truly enduring. I was
    personally honored to be part of his vision for 36 consecutive years.

    This is my first time back behind the microphone since his passing. I
    find it poetic that Bill left us at age 73. In our world, that's no coincidence.

    73, my friend.

    This is Jim Davis, W2JKD

    **
    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; ARDC; David Behar K7DB; DX
    World; Gizmodo; Lucian, YO8SLC; Newsweek; QRZ.com; Radio Society of
    Great Britain; Radio World; Shortwaveradio.de; SKCC; Wireless Institute
    of Australia; WREG Radio Memphis; WRTC List; Youth on the Air; 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
    Skeeter Nash N5ASH in Jonesboro, Arkansas saying 73. As always we thank
    you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2025. All
    rights reserved.

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