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G4APL  > NEWS     09.12.18 10:14l 221 Lines 10107 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News  - 2 Dec 2018
Path: IZ3LSV<IK8VKW<IR2UBX<F1OYP<ON0AR<GB7CIP
Sent: 181202/0331Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO #:47513 [Caterham Surrey GBR]
From: G4APL@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO
To  : NEWS@EU


GB2RS Main News for Sunday 2nd December 2018

[Note to Newsreaders: The plans for the Christmas period are as 
follows. There will be a GB2RS script as normal for Sunday 23 
December, but not for Sunday 30 December. Normal broadcasts will 
resume on Sunday 6 January. Feel free to run a net for your regular 
listeners on 30 December – that's entirely up to you, but please do 
so under your own callsign, not GB2RS. We will include a brief news 
item next week to communicate this information to listeners. Thank 
you all for your unstinting efforts over 2018 and, in most cases, for 
a goodly few years before that. GB2RS could not continue in its 
present form without you and the RSGB is very grateful for your time 
and efforts.]


The news headlines:

* Listen for YOTA stations
* Intro to Amateur Radio workshops at Bletchley
* High Altitude Balloon news


YOTA month has just started. The first club to activate the GB18YOTA 
callsign was Aberkenfig Radio Club in Bridgend on the 1st of 
December. Sandringham School Amateur Radio Club, with help from 
Verulam ARC, will activate it on Monday the 3rd. On the 5th, it's the 
turn of Swansea Radio Club, then Silcoates School on the 6th and 
Hilderstone Radio Club on the 8th. If you hear these stations and 
others around the world taking part in YOTA month, please take the 
time to contact the young people.

The RSGB is still taking bookings for the Introduction to Amateur 
Radio workshops running in association with Bletchley Park on the 
15th and 16th of December. These workshops will give an introductory 
insight into the world of amateur radio, as well as a chance to see 
the RSGB's National Radio Centre. So spread the word to any friends, 
family members, colleagues who might be interested in finding out 
more about our amazing hobby. Full details, including booking 
information and prices, can be found at tinyurl.com/ya7exjva

On the 6th of December, a team from Hi-impact on the Wirral will 
launch another high altitude balloon, in conjunction with pupils from 
St Bridget's Primary School in West Kirby. Once again they will 
launch from Welshpool. They are hoping as many local amateurs and 
SWLs as possible will assist in feeding the data into HABHUB, using 
the DL-FLDIGI software. They will be launching at around 10.45am 
using a licence-exempt transmitter with the callsign STBRIDGET on 
434.650MHz USB and RTTY, 50Baud, 425Hz shift, 7 bits, no parity, 2 
stop bits.

Two more 2018 RSGB Convention lecture videos are available on the 
Members' section of the RSGB website. Don Greenbaum, N1DG talks about 
the KH1/KH7Z Baker Island DXpedition and Bo Hansen, OZ2M lectures on 
P14, the digital mode for beacons, and why it is a success. To view 
the videos go to www.rsgb.org/videos

SpaceX has announced that the SSO-A, SmallSat Express mission 
carrying AMSAT's Fox-1Cliff is now scheduled to launch today, the 2nd 
of December, at 1831:47UTC. It was previously scheduled to launch on 
the 28th of November but was been postponed due to extreme 
high-altitude winds at Vandenberg Air Force Base. In addition to 
Fox-1Cliff, the SSO-A mission will carry several other amateur radio 
satellites, including FUNcube on ESEO, JY1-SAT, K2SAT, and ExseedSat. 
The launch window extends for approximately 30 minutes. Fox-1Cliff 
has uplinks at UHF and L-band, and downlinks on VHF.


And now for the details of rallies and events for the coming week 

Members of the British Vintage Wireless Society are holding a 
Swapmeet & Auction on the 9th of December at Royal Wootton Bassett 
Memorial Hall, Royal Wootton Bassett, Swindon, Wiltshire SN4 8EN. 
Doors open at 10am and the auction starts at around 1pm. More details 
of BVWS membership at www.bvws.org.uk

To get your event into RadCom and GB2RS, please send details as early 
as possible to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk – we need to know at least 
three to four months in advance to get your information into RadCom. 


And now the DX news from 425 DX News and other sources

Steff, HB9FXL will be in Cambodia until the 14th of December. Look 
for him with the callsign XU7AKB on SSB on all bands from 40 to 10m. 
QSL via Club Log OQRS.

Alain, F8FUA will be active as XT2BR from Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso 
between the 2nd and 11th of December. He plans to operate CW, SSB and 
digital modes. QSL via F8FUA either direct or via the bureau and 
Logbook of The World.

Several Russian operators will sign H7/homecall from Big Corn Island 
in Nicaragua until the 7th of December. Also look for YN4RRC from the 
same location. The IOTA reference is NA-013. QSLs for the H7 Russian 
operation go via RZ3FW.

Remo, HB9SHD is active as H44SHD from Uepi, in the Solomon Islands, 
OC-149, until mid-December. He operates FT8 and SSB. QSL via his home 
callsign. 

Martin, PT2ZDX will be active PS6I from Itaparica Island, SA-023, 
until the 7th of December. QSL direct to F4BHW.


Now the special event news 

SX60RAAG will be active until the 31st of December to celebrate the 
60th anniversary of the Radio Amateur Association of Greece. QSL via 
Logbook of The World, eQSL or Club Log's OQRS. Logsearch and 
downloadable awards can be found at http://sx60raag.hamlogs.net/

Please send event details to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk, as early as 
possible, for free publicity on GB2RS, in RadCom and online. UK 
special event stations must be open to the public, so our free 
publicity can help make your efforts more widely known. 


Now the contest news

The ARRL 160m contest ends its 40 hour run at 1600UTC today, the 2nd 
of December. It uses CW only. The exchange is just the signal report, 
although American and Canadian stations will also send their ARRL or 
RAC section number.

Also today, the 144MHz Affiliated Societies contest runs from 1000 to 
1600UTC. Using all modes on the 144MHz band, the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and locator.

The UK Six Metre Group's Winter Marathon began on the 1st of December 
and runs until the end of January. There are no specific operating 
periods. Just work as many Locator squares as you can, when you can, 
using any mode on the 50MHz band.

On Tuesday the 144MHz FM Activity Contest runs from 1900 to 2000UTC, 
using FM only. It is immediately followed by the all-mode 144MHz UK 
Activity Contest from 2000 to 2230UTC. The exchange for both contests 
is signal report, serial number and locator.

Next weekend it's the ARRL 10m Contest that runs from 0000UTC on the 
8th to 12359UTC on the 9th. Using CW and SSB, the exchange is signal 
report and serial number, with American and Canadian sending their 
State or Province code.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA and G4BAO 
on Friday 30th November.

The CQ Worldwide CW contest last weekend showed that you can work DX 
with zero sunspots. Reports show that stations as far west as Arizona 
and California, plus the Caribbean, were workable from the UK on 20 
metres, plus there were reports of some limited F2-layer openings on 
10 metres. Chris, G0DWV even reported an afternoon greyline opening 
to Japan on 80m using a four-square antenna array for the band.

The sun remained spotless last week and geomagnetic conditions were 
very settled, which no doubt helped the HF DX. The Kp index never 
rose above two and was often at zero for long periods. However, at 
the time this report was being prepared there was still an alert out 
for potentially-unsettled conditions on Friday 30th and across the 
weekend due to ongoing coronal hole activity.

NOAA predicts that next week will see the solar flux index pegged at 
68 again. Conditions should be a little more settled geomagnetically 
with a maximum K index of three for most of the week. Conditions may 
be a little worse on Friday the 7th and Saturday the 8th due to a 
high-speed solar wind stream from a recurrent coronal hole that will 
become Earth-facing again.

This is a good time to start to think about the lower bands. Eighty 
and 160 metres are starting to come into their own with the longer 
nights. If you have never worked the USA on 80m then it might be 
worth looking around UK sunrise. There is often transatlantic SSB 
activity around the top of the band, especially 3790-3800kHz, in the 
early morning.


And now the VHF and up propagation news.

There is a distinctly unsettled look to the charts again for the next 
week. This means that Tropo will not be a big player and the only 
weather-related DX option is probably limited to some occasional rain 
scatter on the microwave bands. During the winter months, rain 
scatter is most likely around the coasts than inland. Last Tuesday's 
SHF UK Activity Contest saw the west of the UK missing out as the 
rain moved east just before the contest started, leaving a disturbed 
troposphere in its wake. This highlights the fact that good 
propagation rarely waits for you if you only operate during contests. 
Rain scatter paths from East Anglia to the North remained good 
throughout.

Other options might include some aurora on VHF if we are lucky. 
‘Space Weather Woman' Doctor Tamitha Skov tweeted last week that we 
might reach solar storm levels at the beginning of December due to 
the coming fast solar wind. So be on the lookout for that.

There are three small meteor showers this week – use Google to find 
the Make More Miles on VHF website for details. And remember that the 
big Geminids shower is only two weeks away now. 

Moon declination goes negative today, so Moon windows will be shorter 
and of lower elevation as the week progresses. Note that the Sun will 
be very close to the Moon on Friday.

And that's all from the propagation team this week.


And that's the end of the main news for this week prepared by the
Radio Society of Great Britain.  Items for inclusion in subsequent
bulletins can be emailed to  radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk to arrive by
10:00 on the Thursday before transmission.


Our thanks to Andy G4TNU for providing this RSGB feed.
--
g4apl@gb7cip.ampr.org g4apl@gb7cip.#32.gbr.euro
http://www.theskywaves.net http://gb7cip.ampr.org


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