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G4TNU  > NEWS     08.03.20 17:34l 287 Lines 13719 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 08 Mar 2020
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T:From: G4TNU@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO <g4tnu@gb7ipf.ampr.org>
T:Newsgroups: ampr.news.europe
T:Message-Id: <E110700_G4TNU@gb7ipf.ampr.org>

GB2RS Main News for Sunday the 8th of March 2020

The news headlines:

* RAYNET helps in flooding emergency
* Blue Ham this weekend
* 6,873 February visitors to NRC

North Humber RAYNET were recently activated during the widespread 
flooding that occurred on the 27th of February in Snaith, East 
Yorkshire. A temporary control station was first established at the 
‘washlands' near the village of the East Cowick during the 
afternoon of the 26th, with thirteen members attending the developing 
situation over three days. Members were positioned at Vehicle Check 
Points, flooded roads and worked alongside Yorkshire 4x4 Response 
vehicles as well as being co-located in the local Town Council 
emergency control centre and Bronze Command. Most of the radio 
traffic was carried over 144MHz, with some on 70MHz. A VHF/UHF 
talk-through was located in a vehicle outside Snaith Fire Station to 
provide local access and an increased range as the 4G mobile phone 
coverage was patchy in some areas and there were issues with access 
at times. The group were finally stood down late in the evening of 
Saturday the 29th of February as the flooding and the situation 
stabilised.

The RAFAC tell us that the next Blue Ham Radio Communications 
Exercise will be this weekend, the 7th and 8th of March, using the 
5MHz band. Details of the exchange of information to count as a QSO 
is at https://alphacharlie.org.uk/exercise-blue-ham. A Blue Ham 
Certificate is available if you contact 10 or more special MRE 
callsigns during the exercise with the Cadets.

No fewer than 6,873 visitors were welcomed to the RSGB National Radio 
Centre at Bletchley Park during February. As part of the on-going 
recruitment campaign, two new volunteers joined the NRC team: Mike, 
G0RBB and Nick, M0NPH. The RSGB would like to thank them and the 
other NRC volunteers for their time.

Yves F5PRU / 6W1TA in Senegal has been informed by the Senegalese 
Telecom Regulatory Authority that the new WRC-15 Amateur Secondary 
Allocation 5351.5 – 5366.5kHz is now allowed in the country. The 
IARU Region 1 band plan should be used with a maximum power limit 
available of 15W EIRP. Yves has been living in Senegal for 18 months. 
He is mainly on the air around 5354kHz on CW and sometimes on 5357kHz 
FT8. 

Venues and dates for the 2020 series of Train the Trainers courses 
can be found on the RSGB website at www.rsgb.org/train-the-trainers. 
In order for the organisers to ensure that courses are run as 
cost-effectively as possible, between 20 and 25 candidates are 
required for each venue. To reserve a place on any course please 
email trainthetrainers<at>rsgb.org.uk with your name and telephone 
number. The first course to run will be held in Telford on the 21st 
of March; it now only has two places available. Following Telford 
will be Cardiff on the 18th of April. This course needs more 
candidates, so if you want to attend this event please book as soon 
as possible. Details of other courses available are on the website.

The RSGB is delighted to announce that Tony Jones, G7ETW has been 
appointed as Amateur Radio Development Chair and Chris Colclough, 
G1VDP has been appointed to the role of Beyond Exams Coordinator. 
Both were licensed in the 1980s, have been active in a range of 
amateur radio activities and are looking forward to being part of 
these initiatives. 

The first lecture as part of the Marconi Centenary 2020 has been 
announced by the Chelmsford Civic Society. Professor Danielle George 
has kindly agreed to speak at Anglia Ruskin University, Bishop Hall 
Lane, Chelmsford, CM1 1SQ on Tuesday the 31st of March at 2pm. The 
lecture is free to everyone but must be pre-booked. Go to 
https://tinyurl.com/eventbrite-marconi.

The RSGB has created a new policies page where you will find all the 
Society's main policies in one place: www.rsgb.org/policies. Where 
relevant you can also still find them on the appropriate sections of 
its website. The policy documents have been updated into the RSGB's 
current branding so please make sure you refer to the most recent 
versions.


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

The Pencoed ARC Table-Top Sale scheduled to take place on the 8th of 
March has been cancelled. 

Due to concerns raised over the Covoid-19 virus, the committee of 
Wythall Radio Club have decided to cancel this year's Wythall 
Hamfest, originally planned for next Sunday the 15th of March. They 
would like to thank the traders for their support for this year's 
event and hope to see everyone next year.

On the 22nd of March, Stirling & District ARS is holding a CW Boot 
Camp in conjunction with GMDX. Further information is at 
www.gmdx.org.uk/cwbootcamp

Please send details of your rally and event plans as soon as possible 
to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk – we give you valuable publicity online, 
in RadCom and on GB2RS, all for free.


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

David, F8AAN will be active holiday style as 3B9AN from Rodrigues 
Island, IOTA reference AF-017, between the 10th and 19th of March. He 
will operate CW on the 80 to 17m bands. QSL via Club Log's OQRS, or 
direct to his home call.

Richard, G3RWL will be active as 8P6DR from Barbados, NA-021, from 
the 8th of March to the 9th of April. He will operate CW and possibly 
some RTTY on the 80 to 10m bands. QSL via Club Log's OQRS, Logbook of 
The World or via his home call, either direct or via the bureau.

Noel, F6BGC will be active as 8Q7NC from the Maldives, AS-013, 
between the 12th and the 21st of March. He will be operating 
holiday-style on the 80 to10m bands using SSB, CW and digital modes. 
QSL via Logbook of The World, or direct to his home call.

9K2HQ and other members of the Kuwait ARS will be active as 9K2F from 
Faylakah Island, AS-118, between the 11th and the 15th of March. They 
will operate SSB, CW and FT8 on the 80 to 10m bands. QSL via 9K2RA 
and Logbook of The World.

Thierry, F6CUK will be active as TM8C from the lighthouse on Cordouan 
Island, EU-159, between the 13th and the 15th of March. He will 
operate CW and SSB on the 40 and 20m bands. QSL via his home call.


Now the special event news 

On the weekend of the 14th and 15th of March, the Shepparton & 
District ARC will connect amateur transceivers to the curtain array 
and rhombic antennas at the Broadcast Australia site in Shepparton, 
which is located in North Central Victoria, Australia. This site was 
previously a short wave Radio Australia location. VI3RA will be on 
the air from 2300UTC on Saturday the 14th of March until 2300UTC on 
the 16th using the 7, 10, 14, 18 and 21MHz bands.

The Maine Bicentennial Special Event celebrates the 200th anniversary 
of Maine statehood between the 16th and the 22nd of March. Twelve 
special event callsigns will be active, each representing one of 
Maine's nine original counties, plus three special locations that 
have historical significance, including K1B, K1J, K1P, W1C, W1H and 
W1Y amongst others. Certificates will be awarded to those who contact 
special event stations, with endorsements available for bands, modes, 
and a clean sweep for contacts with each of the Maine 200 Special 
Event call signs. See https://maine200specialevent.com/ for more 
information. 

Please send special event details to radcom<at>rsgb.org.uk as early 
as possible to get your event publicised here on GB2RS, in RadCom, 
and online. 


Now the contest news

The ARRL International DX contest ends its 48 hour run at 2359UTC 
today, the 8th. Using the 1.8 to 28MHz bands, the exchange is signal 
report and transmitter power. US stations also send their State and 
Canadians their Province.

The 144/432MHz contest ends its 24 hour run at 1400UTC today, the 
8th. Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number 
and locator.

The UK Microwave Group's Low Band Contest takes place today, the 8th, 
from 1000 to 1600UTC. Using all modes on the 1.3 to 3.4GHz bands, the 
exchange is signal report, serial number and locator.

The Worked All Britain 3.5MHz contest also takes place today, the 8th 
of March, from 1800 to 2200UTC. Entries need to be with the contest 
manager by the 18th of March. The exchange will be RS plus serial 
number plus WAB square. Full details of the rules and methods of 
entry may be obtained from the WAB website, 
www.worked-all-britain.org.uk.

On Tuesday the 432MHz FM Activity Contest runs from 1900 to 1955UTC, 
using FM only. It is immediately followed by the all-mode 432MHz UK 
Activity Contest from 2000 to 2230UTC. The exchange for both contests 
is signal report, serial number and locator.

On Wednesday the 80m Club Championships CW leg runs from 2000 to 
2130UTC. The exchange is signal report and serial number.

On Thursday the 50MHz UK Activity Contest runs from 2000 to 2230UTC. 
Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number and 
locator.

The longest running RSGB contest of them all is the Commonwealth 
Contest, formerly known as BERU. It runs for 24 hours over the 
weekend of the 14th and 15th. There are always some travellers who 
fly off to activate Commonwealth countries that are not heard every 
day and they will all be pleased to work anyone in the UK, contester 
or not. The contest runs from 1000 to 1000UTC, it's CW only on the 
3.5 to 28MHz contest bans and the exchange is signal report and 
serial number.

Next Sunday, the 15th, the 2nd 70MHz Cumulative contest runs from 
1000 to 1200UTC. Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, 
serial number and locator.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA and G4BAO 
on Friday the 6th of March.

The VP8PJ DXpedition to South Orkney Islands has now finished, with 
the last active day on the 5th of March. The DXpedition resulted in 
many UK stations putting South Orkney into their log, on all bands 
and modes from 160 to 15 metres, with a few reports even of 10m 
contacts.

This was a good example of how ionospheric propagation can be hard to 
predict as some of the paths looked very difficult if not impossible. 
But over a week-long period there were times when signals were able 
to get through, if only for short periods. It also showed how 
localised HF propagation can be, with some stations in the UK hearing 
them, while 100 miles away there was nothing.

Solar figures wise, the week ended pretty much as it started with 
zero sunspots and a solar flux index of 69 to 70.

The week was mainly settled geomagnetically, apart from the night of 
Saturday February the 29th and Sunday the 1st of March when the Kp 
index rose to four. This was due to a solar wind stream from a 
coronal hole on the Sun, which we predicted last week. Luckily, this 
was pretty short lived and after it struck the Kp index fell back 
again to one or two representing more settled geomagnetic conditions.

NOAA predicts that next week will be pretty similar to last with zero 
sunspots and a solar flux index around 70 to 71. The US Air Force 
predicts fairly quiet geomagnetic conditions with a Kp index around 
one or two. 

At the time of writing a small coronal hole has appeared on the Sun's 
equator, which should become geoeffective this weekend. Another polar 
coronal hole is also growing towards the solar equator. This means 
that any solar matter from these holes could impact the Earth some 
time over the weekend or early next week. If it does, expect a 
possible short-lived pre-auroral enhancement followed by a general 
reduction in the MUF as the Kp index rises.

Don't forget that next weekend is the Commonwealth Contest with CW HF 
stations on from Australia, New Zealand and Canada, as well as exotic 
locations such as Mauritius, the Cayman Islands, Belize and the Turks 
and Caicos Islands.


And now the VHF and up propagation news.

March is usually a month of typical spring gales and storms with the 
main Atlantic jet stream across the British Isles. Next week's 
forecast is therefore not unexpected, and the main theme is a very 
changeable one with quite strong winds at times and periods of rain. 
No surprise then, that there is little prospect of high pressure and 
Tropo for the VHF/UHF bands.

What's left is a challenge for microwave operators to seek out some 
rain scatter from fast-moving scatter points in this train of lows 
and fronts crossing the country. 

Also, if you have heavy local rain between you and the QO-100 
satellite, look out for a reduction in signal strength from the 
transponders. This is due to the scattering effect of the water 
droplets causing blockage at the GHz band downlink frequency.   
The strong jet stream will also produce some small opportunity for 
out-of-season Sporadic-E, probably towards the south into Spain or 
Italy. 

Moon declination goes negative on Wednesday so the best peak Moon 
elevation will be in the early half of the week. Tuesday is perigee 
so, with path losses at their lowest, it's still a good week for EME. 
144MHz sky noise is low for the early part of the week but climbs 
slowly, reaching 750K a week today. 

The small Gamma-Normids meteor shower peaks next Saturday, but with a 
zenithal hourly rate of just six, it's nothing to get excited about, 
so keep looking for random meteor scatter QSOs around dawn. 
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.


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