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G4TNU  > NEWS     23.04.23 01:33l 276 Lines 13106 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 23 Apr 2023
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T:From: G4TNU@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO <g4tnu@gb7ipf.ampr.org>
T:Newsgroups: ampr.news.europe
T:Message-Id: <E1_9416700_G4TNU@gb7ipf.ampr.org>

GB2RS Main News for Sunday the 23rd of April 2023

The news headlines:

* RSGB Coronation activities
* RSGB AGM announcements and videos
* RSGB Board Chair

The RSGB is delighted that Ofcom has confirmed that the callsign 
GB23C can be used for the RSGB's Coronation Special Special Event 
Station. Cray Valley Radio Society members led by Bob, M0MCV and 
Dave, G4BUO are organising the flagship amateur radio station that 
will use this callsign from the 3rd to the 8th of May. The Special 
Special Event Station will be in the grounds of the Old Royal Naval 
College, along the riverside in Greenwich. From  the 10th of May 
onwards the callsign will be available for individuals and clubs to 
use until the end of June 2023, and further details about this will 
be announced shortly. Ofcom has also kindly agreed to a block of 676 
Special Special Event Station callsigns for the RSGB's Beaconnect 
activity for the Coronation. These are GB23BAA to BZZ, which will be 
available throughout May and June. More details on how to obtain one 
of these will be given next week, but meanwhile you may wish to find 
a beacon site you could activate one or more times for this event. 
Finally, if you are planning outreach activities with local clubs and 
groups, take a look at the paper circuit template the RSGB has just 
shared on its website – go to rsgb.org/coronation and choose the 
coronation activity ideas tab in the right-hand menu. 

The RSGB's AGM was held online last Saturday, the 15th of April. If 
you missed the live event, you can see the results of the elections 
and follow links to the trophy awards and the construction 
competition winners on the RSGB website via rsgb.org/agm. You can 
also catch up on the full livestream or watch individual sections on 
the Society's YouTube channel. The RSGB has released separate videos 
of the outgoing President's review of 2022, its new short Convention 
promo, and the interesting presentation about preparing the GB2RS 
propagation reports by the RSGB Propagation Studies Committee Chair, 
Steve Nichols, G0KYA. You can see them all in the RSGB 2023 AGM 
playlist on YouTube via youtube.com/theRSGB  

Following the RSGB AGM on Saturday the 15th of April, a brief Board 
meeting was held to consider necessary appointments. The Board was 
aware that Stewart Bryant, G3YSX, who had been in a dual role since 
the recent resignation of Richard Horton, G4AOJ, had expressed a 
willingness to continue as Chair if required. It was agreed that 
Stewart should be co-opted to the Board under the terms of Article 37 
and was asked to join the meeting. Stewart was then elected 
unanimously to serve as RSGB Board Chair until the 2024 AGM.

A reminder now that SOS Radio Week 2023 starts at midnight on the 1st 
of May and concludes at midnight on the 31st of May. It is an 
opportunity to support the many voluntary organisations in the 
British Isles whose members volunteer to save the lives of others at 
risk around the many miles of its coastline, and out at sea. These 
organisations include the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, the 
National Coastwatch Association and the numerous independent lifeboat 
and coastal rescue groups. Individual amateur radio operators and 
clubs are invited to register to become an official SOS Radio Week 
station and operate under their own callsign, their club's or a 
special event callsign to raise awareness of the great work these 
volunteers perform. Awards are available for registered stations that 
make the most contacts on each of the 160m to 70cm bands and using 
various modes. Registration is now open and further details can be 
found at sosradioweek.org.uk


And now for details of rallies and events 

The Northern Amateur Radio Societies Association Rally, also known as 
both the ‘NARSA Rally' and the ‘Blackpool Rally', is taking place 
today, Sunday the 23rd. The venue is Norbreck Castle Exhibition 
Centre, Blackpool FY2 9AA. For more details contact Dave, M0OBW on 
01270 761 608, email dwilson<at>btinternet.com or visit narsa.org.uk

Ripon Radio Rally will take place next Sunday, the 30th of April. 
The venue will be Hugh Ripley Hall, Ripon, North Yorkshire, HG4 2PT. 
Traders can gain access from 7am and tables are GBP 12 each. Doors 
open to the public from 10am and entrance is GBP 3 per person. For 
more information and directions visit: g4sjm.co.uk

Thorpe Camp Hamfest will take place on Sunday the 7th of May. The 
venue will be Thorpe Camp Visitor Centre and the entrance fee will be 
GBP 4 per person. Traders should arrive from 7am. The rally will take 
place from 9am to 1pm. Hot food and drinks will be available on site. 
For more information phone Sylvia or Anthony on 07956 654 481.

Dartmoor Radio Rally will take place on Sunday the 7th of May at 
Yelverton War Memorial Hall, Meavy Lane, Yelverton, Devon, PL20 6AL. 
There will be the usual bring and buy, trader stands, refreshments 
and free parking available. Doors open at 10am and admission is 
GBP 2.50. For more information contact Roger by phone 
on 07854 088 882 or email via 2e0rph<at>gmail.com

 
Now the Special Event News

Special callsign 5P0WARD will be active from Denmark until Tuesday 
the 25th of April in celebration of World Amateur Radio Day. QSL via 
Club Log's OQRS, Logbook of the World, eQSL, or via OZ1ACB. 

Also celebrating World Amateur Radio Day, special event station 
OT23WARD will be active from various locations in Belgium until the 
30th of April. QSL via Club Log's OQRS, Logbook of the World and 
eQSL. A certificate will be available. For more information visit 
QRZ.com

Polydoros, SV1AHH is using special callsign SX50AHH to mark 50 years 
of being involved with amateur radio. Operating from Greece, the 
callsign will be active until Friday the 28th of April. He will be 
active on the 160 to 10m bands using CW, SSB, FT8, FT4 and RTTY. His 
logs will be uploaded to eQSL, Logbook of the World and Club Log. 
Paper cards will not be available.

Special callsign 3A8AB is operating from Monaco until Sunday the 30th 
of April. The station is active to commemorate the 100th anniversary 
of the first transatlantic amateur two-way contact between Leon 
Deloy, F8AB and Fred Schnell, 1MO in 1923. QSL via Logbook of the 
World.


Now the DX news

Look out for Paul, VP9KF who is active from Baileys Bay, Bermuda, 
NA-005, until Wednesday the 26th of April. He operates CW only. QSL 
direct to Paul's address which you can view via his QRZ.com page.

Sands, VK4WXW has been on Willis Island, OC-007, since October, and 
will remain there until the end of April 2023. He works at the 
Australian Bureau of Meteorology's weather monitoring station on the 
island, and in his spare time he is QRV as VK9WX.

The T30UN operation from West Kiribati [KI-REE-BAS], OC-017, is 
expected to be active until the second week of May. Operators plan to 
be available on the 160 to 6m bands with one CW station, one SSB 
station and seven FT8 stations. It will be possible to see two FT8 
stations on the same band, at the same time, on different 
frequencies. QSL via Club Log's OQRS.


Now the contest news

The SP DX RTTY Contest ends its 24-hour run at 1200UTC today, Sunday 
the 23rd of April. Using RTTY on the 80 to 10m bands, where contests 
are permitted, the exchange is signal report and serial number. 
Polish stations send their province code.

Today, Sunday the 23rd of April, The British Amateur Radio Teledata 
Group Sprint 75 Contest runs from 1700 to 2100UTC. Using 75 Baud RTTY 
on the 80 to 10m bands, where contests are permitted, the exchange is 
serial number.

On Monday the 24th of April, the FT4 Series Contest runs from 1900 to 
2030UTC. Using FT4 on the 80, 40 and 20m bands, the exchange is your 
report.

On Tuesday the 25th of April, the SHF UK Activity Contest runs from 
1830 to 2130UTC. Using all modes on the 2.3GHz band, the exchange is 
signal report, serial number and locator.

On Wednesday the 26th of April, the UK and Ireland Contest Club 80m 
Contest runs from 2000 to 2100UTC. Using CW on the 80m band, the 
exchange is your six-character locator.

On Thursday the 27th of April, the 80m Club Championship runs from 
1900 to 2030UTC. Using PSK63 and RTTY on the 80m band, the exchange 
is signal report and serial number.

Next Saturday, the 29th, the UK and Ireland Contest Club DX CW 
Contest begins at 1200UTC and runs for 24 hours. Using CW on the 80 
to 10m bands, where contests are permitted, the exchange is signal 
report and serial number. UK and Ireland stations also send their 
District Code.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA, and G4BAO 
on Thursday the 20th of April 2023

We had a surge in sunspot activity over the last week, pushing the 
solar flux index up to a maximum of 178, although it subsequently 
declined to 147.

Solar flare activity was quite subdued after a frantic period from 
the 13th to the 15th that saw 40 C-class flares and two M-class 
flares erupt.

This activity was mostly centred around active region 3282 in the 
northwest quadrant.

Geomagnetic conditions were unsettled for a time around the 18th and 
19th with the Kp index hitting a maximum of 4.3. This appears to have 
been due to enhanced activity from a coronal mass ejection and 
continuing coronal hole activity that saw the solar wind speed hit 
more than 600km/s and the Bz swing south.

The critical frequency was down below 7MHz on the morning of 
Wednesday the 19th, which impacted near-vertical incidence skywave 
signals around the UK.

This impacted maximum useable frequencies, which struggled to exceed 
21MHz over a 3,000km path on Wednesday, although by Thursday they 
were back over 28MHz again. A critical frequency of more than 10MHz 
meant the 40m band was once again suitable for close-in contacts 
around the UK.

There were many reports of DX being worked later on during the week, 
with Australia and New Zealand topping the bill on 18MHz and 28MHz.

Next week NOAA has put a more positive spin on sunspot activity. The 
Solar Flux Index is predicted to be in the range of 168 to 172 for 
the first half of the week, falling to around 160 in the second half.

But we could be in for a bumpy ride geomagnetically, with the Kp 
index predicted to hit five on Wednesday the 26th of April through to 
Monday the 1st of May. This may be due to the return of solar 
phenomena that occurred 27 days ago and saw the Kp index get up to 
4.67.

Meanwhile, a very large solar coronal hole, albeit positioned very 
south on the Sun's surface, and a much smaller one on its equator, 
threaten HF conditions this weekend. 

Keep an eye on the real-time solar wind from the ACE spacecraft for 
signs of a rise in speed and a southward-pointing Bz interplanetary 
magnetic field on solarham.net  This could push to Kp index higher, 
perhaps to four.


And now the VHF and up propagation news

The Sporadic-E season is nearly upon us. Remember it will usually 
activate on 28MHz and then higher bands will follow if the event 
intensifies. There have been some 50MHz FT8 paths flagged up on 
DXmaps.com, although some may have been tropo. 

The recent large high pressure centred over Scandinavia has been a 
bit subdued as regards Tropo. Much of the time, the air nearer the 
surface has been fairly dry with little sign of banks of sea fog over 
the North Sea, which would suggest better ducting potential.

We are now entering a phase with low pressure on the charts, 
initially over the south of Britain, but edging north for a time 
before drifting out across the North Sea. This could produce some
rain scatter on the GHz bands, especially should any heavy April 
showers develop.

Early next week a ridge will edge south across the UK in a colder 
northerly weather pattern, so although high pressure returns, it may 
not be especially good for tropo.

The third changeover comes after midweek when a milder south-westerly 
returns with active fronts bringing rain and unsettled weather, 
especially to the north and west. This could mean further 
opportunities for rain scatter on the GHz bands and perhaps a hint of 
tropo in the Southeast towards the continent.

Aurora and meteor scatter are well worth considering, and the Lyrids 
shower peaks on Sunday the 23rd. The message is to monitor meteor 
scatter frequencies and the clusters for signs of activity and, of 
course, try putting out a CQ call!

Moon declination is positive and rising, meaning increasing Moon time 
and increasing peak elevation until peak declination on Tuesday. Moon 
apogee is next Friday so path losses increase all week.
144MHz sky noise is moderate to low. 

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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