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VK7AX  > VKNEWS   15.06.13 03:24l 817 Lines 28901 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: WIANEWS - JUNE 16 - VK National News
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To  : VKNEWS@WW


Weekly news from the WIA:
MP3 edition of news available at: http://www.wia-files.com/podcast/wianews-2013-06-16.mp3 
Text edition:

 
WIANEWS - JUNE 16 - VK NATIONAL NEWS
 

 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 THE BEST NEWS YOU'LL GET ALL WEEK

 Oh... and to contact us with your news because
 If It Matters To You It Matters To Us!

 Email nationalnews(at)wia.org.au 

 http://www.wia.org.au   (click news in member area) Submit your audio news 

 TWITTER http://twitter.com/VK1WIA

 Please... If you are only submitting text and not audio, write your story as
 you would expect to hear it being read back and NEVER send just links &
 url's. When you upload audio email us the txt version. 
 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 WIANEWS WEEK COMMENCING JUNE 16 2013.  
  
 WIA GO TO MEETING

 WIA QSL BUREAU ADDRESS CHANGE.

 WIA CONTEST WINTER VHF-UHF FIELD DAY

 THESE STORIES AND MORE IN THIS EDITION OF NEWS FROM THE WIRELESS INSTITUTE
 OF AUSTRALIA FOR WEEK COMMENCING JUNE 16 2013. 
 

 RSGB Centenary Day July 5

 The RSGB Patron, HRH The Duke of Edinburgh is indisposed and, as a result,
 will not be able to be present on the Society's Centenary Day.

 Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire, Sir Henry Aubrey-Fletcher,
 Bt JP has kindly agreed to officiate in his stead.   


 WIA BOARD TALK
        
 As we mentioned on last weeks news the new WIA board has been formed.

 News in this week is that the new WIA board has scheduled it's first
 board meeting to take place next week using an online video conference
 technology known as "Go To Meeting".

 WIA director Robert Broomhead VK3DN said this week, that being able to have
 regular monthly meetings using video conference technology will help to
 improve communications between the various board members as well as reducing
 costs to the WIA associated with holding face to face meetings.

 At it's first meeting the WIA board will formally elect its President and
 Vice President and will be discussing a number of important matters including
 progress on the ACMA's evaluation of the high power trial.



 QSL BUREAU

 Check out the new address for the QSL bureau, it's on wia.org.au

 OUTWARDS bureau mailing address is now. PO BOX 66 Boolaroo NSW 2284.


 HAMS ACROSS AUSTRALIA. 
   
 Community broadcasters with spurious signals

 An Australian and Communications Authority (ACMA) audit of FM community radio
 transmit sites found 28 per cent of them sending out spurious emissions along
 with the allocated frequency.

 A significant number of those transmitters were emitting into the
 aeronautical radiocommunication band of 108-136 MHz.

 The ACMA says this could potentially cause interference to this nearby
 aviation band and to the safety of aircraft.

 It wants community broadcasters to maintain clean signals on air.

 Most problems are fixed by the use of antenna filters that limit the emission
 of unwanted spurious signals.

 ACMA have identified some simple ways to check the health of radio
 transmissions:

 Are there any changes in transmitter meter readings?
 Is the transmitting equipment overheating?
 Is there a change in transmitter power levels?
 Is there any damage or deterioration to the antenna or antenna cable?

 Spurious emissions are easily detected with a spectrum analyser. This means
 that an assessment by a technical expert is often the most effective method
 of identifying spurious emissions. Using a “scanningö type receiver across
 the aeronautical band may give an indication of spurious emissions.
 
 Licensees or operators of community based radio broadcast services who need
 advice on interference resolution matters can contact the ACMA or Airservices
 Australia via email:

 ACMA – interference@acma.gov.au
 Airservices Australia – interference@airservicesaustralia.com

 (Jim Linton VK3PC/Radio Info)

 (ED:- Of  course I'm sure the 2 community stations that take this WIA National
  News service, namely TANK-FM in Kempsey and Trax FM 105.1 upper Spencer Gulf
  would not fall into this category! HiHi)



 Winter VHF-UHF Field Day

 The Winter VHF-UHF Field Day will be held over the weekend of June 22 and 23.
 
 The Field Day includes sections for portable, home and rover stations, and if
 you prefer you can enter the 6 hour section rather than the full 24 hours.
 
 Full details were published in the May issue of "Amateur Radio" magazine, and
 you can download full details and scoring sheets from the contest web page on
 wia.org.au
 
 (John VK3KM Contest manager)


 VK0

 Moon bounce from Antarctica

 The exploits of Craig Hayhow VK0JJJ in bouncing radio signals off the moon
 from Mawson has been written about in the Australian Antarctic Division
 science newsletter.

 Craig VK0JJJ achieved a 742,000 km hop when he made an EME contact with Peter
 Taylor G8BCG at Cornwall in England, on May 4, at 0720 UTC.

 Two nights later he contacted via 'moon bounce' Bo Nilsson SM7FJE in Sweden.
 He said it seemed now like everybody in Europe and the USA wanted an EME
 contact.

 Now that the equipment and software has been proven a success, more EME
 contacts will be made.
  
 The newsletter hailed it as a first from an Australian Antarctic station.
 Craig VK0JJJ said, "The technical challenges are immense, but with modern
 high speed computers and sophisticated software, it has become a lot easier."
 
 During his recreation period he is also on the HF bands, often causing pile-ups
 with his unique location. 
 
 (Jim Linton VK3PC) 


 VK1   
   
 VI 100 ACT - commemorating the centenary of Canberra, capital of Australia.
              Canberra Region Amateur Radio Club members are activating the
              special event call till 31st Dec. LF through to VHF using
              multiple modes.



 VK3 
 web service:- http://www.amateurradio.com.au/news/     
     
 JUL    14  VK3  GippsTech will be held on Twelve to the 14th of July 2013,
                 at Churchill. Further information vk3bez.org
                 (Nick vK3VFO).


 VK4 - QNEWS  
 Send your stories for news. SCRIPT to qnews@wia.org.au
 send audio to http://www.wia.org.au/members/broadcast/upload/
 
 get local audio news    www.wiaq.org.au/ftp/vk4_qnews_64.mp3  
 get local news emailed  qnews-vk-subscribe@yahoogroups.com   
   
 
 North Queensland Amateur Radio Convention

 The 21st Bi-ennial North Queensland Amateur Radio Convention will be happening
 in Charters Towers from Thursday 3rd to Monday 7th October 2013, with
 primary venue and events happening at the Charters Towers Golf Club
 from afternoon Friday 4th to Sunday afternoon 6th October.

 Displays, Talks, Awards, Raffles, Prizes, a home brew afternoon, some golfing
 combined with ARDF, the Monster Auction and some serious socialising will
 all be a part of the convention proceedings.

 There are some school reunions happening at the same time and motel and cabin
 accommodation is scarce, but can be had if you ring around or head online.

 Book your accommodation now!

 (tarc)


 VK9 
 
 The RSGB tells us that VK3DAC is currently operational as VK9DAC from
 Christmas Island, IOTA reference OC-002.
 He is active on the 10 to 80m bands.



 DISCUSSION POINT  
    
 What use is an f-call? 

 In 2005 there were no F-calls in Australia. Today there are more F-calls than
 Standard licenses. Clearly there is an influx of Amateurs coming from the
 introduction of the Foundation License.

 I know that there are many Amateurs who want F-calls to upgrade their license.
 This is not a new phenomenon. In the past there were Z-calls who were
 encouraged to upgrade their license. I suspect that if I spent enough time
 doing research and talking to Hams who've been around the block, I'll find
 that there are examples going back to the dawn of Amateur Radio.

 In fact, a HAM, i.e., us, is an example of that. In the official world of
 Radio Telegraphy a hundred years ago, us amateurs were not taken seriously as
 a group. Funny to think that today there are still people who distinguish
 themselves from Amateurs by calling themselves Professional.

 My point is this, being encouraged to upgrade or gain skill is nothing new.
 It's been around for over a century and it will continue long after everyone
 listening today has become a silent key.

 Do I want to have a higher license than the one I have? Well, perhaps.

 Right now I'm spending my time learning about anything and everything.
 For me, Amateur Radio is a way to escape from my daily grind as a
 professional in my field and escape to the joy of learning new things.
 Getting a license that is of a higher class is in of itself not an endpoint.

 At the moment I'm learning Morse, I'm learning about Morse keys, figuring out
 how to set my radio up for portable operation in a simpler way than I've been
 doing to date and finding the time to participate in this amazing community.

 Will I always be a Foundation License holder, who knows - I've got a HR truck
 license and have been toying with upgrading it to an MC - but I know plenty
 of people who didn't get more than their car license.

 What you want to get out of Amateur Radio is up to you. There are going to be
 people around you wanting to encourage you to learn, regardless of your
 license, but there will also be those who look down their nose at what they 
 see as a lowly F-call.

 I'm Onno VK6FLAB



 EDUCATION YOUTH AND ADVANCEMENT OF AMATEUR RADIO   
 www.hamcollege.com.au       
 
 RADIO AMATEURS CAN CONTRIBUTE TO SCIENCE

 The ARRL published a new book called Radio Science for the Radio Amateur.

 The 190 page book explores and explains the often profound differences
 between science and technology, and dispels the notion that we know all there
 is to know about radio.

 Using a fresh, playful approach, Author Eric Nichols, KL7AJ, will guide you
 through some of the most fascinating "nooks and crannies" of the radio
 universe. Along the way, you'll find out how solving long-standing mysteries
 of radio, of which there are still many, doesn't require expensive hardware,
 but merely a scientific mind-set and attention to detail.

 (zs news)



 INTERNATIONAL NEWS With thanks to IARU, RSGB, SARL, Southgate AR Club, ARRL, 
 Amateur Radio Newsline, NZART, ARVictoria and the WW sources of the WIA. 
        
 A new radio system being installed at Fort Gordon in the USA should enhance
 emergency communications across the area but is causing mass frustration with
 hundreds of homeowners who have been locked out of their garages because of
 jammed remote-control signals. 

 The confusion started last week when Fort Gordon unexpectedly upgraded its
 land-mobile radios to a 390 megahertz bandwidth, the same frequency used in
 many automatic garage door remotes.

 As a result, nearly 500 residents have called or visited the Overhead Door Co.
 of Augusta to complain about garage doors that fail to open and close on
 command.

 Most complaints have been reported along Gordon Highway, faulty remotes have
 been encountered as far as 15 miles away from Fort Gordon.


 PERCEPTIVE RADIO ADAPTS TO WHERE IT IS

 A radio that is able to change the context of a 
 broadcast depending on where you are and what you 
 are doing, has been demonstrated by the BBC.  The 
 Perceptive Radio, created by Ian Forrester of the 
 corporation's Future Media division, is thought to be a world first.

 For its initial showing the team produced a 
 computer-generated radio drama where the script 
 altered depending on factors such as 
 weather.  This proof-of-concept drama used a 
 computer generated voice for one of the 
 characters and could adapt on the fly according 
 to data pulled from external sources.  For 
 instance, it could make reference to local places 
 which would differ from the script depending on 
 where in the world a listener is.
 
 If you want to read more about this latest in 
 almost senescent computer technology you will 
 find it on the web at tinyurl.com/thinking-radio.


 =============================================================================


 ARNewsLineÖ from various news sources


 LOST MOON DUST FOUND IN STORAGE ON EARTH

 And finally this week, several vials of moon dust 
 brought back to Earth by the first men on the 
 moon have been found inside a lab warehouse in 
 California.  This after sitting in storage 
 unnoticed for more than 40 years.  Amateur Radio 
 Newsline’s Cheryl Lasek, K9BIK, reports:
 
 --
 
 Many of you likely remember those fuzzy live 
 pictures from the moon’s surface when Astronaut 
 Neil Armstrong became the first human being to 
 set foot on an alien world.   We also watched as 
 Armstrong and Apollo 11 crew mate Buzz Aldrin 
 collected samples from the Lunar surface before 
 returning with them to mother Earth.  Now some 
 four decades later a part of the samples that 
 Armstrong and Aldrin brought back with them were 
 recently rediscovered by an archivist who was 
 going over artefacts tucked away at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
 
 Karen Nelson, who made the surprising discovery, 
 said in a statement from the lab that they don't 
 know how or when the samples ended up in 
 storage.  She says that she came across about 20 
 vials with handwritten labels dated "24 July 
 1970," packed in a vacuum-sealed glass jar.
 
 Accompanying the jar was an academic paper 
 published in the Proceedings of the Second Lunar 
 Science Conference in 1971, titled "Study of 
 Carbon Compounds in Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 
 Returned Lunar Samples."  All of the authors of 
 the paper were from the University of California, 
 Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory.  This 
 included Nobel Prize-winning chemist Melvin 
 Calvin, who worked with NASA on efforts to 
 protect the moon from contamination during the 
 first lunar landing, as well as planning on how 
 to protect those on Earth from unknown pathogens 
 that might have been lurking on the Moon’s surface.
 
 It turns out that the moon dust samples were 
 supposed to have been sent back to NASA after the 
 Space Sciences Laboratory team finished their 
 research on them for some unknown reason they instead ended up in storage.
 
 After making the discovery Nelson then got in 
 touch with NASA officials.  They in turn 
 permitted her to open the jar to remove the vials 
 before she returned them to the space agency and 
 making for a happy ending to a 4 decade old story 
 that began on the surface of the Moon.
 
 For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I’m Cheryl Lasek, K9BIK, in Zion, Illinois.
 
 - -

 In all, NASA's moon-walking Apollo astronauts 
 brought 842 pounds of lunar samples back to Earth 
 between 1969 and 1972, and very little of it was 
 thought to be unaccounted for until Nelson’s 
 discovery.  More on this important find is on the 
 Web at tinyurl.com/moon-dust-found



 EMC WORKING GROUP FRIEDRICHSHAFEN MEETING

 The International Amateur Radio Union’s Region 1 
 Electromagnetic Compatibility Working Group has 
 invited its members as well as observers from all 
 national societies to attend the meeting.  This 
 to take place in Friedrichshafen, Germany on Friday, June 28th.

 The meeting will be held from 12:00 to 13:30 
 local time at the same venue as last year. 
 Details of how to find the meeting room can be 
 obtained from the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club or 
 IARU booths in the main convention hall or from 
 the convention’s operations personnel.  More 
 including a group of EMC Working Group members is 
 on line at tinyurl.com/iaru-r1-emc-2013



 OPERATIONAL NEWS - DATELINE

 2013  
  
 WIA Winter VHF-UHF Field Day weekend of June 22 and 23.

 WW International Museums Weekends June 15/16 and 22/23

 160M PHONE & 80/160M CW & DIGITAL TRANS-TASMAN CONTEST: 20 JULY, 8PM-2AM 




 2014

 VK Harry Angel Memorial Sprint May 3 2014



 SPECIAL EVENT STATIONS, DX and BEACON AND NET ADVICE     
     
 QSL BUREAU

 Check out the new address for the QSL bureau, it's on wia.org.au

 OUTWARDS bureau mailing address is now. PO BOX 66 Boolaroo NSW 2284.



 Improved RTTY performance from DXpeditions

 A leading DXer has objectively analysed 36 recent DXpeditions with a total
 of two million contacts, to find only 6.7 per cent of all QSOs were in RTTY.

 Ernie Walls VK3FM, writing in the June edition of the WIA journal, Amateur
 Radio magazine, is in praise of the good job done by DXpeditions activating
 far flung DX entities.

 However, while most DXpeditions prepare well to service the CW and SSB demands
 by having good operators, they miss the boat when it comes to RTTY.

 He said the mode was arguably the fastest growing on the bands and those
 using it deserved better from DXpeditions. 
 
 Ernie VK3FM claimed that in general DXpeditions don't maximise the mode,
 place enough resources behind it, and quite often leave it to relatively
 inexperienced and sometimes those apparently not terribly interested in RTTY.
 
 Only two out the 35 DXpeditions surveyed produced a RTTY ratio above 15 per
 cent, which Ernie VK3FM suggests indicates the current demand.

 He believed it was time that every well planned DXpedition select a skilled
 RTTY expert to give it the best shot, rather than leaving RTTY as an afterthought.

 The full story "Can a 'small pistol' station offer useful advice to a 'big
 gun' DXpedition? ‘can be read on pages 32 and 33 of the magazine.

 (Jim Linton VK3PC) 



 The VU 7 KV Lakshadweep Islands operation last month has been approved for

 DXCC credit.   If anyone had this contact rejected in a recent submission
 send an e-mail to bmoore@arrl.org to be placed on the list for an update
 to your record.



 F 5 SWB is on the air as TU 5 DF from the Ivory Coast through to October.
 Activity on all of the High Frequency bands.
 QSL via F 5 SWB.



 BROADCAST  MONITORING SWL AND SCANNER NEWS    
 
 BBC World Service has confirmed that MW transmissions to Israel and other
 parts of the Middle East have resumed for 10hrs per day on 1323kHz.
 
 This gives listeners breakfast listening and then drive-time and evening 
 coverage from about 4pm to 10pm. 

 Steve Titherington, World Service Commissioning Editor, says:
 “We had a huge response to the end of MW transmissions in Israel
 and we are responding positively to listeners’ demands for a return
 to of the BBC broadcasts." 



 INTRUDER WATCH - ENFORCEMENT ZONE

 Region III IARUMS Coordinator Peter Young VK3MV  

 VK IARUMS reflector email to subscribe intruders@wia.org.au

 INTRUDER NETS
 Friday 0730 UTC 7.065.5 with VK4CEU David.  


 Amateur exclusive frequencies where any non-amateur signal is definitely an
 intruder.

 Amateur HF Spectrum world wide
  7.050 to  7.100
 14.000 to 14.250
 14.250 to 14.350 No broadcasters
 21.000 to 21.450
 24.890 to 24.990
 28.000 to 29.700
   
 IARU Monitoring System Newsletter

 The latest newsletter reports a UK military STANAG 4285 station, which is
 believed to be in Norwich, has been on 14236.8 kHz.

 Also in the newsletter Mario DG0JBJ reported during May no less than 11 Over
 The Horizon (OTH) radars on 20 m, 65 OTH radars on 15 m and 30 OTH radars on
 10 m, not including the numerous jumping Iranian OTH radars.

 Read the International Amateur Radio Union Monitoring System (IARUMS)
 Region 1 May 2013 newsletter at

 http://www.iarums-r1.org/iarums/news2013/news1305.pdf



 Now to awards and again this week thanks to Ray VK4CF it's to another of 
 Brisbanes Redcliffe Clubs Award.

 Last week I outlined the VK9 award, one of 3 awards that are sponsored by the
 Redcliffe club.  

 This week I will outline the TOWBAR award.

 The TOWBAR award is an armchair tour around Australia by amateur radio,
 making progressive contacts as you go. The award can be completed, by using
 any or all bands and all modes including Echolink.
  
 Short wave listeners are eligible to participate in this award and to qualify 
 their log must include of the callsigns of both stations claimed.

 To complete this award requires contact with amateur radio stations located
 in 19 cities and towns around Australia. The FIRST and FINAL contacts are
 deemed to the Redcliffe checkpoint regardless of the participant's QTH and
 this contact must be a member of the Redcliffe and District Radio Club.

 Amateur radio stations must be contacted in the following CITIES and TOWNS in
 order: REDCLIFFE; BRISBANE; GOLD COAST; LISMORE; SYDNEY; CANBERRA; MELBOURNE;
 HOBART; ADELAIDE; PERTH; DARWIN; MOUNT ISA; CAIRNS; TOWNSVILLE; MACKAY;
 ROCKHAMPTON; BUNDABERG; MARYBOROUGH, SUNSHINE COAST & REDCLIFFE. (N.B. For 
 Sydney and the other major cities, all amateur stations in the greater
 metropolitan area of the city, are included as the major city).
 Your tour may be run in either direction, i.e. Redcliffe south towards Sydney
 or Redcliffe north towards Townsville but the progress must be in order from
 the cities and towns listed above.

 The application for this award should be accompanied by a certified log
 extract, signed by 2 other licensed amateurs showing date, time, frequency,
 call sign and location of stations worked.

 Fill out the log, get it signed by two licensed amateurs, enclose either
 $A 10.00 or 10 IRC, and send to THE AWARDS MANAGER, REDCLIFFE and Districts
 Amateur RADIO CLUB, PO BOX 20 WOODY POINT QLD 4019, AUSTRALIA or email it to
 the clubs website http://www.redclifferadioclub.org.au or just type in
 Redcliffe radio club into your search engine for all the details.



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- ARDF
 WIA ARDF COORDINATOR VK3WWW  Jack vk3www@wia.org.au
 http://users.mackay.net.au/~ron/
 http://www.homingin.com
 http://www.ardf.org.au 
        
 ARDF event in Mongolia

 JT 1 CS reports the Mongolian Radio Sport Federation has organized the first
 ARDF event of 2013.

 "Spring Leader" ARDF 144MHz was for young and new ARDFers.

 Taking part in the event were 32 male and female contestants with 9 referees.

 They are training new and older ARDFers between Events. This year they are
 planning to send several ARDFers to S. Korea for Championship this September.

 (sourced to SouthGate)



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- FINAL FRONTIER    
 
 HAMTV FROM THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION

 The frequencies of 2422.0 MHz and 2437.0 MHz have 
 been announced for a new ham radio Digital TV 
 transmitter that will operate as an educational 
 adjunct from the International Space Station.

 The main mission of what’s being called Ham TV is 
 to perform school contacts between the astronauts 
 on-board ISS and educational institutions on the 
 ground.

 This by providing space station to ground video within ARISS program.

 To accomplish this, the ISS will host a new 
 S-Band video transmitting station in addition to 
 the existing VHF FM ham band transceiver. 
 The  new equipment will have the ability to 
 transmit images from orbit during the school 
 contacts.  It will also be able to broadcast 
 other pre-recorded video images up to 24 hours a 
 day to allow ground stations tuning. More 
 information on this new on-orbit service is on 
 the Web at tinyurl.com/iss-dtv

 (ARNewsLine)



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- INTERNET --- THE HAMS DOMAIN     
 TWITTER http://twitter.com/VK1WIA
 www.HamRadioNation.com  
  
 Happy Birthday the PDF file format. 

 The original PDF file format version 1.0 was born 15th June 1993 20 years ago,
 a creative new document solution was born. Its name was Portable Document
 Format, commonly known as PDF, and it changed the world forever.

 Thanks to PDF, we now live in a world where printing is a choice, not a
 requirement; where we can securely sign and send a document instantaneously,
 not by mail; and where we can collaborate with peers without using a red pen.

 For more see
 http://www.prepressure.com/pdf/basics/history

 (Robert Broomhead)



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- IOTA
 http://rsgbiota.org     
 
 Canadian arctic Iota’s to be activated 

 Mike, VE 2 XB, currently active from the Canadian High Arctic IOTA
 Dorset Island (NA-156) as VY 0 BRR (he states - It's FREEZING), is planning
 to activate other very rare IOTAs within the Region of Nunavut. 

 His QTH is Cape Dorset, an Inuit hamlet located on Dorset Island near
 Foxe Peninsula at the southern tip of Baffin Island.
 
 Mike is looking to travel to other places in Nunavut, and will activate
 some very rare IOTAs including: Coral Harbour, Southampton Island (NA-007), 
 Belcher Islands (NA-196) to name but a few.
 
 He also adds, "Maybe I will travel to some rare IOTAs in the Northwest
 Territories or NWT to the West...and maybe to Yukon too. (Vy1)."
 
 Also whilst in the region listen up for CK 3 C  commemorating the
 100th anniversary of the Canadian Arctic Expedition 1913-1916 on until July .



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- QRP and WEAK SIGNAL COMMUNICATION
 
 WORLD QRP DAY 

 On Monday 17 June, it is World QRP Day. Switch off the amplifier, turn down 
 the power on your rig and try QRP power. How many kilometres per watt can you
 achieve. You will be amazed at what you can achieve with QRP.



 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- RESCUE RADIO 
 
 Today Sunday 16 June is the TOWSA Strand Swim a qualifying event for the
 Maggie Island to Townsville Swim happening in July.

 Even now you may be of help if you take your handheld radio and a supply of
 batteries for 5 hours of operating portable at the award winning Strand
 precinct.
 
 Maybe if you are in the region sing out on the RAT to seee if you can help.

 (sourced to tarc)



 SOCIAL SCENE


 JUL 12-14  VK3  GippsTech will be at Churchill. Information vk3bez.org
             
 JUL    20  VK3  Gippsland Gate Radio & Electronics Club Hamfest

 JUL    20  VK4  Caboolture Hamfest 9am  

 JUL    28  VK2  Albury Wodonga Amateur Radio Club Hamfest 10AM

 AUG    11  VK2  SARCFEST 414 Richmond Hill Rd near Lismore   

 AUG 17-18   WW  ILLW 

 Register now for the ILLW

 Australia and Germany have by far the most registrations so far in this year
 s International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend in August - just nine weeks
 away.

 Up there also is a strong representation from the USA, England and Argentina.
 With 260 registrations from 30 countries, attention is now focussed on who
 will grab the coveted 300th spot.

 The International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend on August the 17th and
 18th sees radio amateurs go portable from lighthouses, lightship and marine
 beacons.

 For more information or to register visit the website at www.illw.net
 
 (Jim Linton VK3PC)


 Oct  3- 7  VK4  North Queensland Amateur Radio Convention Charters Towers
 
 NOV     2  VK4  Gold Coast ARS HamFest at Albert Waterways Hall.

 NOV     3  VK5  HamFest Adelaide Hills Amateur Radio Society  Goodwood. 

 NOV 15-17  VK3  Victorian National Parks Weekend

 Nov    24  VK3  Southern Peninsula Amateur Radio Club: Rosebud RadioFest 



 Submitting news items

 If you would like to submit news items for inclusion in the
 VK1WIA broadcasts, please email your item in text to nationalnews@wia.org.au 

 to submit audio read "how to submit items" in the weekly news page on
 wia.org.au 

 Remember the sooner you submit material the more the likelihood of it being
 broadcast in the very next edition of WIA National News. Each item will only
 be broadcast once, if you want a couple of mentions, please submit different
 slants to keep your event 'fresh ‘and always if the news room is to read your
 item write in the 3rd person.
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  
  
 =============================================================================
		
 WIANews - we've reported...YOU decide.

 TWITTER http://twitter.com/VK1WIA

 Societies and Club News Letter Editors can EXCHANGE a feed prior to
 the actual broadcast date, e-mail nationalnews(at)wia.org.au

 Call-backs follow the RF editions, but also for text readers you may
 lodge a quick reply to let us know you read it, who knows, you might
 even get a "cheerio call".


 Thanks to our dedicated band of broadcast volunteers who utilize
 their time and equipment in bringing you this weekly broadcast.

 The purpose of "WIANews" is to rapidly provide news of interest to
 active amateurs residing in Australia and the globe. 

 We strongly encourage membership in the Wireless Institute of Australia
 and participation in the activities of local clubs. Opinions expressed in
 "WIANews" are those of the writers who submit material and do not necessarily
 reflect those of the rebroadcasters, nor the National WIA, but are broadcast
 in the spirit in which they were submitted." 

 Material may be reproduced in whole or in part, in any form, a credit to
 WIANews wouldn't go astray... 

 Compiled by VK4BB on behalf of the National WIA.


 -------------

_______________________________________________



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