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VK7AX  > NEWS     29.11.08 13:20l 847 Lines 29373 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: WIANEWS - Nov 30 - VK NATIONAL NEWS
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 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 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


 Please.. write your story as you would expect to hear it being read back
 do NOT send us links and url’s!!

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



 This is WIANEWS for week commencing Nov 30  2008 
 
 At the annual gala dinner of the Australian Radio Communications Industry
 Association held at the Melbourne Telstra Dome in front of over 500 people,
 Peter Young VK3MV, a WIA Director, was awarded the Jonathon Livingstone
 Seagull Award and Perpetual Trophy in recognition of his contribution to the
 radio industry in Australia. 

 The concept of the Jonathon Livingstone Seagull award is to recognise someone
 who has learned more and risen above what would normally be expected of them
 in their usual role in the Industry, and then contributed back to the
 industry in a way that doesn’t necessarily relate to their own direct 
 benefit. This could be through additional training, encouragement of other
 people to benefit themselves, a contribution that is to the benefit of the
 community, either as a whole in the context of the radio industry, or perhaps
 within their own local community in smaller areas. 

 The WIA congratulates Peter on this industry recognition, and again
 acknowledges his contribution to the Australian Amateur Radio community in
 his capacity as a Director on the WIA Board. 

 A more detailed report will be featured in a future edition of Amateur Radio
 magazine. 





 Local Political Action By Clubs Necessary to Avoid NSW Crown Land Rental Fees

 In 2005 the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) undertook a
 review of rental agreements for NSW Crown Land communications sites. One of
 the recommendations was to standardise the rental agreements for occupiers
 of Crown land and to introduce a standardised fee schedule.
 
 The NSW Government accepted this recommendation and categorised Crown Land
 communications site users into nine categories, from television broadcasters
 paying $30,000 per-year per-site, down to community organisations, such as
 amateur radio clubs maintaining repeaters, paying $100 per-year per-site. 
 However, as the NSW Crown Lands act specifies a minimum site rental of $350,
 the fee for community organisations was set at $350 indexed for CPI from
 2004, or $396.00 in 2008. 

 Several months ago the NSW Department of Lands wrote to amateur radio clubs
 who maintain communications facilities on Crown Land. The clubs were provided
 with a contract to sign at quite short notice, virtually as a
 "fait accompli."

 Some radio clubs welcome the opportunity to enter into the agreement which
 formalises their occupancy, and provides long secure tenure for their 
 repeater site.
 
 Other clubs, especially smaller clubs or clubs with several repeater sites,
 determined that they would be unable to afford the fee and would need to
 close or relocate their repeater facilities to less favourable locations.

 In August this year the WIA wrote to the Director General of the NSW
 Dept of Lands asking for special consideration for small amateur radio clubs
 based on their inability to pay the rental fees, and suggesting that small
 clubs in rural areas should be exempt from the need to enter into the rental
 agreement.

 In November the Director General replied to the WIA advising that the
 licence agreements were drafted to ensure appropriate use management
 of Crown Land sites, and also that rents cannot be reduced below the minimum
 rent provisions. 

 This leaves some rural amateur radio clubs in a very difficult position, as
 it must also do to rural CB radio clubs who maintain UHF repeater facilities
 so important for rural landholders and travellers.

 The current situation is that every amateur radio club maintaining
 communications facilities on NSW Crown Land is now required to enter into
 a rental agreement with the Department, and pay $396 per site per year,
 CPI indexed.

 The WIA is of the opinion that further action needs to be mounted in the
 political arena and that such action should be local and by the affected
 club.  Affected clubs, together with any affected local CB radio
 organisation, should lobby their local State member of parliament,
 preferably in a face-to-face meeting, providing background information
 showing how the club is affected. Follow up letters should also be sent to
 members of parliament.

 Clubs may also apply for a government grant, as there is considerable scope
 in the sorts of grants provided. Clubs may also seek support from local
 newspapers and community radio stations.

 The WIA is able to provide materials and advice to clubs that wish to take
 this issue further.

 The WIA’s letter to the Director General of the NSW Dept of Lands, and the
 Departments reply is posted in the news section of the WIA website at
 www.wia.org.au

 (Phil Wait, VK2DKN for the WIA)





 HAMS ACROSS AUSTRALIA. 

 VK2    
 web service:-  http://www.arnsw.org.au/html/news_vk2wi.htm   
 VKG Roundup    http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news 
     
 
 SUMMERLAND CLUBROOM TOWER WORK CONTINUES.

 Additional stays and base reconstruction has been done on the tower.
 This and other work continues as time permits by a few of the members.

 SARC CHRISTMAS PARTY,  SUNDAY 7 DECEMBER.

 All invited to the Clubrooms for this day, come along.

 The usual BBQ lunch provided plus extras brought along.

 Please bring along a plate of extra nicies for the table to add variety.
 Requested that children's presents don't exceed about $20 ea in value





 VK3 
 web service:-  http://www.amateurradio.com.au/news/      
 VKC Roundup    http://www.police 
  
 Peter Freeman VK3KAI advises that the Eastern Zone ARC will again be
 hosting GippsTech.

 11 July for 2 days will see GIPPSTECH 2009 in full operation.
 
 This Annual GippsTech technical conference services VHF, UHF & microwave
 devotees and is a friendly get together for all who are interested in weak
 signal VHF,UHF and microwave communications.

 Conference registration includes barbecue lunch Saturday and Sunday, an
 optional conference dinner Saturday night and a social meal Friday evening.

 More detail at www.vk3bez.org 





 VK4    
 web service local news:-   www.wiaq.com/qnews/upload/qnewsbcast.htm
 local news email qnews-vk-subscribe(AT)yahoogroups.com  
 VKR Roundup  http://www.police.qld.gov.au/News+and+Alerts/Media+Releases/
     
  
 Remember the Christmas Party at the Gold Coast Club house is on the 13th
 December and those who have not made a booking yet check with Pam VK4PTO
 and see if there is a place still available for you.

 And further north Christmas came early in Townsville thanks to ACMA.

 Some VK4 hams were lucky enough to get some bargains at a recent Pickles
 auction – the radios and test equipment came from the ACMA field tech offices
 in Cairns Townsville and Rockhampton which are all closing at the end of this
 year.

 All technical operations for Northern Australia will be conducted from the
 Brisbane office.

 This ends a manned presence for Radio Inspectors in the North that was 
 maintained for many years.

 Northern VK4 area, your nearest point of contact for the ACMA is now on
 telephone 1300 850 115.





 VK5  
 www.qsl.net/vk5bar/    

 AS-LAN #10 takes place in Adelaide 27th of December from 10am!
 AS-LAN (Air-Stream LAN) is a lanning event for gaming fun and also to
 promote the presence of the Air Stream wireless community in the Northern
 suburbs of Adelaide.
 As usual AS-LAN is being held at the Mawson Centre from 10am until 10pm.
 That's 12 hours of lanning goodness all for the small cost of $10 payable
 at the door!





 EDUCATION YOUTH AND ADVANCEMENT OF AMATEUR RADIO   
 www.hamcollege.com.au

 REAST have another new Foundation Licensee who has passed his assessment
 and a new Advanced Licensee.
 Congratulations to Paul and Len and we look forward to hearing you on the
 airways with your new callsigns.

 If you are interested in attending a foundation licence course or an
 assessment for any licence in the Hobart area then please let Reg VK7KK
 on mobile: 0417 391 607 now.

 or email: regemm(AT)ozemail.com.au




 In Melbourne and want to become a radio amateur, learn something new.
 Enter an exciting communications hobby through the foundation licence.
 Next course after this weekend along with assessments will be December 13-14.
 For inquiries, to enrol or obtain the Foundation licence manual for $26.00.
 Contact Barry Robinson VK3PV 0428 516 001 




 Canberra region have run another of their Foundation Licence courses with 3
 attendees, all of whom passed their exams and practical tests.
 They also had people sit the Standard & the Advanced Theory and Regulations
 papers and Alan VK1WX is glad to report that everyone passed what ever they
 attempted.
 
 Congratulations to:-

 Foundation Licensees;  Allan Williams,  Adam Longworth and Rachel Barnicoat
 Standard Licensee (upgrade);  Steve Sahariv. 
 Advanced Licensee (new Amateur);  Ian Bennett.
 
 While on the subject of Licence assessments C.R.A.R.C. are in desperate need
 of additional Learning Facilitators.
 
 The learning facilitators task is to assist the WIA assessors run the
 assessments by Checking forms are correctly filled in, Supervise the conduct
 of written assessment papers and assist the WIA assessor to conduct
 practical assessments.
 
 If you are interested contact Alan Hawes VK1WX Education Officer 6258 2568
 committe(AT)crarc.ampr.org




 HAM COLLEGE VK6

 Ham College is looking to finalise numbers for the Standard Course for
 2009 - anyone interested in attending the Standard Course run Tuesday nights
 starting from early February should email their interest via the contact
 page at www.hamcollege.com.au
 or you can phone Kylea on 0412 704 226 for more information. 





 Discussion Point - The hidden costs of repeaters

 Increased site rental charges for amateur repeaters are forcing clubs to
 consider whether to pay more, relocate or close repeaters.

 The days of using simple gear for a repeaters are quickly ending.
 Increasingly site owners demand modern commercial specification transceivers.

 This is to avoid interference but also increases rack mount capacity so
 more paying customers can be accommodated. 

 Diplexers, splitters, filters and other plumbing, power bills and licence
 fees also add to the cost. 

 Antenna work almost universally needs a fully insured qualified rigger
 that charges thousands of dollars a time. 

 Whether it’s an analogue FM or the latest D-STAR repeater, they seem to get
 minimal use.

 Should there be some repeater rationalisation in both the heavily populated
 regions and country areas? 

 Are those repeater and beacon users who expect a high level of service
 and reliability aware, or give much thought to, the enormous financial
 costs and volunteer man-hours involved? 

 I’m Barry Robinson VK3PV and you’re listening to VK1WIA.




 INTERNATIONAL NEWS With thanks to RSGB, Southgate AR Club, the ARRL, 
 Amateur Radio Newsline, NZART and the WW sources of the WIA.   
 
 The following from AAP News courtesy Michael VK2ZEN and Barry VK2BZ both
 Westlake’s members

 Pirates thwarted with MP 3 blast. 

 A British firm is spearheading  use of a high-tech "sonic laser" to beat
 bandits on the high seas.
 
 The piracy problems of shipping firms running through the Gulf of Aden and
 down Africa's east coast have been thrown into the spotlight by the seizure
 of the Saudi Arabian super-tanker Sirius Star.
 
 Help could be at hand in the form of a long range acoustic device (LRAD),
 hooked up to a humble MP3 player. 

 About the size of a domestic satellite dish, LRADs blast the target with a
 precise beam of sound, warning messages, noise or sirens which can be tuned
 to excruciatingly painful levels should an attacker get too close.
 
 It's very effective up to 1,000 metres and excruciating if you  get within
 100 or 200 metres. At full power it would result in permanent hearing damage.
 
 It has been tested in an actual attack and the pirates were driven off.  

 In a moment Jim Linton, president of Amateur Radio Victoria will have
 another "sound" story akin to this when he presents this weeks
 "Weird and Wonderful file".
  


 MP3's and iPod's are so popular that there is a huge amount of accessories
 and gear to go along with them. Typically, accessories revolve around
 speakers, earphones, FM transmitters and the like. Sometimes we see a few
 more exotic accessories like voice recorders.

 This week a new iPod accessory was announced that takes the "gadget cake"
 it is called the iBreath iPod Breathalyser.

 A fold out breath tube lets users blow into the device to see their blood
 alcohol level and decide if they have had too many drinks to drive.

 The device also works as an FM transmitter. The breathalyser portion
 requires users be sober enough to blow for five seconds. After blowing the
 Blood Alcohol Content number is given within two seconds.
 

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


 NEWS FROM ARNEWSLINE    

 THE BOOBY-TRAP REPEATER JAMMER

 And finally this week, the rather bizarre video showing the discovery of
 a repeater jamming device with a booby-trap attached.  That's the
 story from the United Kingdom told in an item that first aired on ITV
 news and is now  posted to a video sharing website.  Amateur Radio
 Newsline's Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has the rest of this rather strange tale
 now coming to the attention of hams world wide:


 The accidental find of the booby trapped jamming unit apparently took
 place in the United Kingdom in late 2007.  According to an early 2008 
 report by Erika Barnes of ITV News and only recently discovered on the
 YouTube dot com video website, the device was accidentally discovered in
 Buckinghamshire by the caretaker of the property.

 Mike Harrison is the manager of Wolton Estate. That’s a tiny in-land
 island in England’s south end.   He told Barnes that in the course of his
 regular duties that he unearthed some top soil and found a white box. 
 He was suspicious and decided to not go near it.  After turning it over
 using a long stick he noticed a battery attached to something that he
 suspected might be an explosive and decided to back away.
 
 Authorities found it to be a radio jamming device intended to interfere
 with ham radio relay communications to a repeater located on a tower
 near a location known as Brill.  Authorities say that the device was
 also designed harm and possibly kill anyone who might have found it and
 try to turn it off.  Thankfully for Harrison he moved it with the stick
 and even more thankfully the device failed to detonate.
 
 At the time the report aired that there was at least one more jamming
 device in the area.  The ITV story warned that anyone who might find it
 to not tamper with it.  Instead, that they should notify the local
 police.  No word if it was ever located and disarmed.
 
 For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF.
 
 Talk about carrying repeater jamming to a new low.  As far as we have
 been able to determine, the person or persons who planted the booby
 trapped jamming devices is still at large.   You cam see the story
 yourself at www.youtube.com/watch?v=OT11HFigbxk&feature=related 


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


 RSGB NEWS FROM G4NJH

 Astronomy podcast from Jodrell Bank

 A podcast covering all aspects of astronomy from The University of
 Manchester's Jodrell Bank Observatory may be of interest to radio amateurs.

 It has been created by a group of astronomers for anyone who is
 interested in things out of this world. Parts of this podcast are
 available as separate downloads from
 www.jodcast.net/amp/jodcast.html#jodcast_50

 There's even a piece about radio noise from the atmosphere and space.


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


 WEIRD N WONDERFUL     
    
 
 Hello I'm Jim Linton VK3PC with the Weird ‘n Wonderful File.

 Just image driving along the road and your car starts to vibrate?
 Is it an earthquake you think, a service overdue or are the wheels
 about to fall off?

 No, it will be a blast from the latest low frequency howler being
 fitted to ambulances to augment their traditional lights and sirens.

 These send pulses of low frequency tones  every eight seconds
 vibrate cars and other things including pedestrians within range of
 an ambulance on an emergency dash. 

 This will hopefully alert motorists who may be not concentrating on
 the driving task, perhaps with their car stereo's turned up too loud,
 or dare we say ... they’re on the mobile phone.

 The Emergency Medical Services Authority in Oklahoma is among the first
 to be installing them in ambulances.

 If they prove successful in reducing delays and intersection accident
 collision rates of ambulances then we can expect others to fit this
 latest technology.

 I just can’t wait to experience the good vibrations.

 (Jim Linton VK3PC)




 




 OPERATIONAL NEWS -  
 


 ON AIR CONTEST AND EVENT COLUMN -  D A T E  L I N E 
  
 2008   
        

 November 29-30 WW CQ WW CW contest        0000Z, Sat until 0000Z Sun.

 
 
 2009
 
 JAN  1         ROSS HULL Contest starts 

 JAN 17 - 18    Summer VHF Field Day  
 
 FEB 28 - Mar 1 JOCK WHITE MEMORIAL FIELD DAY  0200 UTC til 1100 UTC 21ST
                                               1700 UTC til 0200 UTC 22ND
    
  

 
 VHF CONTEST NEWS 

 The annual Spring VHF-UHF Field Day was held over the weekend of November 15
 and 16, and logs are due in no later than next Wednesday, December 3. Full
 details were published in September Amateur Radio magazine and on the WIA web
 site.

 The next VHF-UHF Field Day will be held on the weekend of January 17 and 18.

 The rules will be published in the December issue of AR Magazine, and they
 are already available on the WIA web site. 

 If you haven't participated in a VHF-UHF Field Day before, mark those dates
 in your calendar! The Field Days are a lot of fun and they are becoming more
 popular each year. And if you aren't able to go portable, you can participate
 as a home station.

 Another event in the VHF contest calendar is the Ross Hull Contest, which
 runs during the month of January. The rules have been completely revamped
 this year, with a new scoring system based on Maidenhead locator squares.

 Full details will be published in the December issue of AR magazine, and
 we'll give you even more information about it in next week's broadcast.




 VK SHIRES CONTEST

 Trent VK4TI is seeking feedback to a proposal to implement a new contest on
 the VK Scene. The VK Shires contest - a sort of modified Jack Files where
 the multipliers are the various state based shires or local government
 organisations. 
 
 Key highlights are ALL BAND operation on STANDARD LICENCE HF FREQUENCIES
 proposed modes are SSB and CW.

 For a copy of the proposed rules please drop an email to vk4ti(AT)wia.org.au
 or check the web edition of this bulletin

 Any of your thoughts that could be put onto an email would also be
 appreciated by Trent VK4TI. 

 vk4ti(AT)qrz.com




 SPECIAL EVENTS, BEACON DX AND NET ADVICE  
 hf nets ON the net,  www.timroberts-vk4yeh.id.au/
 
 9M1CS* 18 Scouting stations (* Apart from 9M1CSS in 9M6 all
                                others are 9M2 stations.
                                QSL via 9m2 bureau)               Until Dec 31   


  C   4 EURO  E-Day,  1st of January currency changes to Euro.    Until Dec 31

    
 ON  55  INR  marks start of TV broadcasting from Brussels        Until Dec 31 

 
 PY 100   JA  Centenary of first Japanese immigration to Brazil.  Until Dec 31
  
  
 VI  90   BV  Waverley Amateur Radio Society 90th Birthday   JAN 1-DEC 31 2009 

 

 BIG IS BEST

 Operators Peter PA8A, Fred PA8F and Rob PA3GVI will once again activate the
 "big array", formerly used to broadcast 'Radio Netherlands', with the special
 callsign PG 6 G between 1200z, November 27th and 1200z, November 28th.
 The array antenna is a curtain antenna with 8 stacked dipoles between two
 400 feet towers. Radiation angle is about 7 degrees and a gain of
 approximate 22 dB!!
 
 Their activity will be on CW and SSB, mainly on 40 meters. 
 QSL via PA3GVI.

 (SOUTHGATE)




 6TH IDXC CONVENTION IN APRIL 2009

 Turning to DX eyeballs, word that Italy's 6th International DX Convention
 will be held April 18th to the 19th, 2009.  Organized by the Strange Radio
 Team the venue is the city of Paestum near Salerno.
 More details will be forthcoming in January and posted at
 www.strangeradioteam.com. 


 

 20th Anniversary of BCDX Net, India 

 VU2JOS says the weekly BCDX Net operating on the 40 Meter Amateur Band in
 South India is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year. This Net was
 started November 27, 1988 by a small group of Amateurs with input by SWL's.

 The whole concept of BCDX started when these Hams used to meet regularly on 
 the band and exchanged DX news at various times. This later transformed into 
 a regular Net which benefited many people. This Net is conducted on Sunday
 mornings for the advantage of those who are keenly interested in Broadcast
 Band Dxing.

 The unique thing about this Net is that is helped Hams to become SWL Dxers
 and SWL's to become Hams!
 
 The BCDX Net has been very regular all these long 20 years, thanks to the
 dedicated Net Controllers.

 Now a days it is conducted on Sunday mornings 0300 UTC on 7085 kHz
 Occasionally also on the 20 Meter Band 14150 kHz at 1600 UTC.





 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- FINAL FRONTIER 

 AMSAT-VK UNOFFICIAL HF Net.
 2nd Sunday each month.
 November through March 0900 UTC 7.068 MHz
 April through October  1000 UTC 3.685 MHz     
  
 St Theresa School to space, over.

 How many times have we seen this, a great ham radio story not being passed
 on by the hams who contributed, but we find in the main stream media instead.

 In this case thanks to Felix VK4FUQ our ever resourceful "eavesdropper" and
 the ZL paper, The Dominion Post, we get to hear of yet another successful
 ARISS contact, ZL's first?

 Caitlin Austin, has had the rare privilege of speaking to a NASA astronaut
 as he floated hundreds of kilometres above New Zealand.

 Caitlin, 12, was one of 21 pupils involved in a question and answer session
 with Nasa astronaut Mike Fincke, sent from their classroom at Featherston's
 St Theresa School to the International Space Station over ham radio.

 It took the school two years to organise the 10-minute session - which is how
 long the space station stays above Australia and New Zealand - and they had
 not studied outer space since last year.

 But their interest was rekindled after reports that Endeavour space shuttle
 crew member Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper had become the first woman to lose
 her tool bag and watch it drift off into space during a space walk.

 Caitlin said the muck-up was embarrassing and that would not happen to her.

 "I don't think I'd be taking my bag into space, there's nothing to buy up
 there."

 The children, aged 7 to 13, each put a pre-approved question to Mr Fincke
 and got some interesting responses.
  
 Oh and the lost "tool bag?"

 It has been spotted and filmed by an amateur astronomer from Canada.

 The backpack-sized tool bag which floated away from the astronaut
 was seen by Kevin Fetter and filmed and is now posted to YouTube. 
 
 Kev said "anyone can spot the bag with a pair of binoculars if they know
 where to look, the bag will keep orbiting the earth until it's orbit decays
 and it burns up upon re-entry to earth."
 




 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- INTERNET --- THE HAMS DOMAIN  
    
 First test for interplanetary internet  
 
 The net has taken a giant leap that has extended cyberspace into outer space.

 NASA has successfully transmitted images to and from a spacecraft 20 million
 miles away with a communications system based on the internet. 

 The Disruption-Tolerant Networking (DTN) technology is designed to work
 across vast distances where response times can be measured in days. 

 Further tests of DTN are due to take place on the International Space Station
 (ISS) in 2009. 
 
 DTN will also help NASA mount very complex missions that involve many
 different types of craft that before now have been hard to co-ordinate.
 It would also underpin communications with astronauts when a return trip
 to the moon takes place. 

 (sourced to bbc)





 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP --- MILITARY    
    
 The UK has Bletchley Park home of WW2 code breaking efforts, the USA has
 Fort Ward, well the fort is actually a house.

 Sarah Lee bought a property not knowing what its roots were until the
 new household was filmed and photographed most weekends by passes by.
 
 “I knew there was something significant because older people would drive by
 sometimes, especially in the summer, and get out of their cars and take 
 photos. Almost apologetically,ö she said. 
 Lee’s Parkview Drive home was once known as Station S.

 There, on Dec. 7, 1941, U.S. Navy personnel working at the top-secret outpost
 intercepted a famous message sent from Tokyo to the Japanese ambassador in
 Washington, D.C. 
  
 Decades after the war ended, Lee’s impromptu visitors and the veterans she
 meet in the area remain reticent about revealing details. Even at a 2002
 celebration held in Fort Ward to honour the veterans who served there,
 old buddies shushed each other. 
 
 She was mildly amazed, then, and deeply appreciative of the irony, when she
 was contacted by Tokyo Broadcasting Systems’ international news department
 who had made arrangements to interview Tom Gilmore, one of the Navy men who
 worked in Station S, about the intelligence work that took place there.

 The interview to be part of a 4 ½-hour docu-drama about Japan’s role in
 World War II. 

 Tokyo knew that this house was one of the places where Japanese code was
 intercepted. 
  
 For more on this story google "Bainbridge Island Review"





 WW SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS --- RADIO AMATEUR OLD-TIMERS
 http://www.raotc.org.au

 OLD TIMERS
 Members and friends of the Radio Amateurs Old Timers Club Australia are
 reminded that the next news and information broadcast will take place on the
 first Monday of the Month.

 using the RAOTC callsign of VK3OTN.

 10.00 am Victorian time on  7.060 and 3.650 MHz plus 1.843 MHz AM, and
 145.700.

 On 14.150 MHz at 01.00 UTC beaming north and 02:00 UTC west from Melbourne

 For those not yet retired,  8.30 PM Victorian time tune 80 mtrs 3.650 MHz 





 SOCIAL SCENE        

 Dec 6 VK7
 VK7 HAMFEST – Central Highlands of Tasmania at Miena – starts 10am.
 http://www.qsl.net/charct/


 2009
 
 International Telecommunication Union's Telecom World 2009.



 JANUARY 18 2009 VK2
 Mid North Coast Amateur Radio Group's Radio Expo St Johns Church Hall,
 Maclean Street Coffs Harbour  8.30am


 


 Feb 8 2009  VK2
 WYONG FIELD DAY

 


 June 5 - 8   VK4
 FNNQARG at Cardwell Village Beachcomber Resort book on 1800 005633
 Contact FNNQARG co-ordinator Gavin VK4ZZ for site booking guidance.



 July 11 - 12 VK3 
 GippsTech 2009, the technical conference with a VHF, UHF & microwave 
 focus.

 


 OCT 12 - 16   ZL
 14th IARU R3 Conference Christchurch 12 ? 16 October 2009.
 Details at www.christchurch.org.nz/
 The Region 3 Web Site: www.jarl.or.jp/iaru-r3/
 

 
 
 Please think of the environment before printing this email 

 ========================================================================
		
 WIANews - we've reported...YOU decide.

 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 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.



 ************************************************************************
                        - NEWS POSTING TO PACKET - 
            Courtesy Tony VK7AX  VK7AX(AT)VK7AX.#ULV.TAS.AUS.OC 

 ************************************************************************


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