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G4TNU  > NEWS     16.02.20 02:35l 248 Lines 11220 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 16 Feb 2020
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T:From: G4TNU@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EURO <g4tnu@gb7ipf.ampr.org>
T:Newsgroups: ampr.news.europe
T:Message-Id: <E107700_G4TNU@gb7ipf.ampr.org>

GB2RS Main News for Sunday the 16th of February 2020

The news headlines:

* Storm Ciara prevents 40m GB2RS news reading
* Get involved in British Science Week
* Second mock Full licence exam available

Due to the awful weather conditions last weekend during Strom Ciara, 
Gunter, DJ2XB and Colin DJ0OK were unable to read the GB2RS news on 
40m. Both readers had to take their antennas down for safety. They 
hope to resume a normal service today, the 16th, weather permitting.

If you or your radio club want to get involved in British Science 
Week, which takes place between the 6th and the 15th of March, 
activity packs are now available to download from 
https://tinyurl.com/qvyqnr8  The pack contains tips on how to run 
British Science Week in school or at home, easy-to-run activities, 
and details of the annual poster competition. Whilst there's no 
details of radio activities, there's a lot to get you started on this 
excellent initiative and can be adapted for amateur radio use. 

The RSGB has published a second mock exam paper for the Full licence 
this week so there are now two for each licence level. You can see 
all the mock exam papers on the Society's website at 
www.rsgb.org/mock-exams 

Amateurs in all French territories now have access to the 60m 5351.5 
to 5366.5kHz WRC allocation at a maximum power of 15WERP following 
the publication in the French official journal. The French national 
society, REF, advocates the use of the IARU 60m band plan.

Mitsuo, JA1WQF successfully decoded a 47GHz signal bounced off the 
moon from Al, W5LUA on the 10th of February. Al posted news of the 
achievement on the Moon-Net email reflector saying these were only 
one-way tests that started out with sending single tones that were 
copied well. Then Al sent several sequences of calls and grid that 
Mitsuo was able to decode at 1146 and 1234UTC. Signal levels were -23 
and -25dB. More tests are planned. 

The Leicester Mercury has a story on the top-secret wartime listening 
station Beaumanor Hall's crucial role in the Second World War. It was 
a Y station and you can read the full story at 
https://tinyurl.com/rhtb8tl 

The IARU Monitoring System Region 1 Newsletter January 2020 is now 
available at www.iaru-r1.org. Richard, G4DYA is the Intruder Watch 
Coordinator runs the RSGB Monitoring System, part of the IARU 
Monitoring System. His report contains several instances of the 
Container over-the-horizon radar.

The RSGB Build a Radio workshop at the National Radio Centre at 
Bletchley Park on the 14th of March is now sold out. Details of the 
next event will be in a forthcoming GB2RS.


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

Today, the 16th, the RadioActive Rally will be held at Nantwich Civic 
Hall, Cheshire, CW5 5DG. There is free car parking and doors open at 
10.30am. There will be a Bring & Buy, as well as traders and an RSGB 
book stall. A single raffle ticket is included with the entrance 
programme; additional tickets available. Catering is provided on 
site. Contact Stuart Jackson on 0788 073 2534.

Also today, the 16th, the Lomond Radio Club Bring & Buy event takes 
place at John Connolly Centre, Main Street, Renton G82 4LY. Doors 
open at 10am. There will be a Bring & Buy, traders and refreshments 
will be available. Contact Bill at mm0elf<at>blueyonder.co.uk

Next Sunday, the 23rd, the Rainham Radio Rally takes place at The 
Victory Academy, Magpie Hall Road, Chatham, Kent ME4 5JB. Doors open 
from 10am to 4pm and admission is GBP 3 with children attending free 
of charge. Talk in will be on 145.550MHz using GB4RRR. Local and 
national traders will be in attendance. The BRATS Interactive Zone 
for Kids will be available as will the BRATS Junk stand. Refreshments 
from the BRATS Kitchen. Contact 0782 583 8877 if you need more 
information.

Also next Sunday, the 23rd, is the Red Rose Winter Rally at St 
Joseph's Hall, Chapel Street, Leigh WN7 2PQ. Doors open at 11am. 
There will be trade, individual and Club stands as well as a Bring & 
Buy. Details at www.wmrc.co.uk

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

Chas, NK8O will be active as 5H3DX from Zinga in Tanzania between the 
16th of February and 16th of March. In his spare time, he will 
operate CW, PSK31, FT8 and possibly SSB on the 40 to 10m bands. QSL 
via NK8O direct only, see qrz.com for instructions, Logbook of The 
World and eQSL.

Hiro, JG1SXP will be active as 8Q7HK from the Maldives, AS-013, 
between the 19th and 24th of February. He will operate FT8, CW and 
some SSB on the 80 to15m bands, possibly also on 160m depending on 
local conditions. QSL via Logbook of The World, Club Log's OQRS, or 
direct to home call.

Brian, ND3F will be active as KP2/ND3F from St. Croix in the Virgin 
Islands, NA-106, until the18th of February. QSL via EA5GL.

Mike, TI5/W1USN and Bob, TI5/AA1M will be active from Costa Rica from 
the 20th of February to the 4th of March. They will operate CW, SSB 
and FT8 on the 160 to 10m bands. QSLs via Logbook of The World, or 
via their home calls either direct or via the bureau.

Rick, N1DC is active holiday style as N1DC/4 from Hutchinson Island, 
NA-141, until the 25th of February. He operates CW, FT8 and SSB on 
the 40, 30 and 20m bands. QSL direct to his home call and Logbook of 
The World.

Wolfgang, DL5MAE will be paying another visit to Laos until the 20th 
of February. In his spare time, he will reactivate his 3W2MAE 
callsign. He suffers from heavy local QRM and requests that callers 
bear this in mind when trying to contact him. His preferred QSL route 
is via the German QSL bureau.


Now the special event news 

Members of the Bruneck section of the ARI, the Italian national 
society, will be using II3BIA until the 23rd of February to celebrate 
the Biathlon World Championships in Italy. Operations will be on all 
bands between 160 and 10m as well as 2m and 70cm using CW, SSB, 
digital modes and QO-100 satellite. QSL via IN3ZWF, by the Bureau, 
direct, eQSL or OQRS.

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

This weekend the ARRL International DX Contest ends its 48-hour run 
at 2359UTC today, the 16th. Using CW only on the 1.8 to 28MHz bands 
the exchange is signal report and transmit power, with US stations 
also sending their State and Canadians their Province.

On Monday the first FT4 contest runs from 2000 to 230UTC on the 80m 
band. The exchange is your 4-character locator.

On Tuesday, the 1.3GHz UK Activity Contest runs from 2000 to 2230UTC. 
Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number and 
locator.

On Thursday the 70MHz UK Activity Contest also runs from 2000 to 
2230UTC. Using all modes, the exchange is signal report, serial 
number and locator.

Next Sunday, the 23rd, is the first 70MHz Cumulative Contest. Running 
from 1000 to 1200UTC and using all modes the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and locator.

For 48 hours next weekend the CQ 160m DX contest take place. Starting 
at 2200UTC on the 21st, it ends at the same time on the 23rd. Using 
SSB only the exchange is signal report and CQ Zone with American 
stations also sending their State and Canadians their Province.

From 0600UTC on the 22nd to 1800UTC on the 23rd, the REF Contest is 
SSB only on the 3.5 to 28MHz bands. The exchange is signal report and 
serial number with French stations sending their Department number or 
overseas prefix.

For 24 hours from 1200UTC on the 22nd, the UK EI Contest Club DX 
contest is CW only on the 3.5 to 28MHz bands. The exchange is signal 
report and District Code.


Now the radio propagation report, compiled by G0KYA, G3YLA and G4BAO 
on Friday the 14th of February.

Last week saw reasonably-settled HF conditions after the effects of a 
geomagnetic disturbance passed. But the Sun remained spotless again 
with a solar flux index of about 70-72 all week.

Wednesday's 80m Club Championship contest left many amateurs feeling 
disappointed and with fairly empty logs after the critical frequency 
let them down.

At the start of the contest the f0F2 as measured at RAL in Chilton 
was 3.5MHz, but it then declined before finishing at 3.45MHz at 
21:30hrs. As a result, long skip was the order of the day with the 
highest scorers being in Scotland, the Netherlands, Germany and 
Sweden.

With a few exceptions, there were few inter-G contacts as the 
high-angle signals were just not being returned by the ionosphere. 
Hopefully, this will improve over the next few months as the series 
continues and the evening critical frequency or f0F2 rises.

Barring any dramatic changes, NOAA has the solar flux index at 71 
this coming week. A large coronal hole should become Earth-facing on 
Friday the 14th, which means we may see its associated high speed 
solar wind impact the Earth around Sunday or Monday the 16th/17th. 
This could see the Kp index rise to four with characteristic 
disturbed conditions after a potential initial positive phase.

There are some DX nuggets to be had this week. Mike TI7/G3WPH and 
John TI7/G4IRN are both active in Costa Rica until 17th February. 
They have already been spotted on 160m and 40m, and should be taking 
part in this weekend's ARRL International DX Contest. See 
www.rsgb.org/predtest for prediction details to Costa Rica


And now the VHF and up propagation news.

Next week's weather is likely to continue the unsettled theme, so 
more strong winds at times and little real chance of significant 
Tropo paying a visit. There may just be a brief weak ridge close to 
southern England midweek, but not looking too useful for developing 
the inversions needed for Tropo.

In propagation terms, that leaves us with some potential for rain 
scatter as active fronts and showers bring useful scatter points 
regions for the GHz fraternity.

The shower examples may be quite a challenge since the rate of 
movement can be quite high in such windy weather; imagine trying to 
follow a target moving at 40mph! Radar displays are your friend here 
and can make a big difference to the outcomes.

Moon declination reaches its minimum for the lunar month on 
Wednesday, with the Moon appearing above the horizon for seven hours 
and reaching just 13 degrees elevation. Path losses are rising all 
week and 144 MHz sky noise is very high, peaking at around 3000 
Kelvin on Tuesday.

Keep looking for random meteor scatter QSOs around dawn when the 
Earth is rotating towards the main meteor flux to keep the VHF DX 
coming.

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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