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G4TNU  > NEWS     09.02.11 18:16l 230 Lines 11717 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 13 Feb
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T:From: G4TNU@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EU <g4tnu@gb7ipf.ampr.org>
T:Newsgroups: ampr.news.europe
T:Message-Id: <E10615_G4TNU@gb7ipf.ampr.org>

GB2RS Main News for Sunday 13th February 2011

The news headlines:

* RSGB AGM to be held in Derby
* RSGB looking for EMC volunteer 
* Northern Train the Trainers session

Join us in Derby for the RSGB 2011 AGM. It will take place on 
Saturday 16 April at the Menzies Mickleover Court, Etwall Road, 
Mickleover Derby DE3 0XX. The whole day is geared to bringing the 
RSGB to you and is an ideal opportunity for local clubs to socialise 
and meet with each other and meet with senior RSGB officers. Winners 
of the 2011 National Club of the Year, sponsored by Waters & Stanton, 
will be announced.

Do you have legal skills? The Society is in need of some help in the 
area of legislation concerning EMC and related matters in the UK and 
European context. This person would be invited to join the EMC 
Committee, either as a full member, a corresponding member or a 
consultant. We need to further build our ‘in-house' strength on 
European and UK legislation particularly as it applies to the 
technologies involved in radio communication and EMC matters. If you 
are a qualified lawyer, current or retired, and feel you can help the 
team looking at this, or if you know of someone who might be willing 
to offer some help, please contact the RSGB Director responsible, Don 
Beattie, G3BJ, by email to g3ozf<at>btinternet.com or phone 
01694 781 666. 

A Train the Trainers day is being organised for 19 March at the 
Carman Centre, Helensburgh. The purpose of the Train the Trainers 
course is to offer tutors some guidance on running courses and 
teaching techniques. If you are or wish to be a Registered Instructor 
and wish to attend contact Len Paget, GM0ONX by e-mail to 
GM0ONX<at>rsgb.org.uk or telephone 01563 534383 for further details.

After a successful Bath Morse Course that ran in 2010, Steve Hartley, 
G0FUW and crew have announced more dates for the Morse code training 
course. This year the course will run from 30 March until mid June. 
All you need is a pen, some paper and the enthusiasm to learn the 
code. Each week more letters are added to the mix in a proven method 
thus increasing your Morse knowledge in a steady fashion. Later in 
the course as you understand the alphabet and numbers more on air 
etiquette is explored, and some fun games are played to allow you 
retain the knowledge you have gained. At the end of the course 
candidates can sit the RSGB competency test at a speed that suits 
them best. Again this year Assessment will be conducted by Robin 
Thompson, G3TKF. The lessons and test all take place at the Scout HQ 
in Bath. Each meeting is held on Thursday evenings at 7pm. For more 
information please e-mail Stave Hartley on g0fuw<at>tiscali.co.uk or 
call him on 01225 464394

ARRL DXCC Manager Bill Moore, NC1L, reports that the 9X0SP 2010 
DXpedition to Rwanda has been approved for DXCC credit. If you have 
cards that were recently rejected for this operation, please send an 
e-mail to the ARRL DXCC Desk. Once your record is updated, results 
will appear in Logbook of The World accounts or in the live, daily 
DXCC Standings.

Advance news now of a DXpedition. VK8NSB, VK8FNCY, 9M6DXX, 9M6XRO and 
MW0JRX will be operating from Timor-Leste in East Timor between 16 
and 26 September. The location will be Atauro Island, OC-232, 30km 
north of the capital, Dili. The group is working closely with the 
Timor-Leste licensing authority and the DXpedition callsign will be 
announced soon. There will be three stations, two using full licensed 
power linear amplifiers and a third running 100W. Antennas will 
mainly be quarter-wave verticals and vertical dipoles, all located 
within a few metres of the ocean. For 160m an inverted-L will be 
used. Activity will be on all bands 10 - 160m using CW, SSB and RTTY. 
Atauro Island was chosen in order to provide a quiet location, well 
away from the electrical noise of down-town Dili. The beach-front 
site will also allow the group to put up vertical antennas right by 
the ocean, providing additional low-angle gain. In addition, the 
island counts as OC-232 and is part of a very rare IOTA group, having 
being confirmed by only 18% of active IOTA participants.



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

The Harwell Radio and Electronics Rally will take place today, 13 
February, at Didcot Leisure Centre, Mereland Road, Didcot OX11 8AY. 
Talk in will be on S22 and car parking is free. Entrance is GBP 2.50 
and accompanied under 12s are free. Doors open at 10.30am and there 
will be trade stands, special interest groups and refreshments 
available. Details from Ann, G8NVI on 01235 816379.

The Northern Cross Rally returns to its former home at Thornes Park 
Sports Centre, Horbury Road, Wakefield, WF2 8TY today, Sunday 13 
February. There is plenty of parking, an RSGB Bookstall and all the 
usual traders. There will also be several club and group stands. 
Refreshments are available on site at reasonable prices and admission 
is GBP 3. Doors open at 10.30am with disabled access from 10.15. 
Bring & Buy Booking In is also from 10.15. More information from 
www.northerncrossrally.org or contact Ken Quinn, 2E0SSQ on 
07 900 563 117.

There are no rallies next weekend, the next events are on 27 
February. Rainham Radio Rally will take place at Rainham School for 
Girls, Derwent Way, Rainham, Gillingham, Kent ME8 0BX. Doors open at 
10.00am. More details from Trevor, G6YLW, 0771 7678 795. 

Also on 27 February, Swansea ARS Rally will be held at Court Herbert 
Sports Centre, Neath Abbey, Neath SA10 7BE. Doors open at 10.30am and 
entry is GBP 2 with free car parking. There will be trade stands and 
a Bring & Buy along with special interest groups. Details from Roger, 
GW4HSH, on 01792 404422.


Now for the news of special events

The Cornish Club will be running Thinking Day on the Air at 
Gweal-an-Top school, Redruth, Cornwall on 19 February using the 
special event callsign GB1RGG.

North Cork Radio Group will be active the call EI1NC/P on 19 and 20 
February from the Blackrock Castle Observatory from 1000 to 1700UTC 
both days. The venue is a 16th century Castle located 4km from the 
heart of Cork city on the banks of the river Lee. The Castle has seen 
many uses in its long history and now houses a cutting edge space 
observation post.


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

KA1YMX/8P will be active from Barbados while on holiday between 26 
February and 5 March. His operation will be on CW and SSB using an 
Elecraft K2. No other details are available. QSL via his home 
callsign.

G3RWF will be active as 5X1NH from Fort Portal in western Uganda 
between 20 February and 14 April. He prefers to operate CW but plans 
to also be on the digital modes with some SSB on all bands except 
160m. QSL via his home callsign or electronically using Logbook of 
the World. 

Two American operators plan to operate on the amateur bands from 
Haiti between 18 February and 5 March. They will be working at a 
local Christian Mission and during their spare time will be on the 
air as HH4/K4QD and HH4/AF4Z.

J88DR will be active again from 16 February to 14 March. This is the 
call used by Dave, G3TBK while on the Caribbean island of St Vincent. 
Dave is interested in contesting and will be QRV in the ARRL DX CW 
Contest as well as the ARRL DX SSB Contest and the Commonwealth 
Contest during that period.

An international team will operate from Cameroon using the call TJ9PF 
until 20February. QSL manager is F5OGL and full details of the 
DXpedition can be found on www.tj9pf.fr.


Now the contest news

Over the full 48 hours of the weekend of 12-13th the CQWW WPX RTTY 
contest will keep the data portions of the bands busy. Exchange a 
signal report and serial number. Multi-two and multi-multi entrants 
use separate serial number sequences per band, while all others use 
just the one. In parallel with it the CW and SSB portions of the 
bands will also be busy, because the PACC, VERON contest takes place 
for 24 hours. Send a signal report and serial number, but expect to 
receive a report and a 2-letter Province code from Dutch stations. 

The 80m Club Championships data leg takes place on 16 February from 
2000 to 2130UTC. The exchange is signal report and serial number.

The 1.3GHz UK Activity Contest takes place on 15 February from 2000 
to 2230UTC. Using all modes the exchange is signal report, serial 
number and locator.

On 22 February the 50MHz UK Activity Contest takes place between 2000 
and 2230UTC. Using all modes on the band the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and locator.

Also on 22 February, the SHF UK Activity Contest takes place at the 
same time, 2000 to 2230UTC. Using bands between 2.3 and 10GHz and all 
modes, the exchange is signal report, serial number and locator.


And now the solar factual data for the period from the 31st of 
January to the 6th of February, compiled by Neil Clarke, G0CAS on the 
7th of February.

Solar activity was at very low levels, only just though, because on 
the 4th just after midday a B9.5 solar flare occurred just falling 
short of the C class, which would have increased activity to low. 
Solar flux levels varied little day to day and averaged 80 units. The 
90 day solar flux average on the 6th was 99, that's one unit down on 
last week. X-ray flux levels averaged A4.6 units and remained steady 
all week. Geomagnetic activity started at quiet levels but during the 
second half of the 4th levels increased to storm levels. Studying the 
solar wind data it would appear that a coronal hole disturbance and a 
coronal mass ejection that departed the Sun on the 30th of January 
arrived here at Earth at the same time. This resulted in a short but 
intense storm with stations in the Midlands capable of auroral 
contacts on 50 and 144MHz. Stations north of the border had this 
privilege for much longer. The Ap index on the 4th was 21 units. The 
average was Ap 9 units. Solar wind data from the ACE spacecraft saw 
solar wind speeds increase from 300 kilometres per second to 670 
early on the 5th. Particle densities started the period with up to 30 
particles per cubic centimetre on the 31st and the 1st but then 
declined to more normal levels. Bz showed little variation at first 
but fluctuated to minus 20 and plus 16 nanoTeslas at the height of 
the storm during the evening of the 4th.

And now the solar forecast. Old region 1149 that produced eight C 
class solar flares on its last rotation should have rotated back into 
view. Depending on how active this region is will decide on the level 
of solar flare activity for the coming week. Solar activity could 
increase to low levels on some days. Solar flux levels should be 
around the 90 mark for most of the week. A quiet geomagnetic week is 
expected with the Ap index in single figures throughout. MUFs during 
daylight hours at equal latitudes should be about 22MHz for the south 
and 19MHz for the north. Darkness hour lows should be around 8MHz. 
Paths this week to India should have a maximum usable frequency with 
a 50 per cent success rate of about 23MHz. The optimum working 
frequency with a 90 per cent success rate will be around 18MHz. The 
best time to try this path will be between 10:00 and 13:00 hours.

And that's all for this week from the propagation team.


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  gb2rs<at>rsgb.org.uk to arrive by
10:00 on the Tuesday before transmission.


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