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G4TNU  > NEWS     21.09.11 16:02l 324 Lines 17551 Bytes #999 (0) @ EU
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Subj: RSGB Main News - 25 Sep
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GB2RS Main News for Sunday 25th September 2011

The news headlines:

* National Hamfest starts on 30 September 
* T32C DXpedition to go ahead despite equipment difficulties 
* RSGB Convention adds more lectures

Former BBC weatherman, Jim Bacon G3YLA will open the National Hamfest 
this year. The ceremony takes place at 10am on Friday, 30 September, 
when the main exhibition hall will open. Gates open at 9.30am for 
access to the Bring and Buy and Car Boot area. The Bring and Buy is 
bigger this year and arrangements have been made to speed up 
check-in. Forms may be downloaded from the website so that you can 
book in quicker. Check in is from 9.30, half an hour earlier than the 
main exhibition hall. If you are looking for a lift to the National 
Hamfest, or can offer one, e-mail clive<at>nationalhamfest.org.uk and 
your details will appear on the Car Sharing and Lifts page on the 
website. US microphone manufacturer Bob Heil will conduct a workshop 
each day of the show as part of the lecture stream. An interview with 
Bob can be downloaded from the National Hamfest website. Full details 
with directions are at www.nationalhamfest.org.uk.

The 5 star DXers Association's T32C expedition to Kiritimati due to 
start on 28 September has hit some logistical problems. The container 
with its 6 tonnes of kit got as far as T30, Tarawa, but onward 
shipping to T32 has proved impossible. The DXpedition will go ahead 
anyway because thanks to the global sponsor, Yaesu, ten FT-450D 
radios will be carried as luggage by the team along with several 
lightweight linears. The operators will also take enough hardware to 
set up verticals and vertical arrays for all bands 10 through to 
160m. All the computer equipment was to be hand-carried in any case, 
so daily log updates to ClubLog will be unaffected. Unfortunately, 
unless the container makes an unlikely late arrival on the island, 6m 
EME will have to be abandoned, and they will not have the 4-square 
arrays for 30 and 40m. Keep an eye on the website at www.t32c.com for 
updates

The RSGB Convention takes place on 7 to 9 October and there is just 1 
week remaining for bookings. The latest news from the programme is 
that Bob NQ1R from the ARRL will provide a virtual tour of the ARRL 
and Tom GM4DOZ will speak about radio astronomy and its roots in 
amateur radio. With the unfortunate difficulties the T32C DXpedition 
has getting equipment to the island, the lecture from Steve Nichols 
on the reality of propagation to increase your chances of working 
this DXpedition is sure to be a popular one. Full details of the most 
up to date timetable, details of the lectures and booking information 
can be found at www.rsgb.org/rsgbconvention. 

The British Astronomical Association is organising a 'meteor watch' 
exercise for the coming Draconids shower, between 7 and 9 October. It 
would be interesting to compare meteor scatter counts against 
activity reported by visual observers up and down the country. The 
Draconids are not normally a large event but are subject to 
occasional outbursts and there has been speculation that this year 
could produce one of these. Observations are requested across the 
three days: 7, 8 and 9 October. Preferably these would be around-the 
clock, but if this is not possible between 1500 and 2300UTC on the 
three days. Counts in 15-minute bins will be appropriate for most of 
the time but on the evening of 8 October, most likely between 1800 
and 2100UTC the rates may be changing very quickly and so it would be 
advantageous to have the counts in 5-minute bins.

It is very important that receiver settings and antenna alignment are 
kept constant throughout the period of observation. If possible, the 
beam of the antenna should be directed towards the mid-point of the 
great circle path joining the transmitter and receiver locations. 
Paul Hyde, G4CSD the BAA Coordinator for the Radio Astronomy Group, 
will be consolidating the observations into a single report which 
will be sent to all participants. Please contact him by e-mail at 
radiogroup<at> britastro.org for further information on how to submit 
reports.

NASA is giving the public the power to vicariously journey through 
the solar system using a new interactive Web-based tool. The Eyes on 
the Solar System interface combines video game technology and NASA 
data to create an environment for users to ride along with agency 
spacecraft and explore the cosmos.  Screen graphics and information 
such as planet locations and spacecraft manoeuvres use actual space 
mission data. You can begin your ride at 
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/eyes/. 

A new Newsletter has been launched to support the growing number of 
5MHz operating permissions globally. The 5MHz Newsletter is edited by 
Paul Gaskell, G4MWO, one of the original RSGB 5MHz team. It aims to 
be both an accurate information source of news about 5MHz and a 
platform for exchange of ideas, be they theoretical, operational, 
constructional or just general comments about the band. You can 
freely access the 5MHz Newsletter from Google Documents at 
http://tinyurl.com/6fkhcmf.
 
Although originating in the UK, the 5MHz Newsletter invites 
world-wide interest, both in readers and contributors. Understandably 
all that we ask is when contributing items of news concerning new 
5MHz permissions or allocations, that the contributor can provide a 
means of official verification of such. It is hoped to produce the 
5MHz Newsletter on a quarterly basis, its size being dependent of 
course on news and other relevant contributions from 5MHz operators 
and listeners around the world. For those without Internet access 
wishing to have a paper copy of the 5MHz Newsletter, a Self-Addressed 
Envelope of sufficient size to take folded A4 sheets, together with 
adequate postage, or IRCs in the case of outside of the UK, will 
bring a copy of the latest edition. Requests should be addressed to 
G4MWO, who is QTHR in the UK Callbook and on QRZ.com 

Did you know that a real life radio amateur was involved in the 
famous 1961 recording of Tony Hancock's The Radio Ham? His name was 
Alan Florence. He was just 18 years of age and was working as a 
recently appointed sound engineer at Star Sound Studios off Baker 
Street in London. These days he is also known on the bands as G7CDK 
and although he wasn't licensed back in 1961, Alan claims that the 
experience did have some influence on him taking the RAE in later 
years. Saturday 1 October will be the 50th anniversary of the Pye 
recording. The Radio Ham was never made for radio but not to be out 
done, the digital station BBC Radio 4 Extra will be broadcasting The 
Radio Ham and the equally famous Blood Donor between 1400 and 1500BST 
on Saturday 1 October. The shows can also be heard online at 
www.bbc.co.uk/radio4extra and on the BBC Radioplayer for seven days 
after transmission. Last year RSGB member and BBC presenter Jim Lee, 
G4AEH, brought Alan, G7CDK together with the show's iconic writers 
Galton and Simpson, to remember the events of the 1 October 1961. 
Extracts from the interview, in which the writers reveal why they 
chose the radio ham scenario will be broadcast as a series of shorts 
or fillers between the pre-recorded announcements, throughout the day.


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

The National Hamfest organised by the RSGB in association with the 
Lincoln Short Wave Club takes place on Friday 30 September and 
Saturday 1 October. The venue is the George Stephenson Pavilion, 
Newark and Nottinghamshire Showground, Lincoln Road, Winthorpe, 
Newark NG24 2NY, which is close to the junction of A1/A46/A17. There 
will be trade stands, a Bring and Buy, special interest groups, an 
RSGB bookstall, lectures and a car boot area. Full details of the 
rally may be found at www.nationalhamfest.org.uk.

The RSGB Convention takes place at Horwood House near Milton Keynes 
on 7 to 9 October. Five lectures streams are available on both 
Saturday and Sunday, totalling 65 lectures to choose from. There is 
also a Partners Programme for those not interested in the radio 
events of the weekend with a trip to Stowe Landscape Gardens and 
Milton Keynes. Both UK and US exams are available over the weekend, 
see www.rsgb.org/rsgbconvention for full details.


Now for the news of special events

Throughout September, special event station GB2JB, will be on the air 
to commemorate the life and birth place of Jack Binns, radio operator 
of the Passenger Ship Republic in 1909. Operation will be from Coney 
Court, Brigg and is run by Brigg & District Amateur Radio Club. 

The Crewe Heritage Centre ARC will be taking part in the Railways on 
the Air on 25 September. They will be operating two stations using 
SSB and Digimodes from the First Class carriage of the Advanced 
Passenger Train prototype that is on permanent display at the centre. 
Using GB4CHC the club hope to work as many stations as possible 
during the two days on all HF bands.

This year Justices of the Peace in England and Wales are celebrating 
their 650th anniversary of serving the community. The Scarborough 
Special Events Group will be on the air as GB650JP over the weekend 
of 1 and 2 October, to mark the anniversary. QSL cards will be sent 
via the Bureau. Anyone requiring a direct QSL can apply via the club 
callsign G0OOO. SWL listener reports are also welcomed.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of HMS Belfast's arrival in the 
Pool of London, in October 1971, the London Group of the RNARS will 
be active as GB40HMSB between 1 October and 31 December. A 
commemorative QSL card will be available in the New Year.


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

A Belgian group plan to activate on Rockall, EU-189, around 27 or 28 
September. Hoping for good weather and calm seas, during the four day 
voyage to EU189 they will be one the air as ON4ATW/MM. Details at 
www.rockall.be. 

IN3VZE will once again be active from Malawi as 7Q7CE until 3 
October. His operation will be holiday style on 10 through to 80 
metres using SSB and RTTY. QSL via his home callsign, either via the 
Bureau or direct.

Operators from the Cambridge University Wireless Society will be 
active from Miquelon, which is IOTA reference NA-032, until 29 
September. Look for FP/M0BLF, FP/G3ZAY, FP/G4EAG, FP/M0TOC, FP/M0VFC 
and FP/M1BXF all bands, CW & SSB.

A team of 8 amateur radio operators from Australia and the USA will 
be activating YJ0VK from Port Vila on Efate Island between 30 
September and 12 October. Earlier updates indicate that the team will 
operate with 3 stations on bands from 10 to 160m, using CW, SSB and 
RTTY or PSK31. They do not have plans to activate 6m. The YJ0VK team 
has obtained authorization to operate on 60m.

Preparations for the large multi-national 3D2R DXpedition to Rotuma 
are going according to plan. They expect to be on the air from 27 
September to 7 October. They will be active on 10 to 160m using CW, 
SSB, RTTY, PSK and SSTV, plus 6 and 2m EME, with a focus on Europe 
and Africa when propagation permits. QSL via YT1AD. 
www.yt1ad.info/3d2r/index.html. 


Now the contest news

The 48 hour CQWW RTTY DX Contest comes to a close today, 25 
September, at 2359UTC. The exchange is signal report and CQ Zone – 
Britain is 14. Some rare countries ought to be active in this one. 
There are too many entry categories to list here though.

The Practical Wireless 70MHz Contest takes place for four hours 
today, Sunday 25 September, from 1200 to 1600UTC. It has sections for 
Low Power (10W max) and Full Legal. The exchange is signal report, 
serial number and locator.

Tuesday 27 September sees the 50MHz UK Activity Contest take place 
between 1900 and 2130UTC. Using all modes, the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and locator.

At the same time on Tuesday 27 September the SHF UK Activity Contest 
takes place. Using all modes on the 2.3 to 10GHz bands, the exchange 
is signal report, serial number and locator.

Thursday 29 September sees the CW leg of the 80m Club Sprint taking 
place from 1900 to 2030UTC. The exchange is both callsigns, serial 
number and name.

The 1.2/2.3GHz Trophy Contest takes place for eight hours on Saturday 
1 October. After several years of modest but steady participation, 
the number of entries to this event increased substantially last 
year, even though propagation was nothing special and the weather was 
awful. Using all modes from 1400 to 2200UTC, the exchange is signal 
report, serial number and locator.

The Oceania DX SSB Contest runs for 24 hours from 0800 on 1 October 
to 0800UTC on 2 October. QSOs with stations in Oceania are the only 
ones that count for points, which basically means working VK, ZL and 
the Pacific islands. The exchange is signal report and serial number.

The Worked All Britain HF Contest runs on 20m to 10m for 24 hours 
from 1200UTC on 1 October to 1200UTC on 2 October. Using all modes on 
the 14 to 28MHz bands, UK stations send a report, serial number and 
WAB area, while non-UK stations send report, serial number and DXCC 
country. Inter-UK QSOs do not count for points in this one. 

The IARU 432MHz-248GHz Contest runs for 24 hours from 1400UTC on 1 
October to 1400UTC on 2 October. The exchange is signal report, 
serial number and locator. The first six hours coincides with the 
RSGB 1.2GHz/2.3GHz Trophy Contest. From 1600UTC to 2000UTC the SSB 
leg of the EU Sprint takes place. Being a sprint, of course there's a 
QSY rule. It says that if you make a QSO as a result of calling CQ or 
QRZ, you then have to QSY a minimum of 2kHz before you can make 
another QSO. And please don't forget that the exchange includes both 
callsigns. 

The 21/28MHz Contest takes place on Sunday 2 October. The planned 
deletion of this event from the contest calendar may have contributed 
to the substantial increase in entries in all sections last year. 
They are hoping for similar results this year. Taking place from 0700 
to 1900UTC and using CW and SSB on the two bands, the exchange is 
signal report, serial number and district.


And now the solar factual data for the period from the 12th to the 
18th of September, compiled by Neil Clarke, G0CAS on the 19th of 
September. 

The Sun had many groups visible everyday, for example, the 15th had 
11 groups visible. Many of these groups were producing C class solar 
flares. In total over one hundred took place. Most days an M class 
solar flare was expected but never took place, but on the 12th and 
the 14th a C9 flare occurred, failing by fractions to reach the M 
class category. Small sudden ionospheric disturbances took place 
along with a number of coronal mass ejections, one of which headed 
our way, more on the later. Solar flux levels increased from 124 
units on the 12th to 150 by the 18th. The average was 135. The 90 day 
solar flux average on the 18th was 103, that's three units up on last 
week. X-ray flux levels increased from B5.3 units on the 13th to B9.2 
by the 18th. The average was B6.9 units. The first disturbance 
arrived on the 12th when the Ap index was 27 units and 17 units the 
next day, this was in response to a coronal hole. As mentioned 
earlier, one of the coronal mass ejections arrived early on the 17th 
when the Ap was 32 units. The source was a C9 solar flare taking 
place on the 14th. There were some quiet days also, for example, on 
the 16th the Ap was only 2 units. The average was Ap 13 units. Solar 
wind data from the ACE spacecraft saw solar wind speeds decline form 
680 kilometres per second on the 12th to 350 by early on the 17th. 
Particle densities were low except for a brief rise to 18 particles 
per cubic centimetre on the 17th. Bz varied between minus and plus 3 
nanoTeslas on the quieter days and between minus 12 and plus 14 
nanoTeslas on the 17th. Once the disturbance of the 12th and the 13th 
had ended HF propagation reached or exceeded predicted values for 
most of the time, with 28MHz open at times and openings to all 
continents on 24MHz. On the 17th MUFs of around 33MHz were recorded. 

And now the solar forecast. The Sun is going through a restructuring 
phase where what was the quiet side of the Sun is now the active side 
on its return a couple of weeks later. This week solar activity 
should be at low levels but there is the chance that activity could 
rise to moderate levels. Solar flux levels should be around the 120s 
or even higher. Geomagnetic activity is expected to be at quiet 
levels barring any Earth directed coronal mass ejections till towards 
next weekend when a small coronal hole disturbance is expected. MUFs 
during daylight hours at equal latitudes should be around 26MHz for 
the south and 23MHz for the north. Darkness hour lows should be about 
11MHz. Paths this week to the Middle East should have a maximum 
usable frequency with a 50 per cent success rate of around 29MHz. The 
optimum working frequency with a 90 per cent success rate will be 
about 24MHz. The best time to try this path will be between 1000 and 
1500 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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