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VK7AX > WIA 24.06.26 07:11l 57 Lines 3154 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 13168_VK7AX
Subj: Chasing the Horizon: WIA VHF-UHF Distance Records
Path: IZ3LSV<IW8PGT<LU4ECL<VK2RZ<N6PNK<KD6MTU<N5MDT<VK3AT<VK7AX
Sent: 260621/0352Z 13168@VK7AX.#ULV.TAS.AUS.AUNZ LinBPQ6.0.24
Chasing the Horizon: WIA VHF-UHF Distance Records
Date : 19 / 06 / 2026
Author : WIA
For many amateur radio operators, making a contact is only part of the challenge.
For those active on the VHF, UHF and microwave bands, pushing the limits of distance has become a tradition spanning decades.
The Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA) maintains an extensive database of Australian VHF-UHF distance records,
recognising outstanding achievements across bands from 50 MHz through to the microwave spectrum.
These records showcase the technical skill, operating expertise and experimentation that have always been hallmarks of amateur radio.
Recent years have seen remarkable achievements, including a 50 MHz digital short-path contact of 18,602 km between Australia and the
Azores, a 144 MHz national digital record of 5,636 km between VK8 and Japan, and new records being established on microwave bands as
high as 241 GHz.
The WIA distance records program recognises both national and state records and provides a permanent historical record of achievements,
even after a record has been surpassed. Successful claimants receive an official WIA certificate and have their achievement published
in the WIA records database.
The records continue to demonstrate that Australian amateurs are among the world's most innovative experimenters, regularly extending
the boundaries of what is possible on VHF, UHF and microwave frequencies.
Making a Distance Record Claim
Making a record claim involves more than simply working a long-distance contact.
The WIA requires a complete exchange and acknowledgement of callsigns and signal reports, together with information that could not have
been predicted by either station.
This information must be exchanged entirely over the air and cannot be supplemented by telephone, internet chat, messaging applications
or lower amateur bands.
The WIA verifies all claimed distances using latitude and longitude information supplied by the claimants, and the decision of the
records manager is considered final.
Operators wishing to claim a new record should review the record claim conditions and complete the official claim form available from
the WIA records website.
Claims are currently managed by the WIA VHF-UHF Records Manager, Kevin Johnston VK4UH, and may be submitted via email.
Whether your interest lies in tropo, meteor scatter, EME, digital weak-signal modes or microwave experimentation,
the distance records program provides an excellent opportunity to have your achievements formally recognised.
Further Information
WIA VHF-UHF Distance Records Information Link >> https://www.wia.org.au/members/records/data/
WIA VHF-UHF Record Claim Forms Link >> https://www.wia.org.au/members/records/data/documents/Distance%20Record%20Claim%20Form.pdf
Record claims email: distancerecords@wia.org.au
Page Last Updated: Friday, 19 Jun 2026 at 07:36 hours by Justin Giles-clark
(Sourced from https://www.wia.org.au/newsevents/news/2026/20260619-1/index.php)
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(Posted to the packet network courtesy Tony VK7AX)
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