• Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2419 for Friday March 8th, 2024

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    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2419 for Friday March 8th, 2024

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2419 with a release date of Friday
    March 8th, 2024 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Hams race against time to get medicine to an
    ailing train passenger. A new look at recharging batteries, via
    infrared - and Amateur Radio Newsline presents a special tribute to
    Silent Key Bob Heil K9EID. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2419 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **
    HAMS RACE AGAINST THE CLOCK TO DELIVER MEDICINE TO RAIL PASSENGER

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to India, where hams assisted in a
    dramatic race against time - and a railroad schedule - to deliver
    medicine to an ailing passenger on a train. Jim Meachen ZL2BHF brings
    us that story.

    JIM: Two hams in India raced against the clock - and a fast-moving
    express train - to provide medicine to an ailing passenger en route
    from Hyderabad [hydra-BOD] this month. According to several reports in
    the local Indian media, the 35-year-old man had fallen ill and was
    being accompanied back home on the train by his brother when his
    condition worsened. His throat pain became severe and he began to cough
    up blood. Another passenger who was a doctor suggested a remedy that
    could help the man but the train was not scheduled to stop until the
    next station. The ailing man's brother phoned their father, a social
    worker, who put an alert out on social media via WhatsApp. It was seen
    by Ambarish Nag Biswas, VU2JFA, of the West Bengal Radio Club, who went
    on the air with an emergency call on behalf of the passenger. Sai
    Likhith, VU2TFN, a member of the Dolphin Amateur Radio Repeater Club,
    heard the call and responded, receiving the information he needed. He
    was able to locate the necessary remedy. He arrived at the station just
    in time to hand over the medicine during the train's five-minute stop.

    This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

    (TELANGANA TODAY, THE TIMES OF INDIA)

    **
    WIRELESS POWER TRANSFER USES INFRARED

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Need to charge your batteries? Have you ever thought about transferring that power wirelessly? A company in Israel doing just that
    - and Kent Peterson KC0DGY tells us about it.

    KENT: Technology developed 10 years ago in Israel to permit wireless
    transfer of power has begun showing up in some world markets. The
    over-the-air system uses infrared sent from transmitters that transform electricity into infrared beams which they then send to nearby devices
    that need their batteries recharged. Line of sight is necessary for the transmission to be successful and one transmitter's signal can cover
    about 130 square meters of area. For it to work, each device needs to
    have receivers attached to convert the infrared signals back into
    electricity.

    The company, Wi-Charge, has trademarked this far-field wireless
    technology under the name "AirCord." It is designed to replace the
    traditional need to plug devices in using cords to recharge them.
    According to the company website, the technology is already in use in
    some countries in the retail, commercial and industrial sectors.
    Wi-Charge states that AirCord sends narrow beams that focus only on the
    devices equipped with receivers and has been certified as safe by the
    Food and Drug Administration and Underwriters Laboratories in the US
    and by the International Electrotechnical Commission in the UK.

    This is Kent Peterson KC0DGY.

    (FORBES, THE JERUSALEM POST)

    **
    OVERSEAS HAMS GET EXPANDED PRIVILEGES UNDER AUSTRALIA'S NEW
    LICENSESYSTEM

    PAUL/ANCHOR: If you're planning to visit Australia anytime soon and
    want to get on the air, John Williams VK4JJW has some encouraging news
    to share.

    JOHN: Whether you are a US Technician class operator, a Foundation
    licence holder in the UK or a ham with entry-level privileges in
    certain other countries, the new class licence arrangements in
    Australia now permit you to get on the air - up to a maximum of 365
    consecutive days. Visitors from a list of countries no longer need to
    make a separate application for a licence; they need only append VK
    slash before their home callsign.

    The Australian Media and Communications Authority has posted a list of countries with currently recognised foreign licence equivalents who may
    operate under Australian licence rules. Visit the ACMA page at the
    address given in the text version of this newscast script at
    arnewsline.org

    The ACMA makes it clear, however, that hams seeking to relocate to
    Australia will still need to apply for a licence in VK and receive a
    new VK home call.

    [DO NOT READ:
    https://www.acma.gov.au/overseas-amateurs-visiting-australia ]

    This is John Williams VK4JJW.

    (ACMA)

    **
    NEW LICENSE CLASS FOR ENTRY LEVEL OPS IN LUXEMBOURG

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Luxembourg has introduced a new license class for entry
    level ops. Jeremy Boot G4NJH tells us what happens next.

    JEREMY: A third class of amateur radio licence has been introduced by
    the Luxembourg Institute of Regulation to provide entry level operators
    with access to selected bands. Known as the BASE level certificate, it
    permits operation on 2 metres, 70 cm and 10m. Operators may use a
    maximum power of 25 watts PEP and are limited to dipole-type antennas
    and quarter-wave vertical ground plane antennas. They must have no more
    than two radiating elements and a gain of less than 3 dBd.

    The licence became available on the 26th of January and first exams are
    to be offered this coming June. The regulator finalised the agreement
    in consultation with the Radioamateurs du Luxembourg, whose education
    team had submitted the proposal last year. BASE call signs will
    beginLX7.

    The Radioamateurs du Luxembourg says on its Facebook page: [quote]
    "With this new licence class, the start with amateur radio now becomes simplified. After just a short introductory course by our experienced
    radio amateurs and a brief exam at the regulatory authority, you can
    apply for a licence and participate in amateur radio." [endquote] The Luxembourg amateur radio group said it hoped operators would eventually
    sit for the exams for the higher-level NOVICE and HAREC class. The BASE
    licence exam syllabus follows the CEPT/ECC 89 report.

    This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (RADIOAMATEURS DU LUXENBOURG)

    **
    DEADLINE FOR ARDC GRANTS IS APRIL 1ST

    PAUL/ANCHOR: If you or your club or school have a project that helps
    further the mission of amateur radio for everyone, now is the time to
    consider a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications. Stephen
    Kinford N8WB explains what's available.

    STEPHEN: April 1st is the deadline to apply for grants from Amateur
    Radio Digital Communications for this year. The grants are distributed
    across three categories that are consistent with ARDC's mission. The
    first type of grant supports and grows ham radio by helping to fund
    emergency communications initiatives, licensing instruction and
    repeater infrastructure.

    In another category, ARDC also supports education in the schools
    directly, funding support and mentorship of STEAM programs that link to
    ham radio, digital communications or wireless technology. Education
    grants also include support of scholarships.

    Finally, research and development projects, such as the M17 Open
    Protocol Project and Tangerine SDR - two previous recipients - are
    given support to ensure ham radio has access to state-of-the-art
    technology.

    Any projects receiving an ARDC grant must be made available to the
    public and in the case of software, must be open source. Visit the
    website ardc dot net to read more about the grants and to find an
    application form.

    This is Stephen Kinford N8WB.

    (ARDC)

    **

    FRIEDRICHSHAFEN THEME IS IOTA'S 60TH ANNIVERSARY

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Oceans separate us but because of one amateur radio
    programme, oceans have also been uniting us. Sixty years ago, the first
    amateur radio Islands on the Air operators began calling CQ from remote
    ocean islands around the globe. That spirit of adventure is being
    celebrated this summer at Europe's largest amateur radio event. Ham
    Radio Friedrichshafen (PRON: FREED RICKS HAR VEN) has chosen IOTA's
    60th anniversary as the theme for its 47th amateur radio event taking
    place June 28th to the 30th on Lake Constance in southern Germany. In
    the words of the promoters, it is a celebration of "60 years of Islands
    on the Air: technology meets adventure!"

    (HAM RADIO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN)

    **

    DO YOU HAIKU?

    Don't forget the Amateur Radio Newsline haiku challenge. If you're not
    too busy tuning your antennas or chasing the latest DXpedition, pick up
    a pencil and share your experience by sending an original haiku to us
    here at Newsline. Use the entry form on our website, arnewsline.org and
    please follow the rules for writing your three-line haiku -- sorry but
    we cannot accept any entries that aren't written in traditional
    haikuform.

    **

    BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
    Radio Newsline heard on bulletin stations around the world including
    D-STAR Reflector 91 C at 7:30 p.m. Melbourne Australian time on
    Wednesdays, or 0830 UTC.

    **
    NASA RETIRES MARS HELICOPTER

    PAUL/ANCHOR: NASA's Mars helicopter, known as Ingenuity, has officially
    been retired. Images sent late last month to NASA's Jet Propulsion
    Laboratory by Perseverance, the Mars rover, showed that an upper rotor
    blade had broken off, preventing additional takeoffs. After three
    years, however, the mission is nonetheless being called a success. It
    had been deployed to Mars to determine if controlled flight might be
    possible from the surface of the planet - and it proved it was. Those experiments were to include only five flights - not the 72 it had
    completed by the time it became disabled.

    (NASA, FUNKAMATEUR MAGAZINE)

    **
    AUTISM AWARENESS EVENT NEEDS OPS WORLDWIDE

    PAUL/ANCHOR: Do you want to be part of an on-air team that makes a
    difference? Consider signing up to call CQ for World Autism Awareness.
    Patrick Clark K8TAC, who will be one of those activating the W2A
    special event callsign, has this report.

    PATRICK: From April 1st through to the 7th, hams around the world will
    be on the air to educate people about what it means when someone is
    diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, a developmental disability
    that affects all nationalities.

    The organizer, James Gallo KB2FMH, launched the week-long event last
    year with tremendous success and is hoping this year's group of
    volunteer operators will have an even greater impact. Those making
    contacts with the special event stations are directed to the W2A page
    on QRZ.com where they can learn more about autism.

    To make the voice of awareness even stronger this year, organizers are
    looking for additional operators. If you want to be part of this
    important team, send an email to hamradioevents [at] gmail.com and in
    the subject line, write "A A W 2024 - I Want To Help."

    This is Patrick Clark K8TAC.

    (AUTISM AWARENESS)

    **
    WORLD OF DX

    In the World of DX, listen for Iain, G4SGX, operating from Jamaica,
    IOTA Number NA-097, with the callsign G4SGX/6Y through the 13th of
    March. He will be using CW on 80 through 10 metres. He will also be participating in the RSGB Commonwealth Contest on the 9th and 10th of
    March. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

    Jacek, SP5APW, is on the air as 9W2/SP5APW from Langkawi Island, IOTA
    Number AS-058, West Malaysia through the 17th of March, using SSB and
    FT8 in fox and hound mode. He will operate mainly on 6 metres. See
    QRZ.com for QSL details.

    The callsign TO5LA will be on the air from Mayotte, IOTA Number AF-027,
    by operators Ros 4Z5LA, Ruben 4Z5FI and Slava 4Z5MU. Listen on
    various bands where they will operate in various modes between the 28th
    of March and the 2nd of April. They will also participate in the CQ WW
    WPX SSB Contest. QSL via 4Z5FI.

    Be listening for Phill VK7ID who will be on Tasman Island on Saturday
    the 9th of March at noon local time - or 0100 UTC - logging contacts
    for SOTA, POTA and for VK Flora & Fauna. He will be inside Tasman
    National Park, which carries the designations of VKFF-0481 and, for
    Parks on the Air, VK-0535. The island's SOTA designation is VK7/SC055.
    Listen for him running 20 watts into a linked dipole. See QRZ.com for
    QSL information.

    (OZSOTA GROUPS.IO, 425 DX BULLETIN)

    **
    A TRIBUTE: BOB HEIL K9EID

    PAUL/ANCHOR: We devote the rest of this week's newscast to remembering
    an innovator, a mentor, a friend - a fellow ham. Bob Heil K9EID. Once
    in a while, a person comes into your life who inspires you and changes
    the course of your life. I want to personally thank Bob for being that
    person for me and for so many others. Among them was Academy
    Award-winning audio engineer Tomlinson Holman, creator of Lucasfilm's
    THX sound system. He told Newsline in an email that Bob gave him his
    early start in the industry by having him work on some of his first
    live-sound consoles. From there, he said, he grew his business.

    Here is Don Wilbanks AE5DW with Amateur Radio Newsline's tribute toBob.

    DON: On February 28th at the age of 83, the worlds of amateur radio and
    music lost a giant.

    Robert G. Heil was born on October 5th 1940 in St. Louis, Missouri. He
    grew up in nearby Marissa, Illinois. Bob was a gifted musician,
    performing on the theater organ at local restaurant at age 14. He
    became the house organist for the Wurlitzer theatre organ at the Fox
    Theatre in St. Louis. Learning how to tune the thousands of pipes in
    the Wurlitzer taught Bob how to listen, mentally picking apart the
    discrete tones and nuances that became the backbone of his future
    endeavors. These included early satellite dishes and home theaters.

    His teens were when he became a ham radio operator, earning the call
    K9EID.

    In his early 20s, Bob began designing and building theater organ
    installations, and playing six nights a week. In 1966 he founded Ye Old
    Music Shoppe in Marissa, later renamed Heil Sound. In 1970 one fateful
    phone call led to Bob and Heil Sound creating an innovative sound
    system for The Grateful Dead after the band's sound engineer had been
    arrested in New Orleans. Bob finished the tour, which led to a new
    career, creating the de facto modern rock concert sound with such bands
    as The Who, James Gang, Jeff Beck, ZZ Top and many more. It was with
    the James Gang that he met his lifelong friend and fellow ham, Joe
    Walsh.

    In 1973 Bob invented the Talk Box, a device what transfers the sound of
    a guitar via a tube to the artist's mouth, where the sound is shaped
    much like it shapes the human voice. Joe Walsh was given the first one.
    Later, Peter Frampton began using it. Richie Sambora of Bon Jovi and
    countless others still use the Heil TalkBox.

    In the 1980s as musical tastes began changing and many of the acts he
    toured with came off the road, Bob gravitated back to ham radio. He was
    not happy with the sound of the modern radios at that time, calling the
    sound "mushy with no articulation." Heil sound entered the ham radio
    market, creating lines of headsets and microphone elements. The famous
    HC series was born.

    The worlds of pro audio and ham radio came together in 2006 when Joe
    Walsh suggested that Heil Sound should develop concert microphones. A
    full line of vocal, drum and instrument mics came from that idea. The
    PR35 and PR37 have been the choice for top entertainers like Charlie
    Daniels, Carrie Underwood and many more. The PR30 and PR40 studio mics
    are very popular in the broadcasting and podcasting arena.

    Podcaster Leo Laporte won a PR40 at a podcast convention. He was so
    impressed with the microphone that he invited Bob to his studio in
    California to be a guest on his show Triangulation. Triangulation
    episode 8 can still be seen and heard via twit.tv. Bob sat in to talk
    about his life in audio. The online chat room was full of ham radio
    callsigns, leading Laporte to insist that Bob do a ham radio program on
    Leo's network, TWiT. Ham Nation episode 1 debuted May 25, 2011 with Joe
    Walsh performing the theme music and as the shows first guest. Ham
    Nation is still on the air, now on the Ham Radio Crash Course YouTube
    channel.

    Bob continued to host Ham Nation on the Twit network until the COVID
    pandemic forced changes at TWiT, leading to the cancellation of several programs due to a drastic drop in advertiser budgets. As Ham Nation transitioned to YouTube, Bob transitioned to appearing as a guest at
    hundreds of club meetings and presenting his audio demonstrations via
    Skype and Zoom.

    Sadly, Bob lost a yearlong battle with cancer on February 28th. He
    passed surrounded by his family.

    Many of his musician friends left their memories via social media.

    Peter Frampton wrote: "I am so sorry to hear of the loss of my friend
    for so many years, Bob Heil. A musician, inventor, ham radio expert,
    Heil Sound and microphones. He gave me a very important present mid
    seventies. The Heil Talkbox!! Can never thank Bob enough. Rest in power
    my friend."

    Joe Walsh, who had visited Bob recently, said: "So waddya got that
    doesn't work?" I can hear Bob Heil's voice in the back of my mind. An
    amazing musician (especially behind the wheel of a pipe organ at your
    favorite old movie house), a mad scientist, a ham radio aficionado and evangelist, a tireless problem solver, a mentor to me and guide on my
    guitar journey, Bob was our wizard in the Midwest. He was also my
    friend for more than 50 years. "So waddya got that doesn't work?" Well,
    I don't think my phone is working because you're not picking up... RIP,
    man. I love you and miss you already. Sending love to Sarah and to the
    world of audioheads you leave behind."

    My phone must be acting up as well, Joe.

    Farewell, Bob Heil. See you a bit farther on up the band.

    I'm Don Wilbanks, AE5DW.

    **
    NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to ACMA; ARDC; Autism Awareness; Amateur
    Radio Daily; AMSAT; CQ magazine; David Behar K7DB; DXWorld; FCC;
    Forbes; 425DXNews; FunkAmateur Magazine; Jerusalem Post; NASA;
    OzSOTAGroups; shortwaveradio.de; SpaceNews; Telengana Today; Times of
    India; and you our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio
    Newsline. We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio Newsline is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for its
    continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our
    website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also
    remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a
    5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn Eve
    Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our news team
    worldwide, I'm Paul Braun WD9GCO in Valparaiso Indiana saying 73. As
    always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is
    Copyright 2024. All rights reserved.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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