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PY2BIL > ARNR     17.01.25 12:33l 372 Lines 17505 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2464 for Friday, January 17th
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Sent: 250117/0750 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.2.061  $:97643PY2BIL
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Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2464 for Friday, January 17th 2025
  
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2464 with a release date of Friday, 
January 17th, 2025 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. A repeater system stays robust during California's 
deadly wildfires. DXpeditioners pursue a "holy grail" island in India for 
chasers -- and shortwave ingenuity saves a ham radio program's debut.  All 
this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2464 comes your way 
right now.

** 
BILLBOARD CART

**
REPEATER SYSTEM STAYS ROBUST DURING CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES

NEIL/ANCHOR: Our top story takes us to the US state of California where 
deadly wildfires have been consuming much of the Los Angeles area and 
beyond, destroying homes and causing electrical and cellular outages. Even 
as SpaceX temporarily activated the test version of its satellite-to-
cellular service to help deliver emergency alerts and texts, hams were 
relying on the region's robust and resilient PAPA System of repeaters, as we 
hear from Ralph Squillace KK6ITB.

RALPH: As wildfires whipped through the Los Angeles area, the analogue 
repeaters of California's wide-reaching PAPA System had their nets and 
routine traffic communications cancelled for a number of days. The repeaters 
were placed on standby for news and emergency traffic only but by Tuesday, 
January 14th, all but three returned to net-hosting and normal use. Three 
repeaters remained off the main network to continue providing emergency 
coverage in the greater Los Angeles area. The PAPA system's digital 
repeaters, which utilize DMR, P25 and D-STAR, continued to host normal 
traffic.

Cecil Casillas, WD6FZA, president of the PAPA System, told Newsline that as 
of Tuesday 14th, none of the PAPA repeaters had suffered fire-related 
damages. He said that flames closely threatened repeaters on Mount Wilson 
and at Saddle Peak, which overlooks Malibu, but the fires stopped short of 
affecting the buildings, antennas or other equipment. He said the Saddle 
Peak repeater had been knocked out of service by an unrelated battery 
failure but that the fires blocked access for anyone to bring up a 
generator.

Meanwhile, SpaceX gave temporary access to its Starlink satellites to T-
Mobile customers, even without its direct-to-cell constellation being fully 
completed. According to an article in PC Magazine, only T-Mobile customers 
with supported phones would have access to texting but emergency alerts and 
evacuation notices could be received by any cellular phone.

This is Ralph Squillace KK6ITB.

(CECIL CASILLAS, WD6FZA; PC MAGAZINE)

**
TEAM OF 6 FROM INDIA TO ACTIVATE 'HOLY GRAIL'  IOTA

NEIL/ANCHOR: This week we have word that a rare, largely inaccessible island 
off the coast of India is about to be activated for only the second time - 
and the first time in 23 years. Graham Kemp VK4BB has the details.

GRAHAM: Writing in the December 2002 issue of the old 73 Magazine, Sri, 
VU2SBJ, called Sacrifice Rock - a harsh, unwelcoming island off the coast of 
Kerala in southern India - "a plain solid rock in the middle of nowhere." 
Eleven months earlier, this treacherous bit of terrain was activated for the 
first time by Sri and his DXpedition team, who were challenged by its 
difficult access and changeable weather. No hams have been there since.

That is, until now: IOTA Number AS-161, as it is also known, is about to 
become base camp for Team AU2V, six amateurs who are among many to consider 
it a holy grail. The DXpedition website calls it "a dream come true for 
chasers." 

Sara, VU2RS, told Newsline in an email that planning and preparation have 
been intense in advance of the hoped-for visit in the second week of 
February, when the three-month seasonal window for access closes. The team 
will have two CW operators and four using SSB and digital modes and is still 
working out logistics for its hours of operation. The team also continues 
critical fundraising via PayPal to cover what is expected to be 00,000 in 
expenses, covering generators, radios, antennas and, of course, the boat 
that will make that challenging trip across the water to the team's 
destination. If it is not possible to arrive safely by boat, the team will 
need to use an airplane, which will add to the costs.

See the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org for the 
team's website and PayPal address.

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.

[WEBSITE: au2v.vu2rs.com      PAYPAL ADDRESS:  sarath@lven.in).

(DX-WORLD.NET, SARA, VU2RS)

**
SILENT KEY: TOP DXER, YHOTY SUPPORTER, DENNIS MOTSCHENBACHER, K7BV

NEIL/ANCHOR: The ham radio world has lost a top DXer, a friend and a 
supporter of Newsline's Young Ham of the Year Award. We hear more about him 
from Don Wilbanks AE5DW.

DON: We at Amateur Radio Newsline are mourning the passing of Dennis 
Motschenbacher, K7BV. Dennis passed from this world on Thursday, January 9th 
after a 14-year battle with cancer. He was 76.

Dennis was passionate about amateur radio. He was first licensed at age 13. 
An avid DXer, he was equally at home on both sides of the pileup. His 
amateur radio travels took him to 35 countries. He competed in the World 
Radiosport Team Championships in Slovenia in 2000 and won countless awards 
for his ham radio accomplishments. He served as a radioman for two years in 
the US Navy in Vietnam on the USS Canberra. From 1976 to 2002, Dennis worked 
in the fire suppression industry.

He was editor of the National Contest Journal from 1998 to 2002. After that, 
he was sales and marketing manager for the ARRL. From 2006 to his retirement 
in 2019, he was executive vice president of amateur radio sales at Yaesu 
USA. Dennis was a fixture on stage at the Huntsville Hamfest for the 
presentation of our Young Ham of the Year award. 

Some years ago, Gigaparts did a live online TV presentation at the 
Huntsville Hamfest and it was my honor as one of the hosts to spend about 20 
minutes chatting with Dennis as my guest. You can find that on the Gigaparts 
Youtube channel, or at the link in the printed edition of this week's 
newscast. A devoted family man, we send our love to his wife, children and 
grandchildren. Rest easy, my friend. I'm Don Wilbanks, AE5DW.

(https://youtu.be/3SthKRC2bpM?si=gKqDUZFDkj9Sshzd)

**
GET READY FOR WINTER FIELD DAY

NEIL/ANCHOR: Are you ready for Winter Field Day? If you're in the US or 
Canada, get your plans in order now. Travis Lisk N3ILS tells us more.

TRAVIS: In North America, Winter Field Day will be held, as always, during 
the last full weekend of January but there are some changes this year. This 
emergency preparedness test of portable equipment under harsh-weather 
conditions has been extended past its previous 24-hour period.

Clubs and individual amateurs are being encouraged to register their 
stations for this event, which has grown since the first Winter Field Day 
held in 2007. Operators are permitted to use HF, VHF and UHF bands for CW, 
SSB and digital modes. The operating period is now 30 hours long and will 
begin at 1600 UTC Saturday, January 25th and conclude at 2159 UTC the 
following day. Both indoor and outdoor stations are permitted, as are mobile 
stations whether they be moving or stationary.

For more details about the rules and to register your station, visit the 
Winter Field Day website at winterfieldday dot org. That’s winterfieldday- 
one word - dot org. (winterfieldday.org).

This is Travis Lisk N3ILS.

(WINTER FIELD DAY ASSOCIATION)

**
DMR RADIOS OPEN UP THE WORLD TO STUDENTS IN INDIA

NEIL/ANCHOR: Students in government residential schools in rural parts of  
the Indian state of Karnataka can now reach out and touch the world with the 
help of Digital Mobile Radio, or DMR. John Williams VK4JJW explains how the 
radios got there.

JOHN: Twenty new DMR radio base stations are opening up the world to 
students in rural schools run by the state of Karnataka’s Social Welfare 
Department. The installation was done by the Indian Institute of Hams at the 
request of the state. According to news reports in the Hindu and the 
Bangalore Mirror, science teachers and a pair of eighth-grade students from 
a number of the schools received online training for their amateur radio 
licenses and then successfully sat the exam from the Ministry of 
Communications.

The radios are designed to give the students access to scientists, 
researchers and others in the amateur radio community who would normally be 
inaccessible from within their remote rural communities. The radios are 
available to be operated around the clock. Just as significantly, the radios 
are available so the schools can serve as emergency communications centres 
when disaster strikes and the remote regions are likely to be cut off from 
many services.

The initiative is called Ham Yatra and spans the state, the ham institute’s 
director, S. Satyapal [pron: Sat-YUH-poll] told local media. He said he 
hoped the radios would open a window of curiosity for the students about 
opportunities in the world of science.

This is John Williams VK4JJW.

(THE HINDU, BANGALORE MIRROR)


**
BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the NO6BS 
repeater on Thursday evenings in Los Angeles County, California.

**

VOICE OF AMERICA MUSEUM POISED TO REOPEN

NEIL/ANCHOR: The National VOA Museum of Broadcasting in West Chester, Ohio 
is QRV and is about to reopen. Stephen Kinford N8WB brings us the details.

STEPHEN: Six months of renovations have come to an end at the Voice of 
America museum, which is reopening its doors to the public at noon on 
Saturday the 25th of January. The work has created new exhibit space with 
room for more displays that showcase radio history in the US. The building 
formerly housed the Voice of America's Bethany relay station.

The museum will be open every Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. local 
time but can also accommodate group tours on any day of the week if 
arrangements are made in advance.

The West Chester Amateur Radio Association, WC8VOA, has its headquarters in 
the historic building and has had uninterrupted on-the-air activity even as 
remodeling took place elsewhere in the interior. As visitors return, hams 
will be on the air and, as always, ready to welcome them.

This is Stephen Kinford N8WB.

(VOA MUSEUM) 

**

WEST BENGAL HAMS COMBINE PUBLIC SAFETY WITH DXPEDITION

NEIL/ANCHOR: In India, the second largest Hindu gathering - the Gangasagar 
Mela - is presenting a variety of opportunities for DX and award scheme 
participation. That's because hams on DXpedition there are also involved in 
a public-safety mission at this massive religious pilgrimage. Jim Meachen 
ZL2BHF tells us what's happening.

JIM: Where the Ganges River and the Bay of Bengal run together, the faithful 
gather every year. Hams from the West Bengal Radio Club VU2WB have been on 
Sagar Island since the 10th of January, operating  AU2WBRC. They are there 
to help keep people safe as they come to worship and they are helping 
visitors who get lost in the crowd reunite with their families. The hams 
have another mission too; making contact with radio operators around the 
world. Those logging a QSO with any of the operators qualify for any number 
of award schemes, including Islands on the Air, which identifies Sagar 
Island as AS-153. The location also qualifies under the Beaches on the Air 
as number 60572 and World Lighthouses on the Air schemes as lighthouse 2262.

This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

(QRZ.COM, AMATEUR RADIO DAILY)

**
ARMY SIGNAL REGIMENT HOSTS SPECIAL EVENT IN NETHERLANDS

NEIL/ANCHOR: Mark your calendars for January 23rd. You might just work 
someone in the Royal Netherlands Army Signal Regiment during a one-day 
special event with a very specific purpose: to get Marines in the 
Netherlands more involved in amateur radio. Jeremy Boot G4NJH has the 
details.

JEREMY: Special event station PA25MC has a military mission but one focused 
on education and friendship. On the 23rd of January, the Royal Netherlands 
Army Signal Regiment, PI4VBD, will be operating from various locations using 
military radios - some of them historical. There will also be a variety of 
operators. Some are experienced members of the army, others are soldiers in 
training. Some may even be civilian personnel. They will be calling CQ on as 
many HF bands as possible using SSB.

The signal regiment itself is a well-established group that knows well the 
importance of amateur radio. Last year it marked its 150th anniversary.

For QSL information, see the QRZ.com page for PA25MC.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(AMATEUR NEWS DAILY, QRZ.COM)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, be listening for the callsign 5N9DTG being used by 
members of the Rebel DX Group. They will be on the air from Nigeria for up 
to three weeks, starting in the third week of January. See QRZ.com for QSL 
details.

Team IG9/S51V will have several members on the air between the 19th and the 
29th of January operating with the prefix IG9 followed by their home 
callsigns, including S56DX, S51V, S57UN and several others. They will also 
be participating in the CQ WW 160-Meter CW Contest as a Multi-Single entry 
using the team callsign IG9/S51V, all from Lampedusa Island, IOTA number AF-
019.  QSL via the operators’ home calls. See QRZ.com for additional details.

Listen for OF60AP being used by members of the Central Uusimaa [pronounced: 
ooo SEE' muh] Radio Amateurs Association OH2AP in Finland. The club is 
marking its 60th anniversary with this year-long special event.  See QRZ.com 
for certificate and QSL details.

Dwight, VE7BV, is using the callsign TG9BBV until the 28th of January from 
Guatemala. He is operating CW, SSB and some FT8. Look for Dwight on 40 
through 6m. See his personal QRZ.com page for QSL details.

(425 DX BULLETIN)

**
KICKER: THE SHOW MUST (AND DID) GO ON

NEIL/ANCHOR: There’s a saying in theatre that even if you encounter 
hardship, “the show must go on.ö Well, the theatre of radio is no exception 
to that rule. In our final story this week, we learn how an important 
amateur radio program weathered the storm - literally - to fulfill a 
promised short-wave broadcast premiere. Here’s Jeremy Boot G4NJH with the 
details.

JEREMY: Listeners had counted on hearing the first short-wave broadcast of 
the D.A.R.C.'s amateur news programme from Woofferton, England – but no one 
had counted on the severe storm that was bearing down on the west of 
England. The damage rendered 7 of the station’s 35 antennas unusable leaving 
the 9670 kHz broadcast imperiled as the start of the programme drew near.

The technical team scrambled and, on short notice, improvised: They "Crash-
Started" another transmitter and a different antenna so that they were able 
to put the programme on the air, just as expected, on-time and on-frequency.

In an announcement to listeners on Sunday, 12th January, Radio D.A.R.C.’s 
Rainer Englert, DF2NU, thanked the Woofferton team, saying [quote] “this 
incident shows once again that technicians help each other and do everything 
humanly possible.ö [endquote].

Although reception reports varied unexpectedly because of the different 
equipment employed, over 1,000 listeners’ emails poured in, praising the 
programme. Rainer proclaimed the premiere a success.

The Woofferton station had saved Radio D.A.R.C. for its listeners after the 
closure of its previous short-wave broadcaster in Moosbrun, Austria, had 
been obliged to close down.

Meanwhile, the station reports that the original antennas have since been 
repaired and their original configuration restored. The show will indeed go 
on.

(RADIO D.A.R.C.)

**
Have you sent in your amateur radio haiku to Newsline's haiku challenge yet? 
It's as easy as writing a QSL card. Set your thoughts down using traditional 
haiku format - a three-line verse with five syllables in the first line, 
seven in the second and five in the third. Submit your work on our website 
at arnewsline.org - each week's winner gets a shout-out on our website, 
where everyone can find the winning haiku.

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to the Amateur Radio Daily; Bangalore Mirror; 
Cecil Casillas, WD6FZA; David Behar K7DB; Facebook; 425DXNews; The Hindu 
website; PC magazine; QRZ.com; Radio D. A. R. C.; RadioWorld.com; Sara, 
VU2RS; shortwaveradio.de; National Voice of America Museum of Broadcasting; 
Winter Field Day Association; Wireless Institute of Australia; YouTube; 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 Neil Rapp WB9VPG in Union, Kentucky saying 73. As always 
we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2025. 
All rights reserved.

73 de Bill, PY2BIL
PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 17-jan-2025 07:50 E. South America Standard Time






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