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Radio Remote Control 1258 – Remote control your ham radio

RRC-1258 – A complete remote control system for Amateur Radio

I Can really recommend this product for remote control you HF / VHF / UHF Ham radio over the internet. This is much better than the “usual” solution with a computer and skype. With this setup you don’t need a computer at all. All you need is a supported ham radio like Icom IC-706, Kenwood TS-480 and Kenwood TS-2000. Later this will also support Yaesu products. You also need a internet connection at both places (radio/server location and “client” location).. So now my radio are at home, and my front on my Icom IC-706 is at my office desk..

You can read more at www.remoterig.com

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Amateur radio License information for Brazil – PY

Under you see some  information if you want a “visitor-license” in Brazil. That way you are allowed to use your ham radio equipment. 

Licensing information for Brazil – PY

Prepared by: OH2MCN – Veke & PY2NQ / PY1CAS
Status: April 1996, Dec ‘99 links, Jan ‘01 address of ANATEL updated

Intro: If you have a valid license you can get a visitor’s license in Brazil with the help of LABRE.

PTT:
license department in Sao Paulo 
ANATEL – Sao Paulo
Rua Vergueiro, 3073
Tel. 5576 8893 or 5576 8800
or via
Liga Brasileira de Radioamadores [LABRE]
Address: P.O. Box 00004, 70359-970 Brasilia, D.F., Brazil
Location: Setor de Clubes Esportivos Sul, Trecho 4
Lote 1/A, 70359-970 Brasilia, D.F.
Telephone: +55 (61) 223-1157 <HQ>, (84) 228-2151 <PY2BJO> 
Telefax: +55 (61) 223-1161 <HQ>
President: Mauricio Carrilho Barreto, PS7RK
Secretary: Americo Barbosa Fortes, PT2ABF
IARU liaison: Junior Torres de Castro, PY2BJO
E-mail: labre@labre.org
WWW: http://www.labre.org

Paperwork needed:
- passport
- original license
The best way to get a license:
Call regional LABRE office e.g. in Rio and ask for the director Mr. Soni (PY1SL) who will be in charge of getting a license. It takes about 20 days since the first contact with the League. LABRE/Rio de Janeiro phones: (021) 281-5868 (Voice/Fax), (021) 201-5301 (Voice), (021) 581-6273 (Voice). LABRE has also other regional offices, see above. No contact before arrival needed. 
Price:
about 35 USD

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The K7RA Solar Update

The K7RA Solar Update

Finally! A sunspot group appeared this week, about three weeks since the last group disappeared. The first spotless day after sunspot group 1008’s last appearance was Tuesday, November 18; the last spotless day before group 1009 emerged was Tuesday, December 9. As expected, this was another Solar Cycle 24 group, emerging far south of our Sun’s equator.

Sunspot numbers for December 4-10 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 and 13 with a mean of 1.9. The 10.7 cm flux was 69.6, 68.8, 69.1, 69, 68.5, 68.7 and 70.8 with a mean of 69.2. The estimated planetary A indices were 6, 10, 7, 6, 5, 0 and 2 with a mean of 5.1. The estimated mid-latitude A indices were 4, 7, 14, 6, 1, 1 and 2 with a mean of 5.

This weekend is the ARRL 10 Meter Contest. It would be great to have enough sunspots to drive the Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF) above 28 MHz, but that doesn’t seem likely, as group 1009 is near the western limb of the visible solar disk.

What level of solar activity would we need in order to see the MUF above 28 MHz? That varies according to the locations of the two stations trying to communicate, the season and the time of day. For example, if the date is December 13, the path from Cleveland, Ohio to Dallas, Texas is likely to briefly have an MUF at 28.0 MHz around 1730 UTC, if the average sunspot number was at least 105 for several days. In our example, if the average sunspot number for several days was 125, the 3 hour period from 1700-2000 UTC would have an MUF above 28 MHz, and the 1730-1800 UTC period would likely have the best signals. If we calculate the path from Boston to Atlanta for the same date, the average sunspot number for several days should be at least 131 — instead of 105 — to reach an MUF of 28.0 MHz.

But don’t expect 10 meters to be unusable this weekend. An MUF above 28 MHz is desirable for very reliable communications, but perhaps Sporadic-E will offer surprises. Summer Sporadic-E is more intense, but this time of year we should see at least some Sporadic-E.

A few weeks ago, Vic Woodling, WB4SLM, of Centerville, Georgia, wrote about an experience on 30 meters in the middle of the day, copying strong European stations and also 5R8IC working into Europe from Madagascar, but with weaker signals on Vic’s end. This was at 1630 UTC, and when Vic came back to the radio at 1830 UTC, they were even stronger. Although in Vic’s experience this is uncommon, a check with a propagation program for 30 meters on November 22 with zero sunspots between Georgia and England shows propagation closely matching his report. At 1630 UTC, it shows the relative signal level at 15 dB, and then at 1830 UTC it jumps to 29 dB. But if he looks further east to the Czech Republic, the signals stay around the level that they would be for England at 1630 UTC, all through the same period.

Ed Clulow, N7TL, of Portland, Oregon, commented on 75 meter conditions during the ARRL November Sweepstakes (Phone) that was November 15-17; he uses an inverted-V dipole. He said that after dabbling in contests for several decades, he had never seen propagation like it was on Saturday evening, saying it sounded more like 20 meters. He worked Midwest and East Coast stations with ease, snagging them on the first or second call. He knows some hams never venture below 20 meters, and thinks some of us may be missing good propagation at the bottom of the sunspot cycle.

Dave Bennett, VE7YJ, of Aldergrove, British Columbia, wrote, “Carrying on from WE0H’s report on 600 meter activities, I have noted in the past week or so reception from the powerful Far Eastern Russian broadcasters on 153, 180, 189, 234 and 279 KHz. They were at their best on November 29, around 0700 UTC, but were heard as early as 0440 UTC. They haven’t been as good the last couple of days, but were still detectable. I’m using an old IC-751A with a 160 meter inverted-V antenna and could probably get even better results with a bigger antenna. The last few nights, 160 meters has been spotty as well. VE6s were strong, but the Century Club Net on 1892 has been poor, whereas the week before I was hearing stations as far east and south as Texas and Ohio.”

Amateur solar observer Tad Cook, K7RA, of Seattle, Washington, provides this weekly report on solar conditions and propagation. This report also is available via W1AW every Friday, and an abbreviated version appears in The ARRL Letter. Check here for a detailed explanation of the numbers used in this bulletin. An archive of past propagation bulletins can be found here. You can find monthly propagation charts between four USA regions and 12 overseas locations here. Readers may contact the author via e-mail.

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CQtube.com back online after server hack

CQtube.com is now back on line with a more secure and powerful server after a server hack this summer.

In just a few months, CQtube became very popular and at peak times, was transferring around 10MPS. However, the site’s server was maliciously attacked and taken down.

We did not want to bring it back on line without extensive testing and CQtube 2 is now online. It is based on a powerful QuadCore CPU and 4GB ram and to start with 1.5TB of data storage. That should be enough for a while!

www.cqtube.com

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ARISS contact planned with school in Porto Sant ‘Elpidio, Italy

An International Space Station Expedition 18 ARISS school contact has been planned with participants at Scuola Elementare Faleriense ‘Gianni Rodari’, Porto Sant ‘Elpidio, Italy on 18 December. The event is scheduled to begin at approximately 1210 UTC, which is 13.10 CEWT.

The contact will be a direct between stations OR4ISS andI6KZR. The contact should be audible over most of Europe. Interested parties are invited to listen in on the 145.800 MHz downlink. The participants are expected to conduct the conversation in English.

The school “Gianni Rodari” is located in Porto Sant’Elpidio, a small town in Southern Italy. It is situated on the shore of the Adriatic Sea, 50 km away from Ancona and 30 km from the beautiful city of San Benedetto del Tronto. “Gianni Rodari” is a big primary school including a kindergarten. The school offers practical courses and projects such as the radio contact with the International Space Station.

Another important and exciting project for the pupils is the construction and test of the “coherer”, the primitive radio signal detector. It was invented by Temistocle Calzecchi Onesti, who demonstrated in experiments in 1884 through 1886 that iron filings contained in an insulating tube will conduct an electrical current under the action of an electromagnetic wave. This discovery was important for the later work of Sir Oliver Lodge, Edouard Branly and Guglielmo Marconi in the development of the radio. Onesti lived in Monterubbiano, a small village near the city of Porto Sant ‘Elpidio.

Participants will ask as many of the following questions as time allows:

1. How are you?
2. What’s your name and how old are you?
3. How long are you already onboard the ISS on this mission?
4. What do you feel during takeoff?
5. Are you afraid of anything during your stay onboard the ISS?

6. When did you decide to become an astronaut?
7. Did you have good marks at school?
8. What do you see right now when you look through the window of your spaceship?
9. What exactly is a black hole?
10. Do you see any planet from the spaceship?

11. What does the spaceship inside look like?
12. Is it your first time in the spaceship?
13. What is the total size of the spaceship?
14. Do you sleep in a bed with sheets and blanket?
15. What do you eat for breakfast, lunch and dinner?

16. How many hours do you sleep per day? Do you sleep well?
17. What’s your daily routine onboard up there?
18. Are you bored sometimes?
19. Are you homesick? What do you do when you feel like that?
20. Have you children?
21. Is it very hard living without gravity?

ARISS is an international educational outreach program partnering the participating space agencies, NASA, Russian Space Agency, ESA, CNES, JAXA, and CSA, with the AMSAT and IARU organizations from participating countries.

ARISS offers an opportunity for students to experience the excitement of Amateur Radio by talking directly with crewmembers on-board the International Space Station.

Teachers, parents and communities see, first hand, how Amateur Radio and crewmembers on ISS can energize youngsters’ interest in science, technology, and learning.

73

Gaston Bertels – ON4WF
ARISS-Europe chairman

www.ariss-eu.org

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Ham radio news for you

For your own information, you can click “ham radio news” on the top and get access to the latest ham radio feeds on the internet.

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DXLab Announces QRZ XML Support

DXKeeper and Pathfinder are members of the freeware DXLab Suite, a set of eight interoperating applications designed to automate amateur radio DXing activities. DXKeeper supports logging, QSLing and award tracking. Pathfinder is a specialized web browser that provides 1-click access to more than 80 online sources of QSL information, including QRZ.com.

DXKeeper has long been able to populate new and already-logged QSOs with information from QRZ.com without requiring a subscription. It does this by directing Pathfinder to display the QRZ.com results – including advertisements – and then analyzing the returned information. Fred AA7BQ’s continued improvements to the QRZ.com web site have occasionally broken this mechanism, but its been easy to update Pathfinder to compensate; users can obtain and install such updates with a single mouse click.

After the most recent QRZ.com changes, I reviewed the existing DXLab-QRZ.com interoperation with Fred to be certain that he is comfortable with it. During this conversation, Fred suggested that I provide direct access for DXLab users with data-only (XML) or full QRZ.com subscriptions – a request already made by several DXLab users over the past few months. Last Friday, I released DXKeeper version 7.3.3 with this capability.

Thus DXLab users now have the same choice available to those accessing QRZ.com via a web browser: access the callbook data without a subscription but with accompanying advertisements, or access the data directly with an appropriate subscription.

All DXLab applications are free, and available via www.dxlabsuite.com .

73,

Dave, AA6YQ

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ISS 70cm to 2m FM Repeater operational

David Barber has reported on the AMSAT Bulletin Board that the International Space Station (ISS) 70cm to 2 metre FM Repeater is operational.

The Space Station FM repeater has it’s input on 437.800 MHz and it’s output on 145.800 MHz. Unlike terrestrial repeaters there is no need to use CTCSS or any toneburst to activate it.

For information on how to use it see ‘ISS Repeater Tips’ by Miles Mann WF1F at
http://www.southgatearc.org/news/februa … r_tips.htm

You never know, you may get to talk to one of the Astronauts on-board the space station.

AMSAT Bulletin Board AMSAT-BB
http://www.amsat.org/amsat-new/tools/maillist/

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EA8AVI worked on 432Mhz

EA8 worked on 432Mhz
During a good tropo opening, Robbie, EI2IP, worked several EA8 stations on 144Mhz using only 50w and a 10-element DX7ZB.

But, says Robbie, I also worked EA8AVI on 432.200MHz, on both CW and SSB.

Robbie’s setup for 432MHz is a FT-847, 50w and 19-element Tonna at 10 metres high and 100 metres ASL. He is 2.5km from the Atlantic Coast.

Peter, EA8AVI, who is in Gran Canaria, was only using 20 watts. It’s maybe a EI Tropo record on 432Mhz of approx 2,740Km..

Watch this short video of the contact.
http://www.southgatearc.org/news/july20 … ontact.htm

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First-ever contact between South Africa and Reunion Island

Glen ZS2GK and Phil FR5DN have made the first ever 2M VHF contact between Reunion Island and South Africa via the South Indian Ocean.

Glenn ZS2GK reported that early this morning at 0215 SAST he heard the FR5DN beacon from Reunion Island. The message reads: de FR5DN/b FR5DN/b followed by a long tail.

At 0339 SAST he established a two-way contact with Phil FR5DN on 144,200 MHz SSB and also on 144,400 MHz FM.

The signal strength was S5/6 with no QSB over the VHF path of 2875 km. This is a new SARL record on 144 MHz.

ZS2GK Antennas were 4 x 9el Horizontal (made by ZS6OB) on a H frame which is 2M above roof.
Antenna gain – 12,7dB
Array gain – 18.5dB
Power gain – 26dB
Total ERP – 44,5dB
ERP in Watts – 28,100W
Power used was 400W on SSB and 200W on FM.
Masthead pre-amp 12.6dB gain and 1/2″ Heliax Hardline co-ax cable.
With the pre-amp out of line there was almost no copy!

Antenna on the FR5DN end is a single 17el at 6M
Power used was 120W SSB/FM with ERP at about 1800W
Phil also used a masthead pre-amp.

More information and audio files of the contact available here: http://www.astrorun.com/~fr5dn/radio/tropo/
zs2gk_12august2008.html

Congratulations to Glen ZS2GK and Phil FR5DN!!!

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