AMATEUR RADIO "Ham Radio"

This page will provide a source of information and links of interest to serious Amateur Radio Operators.


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Siskiyou County, California
The United States of America

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If we ever forget that we're one nation under God,
then we will be a nation gone under. 

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Listen to the SCARA Repeater System
for Updates.

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Current Universal Time: Current Moon Phase:

NEW PAGE -- INTERNET AMATEUR RADIO
  
"Amateur Radio is antiquated but effective."
NBC Newsperson, 12-29-00
  
Left: The wavelength of radiation produced by an object is usually related to its temperature. The human body is warm enough (about 30 degrees Celsius) to generate infrared radiation, but it takes very high temperatures (millions of degrees Celsius) to produce X-rays. So, how could x-rays come from a frigid comet? Note: degrees Kelvin (K) = degrees Celsius (C) + 273. Credit: Harvard's Field Guide to X-ray Astronomy.

HAM RADIO page 2

NEWSLINE

 

 

HAM RADIO IN SPACE

ISS REPEATER ON AGAIN

The FM Repeater and BBS on board the International Space Station was
again open for general ham radio contacts on September 27th and 28th. 
During that time voice contacts were available on by transmitting up to
the I-S-S on 145.920 MHz with a 67 Hz CTCSS tone while listening for
replies on 435.300 MHz.  The Bulletin Board used an uplink of 145.860 F-
M and a downlink at 435.150 MHz.  This operation was followed by a PSK-
31 Experimenters Wednesday Test on September 29th. 

The system will be on periodically and ARISS will announce the dates and
times in advance.  Check with the I-S-S Fan Club web page at
www.issfanclub.comto see what the latest status is.

Also, keep in mind that the radios on board the space station are not
able to correct for Doppler as the frequencies are  channelized.  It is
up to the ground station to do the Doppler correction.  For 2 meters,
the Doppler shift is about +3kHz at the beginning and goes to about -
3kHz at the end.  For 70 cm, the Doppler is about +10kHz at the
beginning and goes to about -10kHz at the end. 

The 70cm Doppler is roughly 3 times the 2m Doppler.  Many of the
tracking programs have the ability to calculate the frequency shift. 
(ARISS)

**

HAM RADIO IN SPACE:  MIKE FINCKE ON THE AIR

And as his time on board the I-S-S begins to wind down ham astronaut
Mike Fincke, KE5AIT, has been on the air quite a bit.  Not only to talk
to school students in pre-scheduled contacts, but also to any ham who
wants to chat a bit.  One of those who had the opportunity to talk
recently with the intrepid space traveler is Scott Avery, WA6LIE, in
Salinas, California, who had had his recorder running:

--

Contact audio here.  Hear it at www.arnewsline.org

--

Scott says that his QSO with KE5AIT space mobile took place at about
O2:15 on September 28th.  Needless to say that signals were 5 by 9 and
full quieting both ways.

Fincke and Commander Gennady Padalka, RN3DT will be finishing their tour
of duty on the ISS in the middle of October.  They will be replaced by
Expedition 10 Astronaut Leroy Chiao, KE5BRW, and Cosmonaut Salizhan
Sharipov.  WA6LIE's full contact with the I-S-S can be heard on line at
www.qsl.net/wa6lie (WA6LIE)

AO-5

Operational Frequencies

The following are the announced frequencies for AO-51:
 
Analog Uplink: 145.920 MHz FM (PL - 67Hz)
1268.700 MHz FM (PL - 67Hz)
Analog Downlink: 435.300 MHz FM
Digital Uplink: 145.860 MHz 9600 bps, AX.25
Digital Downlink: 435.150 MHz 9600 bps, AX.25
2401.200 MHz 38,400 bps, AX.25
Broadcast Callsign: PACB-11
BBS Callsign: PACB-12

ON THIS PAGE

USEFUL INFORMATION

Amateur Exam Question Pools
QRZ's Practice Amateur Radio Exams
On-Line Practice Ham Exams
Super Morse - excellent code practice program
Ham Bands
Ham Band Plans -Text-
Type a callsign:

NEW 60-METER BAND (5.0 MHZ)

NEW 60-METER BAND

The new five-channel 60-meter amateur allocation becomes available to US
Amateur Radio operators at midnight (12:00 AM) local time on July 3. The
local time designation means that amateurs in the US territory of Guam
likely will be the first to get a crack at the new band.

The new band will be a secondary allocation--federal government users are
primary--and the first on which the only permitted mode will be
upper-sideband (USB) phone (emission type 2K8J3E). The FCC last month
announced it would grant hams access to five discrete 2.8-kHz-wide
channels instead of the 150 kHz-wide band ARRL had requested and the FCC
initially proposed. The League remains optimistic, however, that Amateur
Radio eventually may be able to enjoy a band segment with multiple mode
privileges at 60 meters. ARRL CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ, has said that in the
meantime hams will have to be on their best behavior when taking advantage
of the limited channelized allocation, open to General and higher class
licensees.

The FCC has granted amateurs center-channel frequencies of 5332, 5348,
5368, 5373 and 5405 kHz--the last channel common to the amateur
experimental operation under way in the United Kingdom
<http://www.rsgb-hfc.org.uk/5mhz.htm>. To be "on channel," users of 60
meters should set their transmitted carrier frequency 1.5 kHz lower than
the channel-center frequency. In terms of day-to-day operation, the new
band is expected to resemble the sort of channel sharing typical on local
repeaters.

Hare recommended that on 5 MHz amateurs remain within "a few tens of
Hertz" of suppressed-carrier accuracy. He also pointed out that hams have
a mandate not to have any of their signal occupy spectrum outside the
assigned 2.8 kHz channels.

Noting that high-frequency audio response can vary considerably from radio
to radio, Hare has suggested restricting occupied channel audio bandwidth
to 2600 Hz, rolling off below 200 Hz on the low end and above 2800 Hz on
the high end.

The NTIA selected the channels the FCC authorized to minimize the
possibility of interference to federal government users, and it dictated
the use of USB so that federal government users--who also use only
USB--could readily identify amateur stations if necessary.

The FCC has set maximum power at 50 W ERP and said it would consider a
typical half-wave dipole to exhibit no gain.

W1AW General Bulletins

BPL is "Spectrum Pollution," ARRL President Says

The ARRL Letter

 

Keplerian Bulletins

 

PROPAGATION

Solar Terrestrial Dispatch

NOAA Space Weather Scales (04-18-02)

hfradio.org propagation
On-line current HF propagation prediction!
 

World Radiocommunication Conference 

With the concusion of the World Radiocommunication Conference this weeks first item has been updated to the following, plus the ARRL page http://www.iaru.org/rel030703att3.html is very good at explaining the overall changes.

Sunday 6th July 2003 - update

The Mandatory International Morse Requirement is to Cease

The mandatory international Morse requirement for access to the HF bands is to cease. Colin Thomas, G3PSM, an advisor to the UK delegation to the ITU World Radiocommunication Conference, reported on Monday the 30th of June that the mandatory Morse code requirement for HF access would disappear at the end of the conference. However, if any administration feels that it needs to keep the requirement, it has the right to do so. Here in the UK, the Radiocommunications Agency has already stated that it will bring in code-free HF licences as soon as practical to do so. An announcement will be made on GB2RS and on the RSGB website when Full and Intermediate Class B amateurs can start using the HF bands.


World-wide 200kHz Allocation at 7MHz - but not Until 2009
Discussions on the 7MHz realignment agenda item at the World Radiocommunication Conference had been long and hard, with no agreement until the very last minute. However, in a last-minute compromise, it was agreed that broadcasters in ITU Regions 1 and 3 would move out of the 7100 to 7200kHz frequency range to make way for the amateur service. The new band will be allocated to the Amateur Service from the 29th of March 2009 - less than six years from now and considered to be a short timescale in ITU terms. Although the compromise solution falls short of the IARU's goal of a 300kHz world-wide exclusive band for amateurs, it will double the amount of spectrum available to amateurs at 7MHz in Regions 1 and 3. Amateurs in the Americas - Region 2 - will be unaffected and will continue to have 7000 to 7300kHz available to them.

More detailed reports from Colin Thomas can be found on the RSGB website, while the IARU website carries reports from IARU Secretary David Sumner, K1ZZ.

LINKS

EQUIPMENT

Amateur Radio Resources (05-27-03)
International Pharmacists Ham Group
ARRL SIXTH DISTRICT QSL BUREAU

SWL CONTEST (01-22-02)

SlingShot-99 Ham Radio (11-21-01)
PCsat, A Naval Academy Amateur Radio Satellite (10-02-01)
WinLink 2000 (08-20-01)
AMATEUR RADIO VOICE NETS
HAM Radio Operators & 2002 Winter Olympics (05-27-01)
Ham Radio Earthquake Detection (03-02-01))
SATERN health-and-welfare inquiry (14.265 MHz) (03-01-01)
Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network

The Digital Ham Radio Revolution! (02-24-01)

Tri-State APRS Working Group (02-24-01)
Six Meter Repeater List for California (08-11-01)
Slow Scan Television (SSTV) (02-18-01)
HF-FAX (02-18-01)
Virtual QSL Net (02-16-01)
HF Digital Radio (01-29-01)
Penn-Ohio DX Society (01-18-01)
Solar / Geomagnetic conditions (01-09-01)
Solar Tantrums Could Last Two More Years (12-15-00)
Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) (10-29-00)
Tentative ISS Ham Frequencies (10-29-00)
The DXZone (10-21-00)
Ham Radio Grapevine (09-27-00)
The Electronic QSL Card Centre
Carson Valley Radio Club (08-03-00)
Radio Amateur Technology Society in Finland (07-24-00)
Tomorrow's Amateur Radio is Here! (06-28-00)

Repeater Operating Practices and Etiquette (06-21-00)

Tactical Link Systems (06-16-00)
What Hath God Wrought! (06-12-00)
Propagation ***** (06-09-00)
How Ham Radio Works
Code Quick (05-09-00)
The Art & Skill of Radio-Telegraphy (05-02-00)

Trinity County Amateur Radio Club (05-01-00)

WB6FZH
(05-01-00)
APRS Information (04-03-00)
More APRS (06-22-00)
Army Mars

MISC.

Cu2QSO

FUN

Cable Clock
On-line board game called "Disaster Discovery

Home Brew

Antenna's (08-16-01)
PSK 31

OTHER

SLOW SCAN TV
RDF

Technical

Contester's Rate Sheet

none

ARES / RACES / ACS
Ham Radio Operators ID Badge (03-25-03)
Ham Radios in Space (08-21-00)
FCC Amateur Radio Data Base
FCC Compliance & Information Bureau
ARRL 
ARRL License Search
ARRL Code Practice
Pacific Division ARRL 
Amateur Radio Newsline Listen via Real Audio
Many Ham Links
JARS
K6UGS - Vern in Shady Cove, Oregon
Southern Oregon Amateur Radio
JARS/ORCA

AAR0CAB/KC7SKR
K-BAR-A
Klamath Amateur Television
 KC7HEX - Klamath Falls, Oregon 
KC7VWW, Klamath County Schools ARC
N7RBP, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Keno ARC
The Daily Triplicate-see clubs
Mt. Vaca Radio Club
 W6TEE - Les' Home Page
W4ADJ lots of information
WB6YNM Varmint Al's
YLRL (Young Ladies Radio League)
Lost Traditions
Repeater construction information
Guide to Using and Building Packet Radio Networks
Super Morse - excellent code practice program
Amateur Radio RF safety calculator)
Spread Spectrum
SCARA Controller Manuals
  (RLC4 for 146.79, RLC1 for others))
Helsinki DX Club
Radios Online
The Atomic Clock Time
World Clock, good
Short-wave Listeners Guide

Ham Radio on ISS

Amateur Radio on the
International Space Station (02-06-03)

IMAGE: Logo for the Amateur Radio International Space Station organization, or ARISS.

New 2m repeater on space station

A new 2m repeater is now operating on the
International Space Station 24 x 7.
The uplink is on uhf 437.800 and the downlink is on vhf 145.800.
No tone burst or ctcss is required.
The radio is a  Kenwood tmd700 operating in remote crossband mode.
It just retransmits on vhf what it hears on uhf.
So if you are getting through you can hear yourself
on the downlink

Tentative Frequencies
Worldwide downlink for voice and packet 145.80
Worldwide packet uplink 145.99
Region 1 voice uplink 145.20
Region 2 and 3 voice uplink 144.49
Initial operations will only take place on the 2m band.
Call Signs for the ISS
William Shepherd KD5GSL
Yuri Gidzenko Unknown
Sergei Krikalev U5MIR
German callsign DL0ISS
Russian callsign RZ3DZR
U.S.A. callsign NA1SS
Packet station mailbox callsign RZ3DZR-1
Packet station keyboard callsign RZ3DZR
For more information on the procedures used to       
contact the International Space Station, check out
 the  ARISS Expedition 1 home page.

HOLLINGSWORTH SUGGESTS STEPS TO BRIGHTER AMATEUR FUTURE

1. Be proud of what you have and let your feelings be known. Let the public know what you are, what Amateur Radio is, and why it's valuable. Let your feelings be known to Congress, to the FCC, to the media, to your states and to emergency agencies. Sprint does. AT&T does. Motorola does.

2. Operate as if the whole world is listening. It is!

3. Take nothing for granted. Bill Gates can't, and you can't either.

4. You're at a crossroads now. An old Chinese philosopher (or my grandmother--I can never remember which!) said, "Be careful what you wish for. You may get it." Seize the moment, and make this your finest hour. Ham radio has been at a crossroads before and has thrived. Continue that tradition.

5. Make sure that, on your watch, Amateur Radio never becomes obsolete.

6. Teach the new licensees all you know. We've needed numbers for a long time.. Respect this wonderful legacy known as Amateur Radio that our mentors and Elmers gave us. Every time you key the mike or hit the key, think about what a legacy you were given and your duty to pass it on.

7. Enjoy ham radio. Celebrate it. But realize it comes with responsibility. Every gift of lasting value always does.

8. Stay away from arrogant, negative operators who know all the answers. They just haven't thought of all the questions. Encourage them to take their anger and hate to the Internet. Every minute they are on the Internet is a minute they aren't on Amateur Radio.

9. Never allow Amateur Radio to become the audio version of The Jerry Springer Show.

10. You may not always agree with the League, and that's fine. But I'm standing here before you tonight talking about enforcement because they never gave up. Take care of the one voice you have. You must never doubt that a small group of dedicated people can change the world. They just did.

NEWS FROM ARRL

 

FCC Actions

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FCC ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS

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USEFUL LINKS

 

Ham Radio Links
Wood Call Signs
Amateur Radio Relay League Best source for all Ham radio information.
QRZ.COM Look up callsigns here.
paKet 6.2 Software for Amateur Radio and it is free!
Calif Amateur Radio Users NetCARUN Also a Packet Network in the Bay Area on 145.05 MHz.
Siskiyou County Amateur Radio Frank (N6MRX) has made a comprehensive web site for Ham Radio in North Eastern California.
The Home of Packet Radio Networking
Digital Communications Virtual Library Information on Packet Radio.
Jack and Ione's Amateur Radio Page 
Tucson Amateur Packet Radio (TAPR) Home Page
Atomic Web Clock requires JAVA.
Callsign Database WM7D has a web page for looking up Callsigns
B. A. R. K. Home Page The Berryessa Amateur Radio Klub 146.970..PL-123.0 & 444.100..PL-71.9 on Berryessa Peak and covers North Central California.
Gary Nations, N5KDA's Home page
Fort Peck, Montana N7FSH & N7CTFnew1.gif (298 bytes)
Martin Rath, FA1UKP in France.
APRS Amateur Radio Packet Position Reporting.
Ralph Fowler's Atlanta Ham Radio APRS GPS H.
Daniel Goemmel KQ6AR

Links to other UI-View and APRS sites

M0CYP's UI-View Page- You can find UI-Path here!
G6ODT's Packet Radio Page
G6NHU's MB7UIV Information Page
G0TRT's APRS UK Page
G7JGQ's UI-Tools Page- You can find UI-Tools here!
GB7IPH APRS Site - Lots of UI-View maps of the UK.
The MB7USK Site - UI-View information and maps.
KC2RLM's Sound Card Packet Site - An excellent AGWPE "HOWTO".
ZL2UMF's Site - An excellent site for UI-View maps.
VK4GO's APRS Site
I3YPJ's Ham Radio page (Italian)
ON1CIT's Site - has some UI-View updates on the APRS Stuff page.
The BEACONet Home Page
ZS6OUN's site - APRS maps of Africa.
VK4TEC's APRS Experiment Gallery and links
IK2XYU/KF6EEZ's Site - Bilingual (English and Italian) APRS/UI-View Site
TA1DX's APRS Site - Turkish APRS/UI-View Site
UBA Section OST - Belgian ham site, with UI-View maps in APRS section
VK2THE's UI-View Map's Site - Maps for VK1 and VK2
IK2CBD's Site - Italian WinPack and UI-View site
OE1OWA's Site - Some nice European maps
Cheshunt & District Amateur Radio Club UI-View Page

Maps
Coloured relief maps of the USA

Horizontal bar

Other Amateur Radio Links

G0OPC's Home Page - Lots of WinPack Add-Ons
M0CKE's Site - Including Some UI-View UK Maps
Andover Radio Amateur Club
MaxPak Packet Group Site
Suffolk Data Group
G4EPN's Home Page
G0KRB's Amateur Radio Links
IS0GRB's site

 

Type a callsign:

 

 

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copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 2006, & 2007
by Frank Cross.
All rights are reserved