Subj : Newsline Part 2 To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Dec 23 2016 07:23 am DRUMMING UP A LICENSE UPGRADE JIM/ANCHOR: What's more exciting to a musician than landing a hit on the charts? Amateur Radio Newsline's Ed Durrant, DD5LP, tells us. ED's REPORT: Never mind the name of the latest hit or album from the Britpop group Blur. The bigger news, at least to radio amateurs, is just as chart-busting an event: The group's drummer, amateur radio's Dave Rowntree 2E0DVR, has upgraded his license to Advanced. Dave first became a ham with his Foundation license in 2012. Working first as M6DRQ, he passed his Intermediate exam, and more recently completed this latest test successfully to rock the bands as an Advanced licensee. That's as big a deal - or maybe bigger? - than having another album on the charts. Just like the band has undergone some reinvention since its creation in 1988, so too, has Dave become an amateur who is always evolving. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ed Durrant, DD5LP. (SOUTHGATE) ** CELEBRATING RADIO HISTORY AND A LITTLE OF HIS OWN TOO JIM/ANCHOR: Earlier this month, when radio operators assembled in Greenwich, Connecticut, and Ardrossan, Scotland, they re-sent the original message that became the first confirmed amateur radio transmission across the Atlantic 95 years ago. While other radio operators have also re-enacted this transmission, for one amateur, who grew up in Greenwich not far from the monument marking 1BCG's historic transmission, participating this year as N1BCG -- his 3-year-old callsign reflecting the Connecticut operators' callsign -- was especially fulfilling. CLARK: After after having a couple of sequentially assigned call signs for ham radio I thought "wouldn't it be nice to get something that is more a tribute to the history of international communications, which occurred right here in Greenwich? What are the chances, since I happen to live here, too? It was such a significant event from a historical standpoint. N1BCG was available." JIM: That is the voice of Clark Burgard, N1BCG, of Greenwich, Connecticut. Clark worked single sideband earlier this month in the latest re-staging of the contact with Scotland. The event was a partnership of the Radio Society of Great Britain, the ARRL, and the Radio Club of America -- but the location from which he transmitted turned out to be his grade school alma mater, where he operated his first childhood radio station. CLARK: It goes back to about 40 years ago, and that is actually one of the reasons the Greenwich Country Day School was selected for this year's 1BCG anniversary, because the school to me, is rich in radio history -- whether they intended it or not. They were very helpful in getting us a location for this past December 11's anniversary event. JIM: As Clark notes, it was the same school where he'd played with radio as a child, and where something else caught his eye. CLARK: We were in the boys gym, because there is a flagpole - I'd had my eye on that flagpole for 40 years. I thought that would be great to hang an antenna off that. I would be in a world of trouble if I actually did that as a student. I had to let some time go by. I think I've been pretty patient." JIM: That was Clark Burgard, N1BCG, of Greenwich Connecticut, who finally got to hang three dipoles on that childhood flagpole, and helped radio relive a milestone in shortwave history, while celebrating some of his own radio history, too. He spoke with Amateur Radio Newsline's Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT. ** BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including W5AW, the Big Spring Amateur Radio Club Repeater in Big Spring, Texas, on Thursdays at 8 p.m. Posted by VPost v1.7.081019 .