Subj : SA Radio League News Bulletin for Sunday 16 July 2000 To : SA Radio League From : Richard Peer Date : Sat Jul 15 2000 03:50 pm SOUTH AFRICAN RADIO LEAGUE SARL NEWS SUNDAY JULY 16 2000 This is Amateur Radio Station ZS6SRL transmitting Amateur Radio News , a service from the South African Radio League for the interest of all Radio Amateurs, Short-wave Listeners and Electronic Enthusiasts. For a complete list of broadcast times and frequencies please send a SASE to Amateur Radio News, SARL, P O Box 1721, Strubensvallei 1735. This bulletin is also available on the SARL's web pages hosted by Intekom at www.sarl.org.za, as well as the packet radio bulletin board system. You may also request sarlnuus@mweb.co.za to e-mail it to you in either text or MSWord 6.0 format. Here are the headlines of today's news: TELKOM INTECNET 2000 SARL HF PHONE AND CW CONTESTS NARC HOURS OF BUSINESS HAMNET SIMULATED EMERGENCY CONTEST RESULTS ZS2VHF BEACON BEAMING TO CAPE TOWN SUNSAT TEMPERATURE DOWN PROPAGATION REPORT You are listening to ZS6SRL, the news follows in detail. TELKOM INTECNET 2000 The next Telkom Intecnet 2000 will be held on Sunday 23 July 2000 at 20:00 CAT. The subject will A new satellite for South Africa, Participants in the net will be asked to make input to the name of the satellite and what Amateur Radio Payload it should carry. Clubs wishing to link their local repeaters should Email: armi@intekom.co.za with the details of their link frequencies and the telephone number. Please send this information before Thursday 20 July 2000. SARL HF PHONE AND CW CONTESTS The League's two premier operating events are just around the corner. According to the standing rules the Phone contest takes place on the first Sunday and the CW contest on the last Sunday of August. This year, the relevant dates are 6 August for Phone and 27 August for CW. The contest runs from 15:00 to 18:00 SAST. The contests provide an excellent opportunity to hone your operating skills and to renew old acquaintances, and also an excellent excuse to make those station improvements you've been thinking about. All radio amateurs in Southern Africa may participate. Here follows everything you need to know. The 20, 40 and 80 metre bands are used. Contact as many Southern African stations as you can, and exchange reports and serial numbers with each of them. For example, your first contact on phone is number 59 001. He might give you something like 57 002, depending on how quickly he got off the mark. You should also try to contact as many ZS call areas possible. There are two additional areas which are defined in the rules i.e our easterly and westerly neighbours. In the past the ZS3 call area has been the most difficult to find. If you're a ZS3, now is your chance to be in demand. Most participants will follow propagation conditions as sun moves. The activity starts on 20 metres and within half an hour or so, most of the participants will move to 40m. Towards the end of the contest, most of the activity will be on 80m. You must try to catch as many stations and areas on each band as you can before the other participants move down to the next band. There can be only a handful of winners in the contest. However, the contests provide a good opportunity for anyone, regardless of experience and skill level to listen to the experts. You'll hear some slick operators who log stations at a furious rate and you'll hear some operating practices that you will definitely not want to emulate. Learn from the courteous and efficient operators, and you'll see how your own operating style changes for the better. If you're chasing the Worked All ZS award, you'll find no better opportunity to make rapid progress. Especially in the Phone contest, the leading operators come very close to meeting the full requirements in this contest. A full set of rules appear on the League's webpage. NARC HOURS OF BUSINESS The SARL National Amateur Radio Centre hours of business are from 09:00 - 13:00 Monday to Friday. During that period the telephones will be manned and the bookshop and the centre will be open for visitors. Outside these hours you are encouraged to make use of Email : sarl@intekom.co.za, the fax machine : 011 675-2793 or to visit the SARL web at www.sarl.org.za. You will find a wealth of information on the SARL web in an easy indexed format. The SARL Administrator informed SARL NEWS that he is almost smothered under all the membership renewal and hopes that the rate will increase to keep him warm in the cold weather. He asks politely that for the next few weeks only necessary calls be made to him so that he will be able to catch up with the back log. HAMNET SIMULATED EMERGENCY CONTEST RESULTS Al Akers, ZS2U, on behalf of Hamnet Eastern Cape announced the following contest results which took place on 9 April 2000. Category A: Single operator stationary mobile ZS5Q with 675 points Category B: Single operator portable: winner ZS2U with 1188 and second ZS4BS with 1134 points and zs6xt third with 1098 points. Category C: Multi-operator portable: Winner ZS4BHF with 1314, second ZS6RTB with 846 and third ZS6BNE with 570 points. Category D: Single operator base station: winner ZS5CD with 804 and second ZS6COG with 672 points. Nine logs were received out of a total of 15 contestants. It is a pity that the other stations did not also send in logs. Yet a total of about 40 stations were actually involved in the contest. Complementary comments were received from many participants. Al Akers said that, analysing the performances of participants with various antennas in these contests has led him to have greater respect for long wire antennas. ZS2VHF BEACON BEAMING TO CAPE TOWN Mike Bosch, ZS2FM, informed SARL NEWS that the transmission of the ZS2VHF 2 metre beacon operated by the Port Elizabeth Society, is now beaming to Cape Town. The FSK signal is horizontally polarized. The beacon frequency has been changed to 144,412 MHz on request by the VHF manager, John Fielding, ZS5JF, since the long distance FM channel is changed from 144,450 MHz to 144,400 MHz. Unfortunately the old beacon frequency caused interference to the new FM channel, hence the change of 4 kHz. Please note the change in frequencies. The new beacon frequency will also benefit FM operators whose equipment can only tune in 12,5 kHz steps. ZS2VHF has in the past been heard as far afield as Divisions 4,5,6. Please send reports to: Mike ZS2FM at tel. number 041 581-2425 or cell number 082 654 0623 WIN TICKETS TO FREQUENCY Five double tickets to the film frequency will be given away this weekend in Amateur Radio Mirror International. The film premiers on Friday 21 July with Amateur Radio promotions at several cinemas around South Africa.. Listen to Amateur Radio Mirror International this Sunday at 10:00 CAT on 21560, 9750 and 7082 kHz for full details. SUNSAT TEMPERATURE DOWN With SUNSAT SO35 in full sunlight high temperature problems were being experienced. As a precautionary measure the team commanded the satellite off and commenced investigation to find a way to solve the problem. The obvious solution was to topple the satellite and let the bottom face to outer space. On June 20 the ground control team carried out an Attitude Determination and Control (ADCS) System spin test to measure the effects of the spin rate on the temperature of the satellite. The following day the new software was tested for other spin rates. On Thursday the new ADCS Software was loaded and SUNSAT was commanded so that the bottom plate of the satellite and battery are pointing to outer space with the hope that the temperature would drop. By Friday 23 June the team's efforts were rewarded with a drop in 8 degrees in battery temperature. That same day the team activated the digipeating mode to provide services during the ARRL Field day. Last Saturday the other amateur services were activated. On Sunday 25 June, the ground control team tested SUNSAT with a small handheld Kenwood Radio with a rubber duckie and were able to digipeat at 1200 baud successfully even when the satellite was just above the horizon at 1,5 degrees. The power used was only 5 watt. Tests are continuing. Sunsat will operate in Mode J during the coming weeks (with weekdays included). A schedule for all voice passes to the end of July is available on the SUNSAT web . The uplink is 145.825 MHz, downlink 436.250 MHz. PROPAGATION REPORT The last few days has been noted for the very high number of flares from the sun. >From Monday to Friday no less than 24 major solar flares occurred and most of them caused a fade-out somewhere on the earth affecting frequencies below 12 MHz. On Tuesday afternoon at 15:10 SAST and again on Wednesday at 12:37 SAST two X-ray class flares occurred. A X-class flare is a major flare and usually have a fairly serious impact on the earth. Just before noon on Thursday a double magnetic shockwave impacted on the earth. This was followed by a shock-wave of protons and other heavier particles just after mid-day on Friday. By Friday night SA time the earths magnetic field had reached a high level of activity and Boulder in Colorado classified the field at severe storm level. Friday saw another large x-class Solar flare, this one being rated a whopping X5 and warnings has been issued in the northern hemisphere for power distribution organisations to expect possible surges on power networks due to ground level magnetic effects. Once again we here in Southern Africa was fortunate because it is winter with us and the northern hemisphere born the brunt of the impacts. However today we are not going to miss the effects entirely. Major storm conditions are forecast for today and the Maximum Useable Frequencies should be 20 to 30 percent lower than normal. This means that the higher bands will be "dead" to a large degree. Tonight is going to be very noisy and HF bands will be unusable to a large degree. Tomorrow we should still experience active to minor storm conditions while thing die down. More flares are expected so the geomagnetic activity may remain higher longer than expected. The Solar Flux has declined rapidly and should be under 200 today. It is expected to decline gradually and be about 160 to 170 by next weekend. >From Tuesday onwards the earth's magnetic field should be mostly unsettled with fairly normal propagation conditions. Good propagation should occur to the middle east around dusk on the 20 metre band, while good signals can be expected in the morning from the far east. A returning coronal hole on the sun is expected by next weekend and that may push the magnetic field to active conditions. No major disruption of propagation is expected. DIARY OF COMING EVENTS The Sandton Amateur Radio Club will be holding their AGM at the NARC, Radiokop on Saturday 5th August. The meeting begins at 14:30. All welcome. Refreshments and snacks will be provided. Please RSVP to Rob ZS6RAP at 011 708-1875 or 082 567-5649. The Alberton Amateur Radio Club will hold a fleamarket or bootsale on 26 August 2000 at 08:00 in front of the Civic Center, Ring Rd East Alberton. Please book tables in advance with Koos ZS6JPY 082 461 2819. Refreshments will be available. For more information visit our webpage at www.hometown.aol.com/zs6tdk Remember the International Lighthouse/Lightship Activity will take place = during the weekend of 19/20 August. Detailed information will again be provided later. The SARL news service invites radio clubs to supply information for inclusion in the Diary of Events as well as other items of interest to radio amateurs. Email information to sarlnuus@mweb.co.za with a copy to gth@mweb.co.za at least two weeks before the event. Please submit it in both Afrikaans and English wherever possible. The South African Radio League provides this news bulletin as a service to Radio Amateurs and interested listeners on the African Continent. News in this bulletin was supplied by the SARL news service, individuals, and amateur radio clubs in South Africa. Also join us on Sundays at 12:00 for the President's Net on 7082 kHz. This bulletin was compiled by Marten, ZS6ZY and read by......... A reminder that the interesting program Amateur Radio Mirror International is on the air on Sundays at 10:00 SAST on 9750 and 21560 kHz and is repeated on Mondays at 20:00 SAST on 3215 kHz. These transmissions are sponsored by Sentech, the common carrier for broadcasting signals in South Africa and Telkom who provides the transmission lines. The following VHF frequencies are also used: 145,375 for the Northern Free State and Vaal triangle areas, 145,650 MHz for the greater Durban area and if conditions permit in Pretoria on 145,750 MHz. The 145,400 and 439,100 MHz frequencies have temporarily been suspended for technical reasons. . The address for Amateur Radio Mirror International is armi@intekom.co.za. Include your contact telephone number to allow the producers of the programme to call you for a possible interview. Send written reports to P O Box 90438, Garsfontein, 0042 and include a self addressed stamped envelope, overseas stations two IRC's, so that you may receive a QSL card. Please note the new postal address. Thanks to all who gathered news items and have made contributions to this bulletin. We thank all the stations who so reliably relay the bulletins. We wish you a pleasant week. ZS6SRL now closes down with ZS6... at the microphone. Goodbye all. /EX -------------------------------------------------- Internet feed from ZS6ZY moved by Richard de ZR6CK Regards, Richard. --- Msged/Q 1.60 * Origin: QTHR KG44DG, Novell User Group, Pretoria, RSA (5:7106/22) .