Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (C To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Thu Feb 14 2019 08:25 pm BRAZILIAN REGULATOR AFFIRMS HAMS' SAFETY CRITERIA JIM/ANCHOR: Brazil's communications regulator ANATEL has accepted recommendations that had been made by LABRE, the national amateur radio society, on regulations concerning human exposure to electromagnetic, electric, and magnetic radiation. ANATEL had been reviewing distance calculations contained in an earlier resolution, which sets out specific conditions that are relevant to radio amateurs. The Brazilian amateur group asserted, in its input, that it supported the continuation of those criteria, and that no changes were necessary. ANATEL has concurred. (SOUTHGATE) ** BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the K5VOM repeater, in Greenville, Texas, on Monday nights at 7:30. ** DOWN TO HAM BASICS AT NAVY BASE JIM/ANCHOR: In one California classroom recently, the students were from the military, but the curriculum was totally amateur....radio, that is. Here's Dave Parks, WB8ODF, with more. DAVE: Amateur radio operators and the United States military are old friends, dating back to the first World War. Once again, the two recently became classmates as well. This time, the teacher and students were in Point Mugu, California, home of a U.S. Naval Air Station. The classroom of Brian Hill, KF4CAM, was filled with 23 software engineers and developers from the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division. They were there to prep for their amateur radio Technician test. Organizers were quoted in published reports as saying that the one-week immersion session included a curriculum in RF propagation, antennas, and signal modulation. The instruction designed by Brian, who's been a ham since high school, had been crafted to supplement these students' computer science backgrounds by adding some relevant radio theory. The Navy personnel, rookies in amateur radio, are experts in electronic warfare, where a lot of this theory has relevance. It even piqued the interest of a fellow amateur Ian Mann KI6YVO, the head of the division's target design engineering branch, who is also pressing for the schooling to be expanded. The students recently passed their final exam - the FCC licensing test. Organizers say their next activity might well be something like a school field trip. It will likely be a fox hunt - one in which they design and build their own directional antennas, and then go off in search of an RF beacon hidden somewhere on the base. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Dave Parks, WB8ODF. (C4ISRNET, SIGHTLINE MEDIA GROUP) ** FCC SEEKS COMMENT ON PETITION TO CHANGE STATION ID RULES JIM/ANCHOR: The FCC is looking for comment on an Ohio ham's petition to amend station identification rules during emergency operations. The petition from Robert Dukish, KK8DX, would like net control stations, or others in an emergency communications to announce the call signs of all participants every 10 minutes, from a single point, using automatic ID by CW at speeds of no more than 25 wpm. The petition argued that current rules could prove [quote] "burdensome and can hinder the flow of emergency traffic on the channel." [endquote] The same petition was filed in 2005 and 2006, but the FCC did not adopt his suggested changes. Hams wishing to comment are advised to use the FCC Electronic Comment Filing Service or ECFS. (FCC.GOV) ** HOPING FOR A BOUNCE FROM THE MOON JIM/ANCHOR: A team of Swiss amateurs is moonstruck - so much so that they're planning their next DXpedition, preparing for some EME action on Crete. We learn more from Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF. JIM M: Get ready for yet another microwave DXpedition -- this one on Crete. Sam, HB9COG, and Dan, HB9CRQ, are preparing now to set off in May, and expect to be on the air from the 10th through to the 17th. The Swiss operators plan to be on the bands between 23 cm and 3 cm using EME. The trip follows just months after the team's successful activation in Liechtenstein in late November and early December. During that activation, members Mark, HB9DBM, and Dan, HB9CRQ, operated on 23, 13, 9, 6 and 3cm, and according to their website, they completed 131 QSOs and 108 first-time contacts on 5 bands in 5 moon-passes. That adds up to one pass per band. Their QSOs included 25 using CW. As noted on their website, their terrestrial station makes use of WSJT software from Joe, K1JT, and by using WSJT-X, the team has been able to make use of new modes such as QRA64 for 6 and 3 cm EME, and some additional features such as Doppler-Compensation. The team was founded in 1998 by Dan, Sam, and Mark, in Reinach, Switzerland, to operate DX with an emphasis on EME. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF. (HB9Q TEAM) --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32 * Origin: RadioWxNet: The Thunderbolt BBS tbolt.synchro.net (801:1/2) þ Synchronet þ Temple of Doom BBS - tod.eothnet.com .