Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (C To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Aug 23 2019 11:15 am SILENT KEY: THE REV. WALTER HORN W3OKX OF READING, PA. PAUL/ANCHOR: Amateur Radio Newsline extends its sympathies to the Reading (pronounced: REDDING) Radio Club and the family of the Rev. Walter Horn, W3OKX. A longtime member of the Pennsylvania club, Walt had served it as president in 1997, 1998, 2003, and 2004. He died at the Reading Hospital on Monday, August 19th. Walt was 100 years old. (READING RADIO CLUB) ** RADIO SOCIETY OF GREAT BRITAIN CONVENTION FEATURES BUILDATHON PAUL/ANCHOR: When the Radio Society of Great Britain hosts its convention later this year, it will have something special on the menu, as we hear from Jeremy Boot, G4NJH. JEREMY: Just as there are menu choices at the gala dinner at the Radio Society of Great Britain's convention in October, the weekend also offers a menu choice that is an alternative to the dinner itself. Convention organisers are hosting a buildathon on Saturday evening, 12th of October, and participating hams will get an SMD Sudden 2, which is a 40m direct conversion receiver by Kanga Products, UK. Those who attend won't just be building new skills, but will get this new piece of equipment to add to their shack. The Bath Buildathon team will be there to provide guidance in different techniques for surface-mount work. And lest anyone should think all that hard work means going hungry, while the dinner gets underway elsewhere at the Kents Hill Park, Milton Keynes, there will also be a hot and cold buffet, so in between working with all those electronic components, hams will be able to choose among the culinary components, and build their own dinner, too. For more details about the convention, visit the web page rsgb.org /convention. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jeremy Boot, G4NJH. (RSGB) ** HAMS IN BELGIUM PUSH BACK AFTER FALSE ACCUSATIONS PAUL/ANCHOR: In Belgium, hams have pushed back at a broadcast report that made false accusations of wrongdoing against them. Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF, has that story. JIM: Amateur radio operators in Belgium have had their reputations cleared, after a report by the Flemish broadcaster VRT blamed them for hacking into the system that delivers traffic information displayed on motorists' dashboards. An August 13th report said the disruption was the work of people with equipment that can pick up an FM frequency, connect to the local transmission tower, and forward inaccurate information to those on the road. The original report added that [quote] "The burglars are most likely radio amateurs," [endquote} nothing that hams possess the radio equipment necessary to do this. Belgium's national amateur radio society, the Royal Union of the Belgian Radio amateurs - known as the UBA -- lashed out at the broadcaster. The UBA said hams were wrongly accused by the report, and the collective reputations of the nation's licensed radio operators had been damaged. The UBA noted that it believed piracy had been involved, and not any legally licensed radio operator. The VRT has since issued a correction. A note on the UBA website quotes a spokesman for the Flemish Traffic Center, saying that hacking and false notifications have occurred a number of times over the years, and little can be done to prevent it. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Jim Meachen, ZL2BHF. (UBA WEBSITE) --- SBBSecho 3.08-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (801:1/2) þ Synchronet þ Temple of Doom BBS - tod.eothnet.com .