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SkyWarn

Amateur radio in the news: Club POTA activation; POTA, SOTA and JOTA; Skywarn in Knox County, TN

November 21, 2023 By Dan KB6NU Leave a Comment

This looks like a fun thing that you might want to do with your club….Dan

Is ham radio still a thing?

[SUSSEX COUNTY, DELAWARE] Amateur radio, aka ham radio, has been around for more than 100 years. While it started as a way regular citizens could experiment with Morse Code communication, it soon became wireless voice communication. With modern technologies like cellphones and the internet, it would seem there is no need for radio communication. But, ask any one of the almost 2,000 Federal Communications Commission-licensed ham radio operators in Delaware, and they will tell you it’s more than a hobby. For many, it is a part of everyday life.

October was especially busy for local ham radio operators. A group of hams from the Nanticoke Amateur Radio Club set up their equipment Oct. 7 at Redden State Forest just south of Georgetown. The purpose of the event was to give the operators experience in setting up an operational field station completely off the grid. They spent several hours in Parks on the Air conversations with other hams, many of whom were located in a variety of parks and public lands around the globe.

…read more


More club fun…Dan

Ham radio group installs new equipment at Silver Star summit

[KELOWNA, BRITISH COLUMBIA] Radio repeater equipment was recently replaced at the summit of Silver Star mountain by local ham radio operators. As far as we know, no pigs were harmed in the adventure.

Ham radio is not for people who love pork — it’s a well known term for amateur radio operators such as the Vernon North Okanagan Radio Amateur Club.

On Oct. 21 and 22, the group replaced equipment and operated a demonstration and educational radio station as part of the international scouting movement’s Jamboree on the Air, and participated in Parks on the Air and Summits on the Air radio sport activations.

Photo: NORAC.

…read more


National Weather Service SKYWARN volunteers spot storms in Knox County. Want to join?

[KNOXVILLE, TN] Between 1870 and Aug. 7 of this year, there have been 338 tornadoes observed across the 40 counties monitored by the National Weather Service office in Morristown.

Fifty-five of those tornadoes touched down on a single day: April 27, 2011.

During severe events like that violent spring tornado outbreak, the Morristown office relies on its powerful radar to warn the public. But its other greatest tool for keeping the public safe is a bevy of amateur radio operators called SKYWARN, the National Weather Service’s eyes on the ground.

“Our greatest technology that we use here is our radar, and I would say the SKYWARN spotter network is a pretty close second,” said Anthony Cavallucci, a warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service. “I think a lot of people just automatically assume we know what’s happening on the ground, and we really don’t until somebody reports it. Those reports are really quite helpful.”

…read more

Filed Under: Emergency Communications / Public Service, Parks on the Air Tagged With: British Columbia, Delaware, SkyWarn, Tennessee

Amateur radio in the news: Ukraine uses SDR, Winter FD in NC, SkyWarn in TX

April 4, 2023 By Dan KB6NU 1 Comment

Ukraine Uses Off-The-Shelf Electronics To Target Russian Communications

A nonprofit organization based in the U.S. is supplying Ukrainian forces with advanced electronic warfare gear assembled from simple off-the-shelf components. The secret is a new technology known as Software Defined Radio (SDR) which can locate Russian radio emitters, from command centers to drone operators. Previously this sort of capability required expensive, high-grade military equipment.

Serge Sklyarenko says his organization, American Ukrainian Aid Foundation, based in New York, is supplying Ukrainian intelligence with a number of the versatile SDR radio kits.

“The beauty of them is they are software defined, meaning they can be reprogrammed in the field to suit a multitude of use cases,” Sklyarenko told me.

…read more


Eastern Carolina amateur radio club puts emergency response skills to the test

WITN, Greenville, NC, reports on Winter Field Day.


‘Eyes on the ground’

CEDAR CREEK LAKE (TX)–When bad weather is on the horizon, Cedar Creek Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) members such as Charles Wells and Charles Ligon stand ready as amateur radio operators (or “ham”) to help protect the region.

The club has a group called ARES, which stands for Amateur Radio Emergency Services. “In the event there is an emergency, we will gather together on the air,” Ligon says. “We do a lot of storm spotting for the National Weather Service (NWS).” The weather service’s Fort Worth office has a link to club members and gets confirmation on the radio, Ligon adds. “We’re their eyes on the ground.”

…read more

Filed Under: Amateur Radio in the News, Clubs, Public Service Tagged With: SkyWarn, Ukraine, Winter Field Day

Amateur radio in the news: Ham radio helps rescue lost hiker, passing traffic during Falklands War, SkyWarn Recognition Day

December 24, 2022 By Dan KB6NU Leave a Comment

Ham radio repeater connects lost hiker with help

BELMONT, NH — Off trail, after sundown, as the temperature and snowflakes are falling, and with a dead cellphone, it seemed that all factors were against a local man in the woods Sunday evening. Yet he was safely home by the end of his ordeal, and was able to communicate with his wife and emergency services via his amateur radio skills.

…read more


How two amateur radio enthusiasts secretly passed soldiers’ ‘I am safe’ messages during Falklands War  

At the height of the Falklands war, the unlikely friendship of two amateur radio enthusiasts 8,000 miles apart allowed more than 50 soldiers the opportunity to get messages home to their loved ones.

Bob McLeod, a ham radio operator, made history when he broke the news to the world that the Falklands had been invaded but, in doing so, he had also drawn the attention of the Argentines, who were quick to confiscate his equipment.

…read more


Ham radio operators get their message out

Amateur radio volunteers set up temporary operations from forecasting headquarters and made contacts with other stations to demonstrate their readiness to operate in emergency conditions and act as observers for the weather service.

Locally, operations were conducted at the NWS office in Oxnard. Volunteers set up six stations on different radio frequencies and operated through the day under simulated emergency conditions.

…read more

Filed Under: Emergency Communications / Public Service Tagged With: New Hampshire, SkyWarn

Amateur radio in the news: WTWW broadcasting to Ukraine, ME couple listen to Ukrainian invasion on SW radio, Fillmore SkyWarn

March 29, 2022 By Dan KB6NU Leave a Comment


East Boothbay couple listening to Ukrainian invasion on shortwave radio

[WISCASSET, ME] An East Boothbay couple is hearing about the Russian invasion of Ukraine a little sooner than most. For the past month, Al and Shirley Sirois have been glued to HF (high frequency) or shortwave radio transmissions between people around the world and Ukrainians. On March 4, they heard conversations between the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) and Ukrainians during the attack on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant which caught on fire. The Siroises listened until transmission propagation began to wane. In Maine, Al says the best time to listen is between 3 to 6 p.m.

…read more


Fillmore Skywarn — local weather spotters

With spring approaching, many of us begin thinking more about the possibility of severe weather. Thanks to Fillmore Skywarn, a volunteer storm spotting group, we can rest a little easier. The storm spotters stress safety as the highest priority as they look for storms; people are placed to the side or in back of storms and never cross a bridge without knowing there is another way out of the area. Their job is to observe the storm and report it to the proper emergency authorities. Club leader Jim Miller emphasized that they are NOT storm chasers. Brian Stockman added, “We try not to become a victim!”

…read more

Filed Under: Amateur Radio in the News, Emergency Communications / Public Service Tagged With: SkyWarn, Ukraine

SKYWARN Recognition Day, Saturday, December 1

November 27, 2018 By Dan KB6NU Leave a Comment

SKYWARN Recognition Day 2018 is this Saturday, December 1 from 0000Z to 2359Z (1900 EST Friday to 1859 EST Saturday). During this special operating event, operators will visit NWS offices and contact other radio operators across the world. 60 NWS stations will be on the air, and many will be on EchoLink.

From the SKYWARN Recognition Day web page:

SKYWARN™ Recognition Day was developed in 1999 by the National Weather Service and the American Radio Relay League. It celebrates the contributions that SKYWARN™ volunteers make to the NWS mission, the protection of life and property. Amateur radio operators comprise a large percentage of the SKYWARN™ volunteers across the country. The Amateur radio operators also provide vital communication between the NWS and emergency management if normal communications become inoperative.

This event is a lot of fun and recognized some of the good work that many amateur radio operators do.

Filed Under: Operating Tagged With: SkyWarn

Amateur radio in the news: Junior-high kids learn code, Skywarn, digital TV

December 22, 2015 By Dan KB6NU Leave a Comment

Massena junior high school students honing skills in Morse code, ham radio operation. Some J.W. Leary Junior High School students have discovered the joys of communication using technology that’s more than 170 years old. Seventh-grade social studies teacher Tony Cafarella has incorporated Morse code and ham radio into his class as an after-school activity. Students with parental permission, under the supervision of Mr. Cafarella, a licensed ham radio operator, can talk to various countries and log the contact on a map, gaining a sense of geography and science. They’re also learning from scratch how to interpret the dots and dashes of Morse code.

National Weather Service invites hams to event. The sound of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” filled the conference room at the National Weather Service Office in North Platte on Dec. 4. Meteorologist Bill Taylor laughed and shook his head before walking out of the room. “I told you,” said Kevin Curtis to Taylor, who apparently didn’t believe that there was an amateur radio station out there playing Michael Jackson.

The sound faded as Larry Petska, of Hershey, turned the radio dial to find something he actually wanted to listen to. It wasn’t music the men were after — it was other weather service offices. Every year, the NWS offices across the country invite ham radio operators in for an event called Skywarn Recognition Day.

Amateur Radio Operators Convert to Digital Television – Part 1. Ham TV has evolved, moving from mechanical scanning to all-electronic operation, then color, and eventually to digital video and most recently, high-definition imaging. And while commercial television entities have routinely spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in retrofitting analog plants for digital broadcasting, hams—being an ingenious and creative lot—have managed to go digital on the cheap.

Filed Under: Amateur Radio in the News, CW, Kids, VHF/FM/Repeaters Tagged With: digital TV, SkyWarn

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