RAC Ontario Sections Bulletin for January 27, 2024 - Printable Version +- GBARC Forum (https://www.gbarc.ca/ForumBB) +-- Forum: Amateur Radio (https://www.gbarc.ca/ForumBB/forumdisplay.php?fid=5) +--- Forum: NEWS (https://www.gbarc.ca/ForumBB/forumdisplay.php?fid=23) +---- Forum: ISED, RAC Bulletins (https://www.gbarc.ca/ForumBB/forumdisplay.php?fid=13) +---- Thread: RAC Ontario Sections Bulletin for January 27, 2024 (/showthread.php?tid=1129) |
RAC Ontario Sections Bulletin for January 27, 2024 - Richard VE3OZW - 2024-01-27 This is V_3___, Official Bulletin Station for Radio Amateurs of Canada with this week's bulletin. NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL NEWS 1. Former RAC President Daniel Lamoureux, VE2KA SK Radio Amateurs of Canada has received the sad news that former RAC President, Daniel Lamoureux, VE2KA, became a Silent Key on December 2, 2023, at the age of 79. RAC would like to extend its sincere condolences to his family and friends. A tribute article will be included in an upcoming issue of The Canadian Amateur magazine. In addition to serving as RAC President, Daniel was also a member of the Administrative and Finance Committee for several years. He also served as Area A Director of Region 2 of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU). Daniel served as President of the Fédération des clubs radioamateurs du Québec (RAQI) for several years from the mid-1990s to the early 2000s. -- Phil McBride, VA3QR, RAC President and Chair ONTARIO SECTION NEWS ITEMS OF INTEREST 2. 2024 Orlando HamCation Awards The HamCation® Awards committee has announced the 2024 Orlando HamCation recipients of the Carole Perry Educator of the Year and the Gordon West Ambassador of the Year awards. Both awards will be presented at the 2024 Orlando HamCation, on February 9 - 11, 2024. Lewis Malchick, N2RQ, is the recipient of this year's Carole Perry Educator of the Year Award. He formerly taught chemistry at the Brooklyn Tech High School, where he's an advisor to the school's Amateur Radio and Wireless Tech Club, W2CXN. Malchick is the trustee for the Stuyvesant High School Amateur Radio Club, W2CLE, the chairperson of the Long Island Mobile Amateur Radio Club Education Committee and has participated in five ARISS contacts. He's spent his lifetime educating children and adults about amateur radio. The 2024 Gordon West Ambassador of the Year Award winners are Fred, AB1OC, and Anita Kemmerer, AB1QB. The Kemmerer's hold Amateur Extra-class licenses and are active in the Nashua Area Radio Society promoting amateur radio instruction, youth outreach, and STEM education. Together, they've created and helped grow Ham Bootcamp, a program encouraging more than 900 hams to learn new skills. They're active in the club's training and licensing events, along with Tech Night, which complements club meetings. Their participation in STEM activities includes high-altitude balloon launches, foxhunts, and ARISS contacts for many schools. HamCation has been sponsored by the Orlando Amateur Radio Club, W4PLB, since 1946, and is held annually on the second weekend of February. -- ARRL News 3. QRP Self-Spotting Website Low power is fun, but especially if we manage to make QSO's or contacts. QRP signals are usually weak and easily missed in noise and interference. That's why we came up with the idea of creating a QRP self spotting Cluster, where every QRP broadcasting enthusiast can announce on which frequency they are working, in which mode, or with what equipment and power they are working. -- QRP Cluster https://www.qrpcluster.com/ 4. Why We Need “Shortwave 2.0” Debate about the future of shortwave broadcasting focuses on the correct observation that shortwave listening is no longer a mainstream activity in most of the world. The future of shortwave broadcasting — “Shortwave 2.0” — will not involve any revival of those large audiences. Instead, it will be an activity of communications enthusiasts and professionals. They would comprise a reserve corps able to relay information to larger populations in their countries when newer media are blocked or become unavailable. The beginning of the end of “Shortwave 1.0” was described in “Shortwave Broadcasting Begins Its Long Slow Fade,” an article in the 1995 World Radio TV Handbook. The really big chunk fell from the shortwave glacier six years later, when BBC World Service ended its English broadcasts to North America. In the following years, other international broadcasters followed, first dropping shortwave to North America, and eventually to other parts of the world. Read more – RadioWorld: https://bit.ly/4912TYi This concludes this week's bulletin. Does anyone require repeats or clarifications? Hearing none, This is V_3___ returning the frequency to net control. Bulletin sent from Official Bulletin Manager VA3PC |