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PY2BIL > ARNR     17.10.25 13:03z 400 Lines 18063 Bytes #1 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2503 for Friday, October 17th,
Path: SR8BBS<OK0NBR<OK2PEN<N3HYM<K5DAT<VE2PKT<PY2BIL<PY2BIL
Sent: 251017/0846 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.4.0  $:100902PY2BIL
From: PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2503 for Friday, October 17th, 2025
  
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2503 with a release date of Friday, 
October 17th, 2025 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. The IARU shines a spotlight on hams with 
disabilities. More license changes for amateurs in the UK -- and a Halloween 
event that might just scare the life back INTO your radio! All this and more 
as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2503 comes your way right now.

**

BILLBOARD CART

**
IARU URGES MORE INCLUSION OF HAMS WITH DISABILITIES

JIM/ANCHOR: We begin this week with an important call to action from the 
IARU. Amateur radio is for everyone, as we know, but not everyone has the 
same access to what they need to succeed. Some operators, or those who wish 
to get their license, have disabilities that can get in their way. Jeremy 
Boot G4NJH tells us about an effort to shine the spotlight on this situation 
- and the need for change.

JEREMY: One of the greatest challenges of amateur radio ought to be getting a 
rare DX, logging an all-time-new-one or mastering a new skill or new 
operating mode. It should not be the act of trying to get on the air itself.

To ensure that radio amateurs with disabilities have the same chance at all 
the other challenges and adventures, the Program for Disabled Radio Amateurs 
in IARU Region 1 is encouraging a celebration on and off the air to reflect 
ham radio's welcoming spirit.

This event will take place on the 3rd of December, which the United Nations 
has declared to be the International Day of Persons with Disabilities. In an 
announcement about the programme, its coordinator Riri Azrak OD5RI encourages 
ham radio societies to plan awareness events, nets or special events using a 
special call sign incorporating the letters PDRA. Hams are also being urged 
to identify and support radio operators with disabilities or persons with 
disabilities who are seeking their licence.

He wrote: [quote] "Together, we can demonstrate that amateur radio truly 
belongs to everyone regardless of physical or sensory ability." [endquote]

For details, see the link in the text version of this week's newscast at 
arnewsline.org

[DO NOT READ:     https://www.iaru-r1.org/about-us/committees-and-working-
groups/ipha/     ]

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(IARU REGION 1)

**
AFTER DELAYS, SUCCESSFUL LAUNCH OF PROJECT KUIPER SATELLITES 

JIM/ANCHOR: There was liftoff at last in Florida as a much-delayed rocket 
carried the latest installment of satellites into space for Project Kuiper. 
Andy Morrison K9AWM has that update.

ANDY: Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites finally made it into space aboard a 
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket after more than a week of weather-related delays. The 
rocket departed Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Monday, the 
13th of October, at 9:58 p.m. local time.

The 24 broadband internet satellites are part of a planned constellation 
considered to be a rival service to Starlink, which already has had more than 
90 missions this year to bring its satellites into space. Monday's Kuiper 
Project launch brings that constellation's total to 153 such satellites in 
space. Ultimately, 3,236 are expected to be deployed at three altitudes of 
low earth orbit - 590 km, 610 km and 630 km.

Meanwhile, China has been building its own counterpart projects, which 
translate into English as the "National Network" and the "Thousand Sails". 
Both of these planned networks are expected to contain about 13,000 
satellites apiece.

This is Andy Morrison K9AWM.

(SPACEFLIGHT NOW, SPACE.COM)

**
FCC COMMISSIONER PUSHES FOR ACTION AGAINST COPPER THEFTS

JIM/ANCHOR: We all know how precious copper can be in our antennas and 
elsewhere in our shacks. Our broadcast colleagues know it too and have 
suffered in recent years from vandalism and theft involving copper - and it 
has taken them off the air. One FCC commissioner recently called publicly for 
a tougher response, as we hear from Kent Peterson KCØDGY.

KENT: There is a "growing epidemic" of attacks on communications sites - and 
the response needs to include sharper federal penalties and more 
sophisticated preventive action from the industry, according to the newest 
commissioner to join the FCC. 

Olivia Trusty, who was confirmed to the agency in June, called on telecom 
companies and broadcasters to fortify their sites with tamper-proof housings, 
cameras and alarms - and said the government must likewise step up the 
penalties for theft and vandalism. She made her remarks in a video 
presentation this month at the Telecom Industry Incident Management and 
Prosecutorial Collaboration Summit in California.

The past two years have seen a number of high-profile copper thefts in the 
United States, disabling Internet and television services and knocking 
broadcast stations off the air. For some radio stations, the result was tens 
of thousands of dollars' worth of damage.

Trusty noted that in some instances, the "911" emergency service was 
disrupted by similar attacks on telecom sites.

With the US Department of Homeland Security calling communications systems a 
top infrastructure sector, a bipartisan measure has been introduced in 
Congress to address these concerns. It is known as the Stopping the Theft and 
Destruction of Broadband Act of 2025 and was introduced by a Democrat and a 
Republican lawmaker with support from the industry.

This is Kent Peterson KCØDGY.

(RADIO WORLD)

**
SILENT KEY: ED HARE, W1RFI, MAINSTAY OF ARRL LABORATORY

JIM/ANCHOR: Newsline sends its condolences to the ARRL and the family of Ed 
Hare, W1RFI, who had a long tenure as an engineer in the league's lab. Ed 
became a Silent Key on the 10th of October after a long illness, according to 
the ARRL's website. A specialist in radio frequency interference and product 
testing, Ed had retired in 2023 but was still volunteering his time in the 
lab at the time of his death. His career had many milestones, including the 
ARRL's RFI Program which helps hams resolve interference issues,

A devoted and proficient CW operator, Ed was 75.

(ARRL)

**

UK REGULATOR IMPLEMENTS MORE LICENSE CHANGES

JIM/ANCHOR: There are more changes for ham radio operators in the UK, as we 
hear from Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

JEREMY: Ofcom has moved ahead with Phases 2 and 3 of changes announced 
earlier that affect amateur radio licensees. These actions follow those made 
in Phase 1 of February 2024 which adjusted power limits and expanded 
operating freedoms.

This month, hams with intermediate callsigns have the option to replace their 
number "2" series call prefixes with an M8 or M9 and can either retain or 
replace their existing suffix. These are voluntary changes at the moment but 
in five years, the regulator will change all remaining calls. The regulator 
is also limiting licence-holders to a single personal callsign and will be 
revoking all but the one chosen to be kept. Hams are also getting the option 
to change their callsigns every five years. Other changes, including those 
affecting special-event stations, can be found by following the link in the 
text version of this week's newscast script at arnewsline.org

[DO NOT READ: https://tinyurl.com/2xxdbxa9   ]

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

(OFCOM)


**'
HISTORIC TRANSMITTER'S MESSAGE OF PEACE

JIM/ANCHOR: A beloved, historic transmitter in Sweden is once again being 
prepped to send an important message - in this case, a message of peace. Sel 
Embee KB3TZD tells us why.

SEL: The world will be listening on Friday, the 24th of October, for a 
message of peace to be transmitted from a radio station that secured its 
place in history more than a century ago. The Grimeton Radio Station in 
Sweden, a World Heritage Site, will deliver a message to the world on the 
occasion of United Nations Day, a day set aside for promoting global unity - 
one of the goals for which the UN was founded eight decades ago.

The message will go out on the VLF frequency 17.2 kHz from the Alexanderson 
alternator that dates to 1924. As always, the mode will be CW. Where 
possible, listeners will tune their receivers, their SDRs or navigate to 
YouTube.
Ham radio operators, of course, will be able to mark the occasion by doing 
some transmitting of their own on the HF frequencies. Amateur Radio Station 
SK6SAQ will be on the air on 80, 40 and 20 metres, both CW and SSB for those 
who wish to make contact.

For a schedule of the transmissions and information about the ham radio 
station, visit the link that appears in the text version of this week’s 
Newsline script at arnewsline.org

[DO NOT READ: https://alexander.n.se/saq-scheduled-to-air-on-un-day-oct-24th-
2025/)   ]

This is Sel Embee KB3TZD.

(GRIMETON RADIO STATION)

**
BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the J88CU 2-
metre repeater in St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Fridays at 6:30 pm. local 
time.

**
GRANT HELPS IDAHO HAMS UPGRADE OUTDATED EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: When it comes to ensuring public safety, obsolete radio 
equipment is a liability for hams whose priority is emergency preparedness. 
Thanks to a grant to help them pay for an overdue refresh, one club in Idaho 
expects to be better prepared from now on. George Zafiropoulos KJ6VU has 
those details.

GEORGE: A grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications has brought good 
news for seven fire stations in Boundary County and an underperforming 
antenna in the North Idaho repeater group: The Sally,394 in funding will help 
the Boundary Amateur Radio Club W7BFI install new radios and power supplies 
at the fire stations and replace the antenna on Black Mountain - all part of 
a necessary upgrade of obsolete equipment.

Club board member Dan Parrent K7ZFR told the Bonners Ferry Herald that the 
radios were already 15 years old when the club received them as a donation 
from the railway 15 years ago. He said [quote]: "They can't be programmed. 
One of them doesn't work but those radios were deployed at each of the seven 
main fire stations." [endquote]

He told the paper that the club can also install a better antenna at Boundary 
County Hospital, shoring up a necessary connection between radio operators 
and the hospital in an emergency.

This is George Zafiropoulos KJ6VU.

(BONNERS FERRY HERALD)

**

NEW ATTENDANCE RECORD FOR NORTH STAR RADIO CONVENTION

JIM/ANCHOR: Just three years old, Minnesota's North Star Radio Convention is 
growing in prominence, size and importance, as Kent Peterson KCØDGY, tells 
us.

KENT: The 11th of October was a busy day on the Hennepin Technical College 
campus in Brooklyn Park, where an attendance of more than 250 set a new 
record for the North Star Radio Convention in its third year, putting the 
convention more prominently on the state ham radio map.

Program manager, Dale Henninger, WØDHZ, told Newsline [quote] "The convention 
has successfully revived the tradition of a statewide amateur radio 
convention in Minnesota - something the community had been without for more 
than two decades." [endquote]

This was also the 2025 ARRL Minnesota State Convention, organized with the 
support of 11 local ham clubs whose members provided volunteers and financial 
sponsorship, through the Minnesota Amateur Radio Consortium.
The agenda included a transmitter hunt, a QRP QSO Party, a Get on the Air 
station and 25 educational sessions covering a range of topics.

Dale said that the convention is one way in which the groups work together to 
[quote] "strengthen Minnesota’s amateur radio community and inspire the next 
generation of operators." [endquote]

This is Kent Peterson KCØDGY.

(DALE HENNINGER, WØDHZ)

**
AMATEUR TRIO PLANS MALDIVES 'WET SQUARES' ACTIVATION 

JIM/ANCHOR: If you like hunting grid squares and want something different, 
you may want to try getting your feet wet, in a manner of speaking, by 
chasing these stations activating so-called "wet squares." We have those 
details from Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

JIM: Operational plans are under way to activate around the Maldives but 
don't expect to log any contacts from Islands on the Air locations. The grid 
squares for 8Q7OS are being activated as "wet squares" during an ocean-diving 
safari led by Sergey R9OOF with Mariya UB9OGC and Dmitry UB9OFY. Listen for 
the callsigns 8Q7OS/mm, 8Q7DD/mm and 8Q7MD/mm from the 26th of October 
through to the 2nd of November. They'll be on the air using SSB on 20, 17, 15 
and 10 metres.

During this not-uncommon way to combine boating adventure with amateur radio, 
the hams won't just be fishing for QSOs but diving for recreation from a 
chartered yacht.

So if the Maldives archipelago is on your list of All Time New Ones, Sergey 
writes on his page on QRZ.com that you're bound to be disappointed. He wrote: 
[quote] I am not on air from any islands." [endquote]

This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

(QRZ.COM)

**
SUNDERBANS DXPEDITION TO FEATURE YOUTH OPERATORS

JIM/ANCHOR: Young amateurs from Bangladesh are preparing for the trip of a 
lifetime at a UNESCO World Heritage site. For some, it will be their first 
major DXpedition, as we learn from Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

JASON: Organisers from the Amateur Radio Club of Khulna are calling the 
Sundarbans DXpedition a "milestone event" that will combine the talents of 
newly licensed ham radio operators from Bangladesh under the coordination of 
Shuvo S21CMD.

Operating from what is considered the world's largest mangrove forest, the 
youthful team of as many as 20 will be putting the callsign S21SDX on the air 
from the 13th through to the 15th of November. Shuvo said in an email: 
[quote] "Bangladesh's few young amateur radio operators are not only 
connecting voices across continents but also carrying the spirit of nature in 
every transmission, whether calling CQ or sharing stories over HF." 
[endquote] They will be operating on most of the HF bands using SSB and FT8. 
The activation in the west forest division of the Khulna Range will be a POTA 
activation as much as a DXpedition. The Sundarbans is a UNESCO World Heritage 
site and a sanctuary for the Bengal tiger.  

Shuvo said [quote] "Our target is to test and prove the potential of young 
amateur radio operators of Bangladesh and to spotlight the beauty, 
biodiversity, and cultural richness of the Sundarbans to the world through 
the universal language of radio." [endquote]

This is Jason Daniels VK2LAW.

**
KICKER: WHEN ZOMBIES COME TO LIFE - AT LEAST, ON THE AIR

JIM/ANCHOR: For our final story this week, we encourage you to 
turn....your....lights.....out, in the spirit of the Halloween season. Get 
ready for something special from Jim Davis W2JKD.

JIM DAVIS: Popular operating events, like zombies, never seem to die -- but 
what happens when one long-running popular operating event is, in fact, full 
of zombies? It's an event that rises from its eternal slumber for one day 
every year in the hopes that the bands may not be dead. Welcome to the Zombie 
Shuffle, which is marking its 28th year of bringing CW operators back to life 
by inviting them into the slow lane of QRS while operating QRP.

You will find the QRP Zombies in their usual HF haunts on the 24th of October 
- one a week before Halloween. They will be on the air from 1500 local time 
to local midnight anywhere in North and South American time zones. This is 
considered a contest, so no one stands a ghost of a chance grabbing a contact 
on 60, 30, 17 or 12.

By the way, the organizers want you to know that there's no point to this 
event except - as they say on their website - [quote] "to get on the air and 
have some goofy fun with fellow Zombies and QRPers." [endquote] In other 
words, this is just a little exorcise....er, exercise in radio fun.

To learn more or to register for your official Zombie number, visit the event 
website at the link in this week's newscast script at arnewsline.org

[DO NOT READ:    https://www.zianet.com/qrp/ZOMBIE/pg.html  ]                           

The zombies are coming. You could be one of them. Be not afraid.

This is Jim Davis W2JKD.

(ZOMBIE SHUFFLE WEBSITE)

**
If you haven't sent in your ham radio haiku yet, what's been stopping you? 
Visit our website at arnewsline.org and as you compose your ode to your 
favorite online activity, we will help you use the correct number of 
syllables to make an authentic haiku. Submit your work and then sit back and 
wait to hear whether you are the winner of this week's challenge. The winner 
gets a shout-out on our website, where everyone can find the winning haiku.

NEWSCAST CLOSE

With thanks to Amateur News Daily; AMSAT News Service; Bonners Ferry Herald; 
David Behar K7DB; Dale Henninger, WØDHZ)DXNews; 425DX Bulletin; FCC; Grimeton 
Radio Station; IARU Region 1; Ofcom; QRZ.com; Radio World; Shuvo, S21CMD; 
shortwaveradio.de; SpaceflightNow; Space.com; Wireless Institute of 
Australia; YouTube; Zombie Shuffle website; and you our listeners, that's all 
from the Amateur Radio Newsline.  We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio 
Newsline is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for 
its continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our website 
at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also remind our 
listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a 5-star rating 
wherever you subscribe to us. 

For now, with Caryn Eve Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our 
news team worldwide, I'm Jim Damron N8TMW in Charleston West Virginia saying 
73. As always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is 
Copyright 2025. Amateur Radio Newsline retains ownership of its material even 
when retransmitted elsewhere. All rights are reserved.

73 de Bill, PY2BIL
PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 17-Oct-2025 08:46 E. South America Standard Time





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