Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old June 15th 07, 01:36 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2007
Posts: 156
Default part 9


http://groups.google.com/group/rec.r...b08597e42421/#
Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) Report 1556 - June 8, 2007

Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1556 with a
release date of Friday, June 8, 2007 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.


The following is a QST. A Manassas Virginia ham
proves RF ingress can seriously hamper
BPL, South Africa's ham community takes a stand
on BPL, and the FCC takes another step toward an
enhanced Emergency Alert System. All this and
more on Amateur Radio Newsline report number 1556 coming your way
right now.


(Billboard Cart Here)


**


THE BPL FIGHT: MANASSAS VA HAM PROVES BPL INGRESS AT PROBLEM EVEN AT
QRP


A simple test conducted by a ham radio operator
in Manassas, Virginia, has provided proof
positive that even flea-power Q-R-P ham radio
operations can shut down Broadband Over Powerline
Internet access operation. Amateur Radio
Newsline's Don Carlson, KQ6FM, reports:


--


The revelation comes on the website of George
Tarnovsky, K4GVT. On it, Tarnovsky shows the
results of tests made using only 40 watts and QRP
at 2 watts on the 80 through 10 meter bands.


The gear used in his test was an Icom 706
transceiver, with Outbacker Perth antenna on his
car parked curb side. The vehicle was
approximately 70 feet from his house, and more
than 100 feet from the BPL power pole
interface. Inside the home a laptop with BPL
interface repeatedly downloading a 40 Megabyte file.


--


Tarnovsky: "Well, what we found is that when we
were within reasonably close proximity -- I would
say within 100 feet or so of any of the BPL
installations -- when we transmitted on E-CARS on
7.225 that we actually had an affect on
them. The way ewe knew that we had an affect was
that as soon as you released the microphone
(PTT), rather than hearing the typical BPL noise,
you knew the system was backed up with data and
consequently became very aggressive and just
blanked (the band). If you looked at a spectrum
display of it -- it just covered the entire
spectrum. Its almost as though all the stops
were off. In other words the band stops were
off. Just rip and get the data out and that's exactly what it did."


--


What K4GVT found was that on all bands the
connection suffered at least a major slowdown
when he transmitted at the 40 watt level. On 80
through 15 meters the 40 watts caused the
download to stop altogether and requiring it to
be restarted. But the biggest surprise was on 40
meters where 2 watts of R-F rendered the BPL
connection numb. He says that the 2 watts at 7
MHz caused the BPL data transfer to stop.


--


Tarnovsky: " With the original G1 installation,
2 watts would have an affect on it. Since then
they have made some changes in their firmware to
the G1. The G2 has agile notching so they can go
in and they can notch it (the spectrum), but
being agile they can also remove them and that's
the problem that we are facing here."


--


Tarnovsky notes that regardless of what carriers
a BPL provider might notch out of a system, the
system operator cannot filter its input. As
such, R-F ingress to the BPL system is wide open,
and susceptible to all near field RF from 2 to 29
MHz. Even one that only 2 watts and more than 100 feet away.


For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Don Carlson, KQ6FM, in Reno.


--


More on the BPL ingress experiment by K4GVT
including a band by band results chart is on his
website. Its in cyberspace at
www.k4gvt.com/bpl/bplweakness.html (ARNewsline(tm), QRZ.com)


**


THE BPL FIGHT: LATEST SOUTH AFRICA REPORT NOTES INTERFERENCE
POTENTIAL


South Africa's ham community has confirmed what
so many others know already. That Broadband Over
Powerline Internet access is a major source of
interference to High Frequency communications


During a recent net, South African Radio League
President Graham Hartlett, presented an update on
the society's position of powerline
telecommunication in South Africa. The latest
tests have confirmed that BPL has an inherent
interference potential and that this must be
taken care of in new type approval specification
for powerline data communications systems.


Hartlett noted that telecommunications regulator
ICASA has recognized that it will need to
strengthen its interference complaint handling
capability and has asked the EMC working group to
develop type approval specifications and how to
deal with interference should it occur. These
specifications would be an interim measure and in
no way pre-empt international
specifications. Once international standards
have been agreed, the interim specifications
would be revised and brought into line. (WIA News)


**


THE BPL FIGHT: ARRL SAYS FCC MUST SHUT DOWN AMBIENT


Still with BPL news, word that the ARRL has again
demanded that the FCC shut down Ambient
Corporation's broadband over power line pilot
project in Briarcliff Manor, New York.


In a May 31 letter to FCC Spectrum Enforcement
Division Chief Kathryn S. Berthot, ARRL General
Counsel Christopher D. Imlay, W3KD, says that
it's long past time that the Commission enforce
its own rules, and again objected to the
Commission's inexplicable inaction in the face of
evidence the system is noncompliant.


On May 21 the FCC called on the BPL equipment
maker and system operator to demonstrate it's
complying with all terms of the Part 5
Experimental license authorizing the system, or
face possible enforcement action.


Imlay's letter pointed out that the FCC's May 21
letter made no mention of Condition #1 of
Ambient's Part 5 Experimental license. That
condition requires that if any interference
occurs, the holder of the authorization will be
subject to immediate shutdown. (ARRL)


**


RESCUE RADIO: FCC MOVES TOWARD AN UPGRADED EAS


The FCC has adopted a Second Report and Order and
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that
strengthens the nation's EAS or Emergency Alert
System. The Commission's Order promotes the
development of fully digital Next Generation
technologies and delivery systems that will better serve the American
public.


According to the CGC Communicator, the Order
requires EAS participants to accept messages
using a messaging system called Common Alerting
Protocol. CAP as it will be known is the
groundwork for what's being called the Next
Generation EAS delivery systems. This protocol
will need to be in place no later than 180 days
after FEMA makes a key announcement.


The Further Notice of Proposed Rule Making is the
second part of the decision. It seeks comment on
whether participants should be required to
deliver EAS alerts originated by local, county,
tribal, or other state governmental
entities. More on the Report and Order is
on-line
at http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_publi...C-273458A1.pdf
(CGC)


**


HAM RADIO IN SPACE: RAFT DE-ORBITS


The US Naval Academy's RAFT ham radio satellite
has reached the end of its orbital life. Data
compiled from stations monitoring its 145.825 MHz
downlink indicates that RAFT de-orbit occurred
between 02:00 and 03:00 UTC on May 30th. Its
final beacon was heard at 01:45 UTC that day. (ANS)


**


WITH ARNEWSLINE(tm): 2007 YHOTY NOMINATIONS NOW CLOSED


The nominating season for the 2007 Young Ham of
the Year Award is now closed. The deadline for
submitting nominations was midnight on May
30th, The judging committee is now hard at work
selecting this years winner. We will have that
persons name to announce in a few weeks.


**


Break 1


From the United States of America, We are the
Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin
stations around the world, including the X Warn
repeater system serving Xenia, Ohio.


(5 sec pause here)


**


TELECOMMUNICATIONS LAW: BROADCASTERS WIN APPEAL ON INDECENCY AND
PROFANITY
RULES


A federal appeals court has overturned an
indecency ruling against the Fox Broadcasting and
has broadly questioned whether the Federal
Communications Commission has any right to police
the airwaves for offensive language. Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, has mo

--


In a 2 to 1 decision on June 4th, , the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit in New York
ruled that the FCC went too far in issuing a 2006
decision against Fox for separate incidents in
2002 and 2003 after two personalities each
uttered an expletive on live television.


In 2004, the agency reversed years of policy and
effectively branded even "fleeting," or one-time,
use of an expletive off-limits on broadcast
television and radio In its ruling the court
found that that the FCC had not adequately, or
constitutionally, explained why it changed its
mind on the fleeting use of profanity and ordered
the agency to retool its regulations.


Because the Fox incidents occurred before the
FCC's 2004 ruling on fleeting profanity, the
agency did not fine the network, though it did
rule that the broadcasts were indecent. Fox
appealed the FCC ruling to the 2nd Circuit,
saying the new rule set a dangerous precedent for clamping down on
free
speech.


According to the Washington Post, the decision is
likely to be looked on as a rebuke to the FCC and
a victory for television networks, which in
recent years have pushed back against the
regulatory agency's crackdown on indecency. It
could also bolster the broadcasters argument that
parents need better tools such as
channel-blocking technology rather than more
government regulation to police the viewing habits of their children.


FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said that he was
disappointed in the court's ruling. He added
that FCC attorneys were reviewing the agency's
options and might appeal the decision to the
Supreme Court. Lawyers who specialize in the
First Amendment issues told the Washington Post
that such an appeal could easily become a test
case to determine whether the federal government
still has the right and responsibility to police the public airwaves.


For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, in
Philadelphia.


--


What affect this ruling might have on indecency
and profanity issues in other FCC administered
services is unknown. (ARNewsline(tm) from published news reports)


**


RESCUE RADIO: TSA VOLUNTEER TRAINS NEW HAMS


30 Transportation Safety Administration
volunteers have been trained to use emergency
high frequency radio equipment during disasters.
The 30 have also qualified for Amateur Radio operator licenses.


According to news reports, TSA employees
participating in the May 9th training traveled to
Pensacola, Florida for the session. Volunteers
came from as far away as Louisiana, Alabama,
Mississippi, Arizona and New York State.


Spokesman Steve Earnest said that Pensacola is
fortunate that it has a Transportation Safety
Officer who is also a highly experienced Amateur
Radio operator, trainer and examiner.


Earnset says that this radio amateurs volunteer
efforts have given the agency tremendous in-house
capability. One he says would have been
expensive for the agency to replicate using
contractors. More is on-line at
/www.tsa.gov/press/happenings/amateur_radio_operators.shtm (TSA
Release)


**


RESCUE RADIO: TENNESSEE RED CROSS CHAPTER GIFTED RADIO GEAR


Within the next 18 months, the Treis-County
Tennessee Chapter of the American Red Cross
should have a new emergency communications
station. One with improved capabilities ready to
use in the event of a disaster.


According to the Tullahoma News Guardian, the
emergency communications station is being made
possible by a donation by the wife of the late
Bill Bearden, a former Red Cross volunteer and
ham radio operator. Mrs. Bearden has donated two
antennas and numerous pieces of Amateur Radio
equipment that is being refurbished. One of the
antennas will be installed on a new tower at the
local Red Cross headquarters where the station will be installed.


Chapter Executive Director Alice Cano thanked
Mrs. Bearden and noted that the new station would
better enable the Red Cross to stay in touch with
drivers of emergency response vehicles. She also
noted that Bryan Marlowe, KE4LPL, a member of the
Red Cross chapter's information technology team,
Jimmy Floyd, NQ4U and other radio amateurs make
up the Treis County chapter's disaster
communications committee. (Tullahoma News)


**


RESCUE RADIO: ATV AT SANTA BARBARA EM COMMS DRILL


Fifteen California Amateur Radio Emergency
Service volunteers equipped with
slow-scan television assisted with a voluntary
wildfire evacuation drill on Saturday morning,
April 28th. An exercise involving residents of
over 900 homes near the city of Santa Barbara.


During the event, five ARES teams were stationed
at key intersections where winding, narrow roads
merged into the main street out of a mountain
community. The amateurs sent slow scan photos in
a pre-arranged rotation, with the camera number
appearing in the picture. Each number
corresponding to the assigned intersection so
officials could easily identify the location on large area maps.


Receiving stations were set up at the City's
Emergency Operating Center. According to Santa
Barbara City Fire Battalion Chief John Ahlman,
the amateur television pictures were the only
continuous, real-time information his department received from the
field.


This is not the first time ham radio has been a
part of Santa Barbara emergency communications
drills. Fire officials were so impressed with
the information provided by the ARES slow-scan TV
at a smaller drill two years ago, that they
invited the ham radio group back to participate in this one as well.
(N6ZKJ)


**


ENFORCEMENT: BEHRINGER FINED $1,000,000 FOR UNAUTHORIZED GEAR SALES
Electronics supplier Behringer USA, Inc. has been
dinged with a proposed one million dollar fine by
the FCC. This, for marketing 50 models of
unauthorized radio frequency equipment in the
United States without prior consent from the regulatory agency.
The gear in question is described as digital
audio music devices. This says the FCC was a
willful and repeated violation of Section 302(b)
of the Communications Act of 1934, and Section
2.803(a) of the Commission's Rules. (FCC)
**


REGULATORY NEWS: ARRL VEC TYPO LEADS TO LICENSE CLASS CORRECTION


The FCC has rescinded an Extra class upgrade
accidentally granted to W5VXJ of Phoenix,
Arizona, who had only filed for a General class
upgrade. And it's doing so with the implied
consent of the radio amateur involved. Bill
Pasternak, WA6ITF, has the details:


--


The story goes this way. On February 2, 2006,
the Commission received from the ARRL VEC an
electronic data file that contained an
application requesting modification of John R.
Ure, W5VXJ''s license to upgrade his operating
privileges from Technician Plus Class to Amateur
Extra Class. The license was modified to
authorize Amateur Extra Class operator privileges on February 2, 2006.

On April 19, 2006, the ARRL VEC requested that
the Commission rescind this modification. This,
on the grounds that the earlier data file it
submitted contained a typographical error and
that the requested upgrade was intended to modify
the operator privileges for Amateur Radio Service
Station W5VXJ to General Class operator privileges.


Based on the new information, the FCC contacted
Ure and proposed to modify the license to change
the license class from Amateur Extra Class to General Class.


For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, in Los
Angeles.


--


W5VXJ did not protest the proposed modification
of his license within the requisite thirty-day
time frame s the FCC says that Ure is deemed to
have consented to the modification. (FCC)


**


TELECOMMUNICATIONS LAW: SPOOFING CAN GET YOU 5 IN JAIL


Spoof and you could go to jail. So says one
house of Congress. Jim Davis, W2JKD, has mo


--


The House of Representatives has voted to make
phone "spoofing," the use of fake caller ID
information to defraud people, a felony subject.
The bill makes it a federal crime to use false
caller ID information with the intent to defraud
or to deceive the recipient about the identity of
the caller. A conviction brings a 5 year prison
sentence and forfeiture of any gains from the
offense, or of the software or technology use to
commit the crime. Exemptions are made for the
activities of law enforcement and intelligence agencies.


--


The bill now goes to the Senate for action and debate. (Technology
Today)


**


NEW AT HAMVENTION 2007: LINK COMMUNICATIONS


Continuing with our coverage of new products
shown at the recent Dayton Hamvention, we turn
this week to a rather specialized area. That of
repeater controllers and a company called Link
Communications. Here's Fred Vobbe, W8HDU:


--


Audio report only. Please download the audio report at
www.arnewsline.org


--


More on the RLC-DSP404 is on line at www.csm1000.com (ARNewsline(tm))

**


BREAK 2


This is ham radio news for today's radio
amateur. From the United States of America, We
are the Amateur Radio Newsline with links to the
world from our only official website at
www.arnewsline.org and being relayed by the
volunteer services of the following radio amateur:


(5 sec pause here)


**


HAM HAPPENINGS: "AMATEUR RADIO TODAY" IS #1 HAM VIDEO ON YOUTUBE


"Amateur Radio Today" the ARRL video produced by
Dave Bell, W6AQ, Bill Baker, W1BKR, Bill
Pasternak, WA6ITF and the late Alan Kaul, W6RCL
-- and written by W6RCL-- has today become the
most watched ham radio video on www.YouTube.com


As this is written, there are three postings of
"Amateur Radio Today" of this show on
YouTube. The one posted by "Tomintexas" has to
date garnered some 24,423 people screening
it. Another by a user named mranticocialguy has
been screened 3,727 time and the third by user
VA3CSS that has been viewed 1859 times. Adding
all three postings together, "Amateur Radio
Today" has been viewed on YouTube a total close to 30,000 times.


In second place in the most viewed ham radio
YouTube videos is "The Ham Band" singing "Come
and Join Us On The Airwaves." The video
featuring Andrew John Huddelston, Oh-Zed-1-X-J
and his wife Lissa Ladefoged on a 100 foot high
tower has so far racked up an impressive 20,676 views.


Third place goes to the on-line programmer 88
SLIDE whose "Ham Radio Field Day" video has
garnered 6785 views. It uses footage shot around
Los Angeles and Orange County California on Field Day weekend, 2006.


While none of these shows have set any YouTube
viewing records their numbers are still very
respectable for a special interest such as Amateur Radio.
(ARNewsline(tm))


**


COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY: DAB STANDARD BEING CHANGED


A major change is coming to a digital broadcast
radio near you. Jeramy Boot, G4NJH, is in
Nottingham in the U-K with the latest on DAB
standards and the future of digital receiver design:


--


Current DAB radios may be unable to receive
anything in a few years time, according to Pure Digital.


This is due to the introduction of DAB Plus,
which uses the new AAC Plus audio coding. The new
DAB standard is incompatible with existing DAB
receivers, and will render them obsolete. The new
coding system is twice as efficient as the MP2
system currently in use, meaning that the number
of channels per multiplex could double.


Manufacturers are expected to quietly switch to
producing dual standard receivers before any changeover occurs.


I'm Jeramy Boot, G4NJH.


--


The switchover only affects terrestrial DAB radio
and not satellite delivered services such as Sirius or XM. (GB2RS)


**


WORLDBEAT - GERMANY: THE DL 100 AWARD


In news from around the world, German hams are on
the air throughout June with a special
celebration. This with members of the radio
clubs of Norddeich and Hage commemorating the
100th anniversary of the well known coast station
Norddeich Radio. Operations are planned for 160
through 10 meters on various modes. The special
callsign, DL100DAN is being used and a special D
A N 100 award will be available. More
information can be found at http://norddeich-radio.de/ (OPDX)


**


WORLDBEAT - JAPAN: JARL TO CELEBRATE INTERNATIONAL QRP DAY


The Japan Amateur Radio League's QRP Club will be
running five special event stations, 8J1P, 8J3P,
8J4P, 8J5P and 8J6P on June 17th to celebrate the
International QRP Day. International QRP Day was
designated by the IARU Region 1 Conference held
in April 1984 in Italy to stimulate QRP operation
worldwide. It was reaffirmed by the IARU Region
3 Conference in New Zealand in December of 1985 (JARL)


**


WORLDBEAT - UK: GB3RAL PROPOSED 40 AND 60 MHz BEACONS ON THEIR WAY


In VHF news, work from the United Kingdom that
the new GB3RAL 40.05 and 60.05MHz beacons are due
to receive government clearance in mid-June but
both have already cleared their key Primary User
stages. Assuming that regulatory clearance is
also obtained the sponsors will go forward to for
final clearance and approval sometime this summer.


If approved, it brings ham radio in the UK closer
to the prospect of a unique 40, 50, 60 and 70 MHz
co-located beacon system at the Rutherford
Appleton Labs location near Oxford. While not in
amateur bands, the 40 and 60 MHz beacons should
prove to be extremely useful propagation study
markers both in the UK and world wide. (GB2RS)


**


ON THE AIR: CELEBRATING IN INDY WITH HAM RADIO


Back in the United States, Indianapolis,
Indiana has been a hotbed of special event
stations during May and it continues in
June. Fire up that new HF rig and get ready to
copy. Jack Parker W8ISH has this report from the Circle City.


--


If you have your HF rig fired up and your antenna
pointed toward Indianapolis you many score some
great contacts in the next few weeks. Beginning
Friday evening June 8th the Indianapolis Radio
Club will begin making contacts from the site of
the USS Indianapolis Memorial. The USS
Indianapolis was sunk during World War Two after
delivering atomic bomb components that were later
used in the attack on Hiroshima. Listen for the
W9IND call sign during the 44 hour event or check
the Indianapolis Radio Club web page for more information.


The pace continues to quicken as the United
States Grand Prix rolls into town on Fathers Day
weekend, June 17th. Special event station W9IMS
will be on the air, taking check-ins, during that
weekend . This world class special event station
operates during each one of the major races at
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. If you don't
catch W9IMS during the Formula One race you have
another opportunity to snag a special QSL card
during the Brickyard 400 NASCAR race the weekend of July 29th.


And last but not least, many central Indiana
clubs report gearing up for Field Day 2007 on
June 23rd and 24th. Maybe we'll catch you on the HF bands.


Reporting for Amateur Radio Newsline this is Jack Parker W8ISH.


--


The USS Indianapolis Memorial station will join
nearly 70 other special event stations around the
world as part of the Museum Ships Weekend. (W8ISH)


**


DX


In D-X, word that N6PF, will be celebrating his 60th birthday with a
visit to 3A2MD's QTH in Monaco. He will be
operating with his call portable 3A from June
25th to the 30th. Bands and modes of activity
were not provided. QSL via his home callsign.


And SQ8JCA, will once again be active portable 5N2
from Cogi, Nigera during all of June. Activity is
expected to be on 80 through 6 meters on SSB
only. Listen out for him between 10:00-16:00 UTC
and QSL to his home callsign address.


Lastly, members of the Borisov Amateur Radio Club
will be active as EW905B between now and November
30th. This, three number callsign is to
celebrate the 905th anniversary of Borisov City
in Belarus. QSL this one via EW2EO.


(From various DX news sources)


**


THAT FINAL ITEM: THE LONG SAIL


And finally this week the story of a voyage by
sea and the role played by Amateur Radio. Rob Mt
Barker, VK5MM, of the W-I-A News has the details:


--


"Sometimes we could hear them, but they couldn't
hear us. But we knew they were out there."


They were the words of John Hackney of Orono, who
joined the crew of a Trans-Atlantic sailing
expedition in the British Virgin Islands.


A father and son crew from Bangor, along with an
assortment of additional mates, completed the
last leg of a journey that took them from Bangor
to ports throughout Europe and back again over the course of two
seasons of
sailing.


Dan Cassidy, 58, and his son David, 23, left
Bangor in May 2006 to start the voyage that would
cover nearly 18,000 miles and take them to 10
different countries. And Amateur Radio went along for the ride.


In a smaller boat, rotating watches have to keep
an eye out for other, larger vessels and an ear
out for the weather forecasts. For those
communications, they relied on a Ham radio
contact with an inland operator who monitors weather conditions for
mariners.


The Ham radio also allowed Fleana's crew to send
e-mails, which sometimes were more reliable than
voice communications. Those e-mails were a godsend for family members.

"We were getting some information," said Deena Cassidy, Dan's wife.


"We knew things were going well, so I didn't really worry."


Good day. I'm Robb, VK5MM


--


As we go to air, the voyage continues. (WIA News)


**


NEWSCAST CLOSE


With thanks to Alan Labs, AMSAT, the ARRL, the
CGC Communicator, CQ Magazine, the FCC, the Ohio
Penn DX Bulletin, Radio Netherlands, Rain, the
RSGB, the Southgate News and Australia's W-I-A
News, that's all from the Amateur Radio
Newsline(tm). Our e-mail address is
. More information is
available at Amateur Radio Newsline's(tm) only
official website located at
www.arnewsline.org. You can also write to us or
support us at Amateur Radio Newsline(tm), P.O. Box
660937, Arcadia, California 91066.


Before we go, the results of our on-line poll
that asked the question of what are your upgrade
plans now that Morse is no longer required. Well
38.8% of those who responded said they planned to
upgrade while only 15.8% said they will stay with
the license they now have. And a whopping 45.8%
clicked the box that said that they
wished everyone would stop talking about the
Morse exam going away. We tend to agree.


The new poll now on line regards your ham radio
reading habits. It asks what is your favorite
major U.S. ham radio magazine. You vote at www.arnewsline.org.


For now, with Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, at the
editors desk, I'm Jim Damron, N8TMW, and I'm Jeff
Clark, K8JAC, saying 73 and we thank you for listening.


Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2007. All rights reserved.



"one useless man is disgrace 2 become a law firm 3 or more become a congress"
adams

woger you are a Congress all in your own head

http://kb9rqz.bravejournal.com/

G

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Where does part 97 end and part 15 begin? [email protected] Homebrew 64 February 23rd 07 04:08 AM
Where does part 97 end and part 15 begin? John Smith I Policy 1 January 27th 07 07:04 AM
need part john carson Homebrew 3 July 9th 06 12:21 AM
WTB Zenith part/part radio Alfred Carlson Swap 0 January 23rd 04 01:29 AM
WTB Transoceanic Part/Part radio Alfred Carlson Boatanchors 0 January 23rd 04 01:27 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:48 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017