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/////////////////////////////////////////// ANZAC 100 'Last Hurrah' in Full Swing: Posted: 15 Dec 2015 05:01 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/35796 The WIA ANZAC 100 'last hurrah' began at the weekend with commemorative ANZAC-suffixed callsigns in Victoria, Queensland, Perth and Darwin.VI3ANZAC reports activity on HF, using phone and digital contacts. On Tuesday December 15, it will be on Digital Amateur Television through VK3RTV, with an exponent of that mode at the ready. It will end on December 19-20 with VI3ANZAC coming from Fort Gellibrand in Melbourne's inner-west. VI4ANZAC has had CW and SSB contacts, using the lower, HF, and 6m bands. At one stage it averaged 20 contacts per night on 80m. All involved in operating and making contact are most pleased. The VI4ANZAC team is made up of mostly ex-NAVY, some Army and marine-type operators, promoting the Royal Australian Navy Bridge Train (RANBT) who were the 'Sailors in Khaki' at Gallipoli. The Ham College in Perth also began its commemoration on December 12-13 at the RAAF Museum Bull Creek in the Cobra Helicopter display. On the final weekend December 19-20, VI6ANZAC will continue on HF using SSB and sometimes CW, and plans to activate an FM satellite as well from its new QTH at a scout hall. VI8ANZAC has been hitting the bands with plenty of activity. From Germany a visitor Horst Kleinschwaerzer DM6HK, had a couple of hundred QSOs, before the storms reached Darwin. He also became the 33 DXCC to visit Stuie VK8NSB in the top end. Throughout the week VI8ANZAC will continue mainly on 15m and 20m to work long path, with some good openings already reported. /////////////////////////////////////////// George Marti Dies; Iconic Equipment Maker: Posted: 15 Dec 2015 05:00 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/35795 Ask any U.S. radio broadcast engineer above the age of 40 for the name most associated with "Cleburne, Texas." They'll be sure to answer: Marti. Iconic radio manufacturer George Marti has died at age 95, according to the Cleburne Times-Review. Marti was indeed a central figure in that city -- he was its long-time mayor, for one thing -- but radio people know him for the remote pickup and studio/transmitter links he manufactured for many years. His gear was so popular that for decades, his last name became both a common noun and verb -- engineers who wanted to set up a remote broadcast and feed it back to the station would talk of doing a "Marti" or "Marti-ing" the signal back to the studio. An early Marti RPU is part of the collection of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. In 1991, the National Association of Broadcasters honored George Marti with its Radio Engineering Achievement Award. "Texas has lost a giant with the passing of George Marti," stated TAB President Oscar Rodriguez, calling him "a man whose technical and business acumen changed the course of the broadcasting industry throughout the world and fueled scores of local, independent broadcast operations serving communities across the state." According to the TAB's bio, Marti graduated from Central High School in Fort Worth at the age of 16 and attended technical school for nine months. He received his radiotelephone First Class and Amateur Radio licenses just prior to his 17th birthday (call letters: W5GLJ). TAB said Marti cited his grandmother as influencing him more than any other person. |
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eHam.net News for Tuesday 15 December 2015 | Info | |||
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