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/////////////////////////////////////////// Amateur Radio: Who Ya Gonna Call? Surrey Hams! Posted: 15 Jan 2016 04:10 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/35985 SURREY -- If you felt the recent earthquake that hit B.C., you may have pondered the aftermath of a large disaster. Technology, as we know it, would likely be rendered useless. Our phones no more useful than paperweights. Our televisions and computers worthless without energy to power them. Enter amateur radio. Hams, as amateur radio operators are nicknamed, are often called on to help with emergency communications during disasters around the world when all other communications fail. We're in pretty good shape should we ever need to call on our Surrey Hams. The club placed first in Canada and second in North America in their category in the annual North American Field Day last year. While there are tons of competitions, this one's their Super Bowl. /////////////////////////////////////////// Ham Radio to the Rescue: Posted: 15 Jan 2016 04:09 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/35984 Amateur radio can be a vital source of information in the aftermath of future disasters: As phone lines were jammed and the internet went down in Nepal after last April's earthquake, the only way Manju Sunar could find out if her daughter was safe was to ask an amateur radio operator in France, where she worked, to contact another radio hobbyist in Nepal who then sent people out on motorbikes and found Sunar's daughter safe. Amateur radio enthusiasts, called ham operators, can speak to each other across the world through shortwave transmitters. The 2.5 million licensed operators communicate through voice or the Morse code, a method of sending messages in a series of electronic pulses. With additional equipment, operators can even attach files and send emails through radio signals alone. Though primarily taken up as a hobby, these devices become crucial in times of disaster when all other modes of communication fail as happened in Nepal, or during the Asian tsunami in 2004, when ham radio operators coordinated rescue. "We probably helped search and rescue over 400 people," says Pravin Joshi, a ham radio operator in Kathmandu. /////////////////////////////////////////// Propagation Forecast Bulletin #3 de K7RA: Posted: 15 Jan 2016 10:01 AM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/35983 Trends over the past week were just the way we like them, with average daily sunspot numbers and solar flux increasing, and geomagnetic indices lower, compared to the previous seven days. Why do we like these numbers? When solar flux and sunspot numbers are higher, this increases the likelihood that there will be openings on HF. Lower geomagnetic indices suggest lower absorption. |
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