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eHam.net News
/////////////////////////////////////////// Amateur Radio Station Recognized Around the World: Posted: 21 Nov 2016 04:50 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/38059 ZANESVILLE, Ohio -- One local man's hobby has allowed him to experience the entire world without ever leaving his basement. Everett Jackson started his amateur radio station, WZ8P, back in 1962. Since then he has used his station in the basement of his Zanesville home to communicate with someone in every single country in the world. His passion started when he was just a teenager. "I loved the radio and I wanted to talk on it but it was illegal because CB radio was for small businesses. So my dad says 'you need to get an amateur radio license.' So he brought home some 33 1/3 records and I sat in bed and I played them and I listen to these records for two years to learn Morse Code to be able to go and take the exam and get a novice license," said Jackson. It took Jackson 32 years to reach his goal of talking to every country. He now has a binder with post cards from every nation and island he's been on air with. /////////////////////////////////////////// Mystery Signals from Arabian Sea Baffle Ham Radio Buffs: Posted: 21 Nov 2016 04:49 PM PST http://www.eham.net/articles/38058 Mumbai: Amateur radio operators, also known as ham radio buffs, in Mumbai were baffled by unidentified mystery signal transmissions reportedly originating from the Arabian Sea on the country's west coast, an operator said here on Monday. Though the signals have been picked up by their VHF wireless radios since the past five months or so, they became suspicious after they tracked them down to the deep sea off Maharashtra-Gujarat coasts, said Ham Radio Operators Mumbai spokesperson Ankur Puranik. "We have written to the Wireless Advisor, Ministry of Telecommunications and IT, with copies to the PMO, other ministries, and top defence and police officials to take note and investigate these unknown signals," Puranik told IANS. They sent the memorandum to the Centre after analysing the signals with their direction-finding equipment and antennae and were alarmed to learn they originated around 100 nautical miles in the high seas off the Maharashtra-Gujarat coast. "They are encroaching on our allotted bandwidth 144-146MHz for our two-way radio, they don't use the compulsory 'call sign' by which each ham radio operator in the world can be identified and tracked, and they speak in a language we can't understand," Puranik explained. The amateur radio operators did not rule out the wireless signals originating from some anti-social elements or sea pirates or other groups with possible nefarious motives. |
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