A Publication of the Blue Ridge Amateur Radio Society, Inc.
President: William (Buddy) Rodgers-KA4END, 19
Wintergreen Ln., Taylors, SC 29687
Vice President: Al Holden-KM4TN, 3115 White
Horse Rd Box 189, Greenville S.C. 29611
Treasurer: Carlisle Rogers-WA4ULE, 56 Oak
Crest Ct, Greenville S.C. 29611
Secretary: John Chism-ND4N, 139 Mustang
Circle, Simpsonville, SC 29681
The End of an ERA
From The Economist Submitted
Morse code is being replaced by a new satellite-based system for sending distress calls at sea. Its dots and dashes have had a good run for their money.
"CALLING all". This is our last cry before our eternal silence. Surprisingly this message, whichflashed over the airwaves in the dots and dashes of Morse code on January 31st 1997, was not adesperate transmission by a radio operator on a sinking ship. Rather, it was a message signaling theend of the use of Morse code for distress calls in French waters. Since 1992 countries around theworld have been decommissioning their Morse equipment with similar (if less poetic) sign-offs, as the worlds shipping switches over to a new satellite-based arrangement, the Global Maritime Distress and Safety System.
The final deadline for the switch-over to GMDSS is February 1st, a date that is widely seen as the end of an era. For although dots and dashes will not die out altogether they will, for example, continue to be used by amateur radio operators, spies, and some members of the armed forces the switch to GMDSS marks the end of the last significant international use of Morse. The code has, however, had a good innings. From its origins in 1832, when an American inventor called Samuel Morse first started scribbling in his notebook, it grew to become the global standard for sending messages along wires and, later, over the airwaves. Morse code was, in effect, the network protocol for the worlds first Internet: the International Telegraph Network, whose cables trussed up the globe in the second half of the 19th century. The was the mother of all networks. Appropriately for a technology commonly associated with radio operators on sinking ships, the idea of Morse code is said to have occurred Samuel Morse while he was on board a ship crossing the Atlantic. At the time Morse was a painter and occasional inventor, but when another of the ships passengers informed him of recent advances in electrical theory, Morse was suddenly taken with the idea of building an electric telegraph. Other inventors had been trying to do just that for the best part of a century. Morse succeeded and is now remembered as the father of the telegraph partly thanks to his single- mindedness. It was 12 years, for example, before he secured money from Congress to build his first telegraph line but also for technical reasons. Compared with rival electric telegraph designs, such as the needle telegraph developed by William Cooke and Charles Wheatstone in Britain, Morses design was very simple: it required little more than a key (essentially, a spring-loaded switch) to send messages, a clicking sounder to receive them, and a wire to link the two. But although Morses hardware was simple, there was a catch: in order to use his equipment, operators had to learn the special code of dots and dashes that still bears his name. Originally, Morse had not intended to use combinations of dots and dashes to represent individual letters. His first code, sketched in his notebook during that transatlantic voyage, used dots and dashes to represent the digits 0 to 9. Morses idea was that messages would consist of strings of numbers corresponding to words and phrases in a special numbered dictionary. But Morse later abandoned this scheme and, with the help of an associate, Alfred Vail, devised the Morse alphabet, which could be used to spell out messages a letter at a time in dots and dashes. At first, the need to learn this complicated-looking code made Morses telegraph seem impossibly tricky compared with other, more user-friendly designs. Cooke's and Wheatstone's telegraph, for example, used five needles to pick out letters on a diamond-shaped grid. But although this meant that anyone could use it, it also required five wires between telegraph stations.
Morses telegraph needed only one. And some people, it soon transpired, had a natural facility for Morse code. As electric telegraphy took off in the early 1850s, the Morse telegraph quickly became dominant. It was adopted as the European standard in 1851, allowing direct connections between the telegraph networks of different countries. (Britain chose not to participate, sticking with needletelegraphs for a few more years.) By this time Morse code had been revised to allow for accents andother foreign characters, resulting in a split between American and International Morse that continues to this day. On international submarine cables, left and right swings of a light-beam reflected from a tiny rotating mirror were used to represent dots and dashes.
Meanwhile a distinct telegraphic subculture was emerging, with its own customs and vocabulary, and a hierarchy based on the speed at which operators could send and receive Morse code. First-class operators, who could send and receive at speeds of up to 45 words a minute, handled press traffic, securing the best-paid jobs in big cities. At the bottom of the pile were slow, inexperienced rural operators, many of whom worked the wires as part-timers. As their Morse code improved, however, rural operators found that their new-found skill was a passport to better pay in a city job. Telegraphers soon swelled the ranks of the emerging middle classes. Telegraphy was also deemed suitable work for women. By 1870, a third of the operators in the Western Union office in New York, the largest telegraph office in America, were female. Just as skilled operators found that they could recognize each other over the wires from their style of Morse code, many operators claimed to be able to recognize women operators. Inevitably, romances were initiated over the wires just as they are today by e-mail. There were even a handful of weddings by telegraph.
In a dramatic ceremony in 1871, Morse himself said goodbye to the global community of telegraphers he had brought into being. After a lavish banquet and many adulatory speeches, Morse sat down behind an operators table and, placing his finger on a key connected to every telegraph wire in America, tapped out his final farewell to a standing ovation. By the time of his death in 1872, the world was well and truly wired: more than 650,000 miles of telegraph line and 30,000 miles of submarine cable were throbbing with Morse code; and 20,000 towns and villages were connected to the global network. Just as the Internet is today often called an information superhighway, the telegraph was described in its day as an instantaneous highway of thought. Following the invention of radiotelegraphy by Guglielmo Marconiin 1896, its potential for use at sea quickly became apparent. For the first time, ships could communicate with each other, and with the shore, whatever the weather and even when out of visual range. In 1897 Marconi successfully sent Morse code messages between a shore station and an Italian warship 19 km (12 miles) away. The first sea rescue after a distress call sent by radiotelegraph took place in 1899, when a lightship in the Dover Straits reported the grounding of Elbe, a steamship. Two years later, Marconi sent the first transatlantic radio signal: three dots, the letter "S" in Morse code. By 1910, Morse radio equipment was commonplace on ships. The sinking of the Titanic in 1912, however, highlighted the need for radio operators to listen at all times for distress signals. After the disaster it emerged that the liner Californian had been only a few miles away, and that hundreds of lives might have been saved had the Californians radio operator been on duty and so able to receive the Titanic's "'SOS" distress call. At the first International Convention for Safety of Life at Sea(SOLAS), held in London in 1914, it was agreed that large vessels should maintain 24-hour radio watch. This rule has remained ever since, with subsequent SOLAS conventions gradually introducing new rules to keep pace with the development of technologies such as radiotelephony. The advent of satellite technology led the International Maritime Organization to amend the SOLAS convention in 1988 to introduce GMDSS, an automated emergency communications system based on satellite and radio links. Optional since 1992, GMDSS equipment will be compulsory worldwide from February 1st on all ships that exceed 300 tons, carry 12 or more passengers, or travel in international waters. (Owners of smaller vessels can install the equipment if they wish.) Under GMDSS, anyone on board a ship in distress merely has to press a button to send a distress call containing the vessels identification number and its precise location there is no need for a skilled Morse operator. And so, after nearly 170 years, Morse code will finally slip beneath the waves. Over and out As communications protocols go, Morse has lasted a surprisingly long time admittedly with a few tweaks here and there.
So how might its modern descendant, the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), fare in comparison? TCP/IP was devised in 1973 by Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf (a man with Morse-like stature in the Internet world who is often known as the father of the Internet. TCP/IP is being improved to respond to new challenges and technologies. Its addressing system is now being overhauled to make room for billions of additional connections, to allow for the wireless devices expected to proliferate over coming years and to enable even household appliances to go online. Mr Cerf is also working on how to extend the Internet to such other places as the moon and Mars, since the time delays as radio signals travel through space make the current protocol unsuitable. Further improvements will follow: indeed, since it is spoken by computers, not humans, TCP/IP is easier to adapt than was Morse. Even so, in today's fast-changing computer world, it seems unlikely that TCP/IP will remain in continuous use for anything like as long as the century and a half managed by Morse code, its distant digital ancestor.
From ARRL Headquarters
To all radio amateurs
Radio amateurs around the world joined in mourning the death over the weekend of Jordan's King Hussein, JY1. Hussein, 63, died Sunday morning. The Middle East's longest-reigning ruler, he'd been Jordan's king for 47 years, taking the throne when he was just a teenager. His son, Abdullah, 37, succeeds him.
Hussein had earned a reputation as a catalyst for peace and as a conciliator in the Middle East. President Clinton is among the heads of state from around the globe gathered in Jordan today for King Hussein's funeral.
Hussein was a life member of the ARRL. ARRL Executive Vice President David Sumner, K1ZZ, called him ''an enthusiastic radio amateur whose support was invaluable to us in obtaining new amateur bands at the 1979 World Administrative Radio Conference.'' Sumner recalled that in May 1979, International Amateur Radio Union President Noel Eaton, VE3CJ, was invited to Amman to meet with King Hussein.
''Jordan's support of the Amateur Service was much in evidence at the conference that fall, and was a crucial element in our success,'' Sumner said. The WARC-79 resulted in Amateur Radio's gaining the 30, 17, and 12-meter bands. That same year, JY1 was featured in the film, ''The World of Amateur Radio.'' Hussein regarded his 1983 contact with Owen Garriott, W5LFL, on board the Space Shuttle Columbia, as a high point in his Amateur Radio activity.
King Hussein also participated in the historic 1995 joint Israel-Jordan JY74X operation on Mt Nebo, where hams from both countries participated in a Field Day-like operation. The King put in appearances both on the air and in person, much to the delight ofthe participants and those waiting to work him and JY74X.
Hussein's friend Bruce ''Blackie'' Blackburn, W4TA/JY9BB, of St Petersburg, Florida, called him ''one of the world's most respected amateurs'' and recounted many stories about King Hussein as a person and an avid Amateur Radio operator. ''He was a wonderful guy, interested in everything and everyone,'' he said.
Blackburn said King Hussein ''promoted Amateur Radio to the hilt in Jordan'' and saw to it that Amateur Radio classes were instituted in elementary schools. King Hussein also dropped in on meetings of the Royal Jordan Radio Amateur Society in Amman. King Hussein also was involved with the early satellite experiments.
Hussein had been active in recent months from the US while seeking cancer treatment at Minnesota's Mayo Clinic. A QSO with JY1 was considered by many hams to be both an honor and a privilege. His elegant QSL card was prized. AMSAT Area Coordinator Bruce Paige, KK5DO, in Houston, worked JY1 while the king was in the US last summer. ''That was a very exciting moment for me,'' he said.
Pat Kilroy, WD8LAQ, says he enjoyed a three-minute contact on 20 meters with King Hussein in the fall of 1995. ''JY1 was traveling aeronautical mobile, enroute to the United Nations. He insisted on me addressing him simply as 'Hussein','' he said. ''In one of the oldest traditions in Amateur Radio, Hussein upheld that this kinship transverses not only age and nationality, but also between citizen and head of state.
All members of the Jordanian royal family automatically have Amateur Radio privileges in Jordan. Although the new king does not appear to have a call sign, King Hussein's widow--the American-born Queen Noor--is JY1NH. King Hussein's brother, the former Crown Prince Hassan, is JY2HT, while his cousin, Prince Raad, JY2RZ, is chairman of the Royal Jordan Radio Amateur Society.
Notice
I would like to remind all member of my Amateur Radio Land Line BBS. It can be reached at 235-8708. A lot of ham files and the only ham bbs in the state.
73 LeRoy
Check out W4VIW's BBS @ 235-8708
Programs for 1999 Club Meetings
If you have an idea for a program, or know someone who would be willing to come speak to the BRARS club please contact Al Holden KM4TN.
A GOOD DX TOOL
I recently came across an interesting site that provides Real Time MUF (maximum usable frequency) paths on a world wide basis. The map is updated every 30 minutes. You can find the map on the Internet at: http://holly.cc.uleth.ca/solar/www/realtime.html
Take a look, you will find it interesting.
73 Marty K4MLW
Hints & Kinks
From Ed, K4KK
How far away can my signal be heard? That is perhaps the most often asked question in amateur radio. Unfortunately like most questions in this exciting hobby, the answer requires a little work.
We will focus on line of sight propagation on the VHF & UHF bands. These are the most common bands used by both mobile and base operations.
To properly estimate a signal's range, you must have a few important figures:
a.. Frequency/Band
b.. Transmitter power (in watts)
c.. Antenna height (from sea level)
d.. Antenna gain (net after coax loss)
Using this estimator table you should be able to calculate the range of your signal. This table can be used not only for mobile or base operation, repeater owners can also estimate the range of their mountain top repeaters!
Follow the six steps listed and you should have a fair estimate of your signal range.
These instructions assume a receive signal in the 1 microvolt range. One microvolt is considered a strong signal strength. Most modern radios have a .15 microvolt sensitivity.
If you wish to estimate the maximum distance you signal can be heard, you can move up the distance table six lines every time you divide the receive signal by one half. For a .5 micro volt signal, move up six lines. For a .25 microvolt signal, move up 12 lines.
While these figures are just an estimate, you'll find that they are usually reliable.
The distance your signal will travel can be calculated using the table below. (@ 1 micro-volt RX)
1. Locate the height of your antenna on the proper transmitter power column.
2. Find the line closest to that point.
3. Move up one line for every dB gain of your antenna system.
4. Move across the line to the proper vertical frequency band.
5. The closest number to the line is the distance in miles your signal will travel with a 1 micro-volt receive signal.
6. Move up six lines to calculate the .5 micro volt range.

T.I.H.L.A.A.H. ( Thing I Have Learned As A Ham )
If you have learned a few things the hard way . Please share them with us For the less adventurous we can tag your encounters with Murphy with the byline anonymous.
| T.I.H.L.A.A.H. | Three amateurs, a lot of rope and a pickup
truck can lower a second hand sixty foot tower in mere minutes. Unfortunately that tower
now has more curves than Miss America and is worth only a fraction of the several hundred
dollars paid for it. I am now a believer that jen poles are worth their weight in
gold
or atleast worth more than that sixty foot of scrap metal. By Anonymous. |
Minutes of the 02/01/99 BRARS Club Meeting
| K4AIB | V.H. | (Virginia) | TOLLISON | 350 Wilkinson Pkw Apt #6 | Toccoa | GA | 30577 |
| KF4RVH | J.D. | (JD) | NORRIS | 300 Parkdale Dr. | Greeenville | SC | 29611 |
How About it Folks?
Applications that will be submitted for Membership Approval at the March 1, 1999 meeting:
| KD4OJZ | W.D. | (Wayne) | DUNCAN | 21 Lorraine Dr | Travelers Rest | SC | 29690 |
| (Associate) | W.V. | (Wanda) | ALLISON | 34 Boswell Cir | Travelers Rest | SC | 29690 |
Submit any comments on above applications in writing to:
Attention: Board of Directors, BRARS, Inc, P.O. Box 6751, Greenville, SC 29606-6751
Next meeting March 1, 1999 at the American Red Cross Building on Grove Rd.
John E. Chism, ND4N
Secretary, BRARS Inc.
REMINDER:
Its renewal time again. Dues are due 1 January with a grace
period till March 1.
Dues are $20.00 for full membership, $15.00 for full membership if over 65 Years of age,
$10.00 for family membership.
Make checks to "BRARS, Inc." and send to:
Attention: Secretary, BRARS Inc., PO Box 6751, Greenville SC 29606
Check your mailing label. If the card number begins with an "9",
youre paid up.
Also..... Send corrections of Address, Name, Call, or phone number changes to attention of
the Secretary. Updated roster will be published in March.
HAMFEST ASSOCIATED TASKS NEEDING MASTERS:
The following is a partial list of HAMFEST tasks that NEEDs SOMEONE to be in charge of. In most cases, someone is covering or at least has it covered to date. What is needed are VOLUNTEERS to step forward and TAKE OVER (ie. ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR) the tasks to get more involved with and learn how to "put on the HAMFEST".
Please call one of the Board Members if you would like to get involved!!!
ADVANCE TICKET SALES & TABLE RENTALS
ANNOUNCING at the Hamfest
ARRL COORDINATION
BINGO
CAMPING - Collecting
DEALER/VENDORS
FLYERS
FORUMS
INDOOR FLEA MARKETERS
LICENSE TESTING
PA SYSTEM CHECKOUT AND SETUP
PARKING
PUBLICITY
SECURITY / SAFETY - Friday Night and during HF
SIGNS
SITE ARRANGEMENTS AND COORDINATION
SITE LAYOUTS AND SETUP
TABLES AND CHAIRS - COORDINATION
TAILGATING -
TICKET SALES
AND OTHERS!!!
HELP NEEDED FRIDAY AND SATURDAY:
Bingo
Camping
Dealer / Vendor - Showing where tables are
Forums
Indoor Flea Marketers - Showing where tables are
License Testing
PA Announcing
Parking Help
Security & Safety
Setup of Tables & Chairs
Signs - installing
Tailgating Help
Ticket Sellers
AND OTHERS!!!
NOTE: This list will be further refined as time goes on. LETS Discuss it further at the MARCH Meeting.
Any comments, suggestions, articles, etc. regarding the newsletter should be sent to
livewire@brars.org
The Livewire Editor is Teri
Hawkins, KF4WVD and this webpage is maintained by Jonathan
Nalley, KE4ZVU who is a member of the
Send your comments or inquiries to: brars@brars.org
©1999 Blue Ridge Amateur Radio Society, Inc.