Wednesday, December 28, 2022

2metre enhanced propagation

 We have had some enhanced propagation the last few days since 25th December, on Xmas night, we could see sea-fog rolling in from ocean, from nth east after a warm day, I checked repeaters near midnight, noting Mt.Bindo VK2RDX which is normally s-1 at my house was now 60/9, so I checked around other rptrs, 6675 from sth coast was 60/9, I could key 146.900 but no ident,  it could be either VK2RKG in Bathurst or the Newcastle rptr. At 4.30am on 26th December I had briefly got up and noticed it was solid fog outside,  visibility 150metres in all directions, the two streetlights I could see looked like cones of light. by 9am the sun starting to burn off the fog, still Bindo was 10/9.

27th December, the sea fog starting again after dark, by near midnight I could key rptrs, Bindo VK2RDX again at 60/9, found VK2RAB 146.825 Mt. Crawney s-5, VKRTM 146.750 Tamworth s1, and 146.900 was able to be keyed, but no ident, possibly VK2RKG in Bathurst. Checked 6metre rptrs, still the same.

Sunday, December 11, 2022

6metre FM repeaters in and around Sydney

 Repeaters status as of 11th December 2022

VK2RAG, Somersby, 53.725 MHz  requires  91.5 Hz  CTCSS tone  - they run Sunday WIA b'cast and callbacks

VK2RWI, Dural, 53.850 MHz - working,  WIA Sunday b'casts will run through this next year

VK2RBM, Blue Mtns, 53.875 MHz - working  requires 123Hz CTCSS

VK2RMP, Maddens Plains, 53.650 MHz  - working  requires 123Hz CTCSS

VK2RSN, Mt Sugarloaf, Newcastle, 53.625 MHz    nil response, I tested yesterday when I was up that way

VK2RGN, 53.700 MHz, Goulburn,   off air according to the Goulburn ARC website.



Friday, December 9, 2022

6metre FM opening today 9 Dec 2022

 I think the first opening  for FM today for this summer period, open to VK3 and VK7, with respect to FM repeaters, it was from Sydney to VK7,  although I see VK3 were seeing VK2 around 6pm AEDST

I worked VK7RCH 53.700- working some locals from Sydney   plus VK7QF, then VK7RAD 53.825 and VK7RAA 53.875,  although sometimes keying two rptrs.

Of course looking from a weak signal perspective it was wide open into Pacific, 3D2 and ZL, up to JA,

actually FM is a good indicator that it wide open for SSB and other weak signals modes.


Monday, December 5, 2022

update on 23cm Repeaters as of 5th December, 2022

 a recap on 23cm repeater systems centered around Sydney as of  5th December, 2022

Here are the operational 23cm FM Analogue repeaters I can work:

OUTPUT / INPUT    CALL          Location

1273.100 / 1293.100 VK2RTZ  Mt. Sugarloaf  - working,  it idents every hour, requires 91.5Hz ctcss

1273.200 / 1293.200 VK2RWC   Chatswood  - working

1273.400 / 1293.400 VK2RAG  Somersby - working, has beep on the tail

1273.500 / 1293.500 VK2RWI Dural  -  yes, it is working again.

1296.850  VK2RMP FM Simplex analogue parrot repeater at Maddens Plains - working, it idents regularly with a CW message

There is also some wide band or frequency  hopping digital signal that comes up occasionally, can be any time of the day, however, it only runs for approximately 30mins, then disappears,  it seems to come from direction of the city,  I won't call it interference, as it maybe a legitimate user of 23cm, as we are secondary users. It just annoying when you scanning. I see this signal down at 1250 MHz and all way up to 1296MHz, sometimes it will keyup Chatswood rptr and also keyup the Maddens Plains parrot rptr. 

1294.000 FM Simplex, not heard anyone since July 2022.

There are other known 23cm Repeaters, i.e VK2RRR Razorback and  others at Blue Mtns, Walcha, Muswellbrook, Lismore and Jervis bay,  all these have been unfortunately been cancelled, scrapped or never completed.

Murchison Radio Telescope project in Western Australia.

 this is news article from ABC News,  absolutely  fantastic presentation from ABC News, 

I love to see high tech space research,  great to see Australia leading with a major integral part of the overall radio astronomy project, I can't wait until 2028 when it is expected to be completed.


https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/construction-begins-on-world-s-largest-radio-telescope-in-wa/vi-AA14TdMS?ocid=entnewsntp

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Web SDR map

here is the link to the KIWISDR Web SDR map  map.kiwisdr.com

I can see Terry VK2KTJ operating one. I hope it is low noise site as promised.

I would like to run a Web SDR out at QF46pv,  it is definitely low noise floor site.

Friday, November 18, 2022

6 metre FM update - 18 Novermber, 2022

 Since fixing my old AWA RT85 transceivers up, since they failed several years ago,  the usual pin diode failurein the Tx PA stage, I ripped out the pin diodes  and added a small RF relay that came from scrapped Philips FM828's  Now I back on 6 metre FM.

Repeaters I can hit and have been able to hit in the past,

VK2RAG, Somersby, 53.725 MHz  requires  91.5 Hz  CTCSS tone  - hearing activity here after Sunday WIA b'cast.

VK2RWI, Dural, 53.850 MHz - working

VK2RBM, Blue Mtns, 53.875 MHz - working, 123Hz ctcss required

VK2RMP, Maddens Plains, 53.650 MHz  - working, 123Hz ctcss required

VK2RSN, Mt Sugarloaf, Newcastle, 53.625 MHz   I not sure, as I can't hear it from home, I need to go mobile to check this one.

VK2RGN, 53.700 MHz, Goulburn,  I believe it is off air according to the Goulburn ARC website.

and

VK2RWI,   52.525 WIA  b'cast, last Sunday 18 people called in.  Good turn out

Flood Mitigation Dams

 On the news for past  year, all we hear about is the floods in Lismore and western Sydney and Forbes and Deniliquin, etc etc,  lots of whingers , complaining about flooding and damage time and time again. Constantly asking what is the Govt going to do about compensating them because Insurance companies don't want to pay, etc, etc.  Then  we get the Greens whinging about climate change and giving their crap about "this is the worst flood ever!" blah blah, typical rhetoric from dope smoking, lentil eating, Greenies and hippies. 

All this flooding can be stopped, or to be more precise, it can be greatly reduced. Nothing difficult about the problem. The Egyptians built mammoth projects like pyramids, so in this modern age it can't be too difficult to reduce flooding when we get lots of heavy rain. Surprisingly, I not heard anyone suggest it in the media about this. 

All the Govts should be doing is building  Flood Mitigation Dams. These are not like the typical storage dams like Warragamba,  FMD's are much smaller and only temporarily hold the water,  we can control the flow from the dam to mitigate flooding. a FMD's are temporary storage, unlike a storage dam where you try to keep it full all the time, particularly in a drought period. Also FMD's  could be used for partial storage, but the idea is that the bulk of the storage in a FMD is purely temporary storage during heavy rain periods.  FMD's are situated upstream from  floodplains or storage dams.  In a place like Lismore, there are many tributaries in the high country that eventually all congregate  at Lismore, the idea  is have multiple small Flood Mitigation Dams  across all tributaries and there maybe more than one FMD on a single tributary.  

The advantage of FMD's is they don't all need to be built on the same day, the cost can be spread over 30 years, by building one at a time, I say 30 years, as the next big floods will probably be in another 30 years. Unlike  a storage dam, where a decision is made to build one, then you need to build one now, plus it hard to find the large basin/valley to build one,  whereas FMD's are smaller, you have more choice on where to put them and have lesser impact on the environment than big storage dams. Another advantage of FMD's is reduction of land erosion, slowing the flow reduces the soil and crap ending up in the ocean.

At Warragamba they talking about building a higher wall,  which is great for extra storage, but when it rains, they are just going to open the flood gates again and flood the Hawkesbury, realistically Warragamba needs FMD's or FMD's with partial storage further up the catchment area to slow the flow of heavy rains. Then add  FMD's on the Colo River, as the flood bottleneck is where the Colo River meets the Hawkesbury. We don't need massive valleys dammed up as storage, but smaller dams to slow the flow.

Paying for it ? the Govt. should ask the Insurance Companies to chip in some money to help pay, because, in the long term, the Insurance companies would benefit from not having to pay massive claims when there are big floods. In the long term, the Govt saves on taxpayer money, as they won't need to keep paying compensation to flood victims who can't afford insurance.


Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Mobile trek to VK3 and VK5 - November 2022

 We did a recent mobile trip to VK3 and VK5, Sydney > Albury > Benalla > Shepparton > Bendigo > Daylesford  > Ballarat. Did some gold mining history research at Haddon, Smythesdale, Scarsdale and Gordon, including visiting some historic cemeteries.

Then onto Geelong > Portarlington > St.Leonards >  Queenscliff >Point Lonsdale , along ocean road to Barwon Heads > Torquay > Jan Juc > Bells Beach > Anglesea > Aireys Inlet  > Lorne >

Then from Lorne > along Great Ocean Road to Apollo Bay > Cape Otway lighthouse > Glenaire > Lavers Hill > Yuulong > Princetown > Tweleve Apostles > Loch Ard Gorge and other cliff spots > Port Campbell.

Then to London Bridge > Peterborough > Bay of Islands > Allansford > Warrnambool > Port Fairy >Portland > Cape Nelson Lighthouse > Nelson > Mount Gambier > Millicent > Robe.

Then from Robe > Kingston > Meningie > Tailem Bend > Murray Bridge > Hahndorf.

From Handorf to Port Elliot > Victor Harbour > Capre Jervis > Normanville > Glenelg > Tanaunda.

Then from Tanunda > Kapunda > Hamilton > Waterloo > Black Springs > Burra > Hallet > Oodle Wirra and through to Broken Hill.

From Broken Hill onto Wilcania > Cobar > Nyngan > Narromine > Dubbo.

Last Day, was Dubbo > Dunedoo > Merriwa > Denman > Jerrys Plains > Warkworth > Mount Thorley and back onto the motorway to Sydney.

All up about 5100km

Note:  big gaps of no Optus mobile coverage  either side of Broken Hill.  Telstra mobile coverage MUCH better out there.

Big gaps of 2metre APRS found in VK3 and VK5, plus my HF APRS stopped near Shepparton, HF antenna base failure. Then moved HF antenna to different base, but then TT3 didnt want to TX anymore for rest of the trip. TT3 for HF  worked when I arrived home. Didnt hear much 2m or 70cm FM traffic whilst travelling, when arrived home I investigated to find both Diamond SG-M507  antennas are stuffed, with high VSWR.  Replaced them with the more expensive Diamond SG-7500, now I hear distant repeaters again.  Then I checked my 2metre APRS antenna, high vswr,  it is also stuffed, it was just a 1/4 wave, I fitted new 1/4 wave, now APRS working better.

Lessons learnt: check your antennas are actually working before heading to outback or major road trips.


The screenshot is my VK2KFJ APRS last 7 days tracking, the pink lines are where there is nil Optus coverage


Friday, October 7, 2022

Improving receiver performance for Pi-Star MMDVM hotspots

 Since on the subject of my Pi-Star MMDVM hotspots, here is a tip for improving  the receiver performance if you running multiple hotspots of even a single hotspot in a high RF  environment.

Remember these MMDVM hotspots and even the other hotspots like OpenSpot have a simple wide-band receiver which can be easily overloaded, one thing I noticed when running my MMDVM in P25 mode was that  I was getting a lot of artifacts on my transmissions from my Motorola handheld when I operated in the same room or nearby rooms to my hotspot, it was much better when I operated from outside my house or other end of the house. First I thought don't use the little attached external antenna, but even when using just the onboard cct board antenna I could still overload the receiver up close  and I also noticed that when my DMR hotspot was transmitting I was getting errors on P25 receiver, even though the two hotspots operate almost 20MHz apart, I had all my hotpots running off the same USB power adaptor and I could get different behaviour by moving them around.

I decided to try some ferrite core clipons on the USB cables,  this was because I realised I could hear the USB power adapter noise getting into my HF receiver and it varied as I moved the hotspot position around, so I added some big clip-on ferrite cores and wrapped the USB cable through the hole a few times and experimented for best and minimum  effect on HF, I cleaned up all the noise. I was not quite sure who was the main culprit, so I added the multi-turned ferrite end of the cable closest to the hotspot. 

Later and purely by accident,  I was playing on P25 and noticed I not getting the errors I was previously getting, as normally I could not run my Motorola handheld in close proximity without getting artifacts on my transmissions, I also noticed the DMR hotspot now not de-sensing the P25 hotspot. This proved the hotspot receiver was picking up RF via the USB power connector, from this I made sure all my hotspots had a either toroid or big chunky ferrite clipon (14mm ID) with several turns of USB cable and fitted as close to the hotspot power connector as possible,  Now I can operate ether either DMR handheld or P25 handheld in reasonably close proximity to the hotspot without interfering (desensing)  with the reception of opposing hotspots. I also added smaller 3.5mm clipon ferrites at the power adaptor end of the USB cables.

It was a win-win situation, I reduced noise affecting my HF receiver radiating from hotspots and USB power adaptor and improvement of receiver performance of my hotspots by reducing receiver desense from other hotspots RF entering via USB power cables and localised RF from handheld transceivers. In terms of the MMDVM boards, if operating in a high RF environment, you are better not to use the external antenna, just use the on-board cct antenna. Only use the external antenna if operating out on low noise floor environment like a farm. Also if you running multiple hotspots, try to separate them from each other, the further the better, remember even with mW transmissions, the signals are still flattening each other's receiver front end at close proximity.


Pi-Star for MMDVM Update - October 2022

 here is the latest on updates for Pi-Star for MMDVM, as of 7th October, 2022,

we still on Pi-Star 4.1.6 and Dashboard is 20220926 (26th Sept 2022)

on my nodes running Raspberry Pi Zero W Rev 1.1 with Kernel 5.10.11+

Unfortunately, still no P25 to DMR gateway yet. Fingers crossed it comes one day.

But still, my P25 node works fine  and my DMR node on VKDRM network works fine as separate entities.

NOTE: to run P25, you have to use old Kernel 4.19.97+  as the P25 don't like the later 5.10.11+ kernel

RFI/EMI from solar panel inverters

 Well, it had to happen, the increase of people  installing f%$#ing solar panels on their roof, because they "think" they are saving the world, has wiped out my HF reception. There are a couple  houses across road from me, but I haven't had an issue with them, even the Tesla driver with his whole roof covered. But a couple weeks ago I noticed noise level on 40m jumped to s6 and pretty consistent each day, it can seen on the spectrum display on my HF, it is inverter noise,  

I spent a day turning off and unplugging everything in the my house to see if I was the source, nope. Got up on roof, spotted a house  diagonally over back fence with a brand new set of f#$%ing solar panels, they weren't there, when I last up on the roof a few months back. Here's hoping the inverter isolation safety switch malfunctions and burns their house down.

Now I understand why the big push from ACMA to introduce a Class license system for Amateur Radio operators, the ACMA knows what is going to happen, lots of RFI/EMI complaints from faulty or cheap solar panel installations, once we are a Class license, then we can't complain about interference, it becomes  "your problem, you deal with it!"

Another problem the Greens have inflicted on society. Having done work for govt corruption bodies, I know what the Greens do and how they operate. It's a shame nobody will take steps to shut them down and put them in prison for their criminal activity. I can assure you The Greens are not the smiley faced do-gooders they make themselves out to be.

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

23cm / 1296Mhz Update - October 2022

 a recap on 23cm repeater systems centered around Sydney as of October, 2022

Here are the operational 23cm FM Analogue repeaters I can work:

OUTPUT / INPUT    Callsign    Location

1273.100 / 1293.100 VK2RTZ Mt. Sugarloaf

1273.200 / 1293.200 VK2RWC  Chatswood  

1273.400 / 1293.400 VK2RAG Somersby

1273.500 / 1293.500 VK2RWI Dural  - currently off-air due to antenna problem

1296.850  VK2RMP FM Simplex analogue parrot repeater at Maddens Plains

There are other known 23cm Repeaters, i.e VK2RRR Razorback and  others at Blue Mtns, Walcha, Muswellbrook, Lismore and Jervis bay,  all these have been unfortunately cancelled, scrapped or never completed.


VK2MB - Manly Warringah Radio Society - historic web pages

 I had forgotten about these, but they archived away for prosperity.

https://www.qsl.net/vk2mb/old/pages/   drill down from here 

The Manly-Warringah Radio Society - Interference Reports (qsl.net)

The Manly-Warringah Radio Society - VK2RMB Repeater Update (qsl.net)

The Manly-Warringah Radio Society - Special Events (qsl.net)


David VK2CZ has conducted numerous DXpeditions, including:

https://www.qsl.net/vk2mb/old/pages/SpecialEvents/ContestStations/vk9aa/vk9aa.html

https://www.qsl.net/vk2mb/old/pages/SpecialEvents/ContestStations/vk8aa/vk8aa.html

https://www.qsl.net/vk2mb/old/pages/SpecialEvents/ContestStations/vk9xd/vk9xd.html


Tuesday, August 2, 2022

23cm updates for 2nd August, 2022

I had 23cm transceiver scanning, I kept hearing a very weak female voice, looks to be a automated ident, kept trying to catch which frequency but eventually got it, so this good news, confirmed VK2RTZ is alive and still working. This is Peter VK2ZTV's baby.

 VK2RTZ in QF57SC                                  1273.100000 REP 51

Spotter: VK2KFJ in QF56OG @19° 97.5 Kmfrom Sugarloaf Range, near Newcastle, s0 weak, has a female voice for ident

I also in recent days seeing some weak signal digital activity,some guys doing JT65 on 1296.215 MHz between VK4'sand some WSPR on 1296.500 MHz between VK1 and VK3 stations
This is exciting, I need to get some more 23cm antennas up in the air.

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Release of WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc2

 Dear WSJT-X Users,


We are pleased to announce that Release Candidate WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc2 is
ready for download by beta testers. A list of its essential changes from
previous releases can be found in the Release Notes:
https://physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/k1jt/Release_Notes.txt

Links for downloading WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc2 can be found on the WSJT-X Home
Page, https://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/k1jt/wsjtx.html
Scroll down to find "Candidate release: WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc2".

We hope you will enjoy using this beta release of WSJT-X 2.6.0. As a
beta tester you should report on your experiences with its new features,
successful and otherwise, on one of the relevant WSJT forums. Bugs
should be reported by following instructions found here in the User Guide:

https://www.physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main-2.6.0-rc2.html#_bug_reports

WSJT-X and MAP65 are licensed under the terms of Version 3 of the GNU
General Public License (GPLv3). Development of this software is a
cooperative project to which many amateur radio operators have
contributed. If you use our code, please have the courtesy to let us
know about it. If you find bugs or make improvements to the code, please
report them to us in a timely fashion. Additional licensing details can
be found here:
https://physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/k1jt/devel.html

73 from the WSJT Core Development Team
Joe, K1JT; Steve, K9AN; Nico, IV3NWV; Chet, KG4IYS; Uwe, DG2YCB;
Brian, N9ADG; and John, G4KLA

23cm activity 26th July 2022

 found that I can key and hear myself noise free via the parrot repeater, as per my VKSpotter entry

VK2RMP in QF55LR1296.850000  53

Spotter: VK2KFJ in QF46XE @119° 100.9 KmFM parrot rptr
then spent 25mins chatting with Brian VK2AH at Bulli via the parrot.
Brian advised that IARC would like to convert the parrot to a proper 23cm FM repeater in the future.
gave some CQ's on 1294 MHz FM simplex. nothing heard.

VK2TDN in QF56ME1294.000000 FM 51

Spotter: VK2KFJ in QF46XE @89° 99.8 Kmqsb, and rain squalls in between

VK2RWC in QF56OE1273.200000  59

Spotter: VK2KFJ in QF46XE @88° 109.8 Kmworking dave vk2tdn via the rptr

Monday, July 25, 2022

23cm Update 25th July, 2022

 

Made contact with VK2JDS at QF46pu, height 920mASL from my location on HorseshoeBend Rd, near Edith, QF46xe at 1340m ASL, on 1296.100 SSB and also FM, signals rcvd varied from  s0 from a handheld, to 30/9 for 8w into 5m diam dish with ic-910, Dave also tested loop yagi and  a gridpack about s9, distance between us was 95.6km

I was using ic-910 into a gridpack antenna, portable..

Later testing operational 23cm FM Analogue repeaters worked today:

1273.200 / 1293.200 VK2RWC  at Chatswood  40/9 from Porcupine Hill, QF46xe
1273.400 / 1293.400 VK2RAG at Somersby  s5 from Porcupine Hill, QF46xe

Worked Ron VK2GO, Lew VK2ZIP and Dave VK2TDN via VK2RWC Chatswood rptr.

For next year, I will bring 3.4GHz and 10GHz equipment.

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Mallanganee Lookout - Bruxner Highway, Mallanganee, west of Casino, NSW (QG61JC)

 on recent trip I found Mallanganee Lookout, it is just off the Bruxner Highway, near Mallanganee, which is west of Casino, NSW. The Grid location is QG61JC, it is just over 400m ASL, not real high, compared to say the New England plateau, but what attracted me to this site is that it is easily accessible from the highway via  short dirt track for normal car. the top is almost clear of  trees, it is a mountain so relatively unobstructed. I came across this site about 20 years ago and found it great for accessing distant repeaters,  hence  it could be useful for a VHF/UHF Contest, without having to fight with trees.

REAST - Ham Radio Conference and Expo - November 2022

 the Radio and Electronics Association of Southern Tasmania Inc (REAST) is holding an event on the Amateur Radio calendar – the Tassie Ham Radio Conference & Expo to be held in Hobart at the University of Tasmania, Sandy Bay Campus on Saturday, 5th and Sunday 6th November, 2022 in Hobart, Tasmania (VK7).

If you have the opportunity to take a vehicle across to Tasmania via the Spirit of Tasmania from Melbourne, then do it, do the conference weekend and take a week to do a drive around Tasmania (and don't forget your radios), I have done the drive tour around Tasmania and it is definitely worth it !! The VK7 VHF/UHF repeaters are located in excellent sites and give great coverage across Tasmania. Plenty of accessible mountains across Tasmania to take weak signal gear and work DX back to the mainland.

Tassie Ham Radio Conference and Expo | Welcome to REAST

Sunday, July 17, 2022

Gold Coast amateur radio activity

 visiting Surfers Paradise again, last visit was around 20th-22nd March 2020 just as Covid was ramping up. 

I brought my scanner,   listening on  146.700 VK4RGC Springbrook belonging to the GCARC    and there is 438.100 VK4RZA also at Springbrook, hearing it ident in CW regularly, it is linked to 70cm rptrs at Brisbane and Sunshine Coast.

Hearing  147.225 VK4RGX, located at Springbrook, which is linked to 146.650 VK4RMC Mt.Cootha, Brisbane which I can also hear.  Also 146.875 is active.

the GCARC have their morning net at 8am, certainly seems a lot more activity here on Gold Coast than there is back in Sydney, the rptrs here are  quite active day and night. On past visits it seemed very quiet when I brought 2m/70cm hheld, I think it was probably my cheap Baofeng desensed by local RF.   

And Microwave band, they have 23cm rptrs up here too. I wish I had brought my ic910 now.


these pics are from 56th floor of Soul Building (Peppers),  top left is towards ZL, top centre is Coolangatta,



top right is Springbrook,  just to right of QT building is Mt.Warning  in NSW, and over the top of it is direction of Sydney.  
From a microwave DX perspective I think Coolangatta is better and aim north to work the VK4's in Brisbane and up the coast.

 

Monday, July 11, 2022

release of WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc1

 Dear WSJT-X and MAP65 Users,

We are pleased to announce that Release Candidate WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc1 is ready for download by beta testers.

This release has new capabilities beyond WSJT-X 2.5.4. A full list of enhancements can be found in the Release Notes:

https://physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/k1jt/Release_Notes.txt

Links for downloading WSJT-X 2.6.0 can be found on the WSJT-X Home Page, https://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/k1jt/wsjtx.html
Scroll down to find "Candidate release: WSJT-X 2.6.0-rc1".

We hope you will enjoy using this beta release of WSJT-X 2.6.0 and MAP65 3.0.0, and exercising the new mode Q65. As a beta tester you should report on your experiences with new features, successful and otherwise, on one of the relevant WSJT forums. Bugs should be reported by following instructions found here in the User Guide:

https://www.physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main-2.6.0-rc1.html#_bug_reports

WSJT-X and MAP65 are licensed under the terms of Version 3 of the GNU General Public License (GPLv3). Development of this software is a cooperative project to which many amateur radio operators have contributed. If you use our code, please have the courtesy to let us know about it. If you find bugs or make improvements to the code, please report them to us in a timely fashion. Additional licensing details can be found here:
https://physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/k1jt/devel.html

-- 73 from Joe, K1JT; Steve, K9AN; Nico, IV3NWV; Chet, KG4IYS;
Uwe, DG2YCB; Brian, N9ADG; and John, G4KLA

Monday, June 6, 2022

TYT MD380 DMR handheld radio update

 TYT MD380 DMR handheld radio update

I have not edited my codeplug for MD380 since Sept 2020, I needed to make sure it up to date in firmware, since my unit is old vocoder then it is 3.20 which is still current  and I still using CPS Programmer v1.41

Quite a few changes in VK-DMR talkgroups, several new TG's, and some old TG's removed

Gone are D-Star gateways TG541 and 542.  Pacific 153 also gone.

Some new ones I am interested in and that I have added are TG50589 for Fusion Repeaters gateway.

TG530 for ZL.

Also TG1910 for ARNSW DMR rptrs. 

and some of the State based  TG's such as 8/2 for VK2 Sydney and west. 8/3 for VK1-Goulburn-Yass and 8/8 for  Central Coast-Hunter Region.

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

update on WIA Contests for remainder of 2022

 VK Trans-Tasman Contest is on 16th July 2022

 RD Contest is on 13th August 2022

These are the remaining two WIA VHF/UHF/SHF Field Day Contests for 2022.

  Winter 2022 - 0200 UTC Saturday 25 through 0159 UTC Sunday 26 June (0400 / 0359 in VK6). 

  Spring 2022 - 0100 UTC Saturday 26 through 0059 UTC Sunday 27 November (0400 / 0359 in VK6).

the full WIA 2022 Contest Calendar is here :

New release of VK 2022 Contest Calendar (wia.org.au)

Friday, May 6, 2022

my Radioddity GD-77 DMR handheld radio update

 today, I decided to update my GD77 handheld, as I noticed that  Brandmeister TG 50526 (VK2GWY-CCARC) had sprung into life yesterday, presumably a new gateway had been added by the CCARC club (aka VK2RAG), first I had to setup the GD77 Programming Software on my laptop, as when I last updated it, I was then using a WINXP PC. I installed the latest version 3.1.9, which is the same I had used on the old PC.

Checking  the Radioddity website I noticed there had been some firmware updates since last time, my GD77 was currently using  ver 4.02.08, and the latest is 4.03.09, so I downloaded the firmware, ran the firmware installer and updated the firmware (without bricking the device) successfully to  ver 4.03.09, which was confirmed when I did a Read of the device using the Radioddity GD77 Programming  Software. DSP version remains the same at HRC6000 ver 1.2

I made my changes doing a shuffle of some TG's and adding TG50526 (VK2GWY-CCARC) for my Brandmeister Group.

The updated GD77 codeplug is now installed and operational. 

I also updated my Motorola XTS3000 today as well, to remove some repeater channels that have been redeployed as VK-DMR repeaters and shuffle a couple P25 channels around and uploaded that new codeplug into the XTS3000.

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

P25 Repeater update for VK2 (Sydney and NSW)

 I been auditing which P25 repeaters  are still working on the 70cm band here, looks like 7 are now gone.

as of 3rd May 2022,

Operational :  

VK2RMB Terrey Hills but is standalone, waiting to be configured and linked to P25 network 

VK2RNS Asquith, currently standalone, as it not linked due to recent lightning strike

VK2RWK Kurrajong, standalone

VK2ROT Paddington, standalone

VK2RCG Sydney city (GPT) - linked into P25 network

VK2RHP Horsley Park, linked into P25 network

VK2RGN Goulburn - not sure if linked


Non-operational or redeployed :

VK2RWI Dural - now a VK-DMR rptr

VK2RHT Chatswood - now a VK-DMR rptr

VK2RAG Somersby - gone maybe redeployed

VK2RHR High Range - failed, getting fixed

VK2RCF Carlingford - gone

VK2RLE Heathcote - nothing

VK2RWS Berowra - gone

and possibly a P25 repeater for central west NSW (Bathurst-Orange region) being configured.

Talkgroups for these linked ones are typically TG10700 or TG10400


Friday, April 8, 2022

Pi-Star version for MMDVM hotspot as of 8th April, 2022

 Pi-Star version for MMDVM as of  8th April, 2022

I have updated my Pi-Star MMDVM nodes to Pi-Star v4.1.6 and Dashboard 20220401 (1st April 2022),

nothing noticeably different for me, as I just run DMR and P25 on my hotspots.

Thursday, March 24, 2022

John Moyle Field Day 2022 - postmortem

 I went to QF46pu with the intention of  working VHF and above, however after the first hour  of calling and finding nothing and hearing nothing,  (except for  VK2LE/p on 146.500, but they could not hear me). Dave VK2JDS was tuning around 40metres and found lots of stations calling CQ Contest,  so I started working the contest on 40metres, it was great fun, lots of strong signals, easy to work them. There were some serious stations out there, but also many casual contesters who liked a bit of a chat, which I was very obliging with. 

I was not  doing the contest seriously, just give out some numbers.  There seemed like there were many club groups and family groups, one op had his daughters doing the CQ calls while he made the contacts, so I was surprised by the number of young operators, both genders present, some of which had picked up the contest bug and operating very professionally and proficiently, which was great to hear. 

Over the 24 hour period I racked up 50 contacts, in between other projects,  while realistically just having a bit of fun in the contest.  I was operating under my other callsign VK2ABP,  running the Icom 756 Pro2 into a 80metre horizontal wire loop, strung out among the trees. 

Now that I had fun on a HF contest, I think I need to have a go at the RD Contest in August. I think I leave the VHF and above for the WIA VHF-UHF Field Day Contests.

Monday, March 7, 2022

update on VK2RWI Repeater facilities

 

BandOutput FrequencyInput Frequency
6 metres FM53.850 MHz52.850 MHz
2 metres FM147.000 MHz146.400 MHz
70cm FM438.525 MHz433.525 MHz      
70cm DMR438.600 MHz433.600 MHz
23cm FM1273.5 MHz1293.5 MHz

Saturday, February 19, 2022

WSJT-X FT8 update

 I ran this WSJT-X on my Linux Mint laptop on 50.313 in FT8 mode for a few days, amazed at what it decoded,  from here in Sydney (VK2)  decoding stations VK1,2,3,4,5,6,7, plus ZL1,2  this is not using a 5 or 6 element 6metre yagi, no, this is  from using my 40m HF dipole, through the Icom 756 Pro2's antenna tuner, with s5 noise level, the FT8 does the trick of pulling signals out of the noise.  Even a SWL can throw a bit of wire out in the backyard and decode these signals.  

It's not hard to think  what you can get with a couple phased arrays up a mast, in a low noise environment. No reason not to get the America's or Europe with proper 6metre setup. Great fun, I can't wait to go out in the country and try it from a low noise floor environment. It's too damned noisy in the city suburbs with all these damned houses with solar panels with noisy inverters running all day. Tired of listening to high noise level on HF  and 50 Mhz, thanks to fxxxing Greenies and their fxxxing solar panels polluting the RF spectrum.

WIA VHF/UHF/SHF Field Day Contests for 2022

 as mentioned earlier this year, the Summer VHF/UHF/SHF Field Day Contest has come and gone already

These are the remaining two WIA VHF/UHF/SHF Field Day Contests for 2022.

  Winter 2022 - 0200 UTC Saturday 25 through 0159 UTC Sunday 26 June (0400 / 0359 in VK6). 

  Spring 2022 - 0100 UTC Saturday 26 through 0059 UTC Sunday 27 November (0400 / 0359 in VK6).

The Wireless Institute of Australia (wia.org.au)

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Beware when visiting Canberra - ACT Gov is stooping to low acts of money grabbing.

 This is a pic looking southbound on Northbourne Ave in Canberra,  just before Cooyong st, the speed limit drops from 60km/hr to 40km/hr with only these small signs to warn you that speed limit has dropped. This section was 60km/hr. This is a six lane major thoroughfare, that follows from the Federal Highway and becomes Northbourne Ave and continues across Canberra to Woden and onto Tuggeranong.  This is the "main" thoroughfare of Canberra.  The ACT Gov obviously strapped for cash, came up with this new cash grab. This must be recent, I don't remember seeing this last December (2021) but its now there is January 2022. The joke of these picture is the tiny speed signs  say "High pedestrian activity". High pedestrian activity in Canberra ?  

 If this ploy was for safety, then the  ACT Gov  should have put big 2metre high speed signs and flashing lights, and ripple strips on the roadway to get driver's attention. 

 Lucky, I was dawdling at less than 40km/hr looking for a particular address, if I had been coming down there at 60km/hr, then I would have been severely stung.



Addendum : 9th April 2022 - I just been to Canberra, one of the small signs (on the left side) has been replaced with a 2metre high  sign, plus a warning sign  of road changes placed ahead of the speed sign.   Somebody  in ACT Govt realised their whoopsie. Another of the 40km signs obscured by a tree.  I also took note of all the speed  changes  on this main road from above Watson through to Woden, 100, 80, 70, 60, 40, 60, 70, 80, 60. The speed limit is all over the place. 
The next dodgy speed trap is still southbound when crossing London Circuit, there is a speed camera to catch people accelerating towards the open space of the  huge round about ahead.

Sunday, February 13, 2022

John Moyle Field Day Contest 2022

 The next John Moyle Field Day Contest will be held over the weekend of the 19th-20th March 2022 and will run from UTC 0100 on the Saturday to 0059 on the Sunday (24hr period) 

I planning to head out west for the weekend and Manly Warringah Radio Society (VK2MB) is also planning to operate portable too.

Good luck to all participants, hopefully now that we starting to get ahead of Covid, many of us can go portable for the contest.

Saturday, January 22, 2022

WSJT-X 2.5.4 running on Linux Mint 20.3

 I finally got around to installing latest WSJT-X, both on my Windows10 laptop and also on my Linux Mint laptop, these are old hand-me-down laptops,  the Linux Mint laptop is an old ASUS N550J 2015 model I think, it was my XYL's MS Windows10 laptop which became unbearably slow and useless, so I took it and installed Linux on it, I tried a few different versions, but settled on LinuxMint as it is derived from Ubuntu and Ubuntu derived from Debian. Anyway, the old ASUS has a new lease on life, it is fast again.  I have in the past ran WSJT on  various Linux platforms, on old Dell servers, I had deliberately  gone about  compiling and testing WSJT on  the various Linux derivations and documenting it. Anyway, I finally put some antennas up at home, since moving house, I thought lets try some actual weak signal radio activities.  

Next, I downloaded the .deb files for WSJT-X 2.5.4 and installed on Linux Mint 20.3 this was just too easy, much easier than the old days of manually compiling against different version of Linux, now days  it is  as easy installing on Linux, (since it based on QT5,) as it is for  installing on a MS-Windows 10 laptop.

Next step, connect the TigerTronics USB SignalLink interface to my IC-756PROII transceiver and the other end into the USB of the Linux Mint laptop, to make sure it was found and defined as a linux device, I ran a couple commands from terminal window, such as lsusb command to show the USB devices,  and used the Sound application in Linux Mint to see the input and output sound devices were identified and could see it displayed and I could test the interface.

I read some forums, I can see quite a few hams complaining that they  could not get their SignalLink devices to work on LinuxMint, I can't understand it, as I found it so easy. I can't imagine what the hell they were doing, (or not doing),  to make it work, it was just so damned easy. Maybe they just using some old crappy PC or laptop.

Anyway, I had it all installed and configured and plugged into the transceiver and before I even realised it, the thing was decoding  FT8 on 50.313MHz, which blew me away, as I couldn't even hear anything like a signal coming from the radio, yet, I was decoding callsigns and messages from other hams. This is what I call weak signal Dxing!

Next step, I better read the WSJT-X documentation to see how I start replying to people on FT8. A few years I was at Dave VK2JDS's place watching JT65 on 23cm EME, which was impressive as it is, but FT8 is pushing the boundaries even further.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

WIA Summer VHF UHF Contest 15th-16th 2022 post-mortem

 I had to work, but I did listen on 50.150, 144.150, 432.150  I did hear several content stations on 6m and 2m across Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning.  I will try again and for the 2022 WIA Winter VHF UHF Contest and hopefully be active in that contest.

Friday, January 14, 2022

23cm FM Repeaters update


Update of 23cm FM voice repeaters for VK1/VK2

OUTPUT   INPUT      Callsign       Location

1273.100   1293.100 VK2RTZ      Mt Sugarloaf , Newcastle   91.5Hz ctcss

1273.200   1293.200 VK2RPW    Grundy Mtn,  Walcha  - defunct

1273.200   1293.200 VK2RWC    Chatswood,  Sydney (north)

1273.300   1293.300 VK2RPL     Mt Nardi,  Lismore  - defunct

1273.400   1293.400 VK2RAG    Somersby,  Central Coast

1273.500   1293.500 VK2RWI     Dural,   Sydney (north west)

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

WSJT-X 2.5.4 GA Release

 WSJT-X 2.5.4 GA Release


Please welcome two new members of the core WSJT Development group: Chet
Fennell, KG4IYS, and Uwe Risse, DG2YCB.  Each brings important skills
and experience to the project, after the loss of Bill Somerville, G4WJS.

The newly constituted group has been working to redefine standard
operating procedures for new releases.  WSJT-X 2.5.4, a bug-fix release
correcting these two flaws in release 2.5.3, is now available as a
General Availability (GA) release.

Changes from v2.5.3 are:

WSJT-X: Repair a defect that caused occasional crashes when in QSO with
stations using nonstandard callsigns.

MAP65: Correct a bug that prevented "Best-fit Delta phi" solutions from
being displayed to the user.

Links to WSJT-X 2.5.4 installation packages for Windows and Linux are
available here:
http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/k1jt/wsjtx.html

Thanks to John Nelson, G4KLA, the installation package for macOS will be
added soon.

You can also download the packages from our SourceForge site:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/wsjt/files/
It may take a short time for the SourceForge site to be updated.

WSJT-X is licensed under the terms of Version 3 of the GNU General
Public License (GPL).  Development of this software is a cooperative
project to which many amateur radio operators have contributed.  If you
use our code, please have the courtesy to let us know about it.  If you
find bugs or make improvements to the code, please report them to us in
a timely fashion.

The authors and Copyright holders of WSJT-X request that derivative
works should not publish programs based on features in WSJT-X before
those features are made available in a General Availability (GA) release
of WSJT-X.  We will cease making public Release Candidate (RC)
pre-releases for testing and user early access purposes if this request
is ignored.

Bugs should be reported by following instructions found here in the User
Guide:

https://www.physics.princeton.edu//pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx-doc/wsjtx-main-2.5.4.html#_bug_reports

We hope you will enjoy using WSJT-X 2.5.4.

   -- 73 from Joe, K1JT; Steve, K9AN; Nico, IV3NWV; Chet, KG4IYS; and
   Uwe, DG3YCB.

Monday, January 3, 2022

6metre FM voice Repeater Status Update - Jan 2022

 here is the latest update on these 6metre Repeaters for Sydney and surrounds as of 3rd Jan 2022

53.625 Newcastle  - unknown

53.650 Illawarra  - operational

53.675 Terrey Hills - still off air

53.700 Goulburn - unknown

53.725 Somersby - operational

53.850 Dural - operational

53.875 Blue Mtns - operational

in recent weeks I have heard people chatting on 53.650, 53.725 and 53.850

TYT TH-9800 Quad band bios settings

 

TH-9800 Quad Band FM - Firmware Options

  • Turn off radio via normal power button
  • Press left LOW button AND power button, to enter firmware mode
  • Radio will boot in firmware mode: “F1 – SETMOD RESET” on display
    • Press A = MAIN UPDATE
    • Press B = PANEL UPDATE
    • Press F = RF Test mode
    • Press Set = Reset radio settings (keep channels memory)
  • Left/Right Dial scroll, switch between mode =
    • F1 = SETMOD RESET
    • F2 = HYPER RESET
    • F3 = MEMORY RESET
    • F4 = ALL RESET
    • F5 = M_ONLY MODE

MAIN UPDATE mode is used to upload new firmware to the body.  

PANEL UPDATE mode is to upload new firmware to the remote head.