SIX NEWS - UK Six Metre Group
Transcription
SIX NEWS - UK Six Metre Group
SIX NEWS Issue 124 Aug 2015 Journal of the UK Six metre Group Dedicated to promoting 50MHz activity around the Six News 1 world 2 Six News Contents Editorial Peter Bacon, G3ZSS 5 Chairman’s Corner Chris Deacon, G4IFX 6 Secretary’s Page Tim Hugill, G4FJK 7 C6AUX Bahamas DXpedition Pete Csanky, VE3IKV 8 70 MHz International Allocations Peter Bacon, G3ZSS 9 VU4KV Dxpedition Krish Kanakasapapathi, W4VKU 10 What’s on Six Chris Patterson, W3CMP 16 What’s on Six – Late News Chris Patterson, W3CMP 45 Shure Headset and Interface Review Peter Bacon, G3ZSS 47 Experiences with a 5 ele LFA Antenna Ron Williams, G6ZJN 48 UK Six Metre Group 42 FRONT COVER The UKSMG has attended a few rallies this year. The photos on the front cover show Trev G3ZYY, Chris G4IFX, Fred G4BWP, and Kerry G8VR hard at work at the Eastbourne Rally. Six News is published by the UK Six Metre Group four times a year. For the latest news visit our website at http://www.uksmg.org Six News 3 UKSMG Committee Chairman Chris Deacon G4IFX Vice Chairman Trevor Day G3ZYY Treasurer Mike Wills G3OIL treasurer@uksmg.org Secretary Tim Hugill G4FJK secretary@uksmg.org Editor Peter Bacon G3ZSS editor@uksmg.org Awards Manager Dave Toombs G8FXM awards@uksmg.org Webmaster Dave Toombs G8FXM webmaster@uksmg.org Contests Manager* Dave Edwards G7RAU contest@uksmg.org G3ZYY sponsorship@uksmg.org Sponsorship Manager Trevor Day chairman@uksmg.org Member #1 Robin Burrows-Ellis M1DUD m1dud@uksmg.org Member #2 Matt Madsen OZ6OM oz6om@uksmg.org Member #3 Chris Patterson W3CMP w3cmp@uksmg.org *G7RAU is a Corresponding Member of the Committee . Please send all membership subscriptions to: Tim Hugill, G4FJK Swandhams House Sampford Peverell, Tiverton Devon, EX16 7ED secretary@uksmg.org Please send all award applications to: Dave Toombs, G8FXM 1 Chalgrove Welwyn Garden City Hertfordshire AL7 2QJ awards@uksmg.org Please send all items for Six News to: Peter Bacon, G3ZSS High View, 18 Monks Well, Farnham, Surrey GU10 1RH editor@uksmg.org Please send all DX information to: Chris Patterson, W3CMP 590 Valley Road Lancaster PA 17601, USA DXnews@uksmg.org Please note that all address changes should be sent to the Secretary and not the Editor Deadline for the next issue is 4 October 2015 4 Six News Editorial Peter Bacon, G3ZSS Well let me start by making the understatement that Six Metres has been a little quiet this Summer in G-land. Yes there has been the usual Sporadic Es around Europe, but transcontinental DX has been a bit lacking. No sign of SSSP to Japan this year, and only a few openings to the Caribbean, with even fewer openings to North America. Fingers crossed for what TEP might bring us this Autumn. By the time you read this, some of us will have gathered at the G3WOS BBQ, and exchanged tales of woe. Or if you are heading off to the infamous Jimmy and Dicks BBQ in Austin – enjoy yourselves and don’t drown in your sorrows! Late last year the UKSMG sponsored the VU4KV dxpedition so they could take a 6m antenna with them. We are grateful to Krish for his write up on the dxpedition and to learn of their success in working into Japan. Unfortunately the propagation gods did not let them work any Europeans. In June Pete VE3IKV went to the Bahamas and operated as C6AUX. Pete provided a short write up of his experiences from the Bahamas, but unfortunately as his report says, he only had limited openings to Europe. In this edition, we are once again grateful to Chris, W3CMP for compiling What’s on Six. Some of you may have received an email from Chris soliciting any reports of 4m activity. While the UKSMG is primarily focused on promoting 6m, we decided at a recent committee meeting to see if there was any interest in including some 4m activity reports as they are both the lower VHF bands. Since many members also operate on 4m and there is no real voice for 4m activity we would like some feedback from members if they would like to see this included. Earlier this year the UKSMG sponsored the I2YSB dxpedition to 5Z0L, and we hope to have a full write up in the next issue of Six News. Kenya had just announced 6m licence privileges, and our Italian friends made a special trip with their emphasis this time on 6m instead of the usual HF. While on the subject of sponsorships following an initial approach by Neil, GØJHC, the UKSMG together with Innov Antennas decided to send an antenna down to Robert, 3B9FR. Previously Robert was using a wire dipole and having some limited success working into Japan. The shipment of the antenna took a while to get to Rodriguez as there is no direct route to the island. But some of us in Europe were lucky enough to work Robert in early May for an all-time new one. If you do know of any station in a rare part of the world that is interested in getting on 6m, then please let the UKSMG Sponsorship Manager know, and we’ll see if we should provide an antenna to improve their signal. Six News 5 Chairman’s Corner Chris Deacon, G4IFX You’re probably getting bored with me telling you about the improvements we’ve been making in the last year to our website, to our contests and to our magazine. So I won’t repeat all that again but there is one more new thing that you may see evidence of in this issue of Six News, one which may prove a little more controversial. We’ve decided to test the water on adding a certain amount of 70MHz coverage to Six News. I’m not on 4m we’re so interconnected these days that we all myself, but with the increased availability of the get to hear about it. band in Europe you can see on the ON4KST Actually I think it’s true that this year’s chat that many of the 50MHz operators are on northern Es season is not one of the best ever and 70MHz as well; there is a lot in common between that’s hardly surprising because we’re in what is the two, much more than with (say) 10m or 2m, sometimes called the ‘post-maximum auroral but there is no functioning 4m group or magazine phase’. The level of magnetic disturbances and although there is a useful website typically reaches a maximum a year or two after (www.70mhz.org) it’s not anything like as the sunspots have peaked, i.e. where we are now, comprehensive as ours. and that leads to more auroras and a disturbed We’re keeping this trial very low key at the ionosphere. It certainly isn’t the case that an moment. 50MHz is still the primary focus of aurora destroys all the Es, in fact there can be UKSMG and will remain so (and no, we’re not some very interesting auroral E and/or Es in going to change the name of the group in the conjunction with quite significant magnetic foreseeable future) but I hope you agree that a bit storms, but on average, over a period of weeks, a of 70MHz news might add something to the disturbed magnetic field does tend to damp down operating enjoyment of our members. the Es and I think that’s been happening this On other matters, one thing I’ve learned in year. The paths from the UK to North and Central my thirty years (cough) on 50MHz is that every America have certainly been pretty poor by year someone, somewhere announces that “the normal standards and I haven’t heard of any UK sporadic-E is rubbish this year”, or even “this is to JA openings at all. But on the other hand the worst Es season ever”. Although there are some paths have been remarkably consistent – (almost) predictable contributing factors like the Europe to the Middle East and Central Asia, for movements of the jet stream and the incidence of instance so there’s always hope of something thunderstorms, Es is still inherently unpredictable better. and this applies both over time and around the By the time you read this we’ll know pretty world. So it’s perfectly possible that somewhere much how it turned out – I hope it was good for in the world it really is the worst ever season and you and you worked some fantastic DX! Disclaimer / Copyright The views expressed in ‘Six News’ are not necessarily those of the Editor or those of the committee of the UK Six Metre Group. Most items in ‘Six News’ may be freely quoted provided credit is given, but articles marked as copyright may not be reprinted without the owner’s permission. 6 Six News Secretary’s Page Tim Hugill, G4FJK After many complaints that this Es season was rather quiet, Six Metres eventually woke up in June and has been lively for us in Northern Europe over the past few weeks. It has been good to hear many new callsigns on the band, trying Six it would seem for the first time. With the seasonal peak in interest in the band, I am happy to report a total of 27 new members joining the UKSMG for the first time. Welcome to 2E1IDC, 5R8UI, AC2NR, DH9DX, DJ7ZZ, EA3GCT, EA8DBM, GØBUX, G1BTV, G3MWV, G4AYU, G4EZV, G4FGJ, G4JUR, HB9FKF, HSØZIL, K4MM, LA1NG, MØHVC, MØOSA, MØWAF, MØXTA, Tim is a leading member of the GW2OP Contest team. The photo shows GWØGEI and GW4VRO operating the 50MHz station at GW2OP/p during the RSGB VHF NFD. MM6BJJ, NZ1I, OK2IT, PA4MSA and SM6CVX. In addition, Welcome-Back to eight returning members, CT1HZE, EA6VQ, EI4GOB, GØUJD, G1BHR, G8GAJ, GM7UXH and M1MBZ. As part of the development of the UKSMG website, we have introduced a new feature as part of the Membership Sign-up and Renewal pages. When a visitor completes either of the online forms and pays for their membership via credit card or PayPal, they now receive an automatic email from UKSMG, confirming the details that they sent via the form, and also giving them an opportunity to register on the website if they have not done so already. This feature has been introduced to help both new and existing members, and it also helps us manage your membership information better. If you have any suggestions for the UKSMG committee, or any contributions for Six News, please do send an email to me at secretary@ uksmg.org or to any of the committee. Best 73 and good DX on Six. Six News Needs Your Contributions! We hope you enjoy Six News, but please remember the success of the magazine depends on our members contributing articles for publication. We are always interested in your; Articles Reviews News Items Letters Photos … on any aspect of 6m operation, propagation, reviews or techniques. Please send your DX news items to Chris, W3CMP via email DXNews@uksmg.org Please send all other items to Peter, G3ZSS via email Editor@uksmg.org Do not worry if your English is not perfect as we can help tidy up any submitted article. If you have any good photos relevant to 6m, then please email them to Editor@uksmg.org. Please remember that for use in a printed magazine the photos should be in high resolution. Whatever you can contribute will be gratefully received. Six News 7 C6AUX Bahamas DXpedition Pete Csanky, VE3IKV Bill VE3MMQ and I arrived at the Baycaner Beach Resort, Pirate’s Well, Mayaguana Island FL32 on Monday 22nd June and set up the bigboy eight element, 43 foot long W7GJ DXpedition yagi. Mayaguana is one of the Bahamas Out-islands. Owner Earnell “Shorty” Brown allowed us to set up the antenna on the beach in front of the resort which gave a great salt water horizon to North America and Europe. Island 110V ac power was off due to construction of new water system. to W7 Utah and Arizona, and triple hop 4733 km to W6 California DM06. Wednesday 24th June – Band opened for single hop Es to US Midwest and double hop 3500 km to W0 Colorado. Thursday 25th June – Band opened for single hop Es to US East coast and double hop 2400 km to Maine and New Hampshire. Friday 26th June – The band was closed. We had only one meteor scatter QSO to K7BV in North Carolina, about 1500 km. Bill went fishing and saw a 10 foot reef shark close to the boat! We had fresh Bahamian grouper for dinner. Saturday 27th June Band opened for single hop Es to Florida; in afternoon we had a multihop opening to Europe from 19.30z. We worked 9A, PA, CT, F, DL, SM, OZ, LA, GM, and G. Pirate’s Well, Mayaguana Island Bahamas. C6AUX QSL card showing eight element M 2 yagi at the Baycaner Resort on Mayaguana Island, Bahamas. Tuesday 23rd June – The band opened for single hop Es to US East coast, VE1, VE2, VE3, double hop 2650 km to W9 Illinois and 4100 km 8 Six News Pete VE3IKV/C6AUX with conch shell collected when six metre band was closed. Sunday 28th June – Band was again open single hop Es to US east coast. At 11.00z there was a brief opening to EI and GM followed by double hop 3800 km to DN86 North Dakota and DN74 Wyoming. Monday 29th June – Band opened for single hop Es to US East coast, Midwest, and VE2 andVE3. Tuesday 30th June – We had single hop Es to W8, VE3, and US East coast. At 16.10z band opened to JW7QIA in Svalbard, 1300 km from the North Pole, for the first ever C6 Bahamas to JW7 Svalbard six metre QSO! Distance was 7550 km. The band was open to JW7 until 18.17z. No other European or North American stations were heard were heard by us during that time. Wednesday 1st July - Band closed; no QSOs. Thursday 2nd July – Band closed, no QSOs. Friday 3rd July – Band opened with open single hop Es to US East coast, VE3, then US Midwest Saturday 4th July - Band closed, no QSOs. Pete VE3IKV and his wife Jojo did a 12 km hike at low tide to see the flamingos on the reef. Sunday 5th July – Band was open with single hop Es to US East coast, VE3, W8 and W9. Flamingos feeding on reef at low tide, Mayaguana Island. Summary: 875 total Six metre QSOs in 23 DXCCs: W/K, VE, FG, CO, YV, CT, 9A, PA, F, DL, SM, OZ, LA, GM, G, EI, XE, 9Y4, JW7, PJ5, J79, J69, and 6Y5. Conditions to Europe were bad. Almost 100% of all QSOs were on cw. Anyway, we left the six metre antenna down there and we’re heading back there again with the XYLs in June next year. The place and people are fantastic and the pictures don’t do it justice. Rig was the Yaesu FT-650 barefoot at 100 watts output on six metres. 70 MHz International Allocations Your Editor has recently got on 4m and found that one of the first quirks on the band for DX chasers are the frequency allocations. There is no point leaving the receiver on, for example, 70.200 MHz and listening for activity, when not 70.000 MHz 70.100 70.200 all of Europe can use this frequency! A SDR receiver with a good waterfall display is invaluable for watching the band, and noticing the beacons pop up all over the band. I made up this table as a useful tool to keep beside the rig. 70.300 70.400 70.500 3A, 9H, LZ, OY, ZB, OX, HA, PA G/GD/GI/GM/GJ GU/GW 4O CT + islands DL (Temporary) EA EI LA LX LY OK (Temporary) ON OM (Temporary) OZ ES, OH, YO S5, 9A SP SV A92 V5, ZS Six News 9 VU4KV Dxpedition Krish Kanakasapapathi, W4VKU Prelude After our expedition to Lakshadweep Islands in 2013 (VU7AG), which was well received by the fraternity, we received many requests to consider putting the Andaman Islands back on air. There had been an expedition to the Andamans in 2011 (VU4PB) and yet VU4 hadn’t really fallen low enough in the Most Wanted rankings. In fact, a quick look at Clublog and N4AA’s Most Wanted List showed it had managed to sneak back up in the Top 50, residing smugly at 34! We were still catching up with post-expedition activities and settling back into our routine lives when Krish suggested that we should look at VU4 in the coming months. The answer was a rather unanimous “No!” J If one looks at the VU7AG team, barring one retired member, all others have regular, full time jobs and families with dependents. So rationing time for an expedition is always a challenge. But the addiction of a DXpedition pileup is hard to get away from and no amount of familial rehab would change that. When Krish communicated his plans to do a solo trip to Port Blair in March, the team went into reconsideration mode. Andaman & Nicobar Islands The islands are a Union Territory of India and are closer to Sumatra than the Indian mainland. Out of the 572 islands in the group, only 34 are inhabited. A few of the islands have indigenous tribes that are protected and access to those areas is prohibited. The islands are rich in flora and fauna and there is even an active volcano (Barren Island), the only one in South Asia. These islands were born out of seismic activity in the East Asian- Indian Ocean region and still experience tremors on a frequent basis. While no serious seismic events have been reported in the last 10 years, the memories of the 9.1 magnitude earthquake of December 2004 and the ensuing Tsunami which caused incomprehensible damage are still fresh in the minds of the island residents. From a DXCC perspective, both the Andaman and Nicobar group of islands constitute a single 10 Six News DXCC entity but different IOTA groups; the Nicobar Islands being amongst the rarest in the world, having been activated only once back in the 1980s. VU4K - March 2014 Krish W4VKU travelled to Port Blair in March 2014 and was fortunate to be granted the call VU4K. This was a scouting trip for the planned bigger operation and also explore the possibility of putting Nicobar Islands on the air. In fact, the requests from the IOTA community were too many to ignore even though getting Nicobar on air would mean a significant logistical challenge with too many uncertainties. While VU4K did manage to put over 7,500 QSOs in the log, the primary purpose of the trip was achieved. Krish managed to build contacts with various important personnel in the Andaman & Nicobar administration as well as Defence (A & N Command) who later proved instrumental. A recce trip to Nicobar couldn’t materialise due to the unpredictable schedule of the boat services, and equally unreliable and excessively steep helicopter services. But liaisons were established who would help getting the whole project off the ground. VU4K was QRV in the last week of March, 2014 from the same QTH which was used for VU4PB in 2011. hex-beam was put up quickly along with the CrankIR vertical with elevated radials. VU4CB went on air on November 3, 2014 around 16:38z with VU2NKS who answered VU2PAI on 17m ssb and the pileup was instantaneous. VU4CB – Campbell Bay, Great Nicobar Island Great Nicobar is the largest and southernmost of the Nicobar Islands, and is home to the Shompen tribe. The island is primarily a biosphere reserve and the population largely resides in Campbell Bay, which is a natural harbour on the south-eastern side of the island. Campbell Bay is connected with Port Blair by a government-run boat service which plies alternate days. However, the schedules are erratic and published only a few days in advance of departure. Tickets can be booked only a week in advance and priority is given to native islanders, officials, and medical cases over visitors from the mainland. Nicobar islands are off-limits for foreigners so only Indian citizens are allowed access after purpose of visit, duration and place of stay are communicated. Permits are issued only for the island one wishes to visit and one cannot get off the boat on any of the islands where the boat docks. Our local liaison in Port Blair had managed to get us a confirmed stay in the guest house of the Public Works Department of Great Nicobar. This was subject to change if any PWD officials decided to visit during the same time as our trip, in which case we would have to make alternate arrangements. Thankfully, no officials visited Campbell Bay and we could use the guest house as our QTH. The guest house was a 15 minute walk from the jetty and was a run-down place with only basic facilities. At least it had working air conditioning unlike the boat from Port Blair, which was only had air-con fixtures and was a floating tin-can with temperatures hitting 40C during the day! Add to it the sweltering humidity because of rain showers on all days, both Krish and Pai VU2PAI, were glad to set foot in Campbell Bay. The QTH had a flat roof and a Pictures of QTH. We had published our operating policy before departure and since this was an IOTA trip, the operation would be restricted to a few bands only. The larger VU4KV operation was to follow that would cover all HF bands. One of the things the team had considered in the planning stages was to have the IOTA activation after the bigger activation. But the challenges on the ground with equipment shipping to Nicobar on time and uncertainty on the dates of travel were too large to ignore. It was therefore decided that the focus would be the bigger expedition since we need to firm up the accommodation and make advance payments. There was more certainty in going to Andaman than going to Nicobar. This worked out perfectly in the end as FT4TA was on the bands in early November and over-lapping pileups would have been a night-mare for DXers. While in Campbell Bay, we had to report our arrival at the local police station and it was the first time anyone there had heard of amateur radio. Needless to say, word of our arrival got around quickly and we were nothing short of celebrities. This is good because any items like food or ropes for securing antennas can be made available to Six News 11 you anytime. The down-side is the constant interruption from visitors who have a knack of dropping in unannounced and want to spend time with you. Even make you pose for pictures! But we kept chugging away despite these distractions. There were many meetings scheduled during the day with island officials who wanted to know more about amateur radio and its usefulness, especially since Great Nicobar had borne a significant brunt of the tsunami. It was cut-off with the main-land for over 2 days and there had been a significant number of deaths. The grim reminders of the devastation still abound even 10 years after the incident. Land lost to the sea, broken houses which haven’t been torn down, and islanders who suffered loss of limbs and other grievous injuries including loss of loved ones, still recall the fateful day their lives changed completely. We were humbled by the courage shown by these very simple island folk who soldier on despite hardships. The least we could do for them was to give away some of our operating time to listen to their stories and talk about life in the mainland and overseas. We would also go off-air routinely because of the instability of the power supply. Electricity is supplied by diesel gen-sets but it is not 100% reliable. Log uploads too became an issue as the only place which offered connectivity was the Governmentowned telco office that was still using dial-up modems. The modems were notorious for working only a few days in a month and their off-days perfectly coincided with our stay! Indira Point – southern-most tip of India The Indira Point lighthouse (renamed from Pygmalion Point after the late Prime Minister of India, Mrs. Indira Gandhi) is a beacon to the shipping lanes of South East Asia. It is located at the southern-most tip of Great Nicobar. Indira Point suffered heavy casualties as the tsunami hit with the light-keeper’s quarters, a police station, and other military establishments got wiped out by the deluge taking away the personnel and their families residing there. Today, the light house juts out eerily out of the sea as the sea has encroached inland. We could not manage to land near the lighthouse because of the breakers but we consider ourselves lucky enough to have seen the lighthouse from close quarters. A rather ghostly structure with remnants of the destruction around it. Picture of Indira Point Lighthouse and Activation trip. VU4CB ended with a net of 8849 QSOs. Not a large effort by any means but importantly we made many friends during our stay. Our presentation to the island administration and local high school were well received and we were assured of future cooperation if we ever visited again. We were glad to have put the rare AS-033 IOTA group on the air finally. VU4KV Neil Island Temples inundated and submerged due to land subjugation. 12 Six News Neil Island was chosen as the proposed QTH because of two reasons. Previous experiences of operating from Port Blair had shown that low bands suffered due to the topography which prevented putting up decent low band antennas, and local QRN which is synonymous with townships. Secondly, the hotels in Port Blair can no longer be termed economical as the Andamans are a favourite holiday destination with tourists from all over the world, especially from Europe. The prices are absurdly steep especially during months that see a good flow of tourists. On the other hand, Neil Island is a quaint ‘town’ located across another popular holiday spot – Havelock Island. There was a resort on Neil which offered a large space for putting up antennas with a northfacing beach and a sparse tourist flow. It has stable electricity supply and the resort had backup power arrangements with a tariff that wouldn’t impact our budget. Perfect! Unloading Dxpedition Cargo at Neil Island. First row rooms at the Tango Beach Resort. The plan was to have a total of 15 days operating time and look at surpassing the QSO figure of VU7AG (55k QSOs). Modest goals yet only one could be met. The licence permitted 12 operators but as has been our story with a team of individuals having limited free time and other responsibilities, we had drop outs. When part of the team assembled in Port Blair on the 13th of November, the team size was down to nine. Some members were to join a bit later but that was not an issue. Upon landing in Port Blair, VU2PAI got news that he had to be back home to attend to a workrelated exigency. This was a big loss as Pai had contributed a significant number of CW and SSB QSOs from VU7. The team travelled to Neil Island on a ferry and awaited arrival of the cargo which was being shipped separately. Over 2.5 tonnes of cargo was held back in Port Blair and required hiring a separate boat as the passenger ferry refused to take our cargo, even in multiple trips. Thankfully, all this was arranged without any significant loss of time. Though one of the ops had his personal baggage misplaced by the airline and that caused him some discomfort. A antennas along the waterline and they went up in no time. By sun-down on the 16th of November, VU4KV was QRV and already running big pileups into NA and EU. The following days saw a 2element phased array for 80 and 30m, a 4-square for 40m and a top loaded vertical for 160m. Pileups were huge but thankfully there weren’t too many occasions where the callers were unruly. Most callers respected the ops instructions when calling for a particular area. This was also a good thing for the ops since they had had a few forgettable experiences earlier from VU7 when the pileups had spun out of control. Four days into the operation and another op – A45WH (VU2WH) had to return back home to the mainland to attend to a family matter. The team was down to 7 members and this meant extra workload for everyone. Especially since Krish had other commitments like liaison with local government Antenna farm at Neil Island (VU4KV). Six News 13 agencies, making presentations to schools in the Islands, which meant a trip back and forth in the middle of the operation. The reduction in team-size meant the goals had to be relooked. We had intended to do 6m, where the operation was to be only on RTTY and FM, since the existing rules do not allow CW or SSB on VHF (possibly due to a clerical error while drafting. Yeah, possible!). We had clarified the use of modes with the licencing authority in New Delhi and were told to go by what is published, no exceptions would be made. At the same time, the demand for low bands was still quite high and efforts were diverted between making QSOs on HF as well as on Top Band. Kumar VU2BGS had been tasked with the responsibility of operating 80 and 160m and he split time between both bands, apart from stints on higher bands during the day and the troubleshooting of equipment or antennas. Nandu VU2NKS continued plugging away on RTTY and managed over 7000 RTTY QSOs in the end. A very respectable effort. SSB operation was largely divided between Chetan VU3DMP, Kiran VU3KPL and Krish W4VKU (VU2VKU). VU3KPL was an expedition rookie but improved by leaps and bounds and was soon running pileups very efficiently. Any newcomer who can keep his cool while working a raging EU pileup on phone and then have the energy to go on putting NA in the log without showing the slightest amount of stress deserves praise. CW responsibilities were largely shared between Prasad VU2PTT and Deepak VU2CDP, and VU2BGS would help them take a break when not operating the low bands. VU2CDP noted that very often callers would send ‘161’ to him and he would reply with a 73. He would occasionally QLF to drop a hint that it wasn’t VU2PTT on the key all the time. VU4KV ended SSB operations on 28th November as most of the ops returned home on that Friday. This was the weekend before CQWW CW and the CW ops decided to operate MultiMulti and continue giving out a new one or a multiplier in the contest. RTTY operation continued on the WARC band till the very end. The permit expired on 30th November and VU4KV went QRT at local midnight (18:30z) with a total of 49.8k QSOs in the log, some 270 on 6m but all with JA on RTTY and FM. Final thoughts We believe that VU4KV gave many a new one on a particular band or mode. Our operating was well distributed on the higher bands with an average 16% of QSOs made on 15, 12 and 10m. There was also focus on 30m where many still needed VU4. A healthy new band percentage of over 40 (as per Clublog) ratifies this, even though the number is reflective of only Clublog users. 80 and 160m continue to be areas for improvement. There is a dearth of LF operating experience in our part of the world, but we believe this will change as some of us intend making improvements in our stations as we head out of Cycle 24. The VU4KV operators (top left clockwise) VU2WH Sangeeth, VU3KPL Kiran, VU2BGS Kumar, VU2PTT Prasad, VU3DMP Chetan operating from his bed due to back problems and VU2CDP Deepak. 14 Six News QSL Image of VU4K. 6m operation from Neil Island The veteran in our team, VU2BGS has considerable experience on 6m where a homebrew yagi was planned. The team also had 2 Rohn push-up masts from DX-engineering to install the yagi. However, things took a different turn at the island; we only had 50ft of low loss heliax and the yagi had a 40ft boom. Looking at the size of the antenna, and our prime goal of public safety, we had concerns that if the antenna fell and someone was hurt, that could be the end of amateur radio from this location for the foreseeable future. There was a spot near the beach, where the mast could be secured to a large tree stump, but the 300ft run of LMR400 would have done no good on 6m due to the cable loss. The other option was to rebuild the yagi with fewer elements, thus reducing the boom size. Kumar, VU2BGS got to work and reconstructed the yagi to come up with a shorter version. The yagi was pointed to look over the water towards Japan. Long story short, Kumar was unsatisfied with the performance of the shortened yagi and the 150ft of LMR400. Finally, something had to be done and unwilling to give up, VU2NKS (Nandu) and VU2BGS (Kumar) used a spider pole and build a J-pole for 6m. They hoisted this antenna over the station’s building and ran the shortest piece of the coax cable they could find. This setup worked well to log several stations in Japan on 6m. They were deeply disappointed that they could not work anyone in Europe. As the leader of the expedition Krish says, “ I need to take some responsibility for their disappointment. I discouraged them from installing the full size yagi anywhere closer to the building with the 50ft of heliax, since it was a heavily trafficked spot. My first goal was to run a safe operation without hurting anyone”. The shortened 6m yagi on test. We have never done 6m in the past. This is a learning experience and we will plan to do a much better 6m operating plan for the next one. The 40ft boom 6m yagi was originally rigged up for EME work, but it turned out that the timing and location for EME work did not coincide well. J-pole 6m antenna right near Station-1. We gratefully acknowledge the support granted to us, and at the same time offer our apologies to the UKSMG who supported us unconditionally despite our inability to make any 6m QSOs outside of JA. We hope you enjoyed chasing VU4KV on the HF bands nonetheless. Six News 15 What’s on Six The world of six metres with band reports, DX News, propagation and topical information for every operator, compiled by Chris Patterson, W3CMP 590 Valley Rd Lancaster, PA 17601, USA Opening Remarks Hello again from wet and warm southeastern Pennsylvania. Summer came here after almost no spring, and I am still trying to catch up on jobs that should have been done in May. In much of the U.S., six metres has tracked the weather. The E season was late in starting; the first transatlantic E opening of any substance didn’t occur until 4th June. Since then, with a few hiccups, the band has been at almost full throttle. When the band has been open, it’s been very good. When it hasn’t been good, it’s been dead. As of the end of June, the VP2MTT and FS/ K9EL DXpeditions have finished their operations. The C6AUX and PJ5A efforts are in full swing. Pete VE3IKV is doing a great job from Mayaguana Island in FL32. He’s given a new grid to many, and today, 30th June, he worked JW5QIA. Dick K5AND and Terry K4RX seemed to be into Europe endlessly from Statia until the band went completely dead for them a couple days ago. I was expecting to join them but a couple family matters intervened and I had to beg off. I hope to be able to return to the DXpedition trail next year. In this column you will see several changes in the roster of high-profile six metre operators. Bob ZL1RS, who for many years has been a stalwart on six from the South Pacific, has announced that he is taking a hiatus from the band. Nicolas TJ3SN is leaving Cameroon for another as yet unannounced African location. Nicolas has given many of us a new DXCC from central Africa; I regret that I was not one of the fortunate. Fred K6IJ, formerly KH7Y, has moved back to California from the big island of Hawaii. For 11 years Fred was one of the regulars on the band from the central Pacific. In last issue’s column I posted an incorrect picture of T3ØD’s QSL card. I also omitted 16 Six News e-mail DXNews@uksmg.org ZD8D’s report. I apologize for the foul ups. When I sent out request for reports a few days ago, a number of you in Europe noticed a request for reports about four metre activity. Even though 70MHz is not an authorized amateur band in many parts of the world, the Committee believes the band deserves more recognition and regular coverage. As a result, you will see a new item in this column – “Four Metre happenings.” If you have propagation reports, equipment or antenna evaluations or items related to four metres that you believe may be of interest to the readers, please send them in. Plans are firming up for the G3WOS and W6JKV/K5AND BBQs; I hope to see you at one or both of them. This evening, 3rd July local time, I caught a bit of an opening to Europe. The bulk of the opening centered on New England. K1SIX, K1TOL, K1WHS and others in the Northeastern US described the band as “20 metres.” MDØCCE, MMØAMW, GM4WJA and Tom EI4DQ made it into the log here. In this issue there are more than 40 reports from six metre enthusiasts around the world. These reports give a great idea of what the band has been doing and a lot of insight into our common affliction. Enjoy! July 2015 Solar Report to Six News KH6/K6MIO 07/03/15 Solar Cycle 24 While it actually has nothing to do with whether propagation will get better or worse, in the sunspot world, at least, a major technical milestone was very recently achieved. In the current “modern” era, high-precision cameras and computers can be used to calculate the areas of sunspot features, their brightness, magnetic intensity, and so forth, all in reliably calibrated ways. On the other hand, the older historical data, going back to 1700s and before, were gathered by individual human beings, looking at the Sun’s filtered image with their eyes, and assigning subjective a number to what they saw. Different people got different answers; different telescopes located in different locations also had different characteristics and weather. As a result, there were well known systematic differences between different datasets. Generally, the trends in the different data tracked pretty well, but not the values themselves. That is to say, different databases were likely to more or less agree on when solar maximum occurred, but disagree greatly on the index value of the maximum. On 1 st July the Royal Observatory of Belgium, in Brussels, whose data I frequently present, announced that they have completed the monumental task of going through their own data, back to 1749, and systematically recalibrating it to remove these systematic variations their solar R indices. By and large, they have rescaled the values upward significantly. During the period from 1992 to the present, it has resulted about a 61% average retroactive upward change in R indices values. For the readers of my reports, these rescaled plots now show much higher index values, but unfortunately that doesn’t change the reality of the propagation impact. One likely outcome is that the revised values will correspond much more closely with the NOAA Boulder index values, even though their computational algorithms are somewhat different. Figure 1shows the most recent, newly scaled data. Note that previous presentations have used an R scale to about 100; now the same information is on a scale of 130. The northern solar hemisphere Rn continues to hang out around 40, as it has for nearly three years. At the same time, southern solar hemisphere continues its steady decline. There is no current evidence for either of these patterns changing over the next few months. Looking forward to the future, in the next report I plan to discuss what some of the solar experts are speculating about Cycle 25. Recent Pacific Propagation The Pacific northern Spring TEP and related propagation, which was rather good, has since undergone its normal seasonal decline. So far, the Summer Es season here in KH6 has been very thin indeed. One must bear in mind that the nearest inhabited land is at least a double-hop distance away. Nevertheless, the last two summers have so far been unusually poor. That just happens sometimes, and it probably isn’t connected to the solar cycle. For example, I note that there seems to have been a fair amount of Es single-hop and greater activity going on over land paths, both in the eastern and western hemispheres, including northsouth paths that suggest TEP-like assistance. 73, Jim KH6/K6MIO DXpedition News FS St. Martin If you missed John K9EL’s activity this June, he will once again be active as FS/K9EL from St. Martin FK88 between 21st and 28th October. Activity will probably be on 80-6 metres using CW, SSB and RTTY. He will be running 500 watts into a three element yagi on six metres, dipoles for 10-30 metres and a vertical for 40-80 metres. John usually will operate on 60metres if there is interest. There will be daily uploads to ClubLog and LoTW. QSL is via his home call sign or on ClubLog’s OQRS. His operating frequencies will be announced. KH5 Palmyra Overall Solar Activity Ri and indices of northern solar hemisphere Rn and southern solar hemisphere Rs. Craig K9CT and Lou N2TU are proud to announce a DXpedition to Palmyra Atoll. After many months of negotiations with US Fish and Wildlife and the Nature Conservancy, the Palmyra Island DXpedition Group has been Six News 17 awarded permission to activate Cooper Island in the Palmyra Atoll during January 2016. A team of 12 highly experienced operators and veterans of many DXpeditions has been formed. Team members include Craig K9CT, Lou N2TU, Jerry WB9Z, Tom ND2T, Mike K9NW, Ralph KØIR, John K6MM, Bob K4UEE, Hal W8HC, Dick W3OA, Jim N9TK, and Glenn WØGJ. They plan to operate five stations over a 14 day period, 160 to six metres on all modes. A call sign will be announced at a later date. The website, Palmyra2016.org, developed by team member John, K6MM, will provide updates as they become available. KH9 Wake Island will be active as T2GC from the Vaiaku Lagi Hotel in Funafuti between 24th September and 14th October 2015. Activity will be on 160 - 6 metres using CW, SSB and RTTY. Suggested six metre frequencies are 50.097MHz CW and 50.120MHz SSB. QSL is via LZ1GC, direct, by the bureau or LoTW. The preferred method for a QSL or LoTW requests is via his PayPal account. For more details and updates, watch http://www.c21gc.com. T8 Palau BM2JCC/JP1RIW, will once again active as T88KH from the West Plaza Hotel by the Sea, grid PJ77FI, on Koror Island between September 12th -16th 2015. Activity will be on 80 - 6 metres, including 17 and 12 metre bands. He will be most active on SSB. Power is 500 watts on HF and 100 watts on six metres. His antennas are: 80 metre vertical, 40/30 metre dipole, three element tribander for 20/15/10 metres, two element HB9CV for 17/12 metres and five element beam for six metres. QSL via BM2JCC, by the bureau or direct. Mike AG6IP is in the planning stages for a DXpedition to Wake Island in September 2015 for two weeks. He states [edited], “I plan to be there sometime in early September to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of Battle of Wake along with a group of World War II vets. I have reserved a special call sign K6W from September 4th to 19th, 2015. I am seeking monetary donations and sponsors that would like to help to put Wake Island back on the air in 2015. I will be operating 80 - 6 metres using digital (PSK, RTTY and JT65) and SSB. Donations will offset a small portion of my outof-pocket equipment shipping, transportation, lodging, operating and postage expenses while there. Wake Island is currently number 46 on DXCC most wanted in ClubLog and currently restricted to the public. There are no commercial flights in to the island. I have also operated out of ZC4 land UK bases in Cyprus twice in 2007 and 2014 as ZC4MIS. Please share link to other amateur radio operators around the world. Thanks..... Mike.” For more details and updates, watch: https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/bvqHd? psid=691bff52b5b94c36b264224fc67df05b Oliver W6NV will be active as ZD7N from Helena Island during the CQWW DX SSB Contest 24th -25th October, 2015. Look for activity outside of the contest on the HF bands and 6 metres. QSL via W6NV. SV5 Dodecanese G3WOS BBQ Update Volker DL1ZB will once again be active as SV5/DL1ZB from Kos Island between 12th August and 29th September, 2015. Activity will be on 20 - 6 metres using SSB, RTTY, SSTV and PSK63. QSL is via DL1ZB, by the bureau, LoTW and eQSL. Hi all! We are now getting near the time of the BBQ so I have attached maps of Farnborough showing the location of The Falcon hotel, my house and the Wings Cottage restaurant for the Friday Night DXers’ dinner. In regard to payments, I would prefer to receive payment before the day if possible as it will save me from spending time at the BBQ collecting cash. However, if you are T2 Tuvalu Operators Stan LZ1GC and Lubo OM5ZW 18 Six News ZD7 St. Helena General News 5Z4 Kenya Receives Six Metre Authorization On 22nd April Nick G3RWF/5Z4LS reported: Hi. Thought you might be interested to know that six metres has just been authorised for 5Z4 Kenya. This is after long years of asking by the Amateur Radio Society of Kenya. 73, Nick G3RWF/5Z4LS travelling from outside of the UK, I am happy to collect on the day. Just please let me know that you will be doing this. My preferred method of collection is through PayPal using the address chris@gare.co.uk; however I’m happy with cheques or even bank transfer. Again let me know when and how you have transferred monies and I will confirm receipt. This year’s fee is 30 UK Pounds. You can catch up with arrangements at http:/ /www.gare.co.uk/bbq2015.htm. My address is: Old White Lodge, 183 Sycamore Road, Farnborough, Hampshire GU14 6RF. 73 Chris G3WOS California. On 13 March, 2015 KH7Y went QRT. Here are some pictures of the antenna and tower removal from Fred’s location on the south side of the Big Island of Hawaii. HSØ Thailand National Telecommunications Commission Rejects Six Metre Amateur Allocation On 27th April, Karsten HSØZIL/DL2LAH reported from OK16BQ Thailand: Hello from Thailand, I want to ask if I can use the UKSMG-Logo on my Website http://www.moonbouncing.net. All countries around Thailand are already QRV on six metres, so we have to be very careful in our talks with the NBTC and not too hot emotion. We will hope the best for six metres from Thailand. 73 from Thailand, Karsten, HSØZIL Trev UKSMG Vice Chair responded: Hi Karsten, Many thanks for your mail and the information from NBTC. I am very sad to hear that and hope that something can be arranged. A few years ago we (UKSMG) were asked to write a letter in support of six metres in Thailand; I have included a copy of that letter at the attachment for your information. I understand the difficulty talking with the authorities but hopefully they will relent. Separately, yes of course please go ahead and use our logo; thank you for asking. I have attached a transparent .gif version and a standard jpg version for your use if you need them. Again, good luck with NBTC, if you think there is anything we can do to help please ask. 73, Trev G3ZYY, Vice Chairman UKSMG KH7Y QRT Late last year, Fred K6IJ ex KH7Y announced that he and his wife were moving back to Crane removing tower at KH7Y. M 2 log periodic antenna coming down at KH7Y. Fred noted: We removed 140 feet of tower and removed 11 antennas, four being six metre antennas. The large log periodic is an M2 skip log which covers 7MHz to 30MHz. The 11 or so years of operation from Hawaii was a highlight of my 59 years of hamming. No way to work that rare DX from northern California. A total of 305 K QSOs were made over that period, including HF, six and two metres, when you add in all the contest scores. I am very Six News 19 Antenna and tower removal crew at KH7Y. From left to right are Fred KH7Y/K6IJ, Lloyd KH6LC, crane owner Bud, Andy and Dave. Not shown but taking the picture is Dan KH6AFJ. humbled about last year’s five long path openings to Europe and the Far East. There is a secret to all this, besides the sun working for us. You cannot rely on 100 watt beacons for these very marginal openings. You need to be making noise and networking all the time or these very rare openings go by unnoticed. Aloha, Fred K6IJ ex KH7Y W6JKV/K5AND BBQ Update On 22nd June, 2015 Dick K5AND wrote: Howdy all…. Hope everyone is doing well and got in on the great opening yesterday on six metres. A few updates are in order to help you with your trip plans. 1) The new Sonesta hotel ‘deal’ for the BBQ ends on 17th July, so be sure to make reservations before then. 2) If you’d like to join the Thursday night dinner group, please rsvp to me to say that you’d like a spot at one of the tables. The dinner will be at same spot we’ve been doing it for past 3-4 years - Mandola’s Italian Market. It is located at 12815 Shops Pkwy in Bee Cave, across from Hill Country Galleria. Phone number is 512600-8500. 3) If you’ve not yet registered or paid for the event, now would be a good time to do so. 4) We could still use a few more “volunteers” for the margarita machine; the job is low pay but has excellent benefits. Stay thirsty my friends. Please check www.w6jkvk5andbbq.com for other announcements. 73 Dick and Jimmy Member Band and Other Activity Reports Europe CT1FJC (Mark reports from IM57PC) Hello Chris Sorry I am late with this, due to move of QTH etc. Six metre log is attached. All contacts up to the end of April were from the old QTH IM57OC. No contacts in May due to QTH move. Contacts from June onward are from the new QTH IM57PC, and were worked using only a two element 28 ohm to a DK7ZB design, mounted 1.2 metres above the Penthouse east facing terrace, pointed in a north east direction. It’s not a good arrangement but all I can do for the time being. Condos are a pain! Still it’s interesting to see what you can work with a small antenna and low power on JT65A. I do think that ISCAT is more suited to band conditions on six metres than JT65A, but people seem to want to stick to JT65A. Thanks and trust you enjoyed your Caribbean trip. 73 Mark CT1FJC IM57PC QSO worked by CT1FJC on 50MHz. From 01/04/2015 to 31/12/2015 Date Time UTC Callsign Locator TX RX Mode Prop. 02/04 03/04 03/04 04/04 04/04 04/04 05/04 05/04 05/04 05/04 KG47 GD18BH GF15 IJ39DM FK9Ø GF15 FE49 GF27VP GF15 GF15 599 59 599 539 53 55 539 579 599 55 599 59 579 599 53 55 429 559 599 55 CW SSB CW CW SSB SSB CW CW CW SSB TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP 16.32 16.13 18.21 15.21 15.48 17.54 16.49 18.31 18.38 18.46 20 Six News ZS4TX/6 VP8LP CX7CO 3XY5M 9Y4D CX4AAJ LU1YT CX6VM CX9AU CX5BL QRB 7713+10964 9390+3107 5984+9390+10701+9049 9390+9390+- Date Time UTC Callsign 05/04 13/04 13/04 13/04 13/04 13/04 18/04 18/04 18/04 23/04 23/04 24/04 25/04 25/04 14/06 14/06 14/06 15/06 15/06 15/06 15/06 20/06 20/06 20/06 20/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 22/06 25/06 25/06 26/06 26/06 29/06 29/06 29/06 29/06 29/06 30/06 18.49 15.18 16.15 16.19 16.52 19.33 15.47 16.58 18:40 19.45 19.49 19.13 11.46 15.00 14.52 15.27 15.35 18.20 20.29 21.33 21.56 08.43 09.28 10.28 12.21 09.01 15.41 16.52 17.23 17.54 21.51 22.04 15.53 23.20 23.38 09.42 09.50 16.10 16.27 17.35 17.49 18.02 18.58 Locator CX7BL GF25LQ FR4NT LG79PA V51DM JG77II IG9/I2ADN JM65KU ISØAFM JM49NF ZP6CW GG14LM V51WW JH81OC CX9ØIARU GF15 CX2CC GF15WC Z81D KJ54SU SX15ØITU KM18 OE9ICI JN47VN CU1EZ HM76 CN8LI IM63 GØHFY IO81 GW4MBN IO71PR GØJEI IO93IC S59C JN66WA T77C JN63FW DF1TL JN49 PE1MXP JO32GH EA6AM JM29DV OP7V JO1ØWU CT1FBK IM58 9H1KR r-11 9H1SS JM75 HVØA JN61 SP3AMZ JO81JT SM6XVI JO66QM ES1JA KO29HK LY2VM KO14 DH3FBI JN49 LX1JX JO3ØAB 9A5CW JN65XF EI4DQ IO51WU GJ7DNI IN89WE UT9LC KN89GM YO9BLY KN24RW LZ2WO KN23AL SV2BBO KN1ØNO UY7CA KN59 SV8RHR r-9 CN8KD IM63 CU1EZ (Antonio reports from HM76KX) Good morning. Activity in 50MHz 24 QSOs - OG2, GM4, 26th June 2015 MIØ, GI4, OH2, ES2, SM4, F1, OH3, UX1, OK2, US7, M5 and G4. TX RX 53 55 59 59 599 559 59 599 599 55 559 559 55 26 -14 r-21 r-6 59 579 559 R-12 59 59 r-13 -19 r-13 59 r-9 r-7 r-8 r-8 -9 59 559 559 r-3 r-7 559 559 r-11 -9 -21 599 59 55 59 59 599 559 59 599 599 53 599 449 55 37 -9 -7 -12 59 559 539 -9 59 59 -19 JT65 -11 59 -5 -2 -7 -11 r-19 59 599 599 -13 -7 559 599 -5 -9 JT65 599 Mode SSB SSB SSB SSB CW CW SSB CW CW SSB CW CW SSB JT6M JT65 JT65 JT65 SSB CW CW JT65 SSB SSB JT65 ES JT65 SSB JT65 JT65 JT65 JT65 JT65 SSB CW CW JT65 JT65 CW CW JT65 JT65 ES CW Prop. TEP TEP TEP ES ES TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES 2071+ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES 2836+ES QRB 9272 9299 7080 1930 1574 8597 6792 9390+9382 5434 2779+1906 1446+429+1665+1656 1869 2113 1936 1982+2067 1172 1825 159+2129+1928+2578 2710 3432 3086+1982+1860 2091 1640 1444 3844 2970 2846 2768 3449+429+- 29th June 70 QSOs - North American GRID EL93, 98 EM12, CM95, FM04, DM67, EN80, EL97; N4, WD5, NT2, W3, KY4, UT1FG/MM grid GM02, K4, WA3, NØ, NEØ, WØ, W6, W8, KØ. 73 António José Costa CU1EZ Six News 21 DL7VEE (Rolf reports on T3ØD from JO62SM in Berlin) Hi Chris, Thanks a lot for this copy [of Six News]. Interesting to read. By the way, the photo is not the T3ØD QSL. I attach one. T3ØD QSL card. Here in Berlin we are very high in the North. JO62SM is like FO in North America. So we look with envy to South Europe with its nearly daily DX-openings on six metres. Here the band is mostly quiet. But yesterday 25th April a few Berlin people could work 3B9FR on six metres. I worked 3B9 at 15.34z CW both 559. This was a new one for me. Reports were 559 in CW. No one signal from USA or Japan this year until now. Two very poor openings from my QTH to Caribbean area, only maximum S1-2. From southern Europe it is much easier. 73 Rolf DL7VEE DL8YHR (Frank reports from JO41GV) Hi Chris, Corry I’m a bit late. Well it’s been a poor season here; just one moderate opening last week of June to W 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, and 9. ODX was W6TOD. Worked 5ZØI for a new DXCC. It was last country needed from Afrika. I loved to read about CY9 plans for summer 2016, very nice. I’m now up and running four 6M5X. Now just need DX conditions. Believe me or not; not even a single JA this season. In plans is a six metre EME trip late this year; but not fixed yet because too much stress in QRL. I just found an interesting link here: http://www.vpa-systems.pl/yagi-dk7zb-50mhz-8el-2850-1230cm-141dbi-p-119.html. Best wishes, Frank dl8yhr.de EA6VQ (Gabriel reports from JM19MP) Hello Chris, Quite a lot of interesting DX on six metres…here. I attach the most outstanding contacts made between April, 1st and today. I’m sorry I can’t do a more detailed report, but really do not have the time. Gabriel – EA6VQ QSO worked by EA6VQ on 50MHz. From 01/04/2015 to 26/06/2015 Distance over: 4000 km Date Time UTC Callsign 02/04 01/04 04/04 04/04 04/04 04/04 05/04 05/04 09/05 09/05 16/05 23/05 08/06 08/06 08/06 16/06 16/06 21/06 21/06 16.32 18.46 16.48 16.56 17.06 18.56 11.49 18.50 16.39 18.54 18.20 15.39 16.40 17.06 17.15 20.21 20.49 17.14 17.17 22 Six News ZS4TX/6 PY2XB LU9DO TJ3SN LU9DO PY2OI ZS6A PY2BW PU5BOY PY1RO 5R8UI 5ZØL 9K2OD 9K2GS 9K2HN NP4A FS/K9EL XE2X K6EID Locator TX RX Mode KG47 599 559 57 599 599 59 599 57 55 599 59 599 59 59 599 59 599 599 599 599 599 59 599 599 59 599 59 55 599 59 599 59 59 599 59 599 599 599 CW CW SSB CW CW SSB CW SSB SSB CW SSB CW SSB SSB CW SSB CW CW CW GFØ5 GG66 KG43EU GG65 GG53 GG87 LH46CQ LL49AI LL39XG LL39XI FK68 FK88LC ELØ6UC EM73 Prop. QRB 7713+TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP TEP ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES 8723+10407+4070+10407+8723+7771 8812+9111+8393+7512 5701+4231 4228 4224 7015+6706 9079 7558+- Date Time UTC Callsign 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 17.17 17.18 17.21 17.22 17.23 17.24 17.25 17.26 17.27 17.28 17.29 17.30 17.33 17.33 17.35 17.36 17.37 17.39 17.40 17.41 17.42 17.43 17.43 17.44 17.44 17.47 17.48 17.49 17.50 17.50 17.52 17.53 17.54 17.55 17.58 17.59 18.01 18.02 18.02 18.04 18.04 18.07 18.08 18.08 18.10 N4GG WA2VYA W4MW N2NL N4OV N4OX K5VWW K4CN W4CCS WD5K KA1R AB4B W3UUM N5DG KN5O W5TM W5HNK WX4G KI2JA W4ETN W5PR W5ZG N5CQ K4EJQ K4RWP KZ4RR KS4OT KQ5U K5MC W5PF KJ4E K5NZ N4TB N4RJ N2TU K4MQG WO4O K5UR W4BCU K5EJ W4IR K2BLA N3LL W5ADD N5PN Locator EM43 FN2ØVI EM96 EL88 EL96 EM6ØIR EL29 EM65SX EM81CG EM12 FN42NE EL29 EM2ØAB EM4ØXL EM15XL EL29IO FMØ6QA EM83 EL29HM EM2ØDE EM1ØAF EM86TM EM86MM EM9ØGE EM2ØHB EM32VM EM2Ø EL98IT EM2ØAS EL97FP EM91HK EM95NN EM96 EM66OJ EM35 EM86TM EM45MA EL97HG EL99IA EL86TX EM4ØWL EM82 EI7BMB (Tony reports from IO63TH) Hi Chris, I’m finally getting to grips with the Anan 100 and having it working the way it should be. Just now I am hearing EX9T which I’ve not heard TX RX Mode Prop. QRB 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW 8013+6351 7072+7714+7680+7915 8584+7520 7607 8525+6012 6635+8584+8622 8144 8254 8604 6921 6635+7403+8616 8594 8759 7179 7224 7490 6635+8578 8173 8515+7562 8573 7656 7406 7121 7072+7519 8029+7179 7915 7666 7549 7766 8151 7464+- ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES since 2011. OJØB was worked on 14th June. Thanks to the guys for that activation. ZS4TX was a nice surprise via linked TEP on 13th May but the big prize was 3B9FR on the 11th May. I think this is an EI first on six metres. CE3SX was Six News 23 another new one on the 14th May. A few days ago just before an AU event we had a long period of short skip which was unusual as normally this lasts only a short period. IO91 was the shortest hop to my QTH in IO63. Best of luck on your DXpedition. Tony G6TGO (Ian reports from IO83UJ) Hi Chris. This was my first sporadic E Season using a dual band 4 x 4 6m/4m yagi. The antenna is fed with one length of 90 metre unbroken Ecoflex 10 coax and the aerial is five metres off the ground. It is pitched one degree up from horizontal. The aerial was not performing at six metres as expected from day one; I thought it was conditions using beacons as a guide over a few months. A study on the yagi behaviour once activity started on six metres highlighted a problem and after a lot of thought I thought it may be where the aerial mount had been located (centre of the boom) was interfering with the overall performance on six metres but not on four metres. I moved the bracket further back towards the rear of the boom between elements two and three, and what a difference it made on six metres. Moving the bracket back had to be carefully thought about, because of the weight shift of the aerial and uneven weight distribution on the support pole and the stress on the rotator bearing. I tested the yagi in its new configuration and it was quickly established that now I could even hear EIØSIX. I continue to do so, whereas I had never heard this beacon on six metres ever since I first started on our wonderful band back in 2003, unless either the beacon keeper has changed the aerial or increased the power out in the meantime. But I can hear it now +519 24/7. Since I moved the bracket I then carried out a test on four metres and the antenna was down on performance using EI4RF and GM8RBR beacons as a reference point. So I brought the tilt mast down and checked again that the element lengths were correct. It was discovered that element four for 70MHz was 1mm longer at each end than element three. This was corrected and this turned out to be my mistake when I first constructed the yagi. A quick tweak resolved the four metre performance issues without compromising the six metre performance. As a result, I have had some nice openings on six metres but on four metres even nicer. 24 Six News Six Metres No real triple hop highlights on with the normal European stations being worked but at very nice signals most of the time. 2nd May 12.35z-12.39z was the first minor E opening for me for the year, with no stations received but IØJX beacon 529. 7th May 13.00z heard ESØSIX 589 followed by working several 59+ OH stations KO20 until 13.42z when I worked SM stations again 59+. 9th May 13.34z I worked EA5DIT IM95. Also worked OH/SM stations centering on KO20 and KP10 squares with signals in excess of 59+ on the TS2000. 14th May I was encouraged by working SV1BYR KM49. He gave me 5/5; he was 5/8. I then worked SV1DTD KM39EA later in the day. Other prefixes worked include HA, OM, YO, YL, SP, HB9, and IZ. 15th May From 0632 Open to HA, YO, IZ, HB9 F6, DL. The highlight was working 5B4AAB KM64 at 07.50z who was a genuine 59 and I was 56-8 with QSB. What was amazing about this is normally 5B4 would be normally 5/ 6 on my mono bander based on the last five year’s data. We chatted for quite a while after he called me after I had been talking to HB9ACA. June was a little better with daily openings with me averaging OH and ES. 26th-27th June. From 22.00z-23.59z and 00.00z-01.00z the band was open but with no humans. Beacons heard included OH2SIX, OHØSIX, ESØSIX, IØJX/B, IK5ZUL, IQ4FE/B, and 1Z3EPM /B. No South American or US/Canadian stations heard when expected which is a disappointment this is up to the 28th June. Here in IO83 six metres has appeared to have been worse in particular May than at any time in the last five years; however it would be interesting to see if other contributors to Six News have noticed similar experiences of a poor May. TEP and Transatlantic contacts have been non-existent for me so far, but more and more I wonder if July will be the best month we will report next time. 73, Ian G8BCG (Peter reports from IO70 and IL39) Hi Chris, It’s been an interesting and sometimes frustrating period here in IO70. April 4th Nice early opening from 11.30z to ZS and V5. 3B9 was also on, but not heard here. At 13.00z EA8DBM worked KG6DX and Jas. 13th The usual afternoon into South Africa. 3B9 was also into the Mediterranean but didn’t make it here despite some Es. IG9/I2ADN worked 59+. During evening TEP to South America PY1RO and ZP5SNA were in at low level around 19.30z. 16th ON4IQ worked 3B9 at 15.00z. I was working. 17th Nice easy EME QSO with Bob N7IP for initial #136. Also copied ZS4TX working various North American stations. I hope to catch Bernie when he is less busy. 3B9 was in briefly at 15.50z; I can’t wait until he gets his LFA. Band was open to FD field from 15.30z. I heard on CE8EO on SSB – wall. 24th Never give up. Afternoon and evening TEP to South Africa but on the edge with 3B9 again. I copied him but only briefly. Heard many PY LU CE CX during evening TEP to South America. LU5FF worked on JT6M for an ODX on that mode. New EME initial # 137 with K4PI. 25th Another day on the edge with 3B9. I heard two 30 second periods of brief copy but 599 sigs from Europe. EA8/G8BCG 29th April – 14th May 29th I was in EA8; another world in IL39. From 17.15z onwards band was full of TEP LU and PY beacons plus D4C/b on tropo. At 21.10z I worked TJ3SN/9 JJ42 for a new square. ZD8VHF beacon heard loudly. 30th Ran EME on my moonset – 02.30z – 04.30z and worked three initials KB8RQ, K4PI and KG7H, plus incomplete QSO with ZL3NW. I ran out of moon. May EA8/G8BCG 1st From 18.30z onwards heard loud beacons YV1AB, FM1ZAC, and YV5LIX. Then YV4NN worked 59+ SSB and 599+ CW. Also heard V44KAI/B loud for about an hour. Not much TEP; it was an early night. 2nd - 14th The band was pretty much dead apart from bits of weak TEP and usual tropo to EA/CT. DX was elsewhere. 12th At least the moon still works. I made two new initials W5ADD and N8JX. 15th First day back home in IO70 as G8BCG. All day European-wide Es but mainly single hop. There was no trace of 3B9 etc. Again there was strong and early TEP to South America. PY, LU, and CE were loud; Jack OA4TT was in for 30 minutes or so but never above 439. 16th Widespread Es across Europe but no TEP. 17th It was a very poor day for Es in Europe and beyond. No trace of 3B9. Excellent evening TEP with many PYs, ZP and LU5FF heard. Heard an interesting CQ just as the band was closing at 21.25z - VK3DF? I made a nice recording of what is almost certainly a pirate. After the fake HL and PYØ last year, which I suspect were both in IO80, I was a little suspicious. But there is what sounds like F2 type QSB. 18th Poor day - nothing much. 19th Band was dead. 20th There were mainly single hop Es around Europe plus an intense N/S Es and evening TEP opening to PY and ZP with very localized footprints. 21st Afternoon Es and 3B9 was briefly into the Mediterranean around 15.00z. Insufficient linkage to work him. There was no evening TEP linkage this far North. 22nd Afternoon Es and 3B9 was again briefly into the Mediterranean around 15.00z. Again insufficient linkage. New EME Initial # 138 W5ADD; I’ve now worked Parker from EA8 and G. Thanks. Spotty but loud TEP to PY and ZP. Heard LU5FF all alone for 20 minutes at 579. There was a late opening to NP4A; he was weak here but loud into Mediterranean. 23rd Mainly single hop Es around Europe; 5ZØL was in briefly around 16.30z. 24th Mainly single hop Es. Had a good evening of EME with many big signals and two new EME initials: #139 ZS4TX and #140 LA9DFA. 25th At 08.30z had first SSSP of the season, JE1BMJ - OZ1DJJ. Otherwise band was dead all day. No significant Es. 26th SSSP into DL at 07.00z. There were signs here but no QSO. I was on the edge with 5ZØL again. Station had a small signal and there was a big wall. Heard from 15.30z. Then, just as they were building, they went to SSB. They came back to CW about 15 minutes later but never really peaked again. In again at 19.15z with possible skew over EA. 27th Double hop Es across Europe at 06.15z; things were looking good. Nice JA to Southern Six News 25 Europe opening from 08.30z to 11.00z. 5ZØL was again into Europe as far as PA at 10.00z. I heard just pings here. There was lots of early evening excitement as “5ZØL” was 599 here and across Northern Europe. It was a pirate of course. Had some nice Tropo to EA and CT3 on 144MHz 28th Big single hop Es across Europe and virtually nothing else. 29th Another day of intense single hop Es and nothing else. 30th More intense single hop and some double hop Es across Europe, but nothing else. 31st Nice SSSP opening to JA, and another day of intense single hop and some double hop Es across Europe. There were the beginnings of some trans-Atlantic stuff from CT /EA8 at least. G8BCG 50099.1MHz 7 dB G8BCG 50095.1MHz 3dB G8BCG 50095.1MHz 3dB G8BCG 50093.7MHz 6 dB G8BCG 50099.1MHz 12dB June 1st SSSP opening between Mediterranean and JA, and some east-west multi Es across Southern Europe. I locked down antennas because of100km/h winds so I didn’t hear 5V7MI who was into Northern France in early evening. 2nd There were Es again plus a one man opening from 9M2TO to pretty much all of Europe. Later in the evening 4X4DK was in for a long time on a dead band with lots of F2 type backscatter from Northern European callers. No intermediate hops heard. 9K2OD also working many, but he was very weak here. 3rd At last some afternoon multi Es including KP4 etc. Sadly no North south Es so still waiting for 5V 4th Good USA - SV opening. It was very narrow; heard only backscatter from SV stations here. 5th-6th I was not QRV. 7th Got on for last 40 minutes of UKSMG Contest. There were one Es to south but nothing else. 8th Good European Es but nothing else. 9th Strong multi-hop Es around Europe but nothing else. 10th Good European Es but nothing else. 11th Multi-hop Es around Europe plus a long one man opening to UK8OM. 12th Good European Es but nothing else. 13th There were good European Es and finally I had a nice evening opening to Caribbean and northern South America. I worked YV, 8P, KP4, 9Y, PV8, FM5, etc. even on my vertical at home in the valley. (CW skimmer): G8BCG 50104.2MHzCT1HZE CW CQ 14dB 19 wpm 00.46z 16th June 26 Six News PV8ADI 33 wpm FM5WD 26 wpm FM5WD 26 wpm G4FJK 19 wpm PV8ADI 33 wpm CW CQ [LoTW] 21.12z 13th June CW DX 21.08z 13th June CW DX 21.07z 13th June CW CQ [LoTW] 21.03z 13th June CW CQ [LoTW] 20.56z 13th June 14th Widespread multi-hop Es in Europe plus another small evening opening to Caribbean with YV, 9Y, and KP4 heard/worked. 15th Widespread multi- hop European Es. Finally there was an afternoon and evening opening to North America. It was patchy and weak. C6ATA worked in FL15. Band was still open in Europe 01.00a on 16th June. 16th Widespread strong multi hop Es in Europe. 4L1AN had a good signal on SSB at 18.45z. There was also an evening opening to Caribbean and North America. FS/K9EL was in with a good signal for over one hour. I did not work anyone as every time I called CQ NA or CQ DX in the DX window or below 50.1MHz half of Europe called me. 17th Was a quiet day followed by Elton John at the Eden Project for a nostalgia fix. 18th Widespread Es in Europe and another night opening to the Caribbean with FS/K9EL, VP2MTT, and KP4s. Nice evening Es to Italy on 144MHz and a big signal across the Channel from F1NUM on 432MHz 19th YV4NN was loud at 16.15z. One CQ and I received an “agn” from 5V7 at around 17.15z. Had nice tropo on 144MHz. I worked a string of EAs plus EA8TX. CS3 beacon was 59+ for over an hour. 20th Worked JE1BMJ 419/539 08.20z QTF 25. Also had an evening CW QSO with Jack OA4TT despite constant IMI and call signs from ignorant contest stations. 21st European contest mayhem but also an amazing opening for 5V7MI whom I worked for DXCC#233. Michal has 100 watts and a dipole. Sylwia Michalak are on an amazing journey - see rainbow truck and give them support if you can. Late afternoon saw an extensive opening to North America and I worked some new squares in DM and DN grids. Then an opening to the Caribbean for several hours. I worked 8P2K, 9Y4D, PV8, YV, FM5, J69, etc., plus HC5 on JT65. 22nd Good opening to North America and followed by a big Aurora and AuE after CME hit. There were big Es and aurora on 144MHz also. 23rd Aurora was still running in the morning. Wide single hop Es but nothing else. 24th Very quiet in Northern Europe. Good path to BV from Mediterranean. A second CME hit didn’t produce anything significant. 25th Intense Es across Europe and out to MN grid. There was a small evening opening to US and intense backscatter from QTF 130 degrees around 20.30z 26th Some JA SSSP into Southern Europe. Intense Es across Europe and out to MN grid and A71, etc. In evening there was a late opening to FM5. Caught PV8 on my vertical/skimmer: G8BCG50102.8MHz PV8AD 8dB 33 wpm G8BCG 50061.0MHz ED4YBA 4dB 13 wpm G8BCG50.098.4MHz FM5WD 11dB 23 wpm G8BCG50.098.4MHz FM5WD 10dB 24 wpm G8BCG 50.100.4MHz EA8DBM 24dB 24 wpm CW CQ [LoTW] 21.29z 26th June CW DX 21.23z 26th June CW CQ 21.14z 26th June CW DX 21.13z 26th June CW CQ [LoTW] 20.31z 26th June My skimmer never sleeps: G8BCG 50.097.3MHz MMØBSM CW CQ [LoTW] 14dB 23 wpm 23.47z 26th June G8BCG 50.097.3MHz MMØBSM CW DX [LoTW] 10dB 23 wpm 23.43z 26th June G8BCG 50.098.4MHz PAØO CW CQ [LoTW] 27dB 22 wpm 23.34z 26th June G8BCG 50.100.2MHz LA5YJ CW CQ [LoTW] 8dB 21 wpm 23.28z 26th June G8BCG 50.098.8MHz SMØKAK CW CQ 16dB 16wpm 23.28z 26th June 27th PJ5A was in from about 15.20z; he was still in 22.30z – amazing. Then there was a Caribbean opening with PJ5A, KP4, KP2, VP2E, 9Y, YV, PV8, HI3, C6 etc., heard/worked. My skimmer also had a great night including YV4NN 50095.1 CW CQ [LoTW] 7dB 23 wpm 21.47z. Not bad for a vertical in a valley. 28th It was a very quiet day here in the West. Nice evening opening to Caribbean again. I worked CO8LY, PJ5A, and 9Y4D. My skimmer reported: G8BCG 50.101.3MHz HI3TEJ CW CQ [LoTW] 5dB 22 wpm 20.24z 28th June G8BCG 50.083.3MHz CT1HZE CW CQ 8dB 20 wpm G8BCG 50.100.3MHz CO8LY 5dB 21 wpm G8BCG 50.100.1MHz HI3TEJ 5dB 22 wpm G8BCG50.097.0MHz ZB2CW 18db 26 wpm 19.40z 28th June CW CQ 193.3z 28th June CW CQ [LoTW] 19.19z 28th June CW CQ 13.56z 28th June That’s it for no. See you at the BBQ. 73, Peter On 30th June Peter added: Hi Chris, Some “stop press” from yesterday. I like sending you reports; it always seems to result in an opening the day after. Lots of fun on six metres but by far the most exciting for me was a 144MHz tropo QSO with D44TS at 4400 km / 2734 miles. The D4C/B was in for 10 hours on a stable duct. The weather here was also stable at 30C today – VERY unusual. 29th June A solid tropo duct on 144MHz to D44 from mid-day until at least 22.00z. D44TS worked plus a string of EA8s. It was a fairly quiet day on six metres; then from 17.50z the PJ5A show was 599 / 59 all evening. Plus UT1FG/ MM worked for a new field and grid GM03, and a string of DX heard or worked included 9Y4, VP2ETE, FG8OJ, PJ5A, KJ4E, J69DS, HC5K, HC6F, YV4NN, HK4SAN, FG5GP, FM5WD, YV5IUA, and YV4NN. My skimmer didn’t do so well. G8BCG 50.101.2MHz YV4NN 9dB 23 wpm CW CQ [LoTW] 19.16z 29th June 30 Jun 30th A quiet day so far as I could see - not QRV. Whilst we were having an evening swim and picnic at Palace Cove my skimmer was quite busy.– EA9PY 50103.4MHz 25 wpm EA7AIN 50101.5MHz 18 wpm CN8KD 50098.3MHz 32 wpm CW DX 1924z 30th June CW CQ 19.15z 30th June CW CQ [LoTW] 18.59z 30th June 13dB 16dB 23 dB 73, Peter G8BCG. G8VR (Kerry reports from IO91WP) Hi Chris I look forward to seeing you at Chris’s BBQ too. As for six metres, well yes of course things are much improved. On 24th April I listened to a Six News 27 long, at least 45 minute, opening to South Africa. ZS4TX/6 was over 559 for 30 minutes, being audible here between 15.46z and 16.30z. 9J2BO was also in that day. That was on my single five element Innov OWL yagi, which got swapped out for a six element Innov OWL on 20th May. I had intended to put up two antennas, but time did not allow and the other one is still in the shed. The band has seen good propagation to the Middle East and 9K stations have been in on many days through June. For me the highlight of June was Nicolas, TJ3SN whom I worked on the 9th after years of chasing. In the past he never quite seemed to make it here. G4BWP has returned to the UK from working in Dubai, so I guess we will spend a lot more time on our joint EME activities now. Best 73 Kerry that I sent to Dave G8FXM. Dave (or ‘Dai’ being originally a Welshman) and I go back a long way; he was my Best Man when I got married to XYL Mandy back in 1977. Dave moved out of Wales, and although we exchanged Christmas greetings we kind of lost contact for a few years. Roll forward to around 2012 or so and it was through Dai that I joined UKSMG. I’ve operated a couple of UKSMG contests with The Three As Contest Group where we used the special contest call MW5A. See GØAAA.com. As you see from the email exchange you were copied on, in the last few weeks I’ve actually got on six metres from home, albeit with a somewhat restricted antenna. See attached photo. GMØEWX (Calum reports from IO76UL) Hi Chris Last Sunday 21st June I worked PY and 9Y on six metres after hours of hearing Europe on back scatter working Ws. Then Italy on 2m the following day 73 Calum GMØEWX. GM8IEM (Martin reports from IO78HF) Hi Chris, Here’s a brief report for your What’s on Six column in Six News – always a good read. The shack re-build is nearly complete and back to full capability, though with an improved layout and system interconnect. April 4th: In the period 10.10z to 13.15z heard ZS4TX/6 and V51YJ calling CQ in CW, but too poor to work either; heard and called ZS4TX/6 and ZS6A in Iscat-B, but without success. However, I did manage a fairly quick Iscat-B QSO with ZS6WAB, completing at 10.38z. 5th: Caught ZS6A calling CQ in CW at around 11.50z on CW Skimmer while I was out of the shack, then gone, so tried an Iscat-B QSO from 11.57z to 12.15z, but nil at both ends. 25th: Z81D came up out of the noise at 22.08z, working Europeans, and we had a quick exchange at 22.13z. 73, Martin GW4BLE (Steve reports from IO81LO) Hello Chris, Well, there’s not that much to add to the email 28 Six News GW4BLE five element six metre beam mounted at 7 ½ feet above ground and fixed at 270 degrees. My main interest is in HF Contesting where I enjoy SO2R with a pair of FT5000s to a TH111, two element 40 metre antenna and wires. 73, Steve Here is Steve’s email to Dave: “Hi Dai, Thought I’d send you a photo of my 5 element six metre beam - it finally got fixed to the tower (at the massive height of around 7-and-ahalf feet) and went up on the 19th June. It’s fixed pointing at 270 degrees. There’s a long story why it isn’t any higher.....! Anyway, it’ll do for what’s left of this Es season (I told Mandy it would be up ‘for a couple of weeks’!). Results ? Well, not bad actually - worked KP4, FG, YV, J8, PJ5 etc yesterday, and last week 9Y4, 8P & FM.Currently 50 countries in the bag :-). Prior to this all the stuff, mostly around Europe, was worked on the 40m antenna). Anyway, was going to send the photo into SIX NEWS (if they are desperate for stuff it might get printed, hi), but couldn’t see who I’d need to send it to ? P’raps you could? 73 Steve”. On 1st July Steve added: At my main PC now, so for completeness, can tell you of stations worked outside Europe since June 20th. 20th NP4A SSB 21 st CN8HD, FM5WD, K4MM CW; EA9PY, TF3ML/P, 8P2K SSB 27th PJ5A CW 29 th FG8OJ, YV4NN CW; FG5GP, FM5WD, J69DS, KP4EIT, PJ5A, UT1FG/MM, YV4NN SSB That’s it, 73, Steve. HA5KI (Gyuri reports from JN79KN) Hi Chris, First, please correct errors because my English is poor. Here is my report from near Budapest in a valley: May 11th 5R8UI 59 strong 15th PY2VA, PY2WS, PY2YP 599. I never heard such strong Brazilian stations. 16th PP1CZ 599 17th C5YK, PY2XB, PY2VA, PY2OC all 599 June 1st UN7AM 599 15th C6ATA 449, 4L8A 599 16th First U.S. opening this year, only 3 QSOs – 17.33z K1HTV 559, 17.35z W3LPL 599, 18.25z N3DB 579 17th 08.31z DU7/PAØHIP 589 never heard before, 08.37z EX8M 599 21st 09:11z D4C 599 very strong, 10.47z 5V7MI 449 very weak with his dipole antenna, 17.27z- 20.04z 31 QSOs with North America 16.56z NA4RR, 17.17Z N5DG 22nd only two QSOs 23rd 18.35z OY9JD 599 very strong alone in the band 24th 07.43z UN7TW 599, 13.49z A75GG 59, 13.52z 9K2WA 59 Best 73 Gyuri HA5JI. HAØDU (Steve reports from KN07VN) Dear Chris, I work at home as a technical translator, so I am able to monitor six metres about 14-16 hours a day. But even that is not quite enough sometimes. This year started very slowly on six for me. First contact was V51WW on 2 nd March, followed by 9J2HN on 15th March. On 22nd March I had a two-minute opening to A25GF, but I forgot my amp was in standby so I missed him. Then on 24th March FO4BM on EME, and ZS4N on 30th March. Nothing until 16th April when I made a CW contact with 3B9FR for a first 3B9-HA. Next DX was 5R8UI on 11th May; then another new one given by ZP5SNA on 1th May. Another two weeks of noise, when on 27th May I had a 25 second opening to 5ZØL. Very fortunately it was enough to make a QSO. Again, several weeks of silence. I spent countless hours monitoring C6 and VP2M. On 21st June, my 59th birthday brought D4C a new grid, and 5V7MI a new DXCC. The same day my radio went tits up. I replaced it with a borrowed FT-857, but later the blower of my amp also went wrong. In the amazing USA opening I only worked two US stations, W3UUM, a new state and N2NL. I heard another 20 stations, mostly W4s. I heard PJ5A on 29th June, but other HAs called them for a new one, so I stepped back and did not even call once. Currently I am monitoring the frequency on C6AUX, but not one peep in about ten days or so. I do hope he does not leave the island without me logged. Oh, I forgot, my rig at home is an FT-897, the antenna is a seven element homemade DK7ZB at 12 metres. 73 Steve HAØDU P.S. By the way, some years ago I heard you for about a minute from HH4/W3CMP, but HA3UU was in a better position, and he made the contact. I still need HH. Are you planning to go back again? MMØAMW (David reports from IO75EJ) Hi Chris, Not an awful lot to report I’m afraid, at least so far this season. First DX of note was ZS4TX/ 6 on 2nd May for a new grid. Then 14th May brought CE, LU and CX contacts. CE3SX was a Six News 29 new DXCC for me on six metres. Having never even heard a CE before I was very surprised to hear him so loud and easily workable on SSB for what we believe is a CE - GM first. Apart from the odd fleeting European openings, six metres went into the doldrums again until late June, when on the 21st I worked 8P, PV8 and a W4 for my first North Americans of the season. Lots of other Caribbean stations were also heard. The 25th June saw a short, spotty opening to W4 and W1, but only five stations worked. June 26th saw VE1PZ and VE1YX in the log and next day UT1FG/ MM. HI, KP4, PJ5 and C6 were all worked which added a couple of new grids for me. Then on the 28th I had C6 in by mid-morning which is very early for that part of the world. QSOs followed with CO8DM, W4 and VO1. UT1FG/MM was heard again but I couldn’t grab his attention for another new grid as he was working loud North Americans. Just as things were finally looking up for the season, it all fell flat on its face again. A solitary QSO with VY2ZM on the 29th was the last trace of DX for June as we returned to endless hours of white noise. Although the path across the Atlantic has been poor, the path to my east has been virtually non-existent, with very little video from the usual sources either. Fingers crossed for July is about all I can say. 73, David. ON4IQ (Johan reports from JO20AR) Hi Chris, It has been pretty poor year but I managed to get a few good ones in the log. Warming up in February, I managed to work ZS4TX/6 for new grid KG47UR. I heard him several times the weeks that followed. Caught an aurora opening on 17th March. SP, LY, UR, SM, ES, GM, F were logged followed by short F2 to D4C. Later that month there were several openings into ZS6 via TEP. In April the TEP continued, with ZS6 and V51YJ on the 4th of April as well as TJ3SN via F2 . Highlight of the month was 16th April. While doing some jobs in shack heard 3B9FR CQing. A new DXCC was in the log a few minutes later. There were some spotty openings. On 23rd April Z81D KJ54RL was logged; on 24th April FR4NT, and EA6TT, were worked via Es +TEP opening. On 25th April C5YK was in for over an hour. 30 Six News Band was quiet for some weeks until 16th May. I worked 5R8UI in LH46 for new grid. On 23rd May, 5ZØL was worked in spotty opening but #262 in the log. At end of May I worked several Europeans via E skip. First weeks operation in June there was poor propagation, but I managed 9K2GS on the 2nd, 9K2HN on the 7th, KP4EIT and NP3CW on the 18th of June, and 9Y4D on the 19th. On 20th June there was E skip to the US and KØGU was logged. The 21st was a day to remember. The USA was in. East Coast was weak but Midwest and West Coast were in. I heard no VEs. Opening started at 16.12 UTC with weak QSO with KØGU, and lasted to 19.59 UTC. I worked a total of 23 states and a handful of new grids. I worked some old time friends, AC4TO, K4RX, K7BV, and W5OZI, and made some new friends on the air N7KA, W7UT, AA7A, W6TOD, and K7JA - I’ve met Chip a few times back in states but we never made it on the air until the 21st also N6KDP, N6ED, WA6TLA, WB6RSE, N6CA, NWØW, W9RM, and KØTPP. States worked were CO, FL, NM, UT, AZ, CA, MD, TX, MO, GA, LA, MI, AL, NC SC, TN, WI, IL, PA, OH, NH, WV, and VA. I have attached a picture of this month’s repairs on the array. Weather has been very poor last winter and Geert ON4GG had to do some repairs on the array. The picture gives a pretty good idea about the size of these 4 x 6M9KHW. 73, Johan. Geert ON4GG performing repairs on 4 X 6M9KHW array at ON4IQ QTH. Africa TJ3SN (Nicolas reports JJ53SU) Hello Chris, This is a few words. You know my English is poor. You must do something on it.... This is the end of my six metre radio activity from Cameroon. This weekend, the antennas will be dismantled. I’ll be in France for holiday all August and back to a new Africa country, but not a wanted one, for September. Not sure today, need to be at my next home before purchasing a new setup on six metres. Got house photos. Normally I could try to have 2 x five element LFA Yagi. I’m in contact with GOKSC Justin from InnovAntennas. At TJ home the noise level was a big problem with my seven element yagi. I hope to have a better low noise floor with same antenna gain. EME QSOs were hard from TJ house. I just worked W7GJ Lance but I hope to be QRV on JT65 soon from there. I don’t know but I worked more than 35004000 QSOs on six metres and more than 100 DXCC. My best QSO was with VK4MA via long path and FK8CP. The least far was TR8CA, oops TJ3AY at yep, 50 metres. Thank you. See you soon again. Regards, Nicolas now ex TJ3SN. ZD8D (Werner DK9KH reports on the ZD8D Ascension Island DXpedition in late February and early March 2015.) Hi Chris, We have been on Ascension Island from 24th February to 6th March, 2015. Our bungalow was around 800 metres above sea level. There was a free view from NW to NE. We had a three element DK7ZB design, 12.5 ohm technique antenna and a 100 watt transceiver for six metres. The antenna was pointing straight north all the time, since we realized already last year that there was not any change to observe when turning the antenna. We were observing the beacon stations from Portugal and Spain almost every night and found like last year, that usable propagations normally occurred at around 21.00z and lasted about two hours. As I wrote earlier in my e-mail to Tim we managed to work into 29 countries and had almost 200 QSOs. It could have been much more, but we had a delay of 24 hours caused by the airplane. On the other hand we had promised to have a focus on the low bands so we spent most of the evening hours on the low bands. Looking on the locators we found again, that under normal conditions from there (the daily QSOs), you won’t be able to work stations further north than 45°. We didn’t hear any; we didn’t work any. We worked stations from Israel and the whole Mediterranean area- Spain, Portugal, Azores and almost the whole Caribbean. We also had no problems to work into South America CX, PY, YV, etc.; from Africa we had EA8, TJ and 9G in the log. We also worked a very few W stations. Generally speaking we can say that we worked every station we heard, all almost with the same signal strength. PJ4VHF asked us a few times to come on two metres; unfortunately we had no equipment with us. He told us, that conditions would allow also contacts on two metres. As I wrote Tim G4FJK we left a six metre antenna and cable on the Island with ZD8S and told him the hows and wheres. So I am sure that there will be a steady activity on six metres very soon. Stedson ZD8S will take care about the beacon there in the future. It’s the person you see on the picture. Another ham is Ray ZD8RY, who frequently shows up on six metres with a vertical antenna. Last year I had the chance to visit ZD7VC Bruce, who is on six metres from time to time. He is working on stacking his antennas for six metres and will show up soon with a bigger signal. From time to time his beacon is also heard. So far so good for today. Greetings Werner DJ9KH. Report from ZS (Paul reports on all ZS in KG46, KG47, KG55, KG44, KG43, KG30 and JF96). April 01 Band open 16.05z to 18.30z. Stations active: ZS6AYE, ZS6BTE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/ 6. DXCC worked: YU, I, 4X, 4L, EA, DL, CT, ISØ. 02 Band open 13.48z to 19.16z. Stations active :ZS6A, ZS6AYE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: YU, I, 4X, 4L, EA, DL, CT, and ISØ. 03 Band open from 1150 to 2052. Stations active: ZS6AYE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: I, CT, F, V5, 4X, EA8, SV5, TJ, 9K, EA, 9H, DL. 04 Band open 10.07z to 21.01z. Stations active: ZR1ADI, ZS6A, ZS6AYE, ZS6DX, Six News 31 ZS6GJG, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: OK, OE, F, I, DL, SM, 9A, YU, YO ,G, EA, SV, EA8, 9K,TJ, CT, S5, EI, GM, LZ, OM, SP, UR. 05 Band open 10.13z to 20.11z. Stations active: ZS6A, ZS6AYE, ZS6BTE, ZS6DX and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: I, EA, EA8, 9K ,TJ, A7, I,Z3, SV, 4X, E7, EA6, HA, BY, BV, OK, LZ. OE and UR. 06 Band open 11.58z to 20.11z. Stations Active: ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: YU, SV, I. 07 Band open 10.36z to 18.56z. Stations Active: ZS6AYE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: YU,SV,I,8Q,9K,SV5,4X,EA6,EA,A4. 12 Band open 12.15z to 19.36z. Stations active: ZS6AYE and ZS4TX/6 DXCC worked: 4X, SV5, EA9, EA, I, CT3, F, 9K, EI, SV, TK, A7, CT, ISØ. 15 Station active : ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked : ES by EME 16 Band open 14.25z to 18.46z. Stations active: ZS6AYE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: W, I, 9H, CT, SV5, and SV. N7IP worked by ZS6NK by EME. 17 Station active: ZS4TX. DXCC worked: W by EME. 18 Band open 12.31Z to 19.52Z. Stations active: ZS6AYE, ZS6BTE, ZS6BUN, ZS6GJG, ZS6ME and ZSTX/6. DXCC worked: S5, YU, I, EA, SV, SV5, YO, ISØ, F, CT, 9H, EA6, HB9, HA, TK, Z3, 9A ,OE. 19 Station active : ZS4TX DXCC worked : W by EME. 23 Band open 12.24Z to 20.19Z. Stations active : ZS6AYE, ZS6BTE, ZS6NK, ZS6WN and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: Z3, I, YO, SV, 9K, EA6, 9A, 5B4, LZ, S5, Z8, UR, DL, 4X, TA, TK, 9H, EA, OK, CT, F, SP, SV5, HA. 24 Band open 1339 to 1915 Stations active:ZS6A, ZS6AYE, ZS6BTE, ZS6DX, ZS6GJG, ZS6NK, ZS6ME and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: Z3, F, SV,YT, SV5, EA, EA6, SP, 5B4, F, OK, CT, G, LA, DL, LZ, PA. 25 Band open 12.58Z to 18.32z. Stations active: ZS6A, ZS6AYE, ZS6NK, ZS6WN and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: Z3, YU, HA, SV5, SV, 5B4,S5, SV9, SP, UR, OK, OE, 9H, TK, 4X, I. 32 Six News 26 Band open 11.43z to 19.21z Stations Active: ZS6AYE, ZS6NK, ZS6WN and ZS4TX/ 6. DXCC worked: YU, I, OK, OE, F, DL, G, 9A, GM, OM, EA, EA6, CT, SV9, S5, 4X, 3A, SV, ON, PA. 27 Band open 14.39z to 17.52z. Stations active: ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: 4X, I, VK and W. ZS4TX worked VK by EME and ZS6NK worked W by EME. 30 Band open 11.09z to 12.39z. Stations active : ZS6AYE, ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: DL, SP,OZ, UR, PA, SM, SV, Z3, LA, SV9, LZ, OZ, YT, SV5. May 01 Band open 11.46z to 18.56z. Stations active : ZS6WN and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked:OZ ,LA, SP, DL, PA, G, GM, EA, I, LZ, OE, UR, 4X, I, F, ISØ,YU, EA8, SM, YO, S5. 02 Band open 11.56z to 19.45z. Stations active: ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked : SV, LZ, G, DL, GI, EI, GM, 4X, UR, 9A, GW, GD, SV5, YT. 08 Band open 13.22z to 16.39z. Stations active ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked : SP ,I, YU, S5, YO, EA, PA, 9H, 5B4, EA, SV. 09 Band open 16.37z to 19.03z. Station active ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked:4X, OZ, DL, F, LA, SM, G,S V and I. 10 Band open 15.03z to 18.20z. Stations active ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked : I, YU,SP, SV, 4O and I. ZS6NK worked I by EME. 11 Band open 16.35z to 17.43z. DXCC worked : DXCC worked: OM, W, SP, UR, ES, SV, OH, 9A, SM, I, PA, 9H, 4O, OZ, W. ZS6NK worked W on EME. 12 Band open 17.22z to 18.01z. Station active ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: I, SV, EI, F, PA. 13 Band open 16.42z to 20.21z. Station active ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked : I, OK, CT, 9H, 4X, SV, EA6, HB9, PA, DL, G, UR, GW, F and EA. 14 Band open 16.49z to 2016. Station active ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: G, GM, EA, EA6, I, PA, HA, OZ, SM, LA, OH, OK, UR, SP, DL, YO, OK, S5, ON, HB9, OM, YU and LZ. 15 Band open 16.04z to 17.53z. Stations active ZS6NK and ZS4TX/6. DXCC worked: W, I, 9H, ER, and SV. ZS6NK worked W by EME. 17 Station active ZS4TX. DXCC worked: W worked by ZS4TX on EME. 24 Station active : ZS4TX DXCC worked : W, S5 and G by EME. June 20 Station Active: ZS4TX DXCC worked: ZL3NW by EME 21 Station active: ZS4TX. DXCC worked : ZL2DX by EME. Here is an email exchange between Paul, ZS4TX and me in which Paul answers questions raised by your columnist about his recent activity report. Paul’s answers are in italics. Paul:While reviewing the list of DXCC worked from Zs during the last few months a thought occurred to me. It seems like there are virtually no contacts from ZS to the northeast Arabian Peninsula, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, India, Sri Lanka, northern Indian Ocean entities, Malay Peninsula, etc. During Cycle 23 several stations in ZS worked AP, A4, HZ, 9K,VU, YI, AF, YK, JA, BV and VR2. This cycle only 9K, A7, A6, A4, A9 ,AF, YI, BV and BY were worked. Nothing was heard from 4S7. 8Q7 was worked on back scatter. DU7 was worked by a few ZS stations by scatter path with the area above HZ as reflection point. The CW sounded like “keyed white noise”. Some claims for QSOs with YB, JA, HL, 3B9, ZL and VK were made but I cannot confirm the validity of these. There were no openings to South America other than a few Back Scatter QSOs were reported both for cycle 23 and 24.Openings to KH were reported, while there were at least four reported openings in Cycle 23. Only one opening to VK by scatter path was reported with none on the traditional direct path.We need a prolonged high SFI at the right time of the year for the East and West F2 paths, i.e., to VK and JA and to W/VE and South America and this did not occur this cycle. Is this just a function of no activity from these areas or is it that there is no propagation in these directions. If it is a question of propagation, has anyone done any studies to determine why there is so little propagation to these areas? Thanks. I think both low activity but mostly poor propagation due to low SFI are to blame. Many DXpeditions go during the Northern Hemisphere’s Es season which is a dead period for us. If you look at the DX-map on the ON4KST site, you see many lines from FR, 3B8, 9J and 3B9 to both Europe and the Far East but Zip from here, not because we are not on the air but because the propagation does not reach us. Besides my noise problem, ZS4TZ’s remote site in KG47, about 130 km North of me, hears things at S9 level that I don’t hear at all so it’s all about location, location, location! To give you an idea about how poor conditions were for ZS, take a look at 9J2HN’s activity. He is about 1100 km north of me and 1000 km north of ZS4TX’s remote site. He [ZS4TX] too heard none of the Far East stations the 9J was working.73, Paul. North America K1HTV (Rich reports from FM18AP) Here in the Mid-Atlantic at the K1HTV Amissville, VA QTH, the magic band came alive just before 16.00z on Father’s Day, 21st June. The first of 13 countries that I worked were all from a southerly direction. NP3CW was first in the log, followed by Yuri, UT1FG/MM in EL59 off the Cuban coast, CO3JA, 6Y5WJ, YV4NN and XE2CQ in DM12 northwestern Mexico. From 16.50z to 17.50z I worked 17 stations in W6 and 7 land. During that same hour, stations from GA and FL to as far west as NM and XE2 were working into HA, S5, YT, ISØ, 9A and DL, but all I heard to the east during that hour was F2DX calling XE2X. It wasn’t until 18.45z that European DX was heard here. In the next 65 minutes I worked IØJX, IK5MEJ, IZ5BRW & IK5PWJ, HA8CE, ON7BG, OK1DO, G4DBL, S59A, HA8FK, PA2M and ON4IQ. That was it for DX to the east for the day. Local late afternoon to early evening produced many more double hop QSOs to the West Coast, 15 stations in AZ, 15 in CA, three in NM and one in NV. It was a memorable Father’s Day. 73, Rich - K1HTV. K5QE (Marshall reports from EM31CJ) Hello Chris, Although Arliss is really a six metre kind of a guy, we did not take any six metre gear to the Falklands. Arliss was worried about offending Six News 33 the local six metre ops by us coming down there and stealing their thunder. On VHF, we only did two metres. Arliss and Holly did a lot of HF on several different bands. We ran the ARRL June VHF contest, as usual. Conditions were really poor, pretty much everywhere, but specifically here. We only worked 445 contacts on six metres. The entire northern tier of states and down in to southern CA were lit up on the propagation maps. All we got were one here and one there. Our record score of 1836 contacts on six metres, made in 2010, was in no danger of falling. So, not much here. 73 Marshall K5QE K6IJ (Fred reports from CM98PJ) Hi Chris, Not much here in California. Last, last few days there have been Es to most of the states and HI3THJ. No real antenna up yet so not many QSOs. I know K6QXY and a few other California stations have worked JA. We are waiting on the permit process at this time. Maybe more next quarter. 73, Fred K6IJ K6QXY (Bob reports from CM88QL) Hi Chris: April 2nd FK8CP23.27z 2.25z 9th CE2AWW 11th FK8CP21.32z 13th FK8CP 00.41z 17th FK8CP23.12z, CE2AWW 22.57z, CE3RR 23.08z 19th FK8CP23.07z 00.13z, FK8CP 23.23z 20th VK4MA May 16th LZ2CC 15.04z JT65A EME June 22.10z 1st JE1BMJ 23.08z heard 2nd EA8DBM 23.42z heard 3rd KH6SX 6th NP4A 19.41z, JE1BMJ 22.12z, JM1IGJ 22.38z 18th VP2MTT 17.44z, K6WDE/KH6 18.58z, KH6HI 19.24z 01.50z heard, CT1HZE 19th KH6HI/B 16.37z, JE1BMJ 23.30z, JA7QVI 23.42z 34 Six News 21st JEBMJ, JA7QVI, JA5FDJ, JM1IGJ, JQ1ITV, JA3EGE, and JR1LZK all between 04.30z – 05.37z; this was during 2nd diurnal peak to JA. KP4EIT 15.08z, NP4A 15.11z, ZF1EJ 15.12z, and 6Y5WJ 15.15z; IZ5EKV 16.54z, S57RR 17.29z, 9A5CW 17.38z and SV1DH 18.02z. This was first California contact for Costas; distance was10,845km. KP4EIT 15.08z, NP4A 15.11z, ZF1EJ 15.12z, 6Y5WJ 15.15z 23rd C6AUX 22.48z, HI3TEJ 23.28z, CO8LY 23.34z 27th JE1BMJ 21.15z, JL8GFB 21.18z, JAØMVW 21.35z, JAØRUG 21.43z, JF8QNF 22.20z, JH7XRZ 23.07z Bob Costas was very excited. I had already worked Leo SV2DCD via EME several years ago. Here is his email: “From: sv1dh@otenet.gr To: k6qxy@aol.com Sent: 6/22/2015 12:11:54 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time Subj: 6m QSO GM Bob. Many tnx for my first QSO with CA and CM field. My second dream of working CA on 6m came now true (my first one was to work Alaska, accomplished last year, hi). Pse note that during the 6m excellent previous three cycles, I NEVER even hrd CA via F2 but amazingly was wkd via Es!! Your sig was weak to me, max 519 by ear and below noise floor of my RX. I had S5 line noise at my remote KM27 QTH and so I was lsn from KM18 with just a single 7el CL6DXX instead the 2X7el CL6DXX at KM27. Also EUs were calling me all the time, in spite was calling NA only. So, I missed you at your first attempt, but QSO was OK a little later... No other W6, 7s were hrd ydy, opening was mostly directed to W5s. Bob, my QSL+SASE is already in post to you and looking forward to get back yours. 73 Costas SV1DH”. That’s it so far I’ll update if any more happens. 73, Bob. K7CW (Paul reports from CN87LJ) Simone, my loving wife of 35 years passed away at the end of January from cancer. I got back on the air for the 17th March aurora and made 19 contacts. It was refreshing to get on the radio and exchange reports with my friends. Here are six metre contacts of note that I’ve made since my last report from the northwestern corner of the US: 17/3/15 18/3/15 16/5/15 27/5/15 3/6/15 6/6/15 17/6/15 18/6/15 21/6/15 CE2AWW CE2AWW CE3RR LU4FPZ SP3RNZ CW CW and SSB CW CW EME JT54 initial number 62 CW XE2HWB XE2CQCW NP4A SSB VP9/WA4PGM CW DXCC 109 VP2MTT CW DXCC 110 KP4EIT SSB KH6HI CW XE2MVY CW ZF1IE SSB 9Y4DSSB YV1KK SSB DXCC 111 6Y5WJ CW NP4A SSB NP3CW HVØA CW CW DXCC 112 - rare and very exciting! CW IZ5BRW WP3C CW So, it took until the summer solstice for us to really get any sporadic E propagation going. Despite this, I did manage to work four new DXCC entities so far this year, one of them being unbelievably rare for us, anyway. Well, it didn’t last for long, as the sun has now begun a cavalcade of coronal mass ejections which have subdued long-haul propagation again. As I write this on the local morning of 25th June, I note that the ions from the latest CME have just arrived and E propagation continues to suffer. 73, Paul K7CW KØGU (Jay reports from DN70MQ) Hi Chris, Six metres was pretty slow until June arrived. Even then I think the geomagnetic active mostly kept me out of Europe. Good opening to Asia + KL7 on 21st June. I worked my second Chinese station in a new grid block. It was unusual to get KL7s in my JA runs. 73, Jay QSOs worked by KØGU on 50MHz. From 04/01/2015 to 07/01/2015 Date Time UTC Callsign 4/17 04/18 04/18 04/18 04/18 04/24 04/25 05/08 05/08 05/08 05/08 05/08 05/09 05/09 05/09 05/13 05/23 06/01 06/03 06/03 06/04 20.28 19.58 20.12 20.21 22.36 23.06 20.15 20.32 20.54 20.55 22.05 22.12 20.36 21.32 21.41 21.37 16.34 22.17 14.41 14.42 16.27 CE2AWW LW3EX CX9ØIARU CE6SAX CE2AWW CE2AWW CE2AWW LU4FPZ CX7BL OA4TT CE2AWW LU5FF CX7CO LW6DG OA4TT LU9AEA CT1HZE JE1BMJ HI8LAM NP4A LZ2WO Locator FF47 GFØ5 GF15 FF31 FF47 FF47 FF47 FF97QA GF25 FH16 FF47 FF99 GF15XF FF95 FH16 GFØ5 IM57NH QMØ5BR FK58AL FK68 KN23AL TX 599 559 559 559 599 559 559 57 55 55 599 599 599 579 449 55 529 559 599 59 559 RX Mode 599 559 559 559 599 579 579 57 55 55 599 599 599 579 559 55 529 559 599 59 599 CW CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB CW CW SSB SSB CW QRB 8850+9589+9796+9381+8850+8850+8850+9366 9796+6676+8850+9114+9765 9491+6676+9589+7854 9230 4143 4370+9352 Six News 35 Date Time UTC Callsign 06/04/ 06/13 06/15 06/17 06/17 06/18 06/19 06/19 06/19 06/20 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/21 06/22 06/23 06/23 06/24 06/27 06/28 06/29 06/29 06/30 06/30 06/30 06/30 06/30 06/30/ 07/01 07/01 07/01 07/01 20.39 18.49 18.10 02.08 15.58 21.45 16.30 16.34 16.50 17.05 15.42 16.12 22.57 22.58 23.01 23.02 23.03 23.04 23.04 23.06 23.07 23.08 23.12 23.13 23.14 23.15 23.16 23.18 04.11 03.49 22.55 15.05 17.13 15.29 18.29 23.23 00.28 21.52 22.26 22.31 23.09 23.12 01.32 01.37 01.43 01.44 Locator FS/K9EL FK88LC ZF1EJ EK99 CT1HZE IM57NH VP9/WA4PGM FM72 VP2MTT FK86VS YV4NN FK5Ø CT1HZE IM57NH EA7RM IM87CS EA7KW IM67XI ON4IQ JO2ØAR 6Y5WJ FK17 ON4IQ JO2ØAR JA3JTG PM75PC JA7BXS QNØØIT KL7RA BP4Ø JA7DYN QMØ7LT JH7MSB QMØ8 JAØFSB PM97EG JH4IUO PM64 JL8GFB QNØ3QG JA4DND PM65NK BA4SI PMØ1HD KL7HBK BO49 JA8JRC QNØ2TT JR8AMF QNØ3 JA8JEP QNØ3 JH8HWL BG6CJR OM9ØLO JE1BMJ QMØ5BR KL7NO BP54 C6AUX FL32 CO8LY FL2Ø HI3TEJ FK49 PJ5A FK87 UT1FG/MM GMØ2 JG1TSG UT1FG/MM GM13 JL8GFB QNØ3QG JAØMVW PM97OX JAØRUG PM97 JE1BMJ QMØ5BR JHØINP PM96 JF3DRI PM74UO JM1IGJ PM95 JK1AFI PM96 JA3TJA PM74PR N5DG (Ed reports fromEM20AB) Hi Chris Here six metres got off to a slow start with 2nd, 3rrd, and 4th June being the first DX to Europe 36 Six News TX RX Mode 559 59 529 599 599 559 519 599 529 519 599 559 539 539 539 539 539 559 559 559 559 559 519 559 559 559 559 559 559 529 579 579 599 599 55 529 59 559 579 559 559 559 529 559 559 559 579 59 529 599 599 559 419 599 529 519 599 559 559 559 CW SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB CW SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW 559 559 559 559 579 559 579 559 559 559 599 599 559 559 529 579 599 599 599 55 559 59 579 579 599 559 559 529 559 559 559 QRB 4709 3274+7854 3649+4874 4865+7854 8175 8050 7738 3714+7738 9577 8789 3805+9012 8950+9213 9760+8557 9677 10751 3780+8579 8557+8557+9259+10888 9230 3846+3609+3611+3987+4759+4155+9259+4275+8557 9105 9152+9230 9233+9593 9314+9233+9608 from EM20. with SV1DH and LZ2WO were the long haul contacts . Then there was Father’s Day 21st June with 48 European contacts in 23 countries. I worked HVØA for a new one. 4X4KD was also worked on the 21st I have to say HVØA is one of those contact you remember for a life time. Between searching and pouncing on European QSOs I checked 50.137MHz SSB , QRM was horrific. Between the QRM I heard Sergio IKØFTA, the op at HVØA working a GM???? I called Sergio two time and received a 59. Sergio then told Europe that he would be calling North America only on CW. I switched to CW and our tones were spot on for a quick CW QSO. On 23rd June BA4SI had a big signal. This was the best I’ve heard Li . Everyone try to come to the W6JKV/ K5AND BBQ in Austin Texas. You will have the time of your life. Ed N5DG checked in. I asked him if he would listen for me on 50.117MHz he said he would. I called for about 10 minutes on CW without any callers. I then noticed from a post on the European page that he was calling on 50.117MHz SSB. I switched to SSB and began to listen. After about 15 minutes I heard weak SSB. It took a while but I was pretty sure it was him. I let him know on the European page I thought I was hearing his SSB. He told me he heard nothing. At that time Mario K2ZD, who was also listening asked him if he could switch to CW. He said he would. As soon as he switched I could hear him 539 to 559. I called and he came right back. We exchanged signal reports and 73. I know it’s very hard for TK stations to work North America because of the mountains. I was very surprised later when he told me he was only running 100 watts. TK was a new DXCC for me; the first one in over two yrs. 73, Mick W1JJ. W6JKV (Jimmy reports from EM00AH) Chris howdy. I will not be making any trips this summer as my sons activities in late June and early July make it impossible. Hope to resume again next year. Hope that you are doing ok. Jimmy. VE2XK (Michel reports from FN07PJ) YU7EF model EF0610 yagi built by N5DG. NZ3M (Dave reports from FN10PD) Hi Chris, Really nothing worth reporting for me. Work and other things getting in the way. I missed this whole week of strong Es. Before that it was just a couple days to CT and EA. 73, Dave NZ3M. W1JJ (Mick reports from FN41GP) Hi Chris, I was not going to send in a report as it’s been very poor here this Es season. There have been just a couple of weak openings to EA and CT and one QSO with GOJHC. Today 27th June it improved. I worked CT, EA and one I station, then five French stations that were very strong. I went and checked the ON4KST European page to see if there were any other stations that would listen for my CQ. I noticed that TK4LS was Bonjour Chris, All everything here is well; just sic metre conditions are really not good this season. This Es season is the worst I ever had of the past 10 years or since I started on six metres. On this date of 1st July I have only worked two stations from Europe. That’s terrible bad after two months. On 15th June I worked Joseph EA6SA as the first European station of the season. Then on 22nd June I worked Joe CT1HZE. Even those QSOs were on the limit on signal to be workable. Absolutely no deep South Americas stations worked this spring from May to June on E-TEP. In the night of 22nd to 23rd June there were some great mixed conditions of Es, aurora and AUE and AU mixed. That was my annual and traditional Alaskan night like I always say. The AK night was one month early this year. I worked KL7NO, KL7HBK, WL7X and KL7KY, and VE7DAY, VA6EME, VE6SV, VE5UF, VE4XC. A little earlier the band was open on Es into Six News 37 California, Arizona, Washington and Montana and Idaho. I worked KB7Q, WA7JTM, KE7V, K7JA, N6KK, and W7OUU. On 39th June I had a super opening into west coast and British Columbia on double hop. Band was open for more hours. At 14.19z Steve VE7SL called me , then I worked K7CW, W7FI , KE7V, N7NW, VE7XF, VE7DAY, KF7PG, NN7J, K7ZS, K6TW, K7OFT, and VE7PS. Other than this opening I had a few short openings into West Coast and Caribbean but that’s it so far after two months of our Es season. 73 Michel VE2XK On 1st July Michel added: Chris Please add also that I work my DXCC #100 today with Peter JW7QIA at 20.00z. That was the Canada celebration day of course . XE2OR (Rafa reports from DL98OK) Hello Chris, Here is my 50Mhz log for May and June 2015. There was very good tropo last week on 144 MHz to Illinois and Michigan from North Mexico. Distance on SSB QSOs was more than 2230km. 73, Rafa XE2OR. Date UTC Freq. Station Mode RS(T) 3rd May 20.28 21.01 4th May 13.22 8th May 19.47 19.47 9th May 02.25 02.27 02.27 02.33 02.33 16.48 16.54 17.00 17.03 17.20 17.10 17.16 17.18 17.18 17.24 17.34 16th May 15.50 16.38 16.45 nd 22 May 18.19 38 Six News 50.125 50.125 50.246 50.125 50.125 50.140 50.140 50.140 50.160 50.133 50.091 50.091 50.097 50.094 50.094 50.094 50.094 50.094 50.094 50.094 50.100 50.125 50.096 50.092 50.125 K4IMD K4ZIN WA5TKU K9KHW K9PPY KCØCF AK4WO K2DRH NØTIB AB4B N4PN WA8FTA W9SE N4DB K1BO W9EWZ WC4N NWØW K4EJQ N4GG KX4R WZ8D WA8FTA KCØCF KJ4E 59 26 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 59 SSB FSK SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW Date UTC Freq. Station Mode RS(T) 22nd May 19.31 28th May 15.00 3rd June 13.33 13.35 4th June 16.41 th 5 June 14.56 14.59 6th June 12.30 16.23 9th June 18.39 18.40 18.45 18.50 th 11 June 16.13 13th June 14.11 14.14 14.21 14.25 16.01 16.01 16.01 16.41 17.28 18.15 18.25 19.54 th 14 June 14.17 14.54 17.22 18.13 18.27 18.27 18.31 18.31 18.34 19.35 th 15 June 01.20 01.29 01.29 01.30 01.34 01.34 01.46 01.54 01.59 02.00 02.09 16th June 00.07 20th June 17.47 21st June 13.58 14.11 14.11 14.43 14.46 14.46 14.47 14.49 14.49 14.50 50.125 K4MM N4TB 50.120 K5AIH 50.120 K5VH 50.090 K2DRH 50.095 K4EJQ 50.095 K4ZIN 50.000 N2SG 50.090 NP3CW 50.098 W4EFB 50.098 N4LT 50.098 K1BO 50.098 KR4AE 50.125 KP4EIT 50.125 KFØUR 50.125 N6LEE 50.125 WB9KPT 50.125 WØGMO 50.125 KP4KD 50.125 W4ABC 50.125 W5YI 50.145 KS5H/7 50.102 VP2MTT 50.135 WC4H 50.098 KV1E 50.095 K9IMM 50.099 KU8I 50.096 N4PB 50.096 K9CT 50.096 WØUC 50.146 KØJQA 50.146 W3XO/5 50.146 K5TR 50.146 AD5A 50.140 AB5EB 50.125 K2DRH 50.139 W5ZN 50.124 N8XA 50.124 WB8YOK 50.124 K8TQK 50.140 AF1T 50.099 K9IL 50.099 KE7V 50.098 KB3ILC 50.127 NØSZ 50.127 N7HYF 50.098 N5LZ 50.104 CT1HZE 50.092 K2SX 50.091 N4RJ 50.100 N4TB 50.115 ZF1EJ 50.019 XE2CQ 50.119 K6GXO 50.119 NP4LY 50.119 K6FG 50.119 N6HD 50.119 K6KY 50.119 NP3CW 59 599 59 59 599 599 59 599 59 599 599 599 599 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 559 59 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 59 59 59 59 59 59 599 599 599 599 59 599 599 559 599 599 599 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 59 SSB CW SSB SSB CW CW SSB CW SSB CW CW CW CW SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB CW SSB SSB SSB CW SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB CW CW CW CW SSB CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB Date UTC Freq. Station Mode RS(T) 21st June 14.51 14.52 14.53 14.54 14.54 14.55 14.57 14.57 14.57 14.58 14.48 14.59 14.59 15.00 15.00 15.00 15.01 15.01 15.01 15.05 15.07 15.08 15.08 15.05 15.07 15.07 15.08 15.08 15.08 15.23 16.52 16.47 17.08 17.08 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.119 50.113 50.125 50.103 50.103 NP3LY 59 KP2/N5PV 5 9 KK6DDC 5 9 K6SSS 59 WA6QMQ 5 9 WØPE 59 N6VI 59 AE4WG 59 NP4A 59 K7SP 59 KD2JA 59 W7DXW 5 9 WA4II 59 WB6DJI 59 W7RTX 59 W7TY 59 WP3EF 59 WP4EJH 5 9 WP4NIX 5 9 KP4YI 59 XE1ZOZ 5 9 N7WS 59 KF4A 59 KP4YI 59 XE1ZOZ 5 9 N7WS 59 N7EL 59 KF4A 59 W6YLZ 59 FG8OJ 599 EA7AKY 559 UT1FG/MM 5 9 K1TO 599 WX4G 599 SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB CW CW SSB CW CW South America CX8DS (Oscar reports from GF15VG) Dear Chris, It is a pleasure to greet you again. I mention here that the propagation on 50 MHz is void for me. My last contacts in the band were the 21st April 2015. For now the winter has come to the Southern Hemisphere and will have to wait until spring. I enclose a short list of my latest contacts. A big hello. Oscar LU5FF (Javi reports from FF99RF) Hi Chris: I hope all is well with you. Unfortunately I have no conditions since April. In April I had two openings for Europe. Both were very short, with very weak signals. May, the first day I could only work two stations USA and from then on the band has been dead. We see end of August or September when the band begins to move. A big hug and we contact Chris Javi - LU5FF OA4TT (Jack reports from FH16TW) Hi Chris We didn’t have a lot of openings this E’s season. I CQd frequently to EU but only had 3 QSO’s. My log shows the following. 21.00z KX4G, KØGU, 8th May 2015 WX4G, K4MM, W9DR, NØKE, AI2S, AC4TO, W4IHI, WB4TH, W4ABC, KZ4RR, and K4TR 9th May 21.35z KØGU, CP6UA 11th May 02.42z KH6HI/B, OA4DKI, KH6HI, KH6U 13th May 21.18z HC5K 2nd June 19.15z CT1HZE 8P6SH, 19th June 20.30z OE9ICI, FM5WE 20th June 18.0z G8BCG This is a sad showing for many hours on the air. I still think living here on the magnetic equator that the high flux levels screw up my Es propagation, especially east/west. I am away from Peru but will return in October. 73 Jack 8R1WD (Peter reports from GJ06WT) Hello Chris, Likewise, I hope all is well with you as well as the other guys. I haven’t heard from or about any of them for the longest while. I hope they also are all going well. Thank you for your invitation to contribute to your six metre column. Unfortunately my over the line internet was either down or not working well for quite a long while. Apparently both my land line and the modem were malfunctioning. I hope I have got things working well again as of last night. I am now going through all my missed mail. Generally I have not worked much six metres for this year, 2015. My contacts were made mostly between February and March. They were as follows: 4th Feb 01.24z 01.30z 25 Feb 02.02z 02.05z 02.07z th 50.120MHz 50.110MHz 50.110MHz 50.110MHz 50.110 MHz HC5VF HC5K YV4DYJ YV4NN HC5K 5/7 5/7 5/9 5/9 5/6 5/7 5/8 5/7 9/9 5/8 Six News 39 22nd Mar 17.34z 17.44z 17. 45z 17.57z 18.11z 20.21z 50:115MHz 50.110MHz 50.110MHz 50.150MHz 50.110MHz 50:110MHz K4CKS KD5M EA8TX CN8LI EA8DED LU5XP 5/9 5/9 5/8 5/7 5/8 5/5 5/9 5/9 5/9 5/3 5/8 5/9 I do hope that the info is still useful in some way. All the very best. 73 de Peter 8R1WD Asia UN8GC (Mike reports from MN83KF) Hi Chris, Here’s the info on my six metre activity to date: Even though the Es season has started in Almaty around 14th May this year my first QSO are dated 27th May with JA stations. Being busy with work during the day and absent from the rig I cannot attest to Es performance this season though it seems to me a bit worse than the one in the previous year. I have about 40 QSOs to date in the log. On 25 th June we had a good opening to the Philippines. I managed to log two QSOs with very good signals. Southeast Asia is somewhat a difficult path from Almaty. On 26th June again we had an opening to Southeast Asia. I was able to work half a dozen Taiwanese stations and was again heard into the Philippines. I am very pleased to see the increasing six metre activity from Central Asia this season. In particular EX9T is very active from Tamga, Issyk Kul lake. [Yuri] EX8M is being heard often during openings. He operates from the town near Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Also, UN7TW and UN6T from Taraz, South Kazakhstan, being new appearances on the band from Kazakhstan which is heart-warming. That’s it for the time being. Regards, Mike. Pacific/Oceania DU7/PAØHIP (Willem reports from PK10XH) Hello Chris, Here’s my contribution to “What’s on Six”. Since the last report, the equinox conditions dragged on with the daily single hop openings to JA; sometimes also some HL and BY stations joined in. On 1st April FW5JJ, F5MYK/MM and KG6DX were worked and FK8CP heard. 40 Six News Conditions were slowly going down. Openings to the Arabian Peninsula happened only sporadically with mostly only the A47RB beacon coming in, but far fewer times then previous equinoxes. F5MYK/MM was QRV every day on his way to the Suez Canal and I worked him from many grids. Often they were all water. A71AM and A71EM showed up at times with good signals, as did a couple of 9K2 stations. 6th April was also a good day with VU2GSM MK82, YB2TJV OK42, XV4Y OK2Ø and F5MYK/MM LK63 showing up. On 7th April I worked 8Q7SA MJ64 559559 for a new one. This was entity #101. On 8th April he was also worked, but with a much weaker signal. Then the magic band showed his true face again. On 19th April, just when I was planning to go to bed, I heard a weak signal of the ZD8VHF beacon. This rarely happens and I decided to stay up, because I had worked South America on these occasions. But the band was playing tricks again and decided to open up to a completely different place. Around my local 02.00 a.m. I worked TI5XP and TI5/N5BEK, entity #102, beaming approximately to West Africa. The path was skewed. They had good readable sigs but with deep QSB, both peaked shortly to 559. Then YS1AG showed up with a nice 529-559 signal. Not a new one but Andy is the second station I have worked both to the east and to the west after LU5FF. The long path distance to him is my longest DX so far at 24, 527 km. The real distance must be more than that because of the skewed path. I also heard a weak signal from TG9AVR, but unfortunately he didn’t hear me. On 21st April I could hear the weak signal of TI3/W7RI, who was running 80 watts into a vertical, but unfortunately he had too much noise and we could not QSO. The noise here was extremely low. At 17.09 UTC, 1.09 a.m. here, I worked with CE2AWW over the same skewed path over West Africa. The ZD8VHF beacon was again audible. For most of us the disappointing spring Equinox looked over, but it had one more trick in the hat for me. On 3rd May I was dialing over the band around 09.30 UTC and more or less blundered into a CQ call from A52ARJ in Bhutan, NL47VL and a quick 59 -59 was exchanged. This was entity #103. Later on, when there was a change of operators, I also worked A52AEF. After that day equinox conditions collapsed and everybody anxiously awaited the beginning of the northern Es season. How disappointing these first weeks were for everybody. Even here I had very few one hop openings and the band was dead for a long time. This was probably because of the high solar activity. High solar activity and Es seem to bite each other; that is certain here, being 1º North of the Geomagnetic Equator. Then on 17th June the magic came back for me anyway. That day I had a nice opening to Europe. I worked I6WJB, YU6MM, YT1Q, YT9ØIARU, OK1JR, IK8EVE, IZ5EKV, IK5YJY, I6FLD, IK4WMA, US7VF, HA5JI, UN8GC, S59A, SM6CVX, UR5LAK and so on. I heard many more, but the deep QSB got them. All in all I worked three new grids. Highlight of the opening was the moment I heard EA8DBM calling me. We exchanged 599 -599 reports. I worked him before but never that strong; he was 10 dB over S9 on the S meter. Distance was 13,996 km, my best Es DX. On 28th June there was a second long haul opening, but much shorter length. I could only work EA8DBM, who was weaker now 549 – 559, DK2EA and OM5XX. Om was a new one , entity #104. Since then, the band seemed to be closed again. In spite of listening extensively for North America in my mornings from 22.00Z on, no stations were heard, not even a trace. Well we still have a month of Es to go, so who knows what will happen. OK that’s it Chris. 73 to you, yours and the readers, Willem. JE1BMJ (Han reports from QM05BR) Hi Chris On 26th June I worked with Fabien TK5MH. At first European videos were good around 06.00z, I called CQ EU on 50083.0MHz. Then worked with DK8NE, DL1YM, and DK3WG. After a while TK5MH called me and worked with 559/559. The TK was a new entity for me and also for him. Fabien told me that it was an ever-first JA-TK QSO on six metres after formal license of 50MHz in Corsica on May 2013. I am just happy to get a new entity on six meter but also another prize. Additionally I have made a home page about European openings on 2015. The first half of the 2015 summer solstice condition was the worst ever since 2009 but I am expecting an improvement on the second half: http://equina.web.fc2.com/ open_to_eu_2015.html. I am just happy to get new and first ever QSO with TK. de Han JE1BMJ. VK4CZ (Scott reports from QG62LP) Winter approaches us in the Southern Hemisphere, and with it the six metre DX doldrums. But truth be told, the DX doldrums set in around the equinox, with little DX worked or reported over the last three months. For me the DX period ended in April, with no DX, i.e., non VK, stations worked since 18th April, 2015. The DX haul period April to June comprises of just: 11/04/15 03.47z JA1RJU 50.276MHz three other JAs worked 13/04/15 04.18z JF3DIN 50.276MHz 14/04/15 09.23z JA3IVV 50.276MHz two other JAs worked 18/04/15 03.08z JM1VWQ 50.276MHz JT65 JT65 JT65 JT65 It wouldn’t take too much nous for the casual observer to realise from the reports above that with conditions becoming increasingly marginal and signals as result more often than not weak, I’ve shifted some of my activity to the digital modes JT65 and FSK which have producing QSOs that otherwise would have been missed. Reports of typical daytime 1,500km – 2,000km Winter Sporadic E paths between VK4 to VK3, 5 and 7 have been seen on VKLogger.com, but as these have predominantly been weekday events QRL has made me a casual observer and disinterested participant. The positive side to six metre operating in VK has been the rapid increase in the number of stations participating in meteor scatter over the period April to June. Whilst the 50.200MHz SSB MS skeds between VK4, VK3 and VK7 that have been running for years continue, the establishment of FSK operations around sunrise on Saturday and Sunday mornings has produced some great contacts. Most weekend mornings attract about seven operators -two in VK4 and the balance in VK3, 5 and 7. We have been able to complete with stations in VK1, VK2, VK3, VK4, VK5 and VK7 with distances extending out to around 1,600km. Now… hopefully can we get a ZL or two to participate. 73, Scott. Six News 41 VK4MA (Paul reports from QG64KB) Virtually a nil return for me this time Chris. Conditions on six have been very poor for us. I worked W7GJ and K6QXY on 20th April around 00.15z. These are my only six metre QSOs for this quarter. My QSO with Lance was my first with him and my first with Montana on six metres. Cheers, Paul. Frequency is 50.009MHz. Beacon transmitter is running 25 watts to a ground plane antenna at 70 feet ASL and is located at the club shack. The beacon is a joint project of Radio Society of Sri Lanka (RSSL) and Six Meter Beacon Project, Inc. Special thanks go to David N3DB. Your signal reports are most welcome. 73, 4S7JL ZL1RS (Bob reports from RF64VS) Hi Chris, I am not on six metres any more…I found another wall to bang my head against. 73, Bob. ZL3NW (Rod reports from RE66HO) The only six metre DX contact for me during the month of April was with Hiyo san JR2HCB on the 18th at 05.27 UTC. Signals were 539 both ways. He is often the first six metre station heard from Japan. I had EME contacts with Matteo IW5DHN on the 25th April and Bert S57RR on the 4th May. A new active local station just north of Dunedin is Mike ZL4OL with a good view to the east over the ocean. Hec puts out a good signal on six, and all bands up to 23cm, into my QTH. The only station worked on six metres during May was a local Geoff ZL3KQ. June was more interesting with an EME contact with Bernie ZS4TX on the 20th and again on the 21st. Chris ZL2DX also had an EME contact with Bernie on the 21st. On the 23rd there was quite a strong aurora and I worked Mark ZL2WHO with true S4 aurora signals when I was beaming south west. We could also read each others call sign on two metres via aurora as well. There were openings via winter Es to VK on the 26th, 27th, 28th 29th and to a lesser degree on the 30th of June. What was interesting was the length of the openings up to five hours on one day and several hours on other days. Signals varied, typical Sporadic E S9 + at times to into the noise. Sometimes this variation occurred all within the one QSO. Contacts were made into VK2, 3, 4, 5 and 7. 73, Rod ZL3NW. Beacon News 4S7B/B Sri Lanka Beacon Back on Air On 29th April Jaliya 4S7JL reported: The Sri Lankan six metre beacon is back on the air. 42 Six News Jaliya 4S7JL with 4S7B/B beacon transmitter in background. ZB2SIX/B Frequency Changed Forwarded from ZB2B 23 April, 2015: I would like to inform you that it has been decided by several members of our local club, the Gibraltar Amateur Radio Society and me as President of G.A.R.S. that our local six metre beacon will no longer be transmitting on 50.012.8MHz. Sometime during the course of this week it will begin transmitting on a new frequency of 50.412.8MHz, as soon as our beacon keeper John ZB2JK gets the chance to make the change. This change is being made to avoid local QRM problems when monitoring other DX beacons on the lower usual frequencies between 50.000MHz and 50.080MHz. This will be on a trial basis and if it does not cause any problems this will become the permanent frequency for ZB2SIX/ beacon. I hope you can add this frequency to your latest European beacons frequency list. 73 and best regards. Ronald Pincho ZB2B G.A.R.S. President. Four Metre Happenings 27th June Crossband TransAtlantic 50/ 70MHz QSOs On 27th June at 20.00z Bob K1SIX FN43 worked Joe CT1HZE cross band 50/70MHz. Joe’s signal was 59+. Shortly afterwards Joe was also worked cross band by Emil W3EP in FN31. At 23.25z Joe also heard the WG2XPN beacon in FM07FM. K1SIX received Joe on a Downeast Microwave four metre transverter with 28Mhz IF and an FT-857 receiver. Bob’s antenna was a Vine six element yagi about 14 metres above ground level on a hill with elevation of 407 metres above sea level. More information about the K1SIX four metre transatlantic tests can be seen at: http:// w w w. k 1 s i x . c o m / K 1 S I X _ 4 M _ T E S T _ RESULTS.pdf. EA6VQ (Gabriel reports from JM19MP) JN58, and DK5YA for a new country on four metres. They have the small segment to operate in until 15th August. I also worked two SP, two OM, two HA and two S51 stations. At 19.45z the HG9BVC beacon was heard on 70.081MHz and HG8BVC on 70.029MHz followed by CS5BFM on 70.163MHz. Radio broadcast WFM were all 59 as well. For those who have never heard this if you are on SSB it sounds like splatter. 26th June I worked CT and for a new country; three YL/YT followed by five OH and one DL. This was followed by the best contact on four metres, a CW contact with 589 signal from EA8DBM IL18 at 19.34z. QSO worked by EA6VQ on 70MHz. Type of propagation: All. Mode: All. From 01/04/2015 to 26/06/2015 Distance over: 2500 km Date Time UTC Callsign 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 21/06 16.28 18.45 18.46 18.48 18.49 18.51 18.52 18.53 19.06 19.07 19.07 19.10 19.11 19.12 ES1CW OH3CT OH1XT OH1UM OH1LEU OG2M OH1ND OH3DP OH1UM OH1XT OH1LEU OG2M OH2FNR OH1AXT Locator KO29HK KP21 KPØ1 KPØ1UL KPØ1VF KP21TD KPØØ KP1Ø KPØ1UL KPØ1 KPØ1VF KP21TD KP2ØIL KP1Ø G6TGO (Ian reports from IO83UJ) Four Metres 2015 I continued to test the InnovAntenna dual band 4X4 aerial; this time I switched to the FT847 and 45 watt stand-alone amplifier. I have had more fun on there. 15th March PAØO JO33 worked. 17th March major auroral opening previously mentioned in Six News. 15th May I heard beacon SR2FHG at 16.39z; then worked SP2HMR at a full deflection signal with the band closing five minutes later. 15th June I worked two 9A, OM, one CT, and 21 HA stations between 14.24z-14.51z and a second opening 14.57z-15.21z. Beacons received were HG7BVC and CS5BAL. 21st June From 18.04z I worked DKØMN JN58, DK6CQ JN58, DL2OM JO30, DL5RDI TX RX Mode 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 59 59 59 59 59 59 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 599 59 59 59 59 59 59 CW CW CW CW CW CW CW CW SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB SSB Prop. QRB ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES ES 2669 2854+2722+2739 2720 2844 2632+2700+2739 2722+2720 2844 2756 2700+- GMØEWX (Calum reports from IO76UL) Last Sunday (21st June) I worked some good DX on four metres, including HA, EA8, EA6 and other European stations. 73 Calum. TE Systems Amplifiers for 70MHz As of April 2015, TE Systems, a manufacturer of commercial and amateur solid state amplifiers, was upon request, building solid state amplifiers for 70MHz. The model discussed was the 0610G, price was about $525, and build time was about two weeks. More information about TE Systems can be found on their website at: http://www.tesystems. com/ Six News 43 Equipment News Transverters-Store While trolling my favorite used equipment site QTH.com the other day I saw an ad for the Transverters Store http://transverters-store.com/ index.html. The site lists relatively inexpensive transverters for 50MHz and 70MHz, as well as 144MHZ and 222MHz. According to the site, the transverters are assembled and tested before delivery, and the price is $80 shipped. Input of one to 100 millawatts produces 10 to 15 watts output on the six and four metre bands. There is a potentiometer on the transverter board to adjust the input power. Size of the transverter board is 80mm x 45mm (3.2” x 1.77”). Transverter Store LNA with bypass relays rated at 100 watts. Four metre unit is shown. Receive specifications are: RX gain - typical. 20 dB Noise figure – 1.0 dB typical Image rejection - 70 dB typical For rigs running 100 watts a 30db attenuator board is available. Relays on the attenuator board bypass the transverter when the radio is being operated on HF; when the rig is used to drive the transverter, output power of the radio must be reduced to 10-15 watts. The transverter appear to uses solid state switching; no antenna relay is required. Transverter-Store 50MHz high power LNA with bypass relays. The transverters are manufactured in the Ukraine and Serge UT5JCW is listed on the site. Full specifications for the transverters and LNAs can be found on the Transverters-USA site. Parting Remarks Attenuator/transverter board. The Transverters-Store site also lists low noise preamplifier for 50MHz and 70MHz. There are three models for each band. One model comes without bypass relays; a second has bypass relays rated at 100 watts and the third has relays rated at 1500 watts. The LNAs without bypass relays use a low noise monolithic amplifier PGA-103+ MMIC; the LNAs with relays use a SPF5122Z GaAs pHEMT MMIC. Prices for the LNAs are $120 for the bare LNA; $130 for the 100 watt rated switching LNA, and $240 for the 1.5kW rated unit. 44 Six News That’s all there is as of 4th July, 2015. W7GJ has been in from his mountain top DXpedition to rare grid DN24, and KØGU has apparently just worked Sergy UT3UA on an otherwise quiet band. I’m looking forward to reporting on a better second half of the E season, the summer DXpeditions, and the G3WOS and W6JKV/ K5AND BBQs in the next column. For now it’s time to finish the spring jobs that were delayed, finish picking cherries in the orchard, and try to fit in some band monitoring in my spare time. Thanks go to the following for their contributions: 4S7JL, CT1FJC, CU1EZ, DL7VEE, DU7/PAØHIP, CX8DS, DL8YHR, EA6VQ, EI7BMB, G6TGO, G8BCG, G8VR, GMØEWX, GW4BLE, GM8IEM, HA5KI, HAØDU, JE1BMJ, KH6/K6MIO, K1HTV, K5AND, K5QE, K6IJ, K7CW, KA9FCD, KØGU, LU5FF, MMMonVHF, OZ6OM, MMØAMW, N5DG, NZ3M, OA4TT, ON4IQ, OZ6OM, SixItalia Weekly, TJ3SN, UN8GC, VE2XK, VK4CZ, VK4MA, W1JJ, W6JKV, XE2OR, ZD8D, ZL1RS, ZL3NW, ZS6NK, CQ Six 50MHZ DX News, and everyone else who contributed to this column. If I forgot anyone, please excuse the omission. Since it is Independence Day here in the USA, I thought I’d change up the usual quote a bit. Two of my favorites, with no disrespect intended to our UK friends, are:”There, I guess King George will be able to read that.” - John Hancock when signing the Declaration of Independence. “We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.” Benjamin Franklin in the Continental Congress just before signing the Declaration of Independence. If you have anything you would like to see in upcoming columns, or anything to submit, please contact me at DXNEWS@UKSMG.org, or W3CMP@comcast.net. This is your column, and your comments, ideas, and reports are welcome. What’s on Six – Late News Chris Patterson, W3CMP W7GJ (Lance reports form DN27UB on grid DXpeditions to DN24 and DN24) Sorry this is so late. I got side tracked putting together six metre DXpeditions to grids DN34 and DN24. The DN34 operation was above Lemhi Pass, Idaho during the last week end in June and the DN24 operation was at Twin Peaks Lookout in Custer County Idaho the first weekend in July. Lemhi Pass, elevation 7550 feet, was chosen for the DN34 site because it is high and has a clear shot pretty much in all directions except due north, with the lowest horizons to the east and west. Susanna K7SGP also participated in the DN34 operation. The DN24 operation was at Twin Peaks Lookout in Custer County, Idaho, with an elevation of 10,350 feet. It seems like the two operations both pretty well W7GJ/P near Lemhi Pass, Idaho DN34. spanned the peak of Es season out here in the northern Rocky Mountains. I haven’t seen much activity since returning from the DN24 trip. I have photos and summaries from both of those operations on my website. Close up of M2 6M5HG yagi at W7GJ/P DN34 with continental divide in background. Six News 45 Susanna K7SGP operating W7GJ/P. Station consisted of Elecraft KX3 and M2 6M-1000 amplifier. Lance W7GJ mounting 6M5HG on mast at Twin Peaks Lookout in Custer County Idaho DN24. Summary of results from DN34 W7GJ logged 184 stations, and K7SGP logged around 45 stations on six metres. Although we did have HF capability with the IC706 and hamstick whips for 75 and 20m, we dedicated our efforts to six metres. We both operated JT65A mode on during moonrise, FSK441 for meteors in the mornings, and USB during the Es openings later in the day. With respect to the DN24 DXpedition, Lance also noted: I sure was lucky to have such a rare double hop opening back to the northeast on 4th July. After that, the band has been virtually dead. It really would have been a shame to drive seven hours down there and go through all the trouble to set everything up if there were no propagation. I think part of what contributed to the success was: 1. I was over 150 miles further south. It always seems to help to be more southerly. 2. From 10,350', I had a very low horizon to the east, despite the large mountains out that direction. That gave me an edge working marginal Es and meteors. I never thought I would ever be able to operate from that spot during the peak of the Es season because the very marginal road up there is usually blocked until late July, but I wanted to take advantage of this unusually low snow year. It may never be possible again during my life. Summary of results from DN24: I worked 153 stations in the computer log and 23 more on FSK441 on site. While leaving I 46 Six News W7GJ/P station DN24. Antenna is mounted on 24 foot homebrew mast and is pointing east. worked six more stations from DN24 for a total of 182. I also worked two more stations from DN34 and five from DN35. I didn’t have propagation from DN25 or DN26 on the way home. I was quite happy with that, since there were a number of stations who specifically requested DN24, and a number of double hop contacts were made with East coast stations who seldom have a chance to work such rare grids here in the Rocky Mountains. As far as EME is concerned, during April, I worked ZS4TX/6, G3SOA, F6ECI, IT9TYR, ZS4TX, YO8RHI, ZS6AYE, K4PI, UT7QF, W5ADD, and W9JN. In May, I completed with G8VYK, G4BWP, OZ2KEC, OZ1RDP, PC5C, and G4FJK. In June, I worked G4IGO, W7JW, and S59A. The big news on EME this month is that V55EME is handing out a new DXCC to stations on his moonset, and so far has worked N7IP, KG7H and W7JW. N7IP also reports adding four new DXCC on EME yesterday. Most of June here was spent working Es, and putting on the high elevation grid DXpeditions. Those DXpeditions proved that the gear I will be taking with me on the next 6m EME operation - a KX3 driving the M2 6M- 1000 amplifier - works well. The big effort for the V6M DXpedition is underway, and I am looking forward to many contacts in North America NA during their moonset and Europe during their moonrise. I have also been very busy working on the next six metre DXpedition, which will be to a very rare place in October, if I can finalize a license. Watch my web page for late breaking developments. Shure Headset and Interface Review Peter Bacon, G3ZSS Last October I decided that I needed a new headset and after searching the market on the web I came across a company called The RF Connection run by Joel, W3RFC. The RFC manufactures a small desktop box called the Mike-Link which will interface the Shure BRH440M headset to your rig. The total cost for the Shure headset, Mike-Link and a Yaesu cable came to US$ 249.00. Mike-Link You can purchase the Mike-Link separately from the Shure headset which may be useful for people outside the USA looking to save shipping costs and taxes. I purchased the complete solution directly from The RFC. The Mike-Link has an integral cable with a micro XLR cable that fits into the headset. On the opposite side of the Mike-Link are 3 jack sockets for connection to your rig’s headphone output and microphone input. The third socket takes an optional footswitch. Along the side are switches for mono/ stereo, reverse/in phase. Looking inside the box The Mike-Link box next to the rig – Note the useful PTT button. there are lots of ferrites for RF suppression, and I have never had any problems in use. One of the nicest and most useful features is a single PTT button on the top of the box. In use The headset was very easy to hook up to my Flex 6700 and the Shure headset must be one of the most comfortable headsets I have ever worn. I wear them nearly all of the time I am operating the rig as I find it helps me dig out the weaker signals while cutting out any external noise. As you would expect from Shure, the sound quality is excellent. The Shure boom microphone only works when it is lowered in front of your mouth. With the boom microphone raised above your head in a vertical position the actual microphone is automatically switched off. This is a very useful feature if you like to operate with VOX control as you can tune the bands and then pull down the boom microphone when you want to talk. On the Air This headset combination works superbly combining comfort with ease of use. I have a Heil footswitch connected to the Mike-Link and find that I regularly switch between use of the footswitch and the PTT button depending upon the type of operating (contest or rag chewing). Audio reports of my signal have been very complementary and I have even received a few unsolicited reports complementing me on my audio! Further information can be found on Joel’s website http://www.therfc.com Six News 47 Experiences with a 5 ele LFA Antenna Ron Williams, G6ZJN Dateline: March 21st 2015 After five and a half years sat in the box, the new 50Mhz 6M5LFA long yagi is erected. At 10:00 GMT, I decided that today was the day that the brand new six meter 6M5LFA was going up, whether it liked it or not. It has been enjoying a VERY relaxed lifestyle, never having seen the light of day since I bought it back in 2009, hiding away in it’s box, in a dark corner of the cellar. Working alone in my back yard, which is just 3 meters by 5 meters, the 6M5LFA, with it’s 6.1 meter boom is more than just a handful of antenna. Firstly, I assembled all the elements and attached them to their relevant positions on the three sections of the boom. The restricted work area had not been a problem up to this point BUT when it came to connecting the three sections of the boom, now complete with elements, in such a restricted space, made even smaller by my 1.2 x 0.8 x 6.3 meter tower, it became blatantly obvious why the 6M5LFA has enjoyed languishing in it’s box all of these years, hidden from the salty atmosphere associated with a seaside resort. The new 5 ele LFA. Now fully assembled, I thought to myself, “How the hell am I going to get this monster up the tower?”. It was then I remembered that back in the 1970’s, I used to repair cars for family and 48 Six News friends and needed an engine hoist, which I duly purchased at that time. “Whatever happened to it?” I thought to myself. You guessed it. It is hiding in a dark corner of the cellar. Voila! I found it and judging by the lack of greasy stains on the rope, it was never used. So now I have a 4 x 3 block and tackle. It can carry the 6 meter long antenna up the tower, which it did with ease. All I had to do was to pull and pull and pull and yes you guessed it, pull a lot more, that nice white stain free rope seemed never-ending. Finally! It arrived at the mast head having negotiated the satellite dish, a neighbour’s open window and numerous telephone wires. From here on, everything was plain sailing, although, thank heaven, there was no wind. In fact the temperature was now a balmy 23.6 degrees and the heat of the sun on the side of my face was most welcome after the winter, a bit of a devil though when you are trying to put nuts on bolts with it shining in your eyes. Now, mounted below the fourteen element MET antenna for two meters, which I have had since the latter half of the 1980s, that nice new shiny aluminium glistened in the late afternoon sunshine, making the thirty year old MET look decidedly old. But, there was no time to stand around admiring the handy work, time to fit the coaxial balun, the Heliax feeder and FT-950 and start talking to all those South American stations I had seen on the “DX Spotting Network” here on QRZ.com. Having worked feverishly all day, lunch? No time for lunch, I had lost all track of time but, with great anticipation, I switched on. A quick check of the standing wave and all was well. I started trolling up and down the “Intercontinental” segment of the band and ..... nothing. It was then I realised what the time was, much too late for any chance of some DX. Then I thought to myself, “Oh well”, the monster is up, nothing more to do and..............tomorrow is another day. Voluntary Operating Code of Practice for Six Metre Operators The UKSMG fully supports the DX Code of Conduct, details of which may be found here: http://dx-code.org/ Please read these recommendations carefully and try to adopt their use in your everyday operating. SIX METRES AS A DX BAND: Six metres is a DX band and it, along with other six metre operators, should be treated with respect and tolerance. LOCAL BAND PLAN: Always respect your local band plan. Details vary around the world, and do not forget that IARU Region 1 will have a new bandplan in 2012. LOCAL QSOs: Do not cause nuisance and disturbance to other operators with local QSOs within the 50.100MHz to 50.130MHz DX Window. LEARN TO LISTEN: Most six-metre DXers spend about 5% of their time transmitting while 95% of time is spent listening and observing changing band conditions and propagation modes. This will be far more effective than just calling CQ DX at random. 50.100 - 50.130 DX WINDOW: The DX Window is widely accepted and should in principle be used for INTER-CONTINENTAL DX QSOs only. The definition of what constitutes a ‘DX’ station lies with an individual operator especially when a station within your own region constitutes a new country. INTER-CONTINENTAL CALLING FREQUENCY: The international DX calling channel is 50.110MHz. This should be used for long range DX contacts and such contacts should normally be inter-continental in nature. If a local station returns to your CQ, move quickly to an unused frequency above 50.130MHz. 50.110 CQING: LISTENING is the first rule of working rare DX on six metres. So think twice before calling CQ on 110. But the occasional CQ is good as it can discover an unrecognised opening. QSO TECHNIQUES: Follow the style and take the lead of the DX operator in providing information. Otherwise keep it simple as there are other stations waiting in line. DX PILE-UP OPERATING: You should listen to the DX stations carefully and not continue to call if they request a particular country or prefix if that is not you. You should NOT call if you cannot hear the DX station! SPLIT FREQUENCY OPERATION: When a DX station creates a large pile-up, splitfrequency operating is recommended. To minimise interference with other DX stations operating simplex, it is recommended that a maximum split of 10kHz is used. DUPLICATE QSOs: It is always tempting to call a rare DX station every time you hear it. This should be avoided as it means that you taking away the opportunity for the DX station to work a new station and give them their first QSO with the DX country. CW OPERATION: CW is probably the major mode of operation on six metres due to the usually weak nature of many real DX openings FM QSOs: All FM transmissions should be made above 50.500 MHz for the obvious reason that FM is wide-band and could wipe out weak DX signals. MICROPHONE GAIN: Proper gain adjustments will reduce distortion and will also reduce interference with operators on nearby frequencies. This is a summary of the recommended Operating Code of Practice as issued by the UKSMG in conjunction with JAROC, HARDXA, SixItaly, DRAA, LABRE-SP and SSA. The full version of the Code can be found on the UKSMG website at http://www.uksmg. org/code.htm. Six News 49 UK Six Metre Group The UK Six Metre Group (UKSMG) was formed in 1982 with the primary aim of encouraging an interest in the 50MHz band by all amateurs. It maintains a beacon fund to finance and provide beacons in various parts of the world. Over the last few years the group has also supplied many pieces of equipment to encourage and help six metre enthusiasts activate new counties. The ambition of the UK Six Metre Group, through the medium of its quarterly newsletter, ‘SIX NEWS’, is to provide the best information available on all aspects of the band, including such things as DX news and reports, beacon news, propagation , six metre equipment reviews, QSL addresses, DXpedition news, and technical articles. Why not join the UKSMG and give us a try? We have already attracted over 700 members in over 50 countries around the world. The subscription rates are as follows: UK - £15.00, Europe - £16.00, rest of world £16.00 (air mail). Internet-only subscription (‘Six News’ by download, no printed copy): £10.00 for all countries. Send to: Secretary of UKSMG: Tim Hugill, G4FJK, Swandhams House, Sampford Peverell, Tiverton, Devon, EX16 7ED, UK Cheques in local currency should be made out to ‘UK Six Metre Group’. Or send to one of our Country Managers below. (Cheques made out in equivalent local currency in the name of the Country Manager). Alternatively you can pay by credit card. France Georges Vialet - F8OP, 541 route de Tournus, “Le Cottage”, 71290 Cuisery. Italy Michele Coppola - I7CSB, c/o AR Elettronica, Via P Nenni, 114 San Severo (71016) FG. Poland Bart Bzymek- SQ1K, PO Box 18, 78-540 Kalisz Pomorski. Tel: +48 663 808 343. Spain J R Hierro Peris - EA7KW, Oceano Indico, 11 Mairena del Aljarafe, Sevilla 41927. Sweden Johan Hansson - SMØTSC, Rullstensgränd 8, S-135 50 TYRESÖ, Sweden USA Pete Varounis - NL7XM, PO Box 3026, Easton, PA 18043-3026. Name:______________________First: ____________ Callsign:________________ Address:______________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ Postcode (Zip code): ________________ County (State): _____________________ Country: __________________________________ Date: ______________________ Telephone (Optional): ___________________________ Credit card number: ___________________________ Expiry date: ______________ Your name as it appears on the card: ______________________________________ 50 Six News Six News 51 52 Six News