Gender Imbalance in Amateur / Ham Radio?

Is the term “YL” outdated?

 

In a thought provoking article Yvette Cendes (KB3HTS) highlights the serious gender imbalance in amateur radio. She notes fewer than 15% of US hams are women and says, “Ham radio is not terribly good at making women feel like they belong in the field. I have long ago lost count how many patronizing comments I got in QSOs and "creepy old guy" comments”.

Regarding the century-old term "YL" Yvette says: being called a YL is starting to feel really patronizing and condescending to me, in a way related to calling a grown man "boy."

Full Story - https://www.reddit.com/r/amateurradio/comments/3zqkb1/on_gender_imbalances_in_ham_radio_and_why_i_will/

 

 

New UK Distance Record on 134 GHz

Ian Lamb G8KQW and John Hazell G8ACE have successfully broken the UK distance contact record with a contact using CW on 134GHz extending the existing UK 134GHz distance record to 35.6km.

This exceptional contact was made over a Line Of Sight (LOS) path from Chute Causeway (IO91FH20DP) near Andover to Cheesefoot Head (IO91JB00NV) near Winchester.

The existing 19.2km UK distance record on 134GHz was set by G8KQW and G8ACE on 20th September 2015.

Millimeter bands (24GHz and above) suffer losses due to oxygen and water vapour. Whilst there is nothing we can do to mitigate attenuation due to oxygen, the attenuation due to water vapour reduces in line with Dew Point Temperature (DPT) therefore operating on a very cold winter day would yield minimal water vapour attenuation.

The key enabler for success on this extended distance record contact was lower path loss due to less water vapour attenuation, DPT on 16th January 2016 was -1c whereas on 20th September 2015 it was 14.3c. The reduction in water vapour attenuation between the two tests was sufficient to overcome the ~9db increase in free space path loss attenuation over the 35.6km path.

Equipment used,
Transmitters: ~100 microwatts output Receivers: Sub-harmonic diode mixers with no RF amplification
Antennas: 0.3m dishes ~47dBi gain

All transmitters and receivers fitted with rifle sights for visual alignmen

AX for Australia's National Day

Australian Amateir / Ham Radio Operators can show their support for the Australian National Day by prefixing AX before their VK callsign on Tuesday 26th January 2016.

This gives radio amateurs the chance to be part of the commemoration of the First Fleet's arrival in 1788 at Sydney Gove and the establishment of a European settlement at Port Jackson, with the raising of the British flag by Governor Arthur Phillip.

The same alternative AX prefix applies on ANZAC Day, 25th April and International Telecommunications Day, 17th May.