NIST’s Rolling Wireless Net Helps Improve First-Responder Communications

National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have been working on a solution to integrate different technology brands into a single wireless communication system.

The system, about the size of a large filing cabinet, provides a platform to Emergency First Responders to set-up communications faster than a traditional “cell on wheels”.

Dubbed the “Nerdcart”, the system enables over 200 local users of broadband smartphones, Wi-Fi, data terminals and older walkie-talkie radios to all communicate with each other using voice, text, instant messages, video and data. 

The system can cover a rural area of 4 kilometres (2.5 miles) and can also be integrated with LTE (4G) mobile phones and Land Mobile Radio (LMR) systems.

NIST - https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2016/08/nist%E2%80%99s-rolling-wireless-net-helps-improve-first-responder-communications

18th World ARDF Championship

The 18th World Amateur Radio Direction Finding Championship will take place in Bulgaria on 3-9 September 2016

Hundreds of competitors from 39 countries are expected to take part in the event hosted by the Bulgarian Federation of Radio Amateurs (BFRA).

Bulgaria has been the host of numerous important international ARDF competitions and the organizers say they have always done their best to ensure both competitors and guests leave their country with nothing but good memories.

For the 2016 World Championships they have chosen new areas, where, ARDF competitions haven’t previously taken place.

BFRA say they will do their best to ensure that the World Championships 2016 will be conducted at the highest technological level and will take special care to satisfy all participants’ needs.

ARDF 2016 - http://ardf2016.com/

BFRA (Google English) - http://tinyurl.com/BulgariaBFRA

Illegal GPS Sea Buoys on 10m

A group of Portuguese amateur radio enthusiasts are spending their own vacation time trying to identify the location of a series of GPS buoy clusters that are transmitting, illegally and for years, on the 10 meter band.

So far, we have had some success in determining the location of the few that we can receive when propagation allows. The data suggests that these clusters are located in the Atlantic, alongside the coasts of Africa and Europe but it´s possible that they are present elsewhere.
— Paulo Teixeira, CT2IWW.

According to Paulo´s description, these transmissions consist of three second long F1B bursts(RTTY) at 51bd, 300 kHz shift. Individual transmissions are 10 seconds apart with the whole process repeating every five minutes. Frequencies are between 28000kHz and 28120kHz, at 5 kHz intervals.

The team have detected buoys transmitting on 28010, 28025, 28035, 28050, 28065, 28075 and 28101 khz, and also believe that other frequency ranges are possible.

The group requests the assistance of the amateur community, particularly of those amateurs along the Atlantic, to look out for these transmissions and record them, since they are having a tough time getting more samples, due to lack of propagation.

More recordings are needed in order to get greater consistency of the decoded data and, possibly, work on an automated or semi-automated decoding solution.
— advises Paulo, CT2IWW.

According to the group, it's important that the recordings indicate the date, start time UTC, frequency and mode, preferably in USB. Audio center frequency between MARK and SPACE should be kept as close as possible to 1500Hz to achieve greater consistency (eg. 28025kHz should tuned at 28023.5kHz USB). Recordings should be, at least, 10 to 20 minutes long.

Results can be emailed directly to CT2IWW  via QRZ listing

Buoy Manufacturer - http://www.datawell.nl/Products/Buoys.aspx