ICQ Podcast S06 E05 – Android Tablet Amateur Radio Apps (10 March 2013)
Series Six Episode Five of the ICQ Podcast has been released. News Stories include :-
- Pat Hawker MBE G3VA Silent Key
- Ham radio club to celebrate Legion birthday
- The VK0RTM 6m beacon on air
- Shortwave radios banned in Zimbabwe
- Beijing jamming BBC World Service
- St Patrick's Day special event
- Amateur radio association raising funds
- UK amateur radio licences fail to expire
- Review of Amateur Radio Exam Questions
- WSPR on the Raspberry Pi
- Mariana Islands
Your feedback and Martin Butler (M1MRB & W9ICQ) reviews Android Apps for your tablet.
Colin Butler, M6BOY, is the host of the ICQ Podcast, a weekly radio show about Amateur Radio. Contact him at [email protected].
ICQ Podcast S06 E05 – Android Tablet Amateur Radio Apps (10 March 2013)
Series Six Episode Five of the ICQ Podcast has been released. News Stories include :-
- Pat Hawker MBE G3VA Silent Key
- Ham radio club to celebrate Legion birthday
- The VK0RTM 6m beacon on air
- Shortwave radios banned in Zimbabwe
- Beijing jamming BBC World Service
- St Patrick's Day special event
- Amateur radio association raising funds
- UK amateur radio licences fail to expire
- Review of Amateur Radio Exam Questions
- WSPR on the Raspberry Pi
- Mariana Islands
Your feedback and Martin Butler (M1MRB & W9ICQ) reviews Android Apps for your tablet.
Colin Butler, M6BOY, is the host of the ICQ Podcast, a weekly radio show about Amateur Radio. Contact him at [email protected].
Comforting JT65-HF developments
JT65-HF-Comfort, the fork of JT65-HF that I mentioned a few weeks ago, has now been made into a public beta. There is now a project page at http://abcsolutions.de/jt65hf/. There is also a forum at http://jt65hfcomfort.iphpbb3.com/. If you use JT65-HF then you should really join the forum in order to have an input to the changes being discussed.
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Series Six Episode Five – Android Tablet Amateur Radio Apps
Series Six Episode Five of the ICQ Amateur / Ham Radio Podcast has been released. The latest news, mailbag and Martin (M1MRB & W9ICQ) reviews Amateur / Ham Radio Apps for your Android Tablet.
- Pat Hawker MBE G3VA Silent Key
- Ham radio club to celebrate Legion birthday
- The VK0RTM 6m beacon on air
- Short-wave radios banned in Zimbabwe
- Beijing jamming BBC World Service
- St Patrick's Day special event
- Amateur radio association raising funds
- UK amateur radio licences fail to expire
- Review of Amateur Radio Exam Questions
- WSPR on the Raspberry PiMariana Islands

The following are a few of the 365 Ham Radio apps found in the Google Play store. Most are free, however if the app is chargeable it will cost less than £10 and will have the adverts removed.
- EveryCircuit
- 555 Calculator
- Ohms Law Calc
- ElcalcZs
- RF calculators
- RF Pad Calculator
- Resistor Color Code
- Alldatasheets
- Digi-Key
- Equivalent Resistance
- Circuit Simulator
- Capacitor Buddy
- UK Band Plan
- ISS Detector
- HF Beacon
- NCDXF Beacon
- Grid locator
- QRZDroid
- Morse Code Trainer
Colin Butler, M6BOY, is the host of the ICQ Podcast, a weekly radio show about Amateur Radio. Contact him at [email protected].
How to Get a $10,000 FCC Fine
The ARRL web site reported on this Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture from the FCC. That’s government talk for “we are fining you.”
In case you are wondering how you can get fined by the FCC, here’s the sequence of events that resulted in a $10,000 fine for this person:
- Get a Technician License and then let it expire.
- Repeatedly transmit on 14.312 MHz, interfering with licensed radio amateurs.
- Have FCC agents track the signal to your house
- When the FCC agents enter your house to inspect your radio station, leave the transmitter sitting on 14.311 MHz.
- Tell the FCC agents that you will remove the microphone from the transmitter and only use it as a receiver.
Hmmm, why does 14.312 MHz sound like a familiar frequency? ![]()
73, Bob K0NR
Bob Witte, KØNR, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Colorado, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
JT on JT9
I had an all-day session on the JT modes today. Actually, almost all of today’s contacts were on JT65A. I did listen for JT9-1 signals a few times but most of the time I only saw stations I had already worked before.
I put out a CQ call on 15m JT9-1 and Joe Taylor K1JT came back to me. I’ve decoded Joe’s WSPR signals numerous times and I’ve exchanged several emails with him but I had never had a radio contact with him until now, so that was a nice surprise.
Then it was back to JT65A. The contrast in activity was extreme. There were so many stations active I couldn’t find a space to call CQ, so I had to wait and pounce on new stations that called.
I must say that when using JT9 I miss the infrastructure that has been built up around the JT65A mode – the reverse beacons, the auto-spotting to PSK Reporter so you can see how far your signals have got, the JT-Alerts when you decode someone you’ve worked before. I especially need the B4 alerts. My memory is so bad I can’t remember the calls of stations I’ve worked before so I have often called people who I have worked only a couple of days earlier. I guess that due to the lack of new stations they probably don’t mind too much!
Julian Moss, G4ILO, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, England. Contact him at [email protected].
A cheap way onto 29MHz AM/FM using an Intek M60
After my posting about Sporadic E a couple of days ago, I had an interesting email from Steve G1KQH who pointed me in the direction of a simple way of getting onto 29MHz FM (and AM) using one of the Intek CB radios, the M60.
You do need to pop the cover off and remove link LK2 – this allows the rig to cover 25.610 to 30.100 in ‘PO’ mode (the rig is configured with different settings for different adminstrations’ CB allocations, but PO allows the widest coverage).
Here’s a video from Simon Parker on the modification required
Here Simon shows cycling through the various modes
I’ve not tried this, but it looks a temptingly cheap way to get on 28/29MHz AM/FM for the Es season if you don’t already have a rig.
Thanks Steve for the tipoff and thanks Simon for the video ‘how to’.
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].














