Posts Tagged ‘Surrey BC’

Tomorrow starts Manna/Chowhound Weekend

Manna@80! 

Operations Manna and Chowhound were lifesaving food drops to Northwest Holland 80 years ago, just prior to the end of World War Two. Over 20,000 people had died from starvation and a colder than normal winter. Allied pilots and support staff from the UK, the US, Canada, Poland, and Australia dropped over 7,000 tons of food behind enemy lines. 

There are 10 special event stations operating in these countries Friday, April 25 through Sunday, April 27. If you contact 4 or more, a special event certificate will be issued. Check QRZ.com for any of the following callsigns or Manna80.radio on the web where the stations’ current operating frequencies are available via HamAlert.


Participating stations:


Netherlands
1. PH80MAN: Operating from drop zone Duindigt near The Hague.


The UK

2.  GB80MAN: International Bomber Command Centre

3. GB8MAN: Royal Air Force Station Binbrook

4. GB80CHO: 100th Bomb Group Museum in Thorpe Abbots


The United States

5. W4C: Boca Raton Amateur Radio Assn


Canada

6. VB7MAN: Surrey Amateur Radio Communications in Surrey, BC

7. VB6MAN: Calgary Amateur Radio Club at the Bomber Command Museum of Canada in Nanton, Alberta

8. VE1MAN: Pictou County ARC in Picton, Nova Scotia


Australia

9. VK80MAN: Bull Creek Aviation Heritage Centre Perth, Australia


Poland

10. SN80MAN: The SP5KAB Radio Club

We hope to make contact with you.


[​IMG] ​
~ John VE7TI

Who said kids are not into Amateur Radio


We just graduated this mom and her two kids from our recent on-line course. The kids are age 11 and 13 and passed the written exam AND a CW endorsement with neighbour Guy VA7GI coaching them. 




Congratulations and see you on the bands. 


~


VB7MAN is ON AIR!

Mark VA7MM and others are our first guest operators


A recent VB7MAN QSO with Jake, KC7WXD, in Nevada.

Jake is an antique wireless experimenter and the chirpy note of the Command Set at VA7MM using VB7MAN, obviously caught his attention. The photo is of Jake’s homebrew 802 tube transmitter. His QRP signal at 2.5 W with the 802 transmitter was a perfectly copiable up here in BC.

If you would like to be a guest operator using the MANNA@80 callsign VB7MAN, have a look at the calendar for available slots and send us a note at [email protected]. You can use any band and any mode anywhere in BC.

~


The Planning for MANNA@80 Continues…

 

Planning for the special event stations commemorating the life-saving food drops to NW Netherlands near the end of World War II is now in full swing. 62 nationalities were part of Bomber Command in WW2.

Please visit Operation Manna @ 80 for a full list of stations around the globe. Here are the Canadian stations participating:

VB7MAN Surrey Amateur Radio Communications

In Canada, Surrey Amateur Radio Communications (SARC) has been granted special event callsign VB7MAN from April 1st to May 10th. We will be on the air from our training station and elsewhere prior to, during, and after the event and will seek involvement of the high school students from our RF Communications class. Contacts with Europe can be sporadic from our location but we are generally able to contact North and South America, Asia, and Oceania. We have created a QSL card to commemorate the event. The card bears the $100 Royal Canadian Mint gold and silver coin struck in 2020 for the 75th anniversary. 

VB7MAN QSL Card

We will update this page as plans progress but hope to make a QSO with you in April or May. Any certified amateur in BC may operate the special event callsign, as long as it is only used in one location at a time. If you wish to use the call on any band or mode, a Google calendar has been set up to reserve the call for your use between April 1st and May 10th. If you wish to book an operating time for VB7MAN, please contact [email protected].

John VE7TI
Coordinator [email protected]

VB6MAN Calgary Amateur Radio Association

CARA will be operating from the Bomber Command Museum of Canada in Nanton, Alberta. They will activate on April 25, 26, and 27th and May 9 and 10. The final dates and hours of operations will depend on the radio amateur operators participating.

VB6MAN

VE1MAN Nova Scotia

The Canadian teams closest to Europe will be operating from their club station as VE1MAN. They may be activating from a former WW2 air base or another location of significance to tie in with the event.

 

VE1MAN

 

Radio Amateurs of Canada published an article about MANNA@80 in the March-April issue of The Canadian Amateur, as did the Radio Society of Great Britain in their national magazine RADCOM.

 

~

 

 

 

The RF Communications course continues…

 

 

~



Canadian Amateur Radio Hall of Fame Presentation

At the Surrey Amateur Radio Communications March general meeting, Hitoshi Takahashi VE7LET, the Radio Amateurs of Canada Director for BC & Yukon, presented John Schouten VE7TI with a plaque commemorating his appointment to the Canadian Amateur Radio Hall of Fame for 2024.


John Schouten [left] and Hitoshi Takahashi [right]



[left to right] Hiroshi Takahashi, 
 John Schouten and former
RAC BC-Yukon Director Keith Witney


Radio Amateurs of Canada recognizes deserving Amateurs by appointments to the Canadian Amateur Radio Hall of Fame. The Constitution for the Hall specifies that the appointment as Member of the Hall is made for “outstanding achievement and excellence of the highest degree, for serious and sustained service to Amateur Radio in Canada, or to Amateur Radio at large”. The Trustees of the Hall have interpreted the Constitution to mean that the person has performed significant service over many years to enhance the well-being of Amateur Radio. Radio Amateurs of Canada and the Board of Trustees of CARHOF sincerely congratulates John Schouten VE7TI, on his appointment to the Hall of Fame.

A detailed account of his achievements will be presented in an upcoming edition of The Canadian Amateur magazine.

For more information on the Canadian Amateur Radio Hall of Fame please visit: https://wp.rac.ca/carhof/

Frank Davis, VO1HP
Chair, Board of Trustees
Canadian Amateur Radio Hall of Fame

~

 

 

The Communicator March – April 2025

Lots happening...

You will find some great articles in this issue, along with our regular columnists.

Now read in over 165 countries, this issue brings you 115+ pages of Amateur Radio content from the Southwest corner of Canada and around the globe. With less fluff and ads than other Amateur Radio publications, you will find Amateur Radio related articles, projects, profiles, news, tips and how-to's for all levels of the hobby.





Download the January - February Communicator in 
LARGE or SMALL format, or r
ead it on-line like a magazine

Previous Communicator issues:

Search for past Communicator issues

We are working on providing you with a comprehensive searchable index,
but in the meantime 
a searchable topic index is HERE.  

As always, thank you to our contributors, and your feedback is always welcome. 

The deadline for the next edition is April 15th.

If you have news or events from your club or photos, stories, projects or other items of interest from BC or elsewhere, please contact us at [email protected]

73,

John VE7TI
'The Communicator' Editor


The Table of Contents for the March - April 2025 Communicator issue:

  • The Rest of the Story - Alfred Lewis Vail 4
  • Bob King G3ASE: World War II RSS Monitor 8
  • World Amateur Radio Day 10
  • News You Can’t Lose - BandOpticon 12
  • Page13—News You Can Lose 13
  • Radio Ramblings: Passive Radar Update, BladeRF SDR, $5 Yagi 14
  • The Wobbulator 25
  • Rubber Coating Removal 28
  • Dealing With Leaking Dry Cells 29
  • An affordable and easy PCB vise solution for electronics hobbyists 30
  • The ‘7300’ User Group - The spectrum scope and waterfall 31
  • Remote control and operation 34
  • Do you own an Alinco DR/135/235/435T or TYT9000? 37
  • The Background Noise on the HF Amateur Bands 38
  • BCQP 2025 — Initial Thoughts 44
  • From the ATV Journal - An Impressive, Low Cost LNA 46
  • Pi Pico Makes SSTV Reception a Snap 49
  • ISED Releases New Canadian Basic Amateur Radio Question Bank 50
  • Forget the Coax, Use Cat 6 52
  • Ohm’s Law: Look what you can do with it 53
  • Stranded: An Unlikely Friendship 55
  • A satellite primer 58
  • A DMR Primer 59
  • Those Darn Wall-Wart Power Supplies! 60
  • Operation Manna @ 80: Honouring the legacy through amateur radio 63
  • Ham Radio Gizmos Platform  Launches Documentary Series 66
  • Ham Radio Outside the Box: An Off-Center Fed Sleeve Dipole 67
  • Are You a Rag Chewer or a “59 73” Operator? 70
  • 2 Meters: Another Slacker DXpedition 71
  • KB6NU: How do we encourage more experimentation in amateur radio? 74
  • What CAD software do you use? 75
  • SARC on 24 GHz! 76
  • The Solar Max: Is a second peak coming? 77
  • Foundations of Amateur Radio 78
  • No-ham Recipes: Toad-in-the-hole 81
  • Back to Basics: Understanding Ohm's Law 82
  • Profiles of SARC members 88
  • Index of Past Profiles of SARC members 90
  • Winter Field Day 95
  • A Review of Distracted Driving Regulations in BC 109
  • QRT: The Crucial Role of Amateur Radio 110







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