Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (C) To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Jul 08 2022 10:28:14 DISASTER EXERCISE SET FOR HAWAIIAN ISLANDS DON/ANCHOR: Hams throughout Hawaii are getting ready for a disaster drill that needs as many participants as possible. We hear more from Kevin Trotman, N5PRE. KEVIN: To help hams in Hawaii ensure that they can be prepared when hurricanes or other disasters strike the islands, Hawaii ARES is conducting a disaster exercise on Saturday the 16th of July. Amateurs who volunteer to participate will make use of their radios as well as their computers to send messages in a variety of ways. That will include the use of Winlink to transmit emails with simulated hurricane reports. Other messages will also simulate reports from area Red Cross shelters and will provide field situation and damage reports. Michael Miller, KH6ML, appeared on a recent KITV newscast in Hawaii to share the details and ask for all licensed amateurs to get involved. Hams who participate in SKYWARN, CERT, and other emergency response programs are welcome, as are those who may not be involved in RACES, ARES or any club. In this statewide exercise, the hams will follow the standardized Incident Command System that is in use throughout the United States. The exercise presumes that each of the Hawaiian islands has lost internet, cell phone service and electrical power as a result of a hurricane. For details on how to get involved visit the website hawaiiares.net For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kevin Trotman, N5PRE. (HAWAIIARES.NET, KITV HAWAII) ** TRADITIONAL CW CELEBRATED DURING 'NIGHT OF NIGHTS' DON/ANCHOR: Listen up: Commercial Morse Code is about to return to the air, if only for a night. Randy Sly, W4XJ, explains. RANDY: In the early years of the 20th century, there was nothing more reassuring for a lonely radio officer on a storm-tossed ship than the response of a coastal station to their call. The last of these Morse messages was sent on July 12, 1999. On that date, the founders of the Maritime Radio Historical Society established their organization with the specific goal of returning coast station KPH to the air as a means to honor the men and women who made the profession of radiotelegrapher one of honor and skill. On July 12, 2022, the MRHS will hold its 23rd annual Night of Nights, commemorating the tradition of commercial Morse code once thought dead. Each July 12th, since the year 2000, transmitters are brought online for this special event from the original Marconi/RCA transmission site in Bolinas, California. KPH and KFS will be operating on assigned commercial frequencies while K6KPH will be operating on several HF amateur radio bands. For operational times, frequencies and QSL information, please check the Maritime Radio Historical Society website at radiomarine.org. (MARITIME RADIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY) Newsline's Randy Sly, W4XJ reporting. ** POTA OPERATORS UPLOAD OWN LOGS DON/ANCHOR: Hams active in Parks on the Air received upbeat news on the POTA website recently: From 1200 UTC on July 1st activators have been able to upload their own logs rather than rely on regional volunteer coordinators to do so. Hams logging onto the POTA site should now see a menu option called "My Log Uploads." The feature became active on July 1st, following a period of successful beta testing. Posting on the website QRPer, Thomas Witherspoon, K4SWL, said the option was a welcome change for activators. The system update comes just in time for the POTA Annual Support Your Parks Plaque Event on the 16th and 17th of July where there will be shields to be won for various classes of operation. (POTA) --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (954:895/7) .