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Yesterday — 13 July 2024Main stream

Zero Retries 0160

13 July 2024 at 00:07

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third fourth year of publication, with 1800 1900+ subscribers. Radios are computers - with antennas!

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 05 for renewing their Annual Paid Subscription to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 36 for becoming a new Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 37 for becoming a new Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

Recent updates in the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences include these events:


Zero Retries Readers in Certain States Needed

Glancing at one of the many obscure status pages for Zero Retries in Substack - Audience Insights, this statement got my attention:

Location

Zero Retries is read across 49 US states and 58 countries.

49 states??? I clicked into that section to find out who the holdout state was, and actually there are several Zero Retries “holdout” states (have no Zero Retries subscribers):

  • Alaska

  • Mississippi

  • New Hampshire

  • New Mexico

  • North Dakota

  • South Carolina

  • Vermont

  • Wyoming

I’m a bit skeptical of this metric, given that Substack only knows about email addresses and IP addresses when you read or click on an issue of Zero Retries. “Registration” with personal identifying information, like address, isn’t required for subscribing to Zero Retries.

Still, if you know of a co-conspirator that might be interested in Zero Retries, located in the Zero Retries holdout states, please put in a good word for Zero Retries 😄.

“According to these stats”, the most popular state for Zero Retries (14%) is California. Washington and Oregon are tied for second most popular state - 8% for each of them.

Worldwide, Zero Retries is still pretty obscure, though it’s making some inroads, with one subscriber each in:

  • Argentina

  • Chile

  • Hungary

  • Norway

  • Romania

  • South Africa

  • South Korea

  • Sweden

  • Switzerland

Again, these stats are highly suspect; despite a subscriber count of 1800+, per this report there are 275 subscribers in the US. And no subscribers in Peru - bummer! The map was skewed to the point where I couldn’t find several countries despite browsing the cursor in the areas where I know some small countries are located.

But it was kind of fun to look at this.

Thank you again, Zero Retries subscribers!


Beginning the Fourth Year of Zero Retries - With 1900+ Subscribers!

I once read a story1 about Steve Jobs that when he became CEO of Apple (again), he was checking out his new offices and came across a closet full of older Apple units that were being saved for an eventual on-premise Apple Museum. The story goes that Jobs told his assistant to get rid of them, donate them somewhere. The memorable part of that story, to me, is that Jobs reportedly said that “If you look backwards in this industry, you’ll get run over” (or “you’ll get killed”, or something to that effect).

I thought about that pearl of wisdom from Jobs this week as I approached the 3 year anniversary of Zero Retries (2nd Friday of July) and am now faced with how to deal with the legacy of securing hundreds of issues of Zero Retries into archival form. I was discussing with a trusted advisor to Zero Retries on how best, and most efficiently, to secure those past issues issues into a permanent archival form, safe from the vagaries of Substack. I felt like Jobs did upon seeing that closet full of computers; time spent dealing with the Zero Retries archive is time away from creating new material for Zero Retries, and of course the fun of Amateur Radio activities. But unlike Jobs, creating archives of Zero Retries is a unique task that falls to me (though the trusted advisor suggested outsourcing this task).

I don’t have any profound insights to offer for Zero Retries having been in continuous weekly publication for three years now; just a few minor insights.

The first is that I periodically need to emphasize to Zero Retries readers that most of what I’m writing about in Zero Retries is largely exposing technological innovation in Amateur Radio that others are doing that isn’t being reported on elsewhere. I periodically offer some of my own thoughts about technological innovation that I’d like to see Amateur Radio go in… but beyond Zero Retries, my contributions to technological innovation in Amateur Radio are pretty modest. There have been a few surprises, such as Mark Herbert G1LRO creating an Amateur Radio Data Appliance that I only imagined:

In this article by Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Steve sets out the functionality required to create the Amateur Radio Data Appliance, being:

  • Power supply

  • Battery backup

  • Radio transceiver

  • Modem

  • Embedded computer with a minimal display for status / health / troubleshooting

  • Networking required to for remote access via “household” network (not Internet)

  • Most of all, cabling to interconnect all of the above

And, as you’ll read, I had actually imagined something vaguely like Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC), but I did not imagine the scope of what DLARC has become, and how wonderful it is to have DLARC as a publicly accessible resource.

Although I had nothing to do with the creation of Open Source in Amateur Radio wiki, l had imagined and written briefly that such a directory was needed to be able to easily locate existing Amateur Radio Open Source projects to lessen the “reinventing the wheel” issue of creating multiple implementations of the same system. I had advocated for funding such a thing with a grant or direct involvement of ARDC, but that went nowhere, and this project is simply a better realization of my idea.

All that said, I do have some plans for doing a little of my own technological innovation in Amateur Radio that I hope to make a bit more real during Summer 2024.

When I began Zero Retries, I had a lingering fear that I would run out of interesting material to report on. I began with a substantial queue of interesting things to write about, but I wasn’t sure what would happen when I emptied that queue 🤣 - would there still be interesting things continuing to occur that I could keep Zero Retries going? This actually happened two decades ago with my Digital Wireless column in CQ Magazine. I actually did run out of things to talk at times, which caused friction with CQ’s editor about missed deadlines. The good news is that in the 2020s, the rate of technological innovation in Amateur Radio is such that the queue has kept growing, not reducing. The bad news is that caused the opposite problem to what I feared - there are too many things to write about, with not quite enough time and never enough space in Zero Retries as an email newsletter.

Another minor insight is that I now have confidence that I can sustain a weekly publication schedule, being able to say something of substance about technological innovation occurring in Amateur Radio.

Yet another minor insight is that I must be doing something right given the subscriber count keeps growing - now at 1900+. When I began Zero Retries, I did not imagine that level of interest; I only imagined perhaps a few hundred subscribers would share my specific interests in Amateur Radio… but apparently I didn’t dream big enough.

Speaking of “Dreaming Bigger”…

I have some short term plans for the Zero Retries ecosystem:

  • My book - Zero Retries Guide to Amateur Radio in the 21st Century is still in progress. I recently discovered an interesting service that can publish a book online (beyond a simple PDF on a website) that might speed up my progress to allow posting incremental updates (chapters) as I complete them.

  • I’ve been threatening to create an email list on groups.io for Zero Retries, and that is now imminent.The first tranche of invitations will go out to the paid subscribers as a Thank You for their financial support of Zero Retries. Eventually the Zero Retries email list will be opened to all Zero Retries subscribers. My idea is to post the headlines / links there each week and let the discussions between subscribers commence in a more interactive, easy to access system. The Comments section of Zero Retries on Substack has proven problematic for a lot of folks who don’t want to “get involved” in Substack’s ecosystem for various reasons (and I don’t blame them). I also plan to offer “requests for comments” for upcoming articles in Zero Retries in which I invite folks to contribute ideas and background on subjects that I need help in understanding. Zero Retries can sometimes come across as a “one man show” but believe me, I lean heavily on advice and expertise of others when I’m trying to understand and explain a deeply technical subject on Zero Retries.

  • Kay Savetz K6KJN and I have decided to do a podcast called Store and Forward. We conspired that we can offer a unique combination of looking back at Amateur Radio (from the perspective of DLARC) - “Store” and the future of Amateur Radio (from the perspective of Zero Retries) - “Forward”. The prototype episode of Store and Forward is online in DLARC. Initially (Summer 2024) we’ll be recording biweekly. The longer term logistics - website, podcast feed, etc. will be worked out. Both K6KJN and I have busy summer plans (some intense travel ahead for K6KJN, as you’ll read) and I just have a lot of catching up to do in N8GNJ Labs to take advantage of the summer weather interlude between the Whatcom Winds / Monsoon Rains seasons. Thus the publication schedule of Store and Forward might be a little irregular initially.


Using DLARC, Amateur Radio Operators are Resurrecting Technical Ideas from the Past, Using 21st Century Tech

I recently wrote a brief note of thanks for the existence of DLARC within the Internet Archive to Brewster Kahle, Founder and Board Chair of Internet Archive:

I just wanted to drop a note to you and IA in general as a Thanks for creating and maintaining the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications within IA.

DLARC has proven to be an absolute godsend of archival information for Amateur Radio (despite the stubborn resistance of the ARRL… which I’m working on). One of the most valuable aspects of DLARC is reading about technologies and projects that were mere dreams or not-quite-successful decades ago that can be realized now with current technology such as cheap embedded processors and FPGAs and Software Defined Radio technology.

I use DLARC multiple times per week… and contribute to it regularly, working with Kay Savetz to periodically send in material from my Amateur Radio collection that DLARC doesn’t already have.

Kahle replied and wondered if my “dreams” perspective might be expanded into a post on the Internet Archive blog, and I agreed.

That article is now online - Using DLARC, Amateur Radio Operators are Resurrecting Technical Ideas from the Past, Using 21st Century Tech. A Thank You to Internet Archive’s Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications.

Excerpt:

One of my favorite ways to use the DLARC (nearly 120,000 items now, and still growing) is to re-explore ideas that were proposed or attempted in Ham Radio, but for various reasons, didn’t quite become mainstream. Typically, the technology of earlier eras simply wasn’t up to some proposed ideas. But, with the technology of the 2020s such as cheap, powerful computers and software defined radio technology, many old ideas can be reexamined with perhaps succeed in becoming mainstream now. The problem has been that much of the source material for such “reimagining” has been languishing in file cabinets or bookcases of Ham Radio Operators like me, with nowhere to go. With the grant, IA could hire a dedicated archivist and began receiving, scanning, hosting, and aggregating electronic versions of old Ham Radio material.

Kahle noticed the post, and commented:

You are most welcome– thanks to ARDC, DLARC has been a huge success for other reasons as well: a possible model for other communities.

Kay has made this a success, I believe, because he is both a knowledgeable ham community member, and embedded at the Internet Archive (he has the tech and social chops to get things through our internal processes).

This is a first for us– and hopefully a model for archives to come.

Thank you ARDC, Kay, and ham community.

I agree wholeheartedly - while ARDC provided the funding with a grant, and IA had the infrastructure to host DLARC… K6KJN has made DLARC a success.


Not Much Zero Retries Interesting Reported from HAM RADIO 2024

I’m surprised that not much that was Zero Retries Interesting was reported out of HAM RADIO 2024 which concluded 2024-06-30, at least that I’m aware of. No new Zero Retries Interesting products, or Zero Retries Interesting new vendors, etc. Admittedly I haven’t watched the walkthrough videos that have been posted (they’re queued up in a too-deep queue of videos to watch), but I would have thought that there would be some exciting developments reported. If I missed something, please Zero Retries readers, let me know so I can share it here in Zero Retries.


Another 21st Century Telecommunications Option for N8GNJ Labs?

Most of the summer, Northwest Washington where we live is blessed by a mild summer climate, so we mostly sleep with the windows open to the fresh cool air overnight. One morning last week we awoke to hearing some voices in a small group on the edge of our property. To my delight, the voices turned out to be a survey crew from Ziply Fiber who apparently is considering bringing in fiber to our neighborhood and down our private street.

In contrast, Comcast’s infrastructure in our neighborhood is solely serviced by “well aged coaxial cable” with a fiber / coax transition well outside the neighborhood. A neighbor was experiencing significant issues with their Comcast service and reported to me that Comcast would constantly play the “reset your router and in 10 minutes it should be OK” game, replacing the router, etc. - everything to forestall sending out a technician who discovered that a previous technician had disconnected the first neighbor’s coax to bring a new neighbor online whose house previously didn’t have Comcast service. Thus switching to Starlink for my household was a relief from the vagaries of Comcast “service” over “well aged coaxial cable”.

If Ziply Fiber does become available on my street (I’ve heard of Ziply not actually deploying fiber as promised), that’s going to be a tough decision not to opt for that, if for nothing else than greatly improved uplink speeds beyond what Starlink is capable of given that I eventually plan to do video production. But it’s possible Starlink might tinker with their service plans with a more affordable price than the current $120/month for unlimited usage. I’d happily accept a transfer cap for mostly standby (or solely Amateur Radio) use for a lower price such as the $30/month Starlink currently charges for use of the new Starlink Mini user terminal.


The Random Wire Newsletter (and now Podcasts!) - Zero Retries Interesting, and Recommended

I’ve recommended The Random Wire newsletter (and now, podcasts!) in Zero Retries and would like to do so again here. Tom Salzer KJ7T is doing a stellar job exploring various aspects of Amateur Radio that I simply don’t get around to, or have much depth to offer, here in Zero Retries. One example is KJ7T’s regular coverage of radio hotspots for Amateur Radio Over Internet such as AllStarLink, covered so well that instead of trying to cover that subject in Zero Retries2, I’ll defer to KJ7T’s much better knowledge of the subject, and his constant experimentation with different aspects of Amateur Radio Over Internet.

I’ve said before that I probably wouldn’t have started Zero Retries if the stuff I’m interested in was covered adequately in other Amateur Radio media. The Random Wire is an excellent example of exactly that - covering subjects I’m interested in so well that I can just read it (enjoyably) and learn from it instead of having to research it to write about it. I’ve also been enjoying KJ7T’s foray into podcasting, following his adventures with microphones, recording, etc. Given our geographic proximity, I hope to meet up with KJ7T face to face sometime this summer. I think that if you enjoy the subject material in Zero Retries, you’ll find ample Zero Retries Interesting material in The Random Wire and I recommend that all Zero Retries subscribers also subscribe to The Random Wire.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Image courtesy of Internet Archive / Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications

What’s New at Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications - July 2024

By Kay Savetz K6KJN

Greetings from DLARC World Headquarters, which has three big things going for it: a fast Internet connection, air conditioning, and cats to pet. In the past few weeks, I’ve added a wide variety of ham radio material to DLARC. Here’s a peek at some of it.

The DX Bulletin (TDXB) was written and published by Jim Cain, K1TN. He published 324 issues from 1979 to 1986. He scanned the entire run — about 1500 pages — years ago. The scans have been hosted by The Yasme Foundation, a non-profit that conducts scientific and educational projects related to amateur radio. Mr. Cain and Ward Silver of The Yasme Foundation agreed it would be a good idea to make the newsletters available at DLARC as well. Mr. Cain told me that in retrospect, the name The DX Bulletin was too generic — many other publications have had similar names over the years — and maybe he should have titled it “Jim Cain's Weekly DX Screed.” By any name, it’s a fascinating read and DLARC is better for its inclusion.

Cain is also the author of the book “YASME, The Danny Weil and Colvin Radio Expeditions” which is now downloadable from DLARC with his permission. From the back-of-book blurb: "This is the history of three travelers spanning the birth of YASME — the boat that carried young sailor Danny Weil on his first voyages beginning in 1954 — and the lives of famed ham radio DXpeditioners Lloyd and Iris Colvin.”

DLARC has added 217 issues of the “Blown Fuse” newsletter from the East Bay Amateur Radio Club out of El Cerrito, California. Some of them were PDFs on their web site. For the older issues that were only available on paper, the club lent us a hefty stack of newsletters to scan, some of which go all the way back to 1964. We’ve also added 113 issues of the Minnesota Amateur Radio Technical Society newsletter. The 12-year-old group is based in Minnetonka, MN.

Sometimes a simple newsletter donation turns into a whole little project. California Historical Radio Society donated, and we scanned, 35 issues of Spark Gap Times, which was the newsletter of the Old, Old Timer's Club. That organization started in 1947. At the time, the requirement for membership was proof of two-way communication by wireless 40 or more years prior to 1947. I can only assume that specific requirement was relaxed as the years passed.

The OOTC web site is gone now (replaced by a spammy ad for a sportsbook) and I guess that the organization is now defunct. The OOTC site’s last capture in the Wayback Machine was just this May. So I scoured the site in Wayback, found another 44 issues of Spark Gap Times, and added those to the collection too. Thanks to the California Historical Radio Society for the donation of those first 35 issues which started me down this rabbit hole.

Here’s a special treat for our esteemed editor, Steve Stroh: last year he donated three issues of the Texas Packet Radio Society “Quarterly Report” newsletter. TPRS was devoted to radio digital communications, and the creators of TexNet, a wireline/wireless hybrid networking project. Based on their site in The Wayback Machine, the group lasted from roughly 1996 to 2003ish. I scrounged 15 more newsletter issues from their Wayback’d web site and created the TPRS Quarterly Report newsletter collection. If you have more issues in any format, please let me know.

I was sorry to learn that Allen Katz K2UYH died in June. Katz was the publisher of 432 And Above EME News, and was a professor of electrical and computer engineering at The College of New Jersey. I am grateful that he gave permission to archive his newsletter in DLARC before he passed.

Somehow I’ve managed to write almost entirely about newsletters so far. Moving on to other topics.

DLARC has added all 99 episodes of the Ham Radio 360 podcast. This podcast ran from 2014-2018: it was a bi-weekly show created “for the new guy” hosted by Cale Nelson K4CDN. (Nelson recently launched a new podcast called PrepComms.)

Software Defined Radio Academy is an annual conference, since 2015, that covers all aspects of SDR. The hosts have done an admirable job of recording their conference’s presentations over the years, and now those talks are archived in DLARC.

Meanwhile, the Internet Archive’s scanning centers have been hard at work scanning thousands of magazines and books, which can be checked out using controlled digital lending in the DLARC Library. It would be folly to try to list them all, but I encourage you to browse around and see what’s new. Of particular note are many books and journals about microwave communications, which were a generous donation from the family of James Beyer W9ADJ, who was a specialist in that field.

If you’ll permit me a paragraph about a personal project that’s only tangentially ham radio related: I found, recovered and digitized 53 episodes of “The Famous Computer Cafe”, a radio show about home computers that was broadcast from 1983-1985. The hosts interviewed many of the big tech names of the day: Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Apple’s Bill Atkinson, Atari VP James Copland, author Timothy Leary, author Douglas Adams, and more. From the news segments to the commercials, the shows are a perfect time capsule of the world of home computers in that era. One of the interviewees is Steve Roberts, a ham radio operator. From 1983 to 1991, he explored the United States on a computerized, radio-equipped recumbent bicycle named BEHEMOTH.

Next week I’ll be leaving the cats and climate-controlled comfort of DLARC World Headquarters for Denver Colorado to retrieve pallets of material from the estate of Bob Cooper. Bob was an expert in satellite and cable TV communications, and publisher of Coops Satellite Digest. I already have a little start of a Bob Cooper collection in DLARC, but there’s sure to be much more in the coming months as we begin to process and digitize what I find in Denver.

Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications is funded by a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) to create a free digital library for the radio community, researchers, educators, and students. If you have questions about the project or material to contribute, contact me at kay@archive.org.

Kay Savetz, K6KJN
Internet Archive's Program Manager, Special Collections
DLARC want list: https://archive.org/details/dlarc-wantlist

Editor’s Note - K6KJN is too modest to mention this in this month’s column (which is intended to highlight new material in DLARC), but unlike DLARC, the work of digitizing the 53 episodes of “The Famous Computer Cafe” (and potentially additional episodes should they be located), is privately funded, with some reimbursement from a successful GoFundMe campaign (donations currently closed). There’s more detail about the rescue of TFCC there. Kudos to K6KJN for rescuing these treasures.


Bits Oughta Be Just Bits

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Some thoughts about the ideal interoperability of digital voice and data in Amateur Radio.

Digital repeaters are easier, and work better, than analog repeaters

I’m on an email list where the technical details of Amateur Radio repeaters are discussed… at times in excruciating technical detail. The discussion that inspired this article was about the minutiae required to keep a repeater signal and audio path absolutely “clean” for good retransmitted radio signal and good audio, including knowing about external factors that can influence the repeater’s signal quality - down into the weeds to the point of debating the relative merits of different types of coaxial cable connectors.

I’m not disparaging the concepts being discussed or the folks making offering the minutiae. But it struck me in reading the discussion that to a large extent, most of those details largely become moot if the repeater was operating as a digital system rather than analog (FM).

Disclaimer - Yes, I am acutely aware that one cannot entirely ignore the analog aspects of radio transmission. While digital systems can overcome some aspects of interference, or noise, or other radio issues… “making it digital” is certainly not a “cure all” for significant radio system issues such as major antenna and feedline issues.

In my highly inexpert opinion, almost all of the issues of the discussion I was following would simply not be an issue if that system were digital, largely because of the presence of Forward Error Correction (FEC) in modern digital radio systems. Minor noise issues on analog systems that are annoying to the point of the system being unusable (un-listenable) are simply not an issue with digital systems.

One of the most elegant digital techniques I know for Amateur Radio digital repeaters is the idea of receiving a digital signal and then applying bit regeneration at the repeater. which permits the transmitted signal from the repeater to be perfect, even if the signal received at the repeater wasn’t perfect. (Yes, I understand that there’s a threshold beyond which the FEC cannot help.) I featured an excellent article about bit regeneration in Zero Retries 0147 - Advantages of a Bit-Regenerating Repeater for Local Area Networks that explains the concept well, despite predating the now-common use of FEC.

But beyond the “digital fixes analog issues” factors, digital radio systems offer the (theoretical) advantage of being able to do data in addition to digital voice.

Bits Are Bits - once it’s digital, the bits should be agnostic.

Think about how different types of data is handled by TCP/IP and by extension, the Internet. We take it for granted that the same high speed TCP/IP connection into our homes, offices, and shacks can easily handle realtime voice (and video) bits, recorded voice (and video) bits, email bits, file download bits, photo bits, realtime telemetry bits, etc. That’s because TCP/IP generally3 treats all bits the same. It doesn’t care what the bits are supposed to be part of in the end, it just moves the bits from point A to Point B.

In Amateur Radio, we haven’t done voice / data mixing and matching particularly well to date. When there is a data capability in an Amateur Radio digital voice system, to date, data has been an afterthought. In the oldest Amateur Radio digital voice system - D-Star, there is a 900 bps data stream accompanying the (3600 bps) digital voice stream. Roughly two decades after its introduction, Icom quietly slipstreamed “DV Fast Data” mode into some radios4 which allows the digital voice stream to also be used for data. System Fusion’s data capabilities are “locked” to only support transport of images and some telemetry data such as APRS. DMR and P25 have data capability in their respective system and protocol specifications. In those systems, digital voice interoperability was extensively tested and required, but data capabilities were left to individual vendors such as Motorola and Hytera to implement a usable data option.

This is somewhat understandable - Amateur Radio has been doing voice over radio for about a century now, and data for nearly as long (Radio TeleTYpe - RTTY was used extensively in World War II). But with the technology of the 2020s and beyond, we can do better, and I posit we should do better. Amateur Radio shouldn’t remain stuck in a frame of reference from the 1960s that “repeaters are for voice”5.

Sidenote - Repeaters are for voice, Digipeaters are for data is a specious premise.

There is a “blind spot” with many Amateur Radio Operators that think that because data systems like packet radio can use digipeating to extend range, that data systems should use digipeating, and not use (simultaneous receive / transmit) repeaters to extend range of data systems.

Digipeaters can work well if they are very lightly loaded, but if there is significant usage of a digipeater, it begins to be subject to Hidden Transmitter Syndrome (Wikipedia calls this issue Hidden Node Problem).

A simple thought experiment can demonstrate what a specious premise this is. There have been “simplex voice repeaters” for decades, ever since we’ve had microprocessors that can record a transmission, and replay it back onto the same channel. It’s a poor experience at best, obvious because we can hear the poor result. No one likes using a simplex voice repeater, and will go to the trouble and expense to create a full duplex repeater instead. Digipeaters for data are no different in suffering from the poor effects of receive / buffer / retransmit on a simplex channel. It’s just that with data, the effects are hidden by the data devices.

We’re getting a bit better about making data equivalent to voice in Amateur Radio. As discussed in Zero Retries 0159 - M17 Data Modes, M17 can do both voice and data within the M17 protocol / systems. FreeDV is a digital voice mode for HF communications, and the modem for dealing with HF conditions is so good that there’s now work underway to use the FreeDV modem for data - FreeDATA. I’m not aware that FreeDV and FreeDATA are going to be made interoperable - send voice, or send data, interchangeably from the same app / system, but in my opinion, that should be a goal.

But the most recent such development was (welcome!) recent news from Open Research Institute about their ongoing project called Opulent Voice (emphasis mine):

Opulent Voice Flying High

Opulent Voice is an open source high bitrate digital voice (and data) protocol. It’s what we are using for our native digital uplink protocol for ORI’s broadband microwave digital satellite transponder project. Opulent Voice has excellent voice quality, putting it in a completely different category than low bitrate digital communications products such as D-Star, Yaesu System Fusion, and DMR. Opulent Voice can be used on the 70 cm band and above.

Opulent voice switches between high resolution voice and data without requiring the operator to switch to a separate packet mode. Opulent voice also handles keyboard chat and digital file transmission. Seamless integration of different data types, using modern digital communication techniques, differentiates Opulent Voice from any other amateur radio protocol.

(It’s not explained why ORI says Opulent Voice can only be used on “70 cm band and above”, possibly because the US FCC currently applies too-restrictive limits on bandwidth and data rates on VHF / UHF bands below 70 cm. Such limitations are generally not an issue outside the US, and hopefully that issue will be fixed in the US soon.)

Yes! YES!! YES!!! Someone finally gets this fundamental issue of being able to seamlessly mix digital voice and data, designed in from the beginning!!! Kudos to Open Research Institute for sponsoring this project, and to the developers who have pulled this off! I have previously not studied Opulent Voice very deeply because I was unaware of the data capability, only that it was higher quality digital voice system for Amateur Radio. But now, I will investigate Opulent Voice more deeply.

Also, it’s probably kind of assumed / understood that Opulent Voice is open source… from the Open Research Institute… but in Opulent Voice, like M17 / FreeDV / Codec 2, there’s no dependence / usage on a proprietary CODEC (chip) as there is with DMR, D-Star, System Fusion, etc. That factor is a third significant differentiation, beyond high quality voice and integrated data capability, of Opulent Voice from DMR, D-Star, SF, etc.

Gosh I look forward to sitting down at my Amateur Radio station, tuned to the local repeater, seeing a dashboard of who was recently on the repeater realtime… and reading my emails and bulletins that have queued up waiting for me… all on the same system! That will be a dream, realized.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

RFBitBanger Batch 2 Kits Available

Kits are available at our eBay store at this link https://www.ebay.com/itm/364783754396

Be a part of the future with a prototype Batch 2 kit build of the RFBitBanger, a low-power high-frequency digital radio by Dr. Daniel Marks KW4TI. Presented by Open Research Institute, this kit is designed to produce 4 watts of power and opens up a new digital protocol called SCAMP.

SCAMP Is now available in FLDigi!

SCAMP is a new protocol that allows keyboard-to-keyboard contacts with a digital protocol that has excellent connection performance. See Dr. Marks presentation [link added to original text] about RFBitBanger at QSO Today Academy in September 2023 to learn more about SCAMP and the RFBitBanger project.

Open Research Institute has been busy lately, between Opulent Voice and now making RFBitBanger widely available… with the new SCAMP data mode! And as you’ll read at the link, a significant present at DEFCON32.


Project Yamhill Progress Continues

The biggest news by far is that I finally was able to submit my large PCB order for manufacturing. It was put off a lot longer than I was hoping for, because I kept finding small changes that I needed to make. However, I didn’t want to fall into the trap of analysis paralysis, so I had to commit to getting it pushed to manufacturing in order to not completely lose momentum.

I’ve been following Jason Milldrum NT7S’ progress on this ambitious project of a new low power HF radio, completely from scratch, fascinated by the detailed explanations of his design choices and the results (and sometimes, non-results) of his development process. I’m learning a lot from the insights into his development process that other developers don’t offer - NT7S is a great writer. NT7S’ newsletter Applied Ethics is Zero Retries Interesting, and recommended!


THE WORLD OF FREE PACKET SOFTWARE IN AMSTERDAM

This is an impressive archival collection of packet radio software, and some other categories. They’ve done a great job of archiving and making available a lot of historical (and often still relevant) Amateur Radio data communications software. I haven’t explored much of what they offer yet, but doing so is yet another thing that’s in my queue.


Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Small Vendors

I decided this was needed so as I develop the archives of Zero Retries, and new issues, I had a single repository to mention all the interesting Zero Retries Interesting hardware products and projects I discover and consider worth mentioning. It’s certainly not complete (done), but it is usable so I decided to mention it this week.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

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In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-07-12

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

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Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.


Footnotes for this Issue

1

I did a brief web search for this story but didn’t find any references. This story is not related to Job’s famous commencement speech about “looking back and connecting the dots”.

2

AllStarLink definitely falls within the scope of Zero Retries Interesting subjects… but there are so many such subjects, and KJ7T covers it so well.

3

Yes, there are a few exceptions of special handling of different types of data within TCP/IP such as IP Multicast. And there are also Quality of Service (QOS) mechanisms that can be used.

4

In the linked article, radios supporting DV Fast Data include the ID-52A/E, IC-705, and IC-9700, and hopefully VHF / UHF radios introduced since those radios such as the IC-905.

5

Again, there are exceptions - there have been RTTY repeaters, and some data repeaters such as the Puget Sound Amateur Radio TCP/IP Network, Icom D-Star DD mode data repeaters (many still active), and even 56 kbps data repeaters based on the WA4DSY 56k modem.

Before yesterdayMain stream

Zero Retries 0159

5 July 2024 at 23:15

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1800+ subscribers. Radios are computers - with antennas!

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 35 for becoming a new Annual Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Approximately one year ago, at the request of a few dedicated readers who wanted to support Zero Retries financially, I activated payment options for Zero Retries. I include this in every issue of Zero Retries at the “ending boilerplate”:

If you’d like to financially support Zero Retries, becoming a paid subscriber is greatly appreciated and helps offset expenses incurred in publishing Zero Retries. Paid subscriptions for Zero Retries are entirely optional, as explained in this special issue of ZR:
Zero Retries Administrivia - Activating Payment Options.

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I am especially indebted to K3FZT for a formative conversation I had with him at Hamvention 2022 and his ongoing support and feedback on Zero Retries.

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.

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Major Conference Countdowns

See the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences for other Zero Retries Interesting events.


We’re almost at the three year anniversary of Zero Retries - the 2nd Friday of July, and I’ll have some reminiscing to do next week in Zero Retries 0160, with the start of Zero Retries’ fourth year of publication.

But this has been a busy week on the personal / home front, with some travel and the US Independence Day holiday, thus I’m falling back on a favorite quote of mine from the television series Stargate SG-1, “The Serpent’s Lair”, by Col. Jack O’Neill. The context is that his team is on the cusp of beginning a “big project”.:

Well, I suppose now is the time for me to say something profound.

[long pause]

Nothing comes to mind. Let's do it.

And today a trusted advisor to Zero Retries offered this advice:

If it gets to be a grind - might already be - take 2 weeks off. Nobody'd mind. Gotta keep yourself happy.

While I’d get a bit itchy if I didn’t put out an issue of Zero Retries each week, Thank You for that grace, trusted advisor!

So please enjoy this “lite” version of Zero Retries with no heavy reading, only ZR > BEACON items.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Looking for HF-forwarding packet nodes to extend RF-only network in USA

Jeff Mein KP3FT on Facebook Packet radio systems and information:

We're using VARA HF and ARDOP between NVIS-range stations. The conventional 300-baud AFSK mode isn't very good for HF links, which is why we're using VARA and ARDOP. Currently we have from NY to Virginia linked. NVIS range preferred for 24/7 links. We want to keep extending to every direction (except eastward over the ocean obviously). Map: https://www.qsl.net/swlkp3/Packet/(X)Net/NEnetwork6.png There's a Groups.io page dedicated to RF forwarding here: https://groups.io/g/Packet-Radio-RF-Forwarding The most common setup is a packet node using BPQ with a VARA HF port or ARDOP, with BBS mail forwarding set up to forward to a partner BBS using one of those modes. Other modes can be used as well, but VARA HF is easily the best performer (except probably the very expensive PACTOR mode).
Thanks, 73 Jeff KP3FT

In the early to middle stages of the “Packet Radio Revolution”, forwarding of Packet Radio Bulletin Board System (PBBS) traffic via HF was common… but problematic as the 300 baud Audio Frequency Shift Keying (AFSK) modulation and the AX.25 protocol was barely up to the task of getting messages back and forth over noisy, erratic HF frequencies. A single bit error in a packet would require resending the entire packet. In fact, it’s surprising this system worked at all. When access to the Internet became available for the general public, much of the PBBS traffic moved to the Internet… until PBBS usage fell to the point where PBBS sysops didn’t feel it was worth continuing to keep a PBBS online. But PBBS’ are seeing a resurgence, and we now have VARA HF which, in a phrase, “just works”, because it’s robust, adaptive, and offers higher data rates. For those that prefer not to use VARA HF, Amateur Radio Digital Open Protocol (ARDOP) is also an option. It’s notable that this network uses Near Vertical Incidence Skywave (NVIS) techniques to “restrict” the area covered to “regional” versus “worldwide” propagation. The G8BPQ BBS package has good integration with both VARA HF and ARDOP. Kudos to KP3FT and friends for getting the radio back into Amateur Radio Networking.


HamCon:Zion 2024 Conference - 2024-07-12 and 13 in St. George, Utah

Bill Buhler AF7SJ via email:

The really cool part is that there are a lot of presentations that I believe will have a high level of appeal to Zero Retries readers:

  • Digital Communications by "Bucky" Buckwalter W0SUN

  • Mesh Networks by Frank Kostelac N7ZEV

  • Winlink by Gary Hutton KE7UIA

  • Ham Radio Homebrew by James Kretzschmar AE7AZ

  • Using Attenuators by myself, Bill Buhler AF7SJ (I believe a vital part of good digital experimentation / station calibration).

  • Build the Foundation & They Will Come by David Becar KI6OSS might be

    interesting.

  • AI and Machine Learning in Ham Radio by Michelle Thompson W5NYV

  • Arduino University Workshop by Jeff Anderson (requires additional fee and pre-registration)

  • #APRSTHURSDAY by Mike DiTurno KC8OWL

  • Starlink by Jeff Baxter KE7DYR

  • Amateur Satellites by Ednaf Buckley N6UTC/MW1BQO & Patrick Stoddard WD9EWK / VA7E

There are several other presentation on things like the Icom 905, Yeasu System Fusion, and other more traditional ham radio topics.

For those not in the US, “Zion” refers to the nearby Zion National Park. Judging solely by the website, there seems to be an unusually high level of energy to HamCon:Zion! I agree with AF7SJ about a number of Zero Retries Interesting seminars, to which I would add Icom 905 by Scott Honaker - N7SS - Icom. This is the first time I’ve seen a seminar devoted to this radio; its unique capabilities are worth devoting a seminar session to. Had I known about this conference earlier, I might have made plans to travel and attend - the route from Bellingham to St. George looks like an interesting two-day drive. This conference is now on the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.

If Zero Retries readers are aware of other “general” Amateur Radio conferences with a “reasonable number” of Zero Retries Interesting presentations, please let me know about them. (“Reasonable number” is entirely subjective, at your discretion from your reading of what subjects receive coverage in Zero Retries.)


New AREDN Production Release Available - 3.24.6.0

AREDN production software version 3.24.6.0 is now available, with many new features and enhancements.   Besides a fix for an RF link issue that snuck past beta testing release 3.24.4.0, this release contains these fixes and enhancements:

Enhancements

  • Added MTR support via installable package (mtr-nojson).

  • Improved iPerf3 service to provide data line by line rather than at the end.

  • Now use the closest supernode rather than first discovered supernode.

  • Made LQM+OLSRD improvements where weak connections are detected.

  • Now detect "leaf" nodes and prevent them being blocked.

New Device Support

  • Antenna: Mikrotik 30 dBi 5° Dish

  • Antenna: airMAX 2.4 GHz, 24 dBi 6.6° RocketDish

  • Antenna: airMAX 3 GHz, 26 dBi 7° RocketDish

  • Antenna: airMAX 3 GHz, 18 dBi, 120° Sector

  • Antenna: airMAX 3 GHz, 12 dBi Omni

  • Antenna: airMAX 5 GHz, 30 dBi 5.8° RocketDish Light Weight

  • Antenna: Mikrotik 15 dBi 120° Sector

  • Antenna: Mikrotik 19 dBi 120° Sector

  • Antenna: Mikrotik 30 dBi 5° Dish (PA)

Plus numerous fixes and improvements. The energy and continuous improvement of the AREDN development team is really impressive. They continually demonstrate technological innovation within Amateur Radio!

If you want to learn about AREDN and experiment with (very local) Amateur Radio microwave networking, the easiest (in my opinion) and least expensive way to do so is with the GL-iNet products that are supported by AREDN.


2024 ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC) Sept. 20-21, Knoxville, Tennessee

I saw this terse mention of this conference only in passing in the TAPR website RSS feed. “In association with GRCon24” refers to GNU Radio Conference 2024.

Editorial - I do wish TAPR would have the courage to drop the reference to ARRL from this conference. All management, scheduling, financial commitments, etc. are solely done by TAPR; ARRL has had nearly nothing to do with this conference for decades now other than some history, passive mentions of it in their publications, and “printing” the conference Proceedings of which I’m probably one of a dozen that actually purchase them.


2024 AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting – October 25th thru 27th, 2024

Doubletree by Hilton Tampa Rocky Point Waterfront
3050 N Rocky Point Drive West
Tampa, FL 33607

https://www.amsat.org/

I saw this terse mention of this conference in passing in the AMSAT News Service 182. Despite the inclusion of the AMSAT website link, at the moment there is no information about this conference available there (but ample details about the 2023 conference).


Heathkit was Acquired… And Relocated… and No One Noticed

I’ve been mildly curious about Heathkit since its “revival” early in the past decade and the “revival owners” idiosyncratic mysteriousness about not revealing the owners and other personnel of the company. Not much seems to change with “New Heathkit”, so every few years I browse around to see if there are any new developments beyond their two primary products, a clock and an AM broadcast receiver. This year’s browsing resulted in some actual news - from a LinkedIn post for Heathkit nearly a year ago:

Kirkwall is pleased to announce its acquisition of Heath Company. Following the acquisition, William Cromarty will serve as Chief Executive Officer of both companies and will oversee a relocation of manufacturing operations to North Dakota as part of a planned expansion.

There is no mention of this acquisition (or relocation of facilities) on the Heathkit website or the Heathkit page on Facebook (last post 2020-01-01).

In the time since this announcement, this statement doesn’t appear to have been realized:

This expansion of operations in North Dakota will build on the impressive work of the Heath team in reestablishing the company as the premier educational electronics kit manufacturer, and allow our team to scale operations in preparation for new product launches.

I understand that all press releases are intended to be a bit over-the-top to get noticed, but… premier educational electronics kit manufacturer??? That was true in Heathkit’s prime, but that statement is really over-the-top considering New Heathkit’s very modest product line compared to, for example, the electronic kits available from Velleman or Adafruit. But, I guess the press release served its purpose - it did get this mention.


M17 Experimental Authentication Signatures

The goal of the M17 Project is to create a digital voice / messaging / telemetry / data system for Amateur Radio VHF / UHF that does not use DVSI’s proprietary digital voice CODEC. In mid-2024, “the pieces are in place” (in my opinion) that M17 can actually be used as a radio system. Documenting the usability of M17 in real world usage, such as this item and the following two items, is an ongoing project here in Zero Retries.

Apologies for how “fuzzy” this item is, but in the past couple of weeks I saw mention by Wojciech Kaczmarski SP5WWP that he was experimenting with adding authentication signatures to M17 transmissions.

Unfortunately, I cannot find the actual statement from SP5WWP (he posts his ideas in a variety of places). I recorded this link, but don’t see any detail there to support the above statement.

Update - Found it (post publication) - M17 Project on Mastodon:

Finally some good news regarding digital signatures. I've been experimenting with ST's CMOX library and just got 160-bit ECDSA to run on the Module17. It takes around 8.25 ms to sign a 16-byte M17 voice stream digest. The signature can be appended to the voice stream. The curve used is Brainpool P-160 R1, with secp256r1 signing takes a tad under 15 ms.
^SP5WWP

In the future, users might be able to generate ECDSA key pairs and use the private key for M17 stream signing. Then, by sharing the public component, allow the rest to perform identity checks. No more impersonation.

Our protocol implementation has just been updated with experimental ECDSA signature support based on the secp256r1 curve. No signature verification has been added yet.
https://github.com/M17-Project/M17_Implementations/tree/auth
^SP5WWP

Implementing digital signatures in M17 - part 2. Looks like both encoder and decoder work together and the latter is able to verify stream signatures now.
^SP5WWP
GitHub (`auth` and `crypto` branches are the most interesting):
https://github.com/M17-Project/M17_Implementations

I think the idea is that in addition to the digitized voice or data and overhead data, an authenticated M17 transmission would interleave the data (or perhaps a separate payload) interleaved private key that can be authenticated with checking it against a person’s public key. This is a good example of the nature of an Open Source system, and the ability to extend it to experiment with new ideas that aren’t practical with “hardcoded” and commercially produced radios.

Update - (post publication) email from SP5WWP:

[Your description is correct.] The signature occupies 4 last data frames of the stream. It is generated after the data transmission has finished. When there's no more user data to transmit, a hash based on all the contents is calculated. That hash value is then signed with the user's private key. The assumption here is that there would be a central, trusted public key directory (a database with callsign-key pairs). That would ideally be run by IARU or some other international organization. I'm aware that IARU does not have enough human resources to run this, tho.

Key pair generation is trivial (under Linux CLI, it's a one-liner). An experimental (but already fully-functional, even with strong encryption) implementation is already available in our "M17_Implementations" repository ("main" branch).


Connect Systems M17 Project Status 2024-07-04

“Ongoing” communications like this are only accessible from signing up for the Connect Systems email list - there’s no web-based archive. Connect Systems is developing a pair of portable Amateur Radio units that will feature a native M17 mode - no reprogramming or modification needed. To my knowledge, these radios will be the first to feature a native M17 mode, and are hoped to be available in Summer, 2024.

Excerpt:

There is something else to consider. If I buy the AnyTone, I just give them money and I get the radio With the M17 design, the company is paying for the development to implement the protocol in our radio. Then we will support for the CS7000 M17 PLUS for the development and implementation of the other protocols such as Fusion and DSTAR.

Obviously the CS7000 M17 is costing us a lot more to buy but there is a reason. The CS7000 M17 is based on a commercial radio and the receiver is a double conversion superhet design with front end varactor tuning. That compares with the AnyTone which uses a single chip direct conversion receiver. The radio is also rated at IP-67 which means you can swim with it and not destroy it.

2. What is the status of your work and was is an approximately schedule for you to complete this part of the project.

The radio transmits and receives M17 without modulation or demodulation issues. I'm currently working on the radio driver in order to properly set up the missing parts, that are the bias voltage for the input filter and RF PA and some HR_C6000 configurations. It also seems that there is a bug somewhere that causes the radio to sometimes transmit only a carrier, but I didn't figure out yet where the problem is. I also brought up the driver to use the HR_C6000 as the audio DAC for the speaker, it needs some integration and final touches. The plan is to have a first alpha version of the firmware, with working M17 but still without settings' persistence, within two weeks: it all depends on how much time it's going to take working on the radio part, which implies a lot of reverse engineering of the CoValue firmware (and this takes really a lot of time). After this, I'll move on implementing the persistence, codeplug system and the remaining parts.


M17 Data Modes

I have not been able to be continuously engaged with the m17-users email list that I created, but my co-conspirators there have been keeping things interesting, such as this interesting post by Tony Langdon:

M17 uses 4FSK modulation at 4800 baud (9600 bps). Last I knew, there were 3 modes defined:

  • Full rate voice (Codec2 3200). This is currently by far the most dominant format. However there’s still room for some ancillary data like GNSS position. I believe this is a streaming mode.

  • Half rate mixed voice/data (Codec2 1600 plus a data channel). Kind of like D-STAR’s original mode. I’m not sure if this one is still officially defined.

  • Packet mode. This is M17’s data only mode.

Another interesting fact is M17 over KISS has been defined, which allows M17 frames to be sent to a TNC and transmitted. Obviously the TNC has to support 4FSK for the resulting transmission to actually be M17. The TNC4 is able to do this.

It’s also possible to use packet mode to run AX.25 over M17.

This… is really cool. M17’s data capabilities are something that I intend to dive deeply into. My thanks to Tony for explaining this so clearly - in my previous readings of the M17 Specification, I had not been able to find that level of detail / explanation about doing data over M17.


Arduino Digital Transceiver (ADX) Buildathon

Email from Clifford Heath VK2CLF:

You asked for Australian info. Manly Warringah Radio Society (VK2MB) is building the ADX (Arduino Digital Transceiver) and today was a big build day with the first units on-air. It's all documented on the club website:

Image courtesy of the Manly-Warringah Radio Society

It all started with very good lecture by Richard Hinsley VK2ARH/W5ARH on the ADX (the Arduino Digital Transceiver) in April 2024 followed by an email to all from Michael VK2MDP asking around about interest for a club buildathon, very quickly the list of interested members grew to 28 people wishing to grab a kit, many to attend the 2 buildathon sessions, others either not local, not available or just wanted the challenge to try it on their own.

The ADX Buildathon workshop dates were:

  • Wed 26-Jun-2024 – 7:30pm to 9:30pm Winding toroids for the low pass filters.

  • Sat 29-Jun-2024 – 9:00am to 5pm ADX Build and Testing … and mandatory BBQ.

This buildathon of the ADX (link, I think…) by the Manly-Warringah Radio Society (Terrey Hills Allambie Heights, New South Wales, Australia) is well-documented with many photographs of folks obviously having a good time with their builds, elbow to elbow.


TX Factor - Episode 31 (TXF031) - Bluetooth Radio and QO-100 Ground Station

Email from Zero Retries Pseudostaffer Jeff Davis KE9V:

I was just watching the latest edition of TX-Factor that was out new yesterday (TXF031). It includes the 2nd half of the QO-100 groundstation, but perhaps even more ZR relevant was as review of the new Anytone BT01 bluetooth “microphone” for the Anytone 578 DMR transceiver. The video can explain much better than I can type it up but basically, it's a useful accessory that permits the mobile style radio to have remote access (via BT) which works well since that transceiver doesn't have a detachable head.

I can see where this would be very useful and I imagine a lot of ZR readers are into DMR.

I jumped into this a video on KE9V’s recommendation and it’s pretty engaging. The Anytone BT-01 is a pretty cool item, which I first wrote about in Zero Retries 0065. It’s just one of several Bluetooth “remotes” for Amateur Radio units, and it would be cool if someone was able to reverse engineer the Bluetooth protocol and create an open source equivalent. Also, the Anytone 578 is also capable of FM, so if the BT-01 is a major usability improvement, and you don’t have any DMR repeaters in range (or don’t care for DMR operation), it might still be worth investing in an Anytone 578. The last part of the video is also pretty engaging, operating on the QO-100 geostationary Amateur Radio payload accessible from most of the Eastern Hemisphere using the DXPatrol Full Duplex Groundstation V2.0.


ELEKITSORPARTS - the Most Zero Retries Interesting Amateur Radio Retailer

A correspondent [in the US] remarked recently:

Sometimes I wish I lived in Europe ... everything good in the ham radio world is “over” there now, not here.

I replied with a link to ELEKITSORPARTS, which I’ve been a fan of since they became the first to offer a plug and play New Packet Radio unit. Their unique product mix for Amateur Radio exemplifies what my correspondent was saying. I have no idea where ELEKITSORPARTS is located in Europe; I’ve never been able to find a clue on their website.

ELEKITSORPARTS keeps featuring new Zero Retries Interesting units, most recently the New digiPi HAT. Just as an example, here are some Zero Retries Interesting radio options:

ELEKITSORPARTS is pretty close to my ideal of a 21st century Amateur Radio retailer. If we could combine that with a Raspberry Pi retailer for one shop stopping for computer and radio hardware… that would be fantastic.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT (Renewed 2024)

    Founding Member 0002 - Chris Osburn KD7DVD (Renewed 2024)
    Founding Member 0003 - Don Rotolo N2IRZ (Renewed 2024)

    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
    Founding Member 0005 - Ben Kuhn KU0HN
    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
    Founding Member 0008 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 14
    Founding Member 0009 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 19

  • Numerous Annual and Monthly subscribers who also generously support Zero Retries financially!

Want to Support Zero Retries?

  • The most effective way to support Zero Retries is to simply mention Zero Retries to your co-conspirators that are also interested in knowing more about technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio and encourage them to become a fellow subscriber.

  • One particularly effective method of promoting Zero Retries is to add a mention of Zero Retries to your QRZ page (or other web presence) and include a link:

    https://www.zeroretries.org

  • If you’d like to financially support Zero Retries, becoming a paid subscriber is greatly appreciated and helps offset expenses incurred in publishing Zero Retries. Paid subscriptions for Zero Retries are entirely optional, as explained in this special issue of ZR:
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Email issues of Zero Retries are “instrumented” by Substack to gather basic statistics about opens, clicking links, etc.

More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-07-05

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

If you’d like to republish an article in this issue for other uses, just ask.

All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.


Zero Retries 0158

28 June 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1800+ subscribers. Radios are computers - with antennas!

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Rick Gilmore W3TM for becoming an Annual Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week! He included this nice message:

I learn something new in every post. And learning is what this grand hobby is about, IMHO.

My thanks to Eric Stammers M0REQ for becoming an Annual Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 34 for becoming an Annual Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries!


Major Conference Countdowns

  • HAM RADIO 2024 in Friedrichshafen, Germany on 2024-06-28 thru 30 - this weekend. I’ve received some hints that there will be some interesting projects shown there. Zero Retries readers that will be attending HAM RADIO 2024, please provide some reports of Zero Retries Interesting projects and products.

  • JARL Ham Fair 2024 in Tokyo, Japan on 2024-08-24 and 25, in 8 weeks!

See the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences for other such events.


Zero Retries Correspondents Wanted - Australia, Brazil, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, etc.

Of necessity, most of what I report as Zero Retries Interesting here in Zero Retries is US-centric, with occasional contributions from Zero Retries readers, and occasional stories about ZRI developments in Europe (such as QO-100) and Japan. I’d really like to cover more frequently the Zero Retries Interesting developments occurring in countries with active Amateur Radio technical activities - data communications, satellite / space, creation of interesting, specialized Amateur Radio hardware, etc.

I’m not asking for folks to write an article. While I feature co-authors whenever I’m offered articles, I understand that writing an article is daunting to most folks in this era. The more usual circumstance these days is for folks to get in touch with me and point out something that’s Zero Retries Interesting. I take it from there, with credit to the correspondent (if they want). To keep Zero Retries interesting and relevant, I need folks like you Zero Retries readers to tell me what’s going on - point me to local clubs doing Zero Retries Interesting things, data networks, technical activities, etc.

Please don’t take offense if I don’t feature your info (there are times when there are just too many items to include), or that I’ve previously mentioned your info in a previous issue of Zero Retries. It’s better to be over-informed than under-informed. If I really miss something significant, please remind me.

The countries listed in the headline are my biggest “mystery countries” at the moment, with practically no visibility about Zero Retries Interesting Amateur Radio activities there.

I hope Zero Retries readers can help. If I get at least a few volunteers, I’ll set up an email list for “Zero Retries Contributors” where we can be in touch with each other instead of purely private correspondence with me (though that is, of course, an option if you’d prefer).


Google NotebookLM

Speaking of “previously mentioned your info in a previous issue of Zero Retries”, there are times that I forget what I’ve covered. It’s also painful at times to find when I’ve mentioned something in a previous issue of Zero Retries. Substack’s search tool has become ineffective because it now defaults to also searching other Substack publications… and items in Zero Retries are already obscure and hard to search for.

But citing previous articles is a significant part of Zero Retries and with three years of weekly issues, it’s getting ponderous to do manual searches. To help with that I’ve experimented with pouring a subset of text versions of Zero Retries into a single file so I can do faster searches. That didn’t go well.

But a fellow writer, of much longer standing and much greater stature than I experienced the same frustrations, and his public plaints on the matter were heard. A few years ago Steven Johnson was invited to join the team that created Google’s new NotebookLM. That sounds like that’s exactly the tool that I’ve been hoping for. My “Zero Retries Notebook” in Notebook LM will be restricted entirely to the content I put into each notebook. All I have to do is to finish exporting all three years of Zero Retries into PDF versions, which unfortunately is a semi-manual process because of the odd ways Substack creates its web pages, I usually have to fuss with the creation of the PDF to get it to turn our right. If I “respected” Substack’s warnings about “too large for email” then I could have shortcut this process by exporting just the email versions of Zero Retries, but oh well.

I’ve become wary of investing my efforts in Google projects… because Google has, in my opinion (and others) become actively predatory, and because Google has become infamous for its many Killed by Google projects. But I haven’t seen a better alternative than NotebookLM for my specific requirements for Zero Retries, and Johnson is a trusted name in non-fiction writing and he’s putting his name behind NotebookLM. Plus, having created the PDF library, my data will be secure and under my control, and it’s all public anyway, in the likely event that Google decides to “overshare” my Zero Retries Notebook in .

With those factors, a Zero Retries NotebookLM seems worth a try. A bonus will be that I can do limited sharing of the Zero Retries NotebookLM, and since the sharing is limited, that may end up being a perk of Zero Retries paid subscribers.

Just to stretch your imagination a bit, NotebookLM can be used with any collection of PDFs. Given that 73 Magazine is already in PDF form, that might be my next NotebookLM project.


Guilty of Optimism

As I put the finishing touches on this issue Friday morning, I had an email exchange about politics with an old friend, and they accused me of optimism (as in the opposite of realism)… and I replied that I wear the epithet of “Optimist” with pride.

It’s easy to be pessimistic about the future of Amateur Radio. It’s an activity that was begun in the early years of the previous century and in this modern society of wristwatches having their own cellular radios, light bulbs having a TCP/IP stack and a Wi-Fi radio, and mobile phones now having direct-to-satellite connectivity… it’s easy to think of Amateur Radio as an anachronism. The “realistic” point of view about Amateur Radio is that it is inevitably declining - in licensees, in relevance to society, in innovation, etc.

But from my “optimism” perspective, I believe that Amateur Radio has a role to play in the 21st century as our society has transitioned wholly to radio technology for the last miles, last few feet, and last few inches our electronic communications. Just as the previous century required vast numbers of those skilled in working with internal combustion engines, this century will require vast numbers of those who understand radio technology beyond the simple act of plugging in a Wi-Fi access point or using a mobile phone.

Amateur Radio is a perfect vehicle for developing such knowledge and skills and Zero Retries is a testament to that perspective and my optimism about Amateur Radio.


Happy Independence Day

To Zero Retries readers in the US, Happy Independence Day this coming Thursday. Despite our vast shortcomings as a nation and as a people, we continue to struggle to continually create a “more perfect union” for 248 years now. Despite sometimes vastly different perspectives between us, we collectively continue to try to make ourselves better as a nation and as a people. For my part, I consider myself blessed beyond all reason to have been born in the US and thus a US citizen with no effort on my part. Many wonderful friends of mine were not similarly blessed. That they chose to work very hard and sacrifice much to become citizens of this incredibly imperfect nation tells me that the US is at least doing some things right.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Two Projects for Making Amateur Radio Open Source Software Easier to Find and Use

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

One of the most significant issues in Open Source development in Amateur Radio is the creation of multiple, sometimes incompatible implementations of various applications or functions that are made available as open source software (or hardware) … somewhere… (often somewhere obscure, such as a personal blog or website). Various implementations of the AX.25 stack for use with Linux comes readily to mind as an example of this issue. Two recent projects should start helping to make various Open Source Software much more visible so that there is less “reinvention” needed, and thus more (defacto) standardization and interoperability.

Radio Catalog: Ham Radio Software Preservation and Restoration

Ham software is becoming increasingly hard to find. Decades worth of development person-years are at risk of being lost.

I've noticed a lack of best practices for managing the open source software projects that many hams have built and rely on over the past couple decades. It's understandable given that these were often hobby projects, but it would be a shame to lose some of the great contributions to our community. As many of these hams are getting older or become silent keys it becomes increasingly difficult to locate many of the original source files for these projects. This is often due to these sources no longer being hosted on their original sites, entire domains being taken offline, link rot, or for a number of other reasons.

I propose building a software catalog to aggregate many of these long-standing, open source ham software projects into history preserving code repositories using git, a modern source control management system and the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC) archive. These code repositories would also serve as a place for continuous future development and iteration. I'm a software engineer in my day job and it's something I would be very interested in helping put in place. I believe it would go a long way to making these projects remain accessible and relevant across our ham community going forward.

List of 10 software projects for preservation:

  • ardopc - mode for HF Winlink

  • QtSoundModem - multi-platform port of UZ7HO's SoundModem

  • arim - Amateur Radio Instant Messaging

  • rmsgw - Linux RMS Gateway for Winlink

  • ax25mail - Utilities for packet radio mail exchange with the BBS

  • 4NEC2 - Antenna Simulation and modeling software

  • LinFBB - F6FBB BBS software for bulletins and messages distribution via Packet Radio and wired networks

  • OpenBCM - packet radio mailbox system by DL8MBT

  • Linpac - A modular console-oriented amateur radio AX.25 keyboard to keyboard chat and PBBS program

  • Paclink-unix - A UNIX/Linux client for the Winlink 2000 ham radio email

(Excerpts of the grant proposal used with permission of Rob Hernandez KM6BLU.)

While ARDC has not made this (approved) grant public, I received permission from the principal of this grant, Rob Hernandez KM6BLU to mention this project in Zero Retries.

At present, there is not yet an online presence for this work as their grant was only recently approved and KM6BLU and his collaborators are just getting the work organized.

Update 2024-06-30 - At present, there is not yet an online presence for this work as their grant was only recently approved and KM6BLU and his collaborators - Paul Harvey M0SET and Matthew Croughan are just getting the work organized with their fiscal sponsor - National Upcycled Computing Collective (https://www.nuccinc.org).

Although this team’s initial software projects to preserve is a good start1, there are many such open source projects that are equally critical and influential within Amateur Radio, and thus the methodology, standards, display format, etc. that KM6BLU and team will develop for this work will be probably more foundational for Amateur Radio in the long term.

I’ll be watching this work and am looking forward to reporting on this project in future issues of Zero Retries.

Open Source in Amateur Radio Wiki

Michael Clemens DK1MI / N1BSD on Reddit r/amateurradio:

[OpenSource.radio] is a wiki, which in the first step categorises and lists all open source software and hardware projects for amateur radio that I/we know of. Later, more detailed pages on the individual projects will be added. I also envisage adding setup descriptions for open source based amateur radio stations or collections for GNU Radio blocks/flowcharts or Node Red flows, functions and scripts.

Open Source in Amateur Radio

Image courtesy of OpenSource.radio

Welcome to the Open Source in Amateur Radio wiki! This resource is dedicated to providing information about open-source software and hardware as well as free home-brew projects for amateur radio enthusiasts. The idea of this website or wiki is to give a (future) radio amateur an overview of all available open source projects. The aim is to promote the use of open source software and hardware in amateur radio. Depending on personal requirements, it is now possible to set up an amateur radio station whose main components are open source.

The OpenSource.radio Wiki (clever domain name!) is also a recent project which has a similar goal (at least in my mind) of creating a directory of Amateur Radio Open Source projects (notably, not just software) and thus would also serve the goal of reducing the creation of multiple, sometimes incompatible implementations of various applications or functions that are made available as open source. In short, why reinvent something if someone has already done it? The trick, prior to this project, is knowing that a specific open source project even exists; it’s tough to search for an open source implementation if you don’t know if such a project exists, and especially its name.

OpenSource.radio is off to a good start, and I plan to get involved in adding to it with some of my favorite open source projects such as adding to the Packet Radio section.

The current nine contributors could use some additional help:

Help!

This wiki cannot be filled and maintained by one person alone, which is why I call on people to register on the wiki in order to correct errors, add information, translate articles and/or create new content.

Please visit How to contribute for further information.

I’m sure there are many able contributors in the Zero Retries readership.

Wikipedia - List of Amateur Radio Software

Lastly, this Wikipedia article seems to be a poorly maintained or abandoned list of some software used in Amateur Radio. While there are a few mentions of proprietary software, most items seem to be open source software.

While this article is within the semi-authoritative easy to find Wikipedia… the OpenSource.radio Wiki seems to be the better project for contributing one’s efforts to document the many open source projects within Amateur Radio that have been developed over the decades. We’re just going to have to figure out how to insure its survival as an information database - at a minimum, regularly “snapshotted” by Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine and perhaps regular mirroring to other sites.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Darryl Smith VK2TDS Highlighted in ARDC Newsletter

ARDC Newsletter June 2024 (not yet posted on their website):

A member of the inaugural [Grants Evaluation Team - GET], Darryl has enjoyed analyzing the results of the work that ARDC has funded, stating “I feel privileged to be a part of the team.” Licensed in Sydney, Australia more than 30 years ago, Darryl became a ham to experiment with packet radio and has “loved every minute of it.” After many years of focusing on VHF, Darryl got his first HF radio early last year. When he’s not volunteering at ARDC or on the air, Daryl is a consultant electrical engineer, where he had the amazing opportunity to work as a microwave and satellite engineer & RF technician on the set of Furiosa - A Mad Max Saga, work he cites as the work he’s most proud of. In his spare time, Darryl also enjoys recreational running, where he averages running about one marathon a year.

VK2TDS is also beginning his 8th three-year term as a Board Member of TAPR.

I’m looking forward to seeing Furiosa when it’s available on one of my streaming services, especially now knowing that VK2TDS was working on the complicated communications required for that movie.


Digital only POTA Activation using FT8 on the sBitx V3

David Saylors WK4DS on his WK4DS Amateur Radio Blog:

So today was a good day for radio. I had a block of time and wanted to see how hard it would be to get the activation only on FT8. I know it is possible to do this, but I also wanted to do it on 15 meters too and that is where the problems come in. You see the last couple of weeks have been tough for 15 meters operations what with the solar flares and CMEs and all. So to secure the activation on the higher bands will be… interesting…

Image courtesy of David Saylors WK4DS

One of the things that I like most about this radio is the clean layout of the FT8 mode. It is not cluttered with an endless array of different information and on screen settings. The other programs, while very versatile and powerful, are rife with buttons and information that really is not needed for simple QSO contacts. The sBitx could be a little easier though so it is not perfect either. One thing that has come up a couple of times is that it needs the ability to be able to sort the information display to just stations calling CQ so you can pick one easier. I agree with this as it can be tough to grab a calling station in that 2.5 second window of time. So being able to sort by CQ would be a big help there. One other thing that is mildly frustrating is that there is no way to scroll the display so if there is a lot of stations on the band then you will not be able to see them all. It pushes them off the top of the screen and then they are just gone.

What WK4DS did as a Parks On The Air (POTA) activation with a data-only radio (in his case, the sBitx v3), is pretty much what I was imagining for a data-only Field Day activity. Based on a Raspberry Pi, the sBitx v3 seems so elegantly designed for data use. I didn’t know what exactly I was looking for until I saw it with the sBitx v3, which is now on my wish list… unless perhaps the zBitx becomes a reality.

My thanks to Amateur Radio Weekly Issue 336 for the pointer to this story.


ARDC Grantees Include Society of Women Engineers (SWE) 2023 Programs

I thought this post from ARDC about the impact of their grantmaking was Zero Retries Interesting:

Society of Women Engineers (SWE): SWE 2023 Programs

Society of Women Engineers (SWE)
Image courtesy of Society of Women Engineers

The Society of Women Engineers (SWE) is an organization that promotes diversity and inclusion in STEM fields. In 2023, ARDC funded 30 of SWE’s Global Scholarships, as well as contributed to multiple programs that help women in engineering fields excel professionally and showcase their achievements. Last month, SWE published a blog post that included testimonials from scholarship recipients, emphasizing the significance of ARDC-funded scholarships on their educational pursuits. You can check out the blog post in its entirety at https://alltogether.swe.org/2024/05/the-impact-of-the-ardc-foundations-scholarships-for-women-in-engineering/.

ARDC also supported a first-time analysis into the impact of SWE scholarships on women pursuing a STEM degree. The results of this analysis can be found at https://swe.org/research/2024/the-impact-of-swe-scholarships-on-retention-in-engineering-and-computer-science/.

Funding also supported the SWENext High School Leadership Academy. You can check out a year in review of the SHLA program in this blog post: https://alltogether.swe.org/2024/06/fy24-shla-year-in-review/.

The Community Collegiate Affiliate Support & Expansion (CCASE) is designed to encourage more women in community colleges, particularly those facing exceptional financial challenges and from underrepresented backgrounds, to pursue a STEM degree. In its first program year, CCASE helped establish seven new community college affiliates/sections and added 81 SWE members.

Pull quote of the study that ARDC supported:

Research indicates that women pursuing bachelor’s degrees in STEM switch to non-STEM fields at higher rates than men, with 32% of women major switching compared to 26% of men. Overall, less than half of women persist in their bachelor’s degree programs in STEM.

The impact of a SWE scholarship is remarkable! Almost 88% of undergraduate scholarship recipients have either earned or are still pursuing a STEM degree, with 97% of these STEM students majoring in engineering or computer science.

That result is fantastic! Note that Amateur Radio isn’t mentioned, and there’s no Amateur Radio involvement in the SWE scholarships (you don’t have to be an Amateur Radio Operator)… but I cannot imagine that those scholarship recipients didn’t take note that an organization called Amateur Radio Digital Communications helped to fund their STEM degree.


Followup on Fixing the Linux Kernel AX.25 ARDC Grant

Grant: Fixing the Linux kernel AX.25
Date: December 2021
Amount: €179,690

Changes to the Linux kernel over the years have improved and modernized the kernel, but have also made existing AX.25 implementations incompatible and turned preexisting issues into bugs. This can make systems unpredictable or even unusable. Linux kernel development is complex, requiring deep specialized knowledge, and bugs are hard to trace. This may be one of the reasons, why the Linux kernel AX.25 stack is currently in such a bad state.

This ARDC grant funds will allow the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club to hire software developers who can create a stable Linux AX.25 implementation and prevent Linux distributions from dropping pre-compiled AX.25 support. The fixed and functional Kernel-AX.25 stack will improve global amateur radio infrastructure. Professional kernel development can bring Linux AX.25 back to life.

It’s a shame that ARDC rarely issues status reports on how grants like this turned out. ARDC formed a Grants Evaluation Team (GET) in 2024, but to date, there have been no results from that team publicly disclosed.

Now, two and a half years after this grant was awarded, we get a small glimpse of the outcome of this grant from a brief statement on ARDC’s 44Net email list by ARDC Grants Manager Chelsea Párraga KF0FVJ:

The AX.25 team ran into some challenging circumstances and they were unable to carry out the grant. In these situations we work with the grantee to return funds to us. If you'd like to know more about the project I suggest reaching out directly to those working on it!

Of course, the above description is all that ARDC has publicly released about this grant, and thus there is no contact information for “those working on it” provided by ARDC for us to to actually be able “reach out directly”. Since there was no progress on this grant, there seems little point in further followup. But given that unless ARDC chooses to feature a grant in one of their stories, which usually includes names of those involved with the grant, ARDC doesn’t otherwise disclose details about their grants such as the names and contact info associated with the grant… so that it actually is possible to “reach out directly”.

Such lack of detail when ARDC does report a grant being made, and lack of followup (publicly reported) on most of the ARDC grants, even years later, has been a continuing frustration to those of us following ARDC’s grantmaking.


BBS and email for Meshtastic

TheCommsChannel / TC2-BBS-mesh on Github:

This is the TC²-BBS system integrated with Meshtastic devices. The system allows for message handling, bulletin boards, mail systems, and a channel directory.

YouTube video - BBS and Mail for Meshtastic! (queued for future watching), unfortunately no transcript available to excerpt.

As an active participant in the rise of Packet Radio systems in Amateur Radio, it’s fascinating to me to see the rapid evolution of Meshtastic and seemingly exponential interest in building out Meshtastic networks as a hobby activity. Now Meshtastic users will be able to discover the fun and utility of Bulletin Board Systems.

While Meshtastic does feature better physical layer technology (Semtech’s proprietary LoRa, an implementation of Chirp Spread Spectrum) versus Amateur Radio’s 1200 bps Audio Frequency Shift Keying, Meshtastic users will soon discover the limits of simple radio physics - crowded channels, low throughput, and the limitations of ad-hoc mesh networks when they become popular and over-used.

We experienced Amateur Radio Operators could, and I would argue should get involved with our local Meshtastic activities and offer our perspective of what has worked in the past, at least to the limits of what the LoRa technology is capable of.

And perhaps, as we “tap into” the energy and excitement of these new Meshtastic users and networks, we can rediscover some energy and excitement that we can apply to recreating what we know now to work in Amateur Radio networking. Things such as leveraging the vastly better technology we now have available - higher speed modems, forward error correction, more robust modulation techniques, etc. And… rediscovering the fun of building something collaboratively with our fellow Amateur Radio Operators.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
    Founding Member 0001 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 01

    Founding Member 0002 - Chris Osburn KD7DVD
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    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
    Founding Member 0005 - Ben Kuhn KU0HN
    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
    Founding Member 0008 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 14
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Email issues of Zero Retries are “instrumented” by Substack to gather basic statistics about opens, clicking links, etc.

More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-06-28

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

If you’d like to republish an article in this issue for other uses, just ask.

All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.


Footnotes for this Issue

1

To that list, I would have included KA9Q NET, KA9Q NOS, ka9q-radio, Dire Wolf Software TNC, G8BPQ BBS and other G8BPQ utilities, Xastir, D-RATS, FreeDV, FreeDATA, and JNOS.

Zero Retries 0157

21 June 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1800+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Scott Honaker N7SS for becoming an Annual Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

  • HAM RADIO 2024 in Friedrichshafen, Germany on 2024-06-28 thru 30 - next weekend. I’ve received some hints that there will be some interesting projects shown there. Zero Retries readers that will be attending HAM RADIO 2024, please provide some reports of Zero Retries Interesting projects and products.

  • JARL Ham Fair 2024 in Tokyo, Japan on 2024-08-24 and 25, in 9 weeks!

Attendees at HAM RADIO 2024 might also be interested in attending the 10th Software Defined Radio Academy on 2024-06-29:

The programme for the 10th Software Defined Radio Academy (June 29) in Friedrichshafen is ready. Because of possible short notice changes please check the following website:

https://2024.sdra.io/pages/programme.html

We have assembled an attractive programme again for this anniversary year and we are looking forward to see you all either on site in Friedrichshafen or in the live stream. The SDRA starts at 10:00 in the room “Berlin” in the Conference Zone East. For HAMRADIO visitors there is no entrance fee, and visiting individual talks is just perfectly fine. You can find the stream at:
https://youtube.sdra.io


BR / VY73
Markus
DL8RDS

My thanks to Alexander von Obert DL4NO for forwarding this notice.

See the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences for other such events.


Minor Case of Summer Doldrums

This week I had a minor case of the summer doldrums where I didn’t get a lot done (that’s of measurable progress), either on Zero Retries and its associated projects, or in N8GNJ Labs. Thus the bulk of the content of this issue will be ZR > BEACON short mentions.

I guess I just “soaked in” the first full week of mostly sun and no rain and only brief cloudy overcast, and it took this week for my psyche to switch fully over to “enjoy the summer” mode. Up here in the Pacific Northwest corner of North America, we’ve been spared (thus far) the punishing “heat dome” that is enveloping much of the US, and for that, we’re grateful.


ARRL Field Day This Weekend

This weekend is ARRL Field Day in the US. I have no plans to attend any of the festivities in my area, mostly from lack of enthusiasm for the overall experience.

At the last ARRL Field Day event I attended, a friend had an Icom IC-705 and it seemed an idea rig for (my idea of) a casual Field Day experience. I had hoped by now to have procured an IC-705, and if I did have one, that would probably motivate me to get on the HF bands for Field Day.

Instead I think I’ll treat this weekend as an Amateur Radio holiday and work solely on some long-deferred Amateur Radio projects in N8GNJ Labs.


ARDC 44Net VPN Beta Testing - I’m In!

After a few “nudges” regarding my request to participate in the 44Net VPN Beta Test, I finally received acknowledgement that my request had been accepted and some basic instructions on how to get started. I haven’t done anything quite yet, but I will do the requested actions this coming week and start actively learning about how to use 44Net IPv4 addresses. One of the first things I’m going to do is to set up an “air gapped” LAN within N8GNJ Labs with a dedicated computer. I’ll report on my progress here in Zero Retries.


Battle of Britain: The Race for Radar - Highly Recommended!

I’m a very casual history fan, and lately my interests have been focused on the World War II era.

On Prime Video, I discovered Battle of Britain: The Race for Radar, and it was fascinating - extremely Zero Retries Interesting!

I was aware that the only way that the UK was able to effectively defend themselves against the German Luftwaffe bombing campaign (The Battle of Britain) in 1940 was to build “The Dowding System” - a RADAR and Command and Control network that directed the limited UK fighter groups towards the highest concentration / greatest threats of Luftwaffe bombers. But I knew nothing of the technical details of the RADAR system, which was named Chain Home. This documentary explained the technical details including that Chain Home barely worked at first, and was, by design, “third rate” - not the best technical solution, but a system that would be at least minimally effective and most importantly could be constructed in time to be ready when it would be needed most.

One of the most interesting technical details to me was that all of the transmitters in the system transmitted continuously and in phase with each other, transmitting 25 pulses per second. The synchronization system chosen was the simple expedient of using the national power grid’s synchronized 50 Hz (cycles, then) AC line frequency to synchronize the RADAR transmitters, and it worked!

Another detail that was interesting to me was that the Germans were aware of the very powerful transmissions from the Chain Home, but never understood how it functioned. The Germans eventually concluded that the transmissions were spurious leakage from the UK national power grid, and thus discounted the idea that the UK had a terrestrial RADAR system.

The documentary makes a compelling case that the creation of Chain Home and The Dowding System was a primary influence in the outcome of World War II. If the UK had not been able to repel the majority of Luftwaffe bombers, German bombing may have reduced the UK’s defensive capabilities and made Germany’s “Operation Sea Lion”, the seaborne invasion of the UK, viable. If the UK was successfully invaded by Germany, the US would not have been able to use the UK as a staging base for Operation Overlord, the Allies invasion of France and into Europe.

I’m certainly not positing that my ancestral fellow radio techies “won World War II”… but after viewing this documentary, we radio techies were very active participants in contributing to the Allies victory in World War II… and we’re present in current battles, and will be present in future battles.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Just In Time for Meadow Day Anniversary - Starlink Mini

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

One year ago, on the same weekend as ARRL Field Day, I conducted my “Meadow Day” test of using Starlink as (simulated) emergency communications, similar to the premise of ARRL Field Day. One year later, we’ll soon have a better alternative to “fixed Starlink” for real emergency communications - Starlink Mini.

Background on “Meadow Day” 2023 - https://www.n8gnj.org/2023/06/meadow-day-2023.html

Meadow Day 2023 was conducted with a bulky “Gen 2” Starlink antenna and router. Those units are intended for permanent fixed installation to provide service to a typical household, but somewhat usable for “luggable” use with a suitable (mains-equivalent) power supply. I made it work, and Starlink now offers units intended for mobile use such as affixing it horizontally to the roof of a boat or a recreational vehicle or a semi tractor.

But now there is another variant of Starlink that’s far more conducive to my “Meadow Day” scenario - Starlink Mini.

All this information about Starlink Mini comes from a great (new to me) Zero Retries Interesting website and YouTube channel - StarlinkHardware.

StarlinkHardware.com is an unofficial resource for SpaceX Starlink satellite internet users. We are not affiliated with Starlink or SpaceX in any way.

Founded in 2021, our goal is to provide helpful information, tutorials, and advice for Starlink users. We are Starlink fans and users, and aim to help others get the most out of the system.

Image courtesy of StarlinkHardware.com

The most obvious aspect of the Starlink Mini is that it’s smaller - roughly the size of a laptop, as shown above.

Beyond the smaller size, Starlink Mini is optimized for portable use, including:

  • Lightweight - under 3 pounds,

  • Integrated Wi-Fi (Wi-Fi 5 standard) (no separate Wi-Fi router / power supply),

  • DC power input, 12-48 volts DC. There will be apparently be an optional “USB-C to Barrel Jack Cable Accessory”, thus you apparently can use battery units provide a USB-C power outlet.

  • Lower power consumption; 25 - 40 watts.

Starlink Mini also seems usable for fixed (or mobile) use by including a number of features that could have been omitted for “cost optimization”, including ability to mount on a pipe (pipe mount is included), an Ethernet port, and most surprisingly, the heating element to be able to melt snow or ice buildup.

Like the current (Gen 3) Starlink Standard unit, optimum performance of the Starlink Mini will depend on the user orienting it optimally per the Starlink app on a mobile phone.

One of the most notable features of Starlink Mini is (as “reportably” as an Elon Musk “tweet” can be) that Starlink Mini will sell at “half” the price as a Starlink Standard unit - $300 versus $600, though there was a recent price drop of the latter to $499, so perhaps Starlink Mini might be priced at $250.

This week, Starlink has done a “dribbling release” of details about Starlink Mini, as well-documented by StarlinkHardware:

In the US, some existing Starlink customers are receiving invitations to purchase the Starlink Mini hardware for $599 (yes, that’s $100 more than the “full size, full service unit), with a service plan of $30 / month for up to 100 Mbps download speeds and 50 GB of transfer. That service plan is in addition to an existing Starlink service contract.

Starlink explains this rationale in the Support section of their website:

Currently, the purchase of Starlink Mini is limited to a small group of customers in the US and is invitation only. We are unable to accommodate order requests from customers who did not receive an invitation.

Starlink Mini will expand to other markets over time. However, we do not have estimated dates to provide at this time. Stay tuned for updates on the wider release of Starlink Mini!

Our goal is to reduce the price of Starlink, especially for those around the world where connectivity has been unaffordable or completely unavailable. But in regions with high usage, where Starlink Mini places additional demand on the satellite network, we are offering a limited number of the Starlink Mini Kits to start for $599.

This makes sense… those who accept this offer can get a more portable Starlink unit when they are traveling, and Starlink gets to “beta test” the unit with customers who are willing to pay full price, without sacrificing profit margins from existing service plans. The selective invitations won’t add to Starlink service being already at (or past) capacity in certain parts of the US, such as the major metro areas of California.

There was also a mention that the latency of Starlink can be lower than than cable Internet, which I can easily believe given the vagaries I experienced with Comcast on our neighborhood’s 20-30 year old coaxial infrastructure. Glancing at my Starlink status panel as I compose this article…

LATENCY: Min: 20 ms * Max 115 ms * Last 27 ms

It’s pure speculation on my part, but Starlink Mini will open up entirely new use cases for Starlink such as remote monitoring. Imagine monitoring a power substation, including live video (and even live infrared video to see hotspots developing in the equipment).

It’s also speculation that Starlink Mini is optimized so well that organizations involved with emergency communications (in the US, such as Red Cross and Salvation Army) will be able to hand over a backpack or rugged (“Pelican”) case to volunteers to deploy to a remote area that has lost communications. Or a search and rescue operation in a remote area. The package will include a Starlink Mini, perhaps a mag mount for temporary installation on a vehicle roof, lots of various cables, a battery unit good for several days of operation, perhaps even a ruggedized solar panel, and a phone or two that has apps preinstalled for voice comms, telephony-over-Wi-Fi, video, assessment survey apps, email, etc.

The most disruptive aspect of Starlink that many observers simply don’t understand, because we’ve never had such a communications system previously, is that each square mile, per hertz, per second, per satellite that isn’t fully utilized is additional potential for revenue for Starlink. Each Starlink satellite in the constellation is “paid up” by each satellite’s time providing service to customers (US, Canada, Western Europe, etc.) who can pay higher prices for Starlink service. Thus if there are places that cannot afford that price point in the orbital path of each satellite, Starlink can sell a lower-cost, but still-attractive service package and capture additional revenue from each satellite.

I’ll further speculate that Starlink Mini will eventually become a full product in the US for a price point of $300, with a service plan of no more than $50 / month for up to 100 Mbps download and 50 GB of transfer, and probably allow mobile and marine use as it’s simply easier to accommodate a smaller antenna on a vehicle. I’ll guess that long term, Starlink will add other service tiers and allow Starlink Mini to be turned on and off for camping season, skiing season, beach season, etc.

As for Amateur Radio… once Starlink Mini is a full product, I’ll leave it to readers to imagine a future for Amateur Radio emergency communications versus such a capability.

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Preview - Building Back Better Amateur Radio Networks

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

I didn’t make as much progress on this article this week as I’d hoped, but I did write enough to justify a “preview” of the full article that I hope to complete in the next couple of weeks.

I’m seeing increasing numbers of Amateur Radio radio networks. We’ve never had better radio network building blocks for groups of Amateur Radio Operators to experiment with, learn on, and have fun with.

My inspiration for this article was that apparently I hit some mental threshold of seeing yet another casual mention of yet another Amateur Radio radio network, and realized with a startle that such activity has become so ubiquitous, and perhaps so subtle, that most of us “don’t see the forest for the trees”.

For Amateur Radio Operators from my generation of Amateur Radio - first active in the 1980s when extended packet radio (and Packet Radio Bulletin Board System forwarding), active and growing Amateur Radio radio networks were the norm, and constantly growing and improving.

Then… the general public was able to use the Internet through dialup connections, and Packet Radio and Packet Radio BBS use looked primitive by comparison.

Despite many / most packet radio and BBS networks falling into disuse, many Amateur Radio radio networks never went away. And, many new Amateur Radio networks have quietly come into being, but not widely recognized outside their area.

What has changed between “the Internet happened” and now is that TCP/IP became the for networking, and it has become the defacto method to bridge disparate Amateur Radio networks. In the packet radio era, it was a heavy lift for the typical devices such as TNCs to be able to interoperate with TCP/IP - convert the TNC to a KISS TNC, set up KA9Q NOS on a DOS PC, etc.

But in this era, we have $35 computers with ample memory, compute power, and especially ample Input / Output to function as a router. For example, JNOS can route between AX.25 packet radio connections (which know nothing of TCP/IP) and an “advanced” TCP/IP network such as New Packet Radio.

Amateur Radio now has a plethora of networking tools… and networks, many that are operating entirely independently. Thus what remains is to highlight and recognize those local and regional networks and perhaps bridge them into an integrated whole of networking to be usable as “ARNet”. I use this name to differentiate from AMPRNet which is a registered domain name (.org) that is used by Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC).

In the full version of this article, I’ll discuss various Amateur Radio radio networking technologies and a few networks that I know of, so Zero Retries readers can begin to see the same individual “trees” in the “forest” of Amateur Radio network capabilities, that I have been seeing for a while now.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Career Days Makes Debut at HAM [RADIO 2024]

Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2434 for 2024-06-21:

PAUL/ANCHOR: For our final story we visit the international Ham Radio exhibition in Friedrichshafen [Freed-Ricks-Harf-Ven], Germany, which will have its doors open between the 28th and 30th of June. This year's event has found a way to combine the amateur with the professional - and Jeremy Boot G4NJH tells us how.

JEREMY: Employers in technical fields and prospective job candidates will have a chance to meet up for the first time this year in Friedrichshafen to see who is hiring and who is hunting. According to the organisers' website, the job marketplace recognises that hams are ideal candidates for employment in technical fields and their amateur skills fit well in a professional environment. Career days will be held for two days - the 28th and 29th of June.

Visitors can now have a lot more to look forward to than a fancy new state-of-the art rig: They will perhaps find a new way to afford it.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

Hmmm… glad to see that phonetic explanation of Friedrichshafen - I’d always heard it pronounced Freed-Rick-Stoff-Ven - Thanks Amateur Radio Newsline!

Waxing nostalgic a bit, I remember when US employers looking for technical personnel to hire would have “we’re looking for help” booths at Hamvention. I haven’t seen that in the last several Hamventions that I’ve been able to attend. Kudos for HAM RADIO 2024 for arranging this, and those employers that are recruiting will find a plethora of good candidates that are self-motivated to educate themselves about current and future radio technology.


Digirig Lite Rev. 1.2

Image courtesy of digirig.net

[Digirig Lite is] a minimalistic version of Digirig with the same audio [codec] as regular model of the interface but without serial port.

  • Combines audio codec and PTT switch

  • Supports PTT by GPIO3 of CM108 audio codec

  • Supports VOX PTT by the tone on the unused right channel (experimental)

  • Works with all major OS flavors: Windows, MacOS and Linux

  • Uses a single TRRS connector compatible with existing Digirig audio cables

  • Growing collection of pre-made cables including popular Icom, Yaesu, Elecraft, Baofeng, Xiegu transceivers

  • Isolation can be easily added using inexpensive USB isolator dongle

The new revision of Digirig Lite got its enclosure, cable form factor with USB-C tail and USB-A adapter included. Other changes include added indicators for power and PTT, significantly improved PTT by tone/VOX. Solder pads for individually disabling PTT by GPIO3 and VOX. Pad easy access to codec’s GPIO lines used for COS and CTCSS.

Digirig, and especially Digirig Lite Rev. 1.2 is just an elegant, well-integrated piece of hardware!


Status of the Connect Systems M17 Project - 2024-06-19

Connect Systems email list:

The two production radios have shipped to the developers as promised late last month. The status of those radios are shown below. The production radios are now ready to be modified and shipped to the customers who have already bought the radios. I will generate another email blast when I have a more definite date on shipping to the customers who have already bought the radio.

If you are in Europe and going to the Ham Convention, you should see the production radios in operation.

[2024-06-14]

RX works, TX needs some more adjustment because the transmitted signal is distorted. I need to investigate further where the problem is.

[2024-06-18]

Hardware modifications are good to go, both TX and RX work and the transmitted audio is loud.

I just want to see if changing a resistor on the baseband path improves a bit the modulation quality, but is not a mandatory change.

Sounds like we’re very close to having portable radios with native M17 capability!


ARDC is Hiring: Technology Department Manager

ARDC seeks an experienced Technology Department Manager to join our team and lead all technology efforts. These include, but are not limited to, overseeing the following department initiatives and personnel management:

  • Activities of 44Net, and IPv4 address space allocated to amateur radio;

  • Open-source software development projects; and

  • General internal IT system administration, including streamlining existing systems and helpdesk.

In addition to having solid management experience in a technical field, this person must also be an excellent communicator – able to write policy, wrangle volunteers, and manage open-source technology development that includes staff, volunteers, and contractors. The ideal candidate will have demonstrated the ability to effectively communicate with executive-level management on a regular basis. It is expected you will prepare management reports and complex technical documents that are well written, appropriately and effectively organized, accurate, and comprehensive, meeting all professional standards.

Direct reports to this position include technical contractors and staff; the department is also supported by communications and operational staff, and 60-70 volunteers are working in association with our technical activities. This position reports to the Executive Director.

Some important notes about this role:

  • Experience and history with amateur radio and the Internet is required. Many of the people we work with, projects we take on, and communities we make grants to are rooted in amateur radio, and our particular realm of focus intersects heavily with the information technology and hacker communities. Applicants without an active amateur radio license will not be considered.

  • Experience working with nonprofits and/or open-source technology projects is required. There are nuances of working in nonprofit and community-driven environments, including participation in open-source technology projects, that can only be learned through experience – such as collaborative decision-making and best practices in engaging with open-source development. Experience in one or both of these areas is required for this role; applicants without such experience will not be considered.

This is a challenging position, requiring equal parts managerial, networking, and general software / technical skill. From my time volunteering on the ARDC Grants Advisory Committee, I witnessed that ARDC’s “technology stack” is… let’s just say varied… and in need of improvement. And, the position entails considerable cat-herding, judging from the discussions on the various ARDC mailing lists.

Zero Retries readers, please pass the word about this position. With the numerous specialized requirements for this position, ARDC will have to cast a very wide net to find the right person. ARDC is critical to the future of Amateur Radio, and this position is critical to the future of ARDC.


VarAC V9.2.3

From the VarAC mailing list. These are the two most salient features (to me).

Chat Recall

Have you ever found yourself reconnecting with someone only to ask the same questions again? You know you've chatted before; you see their basic details on screen, but the specifics escape you. That's where Chat Recall steps in.

Upon connection, your data stream seamlessly incorporates previous correspondences with this contact. Just like in WhatsApp, where even after a year, you can effortlessly revisit past chats to refresh your memory.

DCD Bypass

By default, VarAC respects the busy indicator and prevents you from transmitting in any way while the BUSY indicator is lit. This means no CQs, beacons, broadcasts, or connections.

However, sometimes constant noise, such as an OTH radar or deliberate QRM, can block the frequency.

Version 9.2.3 allows you to temporarily override the DCD detector and ignore the BUSY indicator. You can enable this by checking the box on the right side of the VarAC console. VarAC will automatically turn it off after 2 hours.

Starting with VarAC V9.2.3, the send broadcast form includes a checkbox to request an SNR report in your broadcast. This signals the recipient to send you a report back automatically.

Please note that this feature is only available when sending a broadcast to a specific station. You can't request a report from "ALL".


QO-100 Satellite Ground Station Complete Build

Mike Tatum M0AWS on his blog:

I get quite a few emails from readers of my blog asking how my QO-100 satellite station is put together and so, I thought perhaps now is a good time to put together an article detailing the complete build.

My QO-100 satellite ground station is built around my little Icom IC-705 QRP transceiver, it’s a great little rig and is ideal for the purpose of driving a 2.4Ghz transverter/up-converter.

Of course all the software used for the project is Opensource and freely available on the internet.

The station comprises of the following building blocks:

  • Icom IC-705 Transceiver

  • DXPatrol 28/144/433Mhz to 2.4Ghz Up-Converter

  • DXPatrol GPSDO Reference Oscillator

  • DXPatrol 2.4Ghz 5/12w Amplifier

  • Nolle Engineering 2.2 turn 2.4Ghz IceCone Helix Antenna

  • 1.1m (110cm) Off-set Dish

  • Bullseye 10Ghz LNB

  • Bias-T to feed 12v to LNB

  • NooElec SmartSDR Receiver

  • PC Running Kubuntu Linux Operating System

  • GQRX SDR Opensource Software

  • Griffin Powermate USB VFO Knob

  • QO-100 Ground Station Dashboard developed using Node-RED

  • LMR400-UF/RG58 Coax Cable

This is a great article with ample detail, but if you’re a US reader, like me, it’ll make you itch to have a similar capability to QO-100 in the Western Hemisphere.

My thanks to Amateur Radio Weekly Issue 334 for the pointer to this story.

Related, also mentioned in ARW Issue 334:

TX Factor Episode 30 - To space and back - TX date 7th June 2024

Bob G0FGX demonstrates the Groundstation 2 from DX Patrol in the first of a two-part feature on operating via the QO-100 geostationary satellite. He looks at the hardware and software needed to achieve your first QSO at home or out mobile.


Foundations of Amateur Radio Episode 010 - Do Your Thing and Find Friends to Play With

Today in Amateur Radio is no different from yesterday, last year, last decade or longer. The hobby today is filled with people who are here to have fun, learn stuff and experiment. This hasn't changed since our hobby came into being.

You can argue that the hobby has seen a great many changes. We have seen spark-gap transmitters, valves, transistors, miniaturisation, chips and now software defined radios. The experimental nature of our pursuit has not changed.

We still spend time looking for cool stuff to do and people to do it with.

And that's the single point I'd like to make.

Finding people “to do it with”.

If you're a new amateur you might look to a club or your fellow classmates to combine your efforts. This can be a great way to forge life-long friendships and it's a sure fire way to find exposure to other ideas and activities.

There might come a time when you find yourself at a loss what to do next, or who to do it with. You might lament that the group you're hanging out with are not doing fun stuff anymore, or that activities never quite happen or any number of observations that make it less fun to be part of amateur radio.

I've now been here for a little while and I've noticed that some of my fellow amateurs have fallen by the way-side. Of course family and changing interests will account for some of that, but often it's a lack of something to do that makes people fade away.

There is nothing stopping you from organising your own event. You can plan a camp-out, or an antenna testing day, or a DX activity, a contest, an activation, some software hacking, or hardware building, soldering training, learning how to log, how to do a QSO, or any number of other things.

If you tell the community about it, you're likely to be surprised by some other amateur who was just thinking to do the same thing.

So, don't wait for someone else to do your fun activity. If you focus on doing things that you enjoy, you might find a few like-minded friends who will participate.

I'm keen to hear your ideas and activities, so drop me a line.

I'm Onno VK6FLAB

Good advice, which has direct bearing my (lack of) enthusiasm for participating in (conventional) ARRL Field Day activities. Perhaps for Field Day 2025 I can find some kindred Zero Retries Interesting folks in Western Washington (or the Pacific Northwest region) that would also be interested in a data-modes-only ARRL Field Day.

I’ve been meaning to mention the excellent Foundations of Amateur Radio podcast by Onno Benschop VK6FLAB in Zero Retries for some time now. To date, VK6FLAB has created 470 weekly (?) episodes. I enjoy FoAR because a number of episode topics are Zero Retries Interesting, but also because FoAR is a “solo” podcast with an accompanying transcription / script. That’s a podcast model that is very similar to what I plan to do for Zero Retries. FoAR’s model of discussing a single, distilled topic is far more workable than attempting to discuss the variety of topics that I mention in a typical issue of Zero Retries.

… the transcript of the weekly 'Foundations of Amateur Radio' podcast, produced by Onno Benschop, VK6FLAB who was licensed as radio amateur in Perth, Western Australia in 2010. For other episodes, visit http://vk6flab.com/. Feel free to get in touch directly via email: cq@vk6flab.com.

Each week / episode, VK6FLAB publishes the script / transcript via an email list, and thus it’s easy, and time-efficient to determine if a FoAR episode is “Zero Retries Interesting” and thus worth queuing up for my limited “audio time”. (I’m a far faster reader than a listener, so I now read the text each week.) Yes, in reading the text, I get the basic information, but as listeners pointed out in my podcast experiments, audio adds more depth than what mere text can convey.

I wish more Amateur Radio podcasts could do the same thing as FoAR; many Amateur Radio podcasts that are potentially Zero Retries Interesting don’t bother to publish show notes (and apparently aren’t popular enough to have Apple Podcast apps create an automatic transcript), so I tend to not queue those up unless the title hints of a Zero Retries Interesting topic.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-06-21

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Zero Retries 0156

14 June 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1800+ subscribers.

Radios Are Computers - With Antennas!

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

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Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 33 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.

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Major Conference Countdowns

Zero Retries readers in the Portland, Oregon USA area might be interested in attending the Teardown 2024 conference which will be 2024-06-21 through 23 at the Lloyd Center (Mall). Teardown 2024 is sponsored by Crowd Supply, which has crowdfunded a number of Zero Retries Interesting radio technology projects. There are a few Zero Retries Interesting talks on the schedule such as:

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


New Logo for Zero Retries!

Graphic of stylized radio tower with the words Zero Retries
New logo of Zero Retries!

My wonderful wife Tina Stroh KD7WSF created a new logo for Zero Retries to replace the generic satellite dish icon I had been using. Thanks Honey! There will be more “logo” news in the next issue of Zero Retries.


Thought Experiment - A Zero Retries Semi-Official Gathering (ZR SOG)

It’s been a favorite thought experiment of mine since beginning Zero Retries to have an in-person meetup of Zero Retries readers… somehow. But considering how thinly we are dispersed around the world, I haven’t thought of any good ideas other than choosing a restaurant and evening to do an information meetup in conjunction with a major event like Hamvention. I got this idea from the TAPR informal meetup that was formerly held at a restaurant called (I think…) McNasty’s (BBQ) where the talk was “all packet radio” (which, of course, I loved being part of). It looks like McNasty’s restaurant has tranmongrified into a food truck. Hmmm, perhaps lure the McNasty’s food truck to a convenient spot near Hamvention?

The other inspiration for the ZR SOG was the originator (at least, the first time I heard the phrase) was that the SOG was a “conference” (though that crowd would cringe to hear such a formalized description) held for the readers of Micro Cornucopia magazine, such as SOG III described in the October 1984 issue of Micro-C. I miss Micro-C just from wonderful writing by Micro-C’s Editor / Publisher David Thompson, such as this:

New Blood

As for attracting new people to Bend [Oregon, USA] (my secret motive, remember?) it looks like I may have succeeded beyond my wildest dreams. Several individuals and one good size company have either said they are definitely coming (and are presently pouring over multiple-listing books) or are definitely interested in locating here and are exploring ways to do it.

Interestingly enough, it appears that the wives are often the prime motivation in the moving decision. There is something about Bend with its open fields, horse ranches, forests, wilderness areas, and skiing that makes family raising a reasonable (if not genuinely fun) preoccupation. You could think of it as taking on a long-term application project in a really good systems environment.

Financial Hard Times

Some folks tried to get their companies to reimburse their expenses but when they passed around our flyer with Semi-Official Get-together on it, their managers didn't feel the event was serious enough. These poor souls suggested we change the name to Super Official Gathering (not to be confused with Superficial Gathering). Maybe next year we'll have two brochures — an official one (for expense accounts) and an unofficial one (for fun).

Superficial Gathering” had me chuckling. Apparently Thompson’s “New Blood” plan worked. Per this web page, Bend’s population in 1984 was ~70k, and currently it’s ~210k. In comparison, Bellingham, Washington where I now live was likely < 50k in 1984 and is currently ~92k - a bit less cosmopolitan than Bend… and attracting more techies all the time - just sayin’.

But, I digress…

Independent of an in-person SOG, in Fall 2024 (let’s not waste too much Summer sitting indoors in front of a computer), I’ll start conducting regular videoconferencing meetings at least monthly. Since they may well be too popular to be conducive to useful discussion, I’ll be capping ZR videoconferences at a “not to exceed” number, and early invitations will go out to the paid subscribers and selected folks like guest authors and Zero Retries Interesting folks that are working on Zero Retries Interesting projects.

On both the ZR SOG and the videoconferences, I welcome ideas from Zero Retries subscribers.


Full-to-Burstin’, This Issue Is!

I have two systems to bookmark items I want to include in Zero Retries. There was so much content this week that I included a handful from one bookmark system, and deferred another article. It’s a nice problem to have, but there’s only so much room in a weekly issue of Zero Retries. I’m imagining ways to incorporate a “Just the Links” with a very terse description, similar to Amateur Radio Weekly, perhaps even a separate issue of Zero Retries that would be available to paid subscribers a week earlier. Nothing has been decided yet, but I welcome ideas from Zero Retries subscribers.


Amateur Radio is Dying… Right?

At least that’s what the Gloom & Doom faction in Amateur Radio is telling us. The total number of US Amateur Radio Operators is decreasing. We’ve recently lost CQ and MFJ. Lots of folks have said they’re not going to renew their ARRL membership because of the dues increase or Logbook of the World having been hacked. Many… most VHF / UHF Amateur Radio repeaters are deathly quiet for 99% of the day. Most HF activity now seems to be FT8, not “real” contacts. New Amateur Radio Operators pass the Tech test, buy an inexpensive portable radio and say “Now what? Where’s all the excitement?”. The most interesting Amateur Radio content is on YouTube. Some “served agencies” are saying to Amateur Radio operators who try to offer emergency communications “Thanks, but we’re good with Starlink, satphones, and FirstNET”. Etc. Ad nauseam.

The Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex posits that the solution is to join them (for a small annual fee) and then you get instantly into the mainstream of Amateur Radio. Their flagship publication devotes an entire section to reprinting content from the middle of the previous century (including ads)… half a century before the current generation was born. Long time Amateur Radio Operators would have you think that the solution is learn how to solder and build your own rig (using tubes) and put up a massive tower and HF beam antenna for the “Real Amateur Radio” experience. Etc. Ad nauseam.

But, what if that’s not the whole story about Amateur Radio in the 21st century?

Amateur Radio is changing - no question about that. But my observation is that such changes are a normal shift resulting from the priorities of a new generation along with better (and cheaper) technology as Amateur Radio is redefined by this generation and new technologies. Half a century ago, this was one of the generational challenges confronting Amateur Radio (per 73 Magazine’s Wayne Green W2NSD in the 1974-01 issue):

NEW BAND AVAILABLE

As the last few holdouts on two meter AM move on up to the FM end of the band the lower two MHz is developing into a wasteland. Experience has shown us that as soon as anything like this has remained unused for a short while there are vultures just waiting to swoop down ... a la the CB proposal for amputation of the 220 MHz ham band, starting first with the top MHz.

Unless some way is found to get Walker to back down on his firm resolve to limit repeaters to the top two MHz and no more, the repeater channels will inexorably grow more and more crowded and the rest of the band more and more deserted.

Obviously something will have to be done about this.

In this generation of Amateur Radio, a lot of new radios are mostly software, with minimal hardware, built around a powerful processor. (I’ve encapsulated this profound change in a phrase: Radios are computers - with antennas!) The current generation of Amateur Radio Operators are Internet natives, which means (among other things) that they grew up with ubiquitous text messaging and social media, so data modes “via radio” (like FT8) and one-to-many text communications are the norm for them. A lot of Amateur Radio now involves Internet connectivity, which is no more a problem for the current generation than “depending on grid power” was for previous generations.

I created Zero Retries in 2021 because the perspective of the Gloom & Doom faction’s perspective isn’t the whole story of Amateur Radio in the 21st century. Each week in Zero Retries I try to present a variety of stories about the technological innovation that is happening in Amateur Radio… that you’ll likely never hear about (at least, substantively) in the “mainstream” Amateur Radio media… or from the Gloom & Doom faction.

I’m glad to have you 1800+ Zero Retries subscribers along for this wild ride of Amateur Radio in the 21st century.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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The Innovator’s Dilemma Applied to Amateur Radio Industry

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Some thoughts on how the lessons of “The Innovator’s Dilemma” apply to the Amateur Radio industry. ReadyKilowatt’s comment below initiated this article.

ReadyKilowatt commenting on Zero Retries 0155 (excerpt):

At this point I think it might be time to fork radio. Instead of continuing to adapt commercial band equipment to amateur use, maybe it's time to come up with reference designs that are specific to amateur use. Radios that run Linux or Android under the hood. That can be configured and controlled through a web browser (if my $20 light switch can do it, why can't my $800 radio?), and can run 25KHz bandwidth (or 6MHz, or whatever I dial up). DMR et al are interesting, but there's no shortage of bandwidth in the amateur bands, so why are we acting like there is (spare me the “no open repeater pairs” argument, how many inactive repeaters still hang on to “their” frequency)? DMR solved a problem we didn't have, and required bodging a fix that doesn't fit into the amateur ethos of VFO and direct operator control. But at least the radios are cheap and can be programmed to police repeaters!

Sorry to be such a downer. Maybe I'm the one who's wrong. But I think we've refined enough. Time to add a few modern features.

I replied at length with a counter-comment. See the link above for my response there, some of which became the basis for this article.

The book The Innovator’s Dilemma had a profound influence on me when I read it within the first year or so after it was published in 1997. It helped me make sense of seeing successful companies with seemingly unassailable, successful products, go down to ruin. Two examples that are front-of-mind to me were Research In Motion (RIM) the creator of the Blackberry personal messager / mobile phone, and Sun Microsystems. In hindsight of their failures, you could see their corporate hubris, and The Innovator’s Dilemma finally explained (at least, to my satisfaction), the thought processes that were behind such failures.

Wikipedia offers a reasonable capsule description:

The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail, first published in 1997, is the best-known work of the Harvard professor and businessman Clayton Christensen. It expands on the concept of disruptive technologies, a term he coined in a 1995 article "Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave".1 It describes how large incumbent companies lose market share by listening to their customers and providing what appears to be the highest-value products, but new companies that serve low-value customers with poorly developed technology can improve that technology incrementally until it is good enough to quickly take market share from established business. Christensen recommends that large companies maintain small, nimble divisions that attempt to replicate this phenomenon internally to avoid being blindsided and overtaken by startup competitors.

I think those seminal lessons also apply to the Amateur Radio industry, and we will see disruptive technology have a profound effect on most of the currently successful companies and organizations in Amateur Radio by the end of this decade.

With the understanding of “The Innovator’s Dilemma”, I am seeing disruptive technology subtly undermining the foundations of successful companies in Amateur Radio such as Icom, Kenwood, Yaesu, and Elecraft2, all of who make expensive HF radios with lots of knobs, but allow little or no customization by users. Companies and organizations within, or adjacent to Amateur Radio are also being disrupted such as:

  • SCS, creator of PACTOR 4 is being disrupted by VARA HF.

  • DVSI (CODEC voice chips used in DMR, D-Star, System Fusion, P25) is being disrupted by Codec 2.

  • AMSAT’s satellite construction activity is being disrupted by companies that can provide turnkey “from design to orbit” microsats to any organization (even as small as a local Amateur Radio club who can do an adequate fundraiser) who can pay their reasonable fees. AMSAT is also being disrupted of their requirement of paying a membership fee to view their publication AMSAT Journal by those who are generating enthusiasm for satellite operations without a membership fee such as YouTube creators, SatNOGS, and TinyGS.

  • ARRL is especially poised to be disrupted as its primary income from publishing books on paper, a paywalled magazine, and increasingly high membership dues render it uncompetitive with YouTube channels and free, publicly accessible digital publications such as the Surrey Amateur Radio Communications (club)’s Communicator Newsletterzine (usually more than 100 pages).

  • “Traditional” APRS (1200 bps AFSK AX.25 on 144.39 MHz) is increasingly being disrupted by new interpretations of APRS such as APRS on HF using VARA HF, APRS using LoRa, Communication And Telemetry System (CATS), etc. while the APRS Foundation is still struggling to offer more than a placeholder website and vague ideas of future directions for the organization.

Some of the “disruptive technology” that is affecting Amateur Radio:

  • Changing demographic of new Amateur Radio Operators who trend to be more technically oriented, “space constrained” (apartments and condos, rather than suburban houses), interest in VHF / UHF rather than HF, interest in data modes rather than voice modes, less budget and time for hobbies, etc.

  • The Open Source model of publicly sharing software, hardware designs, protocols, standards, etc. The M17 Project is a good example of this, and of course, the plethora of Amateur Radio open source projects maintained on GitHub (simple search yields 1300 results).

  • Software Defined Radio technology. We’re now firmly in the era of “radios are computers - with antennas” such as the LimeSDR Mini 2.0 and CaribouLite RPi HAT.

  • Electronic manufacturers in China who are increasingly willing to do small production lots of custom hardware.

  • Virtual organizations organized around videoconferencing rather than local, in-person meetings such as Radio Amateur Training Planning and Activities Committee (RATPAC).

  • Increasing use of data communications modes such as FT8 and JS8Call in lieu of voice and CW (Morse Code) modes on the HF bands.

  • Rising radio noise on the HF bands primarily from cheap switching power supplies of which there are dozens in every household are increasingly rending analog modes on HF less usable.

  • Lack of usage of VHF / UHF repeaters except for scheduled nets and linked repeaters that create artificial activity. New Amateur Radio repeaters are put on the air every month, and are briefly popular, but then tend to lapse into silence as they realize that “build it and they will come” increasingly doesn’t work.

  • New Amateur Radio Operators are almost always Internet natives versus long time Amateur Radio Operators who spout “well, that’s not real Amateur Radio”.

  • New funding models for small, medium, and large scale Amateur Radio projects (don’t need to form a company, or sometimes even an organization if fiscal sponsors are used):

  • Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning / Pattern Recognition on local hardware (not using data center / Internet resources) will inevitably play a profound role in Amateur Radio within a few years. Raspberry Pi now offers a Raspberry Pi AI kit for $85.

  • Cheap compute power such as the Raspberry Pi products of embedded microcontrollers and computers, all of which are incredibly well-supported with tailored Linux distributions, great documentation, and (now, resuming) ample distributon:

  • The breadth of web-based information distribution, versus “exclusivity”. Basically, those who recognize that if your content or product isn’t easily, publicly accessible, it’s essentially irrelevant.

  • Constantly shifting social media; “old and tired” is Facebook, X, LinkedIn; “new, hip, and happening is TikTok, Reddit, and Discord.

  • Non Amateur Radio “radio” activity such as Meshtastic (messaging via mesh network), SatNOGS (receiving micro research satellite telemetry), Ribbit / Rattlegram (messaging over any radio using acoustic coupling), rising popularity of GMRS repeaters for casual chat and emergency communications.

Just as RIM and Sun Microsystems couldn’t / wouldn’t change their products, business models, and organizations to meet the oncoming disruptive technology (until it was too late), I don’t think the current successful Amateur Radio companies have the corporate courage to change their products, business models, and organizations to meet the above disruptive technology (and societal) trends occurring in Amateur Radio outlined above.

One prime example is one Japanese Amateur Radio manufacturer’s Only Invented In Japan focus on developing Amateur Radio products in Japan, by Japanese marketers and engineers, largely for the Japan market, and then lightly adapting them for other markets such as the US and Europe. An example of this… “Japan focus”… is that this Amateur Radio manufacturer hasn’t included the US 222-225 MHz band in any of their products developed over the last two decades.

There’s just nothing that can be done. No amount of external warnings, suggestions, recommendations, user feedback, etc. will budge them. Like RIM and Sun, they’re going to stay focused on what they think their current market is, and the largest profits are at this moment. If they do see the disruptive technology trends as discussed above coming at them, that’s a problem that can be deferred for “maybe next year”. The problem with that approach is, of course, there’s always going to be a higher priority next year.

Overall, I think that Amateur Radio will be OK, even if we lose major manufacturers from the Amateur Radio market. Amateur Radio has survived the loss of venerable and beloved manufacturers such as Hallicrafters, R. L. Drake, . E. F. Johnson, and mighty Collins. There will always be demand for innovative Amateur Radio products, and sophisticated Amateur Radio units, and increasingly those can be accomplished on a small scale with adapting to the new realities and capabilities of this era of Amateur Radio. FlexRadio was deliberately not included in the above examples of “likely to be disrupted” companies because in my opinion, FlexRadio is successfully adapting to the distruptive technology (and societal trends) such as being a truly software-defined radio, offering extensibility and customization by users, and a reasonable and sustainable product lineup. Another example of a “new generation” Amateur Radio unit and manufacturer is the Charly 25 HF radio by Smart Radio Concepts3, based around a family of very powerful software defined transceiver boards (originally intended as a lab instrument) called the Red Pitaya.

Now we just need for a new manufacturer to become the “FlexRadio” of VHF / UHF radios. I keep hoping to see that soon.

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Commentary on What Stalls Amateur Radio Development?

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Some personal commentary on the open letter by Wojciech Kaczmarski SP5WWP in Zero Retries 0155 - What Stalls Amateur Radio Development?

In his open letter, SP5WWP highlights some very real issues within Amateur Radio when we attempt to advance Amateur Radio technology. Such work can be taxing to the point where such work can grow the point where it isn’t sustainable solely with volunteer labor:

There is a big problem behind it though - volunteers can rarely be bound with any obligations or time constraints. This also means no one can have any expectations against volunteers. They can be distracted, their reliability and commitment can span from anything between extremely enthusiastic to hardly interested. It is understandable that people prioritize tasks in their lives - family and daily job is by far more important for most of us than hobby-related projects.

Just within Amateur Radio, this issue has been known for decades now. Some examples of ambitious Amateur Radio projects that ultimately weren’t successful because (in my opinion), volunteer labor wasn’t sufficient to complete such ambitious projects:

  • TAPR announced the TAPR packetRADIO in 1989… and that project went nowhere because Radio Frequency (RF) design is hard, and RF design expertise (especially for VHF / UHF) is a rare skillset, especially for volunteer projects. My memory is that TAPR simply could not find enough volunteer RF design expertise to create a stable, reproducible, reasonably priced radio.
    It’s notable that in the same era, with the same project scope (a data radio for the Amateur Radio market), using professional labor, Kantronics created the D4-10 Data Radio for 420-450 MHz and the low power dvr 2-2 for 144-148 MHz. Similarly, MFJ was able to create low power data radios for 144-148 MHz and 220-225 MHz. Even more impressive was the Symek TRX2S and TRX4S radios which were synthesized, with 20 watts output power, and could do data speeds of 150 kbps+.

  • Hubmaster was a project in the 1990s to develop an Amateur Radio networking system that would operate at 256 kbps at 10 watts in the 902-928 MHz band. It was promising, and (if memory serves, there was some limited deployment, but ultimately it didn’t become a widely adopted system.

  • In Zero Retries 0000 - Story 3: The Radios That Weren’t; Part 1 I discussed the TAPR Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum Radio. Volunteer labor was sufficient to complete this project, but not on a fast-enough timeline; critical parts became obsolete over the course of the project. This happened twice before the project was canceled.

  • Also in Zero Retries 0000 - Story 4: The Radios That Weren’t; Part 2 I discussed UDRX-440 by Northwest Digital Radio (NWDR). There were prototypes of this radio developed, but for many reasons, the volunteer labor on the project just wasn’t able to complete the critical integration of software and hardware required for that project.

  • FaradayRF was an ambitious project / company to develop Faraday, a data radio that would operate in 902-928 MHz. For reasons unstated, FaradayRF just faded out, likely because of career pressures of the two founders.

  • The RPX-100 was yet another very promising, but ambitious project to create a Software Defined Transceiver for 50 / 144 / 440 MHz, and it also just faded out without creating a viable design (though they did leave behind some great technology, including an RF power amplifier for 50 / 144 / 440 MHz). Interestingly, this project was unique from the above projects in having received a significant grant from ARDC.

What has changed, and what SP5WWP doesn’t quite acknowledge in his open letter, is the existence of grants from ARDC now make it much more possible to create new radio technology and systems for Amateur Radio.

Disclaimer - What follows is mostly personal opinion and based on my (often flawed) memory and a bit of “insider knowledge” from my tenure (2021-2022) on the ARDC Grants Advisory Committee (GAC).
I have not been formally involved with ARDC since ending my tenure on the GAC at the end of 2022. ARDC does not speak for me, and I don’t speak for ARDC.
To the best of my knowledge, these points are not confidential, and as you’ll read, certainly not “secrets” given that paying for professional labor has been prominent in a number of ARDC grants.

Early in my tenure on the GAC, the issue of paying for professional engineering labor, such as developing new software and hardware, came up and was discussed. Some on the GAC felt that “this is Amateur Radio” and Amateur Radio projects should be done almost entirely on a volunteer basis, and ARDC grants should be used to pay for unusual “commercial” expenses such as fabrication of prototypes, test equipment, etc. Ultimately the GAC decided that it was acceptable for an ARDC grant to include payment for professional labor needed to successfully complete a project. Our reasoning was that building radio systems, especially for systems operating above 50 MHz, was a very specialized skillset and anyone with such a skillset was in high demand, with little “volunteer time” available for Amateur Radio projects. Similarly, software engineering for embedded processors and components such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) was a skillset that was similarly in demand, with little “volunteer time” available for Amateur Radio projects.

I believe that I explained my observations about the TAPR FHSS Radio, and the NWDR UDRX-440, and my conclusion that in this era… creating VHF / UHF radios, and other projects that required specialized skillsets, simply weren’t possible to accomplish without paying for professional labor.

The GAC, and ultimately the ARDC Board (during my tenure, the board approved, or vetoed, every grant request that the GAC approved) agreed with that perspective. Here are a few selected ARDC grants where paying for professional labor was an explicit part of the grant:

There are many other ARDC grants where the hiring of professional labor was not explicitly stated, but can be inferred from the complexity of the project and / or the size of the grant, such as Improving a State-of-the-Art Free Software Telecommunication Network Stack for the HF Band.

What SP5WWP wasn’t entirely transparent about is that he is a beneficiary of ARDC’s willingness for its grants to pay for professional labor. For some period, SP5WWP has been working almost entirely on M17 and related projects such as the OpenHT and Remote Radio Unit) as part of the M17 Project Popularization, Research and Development grant.

Thus, I think that ARDC has already answered (in the affirmative) a least part of SP5WWP’s issue. Someone who wants to develop an Amateur Radio project / system / organization (conceivably) can receive payment to do such work. But, the caveat of doing so via an ARDC grant is that such work:

  • Must be done under the auspices of a qualifying fiscal sponsor such as a not-for-profit organization (in the US, a 501(c)(3) organization or an educational institution), and

  • The resulting work must be made publicly available (essentially, released as open source).

As I read SP5WWP’s open letter, what I perceive from it as the larger context, is that SP5WWP sees a need for a new kind of organization within Amateur Radio beyond fiscal sponsors - a “Research and Development” organization. If someone interested in Amateur Radio has a unique project in mind that could benefit Amateur Radio, they could apply to work on that project and be paid for that work. The R&D organization would handle the “administrivia” overhead of managing all the other aspects of the project such as working with vendors, managing the “community” that grows up around such a project, and conceivably continuing the project into availability, perhaps even commercial availability. This would allow the “project originator” to focus on the tasks that they are most capable of working on (and have the needed critical skills).

With that context in mind, here are some at least partial answers / opinions:

  • At least in name, Amateur Radio actually has such an organization - Amateur Radio Research and Development (AMRAD). AMRAD’s About page:
    The purpose of AMRAD is to develop skills and knowledge in radio and electronic technology, advocate design of experimental equipment and techniques, promote basic and applied research, organize technical forums and symposiums, collect and disseminate technical information and provide repeaters.
    I’ve been told that AMRAD is now largely inactive as several key members such have become Silent Keyboards. But, wouldn’t it be cool if AMRAD could be resurrected and reimagined to live up to its name?
    If any Zero Retries readers are members of AMRAD, please get in touch - I’m curious about the fate of AMRAD.

  • I think that what SP5WWP would like to have is an Amateur Radio equivalent of Y Combinator, a highly specialized venture capital company that helps potential entrepreneurs build a company with unique forms of assistance and investments. In my opinion, such an organization wouldn’t be feasible in Amateur Radio as what makes Y Combinator’s model possible is a vastly larger potential market than the potential market of Amateur Radio… and vast potential profits. That said… perhaps there’s a role for quiet, personal Angel Investmenting. I’ve heard rumors of some Angel Investing in Amateur Radio projects; there are a lot of Amateur Radio Operators with significant wealth out there… but I can’t offer any specifics.

  • ARDC is not, and cannot (per its legal structure, or perhaps just because of its chosen policies) be such an organization. ARDC can only provide funding via individual grants, and perhaps grant extensions.

  • Perhaps ARDC grants could be used creatively to make projects that receive ARDC grants made commercially available. The ARDC grants for A Low-Cost Open-Source Universal Radio Test Instrument and ZUM Radio: Multimode Digital Voice Modem (MMDVM) Project both involved commercial companies, but it wasn’t explained exactly how the “technology transfer” with those companies will ultimately work. My guess is that as long as the work that is paid for by the ARDC grant is made publicly available… the associated commercial company (or any commercial company, or individual, or organization) can make use of that work.

  • In previous decades, TAPR used to provide such a role. For example, TAPR would arrange for writing documentation, providing website support, mailing list support, development of kits, stockpiling parts, sales, after-sales support, etc. TAPR now seems to function mostly as a “sales” organization for smaller projects that are self-developed and self-managed. My impression is that you can no longer come to TAPR with an idea, get funding for the idea, and have support functions provided. Perhaps TAPR could be a fiscal sponsor for an ARDC grant, and TAPR could, through its fiscal sponsorship, arrange for “support functions”.

  • Perhaps… the Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB) might be at least a partial answer, per this article - Amateur radio research and development:
    The RSGB, through its Legacy Fund, has provided funding for projects aimed at supporting innovation. Funding was provided for the ground-breaking work that Dr Martin Sach, G8KDF did on understanding the detailed characteristics of VDSL2, which must surely be the first step in building a method of digitally mitigating its impact on received signals. In the autumn, the RSGB Legacy Fund also subsidised a course organised by John Worsnop, G4BAO designed to encourage radio amateurs to experiment with GNU Radio Companion, and to teach others to do likewise. The Legacy Fund is always looking for proposals for innovative ideas that will advance amateur radio – if you have an idea, please email legacy.chairman@rsgb.org.uk

  • In Zero Retries 0079 (2022-12-30), the entire issue was a mostly fictional story about how Amateur Radio organizations might evolve in the near future - A Vision for Zero Retries Interesting Amateur Radio in 2029. Though I didn’t imagine a specific Research and Development organization for Amateur Radio, the (again, fictional) organization Amateur Radio Standards Organization (ARSO) would at least partially fulfill the role of Research and Development in Amateur Radio.

In conclusion, perhaps the most viable path that I think comes the closest to SP5WWP’s vision is to create a very small company and crowdfund a project. The example that comes to mind that is the closest to such an ideal is the very successful KrakenSDR project, which was crowdfunded (more than $1.5M to date) through Crowd Supply, by KrakenRF, Inc. I have no specific knowledge about the principals of KrakenRF, Inc. but in following the project from its announcement, my impression is that the KrakenSDR was developed by a small group of talented folks with an idea for a unique, compelling, and realistic product. KrakenRF, Inc. “put out their vision” via Crowd Supply, and the idea was well-received by enough folks to fund the project to the point of paying for development and production of the KrakenSDR. Unlike an ARDC grant, with crowdfunding there are no restrictions on how the funds could be used, only some due diligence (one would hope…) by Crowd Supply to verify that KrakenRF, Inc. was likely capable of creating this product per the crowdfunding proposal. The funds raised can then be used, in part, to pay for “administrivia” help so the developer(s) can focus on development.

Ultimately, in Amateur Radio, there’s currently no complete solution for developing technology, systems, or products for Amateur Radio and being paid to do so (without contributing one’s own funds, having investors (including bank loans), or obtaining grants. But, as explained in this article, it is possible to be paid to work on Amateur Radio projects.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Ashhar Farhan VU2ESE Joins ARDC’s Board of Directors

The team at ARDC is pleased to announce that on March 26, 2024, Ashhar Farhan (VU2ESE), joined our Board of Directors.

Licensed initially at the age of 15 as VU2FAX and “fascinated with electronics as a child,” Farhan became interested in amateur radio after being “hooked” following a local club coming to his school to perform a ham radio demo. Following a hiatus, he returned to the hobby in 2002 and obtained his general grade license as VU2ESE. Active in the amateur radio community, Farhan is the founding Vice President of the Lamakaan Amateur Radio Club (LARC), which he and his friends established in 2012; for the past seven years, the club has hosted an annual convention each December. Through LARC’s collaboration with the Digital Empowerment Foundation, Farhan actively promotes both ham radio and electronics in the inner cities.

Farhan’s technical contributions to amateur radio have earned him inductions into both the QRP Amateur Radio Club International (QRPARCI) Hall of Fame (2016), and the CQ Ham Radio Hall of Fame (2018). An avid radio and test equipment builder and designer, he is well-known for the BITX, a beginner friendly buildable QRP transceiver that is ideal for operating on 20m and modifiable for operating on other ham bands. The BITX, along with additional buildable transceivers, are available through HF Signals, a company Farhan co-founded with the goal of inspiring people to be active in ham radio around the globe.

Throughout his career, Farhan has worked in the fields of Internet telephony, free software, and voice codecs. An entrepreneur, not only has Farhan founded HF Signals, he has also co-founded Lamakaan, a cultural center in Hyderabad, as well as Exseed Space (now Satellize), which specializes in building satellites: to date, they have launched two amateur radio-carrying satellites into space. In addition to founding the above companies, Farhan is an angel investor in various technology startups.

“I am excited that Farhan agreed to join our Board of Directors,” says ARDC President Bdale Garbee KB0G. “Well-known for his open ham radio transceiver and test equipment designs that enable and encourage learning and experimentation, he also brings a wealth of career experience, and expands our understanding of opportunities and needs to a new geographic region. I am confident that his contributions will be invaluable as we work to achieve our long-term goals.”

“One of the first radios I built early in my ham radio career was Farhan’s BITX 20,” says ARDC Board Member Ria Jairam, N2RJ. “It was from that moment onward that I realized that he was dedicated to making homebrew and open source radios accessible. Farhan’s ideals of experimentation, open source hardware and software align very well with ARDC’s mission. I’m proud that he has decided to join ARDC’s board and look forward to working with him as one of our colleagues to shape the future of open source ham radio.”

“I really and truly am delighted to have him on board,” says ARDC Executive Director Rosy Schechter KJ7RYV. “He’s already bringing a lot to the table, and I can see him playing a key and positive role in ARDC’s continual evolution.”

From my perspective, the addition of VU2ESE to the ARDC Board is not just Zero Retries Interesting, but also a very welcome development within ARDC! In my opinion, VU2ESE will add some (needed) technical depth to the ARDC board about radio hardware technology. He will also add some international perspective as the only ARDC board member not based in the US.

As I mentioned in Zero Retries 0155 - FDIM 2024 - zBitx - Bringing CW into the 21st Century by Asher Farhan VU2ESE, I am mightily impressed with VU2ESE’s grasp of what’s important in future Amateur Radio, including his choice to use a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W in the zBitx (future?) radio he discussed, and matter-of-fact inclusion of some data modes in a “QRP CW” radio. He also has a pragmatic perspective of what it takes to drive a project to successful completion via his company, HF Signals and I hope VU2ESE is able to imbue ARDC with that understanding in guiding ARDC’s future grantmaking.

Welcome to ARDC, VU2ESE!


ARDC Updates Policies Regarding 44Net Subdomains

Rosy Schechter KJ7RYV on the ARDC 44Net email list:

It’s been just over two months since we launched the new Portal. It came with, as you have seen, some major bumps. Today, ARDC is resolving, at least temporarily, one of those hurdles: administrative access to subdomains. 

As of today, anyone who had a subdomain with ampr.org before the launch of the new Portal on April 3, 2024, will, for now, have full access to their DNS records. This includes subdomains that fall outside of our preferred format of callsign.ampr.org

This administrative access still depends on call sign verification, which requires confirming given name, family name, email, and valid amateur radio license. This step helps us ensure that the network is being used by valid amateur radio operators. During our recent work, we’ve found several bad actors, which is both unfair to the community and a security risk.

We’ve also made a functional change to the portal: once a call sign is verified, you are now automatically able to create a subdomain with the format of callsign.ampr.org. All other new requests for subdomains that fall outside of that format (e.g., foo.ampr.org, which I’ll refer to as nonstandard subdomains for brevity) will require review and approval.

Please note that we will be limiting the number of nonstandard subdomains going forward. Thus, if you have one (or, in some cases, many more), please consider it temporary. You can currently create as many second-level subdomains as you want—e.g., foo.callsign.ampr.org, bar.callsign.ampr.org, etc. 

We are working on a more official policy around subdomains using ampr.org. As promised at the recent regional coordinators' meeting, we will ensure you can see this policy before officially implementing it. We will also provide a transition period, likely many months, for users to edit their entries before official deprecation. This is, ultimately, what we should have done initially, and we take responsibility for not following a better process and, instead, rolling out this change without taking proper preparatory steps. 

Some of you may be wondering why we are making this change in the first place. It is because, without doing so, we end up in our current and very unwieldy situation: a database of over 51,000 DNS entries, most without knowledge of who they belong to, accumulated over at least a decade, with very few entries currently in use. If we aim to increase the usage of 44Net, then we need a system where we understand ownership and are able to provide an efficient service where we can address problems as they arise.

For now, we hope that this helps to unblock anyone that currently feels blocked, while also providing an ample notice for changes that are coming down the pipeline at a later, though likely not-so-distant date.

Some long time 44Net users are upset with this policy “modernization”, but in my opinion, seeing it from the perspective of ARDC trying to manage 44Net for the future, and cleaning up some of the non-allowed usage that has crept in, these new policies seem reasonable. If you want a “cute” name for your 44Net address block, the cutename.callsign.ampr.org naming convention seems a reasonable compromise, and in other email discussions, apparently a cname can also be used.

Another issue that came up is when a 44Net address block is used by a club, and administered by someone who isn’t the trustee of the club callsign. Undoubtedly that corner case will be worked out in a reasonable fashion.

A minor issue is the legacy IP address assignments of individual Amateur Radio Operators (some of whom are now Silent Keyboards). For example, the Puget Sound Amateur Radio TCP/IP group had a number of IP address blocks assigned to our various data repeaters in the Seattle area. Those IP address assignments were never cleaned up when that network was shut down. I’m going to try to do my part and go onto the portal and release all my legacy IP address assignments from that era.

Kudos to the ARDC staff, contractors, and the Technical Advisory Committee (TAG) volunteers for apparently working their butts off to sort out all the issues resulting from modernizing 44Net (ticketing system, new policies, real documentation, the eventual 44Net VPN, etc.). With the role of Technical Director vacant, and the recent death of John Hays K7VE (who was highly involved and knowledgeable of 44Net), getting 44Net’s issues sorted seems to be an “all hands on deck” priority with ARDC - for the benefit of us Amateur Radio users of 44Net worldwide.


Technical Aid Group

From the 1974-01 issue of 73 Magazine

The Technical Aid Group is a group of hams who have indicated a willingness to share their knowledge and skills with others. They have volunteered to be of service to fellow hams and do so without compensation. If you have a technical question, look over the list to see who has competency in the area of your question. For many of the TAG members, descriptions of all areas of expertise would be lengthy, so an abbreviated description is given. When stating your problem, give as much information as possible and clearly state the difficulty. Enclose a SASE for reply.

For those hams who have a desire to share, the TAG is the thing for you. Send a brief note requesting the membership form, fill it in and send it back. It asks a few questions about your qualifications, and there is a check-list to indicate your fields of competence. These cover all modes currently used by hams, antenna design and theory, transmitter and receiver design for HF, VHF, and UHF, logic, ICs, general help, and other areas. As more members are added, their names and addresses will be published.

I stumbled onto this in researching one of the articles in this issue. Wow… what an idea… and how doable this could be, in this era, via a website!

We’ve kind of done this with email lists for various broad topics (like the various email lists mentioned in this issue), but there’s a lot of value in knowing unique (and searchable) knowledge and potential mentorship.

And, once again, this is an example of how invaluable the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC) is proving to be for Amateur Radio. Thank you Kay Savetz K6KJN, Internet Archive, and ARDC (for the grant that made DLARC possible).


FreeDV Running Natively on sBitx

Jonathan Bruno W2JON on the digitalvoice email list:

… I picked up an sBitx from HFSignals.com and fell in love with its open-source nature.

If you aren't familiar the sBitx is one of Ashhar Farhan, VU2ESE creations. Big brother to the uBitx, BITX20, BITX40, Antuino, and zBitx.

The sBitx is a hybrid SDR that runs on a Raspberry Pi4 its a hoot to work and play on.

Now, you can buy just the board and experiment but I went all in and picked up the completely assembled unit which comes in an aluminum case with the Raspi 7" capacitive touch screen.

The sBitx software has fldigi in the backend handling some heavy digital lifting and the wsjtx libs are baked into the control surface so the rig can even decode and log FT8 QSOs all in one small box with no additional hardware.

Well, with all that being said, the one thing I wanted to run on it, it couldn't run.. why? the screen is too darn small for the FreeDV GUI.. even with the GUI heavily crunched down it just wasn't useable.

I sat down and thought I wasn't willing to give up the idea of running FreeDV on the sBitx so I set out to write a control companion for the FreeDV codecs.

I'm not a developer by any stretch of the word I'm an infrastructure engineer, but I know enough to be a problem but somehow I got it pretty much working and fairly capable.

I call my abomination FreeDV_PTT [https://github.com/SigmazGFX/freedv_ptt] and If you have an sBitx please feel free to give it a whirl.

But one gotcha. This will only run on the 64bit upgraded OS. (no 32bit).

So now FreeDV has been implemented on a sBitx… but that can’t be done on a FlexRadio 6000 series? I guess the moral of this story is never overlook the capabilities of a motivated amateur (as in non-professional) software developer to make something work the way they want it to… and the power of user-extensible radio hardware. Kudos to both HF Signals for the extensible architecture of the sBitx and W2JON for this achievement.

And… yet another example that Radios are computers - with antennas!


Interesting (and Unusual) VHF / UHF Antenna Configuration

Stephen Smith WA8LMF on the VARA-MODEM email list:

In the late 1970s, I worked at Collins Radio in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. At the time, repeaters were not ubiquitous as they are today. People routinely used 100-150-watt-plus amplifiers on 2M mobiles to work simplex 50-100 miles (80-160 Km) across the gently-rolling terrain of Iowa to fixed stations with 8-element or more beam antennas. One normally expected mobile flutter and rapid fade-outs/fade-ins as mobiles moved down Interstate-80 at 70 MPH / 110 KMh. I used two 8-element KLM beams vertically side-by-side fed in phase with a divider harness to produce vertical polarization.

I then tried mounting the two antennas one leaning 45 degrees to the left and the other 45 degs to the right (i.e. 90 degs apart) and fed them with a phasing harness with an extra 1/4-wave of coax on one leg. This creates circular polarization instead of planar vertical-only. The effects were spectacular - the mobile flutter and fading on long simplex paths totally disappeared! Note that you DON'T need to have CP antennas at both ends of the path - the normal vertical-only mobile whip at one end of the path will work as long as the other end of the path has a CP antenna.

I had the same experience with a two-meter repeater covering a narrow canyon road in Los Angeles. The narrow winding rocky-walled canyon road was a nightmare of multi-path phase distortion and rapid-fire fluttering when the repeater at the summit used the usual vertical gain antenna. I switched the repeater to a circular-polarized crossed-yagis antenna intended for satellite tracking pointed down into the canyon. Again, the results were night-and-day - the flutter and spattery audio phase distortion on mobiles in the canyon completely went away.

Imagine combining this technique with a “voting” receiver system now that highly capable, sensitive, and inexpensive Software Defined Receivers are available, not to mention the possibilities of Digital Voice (DV) techniques that incorporate Forward Error Correction (FEC). An interesting subtext is that WA8LMF made this discovery while working for a radio communications company… as an Amateur Radio Operator in his personal time. One can only imagine what cool innovations WA8LMF must have contributed within Collins Radio because of his hands-on experiences in Amateur Radio like this.


Two Books on Software Defined Radio

Joanne Dow W6MKU (I think…) on the SDR-Radio email list:

There is no “one book.” They all have different slants and designed audiences.

"SDR4Engineers" is not as deep as it sounds but deeper than you might like. It is heavily coupled to the [Analog Devices ADALM] Pluto. This is very much how it is done with the math.

"Software Defined Radio Handbook" by Roger Hosking is pretty much a Pentek ad with lots of diagrams. It shows you how the blocks are put together.

Both are free.

I found two likely links for the former:

https://www.analog.com/en/resources/technical-books/software-defined-radio-for-engineers.html

https://archive.org/details/sdr-4-engineers/mode/2up

It was easy to find the latter with the author’s name:

https://www.pentek.com/sftradhandbook/SftRadHandbook.cfm

Thank you W6MKU!


Another Great “All Zero Retries Interesting” Issue of The Random Wire!

The Random Wire Newsletter issue 94 is so packed with Zero Retries Interesting items that I’ll have to re-read it several times to absorb it all. Recommended!

Kudos to Tom Salzer KJ7T!

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
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    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
    Founding Member 0005 - Ben Kuhn KU0HN
    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
    Founding Member 0008 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 14
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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-06-14

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

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Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.


Footnotes for this Issue

1

[Footnote from Wikipedia] Bower, Joseph L. & Christensen, Clayton M. (1995). However the concept of new technologies leading to wholesale economic change is not a new idea since Joseph Schumpeter adapted the idea of creative destruction from Karl Marx. Schumpeter (1949) in one of his examples used "the railroadization of the Middle West as it was initiated by the Illinois Central". He wrote, "The Illinois Central not only meant very good business whilst it was built and whilst new cities were built around it and land was cultivated, but it spelled the death sentence for the [old] agriculture of the West. "Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave" Harvard Business Review, January–February 1995.

2

The exclusion of FlexRadio from this list is deliberate, as FlexRadio’s products are largely software-based, and allow significant user customization through the use of their TCP/IP API and their Waveform API and their update of the product line to the 8000 series with significantly more compute capability as the basis for future capabilities.

3

Currently being redesigned / updated due to obsolescence of critical parts.

Zero Retries 0155

7 June 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1700+ 1800+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

1800+ Subscribers!

In Zero Retries 0153, a mere two issues / weeks ago, Zero Retries achieved 1700+ subscribers. Now Zero Retries has 1800+ subscribers!

Welcome, new subscribers, to Zero Retries!

Nice Mention of Zero Retries on Amateur Radio Workbench

This rush of subscriptions was due in part to Zero Retries receiving a mention from George Zafiropoulos KJ6VU on his popular podcast - Amateur Radio Workbench, Episode 209:

The other one I want to mention is a blog called Zero Retries by Steve Stroh, N8GNJ. And Steve is really a super accomplished digital VHF UHF expert. And he's participated in various organizations like [TAPR] and made publications and delivered papers and is just a real authority around digital radio stuff.

And he's got a fantastic blog called Zero Retries. So go to zeroretries.org.

My thanks to Dave Cherkus, N1AI in the Zero Retries 0153 comments for mentioning KJ6VU’s shout out.

(Zero Retries didn’t make it into the show notes of HRWB 209 which is why I wasn’t initially aware of it.) Zero Retries is now mentioned in the HRWB 209 show notes.

That prompted me to do a bit of long-neglected housekeeping to the Closing the Channel section at the end of every Zero Retries. In addition to:

These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:
and
These YouTube channels regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

I’ve now added:

These podcasts regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

(And will add other podcasts that regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content as I identify them.)

Nice (Extended) Mention of Zero Retries in Hot Iron Newsletter

Zero Retries also got a nice (extended!) mention in HOT IRON #125.

* Similarly, Zero Retries has articles of interest:

- #140: Pwr Amp suitable for Software Defined Transmitters, AI in electronic warfare

- #152: Teensy SDR project, Photon Radio (!)

- #151: The Modern Ham, Raspberry Pi, Stuff You Should Know

- #150: MJF wind down, more

- #149: Jam-resistant Ukranian drones, new designs, IPv6

- #148: Meshtastic, Meshmail, more

- Look at the archived issues for much more

This issue of Hot Iron (The Journal of the Constructor’s Club) was largely references to websites and other publications, etc. and the majority are Zero Retries Interesting. Hot Iron is free, delightful to read every quarter, and recommended!

That mention reminded me to do another bit of long-neglected housekeeping to add Hot Iron to the Closing the Channel section at the end of each Zero Retries:

These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:


Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 31 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 32 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


M17-Users email List Off to a Great Start

The M17-Users email list is off to a great start with 75 subscribers to date. We’re self-educating each other on topics relating to getting M17 more widely out into the real world. One example is the current thread about M17 (Wide Area) repeaters? where I learned that Bridgecom sells an off-the-shelf MMDVM option for its repeaters.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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What Stalls Amateur Radio Development?

By Wojciech Kaczmarski SP5WWP
w.kaczmarski@teletra.pl

An open letter exposing the current state of the amateur radio world, and roadblocks on the way to making it technologically up-to-date.

Warsaw, June 2024

Background

I’ve been a licensed amateur radio operator since 2016. In 2019, I started the M17 Project (1), a highly successful and widely acclaimed international endeavor. A few years later, in 2021, I was honored with the ARRL Technical Innovation Award for my contribution to the technical development of our hobby (2). M17 has become a large, overarching ecosystem, offering both software and hardware, open-source solutions (3). Through this time, I have worked with many people from all around the world. Most of them were exceptionally brilliant, but since M17 is based on volunteers’ work, our team members rotated constantly.

The current status of Amateur Radio

It’s not a secret that most of the amateur radio community depends on large companies (Icom, Yaesu, Kenwood) and solutions they provide. The status quo is all about keeping hardware and software proprietary, minimizing users’ chances to modify it. While there are new models of radios being advertised all the time, they do not offer anything new. This keeps the amateur radio world in a state of artificially sustained technological stagnation, short-sightedly throttling down the progress in order to maximize someone’s profit. It’s been already shown that community-driven projects can lead to technological advancements - the advent of MMDVM (4), M17, OpenRTX (5), WPSD (6), OpenWebRX (7), and many others. The purpose of this open letter is to show that cutting-edge, open-source solutions can only be successfully proliferated by a group of skilled amateur radio developers.

Stock, commercial firmware mostly lacks functionalities amateur radio operators seek. The reason behind that is simple - large corporations often don’t have a clue what amateur radio operators want. A solution to this seems very simple - let skilled users write their own replacement firmware, then release it under an appropriate open license, for the rest to use. Sounds easy, but as always, there’s a catch. The firmware flashing process is not always easy (binary files are almost always obfuscated) and requires a fair amount of reverse engineering effort.

The most popular digital voice mode is DMR (8) (looking at the users count and radio infrastructure size). It had to be adapted for ham radio use cases, as it was originally designed for professional use. DMR is based on an open standard released by ETSI. The standard by itself does not mention what voice coder should be used, but the de facto protocol seen “in the wild”, enforced by manufacturers, uses AMBE.

Linking radio access networks (RAN) using IPv6 and geostationary satellites and utilizing remote radio units (RRU) with powerful I/Q modems is without a doubt a technological advancement. Wouldn’t it be amazing to see Daniel Estevez’s (EA4GPZ) 32APSK modem (9) “move out” from the shacks of a few and be used in real hardware and by hams worldwide? Or at least in the QO-100’s footprint? This is just the tip of an iceberg of ideas to implement in the real world. We can’t just passively wait and expect major manufacturers to pick up on it. It is something we can do on our own.

The pitfalls of volunteer-based work

Volunteering is a wonderful work model - you get excellent, qualified workforce for free. It allowed many amazing projects to appear - MMDVM, OpenRTX, WPSD, M17, to name a few in the amateur radio community. There is a big problem behind it though - volunteers can rarely be bound with any obligations or time constraints. This also means no one can have any expectations against volunteers. They can be distracted, their reliability and commitment can span from anything between extremely enthusiastic to hardly interested. It is understandable that people prioritize tasks in their lives - family and daily job is by far more important for most of us than hobby-related projects (10).

This reveals the first issue of volunteer-based work: the difficulty of scheduling work when there aren't reliable resources available (11). Moreover, one’s good will is not enough to maintain focus on the less fun and more administrative sides of the project. Lifespan of a project can be short regardless of the level of technological advancement offered, due to lack of workforce.

Second issue relates to long term commitment required for sophisticated projects. Many complex functions require more than one person to be involved (12). This implies project management, reporting, planning and documentation, tasks seldom attractive for volunteers. People come and go, leaving unfinished tasks behind. The turnover rate varies mostly between days and, more rarely, months.

A volunteer-powered project works well when each task can be handled by a single person and when there are not too many interconnections with other functional blocks or submodules. This, of course, only applies with the assumption that there are no deadlines or other expected time constraints. The project basically has to “live its own life”, at its own pace, dictated by its contributors.

Third issue is maintainer burnout (13), widespread in the open-source community. Volunteering contributors come and go, but maintainers bear the long-term responsibility for the project's health and sustainability. This burden grows quickly with the project's popularity, leading to a form of burnout that leaves maintainers with emotional exhaustion and a decreased sense of accomplishment. One of the major contributors to maintainer burnout is loneliness (14).

As mentioned by Artem Sapegin (15):

“Open source became a synonym of free labor, not just free code, and it’s not only harmful for the whole community, but mostly for the maintainers of open source projects.”

The seemingly free labor suddenly turns expensive in terms of management and commitment sustenance.

In conclusion, this reasoning shows the difficulty of foreseeing a project's future in terms of development, funds management and allocation. That also makes any granting request process extremely hard or even unfeasible, leaving the following questions open:

  • Why are there so few developers paid for their work?

  • Is there an entity out there having enough funds and willing to change this?

“They all want, but do not commit”

Project’s followers usually have brilliant ideas and provide valuable feedback, but when it gets to implementation, suddenly everyone turns impotent. There are also those affected with severe non-committal disorder, who still keep repeating that they "would love to help", but for some reason nothing ever fits their specializations. Frequently, empty promises appear. Sooner or later, ideas are written off as “not having enough developers to implement” - there’s simply no one to perform the required task - an inherent developer shortage. Most projects just don’t have enough staff (are under-resourced) (16). This causes frustration and breaks down existing developers’ morale - they are overwhelmed by the number of pending tasks to do.

Another example is the shortage of educational and explanatory materials created by the community, despite the fact that the community has enough knowledge to create it.

For this exact reason, most subprojects are run by a single person, or mostly by a single person [vide: M17 specification document (17), WPSD (18), the Remote Radio Unit (19), OpenRTX (20)]. This burden causes significant emotional stress, easily deteriorating the lone developer's psyche. The effect is further amplified by the pressure coming from the user base, with its never-ending requests and expectations (21).

A possible solution

To be a real threat to the aforementioned status quo and bring amateur radio back to its open-source tinkering roots, it is not enough to rely on volunteers, as this model is too inefficient for large, high-impact projects. There is a significant, consistent effort required to provide the critical mass needed to bring products to market.

Justification

There are some good examples of companies that are the owners of open-source products (22). They all have paid staff to drive the vision and schedule for products, while maintaining good relationships with volunteers contributing to the projects. There must be a clear vision of the for-profit company to help align the volunteers who wish to remain incidental contributors.

Monetary profit is a human motivator that can be used to push the state-of-art forward faster than it would otherwise move. There seems to be a wide assumption that technology will continue to improve, however, that is not a certainty. Hiring an engineer who believes in the goals and vision of the organization relieves the pressure for the individual to have to work elsewhere to earn a living. The engineer’s priorities will naturally align with the priorities of the organization. This will help the organization to consistently drive to keep striving.

To sum it up, financial support:

  • allows contributors to stay focused on tasks (strong monetary incentive)

  • allows the team to make necessary purchases - equipment, licenses, etc.

  • makes management easier, as the workforce allocation can be adjusted

  • fixes timeframes for tasks

  • makes work efficient by making human resources engaged over extended periods of time.

Potential pitfalls

There should be no apologies for making a profit as this allows the organization to increase R&D efforts and add individuals to the engineering workforce. It can be a difficult transition from a non-profit volunteer based organization, as misunderstandings and hurt feelings can occur. However, by ensuring the vision is communicated clearly to the entire organization, both paid and volunteers, many of the issues are avoided.

Footnotes:

  1. M17 Project’s homepage - https://m17project.org

  2. https://www.arrl.org/news/view/the-2021-arrl-technical-innovation-award-honors-wojciech-kaczmarski-sp5wwp

  3. M17 Project’s repositories - https://github.com/M17-Project

  4. Multimode Digital Voice Modem - https://mmdvm.com

  5. OpenRTX project’s homepage - https://openrtx.org

  6. W0CHP Pi-Star Dashboard - https://w0chp.radio/wpsd/

  7. Homepage - https://www.openwebrx.de/

  8. https://www.repeaterbook.com/repeaters/niche/index.php?mode=DMR

  9. https://destevez.net/2021/05/32apsk-narrowband-modem-for-qo-100

  10. https://networkingnerd.net/2024/04/26/on-open-source-and-volunteering

  11. IARU “Shaping the Future” programme - https://storage.iaru-r1.org/index.php/s/DAtTorPyFaNFdXK/download?path=%2FInput%20documents%20incl%2 0amendments&files=ZL23_C3_54%20Shaping%20the%20Future%20programme.docx&downloadStartSecret= 5bs5djy8c13

  12. https://stackoverflow.blog/2021/01/07/open-source-has-a-funding-problem

  13. https://opensauced.pizza/blog/the-lonely-journey-of-open-source-maintainers

  14. https://nutjs.dev/blog/i-give-up

  15. https://dev.to/sapegin/why-i-quit-open-source-1n2e

  16. IARU “Shaping the Future” volunteers and contributors - https://storage.iaru-r1.org/index.php/s/DAtTorPyFaNFdXK/download?path=%2FInput%20documents%20incl%2 0amendments&files=ZL23_C3_59%20Shaping%20the%20Future%20volunteers%20and%20contributors.docx &downloadStartSecret=9qjobuk5o3v

  17. https://github.com/M17-Project/M17_spec

  18. https://repo.w0chp.net/WPSD-Dev/WPSD-WebCode/commits/branch/master

  19. https://github.com/M17-Project/rru-rf-hw

  20. https://github.com/OpenRTX/OpenRTX/commits/master

  21. https://github.com/OpenRTX/OpenRTX/issues

  22. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_models_for_open-source_software

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FlexRadio - APIs Include “Run In The Radio”

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

An update on the ability of FlexRadio units to run non-FlexRadio software in the radio - putting the (User) “Software Defined” into FlexRadio units. And a few impressions of the updated FlexRadio Maestro Control Console.

In Zero Retries 0153 - FlexRadio 8000 Series HF Radios - Even More Capable… Except for FreeDV, I took FlexRadio to task for not including the FreeDV mode as a feature of these new, more powerful radios:

No matter what the “advanced features” of the FlexRadio 8000 series, the lack of FreeDV as a native feature in SmartOS, is (in my mind) a significant failing on the part of FlexRadio. That FlexRadio can’t, or won’t, implement such a fundamental (in the mid 2020s) new mode says to me that FlexRadio is focused on the past of Amateur Radio:

Emission Modes - USB, LSB, CW, RTTY, AM, Synchronous AM, FM, NFM, DFM

RTTY isn’t quite a century old; but the rest of those modes are more than a century old.

At SEA-PAC 2024, I spoke to a person knowledgeable about FlexRadio who clarified a major point in my understanding of user customization of current FlexRadio units and current versions of FlexRadio’s SmartSDR software (the operating system of the radio units).

I did know that FlexRadio provides an Application Programming Interface (API) that allows external devices (and software running on external devices) to integrate with a FlexRadio, allowing those external devices / software to “appear native” on a FlexRadio. This capability is apparently implemented via the SmartSDR TCP/IP API. This is how the EZDV external unit is currently able to integrate with FlexRadios to operate FreeDV on a FlexRadio unit, such as shown in the illustration below:

FreeDV mode enabled on a current FlexRadio unit. Image courtesy of FreeDV Project.

Waveform API

When I explained my perspective that FreeDV should be able to run on the (sophisticated, powerful, Software Defined) FlexRadio units, the person knowledgeable about FlexRadio explained that FlexRadio offers another API, that allows software to run on the radio - the Waveform API:

For those wishing to experiment by creating their own digital mode or waveform, FlexRadio Systems offers the SmartSDR Waveform API. The Waveform API allows developers to create their own digital modes and integrate directly into SmartSDR. When a waveform module is loaded, the module registers with SmartSDR and delineates the modes it supports. These modes are then available in the standard mode selection interface inside SmartSDR. The operator simply selects the mode and beings operating. The Waveform API exchanges commands and status with the developer written waveform module as well as streaming samples. Completed modes may be run both outside and inside the radio with virtually no changes!

OK, now we’re talking! That sounds like exactly what was needed to implement FreeDV as a “native” mode on the radio. But, the person knowledgeable about FlexRadio disclaimed that because FreeDV is constantly being iterated, FreeDV is a “moving target”, and thus a low priority for FlexRadio to implement as a native mode in SmartSDR.

But, again, the Waveform API is there for anyone to use, such as FreeDV’s developers.

Thus, my understanding of this issue settled out into good news / bad news points:

Good News - The FlexRadio Waveform API exists, and could, in theory, makes my “ask” of adding FreeDV as a “native” mode on a FlexRadio unit / Smart SDR, running on the radio actually possible.

Bad News - The person knowledgeable about FlexRadio said that basically there isn’t enough (remaining) computing power on the current FlexRadio 6000 series units to actually add FreeDV (or other modes) as native modes via the Waveform API. (Almost all of the computing power of the FlexRadio 6000 series is now used to run the native SmartSDR functions.) Thus, adding FreeDV to FlexRadio 6000 units can only be implemented externally via the EZDV or equivalent unit (where the FreeDV processing happens outside the FlexRadio unit).

Good News - The newly announced FlexRadio 8000 units1 with …

4x the CPU power of the 6000 series and twice the performance in the FPGA over the FLEX-6000 series…

Will easily accommodate (again, per the person knowledgeable about FlexRadio) incorporation of FreeDV (and more) to run on the 8000 series radios.

Bad News - With the introduction of the FlexRadio 8000 series, the FlexRadio 6000 series is now obsoleted (but still highly functional, and very good HF radios).

Good News - The FlexRadio 8000 series is now the standard (only) product line available from FlexRadio, and it looks like FlexRadio maintained (at least, approximately) the same price points as the FlexRadio 6000 series.

So… apparently, my initial plaint about the FlexRadio 8000 series - that they wouldn’t / couldn’t run FreeDV (and other data modes) on that new radio product line… will be possible after the FlexRadio 8000 series begins shipping in August, 2024.

It probably won’t be FlexRadio that will implement FreeDV (and other modes) natively on the FlexRadio 8000 series, but apparently it’s doable by others via the FlexRadio Waveform API.

The New FlexRadio Maestro Control Console is Gorgeous!

At SEA-PAC, FlexRadio was showing off pre-production units of the FlexRadio 8000 series, along with the current (second generation?) version of the FlexRadio Maestro (Remote) Control Console. I… liked… the original Maestro Control Console… but I love the (new) current version of the Maestro Control Console. Apparently I was so infatuated with it I didn’t take a photo of it - argh! (The photos of the new Maestro on the FlexRadio website don’t do it justice.) The newer Maestro was just so… bright… and high resolution, and seemingly larger. It was just… compelling! When I (likely) purchase a FlexRadio unit, I will definitely purchase the Maestro Control Console.

Excellent job on the new Maestro, FlexRadio!


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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

44Net VPN Beta Test Open for Applicants

Rebecca Key KO4KVG on the ARDC:44Net email list - 44Net Update, June 7, 2024:

For those of you interested in being a beta tester for the 44Net VPN, reach out to Adam at adam@ardc.net to get set up!

My email has been sent! Kudos to ARDC for finally getting to this point with the 44Net VPN project.


How the Army Handled D-Day Communications

The Allied invasion of continental Europe 80 years ago was a logistical tour de force. Its success hinged on an operative communications network unifying the invading armies and their support systems.

The U.S. Army Signal Corps, or “SigC,” was tasked with establishing massive, reliable, multi-channel high-speed voice and “data” networks. These networks would support a mission buildup of more than a million troops in a hostile environment.

That meant two-way voice circuits to keep decision-makers in touch and high-speed channels to exchange reconnaissance photos and situation maps evaluating the impact of aerial and ship-launched ordnance.

SigC’s design baselines were high capacity and agility, with low latency. Communications with the beach had to be established speedily using whatever gear made it to shore in the contested landings. The system had to be mobile: radio supplemented by ad-hoc wire telephony. Contact within operating units had to survive when troops mistakenly landed in one another’s sectors.

SigC had estimated it would need some 90,000 transmitters for the job. This mandated frequency coordination. The radios were largely short-range “hand-helds” but also included short- and medium-distance radio links to naval and air elements and Allied headquarters.

This is an excellent Zero Retries Interesting article by Mark Durenberger in RADIOWORLD, appropriate for the 80th anniversary of D-Day yesterday.

My thanks to Amateur Radio Weekly Issue 333 and Frank Barnes W4NPN (Hot Iron [Newsletter] Co-conspirator) for a special issue of Hot Iron Newsletter that alerted me to this story.


EggNOGS Antennas in Beta Test

Mark (Smitty) Smith N6MTS of Halibut Electronics is developing an easy kit (see the link for photos) for constructing an inexpensive, receive-only (at present) Eggbeater antenna. Eggbeaters are omnidirectional antennas where the energy (or receive focus) is focused “up” instead of “out” to better receive signals from satellites whizzing by overhead. The basic EggNOGS design has been proven out, but improvements are being made to the instructions, and correcting a few minor issues. EggNOGS kits will likely be available for sale in the next few months. The purpose of EggNOGS is to help construct SatNOGS stations for receiving telemetry from research satellites such as cubesats built and launched by university students or other small, not-for-profit project entities that don’t have global infrastructure to receive telemetry from their satellite.

Apparently the tricky bit about building your own eggbeater antenna is getting the phasing harness correct for developing the desired directivity of the antenna. N6MTS figured out that a printed circuit board would help with the most demanding parts of an eggbeater antenna, with only some small coax, and some wire (such as solid copper household interior electrical wire) to build your own low-cost eggbeater antenna. There will apparently be several versions of EggNOGS for specific frequencies depending on your desired satellite reception.

N6MTS has discussed the development of EggNOGS on the Ham Radio Workbench podcast and the Halibut Electronics support email list.


TheModernHam Blog - Zero Retries Interesting Articles

Billy Penley KN4MKB of Modern Ham YouTube channel and TheModernHam Blog has pushed out a streak of Zero Retries Interesting articles lately:

And those… were all written / posted in May, 2024!

KN4MKB’s energy (and breadth of Zero Retries Interesting knowledge) is inspiring!

Note that you can subscribe to TheModernHam newsletter (one email per month, summarizing blog articles) in the lower right corner of the blog.

Kudos KN4MKB!


Pico SDR (I have never built a radio before.)

From the blog nanoseconds of curiosity:

As a software developer I have had my share of building networking applications. Even ones that made use of WiFi or cellular networks. But I have never really understood how those radios worked at the level where software met the electromagnetic field.

I have looked into some of the lower frequency, DIY amateur stuff. Everyone seemed to be building “Manhattan-style” analog boards. That was putting me off, because I am rather clumsy with my hands, lack the patience to carefully “dead-bug” solder the parts and most importantly, I don’t really find circuits without a programmable controller attractive enough.

On the transmitting side, it ends up being fundamentally pretty simple. Just toggle a GPIO pin at the correct frequency, connect piece of wire as an antenna and get on the air. Besides the desired signal, you will pollute the spectrum with a lot of unwanted harmonics and mixing products, so add a filter or use more pins to shape your signal to more closely resemble sine wave. There is a lot more to it, but most of the complexity lies at the receiving end.

Receivers are hard.

How would one even go about building a digital receiver? And I am not talking about buying a ready-made module and connecting it to an Arduino. How would one even begin building a receiver using general purpose microcontroller from scratch?

Surprisingly, it has been done and documented multiple times before. Some super smart people who have actually made radio receivers using FPGA and some passives have left the breadcrumbs for us to follow.

The only issue is that their FPGA always had a high speed comparator to use as a 1-bit ADC. And the chip I currently enjoy messing around with does not have one. So how would one build a digital radio receiver using RP2040, heart of the Raspberry Pi Pico?

This is a different approach to building a software defined radio, and the author explains their learning progression very well.

My thanks to Jenny List and Hackaday for mentioning this article.


ARDOP added to HF [BBS] Backbones

Jeff Mein KP3FT on the EastNetPacket email list:

If anyone's interested, N3MEL and I have added the ARDOP mode to our HF backbone setup. It's a good mode for anyone who doesn't want to use VARA, plus it is Linux-native (as well as Windows). I'm using the latest ARDOPCF version which was released a few days ago. Glenn N3MEL is using the oriogional ARDOP. They're compatible with each other.

There's some good info here on the older ARDOPC version: https://www.cantab.net/users/john.wiseman/Documents/ARDOPC.html

If you want to try the latest version, the downloads are here:  https://github.com/pflarue/ardop/releases/tag/1.0.4.1.2

They're stand-alone binaries, so no installation is required.  Just put in in any folder and run it from there.  The Linux version needs to be made executable in permissions before running it.  Also, renaming the download to just "ardopcf" makes things easier.  It's command line in Linux and Windows, so in my case I use for Linux:

ardopcf -G 8514 8515 plughw:1,0 plughw:1,0

and for Windows, I use:

ardopcf -G 8514 8515 USB USB

The -G 8514 switch enables a web browser interface (127.0.0.1:8514) that shows a nice waterfall and some settings.   8515 is the default ARDOP port for BPQ, Winlink, etc. to link to.

The command-line will be different for others, depending on your setup.  USB USB works fine in WIndows if you're using only one USB sound device for digi-modes.  In Linux, the plughw:1,0 plughw:1,0 is my USB sound device.  The plughw:1,0 plughw:1,0 forces 12000hz sampling since ARDOP works better with that rate.

Make sure your radio's filter passband audio is at least as wide as ARDOP's bandwidth, otherwise ARDOP will show "BUSY".  ARDOP can use four bandwidths: 200, 500, 1000, and 2000.  We're using 1000 since it allows decent BPS speed but still without being very wide.  200 is way too slow for forwarding BBS mail.

The only ARDOP-interfacing I'm familiar with is BPQ and Winlink, no idea what's possible with interfacing it with, say, JNOS or others.

Oops, I left out KN4LQN in Virginia.  He's also running the new ARDOPCF on his node, backbone-linked the N3MEL.  It's not strictly Eastnet, but we're using HF to link some Eastnet to some BPQ and JNOS nodes and vis-versa.

Latest ARDOPCF release:  https://github.com/pflarue/ardop/releases/tag/1.0.4.1.2

The developer is looking for users to give feedback.

VARA works great, but some folks don't want to use closed-source, proprietary or non-Linux modes, so ARDOP is a good alternative to use for HF backbones.

Wow… sounds like ARDOP is now evolving quickly to be an open source alternative to VARA HF for reasonably fast data communications on Amateur Radio HF.


Open Headset Interconnect Standard (OHIS)

Image courtesy of Open Headset Interconnect Standard - ohis.org
  • Open: Any individual or company may make devices compliant with this standard, with no obligation.

  • Headset: Describes the signaling commonly found between a user and a radio: Microphone, Headphones, and Push To Talk.

  • Interconnect: Describes both the physical and electrical connection of those signals between the user and radio.

  • Standard: Devices built to this standard will work with other devices built to the same standard.

Introduction, The Elevator Pitch

The Amateur Radio community has standards for DC power (13.8v +/- 15%, Anderson Powerpole connectors, etc) and RF (50 ohm coax, PL-259/BNC/SMA connectors, etc). But we have no such standards for the interface between the user and the radio. Is the microphone a dynamic, or electret? Is it balanced, "pseudo" balanced, or unbalanced? Is the audio out from the radio at speaker level, headphone level, or line level? Is it push-pull, or ground referenced single ended? Is push-to-talk (PTT) triggered by a contact closure to ground, completing the Mic loop, or by a serial digital command?

There are so many different standards for microphone, headphone, and PTT that it is improbable that one could take their preferred headset and connect it to any radio without an adapter. In a multi-user environment, such as a club shack, Field Day type event, or an EOC, they would need a full-mesh of adapters to ensure any user can connect their own headset to any radio: O(N^2) adapters.

With the Open Headset Interconnect Standard, or OHIS, the club/EOC can build/buy one adapter for every radio which stays with that radio, and the user only needs to build/buy one adapter for their specific headset which stays with their headset, and now they can achieve full interoperability with only O(N) adapters.

This standard builds on the work done by Tom Tengdin WB9VXY, with his Proposed ARES Standard Headset. This standard is different than his proposal in a few places to make it more generalized, and provides more detail and clarity around several points.

Mention of OHIS is one of way too many “deferred too long” topics to I intended to mention in Zero Retries. (I gotta clear out that backlog, somehow.) I met Mark (Smitty) Smith N6MTS of Halibut Electronics at SEA-PAC 2024, and seeing the HE products on display reminded me of the excellent work (and energy) N6MTS has put into OHIS including offering OHIS products based on the Open Source OHIS standard.


Three Zero Retries Interesting Mentions in Amateur Radio Weekly Issue 333

2024: Ham Radio in China, Soon Chinese Hams in Space

A group that accounts for only 1/10,000 of the country's population – Amateur Radio enthusiasts.

We (at least in the US) just don’t hear much about Chinese hams. We know they exist and this answers a few questions. There have been a number of interesting Chinese Amateur Radio systems put into space in the last few years.

So what's all this HaLow Long-Range WiFi about then?

HaLow or IEEE 802.11ah protocol are starting to edge into the realm of affordability.

Amateur Radio data communications in the 902-928 MHz band is “a fertile area for development”.2 I hope to feature an interesting article on this subject by a highly qualified guest author in Zero Retries soon. The link is to a (typically good, conversational) Hackaday article, which links to a great YouTube video by Andreas Speiss (HB9BLA, though this is his “non Amateur Radio” YouTube channel).

A History of Amateur Satellites and Project OSCAR

A detailed history of Amateur Radio satellites from 1961-2003.

This is really good, and as ARW says, detailed! A bit sad that it doesn’t continue through the present day. Kudos to Steve Bible N7HPR for compiling this.

Kudos to Cale Mooth K4HCK - he’s doing a great job of sourcing Zero Retries Interesting mentions in Amateur Radio Weekly and Amateur Radio Daily! Both recommended!


FDIM 2024 - zBitx - Bringing CW into the 21st Century by Asher Farhan VU2ESE

I’ve only watched this video in spurts and skipping around; I haven’t watched it all the way through (though I will).

VU2ESE has a refreshing approach to his (proposed? prototype? future product? - not sure) zBitx radio (of which there is no other mention on the web, that I can find), which despite the prominent mention of CW, will actually support SSB and some data modes. He makes an interesting (and, highly relevant, in my opinion) case for a “CW” radio to include FT8 as a fast, automated way to “sound” the bands to insure that the radio and antenna are working. I think that’s the best argument for an automated method of making contacts, similar to WSPR / WSPRnet, to be able to rapidly and iteratively test antennas, radios, modifications, changing antenna orientations, etc.

This is yet another Zero Retries Interesting development coming out of (adjacent to) Hamvention 2024 that hasn’t been widely mentioned.

My thanks to Garth Kidd VK2TTY on Mastodon for mentioning this video.


kissutil - Man Page - KISS TNC troubleshooting and Application Interface

kissutil  can be used interactively for troubleshooting a KISS TNC. It is usable with direwolf and other generic KISS TNCs connected to a serial port. It can also be used as an application interface where each side places files in a directory for the other to process. See User Guide for more details.

Given the very wide usage of KISS in Amateur Radio applications, this utility might be very handy for troubleshooting when KISS… isn’t quite so simple.

Apologies, I didn’t record the source of this mention.

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Footnotes For This Issue

1

Oddly, there is still no press release by FlexRadio in their News section with the specifics of the improvements of the 8000 series over the current 6000 series. But apparently there was a press release - PileupDX mentioned it - The Next Generation of SDR Solutions to the Amateur Community.

2

Very fertile area for development; I’ve lost count of the attempted, and failed, projects doing Amateur Radio data for 902-928 MHz.

Re: What stalls amateur radio development?

Recently the leader of the M17 radio project, Wojciech, SP5WWP, wrote an interesting open letter.

He wrote; "amateur radio community depends on large companies (Icom, Yaesu, Kenwood) and solutions they provide."

What I have to add to this is as time has elapsed this dependancy has become more so than in it the early days of the hobby. And clearly this is not good without at least a better line communcations with these companies.

However, there are external to the hobby factors to consider. Globalization is what has lead us from a lot of small companies to a few large ones. Some good of globalization has come, but truthfully a lot of bad as well.

In am 45 and when and where I grew up there was still a vibrant manfactuting based economy. Now that has sadly shifted to a consumer based economy. And how does that house of cards even really work in a global society? What do you have to trade? You once did....

The education system (at least speaking of the American one) is another point of failure as it has really not kept in check with promoting technical schools and life skills vs 4 year colleges.

My grandfather and father's generation were handy, they could fix jut about anything they had. Why did this change? Part of it was they lived through or had an effect left by the great depression. Now are better off (at least in the pocket book), and really I hate to say it, this has made us lazy. Sure maybe you father now doesn't change his own oil for example, but if that's the case his son will likely never learn it. It's not rocket science, but if the future doesn't learn certain things then they die off.

Wojciech alos talks about pitfalls of volunteer-based work. He is talking about open source development, but when I look at any number of clubs or groups, be them ham radio or other; the bulk of the reliable volunteers are that of an older generation.

The question is what motivates people these days? The survival instinct of the older generation has faded.

Zero Retries 0154

31 May 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1700+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Major Conference Countdowns

  • HAM RADIO 2024 in Friedrichshafen, Germany on 2024-06-28 thru 30, in 04 weeks! (Previous mentions of HAM RADIO 2024 have been off by two weeks - please help me keep these correct, folks.)

  • JARL Ham Fair 2024 in Tokyo, Japan on 2024-08-24 and 25, in 12 weeks!

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Greetings From SEA-PAC at Seaside, Oregon, USA

I’m in (sunny!) Seaside this weekend to soak in some Amateur Radio ambiance and do a little bit of evangelism for Zero Retries at SEA-PAC 2024, which is

The Northwest's Largest Ham Convention
and the ARRL Northwestern Division Convention

As explanation to those outside the Pacific Northwest, despite our major cities of Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, there is no other all-weekend Amateur Radio conference in the Northwest. Thus, SEA-PAC is the “Hamvention” of the Northwest.

SEA-PAC is held in a small convention center in the middle of Seaside, which is a vacation destination on the beautiful Oregon coast, so there are ample distractions besides Amateur Radio to justify a family vacation for non-techie Dad and the kids while Mom indulges in some total immersion of Amateur Radio for a few hours at a time. It’s common for SEA-PAC attendees to drift in and out of SEA-PAC to attend a seminar, check back with an exhibitor that was previously too crowded, and then go for a walk or extended lunch, etc. SEA-PAC has an active flea market, all indoors, with a large number of tables on Saturday, and about 25% of the flea market tables remaining on Sunday.

In summary, SEA-PAC is a smaller, relaxed Amateur Radio conference that draws attendees from the extended Northwest region, including other western states and a fair number of Canadians.

Zero Retries will have its first-ever exhibit table at SEA-PAC 2024, where I will be talking about Zero Retries and hoping to speak with a lot of Zero Retries Interesting Amateur Radio Operators! (Photos in next issue of Zero Retries.)

Separately, Tina KD7WSF will staff the Zero Retries’ flea market table with a fair amount of ephemera from N8GNJ Labs as a fundraiser for Zero Retries. All items will be “priced for sale”.

We hope to see you at both tables!


Nice Mention of Zero Retries in Ria’s Ham Shack Newsletter

The Ria’s Ham Shack Newsletter by Ria Jairam N2RJ has resumed after a hiatus of almost a year. In her 2024-05-28 newsletter, she gave a nice shout-out to Zero Retries:

But this isn’t the end for ham radio. Over the years I’ve seen a number of small businesses pop up and make ham radio accessories. As has been noted in Zero Retries - another SubStack that you should definitely subscribe to - many of the smaller guys are stepping up and making stuff. And ham radio has always been more of a boutique niche anyway. In particular I have seen Scott Robbins, W4PA, take on the ownership of Vibroplex and add many more product lines. Ironically they are even selling microphones.

N2RJ’s mention caused another burst of new subscribers to Zero Retries, so Thank You N2RJ!


Active Commenting on Zero Retries 0153

As I write this, there are now 20 comments on Zero Retries 0153, including several follow-ups from Jerry Wagner KK6LFS (Connect Systems, Inc.) regarding my story about Connect Systems versus DVSI.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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M17 Is a Complete System

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

A funny thing happened in the years-long development process to create a new digital voice system called M17 Project, based on open source principles, for Amateur Radio…

It worked! All the pieces are now available for M17 to be a usable system.

Footnote from Zero Retries 0153 that, in retrospect, should have been more prominent:

It’s a longer term discussion, worthy of an (eventual) dedicated issue of Zero Retries, but I’ve recently come to the conclusion that M17 is complete (enough) and “ready to go” to be a capable digital voice… and messaging / data… system for Amateur Radio. There are some issues, including establishing recognition that M17 is usable now, getting it adequately documented, and of course, having at least a few ready-to-use radios with M17 built-in available. But the largest issue with M17 is the momentum, and the sunk costs, of existing single-mode DMR, D-Star, SF repeaters, radios owned by individuals, and Internet interconnection networks. It will take some serious evangelism to get folks to understand the advantages of M17.

My thanks to Zero Retries Pseudostaffer Dan Romanchik KB6NU for a conversation that touched on M17 for sparking this “dawning awareness” on my part that all of the pieces are now in place for M17 to be used for communicating via digital voice (and probably, text messaging and data transfer, though I haven’t fully confirmed that). Those that have been following M17 closely, or involved in its development, have undoubtedly understood this point, but (many? most?) of us merely trying to follow the progress on M17 haven’t quite caught up to this development.

In answer to a likely question (thanks again KB6NU!) in advance:

Why haven’t I been hearing about this progress with M17?

… I can’t really answer why the official M17 team hasn’t been better evangelizing that M17 really is “ready to go”. I only recently came to this realization from trying to follow, and explain, M17 for discussion here in Zero Retries.

Another obvious question in advance:

Do we really need more splintering of digital voice modes in Amateur Radio?

In a word, Yes.

Yet another Digital Voice mode is justified given the significant technical (and philosophical) differentiation of M17. There is a significant user base in Amateur Radio that does not like using proprietary technology such as proprietary CODECs in Amateur Radio, and M17 is an answer to that issue.

The primary differentiation of M17 versus all the other VHF / UHF (repeater operation) digital voice modes used in Amateur Radio is that M17 is fully Open Source. All of the details - hardware, software, protocols, etc., especially the critical voice CODEC are publicly documented. That documentation is sometimes not easily found, but it’s all out there. Part of my “M17 mini project” is to track down all of that for easy reference. And, with technologies such as Software Defined Transceivers and Multi Mode Digital Voice Modem (MMDVM), it’s “easy” to incorporate, or switch to a new mode such as M17.

As I say above, to fully explain all of this requires a dedicated issue of Zero Retries (which I intend to do within the next month), and perhaps even a small book, as well as other support resources, such as…

Another resource that I think has been needed for M17 to become more mainstream in Amateur Radio is an email discussion list, which I’ve now created:

  • M17-Users page on Groups.io (if you have a groups.io account)

  • Send a blank email to m17-users+subscribe@groups.io.

Note - I started M17-Users as a free account on groups.io, which has a maximum of 100 users. If you try to subscribe and are told the list is “full”, please be patient. I’ll deal with expanding M17-Users into a paid Groups.io option (hopefully with some financial assistance) in due course.

Admittedly, it’s… inadvisable… to create such an email list on a weekend when I won’t be able to actively monitor it, but this article was the optimal opportunity to mention such a group. Thus, initially, I chose to require approval of new subscribers. I’ll approve new subscribers as fast as I’m able - please be patient.

If you’re interested in being a co-moderator of M17-Users, please let me know.

One last note is that in doing the aforementioned dedicated issue of Zero Retries on M17, (potentially) a small book, and the M17-Users email list, I’m not trying to usurp or bypass or exclude the existing M17 Project web page or resources, or “steal any of the credit” for all those who’ve created or supported M17. These items are my individual assessment of additional “exposure” that M17 needs to “rise to the next level” of wider usage and understanding, and what I’m capable of doing to support M17 as an individual, in conjunction with my work in Zero Retries. If there’s interest on the part of the existing M17 team, I’m happy to work with them to integrate these resources into the larger M17 ecosystem.

And… to answer two last questions, given the nature of M17 as an Open Source system:

  • Yes, I will make the contents of my (potential) M17 book publicly available (though I plan to also sell it as a hardcopy book).

  • Yes, the choice of Groups.io (a proprietary system) was deliberate. I have no desire, or ability, to self-host an email list using open source email list systems.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

QMX+ 160-6m, 5W Multi-mode Transceiver

QRP Labs QMX+ - Image courtesy of QRP Labs

The QRP Labs QMX+ apparently debuted at the Four Days In May (FDIM) 2024 conference held in conjunction with Hamvention 2024, but was not widely reported (that I saw).

The "QMX+" (QRP Labs Mulitmode Xcvr): a feature-packed, high performance, 11-band (160-6m) 5W multi-mode transceiver kit, including embedded SDR receiver, 24-bit 48 ksps USB sound card, RTC, CAT control, synthesized VFO with TCXO reference. QMX+ transmits a SINGLE SIGNAL, it is not an SSB modulator with associated unwanted sideband and residual carrier, or intermodulation due to amplifier non-linearity. QMX+ outputs a pure single signal. QMX is currently only suitable for single tone FSK modes, which covers the majority of digital modes in use today (if it later supports SSB, multi-tone and phase shift digi modes will be possible). This includes everything in WSJT-X, JS8Call, some fldigi modes e.g. RTTY, Olivia and more. QMX+ is also suitable for on/off keyed modes such as CW because it has click-reducing RF envelope shaping; it is not suitable (until and if SSB is implemented) for phase shift keyed modes such as PSK31 or modes involving multiple concurrent tones such as WinLink.

The above is very short shrift for this radio that’s been more than a year in development, has a wide range of relevant (not “fluffy”) features, and is the product of one person - Hans Summers G0UPL. Please go to the link above for the full description of the QMX+.

What’s amazing is that the price, if you buy it assembled, with options such as a case, is less than $250! Granted, this is a low transmit power HF radio, but wow… for that price… it’s pretty Zero Retries Interesting! What was particularly Zero Retries Interesting was this mention:

QMX+ is not yet suitable for phase shift keyed modes such as PSK31 or modes involving multiple concurrent tones such as WinLink (a later SSB firmware release will enable this).

I’m particularly interested in the QMX+ because of its 6 meter (50 - 54 MHz in the US) capability. The 6 meter band is called the “Magic Band” for its ability to act like a VHF band (short range), or an HF band (long range) depending on the whims of the ionosphere, and that sounds like fun, especially given that antennas for 6 meters can be made to a reasonable size.

To me, it’s impressive that QRP Labs will (potentially; apparently it’s not promised) enable such a significant new feature (mode), solely in a future firmware release.

Apologies that I can’t find a reference to who first brought the debut of the QMX+ to my attention… but it was probably Zero Retries Pseudostaffer Jeff Davis KE9V.


In the Age of Satellites, Cell Towers and Web Servers, CMU Offers Amateur Radio Course

From WESA 90.5 - Pittsburgh’s National Public Radio News Station:

Carnegie Mellon University first offered the Introduction to Amateur Radio course to aspiring student radio operators in spring 2022. Students learn not only the technical skills necessary for basic construction and use of amateur radio, or ham radio, but also the history and culture, dating back to the early 20th century, when the U.S. Radio Act of 1912 guaranteed the use of the electromagnetic spectrum to the public.

“I think it's one of the very unique things about ham radio: It's a people thing,” said former course student and Carnegie Tech Radio Club president Anish Singhani. “At its core, it's about the people.”

Amateur radio in the advanced technological age

In the 21st century — years past the advent of smartphones and the internet — ham radio may seem like an obsolete form of communication, but assistant teaching professor Tom Zajdel explained that amateur radio is still evolving and improving. While new technologies have asserted themselves in the sphere of wireless communication, Zajdel believes amateur radio is around for the long haul.

“Ham radio’s death has been predicted many times, but it changed a lot and evolved,” Zajdel said. “[It] used to just be Morse code, like that was your only option. Then, vacuum tubes were a thing, so you could modulate your voice … The technology keeps changing.”

“Now you can do digital communication modes using encoding schemes and compression schemes that were unheard of 20 years ago,” Singhani said.

The technological developments in amateur radio aren’t the only thing keeping it alive. Behind the science of soldering an FM transmitter and bouncing radio waves off the atmosphere lies a technical art that never gets old to the operators.

“Amateurs like building their own equipment, and there's just a lot of pride in kind of making your own thing — can I make the antenna super-small, super-lightweight, really efficient?” Zajdel posed. “It's just really neat to see the art coming in that way.”

The amateur radio course gives CMU students the chance to connect with operators across Pittsburgh on the air; Singhani says it also strengthens personal connections across the CMU community.

“One of my favorite parts of being the president of this club has been collaborating with all of these other groups on campus that we provide radio communications for,” Singhani said. “I've worked with all of these different groups that do all these different things, but in some way or another, I've been able to help them out with [their] radio services.”

CMU is a major technological educational institution in the US, and that it finds merit in offering a course dedicated to Amateur Radio is to me, highly significant.

It puzzles me why significant developments and mentions like this are not widely reported in Amateur Radio media, but lack of mentions like this are why I saw the need to start Zero Retries.


ARRL Digital Contest This Weekend

The ARRL Digital contest is this weekend (2024-06-01 and 02 (first full weekend of June). In my opinion, the contest should include all of the VHF / UHF bands to be more inclusive to (US) Technician Amateur Radio Operators. Although the intent of the ARRL Digital Contest seems to be data modes, it’s ambiguous as Digital Voice would seem to be within the category of this contest, but I’m not a contester. The evolution of this contest will be interesting in future years as perhaps FreeDV (Digital Voice) and FreeDATA (data using the FreeDV waveform) converge become integrated (or at least, easily interoperable), allowing interleaved voice and data communications. I hope to participate in this contest in future years with a portable system.

Unfortunately, many of the links in the description of the ARRL Digital Contest don’t work due to the ARRL’s ongoing challenges and recovery from its recent Systems Service Disruption.

My thanks to Mark Thompson WB9QZB who posted mention of this contest on the digital-mode-radio mailing list.


Electromagnetic Field 2024 (Event) This Weekend

Apologies for not mentioning this event sooner. I think it was mentioned to me in advance, but I don’t think such a mention made it into previous issues of Zero Retries.

Electromagnetic Field is a non-profit camping festival [in Eastnor, UK, May 30th – June 2nd 2024] for those with an inquisitive mind or an interest in making things: hackers, artists, geeks, crafters, scientists, and engineers.

A temporary town of nearly three thousand like-minded people enjoying a long weekend of talks, performances, and workshops on everything from blacksmithing to biometrics, chiptunes to computer security, high altitude ballooning to lockpicking, origami to democracy, and online privacy to knitting.

To help matters along, we provide fast internet, power to the tent, good beer, and amazing installations, entirely organised by a dedicated team of volunteers.

The above description doesn’t mention radio, but I think that the mentions to me (again, apologies…) stated that radio is a significant part of Electromagnetic Field.


uSDR Software Updated to v1.7.0

RTL-SDR.COM blog:

USDR SOFTWARE UPDATED TO V1.7.0

Thank you to Viol for writing in and letting us know that his uSDR software has recently been updated to V1.7.0. The uSDR software (not to be confused with the unrelated uSDR hardware) is a lightweight general-purpose multimode program for Windows that supports the RTL-SDR, Airspy, BladeRF, HackRF, LimeSDR, and other SDR radios.

Viol highlights the latest features added in the 1.7.0 update below:

  • Fobos SDR frontend native support, the very new SDR from RigExpert

  • bladeRF API v2.5.0 support, oversampling mode up to 122.88 MHz sample rate (do not forget to update FX3 firmware)

  • advanced IQ playback mode, precise timing and streaming

  • improved DSP routines and memory management, minimized CPU load

  • excellent ruler tool for spectrum frequency and amplitude measurements

Despite support of Software Defined Transceiver units (BladeRF, HackRF, LimeSDR), uSDR is a receiver application.


Secure, Adaptive, And Intelligent: The Future Of Military SDR Applications

Interesting mention of Amateur Radio, and a different way to think about Software Defined Radio, in this article from RF Globalnet:

More Than “Voodoo Magic”

SDR is popular with amateur radio enthusiasts who use the technology for radio communication, satellite tracking, and signal decoding. Ham radio operators, especially the younger generation with ECE/CS degrees love the technology but parts of the older generation frown upon SDR as “voodoo magic” with too many computer/network dependencies.

Ham radio operator and professional technologist Onno Benschop (VK6FLAB) says on his podcast Foundations of Amateur Radio (April 28, 2019)that describing SDR as “traditional radio where all the components are implemented in software” is similar to “explaining how a radio works by waiving your hands and saying: here is magic.” Benschop says that how SDR works is altogether more interesting and thought-provoking than that.

“You may have heard that a Software Defined Radio hears all frequencies at the same time,” Benschop says. “Essentially, it's a voltmeter connected to your antenna, spitting out measurements as fast as it can for processing by a computer. The waveform that comes from those antenna voltage measurements represents all of the RF spectrum and it's just the beginning of what you can do next.

“In the same way that my voice is made up of lots of different parts, all played together, the RF spectrum is made up of the local broadcast stations, the local TV stations, mobile phones, garage remotes, Roy on the 7130 DX net, this podcast on your local repeater, all at the same time, all played together, to make the waveform that represents the measurements you make at the base of an antenna. Unlike a traditional radio, which has to work hard to filter out undesirable information, a software defined radio can filter out information by just deleting those measurements you're not interested in.”

While Benschop is interested in SDR because of his love of amateur radio, defense agencies worldwide seeking advanced communication solutions are utilizing it as well to the point is emerging as a vital component in modernizing military communication systems.

A sidebar on this article pointed to an RF Globalnet article from 2023-06 that I missed:

What We've Learned About SDRs From Russia's War On Ukraine


Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Seeks Comment on the Impacts of the May 2024 Geomagnetic Storm on the U.S. Communications Sector

US Federal Communications Commission (FCC):

PS Docket No. 24-161

Comments Due: June 24, 2024

The Federal Communications Commission’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau (PSHSB or Bureau) seeks comment on any observed impacts to communications that resulted from the May 2024 severe geomagnetic storm. On Thursday, May 9, 2024, the National Weather Service Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) issued a severe (G4) Geomagnetic Storm Watch, forecasting a series of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that merged with the Earth’s electromagnetic fields between May 7-11, 2024. On May 11, 2024, the storm reached extreme (G5) conditions, the first time this severity has been observed since 2003. According to the SWPC, CMEs are large expulsions of plasma and magnetic field from the Sun’s corona. Electromagnetic currents generated by CMEs, when merged with the Earth’s electromagnetic fields, may distort the propagation of radio frequency waves.


Engineering for Slow Internet - How to Minimize User Frustration in Antarctica

From brr.fyi (blog of an IT specialist who spent a year in Antarctica):

It’s a bit of a departure from the normal content you’d find on brr.fyi, but it reflects my software / IT engineering background.

I hope folks find this to be an interesting glimpse into the on-the-ground reality of using the Internet in bandwidth-constrained environments.

It’s a non-trivial feat of engineering to get any Internet at the South Pole! If you’re bored, check out the South Pole Satellite Communications page on the public USAP.gov website, for an overview of the limited selection of satellites available for Polar use.

Until very recently, at McMurdo, nearly a thousand people, plus numerous scientific projects and operational workloads, all relied on a series of links that provided max, aggregate speeds of a few dozen megabits per second to the entire station. For comparison, that’s less bandwidth shared by everyone combined than what everyone individually can get on a typical 4g cellular network in an American suburb.

I found a mention of this blog early during his tenure in Antarctica and I was fascinated by their techie perspective of the amazing adaptations that are required (by humans) to live in Antarctica.

This particular post is Zero Retries Interesting because it explains, in contemporary terms, that TCP/IP does work at v… e… r… y… slow data rates… if reasonable assumptions and engineering (which they explain) are applied to Internet applications. Like “higher” speeds possible with Amateur Radio data communications on VHF / UHF such as VARA FM, New Packet Radio, etc. (think kilobits per second, not necessarily megabits per second).

Perhaps… Starlink to the rescue for Antarctic personnel in the near future?


TinyCircuits - Worth a Look

TinyTV 2 - Image courtesy of TinyCircuits

TinyCircuits has nothing to do with Amateur Radio (at least yet…), but they have an amusing… actually, kind of amazing, product line, including the TINYTV 2 shown above. TinyCircuits products would be an ideal gift for techies.

I decided that TinyCircuits was worth a mention here in Zero Retries given the recent discussions of new generations of portable Amateur Radio units (hopefully Software Defined Transceivers), and the challenges of small, power efficient displays, etc. In addition to the “cute” products, TinyCircuits offers the TinyDuino Platform:

… a miniature open-source electronics platform based on the easy-to-use hardware and software Arduino platform. The platform is comprised of a TinyDuino processor board and multiple TinyShields which add special functions, like sensors, communications, and display options that stack together like LEGO blocks. The TinyDuino Platform is also open-source, we have released all of the design files for all of our products. If you have a great idea you are free to design your own board derived from our design files which can be found here

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
    Founding Member 0001 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 01

    Founding Member 0002 - Chris Osburn KD7DVD
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    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
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    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
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  • Numerous Annual and Monthly subscribers who also generously support Zero Retries financially!

Want to Support Zero Retries?

  • The most effective way to support Zero Retries is to simply mention Zero Retries to your co-conspirators that are also interested in knowing more about technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio and encourage them to become a fellow subscriber.

  • One particularly effective method of promoting Zero Retries is to add a mention of Zero Retries to your QRZ page (or other web presence) and include a link:

    https://www.zeroretries.org

  • If you’d like to financially support Zero Retries, becoming a paid subscriber is greatly appreciated and helps offset expenses incurred in publishing Zero Retries. Paid subscriptions for Zero Retries are entirely optional, as explained in this special issue of ZR:
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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Jeff Davis KE9V also mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

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  • Experimental Radio News by Bennet Z. Kobb AK4AV discusses (in detail) Experimental (Part 5) licenses issued by the US FCC. It’s a must-read-now for me!

  • RTL-SDR Blog - Excellent coverage of Software Defined Radio units.

  • TAPR Packet Status Register has been published continuously since 1982.

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-05-31

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

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Death to FM

It's no secret that I feel it's out lived it's usefulness. We are at a point where the commerical two way is near non-existant. That has mosly all moved to cellular. In the past we have had a lot of repurposed equipment from public safety and commerical markets. We've also seen "cycles" in the hobby. It started with spark and CW, then AM voice, then SSB, then the 70's and FM. In the 90's there was quite a fuss about spread spectrum, but sadly it never really look off in the hobby.

How we have the VHF/UHF bands carved up and regulated and adminstered by overbearing repeater coordination bodies plays a part on moving from FM to something more useful. If you have been reading my ramblings you know that I feel we could likely so with less repeater coordination. I feel more shared non protected pairs should exist for any system less than 100 watts and 100 feet etc, should just use those.

You've also likely noticed how I feel about mode disparity. Data has significantly more stringent regulations than other modes.. and well Spread Spectum... it's just unclear if this even exists as a mode, since we classify our transmissions by the content they carry, which is also just stupid.

I'd like to see the tables turned to promote advancements in the hobby. Make FM ugly and over regulated. Make voice also the ugly red headed step child.

It's time for QAM and other types of modern modulation.

But there are no radio's you say? Well that is where changing regulation will force a manufacturing change. An example of this is when PL became required for repeaters in the late 80's and early 90's. This mandate was from coordinaton bodies and in a few years user end radios began to have PL encoders in them as a standard. (Prior to that you had to wire in your own PL deck.)

Then there is the M17 labs that we don't hear really anything about. And for that matter in 2015 TAPR mentioned they's like to see the OFDM work of John, KD6OZH advanced...

In short FM is 40 year old technology. And most of the current Digital Voice modes are not using modulation that is a whole different than conventional analog FM. The only way to achieve better data rates is move to modulation that is significanly different than FM.

Some times I think the ARDC ought to post bounty grants to help move certain things forward.

The new QMX+

25 May 2024 at 14:02
Last week without any fanfare, Hans Summers small company QRP Labs, launched the bigger QMX+. A full blown 160m-6m CW and Digital modes QRP rig. (SSB to come in a future firmware release). The radio is available as either a kit, or as a ready...

💾

Status of Further Notice (FNPRM) ?

In January I filed express comments on what bandwidth limit for above 30 Mhz should be set if any to replace the symbol rates for data in relation to the furhter notice for WT Docket 16-239.

I considered writing a longer paper, but Steve Stroh had already done that, covering everything nicely. The other reason I opted for the express route is because in the back of my mind I figued the good old (freaking) FCC would sit on this like the main HF part for god only knows how long. I even remarked on how it was unclear when a decision would be made by the commission.

I must be getting more impatient as I get older, as even at work and in other projects I particpate in, I look at what the outcome is and when it will be achived Before donating my time. Short summary: I like things the bear fruit.

So are we going to have to get congress woman Lesko involved again to kick the FCC in the rear end again?

For what its worth, in a somewhat private circle I have brought up the idea of having the whole amateur regulation business outsourced since the FCC does such a poor job. It seems almost inconceivable to accomplish, but I do believe we'd be better off that way.

Zero Retries 0153

24 May 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1600+ 1700+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

1700+ Subscribers!

In Zero Retries 0150, a mere three issues / weeks ago, Zero Retries achieved 1600+ subscribers. It’s rare that new subscribers tell me where they heard about Zero Retries, and Substack only parses out a small number that came from other Amateur Radio newsletters on Substack. Thus I don’t really know where this wave of new subscribers came from.

Welcome, new subscribers, to Zero Retries!


Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Joe Hamelin W7COM for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week! W7COM shared this message with his paid subscription:

Good Geekness

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.

Subscribe now


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


SEA-PAC 2024

SEA-PAC 2024 logo - crab and radio
SEA-PAC 2024 pin designed by Adam Lea KC7NKP. Image courtesy of SEA-PAC.

Zero Retries will be attending SEA-PAC 2024 in Seaside, Oregon, USA on Saturday June 1st and Sunday June 2nd, 2024. There will be a Zero Retries booth, as well as having a table in the flea market to cleanout some of the excess ephemera from N8GNJ Labs. We will also have a bit of Zero Retries collectible items, so if you are a Zero Retries fan, come early. We’ll also have lots of DLARC stickers! (Zero Retries stickers are still in development.)


Update on Let’s Get Some More Manuals Scanned

In Zero Retries 0152, I asked Zero Retries readers to contribute to a project to get more electronics manuals scanned for Internet Archive. I’m happy to report that more than $600 was raised after that appeal.


Hamvention 2024 - Not Much Zero Retries Interesting

I don’t have anything substantive to add to the mentions in Zero Retries 0152 about some Zero Retries Interesting-ish announcements at Hamvention 2024. If you Zero Retries readers saw something I missed, please let us all know in the comments.

The most Zero Retries Interesting item I learned of was the ComJoT CJ-1 “Android portable radio”. See the article below for more detail.

Kudos to Cale Mooth K4HCK of Amateur Radio Daily for capturing some brief audio interviews with Zero Retries Interesting exhibitors at Hamvention 2024, including HamSCI, Photon Radio, Libre Space Foundation SatNOGS, AMSAT CubeSatSim, and AREDN. I really liked K4HCK’s technique - quick, audio-only interviews, made available within a few days of being recorded (a few were posted the same day). Noted for future events that I attend!

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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FlexRadio 8000 Series HF Radios - Even More Capable… Except for FreeDV

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Kudos to the FreeDV team for implementing FreeDV via their clever ezDV dongle… and raspberries to FlexRadio for requiring that method for FreeDV to be available on these “more powerful” FlexRadio products.

Since the announcement of a new line of highest-end HF radios on Friday 2024-05-17, FlexRadio has posted some information about this new product line. The highest-end unit is the FLEX-8600M. Obviously this product line is newer and more powerful, with more potential for future upgrades with a more powerful processor and larger Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). But… (not being a contester or DXer), the improvements offered in the 8000 product line are lost on me. If you’re curious, YouTubers Kyle Krieg AA0Z of Kyle - AA0Z and Jason Johnston KC5HWB of Ham Radio 2.0 scored 1:1 interviews with FlexRadio’s Mike Walker VA3MW, and both of them sounded impressed.

But one lack of a feature in the FlexRadio 8000 product line really stood out to me… no inclusion of the FreeDV digital voice mode as a standard feature.

To be fair… all of the other “big” Amateur Radio HF radio manufacturers - Alinco, Elecraft, Icom, Kenwood, and Yaesu join FlexRadio in not supporting FreeDV without an outboard dongle. But those others didn’t boast of doubling processing power and quadrupling the size of the FPGA in a new “SDR” HF radio design in 2024.

I think the dichotomy of the potential of Software Defined Radio… and the reality of what manufacturers choose to do with the potential capabilities of Software Defined Radio technology was illustrated perfectly in these two developments at Hamvention 2024:

  • Announcement of the FlexRadio 8000 series by FlexRadio

  • Announcement of the ezDV Adapter by TAPR and the FreeDV team

ezDV is a handheld hardware device that allows easy use of FreeDV, whether on the go or at home. Powered by an ESP32-S3 microcontroller, its built-in Wi-Fi support allows completely wireless setup (with supported radios) along with enabling more modern functionality such as FreeDV Reporter reporting and wireless firmware updates.

So… on the one hand, FlexRadio debuts a much more capable line of HF radios, with even more processor power and an even larger FPGA. But, despite all that “power”, the one thing that these radios apparently can’t do… is to operate the FreeDV digital voice mode.

Enter the ezDV which is the FreeDV mode implemented in a small dongle (with the not very powerful ESP32-S3 processor). The ezDV can connect to current FlexRadio units via Wi-Fi, which then allows a FlexRadio unit, apparently including the 8000 series, to then operate FreeDV.

Keep in mind that there’s nothing in FreeDV that’s dependent on specific hardware. FreeDV is open source software and there’s ample support available for implementing it into any software defined radio platform that has sufficient processing power.

Candidly… if I worked for FlexRadio… I would treat the requirement of an ezDV to operate FreeDV on current generation FlexRadio units as an embarrassment. A team of part-time developers were able to implement FreeDV… but FlexRadio (with native access to vastly more capable processing power of the current generation FlexRadio units) couldn’t… or perhaps more damning… wouldn’t implement FreeDV as a native mode.

I say wouldn’t, because a previous version of FlexRadio’s SmartSDR software could install FreeDV, to be able to run it on the radio.

No matter what the “advanced features” of the FlexRadio 8000 series, the lack of FreeDV as a native feature in SmartOS, is (in my mind) a significant failing on the part of FlexRadio. That FlexRadio can’t, or won’t, implement such a fundamental (in the mid 2020s) new mode says to me that FlexRadio is focused on the past of Amateur Radio:

Emission Modes - USB, LSB, CW, RTTY, AM, Synchronous AM, FM, NFM, DFM

RTTY isn’t quite a century old; but the rest of those modes are more than a century old.

Instead of adding a new mode that was created within the 21st century and is “native digital” (could only be implemented in a digital radio), FlexRadio has chosen to add “dancing on the head of a pin” features, rather than a feature that reflects advanced capabilities of Amateur Radio, such as FreeDV’s amazing robustness in the presence of noise and interference. In my opinion, such decisions by FlexRadio pretty much negate the potential of Software Defined Radio in the FlexRadio product line.

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Connect Systems Versus DVSI

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Unfortunately, the Connect Systems newsletter(s) are only available via email - there’s no web version. Thus this recent newsletter is “reprinted” here in its entirety for the Zero Retries readership, and perpetuity of the Zero Retries web version.

This particular CS newsletter is Zero Retries Interesting because it illustrates the challenges of Amateur Radio manufacturers in the era of a dominant technology vendor who can exert overpowering influence on radio systems. Or can they? See commentary after the CS article.

Connect Systems - Blog of the M17 Project - 2024-05-18

To the furtherance of the M17 project, I want to add D-STAR to the CS7000 M17 PLUS radio. The basic work has already been done in the MMDVM. The only real issue is the Vocoder. While there are some D-STAR vocoders, none of them is as good as what DVSI sells.

The D-STAR vocoder was first used in the ICOM D-STAR radios over 20 years ago. That means that the underlying patents are now expired. However, that does not mean the Copyright has expired because Copyrights are now good for about 99 years thanks the Micky Mouse and Disney.

To get around Copyrights with a Vocoder, you take the patents and write from scratch the code to make the D-STAR vocoder. As long as you did not copy the vocoder made by DVSI, you are clear. However, by writing the new code, you might now be infringing on some new patent of DVSI or some other company.

The get around the potential patent and copyright issue, I made an offer to DVSI. For every CS7000 M17 and CS7000 M17 PLUS radio we sold, I would give them a $2.00 royalty against them making a claim that the D-STAR vocoder in the radio infringed against their patents or copyrights. This is in addition to the royalty they already get for the AMBE II Vocoder we use to support the DMR features. We were not asking them for the firmware of their D-STAR vocoder.

The royalty concept was [completely] rejected. If I want to use the D-STAR vocoder, I need to pay them an up-front fee of about $350,000 plus royalty for every radio I sell. My alternative was to buy their AMBE 3000 series chip for $22.

For a company that is going to sell between a hundred thousand radios and a million radios like Motorola and ICOM, that up-front fee is no big deal. For a smaller company, that up-front fee is outrageous.

While that $22 fee for the AMBE 3000 chip is acceptable, it puts us at a significant technical disadvantage compared to the larger companies. The first problem is the AMBE 3000 chip takes a significant amount of power which means the battery life will be significantly less compared to the larger companies. The second issue is the AMBE chip takes room on the PCB which means my radio will now be larger compared to the larger companies.

In my opinion DVSI is in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust laws. Because of their policies, it is not possible for a smaller company to compete against the larger companies as described above. However, to fight them, would cost more in legal fees than their outrageous up-front fees.

My suggestion for the Amateur community is to make the best vocoder you can and if DVSI then says you are breaking their patents, ask which one so you can then fix the problem. If they complain about copyright infringement, ask how they can be in violation of their copyrights if they have not released their code to copy. If you reverse engineered their code, go out of your way so you are not infringing.

Here is an interesting question. If I bought a AMBE 3000 series chip and put it in the radio but did not hook it up and then I duplicated their code and ran it in the radio, would I be infringing on DVSI intellectual property?

My thanks to friend of Zero Retries Steve Lampereur KB9MWR for an extended email and phone discussion about this topic, which greatly helped me frame what follows.

I understand Connect Systems wanting to make the best possible, “most features” radio that it can. Clearly a portable radio that can do FM, DMR, M17, and D-Star would be more interesting and offer more value than a radio that couldn’t do D-Star.

But the above situation illustrates perfectly why M17 (and its underlying CODEC - Codec 2) was developed as an open source technology in the first place. It’s open source, thus no patent fees, no royalty fees, no intellectual property, copyright, or other such encumbrances.

That is the point of open source technology!

That’s not to say that using open source technology is cheap to implement, or easy to implement, or mature, or robust, or any other guarantees.

But when you use open source technology, you’re a lot less likely to have a company quietly suggest “Nice little digital voice radio business you have there… would be a shame if all your profits, and more, had to be used for a legal defense against a patent lawsuit.”

Unfortunately, given the size of the Amateur Radio market, I don’t see any reason why DVSI would have any incentive to “play nice” with Connect Systems and offer a reasonable deal such as what Connect Systems proposes. In fact, there’s a disadvantage to do. If DVSI gave Connect Systems a reasonable (for Amateur Radio) deal, then Motorola and other big radio manufacturers could demand (with some clout) that DVSI offer them the same good deal that Connect Systems got.

If DVSI is ever challenged about their stance towards a small Amateur Radio manufacturer, they can point out that “it only costs $22 per radio / chip to incorporate our superior, proven, industry-standard digital voice technology”.

The failing in Amateur Radio digital voice isn’t that we don’t have a free or cheap version of DVSI / AMBE digital voice CODEC chips… it’s that Amateur Radio manufacturers haven’t offered… and Amateur Radio Operators haven’d demanded the use of Codec 2 digital voice.

Amateur Radio has an elegant way to simply work around “the DVSI / AMBE issue” - use M17 (and within M17, Codec 2). It’s not widely recognized yet1, but M17 is now (finally) a viable digital voice system for Amateur Radio that’s truly an alternative to DMR, SF, SF, P25, etc. There’s even “data” in there (I’m told, but I’m still teasing that out).

BUT, and it’s a huge, enormous, perhaps insurmountable BUT… The big Amateur Radio manufacturers want to ignore the existence of Codec 2, M17, and FreeDV because they feel they’ll make more money (and less cost in overhead, engineering, customer support hassle) by continuing the previous paradigm of using DVSI’s AMBE CODEC chips, for which they can “peanut butter” the costs into their (more profitable) commercial radio product lines.

Hedging Bets by Including D-Star?

I understand why Connect Systems wants to “hedge its bets” on their upcoming M17 radio by trying to include D-Star, but I think that’s a bad choice beyond the issues CS has encountered in dealing with DVSI. Some issues I see2 in attempting to incorporate D-Star in Connect Systems M17 radios:

  • The primary (most enthusiastic) market for D-Star radios is in Japan, and my impression is that Connect Systems (Amateur Radio) markets mostly into the US Amateur Radio market.

  • From my (admittedly imperfect / incomplete) observations, I don’t see any momentum in D-Star in this era. I’m not hearing about enthusiastic new D-Star users (D-Star radios remain “Hmm… really gotta think about this” expensive), nor any new D-Star repeaters going on the air. Yes, there are a lot of D-Star repeaters, and D-Star radios out there, but that was (again, from my impressions) mostly from the initial wave of excitement two decades ago now for D-Star the first digital voice system that was designed for Amateur Radio. From my observations, the majority of the energy and momentum for Amateur Radio digital voice has shifted to DMR3.

  • D-Star capability isn’t needed for this radio to sell; D-Star capability won’t be a differentiating factor like M17 capability will be. If one wants to buy a radio with M17 built-in, Connect Systems is currently the only vendor (that will be) offering such a product. If one wants D-Star capability in a portable radio, Icom and Kenwood offer that capability now, in more mature, supported products.

  • Despite Icom being an early advocate of the open source D-RATS software for D-Star radios, D-RATS has essentially been deprecated (if I understand the situation correctly) because of its use of Python 2 and that being deprecated in favor of Python 3. If Icom was really interested in promoting D-Star, it would have allocated some funding for professional developers to update D-RATS to be usable with more modern computer operating systems (port it to Python 3). That Icom has not, to date, done so, speaks to its waning support for D-Star.

  • Trying to add D-Star to the Connect Systems M17 radios adds complexity to the radio, beyond the DVSI / AMBE chipset issues that Connect Systems has encountered. Can the radio support easy, mixed-mode FM / DMR / M17 and D-Star?Connect Systems’ M17 radios already include backwards compatibility with DMR and FM - I think that can be considered “good enough” backwards compatility.

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Impressions of the ComJoT CJ-1 Android Portable Radio

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Last moment update - I reached out to ComJoT to perhaps arrange a post-article interview and “Joe” of ComJoT Sales was very responsive, and quickly updated the CJ-1 web page to include a prominent mention of the “audio passthrough” capability of the CJ-1. I hope to do an interview with ComJoT about the CJ-1 in a future issue of Zero Retries. Unfortunately, time didn’t permit a rewrite of the article, and I didn’t want to postpone it given that the CJ-1 was the most Zero Retries Interesting development from Hamvention 2024.

A few observations about this new portable “Amateur Radio” unit solely from information provided by the manufacturer. TL:DR - I’m intrigued.

The world’s first Open Source Dual Band Android Amateur Radio!

No need to have an Android Radio with Old, Legacy Operating System

CJ-1 is running Android 14 and has AES256 Encryption

DMR Tier 1 and 2 + FM Analog (136-174MHz, 400-480MHz)

It quickly becomes apparent that while Amateur Radio is a market for the CJ-1, it’s not ComJoT’s primary market. The primary clue is the price - $999. Another is mentions of this radio appealing to “amateur radio aficionados” and “amateur radio enthusiasts”. Yet another is prominent mention of its AES 256 encryption capability, which of course is not allowed on Amateur Radio.

But there’s a lot to like on this unit. Like previous “Android phone with a radio grafted on” units, the CJ-1 is primarily an Android mobile phone so there’s an always-on (as long as you’re within cellular range with the bill paid up) Internet connection. With always-on Internet, there is live access to RepeaterBook and RFinder repeater lookup.

In looking at the RFinder page… their implementation of “Android phone with radio grafted on” looks very similar to the CJ-1 with a few cosmetic differences. It seems likely that both units are made by the same radio manufacturer.

The radio side is similarly conventional:

DMR Tier 1 and 2 + FM Analog (136-174MHz, 400-480MHz)

Power Output VHF: 5W/1W, UHF: 4W/1W

Though it’s not mentioned on the CJ-1 product page or the CJ-1 brochure (mentioned in passing on a Hamvention 2024 walkthrough video on YouTube), a key differentiation of the CJ-1 from other “Android phone with a radio grafted on” units is that the audio path is two-way between the Android subsystem and the radio subsystem.

Previous implementations of “Android phone with a radio grafted on” units were limited to an Android app for controlling the radio, and the lookup features. (You couldn’t really run Android software on the radio subsystem.) The two-way audio path means that data modes such as packet radio and APRS could “easily” be implemented in an Android app on the CJ-1 and used on Amateur Radio.

ComJot seems to equate Android with “Open Source” with statements like:

The ComJoT CJ-1, dubbed as the first Open Source Android Amateur Radio, is a feature-packed device that marries traditional communication methods with modern technology.

Open Source Advantage Being open source, the ComJoT CJ-1 encourages innovation and customization, allowing users to adapt the device to their specific needs and preferences.

At least there’s no mention of a ComJot Android store, so it seems likely that user-developed Android apps can be loaded onto the unit via Internet, micro SD card, or USB-C.

The $999 price of the CJ-1 can quickly be rationalized by an extensive set of additional features that, with clever software, could be taken advantage of in a portable Amateur Radio unit:

  • “Octa-core” 2 GHz CPU

  • MicroSD card slot (though they use the older terminology of “TF” card.

  • 4” color display with touch screen.

  • Camera (Front and Rear).

  • Wi-Fi (both 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz).

  • Bluetooth (Low Energy 5.0 - reasonably current).

  • Overall, pretty rugged.

  • 3 Ah battery.

  • USB-C charging and data.

Despite some overzealous marketing phraseology such as

The Android interface makes it familiar to younger, tech-savvy generations, while its amateur radio features appeal to traditional radio enthusiasts, fostering cross-generational communication, learning and excitement about Amateur Radio.

And a few unexplained issues (there’s a “flat contact” external Speaker / Microphone connector on the right side of the radio, but no mention of such an accessory being available)…

As I looked into this unit more and more, it kind of grew on me. Granted, I’ve never seen one, let alone actually used one so I have no idea if this radio is well-developed, or not. But the CJ-1 seems to have more potential for Zero Retries Interesting applications than the $749 Kenwood TH-D75A. Just one example (imaginary) application could be a smart APRS digipeater (implemented in an Android app) that could be remotely controlled and powered indefinitely via the USB-C port and a big USB-C power bank.

One appealing factor of the CJ-1 for me is that it’s big and rugged instead of small and petite. There are only a few physical buttons, and the rest of the controls are via touch screen, thus all functions could be reasonably discoverable in the graphical user interface, a welcome change from inscrutable multifunction keys requiring carrying a mini manual (or a PDF on another device). It also has a large capacity (and swappable) battery.

I wish ComJoT well with the CJ-1 and I plan to reach out to them and ask to be notified about Amateur Radio applications as they are developed.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Mostly DIY RF New Products Announced

Todd Carney K7TFC announced a number of new proudly “Hardware for Hardware-Defined Amateur Radio” products in his Spring 2024 newsletter, including:

  • Bidirectional PG-TIA IF Amplifier

  • GPAA-1 General-Purpose Audio Amp

  • Dual-Gate J310 JFET

and a number of others. I highlight DIY RF here in Zero Retries because I’m in awe of K7TFC and other “solo” Amateur Radio hardware vendors who keep Amateur Radio interesting and exciting by offering unique products, no matter how mundane.

What is Mostly DIY RF, Anyway?

That really should be a “who” and not a “what” question. Mostly DIY RF is just a trade name for me, Todd Carney, K7TFC. I'm a garden-variety amateur-radio enthusiast, and I don't mind admitting I'm also an amateur at manufacturing and business as well. Naturally, I try to do my best at all three, but nevertheless as a true amateur (from the Latin amare: to love; doing something for the love of it).

As a business, MDRF is the smallest possible: it's just me, K7TFC. There's no other workers or employees, and there's certainly no other investors or sources of capital. The good side of this is that I don't have to answer to anyone else, nor do I need to meet their expectations of profit or capital gains. I can offer products to fellow amateurs that no properly-capitalized company would ever bother with, and I can do so at prices that are lower than what a high-overhead firm could get away with. In fact, my business overhead is the same one I live under, and though I do have some dedicated space for MDRF work, my kitchen table has been pressed into service more than once.


Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) KISS TNC Specification

This was mentioned in a support exchange of emails regarding the Island Magic B. B. Link Adapter by Georges Auberger WH6AZ:

The B.B. Link adapter solves one problem: exposing the built-in TNC packet modem from the Kenwood TH-D74/5 radios to devices that can not use the Bluetooth Classic serial profile to access it. It does this by bridging Bluetooth Classic protocol to the Bluetooth Low Energy protocol and exposes it following the BLE KISS TNC specification.

I’m continually impressed that Amateur Radio generates bits of hard-won wisdom such as Specification for KISS over BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy), documented reasonably, that others can build upon. And that Amateur Radio generates small, focused, but critical devices such as the B. B. Link.

I’ll guess that Mike Chepponis K3MC and Phil Karn KA9Q would not have imagined that their KISS Protocol (which I remember being described at the time of its creation as a “quick hack” to use existing AX.25 TNCs for TCP/IP) would become so integral to Amateur Radio data communications. Not only is KISS in regular use in all manner of Amateur Radio systems, it’s continually being expanded into new systems and devices such as the Kenwood TH-D75A portable radio and the B. B. Link nearly four decades later. Not bad for a “quick hack”.


The Radio Today guide to the Icom IC-905

Andrew Barron ZL3DW mentioned his new book on the IC-905 mailing list (must be a subscriber to view):

hi everyone, I am pleased to announce that my new book, The Radio Today guide to the Icom IC-905 is now available from the RSGB bookshop and Amazon in print and Kindle versions. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0D1N6H5J5 

Some of you will be familiar with my other books, see https://www.qsl.net/zl3dw/Books.html

I extended the first few chapters to discuss the benefits and challenges of the radio. So, if you are still deciding about buying an IC-905, they may help you make the decision. If you already have the radio, there are plenty of tips about using it. I didn't buy the 10 GHz transverter, find out why!

Here is a note from the website.

The IC-905 is a great radio and definitely worth considering if you are interested in the microwave bands. The longer I used it the more I liked it. Some say that it is expensive, but there are many things to consider, such as the price of buying a different radio, plus transverters, plus a GPS disciplined reference oscillator. The IC-905 covers the complete band not just the single frequency of some transverters, and it is far easier to configure. You even get D-Star, cross-band operation, and video (to another IC-905).

The book has a longer introduction than usual to help you decide if the radio is a good option for you. I have discussed how you can use the rig, and the positives and negatives for using it for the QO-100 satellite, or DX.

73 and GD microwave DX, 
Andrew ZL3DW

A new paradigm radio such as the Icom IC-905 “microwave” radio really deserves a book-length treatment from an independent perspective - kudos to ZL3DW for doing so. Even if you have no interest in buying an IC-905 (it’s too expensive, you’re already all set up for microwave), I think this book would still be an interesting read just to understand Icom’s choices and tradeoffs in creating such a radio.


RADAE - Radio Autoencoder; Machine Learning Applied to HF Digital Voice

David Rowe VK5DGR:

Given the encouraging results with RADAE, we’ve pivoted our ARDC project plan to focus on RADAE, and have paused development of Codec 2 and FreeDV modes. RADAE appears to be our strongest candidate for satisfying the top three goals we set for ourselves when applying for the ARDC grant:

  1. Improve speech quality to a level comparable to commercial codecs.

  2. Develop a “rag chew” FreeDV mode with subjective speech quality comparable to SSB at high SNRs.

  3. Improve low SNR operation such that FreeDV is superior to SSB over poor HF channels.

We are on track to meet (and indeed exceed) the first two goals, but I think the final goal has yet to be demonstrated (e.g. SSB and the current incarnation of RADAE fall over at roughly the same SNR). There are a few bugs and many practical issues to work through before we have a real world version of RADAE that anyone can use. Plus there will be a few “gotchas” we haven’t thought of yet. Plenty for me to do in the coming months!

What blows me away about this work is that it’s mentioned in passing like it’s “business as usual technical development”. But unlike a lot of machine learning, this development (seems to be) done at “Amateur Radio scale” - with conventional desktop computers and embedded computers, not some desktop supercomputer or online server farm.

Read the whole article (and a previous mention from 2024-03) to get an idea of just how cool this is, including sample audio clips. This is yet another example of unique technological innovation in Amateur Radio!


All-In-One-Cable (AIOC) Units Available for Sale

AIOC GitHub page:

The AIOC is a small adapter with a USB-C connector that enumerates itself as a sound-card (e.g. for APRS purposes), a virtual tty ("COM Port") for programming and asserting the PTT (Push-To-Talk) as well as a CM108 compatible HID endpoint for CM108-style PTT (new in firmware version 1.2.0).

The above description “buries the lede” a bit about how cool this idea really is, but the concept is quickly explained in the photos. An AIOC is a “dongle” that plugs into many portable radios instead of requiring a dedicated programming cable, and a (different) dedicated audio interface. In short, it’s an elegant solution for using portable radios for data communications, and (more easily than programming from the front panel) getting them programmed for use with multiple repeaters, etc. It’s also refreshing that AIOC uses USB-C which is now the standard USB connection in 2024 and beyond.

But when I last mentioned AIOC in Zero Retries 0090, AIOC was a project.

Now AIOC is available as a very reasonably priced product available from the NA6D web store:

NA6D All In One Cable printed circuit board
NA6D AIOC - Image courtesy of NA6D.com

NA6D also offers a nice for its AIOC printed circuit board, which makes for a nice, complete-looking unit. Kudos to Nigel Armstrong NA6D for this “nice bit of kit”. I’m going to have to verify that the AIOC supports a couple of my favorite portable radios, and if that’s the case, get one or two on order.


AMSAT Argentina to Launch Transponder Balloon

AMSAT-UK - 2024-05-22:

On May 26, at 1300 GMT AMSAT-LU plans (weather permitting) to launch a balloon carrying a linear multimode transponder V➤U, CW, SSB, FM, APRS LU7AA-11 and VIDEO.

It could last 9 hours if it reaches 82,000 feet height landing in Uruguay, or 6 hours landing at Gualeguaychú. The flight has been approved by ANAC/EANA.

Flight forecast: http://lu7aa.org/pronostico.asp?callsign=LU7AA-12

An attempt will also be made to launch LU8YY PicoBalloon emitting WSPR at 20m, if the winds help it could go around the world.

In Merlo, from May 24 to 26, presentations will be made to schools and universities. Depending on the weather it could be launched on May 25.

This experience will provide 4 FM channels + 3 CW + 3 SSB + 1 digital channel and 1 SSTV, all simultaneous. It will allow field testing on a balloon the future satellite platforms planned by AMSAT Argentina.

For latest updates check http://amsat.org.ar/?f=merlo.

Kudos to AMSAT Argentina for this project! A transponder payload on a balloon is seriously Zero Retries Interesting! I just haven’t seen any explanations of how to build such a transponder; it would seem like this should be something that’s doable in software within a Software Defined Radio system. Amateur Radio hasn’t done nearly enough experimentation with terrestrial transponders like this great experiment, and I think we should be doing a lot more of that now that software defined transceivers are becoming more accessible to Amateur Radio Operators.


Random Wire Review 91: May 24, 2024 - An All Zero Retries Interesting Issue!

Tom Salzer KJ7T put out a blockbuster issue of his Randon Wire Review newsletter in Issue 91. Every bit of it was Zero Retries Interesting, and merited at least a 3x re-read to really grok all the cool stuff he discussed. I particularly enjoyed the discussion of the (new to me) FreedomLINK radios. KJ7T also said:

Personal note: As I review some past issues of the Random Wire, I am recognizing something I had not really verbalized before: if it has to do with radio, I’m all in! Amateur radio is my hobby of choice but I like radio in all of its manifestations. It doesn’t have to be something within my amateur radio license to be interesting.

QSL, KJ7T… QSL! I too like radio in all its manifestations, and that’s an elegant “elevator pitch” to explain our common curiosity about all kinds of radio technology.


New official [JNOS] 2.0p, IPV6, APRS, VARA, and important AT loop fix

Maiko Langelaar VE4KLM on the NOS-BBS mailing list:

Good day,

In case anyone missed it, there is a new official version - JNOS 2.0p.

Don't feel you need to switch over, I can just see (not) the miles of cars lined up.

BUT there is an important fix to an 'AT' loop issue that can lockup JNOS really good.

The issue has actually been around since the early JNOS 1.11f days (or before), so you might want to take a look at, the new code is in the development repository.

For anyone asking for 'features' or 'fixes', I am not ignoring you, really I'm not.

It's all on my todo list, but 'life' is just in the way right now - called priorities :|

Maiko / VE4KLM

http://www.langelaar.net

My thanks for Bill Vodall W7NWP for mentioning this on another email list that we’re both on. I’d completely forgotten about the NOS-BBS mailing list, and have now (attempted to) resubscribed.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

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2024-05-24

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1

It’s a longer term discussion, worthy of an (eventual) dedicated issue of Zero Retries, but I’ve recently come to the conclusion that M17 is complete (enough) and “ready to go” to be a capable digital voice… and messaging / data… system for Amateur Radio. There are some issues, including establishing recognition that M17 is usable now, getting it adequately documented, and of course, having at least a few ready-to-use radios with M17 built-in available. But the largest issue with M17 is the momentum, and the sunk costs, of existing single-mode DMR, D-Star, SF repeaters, radios owned by individuals, and Internet interconnection networks. It will take some serious evangelism to get folks to understand the advantages of M17.

2

In “prognosticating” about D-Star, I miss John Hays K7VE more than ever. John had an invaluable, independent, in-depth perspective on D-Star, which didn’t interfere with his advocacy of D-Star. If he were still with us, I would have solicited and incorporated his thoughts on this issue. You are too soon gone, John - Rest in Peace.

3

Despite all the issues with Amateur Radio use of DMR (such as no callsigns being transmitted digitally), data being implemented poorly, etc.

Zero Retries 0152

17 May 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1600+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Major Conference Countdowns

  • Hamvention 2024 in Xenia, Ohio, USA - Today through Sunday. I look forward to highlighting any Zero Retries Interesting product reveals in next week’s Zero Retries.

  • HAM RADIO 2024 in Friedrichshafen, Germany on 2024-06-28 thru 30, in 03 weeks!

  • JARL Ham Fair 2024 in Tokyo, Japan on 2024-08-24 and 25, in 14 weeks!

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Let’s Get Some More Manuals Scanned

The Zero Retries readership is nearly 1700 subscribers, and well over 2000 when various “followers” are counted. I’d like to think that we’re a progressive bunch.

In Zero Retries 0151, Kay Savetz K6KJN said:

Do you want more manuals like these to be scanned? We can make it happen, with your help. Internet Archive has many more pallets of unsorted manuals just waiting to be scanned. You can help get them to the scanning center. We’ve negotiated a situation where, if money is donated, the remaining manuals can be sent for scanning without us having to pre-sort them like we did for the first four pallets. DLARC will fund the scanning of manuals that overlap with our mission, and plenty of non-radio manuals will be scanned too. If you want to help, here is a special donation link. If you’re in the U.S., donations are tax deductible.

“Amateur Radio” (the ARDC grant that funded the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications) did its part in getting 4,000+ manuals (that related in some way to “radio” and “communications”) scanned and online. If you’re curious from the great “Manuals Plus” rescue, you can read more about it at http://ascii.textfiles.com/archives/4755.

But there’s a lot of those rescued manuals left to be digitized and made available online, and I think they should be, and can be. Per K6KJN’s article, there is some “special deal” worked out that can expedite those remaining rescued manuals getting digitized and made available online from “approximately before the end of time” to “much sooner than that”… if some additional, dedicated funds can be raised.

I would like to ask the Zero Retries readership to donate to this effort, and if you’ve thought about becoming a paid subscriber to Zero Retries in 2024, including renewing your paid subscription, please consider donating to this project instead. Again, here is the

special donation link.

Bonus - unlike paid subscriptions to Zero Retries, a donation to Internet Archive is (US) tax deductible!

My reasoning for this request is that (from what I understand - this wasn’t stated in the article or to me personally) these rescued manuals are in limbo at the moment as no one is sure if they’ll be digitized “soonish” or not. If “not”, I’ll guess that they’re going to go into a very long term queue (deep storage) and they may not get digitized and online in this, or perhaps the next, decade. That’s just the reality of the way the Internet Archive has to do things given the constant influx of physical media that has been rescued from oblivion. Getting these manuals digitized and online is unglamorous, but I can easily imagine that some of them may become important at some point. Imagine some obscure piece of equipment at some vital, but pitifully funded system that Amateur Radio cares about, like WWWB, or National Weather Service, an Antarctic base, or ??? that has a piece of equipment needed repair and no one can find the old paper manual to service that equipment.

Again, while Zero Retries happily accepts donations in the form of paid subscriptions, I think this particular project, at this particular moment, is “the greater good” and I’ll happily forego paid subscriptions to Zero Retries for a while. I chipped in for $100,and hope I’ll have a lot of company in that.

One last time, here is the special donation link to help get the remainder of the “Manuals Plus” manuals digitized and made available online.

Thank you for considering this request.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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#Hamvention2024

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Zero Retries Interesting developments at Hamvention 2024 this weekend in Xenia, Ohio, USA.

Photon Radio

Photon Radio logo
Logo courtesy of Photon Radio

The “sleeper” development of Hamvention 2024, for me, was a subtle reference in the vendor directory to “Photon Radio” (looks inserted at the last moment, out of sequence at the end of the directory) in booth 4307:

Photon Radio - Tools for photon communication

Welcome to the wave particle duality of radio! We are showing off our 1Mbit per second non-wave making digital transmitter for the 160M to 30M HF bands. Work with us online or come to our radio resort in Japan to build out a new generation of high speed digital communication devices. We can supply circuit boards, kits, training and sabbatical opportunities at our beachside location.

I was finally able to click through the link in the directory to https://photonradio.com.

Oh my, this was quite the “though the looking glass, down the rabbit hole” experience…

Summary

  1. AK4VO discovered how to generate pulses of photons instead of continuous waves via direct current activation of non-resonant antennas. This allows mbit/second digital communications over the HF bands.

  2. We can transmit bits at 800k bit/second in the 80 meter band at very low bandwidth. Our technology also can improve the clarity and speed of CW.

  3. We can provide circuit boards and kits for HF ham bands and are looking for collaborators. Our 20-watt transmitter board transmits a programmable 128 bit message at 5, 10, 50 or 100 sine cycles per bit.

  4. Please join our user’s group and fill out a questionnaire letting us know what kind of digital transmitter and receiver that you would like to see developed. Let`s interface a little bit with your computer!

  5. Take a look at our publications, in hard copies here and also available at photonradio.com. Introduce yourself and tell us your arguments and objections.

I would absolutely seek out this booth for some extended conversation with Marvin Motsenbocker AK4VO. All this… sounds… wild… to me and I would have thought that such a technology would have been known by now.

But, we keep getting surprised1 with completely new approaches to radio technology, thus I’m more than willing to have an extended conversation. That Photon Radio seems to welcome questions, provides extended technical descriptions, and has some hardware (reportedly) available lends credence to their claims.

Zero Retries Interesting(ish) Announcements

Gleaned from the first day of Hamvention 2024 (still underway as I finish the last edits of this issue of Zero Retries)… these announcements / debuts were the most Zero Retries Interesting:

  • FlexRadio 8400/M/8600/M - The big announcement from FlexRadio is a more capable high high-end family of HF radios to be available in August. This is the sort of development that rates a press release, but noting found about this new radio family at FlexRadio’s press page. Without a careful A / B parsing of older products versus these new products, I can’t really explain the substantive improvements being made in this new family. YouTube channel Kyle - AAOZ interviewed Mike VA3MW of FlexRadio, and who showed a slide that claimed the new radios had “4x increase in CPU”, and “2x increase in FPGA” and a built-in GNSS (GPS) receiver feeding a GPS Disciplined Oscillator (GPSDO) for improved frequency stability.

  • EZDV Adapter for FreeDV - Units are for sale at the TAPR booth, and apparently for sale online.

  • Beta of CubeSatSim Kits - AMSAT will be selling kits of the CubeSatSim at Hamvention. Apparently this is the first lot of kits, thus the “Beta” descriptor. This is the first time this unit has been available as a full kit of all parts. Previously, you bought the (unpopulated) printed circuit boards from AMSAT and then sourced all parts yourself, including 3D printing the structural pieces. This kit will exponentially expand the number of CubeSatSims out in the world to help evangelize Amateur Radio satellites.

  • ComJot CJ-1 - “World’s First Open Source Android Radio - Android 14, DMR T1 & T2, VHF & UHF - see the video. More info at https://tait-radio.com/comjot-cj-1/

  • Kenwood TH-D75A/E Operating Tips Manual - Kenwood debuted a “limited run” of hardcopies of this new manual at Hamvention 2024.

  • Hamvention Full YouTube streaming for Hamvention seminars - I was impressed that Hamvention will be streaming all four Forum rooms at Hamvention, simultaneously, on Friday and Saturday. In previous years, not all of the Forum rooms / all of the presentations, were streamed, so some of the Forums that I was interested in weren’t recorded.

  • Icom “X60” Box of Boards - Barely Zero Retries interesting, but Icom debuted a plexiglas box of boards and modules (yes, literally) with no information about what those pieces are intended for. There are some labels on the units, but I didn’t see a close up photo to even hazard a guess. A bit later I saw some close-up video and it looks like boards for an HF radio.

  • Kenwood Tri-band Mobile Radio in Development - I skimmed through the first 25 minutes or so of Ham Radio Crash Course’s Hamvention Booth Tour - Day One! video and approximately 23:30 a rep in the Kenwood booth claimed that Kenwood is working on a “tri-band mobile”.

Zero Retries Interesting Commercial Vendors

From the Hamvention 2024 Commercial Booth directory, these are the vendors that I would have prioritized to visit / interview as Zero Retries Interesting:

  • ADSBexchange.com

  • AMSAT

  • AREDN

  • ARISS-USA

  • Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC)

  • Amateur Television Network

  • FIRST Robotics

  • FlexRadio Systems

  • Free DV

  • Libre Space Foundation

  • MMDVM

  • NOAA - National Weather Service

  • NVIS/Codan Communications Consulting

  • Photon Radio

  • QRP Labs

  • TAPR (Tucson Amateur Packet Radio)

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

First Contact Made Through QO-100 from North America

Amateur Radio Daily 2024-05-12:

The first contact through the QO-100 geostationary satellite made from North America took place on May 11th from Newfoundland, Canada. VO1/M0XUU (VU3HPF) made a trans-atlantic FT8 contact with G0MRF in London. The contact is significant considering the QO-100 footprint falls beyond Newfoundland at -0.9° below the horizon.

Source: AMSAT UK

This is pretty Zero Retries Interesting! Below the horizon isn’t supposed to be “possible”, but it’s… radio…, in all its weirdnesses and exceptions to the rule!


Open Source in Amateur Radio Wiki

Dear open source hams,

I was thinking that it would be a good thing to have a public wiki where (in the first step) all the ham radio related open source hardware and software projects are listed. As a second step it could contain articles that describe how to build an open source station. It further more could get more content with howtos etc.

So here is a first draft:

https://opensource.radio

It really is only the work of few hours and far from being structured or even complete.

What do you think? Is it worth the work? Would you like to contribute?

I think it's impossible to do this by myself and I wonder if others would be interested to contribute.

I discovered this brand new project on Mastodon from https://mastodon.radio/@DK1MI. This is a worthy project.


Announcing [Amateur Radio Software Award] 2024 award recipients - Jakob Ketterl (DD5JFK) for OpenWebRX and Marat Fayzullin (KC1TXE) for OpenWebRX+

The Amateur Radio Software Award (ARSA) committee is pleased to announce that OpenWebRX, a project led by Jakob Ketterl DD5JFK, and OpenWebRX+, a project led by Marat Fayzullin KC1TXE, have been selected as the winners of the 5th annual Amateur Radio Software Award. The award recognizes software projects that enhance amateur radio and promote innovation, freedom, and openness in amateur radio software development.

The history of these projects showcase the benefit of open source software. OpenWebRX was originally created by András Retzler but due to the demands of his career he decided to discontinue its development. Jakob Ketterl took over the OpenWebRX project and continues to maintain and improve OpenWebRX. Marat Fayzullin’s OpenWebRX+ builds on top of Jakob Ketterl’s OpenWebRX adding support for additional communication modes and advanced features. Both projects are currently separate allowing implementers of hosting sites to choose between the simple core version or the enhanced version without difficulties while allowing the developers to focus on their projects goals.

OpenWebRX was barely on my Zero Retries Interesting RADAR, but OpenWebRX+ was not. I’m in awe of KC1TXE’s vision for OpenWebRX+:

In a way, I view OpenWebRX+ as a real-life ‘tricorder’ for the radio spectrum.

My thanks to Amateur Radio Weekly Issue 330 for noting this Zero Retries Interesting story.


MicroLink Project - Open Source Implementation of EchoLink with a Microcontroller

MicroLink board
MicroLink V3 - Image courtesy of Bruce MacKinnon KC1FSZ

Is it possible to build a full EchoLink® node using a $6 microcontroller? I'm not completely sure, but let's find out. The goal of this project is to create the smallest, cheapest way to put a radio onto the EchoLink network. If you are new to the world of EchoLink please see the official website for complete information. EchoLink is a peer-to-peer VoIP (voice over IP) network used to link amateur radio stations across the Internet.

There are much easier ways to get onto EchoLink. The MicroLink project will only be interesting to someone who wants to get deep into the nuts-and-bolts of EchoLink/VoIP technology. In fact, you should start to question the sanity of anyone who spends this much time building their own EchoLink station. I am a homebrew enthusiast and I try to avoid off-the-shelf software/components where possible. This has been a huge learning opportunity.

The system currently runs on a Pi Pico W (RP204, ARM Cortex M0) board. I'm pretty sure it could also run on an ESP-32, or possibly an Arduino of sufficient caliber. More experimentation is needed here.

The software is fully open source. Now that EchoLink is “open”, others can experiment with this important amateur radio technology. I am currently working on adding support for AllStarLink. More to follow ...

This is a cool Zero Retries Interesting project by Bruce MacKinnon KC1FSZ. I’m in awe of his ability to write software “for bare metal” (note - microcontroller, so no operating system) including Voice over Internet Protocol (VOIP) and a TCP/IP stack for Internet. I said during my email correspondence:

Cool that you’re peeling back the onion of EchoLink and making it more accessible. Every time there is [an open source] project like this, it provides more “fodder” for newcomers interested in radio technology to see themselves helping create new radio things through software.

KC1FSZ noted that the GSM-0610 full rate CODEC used in EchoLink is extremely well documented and it took him “about two weeks” to implement it for MicroLink.

KC1FSZ is also working on a VHF FM transmitter - see his QRZ page. Regarding that I said:

I’ve been saying for a while now that capable receivers are now a solved problem - RTL-SDRs. Reasonable transmitters are the bottleneck.

My thanks to KC1FSZ for bringing this to my attention.


Ribbit Updates

Ricardo Saiz on the Ribbit-Users mailing list:

I have installed and successfully run the linux modem https://github.com/aicodix/modem/ in a Raspberry version 1. I have left it up and working for several days. The script records sound clips from a 2 meter radio, demodulates the data, shows the message in an http server: http://ea4gmz.hopto.org/OFDM.txt and repeats the same message a few seconds later. Fellow hams around Madrid have been able to exchange messages using Rattlegram in their smartphones and a fixed or handheld radio. It works through voice repeaters too. The modem software was modified for making the algorithm faster, maybe at the expense of some sensitivity. I have not noticed a significant loss of sensitivity, and now it takes less than 100 ms to process an audio clip and decode the message, even in a Rpi 1.

This is a temporary and experimental system. I wish to engage more people into Rattlegram as an introduction to Ribbit.

Pierre W4CKX on the Ribbit-Users mailing list::

Know that Ahmet contributed Ribbit codec as an evolution of Rattlegram and that all characteristics were improved across the board. Alex has been working on a PWA for almost 2 months and we are now working on the App UX. Ribbit 1.0 beta is getting closer to release. (We are not committed to any date, it will be released when it's ready).

When released, we will direct you to our ORI GitHub where you will find Ribbit codec and can update your build.

Ribbit will support message metadata, user profiles, geolocation and r/channels.

Ribbit is one of the Zero Retries Interesting projects I try to cite as Amateur Radio adjacent, along with software defined receivers (RTL-SDR, SDR Play RSP1B, and KiwiSDR to name three favorites), SatNOGS, and Meshtastic, that don’t require an Amateur Radio license to experiment, learn, and generally have fun with radio technology.


Teensy SDR Project

Teensy SDR
Image courtesy of Mike Lewis K7MDL

Winter 2020-2021 I decided to build my own Arduino SDR and after looking around I found the Keith'sSDR group at keithsdr@groups.io | Home

The project was focused on building a simple DIY SDR radio based on Arduino on the very capable Teensy 4 series CPU.  I have been using the Teensy 4 for my RF Wattmeter/Band Decoder project, now realized in a RF tolerant PCB design. I jumped in.  I was mostly software focused and wanted to create a high resolution spectrum display and commercial looking UI features primarily to perform as compact low power IF radio for my VHF and microwave transverters.​

I extended the KeithSDR with customizable table drive UI elements then moved onto figure a way to get a high resolution spectrum and waterfall display, eventually running at multiple FFT sizes.  Today that is 1024, 2048 and 4096 both I and Q.  I use multiple FFT sizes to achieve pan and zoom with no extra compute required.  I also wanted the touch screen to evolve to not miss physical controls much, if at all.  On the 7" 1024x600 display version I have not used hardware controls for a year.

This Zero Retries Interesting project by Mike Lewis K7MDL was discovered from a mention by the MicroHAMS Amateur Radio Club which has featured a lot of Zero Retries Interesting topics of late.


Icom IC-905 Amateur Television Capabilities Reviewed

Excerpted from Boulder Amateur Television Club TV Repeater's REPEATER newsletter, May, 2024, 2nd edition, Issue #162:

IC-905 - Icom’s Microwave and ATV Transceiver, by Dave Crump G8GKQ, British Amateur Television Club

Amateur TV Operation --- The IC-905 will transmit and receive frequency modulated (FM) ATV pictures with a single sound sub-carrier. In the UK, this mode has gradually been replaced by digital DVB-S/S2 over the last 20 years.

Digital ATV --- The IC-905 only transmits and receives analogue FM ATV. It is a shame that no attempt has been made to handle DVB-S2 digital ATV which is now the predominant ATV mode in the UK and on the QO-100 satellite. As the unit has no ‘IF’ input or output, the only likely option for introducing this capability would be an internal firmware upgrade. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that the internal processor could handle the challenging error- correction processing required for reception, as this is usually handled in custom integrated circuits. The omission of digital ATV might preclude the use of this rig for any ATV operation in the 1296MHz band following the possible future implementation of restrictions to safeguard radio-navigation satellite services (RNSS).

Conclusion --- I am really pleased that Icom have brought this microwave/ATV transceiver to market. It can only serve to stimulate interest in these aspects of the hobby. It is a polished, capable unit; however, it is not a good fit for the current UK ATV scene - it would have been perfect 20 years ago. Despite the lack of flexibility, I would love to own one, but the price puts me off: £3549.95 for the basic system and another £1499.99 for the 10 GHz transverter.

Not being an active Amateur Television user, I felt I didn’t have much standing for an opinion on that capability of the IC-905. But this review by experienced ATV user G8GKQ validates my initial impressions of the television capabilities of the IC-905:

  • Analog television?

  • In a brand-new (2022) high end VHF / UHF / Microwave Amateur radio?

  • Only accepts analog (not USB) video signals / cameras?

I thought that FM ATV was a neat capability of the IC-905… if it had been released two decades, or even a decade ago. But the advanced Amateur Radio Television folks (especially as documented by the BATVC newsletter this is excerpted from) have long since migrated to using digital television technologies. Thus the IC-905 loses a bit of its luster in not incorporating that “state of the present” standard for Amateur Television.


A Transport Protocol’s View of Starlink

From The ISP Column - May 2024 by Geoff Huston:

Digital communications systems always represent a collection of design trade-offs. Maximising one characteristic of a system may impair others, and various communications services may chose to optimise different performance parameters based on the intersection these design decisions with the physical characteristics of the communications medium. In this article I’ll look at the Starlink service [1], and how TCP, the workhorse transport protocol of the Internet, interacts with the characteristics of the Starlink service.

The Starlink satellite’s Ku-band downlink has a total of 8 channels using frequency division multiplexing. Each channel has an analogue bandwidth of 240Mhz. Each channel is broken into frames, which is subdivided using time division multiplexing into 302 intervals, each of 4.4µs, which together with a frame guard interval makes each frame 1,333µs, or 750 frames per second. Each frame contains a header that contains satellite, channel and modulation information [6]. The implication is that there is a contention delay of up to 1.3ms assuming that each active user is assigned at least one interval per frame.

This leaves us with four major contributory factors for variability of the capacity of the Starlink service, namely:

  • the variance in signal modulation capability, which is a direct outcome of the varying SNR of the signal,

  • the variance in the satellite path latency due to the relative motion of the satellite and the earth antennae,

  • the need to perform satellite switching on a regular basis, and

  • the variability induced by sharing the common satellite transmission medium with other users, which results in slot contention.

I thought this was a fascinating, reasonably high level explanation of just how sophisticated the radio technology has to be for Starlink to be a usable, let alone reasonably high bandwidth system for Broadband Internet Access. The levels of dynamic variables to take into account are just staggering (to me).


OL-SDR - HF 1.8-50MHz 2 Channels SDR Transceiver

OL-SDR represents the pinnacle of innovation in the field of SDR radios, offering unrivaled sophistication and flexibility. Just look at its rear panel, which offers a wide range of connections and functionality, embodying the complexity and power behind this extraordinary technological solution.

With an internal structure centered around a next-generation FPGA, OL-SDR is distinguished by unprecedented versatility and control. This extreme adaptability and operational precision position it as a versatile transceiver in a diverse range of high-demand operating contexts, where the need for extreme performance is critical.

Its internal architecture and advanced external interface are designed to meet the most demanding needs of the most sophisticated operators. OL-SDR is an ideal option for those who require maximum customization and flexibility, offering a level of functionality adaptable to a wide range of specialized applications.

Here are some of the key features of the OL-SDR:

  • Unrivaled sophistication and flexibility: The OL-SDR is packed with features that make it the most sophisticated and flexible SDR radio on the market.

  • Wide range of connections and functionality: The OL-SDR's rear panel offers a wide range of connections and functionality, making it ideal for a variety of applications.

  • Next-generation FPGA: The OL-SDR is powered by a next-generation FPGA, which provides unprecedented versatility and control.

  • Extreme adaptability and operational precision: The OL-SDR is designed for extreme adaptability and operational precision, making it ideal for high-demand operating contexts.

  • Advanced external interface: The OL-SDR's advanced external interface is designed to meet the most demanding needs of the most sophisticated operators.

  • Maximum customization and flexibility: The OL-SDR offers a level of customization and flexibility that is unmatched by any other SDR radio.

I’m not remotely qualified to vet these claims, but it looks like Olliter Laboratory (Italy) wants to give FlexRadio some significant competition. I’m surprised that new companies like this see the market for high-end Amateur Radio HF radios as significant enough to invest into, even if such products are used as a steppingstone to commercial / government sales.


M.2 HAT+ for Raspberry Pi 5 Now Available

The Raspberry Pi M.2 HAT+ enables you to connect M.2 M-key peripherals, such as NVMe drives and AI accelerators, to your Raspberry Pi 5. It provides fast (up to 500 MB/s) data transfer to and from these peripherals, and is available to buy today, from our network of Approved Resellers, priced at just $12.

Raspberry Pi 5 launched back in September last year with an exciting new feature on board. No, not the power button. Or the battery-backed real-time clock. We’re talking about the PCI Express (PCIe) expansion connector: this small 16-way FFC (flexible flat cable) connector, positioned at the extreme left of the board where the MIPI display connector lives on older Raspberry Pi boards, carries a single-lane (one transmit pair, one receive pair, and one clock pair) PCIe 2.0 bus.

To me, the M.2 HAT+ completes the Raspberry Pi 5 as an appliance computer. Using a MicroSD card for “disk” storage, even a “hardened / industrial” unit was widely viewed as reasonable for hobbyists, but not really reliable. With this, Raspberry Pi 5s can use Solid State Drive (SSD) modules directly for higher reliability and performance.


KE9V - The Future is Here

Zero Retries Pseudostaffer and Guest Author Jeff Davis KE9V:

Just a week ago I wrote about the rapidly changing future for amateur radio emergency services due to the growth of wireless internet access provided by the Starlink service and its fleet of low-earth orbit satellites. Then came dangerous flooding in remote parts of Brazil. Did amateur radio send in the varsity squad to provide communication help? No. But a thousand Starlink terminals were sent to facilitate needed comms in the worst hit areas.

Still, it’s a major shift in communication technology and one that hams shouldn’t ignore. The last thing we need is to appear to be a bunch of sour old men waving our handhelds at the heavens and cursing the magic of internet service being delivered from space. We need to find a way to use this paradigm shift to our advantage (if we want to continue hitching our wagon to EMCOMM) and that will likely take the form of using what we’re good at, radio, to fill in the gaps that will invariably appear in any such technology-based solution.

I came to this conclusion last summer with my (Starlink) Meadow Day experiment.


New Zero Retries Interesting Item in the Ham Radio Outlet Catalog

The top half of Page 32 of the Spring Summer 2024 HRO catalog featured a new Zero Retries Interesting device - digirig. I don’t recall seeing digirig in previous versions of the HRO catalog. I’ve mentioned digirig numerous times in Zero Retries as a compact, well-engineered audio interface (modem) for Amateur Radio data communications, ideal for use with portable radios. It’s impressive that digirig has achieved sufficient scale to be featured in the HRO catalog and have the margins to be sold via a retailer.

And… it was interesting to note what wasn’t in this edition of the HRO catalog - Tigertronics SignaLink USB units. A quick check of the HRO website for “tigertronics” shows 34 items so apparently SignaLink USBs are still being sold through HRO.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

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  • One particularly effective method of promoting Zero Retries is to add a mention of Zero Retries to your QRZ page (or other web presence) and include a link:

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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Jeff Davis KE9V also mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

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These YouTube channels regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-05-17

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

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All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

I vividly remember the same sensation of wonder when advanced radio technologies like digital processing gain (thank you once again KA9Q), spread spectrum, ultrawideband, OFDM, and cognitive antennas were all (very patiently) explained to me for the first time.

Zero Retries 0151

10 May 2024 at 22:31

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1600+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 30 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Presentation to RATPAC 2024-05-08

I did a presentation to the Radio Amateur Training Planning and Activities Committee (RATPAC) weekly videoconference earlier this week. My slide deck was titled:

Tracking Technological Innovation in Amateur Radio - Zero Retries Newsletter.

There were… 20? folks on the live videoconference, but RATPAC’s YouTube channel has 6.2k subscribers, so it’s likely that the “watched” count will grow from the current (as I write this) 36 views. I’m grateful that RATPAC posted the video to YouTube so quickly.

This presentation was a good “backgrounder” about Zero Retries, but my closest advisors have advised me that I should do “more pictures, less text”. The longer suggestion was that the topics I discuss in presentations are “front of mind for me”, but to explain to others, visuals are more helpful than plain text.

Thus, point taken, my future slide decks will be better illustrated. As I did with the LinuxFest Northwest slide deck, I’ll annotate this one with links and then get it to RATPAC for posting with the video.


Other “Recent” Interviews and Presentations

In adding these two most recent presentations to my QRZ page - I updated other “recent” interviews and presentations:


In the Meantime…

The heavenly weather - bright sun, temps in the 70s, very light breeze, has returned to Bellingham, just in time for a Mother’s Day weekend trip to Portland, Oregon to reunite my daughter Merideth KK7BKI and my wife Tina KD7WSF… and to spoil the grandcats (and Tina) just a little bit.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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What’s New at Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications

By Kay Savetz K6KJN
Zero Retries Pseudostaffer

There’s so much new stuff in the DLARC library this month! I hardly know where to begin.

The Manuals Plus scanning project is complete!! (Well, for now!) Four pallets of radio and radio-adjacent manuals are completely scanned, online, searchable, and downloadable: 4,294 manuals in all. (In February I estimated the lot would be about 4,000 manuals. My guess wasn’t too far off. I also estimated the project would take six weeks, which turns out was optimistic.) The batch includes manuals for wonderfully esoteric hardware, a majority of which I bet had little to no reliable information online until now. Please explore the collection. Maybe there’s a manual for an obscure gadget that’s in your ham shack.

Do you want more manuals like these to be scanned? We can make it happen, with your help. Internet Archive has many more pallets of unsorted manuals just waiting to be scanned. You can help get them to the scanning center. We’ve negotiated a situation where, if money is donated, the remaining manuals can be sent for scanning without us having to pre-sort them like we did for the first four pallets. DLARC will fund the scanning of manuals that overlap with our mission, and plenty of non-radio manuals will be scanned too. If you want to help, here is a special donation link. If you’re in the U.S., donations are tax deductible.

The other Big News Item is the new DX-peditions collection. The California Historical Radio Society contributed all sorts of material documenting DX-peditions from the early 1960s through the mid 1990s. The media they sent included videotapes, cassette tapes, 35mm slides, and one reel-to-reel tape. 

The videotapes went to my colleague Jason, who digitized all 60-plus of them. These little trip documentaries are provide fascinating glimpses into far-off places and long-gone people. Look at all those old cars, planes, and radios! Meanwhile, I handled the audio: four dozen recordings about trips to Kingman Reef, Pitcairn Islands, Burundi, the Galapagos, and all manner of other far-flung locales.

Yes, I handled the reel-to-reel tape, which turned out to contain a fascinating account by Frank Turek DL7FT (SK) about DX-peditions he made from 1963 to 1975. The 35mm slides (many of which are meant to accompany the audiotapes) haven’t been digitized yet; we hope to be able to scan them sometime this summer. (As you might imagine, properly scanning thousands of slides takes specialized equipment and processes.)

A tangent: snuck in with the DX-pedition videotapes are a few off-topic but very cool videos worth checking out: here’s A Message from Barry Goldwater K7UGA, a short interview with the opinionated, radio-loving senator. And, take a minute to watch Pile Up Busters, a playful parody of Ray Parker Jr.’s “Ghostbusters” theme.

Another update — I had written in February that we had 84 books in the Radio Books from MIT Libraries collection — public domain books and journals about radio that were donated to DLARC by MIT libraries and scanned by us. I thought that collection was complete — until the folks from MIT asked if we wanted scans of another 25 books: books that are so rare or fragile that the librarians thought it wasn’t a good idea to ship them, so they scanned them there. These new additions of old books include The Maintenance of Wireless Telegraph Apparatus (1918), Wireless Apparatus Making: a practical handbook on the design, construction, and operation of apparatus for the reception of wireless messages (1923), and several items in French and German.

Let’s talk radio conferences: DLARC has added material from the emcomm-focused Comm Academy and ham-focused Pacificon.

Comm Academy (originally called Communications Academy) was a free training conference for people interested in developing emergency communications skills. The first Communications Academy took place in 1998. Based in the Pacific Northwest, Comm Academy was primarily a regional event organized by the Western Washington Medical Services Emergency Communications team. Over the years, it gained a reputation as one of the West Coast’s premier emergency communications training events. The final Comm Academy event was held April 2022. This conference ran for an impressive two decades, and DLARC now has more than 400 items from the entire span of the show, including PowerPoint presentations, papers, and video recordings of some talks. There is amazing material that we can all learn from here, all full-text searchable. As I was uploading the items and adding the metadata, a few jumped out at me, including Captain Andy Stevermer’s 2007 presentation “Pandemic Response - Would Communications Make a Difference?” and Carolyn Driedger’s 2012 talk “Preparing for Future Volcanic Eruptions — Mt. St. Helens Lessons Learned” … (Kay types, worriedly watching the [active, but currently dormant - Ed.] volcano visible outside the window.)

DLARC has added material from Pacificon, an annual amateur radio convention produced by the Mount Diablo (California) Amateur Radio Club. The collection includes schedules and flyers for the show going back to 2011, videos of some presentations, some slide decks. (The 2024 Pacificon show will be October 18-20 in San Ramon, California. I hope to be there.)

I’ve continued the hunt for lost audio treasures in the TAPR Software Library CD-ROMs (1996, 1997, and 1998) and boy howdy are there some gems! I want to send bouquets of flowers to whoever recorded those talks so well and then put them on CD-ROMs so that I could find them nearly 30 years later. I don’t even hold a grudge against them for making me convert the files from RealAudio format to MP3.

Here’s a circa 1987 interview about packet radio with Lyle Johnson WA7GXD, co-founder of TAPR. Here’s audio of 14 talks from the 2002 Digital Communications Conference, including sessions about software defined radio and Direct Digital Synthesis. Here’s a handful of presentations from the 6th Annual TPRS Fall Digital Symposium, presented by the Texas Packet Radio Society in December 1997. Here’s audio from several sessions from HamCom 1996 Digital Forum, including DXng by Packet, and “how to step up to 9600 bps easily and inexpensively.” And here’s audio from some sessions at TAPR Digital Forum at Dayton Hamvention 1996, which includes a talk by Phil Karn KA9Q  called “A High-Performance Satellite Modem for the PC.” Listen to them all! Read the transcriptions! The past is the future.

Finally: as soon as I heard the news that MFJ would be winding down, I updated DLARC’s MFJ library with new manuals, newsletters, and videos from their YouTube channel. 

And lest you forget, here’s that special donation link that will help us get more pallets of obscure manuals scanned. The Internet Archive and DLARC thank you.

Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications is funded by a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) to create a free digital library for the radio community, researchers, educators, and students. If have questions about the project or material to contribute, contact me at kay@archive.org.

Kay Savetz K6KJN is the Internet Archive's Program Manager, Special Collections… the curator of the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications project.

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NTIA color logo
Logo courtesy of National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

US NTIA “Open Radio” Innovation Awards Available

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

“Open Radio Innovation”, they say? There are numerous Amateur Radio open source projects could qualify as “Open Radio” innovation, with a little bit of creativity and chutzpah.

Biden-Harris Administration Announces $420M Funding Opportunity to Promote Wireless Equipment Innovation

Today, the Department of Commerce’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) announced that up to $420 million in funding will be made available to build the radio equipment needed to advance open network adoption in the U.S. and abroad.

This second round of funding targets two critical areas:

  • Open radio unit commercialization: Accelerating the development of open radio units to the point where they meet the needs of wireless carriers and are ready for commercial trials; and

  • Open radio unit innovation: Improving the overall performance and capabilities of open radio units through targeted research and development.

NTIA expects to grant between $25 million and $45 million per commercialization award, and $5 million to $10 million per innovation award. Applications are due July 10.

I forwarded this to a company I thought might be interested in pursuing such an opportunity. I outlined the potential synergies that I saw, and the response was… they didn’t really “get it”. I suggested that “Improving the overall performance and capabilities of open radio units through targeted research and development.” could be interpreted to include land mobile two-way radio systems, such as repeaters and other “narrowband” infrastructure. Although “radio systems” has come to mean mostly cellular / mobile systems, and some satellite systems, there is still considerable use of land mobile two-way radio systems including public safety and especially law enforcement. Thus NTIA might be persuaded to “broaden their definition” of radio systems to two-way radio systems. Though “commercialization” might be a big leap for my ideas below, I’ll guess that these ideas could qualify for an (or multiple) “innovation awards”.

Amateur Radio Open Source Projects Could Qualify as a Basis for an NTIA Innovation Award

Amateur Radio is one of the few sources of any significant innovation in land mobile two-way radio technology (we try new things!) since 12.5 and 6.25 kHz channels were mandated decades ago now and necessitated the use of digital voice techniques.

Some examples:

  • M17 Project - An entire Open Source two-way radio ecosystem that includes digital voice, text messaging, repeaters, Internet linking, protocols, and young enough and still flexible enough (again, open source…) to go beyond existing two-way radio paradigms for a modest investment in focused developer resources.

  • The M17 Project’s Remote Radio Unit - UHF repeater mounted on a tower, including duplexer, so no expensive, lossy coax / hardline running down a tower to the radio.

  • Repeaters that can accommodate multiple Digital Voice and data modes through use of the Multi Mode Digital Voice Modem (MMDVM).

  • Opulent Voice and Codec 2 - Modern, open source CODECs for Digital Voice

  • Single frequency repeaters using Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) techniques. Such a repeater would listen on one time slot, and transmit on the other time slot. This concept was implemented in a Hytera Digital Mobile Radio portable repeater for emergency use, so there’s some prior art to this. The benefit of this approach is that it radically simplifies a repeater; no duplexer is required since there is only one frequency involved. Such an approach “doubles” the available number of repeaters in a given band. New Packet Radio implements TDMA, so single frequency fast transmit / receive switching is apparently doable.

  • ka9q-radio creates a “receive all channels” capability and its creator Phil Karn KA9Q speculates that it could be used for a mobile “voting” receiver for a simulcast repeater network. ka9q-radio could perhaps be extended into a pseudo trunking system, with more of the intelligence in the vehicle / user radio than in the network.

  • Use Single Sideband (SSB) for VHF / UHF two-way radio for 3 kHz channels. We now have very capable, inexpensive Software Defined Transceivers (SDTs) that can easily and flexibly generate, and automatically tune SSB signals. SSB exceeds the current “narrowband” requirement of 6.25 kHz channels, and work being done with FreeDV offers good voice quality over narrow bandwidths, and it’s now easily implemented with SDTs. Perhaps it’s time to try to build such a system for VHF / UHF and repeaters.

Those are just a few ideas that I think could qualify as “open radio units through targeted research and development“ per NTIA. I hope some company in the Amateur Radio market will be bold enough to apply for an NTIA Innovation Award.

Applications are due 2024-07-10.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Island Magic B.B. Link - Bluetooth Low Energy / Bluetooth Classic Adapter

Island Magic B.B. Link Adapter
Island Magic B.B. Link Adapter - Image courtesy of Island Magic Co.

Meet B.B. Link, the adapter that connects iPhones and iPads to Kenwood TH-D75 and D74 radios. With it, iOS applications like RadioMail can fully utilize the radio's built-in KISS TNC packet modem. Plug it into the USB-C port of the phone, turn your radio on, and you're set.

Features

  • Pair with the radio once, and the adapter will remember it. It automatically reconnects whenever the radio is on and within range.

  • Automatically identifies the correct VFO for data connections and switches the radio to KISS TNC mode when an app connects.

  • Allows applications like RadioMail to change frequencies as needed.

  • Automatically returns the radio to its previous frequency and mode once you're done.

  • Comes with a handy lanyard to keep your adapter within easy reach.

  • Over-the-air firmware updates using the B.B. Link Configurator app.

  • Flexible open source firmware.

Compatibility

  • This adapter only works with certain Kenwood radios, iOS devices and apps. Double-check you've got the right gear. You'll need:

  • An iOS device with a USB-C connector, like the iPhone 15 or newer iPad models listed here

  • A Kenwood TH-D74 or TH-D75 radio

A packet application like RadioMail or APRS.fi that complies with the BLE KISS TNC specification

This… is one1 elegant approach to the long quest2 to do reasonable data, either chatting or email, using an Amateur Radio portable radio and a handheld device with a reasonable screen and keyboard (a modern mobile phone). It would have been more elegant for Kenwood to “get with the 2020s” in their design of the TH-D75A (released in 2023, thus the Bluetooth issues were hardly a surprise to Kenwood) and support the modern Bluetooth Low Energy specification. For the minor cost of the B.B. Link and powering it, problem solved.


Status Update on Connect Systems M17 Portable Radios

Email from Connect Systems (no web page to link to):

STATUS OF M17

The follow is the status of the M17 project as reported by the developer.

Hi Jerry,

I'm sending you the new document, with the updated modification to the mic path and a description of the reasons for the changes.

I'm not against having my name mentioned, if you want to do so. :)

Silvano Seva

About this project

There are two people primarily responsible for the development of the M17 project.

Silvano Seva who is the primary person for the firmware and

Wojciech Kaczmarski who is the primary person for the hardware.

If there are other people involved, I am sure I will hear about it and will include it in future blogs.

Link to Modification (PDF File)

Supporting This Project

We are asking the amateur community to buy in advance one or more of the radios. When the radios are available, you will be the first to get them at a discount from the standard price of the radio. If at anytime you decide you would rather not support this project, you can get your money back and then get in the back of the line for when the radios are released.

Link  to Support CS7000 M17 PLUS

Link  to Support CS7000 M17

The CS7000 M17 page states that the expected availability of these radios is “late May, 2024”. Again, kudos to Jerry Wanger KK6LFS for this bold measure of support for M17.


T41 Presentation - With a Zero Retries Interesting Teaser

Link above is for a .odp (PowerPoint) file.

Feature set:

  • 5 band HF 80, 40, 20, 15, 10M

  • 20W, CW - SSB (Fuzzy QRP)

  • Self-contained, no PC, laptop, tablet, or phone needed

  • Large spectrum/waterfall display

  • No touch display – FFS

  • Luggable

  • Reasonable cost

  • Open Source on both hardware and software

I found my way to this interesting HF Software Defined Transceiver project via a brief mention on a mailing list of the associated low cost 100 watt amplifier project (see details in the presentation).

But the Zero Retries Interesting angle was that Slide 56 had this intriguing mention:

  • K9HZ Boards (For T41 and any QRP Radio)

  • VHF-UHF Boards

  • All Ham Bands 220 MHz - 2.4 GHz

  • Under development by KI3P and K9HZ

  • True SDR. I/Q Outputs and Inputs

While I found lots of references to K9HZ’s making printed circuit boards of the T41 widely available, I didn’t find anything about the “KI3P / K9HZ VHF-UHF Boards”.


The Modern Ham - Recent Zero Retries Interesting Articles

I admire Billy Penley KN4MKB of the Modern Ham YouTube channel for his coverage of Zero Retries Interesting subjects. Not only does he produce Zero Retries Interesting videos, he also provides good written equivalents on his blog TheModernHam; Modern take on electronics and RF Engineering.

While videos give you a good overview of a subject, the details can easily be lost. KN4MKB’s articles provide that level of detail so you can truly follow along on his software projects.

KN4MKB has been busy of late with these Zero Retries Interesting articles:

And a few others since beginning his Modern Introduction to Packet Radio, AX25, APRS and TCP/IP series in March. One of my projects for Summer 2024 is to get a Radio Bulletin Board System (RBBS) online in my area; almost certainly a BPQ32 BBS, thus these articles are timely for me.

Note that there is an option of receiving a monthly summary of articles via email.


Raspberry Pi Connect - Built-in Remote Access for RPi 4 / 5 (64-bit only)

Today we’re pleased to announce the beta release of Raspberry Pi Connect: a secure and easy-to-use way to access your Raspberry Pi remotely, from anywhere on the planet, using just a web browser.

It’s often extremely useful to be able to access your Raspberry Pi’s desktop remotely. There are a number of technologies which can be used to do this, including VNC, and of course the X protocol itself. But they can be hard to configure, particularly when you are attempting to access a machine on a different local network; and of course with the transition to Wayland in Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm, classic X remote desktop support is no longer available.

We wanted to be able to provide you with this functionality with our usual “it just works” approach. Enter Raspberry Pi Connect.

… Raspberry Pi Connect needs your Raspberry Pi to be running a 64-bit distribution of Raspberry Pi OS Bookworm that uses the Wayland window server. This in turn means that, for now, you’ll need a Raspberry Pi 5, Raspberry Pi 4, or Raspberry Pi 400.

This is pretty cool. As I understand it, a Raspberry Pi (organization) server(s) on the Internet is queried for every connection attempt, even if you’re attempting to connect between two RPis on a LAN. It seems to me it a lot more efficient to attempt an equivalent broadcast on a LAN, and only if that’s not successful, connect to a server on the Internet. I could easily see this being a valuable teaching tool.


Anduril Announces Pulsar Family of AI-Enabled Electromagnetic Warfare Systems

Anduril Industries is excited to announce Pulsar, a first-of-its-kind family of modular, multi-mission-capable electromagnetic warfare (EW) systems that utilize artificial intelligence at the tactical edge to rapidly identify and defeat current and future threats across the electromagnetic spectrum, including small and medium-size drones.

Dominance of the electromagnetic spectrum is critical to operations on a modern battlefield of rapidly-evolving drone, counter-drone, and jamming technologies. As the war in Ukraine has shown, EW tactics are evolving faster than ever — a cat and mouse game of sensing and dodging, disruption and adaptation, in the spectrum — with updates to EW and threat systems now happening over shorter timelines of weeks, days, or even hours. The next generation of EW systems must enable real-time understanding of the spectrum, and provide rapid delivery of effective countermeasures against known and new threats, across domains and modalities.

That is precisely what Pulsar does.

Electronic warfare (EW) has “downscaled” radically because of command and control of drones, and thus EW is now in the tactical realm, hence the need for this product.

A guess on my part is that applicants who are Amateur Radio Operators may well rise quickly to the top of Anduril’s hiring queue. Amateur Radio might be considered “old school” to some, but hands-on experience with radio technology is now bleeding-edge relevant.


Hobby PCB’s SA818 (DRA818) Breakout PCB - $10

Hobby PCB SA818 Breakout PCB
SA818 (DRA818) Breakout PCB - Image courtesy of Hobby PCB / Tindie

What is it?

This is a breakout Printed Circuit Board for a SA818 transceiver module.

Why did you make it?

I am a licensed Radio Amateur and building electronics is part and parcel of the culture. I have wanted to construct a radio using this module for some time and successfully built the shield for an OrangePi zero published by VoltNode. A great design but designed exclusively for the OrangePi. I wanted to be able to interface any MCU to make programming the module easier, hence the PCB here.

What makes it special?

It is a very simple low cost design, that can be controlled by RaspberryPis, Arduinos and Pico's etc.

At $10 (via Tindie), this opens up “radio tinkering” with these widely used radio modules to a whole new audience of experimenters. Note that this item is just the printed circuit board (PCB). This is made clearer on the seller’s website for this item. I think it’s a bit… confusing… to show this item with components installed, which is not what is being offered. But for $10, that’s a minor quibble.


DeepRad - Catch some radio waves with this modular RTL-SDR system

DeepRAD Quad
DeepRAD Quad Board - Image courtesy of DeepSea Developments / Crowd Supply

From Crowd Supply:

DeepRad is a modular version of the RTL-SDR, a product beloved by radio enthusiasts. However, DeepRad offers distinct advantages. Its modularity makes integration far simpler, side-stepping the complexities of designing an RTL-SDR from scratch (such as RF considerations and chip stocking issues). DeepRad is a versatile option for integrating many different radio functions into whatever projects you’re working on today.

We want the community to create their own “motherboards” with 1, 3, or as many as 20 DeepRad modules to bring new applications to life. There are three versions of DeepRad we’ll be focusing on for this campaign:

  • DeepRad Module: The bare DeepRad module (no motherboard). The user has to develop a board to use it.

  • DeepRad Single: A single DeepRad module with a motherboard. It has USB Type-C and an antenna connection. It can be used as your regular RTL-SDR with USB.

  • DeepRad Quad: A motherboard with 4 DeepRad modules integrated via a USB hub with a USB Type-A connector.

Though this isn’t even at the crowdfunding stage, let alone an actual product, the concept has legs. KrakenSDR is a project with similar scope, integrating five software defined receivers into a single unit on the same timebase and USB chain, and it seems to be pretty popular for a variety of applications. Thus being able to have as many as twenty such modules (hopefully relatively inexpensive), has even more potential applications.


May-June 2024 SARC Communicator Journal

Heading into summer...

With another big issue. The May-June 2024 Communicator, digital periodical of Surrey Amateur Radio Communications is now available for viewing or download.

Read in over 150 countries, we bring you 120 pages of Amateur Radio content from the Southwest corner of Canada and elsewhere. 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.

I consider the Communicator a newsletterzine - 120 pages! I consider the quality of the content to be excellent, never mind that it is written, edited, and published by volunteers. The editor mentioned that each issue requires about 40 hours of work. If you miss the general content of CQ or QST (sans contest results), the Communicator is an excellent replacement, and like Zero Retries and other “in service to Amateur Radio” publications, it’s available for free and publicly accessible. Recommended!


Stuff You Should Know - Atomic Clocks, Ahoy!

… for everything to operate correctly tech forward world, it has to be synchronized, right, and you can't synchronize something unless everybody agrees on what time it is. And that's all an atomic clock is. It is very simply, and we'll get into the how these things work, which sounds difficult, but it's actually pretty simple.

My daughter Merideth KK7BKI got me hooked the Stuff You Should Know podcast. I don’t listen to every episode (often as I’m settling down to sleep), but I listen to at least half of their episodes, and all that involve technical subjects (such as Space Stations). In my opinion, the two hosts are pleasant to listen to and do a credible job of research and work hard to accurately and understandably explain what they learn. From this episode I learned why Cesium is used as the basis for most atomic clocks.

(SYSK’s Ham Radio and the Hams Who Use Them episode has some funny moments.)

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
    Founding Member 0001 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 01

    Founding Member 0002 - Chris Osburn KD7DVD
    Founding Member 0003 - Don Rotolo N2IRZ
    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
    Founding Member 0005 - Ben Kuhn KU0HN
    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
    Founding Member 0008 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 14
    Founding Member 0009 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 19

  • Numerous Annual and Monthly subscribers who also generously support Zero Retries financially!

Want to Support Zero Retries?

  • The most effective way to support Zero Retries is to simply mention Zero Retries to your co-conspirators that are also interested in knowing more about technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio and encourage them to become a fellow subscriber.

  • One particularly effective method of promoting Zero Retries is to add a mention of Zero Retries to your QRZ page (or other web presence) and include a link:

    https://www.zeroretries.org

  • If you’d like to financially support Zero Retries, becoming a paid subscriber is greatly appreciated and helps offset expenses incurred in publishing Zero Retries. Paid subscriptions for Zero Retries are entirely optional, as explained in this special issue of ZR:
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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Jeff Davis KE9V also mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Amateur Radio Weekly by Cale Mooth K4HCK is a weekly anthology of links to interesting Amateur Radio stories.

  • Experimental Radio News by Bennet Z. Kobb AK4AV discusses (in detail) Experimental (Part 5) licenses issued by the US FCC. It’s a must-read-now for me!

  • RTL-SDR Blog - Excellent coverage of Software Defined Radio units.

  • TAPR Packet Status Register has been published continuously since 1982.

  • Other Substack Amateur Radio newsletters recommended by Zero Retries.

These YouTube channels regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

Zero Retries is currently using the Substack email publishing platform to publish Zero Retries. It’s particularly suitable for small newsletters as you can get started for no cost.

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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-05-10

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

If you’d like to reuse an article in this issue for other uses, just ask.

All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Two other approaches to using a mobile phone as a terminal to work with an Amateur Radio portable radio, is the Mobilinkd TNC4 and the DigiRig Mobile.

Then there’s the even more elegant approach of the PicoAPRS V4 which is a “data is primary” Amateur Radio portable radio.

2

The Kenwood TH-D7A, which debuted in 1998, was the first (that I’m aware of) Amateur Radio portable radio to include data capability.

Zero Retries 0150

4 May 2024 at 00:17

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1500+ 1600+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Zero Retries 0150 and Zero Retries Hits 1600 Subscribers!

There have now been more than 150 “named” issues of Zero Retries, including one memorable issue that I broke into three issues published simultaneously, but this is a nice milestone - 150+ issues, weekly without break.

The cadence of subscribership growth of Zero Retries seems to be accelerating. Zero Retries’s subscriber count hit 1500 as of Zero Retries 0146 on 2024-04-05 and scarcely a month later, 1600 subscribers! Other than a minor increase from my LinuxFest Northwest 2024 talk this past weekend, I haven’t seen any specific mention that caused an increase of subscriptions.

On Mastodon, I noticed that I hadn’t updated the subscriber count in my blurb. I went to fix that and noted that there are an additional 260 followers there, and pretty much by definition they’re following to know about new issues of Zero Retries since that’s (almost) all I post there.

And, amusingly, Substack notified me that three other Substack newsletters have begun recommending Zero Retries - one about Artificial Intelligence, one about music, and another about investing. I checked them out briefly, and couldn’t see any overlap between their subject matter and Zero Retries.

Thus I conclude that this is “gaming” of some kind within the Substack ecosystem, and it’s symptomatic that Zero Retries is no longer a good fit for continuing to use Substack to publish Zero Retries.

For the benefit of newer subscribers, Zero Retries was begun solely out of frustration that despite so much technological innovation occurring in Amateur Radio, there was no one place to know about it / read about it. Such stories were only mentioned very occasionally in the “mainstream” Amateur Radio media. Eventually that frustration boiled over into starting Zero Retries. At that time, I could imagine that Zero Retries might, conceivably, achieve 500 subscribers - that would have been fantastic. 1000 subscribers was “oh… my…”. Then the 1500 subscriber milestone ticked by and there are now a handful of new subscribers each week.

Thank you Zero Retries email subscribers, RSS followers, Substack followers, Mastodon followers, Bluesky followers, and all of you Zero Retries readers. If there were few readers, Zero Retries wouldn’t be worth continuing to publish at this pace. You readers make this investment in time, work, and sacrifice of other fun, personal projects worthwhile.

As always, my sincere thanks to all the Founding Members and Paid Subscribers who are helping keep Zero Retries going by offsetting some of the expenses incurred with Zero Retries. I plan to publish mention of all financial contributors annually on the (July) anniversary issue.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Presentation at LinuxFest Northwest 2024

My presentation at LinuxFest Northwest 2024 - Amateur Radio and Open Source (Not Just Linux) went well overall. The slide deck was too long (50+ slides), was almost entirely text (and too much text per slide), and it had a lot of extraneous mentions that weren’t really on-topic discussing Open Source activities within Amateur Radio.

That said, presenting at LinuxFest Northwest 2024 was a nice “beta” for future presentations in which I will be “evangelizing” Amateur Radio to techies as a fun, interesting, and useful (in technical careers) activity. As I mentioned this presentation to a few others this week, I received some good feedback that I’ll be incorporating into the presentation. One comment was “well… some people just want to get into Amateur Radio for the fun of it, including using Morse Code”. The implication that I took from that comment was “Do you think only techies are suitable for Amateur Radio?”. No, that’s not my perspective, which is that there are many others such as my former ARDC colleague (and now an ARDC director) Bob Witte K0NR, who can make the case that Amateur Radio is a fun, interesting hobby and activity for many folks (who aren’t necessarily techies). But I feel qualified, from my background, and Zero Retries, to promote Amateur Radio to techies.

The most recent post by K0NR discussed that “Digital Modes” activity were the third most popular activity in a survey of Canadian Amateur Radio Operators, superseded only by “Casual Operating” and “Traditional Voice Modes (SSB / AM / FM)”. That validates my perspective that “digital modes” are worth promoting to techies. Again, I’m not positing that the Zero Retries Perspective - promote Amateur Radio “techie” modes, to techies who might become interested in Amateur Radio, as the only path to grow Amateur Radio. But doing so is “a” path that I can personally, and somewhat uniquely, contribute to. Here is the video of my presentation on YouTube:

The slide deck (annotated with links, post-presentation) is available for download at https://archive.org/download/liinuxfest_northwest_2024_amateur_radio_open_source/liinuxfest_northwest_2024_steve_stroh_n8gnj_slides_with_links.pdf

(My thanks to Digital Library of Amateur Radio and Communications for hosting it.)


Presentation at RATPAC on 2024-05-08

I will be the presenter at the Wednesday session of RATPAC (Radio Amateur Training Planning and Activities Committee) videoconference training series on 2024-05-08.

The topic of my presentation will be:

Tracking technological innovation in Amateur Radio - the Zero Retries newsletter

Mostly I want to use this presentation to highlight some of the more interesting technological innovation that’s underway in the 2020s, and there will be some overlap of my presentation at LinuxFest Northwest 2024.

Go to the RATPAC page and scroll down for the link for my presentation.


Future Zero Retries Project - The Zero Retries Interesting Catalog

As an outgrowth of a story in this issue - Why I’m Not Worried that MFJ Winding Down Presages a Downturn in Amateur Radio, I see clear need to create an online “catalog” which is actually a directory / guide of Zero Retries Interesting products. One of the problems in transitioning from single company with diverse products such as MFJ (manufacturer) or Ham Radio Outlet (retailer of many products and companies), is that it’s really hard for Amateur Radio Operators to know what products are actually available for Amateur Radio. Examples:

These companies, and dozens1 more, are small (often one person) “micro manufacturers” of unique products that don’t advertise, and don’t sell through retail such as Ham Radio Outlet or DX Engineering in the US. Not to mention the numerous Amateur Radio hardware manufacturing projects that aren’t organized as a company such as KiwiSDR and the products related to Amateur Radio distributed through Crowd Supply and Tindie.

Thus without such a catalog / directory / guide, it’s hard for someone new to Amateur Radio to know where to go for unique hardware that would make their Amateur Radio experience more fun and interesting. This isn’t a project that’s necessarily unique to me or Zero Retries… but if someone else doesn’t do it, eventually it will rise up the priority list of projects to tackle as part of the Zero Retries mission.


In the meantime…

I want to spend some significant time in N8GNJ Labs this coming week getting some traction on some fun Amateur Radio projects… not just infrastructure / organizing that has consumed the past month of my time in N8GNJ Labs.

Also to be tackled on a rare day that doesn’t include wind or rain is to repair the bent antenna mast for my primary Amateur Radio antenna.

And, of course, tomorrow… May the 4th Be With You. 😄


Apologies for the late publication time of this issue. It was difficult to finish my remembrance of K7VE.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Logo courtesy of MFJ Enterprises.

MFJ Enterprises to Cease Manufacturing

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

In a widely circulated letter titled “A Heavy Sad Heart”, the Founder of MFJ Enterprises, Martin F. Jue K5FLU, announced that MFJ will cease manufacturing as of 2024-05-17.

As many of you have heard by now, MFJ is ceasing its on-site production in Starkville, Mississippi on May 17, 2024. This is also the same for our sister companies’ Ameritron, Hygain, Cushcraft, Mirage and Vectronics.

MFJ seems to be planning to continue at least some business activity, post manufacturing:

We are going to continue to sell MFJ products past May 17, 2024. We have a lot of stock on hand. We will continue to offer repair service work for out-of-warranty and in-warranty units for the foreseeable future.

As this article is written, there is no mention of K5FLU’s announcement on the MFJ website, though per the announcement, MFJ is “business as usual” through 2024-05-17.

It’s my guess that the timing of this announcement was chosen to set expectations for one of MFJ’s last appearances at Hamvention 2024 in a few weeks. MFJ’s booths have always been one of the largest at Hamvention, and unlike many other large “manufacturer” booths at Hamvention, MFJ was happy to actually sell you a product across the counter.

I’ll always have fond memories of MFJ in my Amateur Radio career as they were one of the first to license the TAPR TNC-2 design and their ability to manufacture at scale, marketing, and distribution made TNCs more widely available to Amateur Radio Operators. “TAPR” might have felt a bit “niche” to many Amateur Radio Operators in the early packet radio era, but if “Good Old MFJ” endorsed packet radio with a product, “there must be something to it”.

Unlike others who licensed the TAPR TNC-2 and literally cloned the TNC-2 design, case, front panel, and all, MFJ immediately began manufacturing their unique version of the TNC-2 (though it too was electrically a clone of the TNC-2), with less expensive thin, stamped steel enclosure and distinct aluminum faceplate rather than the extruded enclosure that TAPR used. The MFJ-1270 was briefly “co-labeled” as a TNC-2 (I have at least one such unit in my collection of TNCs) in addition to the MFJ numbering system for product names - MFJ-1270. Over the years, many MFJ TNCs have found their way to me, including a new old stock (unused, to date) Vectronics version of the MFJ-1270.

My memory is that the variants of the MJF TNC-2 / MFJ-1270 basic design, including versions with add-on 2400 and 9600 bps modems, versions with HF modems and tuning indicators, etc. easily spanned a decade, perhaps more.

MFJ apparently harbored some affection for the MFJ-1270 as long after discontinuing the MFJ-1270 and variants, as MFJ reused “1270” in a couple of related products. The MFJ-1270X was a licensed version of the Coastal Chipworks TNC-X, and the MFJ-1270PI (which, if memory serves, also a licensed product). Totally out of curiosity, I own one of the latter, and ordered my second, and probably final unit this week.

MFJ also briefly manufactured low powered data radios for 144-148 MHz (MFJ-8621) and 220-225 MHz (though I cannot find an online reference for that product). As these were intended to be simple, dedicated data radios, they were crystal-controlled and at the time they were manufactured, crystals for one’s preferred frequencies were easy and inexpensive to obtain.

MFJ always impressed me with their speed of spotting of a potential product niche and rapidly coming out with products to address such niches, at reasonable prices. Some MFJ products seemed rushed and imperfect, though MFJ always seemed responsive in supporting their products with spare parts and repairs. I was also impressed with how granular MFJ’s products could be, including small “switch boxes” which you could put between your radio and TNC, to allow easy switching between using your radio’s microphone, or the TNC, at the push of a button instead of uncabling the TNC to hook up a microphone.

I wish K5FLU a happy retirement and kudos to him for deciding to wind down MFJ gracefully. MFJ will be missed in the Amateur Radio market.


Why I’m Not Worried that MFJ Winding Down Presages a Downturn in Amateur Radio

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

2023 / 2024 seems to be one of those transition years when a lot of change is occurring in Amateur Radio. It really is some of the best of times and worst of times. I’ve never seen so many small quantity, small company Zero Retries Interesting projects created, and almost none of them are big radios or from big companies.

One of the benefits of writing Zero Retries that I have come to enjoy most these past three years is a sense of optimism about the future of Amateur Radio. It’s easier for me… and you as Zero Retries readers, to have that sense of optimism that Amateur Radio is active and vital and progressive and future-seeking… that it has a bright future. That’s because we’re collectively aware of just how much interesting technological innovation is happening in Amateur Radio. But you and I only know such things because of Zero Retries. If it your primary news sources are / were QST, CQ, or even QRZ or some other “general Amateur Radio news” websites / blogs / newsletters / YouTube channels, etc.

In saying the following, I mean no disrespect to MFJ or its personnel. It was a profitable company for many years that made products that satisfied many needs and many customers in Amateur Radio.

But in many ways, MFJ is company that was designed for the economics of the 20th century rather than the 21st century. It made products that were designed to be sold through retail channels, at a markup, and those products were expected to be sold over the course of years and kept in production and stock - with significant “carrying costs”.

What I’m observing from the “Zero Retries Perspective” (ZRP) is a significant shift of Amateur Radio products and projects (especially those that are Zero Retries Interesting) that are created by individuals and small teams. Such products and projects are focused on specialized interest niches, or very small family of products, built in batches for near-immediate sale, and often crowdfunded or bootstrapped by the creator(s). The tools to create new things are so much better than in previous eras. For example:

  • Easily found open source code and libraries mean a lot less “reinventing the wheel”,

  • Good, free tools for creating new circuits and printed circuit boards. Then you can order assembled PCBs from China, Inc. at ridiculously low prices and ridiculously fast turnaround.

  • Fast processors mean that inefficient, inexpert code can be run at reasonable speeds. It’s no longer necessary to code in “efficient” languages such as assembly or C. I’m told that one significant open source software project is largely written in FORTRAN, which you don’t hear much about these days. But that software is running on modern PCs, so the “efficiency” of the code is of little concern as long as it works. Even BASIC code can now be reasonably fast, and I’m looking forward to dusting off my PASCAL (limited) experience and try my hand at writing code.

  • An example about “easy coding” is a recent experiment I read about. An individual with some software experience wanted to create a project driven by a microcontroller. But they didn’t want to learn such programming; they just to create a new system (that didn’t yet exist). The person used AI tools to create and debug the software, and it worked spectacularly. They were able to make their project a reality, they didn’t have to learn microcontroller programming, and the project was relatively easy, fast, and cheap.

  • Ability to publicize, conduct widespread testing, and sales using tools like mailing lists and payment processing systems.

A lot of this “grass roots innovation” is, with very broad perspective, simply better recognition of just how much individuals and small groups can do - if they’re motivated to try.

For MFJ to create the MFJ-1270, it took a team of engineers, manufacturing technicians, a warehouse, retail distributors, and multiple managers. In contrast, the Mobilinkd TNC4 is created, sold, and supported by two people.

Make no mistake, we’ll all miss MFJ… but Amateur Radio will be fine.

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John Hays K7VE Transitions to Silent Keyboard

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

I, and many others, willl miss our friend John Hays K7VE and his many unique contributions to Amateur Radio.

John Hays K7VE and I were both part of a group in the Seattle, Washington area that was active in packet radio networking. As that activity faded, the group transitioned to being “mostly social” and until COVID-19, had met for brunch on almost every Saturday morning. There were a number of times that K7VE and I were the only ones to show up (it was a very loose group). Thus K7VE and I were able to exchange many stories, many discussions of Amateur Radio technology, and just enjoyed getting to know each other. We didn’t always agree, but K7VE was never less than gentlemanly in his disagreement. During COVID-19, K7VE retired from his day job, and he and his wife Bev KC7PAA sold their home in the Seattle suburbs and moved to a custom built home in Kingston, Washington across Puget Sound from Seattle. K7VE built a new office / shack / garage, and I was looking forward to visiting him sometime this summer and seeing his new shack.

One of K7VE’s other roles was as Western Washington coordinator for assisting those of us in Western Washington that wanted to use 44Net and 44Net IPv4 addresses. One of K7VE’s contributions was negotiating between ARDC / 44Net for a large block of IPv4 addresses for use in HamWAN.

Yet another significant, but subtle influence of K7VE on Amateur Radio was his role in creating NW Digital Radio and their “founding project”, the UDRX-440 Software Defined Transceiver / Data Radio (PDF). It speaks to K7VE’s humility that he didn’t make a bigger deal that the UDRX-440 was his vision, explained in one of his many presentations at Amateur Radio conferences, that inspired Bryan Hoyer K7UDR and K7VE to found NW Digital Radio.

The UDRX-440 came agonizingly close to becoming a product. I profoundly wish it had, even with many rough edges. It was to be a 25 watt multimode data radio with all the features we wanted - flexible modems, full software control of transmit bandwidth, frequency, power, etc. There were good, valid reasons that it didn't quite make it. The scope of the UDRX-440 informs my vision for what we could do in Amateur Radio to get real Software Defined Transceivers into the hands of Amateur Radio Operators, and we may well have the “pieces in place” in 2024 or 2025 to realize some or most of the UDRX-440’s capabilities.

One of K7VE’s most famous “hacks” was adding the ability to operate D-Star using a Yaesu DR-1X repeater, which Yaesu had built as a dual-mode System Fusion / FM repeater. The DR-1X was introduced and priced as a “loss leader” to encourage clubs to replace older repeaters and promote the growth of Yaesu’s System Fusion. K7VE explained the details in a (now deleted) blog post on the NW Digital Radio website, but archived on Internet Archive - Universal Digital Radio Controller. This same capability (Digital Voice modes) is now possible with adding a Multimode Digital Voice Modem (MMDVM) to an FM repeater. But, at the time, K7VE’s method was an elegant hack that even had Yaesu (at least a few personnel) chuckling, if a bit grimly.

K7VE was an early and enthusiastic advocate of ARDC after it transitioned to its current form as a charitable foundation and began awarding grants. Before being hired as staff as ARDC’s Outreach Manager, K7VE was an active and enthusiastic supporter of ARDC’s grant making work in chairing ARDC’s first Grants Advisory Committee. K7VE played a critical part in getting ARDC’s grant making up and running, which is told well in ARDC’s remembrance of K7VE - Remembering John Hays K7VE SK.

Beyond his large family, I think K7VE’s involvement in ARDC will be one of his largest legacies given all the change and improvement in Amateur Radio that is resulting from ARDC’s grants that support Amateur Radio activities.

K7VE was also passionate about D-Star and promoting D-Star as a “made for Amateur Radio” system. A remembrance from Jonathan Naylor K4GLX (next story) explains this facet of John’s contributions well.

As for me… I miss my smart, kind friend.

Live life, folks - time is passing fast for us.

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John Hays K7VE SK

By Jonathan Naylor G4KLX

My friend John Hays K7VE died unexpectedly on April 16th. The Facebook algorithms didn't see fit to show me this information and I had to be told days later by Jim KI6ZUM. Instead FB insisted on feeding me pages that I don't follow, rather than stuff that matters to me. Anyway I digress.

I knew John pretty well. He had been an early supporter of my software, and my first dealing with him were in Autumn 2009 only a few months after the release of my first D-Star and FM repeater software, and before it was in widespread use. Many of our emails were about the poor performance of the then popular GMSK modems and what we could do about them, as well as more software related items.

Once I had released the ircDDB Gateway in Autumn 2010 he moved his repeater, then based on an Icom repeater stack, over to use it rather than Icom's G2 software. The next few years would see many more emails being exchanged as I enhanced my software and he suggested changes, reported bugs, etc. John came up with the idea for StarNet which is still included with the ircDDB Gateway.

I first physically met John in 2014 as I was to attend Hamvention as a guest of NWDR, which was John and Bryan Hoyer at the time. We manned a booth at the old Hara arena, and despite being used to Ham Radio in Friedrickshafen, nothing could prepare me for the onslaught of Hamvention. I had a great time, and by the time that Sunday rolled around, I was burned out! Too much of a good thing I suppose.

John backed off a bit with my software with the release of the MMDVM. He wasn't happy with me supporting purely commercial protocols like DMR. It was indeed ironic that I got my first DMR radio at that very Hamvention from Jerry Wanger of CSI, and I also crossed swords with the DMR-MARC guys, which strongly encouraged me to go down the route that would become the MMDVM a little while later.

Since then I would see John at various shows, and then after Covid when things had more or less returned to normal, I saw him at Ham Radio in 2022, and 2023 manning the ARDC stand. I also saw him at Pacificon in October 2023 which would turn out to be the last time I saw him. We would sit and have long conversations about development work and potential projects. I was very much looking forward to seeing him at Hamvention in a few weeks.

Rest in peace John, it was an honour to be your friend.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

M17 Project Seeking Funding Sources to Continue Development

Wojciech Kaczmarski SP5WWP on LinkedIn:

I'm looking for funding sources for the M17 Project.

Our current tasks include hardware proliferation (Remote Radio Unit, Module17/Micro17 and OpenHT being excellent examples). As the Project relies largely on volunteer work, I don't believe it's viable for granting (it's close to impossible to plan ahead, regardless of the time frame, as volunteer work is largely unpredictable, unreliable and chaotic).

Prototyping generates the largest expenses at the moment. We will soon run out of funds and will no longer be able to sustain development.

I'd love to keep working on our cutting edge open-source amateur radio hardware designs for profit. An alternative solution would be to start working as an external contractor or having ability to invoice the funder for the work done. The whole team is just 2 developers (hardware+firmware).

I look forward to your thoughts on this.

I had worried about this possibility. SP5WWP was keeping up a frantic pace on multiple projects. The Remote Radio Unit alone was a daunting project, but its potential is hugely promising. I hope he will be able to complete at least one “ready to go to manufacturing” prototype so a commercial sponsor would have all the material needed to make it available as a product.

LinkedIn seems to be SP5WWP’s primary posting / contact system:

https://www.linkedin.com/in/wkaczmarski/


D-STAR InfoCon is back at Dayton Hamvention for 2024

D-STAR InfoCon is back at Dayton Hamvention for 2024 providing an introduction to D-STAR for new users and more advanced topics for more experienced D-STAR users. The class will be held at the Drury Inn Ballroom at 6616 Miller Lane in the heart of hotel row in Dayton. The 3-hour class will be held on Friday, May 17th beginning at 8:00am local time. This year’s topics will include getting on-the-air with D-STAR, how to connect around the world, programming for all models of D-STAR radios, using DR Mode, easy updating your radio memories and using hotspots and other D-STAR devices.

Mentioned in honor of Silent Keyboard John Hays K7VE, who was a fan of D-Star.


ELEKITSORPARTS - New digiPi HAT

Image courtesy of ELEKITSORPARTS

This is the new digiPi HAT for ham radio digi modes from a raspberry Pi. The board is desgned to be topped on a Raspberry Pi 4 or 5, on which you could work ham radio digital modes remotely. The new digiPi HAT is compatible with KM6LYW’s digiPi image. With KM6LYW’s image, you could work digi modes from a tablet or a smart phone through an internet browser. If you don’t use the KM6LYW’s image, you could still use the new digiPi HAT on a regular rasbian or debian OS by installing the softwares like wsjtx or direwolf, which enable you to work FT8/FT4 or APRS on your Pi SBC. In this case, the TFT LCD will not work, unless you could write your own C++ or Python code to make it display somethings, callsign, the decoded info from direwolf or wsjtx.

Our new digiPi HAT integrates a TFT LCD, two buttons, an on-board temperature sensor(LM75A), an ambient light sensor(BH1750), three 2.54 pin-headers for connecting it to a bme680 enviromental sensor, an external GPS module or some other sensors with I2C interface. These sensors could be used for experimental purpose, that says, with these sensors, you are able to make more funs on APRS by sending beacon packets containing the info measured by the installed sensors or a positional info from a GPS. We also preserve a PCB footprint for lora modules. You could install a SX1278, SX1276 or a LLCC68 lora module on your own. With a lora module, you could receive some lora packets and have it sent again by APRS, but you need C++ or Python skills to do this. YOU DON’T HAVE TO BUY A BME680 and A GPS MODULE if you just use the digiPi HAT for the normal ham radio digi modes operation.

This is a perfect illustration of the new, more granular ecosystem of “micro manufacturers” for Zero Retries Interesting devices. The DigiPi Project was started solely as instructions for Do It Yourself hardware, with good software. Now DigiPi is blossoming into several different options for a really polished experience.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-05-03

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

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All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Quite possibly, there are actually hundreds, not just dozens of “microcompanies” manufacturing Zero Retries Interesting products. We’ll only know when a comprehensive directory is created.

Zero Retries 0149

26 April 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1500+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Andrew Herrington KG5JNC for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 29 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Presentation at LinuxFest Northwest on Saturday 2024-04-27

I will be a presenter at LinuxFest Northwest (LFNW) 2024 tomorrow (Saturday) at 14:30 - 15:30 in room DMC 140 at Bellingham Technical College in Bellingham, Washington USA. The subject of my presentation is on the schedule as “Amateur Radio and Linux”, but it was supposed to be (and will be):

Amateur Radio and Open Source (Not Just Linux)

My presentation will be a cursory overview of Amateur Radio activities and highlight a number of significant open source projects and what techies can do to experiment… hack around… beyond what’s possible / allowed with low-power unlicensed systems such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and LoRa / Meshtastic. I’m just trying to get the techies at LinuxFest to understand that Amateur Radio in the 2020s is technical, fun, and you can learn a heck of a lot about radio technology with Amateur Radio.

LFNW is a favorite of techies in Western Washington and Southwest British Columbia, and even draws from Portland, Oregon which is a six hour drive away. It’s one of the reasons that I became so familiar and fond of Bellingham when it came time to decide on a place to relocate when we decided to leave the Seattle metro area.

Please look for the Zero Retries hat and say Hi!


Presentation at RATPAC on 2024-05-08

I will be the presenter at the Wednesday session of RATPAC (Radio Amateur Training Planning and Activities Committee) videoconference training series on 2024-05-08.

The topic of my presentation will be:

Tracking technological innovation in Amateur Radio - the Zero Retries newsletter

Mostly I want to use this presentation to highlight some of the more interesting technological innovation that’s underway in the 2020s.

Go to the RATPAC page and scroll down for the link for my presentation.


Compensation for Favorable Mention in Zero Retries? Nope.

A Zero Retries reader mentioned not too long ago that “You must be getting all kinds of free stuff for the nice mentions of products in Zero Retries”.

Actually… no.

To date, I’ve accepted two (pretty minor) “freebie” products and a generous donation of several radios modified for data use from Tadd Torborg KA2DEW. When I actually do use those (and perhaps future) “freebie” products and write about them in Zero Retries, I’ll disclose that those items were donated.

First, I don’t ask. I don’t want there to be an expectation (or a suspicion) of paying for mentions in Zero Retries. Unless otherwise noted, I pay full price for the products that I want to experiment with and use.

Second, small vendors of Zero Retries Interesting products in the Amateur Radio market have thin profit margins as is without giving away free stuff. I get it - it’s a struggle for small vendors to stay in the Amateur Radio market. Just like optional paid subscriptions are a “signal” to Zero Retries that the content has value, my purchases to small businesses in the Amateur Radio market, like recently to Zum Radio, KiwiSDR, and RPC Electronics is a signal to them that their products are useful and valuable.


In the meantime…

Next week will be a bit of travel to finally meet Pseudostaffer Orv Beach W6BI in Vancouver, British Columbia.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Good Presentation on CATS

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Stephen Downward VE9QLE did a presentation on Communication and Telemetry System (CATS) to Radio Activities Training Planning and Activities Committee (RATPAC) weekly videoconference.

CATS is a new Amateur Radio data communications system that’s somewhat modeled on Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS). CATS is a “clean sheet of paper” rethinking of the paradigms underlaying APRS and that VE9QLE has launched CATS is testimony to the culture of technological innovation that Amateur Radio continues to experiment with new technology and paradigms like CATS.

The slide deck from this presentation is also available from RATPAC.

Also, there’s an interesting article on Hackaday:

CATS: A New Communication And Telemetry System

In the chat, I asked VE9QLE if the mobile CATS radios could act as standalone (CATS) digipeaters, and he confirmed that they could.

Kudos, again, to VE9QLE on creating and evengelizing CATS.


Jam-Resistant American Radio Keeps Ukraine’s Long-Range Drones Flying

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Includes excerpts from Jam-Resistant American Radio Keeps Ukraine’s Long-Range Drones Flying in Forbes by David Hambling 2024-04-17. If you click on the link, I recommend using your browser’s “Reader” setting as the screen quickly fills with interstitial advertisements.

Parikh says there are three basic approaches to dealing with radio interference, and they use all of them. One is filtering, so that the receiver can block out everything except the exact wavelength being used to communicate. Another is using multiple bands and the third is hopping to a different band where [there] is no interference.

Parikh says that jammers are constantly evolving, but they are staying a step ahead with new techniques to defeat them. The time to switch to a new frequency is now measured in milliseconds.

Parikh describes Mesh Rider as a hybrid software-defined radio. While the theoretical, ideal software-defined radio is capable of communicating with any protocol on any wavelength, in practice it is constrained by hardware. Doodle Labs’ radio uses six different bands in a patented design claimed to be the first to offer this versatility.

I posit that Parikh chooses to omit a fourth approach to dealing with jamming - focus. For example, if a drone has a directional antenna system, flying from friendly territory (West) into enemy territory (East) it can focus its communications link West and ignore the (jamming) transmissions from the East. I’ll guess that Parikh forgoes this approach because it’s not currently practical to implement directional antennas on small, inexpensive drones1. Even “solid state” phased array antenna techniques require significant size, electrical power, and compute capability that would require a large drone with a significant power budget.

One of the challenges with such “rapid channel”, and now rapid band switching is for the two ends of the communications link to stay in sync to maintain two-way communication. I’ll guess that one of the key elements of the Doodle Labs units (sophisticated software) is that the drone unit autonomously selects the band to operate on, switching either constantly, or as necessary when encountering jamming. This could be made to work because the base unit simply listens, simultaneously, to all possible bands (using inexpensive software defined receivers), receives the (authenticated, no doubt) transmission from the drone, and communicates back on that band.

Drones on the battlefield is an example of literally life and death depending on having superior… or at minimum… survivable radio technology. (So is battlefield tactical communications which is mentioned peripherally in the article.) Given that the Ukranian drones cited are surviving the best jamming technology that Russia can throw at them, US radio technology is winning that contest… at the moment.

Doodle Labs Mesh Rider Nano. Image courtesy of Doodle Labs.

I found it remarkable that the sophistication of Mesh Rider can be crammed into a unit as small, light, and inexpensive as the Mesh Rider Nano:

And crucially, the smallest version of Mesh Rider weighs less than an ounce and costs just a few hundred dollars, making it small and cheap enough for expendable drones.

One of the limitations of Doodle Labs’ approach of using off-the-shelf radio “chips” such as those from Qualcomm, is that those chips are designed for bands that are “popular” worldwide (largest possible market) such as 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz (though there is some mention of the North American 902-928 MHz band).

Doodle Labs once offered an Amateur Radio product, the DL435 420-450 MHz OFDM Transceiver. Basically, Doodle Labs used a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi chipset and incorporated the equivalent of a 2.4 GHz to 420-450 MHz transverter. “Green Bay Professional Packet Radio” did a great article on this product which could operate in 5 or 10 MHz channels on 420-450 MHz and could operate at speeds up to 13.5 MHz in a 5 MHz channel and 27 Mbps in a 10 MHz channel. This unit was only available for a short time and probably fell victim to the FCC bandwidth and symbol rate limits on the US 420-450 MHz (70 cm) band of maximum bandwidth of 100 kHz and maximum symbol rate of 56 “kilobaud”.

I see a number of crossovers in Amateur Radio to the technologies being implemented in the Mesh Rider systems, including the “monitor everything, simultaneously” approach (which we can now do with ka9q-radio and inexpensive Software Defined Receivers), ability to dynamically use multiple bands depending on requirements of the moment (such as selecting 50-54 MHz to communicate with one friend, and 1240-1300 MHz to communicate with another), and of course experimentation on the “unlicensed” bands for which US Amateur Radio has overlapping allocations allowing for experimentation beyond what’s possible by “unlicensed” users and products that must adhere to “unlicensed” limitations.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

AREDN Release 3.24.4.0

AREDN production software version 3.24.4.0 is now available, with many new features and enhancements. The AREDN team would like to thank those individuals who contributed to this release:

  • Tim [Wilkinson] KN6PLV

  • Paul [Milazzo] K3PGM

  • Darryl [Quinn] K5DLQ

  • Gerard [Hickey] WT0F

  • Jacob [McSwain] KI5VMF

  • Bailey [Kasin] KK6ORT

  • Steve [Lewis] AB7PA

Go forth and upgrade - your network will thank you!

Presumably v3.24.4.0 incorporates the feature set of AREDN Release Candidate April 2024, which was discussed in Zero Retries 0148.

It’s really cool to see the major contributors to AREDN mentioned prominently. I could care less if my name / callsign ever appears on some list of Amateur Radio contest results, but having my name / callsign associated with a significant technical accomplishment like this… is (again) really cool.

Kudos to all the contributors to AREDN 3.24.4.0!

And, thanks again to AREDN Ambassador (and Zero Retries Pseudostaffer) Orv Beach W6BI for tirelessly evangelizing the capabilities of AREDN within Amateur Radio.


Quansheng UV-K5 TRX VHF UHF (HF RX) Mod Ready

What is it?

This is the PRE-ORDER OF THE QUANSHENG UV-K5 Radio ( DIRECT FROM FACTORY) which has been modified with the si4732 chip to receive the H.F Bands and also flashed with the firmware so as the hardware mod can work.

Modifications done to the radio:

  • Modification of front end Amp (Removal of Inductor/cap and upgrade of cap )

  • Removal of FM Chip and Installation of the DSP Radio AM/FM CHIP SI4732.

  • Installation of the Antenna input inductor change.

  • Upgrading of capacitors around the Audio chip to improve clarity.

  • Upgrading of Firmware to enable new Radio chip operation.

Why did you make it?

I have been receiving requests who wants this radio but are unable to perform such mods. So i am stocking a small stock and modify them myself with all the mods available.

The modification is carried out by a professional engineer and great care is taken not to scratch the radio during the modification upgrade.

What makes it special?

The radio is supplied ready to use with all mods. These radios are supplied from the parent factory so rest assured you are getting the real one !

This is an item on Tindie from Seller “JasonKits QPR” in Malta. I thought this was notable that there is enough interest in these radios ability to be modified that a small business is stepping up to supply units with the necessary (or just nice to have) hardware modifications so the the unit is “ready for software hacking”.

Note that these modifications do not have anything to do with adding the ability to operate M17 mode.


Hackaday - Reverse Engineering the Quansheng Hardware

Also on the subject of the Quansheng UV-K5, Dan Maloney N7DPM on Hackaday:

In the world of cheap amateur radio transceivers, the Quansheng UV-K5 can’t be beaten for hackability. But pretty much every hack we’ve seen so far focuses on the firmware. What about the hardware?

To answer that question, [mentalDetector] enlisted the help of a few compatriots and vivisected a UV-K5 to find out what makes it tick. The result is a complete hardware description of the radio, including schematics, PCB design files, and 3D renders. The radio was a malfunctioning unit that was donated by collaborator [Manuel], who desoldered all the components and measured which ones he could to determine specific values. The parts that resisted his investigations got bundled up along with the stripped PCB to [mentalDetector], who used a NanoVNA to characterize them as well as possible. Documentation was up to collaborator [Ludwich], who also made tweaks to the schematic as it developed.


Expansion of the Masters Communications DRA “M” Series of Amateur Radio Audio Interfaces

Masters Communications DRA-50M. Image courtesy of Masters Communications.

Kevin Custer W3KKC on the DRA mailing list:

Our DRA-50M has been a popular choice among users, and now there are more DRA's that have been added to the M Series product list. With these product additions comes a change in revision that affects all M Series products - including the original DRA-50M. Starting with REV2, the following are features are included - at NO additional cost. Of the models listed below - M Series DRA's now ship automatically when you order a Standard DRA in a metal case. The website has been updated with the proper ordering links and individual product pages, and our assemblers have these products in stock.

In some cases - there are differences between the Standard DRA and the "M". These differences are explained in a linked page for each of the new DRA's.

Revision 2 Features:

  • The COMM OK (blue) LED was moved to come through the front panel.

  • The new front panel includes all three Status LEDs (COMM OK, HB & PTT).

  • All M Series boards have the choice between Transistor and Relay PTT keying.

  • The layout is more organized and allows the jumpers to be easily re-positioned without pliers.

The following DRA's are now available in the M Series. These listings are hyper-linked. Clicking on the model number takes you to the product's page at Masters Communications.

A transistor provides the fastest possible switching time between receive / transmit, but is incompatible with some radios. In an effort to make DRA's compatible with more radios, we're now giving the choice between transistor or relay PTT switching. The PTT keying method is selected by two mechanical jumpers - no soldering required. You choose between Transistor or Relay keying. The Relay position adds compatibility with all radios. The Transistor position insures the fastest keying on radios that are okay with electronic keying. A reed type relay minimizes the keying delay when this method must be used. Some ICOM and Commercial radios don't like a bipolar transistor, so a relay works best with them. As the software authors become more and more aggressive on timing - I wanted to retain the fastest switch time, but give the option of relay switching when is required. For radios that aren't picky - it's best to use transistor switching, but since we use a reed type relay - there is little disadvantage to this type of switching.

In my opinion, Masters Communications could have “gotten away” with perhaps two variations of their Digital Radio Adapter (DRA) series and satisfied the majority of (but not all) use cases. But instead, Masters Communications offers a wide variety of DRAs (beyond these five new models) - see the Features Comparison page.

The improvement of choice of Push To Talk (PTT; aka the “transmit” signal from the modem to the radio) circuitry in a successful product speaks volumes that Masters Communications is listening… intently2… to their customers and providing even more capable products. Plus… I’m a sucker for blinkylights on my communications equipment (makes troubleshooting a lot more efficient)… especially blue blinkylights. Not to mention that sexy Blue metal case option.


A Whole Bunch Of New Designs

… For Turn Island Systems. Paul Elliott WB6CXC on his WB6CXC blog:

I’ve been busy.  Here is the latest batch of designs that have been sent out for fab.  Some are simple, some more complicated, and some are updates of earlier designs.  KiCad and JLCPCB sure make this stuff easy!

Look for these designs to show up on the Turn Island Systems website.

  • RX-888 External Clock Interface Kit

  • Updated Clock Distribution Buffer

  • AC-Coupled SMA Adaptor

  • Filter/Preamp V2

Details and an illustration of each of these units are in the blog post. WB6CXC’s productivity in creation and rapid iteration of his products continues to amaze me.


DoD Officials Gear Up for Spectrum Sharing ‘Moonshot’

Mike Dano in LightReading, 2024-04-09:

Top US military officials, including DoD CIO John Sherman, said the Pentagon is embarking on a 'moonshot' to develop dynamic spectrum sharing (DSS) technology for the lower 3GHz band and other bands.

Top US military officials reiterated the Pentagon's interest in spectrum sharing during a media event this week, describing the technology as a “moonshot” that would help the US maintain an advantage against its rivals both economically and militarily.

The lower 3GHz band, which sits between 3.1GHz and 3.45GHz, pits the US military and the US wireless industry directly against each other. That's because the military currently operates radar and other functions in the lower 3GHz band, but the wireless industry wants to get access to the band for 5G.

According to wireless industry lobbying association CTIA, policymakers need to release the band for 5G so that the US can stay competitive on the international stage. But military officials generally argued that the band is necessary for a variety of military operations, including technologies designed to intercept missiles fired into US territory. As a result, DoD officials have voiced support for spectrum sharing but not for releasing the spectrum completely. The wireless industry generally wants exclusive access to the spectrum.

Not Amateur Radio, but illustrative of the tenacity and omnivorous requirement for more, more, more spectrum (exclusive if at all possible) for mobile telephone systems in the US.

I attended a wireless conference more than a decade ago where it was stated by a presenter that the mobile telephone industry wanted access to this portion of spectrum so badly that they had begun a long term (patient, but relentless) campaign against the US Department of Defense to lobby for exclusive access to it. At the time, I didn’t give much credence to such a campaign. The Citizens Band Radio Service (CBRS) band - 3.55 to 3.7 GHz overlaps with a RADAR system used on US Navy carriers, but the DOD wasn’t required to modify anything in their operations of those RADARs for CBRS. Apparently, these “discussions” have now entered a new phase with the DOD actively contemplating changes to its systems to accommodate the mobile telephone industry.


IPv6 for the Remotely Interested

Sedat Kapanoglu on Medium, 2024-04-16:

I’ve known about IPv6 for the last two decades or so, but I’ve never gone beyond “an overengineered solution to the IPv4 address space problem”. IPv6 was even presented as “every atom could get its own IP address, no IP address shortages anymore”, but I didn’t know how true that was either. I occasionally saw an IPv6 address here and there because almost every device supports IPv6 today. I believe cellular network operators even default to it, so you’re probably reading this on a device that uses IPv6.

Last week, I decided to learn about how IPv6 works under the hood, and I’ve learned quite a few interesting facts about it.

I enjoyed Kapanoglu’s conversational explanation of some of the details of IPv6, which we will all be using natively by the end of the decade - IPv4 just cannot keep up with the demands of modern Internet usage.


50 Years Later, This Apollo-Era Antenna Still Talks to Voyager 2

Willie Jones in IEEE Spectrum, 2024-04-18:

DSS-43 is the only antenna that can communicate with the probe.

For more than 50 years, Deep Space Station 43 has been an invaluable tool for space probes as they explore our solar system and push into the beyond. The DSS-43 radio antenna, located at the Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex, near Canberra, Australia, keeps open the line of communication between humans and probes during NASA missions.

Today more than 40 percent of all data retrieved by celestial explorers, including Voyagers, New Horizons, and the Mars Curiosity rover, comes through DSS-43.

“As Australia’s largest antenna, DSS-43 has provided two-way communication with dozens of robotic spacecraft,” IEEE President-Elect Kathleen Kramer said during a ceremony where the antenna was recognized as an IEEE Milestone. It has supported missions, Kramer noted, “from the Apollo program and NASA’s Mars exploration rovers such as Spirit and Opportunity to the Voyagers’ grand tour of the solar system.

“In fact,” she said, “it is the only antenna remaining on Earth capable of communicating with Voyager 2.”

There’s been a lot of press of late about the Voyager 1 team writing and uploading a software patch to work around failed blocks of memory.

But I think the more remarkable accomplishment is that we still have a communications path to Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, thanks to antennas like DSS-43… and the people who design, build, maintain, and operate them. Can you imagine the sense of pride that the DSS-43 team feels that every bit of knowledge from Voyager 1 and 2 and other deep space probes is available to humanity because of what they do to keep that antenna working?

It’s one of the harder things to get new Amateur Radio Operators to understand that in a radio communications system, an optimal antenna is the primary component. If the antenna isn’t (or can’t be, by design) optimal, it’s possible to compensate for a less than idea antenna (as we’ve seen with our mobile phones, especially direct communications with satellites), with higher transmit power, a more sensitive receiver, software / protocol such as Forward Error Correction, etc. But nothing beats an optimal antenna, which is why after more of a century of Amateur Radio experimentation with antennas, we’re still trying new things such as mechanically tuned antennas.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

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These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-04-26

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

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Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Though, I’ll guess, that there is experimentation or actual use of sectorized antennas. That approach could be reasonably lightweight and requires only a modest antenna switching unit.

2

Example - I suggested the creation of the Masters Communications BCM-6, and it was a product less than a month later. That was just cool!

Zero Retries 0148

19 April 2024 at 22:35

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1500+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 27 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week!

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 28 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries this past week! PtRA 28 included this nice message:

I'm impressed by the range of information you are making visible to me.

Thank you PtRA 28!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Zero Retries 0147 Comments - New Record - 40+

I’m agog at the number of comments, and the number of commenters, resulting from the topics discussed in Zero Retries 0147. We commenters had (and as I write this mid-week, the discussions continue) wide-ranging conversation(s) about Amateur Radio data networks, exchanging a number of views. Honestly, that was incredibly fun to see the discussions - between subscribers. I really loved all that discussion - Thanks folks!

While the comment function works as (Substack) intended (light, focused comments), I found that the commenting in Substack quickly grew awkward as the topics diverged (forked) a bit, and it got harder to keep track of the discussion forks. And, only the commenters were aware of the discussion (if you comment, you receive notifications).

The amount of discussion that resulted from Zero Retries 0147 reminded me that I need to get busy on creating a Zero Retries discussion (mailing) list on Groups.io. That’s been on the Zero Retries “to do” list for a while now, but publishing Zero Retries every week, and working on the book, has kept me pretty busy of late. Given that there are > 1500 Zero Retries subscribers, a Zero Retries mailing list would immediately blow past Groups.io’s free tier (100 maximum), requiring a Groups.io Premium (paid) tier. Thus, that’s another expense in publishing Zero Retries that is offset by the wonderful folks who opt for Paid Subscriptions of Zero Retries.

I know that I ought to also create a parallel Zero Retries Discord server (discussion… not physical, but Discord calls a discussion group a “server”), but I’m not up to managing that and a Groups.io group quite yet.


Podcasts Need Transcripts

The first article, below, discusses a podcast, and thus this observation.

One of my frustrations about many podcasts is that they’re “audio only”, especially podcasts done by non-professionals. That is, no transcripts, few if any show notes, etc. But us Mac and iPhone / iPad users now have a solution to that issue - the Apple Podcasts apps now automatically (machine) generates a transcript of any podcast you listen to in an Apple Podcast app. Thus, that capability made a tedious task - teasing out the relevant portion of this podcast into text, easy easier, just search, copy, and paste. And copy and paste… and copy and paste…

To prevent copy and paste being too easy for entire podcasts, Apple limits the amount of text that can be copy and pasted from the Podcast app’s automatic transcript to approximately two paragraphs at a time. Thus to get the snippet of the podcast below required multiple copy and paste cycles. Tedious, but manageable.

In browsing a bit, Apple allows the podcast creator to access their transcription of podcasts to embed the (full) transcription into the podcast’s “page” via Apple’s podcast distribution. Thus podcasters don’t have to go to the expense of having their podcast transcribed; as I read it, that service from Apple is free.

Yes, I’m aware that there are dedicated transcription services out there for transcribing video and audio recordings, especially now in this era of good-trending-towards-great transcription using Artificial Intelligence techniques, but those are subscription services and I’m not quite to that point, yet.

Because I can now read / skim a transcript, a number of podcasts are now more accessible to me, such as the Linux in the Ham Shack podcast.


Overly Ambitious Article on Next Generation Concepts of Amateur Radio Repeaters

A lot of ideas about the future of Amateur Radio repeaters came together this week, but they were pretty disparate, so it was requiring significant butt-in-chair time to weave that article together into a coherent whole. But 15:30 on Friday keeps coming at me irrevocably, and the article was not yet in reasonable shape for publication. Hopefully I’ll have it complete next week for Zero Retries 0149.


In the meantime…

This week is bittersweet in our household - life can be way too short. Thus, after Zero Retries is completed, I’m declaring this a light “workweek” to make time for more fun, hands-on, doing Amateur Radio activities here in N8GNJ Labs.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Illuminating Discussion About Meshtastic on Ham Radio Workbench Podcast

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Includes an excerpt from Ham Radio Workbench 205 - Guest Mark Herbert G1LRO, Ham Radio Workbench host George Zafiropoulos KJ6VU, and other HRWB co-hosts.

My thanks to Tom Salzer KJ7T for recommending the Ham Radio Work Bench (HRWB) podcast. They release new episodes biweekly, and discussions are often hands-on and technical, thus often Zero Retries Interesting… but the duration is sometimes 2 hours, and thus are challenging to make enough time for some weeks.

Because I’ve been trying to follow the progress of the G1LRO’s Universal Radio Controller, I made time to listen to most of HRWB 205 - Universal Radio Controller with Mark Herbert G1LRO.

Meshtasticl logo courtesy of Mestastic

There were many interesting discussion threads in this episode of HRWB, but one of the best bits was a brief, but pithy discussion of Meshtastic being contrasted with Amateur Radio, between Mark Herbert G1LRO and the HRWB host and co-hosts.

So I was thinking I'll probably put this [Meshtastic node] up on the roof and just leave it as a note to kind of help the mesh. It really comes back to the old days of Packet Radio, which I really enjoyed back in the 80s when this was the same thing, really. You were connecting, you know, computing devices together across AX25, and that was the same sort of thing.

You could hop through other people to get to your destination.

So I have to ask you a question. Since we're on the Meshtastic rat hole, and this conversation topic came up in a previous episode, and my comment about Meshtastic was it feels like a solution looking for a problem. And when I look at something like this, I tend to look at it two ways.

One is the technology. What is it? What does it do?

How does it work? And all that. And then separately, like, what would you do with it?

So the technology part I totally get. I mean, you know, put up a mesh radio, connect it to other radios, be able to send some data. That's very interesting to me.

However, on the other side, which is like to what end, I have no idea. So aside from the fact that you could put one up and connect to somebody else, do you have any idea of like what it would be useful for?

I think it's useful for getting people excited about this stuff, for one, because, you know, there's a community there and it's kind of a, it's like, it's almost like an underground community they can connect to and that they know something's going on, but you need to have one of these to be part of it. So I think it's really useful for like the Arduino generation because it is effectively an ESP32 and you use the same ID and everything. For forgetting that, I forget the Arduino generation interested in radio technology and communicating through radio.

So I think as a kind of gateway drug into amateur radio, this is fantastic because we can get some of those guys then pulled in and say, you know, you've built something, you understand the tech and you've got the buzz. Now find out what you can do if you get licensed and you can talk around the world and use some of the really exciting stuff that we're doing.

So actually as a motivator to get other people who may not be thinking of Ham Radio interested, so that makes sense.

And with that… I’m now convinced to get involved with Meshtastic.

There’s a precedent to this moment where Meshtastic as an “entry level radio technology” is rapidly becoming popular (bordering on wildly popular, at least among techies). The popularity of Meshtastic, and the enthusiasm of the Meshtastic users could “bleed over” into Amateur Radio. In the US, the Citizens Band Radio Service rose out of obscurity (it was created in 1945) and became rabidly popular in the early 1970s1. Having gotten a “taste” of the fun (and utility) of CB as entry level radio communications, many “CBers” became Amateur Radio Operators for the fun (and utility) of being able to use VHF / UHF repeaters2, do “skip” (and use more transmit power than 5 watts) legally, and many other activities in Amateur Radio. That “bulge” of new Amateur Radio Operators benefitted Amateur Radio enormously in numbers, in new talent, new energy in Amateur Radio, and in increased recognition of Amateur Radio in society.

Meshtastic is a perfect “easy entry point” into wide area data communications via radio for those that are comfortable with microcontrollers and embedded computers . Meshtastic’s concept, documentation, the robust technology (LoRa), and especially the many self-support communities, make it easy to “get on the air”. In the US, most Meshtastic activity is occurring on 902-928 MHz, which is overlaid between “Part 15” (license-exempt) use and Amateur Radio use. Thus there’s no license required to get active on Meshtastic, and that’s a huge advantage in getting people interested in wide area data communications via radio.

From the perspective of Amateur Radio, Meshtastic is “Amateur Radio data communications Lite”.

Like G1LRO, I now think that us Amateur Radio Operators that are active in data communications via radio should get busy and get online with Meshtastic and start participating with your local Meshtastic users. Make yourself (subtly) known as an Amateur Radio Operator, and be prepared for the inevitable inquiries from the most enthusiastic Meshtastic users about “well, how can I go to the next level” - faster speeds, more interesting uses, etc. Be ready with a story and applications such as a BBS, email, file transfers, etc. For example, the folks in the North Carolina Packet (NCPACKET) network, EastNet Packet Network, Southern California AREDN Mesh Network, and others could get involved in their local Meshtastic networks and offer mentoring to Mestastic users that wished to learn more about Amateur Radio.

I think the critical thing about inviting Meshtastic users to participate in Amateur Radio is to have something interesting online and operational that really is “next level” beyond Meshtastic to show to them, such as the networks in the previous paragraph. In my opinion, only having a few APRS digipeaters, Winlink RMS stations, especially with legacy packet radio (1200 bps AX.25) etc. won’t impress Meshtastic users too much. Also, there needs to be local documentation about “how to join in the fun”, such as the excellent “onboarding” documentation developed by Terrestrial Amateur Packet Radio Network (TARPN).

And, full disclosure, I’m not there yet in being able to offer the “next level” experience I described to Meshtastic users in my area. Nor is that infrastructure in place to offer an interesting “next level” experience… but I’ll be working on doing so. But in the meantime, I’m going to work on getting online with Meshtastic, mostly because I’m technically curious.

And, in transparency of how little I know about Meshtastic, in researching this story, I discovered that, in addition to the web app and apps for IOS (iPhone, iPad) and Android, there is a Meshtastic app for Mac. That’s going to make it interesting…

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M17 / SP5WWP Videos on M17 Remote Radio Unit

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Wojciech Kaczmarski SP5WWP, the lead developer of the M17 Project, has been busy this week documenting the M17 Remote Radio Unit in two (to date) videos on YouTube.

The first video is SP5WWP's quick introduction to the Remote Radio Unit:

In future such presentations, I hope SP5WWP can be persuaded to use a non-conductive pointer (suggestion - non-metalic chopstick). As a former electronic technician, I kept wanting to yell at the video that pointing at electronic components with a conductive pointer (a small screwdriver) on a board that’s powered up, is just… a bad idea.

One of the surprises (most interesting technology) of the RRU in the first video is the inclusion of a circulator which provides protection for the (expen$ive) power amplifier module in case of loss or damage to the feedline or antenna resulting in excessive Standing Wave Ratio (SWR). That’s normally a feature only found in more sophisticated radio, and illustrates the care that SP5WWP is taking with this project.

The RRU is currently in its fourth iteration, and a fifth iteration is being planned. The current RRU is capable of only FM and M17 modes, but a future generation of the RRU will incorporate “SX 1255 chips” to be able to do I/Q at higher data rates to perhaps support 64-QAM, and that version will be able to do nearly any other mode.

The second video is SP5WWP's quick introduction to the Common Amateur Radio Interface protocol:

One of the surprises of the second video was that there will be a Baseband Unit (BBU) in addition to the Remote Radio Unit (RRU). I don’t recall any previous mention of the BBU, and thus I had assumed that the “Base unit” would be a simple interface to provide appropriate power to the RRU and perhaps a fiber-to-Ethernet converter. I further assumed that all the “heavy lifting” of the radio functions (waveform generation, waveform decoding, etc.) would be done in software running on a host computer.

SP5WWP discussed the BBU only briefly, with the majority of the second video discussing the protocol and messages that will be exchanged between the BBU and the RRU. SP5WWP calls this protocol CARI - Common Amateur Radio Interface.

There are four types of data within CARI:

  • BBU ➡️ RRU - Baseband uplink

  • BBU ⬅️ RRU - Baseband downlink

  • BBU ↔️ RRU - RRU control

  • BBU ⬅️ RRU - RRU feedback

This is a hugely ambitious project, but in part that’s a testament to SP5WWP’s relentless focus on building up M17 to offer a “full family” of hardware options. I look forward to future videos from SP5WWP on the RRU and BBU.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

Armed Forces Day Crossband Test May 11, 2024

ARRL Letter for April 18, 2024:

The US Department of Defense will host this year's Armed Forces Day (AFD) Crossband Test on May 11, 2024. For more than 50 years, military and amateur stations have taken part in this event, which is an interoperability exercise between hobbyist and government radio stations. The event is open to all licensed amateur radio operators and will not impact any public or private communications. The AFD Crossband Test is a unique opportunity to test two-way communications between military communicators and radio stations in the Amateur Radio Service (ARS), as authorized in 47 CFR 97.111.

These tests provide opportunities and challenges for radio operators to demonstrate individual technical skills in a tightly controlled exercise scenario. Military stations will transmit on selected military frequencies and announce the specific ARS frequencies monitored. All scheduled times will be in Zulu (Z), and all scheduled frequencies will be upper sideband (USB) unless otherwise noted.

Information on frequencies, times, and other technical information can be found at DoD MARS - Armed Forces Day. Information for QSL cards and contact information is available at Armed Forces Day QSL request form.

AFD is classified as an observance -- not a federal holiday. It will be celebrated on Saturday, May 18, 2024, and it will be a time of honor. The establishment of AFD was first announced on August 31, 1949, by then US Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson. It was meant to replace the separate Army, Navy, and Air Force Days. All branches were combined to create the US Department of Defense. The first Armed Forces Day was held on May 20, 1950. The day is celebrated with special events, tributes, observances, and parades.

Intercommunication between Amateur Radio Operators and US Department of Defense is pretty cool. Most of the communication will be “radiotelephone” (voice), but there will be some data communications:

An AFD message will be transmitted utilizing the Military Standard (MIL-STD) Serial PSK waveform

(M110) followed by MIL-STD Wide Shift FSK (850 Hz RTTY) as described in MIL-STD 188-110A/B.

Technical information regarding these waveforms is provided at:

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1pYDj7kQbm-QAyY4RPtx0dOXKohjaEjq9?usp=sharing


AREDN Release Candidate April 2024

Pseudostaffer Orv Beach W6BI on the AREDN web page:

AREDN nightly build 20240417 has been designated as the release candidate for the next production release. If you haven't tried a nightly build recently, we encourage you to do so. There's a ton of enhancement and updates. They've all been tested, but having more people use them helps any subtle issues that might be remaining be uncovered. Here's a list of the many changes since the last production release:

Enhancements

  • Wireguard tunnels

  • Configurable DHCP options

  • Antenna information

  • Watchdog support

  • Remote logging

New Device Support

  • Mikrotik mANTbox 2 12s

  • GL.iNet E750

  • GL.iNet GL-B1300

  • GL.iNet GL-MT1300

  • GL.iNet AR300M NAND

  • Ubiquiti Litebeam 5AC LR

  • Ubiquiti Nanobeam 2AC

  • Unraid

  • VMWare ESXi

Notes

See the link for the extensive Fixes and Improvements, and UI Changes.


Meshmail - email Over Meshtastic

Meshmail is an application and protocol for sending and receiving email messages over a mesh network. It utilizes inexpensive LoRa radios running open source Meshtastic firmware.

The app can be run in either client or relay mode: a relay has internet access and manages connections to IMAP and SMTP servers, while the client has only a connection to the mesh.

When a new message arrives at the relay, it is encoded into a protobuf and then split into numerous fragments--binary blobs that are later reconstituted on the client. After generating the fragments, the relay sends a message shadow to the mesh which informs clients of the existence of the message. The shadow contains a preview of the content (subject and sender), as well as a fingerprint (a unique hashcode id), and the number of fragments used. The client then proceeds to send fragment requests and the relay responds by sending fragment blobs. Once the client has all the expected fragments, it concatenates them and reconstitutes the protobuf. Outbound mail is handled by the same protocol, but with the tag of OUTBOUND indicating to the relay that it needs to be transmitted over SMTP.

Meshmail is currently alpha level code, but fully functional. Future potential improvements may include support for multiple clients on a single relay, more advanced email features like bcc, reply all, and attachments, relay status broadcasts, and tuning of protocol parameters.

Oh… this is interesting! This is the first interesting application, beyond text chatting, I’ve seen for Meshtastic.


BI7JTA Online Store (of Zero Retries Interesting Devices)

I know nothing of the background, or the experiences of buying from this online store. There is an interesting mix of devices for sale there such as the BP Pager for POCSAG 137-199 MHz 400-499 MHz.


DigiRig Lite Now (kind-of) Available

Image courtesy of Digirig

Digirig Lite (early access)

  • $24.95

  • Digirig Lite rev 1.1 – a minimalistic USB digital modes interface for amateur radio.

  • Available on backorder

A minimalistic version of Digirig with the same audio code as regular model of the interface but without serial port.

  • Combines audio codec and PTT switch

  • Supports PTT by GPIO3 of CM108 audio codec

  • Supports VOX PTT by the tone on the unused right channel (experimental)

  • Works with all major OS flavors: Windows, MacOS and Linux

  • Uses a single TRRS connector compatible with existing Digirig audio cables

  • Growing collection of pre-made cables including popular Icom, Yaesu, Elecraft, Baofeng, Xiegu transceivers

  • Isolation can be easily added using inexpensive USB isolator dongle

I think this devices is just brilliant - it’s as minimalist of an audio interface as one can get!

In the short time since it was revealed, it’s garnered enough excitement to rate a review on Hackaday - Emails Over Radio.


Jobs at FlexRadio

Annaliese McDermond NH6Z:

FlexRadio is hiring four software engineers to work with me and the rest of my teammates. The company is very open to remote team members (I’m one of them, but we have a couple of others.). C/C++ experience is a plus, but we code in a variety of different languages. There’s more information on our website if there’s any interest.

I also think we have at least one position open in our hardware engineering team.

NH6Z is an old friend and a very accomplished software engineer and knows Amateur Radio systems. FlexRadio got a stellar deal hiring her.

If you inquire about employment at FlexRadio, please tell them NH6Z and Zero Retries referred you.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
    Founding Member 0001 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 01

    Founding Member 0002 - Chris Osburn KD7DVD
    Founding Member 0003 - Don Rotolo N2IRZ
    Founding Member 0004 - William Arcand W1WRA
    Founding Member 0005 - Ben Kuhn KU0HN
    Founding Member 0006 - Todd Willey KQ4FID
    Founding Member 0007 - Merik Karman VK2MKZ
    Founding Member 0008 - Prefers to Remain Anonymous 14
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  • Numerous Annual and Monthly subscribers who also generously support Zero Retries financially!

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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Jeff Davis KE9V also mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Amateur Radio Weekly by Cale Mooth K4HCK is a weekly anthology of links to interesting Amateur Radio stories.

  • Experimental Radio News by Bennet Z. Kobb AK4AV discusses (in detail) Experimental (Part 5) licenses issued by the US FCC. It’s a must-read-now for me!

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More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-04-19

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

If you’d like to reuse an article in this issue for other uses, just ask.

All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Rabidly popular to the point where the FCC gave up on insisting on CB users obtaining an FCC license and use FCC assigned callsigns (I still have mine - . They re-conceptualized CB as a hobby radio service, not requiring a license, where “nearly anything goes” as long as the equipment did not transmit more than 5 watts, using AM/SSB, and within the assigned spectrum for CB. Recently, FM is now legal on US CB radios.

2

Yes, acknowledged that GMRS and GMRS repeaters were / are an option for “CBers” wishing to improve their capabilities from 27 MHz, 5 watt Citizens Band equipment.

Zero Retries 0147

12 April 2024 at 22:30

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1500+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Paid Subscribers Update

My thanks to Prefers to Remain Anonymous 26 for becoming a Paid Subscriber to Zero Retries!

Financial support is a real vote of confidence for continuing to publish Zero Retries.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


A Funny Thing Happened…

Given the large size of Zero Retries 0146 last week, I wasn’t quite sure what would happen when it auto-published at 15:30 Pacific on 2024-04-05. As I was writing it, I received the usual warnings from Substack of “Too large to email”, but that’s nothing new. But, I was pretty sure that ZR 0146 was the largest single issue of ZR that I had attempted to email. Thus I wasn’t sure how Substack (and, potentially, email providers like Gmail, Yahoo, etc.) would deal with such a large emailed newsletter. (I knew the web / online version was available, of course, so I wasn’t really too worried.)

A few hours after ZR 0146 auto-published, I was curious and looked at the stats on Substack… and there were none. I think it said that there had been one (1) “open”. I thought “uh, oh”… My sanity check of having each issue sent to several of my backup email addresses - all of those looked OK. So I checked periodically throughout the evening, several folks “liked” ZR 0146, but the weird stats didn’t change.

On Saturday morning I got a status message from Substack saying that the publisher dashboard function wasn’t working… Oh… OK, whew! Sure enough a few hours later Substack fixed the dashboard, and the usual stats showed up, indicating that yep, folks were opening ZR 0146, clicking on links, etc.

The one time I really cared about seeing the stats…

Well, it ended up being funny to me, at least.


And Another Funny Thing…

On Tuesday this week I received an odd voice mail (the caller wasn’t in my Contacts, thus didn’t ring through) informing me that www.zeroretries.org was going to a “This Domain Parked” page. My first thought as I was listening to the voice mail was that it was another “register your domain with us” scam, but then the caller finished with their name and callsign and mention that we had met briefly. Sure enough, www.zeroretries.org was offline and the domain registrar was redirecting it to a “parked” page. Oh, crap… But updating the credit card on file for that domain (one of the many expenses helped by paid subscriptions) got things back to normal. For some reason the domain registrar had not notified me that the zeroretries.org domain auto-renew had failed for an out-of-date credit card.

Thank you Jack Wolfe KI7RMU for the heads-up about www.zeroretries.org.


Rescanning TAPR Packet Status Register

A number of the scans of various issues of the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter on the TAPR website and Internet Archive’s Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC) are of poor quality, and thus the Optical Character Recognition (OCR) conversion of printed text to electronic text suffers. (The PSR article cited in the second article in this issue is an example - the resulting text required a fair amount of manual cleanup. Example: deter¬ mines.

I don’t remember which issue of PSR it was that I wanted to do a cut and paste from, and noted the poor quality of the OCR’d text. That coincided with having declared a block of a few days as “decrapify my office for better productivity” and one background task I had been deferring was scanning my archive of PSRs, so I decided to just do that as I was sitting and decrapifying my office. I set my scanner (a venerable, but working great Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500M sheet feeder) to minimal compression, highest resolution, gray scale, and simultaneous OCR, and I was surprised how little time was required for each scan. The ScanSnap application seems to make good use of multiple cores on my Intel Mac Mini and my office decrapifying workflow was chopped up into five minute blocks as each issue scanned and OCR’ed. (I converted all of my paper PSR copies into single sheets for sheet feed scanning.) PSR is the “publication of record” for much of the evolution of Amateur Radio Packet Radio, so it made sense to me that PSR justified one final high resolution scan, and I had a lot of the earliest issues that I think were given to me upon my becoming (briefly) the editor of PSR, so it could be that I’m one of the last to have these good issues.

Thus I stumbled on the WA7GXD / KK7P article on bit-regenerative repeaters, and that article was highly relevant to this issue’s theme.


Confluence of Packet Radio Networking Ideas

Sometimes, things just come together for Zero Retries (but admittedly, I cast a wide net for Zero Retries Interesting items). In this case, the three primary articles all came out or were rediscovered within the same few weeks, and all of them nicely fit together into the theme of Amateur Radio data networking:

  • Don Rotolo N2IRZ’s thoughts about the guiding philosophies of Terrestrial Amateur Packet Radio Network (TARPN)

  • Lyle Johnson WA7GXD / KK7P on improving the efficiency of Amateur Radio data communications over Amateur Radio repeaters

  • Brian Webster N2KGC’s thoughts on modernizing existing Amateur Radio (Packet Radio) data networks for a new generation.

Not exactly a grand plan… but it works together.


Honoring Confidentiality… However Frustrating That Is

I’ve been in touch this week with two developers with exciting projects… that I can’t talk about here in Zero Retries - yet.

One group of developers just received an ARDC grant which makes their project viable. Their project is foundational to Amateur Radio, similar (I think) in scope to the difference that Internet Archive’s Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC) is making to Amateur Radio in preserving its history to inform the present (such as the third article in this issue). That grant hasn’t been made public yet by ARDC, so the developers don’t yet feel free to reveal their (now grant funded) project. But I’m working on the story to be ready for when ARDC does disclose their “Spring 2024” grants.

Another exciting project has been in development, but was stalled until recently, and the news I got about its renewed progress is really exciting. But those developers would prefer not to discuss their recent progress pending a big reveal at a future event… and I totally get that as that’s the way I feel for some issues of Zero Retries when I feel I have a particularly good story to tell.

I wish I could “tell all”, folks, as soon as I learn about exciting stuff. But, keeping exciting news confidential, as background information, until the newsmaker is ready to announce is the price to be paid. The upside of knowing a bit more about exciting developments that are in progress makes Zero Retries better, if for no other reason than I have a very real, substantive basis for the positive, progressive, hopeful tone about technological innovation in Amateur Radio that I try to maintain here in Zero Retries.


In the Meantime at N8GNJ Labs…

The biggest accomplishment / time sink of the week was a household infrastructure project to pull an Ethernet cable between the house and N8GNJ Labs. The Starlink terminal that’s our primary Internet access is next to N8GNJ Labs and has been performing perfectly. I have no complaints at all about Internet Access via Starlink and even with the current slightly compromised location, it just works. A recent Starlink speed test was 173 Mbps Download, 10 Mbps Upload, ~20 mS latency - works great for video streaming and the occasional upload, and video conferences. But, I didn’t have good connectivity between the house and N8GNJ Labs.

I had been relying on a pair of “power line modems” to connect N8GNJ Labs and the house, but they have been gradually degrading, and in the last few weeks they’ve required multiple “unplug, wait 10 seconds, replug” cycles per day. That unreliability was finally to the point that this week I opened up a wall in N8GNJ Labs where I knew was pretty sure there was a conduit between the house (somewhere) and N8GNJ Labs. To my delight (and relief), the conduit was where I thought hoped it was, and it was a 2-inch conduit with only one legacy telephone cable in it.

It took me all day, much disruption in N8GNJ Labs (not all put back to normal as I write this), and several trips to Hardware Sales (we’re blessed to have a real, independent hardware store here in Bellingham) for “supplies”. There is now “just plain Ethernet” between N8GNJ labs and the house running at “wire speed” - and “what a relief it is” to finally have “no hiccups” connectivity between N8GNJ Labs and the house. Sometime this summer when I’ve had time to study and plan and purchase all the required units, that Ethernet will be replaced with fiber (mostly for electrical isolation) and I’ll finish the household / N8GNJ Labs network integration. For now, Ethernet works perfectly. For household Wi-Fi, I continue to recommend the Ubiquiti UniFi Express. (No compensation, just a hands-on recommendation.) Despite its diminutive size, its performance is stellar.

It looks like I’ll be picking up a Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) dish this weekend, complete with Low Noise Amplifier and the receiver, courtesy of the Free Stuff section of Bellingham Craigslist. This will be my third such free dish (but my first receiver). I don’t yet have an intended purpose for them, but free is… well, free. Perhaps I’ll eventually have enough to start my Very Small Array.

Stuff I read / listened to / viewed in the past week included:

  • Ham Radio Workbench podcast 205 - Universal Radio Controller with Mark Herbert G1LRO. Those folks just project that they’re having a good time playing with Amateur Radio, and it feels infectious / reinforces that I want to be playing along on my workbench / workshop.

  • I watched the Tech Minds (Matt Miller M0DQW) review of the KiwiSDR 2 on YouTube. M0DQW does a great job of reviewing Zero Retries Interesting units without the breathless and overhyped style (he doesn’t even appear on camera) of many other Amateur Radio YouTube creators. The KiwiSDR 2 is a sweet piece of kit and the review convinced me that the KiwiSDR 2 is now next up on my sliding “About $200 discretionary budget” for Amateur Radio projects. Now I just need to wait for the ordering window for Batch 3 of the KiwiSDR 2 to be opened. I’m on the list to be notified.

  • The Mount Baker Amateur Radio Club’s (MBARC) 2024-04 General Meeting was a presentation by AMSAT Ambassador Clint Bradford K6LCS on How to Work Amateur Satellites with Your Handheld Radio. (The video recording is pending as this issue is published, I’ll update this when the video is available.) K6LCS tailored his presentation (as he always does) for MBARC, with some amusing elements. After K6LCS’ presentation, I (and I think many of us) felt like “Wow… why am I not working these “Easy Sats?”. At a minimum, I’ll soon be dedicating a radio and receive antenna to monitor for the International Space Station’s audio (and packet) downlinks, as well as other Amateur Radio satellites that have FM downlinks. (Doing so beats scanning local repeaters that are almost entirely quiet except for automatic identification.) You can learn more about K6LCS and his presentations and Amateur Radio satellite evangelism at his www.work-sat.com website, or contact him by phone at 909-999-SATS (7287) or email - clintbradford@mac.com.

The biggest adventure of our household for the coming weekend is that the grandkittens are coming to visit… sans parents… and oh, I don’t think our household is anywhere near ready for two energetic kittens. We shall see - it will certainly be an adventure for these two “city kittens” who have only lived in the confines of a two-bedroom apartment.

Have a great weekend folks!

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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What’s New at Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications

By Kay Savetz K6KJN
Zero Retries Pseudostaffer

Happy spring from the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications. If you’re just tuning in: I’m Kay, the person who is lucky enough to oversee the creation of this unparalleled online library of ham radio and related communications. Here are some the latest additions to the DLARC library.

The Manuals Plus collection scanning project is in the home stretch: the scanning center is working on the fourth and final (well, for now) pallet of radio-related manuals that were rescued from a warehouse in 2015. Last month I noted that the collection had 2,450 manuals — today, there are 3,771 manuals from that collection scanned and online. I’ve found everything from a skinny 20-page manual for the Weston Model 1092 Sensitrol relay to a nearly-1000 page behemoth operation manual for the IFR COM-120B Communications Service Monitor

Also new in DLARC are two issues of SSTV Today, a newsletter devoted to slow scan television. I learned about SSTV Today through the obituary of its publisher, Ron Flynn KB8LU. Mr. Flynn passed away at the age of 82 on February 22. Among many other accomplishments and interests that were part of a life well-lived, the obit mentioned his newsletter. I wrote a letter to his family. His window Patricia wrote back a lovely letter: “Because my husband was legally blind, I was quite involved with his computer work, and accompanied him several times to the Dayton, OH amateur radio convention. I have found two copies of SSTV Today, and will gladly give them to you for the archives.” The two issues that she sent were v1n4 from November 1983, and v2n7 from July 1984. You’ll find dot-matrix printouts, a report from Dayton Hamvention, and ads for SSTV gadgets (some of which seem astoundingly expensive when price adjusted for inflation!) Of course I’m dying to find other issues of SSTV Today to add the the DLARC library. I’ve added them to the ever-changing DLARC Wantlist.

I learned about Cornbread Road — Jeff Davis KE9V’s audio-format ham radio mystery — here in the pages of Zero Retries. Davis released the episodes in 2010, but it was difficult to find them online recently. KE9V agreed to re-release Cornbread Road — all 13 episodes plus the hard-to-find epilogue — on DLARC. His intriguing blurb for the series: “Deep in the Heartland a small group of ham radio enthusiasts enjoy an idyllic existence of wide open spaces, no antenna restrictions, low-noise levels, simple living, and good fellowship. But things aren’t exactly as they seem. Unexplained lights in the night sky, radio signals masked from the ether, strange late night visitors to this small farming community…"

How’s your Portuguese? I ask because DLARC just added 46 issues of Revista QSO, a free monthly publication published in Brazil. The magazine is aimed at radio amateurs, and also covers related subjects such as electronics, robotics, programming, drones, and 3D printing. The “zeroth” issue was published in 2011, but the magazine hit its stride with a more regular publishing schedule in 2020.

How’s your Polish? My Internet Archive colleague Jason Scott has been archiving all sorts of public domain works in the Polish language: that collection is closing in on a half-million items. A small subset of that material is about radio, so I pulled those into a Radio Books in Polish collection: 164 items so far, including many issues of “Krótkofalowiec Polski” — that’s Shortwave Polski, a monthly magazine devoted to Polish amateur radio — and “Radiotechnik,” an “illustrated monthly popular-technical magazine devoted to radio engineering and related fields.” Most of this material spans the years 1928 through 1939.

Switching back to the English language, we’ve added 125 newsletters from the North East Weak Signal Group N.E.W.S. Letter. Based in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, NEWSG is a flock of VHF/UHF/SHF enthusiasts. We have their newsletter going back to 1996. I’ve also added 20 recent issues of the National Radio Club DX News newsletter, bringing the number of issues in that collection to 2,763, going back to the group’s founding in 1933. National Radio Club is the oldest and largest club dedicated to medium wave DX.

Speaking of old clubs, the Fort Wayne Radio Club has been around for more than 100 years. Bob Streeter W8ST just uploaded more than 50 issues of that group’s newsletter, Allen County Ham News.

The WA7BNM Contest Calendar provides detailed information about amateur radio contests around the world, including their scheduled dates/times, rules summaries, log submission information and links to the official rules. Bruce Horn WA7BNM has been providing this service for the amateur community since 1998(!) He serves up this contest information in a variety of formats, including a weekly newsletter. At my request, Bruce dug through the database and managed scrape up the newsletters going back to 2002. Thanks to his meticulous research and keeping old data, DLARC now has a searchable record of ham radio contests — 1147 weekly newsletters, going back 22 years.

We’ve added a collection of vintage documents from Eastnet Packet, a packet radio group that’s been around for decades: look here for Flexnet and IGATE manuals and other good stuff.

Believe it or not, this isn’t even close to a complete list of everything we’ve added to DLARC since I wrote last month. For instance, there’s a nearly constant influx of recent amateur radio newsletters from around the world. The scanning centers in Fort Wayne and Boston are always ingesting new material. There are partially-finished projects in the works that I will tell you about later this year. I encourage you to go to the DLARC homepage to search or browse for your favorite radio topic. If you don’t know where to start, follow the advice of N3VEM who said on Mastodon, “So here’s a fun thing to do — go to @dlarc section of the Internet Archive and do a search on your own callsign, and see what pops up.” (Tip: choose the “Search text contents” button for the deepest search.)

Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications is funded by a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) to create a free digital library for the radio community, researchers, educators, and students. If have questions about the project or material to contribute, contact me at kay@archive.org.

Kay Savetz K6KJN is the Internet Archive's Program Manager, Special Collections… the curator of the Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications project.


Image courtesy of TARPN

Why TARPN?

By Don Rotolo N2IRZ
Zero Retries Contributing Author

You may have heard of the Terrestrial Amateur Packet Radio Network (TARPN), and indeed you may even be running a node in one. If so, you can skip to the end, but for the rest I encourage you to read on for a snippet of a Zero Retries Interesting (ZRI) thing.

AX.25 packet isn’t new, nor is G8BPQ networking1. Many of us experimented with packet way back when, and ultimately found it uncompetitive with what could be done with the then-nascent Internet. Or more recently been involved with APRS, one popular application for packet. But other than a few mild tricks, the modern world doesn’t need packet, much like it doesn’t need AM on HF – there will always be enthusiasts, but it’s not mainstream. Or?

A large-ish group in the Raleigh area has built a fairly large, well-performing packet network of around 50 nodes over several counties in North Carolina. Other areas, including Virginia and Kentucky, are growing their own AX.25 TARPN networks. So, why the interest in 1980’s technology? I mean, are they really satisfied with 1200 baud links over a dozen or more hops?

The short answer is that AX.25 is a means to an end. Several ends, in fact. The biggest end is the social network it forms: An application called TARPN Home (by Fin Gold NC4FG) includes a really spiffy real-time Chat feature, keeping those on the network in contact with each other. Even with what we might consider slow links, this app is surprisingly fast and more than responsive enough for serious real-time conversations. And you don’t need to tie yourself to your station: Using WiFi for the last few yards, its HTML user interface lets you use it on any device that supports a browser.

So way back when, in the heyday of packet networks, most networks had trouble traversing a dozen links. This was neither a failure of AX.25, nor of the packet networking software being used, but one of network design in the RF space. There were two major errors prevalent: Shared frequency links and user ports.

Shared frequencies for network links seemed to be a good idea, saving money on equipment and allowing better coverage when someone was lucky or persistent enough to score a high-visibility antenna site. But the issue here is that collisions, hidden-transmitter syndrome (HTS) and channel saturation cliffs doomed these shared channels to failing as soon as they got even a little busy. The simple solution? Dedicated point-to-point links for every link. This is one of the hard and fast rules of a TARPN.

User ports on a shared access frequency also seemed like a good idea, allowing users easy access to the network with modest equipment. But in addition to again suffering from HTS and that saturation cliff (where the channel capacity drops suddenly to zero), it had the even more deleterious effect of separating networkers into two classes: Sysops and Users.

Users had no skin in the game, and so would either go do other things when the channel didn’t work as desired or engage in (often unwitting) destructive behaviors like highly-aggressive TNC parameters, hurting the channel for everyone. Sysops generally enjoyed great network access, but soon tired of complaints from users, dampening their enthusiasm for spending what were considerable sums at the time for a bunch of whiners. The simple solution? No user ports, everyone is a sysop. This is another hard and fast rule of a TARPN: To participate, you need to build a node and link in.

Some of the other rules are to allow for reasonable support possibilities: Only G8BPQ nodes, running a TARPN profile, on Raspberry Pi computers, where everything is discoverable and transparent. Big-money and high-visibility sites* aren’t mixed in, keeping it controllable by the individuals. And, non-Amateur Radio sources for data carried by the network are limited to cut & paste. Internet links and other wormhole-like paths are forbidden, as these only serve to make people lazy, in addition to not promoting amateur radio.

While the rules for a TARPN might seem restrictive, they make a huge difference in how the network functions. TARPN links do not have a tendency to fail when traffic reaches saturation. HTS and collisions are nearly nonexistent. And when there is a link failure, diagnosis is straightforward.

While the social network created by the chat feature of TARPN Home is arguably the killer app, that isn’t the only reason to build a TARPN. Learning is one of the top other reasons: Antennas, propagation, Linux, networking, station-building, wiring, soldering, and a bunch of other really valuable skills are practiced and perfected. And new friendships bloom, which is a different but still valuable kind of social network.

And what’s the ultimate goal? Growing amateur radio. Us old folks will eventually die off, and with no younger blood to carry on, we’re doomed. Ham radio will not go away so easily, but as the ranks thin, it becomes less relevant, a kind of death spiral. Kids are rarely interested in nets, repeaters or traffic handling, but give them an app on their phone so they can chat with their friends and they’ll consider getting their license. To that end, we all need to run regular events at club meetings, teaching how to solder and build things, getting on HF to have conversations with distant places, talking through (or to!) satellites, and other high-energy fun. Beginners night, every month.

Is that all there is? No, not by a long shot. But writing more about it is wasteful when there’s a website, https://tarpn.net, that covers all the details in great depth. Go take a look at the Shopping List for Node Construction (on the builders page) to see if you have enough to build two nodes. Then follow the lengthy-but-simple instructions to build and configure them. If you need help, there’s a Groups.io mailing list dedicated to TARPN where help is plentiful. Even without radios, you can get them talking over wires, and start to explore the possibilities for under $100. Try it, I think you might be surprised. But I need to warn you: The fun doesn’t really start until you have around 5 nodes.

* High visibility sites - i.e., not at someone's home, as in a commercial tower, where 24/7 access may be challenging. If someone lives atop a big hill, that's fine. Access is the concern, particularly when the system is being stressed.

Don Rotolo N2IRZ is a writer on Zero Retries Interesting topics, most recently with his decades-long bimonthly column Digital Connection in CQ Amateur Radio Magazine.

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Advantages of a Bit-Regenerating Repeater for Local Area Networks

By Lyle Johnson WA7GXD / KK7P

Prelude by Steve Stroh N8GNJ

This article is from the TAPR Packet Status Register newsletter #46, dated 1992-04, page 7 and 8. This might seem a counterpoint to N2IRZ’s article - it’s not. But it is convenient timing that N2IRZ submitted his article for the same issue that I had planned to run this article, thus offering a perspective of two different approaches to build Amateur Radio data networks. As you read in N2IRZ’s article, there are working TARPN networks - present day, so provably, TARPN’s approach works. The “TARPN philosophy” precludes use of repeaters (see mentions of “Sysops” vs “Users” in N2IRZ’s article) despite that such repeaters eliminate Hidden Transmitter Syndrome and make it very easy to “get on the network”.

This article is the first mention of Bit-Regeneration Repeaters for Amateur Radio Packet Radio that I’m aware of. This article was the impetus for the creation of the Puget Sound Amateur Radio TCP/IP Group’s network which, at its peak, provided five bit regeneration repeaters for general access. Four of those were 9600 bps based on the TAPR bit-regeneration option board for TAPR 9600 bps modems running on TAPR TNC-2 TNCs (and clones). I can testify from direct experience that the theoretical advantages that WA7GXD / KK7P explains in this article were borne out in practice on the 9600 bps bit-regeneration repeaters we built and used in the PSARTG network.

And yes, I concede the point that despite its technical sophistication, the PSARTG network no longer exists, and TAPRN networks exist and are growing.

While the specific technology described in this article is now outdated, I think that the idea of data via repeater is useful addition to Amateur Radio capabilities. There are several “game changers” that may well make data via repeater more viable in this era, including…

  • Much better modems, such as the vastly improved sensitivity and “recoverability” in the Dire Wolf software TNC. And, modems and protocols based in software mean that systems can now evolve and improve for both infrastructure and users.

  • Implementation of Forward Error Correction (FEC) such as Improved Layer 2 Protocol (IL2P) that vastly improves the throughput of data without requiring retransmission.

  • We have the potential for even faster data rates than 9600 bps now and that could easily minimize the “no one goes there anymore… it’s too crowded” effect of a popular resource like a data repeater.

  • Some Amateur Radio data communications systems are now making use of Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) in the audio channel; essentially subdividing the audio spectrum into many discrete “subchannels” and then dynamically managing each subchannel. This requires significant compute power, which is no longer expensive.

While I think the ideal method of doing so would be to install a Multi Mode Digital Voice Modem (MMDVM) which would include the still-in-development MMDVM-TNC data mode, but there are other methods for data via repeater such as using VARA-FM over an analog FM repeater, with the repeater programmed to transmit a different subaudible (Continuous Tone Coded Squelch System - CTCSS) tone when VARA-FM is being used, and thus voice users can choose to mute the repeater unless voice is being transmitted.

I predict that we will start seeing a slow evolution of analog FM (voice) repeaters that, while still online, are now mostly silent, being “repurposed” into transporting data as well as analog FM voice. It might end up being a faster evolution if MMDVM-TNC is released as a working system.

Background

Over the past ten or twelve years, a number of approaches have been taken to the design of packet radio-based local area networks (LANs). These designs have used various protocols (polling, balanced “interrupt-driven” systems like AX.25, connection- oriented and datagram styles) as well as varying approaches to “medium access.” Typical implementations include systems with full-duplex audio repeaters, digipeaters, single-frequency “networks” and various ad-hoc combinations of all of the above.

In this paper I will attempt to outline a cost-effective, spectrum-efficient method of network implementation at the local level.

Media Access

Media access is a term used to describe the method by which a packet radio station determines that it may safely transmit data, and how it determines if the data it sent was successfully received by the intended recipient.

Most packet radio modems in common use provide a data carrier detect (DCD) output. This signal is used by TNC software to determine if the modem’s bits are worth decoding (valid signal) as well as to determine if the channel is occupied by another station, in which case the TNC will defer its transmission.

There are fundamental problems with this general approach. In some cases, a station may be able to hear distant stations (a hilltop location, for example) and the DCD will cause this transmitter to defer forever, even though its transmissions might not cause any problem to the distant station’s operation (which may be communications with a nearby station at the distant location, for example).

Or, the station’s DCD circuit may be implemented poorly, allowing transmissions to occur and generate interference with stations it was unable to reliably detect.

There is one school of thought which suggests that, since DCD is an often unreliable indicator, it should be ignored and other approaches used to arbitrate channel access. There are others who would couple this approach with a system allowing the TNC to control the transmitter power output level to create "cells” much like a cellular phone system. This approach is valid and is being pursued.

However, there is another approach that is not widely used, but overcomes much, if not all of the problems associated with geographic considerations.

Full Duplex Repeater-based LAN

The use of a full-duplex repeater brings a significant advantage to local area network communications.

It virtually eliminates the “hidden station” effect. If the repeater can hear a transmission, then every station that uses the repeater can hear the station. Thus, DCD can be used as a reliable indicator of channel occupation.

The geographic coverage of the LAN can then be tailored by repeater location and antenna configuration (use of downtilt, broad lobe beam antennas, etc.). Repeater-based LANs can then be networked using another frequency, or combination of frequencies, to implement an efficient network topology.

The usual objection to the use of repeaters is that they require duplexers, and duplexers are several hundred dollars, so repeaters shouldn’t be used. However, in many cases single-frequency “digipeaters” are co-located in intense RF areas and require the use of RF filters as well. And, “node stacks” typically combine several RF transmitters and receivers in close proximity, also requiring RF cavities and/or duplexers.

The use of a full-duplex repeater can be significantly enhanced with the addition of a bit regenerator.

What Is A Bit Regenerator?

In its simplest form, a bit regenerator is a device which is interposed between the repeater’s receiver output and transmitter input. It incorporates a modem (demodulator portion) to recover the received data to the bit level (digital levels, not analog or audio). These bits are then used to drive a modem (modulator portion) which then drives the repeater’s transmitter. DCD is typically used to provide the PTT mechanism to the repeater. The advantage of this is that the transmitted signal is of the proper deviation, even if the received signal is seriously under- or over-deviated.

Another advantage is that the repeater is dedicated to the function for which it has been coordinated -packet radio (or RTTY or whatever other digital mode is designated for it). There are several drawbacks to this simple approach. Perhaps the most serious drawback is related to clock recovery. Any “jitter” on the received data due to noise will be retransmitted. If the received signal is marginal, the transmitted signal will automatically be at least as marginal. Thus, if you have a less than optimum path to the repeater, you will have a difficult time decoding signals from other marginal users. The bit-regenerator can be enhanced to overcome this primary difficulty. A first-in first-out (FIFO) buffer can be incorporated to collect some number of received bits, then deliver them to the transmitter. This buffer acts somewhat like a rubber band, stretching and shrinking as needed to keep the transmitter happy. In this manner, clock jitter is completely removed by use of a crystal-controlled clock on the transmit modem. The buffer must be deep enough to allow for variations in the speeds between various modems (usually well under 0.1%). For Amateur packet radio needs using AX.25 protocols, or any other protocol where the number of bits in a given transmission is under about 20,000, a 16-bit deep FIFO filled to 8-bits before transmission occurs, will easily suffice.

Other Potential Advantages

The implementation of a bit-regenerator on the TAPR 9600 bps modem has other advantages that may be exploited by future TNC firmware. If the bit regenerator/modem is attached to a TNC, the TNC PTT will override the FIFO buffer output. This would allow, for example, a nodestack using a full-duplex bit-regenerator repeater to “grab the channel” in case of an emergency or for administrative purposes. At the same time that the TNC is sending its data, it will still be receiving the uncorrupted transmission from the station which was being regenerated. Thus, the received data is not lost and may simply be delayed if the proper firmware is available for the TNC.

Another application, also requiring specialized firmware, is that of channel-use enforcement. Enforcement is a strong word to use in the Amateur context, but consider the following scenario. Assume a bit-regenerating repeater is being used for a local area network, and that specialized firmware exists on the attached TNC. Further assume that a local user comes on frequently during “prime time” and refuses to set his TNC’s parameters to share the channel in accordance with locally agreed upon guidelines. Maybe this user likes to transfer megabyte files and sets DWAIT to 0, persistence to 255 and FRACK to 1. He is a hog. After repeatedly asking him to change his patterns, the system administrator simply logs this station’s callsign into the “lock out” list on the TNC. Now, whenever this callsign is detected by the TNC, the TNC simply asserts its PTT for 10 mSec and the repeated transmission is corrupted. Thus, the channel abuser is prevented from using the machine. When he amends his ways, his call is removed from the TNC’s blacklist and he can share the channel resource with everyone on an equal basis.

To implement this, the TNC would simply check for the “FROM” call field in the packet as its is being received. There is no need to wait for the CRC! If the incoming packet is decodable by anyone, the address header will be received correctly. If it is correct, then the PTT assertion can occur prior to the CRC to ensure the packet is “locked out”. If the header is misinterpreted due to noisy reception, then the bit-regenerated packet will be exactly as corrupted, and the packet would be rejected by all listening stations anyway. Thus, the enforcer mode is technically feasible. Or, assume that a METCON unit is attached and it is monitoring the deviation of incoming stations via the detector output from the repeater. A transmission could be sent to a station running with too much deviation, asking him to reduce his deviation. Or an automated deviation reporter could be implemented, providing a community resource for getting the deviation set properly. Finally, a bit-regenerator makes a full-duplex 9600-bps (or faster) local area network not only feasible, but easily doable. Hopefully, the availability of the TAPR 9600 bps modem with its bit-regenerator capability will encourage the growth of such higher speed LANs.

Conclusion

A bit-regenerating full-duplex repeater offers many advantages when implementing a local area network. It allows existing TNCs and radios to work in a coordinated fashion, defines a geographic area of coverage and removes hidden stations within that area of coverage. It offers opportunities to encourage technically and socially sound usage patterns for the shared spectrum resource.

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Why It's So Hard to Get People Excited About Using Connected Packet Systems

By Brian Webster N2KGC

Editor’s Note - This article was posted to the EastNetPacket mailing list. Much of the discussion is specific to the collection of technologies and networks that make up EastNet (in the New England region in the Northeast US), but Brian’s observations about the general issues of current packet radio networks are, in my opinion, “spot on”. This article complements the previous two articles well as another perspective on Amateur Radio data networks.

It has occurred to me, that one of the big reasons modern hams are not getting excited about packet radio, is the fact that it’s hard to try and understand what the network even does.

Let’s face it, if you did not do packet back in the 90’s you don’t have any appreciation for what the network is really doing. Most new hams have never had to use a dial up modem and log in to their ISP with a terminal program.

While our networks are not blazing fast fiber internet speeds, they will do a lot of cool stuff still at the speeds we can offer.

A major drawback for everyone is the fact that they have no idea what to do on the network, everything is command line basic text driven. Failing to recognize this drawback is what is keeping anyone new from coming in to the fold.

What I am struggling with is having a user interface that today’s users can function with is the modern day skill sets users have. If you are to try to play around on any packet network these days, you have to have a knowledge of the old command line abbreviated text commands, that is exacerbated by the various node operating systems and their own unique commands and features. You really have to hack around even when you know how current pack systems work. Here is something of what I am frustrated with. Connecting to a large packet network now these are the various Node operating systems you are likely to encounter:

  • [G8BPQ]

  • JNOS

  • FlexNet

  • X-Net

  • XR-Node

  • URONode

  • Variations of native Linux nodes

  • Kantronics KA-Node

  • And others….

There was never any standardization and NONE of those archaic functions have been ported to something useable in today’s world. If you manually try to crawl around a packet network node hoping to explore, you likely have to know what commands and command line features are available once you connect. Most hams these days have no idea what even one of these operating systems can do or even how to get a basic help file or a simple description of what they just connected to.

The BBS system are just as problematic; the funny thing is that most of them can operate very much like today’s web based forums do. The Outpost Packet Message Manager software is a step in the right direction in addressing this.

What is needed is a local hardware/software device like the DigiPi that gives you a basic web page, with wireless connectivity that you can use a phone, tablet or other computing device to connect with. This appliance should detect what node operating system it just connected to and locally offer from the device memory, a web page(s) that provides some hints in HTML format of what commands can be used and the things you can do on the network. If the OS is not known, it serves up some help on how to figure it out or some basic commands that can be tried. All of this help should be HTML formatted on the local device so that it reads easily, but on slow speed networks all of that information does not need to transit the network. Until something like this happens, packet will stagnate.

How many of you know how to connect and use a BBS? Did you know that many nodes and BBS also have the ability to connect to local and worldwide chat systems? Did you know that there are still DX Clusters operating on packet? Would you know how to interface with the WinLink System by packet or did you even know that you can?

Now imagine that you know nothing about packet and are trying to figure out how to use it.

What we need is an effort to really simplify the USER experience on a packet network. They need to believe that there are so many functions that we can do on these networks we have been building and maintaining all these years and that it can be done without the Internet in so many cases. A lot of the new hams got interested in the hobby because they wanted to do cool things like that. But we have failed them with packet because we have not advanced the user interface that was designed in the late 70’s and early 80’s

This is where we have failed. Steve Stroh has talked about this problem in Zero Retries with his idea of the perfect all in one appliance. That device is getting closer to reality with the DigiPi and now you can get the radio interface with GPS that requires no soldering, so we are getting closer. But even if Steve declares that someone has the perfect device, when they use that and try to interface to the packets networks, there is still going to be a great deal of disappointment with packet radio.

It’s not that we don’t have the technologies available. The developers have been doing a great job adapting and improving over the years, what we have missed the boat on is the end user interface and experience. HTML and GUI based systems should not be too hard to develop so long and the actual information that needs to transit from one place to the other is known to be constrained by speed/bandwidth capacity. That is really not an issue. Look at what they are doing with Meshtastic. THEY have solved the issue of the user interface to attract people. They have slower speeds to offer than the current 1200 baud packet systems.

We need to learn from the Meshtasic project, “Packet Radio has a lack of a good interface and end user experience”.

Flame suit on, but I ask that you think about these points before we all jump to defend how we have been doing things forever.

Sean Haga KD4WLE replied to N2KGC:

You mean something like AREDN?

  • Mostly GUI driven with a familiar web interface.

  • Either RF based or Internet Tunnels to fill in gaps

  • Fast

  • Large and ACTIVE userbase

  • Active developer community

  • My entire BPQ stack is on AREDN, along with the graphical BBS interface.

  • My DX Cluster is on AREDN

  • Email, just like the internet

  • Webservers

  • Cool IM Platforms (I run RocketChat with an AREDN and regular Internet interface, so you can install the app on your smart phone)

  • VoIP

  • Computer Aided Dispatch for EmComm people

  • WinGate gateways

  • I even stuck one of my Meshtastic nodes on AREDN

  • And so on..

We have almost completed an Arden Network in East Florida that stretches the entire length of Brevard county.

Brian Webster N2KGC is the current President of EastNet, a large heterogeneous Amateur Radio Packet Radio network in the Northeast US that encompasses a range of legacy Amateur Radio networking systems.

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We Need Better, More Flexible User Interfaces

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Editor’s postscript to Why It's So Hard to Get People Excited About Using Connected Packet Systems (previous article) by Brian Webster N2KGC, and comments by Sean Haga KD4WLE.

N2KGC’s article nicely illustrates that even existing, working, active Amateur Radio Packet Radio are struggling to evolve in this era. N2KGC is correct that the varied… and antiquated… and sparsely / poorly documented user interface(s) to the EastNet network elements is a stumbling block to new Amateur Radio Operators (with no previous background on legacy Packet Radio), but slowly we’re getting a handle on that. We’re no longer resource constrained to host new user interfaces - we have ample compute power and we have powerful user interface and scripting tools including interactive web apps. My two primary examples of how much better user interfaces for Amateur Radio data networks can be are two stellar, modern apps - RadioMail for Apple iPhone / iPad (primarily for Winlink) and VarAC for Windows (primarily for use with VARA HF and VARA FM).

We don’t have to start entirely from scratch. We have some great, friendly, graphical user interface (GUI) applications like WINTNC (venerable enough to include support for Baycom modems), D-RATS (originally developed for Icom D-Star radios for the ~900 bps data stream built into every D-Star radio), and in N2IRZ’s article he mentions TARPN Home.

DigiPi is a great example of a friendlier user interface (all the apps run in a web browser on a remote device like laptop, tablet, or phone)… but there needs to be a more fundamental rethinking of the separation of the networking and the user interface. N2KGC’s mention of Meshtastic is a good example of a nice user interface, but that’s an entirely fresh start with no backwards compatibility.

Modern email on Amateur Radio via KA9Q NOS

“Back in my day…” (yeah, dating myself…) one of the best examples of a nice user interface was the example of KA9Q NOS (stay with me… yes, really, KA9Q NOS). NOS was essentially a TCP/IP stack that ran on DOS, but had built-in drivers for Amateur Radio Packet Radio hardware, including KISS TNCs. One of the best ideas of KA9Q NOS was that it had standard interfaces that sent and received email. You could compose and read email using the very geeky “Bdale’s Mailer” companion app… but KA9Q NOS also supported a standard POP and SMTP interfaces… so you could use an email app like Eudora or Thunderbird - all you had to do to use a modern mail client with Amateur Radio networking was to point the mail app to the appropriate ports on your Amateur Radio system (which is the same approach that RadioMail and VarAC use). This capability is still present in modern “xNOS” applications - G8BPQ, JNOS, etc.

Amateur Radio has significant new technologies such as MMDVM-TNC that may allow us up to 38.4 kbps over conventional 20 kHz VHF / UHF channels (perhaps even via repeaters), we have New Packet Radio which may allow up to 1 Mbps on 1 MHz VHF / UHF channels, and as KD4WLE pointed out, we now have fast (microwave network) data capability with AREDN (and HamWAN, and HAMNET.EU). None of this has to be either / or, or requires completely jettisoning the old stuff in favor of something entirely new (such as Meshtastic). It does require some rethinking of old paradigms such as N2KGC points out, and some adaptation to make the networking available in one area (such as EastNet) look like “just another network” in a unified, easy to comprehend and operate user interface based on modern user interface frameworks and modern networking. Sending an email via Packet Radio BBS to Amateur Radio Operator “A” should be just as easy as sending an email via AREDN to Amateur Radio Operator “B”, and there should be a standard way to view the contents of a Bulletin Board System without resorting to a dumb terminal interface where every prompt is sent every time.

We (Amateur Radio) really can have it both ways - legacy networks and new, more capable networks - we just have to have some help making better user interfaces and adhering to the “stack layers” (which has gotten kind of muddled in Amateur Radio these last few decades).

Lastly… if you… or you and some co-consiprators, have the skills and the desire to tackle such an ambitious project as developing a well-structured user interface for Amateur Radio networking, with support for many / most / all of the wild and wooly Amateur Radio networks that have been developed over the decades…

There is funding available to put serious, sustained effort into such a project. If you’re an individual contributor(s) that are not directly eligible for an ARDC grant, see how the FreeDV team was able to get an ARDC grant via a fiscal sponsor.

Steve Stroh N8GNJ is the Editor of the Zero Retries newsletter and an outspoken advocate of data communications using radio technologies in Amateur Radio.

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

AMSAT / TAPR Banquet at Hamvention 2024 - PACSAT!

ANS-084 AMSAT News Service Weekly Bulletins - March 24, 2024 by Frank Karnauskas:

Another attraction will be the 15th annual AMSAT/TAPR Banquet on Friday at 18:30 EDT. This dinner is always a highlight of the TAPR (Tucson Amateur Packet Radio) and AMSAT (Radio Amateur Satellite Corp.) activities during the Dayton Hamvention. This year’s banquet speaker will be Bill Reed, NX5R, AMSAT Volunteer Engineer, who will highlight the forthcoming PACSAT digital communications payload.

Of all the current, and proposed AMSAT satellites / payloads, PACSAT is the most Zero Retries Interesting… and AMSAT has revealed… not much… to date about PACSAT. I’m sure that NX5R’s banquet speech will be especially interesting and revealing as all the other AMSAT activities have to compete on AMSAT’s packed forum schedule during Hamvention. I don’t always attend the AMSAT / TAPR Banquet when I attend Hamvention… but this one I would definitely make time for. Wish I was able to attend Hamvention 2024!


RadioMail :: Portable VARA FM HotSpot

This video is ~ 3 months old, but it’s new to me (I learned about it from the RadioMail newsletter - scroll to the bottom of the RadioMail page to subscribe). Georges Auberger WH6AZ shows how to use Winlink to send Internet email from a very compact VHF / UHF station consisting of a Windows PC (palm sized, battery powered…) to run VARA FM, a Digirig Mobile audio interface connected to a portable radio, and WH6AZ’s application RadioMail which connects to the PC via Wi-Fi. I was impressed that the Windows PC running VARA FM had been reduced to a physically small appliance (no screen, keyboard, or pointer)… just apply power and input / output cables. WH6AZ provides a polished demo of a streamlined and portable system - a “Go Kit” in a pouch.


ARRL Seeking Applicants for Assistant Education and Learning Manager

The ARRL Letter for April 4, 2024:

ARRL is working to engage the next generation of radio amateurs right in the classroom. Many young people have become active hams because of the ARRL Teachers Institute on Wireless Technology.

This donor-funded effort brings teachers from across the United States together to get them excited about radio through hands-on experiments. The Institute then trains them on how to take that excitement back to their classrooms as they incorporate amateur radio into science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) learning.

Now, we're looking for the right candidate for a position that will help us grow that program. In a posting at www.arrl.org/employment-opportunities, potential candidates can find the entire list of criteria we're looking for in the Assistant Education and Learning Manager.

The position is perfect for someone with an education background, but the most important trait is being able to authentically share a passion for amateur radio, according to ARRL Education and Learning Manager Steve Goodgame, K5ATA. "We want someone energetic and passionate about amateur radio - willing to hit the streets at conferences to get teachers fired up. This person is going to help run the Teachers Institute and be a champion for engaging youth in amateur radio," he said.

Someone who has a passion for educating will be a great fit. According to the listing, the incumbent will develop schedules, choose material and coursework, and understand the needs of education program students. The Assistant Manager will work to facilitate and instruct Teachers Institute sessions.

If you're interested in the job, email Goodgame at sgoodgame@arrl.org. ARRL is an equal-opportunity employer.

The ARRL Teachers Institute on Wireless Technology…

… is a donor-funded professional development program designed to help classroom teachers elevate their STEM programs through the use of wireless technology. As a part of the ARRL Education & Technology Program, several sessions are conducted each year, and the program continues to grow.Teachers Institute is filled with lectures, hands-on activities, and demonstrations to inspire teachers so they can inspire their students through the use of tools and strategies to introduce basic electronics, radio science, satellite communications, Amateur Radio, radio direction finding (fox hunting), weather science, microcontrollers, and electronic sensors to their students. Teachers are provided with the equipment needed to take wireless technology to their classrooms. If you, or someone you know, would like to support ARRL's mission to elevate STEM programs in schools, click here: DONATE TODAY or contact the ARRL Development Office at (860)594-0291

I understand that “data communications via radio” is a tough concept to teach when radio is a pretty new concept to most teachers. But I do wish ARRL would try to demonstrate that “radio” is capable of modern communications like data and text messaging. One method to do so, since there will undoubtedly be portable radios involved, would be to demonstrate the Ribbit / Rattlegram text messaging app which runs on Android or iPhone and acoustically couples the audio (no cables or hardware audio interface required) into any portable radio using the radio’s speaker / microphone to send and receive data using the phone’s speaker and microphone. Perhaps whoever fills this new position at ARRL will be able to incorporate Ribbit / Rattlegram into the curriculum of the Teacher’s Institute for Wireless Technology.


PyHam Paracon

Martin Cooper KD6YAM:

Paracon is a packet radio terminal for Linux, Mac and Windows. It is focused on simplicity and ease of use, and incorporates the core functionality that most packet users need without trying to include all of the bells and whistles that few would use.

Key features of Paracon include:

  • Multiple simultaneous AX.25 connected mode sessions, allowing for connections to multiple BBS or other remote nodes.

  • Unproto (UI, or datagram) AX.25 mode, allowing for keyboard-to-keyboard chat or other non-connected uses.

  • Text-based console application looks and behaves the same on all supported platforms (Linux, Mac, Windows).

  • Uses the AGWPE protocol to communicate with any server implementing that protocol. Tested and supported with Direwolf, ldsped and AGWPE.

  • Self-contained executable requires only a Python installation to run, without the need to install any additional dependencies.

As interesting as Paracon is, I actually became more interested in the parent (?) project of Paracon, PyHam:

PyHam is a collection of applications and software libraries for ham radio enthusiasts, written in Python.

The applications are intended to address real-world use cases for the ham while keeping complexity to a minimum and focusing on ease of use. By avoiding the lure of trying to be all things to all people, PyHam applications target the majority of users at the possible expense of those few who may desire additional capabilities.

The libraries are written in pure Python, and each focus on a particular technology with the goal of making that technology easier to work with than it otherwise would be. PyHam applications are themselves built upon these libraries.

PyHam software has been developed with a primary focus on Direwolf as a platform, since it is the dominant software TNC in use today. However, where appropriate, the software has also been tested against other platforms such as ldsped and AGWPE.

PyHam applications include:

  • Paracon (described above)

  • Libraries - Python packages that can be installed from PyPI, the Python Package Index, using pip.

  • PyHam_AX25 - Modules for working with AX.25 packets in an amateur packet radio environment on all platforms. Includes support for NET/ROM routing table updates, and also facilities for working with the Linux native AX.25 stack.

  • PyHam_KISS - A client implementation of the KISS TNC protocol, providing send and receive capability via a TCP/IP connection.

  • PyHam_PE - A full Packet Engine client library for the AGWPE protocol, enabling and simplifying the creation of connected-mode and unconnected applications that communicate through servers such as Direwolf or ldsped.

These would seem to be ideal “building blocks” for future Amateur Radio data communications modes. From my limited understanding, these modules offer a “template” for how to create “modules” when implementing other or new data modes used in Amateur Radio using a modern software framework.

My thanks to Chris Lance WW2BSA for mentioning this interesting development on the EastNetPacket mailing list.


Using AREDN Cross Links

Tim Wilkinson KN6PLV:

A cross-link allows you to pass AREDN traffic across non-AREDN network links.

Comparison with tunnels

Tunnels and cross-links both connect two nodes together, so they are the same in that respect. However, they do it in very different ways.

Tunnels are a simple to use, all in one feature, which operates over your regular Internet to connect two AREDN nodes. There is a bit of configuration information to exchange, but it is all fairly easy to set up. Tunnels only work over your WAN connection, you use the IP address given by the server, and there is very little else to configure.

Cross-links, on the other hand, are much more basic and flexible. The configuration lets you choose IP addresses yourself, as well as setting a VLAN and port on which xlink traffic leaves the device. The IP addresses let the system route the data (OLSR works at layer 3 so every interface needs an IP address), but unlike the tunnel you can set these addresses any way you desire. You choose any unused VLAN number yourself, and the port sets how you want the data to be physically sent into or out of the node. How the data is moved to the peer device is not defined in any way, and deliberately so. Maybe you want to connect that port directly to a non-AREDN PtP radio. Maybe you feed it into a switch then use some other tunneling technology to get it where it needs to go. Maybe it is just a bit of Ethernet cable. It is entirely up to you. Personally, I use tunnels to connect nodes over the Internet, but I use xlinks to connect nodes over Point-to-Point radios which are not running AREDN firmware.

I knew that this was a capability of AREDN, and widely used in larger AREDN networks… I just didn’t know the particulars or the terminology, and KN6PLV explains it well in this article.

Apologies that I didn’t record who in the Mid-Island AREDN group (Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada) brought this to my attention.


WSPR to the Wind With a Pi Pico High Altitude Balloon

Richard Baguley in Hackaday:

Image courtesy of Hackaday

They say that if you love something, you should set it free. That doesn’t mean that you should spend any more on it than you have to though, which is why [EngineerGuy314] put together this Raspberry Pi Pico high-altitude balloon tracker that should only set you back about $12 to build.

This simplified package turns a Pico into a tracking beacon — connect a cheap GPS module and solar panel, and the system will transmit the GPS location, system temperature, and other telemetry on the 20-meter band using the Weak Signal Propagation Reporter (WSPR) protocol. Do it right, and you can track your balloon as it goes around the world.

The project is based in part on the work of [Roman Piksayin] in his Pico-WSPR-TX package (which we covered before), which uses the Pico’s outputs to create the transmitted signal directly without needing an external radio. [EngineerGuy314] took this a step further by slowing down the Pico and doing some clever stuff to make it run a bit more reliably directly from the solar panel.

If this project doesn’t get your imagination stirring about what’s possible in Amateur Radio with incredibly powerful, but cheap computing power (again, notice… no… radio…) then please just unsubscribe now from Zero Retries.

This project epitomizes my recently updated email tagline:
Radios are Computers - With Antennas!

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

  • Founding Members who generously support Zero Retries financially:
    Founding Member 0000 - Steven Davidson K3FZT
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Want to Support Zero Retries?

  • The most effective way to support Zero Retries is to simply mention Zero Retries to your co-conspirators that are also interested in knowing more about technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio and encourage them to become a fellow subscriber.

  • One particularly effective method of promoting Zero Retries is to add a mention of Zero Retries to your QRZ page (or other web presence) and include a link:

    https://www.zeroretries.org

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These blogs and newsletters regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

  • Dan Romanchik KB6NU mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Jeff Davis KE9V also mentions “Zero Retries Interesting” topics so regularly on his blog (that I otherwise wouldn’t know about) that I’ve bestowed on him the honorific of Pseudostaffer.

  • Amateur Radio Weekly by Cale Mooth K4HCK is a weekly anthology of links to interesting Amateur Radio stories.

  • Experimental Radio News by Bennet Z. Kobb AK4AV discusses (in detail) Experimental (Part 5) licenses issued by the US FCC. It’s a must-read-now for me!

  • RTL-SDR Blog - Excellent coverage of Software Defined Radio units.

  • TAPR Packet Status Register has been published continuously since 1982.

  • Other Substack Amateur Radio newsletters recommended by Zero Retries.

These YouTube channels regularly feature Zero Retries Interesting content:

Zero Retries is currently using the Substack email publishing platform to publish Zero Retries. It’s particularly suitable for small newsletters as you can get started for no cost.

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Email issues of Zero Retries are “instrumented” by Substack to gather basic statistics about opens, clicking links, etc.

More bits from Steve Stroh N8GNJ:

  • SuperPacket blogDiscussing new generations of Amateur Radio Data Communications — beyond Packet Radio (a precursor to Zero Retries)

  • N8GNJ blogAmateur Radio Station N8GNJ and the mad science experiments at N8GNJ Labs — Bellingham, Washington, USA

Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-04-12

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

Blanket permission is granted for Amateur Radio use of any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for Amateur Radio newsletters and distribution via Amateur Radio such as (but not limited to) Packet Radio Networks, Packet Radio Bulletin Board Systems, Repeater Nets, etc.

In such usage, please provide appropriate authorship credit for the content.

If you’d like to reuse an article in this issue for other uses, just ask.

All excerpts from other authors or organizations, including images, are intended to be fair use. Unless otherwise noted in the article, there are no paid promotional items in any Zero Retries articles.

Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Editor’s Note - G8BPQ Nodes can use a variety of networking options, including “Net/ROM / TheNET” mesh networking as well as conventional connections supported directly in AX.25.

Zero Retries 0146

5 April 2024 at 22:31

Zero Retries is an independent newsletter promoting technological innovation that is occurring in Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio as (literally) a license to experiment with and learn about radio technology. Now in its third year of publication, with 1500+(!!!) 1400+ subscribers.

About Zero Retries

Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Editor

Jack Stroh, Late Night Assistant Editor Emeritus

In this issue:

Request To Send

Commentary by Editor Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Zero Retries Hits 1500 Subscribers!

Honestly, folks… when I began publishing Zero Retries in July 2021, I had no idea that my quirky little newsletter about a niche, of a niche, of a niche1 would become this popular.

For the benefit of newer subscribers, Zero Retries was begun solely out of frustration that despite so much technological innovation occurring in Amateur Radio, there was no one place to know about it / read about it. Such stories were only mentioned very occasionally in the “mainstream” Amateur Radio media. Eventually that frustration boiled over into publishing Zero Retries. At that time, I could imagine that Zero Retries might, conceivably achieve 500 subscribers - that would have been fantastic. 1000 subscribers was “oh… my…”.

And, now, 1500 subscribers?!?! Really, I had not imagined that milestone. In addition to email subscribers, I also have a small following on Substack (via the Substack app) and readers from my notifications of new issues of Zero Retries on Mastodon (@n8gnj@mastodon.radio) and Bluesky (@n8gnj.bsky.social).

This latest surge in subscribers was, in large part, to a very nice mention by Mark Herbert G1LRO - see the first story in this issue. Thanks G1LRO!

My sincere thanks to all the Founding Members and Paid Subscribers who are helping keep Zero Retries going by offsetting some of the expenses incurred with Zero Retries. I plan to publish mention of all financial contributors annually on the (July) anniversary issue.


Major Conference Countdowns

See other events at the Zero Retries Guide to Zero Retries Interesting Conferences.


Sometimes Zero Retries Practically Writes Itself

This is one of those rare weeks that at the beginning of the week, I already know the major themes of the upcoming issue of Zero Retries. Significant developments happened throughout the weekend immediately following Zero Retries 0145, and the challenge is in capturing it all to report out here in Zero Retries.

For this issue… Zero Retries probably wrote itself too much. I have no idea what Substack is going to do with an issue this large. Substack’s new “statistics state this issue is 9703 words, 481 sentences, and “reading time - About 45 minutes”. I previously worried about that problem and once published a long issue of Zero Retries in three simulatenous parts, but that ultimately proved to be a bit too painful to manage. So, I’m going to just let fly with this way-too-big-for-an-email-newsletter Zero Retries 0146… and we’ll see how it goes.


DLARC Box 24 - Away!

This past week I packed up and shipped my 24th box of paper media relating to Amateur Radio and Communications to be digitized and made available in Internet Archive’s Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications (DLARC). I’m very proud to participate in DLARC and contribute unique material into DLARC that’s never been available online and publicly accessible. Box 24 included:

  • Issues of the original Zero Retries, the newsletter of the Northwest Amateur Packet Radio Association (NAPRA),

  • Orbit Magazine issues 1 - 18 (except, somehow, Issue 10),

  • Various Amateur Radio books2 I purchased inexpensively at a recent electronics flea market,

  • Manuals and sales material about a major manufacturer’s packet radio products from the 1980s.

Seriously folks… look around your shack at the paper (and electronic) media that you’ve accumulated and imagine its value to future (and present) generations of Amateur Radio Operators… and its likely demise at the recycler’s if you don’t make provisions for it now, while you can. If you’re so inclined to contribute to DLARC, contact:

Kay Savetz K6KJN
Program Manager, Special Collections
Internet Archive, Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications
kay@archive.org

And, kudos to ARDC for having the vision to fund a large grant 3 to Internet Archive to create DLARC… and gratitude to K6KJN for stepping up to manage DLARC (it’s a lot of work).


Excitement About Amateur Radio Technological Innovation

I mean no disrespect to anyone for their opinions… but from my perspective (albeit being occasionally privy to some exciting, but private info)…

If you aren’t excited about the potential of Amateur Radio in the next few years… you’re just not looking at the same end of the “telescope” that I’m looking at.

In 2024 and beyond, Amateur Radio has better tools, more opportunities, and more talent and collaboration coming into it than ever before. If all you’re seeing in Amateur Radio is the same old, same old… and “inevitable decline”, you’re simply not looking in the right places. There’s so much going on in Amateur Radio and adjacent to Amateur Radio that I can’t keep up at times to report out all of what’s going on in technological innovation in Amateur Radio.

I’m a bit silo’d off in this corner of the world, writing Zero Retries and working on various projects in N8GNJ Labs. To keep up my personal enthusiasm for Amateur Radio, it’s become apparent that I gotta get out more and mingle with the co-conspirators of technological innovation in Amateur Radio. Home Power magazine used a great phrase to describe such folks - Them That’s Doing.

Part of that is to go where such folks gather, and yes, that’s on me to get myself there. Though I’m unable to attend Hamvention 2024, I’ll be attending SEA-PAC (Seaside, Oregon, USA) in June and Pacificon (San Ramon, California, USA) in October. I also hope to “go North” a bit and perhaps mingle with some of the folks at various Vancouver, British Columbia Amateur Radio Clubs (especially Surrey Amateur Radio, which is the parent organization of the amazing newsletterzine The Communicator).

But another part of having more interactions with co-conspirators in technological innovation in Amateur Radio is to create online opportunities specific to Zero Retries Interesting subject matter. To that end, within the next few months I’m going to start a series of Zero Retries videoconference meetings specifically to discuss Zero Retries Interesting topics. For example, I’m a big fan of Radio Amateur Training Planning and Activities Committee (RATPAC) - they do a great job, and some of their presentations are quite Zero Retries Interesting.

One unique aspect of the Zero Retries videoconferences will be that with Zero Retries, I can follow up presentations with written material, beyond what RATPAC (or most other Amateur Radio videos) do with posting videos and slide decks. With 1500 potential attendees from the Zero Retries subscriber list, that would be a bit overwhelming, so I’m going to have to figure out a way to keep it manageable - To Be Determined.


In The Meantime…

  • There are a few mostly sunny days in the weather oracle’s (app) forecast for this coming week that I’m looking forward to.

  • I’m still contemplating next steps about the bent antenna pole. Fixing it will require ladder work that I’m not looking forward to.

  • The Color Computer ephemera still awaits boxing up.

  • I’ll be working on an outline for my talk later this month at LinuxFest Northwest 2024 here in Bellingham, Washington on the subject of Amateur Radio and Linux. The actual presentation will be about Amateur Radio and the Open Source ethos, not just Linux.

  • I’m overdue on a long-deferred project to put a radio on the air with VARA FM; my thanks to a long-waiting co-conspirator for this here in Whatcom County who is ready to test with me. Then, build up a VARA FM demonstration system with two 222 MHz radios, two modems, and two laptops for a planned demonstration later this month.

  • I’ll be spending significant butt-in-chair time spent on my upcoming book The Zero Retries Guide to Amateur Radio in the 21st Century.

  • Zero Retries 0147 is already starting to write itself with a Zero Retries Interesting article contributed and an interesting development already influencing the theme of that issue.

73,

Steve N8GNJ

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Amateur Radio Data Appliance: URC & U-Pi-S

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ and Mark Herbert G1LRO

In Zero Retries 0136 - Reimagining Amateur Radio Part 2 - Data Appliance, I wrote a description of what I through Amateur Radio needed to participate on Amateur Radio data modes was an integrated, clean system that could be stuck in a corner (no need for a “shack” or even a desk) and you accessed it and conducted your Amateur Radio (data) activities via a laptop or tablet or phone from the comfort of your couch or favorite chair. To my delight, Mark Herbert G1LRO read my concept of an Amateur Radio Data Appliance… and then created one!

Image courtesy of Mark Herbert G1LRO

G1LRO teased this same photograph on Facebook on 2024-03-05, but didn’t provide any details, thus I refrained from speculating, and didn’t mention it at that time.

Over the weekend of 2024-03-30 and 31 (somewhere… I can’t find the mention now), G1LRO teased about “the big announcement tomorrow”. Being a fan of G1LRO and his continually expanding the capabilities of the URC, I made a point of checking out G1LRO’s website first thing Monday morning, and wow

Here G1LRO’s blog post, verbatim:

Amateur Radio Data Appliance: URC & U-Pi-S:

Currently under development on the G1LRO workbench is the U-Pi-S. This unit is a companion to the Universal Radio Controller (URC) that provides key elements to create the full specification of the Amateur Radio Data Appliance.

In this article by Steve Stroh N8GNJ, Steve sets out the functionality required to create the Amateur Radio Data Appliance, being:

  • Power supply

  • Battery backup

  • Radio transceiver

  • Modem

  • Embedded computer with a minimal display for status / health / troubleshooting

  • Networking required to for remote access via “household” network (not Internet)

  • Most of all, cabling to interconnect all of the above

The U-Pi-S is new to the line-up as it contains the power and computing facilities to create a full antonymous Amateur Radio Data Appliance.

Inside the U-Pi-S is a 12V 15W UPS with 5V power management to operate the integrated Raspberry Pi Zero-W processor. The new Pi-Zero provides ample horsepower to drive most current Ham software, and also has a small LCD screen with control buttons to display and manage system information.

On the rear panel is a high-power 5V output (1.5A) via USB to power the transceiver module, and a separate data USB connection from the Raspberry Pi to connect to the URC main functions. Additionally a 12V UPS-protected output is present to drive low-power equipment.

Inside the U-Pi-S are the main power and computing components to support a stand-alone digital micro-station

Using the upcoming URC transceiver module, a complete stand alone system can be made for uses such as APRs digipeater, simplex repeater, packet node, Allstar Node etc.

The unit runs the DigiPi software Ham Radio software suite especially well, and you’ll find specific articles are making DigiPi run on the URC on this site. Of course you can run virtually any ham radio software written for the Raspberry Pi on the U-Pi-S and URC, DigiPi is just one example.

In Steve’s article he proposes: “With the Data Appliance I’m imagining, add an antenna that’s appropriate for the individual user’s situation, and the new Amateur Radio Operator can operate Amateur Radio data modes within their apartment, condo, or home with a minimum of hassle. Sit down at the kitchen table, or the couch, with their laptop, tablet, or phone when it’s convenient. The Data Appliance is tucked out of the way in a corner, perhaps even on an apartment or condo balcony with a small solar panel and antenna.”

The mission for this unit is to have the URC with Transceiver and UPS providing some foundation for how Amateur Radio could be re imagined / re conceptualized to be more relevant to younger techies in the 2020s.

Please subscribe to the Zero Retries newsletter for valuable updates on the world of digital amateur radio https://www.zeroretries.org.

To be clear,

  • All credit for this newest unit goes to G1LRO - it’s entirely his creation. I had no idea this unit existed (I didn’t collaborate on this project) until his unveiling of it on 2024-04-01.

  • This is not an April Fool’s Day prank (G1LRO was asked that on a Facebook comment, and he said No, it’s real).

G1LRO had a bit of a head start on the Data Appliance concept as I explained in the original article when I mentioned the Universal Radio Controller V2 as a partial implementation of the Data Appliance concept:

But, with the addition of the (in development) VHF/UHF Transceiver Personality Board

… the URC V2 takes a giant leap towards becoming a Data Appliance, albeit at 2 watts transmit power. There is some assembly required by the user (as I read the article) that requires the user to install either a VHF or UHF radio module, and some other components. Commendably, the URC V2 information is available as open source.

It was a masterstroke of G1LRO to incorporate a DigiPi (also mentioned in my original article) as part of his implementation of a Data Appliance.

G1LRO’s URC transceiver module (previously referred to as the VHF/UHF Transceiver Personality Board) is apparently still in development, so all of the elements of a URC Data Appliance aren’t quite ready for sale, but with this development, it appears imminent!

I’m grateful to G1LRO for giving form to my concept of an Amateur Radio Data Appliance. I can’t wait to get one in N8GNJ Labs and put it on the air.

YouTube Overview of Universal Radio Controller

Also on 2024-04-01 (coincidentally, I think), Matthew Miller M0DQW published an overview of the Universal Radio Controller (but not the UPS & Compute Module unveiled today) on his Tech Minds YouTube channel.

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Connect Systems Unveils Planned Radios With M17 as a Standard Feature

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Portions excerpted from Connect Systems, Inc. website and email are reproduced here in Zero Retries with permission of Jerry Wanger KK6LFS of Connect Systems, Inc.

Disclaimer - I have no pecuniary interest in Connect Systems, Inc. or these new radios. My sole interest is that these new radios are Zero Retries Interesting, and thus I’m sharing information about them here in Zero Retries.

This is an exciting development in the evolution of the M17 Project. To be clear, these new Connect Systems units are not the first radios that implement M17. The M17 OpenHT (portable, still in development) implements M17, and OpenRTX has developed modifications for several radios to implement M17.

The “claim to fame” of these units from Connect Systems, Inc. is that they will almost certainly be4 the first to implement M17 as a native capability, available off the shelf, ready to run M17.

In Zero Retries 0133 - Connect Systems CS800D PLUS - Next Generation, the primary discussion was about the development of the (mobile) CS800D PLUS radio. The article emphasized the tight relationship that Jerry Wanger KK6LFS has developed with an Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) in China. That tight relationship was key in being able to develop the unique feature set of the CS800D PLUS.

At the end of the article, I said:

Editor’s Postscript - After I received the original email, I talked briefly with KK6LFS and suggested that adding M17 as a “native” mode of the CS800D PLUS would be a unique selling point as the first Amateur Radio that supports M17 out of the box. KK6LFS agreed that the CS8000D PLUS was likely (ultimately) capable of doing so, but there are a number of issues to be addressed before M17 could be implemented.

In a followup exchange of emails, I provided KK6LFS with some pointers to the M17 Project and pointers to the work that OpenRTX had done in adapting some portable radios to operate M17. As we ended the exchange, KK6LFS seemed somewhat interested in M17, but was non-committal.

At least, non-committal until this comment on Zero Retries 0145:

Hi Steve,

We will soon have a two commercial radios with M17. We currently are calling them CS7000 M17 and CS7000 M17 PLUS. I will probably generate a blog about the radios in the near future and you are welcome to reproduce it in its entirety or part of it. You can go to www.csi-radios.com to look what is put on the website.

It is being implemented by one of the key developers of the M17 project. It is being financed by Connect Systems Inc.

Best Regards,

Jerry

CSI’s Primer on M17 and its New M17 Radios

This was posted to the Connect Systems, Inc. mailing list by Jerry Wanger KK6LFS to discuss the “bigger picture” of implementing M17.

What should you know about M17?

The M17 is a radio technology developed using open source hardware, software, and offer a complete digital radio protocol for data and voice, made by and for amateur radio operators.

The protocol’s voice mode uses the free and open Codec 2 voice encoder. This means there are no patents, no royalties, and no licensing or legal barriers to scratch-building your own radio or modifying one you already own.

This freedom to build, understand and innovate is core to amateur radio, but has been missing from the commercially available digital voice modes. This is part of why amateur radio digital voice modes have largely stagnated since the 1990s and we’re almost wholly dependent on commercial products that aren’t well designed for amateur radio users.

M17 is about unlocking the capabilities that amateur radio hardware should already have.

Here you will find people working on radio hardware designs that can be copied and built by anyone, software that anyone has the freedom to modify and share to suite their own needs, and other open systems that respect your freedom to tinker.

(Taken almost verbatim from https://m17project.org/)

What is unique about the CS7000 M17 radio?

This radio will be both DMR compatible and M17 compatible. By having a radio M17 compatible, you now open up the possibilities of quickly flashing other protocols into the radio such as Fusion, DSTAR, NXDN and others.

With other radios, to completely reflash the radio requires you to take apart the radio, short two pins and then turn on the radio to get into a special downloading mode. With this radio you press the top button and turn on the power to get into the special downloading mode.

What is unique about the CS7000 M17 PLUS radio?

Besides all the features of the basic CS7000 M17 radio, this radio will double the amount of code memory, about three times the amount of internal ram memory and run about three times faster.

This will allow the HAM community to advance the state of the art in communication technology and have the first true multi-protocol digital radio.

Connect Systems M17 Radios

We are developing two radios based on an existing radio from our manufacturer. This M17 radio is going to be a modified CS760. To be true to the M17 project, schematics and a parts list will be provided so you can make your own. However, as part of the design, for the CS7000 M17 we will allow you to load at will either the M17 firmware or the DMR software.

If you wanted to make your own radio, the DMR software will require you to spend a few hundred thousand dollars for the AMBE II vocoder firmware, the radio and battery tooling will cost about $80,000 and you will need to find someone to build it for you. The parts are so small in the radio, you need to either go to someone who has the capability to build the radio or solder it yourself under a microscope. Using three-dimensional printing technology, it is possible to build the case and battery holder yourself for a nominal cost thereby saving the $80,000 in tooling cost.

Why buy CS7000 M17 when you can get a cheaper M17 radio?

There are some inexpensive Chinese radios you can modify to do the M17 protocol. If you have the tools and ability to work with small SMD parts you can save a little. With the CS7000 M17 we do it all for you and it is plug and play.

The CS7000 M17 is a much better radio than the cheap Chinese radios. This radio is Part 90 certified, manufactured to commercial standards and has a frequency range of 400-512 MHz. The other radios are typically 400-470 MHz and designed to amateur standards. Many of those radios are not Part 90 certified.

Why should you get the CS7000 M17 PLUS?

The CS7000 M17 PLUS was designed to have multiple protocols in a single radio. The CS7000 M17 can only have a single protocol at a time. The DMR protocol takes between 500,000 and 1,000,000 bytes of code depending on the features you have. The M17 protocol takes about 400,000 bytes of code. There is a lot of overlap between the code that the DMR protocol takes and the M17 takes so in theory the combined will take a lot less than the sum of the two.

The DMR or M17 protocol takes most of the available resources of the computer running at 168,000,000 instructions per second. The CS7000 M17 PLUS microprocessor will run at three times the speed thereby allowing you to develop better algorithms and have more features than you can have with the basic radio.

What can a more powerful M17 radio do?

We can change the modulation from 4FSK to 16FSK. That will allow us to reduce the bandwidth in half. We can change the vocoder to work at half the data rate. This will again reduce the bandwidth by two. With these two features we can have four channels in a bandwidth of 6.25 KHz. If we use the bandwidth of the old analog channel, we can have 16 channels of voice compared to the single channel of voice that we used to have. If we use it for data, we could double the transmission speed.

We can put in an AGC for the voice so the voice level will sound the same no matter how softly the other person is speaking.

I am sure the amateur community will develop other features that will advance the state of the art compared to commercial radios.

What is Connect Systems Role in this project?

We are doing two things. We are paying to have one of the key designers of the original M17 radio implement what was done before in the cheap Chinese radios in the CS7000 M17 and CS7000 M17 PLUS.

We are coordinating and paying the manufacturer of the radio to make the necessary changes to make the CS7000 M17 and CS7000 M17 PLUS radios.

Status of CS7000 M17 Project

  1. Have manufacturer send sample radios to engineer to modify and test.
    Completed

  2. Have engineer pay import duties and receive radio.
    Completed

  3. Determine changes necessary to put in radio.
    Completed

  4. Put changes in radio and test to verify changes work.
    Pending

  5. Modify software from working M17 radio to be compatible with CS7000 M17 radio.
    Pending

  6. Improve performance of radio.
    Pending

  7. Release radio for limited beta testing.
    Pending

  8. Ship to new radios to customers who prepaid.
    Pending

Supporting This Project

We are asking the amateur community to buy in advance one or more of the radios. When the radios are available, you will be the first to get them at a discount from the standard price of the radio. If at anytime you decide you would rather not support this project, you can get your money back and then get in the back of the line for when the radios are released.

CS7000 M17 UHF Radio - Details

Image courtesy of Connect Systems, Inc.

The CS7000 M17 is the first Amateur digital radio designed for the M17 protocol. The user make the radio into either a M17 radio or a standard DMR and Analog radio.

There are a few things that make this radio different than the standard DMR radio.

  1. The ability to easily get in the native boot mode of the microprocessor to unbrick the radio without opening the radio. This is very important when developing new features because of chance in bricking the radio.

  2. Hardware modifications from standard DMR radios to allow it be used with protocols other than DMR and Analog.

  3. Optional GPS.

Although there is not enough memory in this version of the radio to support multiple protocols at the same time, this radio should be able to take the protocols developed for the plus version and be ported to this version of the radio.

Expanded information from the Store page for the CS7000 M17:

This is a radio designed to do the M17 Protocol. For those not familiar with M17, it uses 4FSK modulation with an open source Protocol and Vocoder. This entire methology was designed by the HAM community. At the current time, this radio is not finished. However, if you would like to buy it now, you will get a $50 discount from the regular price and will ship in the sequence we get orders when the radio is finished. We are in effect setting up a "Crowd Funding" page. If at any time before the radio is shipped, you are welcome to cancel the order and you will get a complete refund of the amount you paid. We expect to ship in late May 2024.

This radio includes the following items:

  • Radio

  • Battery

  • Antenna

  • Power Supply

  • Battery Charger

  • Strap

  • Programming Cable

Due to limitations of the the hardware, this radio will only do M17. There is not enough memory in the radio to do more protocols. See CS7000-M17 PLUS for more features.

CS7000 M17 PLUS UHF Radio - Details

Image courtesy of Connect Systems, Inc.

The CS7000 M17 Plus is the first Amateur digital radio that has the ability to have multiple protocols in a single radio. The first version of this radio will have DMR, M17 and Analog protocols.

There are a few things that make this radio different than the standard DMR radio.

  1. Double the program memory to two megabytes that will allow a single radio to have DMR, Analog, M17 and other protocols such as DSTAR, P25 and other protocols.

  2. Triple the RAM memory to 1 megabyte that will allow the radio to overlay large programs that is unique to diferent protocols.

  3. A processor that is three times faster than what is normally used in DMR radios to allow the abilty to develop new algorithms to advance the state of the art of communications and allow the radio to work better than the commercial radios that are currently sold.

  4. The ability to easily get in the native boot mode of the microprocessor to unbrick the radio without opening the radio. This is very important when developing new features because of chance in bricking the radio.

  5. Hardware modifications from standard DMR radios to allow it be used with protocols other than DMR and Analog.

  6. Built in GPS.

  7. Built in BlueTooth

  8. Built in Vibrator

Expanded information from the Store page for the CS7000 M17 Plus:

This is a radio as initially shipped, is designed to do the DMR, Analog and M17 Protocol. For those not familiar with M17, it uses 4FSK modulation with an open source Protocol and Vocoder. This entire methology was designed by the HAM community. At the current time, this radio is not finished. However, if you would like to buy it now, you will get a $50 discount from the regular price and will ship in the sequence we get orders when the radio is finished. We are in effect setting up a "Crowd Funding" page. If at any time before the radio is shipped, you are welcome to cancel the order and you will get a complete refund of the amount you paid. We expect to ship in late August 2024.

This radio includes the following items:

  • Radio

  • Battery

  • Bluetooth

  • GPS

  • Vibrator

  • Antenna

  • Power Supply

  • Battery Charger

  • Strap

  • Programming Cable

This radio is in effect a super CS7000 M17 radio. Compared to the CS7000 M17, the radio is about three times faster, has twice the program memory and at least four times the flash memory used to hold contacts, channels and other parameters.

With this capability, the radio can easily do multiple protocols in the same radio.

(End of Connect Systems material.)

This is a really cool development! M17 is really starting to gain some traction with this privately funded development of portable radios with native M17 capability.

Couple this with the infrastructure for using M17 such as repeaters:

Reasons to be Excited about CSI M17’s Radios

One reason… perhaps a nitpick, but still important, is that with CSI’s M17 radios, Amateur Radio finally has a “plug and play” open source digital radio system that it can promote to those who require a system to be open source before they have any interest or involvement. For example, in DMR, D-Star, and System Fusion, they have been “turned off” by the presence of a proprietary CODEC in the middle of the radio that they had no capability to work around. Although a proprietary CODEC might still be present in these radios, it’s use is optional (required if you want to use the radio for DMR) or bypassed when operating in M17 mode.

Note the excitement discussed in Zero Retries 0145 about the Quansheng’s UV-K5 - The Most Hackable Handheld Ham Radio Yet. From my reading, the UV-K5 is (somewhat) accidentally compatible with hacking… but the CSI CS7000 M17 Plus is truly designed for hacking:

  • 2 MB flash (?) memory for storage

  • 1 MB RAM

  • Fast(er) processor

  • Easy to recover from a bricking when experimenting with software.

  • Built in GPS

  • Built in BlueTooth

I was intrigued with KK6LFS’s description of the potential uses of the CS7000 M17 PLUS’ enhanced capabilities:

We can change the modulation from 4FSK to 16FSK. That will allow us to reduce the bandwidth in half. We can change the vocoder to work at half the data rate. This will again reduce the bandwidth by two. With these two features we can have four channels in a bandwidth of 6.25 KHz. If we use the bandwidth of the old analog channel, we can have 16 channels of voice compared to the single channel of voice that we used to have. If we use it for data, we could double the transmission speed.

One of the unrealized capabilities of current generation portable radios for Amateur Radio is data, especially once radios (especially portables) began to include Bluetooth. In theory, this was a great development for being able to do Amateur Radio data from one’s laptop (or phone or tablet). But the reality quickly became apparent that either the protocols implemented in the radios have fallen short (the slow data of D-Star and the limitation of “photos only” in System Fusion are two examples) or the Bluetooth implementation has been incompatible, etc. With the existing protocols and the Bluetooth… we had no way to fix those once we knew what the issues were5.

That’s no longer the case with the CS7000 M17 PLUS… having its capabilities defined almost entirely in software. Once we figure out something is wrong, we can fix it. And it will probably be just as easy to add new features and fix existing features now that the paradigm for doing so easily has been established with the “easily hackable” Quansheng UV-K5.

Some ideas of mine that the CS7000 M17 PLUS might be capable of:

  • Variable Forward Error Correction (FEC) for voice depending on conditions. For example, the repeater could report back to the radio that it’s at the limit of the current FEC for good voice quality and the radio needs to engage a more robust FEC to maintain good communications.

  • Simultaneous voice and data similar to the way System Fusion can transmit all digital voice at high quality, some digital voice and some data, or all data at higher speed.

  • Support two different modes such as M17 for voice and text, and MMDVM-TNC for higher speed data.

For those that are thinking “M17… just another digital voice mode…” when we already have digital voice modes such as DMR, D-Star, System Fusion, P25, etc., M17 is a new and unique capability in Amateur Radio because:

  • M17 was developed from within Amateur Radio for the unique needs of Amateur Radio.

  • M17 was created from the beginning using Open Source principles - there’s no proprietary interest or encumbrances as there are with previous digital voice systems.

  • M17 doesn’t use / require the use of a proprietary CODEC chip such as all previous implementations of digital voice. M17 uses the open Codec 2 CODEC.

  • M17 isn’t just a digital voice protocol; it’s the entire ecosystem - digital voice, data, the protocol, Internet interoperability, reference hardware implementations, etc.

In short, M17, with its open source ethos, and now a reasonable range of entry points including reasonably priced “buy it and use it” radios such as the CS7000 M17, or even less expensive radios that can be modified for M17, bodes well for experimenters that want to experiment with open source technologies in Amateur Radio.

Kudos to Connect Systems for this development to move M17 forward into mainstream use!

Connect Systems and KK6LFS - Asking to Vote With Your Wallet

Connect Systems is committing its own funds on the speculation that there will be a market for these radios, and it’s asking for a show of confidence for these radios by putting down deposits for radios delivered within 2024. I think that’s a reasonable request and a more efficient way to crowdfund the development costs than using a third party like Kickstarter or GoFundMe.

I’m sufficiently intrigued that I’ll be putting down a deposit on a CS7000 M17 or CS7000 M17 PLUS within the month. I hope I’ll have lots of company to encourage continuing development of these new radios.

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Detailed Plans for Immediate Future of APRS Foundation

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

If this issue of Zero Retries weren’t already overflowing (for a emailed newsletter), I would reprint this email from APRS Foundation in its entirety. But that’s not possible in this issue, and this new information about APRS Foundation is timely, thus I’ll defer to the original post for the detail of the help that APRS Foundation is requesting.

It’s still puzzling to me that this type of fundamental information is available solely on ephemeral mailing lists instead of being prominently posted on APRSF’s website… but one of the things they’re asking for help is with the website, so maybe, eventually they’ll do so.

Jeff Hochberg - W4JEW, APRS Foundation President, on the two APRS mailing lists:

APRS Foundation Inc. - Opportunities; Great! Now What?

The APRS Foundation intends to build a solid foundation for APRS to build upon - no pun intended. You have to admit…that was a little “punny.” I couldn’t resist! :-)

We can head in countless directions, but much cleanup must be done to establish a baseline.

A mix of technical and non-technical work needs to be done. Some won’t be fun, but it’s a necessity and will be rewarding! It’s long and daunting, but please read through the opportunities to find a place where your skills can help.

  • Define Use Cases

    • Opportunity - Start APRS Use Cases Thread

  • Rebranding

    • Opportunities - Rebranding

  • Website

    • Opportunities - Web Design & Content Review (Multiple opportunities)

  • Webmaster

    • Opportunities - Webmaster (1 to 2 opportunities available)

  • Documentation

    • Opportunities - Documentation Editor (4 to 6 positions available)

  • Project Management

    • Opportunities - Project Manager (# based on demand)

Please email info@aprsfoundation.org if you are interested in helping manage the aforementioned projects and/or any future projects.

Volunteer Work - Not Employment

While APRS Foundation Inc. is a non-profit organization, please do not perceive these opportunities as an offer of employment. John, Lynn, John, Jason, and I are board members, but we do so on a voluntary basis and are not compensated in any way.

The work we are requesting assistance with is on a volunteer basis only.

Keep in mind that we are all working towards Ensuring the Future of APRS! There is no better way to give back to the global amateur radio community than through work of this nature! It’s extremely important, and the rewards are that you get to say you worked on it!

A Lot To Do

As you can see, there’s a lot to do. We're looking for a few good hams!!! We are just getting started! But we cannot do this without YOU!

To make this point abundantly clear, our door is open to any licensed amateur radio operator worldwide interested in contributing to the effort! If one of the areas above strikes a chord with you, please join the conversation and come along for the ride!

Please be patient—we may take a week or two to reply, but I assure you we will!

Thank you for taking the time to read this message. We look forward to working with you!

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ZR > BEACON

By Steve Stroh N8GNJ

Short mentions of Zero Retries Interesting items.

AMSAT-DL - The next generation of a GEO/MEO amateur radio payload?

Here is the proposal for an AMSAT-DL geostationary microwave amateur radio payload, written by the authors Kai Siebels DH0SK and Matthias Bopp DD1US. The proposal takes into account the technical requirements and needs of radio amateurs. Various aspects such as orbit, satellite and platform as well as payload are taken into account.

Among the possible orbits such as MEO, HEO and GEO, the GEO orbit has proven to be the most suitable due to the extensive experience with OSCAR-100. A good compromise for the orbit position would be at ~43 degrees West to also support Eastern European countries and most of North America.

A payload for amateur radio should allow the greatest possible scope for experiments on different bands. Six bands could be used for the uplink to enable experiments with different frequencies. The main uplink band is the 13 cm band, the main downlink band is the 3 cm band. All proposed band / NB transponder combinations can be implemented at the ground station with very reasonable effort.

A dedicated AMSAT (Amateur Radio) mission based on an ESA-supported Micro GEO provides opportunities for several additional experiments that support AMSAT’s education, science and development goals to inspire young people with amateur radio technology. Finally, such a mission could also provide an excellent platform for disaster/emergency communications directly via the GEO satellite transponders.

The link in the first paragraph is a 31 page presentation (PDF) with an amazing amount of detail about potential options for another Amateur Radio geosynchronous satellite, which would include coverage for much of North America (Canada).


Amateur Radio Television Repeaters Using an Optical (Laser) Link

In Issue 158 of the Boulder Amateur Television Club TV Reporter’s REPEATER newsletter, Editor Jim Andrews KH6HTV mentioned this Zero Retries Interesting information:

SAN DIEGO ATV NEWS: Mario, KD6ILO, has recently sent us several e-mail up-dates on their on-going project to use light transmitters in place of microwave transmitters to link up their several sites. I will try to summarize what they are doing here.

Mario reports that they are doing over the air tests of their new optical ATV link transmitter over a 3 mile path between a couple of the group's sites in southern California, San Diego area. The laser transmitter is operating on 1.55μm {1550nm}. They are using 600 mW of power. An EDFA laser light amplifier is used as a pre-amp for the optical receiver. Pointing their extremely narrow laser beam is tricky. They use a beacon beam to find its mark, acquiring and keep a lock once established to send test signal.

Their plans are that these will be used for back-bone links to replace their current RF links for optimum deployment and handling very high data traffic which RF can't. They are calling their system FSOC, short for Free Space Optical Communications. This project is costing their group $120,000. EDFA amplifiers do not come cheap ! Sounds like they found some "deep pockets" somewhere!

Laser links?!?!?! Who can’t get excited about laser links?


FreeDATA Improvements in Progress

David’s FreeDV Update – March 2024

FreeDATA Update

Part of our ARDC grant activities is to support the FreeDATA project. Simon and team have recently completed a major re-write and FreeDATA is back on the air. This month I’ve been working with Simon on a faster modem waveform for “ACK” packets, that will help speed up the FreeDATA protocol. I’m also pleased to see FreeDATA working over real HF channels, including this 7 hour 1.44Mbyte file transfer over an 800km path.


Universal Radio Test Instrument (URTI) - Continued Progress

Good progress report on this open source project by Great Scott Gadgets (of HackRF fame)…

to design a single hardware platform capable of serving as many popular types of one-port or two-port RF test instruments. We plan to build a directional coupler into a wideband, full-duplex SDR platform to enable URTI to function as a:

  • Spectrum analyzer

  • Vector network analyzer

  • Vector signal generator

  • Vector signal analyzer

  • Antenna analyzer

  • Power meter

  • Frequency counter

  • Full-duplex SDR transceiver

My thanks to RTL-SDR.com for the pointer to this progress report. This was another great Research & Development project funded by a grant from ARDC.

I look forward to this unit becoming available!


GNU Radio Conference 2024 Call for Participation

GRCon24 will take place in Knoxville, TN from Sept 16-20

GRCon 2024 celebrates and showcases the substantial and remarkable progress of GNU Radio and its usage in a diverse field of applications and industries.

We invite developers and users from across the GNU Radio Community to present your projects, presentations, papers, posters, and problems at GNU Radio Conference 2024. Submit your talks, demos, and code!

Call for Participation Key Dates:

  • March 1 - Open for Abstract Submissions

  • June 17 - Abstract Submissions Close

  • July 12 - (Initial) Main Track Schedule Posted

GNU Radio has a lot of crossover potential with Amateur Radio, and there are always several Amateur Radio related presentations during a GRCon.


What I learned when I replaced my cheap Pi 5 PC with a no-name Amazon mini desktop

Andrew Cunningham on ARS Technica:

Pi 5 is still an odd fit for day-to-day desktop use; cheap mini PCs come closer.

I recently tried to use a Raspberry Pi 5 as a regular desktop PC. The experiment wasn't a failure—I was able to use a Pi to get most of my work done for a few days. But the device's performance, and especially the relative immaturity of the Linux's Arm software ecosystem, meant that there were lots of incompatibilities and rough edges.

One of the problems with trying to use a Pi 5 as a regular desktop computer is that, by the time you've paid for the 8GB version of the board, a decent active cooler and case, and (ideally) some kind of M.2 storage attachment and SSD, you've spent close to a couple of hundred dollars on the system. That's not a ton of money to spend on a desktop PC, but it is enough that the Pi no longer feels miraculously cheap, and there are actually other, more flexible competitors worth considering.

But if you're actually looking for a cheap functional everyday PC and not just a hobby project, these oddball no-name computers do give you a lot for your money. Arm software is on the rise, but in the here and now (and for the foreseeable future), there's simply no substitute for the app compatibility of an x86 processor, whether you're trying to run the same Linux distros you run on the Pi or you want to run Windows 10 or 11.

In my reading, I’ve seen a number of folks come to the same conclusion. If you’re looking for a reasonable, but cheap “desktop” experience, then the mini PCs with Intel processors are probably a better value versus a fully fleshed out a Raspberry Pi 5 board with fan, solid state drive, etc. Many of them can also be run directly on 12 volts. The article explains how to pick mini PCs with current Intel processors that provide reasonable performance despite the low price.

I remain a fan of Raspberry Pi computers for the ability to create dedicated appliances for various tasks with the RPi as a compute core, but with the RPi5’s requirement of a fan… (versus a fan being optional, with a decent heatsink on the RPi4) is problematic. It may be that the RPi5’s real potential will only be realized in follow-on products such as a “Raspberry Pi 500” or a Raspberry Pi 5 compute module.


TACNPR - Another Independent Implementation of New Packet Radio

On Mastodon, I received this note from Mastodon user “ftg”:

In NPR-70 news.

There is also TACNPR from Finland, which is a firmware compatible reimplementation of the NPR-70 radio.

https://github.com/partio-scout/scoms-tacnpr

12-28V input, 10-15W RF (20 Watt Transmit Power)

On that site, there is both the CAD view (mockup) of the board, and what certainly looks like a completed board (at least the top side - the power amplifier brick is probably mounted on the bottom of the board).

I had not previously heard of this project, and doing a brief web search, found this informative slide deck - SCOMS TACNPR project which provides background on this project:

  • We wanted more integrated hardware than the original (+integrated PA)

  • Finnish Scouts organization was seeking a reliable telemetry solution for a big

  • scout camp

  • Scoms* team (Scout Monitoring System) had some ideas and synergy with their earlier projects

  • Personally, I wanted to learn KiCAD (switched from EAGLE)

Technical guidelines

  • Must: Binary compatibility with the original design (exactly the same CPU)

  • W5500 (SPI ethernet) and RJ45 jack integrated

    • This decision was changed later on: module, to save space on board

  • RF PA would be Motorola MHW720A hybrid (20W out)

    • Well-known from RD5* Mobiras

  • PSU: Buck converter design from an earlier Scoms project

    • 2 converters in parallel to generate enough amps at 12V, third one to step down 12→3V8 for logic

  • KiCAD will be used, prototypes using JLCPCB PCBA (assembly) service

  • Targetting 100mm x 100mm board size

  • SRAM option included, but no support for FDD mode

  • SMD LEDs where they happen to be

  • Same license as the original work (TAPR OHL)

The big benefit of this unit is that they chose a power amplifier module capable of 20 watts! That power level will help out a lot on a transmission with a 1 MHz channel size.

This is a cool project, but in a web search I wasn’t able to find any more details such as if these units were ever put into use or built up other than as a prototype. The last update on the Github page was in mid-2023. I hope this project has continued!

If you want to get going on New Packet Radio in 2024 (100 kbps - 1 Mbps, 420-450 MHz, 7 watts, native TCP/IP with an Ethernet interface), I recommend the New Packet Radio Modem Version 2, NPR-H 2.0. It’s assembled and tested (need to add an enclosure), and available immediately.


A Smattering of Amateur Radio Technology Societies

A delightful discovery from the above was Radio Amateur Technology Society in Finland – RATS / OH2NXX

Which prompted me to do a “quick” web search which led to:

Sadly, Amateur Radio Technical Society (ARTS) in Des Moines, Iowa, USA and the storied Radio Amateur Telecommunications Society (RATS) in Northern New Jersey, USA seem to have died more than a decade ago judging by their websites being offline and the lack of updates to ARRL.


The Wi-Fi Only Works When it's Raining

Finally, this is an amusing, claimed-to-be-true story (despite being published on 2024-04-01) that illustrates nicely the line-of-sight issues with outdoor, long distance microwave communications.

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Updata

Followup / additions / corrections on stories in recent issues of Zero Retries.

More on IPv6 in Amateur Radio - Previous Discussions

I’ve discussed the potential use of IPv6 in Amateur Radio several times previously in Zero Retries, most extensively in Zero Retries 0127 - More Thoughts on IPv6 - No “44Net” within IPv6. Apparently I’m late to the exploration of this topic - my bad for not doing a web search prior to writing that article. There’s some significant previous work:

More Details on Quansheng UV-K5 Hacking

Re: Zero Retries 0145 - The Most Hackable Handheld Ham Radio Yet

Mastodon user “ftg” contributed this:

Amusingly that IEEE article is over 6 months out of date about the current state of UV-K5 hacking.

We have had FOSS firmware for over half a year now.

DualTachyon developed a FOSS firmware under Apache 2.0 for the UV-K5 with 1:1 feature parity with the factory firmware.
https://github.com/DualTachyon/uv-k5-firmware

And others than took off from there.

Best central location for UV-K5 info is the wiki maintained by Ludwich
https://github.com/ludwich66/Quansheng
Correction 2024-04-06 - correct URL follows:
https://github.com/ludwich66/Quansheng_UV-K5_Wiki/wiki

Thus there is a bunch of open (fagci's spectrum, Matoz MCFW, egzumer and oneofeleven for example)

and closed (IJV, uvk5cec by phdlee)

One really exiting recent development is Phil McAllen's hardware reverse engineering and documentation project nearing it's end.

It can get very interesting when people start creating drop-in PCB's with new CPU's and new RF frontends for the UV-K5 later.

The output should be a proper Kicad 7 project.

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Join the Fun on Amateur Radio

If you’re not yet licensed as an Amateur Radio Operator, and would like to join the fun by literally having a license to experiment with radio technology, check out
Join the Fun on Amateur Radio for some pointers.

Zero Retries Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) — In development 2023-02.


Closing the Channel

In its mission to highlight technological innovation in Amateur Radio, promote Amateur Radio to techies as a literal license to experiment with radio technology, and make Amateur Radio more relevant to society in the 2020s and beyond, Zero Retries is published via email and web, and is available to everyone at no cost. Zero Retries is proud not to participate in the Amateur Radio Publishing Industrial Complex, which hides Amateur Radio content behind paywalls.

My ongoing Thanks to:

  • Tina Stroh KD7WSF for, well, everything!

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Thanks for reading!
Steve Stroh N8GNJ / WRPS598 (He / Him / His)
These bits were handcrafted (by a mere human, not an Artificial Intelligence bot) in beautiful Bellingham (The City of Subdued Excitement), Washington, USA, and linked to the Internet via Starlink Satellite Internet Access.

2024-04-05

Blanket permission is granted for TAPR to use any Steve Stroh content in Zero Retries for the TAPR Packet Status Register (PSR) newsletter (I owe them from way back).

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Portions Copyright © 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 by Steven K. Stroh.

1

Technological innovation, the technical aspects of Amateur Radio, and Amateur Radio

2

None of these books contributed to DLARC were published by ARRL. I’ve contributed ARRL books to DLARC, many that are long out of print (and not available from ARRL as print on demand, or digital versions), but they don’t appear in DLARC. When I asked about them, I was told “ARRL has asked us to take them down, and we complied.” I can understand this position regarding titles still available for purchase (including digitally or via print on demand). But absent that case, I really wish ARRL could understand the role of a publisher in the 21st century.

3

Full disclosure - I was on the ARDC Grants Advisory Committee at the time of this grant, and I enthusiastically voted for that grant.

4

The CSI radios aren’t shipping yet, and thus it’s conceivable (but unlikely…) that another manufacturer will ship a radio with native M17 support in the interval between CSI’s announcement and the radios actually shipping. But CSI has a good reputation and many satisfied customers.

5

Yes, current generation radios can be updated via a firmware update, but such updates seem to be very rare, and current commercial vendors are loathe to provide updates that add features, especially when they cannot get additional revenue for such added features.

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