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Saturday, July 11, 2026

ZS1I Mossel Bay DMR Repeater Coverage - Radio Mobile Maps


Image:  Mossel Bay Area (Click on image for larger view.) 

The ZS1I DMR Repeater in Heiderand, Mossel Bay has been running from time to  time since June 2023.  It is permanently on the air from the 1 May 2026 after several hardware and software modifications were done for optimum functioning. Several radio amateurs have provided reports and positive comments with regard to the repeater.  It is quite strange that I never plotted the coverage area using Radio Mobile since June 2023.  I have now plotted the expected coverage area of the repeater.  

Before I publish the images it is important to first publish the repeater- , equipment- , feedline- and antenna information. 

ZS1I Digital Mobile Radio (DMR) Repeater

DMR Repeater Talkgroup 65522:   This repeater is NOT located on a remote mountain site but is situated in the Shack of ZS1I in Heiderand, Mossel Bay. This allows ZS1I to monitor and control the repeater while it is on the air.  
Mossel Bay DMR Repeater Information:

Mode: DMR
Band:  70cm
TX Frequency:  438.262500 Mhz
RX Frequency:  430.662500 Mhz
Radio Mode:  Duplex
Talk Group (TG): 65522
Colour Code: 1
Time Slot:  1 or 2 
RF Power Output: 15 Watt
Logarithmic power level: 41.76 dBm
Antenna EIRP:  46.96 dBm
Antenna:  Diamond X50
Antenna Gain:  7.2 dBi
Antenna Height:  12 Meters
Coax Cable:  RG213 Mil-Spec (West Germany)

This repeater is linked to the ZS1I AllStar Hub Network (Node 49355) (Analog Repeaters / Simplex Link Radio / Echolink / SVXLink / AllStar / South Cape Reflector) via the ZS1I DMR Bridge and Repeater.  

With your system operating at 440 MHz (70cm UHF band) with an EIRP of 46.96 dBm from an antenna height of 12 metres at sea level in Mossel Bay, your real-world coverage will be highly asymmetrical.

Because UHF signals rely almost entirely on line-of-sight propagation and are easily blocked by solid earth, your coverage splits into two completely different zones: vast open coverage over the ocean, and a sharp cutoff to the north caused by the Outeniqua Mountains.

Here is how your 46.96 dBm EIRP system will perform under these specific local conditions:

Line-of-Sight Horizon Limit

The theoretical radio horizon for an antenna 12 metres above sea level is calculated using the standard RF horizon formula:

===================================================================

RADIO HORIZON CALCULATION

===================================================================

Formula:

d = √(17 × h)

Where:

d = Distance to the radio horizon (in kilometres)

h = Antenna height above the ground/sea level (in metres)

-------------------------------------------------------------------

Your Setup Calculation (12-Metre Antenna Height):

d = √(17 × 12)

d = √(204)

d ≈ 14.28 km

Result:

The theoretical radio horizon for your repeater antenna is 14.28 kilometres.

===================================================================

  • To a Handheld Radio (Ground Level): If communicating with a person holding a radio at ground level (approx. 1.5 metres high), their radio horizon is about 5 km. Adding your horizons together means you will have clean, high-clarity Line-of-Sight coverage up to 19–20 km away over the flat ocean surface or open coastal flats towards Hartenbos and Klein Brak River.

2. Terrain Obstacles: The Outeniqua Mountains

To the north of Mossel Bay, the Outeniqua Mountains rise sharply to heights between 800 and over 1,500 metres (such as the Robinson Pass area).

  • The Shadow Effect: At 440 MHz, radio waves behave much like light beams. When your signal hits the massive sandstone slopes of the Outeniquas, the mountains will cast a massive "radio shadow" directly behind them.

  • The Cutoff: Your signal will cleanly illuminate the southern, seaward-facing slopes of the mountains. However, coverage will completely drop off on the northern side of the ridge. You will not be able to reach deeper inland areas like the Little Karoo (Oudtshoorn region) unless you bounce a signal off a mountain-top repeater.

3. Signal Penetration in Town (Urban Factor)

Because your antenna is mounted at 12 metres, it is likely sitting just above or level with standard two-story residential rooftops in Mossel Bay.

  • Structural Losses: 440 MHz UHF is excellent at bouncing between buildings and penetrating walls.

  • Local Range: You can expect highly reliable, punchy coverage throughout the immediate town, even over the hilly terrain of the Cape St. Blaize peninsula. The 46.96 dBm (approx. 50 W) of effective directional power is more than enough to overcome urban attenuation within a 10 to 15 km radius through town structures.

Summary of Estimated Range

  • Over Ocean / Flat Coastline: 20–35 km (Excellent clarity to marine traffic or coastal stations with elevated antennas).

  • Urban Mossel Bay: 10–15 km (Robust signal piercing through local neighborhood obstacles).

  • To the North (Mountains): Up to the ridge line (Signal stops abruptly at the mountain peaks; no coverage in valleys behind them).

     

Images: Courtesy Radio Mobile (Click on images for larger view.)

 Above image:  Mossel Bay wide coverage area

 
 Above image:  Mossel Bay close-up image 1

Above image:  Mossel Bay close-up image 2

Above image: Repeater coverage Albertinia Town.  Bad coverage!!

Above image: Repeater coverage George Area.  Good coverage!!

Above image: Repeater coverage Mossel Bay and Hartenbos Areas.  Good coverage!!

Above image: Repeater coverage West of Mossel Bay / Gouritz River Areas.  Spotted coverage!!


 Above image:  Repeater Coverage - Still Bay, Heidelberg, Riversdale, Albertinia and Herbertsdale.  Bad coverage!!

Friday, July 10, 2026

The decline in Amateur Radio during winter is neutralized by creating activity!!


Who said there is a decline in Amateur Radio during the winter months?  I said so.  Look HERE.

My OM had a saying that if a door is closed into your face, you must always find another door to open and continue with what you are doing and enjoying.  This means do not give up and you will be able to continue also in amateur radio.  So true and this saying I have been following throughout the years.  It allowed me to bounce back in life sometimes even with better results than before.

Well amateur radio activity is up here in the Mossel Bay area as well as parts of South Africa.   Let's look at some of the activity by means of illustrated images:  


Image above:  Connected nodes to the ZS1I HUB in Mossel Bay  (Click on image for larger view.)

Image Above:  Bubble Chart of stations connected to the HUB yesterday afternoon.  (Click on image for larger view.

1.  ZS1I HUB Network Activity:  I will let the images speak for themself.  The HUB is alive and active on a daily basis with stations frequently heard also via all the cross-links and connected nodes and repeaters.  A few overseas stations were also heard on the ZS1I HUB Network.  I do not take any credit for this as the network consists of many participating entities.  Great to hear all the activity taking place.

 Image: Some "useless" information? (Click on image for larger view.)

Image:  Winter playing a role in the decline? (Click on image for larger view.)

2.  ZS1I  Amateur Radio Projects / Activities Blog:  This blog is was created in April 2026 and is already being visited by many viewers on a daily basis.  Hopefully the blog is not only my place were I keep some back-up information but also a medium where young and old can learn something.  I am not a person chasing records or wanting any attention in amateur radio.  I am to old for that nonsense.  The Blog for me is like a amateur radio "diary".  Many article might also be bored and not of interest to others.  None the less thank you to all the visitors for visiting the ZS1I Blog.   I hope to keep up rolling articles out that might be of interest to the general amateur radio community. 


Image:  Brandmeister Hoseline  (Click in image for larger view.) 

3.  DMR Activity still on the increase World Wide!  - Need I say anything about the increase in the use of DMR World Wide and in South Africa?   This is great news for amateur radio operators and the future of digital radio modes.  With the cross-linking of analogue systems to digital systems nobody is left out in the cold even if you only have a analogue HT radio.  At times the ZS1I HUB Network is linked to various DMR Talk Groups which resulted in an increase in activity.  The audio is good and the linked systems work great.  Yesterday operators were heard from Germany, Australia, UK, USA, Japan on Hoseline which was cross linked to the ZS1I DMR Bridge and DMR Repeater in Mossel Bay.  And no it was all country talk groups and not the World Wide Talk Group (91).  Great conversations and activity on DMR.  I do have a few ideas and changes that I would like to make to even better the current cross linked system.   Stay tuned!!

 
 
Image: 40 m WSPR Map South Africa (Click in image for larger view.) 

Image:  Stations that spotted the ZS1I 40m WSPR Beacon recently,  thanks to all.  (Click on image for larger view.)

4.  40m WSPR Activity:  WSPR is a great amateur radio propagation tool.  I am amazed on how propagation changes on the 40m band from time to time.  At one stage only a few stations received the 40m ZS1I WSPR Beacon.  Then all of a sudden there was a increase in spotted stations.  I must admit that I have lots to learn about WSPR.  Sure this will come with time.  In the mean time many thanks to all who regularly spot the Mossel Bay WSPR Beacon.  More interesting developments to come relating to WSPR Beacons in the future. 

5.  ZA-Net Network Activity:  For the past few days I have connected the HUB to the ZA-Net Network up in Gauteng.  At times there were activity even from abroad.  The audio quality was good and the network is working great.  Herewith more information about the network:

ZA-Net Network Web-Site:  Click HERE

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Important change to the ZS1I AllStar HUB in the Mossel Bay Area


In a previous post available HERE I outlay certain changes that were made to the ZS1I HUB Network. 

Once again the need arise to make further changes to the network for the effective working of not only the Mossel Bay Network but also all the other networks that are connected to the ZS1I HUB Network.  Unfortunately this will effect some of our regular users of the  ZS1I HUB Network.  I apologize for any inconvenience but circumstances sometimes force one to make changes in order to better the network or to prevent forthcoming issues and current bad - undesirable practices that will cause unhappiness and worst of all transgressing regulatory statutes and the Amateur Radio Code of Conduct.

Let's get straight to the change:

The Administrator of the ZS1I HUB Network will in future only connect to nodes, repeaters, reflectors etc. if there is no operational or technical issues relating to the connected systems and if there is an interest to do so.  No connections will be made to nodes that demonstrate bad practices and operating procedures by radio amateurs and will those systems be disconnected without any warning or notification.  Once again I do not play policeman or guardian as I explained the reason on many occasions in the past on the old and new Blog.  Now the not connecting will have an effect on all the stations/nodes that regularly connect to the ZS1I HUB Network.  Unfortunately I have to draw the line somewhere as I cannot continue with the issues experienced in the last few weeks / months.

I am not going to mention which nodes/repeaters will be connected and those not connected as your VOIP application dashboard will provide you with that information.  Does this mean that when my favorite node / network is not connected that they transgressed in some way or the other.  NO not at all.  There might be many reasons and I will not speculate on this.  Furthermore the administrator of the ZS1I HUB Network can only monitor so many nodes / repeaters and networks.

Does this now mean that I will be left in the cold?  Not at all.  I am currently busy with many new features for the ZS1I HUB Network as already mentioned briefly in previous articles but there are many more in the pipeline.  One new and popular feature is the cross linking of the weekly DMR-ZA Net to various modes, nodes and repeaters.  More information on this available HERE.

"I cannot access my favorite Net / Bulletin anymore after you stopped connecting to certain nodes / stations!  What now?"   Do not despair.  Your Net Controller is welcome to connect to the ZS1I HUB Network if he so wish permitting there is no other traffic on the network at the time.  Alternatively you can connect directly to the club's / group's node of the Net you want to listen or talk to.  You connect to the specific node of the club / group via AllStar / Echolink / DMR etc., bypassing the ZS1I HUB Network Node.  That way you will not be left in the cold.  

All radio amateur are welcome to use the ZS1I HUB Network as long as they adhere to a few general "rules".  This is the standard practice in all large networks as to ensure orderly operations.   For those not familiar with the "rules - guidelines" a copy is available HERE.  I am sure you will agree that these few lines are really not there to "play policeman" but rather a guideline to good practical operating procedures when using any amateur radio network.

The above change will be implemented with immediate effect.

If you have any questions or suggestions you can contact me HERE


#3 - Amateur Radio News and Announcements (7 July 2026)


In this issue of Amateur Radio News and Announcements:

1.  Tune into the DMR-ZA Net this evening at 19h30 SAST

Herewith a list of different equipment / apps and images that cross transmit / receive the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening. (Click on images for larger view.)

1.  ZS1I 49355 AllStar Hub Network which incorporates Echolink. (ZS1I-R)

2.  DMR / DVSwitch /AllStar Bridge (TG 65522)

3.  ZS1I MMDVM Digital Repeater (TG 65522)

4.  145.550 Mhz Analogue Simplex RF Link Mossel Bay area.

5.  DroidStar / VoxDMR Applications for DMR  TG655

6.  ASL3 to Mumble Bridge PC (Mumble Client) as well as Mobile Phone (Plumble Client) 

7.  BrandMeister - Hoseline Application (PC or Mobile Phone - Receive only.)

8.  DVSwitch Mobile Application (PC or Mobile Phone)

9.   Many Analog-Repeaters and Links are connected to the ZS1I Hub Network on a daily basis.  Some of these analogue repeaters will be connected to the ZS1I Hub Network on a Tuesday evening and they might also be linked to other repeaters country- and world wide.  So why not link up with your local analogue repeater.  You might just be able to connect to the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening at 19h30 SAST. 

Finally:  There are an abundance of means illustrated above to connect to the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening at 19h30 SAST.  The DMR-ZA Net is an open net and all radio amateurs are welcome to join / connect to the net.  Brian ZS5BR is the net controller and I would like to thank him for professionally conducting the net each Tuesday evening.  Highly appreciated!!  

2.  ET still cannot phone home!!

The article is available HERE for those who did not read it.

Transgressions and bad operating practices are still taking place on a daily basis on many of the amateur radio bands and therefor ET cannot phone home!!  Hi Hi!!  Well this is to be expected if nothing is being done to amicably solve these bad practices.   At least I feel a bit better after writing the article.   I guess the Amateur Radio Code of Conduct is not important to some radio amateurs.  However we are living in a comparatively chaotic world with increasingly less social pressure to act or think a certain way. While that freedom is certainly opening the door for plenty of free thought and fresh perspectives, it can be easy to slip into hypocrisy or self-delusion – imagining we’re one thing when we’re actually another. A code, a set of concrete standards which we can objectively understand and vocalize, not only guides us but convicts us. In a world where there’s often no one but ourselves to keep us accountable, the amateur radio code of conduct serve to keep us on track, or at the very least get us to rethink our most fundamental values.3.


3.   ZS Link Network Group yearly get together.

On 18 July 2026, it is once again time for the yearly get together of the ZS Link Network Group at Blandsdrift, Mossel Bay of Jasper ZS1WT and Natasha (LV) with their two young daughters, Larissa and Linelle.

For more information about the gathering listen on the 145.625 Mhz Aasvoelkop Repeater or visit the 625 WhatsApp Group.

On behalf of myself and the family I would like to  render my apology as I will not be able to attend the ZS Link Group gathering on the day.  This is due to another family responsibility that needs my attention.


4.  AI - The New Amateur Radio Elmer?

Yes, AI is increasingly serving as a modern "Elmer" (the traditional amateur radio term for a mentor). While AI will never replace human connection or the hands-on, practical guidance an experienced Elmers offers, it is revolutionizing the learning curve for both newcomers and veteran operators. 

Why AI Makes a Great Elmer

    • 24/7 Availability: You can ask technical questions about antenna theory, RF gain, or operating procedures at any time without waiting for a club meeting. 

    • Personalized Tutoring: AI can break down difficult concepts in multiple ways based on how you learn best, from long-form explanations to specific code snippets. 

    • Study Assistance: Systems can act as digital tutors, tracking where you struggle on practice for the RAE exams and generating targeted questions to improve your understanding. 

Where Human Elmers Still Win

    • Hands-on Help: AI cannot physically help you solder a connector, tune a beam antenna, or show you exactly how to route coax into your shack. 
    • Real-world Experience: Traditional Elmers provide nuanced, practical advice learned over decades on the air—such as how a specific radio behaves in a pile-up or local club politics. 

More detailed information:

Artificial Intelligence functions as a 24/7 technical co-pilot for amateur radio operators by instantly analyzing complex RF data, generating code for digital modes, and explaining dense radio theory. While human Elmers provide essential hands-on mentorship, AI accelerates self-directed learning and troubleshooting.

How AI Functions as a Digital Elmer

1. Accelerated Technical Troubleshooting

    • Schematic Analysis: Operators upload photos of circuit boards or wiring diagrams to identify faulty components.
    • Error Decoding: AI translates obscure error messages from software-defined radio (SDR) programs or digital mode software.
    • Component Substitution: The system suggests modern alternatives for obsolete transistors, capacitors, or vacuum tubes in vintage gear.

2. Specialized Software and Coding Support

    • Microcontroller Programming: AI generates and debugs C++ code for Arduino or Raspberry Pi projects like antenna tuners and rotators.
    • CHIRP Programming Logs: It formats large CSV files containing frequencies, offsets, and tones for bulk radio programming.
    • Automated Logging Scripts: Systems write custom scripts to parse ADIF (Amateur Data Interchange Format) files for contest logging.

3. Interactive Exam Preparation and Theory

    • Formula Breakdown: AI explains the mathematical relationships behind Ohm's Law, SWR calculations, and decibel conversions.
    • Targeted Quizzing: The system dynamically changes its questioning style based on your weak areas in RAE learning.
    • Visual Concepts: It describes spatial concepts like antenna radiation patterns, ionospheric skip zones, and polarization.

Key Comparisons: AI vs. Human Elmers

Capability

AI Elmer

Human Elmer

Availability

Instant, 24/7 access

Subject to personal schedules

Patience

Unlimited repetitions

Varies by individual

Local Knowledge

General geographic data

Knows local repeater blind spots

Physical Assistance

Cannot handle hardware

Helps solder and climb towers

Safety Validation

High-level rule reminders

Real-time high-voltage monitoring



Critical Limitations and Safety Risks

    • Hallucinated Specifications: AI occasionally invents pinout diagrams or incorrect rig specifications, risking hardware damage.
    • Lack of Safety Feedback: A chatbot cannot see if you are about to touch a charged high-voltage capacitor or improperly ground an amplifier.
    • Regulatory Nuances: AI may misinterpret local band plans, emergency traffic priorities, or specific national amateur regulations.


5.  Does the future of Amateur Radio lie in the GHZ Bands?

The future of amateur radio does not lie exclusively in the GHz bands, but these frequencies represent the fastest-growing frontier for technical innovation and experimentation within the hobby.

While traditional High Frequency (HF) bands (1.8 to 30 MHz) remain the beloved backbone for long-distance, ionospheric "rag-chewing" and DXing, the Super High Frequency (SHF) and Extremely High Frequency (EHF) bands (1 GHz to 300 GHz) are revitalizing the maker and hacker culture of ham radio. 

The role of the GHz bands in shaping the future of amateur radio is defined by specific opportunities and challenges: 

Why the GHz Bands Represent the Future of Innovation

    • Massive Available Bandwidth: Traditional HF bands are narrow and congested. In contrast, the GHz bands offer vast allocations of spectrum. This massive bandwidth allows hams to experiment with high-speed data pipelines, high-definition Digital Amateur Television (DATV), and complex digital mesh networking. 
    • Emergence of Commercial Gear: Historically, operating above 1 GHz required advanced homebrewing or repurposing military surplus gear. The release of commercial, multi-band SHF transceivers—like the Icom IC-905—has drastically lowered the barrier to entry, bringing plug-and-play microwave operation to everyday hams. 
    • High-Speed Mesh Networks: Amateur Radio Emergency Data Networks (AREDN) utilize commercial-off-the-shelf wireless hardware modified to operate on amateur 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz allocations. This allows hams to build independent, high-speed wireless networks for emergency communications, capable of routing video and VoIP data over large geographic areas. 
    • Cutting-Edge Space & EME Communication: Modern amateur satellites and deep-space projects increasingly rely on GHz links. Additionally, Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) or "moonbounce" communications heavily utilize the 10 GHz and 24 GHz bands, where smaller, highly-directional dish antennas can be used. 
    • Millimeter-Wave (mmWave) Experimentation: At the extreme end (47 GHz, 76 GHz, and 122 GHz), hams are adapting low-power automotive radar ICs and telecom components to break distance records, pushing the physical boundaries of atmospheric propagation. 

The Defensive Battle: "Use It or Lose It"

The greatest reason the GHz bands dominate conversations about the future of ham radio is political. Commercial telecommunications, 5G/6G cellular deployment, and satellite mega-constellations are starved for mid-band and millimeter-wave spectrum. 

Amateur radio allocations at 3.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz have already faced regulatory pressures and partial rollbacks by agencies like the FCC to clear room for mobile networks. If the amateur community does not actively populate and experiment in the GHz bands, regulatory bodies will continue to reallocate this incredibly valuable spectrum to commercial interests. 

The Verdict

The future of amateur radio is fracturing into a vibrant dual ecosystem:

    1. The Traditionalists: Will stay on HF, VHF, and UHF for long-range voice, CW (Morse code), and global weak-signal digital modes like FT8. 
    2. The Technologists: Will push into the GHz bands to merge radio frequency (RF) technology with AI, high-speed computing, and advanced networking. 

The GHz bands may not replace HF, but they are absolutely critical to keeping amateur radio relevant, cutting-edge, and legally protected for decades to come. 

6.  Is AllStarLink in Financial Trouble?

 

 

Donate Here https://www.allstarlink.org/about/donate.php

AllStarlink Inc. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. We are funded by the generosity of our community. While donations are not required, we encourage users to donate $1 per month per node (Billed annually) to keep our servers running and bring new features to the community.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Change: Broadcast of Bulletins, Nets, Live Link Connections on the ZS1I AllStar HUB Network which will include National and International Broadcasts


Important:  HERE is the current schedule for Bulletins, Nets and Link Connections.  This schedule will soon change as described below.

Many might not know but I am not a monotonous type of person.  I hate when certain repetitive or stale amateur radio activities, nets, chats etc. takes place year in and year out on the same old trend.  To put it plainly - It is mind-numbing !!  Therefor I enjoy making changes on a regular interval to not lose interest or have to listen to useless information over and over.

I had been thinking and that can be rather dangerous.  Well I came up with a new method of broadcasting amateur radio news content.  I am busy setting up a new server that will be used for broadcasting amateur radio news on demand or at a certain time.  I am still working on some detail to achieve a great outcome using AllStarLink, Echolink and DMR.  This setup will run parallel to the current ZS1I Hub Network which will only be used for Nets and QSO's.   Listeners will be able to connect to the News Server and listen to a wide variety of content which will also include podcasts.  Once I have the server operational a final implementation date will be set.

The change will result in the fact that the Sunday morning bulletin schedule will change dramatically.  I envisage that only the two SARL Bulletins will be transmitted at 08h15 and 08h30 SAST on the ZS1I Hub Network.  NO other bulletin or news broadcasts will be transmitted on the ZS1I Hub Network unless prior approval is granted for such broadcasts.

The idea I have is for operators to connect to the dedicated news server either with AllStar, Echolink or DMR to listen to the provided content.  I will provide and list (index) of content that you can listen to and on what day and time.  A nice feature would be a on demand automated digital stream that will stream content on request, maybe something for the future but for the time being, I will use the scheduled method. 

Why not broadcast Amateur Radio News Bulletins on the ZS1I Hub Network anymore?  It is quite easy to explain.

1.   The rapid system expansion of the ZS1I Hub Network resulted in a heavy workload on the equipment of the ZS1I Hub Network  and the administrators of other networks in South Africa.  The SC Network is currently one of the largest networks in South Africa and carries heavy traffic at times.  Control, supervision and maintenance of the network repeaters, nodes, bridges etc. at all times is of the utmost importance to ensure the smooth functioning of the network.  The network consists of many other local and worldwide stations which is linked to the ZS1I Hub Network.  Administrators have to take the rapid expansion, size and workload on all the system into consideration.

2.  The ZS1I Hub Network is a private operated network and is not affiliated to any club, group or organization. The ZS1I Hub Network owner maintain good relations with all clubs, organizations and fellow radio amateurs,  world wide.   The ZS1I Hub owner therefor has no obligation to any club, group or organization when it comes to the broadcast of local amateur radio news bulletins.  

3.  Many national and international amateur radio news bulletins are nowadays automated.  This means that the ZS1I Hub Network System (computer) automatically downloads the audio file from a web-site, cut it up into time slots and then automatically plays it on the network at given time. This is surely the way to go and does the ZS1I Hub Network make use of this helpful AllStar function.  No compiling, editing and live reading of a bulletin on the air.  The  automation of national and international is the preferred method to transmit amateur radio news bulletins as it works great and does not result in a heavy workload on especially RF systems, equipment on the network and administrators.

4.  Many large VOIP and RF Radio Networks has taken the decision not to broadcast any amateur radio news bulletins on their networks.  There are many reasons for this decision.  Some of these networks literally have 100's of systems including RF Repeaters connected together and it makes sense to not broadcast any club bulletins on such networks as a local club bulletin is meant for that specific club members and not for world wide broadcasting.  The ZS1I Hub  Network has therefor also taken the decision not to broadcast local club bulletins over the large network.

5.  Restructuring of the network.  Yes the dreaded word called restructuring, many hate to hear.  Unfortunately we do not live in the stone age and we as radio amateurs need to stay informed of the latest technology and experimenting.  Future changes to the ZS1I Hub Network will be made and some will love it others will hate it.  Amateur Radio means to regularly engage in the activity, developing skills, experiment, learning new things, and finding enjoyment in the process.  Sometimes we need to restructure the network, if not we will stagnate and not move forward with the times.  

The above surely explain the reasons why I will discontinue the broadcasting of local amateur radio news bulletins on the ZS1I Hub Network and create a free standing Amateur Radio News Server as explained above.

Finally:  As indicated the implementation date and how to use the server will be announced in a future posting when the all New  ZS1I Amateur Radio News Server will be operational.  Until then the current method will be still available. Test transmissions might be heard from time to time on the ZS1I Hub Network.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

Update: What progress is being made with the ZS1I - 6 Meter CW Beacon in the Southern Cape Area?

Well I have been asking this question to myself several times since this project was launched.  The project has not been shelved although due to other "gremlins" in the shack the priority and importance was down-scaled a few times until other breakages were fixed.  I am sure that you will agree with me that the 6m Band in the middle of Winter is fairly dead and the priority is on the low side.  Just to re-cap here is the links to the project for those that might have missed it.

1.  Building Low Budget Antennas - DIY Delta Loop Antenna for the 6 Meter Band ( 50 - 54 Mhz)

2.  Building Low Budget Antennas - DIY Moxon Antenna for the 6 Meter Band (50 Mhz)

3.  The ZS1I - 6 Meter Magic Band Project in the Southern Cape Area of South Africa. (Part 1)

4.  Heads Up - Here comes the Next Generation Amateur Radio Beacon (s) for the Southern Cape!! (Part 2)

5.  Update: Next Generation Amateur Radio Beacon (s) for the Southern Cape!! (Part 3) 

Now when I found the time I worked on the 6 Meter CW Beacon.  I also ordered a few parts that I am waiting for to continue the project.  The image below depict the work done so far on the beacon.  There is not many things left to do, that's if the "gremlins" stay away from the work-bench.

I will keep those interested updated about the project and when the beacon is switched on and on the air.  Updates to follow!


 Image:  ZS1I 6m Meter CW Beacon - work in progress

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

What is happening to Amateur Radio in South Africa and will ET be able to phone home ?


Image:  ET phones home correctly by using good operating procedures  (Click on image for larger view.) 

The title question can be interpreted in two ways.  No need for me to explain.  I am sure that there are many South African Radio Amateurs that love the hobby and some started in the hobby while they were still kids.  On occasion I called the hobby an obsession which is a bit over the top.  But that is how I feel about the best and most versatile hobby in the World.   

However  ......  there are a few things that needs to be rectified or looked at, that is not in line with the Amateur Radio Code of Conduct or that transgress the Radio Act and or Radio Regulations.  I on many occasions have said that I am not a "policeman" and has no authority to take any action to rectify any transgressions.  I can however voice my dissatisfaction about a few transgressions as the amateur radio hobby is / should be a self regulating hobby without the need for the authorities to intervene.  

The incidents / transgressions that I am going to mention here is really damaging the image of the hobby and I am sure that this is not what we want to observe and hear about amateur radio.  Be as it may I need to get the following off my chest:

  • Blatant transgression of call signs on the air  -  Have you heard the following:  "1I good afternoon."  1I is not a call sign.  The correct use of the call sign must be "ZS1I good afternoon".  The abbreviation of a call sign is a transgression of the radio regulations.
  • Another transgression is when an operator calls in as "Tobie from Put-Sonder-Water, good afternoon".  Where is the call sign and who is Tobie ..... a pirate?  Even if you know the voice and the person why does he not provide his call sign when he break into / join a conversation.  At least everybody on the air will from the on-set know who Tobie is!
  • The following example in my opinion is rude and I will not even try to join the conversation.  The following happens on many bands.  Right off the bat is HF.  Two friends are chatting and a third and fourth wants to join but the two operators leave no gap for anybody to join.  They just carry on talking.  Yes I know about conditions etc. but this also happens on the VHF / UHF bands and repeaters.  This is not in line with the Amateur Radio Code of Conduct.
  • Since when is a cellphone call more important than an amateur radio conversation.  Have your heard the following:   "Just stand by I have a phone call."  Half an hour later the receiver of the phone call returns and expect to chat further.   This happens many times.  Switch you phone off or do not join a conversation if you expect a call on the cellphone.  Why can you not later return the cellphone call after you ended the QSO?  I have been left in the cold on many occasions and do not "come back" when the "offender" returns.  In my opinion this is out-rite rude conduct.
  • "Kerchunking ..... Kerchunking!!   Need I say anything more about kerchunking a repeater?  What is so difficult to say "ZS1I testing / monitoring the 145.775 Mhz repeater"?   On several occasions I have heard somebody responding to a Kerchunker,  friendly reminding him to provide a call sign but not providing his own call sign on the air.
  • Amateur Radio has a few musicians on the air as well.  They love to play courtesy, sirens and other tones on the air.  Sir / Madam your tones are a nuisance and serve no purpose at all.  You can still use your DTMF tones by setting it up not to be heard on-air via a node etc.  Nowadays there is no need to hear any tones on the air.  There are other ways to do it correctly.
  • CB slang and jargon!!  I also started off in CB many years ago when CB radio just started to become popular.  Please refrain from using CB slang or jargon in Amateur Radio.   I hear many operators in amateur radio talking the talk of CB.  If you want to use slang or jargon use your CB radio for that purpose.
  • Another irritating practice is when a station is talking or busy to hand over to another station and someone makes a comment over a person or in between rounds without providing his call-sign.   Why can this person not wait until it is his / her time (over) to speak.  This practice in my eyes is causing deliberate interference on the air.  Is this a practice that was used by rogue CB operators?  

I have only mentioned a few irritating transgressions which also contravene the Amateur Radio Code of Conduct.  I am sure that you can think and add more ugly "habits" that is not mentioned in this article.

Ask any older radio amateur that has been a radio amateur for many years and he or she will be able to confirm that this is not the way to operate an amateur radio station.  Yes, some of the older operators are also at fault and I do not point finger to any generation in this regard.

If the above transgressions / ugly trends continues it will damage the image of amateur radio and also chase many away from this wonderful hobby which we cannot afford under any circumstances.  

The South African Radio League Web Site provides value information on Ethics and Operating Procedure for the Radio-Amateur made available by the IARU,  Click  HERE to view.

Good operating procedures should and must always be our first priority in amateur radio otherwise ET will not be able to phone home!  👌😢 

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

#2 - Amateur Radio News and Announcements (30 June 2026)


Reminder:  Do tune into the DMR-ZA Net this evening at 19h30 SAST

Herewith a list of different equipment / apps and images that cross transmit / receive the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening. (Click on images for larger view.)

1.  ZS1I 49355 AllStar Hub Network which incorporates Echolink. (ZS1I-R)

2.  DMR / DVSwitch /AllStar Bridge (TG 65522)

3.  ZS1I MMDVM Digital Repeater (TG 65522)

4.  145.550 Mhz Analogue Simplex RF Link Mossel Bay area.

5.  DroidStar / VoxDMR Applications for DMR  TG655

6.  ASL3 to Mumble Bridge PC (Mumble Client) as well as Mobile Phone (Plumble Client) 

7.  BrandMeister - Hoseline Application (PC or Mobile Phone - Receive only.)

8.  DVSwitch Mobile Application (PC or Mobile Phone)

9.   Many Analog-Repeaters and Links are connected to the ZS1I Hub Network on a daily basis.  Some of these analogue repeaters will be connected to the ZS1I Hub Network on a Tuesday evening and they might also be linked to other repeaters country- and world wide.  So why not link up with your local analogue repeater.  You might just be able to connect to the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening at 19h30 SAST. 

Finally:  There are an abundance of means illustrated above to connect to the DMR-ZA Net on a Tuesday evening at 19h30 SAST.  The DMR-ZA Net is an open net and all radio amateurs are welcome to join / connect to the net.  Brian ZS5BR is the net controller and I would like to thank him for professionally conducting the net each Tuesday evening.  Highly appreciated!! 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

#1 - Amateur Radio News and Announcements (28 June 2026)

1.  First ever Moon-Bounce QSO between Netherlands and South Africa on the 24 Ghz Band

 

"On Sunday 14-06-2026 the first ever 24 GHz EME contact was made with the African continent. John ZS6JON and Hans PE1CKK made a two way contact via the moon. This QSO had a long preparation, John contacted Hans a year ago to find out if Hans had some parts to build a 24GHz setup. Parts are very hard to find in South Africa. Hans had a better solution and shipped his second station to SA together with a small beacon to check the installed setup. After a lot of mail and chatting between the two radio amateurs, John had the system up and running last Sunday. Right at the first TX cycle he had a decode and they achieved the  contact (QSO). The setup will stay for some time in SA to allow John to make more contacts via skeds. Working equipment: 1.8m offset dish, wavelab transverter, RW1127 twt 25W and DU3T lna. "

Congratulations to John and Hans on the first ever QSO between South Africa and the Netherlands on 24 Ghz band. 

2.  Earthquakes in Venezuela prompt request for clear emergency frequency

All radio amateurs are being asked to keep 7.135 MHz in the 40-metre band clear for emergency communications in the wake of back-to-back earthquakes that struck Venezuela on Wednesday 24 June. The two quakes, measured by the US Geological Survey at magnitude 7,2 and 7,5 respectively, occurred just one minute apart and caused extensive damage across the South American country, including the capital city of Caracas. As of Thursday morning, government officials were reporting at least 164 deaths, nearly 1 000 injuries and hundreds of people missing. These tolls are expected to rise as rescue/recovery operations continue. More information in the SARL Hamnet report during Amateur Radio Today at 10:00 CAT. 

3.  SARL Newbie QSO Party Saturday, July 4⋅11:00am – 4:00pm

All the new radio amateurs from the May RAE are invited to participate in the first leg of the SARL Newbie QSO Party from 11:00 to 16:00 UTC on Saturday 4 July. It is a phone only contest on 40 and 20 metres. The exchange is a RS report, your four-character grid square e.g. JF95 and a phonetic letter indicating how long you have been licenced. The QSO scoring also depends on how long you have been licenced. Submit your log sheet by 21:59 UTC on Saturday 18 July to zr3vdk@outlook.com and zr3pa@outlook.com.

More information:  2026 SARL Contest Manual (Pages 60 - 61 PDF) 

4.  40m ZS1I WSPR Beacon show an increase in activity in and around South Africa

 


Great to see so much activity on the 40m WSPR Beacon section of the band.  Quite a few new stations were observed this past week. 


5.  Solar Cycle 25 Expectations in 2026 and beyond - by Carl K9LA

Carl K9LA recently gave a presentation to the Madison DX club about what propagation conditions would be like in 2026.  We are on the way down the peak of the sunspot cycle but there will still be plenty of openings for a while yet.  See video for more information. 

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