In the heart of Russia’s fertile Black Earth region, the Voronezh branch of the Union of Radio Amateurs of Russia (СРР) keeps the ether alive. Operating from a modest headquarters on Gramsci Street, it is a place where decades-old callsigns still crackle with authority, and where the art of radio remains both a pastime and a civic duty.
Leadership Anchored in Experience
At the helm is Boris Ilyich Klimov (UA3QD) — a veteran whose calm authority has guided the branch through the shifting landscape of modern communication. His team blends technical prowess with organisational discipline:
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Igor Lysov (RD3Q), secretary and head of the qualification commission, ensures that newcomers earn their air privileges through rigorous testing.
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Yuri Egorov (RN3OG) runs the QSL Bureau, handling the physical postcards of radio contact in an era where many rely on instant digital logs.
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Igor Burykh (RG3K) oversees the regional collective radio station — the operational heart of large-scale contests.
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Sergey Chakan (R3KW) doubles as the branch’s information officer and the smooth-voiced host of its Wednesday 22:00 MSK “round table” on 3.663 MHz.
A Web of Skills
The council’s ranks include technical troubleshooters, regional representatives from Borisoglebsk, and logistical specialists. Each role reflects a crucial truth: amateur radio here is a network — human as much as it is electromagnetic.
The audit commission and qualification board maintain the club’s professional integrity, ensuring that operators adhere to both technical standards and the unwritten etiquette of the airwaves.
QSL Culture and Open Doors
The QSL Bureau operates like a slow-beating heart, moving paper confirmations of far-flung conversations through its mail slots. Citizens and aspiring operators are welcome on Saturdays from 10:00 to 13:00, when the doors at 73-A Gramsci Street open to those curious about antennas, repeaters, or simply the camaraderie of the shack.
A Legacy that Listens and Transmits
Voronezh’s amateur radio community is neither relic nor novelty. It is a living network — one that transmits local identity as surely as it bounces signals off the ionosphere. Here, the ether is not empty space; it is a shared territory, maintained by voices that know both where they’ve come from and how far they can reach.
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