SB SPCL @ ARL $ARLX010 ARLX010 VHF-UHF Pioneer Paul M. Wilson, W4HHK, SK ZCZC AX10 QST de W1AW Special Bulletin 10 ARLX010 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT December 1, 1999 To all radio amateurs SB SPCL ARL ARLX010 ARLX010 VHF-UHF Pioneer Paul M. Wilson, W4HHK, SK VHF-UHF pioneer Paul Wilson, W4HHK, of Collierville, Tennessee, died November 29. He was 75. A stalwart in the 144-MHz and Microwave Standings, Wilson remained active right up until his health deteriorated earlier this year. In early July, he completed his VUCC on 10 GHz. He celebrated his 75th birthday in September by making his first contact on 24 GHz. ''Paul's life should inspire every amateur to strive to always try something new in Amateur Radio, regardless of age or health,'' said ARRL Vice President Joel Harrison, W5ZN--a friend of Wilson's. ''He has definitely been an example for me.'' Wilson got his ham ticket in 1941 at the age of 16. While still in high school, he began experimenting on the old 2-1/2 meter band (112 MHz). After World War II, he rekindled his interest in VHF and UHF, becoming a major figure on the then-new 2-meter band. During the 1950s, he got involved in meteor scatter propagation. In 1954, W4HHK and Tommy Thomas, W2UK in New Jersey sent and received reports via 2-meter meteor scatter over a 950-mile (1520 km) path--a first! W4HHK and W2UK won the ARRL Technical Merit Award for 1955. Wilson took on the challenge of Earth-Moon-Earth propagation as well, and in 1961 he began work on an 18-foot dish. He was among those making their first 70-cm EME contacts in July 1965. From that frontier, he moved on to attempt 2304 MHz moonbounce, and he won the ARRL Technical Merit Award for 1969 for his work on that band. In 1970, W4HHK and W3GKP claimed a new record--the first 2304-MHz EME contact. In 1972, Wilson used his 18-foot dish to monitor the Apollo X command module on 2.2 GHz as the astronauts orbited the moon. He received a NASA confirmation of his reports in the form of a photograph signed by all the astronauts on the mission. Noted VHF-UHFer Al Ward, W5LUA, called Wilson ''a true VHF pioneer and said he would be missed. ''Paul's signal on 2304 EME was like a beacon station, and his presence will be missed by all who have worked him in the last 29 years off the moon,'' Ward said. Wilson retired in 1980 after 30 years as an engineer for TV station WMC in Memphis. His wife ''DB''--to whom he was married for 54 years--is W4UDQ. His son, Steven, is N4HHK. A staunch League supporter and ARRL Technical Adviser, Wilson was frequently in the pages of QST over the years--both as an author and as a subject. In his December 1999 QST ''It Seems to Us . . .'' editorial, ARRL Executive Vice President David Sumner, K1ZZ, singled out Wilson as an Amateur Radio hero for his pioneering accomplishments. The Central States VHF Society awarded Wilson its Chambers Award in 1986 for ''his continuing technical contributions to UHF, especially EME on 13cm.'' A service will be held December 2 in Collierville. NNNN /EX