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N9PMO > LETTER 06.07.14 23:43l 809 Lines 37694 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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Convention Anticipation Peaking, Thousands Expected to Help
Celebrate League's Centennial
FCC Seeks to Raise Vanity Call Sign Fee to $21.60
ISS Contacts Put Smiles on Field Day Faces
FCC Invokes "Red Light Rule" in Denying K1MAN License Renewal
Application
WRTC-2014 Receives ARRL Foundation Grant, Gets Marconi Boost
W1AW Centennial Operations Now in Wisconsin, Utah
WRTC-2014 Will Offer Online Scoreboard to Track Team Standings
FM Transponder Active as Lituanica SAT-1 CubeSat Enters its Final
Few Weeks in Space
ARRL-Sponsored 600 Meter Experiment Approaches 170,000 Hours of
Operation
Voice of America Makes More Cuts to International Shortwave
Broadcast Schedule
MARS Teams Remember D-Day With a Present-Day Purpose
A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL
In Brief...
The K7RA Solar Update
Just Ahead in Radiosport
Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events
ARRL Headquarters is Closed on Independence Day, July 4
ARRL Headquarters will be closed on Independence Day, Friday, July
4, and there will be no ARRL Audio News, W1AW bulletins or code
practice on those days. ARRL Audio News will return July 11. We
wish everyone a safe and enjoyable Fourth of July holiday!
Convention Anticipation Peaking, Thousands Expected to Help
Celebrate League's Centennial
Some 4000 visitors are expected to be on hand when the ARRL
National Centennial Convention kicks off in in a couple of weeks.
The convention theme, marking the 100th anniversary of the League's
founding, is "Advancing the Art and Science of radio -- Since
1914." ARRL President Kay Craigie, N3KN, will preside at the
official opening ceremony and ribbon cutting on Friday morning at
8:30.
The ARRL National Centennial Convention will take place July 17-19
at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford.
FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate, KK4INZ, will be a featured speaker
at the July 17-19 event at the Connecticut Convention Center in
Hartford. FEMA Chief Technology Officer Ted Okada, K4HNL, also will
be attending the convention.
Visitor have registered from all 50 US states and more than 30
countries. Among the attendees will be official delegations from
Japan, England, Germany, Australia, and elsewhere. In addition,
more than 100 vendors and exhibitors will be in the main Convention
Center exhibit hall. Transportation will be available to shuttle
convention registrants to Newington for tours of ARRL Headquarters
and W1AW.
The Centennial Banquet will take place Friday evening at 6:30. A
Wouff Hong Society induction ceremony will follow at 10 PM in the
ballroom of the downtown Hartford Marriott Hotel, which is attached
to the Convention Center. The Wouff Hong is a legendary implement
that League co-founder Hiram Percy Maxim -- writing under his
pseudonym as "The Old Man" -- devised to "punish" poor operators.
By tradition the ceremony is secret.
President Craigie will host a Presidents Breakfast at 7:30 on
Saturday morning in the Convention Center ballroom. Several past
ARRL presidents are expected to attend. Other notable visitors to
the convention include Nobel Laureate Joe Taylor, K1JT, who will
speak at noon on Saturday.
The convention wraps up Saturday at 4 PM. ARRL CEO David Sumner,
K1ZZ, will officiate at the closing ceremony.
Convention registration remains open! The deadline for all banquet
and meal reservations is Sunday, July 6.
FCC Seeks to Raise Vanity Call Sign Fee to $21.60
The FCC is requesting to raise the Amateur Service vanity call sign
regulatory fee from its current $16.10 to $21.60 for the 10-year
license term. The $5.50 increase would be the largest vanity fee
hike in many years. The proposal is contained in a Notice of
Proposed Rule Making (NPRM), "Assessment and Collection of
Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2014; Assessment and Collection of
Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2013; and Procedures for Assessment
and Collection of Regulatory Fees," which appeared in The Federal
Register on July 3.
The FCC reported there were 11,500 "payment units" in FY 2014. The
Commission said the vanity program generated $230,000 in FY 2013
revenue, and it estimated that it would collect nearly $248,000 in
FY 2014.
Interested parties have 30 days to comment on the NPRM. Changes in
the vanity call sign fee typically take effect in late August or
early September.
ISS Contacts Put Smiles on Field Day Faces
Some lucky -- and happy -- ARRL Field Day participants managed to
snag a contact with NASA Astronaut Reid Wiseman, KF5LKT, operating
from NA1SS on board the International Space Station. Wiseman, who
just came aboard the space station this spring, seemed to have fun
working the pileup.
"Enjoyed ARRL FD 14," Wiseman Tweeted. "I operated from the ESA
Columbus module. So many calls!" Wiseman used NA1SS on the standard
VHF frequencies of 144.49 MHz up and 145.80 MHz down. It's not yet
known how many stations he was able to contact.
NASA Astronauts Reid Wiseman, KF5LKT (above), and Steve Swanson
shaved their heads last week after losing a World Cup bet.
[Courtesy of Reid Wiseman via Twitter]
Bob McCown, N3IYI, reported that the Goddard Amateur Radio Club's
WA3NAN Field Day station in Greenbelt, Maryland, was among those
that succeeded in contacting NA1SS during Field Day on Saturday
afternoon. "The pass was almost over, way to the east over the
Atlantic, so things were no doubt quieting down up there," McCown
told ARISS International Chair Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, and others in a
post-Field Day e-mail. "When I mentioned Goddard, he came back with
'Goddard! That's just down the road from where I grew up! Good to
hear from you.'" Wiseman is from Baltimore.
Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK/VA7EWK, in Arizona also reported working
Wiseman on June 28. "I worked NA1SS as it passed over the western
USA at 1818 UTC for my first ARRL (and AMSAT) Field Day QSO," he
said in an ISS Fan Club forum post. "First time working NA1SS
during Field Day!"
"Me too!!" rejoined Umesh Ghodke, K6VUG, who operated Field Day
from the South Bay Amateur Radio Association (SBARA) KU6S site, He
reported that NA1SS was full quieting in Fremont, California on the
space station's first Field Day pass over the Pacific and the
Midwest Saturday morning.
"It was such an out-of-the-world experience having a voice contact
with Wiseman, surrounded by many club members," Ghodke posted. "Due
to the uncertainty of his possible on-the-air operation, we were
set up for both voice as well as the usual packet. And we were
scanning both frequencies every few seconds. When we started
'hearing voices,' we were so excited that it never occurred us to
make a voice recording. This is a once-in-a-lifetime contact."
Stoddard said Wiseman was having occasional difficulty copying call
signs. "With so many stations calling, and being on FM, that is
understandable," he added. "I could hear times during the two North
American passes where he was picking up a different call each time
he was transmitting. He was going very quickly, knowing the limited
time he had over the continent on each pass." Stoddard said he
heard nothing on the ISS's 70 centimeter frequency, 437.55 MHz.
In Elko, Nevada, Shane Wiggins, NV7SW, was operating as W7V for
Elko Amateur Radio Club's 2014 Field Day operation. He managed to
work NA1SS on one of the less-than-ideal passes. "Late into that
pass I heard Reid come back to my call," Wiggins told ARRL. "There
were many people huddled around my satellite station listening, and
we all went crazy when we heard him come back to me. In particular,
there was a young father and son visiting our Field Day location,
[and] the little boy was jumping around." Wiggins said his only
regret was that he had worked NA1SS with the Field Day station's
W7V call sign and not his own. He said he'd dreamed of working
NA1SS ever since seeing the ISS pass overhead one evening in 2009.
Another Field Day group that was fortunate enough to connect with
the ISS were the Boy Scouts of Raymore, Missouri, Troop 32. "I bet
the boys could be heard up in orbit even without a radio when Reid
answered our call!" Scout Leader Jim Reicher, W0HV, said afterward.
"Thanks to Reid Wiseman, NASA, and ARISS for encouraging him to try
the ham station in the ISS Columbus module during Field Day!"
Stoddard said. Read more.
FCC Invokes "Red Light Rule" in Denying K1MAN License Renewal
Application
The curious Amateur Radio enforcement case of Glenn Baxter, now
ex-K1MAN, of Belgrade Lakes, Maine, may be at an end. The FCC
dismissed Baxter's long-standing license renewal application on
June 23, invoking its "Red Light Rule," which gives the Commission
authority to turn down a pending application if the applicant has
an unpaid fine on the books. His Amateur Extra class license is now
shown as "canceled" in the FCC's Universal Licensing System (ULS).
Baxter was liable for a $10,000 FCC forfeiture stemming from
violations over a period extending back several years.
"Anyone filing an application [who] is found to be delinquent in
debt owed to the FCC and who fails to pay the debt in full or make
other satisfactory arrangements in a timely manner will have their
application dismissed," said the Notice of Dismissal appended to
Baxter's ULS file. "Because you have failed to resolve this matter
timely, your application is hereby dismissed."
The FCC Wireless Telecommunications Bureau dismissed Baxter's 2005
renewal application "without prejudice," which means that if Baxter
wants to be licensed again, he must file a new application -- and
the FCC could again invoke its Red Light Rule. Baxter's license
expired in October 2005, but FCC rules gave him the authority to
continue operating while his renewal application was pending. He
lost that privilege, effective June 23.
"If you are currently operating under authority provided by the
Commission's rules based on your submission of [a renewal]
application, you must immediately cease operation until such time
as you come into compliance with the rules," the dismissal letter
said.
The legal history in the case is extensive. In 2011, the FCC issued
a Hearing Designation Order to determine, among other things, if
Baxter's Amateur Radio license should be renewed. According to the
Order, "Baxter has apparently willfully and repeatedly engaged in
unlawful Commission-related activities, including causing
interference to ongoing communications of other amateur stations,
transmitting communications in which he had a pecuniary interest,
failing to file requested information pursuant to an Enforcement
Bureau directive, engaging in broadcasting without communicating
with any particular station, and failing to exercise control of his
station." Read more.
WRTC-2014 Receives ARRL Foundation Grant, Gets Marconi Boost
World Radiosport Team Championship 2014 (WRTC-2014) will benefit
from an ARRL Foundation grant. WRTC-2014 announced what it called
"a significant financial grant" on June 22. The grant will help to
support WRTC-2014's public relations effort to use the event to
promote Amateur Radio to the general public. An international
competition involving 59 teams of radio contesters, WRTC-2014 will
take place July 8-14, with on-the-air activity taking place July
12-13, concurrent with the IARU HF Championship.
"With competitors coming from around the world, this is the perfect
opportunity to showcase the radiosport aspect of Amateur Radio to
the public," said WRTC-2014 Co-Chair Randy Thompson, K5ZD. Thompson
said the ARRL Foundation grant has enabled WRTC-2014 to retain a
media relations expert to help introduce the event to the media and
to issue news releases in the home markets of US competitors.
The ARRL Foundation was created in 1973 to provide grants
supporting Amateur Radio activities and programs, and currently
awards upward of 80 scholarships per year to young radio amateurs
pursuing higher education.
In another public relations coup, WRTC-2014 Co-Chair Doug Grant,
K1DG, made a historical connection the weekend of June 21-22, when
Princess Elettra Marconi at KM1CC. [Photo courtesy of Doug Grant,
K1DG]
he spoke via ham radio with Princess Elettra Marconi, radio pioneer
Guglielmo Marconi's youngest daughter. She was at the Marconi
Wireless site at Cape Cod National Seashore, where club station
KM1CC had set up a station. During the 40 meter SSB contact,
Princess Elettra told Grant that her father would have been proud
to see that radio amateurs were continuing to advance his work in
wireless communication. She went on to praise the WRTC-2014 event
and its ability to promote international goodwill and operating
skill.
"What an honor, and a thrilling QSO," Grant said afterward. "It was
exciting to bridge history from the very beginning of Amateur Radio
to the many aspects of Amateur Radio that we enjoy today." Grant
said Princess Elettra's acknowledgement that WRTC-2014 was helping
to carry on the Marconi legacy added to the thrill.
Grant was using the World Radiosport Team Championship club call
sign, WR1TC. Assisting with the contact was Barbara Dougan, N1NS,
the trustee of the Marconi Cape Cod Radio Club station KM1CC.
A visit to the Marconi Wireless Station Site and Chatham Marconi
Maritime Museum is among the tours available to WRTC-2014
participants and visitors. Read more.
Elettra Marconi Makes Contact Between Historic Radio Sites
Princess Elettra also was at the microphone on June 20 for an
contact between KM1CC at the Marconi Cape Cod station in Wellfleet,
Massachusetts, and the former Marconi Belmar Receiving Station and
"Project Diana" moonbounce site in New Jersey. The contact between
KM1CC and WA2GM, the club station of the Marconi Chapter 128 of the
Quarter Century Wireless Association (QCWA) took place on 40 meter
SSB.
The Ocean-Monmouth Amateur Radio Club (OMARC) hosted the New Jersey
station from its facility at the InfoAge Science History Museum
Learning Center. -- Thanks to Jeff Harshman, N2LXM
W1AW Centennial Operations Now in Wisconsin, Utah
The ARRL Centennial W1AW WAS operations taking place throughout
2014 from each of the 50 states are now in Wisconsin and Utah.
There will be no W1AW Centennial operations from July 9 until July
16. W1AW will relocate at 0000 UTC on Wednesday, July 16 (the
evening of July 15 in US time zones), to South Carolina (W1AW/4).
Only one state will be active that week.
World Radiosport Team Championship (WRTC-2014) takes place July
12-13, concurrent with the IARU HF Championship, and contacts with
competitor teams will be worth 5 points in the ARRL Centennial QSO
Party.
Contacts may be made with the teams on SSB and CW on 80, 40, 20,
15, and 10 meters. WRTC-2014 will take place in New England, and
teams will be using 1 × 1 call signs from US first district.
The ARRL Centennial QSO Party is a year-long operating event in
which participants can accumulate points and win awards. The event
is open to all, although only ARRL members and appointees, elected
officials, HQ staff and W1AW are worth ARRL Centennial QSO Party
points.
During 2014, W1AW will be on the air from every state (at least
twice) and most US territories, and it will be easy to work all
states solely by contacting W1AW portable operations. Working
W1AW/x from each state is worth 5 points per mode/contact, even
when working the same state during its second week of activity.
To earn the "Worked all States with W1AW Award," work W1AW
operating portable from all 50 states. (Working W1AW or W100AW in
Connecticut does not count for Connecticut, however. For award
credit, participants must work W1AW/1 in Connecticut.) A W1AW WAS
certificate and plaque will be available.
The ARRL has posted an ARRL Centennial QSO Party leader board that
participants can use to determine how many points they have
accumulated in the Centennial QSO Party and in the W1AW WAS
operations. Log in using your Logbook of The World (LoTW) user name
and password, and your position will appear at the top of the
leader boards. Results are updated daily, based on contacts entered
into LoTW.
WRTC-2014 Will Offer Online Scoreboard to Track Team Standings
A live, near-real time scoreboard to track World Radiosport Team
Championship 2014 (WRTC-2014) team standings will be available
during the July 12-13 event. The scoreboard will be accessible
directly or from a link on the WRTC-2014 website. The scoreboard
uses an innovative data-collection method developed by WRTC-2014
Director (IT infrastructure and scoreboard) Dave Pascoe, KM3T, and
Bob Raymond, WA1Z. Pascoe is a past WRTC referee and competitor.
Each of the 59 WRTC-2014 teams will use networked computers for
logging during the contest. The score collection system will
monitor network traffic to obtain the latest score and
QSO-breakdown information.
Here's how the WRTC-2014 live scoreboard will appear online. This
screen shot was taken during testing. [Courtesy of Dave Pasco,
KM3T]
"Real-time -- or near real-time -- score reporting has been a
tradition at WRTC events since 2002," Pascoe and Raymond wrote in
the July/August issue of NCJ, which is dedicated to WRTC-2014.
"Each WRTC organizer has used -- or attempted -- various approaches
to report scores from the field. The most common approach
involve[d] having referees send SMS (text) messages from a cell
phone." According to the NCJ article, past near-real time
scoreboard attempts have been plagued by real-world challenges that
included connectivity issues and reliance on referees to report
scores on schedule.
The WRTC-2014 system will transmit score data via cellular modem
every 5 minutes to a score-processing website that Raymond
designed. The website will display team scores in order. Clicking
on a team will reveal its band breakdown, hourly rate sheet, and
position for each hour of the contest. A leader board page will
list the top five teams by CW contacts, SSB contacts, multipliers,
and points per contact.
WRTC-2014 said another innovation is the ability to compare the
scores of multiple teams on a graph over time. "This will reveal
how the fortunes of teams change over the 24 hours, as they follow
their various strategies for building their score," the event's
organizers said in a July 1 news release.
Pascoe said his team has confirmed cell signal levels at all sites
and is confident that WRTC-2014 will have real-time scoring from
all 59 teams.
The scoreboard site is now live for testing purposes, but all
scores will be reset to zero before WRTC-2014 begins at 1200 UTC on
July 12, 2014. The international team competition takes place
concurrent with the IARU HF Championship event. Read more.
FM Transponder Active as LituanicaSAT-1 CubeSat Enters its Final
Few Weeks in Space
The LituanicaSAT-1 OSCAR-78/LO-78 Amateur Radio FM transponder has
been activated, perhaps for the last time. The CubeSat, which has
the call sign LY5N, will deorbit and burn up in Earth's atmosphere,
possibly around August 5. Laurynas Maciulis, LY1LM, of the
LituanicaSAT-1 team said the transponder's duty cycle will depend
on the state of the batteries. He said all telemetry has been
disabled to save power.
"We hope the signal should be even better now, as the satellite is
descending steadily to 300 km and wish you all good QSOs!" he said.
The FM transponder frequencies are 435.1755 MHz up (±10 kHz
Doppler shift), and 145.950 MHz up, with a 67 Hz CTCSS tone. The
beacon frequency is 437.275 MHz; if the beacon is off, the
transponder is operational. The tiny 10 × 10 × 10 cm
satellite weighs slightly more than 1 kg and also carries a VGA
camera. The satellite sports four monopole antennas, three for UHF
and one for VHF, all made of spring-steel measurement tape.
LituanicaSAT-1 was launched to the International Space Station on
January 9 and deployed into orbit with other Amateur Radio
satellites on February 28. On March 22, Lithuanian President Dalia
Grybauskaite transmitted a greeting "to all Lithuanians around the
world" via LituanicaSAT-1 -- her country's first satellite. She may
be the first head of state to send a message via an Amateur Radio
satellite. LituanicaSAT-1 was designed and built by students at
Vilnius University.
The LituanicaSAT-1 team invites reception reports, including small
audio files or any other data online.
ARRL-Sponsored 600 Meter Experiment Approaches 170,000 Hours of
Operation
According to the most recent report on the ARRL WD2XSH experimental
operation on 600 meters, participants have logged 168,472 hours on
the air. Things are not perceptibly closer in terms of obtaining an
Amateur Radio allocation in that part of the spectrum, however. So
far, 522 contacts have been made between participating stations on
472 to 479 kHz since the experiment got underway in late 2006.
"Activity has continued strong into the spring, in spite of the
increasing noise level and decreasing amount of night time,"
Experiment Coordinator Fritz Raab, W1FR, reported in his Spring
2014 summary of operations, released June 23. "Many transmissions
used digital modes and other experimental licensees were quite
active."
The FCC has remained silent regarding the ARRL's November 2012
Petition for Rulemaking that asked the Commission to make 472-479
kHz available to radio amateurs in the US. Delegates to the 2012
World Radiocommunication Conference approved a 7 kHz-wide secondary
allocation for the Amateur Radio Service, with a power limit of 5 W
EIRP (or 1 W EIRP, depending on location). The FCC has indicated
that it will address the issue within the context of its Notice of
Proposed Rule Making in ET Docket No. 12-338, to formally reflect
the Final Acts of WRC 2007 in its rules.
Some regular ARRL MW experiment participants, including Raab, now
are off the air temporarily. Raab is moving to the Midwest, and
Dean Gagnon, KK1K, will take over his site in Burlington, Vermont
and operate as WD2XSH/47. Pat Hamel, W5THT, operating as WD2XSH/6,
also is off the air for the time being. In addition, after one
season, Neil Klagge, W0YSE, in Utah, who had been operating as
WG2XSV, has shut down because he is relocating. Michael Reid, WE0H,
in Minnesota, who had been participating as WD2XSH/16, is off the
air but will return under his own Part 5 Experimental license
WD2XGI, which was modified to add 460 to 490 kHz.
Proponents of the MW allocation, which is variously called "600
meters" and "630 meters," have been spreading the word at ham radio
gatherings. Raab reported that Rudy Severns, N6LF, gave a
presentation on the 600 meter band at the SeaPac earlier this
month, while John Langridge, KB5NJD/WG2XIQ, spoke at Ham-Com in
June and reported strong interest a new band at 472-479 kHz.
A few countries, including Canada, France, Germany, the
Philippines, and Vietnam, have approved Amateur Radio bands in the
vicinity of 500 kHz. Canada's band is 472-479 kHz.
Raab reported that three new experimental licenses have been
issued, and one existing license was modified to include
frequencies in the 472-479 kHz range. They are WD2XGI in Minnesota,
WH2XAR in Arizona, WH2XCR in Hawaii, and WH2XES in Texas.
Voice of America Makes More Cuts to International Shortwave
Broadcast Schedule
With no public announcement or fanfare, the Voice of America has
phased out some 14 hours per day of international shortwave
broadcast transmissions and will cease broadcasting on some of its
customary frequencies, effective July 1. Another 10 hours of daily
cuts have been made to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) and
Radio Free Asia (RFA) broadcasts. The Broadcasting Board of
Governors (BBG) oversees the VOA, RFE/RL and RFA. Tom Witherspoon,
K4SWL, who maintains The SWLing Post Internet site, said he
contacted BBG spokesperson Letitia King for details on the cuts,
which he learned about from a leaked memorandum, "Farewell to
Shortwave," from recently retired VOA staff member Dan Robinson.
Information King provided to Witherspoon said the cuts, okayed by
Congress, will save taxpayers some $1.6 million annually.
"US international media must optimize program delivery by market,"
said the statement King provided. "We are ending some shortwave
transmissions. We continue shortwave to those countries where these
transmissions are still reaching significant audiences or where
there are no reasonable alternative platforms at a lower cost to
the BBG."
King's statement, "Facts and Figures on Shortwave Broadcast
Reductions," said the cuts were to "transmission platforms only,"
and that there would be no staff reductions. "Programming continues
to be available through other media," her statement pointed out.
The cuts include essentially all shortwave broadcasts in English to
Asia -- some 6.5 hours a day in all. "Outside of sub-Saharan
Africa, English speakers are rarely users of shortwave radio," the
BBG explanation said. The VOA also will end 5.5 hours per day of
"Special/Learning English" transmissions on shortwave, although
learning English programs will continue on shortwave to Africa.
Read more.
MARS Teams Remember D-Day With a Present-Day Purpose
For the second year in a row, hams in the Military Auxiliary Radio
System (MARS) have reached overseas to demonstrate interoperability
in cross-border emergencies. The June 6-7 exercise also had a
historical aspect -- to commemorate the role of HF radio in the
D-Day landings of 1944. Joining MARS stations in the US and Europe
in the drill were the Canadian Forces Affiliate Radio System
(CFARS) and units of the British Defence Ministry's Combined Cadet
Force. Replicating beachhead communications on D-Day, the operation
called for using minimal power and simple wire antennas in a
friendly competition to make the most contacts. Army MARS
Headquarters Operations Officer David McGinnis, K7UXO, who created
the drill scenario, dubbed it "Operation QRPX" -- the "X" for
"exercise."
The drill reflected earlier barrier-breaking during the Normandy
invasion 70 years ago. Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary
Force deployed three "Joint Assault Signal Companies" (JASCOs) that
pooled front-line ground, sea, and air communicators to support the
three US landings.
"In the spirit of the JASCOs, this is a global, low-power exercise,
using field equipment and antennas, open to military stations of
each US military department, Allied military stations, and their
respective military communications auxiliaries," said the exercise
order issued by Army MARS Headquarters in Arizona.
Army MARS Headquarters invited Allied military stations to join in
two categories. One consisted of 20 W operation within North
America and Europe; the other of stations running up to 100 W
across the Atlantic. Participants were scored according to the
number of contacts plus a bonus for making automatic link
establishment (ALE) contacts.
In the field: T/Sgt Nathan Belanger of Pennsylvania Air National
Guard joins the D-Day interoperability competition from Fort
Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania.
A preliminary tabulation of 82 entries gave first place to Army
MARS member David Bly, K7DTB, of Sierra Vista, Arizona, with 43.05
points. He was followed by T/Sgt Nathan Belanger of the Air
National Guard's 148th Air Support Operations Squadron, Fort
Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, with 35.7 points.
"I train our operations troops on HF comms, so I saw it as a great
way to reinforce my knowledge and see what we could accomplish,"
Belanger explained. "The exercise also served as great radio
operations and communications etiquette training for the airman
assisting me. Exercises like this really give practical training
and understanding of how far HF can go."
Although Army MARS Region 2 Director Dick Corp, W2WC, placed third
with 33 points, one of his hits was a home run -- a contact with
military contractor Tim McFadden, KB2RLB/T6TM, in Kabul,
Afghanistan. Corp was running 50 W and had used a bow and arrow to
launch an inverted V into an 80 foot tree near Albany, New York.
McFadden, in turn, bagged the American Embassy in Kuwait and one
cadet station in the UK. Read more.
A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL
Looking further at the early 1950s, we see that amateur incentive
licensing (an on-again/off-again thing with the FCC) ended on
February 18, 1953. That same month, a QST article by W1GXJ
introduced a new gadget to hams -- ferrite cores.
K2AH authored a QST article in March 1953 telling of what appears
to be the first use of a transistor in a ham transmitter, running
50 μW output on 2 meters to make contacts of up to 25 miles away.
In the same issue, an article reported the success of W4AO and
W3GKP in receiving a 2 meter ham signal bounced off the Moon!
W6QYT and W6POH were exploring another new frontier --
meteor-scatter communication on 20 and 15 meters.
CW still reigned as king in the 1950s, which saw many articles
published in QST about electronic keyers. Those ran the gamut from
W3FQB's tubeless "Corkey" to W6SRY's "Ultimatic Keyer" with three
dual triodes and seven relays. In the May 1953 issue of QST W6DSR
described building a 40 meter CW transceiver around a BC-453
command receiver; as you tuned it, the transmitter frequency moved
in sync.
Effective March 28, 1953, phone operation was allowed on 15 meters.
During the early years of the Novice license, theory and code
classes sprang up all over. Most were taught through radio clubs,
but even ham employees of Allied Radio started a class, as a
volunteer effort. This 1958 photo shows father and son Ed Bachner,
Jr, and seventh grader Ed III, at one of the classes. Father Ed,
now SK, became KN9OIS, and son Ed became KN9OBZ.
One facet of the Amateur Extra exam during the 1950 was amusing:
The transistor, invented in 1948, was in its infancy. The FCC,
wanting to keep up with the latest, formulated one question about
transistors, which found its way into various study guides and
appeared in every Extra class exam for a couple of years.
The May 1953 issue of QST published an article by W3FQB that
remains, to this day, one of my favorite QST offerings -- "The Man
Who Broke the Bank." Although written as a humor piece, it had the
ring of futuristic hamming about it. It tells the tale of a radio
club with a new member whose day job was working with those
newfangled electronic calculators. Sweepstakes rolled around, and
the new ham turned in an unbelievably large score. There was much
heated discussion over the entry's validity, but the club finally
agreed to submit it to ARRL, which didn't believe it, either. After
cross-checking every single contact, they admitted that it was
accurate and correct. Two weeks later, Ed Handy, W1BDI, visited to
tour the new member's station to get to the bottom of the story.
That's all the room I have for this week, so visit the ARRL
website, search for the article, and read the whole thing. Enjoy!
-- Al Brogdon, W1AB
In Brief...
Last Call for Digital Communications Conference Papers: July 14 is
the deadline to submit papers for the proceedings of 2014 ARRL/TAPR
Digital Communications Conference, September 5 - 7, in Austin,
Texas. You do not have to attend the conference to have your paper
included in the proceedings. Your paper on any technical topic
relevant to amateur digital communications will be published as
submitted and you will retain all rights. E-mail submissions no
later than July 14 to Maty Weinberg, KB1EIB. Send text files and
images separately, and do not attach Zip files. Total attachments
cannot exceed 5 MB per message.
World Wide Radio Operators Foundation Sponsoring WRTC-2014 Preview
Webinar: A World Radiosport Team Championship 2014 (WRTC-2014)
webinar is set for July 6 at 1800 UTC. WRTC-2014 Co-Chair Randy
Thompson, K5ZD, will provide a preview of the upcoming
international competition. He will review the week's schedule, the
teams, and the competitors, and suggest how you can join in the
fun. A few competitors and other organizers may drop in as well.
Register online.
Volunteer Examiner Recognized by Governor of Tennessee: ARRL VEC
Volunteer Examiner Butch Smith, N4TK, has received a Certificate of
Appreciation from the Governor of Tennessee, on behalf of the
Nashville VE Team. Smith is one of the founding members of the
team, which has been continuously offering Amateur Radio exams
since 1986. Smith maintains the VE team website and delivers the
"official opening remarks" at test sessions. -- Thanks to Jiro Oi,
KW6A
NU1AW, W100AW Will Be on the Air for IARU HF Championship/WRTC-2014
Events: IARU club station NU1AW will be on the air for the IARU HF
Championship contest July 12-13. The World Radiosport Team
Championship 2014 (WRTC-2014) takes place within the IARU event.
NU1AW will operate in the vicinity of the WRTC events. W100AW will
be on the air from Newington. The W1AW call sign will not be used
that weekend.
Defect Discovered in Latest QST iOS App: The QST iOS app was
recently updated, but the ARRL has been notified by the app vendor
that a serious defect has been discovered that may cause the app to
stop functioning. ARRL is in discussions with the vendor to
alleviate the problem. Until a solution has been found, however,
members are urged to avoid updating their QST iOS apps. This issue
does not impact QST Android app users.
The K7RA Solar Update
Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: The Earth-facing side of the Sun
is suddenly crowded with clusters of sunspots, so this sunspot
cycle definitely is not over. Over the past week average daily
sunspot numbers rose 43.3 points to 115.6, while average daily
solar flux was up 30.7 points to 129.5. The 45-day outlook has also
improved markedly. On July 2, the predicted average daily solar
flux for July 3-9 rose to 177.9.
The latest short-term prediction shows solar flux at 175 on July 3,
180 on July 4-7, 175 on July 8-9, 170, 165 and 150 on July 10-12,
130 on July 13-15, 110 on July 16-17, 115 on July 18, then
declining to 90 on July 23-24, rising to 165 on August 7, and
declining to 100 on August 15-16.
Predicted planetary A index is 5 on July 3-5, 8 on July 6-7, 5 on
July 8-10, 8 on July 11, 5 on July 12-13, then 8, 12, 8, and 8, on
July 14-17, and 5 on July 18-28, before rising to 8 again.
The latest bulletin and an archive of past propagation bulletins is
on the ARRL website. This week's bulletin was released 1 day early
because of the July 4 holiday.
Send me your reports and observations.
Just Ahead in Radiosport
July 4-5 -- MI QRP July 4th Sprint (CW)
July 5-6 -- 070 Club 40 Meter Firecracker PSK31 Sprint
July 5-6 -- DL DX RTTY Contest
July 6 -- DARC 10 Meter Digital Corona
July 6 -- OK1WC Memorial Contest (SSB, CW)
July 6 -- QRP ARCI Summer Homebrew (CW)
July 8 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)
July 11 -- NS Weekly Sprint (CW)
July 11 -- FISTS Summer Sprint (CW)
July 12-13 -- IARU HF World Championship/WRTC-2014 (CW, SSB)
July 12-13 -- Straight Key Weekend Sprintathon (CW)
July 13 -- CQC Great Colorado Gold Rush (CW)
July 17 -- NAQCC Monthly QRP Sprint (CW)
See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.
Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events
July 5 -- Eastern Pennsylvania Section Convention, Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania
July 9-12 -- Mobile Amateur Radio Awards National Convention,
Visalia, California
July 17-19 -- ARRL National Centennial Convention, Hartford,
Connecticut
July 18-19 -- Arizona State Convention, Williams, Arizona
July 18-20 -- Montana State Convention, East Glacier, Montana
July 24-27 -- Central States VHF Society Conference, Austin, Texas
July 25-26 -- Oklahoma State Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
August 1-2 -- Texas State Convention, Austin, Texas
August 7-9 -- Young Ladies Radio League Convention, Vancouver,
Washington
August 8-10 -- Rocky Mountain Division Convention, Albuquerque, New
Mexico
August 16-17 -- Southeastern Division Convention, Regional ARRL
Centennial Event, Huntsville, Alabama
August 17 -- Kansas State Convention, Salina, Kansas
August 23 -- West Virginia State Convention, Weston, West Virginia
August 23-24 -- JARL Ham Fair, Tokyo, Japan
August 24 -- Western Pennsylvania Section Convention, New
Kensington, Pennsylvania
August 30-31 -- North Carolina State Convention (Shelby Hamfest),
Shelby, North Carolina
September 5-7 -- ARRL-TAPR Digital Communications Conference
(Austin, Texas)
September 6 -- Kentucky State Convention (Shepherdsville, Kentucky)
September 6 -- Virginia Section Convention (Virginia Beach,
Virginia)
September 12-14 -- Southwestern Division Convention (San Diego,
California)
September 19-20 -- W9DXCC Convention (Schaumburg, Illinois)
Find conventions and hamfests in your area.
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