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N9PMO  > LETTER   18.01.15 20:12l 732 Lines 34114 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: ARRL3303 ARRL Letter
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Sent: 150118/1901Z 6209@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NA BPQK1.4.62

ARRL Board of Directors Annual Meeting Set for January 16-17

ARRL Centennial QSO Party Awards, W1AW/p QSL Cards in Process

The ARRL January VHF Contest Offers a Break from Winter's Doldrums

ARRL Library Goes Live!

FCC Fines Pennsylvania Ham $11,500 for Causing Intentional
Interference

Yasme Foundation Announces Award Winners, Grant Recipients

ARRL's "First Couple" Spotlighted in Article Highlighting SKYWARN's
Role

EP6T Iran DXpedition Team En Route

CQ Magazine Combining January, February Issues, Closing CQ Plus
Digital Supplement

Shin'en 2 Designated as Fuji Oscar-82

BSA Encouraging Early Start on JOTA 2015 Planning

Foundation for Amateur Radio (FAR) Invites Scholarship Applications

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

ARRL Board of Directors Annual Meeting Set for January 16-17

Two newly elected members will be at the table when the ARRL Board of
Directors holds its annual meeting Friday and Saturday, January 16-17,
in Windsor, Connecticut. Tom Abernethy, W3TOM, will participate for
the first time as Atlantic Division Director. Formerly the Division's
Vice Director, Abernethy was elected last fall to replace Bill Edgar,
N3LLR, who did not run for another term as Director. Rod Blocksome,
K0DAS, will take part in his first meeting as the Midwest Division
Director, following his election last fall. The former Vice Director
succeeded Cliff Ahrens, K0CA, who opted not to run for another term as
Director.

Two new faces will be among the contingent of Vice Directors at this
week's meeting: Bob Famiglio, K3RF, was elected last fall to succeed
Abernethy as Atlantic Division Vice Director, and Art Zygielbaum,
K0AIZ, was appointed recently to fill the Midwest Division Vice
Director vacancy, created when Blocksome was elected as Director.

As one of its first orders of business, the Board will elect members
of the ARRL Executive Committee as well as one-third of the ARRL
Foundation Board of Directors membership. The Board also will receive
reports from the officers and committees and will consider
recommendations contained in the reports.

ARRL Centennial QSO Party Awards, W1AW/p QSL Cards in Process

Certificates and plaques for stations that participated in the ARRL
Centennial QSO Party are being processed. At this point, point totals
are being calculated and confirmed. Participation exceeded
expectations, with nearly 16,000 stations achieving at least 1000
points in the Centennial QSO Points Challenge. Approximately 2500
stations reached the Top Level of 15,000 points. W1AW portable
operations completed nearly 3.5 million contacts during 2014, and
W100AW logged some 70,000 contacts. Most Centennial QSO Party
participants entered their contact information into the ARRL's Logbook
of The World (LoTW) program.

"The W1AW WAS certificate and plaque designs are complete, as is the
design for the Centennial Points Challenge certificate," said ARRL
Field Services and Radiosport Manager Dave Patton, NN1N. "Once the web
and software processes are ready to go, we will be able to start
fulfilling awards." Patton said order forms will be available on the
Centennial QSO Party web page for those who do not use LoTW or online
ordering tools.

Deadline Extended

The ARRL has extended the deadline to submit Centennial QSO Party logs
to LoTW to January 22, at 2359 UTC. The new deadline will have no
effect on awards. Participants will be able to apply for Centennial
awards indefinitely, once the process is under way. Accounts for US
stations that changed call signs during 2014, will be automatically
combined for Centennial award purposes, although any duplicate
contacts (ie, stations worked with both the old and new call signs)
will be removed. Stations outside the US that changed call signs
during 2014 should notify ARRL.

Patton said that in late January, the entire database of 2014 logs
submitted to LoTW will be rerun through the Centennial QSO Party
software in order to pick up any late changes to the database and
produce more accurate scores. "Most participants will see their points
total climb a bit higher," he said.

Designs for QSL cards for W1AW portable operations are under
consideration, and cards likely will go out via the QSL Bureau and
directly to stations in a few months. US stations who prefer to
receive W1AW QSLs via a QSL Bureau account may sign up via the web
form. "You must have a current, funded account with your district QSL
Bureau," Patton noted. Stations outside the US will receive cards via
their bureaus as they normally do.

Patton said the number of QSLs from W1AW will be limited to one per
each weekly operation and per each territorial operation (KH2, KH8,
etc), with each card confirming about 10 contacts chosen from the W1AW
logs. Printed cards will not be able to confirm counties or grid
squares, but the LoTW system will do this.

The ARRL January VHF Contest Offers a Break from Winter's Doldrums

If the Polar Vortex has been getting you down, then the ARRL January
VHF Contest might just be the antidote! The event gets under way at
1900 UTC on Saturday, January 24, and it wraps up at 0359 UTC on
Monday, January 26. The object is for amateurs in the US and Canada
(and possessions) to work as many amateur stations in as many
different Maidenhead grid squares as possible using frequencies above
50 MHz. It's the US and Canada (and possessions) working each other
and the rest of the world (think F2 propagation!).

"You do not need a huge VHF/UHF antenna farm to compete and have fun,"
said ARRL Contest Branch Manager Matt Wilhelm, W1MSW. He pointed out
that even portable and rover operators have been quite successful.
"January VHF/UHF propagation enhancements often just pop up," he
added, with tropospheric and even extended aurora possible.

The well-equipped N2SLN/rover is operating from FN23 during the
January 2014 VHF Contest.

Getting on the VHF/UHF bands is easy, and Technician licensees have
access to all amateur bands above 50 MHz. Antennas for VHF and UHF
frequencies are far smaller than their HF counterparts. Most modern
transceivers have 6 meter capability, and sometimes even an HF dipole
can be used to work some DX on 6. Contest contacts may be made using
SSB, CW, and even FM simplex, but keep calling frequencies such as
146.52 MHz clear of contest activity.

The January VHF Contest offers Single Operator and Multioperator
categories, and there is even a Single Operator, FM-only category, as
well as a Single Operator, 3-Band (50 MHz, 144 MHz, and 440 MHz)
category. For 2015 three new categories have been introduced: Single
Operator Unlimited High Power, Single Operator Unlimited Low Power,
and Single Operator Unlimited Portable.

All entries must be e-mailed or postmarked no later than 0359 UTC on
Wednesday, February 25, 2015. Submit Cabrillo-formatted logs via
e-mail. Mail paper logs to ARRL January VHF Contest, 225 Main St,
Newington, CT 06111. Contact the ARRL Contest Branch for more
information.

ARRL Library Goes Live!

After several months of planning, The ARRL Library is now live! The
online Library is a free repository of educational presentations and
oral histories. It is aimed at helping to preserve Amateur Radio's
history and to educate clubs and individuals.

"This long-term project will be home to what I hope will eventually
become one of the largest repositories of Amateur Radio-related papers
and presentations, created by and for the Amateur Radio community,"
said ARRL Media and Public Relations Manager Sean Kutzko, KX9X. "This
is your opportunity to submit material for the betterment and
education of all radio amateurs."

Kutzko said the Library will initially consist of three major areas.
These will include PowerPoint presentations that may be used at club
meetings, for outreach to the general public, or for other public
presentations; PDFs of general educational material about Amateur
Radio, and oral histories of radio amateurs describing their personal
experiences with Amateur Radio.

Current content includes presentations on operating digital modes, HF
basics, and impedance matching. While the available material is sparse
right now, Kutzko invites all radio amateurs to submit material for
consideration -- as long as it relates to Amateur Radio. The Public
Relations Committee will vet all submissions, and once a submission is
approved, it will be added to The ARRL Library.

ARRL Media and Public Relations Manager Sean Kutzko, KX9X.

"We have lots of tutorials and information on how to create
presentations on the site," Kutzko pointed out. "Presenting somebody
else's PowerPoint slides is tough," he added, "so we're asking people
who submit presentations to make use of PowerPoint's 'Notes' feature,
which allows the author to provide more detailed information for the
talking points found on each slide, visible only to the presenter.
This will make it easier for the presenter to emphasize what the
author intended to convey."

Answers to typical questions, as well as information on how to upload
content and how to conduct an oral history interview, can be found in
the Frequently Asked Questions area.

"Sharing expertise is one of the best things we can do for Amateur
Radio," Kutzko said. "I hope you will consider submitting material for
the Library and help give back to the entire community."

Ad

FCC Fines Pennsylvania Ham $11,500 for Causing Intentional
Interference

The FCC Enforcement Bureau has affirmed an $11,500 fine against Brian
Crow, K3VR, of North Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, for deliberately
interfering with other Amateur Radio communications. The FCC had first
proposed the fine last July in a Notice of Apparent Liability for
Forfeiture (NAL), and it released a Forfeiture Order on January 13.

The FCC said it imposed the financial penalty because of Crow's
"willful and repeated violation" of Section 333 of the Communications
Act and of Sections 97.101(d) and 97.119(a) of the Amateur Service
rules "by causing intentional interference to licensed radio
operations and failing to transmit his assigned call sign."

The FCC said that Crow did not respond to the 2014 NAL and that, based
on the information before the Commission, affirmed its proposed fine.
On July 22, 2014, the FCC also issued a similarly worded NAL to
Michael Guernsey, KZ8O (ex-ND8V), of Parchment, Michigan, proposing to
fine him $22,000. In both cases, the FCC said the evidence indicated
that the transmissions at issue were aimed at interfering with other
radio amateurs with whom each licensee "had a long-standing and
well-documented dispute" that had spilled out onto the air.

In both instances, the FCC said, it responded in March 2014 to
"several complaints of intentional interference" on 14.313 MHz, and
Commission agents used radio direction-finding techniques to pin down
the transmission sources. According to the NAL issued to Crow, FCC
agents monitored transmissions from his station for approximately 3
hours on March 14, 2014, and heard him transmit slow-scan television
(SSTV) signals and "a pre-recorded voice transmission of another
amateur station on the frequency."

"These transmissions prevented other amateur licensees from
communicating over the frequency," both NALs said, adding that neither
Guernsey or Crow transmitted their assigned call signs while the
agents were listening.

The FCC agents visited Crow's residence and asked to inspect his
station, which they confirmed was capable of operating on 14.313 MHz.
Crow denied operating his station that morning, however, and claimed
that he was not at home when the interfering transmissions occurred.

The Enforcement Bureau had warned both Guernsey and Crow in the past
regarding interference to other Amateur Radio operators. In Crow's
case, the FCC said the fact that he subsequently interfered with other
amateur operators "demonstrates a deliberate disregard for the
Commission's authority," warranting an upward adjustment of $3500 to
his proposed base forfeiture. Guernsey's case is still pending.

Yasme Foundation Announces Award Winners, Grant Recipients

The Yasme Foundation Board of Directors has announced the recipients
of several awards and monetary grants. The Foundation named four
individuals to receive the Yasme Excellence Award for 2014 as well as
eight specific grant recipients.

Honored as Yasme Excellence Award winners were:

Kimo Chun, KH7U, for 20 years of behind-the-scenes support to
DXpeditions to Pacific entities -- including logistics, organization,
equipment, local contacts, and planning.

Dick Flagg, AH6NM, for his years of working with the Amateur Radio on
the International Space Station (ARISS) program and its predecessor
Shuttle Amateur Radio EXperiment (SAREX), and for supporting NASA's
Radio Jove project, both designed to introduce Amateur Radio to
students and the general public.

Florin Cristian Predescu, YO9CNU, and Lisa Leenders, PA2LS, for their
work in organizing and promoting Youngsters on the Air (YOTA) and
Amateur Radio youth activities.

The Yasme Excellence Award is presented to individuals who, through
their own service, creativity, effort, and dedication, have made a
significant contribution to Amateur Radio in technical, operating, or
organizational achievement.

The Yasme Foundation also has designated several entities and one
individual to receive monetary grants to further their contributions
to and efforts on behalf of Amateur Radio. Grants included:

$9500 to the California Historical Radio Society, to fund the Maxwell
Library and Maxwell Archives Room in support of the efforts of Jim
Maxwell, W6CF (SK), to maintain the history of Amateur Radio.

$5000 to the Foundation for Amateur Radio scholarship program.

$5000 to International Amateur Radio Union Region 1, to support
Amateur Radio youth activities, as well as $2000 to IARU Region 1 for
the support of the Egyptian Radio Amateur Society for Development
(ERASD).

$2000 to Bruce Horn, WA7BNM, for providing web-based services to the
Amateur Radio community.

$2000 to the World Wide Radio Operators Foundation (WWROF) in
recognition of its support for the Yasme Foundation, other Amateur
Radio groups, and international radiosport activities, and for
providing webinars to the Amateur Radio community.

$3000 to the ARRL Foundation in support of its scholarship program.

$4000 to the ARRL Second Century Campaign to help support Amateur
Radio over the next 100 years.

The Yasme Foundation is a not-for-profit corporation organized to
conduct scientific and educational projects related to Amateur Radio,
including DXing and the introduction and promotion of Amateur Radio in
developing countries. -- Thanks to Yasme Foundation President Ward
Silver, N0AX

ARRL's "First Couple" Spotlighted in Article Highlighting SKYWARN's
Role

A January 9 article in Virginia's Roanoke Times newspaper featured the
participation of ARRL President Kay Craigie, N3KN, and her husband
Carter, N3AO, in the SKYWARN weather-spotting program. The Craigies,
who live in the Southwest Virginia town of Blacksburg -- home to
Virginia Tech -- have a home weather station and, when severe weather
threatens, are able to supplement local National Weather Service (NWS)
office meteorologists with "ground-level" weather observations.

The article, by Robby Korth of the newspaper's New River Valley
Bureau, noted that the Craigies are among some 2000 SKYWARN members --
many of them radio amateurs -- who work with the NWS to, as the
article says, "verify and give information to issue warnings and also
to stress the danger of weather events to the 40 counties covered by
the Blacksburg office of the National Weather Service."

The article cited meteorologist Phil Hysell, who pointed out that
weather spotters can provide local observations that indicate what's
happening below the radar and in "areas where other tools cannot see."

"It's just one of the ways you can give back to society by just
playing with a radio," the article quoted President Craigie. The
article noted the ongoing need for weather spotters and tells how to
become a SKYWARN spotter, pointing to an online course and test that
individuals can take to become official weather spotters. A list of
SKYWARN training classes in Virginia accompanied the article. Read
more.

EP6T Iran DXpedition Team En Route

Members of the Rockall DX Group in Belgium are on their way to their
Kish Island, Iran (IOTA AS-166), DXpedition site. The group plans to
operate starting this weekend for about 10 days as EP6T. Iran is #33
on ClubLog's DXCC Most Wanted List. The DXpedition will operate on all
bands, 160 through 10 meters, with an emphasis on the low bands. EP6T
plans to remain active until January 26. Organizers say the
DXpedition's theme will be "friendship and cultural tolerance."

"We have 30 fully packed suitcases filled with radio equipment and
antennas. Radios will be carried as hand luggage," the team's latest
media release said. "We expect arrival on Kish Island January 16 early
morning. As soon as we have approval from the local police, we can
start building antennas." EP6T is expected to be up and running in the
early hours of January 17.

"[W]e want to ask people in Europe and Asia for your cooperation when
we have propagation to North America, since this is the most difficult
path on all bands," the release said. "Listen to the operators'
instructions, and we will all be enjoying the pileups."

The EP6T team seeks signal reports via e-mail from North America on 10
meters and 160 meters. The EP6T log will be uploaded to Logbook of The
World (LoTW), once the DXpedition has concluded.

Ad

CQ Magazine Combining January, February Issues, Closing CQ Plus
Digital Supplement

CQ magazine has announced plans to publish a combined January/February
2015 issue and to cease publication of its CQ Plus digital supplement
as of the March 2015 issue. Publisher Dick Ross, K2MGA, said that both
moves are intended to help restore the magazine's normal schedule for
its print edition and to strengthen its foundations moving forward as
it enters its 8th decade of publication.

"These decisions were not made lightly," Ross added, "but in
recognition of the realities of the publishing industry. It's a tough
time to be in the magazine business, and we appreciate the patience
and loyalty of both our readers and our advertisers."

CQ announced last February that it was incorporating content from the
magazine's three sister publications -- Popular Communications, CQ
VHF, and WorldRadio Online --into CQ Plus. At that time the publisher
also phased out the print editions of Popular Communications and CQ
VHF, and it said WorldRadio Online would no longer exist as a separate
online publication.

CQ will continue to publish both print and digital editions, but the
digital edition will no longer contain the 50-60 additional pages each
month that constituted CQ Plus. Editor Rich Moseson, W2VU, said he
hopes to include some CQ Plus content within the pages of CQ, but
added that ham radio will remain the magazine's primary focus. CQ
marks its 70th publication anniversary with its January/February
issue.

The magazine also announced that, "as a consequence of the changes,"
CQ Plus Editor Richard Fisher, KI6SN, will leave the CQ staff after
serving for many years as a columnist for -- and then as editor of --
Popular Communications, WorldRadio Online, and CQ Plus. He was also CQ
magazine's emergency communications editor.

Due to the combined January/February issue, CQ will extend by 1 month
all print and digital edition subscriptions to CQ.

CQ also has named veteran DXer, DXpeditioner, and QSL manager Bob
Schenck, N2OO, as its DX editor. He succeeds Wayne Mills, N7NG, who
stepped down to pursue other ham-related interests, CQ said.

Shin'en 2 Designated as Fuji Oscar-82

AMSAT has designated the Shin'en 2 spacecraft as Fuji OSCAR-82
(FO-82), in response to a request from Seiji Fukushima, JH6RTO. OSCAR
Number Administrator Bill Tynan, W3XO, congratulated Fukushima and the
Fuji OSCAR-82 team on behalf of AMSAT-NA and the Amateur Satellite
community, and expressed the hope that the spacecraft would "fulfill
all of its mission objectives."

An artist's conception of the Shin'en 2 spacecraft. [Kagoshima
University graphic]

Built by students at Kagoshima University Graduate School of
Engineering in Japan, the 17 kg satellite Shin'en 2 identifies as
JG6YIG. Shin'en2 carries a 0.1 W CW beacon on 437.505 MHz and
telemetry on 437.385 MHz (0.8 W) using a mode similar to WSJT. It also
will carry a F1D digital store-and-forward transponder with an uplink
of 145.95 MHz and a downlink at 435.27 MHz (0.4 W), but not the
Amateur Radio Mode J linear transponder announced earlier. The data
format is posted on the Kagoshima University website.

Shin'en2 will have an elliptical orbit around the Sun and travel to a
deep space orbit between Venus and Mars. Its inclination will be
almost zero, which means Shin'en 2 will stay in Earth's equatorial
plane, and the distance from Earth will be between approximately 6.5
million and 12 million miles.

Shin'en 2 and ARTSAT2: DESPATCH were launched December 3 on the
vehicle that took the Hayabusa 2 asteroid sample-return mission into
deep space. ARTSAT2, which also carried an Amateur Radio payload,
stopped transmitting recently after its batteries depleted. -- Thanks
to AMSAT News Service, Kagoshima University

BSA Encouraging Early Start on JOTA 2015 Planning

The word from Boy Scouts of America (BSA) National Jamboree on the Air
(JOTA) Organizer Jim Wilson, K5ND, is: "Start planning for JOTA 2015.
It's never too early." JOTA 2015 won't take place until October
(Friday through Sunday, October 16-18), but the Radio Scouting (K2BSA)
website provides some planning tips to help get a leg up on the
process. The annual JOTA offers an opportunity for Boy and Girl Scouts
and Guides around the world to speak with each other via Amateur
Radio, and its success relies on the cooperation of local radio
amateurs and clubs.

JOTA 2013 at the National Scouting Museum in Irving, Texas. [Photo
courtesy of BSA]

Wilson's extra-early JOTA advisory appeared aimed at boosting JOTA
involvement in the wake of a somewhat disappointing 2014 report
showing a continued decline in participation. In 2013, JOTA
participation was down by nearly 4700 over 2012, and it dropped a bit
further in 2014, when 7208 Scouts and 5589 visitors took part in the
annual on-the-air event.

"[W]e recognize that we need to do a better job promoting the event to
Scout Council staff and volunteers," Wilson conceded last fall, after
the 2014 report was posted. Wilson attributed part of the decline in
JOTA participation to a failure of some stations to file after-event
reports.

"Our survey of those that did not file a report revealed that a few
didn't run the event due to other issues," Wilson said in a JOTA
e-newsletter last weekend. "One was dodging a hurricane. Others said
that time got away from them, and they just didn't file it." According
to the 2014 report, 354 stations registered to participate, but only
205 filed reports.

Wilson recommended that JOTA teams designate someone to record the
data and file the report after the event. He also steered JOTA
planners to some program suggestions for JOTA 2015.

Foundation for Amateur Radio (FAR) Invites Scholarship Applications

The non-profit Foundation for Amateur Radio (FAR) invites applications
for the Amateur Radio-related scholarships it administers. These
academic awards are sponsored by individuals and by Amateur Radio
clubs across the US. The FAR scholarship application process is open
to Amateur Radio licensees worldwide. For 2015 FAR is administering 67
scholarships worth an aggregate $125,500. The list includes 36 Quarter
Century Wireless Association (QCWA) scholarships worth a total of
$77,000 for 2015 (these require a recommendation from a QCWA member).
Individual awards range from $500 to $5000. Applications are due by
March 30, 2015.

The preferred method to apply is by using the electronic form on the
FAR website. Visit the FAR Scholarship Information page or contact
FAR, if you have questions about the 2015 scholarship application
process. Read more.

Ad

In Brief...

ARRL President to Attend Puerto Rico State Convention, January 23-25:
While a good part of the US is experiencing frigid temperatures, snow,
and ice, radio amateurs in Puerto Rico will be warmly welcoming
visitors to their third ARRL Puerto Rico State Convention, January
23-25 at the Francisco "Pancho" Deida Coliseum in Hatillo. ARRL
President Kay Craigie, N3KN, will head an ARRL contingent to
Caribbean's largest ham radio convention. Others will include
Southeastern Division Director Doug Rehman, K4AC, Vice Director
Michael Lee, AA6ML, and QST Columnist Ward Silver, N0AX. Contester and
Western Pennsylvania Section Manager Tim Duffy, K3LR, will conduct the
first Contest University (CTU), Caribbean Edition. KP4AW will be on
the air during the event, which is expected to attract upward of 1500
visitors. Admission is free. The event is sponsored by the Caribbean
Amateur Radio Group, the Puerto Rico Amateur Radio League, and the
Municipality of Hatillo. The ARRL Puerto Rico Section website has more
information.

New WAS Award Application Processing on Hold: ARRL is redesigning the
basic Worked All States (WAS) Award certificate and has put a hold on
the processing of new WAS applications received after about December
24, 2014. "We are making the certificate the same size as a DXCC
certificate (11 × 14), so we can return to using stickers for
endorsements in most cases," said ARRL Field Services and Radiosport
Manager Dave Patton, NN1N. "The ever-popular WAS program has grown in
many ways here at Headquarters, and we need to reorganize for more
consistency." Patton said the Triple Play certificate and plaque will
not change. The Worked All States Award is earned by confirming
contacts with stations in all 50 US states. It was introduced in 1936.

CQ Soliciting Hall of Fame Nominations: CQ is seeking nominations for
the Contest and DX Halls of Fame. Nominations are made by contesting
or DX clubs or national organizations and must be submitted by March
1. Up to two individuals may be inducted into each Hall of Fame each
year. Direct nominations via e-mail or via USPS to CQ (DX or Contest)
Hall of Fame, c/o CQ magazine, 25 Newbridge Rd., Hicksville, NY 11801
US. Specify the hall of fame for which you are making the nomination.

Army MARS Public Affairs Officer Bill Sexton, N1IN/AAR1FP, Retires:
Bill Sexton, N1IN/AAR1FP, retired at the end of 2014 as the US Army
Military Auxiliary Radio System (MARS) public affairs officer, a
volunteer position. Now 86, Sexton, who splits his time between
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and Sarasota, Florida, has been involved
with MARS since the early 1990s, after reading about the program in
QST. He stepped into a PR role with the organization following the
death in 2001 of long-time Army MARS Public Relations Officer Lori
Matthew, N4ZCF. "Bill is credited with creating the Public Affairs
Program in Army MARS," Army MARS Headquarters at Ft Huachuca, Arizona,
said in announcing Sexton's retirement. "According to Bill, if you're
not telling your own story, someone else will. Bill has, through
persistence, prevailed in establishing doctrine for Army MARS public
affairs activities." Sexton plans to remain active in the Army MARS
program. Army MARS is accepting applications for the volunteer post.
Read more.

New World Record Claimed on 10 GHz: Two microwave enthusiasts in
Australia are claiming a new Amateur Radio distance record on 10 GHz.
On January 5, during a tropo opening across the Great Australian
Bight, VK6DZ and VK7MO exchanged reports over a 2732 km path, using
JT4f mode as well as SSB. The distance surpasses by 36 km the previous
World Record of 2696 km from Southern Portugal to Cape Verde Island.
VK6DZ was portable at Torbay Hill, 24 km west of Albany, Western
Australia. He was running 10 W to a 60 cm dish. VK7MO was portable
Cape Portland in northeastern Tasmania, running 50 W to a 77 cm dish.
Read more. -- Thanks to Rex Moncur, VK7MO

Tickets Now Available for 2015 Dayton Contest, Top Band Dinners:
Reservations are now available for the 23rd annual Contest Dinner and
the 26th annual Dayton Top Band Dinner. Both events will take place at
the Crowne Plaza Hotel in downtown Dayton, in conjunction with Dayton
Hamvention® 2015. On Saturday, May 16, the Dayton Contest Dinner,
sponsored by the North Coast Contesters, will feature ARRL President,
Kay Craigie, N3KN, as the keynote speaker. The event begins with a
social hour at 5:30 PM. Master of Ceremonies is CQ Contest Hall of
Famer and World Wide Radio Operators Foundation (WWROF) Chairman, John
Dorr, K1AR. The 2015 CQ Contest Hall of Fame inductees will be
announced. No tickets will be sold at the door. On Friday, May 15, the
Top Band Dinner begins with a social hour at 6:15 PM. An informative
program will follow. The Crowne Plaza is also home to the annual
Contest SuperSuite and other contest-related activities. -- Thanks to
Tim Duffy, K3LR; ARRL Contest Update

Cosmonaut Yelena Serova Operates RS0ISS for Russian ISS School
Contacts: On board the International Space Station, Russian Cosmonaut
Yelena Serova, using the call sign RS0ISS, spoke with students at
schools in Ekaterinburg and Chelyabinsk, Russia, on December 21. She
used the Amateur Radio station in the Russian Service Module. More
information, including video links, is on the AMSAT-UK website.

Worked All Europe Contest Manager Joerg Puchstein, DL8WPX, SK: Worked
All Europe Contest Manager Joerg "Joe" Puchstein, DL8WPX, died
December 16, at his home in Zurich, Switzerland. He was 54. Puchstein
was an active and enthusiastic contester and DXpeditioner who
organized such DXpeditions as VK9LM from Lord Howe (1991, 1996, and
2014), and the S21XX, P29VXX, VK9CR, VK9XY, ZL7DK, VK9DNX, VK9DWX, and
VK9DLX DXpeditions. He also was a member of the DR1A team. -- Thanks
to The Daily DX

The K7RA Solar Update

Sunspot numbers and solar flux rose again this week, while geomagnetic
indices were relatively quiet. Average daily sunspot numbers increased
from 108.1 in the first week of 2015 to 112.6 in the 7 days following.
Average daily solar flux rose from 144.7 to 151.3.

Predicted solar flux for the near term is 140 on January 15-16, 135 on
January 17-18, 130 on January 19-20, then 125, 135, and 140 on January
21-23, 130 on January 24-26, 135 on January 27-28, 140 on January
29-30, and, 145 on January 31 through February 7. Flux values then
peak at 180 on February 11-12, and dip down to 130 on February 20-22.

Predicted planetary A index is 15, 10, 8, and 12 on January 15-18, 8
on January 19-21, then 15, 5, 10 and 18 on January 22-25, and 15, 8,
5, 10, and 12 on January 26-30 and 15 on January 31 through February
1.

This weekly "Solar Update" in The ARRL Letter is a preview of the
"Propagation Bulletin" issued each Friday. The latest bulletin and an
archive of past propagation bulletins is on the ARRL website.

In Friday's bulletin look for an updated forecast and reports from
readers. Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

January 16 -- NAQCC Special 160 Meter Sprint (CW)

January 17 -- LZ Open Contest (CW)

January 17 -- International United Teenager Contest (SSB, CW)

January 17 -- Feld-Hell Low-Down Sprint

January 17-18 -- North American QSO Party (SSB)

January 17-18 -- YLISSB QSO Party (SSB)

January 17-18 -- HA DX Contest (SSB, CW)

January 18-19 -- Classic Exchange (CW)

January 19 -- Run for the Bacon (CW)

January 21 -- Locust QSO Party (CW)

January 22 -- NAQCC Monthly QRP Sprint (CW)

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

January 16-17 -- North Texas Section Convention, Forest Hill, Texas

January 18-24 -- Quartzfest, Quartzsite, Arizona

January 23-24 -- Mississippi State Convention, Jackson, Mississippi

January 23-25 -- Puerto Rico State Convention, Hatillo, Puerto Rico

January 24 -- Georgia ARES Convention, Forsyth, Georgia

February 7 -- South Carolina State Convention, North Charleston, South
Carolina

February 7 -- Virginia State Convention, Richmond, Virginia

February 13-15 -- Southeastern Division Convention, Orlando, Florida

February 20-21 -- Arizona Section Convention, Yuma, Arizona

February 28 -- New Mexico Techfest Convention, Albuquerque, New Mexico

February 28 -- Vermont State Convention, S Burlington, Vermont

March 7 -- Santa Clara Valley Section Convention, Del Rey Oaks,
California

March 13-14 -- North Carolina Section Convention, Concord, North
Carolina

March 14 -- West Texas Section Convention, Midland, Texas

March 20-21 -- Louisiana State Convention, Rayne, Louisiana

March 21 -- MicroHAMS Digital Conference, Redmond, Washington

March 21 -- Nebraska State Convention, Lincoln, Nebraska

March 21 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Stuart, Florida

March 28 -- Texas State Convention, Rosenberg, Texas

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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