|
N9PMO > LETTER 13.10.17 01:14l 631 Lines 28845 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3541
Read: GUEST
Subj: ARRL3541 ARRL Letter
Path: IZ3LSV<I0OJJ<N6RME<N0KFQ<NS2B<N9PMO
Sent: 171012/2308Z 28813@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NA BPQ6.0.14
Vice President Visits "Force of 50," Red Cross Invites Volunteers to
Extend Stay
ARRL Expresses Gratitude for Outpouring of Ham Aid Donations
Ham Radio Bridging the Gap in Wildfire-Stricken California
Hurricane Nets Activate for Nate
The Doctor Will See You Now!
ARRL Headquarters Welcomes New Communication Manager Dave Isgur
ARRL Foundation Accepting Scholarship Applications
FCC Affirms Huge Fine in New York Interference Case
JOTA/JOTI Report More Than 2,500 Registered for October 20-22 Event
In Brief...
The K7RA Solar Update
Just Ahead in Radiosport
Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
Vice President Visits "Force of 50," Red Cross Invites Volunteers to
Extend Stay
Vice President Mike Pence visited "Force of 50" volunteers and
emergency responders at the Puerto Rico Emergency Operations Center
(PREOC) in San Juan's Convention Center on October 6. "He gave a very
motivating speech, and our very own Gary Sessums, KC5QCN, shook his
hand," volunteer Valerie Hotzfeld, NV9L, reported.
The American Red Cross (ARC) this week invited the Amateur Radio
volunteers now in Puerto Rico to extend their duty tours. Members of
the "Force of 50" deployed to Puerto Rico at the start of the month,
all as ARC volunteers. ARRL Emergency Preparedness Manager Mike Corey,
KI1U, joined the cadre of volunteers last week and hit the ground
running. Nearly 2 dozen ARRL volunteers from the mainland and numerous
local radio amateurs have been working in concert over the past couple
of weeks, doing what needs to be done to help Puerto Rico to recover
from hurricane devastation.
Puerto Rico Section Emergency Coordinator Juan Sepulveda, KP3CR, is
better prepared to assist, now that volunteers have delivered a radio
and antenna to him in Lares. "This now gives us a local ham covering
the Lares Medical Center and the hospital, so our ARRL American Red
Cross Amateur Radio operator can cover the Casteñel hospital nearby,"
ARC volunteer Valerie Hotzfeld, NV9L, noted in a team update.
Sepulveda has been coordinating the ARES efforts on the west side of
the island since the recovery began.
Vice President Mike Pence greets Gary Sessums, KC5QCN.
Amateur Radio has continued to provide a link for the medical
community in Puerto Rico. Volunteers have deployed to hospitals,
including remote hospitals that are without communication.
This week, the team relayed a request for Culebra Hospital, which
reported that a generator fire had forced relocation to a nearby
clinic. In addition, volunteers relayed a request from Culebra
Hospital that it needs temporary housing from FEMA for necessary staff
members who lost their homes in the hurricane. The team also relayed a
message for Hima San Pablo Hospital in Fajardo, which needed
specialized IV fluids for a 4-day-old infant.
Rob Landon, KE8AMC, stationed at the hospital on Vieques, learned from
the hospital administrator that they needed to evacuate dialysis
patients, who require air conditioning that the hospital is unable to
provide. "We made their day," said Hotzfeld. "They were not aware of
our presence and were impressed with our communications capabilities."
Val Hotzfeld, NV9L (left), and ARRL Emergency Preparedness Manager
Mike Corey, KI1U.
An Amateur Radio operator has been assigned at Centro Medico (Medical
Central) to provide communication between the center and other
hospitals. "This happened just in time, because the Menonita
(Mennonite) Hospital in Caguas had both generators fail," Hotzfeld
said. The emergency room doctor at Medical Central and the ham
embedded there, Juan Trujillo, N0PSF, coordinated with Dennis Perez,
WP4Q, at the Mennonite Hospital in Caguas to transfer four critical
patients to the Mennonite Hospital in Cayey.
Volunteers at the EOC relayed a request from Guayana Hospital for
snacks, water, and a generator. Their second generator was reported to
be about to fail. They also relayed requests from hospitals for fuel
and water, and they provided communication for fire departments
contacting the EOC.
A helicopter drops a huge concrete barrier into a breach at Guajataca
Dam.
A dozen or so volunteers continue to handle traffic and relays from
the EOC. The Red Cross deployed five radio operators to provide
communication for its reunification teams. Safe and Well data
collection continues at Red Cross shelters, and reunification work
involves going out into areas that have no communication. The Amateur
Radio operators on the island also passed a substantial volume of
health-and-welfare traffic.
Efforts continue toward resurrecting the devastated electrical power
infrastructure in Puerto Rico, and 40 to 50 Puerto Rican radio
amateurs have been assisting the power authority to maintain
communication as it works to restore power.
Hotzfeld; Puerto Rico Section Manager Oscar Resto, KP4RF; Corey, and
Amateur Radio liaison to the FEMA ESF-2 Communications Task Force Gary
Sessums, KC5QCN, traveled to Arecibo, Lares, and the Guajataca Dam to
deliver bottled water as well as spare VHF radios to permit direct
communication between Isabela and the dam, where infrastructure
repairs are under way. A repeater has been delivered to Arecibo
Observatory.
Several team members stocked up on powdered milk, peanut butter,
water, rice, canned fruits and vegetables, and bags of fresh apples,
and delivered these to people in the Arecibo area.
From left to right: Joe Bassett, W1WCN; ARRL Puerto Rico SM Oscar
Resto, KP4RF, and Ed Halcomb, KD8WAV, who delivered two radios and
batteries donated by the Kalamazoo Amateur Radio Club for use in the
field.
The fire station in Guayama reported a complete lack of water, with
people being turned away. One of the Amateur Radio volunteers was able
to assist from the fire station in Juncos.
Volunteer Joe Bassett, W1WCN, worked via relay with local operator Al
Medina-Ramirez, NP3MR, to reestablish contact with an Army task force
on Vieques Island. Army MARS operators were unable to get in touch
with the task force dispatched to assist the island's hospital.
Medina-Ramirez responded to a call from W1WCN to travel to the
hospital and contact the task force, which was found safe and well and
awaiting transport via helicopter, which had been delayed due to the
weather.
Amateur Radio operators at the EOC assisted Samaritan's Purse in
providing a generator to power a repeater near Jayuya. Contact was
provided to have local radio amateur WP4PNS meet Samaritan's Purse
personnel to exchange the generator.
FEMA has reported that only about 19% of cell telephone sites are
operational, and 15% of customers have electrical power. The Salvation
Team Emergency Radio Network (SATERN) stood down on October 11. --
Thanks to ARRL Puerto Rico SM Oscar Resto, KP4RF; Valerie Hotzfeld,
NV9L; ESF-2 Amateur Radio Liaison Gary Sessums, KC5QCN, and National
SATERN Liaison Bill Feist, WB8BZH
ARRL Expresses Gratitude for Outpouring of Ham Aid Donations
ARRL thanks the Amateur Radio community for its generosity in support
of the ARRL Ham Aid Fund, which is making it possible to provide
relief and recovery communications in Puerto Rico. Overall, there have
been more than 600 donations to the Ham Aid program in response to a
call from ARRL President Rick Roderick, K5UR, and nearly $125,000 has
come in from clubs and individuals. Several Amateur Radio retailers
and manufacturers also have stepped up to donate needed equipment.
Roderick said he was amazed at the overwhelming response, including
those who answered his call to join the "Force of 50" now deployed in
Puerto Rico.
"The Amateur Radio community really came together in providing
donations of equipment, funding, and personnel in response to the
great need in Puerto Rico," Roderick said. "The scale of these efforts
and the response is making history. This has got to be one of Amateur
Radio's greatest moments. Our sincere thanks go to all involved."
The list of those offering their generosity and support is long and
growing. Contributors include International Amateur Radio Union Region
2 (IARU R2), which donated two Ham Aid kits in addition to a monetary
donation; the Yasme Foundation, which made a monetary contribution to
the Ham Aid Fund and donated critical equipment, and the Northern
California DX Foundation (NCDXF). Donations also came from the Orlando
Amateur Radio Club (OARC) and from Orlando HamCation®.
Amateur Radio dealers and retailers have made in-kind donations.
Quicksilver Radio (QSR) has contributed antennas and accessories,
Radiowavz has provided antennas, and Heil Sound Ltd. has donated
headsets with cables. Other corporate and retail in-kind contributors
include ABR Industries, AT&T, Icom America, Yaesu, Ham Radio Outlet
(HRO), and DX Engineering.
Monetary donations also have arrived from the CW Operators Club
(CWops); the SouthEastern DX and Contesting Organization (SEDCO),
sponsor of W4DXCC; the Northern California Contest Club (NCCC); the
Fort Myers Amateur Radio Club (FMARC); the Wahkiakum Amateur Radio
Club; the North Shore Radio Club (NSARC), and the Steel City Amateur
Radio Club (W3KWH).
Ham Aid was created in 2005 in response to the need for equipment and
resources to support the Amateur Radio response to hurricanes in the
US and the Caribbean, and Ham Aid kits are in use throughout Puerto
Rico for the Hurricane Maria relief and recovery effort.
Ham Aid equipment will be needed for future disasters. "Your donation
to Ham Aid will help us now, and contributions to Ham Aid are 100% tax
deductible," President Roderick said.
You can donate online (select "Ham Aid" from the Donation Form list),
or by mail by printing a donation form and mailing it with your check
payable to ARRL, noting "Ham Aid" on the memo line, to ARRL, 225 Main
St., Newington, CT 06111 USA.
Ham Radio Bridging the Gap in Wildfire-Stricken California
More than a dozen wildfires in Northern California have damaged or
destroyed cellular telephone and internet infrastructure in some
areas, and Amateur Radio has helped to fill the communication gap.
Mendocino County Sheriff Thomas Allman told news media on Tuesday,
October 10, that damage to cell towers and fiber optic telephone and
computer lines had left officials relying on Amateur Radio operators
to communicate with area hospitals.
Fire on the mountain: Solano County, California. [Elana Leoni photo]
ARRL contacted Robin Carter, a resident of the Willits area in
Mendocino County, who confirmed that ham radio operators were, until
midweek, stationed at all North County hospitals and large nursing
homes, supplementing the county's emergency communication system. She
said cell and landline telephone service had been knocked out at her
home, along with the fiber optic internet connection, although the
family has satellite internet. She said internet service was at least
temporarily restored on Wednesday.
Her husband Mike Carter, KC6MGM, a Mendocino County Community
Emergency Response Team (CERT) volunteer, had, until Wednesday, been
staffing a station at Howard Memorial Hospital in Willits for 12 hours
a day.
Radio amateurs also assisted with communication at Ukiah Valley
Medical Center in Ukiah; Northbrook Nursing Home in Willits; the
Mendocino Coast Hospital in Fort Bragg, and Red Cross shelters at
Ukiah High School and Willits High School, Robin Carter said.
The Redwood Complex Fire, the northernmost of the fires, was
responsible for the Mendocino County outages. The Atlas Fire in Solano
and Napa counties is the largest and most disastrous wildfire. It
covers more than 42,300 acres and was only 3% contained as of October
11.
In Sonoma County, Sonoma County Radio Amateurs (SCRA) has been
conducting an ARES Fire Watch Net to relay fire and emergency
information on its repeater. Auxiliary Communication Service (ACS)
Radio Officer Dan Ethen, WA6CRB, said a controlled Sonoma County Fire
and Emergency Services RACES/ACS net is also active. In Solano County,
radio amateurs are reported to be supporting shelter operations.
Fires have damaged or destroyed telecommunications infrastructure in
California.
In Sonoma County, Sonoma County Radio Amateurs (SCRA) has been
conducting an ARES Fire Watch Net to relay fire and emergency
information on its repeater. Auxiliary Communication Service (ACS)
Radio Officer Dan Ethen, WA6CRB, said a controlled Sonoma County Fire
and Emergency Services RACES/ACS net is also active. In Solano County,
radio amateurs are reported to be supporting shelter operations.
The fast-moving, wind-driven blazes -- 18 large fires in all,
according to FEMA -- have driven thousands from their homes, killed at
least 2 dozen people, and destroyed more than 1,300 homes. FEMA said
the fires cover some 150,000 acres in all. Some towns have been
virtually leveled. Most of the wildfires are clustered around Santa
Rosa, north of San Francisco. According to FEMA, some 106,000
residents are under mandatory evacuation orders, more than 36,500
homes are threatened, and 59 Red Cross and independent shelters are
open with 5,117 evacuees.
A state of emergency exists in Napa, Sonoma, Butte, Lake, Solano,
Mendocino, Nevada, Orange, and Yuba counties. The California Emergency
Operations Center is partially activated.
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection mobile
communications centers (MCCs) are equipped with Amateur Radio
stations, but it's not known if any hams have been deployed on any
MCCs in the field for the current spate of wildfires. Read more.
Hurricane Nets Activate for Nate
The Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) and the VoIP Hurricane Net activated for
Hurricane Nate last weekend. Both stood down on October 8.
"Nate spared the New Orleans area any significant wind damage and
storm-surge flooding, but pockets of tree and wire damage and wind
gusts to hurricane force were recorded in parts of Mississippi and
offshore oil platforms in the Louisiana coastal waters," said VoIP
Hurricane Net Director of Operations Rob Macedo, KD1CY. "Storm surge
values of 3-7 feet were recorded in portions of southern Alabama,
southern Mississippi, and extreme southeast Louisiana."
Nate was downgraded to a tropical storm after making a second landfall
near Biloxi, Mississippi. During a 14-hour net activation, HWN members
collected and forwarded ground-truth weather data from numerous
reporting stations across the northern Gulf to the National Hurricane
Center. "2017 has been a tough year for land-falling hurricanes," HWN
Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, said, noting that the Atlantic hurricane
season continues through November 30.
Macedo said some pockets of structural damage were recorded in parts
of Mississippi and Alabama from higher wind gusts in severe
thunderstorms or possibly tornado activity. One tornado was spotted in
Orange Beach, Alabama, by an Amateur Radio operator who was in the
area, he said.
The Doctor Will See You Now!
"Dirty Transmitters" is the topic of the new (October 12) episode of
the "ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!
Sponsored by DX Engineering, "ARRL The Doctor is In" is an informative
discussion of all things technical. Listen on your computer, tablet,
or smartphone -- whenever and wherever you like!
Every 2 weeks, your host, QST Editor-in-Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and
the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of
technical topics. You can also e-mail your questions to
doctor@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast.
Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone
or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can
also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (free registration
required, or browse the site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher
app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices. If you've never listened to a
podcast before, download our beginner's guide.
ARRL Headquarters Welcomes New Communication Manager Dave Isgur
This week, ARRL Headquarters welcomed Dave Isgur, who will be the
League's Communication Manager. A Boston-area native and 1979 graduate
of Boston University with a bachelor's degree in journalism and a
minor in economics, he brings to ARRL a rich background in journalism
and public relations. Expect him to have a call sign after his name in
the near future.
"I am enjoying it here and have found everyone to be very friendly and
welcoming," Isgur said. "I am working on my ham radio license and have
had an interest in Amateur Radio, as I have a few friends who are ham
radio operators."
He joins the HQ staff after 19 years as the director of media
relations at the University of Hartford, where he served as the
university's chief spokesperson and wrote articles for alumni
publications and student and faculty profiles for the school's
website. A highlight of his time there came in 2015, when President
Barack Obama spoke on campus, and Isgur had the opportunity to work
with the White House on media relations for the event.
Before that, Isgur worked for nearly 20 years as a reporter and editor
at a variety of publications throughout New England. That included a
stint in the 1990s when he was managing editor -- and later editor --
of Hartford Business Journal. He had first arrived in Hartford in
1990, to launch and manage a news bureau in Connecticut's capital for
the Reuters International wire service.
"Working for a wire service taught me a lot about how to craft tightly
written stories under intense deadline pressures," Isgur recalled.
He has earlier experience writing for journals targeting the
insurance, banking, and real estate professions, and he was a reporter
at general circulation weekly newspapers in Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, and Maine.
Isgur said he's a diehard fan of the Boston Red Sox as well as of
horror-genre novelist Stephen King, and mystery and science fiction
novels.
ARRL Foundation Accepting Scholarship Applications
The ARRL Foundation Scholarship program is now accepting applications
from eligible applicants. The deadline to submit applications is
January 31, 2018. All applicants must be FCC-licensed radio amateurs,
and many scholarships have other specific requirements, such as
intended area of study, ARRL Division, Section, or state, and license
class.
This year, the Foundation Board of Directors is offering several new
scholarships. These include The Old Man International Sideband Society
Scholarship; The K6GO Gale Olson and NA6MB Mike Bender Scholarship;
The Harry A. Hodges, W6YOO, Scholarship; the Medical Amateur Radio
Council (MARCO) Scholarship, and The Ladies Amateur Radio Association
of Orange County Scholarship.
Applicants should review all scholarship descriptions and check off
the ones for which they are eligible. More information is on the ARRL
Foundation Scholarship Program page.
FCC Affirms Huge Fine in New York Interference Case
The FCC has affirmed a huge fine of more than $400,000 on Jay Peralta,
a Queens, New York, man who has admitted to making unauthorized
transmissions on New York City Police Department (NYPD) radio
frequencies, maliciously interfering with officers' communications.
The FCC had sent Peralta a Notice of Apparent Liability (NAL) last
April 14. Peralta, 20, is alleged to have transmitted false bomb
threats, false claims of criminal activity involving firearms, false
distress calls from purported NYPD officers, and threats against
individual NYPD officers. The unauthorized transmissions began in
2016, according to the FCC.
"Mr. Peralta has not filed a response to the NAL," the FCC said in an
October 10 Forfeiture Order (FO). "Based on the information before us,
we find no reason to cancel, withdraw, or reduce the proposed penalty,
and we therefore assess the $404,166 forfeiture the Commission
previously proposed in the NAL."
The FCC has calculated the precise forfeiture at $404,166.
The FCC said the transmissions occurred from April through August
2016. The NYPD subsequently provided the FCC with a written statement
by Peralta, who is currently in custody pending trial for related
charges, in which he acknowledged making nine unauthorized
transmissions on the NYPD radio system, the FCC said. Read more.
JOTA/JOTI Report More Than 2,500 Registered for October 20-22 Event
Scouting's Jamboree-on-the-Air (JOTA) / Jamboree-on-the-Internet
(JOTI) report that more than 2,500 have signed up to take part in the
2017 event over the October 20-22 weekend. This is the 60th JOTA, and
there is still time to register.
For those getting on the air, a Scout Station Scheduling site is
available, as is a Scout Camps on the Air (SCOTA) page to register
your own station and arrange contacts.
Two Echolink conference nodes have been designated for Scout contacts
-- *JOTA-365* (node 480809) and *JAMBO* (node 832996).
More Scout frequency information, including D-STAR, DMR, and IRLP, is
available on the K2BSA website. JOTA organizers point out that these
are only suggested frequencies. "Crowded conditions, including
contests, will no doubt require that you move a few kilohertz up or
down," said JOTA Coordinator Jim Wilson, K5ND.
JOTA participating stations should take special care to avoid
conflicting with any emergency response traffic activity under way in
the Caribbean. In general, steer clear of any net traffic you might
encounter.
A potential conflict exists between PSK and the new FT8 mode on 18.100
MHz, the frequency recommended for both modes. FT8 is the predominant
activity at 18.1 MHz right now, and JOTA organizers suggest looking
for PSK contacts on either side of 18.100. Read more.
In Brief...
ARRL Executive Committee to Meet October 14 in Connecticut: The ARRL
Executive Committee of the Board of Directors will meet on Saturday,
October 14. ARRL President Rick Roderick, K5UR, will chair the
session, which will hear reports from officers and the general
counsel. Topping the agenda are FCC regulatory matters, including a
review of enforcement issues and concerns, as well as open items with
no FCC action since the July 2017 Board meeting. The Amateur Radio
Parity Act of 2017 (HR 555) will be the focus when the discussion
turns to legislative matters. The Executive Committee will hear a
status report. The Committee will review pending action items
including work in progress by committees, among them the Amateur
Auxiliary Study Hoc Committee, and will develop a plan to implement
the recommendations of the Entry Level License Committee. The
Committee also will recognize new ARRL Life Members. The Executive
Committee is tasked by the ARRL Bylaws to address League matters
between regular Board meetings.
Noted Micronesian Radio Amateur Albert Haped, V63YAH: Albert Haped,
V63YAH, of Ulithi Atoll, Miocronesia, died on October 3. An ARRL
member, he was 64. Haped had been one of the "people on the other end"
of daily contacts to the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) that
recipients of the ARRL International Humanitarian of the Year John
Bush, KH6DLK/V63JB; Barbara Darling, NH7FY, and Richard Darling, AH7G,
make almost daily. He was an island chief of Mangyang Island, one of
the islands surrounding Ulithi Atoll. Before retiring, Haped was a
teacher at Federai Elementary School. Haped was active during the
recent Typhoon Maysak that hit FSM, especially during the recovery.
School Club Roundup Participants Reminded to Tune Clear of Any
Caribbean Relief Nets: Participants in the ARRL School Club Roundup
(SCR) are being reminded that Caribbean traffic nets associated with
the hurricane recovery effort may be active on 80, 40, and 20 meters.
Several formal and informal traffic-handling operations have been
active on 14.255 and 14.275 MHz, as well as on 7.182 and 7.188 MHz,
and in the high end of the CW subband on 40 meters, where Caribbean
stations may operate on SSB. While stations on the US mainland may not
be able to hear them, they can hear us in the US. Listen first and, if
you're asked to move or told you're causing interference, please find
another frequency.
The K7RA Solar Update
Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: The NOAA Space Weather Prediction
Center (SWPC) has issued a minor (G1) geomagnetic storm watch through
October 13, due to the anticipated arrival of a recurrent,
polar-connected, positive polarity coronal hole high-speed wind
stream. A minor geomagnetic storm can cause weak power grid
fluctuations and may have minor impact on satellite operations. The
primary impact area is north of 60° geomagnetic latitude. A G1 storm
can affect migratory animals, and aurora is commonly visible at high
latitudes, NOAA said.
No sunspots were visible on October 8 through 11, and the last new
sunspot appeared on September 25. Average daily sunspot numbers for
October 5-11 dropped from 32.6 for the previous 7 days to 8.4. Average
daily solar flux declined from 87.9 to 76.8. Geomagnetic activity also
dropped but is now increasing. The average daily planetary A index
went from 16.3 to 8.9, and the average mid-latitude A index went from
12.7 to 8.
Predicted solar flux is 70 on October 12-16; 72, 73, and 76 on October
17-19; 80 on October 20-31; 76 on November 1-5; 74 on November 6-14;
76 on November 15, and 80 on November 16-25.
Predicted planetary A index is 30, 35, 25, 20, 10, 8, and 16 on
October 12-18; 5 on October 19-23; 35 and 45 on October 24-25; 15 on
October 26-27; 10 and 8 on October 28-29; 5 on October 30-31; 8 and 10
on November 1-2; 5 on November 3-5; 8, 25, 30, 36, 28, 16, and 8 on
November 6-12; 5 on November 13-19, and 35, 45, 15, 15, 10, and 8 on
November 20-25.
Sunspot numbers for October 5-11 were 26, 22, 11, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with
a mean of 8.4. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 84.7, 84.1, 79.6, 76.7,
72.3, 70.9, and 69.6, with a mean of 76.8. Estimated planetary A
indices were 7, 9, 5, 4, 3, 4, and 30, with a mean of 8.9. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 6, 6, 5, 3, 2, 13, and 21, with a mean of
8.
Send me your reports and observations.
Just Ahead in Radiosport
October 14-25 -- Makrothen RTTY Contest
October 14-15 -- Oceania DX Contest (CW)
October 14-15 -- Scandinavian Activity Contest (SSB)
October 14-15 -- Pennsylvania QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
October 14-15 -- Arizona QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
October 14 -- FISTS Fall Unlimited Sprint (CW)
October 14-15 -- PODXS 070 Club 160-Meter Great Pumpkin Sprint
October 15 -- Asia-Pacific Fall Sprint (CW)
October 15 -- UBA ON Contest, 2 Meters (CW, phone)
October 16 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)
October 16-17 -- UHF Telephone Pioneers QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
October 16-20 -- ARRL School Club Roundup (CW, phone)
October 18 -- RSGB 80-Meter Autumn Series (Digital)
See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information. For in-depth
reporting on Amateur Radio contesting, subscribe to The ARRL Contest
Update via your ARRL member profile e-mail preferences.
Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
October 13-14 -- Florida State Convention, Melbourne, Florida
October 14 -- Pacific Northwest VHF Society Conference, Moses Lake,
Washington
October 20-22 -- Pacific Division Convention, San Ramon, California
October 21 -- Wisconsin ARES/RACES Conference, Wisconsin Rapids,
Wisconsin
October 22 -- Connecticut State Convention, Meriden, Connecticut
October 28 -- Arizona State Convention, Maricopa, Arizona
November 4-5 -- Georgia State Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia
November 11 -- HamJam Convention, Alpharetta, Georgia
November 18-19 -- Indiana State Convention, Fort Wayne, Indiana
December 2 -- Arkansas DX Association's 50th Anniversary Convention,
North Little Rock, Arkansas
December 8-9 -- West Central Florida Section Convention, Plant City,
Florida
Find conventions and hamfests in your area.
ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for
Amateur Radio News and Information.
Join or Renew Today! ARRL membership includes QST, Amateur Radio's
most popular and informative journal, delivered to your mailbox each
month.
Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday.
Subscribe to...
NCJ -- National Contest Journal. Published bimonthly, features
articles by top contesters, letters, hints, statistics, scores, NA
Sprint, and QSO Parties.
QEX -- A Forum for Communications Experimenters. Published bi-monthly,
features technical articles, construction projects, columns, and other
items of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.
Free of charge to ARRL members...
Subscribe to the ARES E-Letter (monthly public service and emergency
communications news), the ARRL Contest Update (bi-weekly contest
newsletter), Division and Section news alerts -- and much more!
Find ARRL on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter, Snapchat @ARRLHQ, and
Instagram!
The ARRL Letter is published Thursdays, 50 times each year. ARRL
members and registered guests may subscribe at no cost or unsubscribe
by editing their profile.
NNNN
Read previous mail | Read next mail
| |