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N9PMO  > LETTER   29.07.18 12:14l 585 Lines 26786 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3630
Read: GUEST
Subj: ARRL3630 ARRL Letter
Path: IZ3LSV<IW8PGT<CX2SA<N9PMO
Sent: 180727/0031Z 1282@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NA BPQ6.0.16

FCC Proposes $18,000 Fine in Louisiana Amateur Radio Interference Case

Parity Act Options Open Despite Removal from Defense Authorization Act
Conference Report

The Doctor Will See You Now!

Broadcast-Quality Audio Processor Donated to W1AW

Significant Changes in Store for FT8 and MSK144 with WSJT-X Version
2.0

More ARRL Contest Award Certificates Now Available for Download

Ducie Island VP6D Team Awaiting its Turn at Baker Island KH1/KH7Z
Radios

Astro-Ham Alexander Gerst, KF5ONO, Jams with Kraftwerk for Festival
Audience

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

FCC Proposes $18,000 Fine in Louisiana Amateur Radio Interference Case

The FCC has issued a Notice of Apparent Liability (NAL) proposing to
fine Jerry W. Materne, KC5CSG, of Lake Charles, Louisiana, $18,000
"for apparently causing intentional interference and for apparently
failing to provide station identification on amateur radio
frequencies," the FCC said.

"Mr. Materne was previously warned regarding this behavior in writing
by the Enforcement Bureau and, given his history as a repeat offender,
these apparent violations warrant a significant penalty," the FCC said
in the NAL, released on July 25.

In 2017, the FCC received numerous complaints alleging that Materne, a
General-class licensee, was causing interference to the South West
Louisiana Amateur Repeater Club W5BII repeater, preventing other
amateur licensees from using it. In March 2017, the repeater trustee
banned Materne from using the repeater.

Responding to some of the complaints, the Enforcement Bureau issued a
Letter of Inquiry (LOI), advising Materne of the allegations and
directing him to address them. Materne denied causing interference,
but admitted to operating simplex on the repeater's output frequency.
In June 2017, the FCC received an additional complaint alleging that
Materne had repeatedly interfered with an attempted emergency net that
was called up as Tropical Storm Cindy was about to make landfall. The
complaint maintained that Materne "repeatedly transmitted on the
repeater's input frequency, hindering the local emergency net's
ability to coordinate weather warnings and alerts on behalf of the
National Weather Service," the FCC said in the NAL.

Local amateurs were able to track the interfering signal to Materne's
residence and confirmed their findings to the FCC, prompting a Warning
Letter advising Materne of the complaint and pointing out that his
behavior "as described in the complaint would be a violation of
Section 97.101(d) of the Commission's rules." Materne responded to the
Warning Letter to argue that it was legal to transmit on the
repeater's output frequency, further stating that "he was tired of
this trash harassing me," the FCC said.

In the wake of further complaints, FCC agents visited Lake Charles,
tracked transmissions on 146.130 MHz to Materne's residence, and
monitored them for up to 7 hours. The agent reported hearing Materne
"playing music on 146.130 MHz and warning other amateur operators that
the local Amateur Radio club would not be able to conduct their net
later that day."

That evening, the agent watched as Materne drove to a location near
the W5BII repeater, where, the agent said, Materne "began transmitting
an amateur digital radio signal from a hand-held radio in his
vehicle," disrupting the net and failing to identify. Subsequently,
the agent, accompanied by a deputy from the Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's
Office, approached Materne's vehicle and confirmed that he possessed a
radio capable of operating on 146.130 MHz. "Audio recordings captured
by the agent demonstrate that the intentional interference ceased as
the agent and the Sheriff's deputy approached Mr. Materne's vehicle,"
the FCC said in the NAL. Read more.

Parity Act Options Open Despite Removal from Defense Authorization Act
Conference Report

ARRL Hudson Division Director and ad hoc Legislative vocacy Committee
Chair Mike Lisenco, N2YBB, said this week's removal of Amateur Radio
Parity Act (HR 555) language from the National Defense Authorization
Act (NDAA) Conference Report was unfortunate, but does not kill the
initiative. The Parity Act would ask the FCC to grant radio amateurs
living in deed-restricted communities the right to install effective
outdoor antennas. Lisenco said that while the language was removed
from the final NDAA Conference Report, other viable options remain to
see the Parity Act succeed.

"We were disappointed the Parity language didn't survive the
conference process, but we do have other House-passed legislative
vehicles that contain the language, including the Financial Services &
General Government Appropriations bill, which funds the FCC," Lisenco
said.

"We have always known that getting this legislation across the finish
line was going to take a lot of effort," Lisenco said. "The
legislative process is sometimes frustrating for ARRL members, but
there is a way that our membership can be directly involved," Lisenco
explained. "By contacting your Representative and Senators and telling
them you want their support for the Amateur Radio Parity Act, you can
help lend thousands of voices to echo the work of the ad hoc
Legislative vocacy Committee on Capitol Hill."

"It's not unusual for legislation to stall in Congress. To remove the
logjam, we need our elected representatives in both chambers to know
how much of a priority this bill is for our avocation," Lisenco
explained. "The continued active support of ARRL members is critical
in order to do that."

Lisenco said that Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL) has been the lead
obstructionist during several stages of efforts to enact the Amateur
Radio Parity Act, which has passed the US House of Representatives
four times. Lisenco added that that Nelson's opposition makes no
sense, as Florida desperately needs effective Amateur Radio disaster
communications during hurricanes, and hurricane season is rapidly
approaching.

ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, said the House-passed version
of the NDAA included the Parity Act language, but the Senate bill did
not, and a House-Senate conference committee had to resolve a variety
of differences in the two passed bills. He said the Senate Armed
Services Committee Ranking Member was one of the "Big Four" who would
have had to agree to keep the Parity Act in the final NDAA Conference
Report, but unfortunately, he deferred to Nelson on the matter;
without Senator Nelson's opposition to the bill, it would have passed
Congress long ago.

Imlay has assured ARRL members that the Parity Act would be beneficial
to the many thousands of amateurs now living in deed-restricted
communities, as it would allow those hams to erect effective outdoor
antennas notwithstanding the preclusive language of covenants or
homeowner association (HOA) regulations.

"That is the principal benefit of this legislation," he said. "As I
see it, without the Parity Act, Amateur Radio will, over a relatively
short period of time, face death by a thousand cuts, as more and more
communities are subject to private land use regulations that prohibit
antennas entirely."

Lisenco said it was important to keep the legislative efforts in
context. "A decade ago, our bill was being introduced every 2 years
and gathering less than 2 dozen cosponsors before being forgotten and
tossed in the heap. Since we've created the ad hoc Legislative vocacy
Committee, we have seen the bill pass the House of Representatives
four times in less than 2 years and come within a hair of the
President's desk," Lisenco continued. "Momentum is clearly on our
side, and the wind is at our backs. We need our membership's active
engagement to provide that final push to propel the Parity Act across
the finish line."



The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Zero Beating" is the topic of the current (July 19) 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 email 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.

Just ahead: "Antenna Rotators."

Broadcast-Quality Audio Processor Donated to W1AW

Orban Labs, headquartered in Pennsauken, New Jersey, has donated a
state-of-the-art audio processor -- the all-digital 9300 OPTIMOD-AM --
to ARRL. Orban Labs Vice President of Business Development Mike
Pappas, W9CN, arranged for the donation with the intention of
improving the audio quality transmitted by W1AW during its evening
phone bulletins. The 9300 OPTIMOD-AM is used worldwide at broadcast
stations that want the best possible "sound."

W1AW Station Manager Joe Carcia, NJ1Q, installed the 9300 OPTIMOD-AM
into W1AW's audio chain. After making necessary setup adjustments and
working with instructions that Pappas provided, he determined that
overall average modulation had increased and audio clarity was
improved.

At that point, though, it became apparent that some low-level hum in
the station's audio chain was sneaking in prior to the new processor.
The hum was traced to the station's audio distribution amplifier. ARRL
Lab volunteer Tim Smith, WA1HLR, offered up a homebrew method of using
a passive (non-amplified) distribution method. After construction and
installation of the new audio distribution system and some level
adjustments, W1AW's audio chain was passing world-class audio with no
trace of hum on its transmitted signals.

"We greatly appreciate the donation of the Orban 9300 OPTIMOD-AM,"
ARRL Assistant Laboratory Manager Bob Allison, WB1GCM, said. "W1AW
audio quality is improved, with increased average power output, while
still occupying the same transmitted bandwidth. ARRL thanks Mike
Pappas for arranging this significant donation and Tim Smith for his
technical assistance."

W1AW wants your opinion on its new sound. Listen for W1AW's phone
bulletin 0145 UTC on 1.855, 3.990, 14.290, 18.160, 21.390, 28.590, and
50.350 MHz (SSB), as well as on 7.290 MHz (full-carrier, double
sideband AM), and on 147.555 MHz (FM simplex). Send brief signal
reports to W1AW.



Significant Changes in Store for FT8 and MSK144 with WSJT-X Version
2.0

WSJT-X co-developer Joe Taylor, K1JT, has announced that major changes
are coming to the FT8 and MSK144 digital protocols when WSJT-X version
2.0 arrives in a few months. Taylor said version 2.0 should be ready
by January.

"Much of the necessary programming is finished," Taylor said in a post
to the Packrats reflector. "Many of the new features have been tested
on the air, and we find them to work well."

Taylor was quick to point out that the new capabilities are not yet
publicly available, not even in beta form. He said that he, Steve
Franke, K9AN, and Bill Somerville, G4WJS, have been developing
"enhanced versions of the MSK144 and FT8 protocols that extend the
message payload to 77 bits."

"Don't rush to download something," he cautioned. "There is more
testing and code optimization to do." He said current plans call for a
beta-testing period "probably starting in mid-to-late September," with
a full release "possible a couple of months later."

Taylor ticked off a few possibilities WSJT-X version 2.0 will bring to
the table:

ARRL Field Day operation with standard Field Day exchanges.

ARRL RTTY Roundup operation with standard contest exchanges.

North American VHF contest operation with full support of grid
exchanges and rover (/R) call signs.

European VHF contest operation with the exchange of six-digit grids,
QSO serial numbers, and portable (/P) call signs.

Better and more user-friendly support for compound and nonstandard
call signs.

A special "telemetry" message format for exchanging arbitrary
information up to 71 bits.

Support for the existing "FT8 DXpedition Mode," with a more powerful
DXpedition Mode possible too.

"All of these features work seamlessly and automatically," Taylor
said. "No 'contest mode' checkboxes are needed. In most situations,
decoding sensitivity will be slightly better than at present for FT8;
for MSK144 it will sometimes be about 0.5 dB worse. Occupied
bandwidths will be the same as they are now, and false-decode rates
will be significantly lower."

Taylor said WSJT-X version 2.0 will be available in time for users to
digest the new documentation and to practice using the software before
actually using it on the air, but he offered one important caveat.
"The new protocols cannot be backward compatible with the existing
ones," he said in his post. "We will probably provide some temporary
'bilingual' capability for FT8, but not for MSK144. It will be
essential for users to upgrade to version 2.0 in order to use the new
features and communicate with others who have made the upgrade."

Taylor promised "plenty of advance notice" about the transition period
and a must-upgrade-by date.

More ARRL Contest Award Certificates Now Available for Download

The ARRL Contest Branch has announced that more contest award
certificates are now available for download from the ARRL website in
PDF and JPEG formats. Just enter the call sign used. ARRL Contest
Branch Manager Bart Jahnke, W9JJ, said downloadable certificates now
are available for these additional events: the 2017 ARRL 10 GHz and Up
Contest, the 2017 November Sweepstakes, the 2017 ARRL 10 Meter
Contest, the 2017 160 Meter Contest, the 2018 RTTY Roundup, and the
2018 January VHF Contest. Jahnke said 2018 ARRL International DX
Contest certificates would become available in the very near future.

Already available are downloadable certificates for the 2017 IARU HF
Championship, the 2017 ARRL 222 MHz and Up Distance Contest, and the
2017 ARRL September VHF Contest. Jahnke said the new online
certificates will offer enhanced content over what has been previously
available on ARRL certificates. New recognitions have been added for
Top 10 participants in a broader number of geographical (country,
Division, Section) or categorical entries.

New event certificates will be announced as they are released. For
those who never received a certificate or need to replace one, Jahnke
said certificates for contests going back a decade or so are available
for everything but the old UHF Contest and EME Contest.



Ducie Island VP6D Team Awaiting its Turn at Baker Island KH1/KH7Z
Radios

Operators on the upcoming VP6D Ducie Island DXpedition, set for
October 20 - November 3, are looking forward to their turn at the
Elecraft radio equipment used by the KH1/KH7Z Baker Island team during
its just-ended DXpedition. In a recent news release, the VP6D team
reported that its plans to activate Ducie Island this fall are on
schedule, and the Baker Island radio gear has been returned to
Elecraft for inspection, testing, and refurbishing. Members of the
VP6D team will travel to California in early August to get the gear
ready for shipment to New Zealand. Team member Jacky Calvo, ZL3CW,
will then transfer the shipment to the M/V Braveheart, which will
carry the VP6D team from New Zealand to its operating destination.
Nigel Jolly, K6NRJ, is the captain of the Braveheart.

The VP6D team said it is planning to use FT8 as part of its mode mix
on Ducie. "There's no question that the Baker team had considerable
success with FT8," the VP6D release said. "However, a large percentage
of the callers weren't prepared for the challenges of this new mode.
We ask everyone to please read the FT8 DXpedition Mode User Guide. It
will be in everyone's best interest if callers use the most recent
software version, correctly configure their equipment, call VP6D above
1,000 Hz, and call in the correct sequence."

The VP6D DXpedition intends to use Twitter and Facebook to update the
DX community on its progress through regular updates. Seven operating
positions are planned for 160 - 10 meters, SSB/CW/digital, including
FT8.

While on Ducie Island, DXpedition team members will undertake some
non-radio related activities. They will collect soil and plant
specimens for study by the National Antarctic Scientific Centre of
Ukraine to use in their climate change research. The Pitcairn Island
government has issued a permit for the specimens to be collected and
removed from the island, the news release said.

An uninhabited atoll, Ducie Island is a British Overseas Territory in
the Pitcairn Islands in the South Pacific. The last Ducie Island
DXpedition was VP6DX in 2008. Ducie is currently the 21st most-wanted
DXCC entity, according to Club Log. It's believed that this would be
the fourth DXpedition to Ducie.

Sponsored by the Perseverance DX Group (PDXG), the VP6D Ducie Island
DXpedition welcomes support from individuals or clubs. Direct
questions to Team Ducie.

Astro-Ham Alexander Gerst, KF5ONO, Jams with Kraftwerk for Festival
Audience

European Space Agency (ESA) Astronaut Alexander Gerst, KF5ONO, had the
opportunity on July 20 to sit in from space with German pioneers of
electronic music, Kraftwerk. Gerst accompanied the four band members,
each on synthesizers, using a tablet device equipped to serve as a
mini-synthesizer as part of the Jazz Open Festival held on
Schlossplatz, the largest square in Stuttgart, Germany. Gerst appeared
on a huge screen behind the four members of Kraftwerk.

"Never thought that the first concert I [would] ever play in is with
the legendary Kraftwerk, let alone jamming live from space with them,
from the 'Spacelab 2.0' Columbus directly to Stuttgart," Gerst tweeted
afterward. He was in the ESA Columbus module for the event, attended
by about 7,500 Earthlings, and began his part of the concert by
"sneaking in" the well-known five-note melody from the film, "Close
Encounters of the Third Kind." As Gerst explained, "It just fit too
perfectly."

Before joining Kraftwerk for the musical portion of the occasion,
Gerst, speaking in his native German, said, "I want you to come along
with me...with us...on this fantastic journey." Gerst will be aboard
the ISS until December.



In Brief...

The ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC) has issued
another call for papers. Technical papers are sought for presentation
at the DCC, set for September 14 - 16 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and
for publication in the Conference Proceedings published by ARRL.
Conference presentation is not required for publication. Papers are
due by July 31 to Maty Weinberg, KB1EIB, ARRL, 225 Main St.,
Newington, CT 06111, or via email. The ARRL/TAPR DCC is an
international forum for radio amateurs to meet, publish their work,
and present new ideas and techniques. Topics include, but are not
limited to, software-defined radio, digital voice systems, digital
satellite communications, precision timing, digital signal processing,
APRS, spread spectrum, networking over Amateur Radio, wireless
networking protocols, and topics that advance the Amateur Radio art.
Submission guidelines are on the TAPR website.

More Slow-Scan TV transmissions from the International Space Station
are just ahead. Russian cosmonauts on the International Space Station
are expected to activate Amateur Radio Slow-Scan Television (SSTV)
transmissions on 145.800 MHz FM on July 30 and 31 The SSTV experiment
should be active on Monday, July 30, 1600 - 1930 UTC, and Tuesday,
July 31, 1325 - 1915 UTC, using the RS0ISS call sign. SSTV images will
be transmitted using the Kenwood TM-D710 transceiver in the Russian
ISS Service Module. Format is expected to be PD-120. More information
on SSTV from the ISS is on the AMSAT-UK website.

The region of Italy that is home to the birthplace of wireless pioneer
Guglielmo Marconi will host the next World Radiosport Team
Championship, WRTC 2022. The official announcement that the Italian
host committee's proposal had been selected came from WRTC Sanctioning
Committee Chairman Tine Brajnik, S50A, at the close of WRTC 2018 in
Germany. "Thank you for trusting us," WRTC 2022 Organizing Committee
member Carlo De Mari, IK1HJS, told the WRTC 2018 audience. "It will be
a very big challenge. Fingers crossed, everybody!" In a formal
announcement, Brajnik said the Italian committee's application "was
well prepared, and, knowing their determination, we all expect another
outstanding meeting and competition among the world's best contesters,
in the Emilia-Romagna region."

CQ World Wide Contest rules have been updated. CQ has announced that,
effective with the 2018 contest season, some modifications to the CQ
World Wide Contest rules have been developed and approved by the
contest committee. The "busted call/NIL" penalty is reduced from 3× to
2×. Email addresses for log submissions have been removed, and the
committee now "strongly prefers" using web uploads to submit logs.
Paper logs will still be accepted. The 10× penalty for "rubber
clocking" with MS/M2 entries has been eliminated, although the
committee "will continue to vigorously pursue time abuses." Also, the
observer program has been eliminated. "Given the absence of a
reasonable pool of volunteers and supporting funding, the program has
proven to be impractical," CQ said. In addition, the top entry in the
"Rookie" category will be awarded on a one-time-only basis. Previous
Rookie winners are ineligible for plaques in this category. Submit
questions via the CQ WW "Contact Form" page. -- Thanks to John Dorr,
K1AR, CQ World Wide Contest Director

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA Seattle, reports: A single small sunspot appeared on
July 21, then disappeared. Before that, no sunspots had appeared since
June 26. The daily sunspot number on July 21 was 11 -- the minimum
non-zero sunspot number. Because there were no sunspots over the
previous week, average daily sunspot numbers increased from 0 to 1.6,
while average daily solar flux declined from 71.8 to 68.4.

The average daily planetary A index changed from 6.4 to 8.1, and the
average daily mid-latitude A index (measured in Virginia) increased
from 6.1 to 8.

Predicted solar flux is much lower than recently expected. Expected
flux values (based on the September 25 prediction) are 66 on July 26 -
August 1; 68 on August 2-10; 70 on August 11-18; 68 on August 19 -
September 6, and 70 on September 7-8.

Predicted planetary A index is 10 on July 26-27; 8 on July 28-29; 5 on
July 30 - August 11; 8 on August 12-13; 5 on August 14-15; 7, 12, 5,
10, 25, and 15 on August 16-21; 10 on August 22-23; 8 on August 24-25;
5 on August 26 - September 7, and 8 on September 8.

Sunspot numbers for July 19 - 25 were 0, 0, 11, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with a
mean of 1.6. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.5, 70.5, 70, 68.2, 67,
66.9, and 65.8, with a mean of 68.4. Estimated planetary A indices
were 4, 7, 11, 5, 4, 17, and 9, with a mean of 8.1. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 4, 7, 10, 5, 4, 16, and 10, with a mean of
8.

In Friday's bulletin, look for an updated forecast and reports from
readers, including extensive sporadic-E activity observed by N8II.
Send your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

July 28-29 -- RSGB IOTA Contest (CW, phone)

July 29 -- ARS Flight of the Bumblebees (CW)

August 2 -- NRAU 10-Meter Activity Contest (CW, phone, digital)

August 2 -- 1.8-28 SKCC Sprint Europe (CW)

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 email preferences.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

July 27-28 -- Oklahoma Section Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

August 2-5 -- YLRL 2018 Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

August 3-4 -- Texas State Convention, Austin, Texas

August 3-5 -- Pacific Northwest DX Convention, New Westminster,
British Columbia, Canada

August 4-5 -- Midwest Division Convention, Central City, Iowa

August 18-19 -- Southeastern Division Convention, Huntsville, Alabama

August 19 -- Kansas State Convention, Salina, Kansas

August 24-26 -- West Virginia State Convention, Weston, West Virginia

August 31-September 2 -- Roanoke Division Convention, Shelby, North
Carolina

September 1 -- Pennsylvania State Convention, Uniontown, Pennsylvania

September 7-9 -- New England Division Convention, Boxborough,
Massachusetts

September 7-9 -- Northwest APRS Convention, North Bend, Washington

September 8 -- Kentucky State Convention, Shepherdsville, Kentucky

September 8 -- Virginia Section Convention, Virginia Beach, Virginia

September 14-16 -- W9DXCC Convention, Schaumburg, Illinois

September 15 -- Wyoming State Convention, Rock Springs, Wyoming

September 16 -- Southern New Jersey Section Convention, Mullica Hill,
New Jersey

September 21-22 -- W4DXCC/SEDCO Convention, Pigeon Forge, Tennessee

September 21-23 -- Rocky Mountain Division Convention, Albuquerque,
New Mexico

September 22 -- Washington State Convention, Spokane Valley,
Washington

September 28-29 -- Wisconsin State Convention, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

September 29 -- North Dakota State Convention, West Fargo, North
Dakota

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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