2014-05-09

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

///////////////////////////////////////////

Experimental 30 Meter Mobile Beacon

Posted: 08 May 2014 12:03 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...n&goto=newpost

Starting on May 15th at 1400 GMT (8:00 CDST) the first 30 Meter Mobile

Beacon will be on the air at 10.129 MHz on our way to the Dayton

Hamvention. We are using a quarter wave trailing wire for the antenna that

will be floating behind the vehicle. The beacon will be mounted on the

passenger side dashboard and Al Gallo, W0ERE will be the Chief Operator of

the Beacon providing up to date grid locations during our travel. “SAP”

N0SAP/M, will monitor 18.113 MHz for any live reports heard from the beacon

during our travel to and from the Dayton Hamvention. Our return date is

May 20th.

We take Ham Radio in the true sense of being an experimental hobby. We

are asking for signal reports by email and/or audio files sent to
.

///////////////////////////////////////////

The ARRL Letter, May 8, 2014

Posted: 08 May 2014 10:56 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...4&goto=newpost

The ARRL Letter

May 8, 2014

Rick Lindquist, WW1ME, Editor

[Note: Clicking on the story links below will take you to the news article

as it appears in The ARRL Letter on the ARRL website.]

Public Service: Ham Volunteers Shift Gears to Handle Mountain Bike Event

EmergencyPublic Service: Hurricane Watch Net Seeks Net Control

OperatorsRegulatory: ARRL Opposes FCC Proposal to Leave Licensed Service

Users Open to Unlicensed InterferenceRegulatory: Canadian Radio Amateurs

Gain New 472-479 kHz BandCentennial: ARRL Centennial Convention Attracting

Growing List of Vendors and ExhibitorsCentennial: ARRL to Celebrate its

100th Birthday at Dayton!Centennial: W1AW Centennial Operations Shift

States on May 14 (UTC)Events: Massachusetts to Host USA ARDF Championships

June 5-8Ham Radio in Space: Tiny KickSat "Sprite" Satellites May Not

DeployMilestones: Past SCM, DXer, Propagation Forecaster Lee Wical, KH6BZF,

SKFeature: A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRLThe K7RA Solar UpdateJust

Ahead in RadiosportUpcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions

and Events

Public Service: Ham Volunteers Shift Gears to Handle Mountain Bike Event

Emergency

The 2014 Whiskey Off-Road Mountain Bike Event on April 26 in the Prescott,

Arizona, area quickly developed into a real emergency exercise for Yavapai

Amateur Radio Club volunteers, who were supporting communication for the

11th annual race. Some 2000 amateur and professional mountain bike riders

took part in the 50-mile event. About an hour after it began, however,

temperatures dropped, and riders were confronted with a mixture of rain,

high winds, sleet, and snow. As the weather worsened, some riders dropped

out at the second checkpoint, returning to Prescott via a connecting road.

Other riders, however, soldiered on through two more checkpoints, at which

time another 50 participants quit, due to the worsening weather. Some

exhibited symptoms of possible hypothermia. Event communications quickly

switched into evacuation mode, and the net control station contacted all

checkpoints to determine how many riders needed transportation back to

Prescott.

"Net control worked with race, search-and-rescue, and other emergency

personnel to coordinate transportation to evacuate these riders," Yavapai

County Arizona ARES District Emergency Coordinator Lloyd Halgunseth,

WA6ZZJ, explained. "Personal vehicles and a bus were used in the

evacuation."

With evacuation transportation on its way, Amateur Radio volunteers and

race personnel staffing checkpoints provided warm refuge in their own

vehicles for those riders who were suffering the most. The race continued,

and Amateur Radio and event communications were used to locate some missing

riders. Once things settled down, the net shifted back into its accustomed

role of gathering race updates from the checkpoints. Everyone was brought

in safely, albeit a bit cold. Abandoned bikes were retrieved and returned

to the event center.

Despite the challenging conditions, more than 300 cyclists completed the

entire course. The weather front broke later in the morning, and the second

race began around noon. Race officials shortened the second ride from a

planned 25 miles to 15 miles, and it finished with no major incidents.

"During this emergency communications exercise, Amateur Radio enabled a

quick response by race officials, which kept a bad situation from getting

worse," Halgunseth said. "This response contributed to the overall success

of this 3-day event."

The Yavapai Amateur Radio Club is an ARRL-affiliated Special Service Club.

-- Thanks to Frank Bender, K8FB

Public Service: Hurricane Watch Net Seeks Net Control Operators

The Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) needs additional net control operators.

Hurricane Season in the Atlantic begins June 1 and ends November 30; in the

Eastern Pacific, it runs from May 15 until November 30. The Hurricane Watch

Net activates on 14.325 MHz when an Atlantic Basin hurricane is within 300

miles of landfall, or at the request of the National Hurricane Center (NHC)

in Miami. HWN Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, said the net has been getting

everything in place for its 50th straight season, and that includes

recruiting well-qualified, experienced net control operators who can

effectively communicate with the hurricane-prone areas of Eastern Canada,

the US East Coast, the Gulf of Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean.

"We are especially looking for bilingual operators, as we recognize that

some Latin American operators hesitate to check in and send reports to us,

if they aren't fluent in English," Graves said. "The Hurricane Watch Net

relies on volunteer operators -- our members -- who serve as our net

control stations. These volunteers are hams who have above-average stations

and are willing to commit their time to operating in support of the HWN's

mission during net activations."

Graves conceded that net sessions can be "long, and, at times, very

stressful." He noted that while the HWN primarily operates on 14.325 MHz,

it is also looking for volunteers who can handle net control duties on the

low end of the 40 meter phone band. "When 20 meters fades away in the

evening," he said, "we lose the ability to effectively communicate with our

reporting stations or the National Hurricane Center."

Net control operators must be HWN members, but radio amateurs do not need

to be HWN members to participate in the net as reporting stations. HWN

participants provide observed or measured weather reports, or relay

assistance as required by the net control station.

Radio amateurs interested in becoming HWN members or volunteering as net

control stations should visit the net's Membership Information page. Read

more

Regulatory: ARRL Opposes FCC Proposal to Leave Licensed Service Users Open

to Unlicensed Interference

Asserting "a substantial stake" in the outcome of the proceeding, the ARRL

has commented in opposition to an FCC proposal that would leave licensed

radio service users vulnerable to interference from unlicensed devices. In

a docket unrelated to Amateur Radio spectrum, the Commission has indicated

that it's willing to consider adding licensed Globalstar terrestrial users

to the 2473-2483.5 MHz band -- already shared by licensed and unlicensed

services -- with the condition that customer handset users in the new

allocation accept interference from unlicensed radio services now legally

operating there. The League's comments were in response to a Notice of

Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) in IB Docket 13-213 and RM-11685.

"This plan would for the first time create a multiple-use, radio frequency

environment in which Part 15 unlicensed devices do not have to protect a

licensed, allocated radio service from harmful interference," the ARRL

stressed. "This is untenable as a precedent, and it makes the entirety of

the [NPRM] likewise untenable."

The League said allowing Globalstar to deploy Ancillary Terrestrial

Component (ATC) users of its Mobile-Satellite Service (MSS) system under

technical rules that apply to unlicensed users would depart from

long-standing rules protecting licensed radio services from interference

resulting from the use of unlicensed Part 15 or Part 18 ISM devices.

The League said the proposal "represents an unprecedented withdrawal of the

assurances that licensed users have been given by the Commission and relied

upon in dozens of allocation proceedings." The League said many Commission

orders "consistently embody" the principle that Part 15 device operators

must cease operations that cause harmful interference.

"The Commission cannot, consistent with the entire regulatory underpinning

for allowing Part 15 devices, premise an allocation decision in this case

on the unique provision that a component of a licensed radio service will

not be entitled to interference protection from Part 15 devices, whether

those unlicensed devices are incumbent or deployed in the future in the

band at issue," the League concluded.

The ARRL suggested that the FCC "do some bona fide technical evaluation" of

compatibility between and among services in and below the band at question

and of ATC systems before deciding whether or not the proposed overlay is

compatible.

"The price of making the wrong assumptions is too high in this and similar

allocations proceedings," the ARRL said, "and the damage from the wrong

assumptions will be, practically speaking, impossible to reverse." Read

more.

Regulatory: Canadian Radio Amateurs Gain New 472-479 kHz Band

As of May 1, radio amateurs in Canada have a new allocation at 472-479 kHz.

The 7 kilohertz sliver of spectrum is available to hams there on a

secondary basis. Delegates attending the 2012 World Radiocommunication

Conference (WRC-12) approved a secondary allocation between 472-479 kHz for

the Amateur Radio Service, and telecommunications regulator Industry Canada

subsequently proposed numerous revisions to its Table of Frequency

Allocations, including the new MF band. Radio Amateurs of Canada (RAC)

announced the band's "official implementation" on May 3.

"Canadian amateur operators have recently secured two new segments of

spectrum, thanks to the very hard work of RAC volunteers," the announcement

said. "The 60 meter band allocation was made official a few month ago as

well."

MF and LF experimenter Joe Craig, VO1NA, "discovered" last week that the

long-awaited new 630 meter band had become available, after he checked the

Table of Frequency Allocations. Craig said it didn't take long for him and

his wife Michelle, VO1RL, "to get our feet wet" on the new allocation. She

stayed at home, while Joe tossed some gear into the car and drove to a park

for their first contact on the new band (at 473 kHz on CW).

Last fall Industry Canada issued an experimental radio license to Craig's

club, the Marconi Radio Club of Newfoundland (VO1MRC), endorsing

experimental station VX9MRC to conduct transmissions on 472-479 kHz on

December 14 and 15, to call attention to the potential new Amateur Radio

band there and to the role ham radio plays in emergency communication.

The ARRL in 2012 petitioned the FCC to carve out the same band for US hams,

but the Commission has not yet acted on the League's request. The

ARRL-sponsored WD2XSH experimental operation in that region of the spectrum

continues, with Fritz Raab, W1FR, as the coordinator. Other experimenters

also operate there from time to time.

By international agreement, the maximum equivalent isotropically radiated

power (EIRP) of amateur stations using 472-479 kHz may not exceed 5 W (or 1

W EIRP in some locations).

Craig believes the new band will appeal to a broader group of hams than do

more-demanding LF allocations. He has predicted that transatlantic

contacts, while challenging, "should be fairly common using conventional CW

and digital modes." Read more.

Centennial: ARRL Centennial Convention Attracting Growing List of Vendors

and Exhibitors

Upward of 7 dozen vendors and exhibitors already are planning to be on hand

for the ARRL National Centennial Convention in mid-July.

Convention activities begin on Thursday, July 17. The 60,000 square feet

exhibit hall will be open all day Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, at

the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford, for what promises to be the

largest gathering of its kind in the Northeast.

"We're very excited that so many of our QST advertisers, business partners,

fellow societies, and radio clubs from around the country and the world

will be coming to Connecticut for the Centennial Convention and to help the

League celebrate its 100th birthday," said ARRL Business Services Manager

Deb Jahnke, K1DAJ. "It's going to be quite a show!"

It's anticipated that some vendors may offer "show specials" during the 2

days the spacious exhibit hall is open. In addition, there will be two

major prize drawings. The ARRL and R&L Electronics will co-sponsor a

drawing for a $5000 grand prize gift certificate, and ARRL and FlexRadio

will co-sponsor a drawing for a $2500 gift certificate. "The certificates

will be redeemable at the co-sponsors' respective establishments," Jahnke

explained.

Winners will be drawn from eligible registrants at the end of the

convention on Saturday, July 19. The winners do not need to present during

the drawings.

The exhibit hall also will be the place to network with other ARRL members

and friends. Conventioneers from all 50 states and more than a dozen

countries have already registered. Those attending the convention also will

want to visit the large ARRL exhibit area, featuring program

representatives, officials, and a store full of the latest ARRL

publications and membership gear.

Thousands of League members and friends are expected to gather in Hartford,

ARRL's birthplace, to celebrate the organization's first 100 years of

members "Advancing the Art and Science of Radio." Register now to be among

them!

Centennial: ARRL to Celebrate its 100th Birthday at Dayton!

Owing perhaps to grand coincidence, the 100th birthday of the ARRL -- the

actual day -- will fall on Sunday, May 18, the final day of Dayton

Hamvention® 2014. On that date a century earlier, Amateur Radio pioneers

Hiram Percy Maxim and Clarence Tuska, founded the American Radio Relay

League. On Sunday, May 18, at 9:15 AM in Room 1 of Hara Arena, ARRL

President Kay Craigie, N3KN, and Chief Executive Officer David Sumner,

K1ZZ, will host a party, complete with a cake, to wish the ARRL a happy

100th birthday.

Dayton Hamvention is a Regional ARRL Centennial Event. W100AW/8 will be on

the air from Hamvention as a special event station.

ARRL EXPO in the Ballarena will be the nerve center of the League's

Hamvention presence, which will include booths highlighting various League

activities. Visitors can pick up a free Centennial Coin, while supplies

last. The ARRL Store will offer for sale various ARRL publications and all

manner of gear -- don't forget ARRL Field Day supplies (T shirts, hats,

mugs, posters)! Visitors who join ARRL or renew their League memberships at

ARRL EXPO will receive a free gift. Join or renew for 3 years and take home

a free ARRL Centennial Edition Handbook. ARRL Dayton 2014 buttons also will

be available for free.

ARRL EXPO exhibits will include the ARRL Laboratory's "Get Your Handheld

Radio Tested!" as well as the Youth Lounge and activities aimed especially

at younger visitors. Representatives from ARRL Headquarters and many

volunteers will be on hand for DXCC card checking and to answer questions

about ARRL contests and awards, the Centennial QSO Party, the QSL Service,

Logbook of The World, the ARRL Second Century Campaign, ham radio and

Scouting, and more.

ARRL EXPO also is the place to meet and network with ARRL Field

Organization volunteers from around the country. The ARRL Ohio Section will

serve as the host for visitors.

The League will sponsor several forums throughout Hamvention weekend. On

Friday, May 16, at 2:30 PM in Room 5, the League will present the

video "ARRL at 100 -- A Century of Ham Radio." A discussion will follow

about the ARRL Centennial celebration and ways hams can help to promote

Amateur Radio in their communities. Attendees will receive a complimentary

ARRL historical timeline. A repeat presentation will take place Saturday at

10:30 AM in Room 3.

The popular ARRL Member Forum will take place on Saturday at 1:15 PM in

Room 3. ARRL Great Lakes Division Director Jim Weaver, K8JE, will moderate.

National and local League officials will be on hand to discuss key areas of

member interest. At more than 163,000 members, the League is the world's

largest national Amateur Radio association.

The League also will sponsor two antenna-related forums on Saturday at

Dayton. Starting at 9:15 AM in Room 5, The ARRL Handbook and The ARRL

Antenna Book Editor Ward Silver, N0AX, will host "Getting Started with

Antenna Modeling." The discussion will focus on how to use antenna modeling

software to design simple antennas, based on the EZNEC antenna modeling

program. Saturday afternoon at 2:30 in Room 3, Silver will

present "Impedance Matching 101," an overview of impedance matching for

amateur applications -- what it is, and why it's necessary.

The ARRL will be marking its Centennial throughout Hamvention weekend, too.

It's a good time to learn more about the ARRL National Centennial

Convention, July 17-19 in Hartford, Connecticut.

Centennial: W1AW Centennial Operations Shift States on May 14 (UTC)

The ARRL Centennial W1AW WAS operations taking place throughout 2014 from

each of the 50 states will relocate at 0000 UTC on Wednesday, May 14 (the

evening of May 13 in US time zones), from Nebraska (W1AW/0) to South Dakota

(W1AW/0). Nebraska was the first state to repeat as a W1AW Centennial host.

There will be just one state the week of May 14-20. Utah, initially

scheduled to repeat that week, will instead host W1AW the week of July 2-8.

Additional schedule changes have been made, and the schedule has been

updated to reflect these. During 2014 W1AW will be on the air from every

state (at least twice) and most US territories.

In conjunction with the 100th anniversary of the ARRL, the ARRL Centennial

QSO Party kicked off January 1 for 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.

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. (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.

Events: Massachusetts to Host USA ARDF Championships June 5-8

The USA ARDF (Amateur Radio Direction Finding) Championships return to the

Northeast this year. ARRL ARDF Coordinator Joe Moell, K0OV, said on-foot

foxhunting fans of all skill levels will gather near Boston in early June

for 4 days of intense competition. Registration to participate in the event

has been extended to June 1.

Activities begin on Thursday, June 5 with a 10-transmitter short-course

sprint competition on 80 meters. The following day is the foxoring event, a

combination of RDF and classic orienteering on 80 meters in which

participants navigate to marked locations on their maps where very

low-power transmitters can be found nearby. Saturday morning will be the

classic full-course 2 meter main event, with five transmitters in a very

large forest. The banquet and awards presentation follow that evening. A

similar full-course 80 meter main event takes place Sunday morning, with

awards presented afterward.

National ARDF championships typically take place in late summer or early

fall. This year, though, the ARDF World Championships will take place

during early September, however. To provide plenty of time for selecting

Team USA members and planning overseas travel, the 2014 USA ARDF

Championships must take place 3 months before.

ARDF championship rules are set by the International Amateur Radio Union

(IARU). For scoring and awards, participants are divided into 11 age/gender

categories. In classic ARDF championships, competitors start in small

groups comprised of different categories.

The USA ARDF Championships are open to anyone who can safely navigate the

woods solo. A ham radio license is not required. Each participant competes

as an individual.

Stateside winners will be considered for membership in ARDF Team USA, which

will travel to Kazakhstan for the 17th ARDF World Championships.

An online entry form and more information are available on the Boston ARDF

website. Read more. -- Thanks to Joe Moell, K0OV, ARRL Amateur Radio

Direction Finding Coordinator

Ham Radio in Space: Tiny KickSat "Sprite" Satellites May Not Deploy

Because of a technical glitch, the KickSat CubeSat may not be able to

deploy its cargo of tiny "Sprite" satellites after all, Project Manager Zac

Manchester, KD2BHC, announced on May 3. The Sprites, each about

A Hacksat "Sprite" development board.

[https://flux.org.uk/projects/hacksat/hardware.html]

the size of a small cracker, would be the smallest satellites ever to orbit

Earth. Manchester said an unexpected reset of KickSat's master clock may

mean that the 3U CubeSat won't be able to release the 104 Sprite satellites

before it deorbits and burns up in the atmosphere. He further explained

that ground controllers can't command the Sprites to release, because the

uplink radio used to trigger deployment is unable to power up until the

spacecraft's batteries reach 8 V. The batteries have been "holding steady"

at 6.5 V, Manchester said, and he doesn't anticipate that the voltage will

increase to the required level before the satellite drops out of orbit.

"As those who've been keeping up with the telemetry data coming in from

KickSat may have noticed, the packets we've been receiving have changed in

the last couple of days," Manchester said. "This was due to a hard reset of

the 'watchdog' microcontroller on KickSat -- the sort of 'reptile brain' of

the satellite that manages turning on and off the rest of the subsystems

and keeps the master clock."

Manchester, a Cornell graduate student in aerospace engineering, believes

the culprit is radiation, rather than power issues. The reset restarted the

Sprite deployment countdown at 16 days, pushing it out to May 16.

Manchester said it looks like KickSat will lose orbit before then, although

he held out a slim possibility that it could stay up that long.

"We've spent the last couple of days here at Cornell trying to think of

every possible contingency, but it seems there aren't very many options

right now," he said. "While the situation looks a little bleak, there is

still some hope that the batteries may recharge sufficiently to command the

satellite. There is also a small chance that KickSat could remain in orbit

until May 16, at which point the timer would set off the deployment as

originally planned."

Manchester said the KickSat team will continue tracking the satellite over

the next few days -- "with the help of the ham community" -- tracking its

battery voltage and the Sprite deployment status. "Thank you again for your

support," he added. "I promise that this won't be the end of the KickSat

project." Read more.

Milestones: Past SCM, DXer, Propagation Forecaster Lee Wical, KH6BZF, SK

Lee C. Wical, KH6BZF, of Kaneohe, Hawaii, died May 2 after a period of

declining health. He was 79 and had not been active on the air in recent

years. Growing up in Ohio, Wical became interested in radio after getting

an old A****er Kent from his grandfather in 1938, becoming a BCL and,

later, an SWL. His uncle and a cousin both were hams. Early on he aspired

to become a minor league baseball player, but he opted eventually for a

career in electrical engineering.

Wical said on his QRZ.com page that he learned Morse code while in the Boy

Scouts, and that his knowledge of the code attracted the interest of the US

Army Signal Corps when he was in the service during the Korean Conflict. He

got his Novice ticket in 1955 while in Hawaii and almost immediately became

interested into DXing.

While attending college on the GI Bill, he got his first class FCC

Radiotelephone License and went to work for broadcast stations in Ohio.

After graduation he moved to Hawaii and was employed in various engineering

positions before signing on with the federal government for 36 years.

Following that, he resumed his career at AT&T and Lucent Technologies,

working around the world before finally retiring in 1997.

From1962 until 1972, Wical served as ARRL Section Communications Manager

(now SM) for Hawaii. He also was a state MARS director. Wical was an ARRL

VEC and W5YI volunteer examiner "to put something back into radio, which

gave me a great vocation and a great hobby," as he explained. He was an

ARRL Charter Life Member as well as a life member of the QCWA and of AMSAT.

He was a charter member and co-founder of the Honolulu DX Club and on the

club's Board of Directors.

Wical had attained the ARRL DXCC Honor Roll with 358 entities confirmed. He

belonged to the A-1 Operators Club and ARRL's Old Timer's Club. He edited

and published the "KH6BZF Reports" HF propagation forecast and occasionally

prepared the ARRL Propagation Bulletin for W1AW.

An ARRL Diamond Club member, Wical also belonged to the ARRL Legacy Circle

and had included the ARRL in his estate. -- Thanks to Rich Gelber, K2WR,

Ron Hashiro, AH6RH, and Tetsuo Tanaka, AH7C

Feature: A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL

I've always enjoyed reading about the history of Amateur Radio, ever since

I was first licensed as a Novice in 1952. Up to this point in this series,

I've recounted events I'd only read or heard about from the old timers of

my youth. From now on, I'll be reporting about the exciting times I lived

through as a young ham and, later, as an old timer.

During World War II, manufacturing processes were developed to

inexpensively manufacture flexible coaxial cable. Thousands of miles of

coaxial cable showed up on the military surplus market after the war, and

hams fell into the then-new habit of using coax to feed their antennas.

With the advent of TV, inexpensive 300 W "twin lead" became common, and

hams also used that for feed line. But TV's arrival certainly had a darker

side for Amateur Radio -- television interference (TVI)!

Much early TV broadcasting was on the lower VHF channels -- low enough in

frequency to be affected by harmonics (and other radiation) from HF ham

transmitters, in addition to fundamental overload of the TV's front end by

a strong ham signal. The 15 meter amateur band opened in May 1952, and some

early TV receivers used a 21 MHz IF!

Although most TVI problems were a result of poor interference rejection of

the TV receivers, all the neighbor knew was that we hams were ruining his

newfound, precious entertainment medium, for which he had paid big bucks.

Phil Rand, W1DBM, worked with the ARRL to develop TVI-reduction techniques

and methods, and he authored many QST articles on the subject during the

1950s. As part of the League's efforts to help hams reduce TVI, ARRL staff

member Lew McCoy, W1ICP, took his "TVI show" on the road to ham clubs and

community meetings around the country, explaining and demonstrating the

problem and showing how hams could reduce their neighbors' -- and perhaps

their own -- TVI. It was a long time before this problem was under control,

but the League's efforts were a major factor in turning the tide.

Next week: What is this thing called "single sideband?" -- Al Brogdon, W1AB

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: We saw an uptick in solar indices this

week (May 1-7) compared to the previous 7 days, with average daily sunspot

number rising from 73.4 to 118.4, and average daily solar flux up 13 to

135.6. The most active geomagnetic days were May 4-5, with planetary A

index at a moderate 16 and 10, mid-latitude A indices of 15 and 11, and the

high latitude college A index (measured at Fairbanks, Alaska) at 25 and 10.

Predicted solar flux for the near term is 145 for May 8-9, 150 for May

10-12, 145 for May 13-15, 140 for May 16-17, 135 onr May 18, 130 for May

19-20, 125 on May 21, and 120 for May 22-26.

The near-term peak of 184 on June 9 disappeared from the daily 45-day

outlook on May 5. The predicted solar flux for that date was 155 in the

April 25-27 forecasts, jumped to 184 from April 28 through May 4, and was

down to 131 in the May 5-7 forecasts.

Predicted planetary A index is 8 for May 8-9, then 12, 10, 8, and 5 for May

10-13, 8 for May 14-15, 5 for May 16-20, then 10 and 8 for May 21-22, 5 for

May 23-30, then 8 for May 31 through June 1, 12 on June 2, 8 for June 3-4,

and 12 on June 5-6.

At 0538 UTC on May 8 the Australian Space Forecast Centre issued a

geomagnetic warning. Increased geomagnetic activity is expected for the

rest of May 8 due to a coronal mass ejection.

Currently a spate of new sunspot groups are appearing around our Sun's

eastern horizon. This is good news for HF propagation. You can track the

progress of emerging sunspots via the STEREO satellites.

HF conditions are good right now, especially when compared to earlier

points in this weak current solar cycle. We appear to be at a second or

third peak in Cycle 24 activity, with no certainty as to how long this will

last.

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 tomorrow's bulletin look for an updated forecast and reports from

readers, as well as a new tool recommended by Jim Henderson, KF7E.

Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

May 10 -- Alessandro Volta RTTY DX Contest

May 10 -- Armed Forces Communications Test

May 10 -- FISTS Spring Sprint

May 10-11 -- CQ-M International DX Contest

May 10-11 -- Portuguese Navy Day

May 10-11 -- Nevada Mustang Roundup

May 10-11 -- 50 MHz Spring Sprint

May 11-12 -- Straight Key Weekend Sprintathon

May 14 -- CWops Monthly Mini-CWT Tests

May 17 -- Portuguese Navy Day

May 17 -- Feld-Hell Hamvention Sprint

May 17-18 -- His Majesty, the King of Spain Contest

May 17-18 -- Baltic Contest

May 18 -- Worked All Britain (7 MHz Phone)

May 19 -- Run For the Bacon

Visit the Contest Calendar for details.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events

May 16-18 -- Dayton Hamvention -- Regional ARRL Centennial Event, Dayton,

Ohio

May 30 ---Jun 1 Nevada State Convention, Virginia City, Nevada

June 6-8 -- Northwestern Division Convention (SeaPac) -- Regional ARRL

Centennial Event, Seaside, Oregon

June 7 -- Georgia Section Convention (Atlanta Hamfest), Marietta, Georgia

June 13-14 -- Ham-Com -- Regional ARRL Centennial Event, Plano, Texas

June 14 -- Western Pennsylvania ARES Emcomm Conference, Johnstown,

Pennsylvania

June 14 -- Tennessee State Convention (Knoxville Hamfest), Knoxville,

Tennessee

June 27-29 -- HAM RADIO International Exhibition for Radio Amateurs,

Friedrichshafen, Germany

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

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

The ARRL Letter appreciates the support of these advertisers:

Icom

Radio City

Radio Lights

DX Engineering

RF Concepts

Low Loss PWRgate

RemoteHamRadio.com

HRD Software

Timewave Technology, Inc

ARRL members can opt to receive The ARRL Letter (with color images!)

directly via e-mail. If you are not an ARRL member, consider joining now to

receive this and other benefits, including the monthly ARRL journal, QST

(and the QST online digital edition). The ARRL — the national association

of Amateur Radio is the only organization representing Amateur Radio in the

US. As an ARRL member you support the ranks of thousands of other ham radio

enthusiasts shaping the Amateur Radio Service today. If you consider

yourself an active ham, you need ARRL now. Membership costs as little as

$39 a year. ARRL members have access to the ARRL Archive and Periodical

Search, the Product Review Archive, E-Mail Forwarding, a voice in the

affairs of ARRL and ham radio through locally appointed volunteers and much

more! Become part of the future of ham radio. Join the ARRL today!

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 bi-monthly, 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 us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.

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. Copyright 2014 ARRL

///////////////////////////////////////////

The Briefing Room is still dedicated to those Hams and PC buffs with

minimal time!

Posted: 08 May 2014 09:16 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...!&goto=newpost

The Briefing Room is now going on two years old. EVERY DAY news is posted

that may be useful or interesting to other Hams, PC users and Science

Buffs. The goal is to provide readers with quick snappy reviews, advice and

updates of trending news and information they can read and digest in

minutes around a busy schedule. Check it out http://arc.tzo.com/ham/tbr.php

///////////////////////////////////////////

HamRadioNow: Meet Joe Ham.... m

Posted: 07 May 2014 09:37 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...m&goto=newpost

HAMRADIONOW.tv

Episode 143

Meet Joe Ham(m)

Miss us? In this show I'll take a few minutes to talk about what I've been

doing instead of making shows. Well, some of it is making shows... just not

finishing them yet. Then we'll meet Joe Ham...m. Yeah, Ham Nation has Joe

Walsh, but we've got Joe Ham... m. And he'll explain the extra m.

There are a couple of episodes on-line that I didn't post here on QRZ.com,

so come on over to the web site and see what you might have missed.

Watch this episode on our web page:

HAMRADIONOW.tv

HamRadioNow is supported by viewer contributions

If you enjoy the programs, visit www.HamRadioNow.tv and "click the pig"

THANK YOU to all our contributors!

Show more