2014-09-19

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

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WIA plans a submission on new VK operating conditions

Posted: 19 Sep 2014 04:33 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...s&goto=newpost

wia.jpgWIA plans a submission on new VK operating conditions

The expiring Australian Licence Condition Determination

or LCD for the Amateur Service is an excellent opportunity to re-think how

to regulate its existence now, and in the future.

The Amateur LCD is due to 'sunset' in October 2015 and

needs replacement, so the Amateur Service can continue. It includes how

Australia's three licence grades operate, their frequency bands, modes and

maximum permitted powers.

The WIA board of directors has identified several

issues for evaluation and invites all to have input on them and any

related LCD matter, before it makes a final submission next year.

The WIA says many of the current LCD provisions have

been outdated by technology and practice. It wants the LCD to be better

aligned with international standards, able to adapt to emerging

technologies, and reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens.

It takes a holistic view to make sure all radio

amateurs now, and where possible in the future, enjoy the hobby and bring

some benefit to the community.

According to the WIA, the new Amateur LCD must include

references to the Electro Magnetic Emission (EME) requirements for all in

the Amateur Service, to support other awareness and compliance action.

The WIA wants no limit on experimentation to allow

flexibility in communications technologies and applications, and for it to

remain a self-regulating service with no reduction or downgrading from the

current Apparatus Licence principles.

The WIA review covers all licence grades. For the

highest or Advanced Licence it seeks a relaxation of permitted bandwidths

on 1.8 MHz to 430 MHz to enable emerging and newly developed technologies.

In line with greater awareness and compliance with the

EME requirements, the WIA seeks that the Advanced Licence be given a power

limit of up to 1000w pX, as a right without a permit. Several microwave

allocations are also to be sought.

The WIA will seek to raise the Standard Licence

conditions to better match similar intermediate licence grades in other

countries. That includes allowing up to 200w pX instead of the former

Novice Licence carry-over power of 100w pX.

It is looking at increasing the Standard Licence access

to a number of bands between 1.8 MHz and 28 MHz, and particularly access

to the lower part of 6-metres at 50-52 MHz.

The WIA seeks a relaxation of the permitted bandwidths

relating to the Standard licence on all bands over 1 GHz, to allow the use

of wideband digital and image transmission modes by that licence. For the

entry level Foundation Licence, the WIA will seek to add digital modes,

commercially made transmitter kits, conversion of non-amateur transceivers

to ham bands, unattended operation and remote control. An increase of

power level to 25 watts pX is advocated because of the tyranny of distance

of Australia, the noisy urban environment, and that more available

transceivers are routinely fitted with the higher power. The WIA also

notes the Foundation Licence permitted bands are quite restricted when

viewed in the context of other entry level licences across the world.

The WIA also will seek access to the 5 MHz band,

subject to the World Radio Conference 2015 preferably at least enabling

overseas contact, a primary allocation 50-52 MHz and consideration of 70

MHz access overlapping other countries.

Jim Linton VK3PC

Wireless Institute of Australia

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SpaceX to launch SpinSat Saturday

Posted: 19 Sep 2014 04:29 AM PDT
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SpinSat.jpgSpaceX to launch SpinSat Saturday

On Saturday, September 20 at 0616

UT SpaceX plan to launch a Falcon 9 from Florida carrying the satellite

SpinSat with its amateur radio payload to the ISS

On arrival at the ISS it will be put into storage

until deployment, later in the Fall, from the airlock of the Japanese

Experiment Module (JEM).

Developed by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL)

SpinSat is a 56 cm sphere weighing 57 kg that has 12

Electronically-controlled Solid Propellant (ESP) thrusters spread in pairs

throughout the surface of the satellite.

They will be fired in pairs to spin the spacecraft.

With just primary batteries and only 4.8 grams of fuel this phase may last

between three to six months.

The spacecraft will be used to calibrate the space

surveillance network. Lasers will be fired at SpinSat from the ground, the

light reflected back will be measured to determine where in time and space

the satellite is passing overhead. SpinSat will also model the density of

the atmosphere.

The IARU Satellite Coordination Panel report that

SpinSat carries a 2 watt RF output AX.25 packet radio store and forward

system on 437.230 MHz.

Read all about SpinSat at

http://www.nrl.navy.mil/media/news-releases/2014/

with-spinsat-mission-nrl-will-spin-small-satellite-in-space-with-new-thruster-technology

Falcon 9 launch status

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/falcon9/013/status.html

NASA - SpinSat

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/st...ents/1019.html

AMSAT-UK http://amsat-uk.org/

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Live webcast from K6H - 'Last Man Standing' special event station

Posted: 19 Sep 2014 04:26 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...n&goto=newpost

Live webcast from K6H - 'Last Man Standing' special event station

W5KUB.COM will be webcasting the Special Events Station

K6H live from Hollywood on Sept 27 and 28th from the stage of TV's hit Last

Man Standing.

See interviews, visit the set, see the different

operating positions. Communicate directly with us on our chat room during

the show. As usual, we will be giving out prizes to lucky viewers

throughout the day.

Schedule:

Saturday Sept 27 9:00 until 12:00 Noon PST (1600-2000

UTC) watch the Papa System group set up on the stage for the next days

operation. See the set and watch for interviews.

Sunday Sept 28 7:00AM until 3:00 PM PST (1400 - 2200

UTC) watch the special events station make contacts, see special guests,

interviews, and prizes.

Keep up with latest details on our webcasts at
https://www.facebook.com/groups/w5kub/

Thanks,

Tom W5KUB

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Wisconsin Ham falls from tower and dies

Posted: 19 Sep 2014 04:23 AM PDT
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Wisconsin Ham falls from tower and dies

James G. Linstedt W9ZUC of Eau Clair, Wisconsin died

Tuesday evening from injuries he sustained when he fell 95 feet from a ham

tower in Eagle Point, just outside of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.

Linstedt, age 59, is reported to have had extensive

experience climbing and working on towers. He also was reported to have

been wearing an over the shoulder safety harness, but was not tied off

while working on the 100 ft. tower at the home of Ronald Anderson W9RMA,

located on the shore of Lake Wissota.

Linstedt was a member of the Chippewa Valley Amateur Radio Club

John N7UR

Original story at: Nevada Amateur Radio Newswire

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QRZ Anniversary Sweepstakes Weekly Winner

Posted: 18 Sep 2014 02:36 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...r&goto=newpost

Believe it or not, we're only 5 weeks away from November 1st, when we'll

give away that TS-990S to one lucky Ham! And today it's time to name our

weekly winner. Tim Ferguson, KI5L will be receiving a $20 gift certificate

from our sponsor Gigaparts as well as a License Wall Certificate from

QRZ. From the looks of his biography page, Tim appears to be an extremely

musical Ham from the state of Mississippi. We congratulate him on his

exciting win this week!

We also want to remind you all that we have a very special prize from NI4L

Antennas and Electronics that will be given away on October 9th. You can

read about the prize here.

Congratulations to this week's winner and a big thanks to all of you who

have entered the contest so far! Don't forget that you can continue to

enter the contest once per day at the Sweepstakes page to win that much

coveted TS-990s! If you haven't entered yet, you've still got plenty of

time! You can check in on the QRZ News Forum and on the QRZ.com Facebook

Page to stay up to date on the latest weekly giveaways and sponsor

additions. You can also follow us on Twitter @QRZ. Until next time, Good

luck and 73 from the entire QRZ.com team!

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The ARRL Letter, September 18, 2014

Posted: 18 Sep 2014 12:40 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...4&goto=newpost

The ARRL Letter

September 18, 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.]

ARRL Simulated Emergency Test Scheduled for October 4-5 WeekendHigh-Value

ARRL "Red Badgers" Will Be Out in Force on September 21W1AW Centennial

Operations Now in North Carolina, Connecticut. New Mexico, Idaho in the

BullpenNew $21.40 Vanity Call Sign Fee Now in EffectIARU Region 1 General

Conference, IARU Administrative Council to Meet in BulgariaAmateur Radio

Society of India Wants Less-Burdensome Amateur Radio Licensing RulesRare

Eritrea (E3) on the Air for Short TimeMoon-Bound Ham Radio Payload Will

Transmit Earthly Messages from SpaceQatari Es'hail 2 Satellite will Include

AMSAT-DL Phase 4 Amateur Radio TranspondersAMSAT-NA Announces Board of

Directors Election ResultsColorado ARES Team Wins an Honorable Mention in

Citizen Corps Awards"Last Man Standing" Special Event Set for September

28No Easy Answers for RadioShack's Slow, Downward SlideA Century of Amateur

Radio and the ARRLThe K7RA Solar UpdateJust Ahead in RadiosportUpcoming

ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events

ARRL Website Unavailable on September 19 Starting at 2000 UTC

The ARRL website is scheduled to be offline on Friday, September 19,

starting at 2000 UTC. The length of the outage could run for several hours

and possibly into Saturday, September 20. The ARRL IT Department will be

performing maintenance in the process of testing and, if feasible,

switching the site to a new server.

A "Down for Maintenance" message will appear for the duration of the outage

whenever someone attempts to access www.arrl.org.

All e-mail functionality will remain online -- only the website will be

down for testing.

ARRL Simulated Emergency Test Scheduled for October 4-5 Weekend

The national ARRL Simulated Emergency Test (SET) is slated for the October

4-5 weekend, although the window for local and regional exercises is

September 1 through November 30 each year. All groups conduct their events

over the course of 48 hours. The SET is a nationwide exercise in disaster

response and emergency communication, administered by ARRL emergency

coordinators and net managers, in which volunteers respond to a mock

emergency or disaster, such as an earthquake or hurricane. Members of the

Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES), the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency

Service (RACES), the National Traffic System (NTS), SKYWARN, the ARRL Field

Organization, and other groups work together to plan and develop simulated

emergency and disaster scenarios, in consultation with the various served

agencies that rely on radio amateurs during emergencies.

The SET offers volunteer public service communicators the opportunity to

focus on their capabilities, strengths, and weaknesses while interacting

with NTS nets. It also provides a public demonstration -- to served

agencies such as the Red Cross, state and local emergency managers, and the

news media -- of the value that Amateur Radio provides. The SET helps radio

amateurs gain communication experience using standard procedures and a

variety of modes, under simulated disaster-response conditions.

Participating groups earn points toward an overall SET score, adding a

competitive component to the activity. Results are listed in QST (see pages

71-73 of the July issue of QST for the 2013 SET results). Visit the ARRL

Public Service/Field Services page and click on "SET Score Card" for an

explanation of how points are earned.

Many ARES groups across the country will be participating, and all ARES

members are invited to support the national SET and their local ARES

group's activity.

During this year's SET, participating ARES/NTS members can earn SET bonus

points by participating in the ARRL Centennial QSO Party. During the

October 4-5 SET weekend, ARES and NTS field members and appointees are

encouraged to get on the air and call "CQ Centennial." The exchange is

signal report, name, location, and your designator. There will be a special

bonus for groups that include Centennial QSO Party participation. Each

station making at least 5 contacts is worth an additional 3 points toward

your group's SET score. Those taking part in a SET on another weekend may

participate on the national SET weekend and count it later (or submit an

amended SET report form).

See page 78 in the July issue of QST, and page 75 in the September issue of

QST for more information on the SET. -- Thanks to the ARES E-Letter

High-Value ARRL "Red Badgers" Will Be Out in Force on September 21

The next ARRL "Red Badges on the Air" activity is just days away. On

Sunday, September 21 UTC (starting the evening of Saturday, September 20,

in US time zones), holders of red ARRL name/call sign badges will be on the

air en masse, offering a chance to boost your ARRL Centennial QSO Party

total. ARRL officers, elected officials such as Director or Section

Manager, as well as Headquarters staffers and volunteers, and other members

of the ARRL family will take to the air in numbers. Contacts with red badge

wearers are worth as much as 300 points per contact for working ARRL

President Kay Craigie, N3KN. ARRL Membership and Volunteer Programs Manager

Dave Patton, NN1N, said he expects many of the 200 or so Red Badgers will

be on the air on September 21, along with other ARRL appointees, VEs, and

members.

"The first Red Badge Day was a huge success but left many operators wanting

more. Nine months into ARRL's Centennial year, the Centennial QSO Party and

W1AW activations already have proven to be the largest and most active

special events in the history of Amateur Radio, with more than 20,000

participants on the air from all continents."

The event is considered an activity day, not a contest, and operation is

permitted on all bands. Participants can call "CQ ARRL Centennial QSO

Party" on phone or "CQ CENT" on CW or digital modes. While the focus is to

encourage ARRL red badge holders to hand out Centennial QSO Party points,

all activity is welcome, regardless of point value.

ARRL members are worth at least one point in the Centennial QSO Party.

Participants get credit for each band/mode contact, regardless of point

value. ARRL Centennial QSO Party participants can use the leader board to

determine how many points they have accumulated. Read more.

W1AW Centennial Operations Now in North Carolina, Connecticut. New Mexico,

Idaho in the Bullpen

The ARRL Centennial W1AW portable operations taking place throughout 2014

from each of the 50 states are now in North Carolina (W1AW/4) and

Connecticut (W1AW/1). W1AW operations will transition starting at 0000 UTC

on Wednesday, September 24 (the evening of September 23 in US time zones),

to New Mexico (W1AW/5) and Idaho (W1AW/7). W1AW has visited each of the 50

states for at least 1 week so far during 2014. By year's end W1AW will have

been on the air from every state at least twice, as well as from most US

territories.

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. (Working W1AW or W100AW in Connecticut does

not count for Connecticut. Participants must work W1AW/1 in Connecticut.) A

W1AW WAS certificate and plaque will be available.

An ARRL Centennial QSO Party leader board shows participants 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.

New $21.40 Vanity Call Sign Fee Now in Effect

The new Amateur Service vanity call sign regulatory fee of $21.40 became

effective on September 11. The FCC released a Report and Order and Further

Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (R&O) on August 29, in which it recalculated

the fee to $21.40 for the 10-year license term. The $5.30 increase

represents the largest vanity fee hike in many years. In the past, new

vanity fees did not become effective until 30 days after their publication

in The Federal Register, which occurred on September 11.

The FCC reported there were 11,500 "payment units" in FY 2014, and that the

vanity program generated an estimated $230,230 in FY 2013 revenue. The

Commission estimated that it would collect nearly $246,100 in FY 2014

vanity call sign fees.

The vanity call sign regulatory fee is payable when applying for a new

vanity call sign or when renewing any vanity call sign designated as "HV"

in the FCC's ULS database.

As of October 1, 2013, the Commission no longer accepts checks -- including

cashier's checks -- for the payment of regulatory fees. All payments must

now be made by online ACH payment, online credit card, or via wire

transfer. Any other form of payment will be rejected and returned to the

applicant.

IARU Region 1 General Conference, IARU Administrative Council to Meet in

Bulgaria

Representatives of the countries comprising IARU Region 1 (Europe, Africa,

the Middle East, and Northern Asia) will gather this month for the Region 1

General Conference. The Bulgarian Federation of Radio Amateurs, (BFRA) will

host the meeting September 21-26 in Albena on the Black Sea Coast. Regional

general conferences are held every 3 years.

"At General Conferences IARU Region 1 makes major decisions on the future

of Amateur Radio and determines the way ahead with administrative,

operational, technical, and financial matters," Region 1 Chairman Hans

Blondeel Timmerman, PB2T, explained. Conference delegates will elect the

Executive Committee as well as working group chairmen, and coordinators.

General Conference participants will tackle a plethora of papers on a wide

variety of Amateur Radio topics -- from administrative to operational and

technical.

The Radio Society of Great Britain (RSGB) will raise the issue of malicious

QRM, especially in the wake of intentional interference to well-publicized

DXpeditions that have attracted huge pileups. "It is now time for all

Region 1 Member Societies to treat malicious QRM as a major and urgent

priority and to take positive action against this form of anarchy that

threatens the future of Amateur Radio," the RSGB said in its

paper, "Malicious QRM -- Time for Action." Among other approaches, the RSGB

will recommend that member societies use their media outlets to "highlight

the self-regulatory ethos of Amateur Radio, to condemn the actions of the

malicious QRMers, and to publicize where direct action has been taken." The

RSGB also will recommend that Region 1 appoint an Amateur Radio Observation

Service (AROS) network.

The topic of transnational Amateur Radio remote-controlled operation also

will come up for discussion. A recommendation from the Irish Radio

Transmitters Society (IRTS) would mandate the incoming Executive Committee

to set up a working group of individuals experienced in radio regulatory

affairs "to examine the question of transnational remote-controlled

operation and to establish under what conditions such operation might be

regulated."

IARU Region 1 Youth Coordinator Lisa Leenders, PA2LS, has submitted a

proposal to form a Region 1 Youth Working Group, which would be responsible

for Youngsters on the Air (YOTA) activities in addition to promoting

Amateur Radio youth activities within the region. Leenders will recommend

that IARU Region 1 become the "main funder" of a week-long YOTA summer

camp, where youngsters take part in Amateur Radio activities.

Other presentations that delegates to the IARU Region 1 General Conference

will hear include a presentation on CW operating procedure by the Icelandic

Radio Amateurs (IRA) -- Iceland's IARU member-society.

The IARU Administrative Council will meet September 27-28, following the

Region 1 General Conference.

Amateur Radio Society of India Wants Less-Burdensome Amateur Radio

Licensing Rules

The Amateur Radio Society of India (ARSI) -- India's International Amateur

Radio Union (IARU) member-society -- is continuing an effort to make it

easier to obtain an Amateur Radio license in that country, where excessive

red tape is an accepted reality when dealing with government agencies. The

latest attempt came in an August 19 letter from ARSI President Gopal

Madhavan, VU2GMN, to Ravi Shankar Prasad, who heads the Ministry of

Communications and Information Technology.

"In India we are hampered by some very archaic rules, which were possibly

formulated during the British [colonial] times, when everything was done to

restrict radio licenses being given to Indians," Madhavan wrote. "The most

restrictive and time-consuming aspect is the 'security clearance' that is

being done before a license is granted," he continued. "In most cases, this

takes months or even years, and often the paperwork is totally lost in

transit between the various agencies."

Such "inordinate delays" in receiving a license after passing the

examination can cause applicants to simply lose interest, said Madhavan,

who is also IARU Region 3 chairman. "[G]enuine aspirants to Amateur Radio

are denied licenses for months, year, and sometimes forever, as the papers

are lost," he said.

In his letter, Madhavan took pains to spell out Amateur Radio's public

service role in past disasters and emergencies, such as the Indian Ocean

tsunami, the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and the Latur and

Gujarat earthquakes. Amateur Radio also contributes in terms of technical

training, experimentation, and communication, he said.

The Department of Telecommunications within Prasad's ministry issues

Amateur Radio licenses. The Indian government has suggested that ham radio

technology may fall into hands of terrorists and has begun requiring a

security clearance. Madhavan pointed out that the security clearance

requirement is not listed in India's Amateur Radio regulations, and he

called it "totally irrelevant" at a time when many other means of

communication are available.

"Every country has serious concerns about security, but they have not found

it necessary to vet aspirants to Amateur Radio as is done only in India,"

he wrote. In most countries, he noted, applicants can obtain a license

within a week of passing the required exam and paying any necessary fees.

Madhavan requested Prasad's "intervention and coordination" with the

Ministry of Home Affairs to help ease the process of issuing a new amateur

license and to grow India's Amateur Radio population, which currently

stands at some 17,000 in a country of more than 1.2 billion people. Read

more.

Rare Eritrea (E3) on the Air for Short Time

Zorro Miyazawa, JH1AJT, is on the air until September 22 from Eritrea as

E30FB, at present running 100 W to a vertical antenna on 20 and 15 meters,

SSB. Eritrea now stands at number 17 (mixed) on ClubLog's DXCC Most Wanted

List (number 10 on CW, number 22 on SSB). Eritrea has not been activated

since 2001.

This is not a DXpedition. Miyazawa is in Eritrea as part of an official

Japanese delegation. He plans to operate as his schedule permits.

Additional gear has arrived, but he is still missing the shipment

containing an amplifier. He does not have Internet access, and logs will be

uploaded when he returns to Japan.

Once a part of Ethiopia, Eritrea is a small country on the Horn of Africa

that is home to some 6.2 million people. -- Thanks to Jay Oka, JA1TRC

Moon-Bound Ham Radio Payload Will Transmit Earthly Messages from Space

The Amateur Radio payload on the lunar-orbiting 4M-LXS spacecraft is set to

carry up to 2500 brief digital messages into space for retransmission via

JT65B mode on 145.990 MHz. China recently announced plans to launch the

orbiter carrying the 14 kg battery-powered payload, developed by LUXspace

in Luxembourg. The International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) is a partner in

the experiment. Getting a message into space required registering and

uploading one via the 4M website. A "73 de W1AW" message was among those

uploaded before the message collection site closed on September 17. While

the window was open, the site gathered messages of up to 13 characters --

the maximum for JT65 transmissions -- to transmit "from the moon," the 4M

Manfred Memorial Moon Mission website said.

Signals from the Amateur Radio payload can be decoded using the free WSJT

software by Joe Taylor, K1JT. The Manfred Memorial Moon Mission

memorializes Manfred Fuchs, the late founder and chairman of LUXspace

parent company OHB of Bremen. He died in April. The 4M mission is expected

to launch sometime after 1800 UTC on October 23.

According to LUXspace, the 4M spacecraft will transmit continuously on

145.980 MHz (± 2.9 kHz) at 1.5 W into a simple quarter-wave monopole

antenna. "This will give S/N comparable to EME signals at Earth's surface,"

LUXspace said. "The transmission is based on a 1-minute sequence and a

5-minute cycle. The transmission will start 4670 seconds (77.8 minutes)

after launch."

The 4M mission was detailed during a presentation the EME 2014 conference

held recently in France. A paper, "4M Mission: A Lunar Flyby Experiment"

also is available. During the lunar flyby, the spacecraft will be about

nearly 248,000 miles from Earth and between 7440 and 14,480 miles from the

Moon. The spacecraft will be part of the last stage of the lunar mission.

The planned trajectory calls for a lunar flyby and return to Earth, with a

90 percent chance that the spacecraft will re-enter Earth's atmosphere.

LUXspace has provided a tracking tool on its website. Read more. -- Thanks

to LUXspace, AMSAT-UK

Qatari Es'hail 2 Satellite will Include AMSAT-DL Phase 4 Amateur Radio

Transponders

Gunter's Space Page has reported that the Es'hail 2 communications

satellite will carry analog and digital Amateur Radio transponders. The new

satellite, which will be operated by Es'hailSat, the Qatar Satellite

Company, will be in a geostationary orbit, positioned at the 26°

East "hotspot" position for TV broadcasting to the Middle East and North

Africa. Launch is planned for late 2016.

Es'hail 2 will provide the first Amateur Radio geostationary communication

capability linking Brazil and India. It will carry two AMSAT-DL-designed

Phase 4 Amateur Radio transponders, consisting of a 250 kHz linear analog

transponder and an experimental digital modulation transponder with an 8

MHz bandwidth. Uplinks will be in the 2.400-2.450 GHz range, with downlinks

in the 10.450-10.500 GHz Amateur-Satellite Service allocation. Both

transponders will be equipped with antennas capable of providing full

coverage over about one-third of Earth's surface.

The Qatar Amateur Radio Society and Qatar Satellite Company are cooperating

on the Amateur Radio project. AMSAT-DL is providing technical support. --

Thanks to Gunter's Space Page via AMSAT News Service

AMSAT-NA Announces Board of Directors Election Results

AMSAT-NA has announced the results of its recent Board of Directors

election. Tom Clark, K3IO; JoAnne Maenpaa, K9JKM; and Lou McFadin, W5DID,

were elected to serve 2-year terms.

Jerry Buxton, N0JY, will serve the remaining year on the term of the late

Tony Monteiro, AA2TX.

The First Alternate is Drew Glasbrenner, KO4MA, and the Second Alternate is

Frank Griffin, K4FEG. Read more.

Colorado ARES Team Wins an Honorable Mention in Citizen Corps Awards

The Boulder County (Colorado) ARES team (BCARES) received an honorable

mention in the Citizen Corps 2014 Individual and Community Preparedness

Awards. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announced its list

of nationwide award recipients on September 3.

BCARES was cited under the Technical Innovation category for its use of

Amateur TV and APRS and for its Mountain Emergency Radio Network (MERN)

project during its response to the 2013 flooding in the Boulder area. MERN

was created in conjunction with BCARES, the Inter-Mountain Alliance (IMA),

and the Boulder County Office of Emergency Management. The goal of the

system is to facilitate community emergency preparedness and insure

uninterrupted communication between and within six mountain communities in

Western Boulder County, county emergency services, and their resources

prior to and during an emergency via an Amateur Radio network.

FEMA is planning an award presentation. -- Thanks to ARRL Colorado Section

Manager Jack Ciaccia, WM0G

"Last Man Standing" Special Event Set for September 28

A Hollywood-style Amateur Radio special event is set for later this month

from the so-called "Seinfeld Stage" on the CBS Studio Center lot in Studio

City, California. The K6H "Hollywood Hamnado" special event station will be

on HF and D-STAR on September 28, from 1400 until 2200 UTC. Hosts for the

event will be Amateur Radio crew members of the ABC television series "Last

Man Standing." On the show, actor Tim Allen plays Mike Baxter, KA0XTT. The

show's producer is John Amodeo, NN6JA

The Southern California-based PAPA Repeater System, in association with the

Broadcast Employees Amateur Radio Society (BEARS) and Disney Emergency

Amateur Radio Service (DEARS) are sponsoring the special event.

Operation will take place on 10, 20, and 40 meters on HF and D-STAR

reflector 12A. Rob Antonacci, AA6RA, said K6H is planning to run three SSB

stations, operating on or around 28.420, 14.250, and 7.260 MHz. The PAPA

website, the W5KUB chat room, and the Mike Baxter KA0XTT Facebook page will

provide up-to-the-minute updates.

K6H also will use the Disney Amateur Radio Interconnect to link the WB6AJE

repeater in Los Angeles to Disney/ABC-sponsored repeaters in

Manhattan-Bristol, Connecticut; Washington, DC, and Orlando, Florida.

Various IRLP and EchoLink nodes will be available. Those contacting K6H

will receive a limited-edition QSL card.

Tom Medlin, W5KUB, will be on Stage 9 to interview the participants and

report on the special event activity. The PAPA website will stream video

directly from the operating stations. So far, 26 members of the "Last Man

Standing" crew have been inspired by the show's Amateur Radio component to

get licensed. -- Thanks to Rob Antonacci, AA6RA

No Easy Answers for RadioShack's Slow, Downward Slide

Back in the day, RadioShack employees would answer the phone by

saying, "You've got questions, we've got answers." But RadioShack now seems

stumped, and the "B" word is looming ever larger as the retailer -- once

the go-to place for electronic components and, at one point, even some

Amateur Radio gear and shortwave receivers -- casts about for a white

knight. Last March, in the wake of a substantial drop in holiday sales and

a big fourth-quarter loss, the Fort Worth, Texas-based RadioShack announced

plans to close 1100 of its outlets, leaving the chain with 4000 stores,

including more than 900 dealer franchises. The company's second-quarter

2014 report has been deemed "dismal" by investment advisors.

According to CNNMoney, though, the retailer has been able to shutter only

200 of those shops -- because it costs a lot of money even to close

locations, and RadioShack has none to spare. It's already bleeding cash --

some $149 million just this year --in its struggle to board up unprofitable

locations and keep its head above the rising waters, and, as CNNMoney

reported, credit rating agency Moody's expects the company's bank account

to run dry within another 12 months. One Wall Street analyst already has

warned of impending bankruptcy, and Forbes.com reported last week that the

retailer itself has confirmed the likelihood of a Chapter 7 or Chapter 11

bankruptcy filing, if it cannot find a buyer or restructure its debt.

RadioShack CEO Joseph Magnacca said in a statement on September 11 that

while the company was making progress in its turn-around efforts, "we are

actively exploring options for overhauling our balance sheet and are in

advanced discussions with a number of parties."

A filing the retailer submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission

(SEC) this week was far more blunt. In short, it said that if RadioShack

cannot sell the firm, partner with another company, or restructure its

debt, "we may not have enough cash and working capital to fund our

operations beyond the very near term, which raises substantial doubt about

our ability to continue as a going concern." And if Plan A does not work

out, the retailer told the SEC, "we would likely be required to liquidate

under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code." Read more.

A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL

In March 1980, Mount St Helens spectacularly exploded. Before the

explosion, radio amateurs had been assisting with communication among a

number of sites where ongoing measurements were being taken, because

scientists had concluded that the mountain was nearing the point of

eruption. The hams continued to work after the volcano's several eruptions,

with both emergency communications and a continuation of their previous

support work. Sadly, two of those hams lost their lives during the disaster

-- W6TQF and KA7AMF.

By the 1980s, some towns and neighborhoods had begun to impose very

restrictive rules about antennas and towers -- rules that would prohibit

effective amateur antennas. Many of these cases were fought through the

legal system successfully by the affected hams. As with so many issues that

involve many hams all over the country, ARRL joined the fight, providing

legal assistance through the League's general counsel and volunteer

counselors who were also hams.

The ARRL introduced a new periodical in December 1981 -- QEX. Its purposes

were (1) to publish articles that documented advanced technical work in

areas that were not of wide general interest, and (2) to act as a catalyst

for technical development in the Amateur Radio and Amateur-Satellite

Services.

On May 21, 1981, at the request of the ARRL, the FCC restored 160 meters to

exclusive Amateur Radio use. Before this, the FCC rules included an array

of restrictions on 160 meter operation, to protect the LORAN (Long-Range

Aid to Navigation) system. Now, hams could run a full kilowatt on 160, day

and night, anywhere in the country!

In the 1980s, packet radio and packet repeaters -- digipeaters -- came into

being. Numerous QST articles detailed this mode of operation, helping

interested hams to get up and running on packet.

In 1982, cable TV systems expanded across the US, bringing with them the

potential for CATVI -- cable TVI. Some cable channels were on 2 meter

amateur frequencies, and because many poorly installed and maintained cable

systems "leaked" TV signals, causing interference on the 2 meter band. Of

course, if signals could leak out, other signals could leak in, and hams

sometimes caused interference when their signals got into the cable TV

system. Cable companies often blamed the problem on hams, rather than take

the blame for their poor equipment and maintenance. In the meantime, the

FCC was in a fiscal crisis, because of budget cutbacks. Although it was

willing to enforce the regulations and bring the cable companies in line,

it was unable to fund that enforcement effort. This problem continued for

some time before it was corrected.

During the 1980s, the SKYWARN system was established and became affiliated

with the National Weather Service, so hams could report dangerous weather

events that they saw. To this day, SKYWARN members have proven extremely

valuable for monitoring weather conditions and providing "ground truth"

reports to the NWS. Much SKYWARN communication occurs via 2 meter repeaters.

Harry Dannals, W2HD, had been ARRL President for 10 years when he decided

to step down in 1982. At the same time, ARRL Secretary and General Manager

Richard Baldwin, W1RU, retired. At their first 1982 meeting, the ARRL Board

of Directors elected Vic Clark, W4KFC, as the League's new president, and

David Sumner, K1ZZ, as the new Secretary and General Manager.

On the afternoon of January 13, 1982, Air Florida Flight 90 took off from

Washington National Airport. But the Boeing 737 slowly settled toward

Earth, clipping the 14th Street Bridge (I-395) and destroying seven cars

that were on it, before crash landing in the ice-covered Potomac River. The

area's ARES operators and nets sprang into immediate action and provided

much-needed communication support among the various governmental agencies

that had responded. -- Al Brogdon, W1AB

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, On September 11 and 12 two powerful coronal mass

ejections (CMEs) hit Earth, producing a G3-class geomagnetic storm. The

result was a planetary A index of 44 on September 12, and during the final

3 hours of the day (UTC), the planetary K index reached a very lofty 7!

Overall solar activity is down, with the average daily sunspot number

declining from 152 to 124.9 in the September 11-17 period. Average daily

solar flux dropped from 155.8 to 139.8.

Predicted flux values have declined as well. As an example, the daily

45-day forecast for solar flux on September 21 was 120 on August 6-10, 125

on August 11-17, 135 on August 18 through September 7, 150 on September

8-12, 130 on September 13, 120 on September 14-15, and 115 on every day

since.

Predicted solar flux is 125 on September 18-19, 120 on September 20, 115 on

September 21-22, 110 on September 23-25, 115 on September 26, 120 on

September 27-28, 130 on September 29, 135 on September 30 and October 1,

140 on October 2, 145 on October 3-5, and 150 on October 6-7.

Predicted planetary A index is 5 on September 18-25, 15 on September 26-27,

12 on September 28-29, 10 on September 30, 5 on October 1-2, 8 on October

3-4, 5 on October 5, and 10 on October 6-7.

The autumnal equinox occurs on September 23 at 0229 UTC, Monday evening in

North America. The equinox portends improved worldwide communication on the

HF bands. As an example, modeling propagation using W6ELprop and a modest

solar flux of 120, 20 meter signals between California and Japan on the

equinox run about 6 dB hotter in the early evening on the West Coast than

they would have a month earlier.

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, including a

report of aurora seen in Arizona.

Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

September 18 -- NAQCC Monthly QRP Sprint (CW)

September 20 -- Feld-Hell Hell on Wheels Sprint

September 20 -- Pirate QSO Party

September 20-21 -- ARRL 10 GHz Cumulative Contest

September 20-21 -- Red Badges on the Air

September 20-21 -- Scandinavian Activity Contest (CW)

September 20-21 -- South Carolina QSO Party

September 20-21 -- Washington State Salmon Run

September 21 -- BARTG Sprint 75

September 21-23 -- Classic Exchange (CW)

September 22 -- 144 MHz Fall VHF Sprint

September 24 -- SKCC Straight Key Sprint

September 27 -- Texas QSO Party

September 27-28 -- CQ WW RTTY Contest

September 27-28 -- Maine QSO Party

September 28 -- Peanut Power Sprint

September 30 -- 222 MHz Fall VHF Sprint

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events

September 19-20 -- W9DXCC Convention, Schaumburg, Illinois

September 26-27 -- W4DXCC/SEDCO Convention, Pigeon Forge, Tennessee

September 26-28 -- Mid-Atlantic States VHF Conference, Bensalem,

Pennsylvania

September 27 -- North Dakota State Convention, West Fargo, North Dakota

September 27 -- Washington State Convention, Spokane Valley, Washington

October 4 -- Delaware State Convention, Georgetown, Delaware

October 5 -- Iowa Section Convention, West Liberty, Iowa

October 10-11 -- Florida State Convention, Melbourne, Florida

October 10-12 -- Pacific Division Convention (Pacificon), Regional ARRL

Centennial Event, Santa Clara, California

October 11 -- Iowa State Convention (Sioux City Ham Convention), Sergeant

Bluff, Iowa

October 11 -- Pacific Northwest VHF Conference, Seaside, Oregon

October 12 -- Connecticut State Convention, Meriden, Connecticut

October 18 -- Arkansas State Convention, Batesville, Arkansas

October 18 -- Wisconsin ARES/RACES Conference, Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin

October 24-25 -- Oklahoma Section Convention, Ardmore, Oklahoma

November 1 -- TechFest 2014, Lakewood, Colorado

November 1-2 -- Georgia State Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia

November 8 -- Alabama State Convention, Montgomery, Alabama

November 15-16 -- Indiana State Convention, Fort Wayne, Indiana

December 12-13 -- West Central Florida Section Convention, Plant City,

Florida

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

HRD Software

Timewave Technology Inc

Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories Inc

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(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

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Copyright © 2014 American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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

QSO Today Podcast - ham radio expertise to build and serve a new nation

Posted: 17 Sep 2014 12:43 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...n&goto=newpost

One of the original founders of the Amateur Radio Service in Israel, Amnon

Bar Giora, 4X1DF, joins Eric, 4Z1UG, in a conversation about his early

beginnings as a radio operator for the pre-Israel Haganah, his training of

Yugoslav partisans in the use of radio behind the Nazi lines, his pursuit

of the Nazi doctor of Auschwitz across South America, and his co-founding

of the Amateur Radio service in Israel. At 91 years of age, Amnon has a

rich history of radio, service to his country and people, and

entrepreneurship.

Show Notes: http://www.qsotoday.com/podcasts/4x1df

Podcast Link:http://goo.gl/4dVGuK

iTunes Store: http://goo.gl/CvLNmV

Stitcher: http://goo.gl/uhf1XZ

Show more