2014-10-10

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

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This week's winner in the QRZ Anniversary Sweepstakes

Posted: 09 Oct 2014 04:58 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...s&goto=newpost

Today's the day we've been looking forward to for quite a while folks,

because today our weekly prize winner in the QRZ Anniversary Sweepstakes

will be receiving a 40 Meter Fat-Boy Dipole antenna from NI4L Antennas and

Electronics along with a $20 Gigaparts Giftcard and a One Year Premium

subscription to QRZ.

That winner, is none other than Michael R. Hoyt, KA9LEK from Carmel,

Indiana. According to his QRZ Biography page, Michael is a "Lifelong

Hoosier" with an Extra Class license. We certainly congratulate you

Michael, and hope that you'll make excellent use of your prizes!

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 beautiful 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, October 9, 2014

Posted: 09 Oct 2014 12:04 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...4&goto=newpost

The ARRL Letter

October 9, 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.]

Radio Amateur is Among Nobel Prize in Chemistry WinnersARRL Investigating

Web Server BreachARRL Vice Director Candidate Steve Putman, N8ZR, SKWorld

Radiosport Team Championship 2018 Will Be in GermanyLate October Exercise

to Test MARS-ARES InteroperabilityW1AW Centennial Operations Head for

Alabama and Michigan Starting October 15 (UTC)Scouting's 57th Jamboree On

The Air Takes Place October 18-19JOTA Founder Les Mitchell, G3BHK,

SKNominations Open for the George Hart Distinguished Service AwardARRL

Hosts 31st USTTI Amateur Radio Administration CourseIARU Region 1 Announces

Awards to ON4WF, OthersPast Western New York Section Manager, Atlantic

Division Assistant Director Steve Ryan, N2ITF, SKAdaptive Technology

Pioneer Fred Gissoni, K4JLX, SKA Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRLThe

K7RA Solar UpdateJust Ahead in RadiosportUpcoming ARRL Section, State and

Division Conventions and Events

Radio Amateur is Among Nobel Prize in Chemistry Winners

A California radio amateur and ARRL member was among the three winners of

the Nobel Prize in chemistry. William Moerner, WN6I, of Los Altos, a

chemistry professor at Stanford University, will share the prestigious

award equally with two other researchers -- Eric Betzig and Stefan Hell

--for their work in high-resolution microscopy, or nanoscopy. For many

years scientists had believed that an optical microscope could never yield

greater than 0.2 micrometer resolution. The three scientists overcame that

limitation through what the Nobel panel called "the development of

super-resolved fluorescence microscopy."

"I was just incredibly excited and thrilled, and, of course, your heart

races, and you say, 'Oh, can this be? Can this be?'" was how Moerner

reacted when formally notified that he was a prize winner. "I'm incredibly

happy about the recognition of the field, especially of all the workers and

all the scientists at many places around the world who have contributed to

the effort." In Brazil for a conference, Moerner had already heard the news

from his wife, who learned of it from an Associated Press reporter who had

called their home for a comment.

As a Stanford University news release explained, "Optical microscopy was

long limited by the presumption that it could never obtain a better

resolution than half the wavelength of light. Moerner, Betzig, and Hell

circumvented this limitation through the clever implementation of

fluorescent molecules, which made it possible for optical microscopes to

operate at the nanoscale and visualize individual molecules moving within

cells." Read more.

ARRL Investigating Web Server Breach

Late last month, a security breach occurred, involving a web server at ARRL

Headquarters. ARRL IT Manager Mike Keane, K1MK, said that League members

have no reason to be concerned about sensitive personal information being

leaked.

Keane said that servers were taken offline and isolated from the Internet

when the hack was discovered. Certain ARRL web functions -- online DXCC in

particular -- were temporarily disabled.

"Legacy" URLs (ones containing "p1k.arrl.org") have been restored, as has

access to the ARRL Periodicals Archive.

Keane stressed that it is highly unlikely that any sensitive information

was compromised. Any information the hacker might have been able to glean

from the ARRL server, he said, is already publicly available -- data such

as names, addresses, and call signs that appear in the FCC database.

The hacker may have been able to obtain site usernames and passwords that

were established prior to April 2010, and that have not been changed since

then. Members who have not changed their ARRL website passwords since early

2010 should do so at this time.

Keane confirmed that it's always prudent to change passwords on a routine

basis. "That's the best practice," he said.

Keane said that his department is still looking into what types of

information may have been vulnerable to the hack.

"They were poking around, trying all the doors," he explained. "We don't

keep anything of value [to a hacker] there. Hackers don't care about DXCC

totals or want to read the online issue of QST. There's nothing of

financial value there."

Keane said that in addition to reporting the security breach to federal law

enforcement authorities, his department is working to increase the League's

Internet security posture.

ARRL Vice Director Candidate Steve Putman, N8ZR, SK

Steve Putman, N8ZR, of Fairborn, Ohio, one of the candidates for the Great

Lakes Division Vice Director's chair, died unexpectedly on October 5. He

was 58 and an ARRL Life Member. Balloting is already underway for the Great

Lakes Vice Director position, currently held by Tom Delaney, W8WTD, the

only other candidate. The ARRL Ethics and Elections Committee has

determined that all votes cast by members in the Great Lakes Division will

still be counted. If Putman receives the most votes, a vacancy will be

declared that ARRL President Kay Craigie, N3KN, would fill by appointment.

In declaring his candidacy, Putman, a professional engineer, said that he

got into Amateur Radio "to have fun!" Born in Michigan, he was licensed as

a Novice in 1972 as WN4ZRR while living in Alabama. Putman became an ARRL

VEC volunteer examiner in 1985, in the early years of the volunteer

examiner program, and he established a VE program for the USECA Amateur

Radio Club in Utica, Michigan. Putman served as an ARRL Volunteer

Consulting Engineer.

In addition to the ARRL, Putman belonged to the Dayton Amateur Radio

Association and was a volunteer at Dayton Hamvention®. He also was a QCWA

Life Member, and he held the Australian call sign VK2IZR. Putman founded

the Antioch Shrine ARC and served as trustee of its club station, N8FEZ.

In his spare time, Putman enjoyed playing the trumpet in the Antioch Shrine

Band, the Fairborn Civic Band, and at his church.

Putman earned a BS in mechanical engineering from The Ohio State University

and master's degrees (mechanical engineering; MBA) from Bowling Green State

University and the University of Dayton. He retired in 2013 as a professor

of systems engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright

Patterson AFB.

The family invites memorial donations to the Shriners Hospitals for

Children.

World Radiosport Team Championship 2018 Will Be in Germany

The next World Radiosport Team Championship -- WRTC 2018 -- will take place

in Germany. The WRTC Sanctioning Committee announced on October 5 that it

had granted the application of a group representing the Deutscher Amateur

Radio Club (DARC), the Bavarian Contest Club (BCC), and the Rhein Ruhr DX

Association (RRDXA) to organize what are often called "the Olympics of

Amateur Radio." In July, German participants of WRTC 2014 in New England

initiated a petition, urging the WRTC Sanctioning Committee to name Germany

as the site of the next international competition among elite teams of

Amateur Radio contesters. With initial support of the contesting community

in hand, the organizing team of "about 20 contest enthusiasts" defined a

basic project plan, according to the WRTC 2018 website.

"During the next weeks, the team will launch an official organization to

finance and conduct WRTC 2018 in Germany," the Organizing Committee said.

The team is recruiting volunteers and evaluating three geographical regions

within Germany as possible WRTC 2018 venues. General areas under study are

Muenster/Westphalia, Maerkisch-Oderland east of Berlin, and

Jessen/Wittenberg.

Christian Janssen, DL1MGB, heads the WRTC 2018 Organizing Committee.

In announcing the selection of Germany, WRTC Sanctioning Committee Chairman

Tine Brajnik, S50A, said, "The German application was very well prepared,

and, knowing their experience, we all expect another outstanding meeting

and competition among the world's best contesters." The Sanctioning

Committee evaluates requests to host a WRTC and selects the successful

applicant. Brajnik said the committee would be making public information

regarding the qualifying process. It is not known if the committee

considered any other applications.

Qualifying events for WRTC 2018 will start with 2015 ARRL International DX

CW and end with 2016 CQ World Wide CW. Detailed rules will be published by

the end of November. "The rules will follow the WRTC 2014 approach, with

some marginal changes," the committee said. In accordance with feedback

from WRTC 2014 competitors, the committee said it would be decreasing the

number of qualifying contests and, consequently, the qualifying period.

An announcement regarding the location of WRTC 2018 had been expected at

the closing ceremony for WRTC 2014, but no formal proposals had been

received at that point.

A World Radiosport Team Championship features between 50 and 60 two-person

Amateur Radio teams competing in a test of operating skill. The event takes

place concurrent with the IARU HF Championship in July, although WRTC rules

vary from those of the IARU event. All stations use identical antennas and

power level and operate from equivalent sites in the same geographical

region in an effort to eliminate all variables except operating ability.

WRTC 2014 included 59 competing teams from 29 qualifying regions around the

world.

The first WRTC was held in 1990 in Seattle. Read more.

Late October Exercise to Test MARS-ARES Interoperability

US Army and Air Force Military Auxiliary Radio Service (MARS) stations will

participate in a 48-hour nationwide contingency communication exercise on

October 27 and 28 as part of an effort to develop greater cooperation

between the Department of Defense (DoD) sponsored MARS program and the

Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES). MARS is encouraging its members to

discuss communication interoperability in advance of the exercise with

their ARES section and district or local emergency coordinators.

"This communications exercise is sponsored by the DoD to provide MARS

operators the opportunity to develop and train interoperability procedures

with their state/local ARES emergency coordinators and their Amateur Radio

colleagues," explained Army MARS Program Manager Paul English, WD8DBY. He

told ARRL that the DoD/MARS exercise has "full participation" from Army and

Air Force MARS, and that he anticipates that some individual Navy MARS

members may participate as well.

The plan calls for MARS members, using their Amateur Radio call signs and

operating on amateur frequencies, to establish two-way communication with

ARES leadership or members in as many US counties as possible by using

VHF/UHF simplex channels or local repeaters or near vertical incidence

skywave (NVIS) propagation on HF. "The contact can be with any amateur in

the county, if an ARES member or leader is not available," English added.

"Ultimately we would like the MARS operator to join an existing ARES net,

if one is operational during the exercise," English said. If no net is

available, MARS members should come up on local repeaters or check into HF

traffic nets to see what amateurs are available and to determine their

counties. "We want to use existing net times and frequencies to the extent

possible," English continued. "Any mode of operation is fine."

Only one ARES/Amateur Radio contact per county is needed, but more are

okay. The contact must be person to person and cannot rely on

Internet-linked repeaters, Internet connectivity systems, or

store-and-forward e-mail systems, such as Winlink, English said.

The information exchange requested from ARES for each county is the county

name and the county Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) code,

if available.

There are two preferred windows of opportunity to conduct the

interoperability exercise. These are from 1201 to 1800 UTC on October 27,

and from 0001 to 0600 UTC on October 28.

Contact Paul English, WD8DBY, for more information.

W1AW Centennial Operations Head for Alabama and Michigan Starting October

15 (UTC)

The ARRL Centennial W1AW portable operations taking place throughout 2014

from each of the 50 states are now in Missouri and Virginia. They will

transition at 0000 UTC on Wednesday, October 15 (the evening of October 14

in US time zones), to Alabama (W1AW/4) and Michigan (W1AW/8). In addition,

W1AW/KH0 also will be active October 8-21 from Tinian Island in the

Northern Marianas.

So far during 2014, W1AW has visited each of the 50 states for at least 1

week, and by year's end W1AW will have been on the air from every state at

least twice.

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.

Scouting's 57th Jamboree On The Air Takes Place October 18-19

Scouting's 2014 Jamboree On The Air (JOTA) is set for the October 18-19

weekend. The annual event links Scouts around the world via Amateur Radio.

More than a half million Scouts and Guides get together over the airwaves

each third weekend of October for JOTA. According to the World Scout

Bureau, JOTA is the largest Scouting event in the world, with nearly

750,000 Scouts participating from 6000 stations in 150 countries around the

world. Scouts of any age can participate, from Cub Scouts to Boy Scouts and

Venture crew members. Not a contest, JOTA's goal is to foster

Scout-to-Scout communication across borders and oceans.

"The idea is to contact other Scout stations and allow as many Scouts as

possible to talk to other Scouts and learn about who they are and what they

are doing," the Boy Scouts of America has said in its JOTA guidelines,

which offer suggested frequencies.

On-the-air exchanges typically include such information as name, location,

Scout rank, age, and hobbies, but the conversation can certainly go beyond

that. Amateur Radio licensees should be aware that international

third-party traffic agreements may prohibit direct person-to-person

communication between unlicensed individuals in certain other countries. In

those cases, the station control operator may serve as an intermediary.

Licensed mentors often open their stations to Scouts on JOTA weekend,

serving as control operators. Radio operation will be on 80 through 6

meters, all modes, and 2 meters and 70 centimeters FM simplex. Upward of

14,000 stations were on the air for JOTA 2013.

A JOTA participant patch is available, as is a certificate/log sheet that

can also be used to fulfill a Radio merit badge requirement.

JOTA 2014 gets underway on Saturday, October 18, at 0000 local time and

concludes on Sunday, October 19, at 2400 local time. The ARRL website also

has information on JOTA.

JOTA Founder Les Mitchell, G3BHK, SK

With JOTA 2014 a little more than 1 week away comes word that its "founding

father," Les Mitchell, G3BHK, died on October 6. Mitchell started JOTA in

1958, after launching the idea a year earlier at the World Scout Jamboree.

That was the first year the Jamboree had an Amateur Radio station on site,

and it's had one at every World Scout Jamboree since. Mitchell realized

that many scout leaders also were hams, and that it would be possible to

arrange a "Jamboree On The Air."

"Little did I think when I drew up the plans and rules for the first event

in 1958 that its popularity would increase and spread around the world,"

Mitchell reminisced in 2000. "Even more astonishing is the fact that after

all this time it still holds its popularity. In fact it has become the

largest international Scout event ever."

Mitchell said that far fewer Scouts were licensed in 1958, but over the

years Scouts taking part in JOTA got so interested that they became radio

amateurs themselves.

"JOTA is great fun," Mitchell said, adding, "If you put nothing into the

event you may get nothing out of it! JOTA is your chance to speak to Scouts

and Guides over the horizon. Silence makes no friends!"

Nominations Open for the George Hart Distinguished Service Award

The ARRL is accepting nominations for the George Hart Distinguished Service

Award. The deadline to receive nominations and supporting materials is

November 1. The award honors long-time ARRL Communications Manager George

Hart, W1NJM (SK), the chief developer of the National Traffic System (NTS).

Hart died in 2013 at the age of 99.

Established by the ARRL Board of Directors in 2009, the George Hart

Distinguished Service Award is given annually to an ARRL member for

exemplary service to the League's Field Organization. Selection criteria

include NTS operating record, Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES)

participation, or service to the ARRL Field Organization in terms of

appointments and/or leadership positions held.

Nominations should thoroughly document the nominee's lifetime activities

and achievements within the ARRL Field Organization. Nominees are expected

to have at least 15 years of distinguished service.

The Programs and Services Committee will serve as the Review Committee, and

the ARRL Board of Directors will make the final determination at its Annual

Meeting in January.

Submit nominations and related supporting material and letters of

recommendation to ARRL Headquarters or mail nominating documents to ARRL

Field Organization Team Supervisor Steve Ewald, WV1X, 225 Main St,

Newington, CT 06111.

ARRL Hosts 31st USTTI Amateur Radio Administration Course

Students from Thailand, Ghana, and Papua New Guinea attended the 31st

United States Telecommunications Training Institute (USTTI) Amateur Radio

Administration Course (ARAC) September 29-October 3 at ARRL Headquarters.

Two participants got their US Amateur Radio licenses as the course wrapped

up. ARRL Chief Technology Officer Brennan Price, N4QX, coordinated the

session and administered the course, which is designed for government

officials in developing countries who regulate and manage Amateur Radio.

Those taking part in the program work in their respective government's

telecommunication offices, where they have responsibilities for Amateur

Radio licensing and regulation as well as preparation for international

conferences.

"Our students -- Annop Nittaya, HS1PLO, and Virat Uansri from Thailand,

Peter Djakwah, KM4EQL, of Ghana, and Oki Gari, KM4EQM, of Papua New Guinea

-- were already quite knowledgeable about Amateur Radio, and are committed

to the further development of Amateur Radio in their countries," Price

said. "All left with a profound understanding of the unique nature and

needs of the Amateur Radio Service."

The ARAC curriculum covers a variety of Amateur Radio topics and concerns,

including licensing, spectrum requirements, disaster communications, and

antenna requirements. The curriculum also covers the International

Telecommunication Union (ITU) and its regulations, as well as the process

leading to the upcoming 2015 World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-15).

Several ARRL staff members delivered classroom presentations within their

areas of expertise. Emergency Preparedness Manager Mike Corey, KI1U, taught

a unit on Amateur Radio's public service, emergency, and disaster

communication capabilities. ARRL Regulatory Information Manager Dan

Henderson, N1ND, and ARRL VEC Manager Maria Somma, AB1FM, discussed

licensing, examination and regulatory issues. Membership and Volunteer

Programs Assistant Manager Norm Fusaro, W3IZ, talked about developing

Amateur Radio capabilities through club activity.

ARRL Laboratory Engineer Bob Allison, WB1GCM, assisted by ARRL Laboratory

Volunteers Lori Kosior, KB1ZML, and Pete Turbide, W1PT, supervised each

student's successful assembly of a 40 meter receiver kit. Each student took

his assembled receiver home. ARRL Assistant to the Chief Executive Officer

and Meeting Planner Lisa Kustosik, KA1UFZ, coordinated the League's

participation with USTTI and hosted the students.

The students had a particular interest in licensing, and Djakwah and Gari

took examinations for the United States Technician license during their

time at ARRL Headquarters. An ARRL VEC team comprising Somma, Corey, Field

Organization Supervisor Steve Ewald, WV1X, and Outgoing QSL Bureau

Associate Rose-Anne Lawrence, KB1DMW, administered the test, which both

passed.

USTTI is a non-profit joint venture of leading US-based communications, IT

corporations, and federal government officials, who collectively provide

tuition-free management, policy and technical training for talented

professionals from the developing world. The ARRL hosts a course on Amateur

Radio to introduce or further educate regulators and other spectrum users

to its needs and unique issues. The next ARAC course is planned for the

fall of 2015.

IARU Region 1 Announces Awards to ON4WF, Others

At its recent Regional Conference in Bulgaria, International Amateur Radio

Union (IARU) Region 1 awarded the Region 1 Roy Stevens, G2BVN, Memorial

Trophy to Gaston Bertels, ON4WF. IARU Region 1 recognized Bertels for his

many years of serving first as chairman of the Eurocom Working Group and

then of the Amateur Radio Space Exploration (ARSPEX) Working Group.

Bertels, who is 87, has said that he will be stepping down as chairman of

the ARSPEX working group. For many years, Bertels has chaired Amateur Radio

on the International Space Station -- Europe (ARISS-EU). Region 1

conference delegates gave Bertels a standing ovation when the award was

announced. The trophy is awarded to a radio amateur who has best

exemplified the work and dedication of Roy Stevens, G2BVN in international

radio.

The IARU Region 1 Medal was awarded to several radio amateurs for their

meritorious service and their valued contributions to and support of

Amateur Radio.

The recipients were past IARU Region 1 President Hans Blondeel Timmerman,

PB2T; Hani Raad, OD5TE; Andreas Thiemann, HB9JOE; Panayot Danev, LZ1US;

Nikola Percin, 9A5W; Michael Kastelic, OE1MCU, and Martin Harrison, G3USF.

In September, IARU Region 1 named Mitchel Mynhardt, ZS6YH, as the first

recipient of its Outstanding Ham Youth Award. Mynhardt received the 2013

award at the Radio Technology in Action Symposium in Pretoria, South Africa.

International Amateur Radio Union Region 1 is a federation of national

Amateur Radio member societies in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and

Northern Asia.

Past Western New York Section Manager, Atlantic Division Assistant Director

Steve Ryan, N2ITF, SK

Past ARRL Western New York Section Manager Stephen M. "Steve" Ryan, N2ITF,

died on October 3. He was 62. Ryan was appointed SM in November 2010, to

serve the remaining term of Scott Bauer, W2LC, who had resigned. Ryan lost

his bid for election to the section leadership position in 2012. ARRL

Atlantic Division Director Bill Edgar, N3LLR, subsequently appointed Ryan

as an Assistant Director.

"Steve's counsel and participation in Atlantic Division meetings and events

greatly assisted me in representing the members of the Division," Edgar

said. "His friendship and counsel with be sorely missed." Edgar said Ryan

had been diagnosed almost 2 years ago with an aggressive form of cancer.

In addition to his ARRL membership, Ryan was a member and former president

of the Chautauqua County Amateur FM Association, an ARRL affiliated club.

He had been a ham for about 35 years. Read more.

Adaptive Technology Pioneer Fred Gissoni, K4JLX, SK

Fred L. Gissoni, K4JLX, of Louisville, Kentucky, died September 21. He was

84. Born blind, Gissoni was the co-developer of the Porta-Braille and

Pocket-Braille note-taking devices as well as other adaptive technology. He

also authored a popular instruction manual, "Using the Cranmer Abacus."

Gissoni retired in 2011 after 23 years with the American Printing House

(APH) for the Blind.

"Fred contributed 60 years of service to people who are blind and visually

impaired," Deborah Kendrick wrote for Access World, a publication of the

American Foundation for the Blind. "Fred was known across the United States

and around the world for his brilliant intellect, inventiveness, and impish

sense of humor."

A New Jersey native, he became interested in Amateur Radio at a very young

age, and his passion for technology continued through his lifetime. Gissoni

and Wayne Thompson developed the Pocket-Braille and Porta-Braille in the

1980s, while both were working at the Kentucky Department for the Blind.

With the Pocket-Braille, the user entered data from a Perkins-style

keyboard, and the device would render it in speech. The Porta-Braille

included a refreshable Braille "display." He also developed the Janus

Slate, a two-sided interline Braille slate that holds a 3 × 5 index card

for brailling on both sides. Other inventions he developed for APH included

a pocket Braille calendar.

"I also used other ideas that Gissoni came up with or invented," said Bob

Ringwald, K6YBV. "All the time I marveled at his genius, inventive mind,

but never knew he was also a ham radio operator, K4JLX." Read more.

A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL

Part of the 220 MHz band, perpetually under attack by other radio services,

was snatched from the Amateur Service on August 4, 1988, by the FCC, which

reallocated 220-222 MHz to the Land Mobile Service. ARRL had been fighting

this battle for some time and would continue efforts have that band segment

return to the Amateur Service.

January 1989 QST published "The Listener," a quick, but interesting, look

at the efforts of pioneer radio astronomer Grote Reber, W9GFZ.

On January 30, 1989, the FCC released the news that the much-awaited 17

meter ham band was open for business in the US!

The editorial in the May 1989 QST, "Spectrum Management, or Abdication?"

decried a recent FCC action to allow manufacturers of electronic equipment

to radiate unlicensed signals on hams bands from 902 MHz upward. The ARRL

continued its defense of amateur frequencies by preparing to go to Congress

for relief, using this as the latest example of FCC out-of-control decision

making.

A two-part article by KO5I and N4HY in the May and June 1989 issues of QST

introduced the latest generation of OSCAR satellites -- microsats.

In July 1988, a team of hams from Finland and the Soviet Union mounted a

DXpedition (4J1FS) to a new DXCC country, Malyj-Vysotkskij ("M-V Island").

This ended an 18-year effort to put the island on the DXCC List.

Participant Martti Laine, OH2BH, recounted the experience in a June 1989

QST article. [The lease of Malyj-Vysotkskij to Finland expired in 2012, the

island reverted to Russia, and MVI was deleted from the DXCC list. -- Ed.]

On May 11, 1989, a congressional oversight committee summoned the FCC's

chief engineer to defend the Commission's decision to take 220 to 222 MHz

away from amateurs and allocate it to another service. Following the

hearing, the committee chairman wrote the FCC, asking it to reconsider

alternatives. The FCC stonewalled and did nothing. The ARRL subsequently

filed a federal court appeal.

On July 20, 1989, the newly renovated W1AW building was rededicated. Nearly

10,000 individual donors had put up almost a half million dollars to fund

the renovation.

In the "How's DX?" column in the September 1989 issue of QST, Ellen White,

W1YL, noted "Pitcairn Island's Bicentenary," a fascinating read. White

noted that Pitcairn was the country with the highest per capita number of

hams in the world -- 6 hams out of a population of 60! The island's 200th

anniversary was celebrated in part by special event station VR200PI.

In 1990, a husband-and-wife team achieved DXCC on 6 meters. The wife, K5FF,

was first, and her husband, W5FF, was right behind.

An interesting photo in "Up Front in QST" in September 1990 showed Samuel

F. B. Morse III, W6FZZ, operating at a special event station to celebrate

his great-grandfather's 199th birthday.

An article by NU1N appeared in the September and October issues of QST

telling how we could get on the air using lasers. -- Al Brogdon, W1AB

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, Washington, reports: Average daily sunspot numbers

from October 2-8 dropped from 170.1 in the previous 7 days to 98. Average

daily solar flux also declined from 168.9 to 131.9.

Predicted solar flux for the near term is 125, 120, and 115 on October

9-11, 110 on October 12-14, then 115 and 125 on October 15-16, 145 on

October 17-18, 140 on October 19, 135 on October 20-21, and 140 on October

22-25. Solar flux then drops to a low of 110 on November 7-9, and rises

again to 145 for November 12-14.

The prediction for the planetary A index is for a more-active geomagnetic

future, at least in the near term. The predicted planetary A index is 5 on

October 9-10, 8 on October 11, 5 on October 12-14, then 8, 15, 8, and 5 on

October 15-18, then 8, 10, and 20 on October 19-21, 15 on October 22-24,

and 10 on October 25-28.

This weekly "Solar Update" in The ARRL Letter is a preview of

the "Propagation Bulletin" issued each Friday. The latest bulletin and an

archive of past propagation bulletins is on the ARRL website.

In Friday's bulletin look for an updated forecast and reports from readers.

Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

October 10 -- 10-10 Sprint

October 11 -- Arizona QSO Party

October 11 -- Pennsylvania QSO Party

October 11 -- EU Autumn CW Sprint

October 11-12 -- Great Pumpkin Sprint (Digital)

October 11-12 -- ARRL EME Contest

October 11-12 -- Makrothen RTTY Contest

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

HamRadioNow at the Beach; AMBE vocoder EXPOSED! at the DCC

Posted: 09 Oct 2014 10:43 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...C&goto=newpost

HAMRADIONOW.tv

Episode 166: TAPR and the Beach

Episode 167: AMBE Exposed! K6BP at the DCC

I've just uploaded a pair of new episodes. Finally...

Episode 166, TAPR and the Beach (or Hey! You got sand in my SDR! - play it

below) mixes the 2014 ARRL and TAPR DCC Friday morning Introduction from

Steve Bible into my beach vacation. Up go the antennas (not very far up,

alas), and out come the radios.

Episode 167, AMBE Exposed (play it on the web site), sees Open Source czar

Bruce Perens K6BP admit he was wrong about the AMBE vocoder that everyone

seems to be using for digital voice. Scandal!

Here's Episode 166:

See Episode 167 on HamRadioNow.tv

And in case you missed them (because I didn't promote them here on QRZ),

there are a couple of videos of my drive home from the DCC in Austin.

They're in Epsiode 165, also on HamRadioNow.tv

Watch all our programs 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!

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