2015-04-03

QRZ Forums - Amateur Radio News

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Week 11 of the QRZ Subscriber Rewards program

Posted: 02 Apr 2015 02:12 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...m&goto=newpost

It's hard to believe, but we've been giving away a radio a week for 10

weeks now in our Subscriber Rewards program! Each prize is a brand new, in

the box, Baofeng UV-5R Plus, dual band (144/440 Mhz) transceiver,

complete with hands-free headset and a drop-in charger each week!

This is a great little radio that is field programmable right from the

keypad. It also includes a built-in flashlight as well as many great

operating features.

Subscriber Rewards is our way of saying thanks our loyal subscribers

upon whose support we humbly depend to keep the site running. All

current QRZ subscribers are eligible, regardless of their subscription

plan, and regardless of whether they are a US HAM or International.

If your callsign page has a QRZ Subscriber badge, then you're eligible

to win.

Our 11th winner is Rex Reddoch, WD5CCA, an XML subscriber here on QRZ from

the state of Mississippi. We truly appreciate Rex's long time support of

QRZ and hope that he will enjoy this prize.

If you are not yet a QRZ subscriber, we'd love for you to take a look at

the options that we offer. We're pretty sure you'll find one of the

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QRZ SUbscriber Awards winners are announced here in the News forum as well

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see what other fun things we're posting!

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South Africa may transmit 1kW from 1 April.

Posted: 02 Apr 2015 02:05 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...l&goto=newpost

For years HAMÂ’s in South-Africa have called for the legalpower limit to be

raised. The maximum output power was limited to 400 Watt PEPfor decades. A

workgroup was established to campaign for higher power. Afternegotiating

for a couple of years the South African authorities was satisfiedthat the

call for higher power was well motivated. The updated regulation

waspublished in the South African Government Gazette in this week and the

new 1kWoutput power privilege became effective on 1 April 2015. Some HAMÂ’s

thought itto be an April foolÂ’s joke as the new law became effective, on

well, April foolÂ’sday, but it was not. The new 1kW privilege was welcomed

by the South-African Hamfraternity, especially among low band DXÂ’ers end

EME operators. Please pointyour antennas towards the bottom of Africa,

there are eager ZS-HAMÂ’s justwaiting to do real QRO for the first time

ever. Best 73 from ZS land, ZS6FDX.(Francois Reyneke)

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The ARRL Letter, April 2, 2015

Posted: 02 Apr 2015 01:14 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...5&goto=newpost

The ARRL Letter

April 2, 2015

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.]

The FCC's "Ham Guy," Bill Cross, W3TN, to Retire on April 3Oklahoma Amateur

Radio Volunteers Activate Net to Track Severe WeatherPuerto Rico ARES Takes

Part in Caribe Wave/LANTEX 2015 ExerciseUtah Group Puts Broadband-Hamnet to

Work for Food ProjectAmateur Radio to Have a Presence, Special Event at

Preparedness Summit 2015Two More Radio Amateurs Join International Space

Station CrewARISS School Contact Proposal Window Open Until April 15Amateur

Radio "EduTeam" Wows the Crowds at Georgia Super STEM EventAmateur Radio

Television Pioneer Don Miller, W9NTP, SKIn Brief...The K7RA Solar

UpdateJust Ahead in RadiosportUpcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division

Conventions and Events

ARRL Headquarters Will Be Closed on Good Friday, April 3: ARRL Headquarters

will be closed on Good Friday, April 3. There will be no W1AW bulletin or

code practice transmissions and no ARRL Audio News on that day. ARRL

Headquarters will reopen Monday, April 6, at 8 AM Eastern Daylight Time. We

wish everyone a safe and enjoyable holiday!

The FCC's "Ham Guy," Bill Cross, W3TN, to Retire on April 3

Amateur Radio's point man at the FCC is retiring. Bill Cross, W3TN,

officially a "program analyst" in the Commission's Wireless

Telecommunications Bureau (WTB), is stepping down on April 3, after nearly

4 decades at the FCC. Many radio amateurs have had the opportunity to meet

Cross when he conducted the once popular Dayton Hamvention Amateur Radio

forum, which has since fallen victim to FCC budget trimming.

"Most people [at the Bureau] know me as 'The Ham Guy,'" Cross quipped in an

interview with ARRL, "and they send anything relating to Amateur Radio to

me -- as quick as they can." Cross said he did consider making April 1 his

retirement date but, "I didn't want to take any chances."

Cross started with the Amateur Radio Group in what was then the Private

Radio Bureau. That morphed into the WTB when other services were added in

1989. Prior to that, he worked in the Common Carrier Bureau -- now the

Wireline Competition Bureau -- and his academic background in engineering

and economics came in handy.

A ham since 1968, the married father of two said he's still active on the

air, strictly on HF SSB and CW, and he hopes to expand his time for ham

radio once away from the daily grind. He has achieved DXCC Honor Roll and

actively participates in the Islands on the Air program (IOTA).

When he arrived at the FCC in 1976, Cross didn't anticipate making it a

career. But in time, his hobby became his work, and over the years he

witnessed considerable change in Amateur Radio. The Commission's 2007

decision to drop Morse code as a requirement for obtaining an Amateur Radio

license was one example. "We heard that fabric of the universe had become

unglued," he said, "but it didn't." CW seems to be used much more than it

was before 2007, he said, and some DX or IOTA stations are CW only.

Cross acknowledged that Amateur Radio rule making proceedings at the FCC

move with seeming glacial torpor but pointed out that the Amateur Service

competes with an incoming barrage from other services and

bureaus. "Amateurs have a view that the Commission has three bureaus -- the

Bureau of Ham Radio, the Bureau of All Other, and the Bureau of

Administration," he said. "I understand why they wish it was that way, but

it's not."

Looking ahead, Cross said he can see a day when there may be only one

Amateur Radio license class. "Do we really need three license classes

anymore?" he asked. "I can see in the future the number of license classes

decreasing again -- to two or maybe one -- because the differences really

are not that much."

Among the disappointments for Cross has been the rise in questionable

on-the-air behavior, including intentional interference with DXpeditions,

which he believes reflects such less-desirable societal trends as road

rage. "People lose perspective," he said. "No one lives or dies, if they

don't work Navassa Island." FCC budget cutbacks will lead to less

enforcement, he said, and with stretched resources, "something's gotta

give."

That applies in Cross's own Bureau. When he steps down on April 3, no

new "Ham Guy" is standing in the wings to replace him. "The plan is to

divide up my work among other staff members, based on topic," he said.

Waxing philosophical, Cross said people choose to get into ham radio as

something enjoyable and fun. "When the joy and the fun go out of it, and it

becomes a frustration, it might be time to take a step back," he

advised. "Find a new aspect of the hobby. If it doesn't make you happy,

there's something wrong. There's something for everyone. Just have fun."

And Bill Cross plans to do just that.

Oklahoma Amateur Radio Volunteers Activate Net to Track Severe Weather

Amateur Radio SKYWARN volunteers in Oklahoma went on alert March 25 as

severe thunderstorms sparked tornadoes. The Southwest Independent Repeater

Association (SWIRA) and Tulsa Region SKYWARN nets were active in support of

tornado warnings in both the Oklahoma City and Tulsa Metropolitan areas. No

Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) activation was required, however.

"March 25 was a busy afternoon and evening in Oklahoma," ARRL Oklahoma

Section Manager Lloyd Colston, KC5FM, told ARRL.

Oklahoma Section Emergency Coordinator Mark Conklin, N7XYO, said that

ARES-OK Tulsa Region was put on standby. "No communication support was

requested by served agencies," he said. "Other than some local cell service

overload, normal communications were up and working."

The WX5TUL Tulsa National Weather Service SKYWARN Net activated on VHF and

UHF, with approximately 25 stations checking in. Weather spotters reported

four tornadoes, two causing major damage and injury, along with large and

frequent severe hail, minor street flooding and significant damage due to

straight-line winds, causing widespread power outages. The severe weather

has been blamed for at least one death.

Colston said the SWIRA net control stations received reports -- at times

under challenging conditions -- that were relayed to the National Weather

Service office in Norman. "Both the Tulsa and Norman offices have Amateur

Radio stations," he pointed out. "Both encourage SKYWARN and Weather Ready

Nation initiatives in their service areas."

Colston said that as the storm progressed across the Tulsa Metro area, many

of the early damage reports were passed to the Tulsa Area Emergency

Management Agency via Amateur Radio. "Oklahoma Section radio amateurs

reported on this storm system until it exited the state late that evening,"

he said. Colston and Conklin noted that many early "ground truth" and

tornado observations came from SKYWARN spotters.

Conklin said that the Tulsa Amateur Radio Club (TARC) UHF Superlink System

is used for SKYWARN traffic outside the Tulsa Metro area, while TARC's VHF

repeater handles SKYWARN net traffic inside the Tulsa Metro area.

A preliminary damage assessment from the National Weather Service Office in

Norman confirmed more than one tornado, the most severe being in Moore. The

NWS survey rated damage from the tornado as "high-end EF1." Widespread

damage also resulted from winds of from 70 to 80 MPH, the NWS said. Read

more.

Puerto Rico ARES Takes Part in Caribe Wave/LANTEX 2015 Exercise

Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) volunteers in Puerto Rico took part

in the 2015 Caribe Wave Large Atlantic Tsunami Exercise (LANTEX) -- an

annual tsunami drill for the US East Coast, Canada, the Gulf of Mexico, and

the Caribbean Basin. The exercise involved some 50 nations. The aim of the

March 25 exercise was to test the reliability of communication systems and

protocols between centers of tsunami alerts and to help emergency

management agencies to improve their preparedness in the event of a tsunami

alert. Since 2010, Amateur Radio operators have played a role in the

exercise, executed in conjunction with the Puerto Rico Seismic Network

(RSPR), the Caribbean Warning Tsunami Exercise (Caribe Wave), FEMA, the

Puerto Rico Emergency Management Administration (PREMA-AEMEAD), and NOAA.

This year, Puerto Rico Amateur Radio Emergency Service, under the direction

of Section Emergency Coordinator Carlos A. Rosado, KP4CAR, took part for

the first time.

This year's exercise offered two possible scenarios: An

earthquake-generated tsunami off the north coast of Panama, and a

sub-marine landslide off the coast of Florida. The Puerto Rico Seismic

Network chose the Panama scenario. At 10:04 AM Eastern Time, the Emergency

Alert System (EAS) was activated on broadcast and cable TV outlets to

announce the "situation" -- with reminders that it was only a drill. An

hour later, siren systems were tested to verify how well they performed in

coastal areas. Also, many government, public, schools, and senior

institutions in different cities ran their own evacuation drills to test

their preparedness in getting people to the nearest local refuge.

The PREMA activated all 12 of its zones. Each zone is equipped with a

Kenwood TS-2000, funded through a federal grant. The main responsibility of

radio amateurs was to gather reports from other amateur stations around the

island regarding how they were alerted: Broadcast radio, TV, cable, or

other means, such as sirens. The information was delivered to PREMA

Headquarters for post-exercise evaluation session that will involve all of

the involved agencies.

The exercise made use of two repeaters -- one in Jayuya, the highest point

on the island and equipped with emergency power, and the other in Cayey.

Tito Colón, WP4CBC, and Johnny Figueroa, WP4CXG, served as net control

stations, and many hams throughout Puerto Rico participated in the exercise

-- helping to renew their interest in emergency communication.

PREMA Director Miguel A. RÃ#os Torres called LANTEX 2015 a great success,

with performance within parameters established by the agency. -- Thanks to

Angel Santana, WP3GW, Puerto Rico Section Public Information Coordinator

Utah Group Puts Broadband-Hamnet to Work for Food Project

A small band of Amateur Radio volunteers in Utah's Salt Lake Valley

successfully used a broadband Wi-Fi network set up on the 2.4 GHz amateur

band to help coordinate the Boy Scouts of America's (BSA) "Scouting for

Food" project on March 21. Scouting for Food is the Boy Scouts' annual

community service event, in which Scouts collect items for donation to a

food bank. Local radio amateurs provide both voice and digital mode

communication.

This year for the first time they used a Broadband-Hamnet (BBHN) system

that coupled modified wireless router gear operating on amateur frequencies

to create a peer-to-peer Wi-Fi network to share audio and video over a

generous patch of real estate. BBHN is a descendent of the former ARRL High

Speed Multimedia (HSMM) Working Group efforts, earlier known as

the "Hinternet" and pioneered by John Champa, K8OCL (SK), and others in the

early 2000s.

"[W]e would call it Wi-Fi on steroids!" said David Bauman, KF7MCF. The Utah

hams linked 13 nodes across the valley to form a network "that is like a

mini private Internet," Bauman explained. They then used this network to

send live video and audio back to the BSA Headquarters, showing them what

was happening at food drop-off sites and at the [truck dispatch]

headquarters. Bauman called it "a huge step forward in technology from the

old days of Morse code." Retired clergyman Robert Jelf, KG7OHV, of Magna,

headed up the team.

Just outside BSA Headquarters near the University of Utah, Brandon Bauman,

KG7RWO, was able to watch via his laptop as volunteers miles away dropped

off canned food items and as YRC freight dispatched trucks to pickup sites

around the valley. Brandon was part of an Amateur Radio group that assists

the Boy Scouts in the Scouting for Food Project each year by providing

communications. This marked the first time BBHN technology was used to

support the project in the Salt Lake Valley. Their Wi-Fi network, known as

a wireless mesh network, was able to cover a large portion of the valley.

"The farthest point from our hub site was 8.5 miles across the city through

a narrow path lined with lots of manmade objects for signals to bounce

off," Jelf said. "While the mesh group was used to show video of the

dispatch of trucks and of truck trailers at collection points within the

hub site path, collection took place throughout the Wasatch Front area and

elsewhere in Utah." Read more.

Amateur Radio to Have a Presence, Special Event at Preparedness Summit 2015

Amateur Radio will be part of the program when Preparedness Summit 2015

convenes April 14-17 in Atlanta. Special event station N4P will also be on

the air from the conference location. The theme of this 10th Preparedness

Summit is "Global Health Security: Preparing a Nation for Emerging Threats."

"Global health security preparedness issues such as protecting against

infectious disease, the health effects of climate change and extreme

weather, and cybersecurity threats to critical infrastructure, impact all

levels of governmental public health and healthcare agencies," a

Preparedness Summit 2015 announcement explained. The National Association

of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) organizes the event, which

attracted 1600 participants in 2014.

Preparedness Summit 2015 will once again offer an Amateur Radio licensing

prep session on April 14, with testing the following day. A ham radio

demonstration, "When All Else Fails, Amateur Radio Gets Through," will take

place on April 14 as well.

Special event station N4P will be on the air from the Preparedness Summit

2015 venue. Listen for N4P on or around 7.265, 14.265, 21.365, and 28.36

MHz. EchoLink activity using the Georgia Tech Radio Club's W4AQL call sign

also will take place. A commemorative QSL card will be available for

stations working N4P.

The complete Preparedness Summit agenda and more information are on the

conference's website. -- Thanks to Chuck Motes, K1DFS

Two More Radio Amateurs Join International Space Station Crew

The ISS ham radio population expanded to three, following the arrival of

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonauts Mikhail Kornienko, RN3BF,

and Gennady Padalka, RN3DT, on March 28 (UTC). Kelly, 51, and Kornienko,

54, will remain aboard the ISS for 1 year -- the longest space mission ever

assigned to a NASA astronaut.

European Space Agency Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti, IZ0UDF, will head

back to Earth in May, after Kjell Lindgren, KO5MOS; Oleg Kononenko, RN3DX,

and Kimiya Yui arrive at the ISS as part of a scheduled crew rotation.

Cristoforetti has conducted several Amateur Radio on the International

Space Station school contacts during her ISS duty tour.

ARISS School Contact Proposal Window Open Until April 15

The Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) program

coordinator is seeking proposals from schools and organizations that are

interested in hosting an Amateur Radio contact with a member of the

International Space Station crew. The US ARISS contact proposal window will

remain open until April 15.

ARISS is seeking formal and informal educational institutions and

organizations, individually or working together, to host an Amateur Radio

contact with an ISS crew member between January 1 and June 30, 2016. Crew

scheduling and space station orbits will determine the exact contact dates.

ARISS is looking for organizations that have the potential to draw large

numbers of participants and can integrate the contact into a well-developed

educational plan.

Details on expectations, audience, proposal guidelines, proposal form, and

dates and times of information sessions are on the ARRL website. Contact

ARISS with any questions.

Amateur Radio "EduTeam" Wows the Crowds at Georgia Super STEM Event

Members of the North Fulton Amateur Radio League (NFARL) EduTeam in Fulton

County, Georgia, offered students and other members of the public an

opportunity to experience ham radio. The EduTeam hosted an Amateur Radio

booth at the Sandy Springs Education Force's Super STEM (science,

technology, engineering, and math) Event on March 5 at North Springs

Charter High School.

"The theme of this year's STEM Event was Communications Technology, so we

were a perfect fit," said Martha Muir, W4MSA. "Waves of the North Springs

students flooded our booth from the morning until early afternoon. Then it

was time for students from the local middle schools."

That evening, Muir said, officials from the Sandy Springs Education Force

as well as other members of the community visited.

"Our booth was busy all day, tantalizing and educating our visitors with

various aspects of Amateur Radio," she said, "especially about how much fun

it is, and how easily it fits into STEM classrooms."

Mike Cohen, AD4MC, and Wes Lamboley, W3WL, installed an antenna at the

school, so visitors could make voice contacts on 20 and 10 meters. Chuck

Catledge, AE4CW; Sam Wolff, KK4NVJ; Megan Brown, KM4HFY, and Eli Musgrave,

KM4HFZ -- all Mill Springs Academy students -- assisted the guests in

getting on the air.

John Kludt, K4SQC, set up his Mars Lander Amateur Radio Robotics

Exploration Activity (MAREA) robot to simulate how NASA scientists use

radio signals to control the movement of the Mars rovers. "John's MAREA

clearly stood out with the students and other visitors to our booth," Muir

said. He also showed a video of the Amateur Radio on the International

Space Station (ARISS) contact at Mill Springs Academy.

"We received rave compliments from the students, parents, teachers, and

administrators who visited our booth," Muir said. "Several students from

both the high school and middle school expressed interest in starting

Amateur Radio programs at their schools." Muir said she hoped the positive

feedback would help enlist teachers and schools to form ham radio clubs and

help more students to become licensed. Read more.

Amateur Radio Television Pioneer Don Miller, W9NTP, SK

Amateur Radio television pioneer and past ARRL Central Division Director

Don C. Miller, W9NTP, of Waldron, Indiana, died March 22. He was 91. An

ARRL Life Member, he was licensed in 1943. In the 1960s, Miller was

instrumental in developing slow-scan TV (SSTV) for ham radio, working with

Cop MacDonald, VY2CM, and others. Miller wrote several articles on SSTV for

QST. In 1972, Dayton Hamvention® honored Miller as Amateur of the Year.

Miller served as the Central Division Director from 1977 until 1980.

During World War II, Miller served in the US Army Signal Corps before being

recruited to work at the Trinity atomic weapons test site in New Mexico as

part of the Manhattan Project.

"I went to work one day and finally figured out that we were building a

nuclear bomb. But that's all I knew about it," Miller told The Rushville

Republican newspaper in 2007. Miller said he worked with J. Robert

Oppenheimer, who oversaw the Manhattan Project.

Miller also was a collector of Native American and other historical

artifacts, and in 2014, FBI agents raided his Indiana home and confiscated

objects alleged to have been collected in violation of federal and state

laws and of several treaties. Miller's collection included artifacts from

all over the world. He told investigators that he had began collecting as a

youngster.

In 1984, Miller and his wife, Sue, W9YL (SK), founded Wyman Research Inc,

which developed and marketed Amateur Radio SSTV and ATV equipment. Wyman

Research engineered the SSTV gear used onboard the Russian Mir space

station. -- Thanks to The Shelbyville News; The Daily DX

In Brief...

Young Ham's First Contact is via OSCAR Satellite: Eight-year-old radio

amateur Hope Lea, KM4IPF, in Virginia, made her first radio contact just 45

minutes after her call sign appeared in the FCC database. The contact with

K4YYL via the FO-29 satellite took place on March 11. Hope's older sister

Faith, WA4BBC, and her brother Zechariah, WX4TVJ, also worked K4YYL. The

older siblings had earned their Technician tickets in February and upgraded

to General a couple of weeks later. The youngest sibling is studying for

her license. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service via AMSAT-UK

W7FG.net and Trueladderline.com Change Hands: Brian Duerr, WB2JIX --

operating as WB2JIX LLC -- has acquired the assets of W7FG.net and

TrueLadderLine.com in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, formerly operated by Charlie

Redding, K5JYB (SK). "I look forward to carrying on the 20-year tradition

of manufacturing and selling the original W7FG open wire-fed dipoles and

accessories," he said. "I am adding several items to the website, so

purchasers can find everything needed to use this efficient and affordable

antenna." Duerr notes that the antennas and ladder line are assembled by

individuals with disabilities through an Oklahoma program that provides a

place for job training, sheltered employment and a supervised work

environment. "They all take pride in their work, care about what they do

for us, and appreciate your support," he said. Contact Brian Duerr, WB2JIX,

for more information.

Astronaut Mark Vande Hei is Newest Astro-Ham: NASA Astronaut Mark Vande Hei

is now KG5GNP. He attended license classes on March 11 and 12, passed the

Technician exam the following day, and his call sign showed up in the FCC

ULS database on March 24. Vande Hei is a member of the 20th NASA astronaut

class and has qualified for a future flight assignment. -- Thanks to AMSAT

News Service via Kenneth Ransom, N5VHO, and ARISS

Nigel Cawthorne, G3TXF, is Single-Op Cass Award Recipient: Nigel Cawthorne,

G3TXF, is the winner of the 2014 Single-Operator Cass Award. The Cass Award

encourages DXpedition operating excellence. While operating as ZD9XF from

the island of Tristan da Cunha in September 2014, G3TXF worked 9314

individual stations during the first 14 days of his one-person DXpedition,

demonstrating an outstanding effort to log as many DXers as possible and

setting a new Single-Operator Cass Award record. ClubLog founder Michael

Wells, G7VJR (right in photo), presented Cawthorne with his plaque and

prize at the CDXC Annual Dinner on March 21. The annual Cass Award

encourages DXpeditions to maximize the number of DXers worked with a $1000

prize for the Single-Operator DXpeditioner who works the most discrete call

signs over a 2-week period. This award's namesake is Cass Cassidy, WA6AUD

(SK). -- Thanks to The Daily DX

Rich Hallman, N7TR, Named Technologist of the Year: Well-known Nevada

contester Rich Hallman, N7TR, has been named Technologist of the Year by

Nevada's Center for Entrepreneurship and Technology (NCET). The award

honors exceptional individuals who have demonstrated innovative and

effective use of technology in support of their organizations' strategic

initiatives. "I'm honored to be named NCET's 2015 Technologist of the Year

and to be part of a company that has been recognized by NCET for the third

year in a row for its technological advancements," said Hallman, who is

chief information officer for Employers Insurance. He'll receive the award

on April 9. -- Thanks to Tom Taormina, K5RC

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: This week's numbers have average daily

solar flux and sunspot number averages headed in opposite directions. For

the March 26 through April 1 period, average daily sunspot numbers fell 6

points to 77.9, and average daily solar flux increased 13.3 points to

135.7, compared to the previous 7 days. Geomagnetic indices were quieter,

with average daily planetary A index declining 10.7 points to 8.7, and

average daily mid-latitude A index dropping 6.6 points to 7.7.

We saw four new sunspot regions over the past week, one each on March 26,

28, 29, and April 1.

The latest short term prediction for solar flux has 130 and 135 for April

2-3, 125 for April 4-6, 130 for April 7-8, 140 for April 9, 145 for April

10-13, 140 on April 14, 135 for April 15-18, 130 on April 19, and 125 for

April 20-22. Then solar flux sinks to a low of 120 for April 23-25 and hits

a high of 150 on April 28 before declining again.

Predicted planetary A index is 12, 20, and 15 for April 2-4, 8 for April

5-8, 5 for April 9-11, then 15, and 30 for April 12-13, 20 for April 14-16,

15 on April 17, 20 for April 18-19, 12 on April 20, 5 for April 21-22, 8

for April 23-24, 25 on April 25, and 29 for April 26-27.

At 2328 UTC on March 31, the Australian Space Forecast Centre issued a

geomagnetic disturbance warning. Increased geomagnetic activity is expected

due to a high-speed solar wind from a coronal hole. The geomagnetic

activity forecast is for active conditions on April 2 and unsettled

conditions April 3.

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, we will track solar cycle progress with some new

averages ending March 31. It looks like the 3-month moving average of

sunspot numbers centered on February 2015 (containing all data from January

1 through March 31) puts us back at the August 2013 level. The highest

monthly average sunspot number for this cycle was 174.6 in February 2014.

For March 2015 the average was 61.7.

Send me your reports and observations. -- Tad Cook, K7RA

Just Ahead in Radiosport

April 3 -- NS Weekly RTTY Sprint

April 3 -- NS Weekly Sprint (CW)

April 3-12 -- Lighthouse Spring Lites QSO Party

April 4 -- LZ Open 40 Meter Contest (CW)

April 4 -- Missouri QSO Party

April 4-5 -- QRP ARCI Spring QSO Party (CW)

April 4 -- PODXS 31 Flavors Contest

April 4-5 -- Texas State Parks Contest

April 4-5 -- Mississippi QSO Party

April 4-5 -- SP DX Contest (SSB, CW)

April 4-5 -- EA RTTY Contest

April 4-5 -- Montana QSO Party

April 6 -- Low Power Spring Sprint

April 6 -- Easter Contest (SSB, CW)

April 6 -- OK1WC Memorial Contest (SSB, CW)

April 7 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

April 4 -- West Central Florida Technical Conference, Sebring, Florida

April 4 -- North Carolina State Convention, Raleigh, North Carolina

April 4 -- Arkansas State Convention, Fort Smith, Arkansas

April 11 -- Delta Division Convention, Bartlett, Tennessee

April 11-12 -- Communications Academy, Seattle, Washington

April 17-19 -- International DX Convention, Visalia, California

April 17-19 -- Eastern VHF-UHF-Microwave Conference, Manchester, Connecticut

April 24-25 -- Southeastern VHF Society Conference, Morehead, Kentucky

April 25 -- Aurora Conference, White Bear Lake, Minnesota

May 1-3 -- Nevada State Convention, Verdi, Nevada

May 2 -- South Carolina Section Convention, Spartanburg, South Carolina

May 15-17 -- Dayton Hamvention®, Dayton, Ohio

June 5-7 -- Northwestern Division Convention (SeaPac), Seaside, Oregon

June 6 -- Georgia State Convention, Marietta, Georgia

June 12-13 -- West Gulf Division Convention (Ham-Com), Irving, Texas

June 13 -- Tennessee State Convention, Knoxville, Tennessee

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

RIGOL Technologies, Inc

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APRS.FI Down with Google Map Issue

Posted: 02 Apr 2015 10:45 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...e&goto=newpost

For all you aprs.fi users, it looks like the website is down because of a

possible google map licensing conflict.

Heikki Hannikainen response to the issue below

----------------------------------------------------------------------

aprs.fi's Google Maps should be back soonish. I see the speculation for

the reasons is already getting on. :)

Google had noticed that aprs.fi has integrated support for OSM map tiles

*and* Street View. I hadn't noticed that the combination of Street View on

top of anything else than Google Maps is forbidden according to the Maps

API Terms Of Service document. Or I had just forgotten about it when

implementing OSM or Street View (there was probably a year or two of time

in between..).

They had sent me a few emails to warn about the unapproved configs,

starting on 5th of March. I had moved away from reading emails regularly

in Gmail a long while back, but forgotten to arrange for these emails from

Google APIs to go to my primary email address. Silly me.

Oh well. OSM support is disabled for now, and I notified Google that

aprs.fi is again compliant with the terms. Should be back soonish.

I might put OSM support back later, and remove Street View instead, as OSM

is probably more useful in practice at some areas (although admittedly

less visual and "cool"). Or maybe make some sort of arrangement where

Street View only works if you have Google Maps selected instead of OSM.

Have to check with the Google folks if that's OK.

- Hessu

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News from Ham Radio Deluxe

Posted: 02 Apr 2015 10:06 AM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...e&goto=newpost

Ham Radio Deluxe News

Tampa, FL; Dallas, TX; St. Paul, MN — April 2, 2015

In recognition of the Easter and Passover holidays, HRD Software, LLC

announces it will close its offices on Friday, April 3rd. The sales and

support phones will reopen on Monday at 10:00 am EST.

HRD Software managing partner Rick Ruhl, W4PC is proud to announce that

long-awaited support for the Yaesu FT-767GX transceivers has been added in

build 6.2.9.355, released April 2, 2015.

W4PC also adds "For users of Windows XP, Ham Radio Deluxe will continue its

extended support of Windows XP until April 20th, 2015. HRD software has

carried its support one year past the date which Microsoft ended its

support for the venerable operating system. While future versions will not

run on Windows XP, users running earlier versions of Ham Radio Deluxe with

Windows XP should still be able to operate the software as-is.”

As always, HRD is available to “try before you buy,” with a FREE 30-day

trial that includes live technical support. Now is the time to try out HRD

or renew your support package!

If you have been thinking about buying Ham Radio Deluxe or upgrading, now

is the time to get in on a deal – type the coupon code bunny to receive 10%

off your purchase of anything in the store.

Purchase and download Ham Radio Deluxe 6.2 at
http://www.ham-radio-deluxe.com.

HRD Paid Support: http://tickets.hrdsoftwarellc.com

HRD Peer Support Forum: http://forums.hrdsoftwarellc.com

HRD YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/hrdsoftware

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White Oak Tree Antenna

Posted: 01 Apr 2015 07:23 PM PDT
http://forums.qrz.com/showthread.php...a&goto=newpost

A Ham Radio operator in Bella Vista, Arkansas has just stumbled upon what

may be the newest way to communicate without a wire antenna on Radio

Frequencies more commonly known as RF.

The Ham who wants to remain anonymous until he can get all the engineering

data compiled will try to hold a press conference on approximately April

15, 2015. The data should shake the radio industry like leaves from an Oak

tree in the fall.

What the Ham has discovered is; an Oak tree can be used... as an antenna

on most radio bands and alternately as an excellent ground both DC and RF

ground by tapping into the tree with various length stainless steel screws

at various locations and depths on the tree trunk. He has discovered that

some of the taller White Oak trees seem to perform the best on the lower HF

bands such as 160 through 40 meters. Also through his extensive research

this past few winters he has discovered that by loading several trees with

a special phased array antenna tuner the system can be quite directional if

there are a lot of trees available that can be phased into the proper

orientation for 360 degree directionability with a proper antenna switching

device.

Some research has been done using other trees but time and resources have

limited the results from this research although one specie of tree has

shown some better results than the White Oak and that is the rare tree

known as the Black Haw, however one problem noted with the Black Haw is the

terrible odor when loaded to a kilowatt for a prolonged period.

More information may be available as further studies progress.

In the mean time Happy Hamming, 73s, 88s, etc.

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