[CVRC] The ARRL Letter for May 23, 2013

ARRL Web site memberlist at www.arrl.org
Thu May 23 14:42:29 EDT 2013


********************************************
            The  ARRL Letter

Published by the American Radio Relay League
********************************************

May 23, 2013

Editor: S. Khrystyne Keane, K1SFA <k1sfa at arrl.org>

ARRL Home Page <http://www.arrl.org/>ARRL Letter Archive
<http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/>Audio News
<http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/> IN THIS ISSUE

- + Public Service: Amateurs in Oklahoma Respond to Storm Aftermath
- + Dayton Hamvention®: Foggy Skies, Friendly Faces, Fantastic Event
- + Former QST Managing Editor Joel Kleinman, N1BKE (SK), Inducted into
CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame
- + On the Air: Take Part in WX4NHC's Annual On-the-Air Station Test
from the National Hurricane Center
- + FCC News: FCC Now Down to Three Commissioners
- Section News: Section Manager Election Results Announced
- + LoTW: Logbook of The World Reaches 500 Million QSOs
- LoTW: Release of TQSL 1.14 for LoTW Delayed
- Solar Update
- + ARRL HQ to Close in Observance of Memorial Day
- Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events

+ Available on ARRL Audio News <http://www.arrl.org/arrl-audio-news>.

There will be no ARRL Audio News <http://www.arrl.org/arrl-audio-news>
on Thursday, May 30. The ARRL Letter <http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter>
will be distributed on its usual schedule. The Audio News will return
on Thursday, June 6.

==> + PUBLIC SERVICE: AMATEURS IN OKLAHOMA RESPOND TO STORM AFTERMATH

   After an EF5 tornado swept through Oklahoma on May 20, radio
amateurs in that state assisted the American Red Cross with its
communications efforts. "Amateur Radio operators were asked to support
voice communications from the American Red Cross Oklahoma City Chapter
Headquarters to their feeding station at the Incident Command Post
located in Moore," explained ARRL Oklahoma Section Emergency
Coordinator Mark Conklin, N7XYO. Moore, located about halfway between
Norman and Oklahoma City, suffered the brunt of the tornado damage. As
of 8:30 CDT on May 22, all Amateur Radio operations in support of the
American Red Cross ceased.

At least 24 people, including nine children, were killed when the
1.3-mile-wide tornado moved through Moore, Oklahoma's seventh largest
city. The National Weather Service stated that the tornado traveled an
estimated 17-mile-long path for 50 minutes, with an estimated peak wind
that ranged from 200-210 miles per hour, making it an EF5 storm, the
most powerful category of tornados possible. Read more
<http://www.arrl.org/news/amateurs-in-oklahoma-respond-to-storm-aftermath>.

==> + DAYTON HAMVENTION®: FOGGY SKIES, FRIENDLY FACES, FANTASTIC EVENT

Hamvention 2013 began on a foggy May 17 morning in Dayton, Ohio. As
soon as the doors opened, it didn't take long for the streams of
humanity to fill the indoor aisles. The ARRL EXPO
<http://www.arrl.org/2013-dayton-hamvention> drew substantial crowds
throughout the weekend, with attractions such as the W1AW 75th
anniversary exhibit, DXCC card checking, the Youth Lounge and free
spectral purity testing, courtesy of the ARRL Lab.

   Hamvention forums were also well attended. At the ARRL Power Line
Interference forum, ARRL Laboratory Supervisor Ed Hare, W1RFI, offered
advice and guidance with assistance from ARRL Lab Engineer Mike Gruber,
W1MG, and an arcing "Jacob's Ladder."

At the ARRL Member Forum, ARRL President Kay Craigie, N3KN, spoke on a
number of topics, but placed particular importance on the efforts of
new ARRL's Second Century Campaign
<http://www.arrl.org/arrl-second-century-campaign> to ensure the
strength of the organization well into the future. To emphasize the
point and its relevance during the upcoming ARRL Centennial, she said,
"While the past may excite us, it is the future that must inspire us."

ARRL Chief Executive Officer David Sumner, K1ZZ, brought the forum
audience up to date on the status of ARRL involvement in national and
international regulatory issues. While discussing a potential threat to
the amateur allocation at 76 GHz, he stressed the fact that even such
sparsely used amateur spectrum deserved a vigorous defense: "The 76 GHz
band may be of little interest to most hams today, but we need to
preserve our microwave allocations for technologies we can't even
imagine today and the future amateurs who will use them."

   ARRL First Vice President Rick Roderick, K5UR, stepped to the podium
and presented five challenges to the audience:

- If you don't belong to a local club, join one today.
- If you already belong to a club, actively support it.
- Help inactive hams get on the air. Give assistance to new amateurs to
help them use their privileges effectively. Volunteer your time to help
elderly hams who are no longer able to maintain their stations.
- Recruit as many new amateurs as possible. Recruit as many new ARRL
members as possible.
- Donate to the Second Century Campaign
<http://www.arrl.org/arrl-second-century-campaign>.
Early reports from commercial vendors supported the perception that
Hamvention attendance was strong and people were in the mood to buy.
The flea market also saw quite a few browsers and shoppers. The rain
held off and overcast skies helped keep conditions pleasant. Watch for
a Hamvention report, along with new product highlights, in the August
print and digital editions of QST <http://www.arrl.org/qst>.

==> + FORMER QST MANAGING EDITOR JOEL KLEINMAN, N1BKE (SK), INDUCTED
INTO CQ AMATEUR RADIO HALL OF FAME

CQ magazine announced its 2013 Hall of Fame inductees on May 17,
welcoming eight new members into the CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame,
including former QST Managing Editor Joel Kleinman, N1BKE (SK), who
helmed QST from 2001 until his untimely death in 2012. In addition, CQ
named two new members to the CQ DX Hall of Fame and two new members to
the CQ Contest Hall of Fame.

   Kleinman came to the League in 1976 after receiving his master's
degree from the University of Montana; his first article appeared in
QST less than a year later. He quickly moved from the Education side of
the building to the Editorial and Production side as an editorial
assistant before becoming the ARRL Features Editor, then Editorial
Supervisor, then Editorial/Production Supervisor. In 1988, Kleinman
became Book Team Supervisor, where he was responsible for the
development and editorial integrity of ARRL books and other media. He
was named QST Managing Editor in April 2001. Read more
<http://www.arrl.org/news/former-em-qst-em-managing-editor-joel-kleinman-n1bke-sk-inducted-into-cq-amateur-radio-hall-of-fame>.

==> + ON THE AIR: TAKE PART IN WX4NHC'S ANNUAL ON-THE-AIR STATION TEST
FROM THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER

   The annual WX4NHC On-the-Air Station Test from the National
Hurricane Center in Miami will take place Saturday, June 1, 1300-2100
UTC (9 AM-5 PM EDT). "The purpose of this annual station test is to
test all of our radio equipment, computers and antennas using as many
modes and frequencies as possible in preparation for this year's
hurricane season," said WX4NHC Assistant Amateur Radio Volunteer
Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4R. "This is not a contest or simulated
hurricane exercise."

WX4NHC will be on the air on HF, VHF and UHF, as well as 2 and 30 meter
APRS. Suggested SSB frequencies are 3.950, 7.268, 14.325, 21.325 and
28.425 MHz, +/-QRM. WX4NHC also will be on the VoIP Hurricane Net from
1700-1900 UTC (IRLP node 9219/EchoLink WX-TALK conference node 7203)
and on VHF/UHF repeaters in Southern Florida. Read more
<http://www.arrl.org/news/take-part-in-wx4nhc-s-annual-on-the-air-station-test-from-the-national-hurricane-center>.

==> + FCC NEWS: FCC NOW DOWN TO THREE COMMISSIONERS

   With the departure of Chairman Julius Genachowski and Commissioner
Robert McDowell this past weekend, the FCC now only has three of its
full complement of five Commissioners. Pending the Senate confirmation
hearings for Tom Wheeler, President Obama's pick to head the FCC, Obama
has named Mignon Clyburn, the FCC's ranking Democrat, to serve as
Acting Chairwoman. The three remaining Commissioners -- Clyburn, fellow
Democrat Jessica Rosenworcel and Republican Ajit Pai -- have almost six
years of combined experience on the FCC. The Senate confirmation
hearings for Wheeler as the new FCC Chairman have yet to be scheduled.
President Obama has not announced his nomination of a candidate to
replace McDowell. Read more
<http://www.arrl.org/news/fcc-now-down-to-three-commissioners>.

==> SECTION NEWS: SECTION MANAGER ELECTION RESULTS ANNOUNCED

   This spring, the ARRL held two balloted elections for Section
Manager. ARRL members in Nebraska elected a new Section Manager, while
members in Utah -- faced with a three-way race -- voted to keep their
Section Manager. In addition, ARRL members in New Hampshire and
Wisconsin will each get a new Section Manager, and Section Managers in
seven Sections ran unopposed and were declared elected for a new
two-year term. Ballots were counted and verified at ARRL Headquarters
on Tuesday, May 21. Read more
<http://www.arrl.org/news/section-manager-election-results-announced-1>.

==> + LOTW: LOGBOOK OF THE WORLD REACHES 500 MILLION QSOS

   On May 21 at approximately 9:40 PM EDT (0140 UTC on May 22), Logbook
of The World (LoTW <http://www.arrl.org/logbook-of-the-world>) -- the
ARRL's online QSO confirmation system - reached a new record: 500
million QSOs. This milestone was reached as Gabor Horvath, VE7JH, of
Crofton, British Columbia, uploaded a log from 2011 for VC7M, the
Canadian Multi/Multi Team in the 2011 CQ WPX CW Contest
<http://lists.contesting.com/pipermail/3830/2011-June/225000.html>.

Since LoTW was first introduced in September 2003, almost 58,000 hams
around the world have registered to use the system to confirm two-way
contacts they have made. The confirmations are credited toward various
ARRL operating awards, such as Worked All States and DXCC. By using
digitally signed certificates with QSO date ranges and station
locations for geographic information, LoTW is able to accommodate
clubs, previously held call signs, QSL managers, DXpeditions, mobile
and rover operators just as easily as it handles the individual user
with one call sign and one location,

==> LOTW: RELEASE OF TQSL 1.14 FOR LOTW DELAYED

Last week, the ARRL announced
<http://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-announces-new-version-of-lotw-software>
that the introduction of the new TQSL 1.14 software for Logbook of The
World (LoTW <http://www.arrl.org/logbook-of-the-world>) would be
available on May 20. Upon further testing, three defects -- now
corrected -- were reported after that announcement. Before publicly
releasing a corrected version of TQSL 1.14, the software must be
thoroughly retested by the Trusted QSL Software Development Team. LoTW
users should expect a public release of TQSL 1.14 by the end of the
month.

==> SOLAR UPDATE

   Tad Cook, K7RA, reports: Solar activity remains quiet, but on May 16
the daily sunspot number reached 212. I had to keep searching further
and further back in the records to find a higher sunspot number. One
year, six months and one week earlier -- November 9, 2011 -- the
sunspot number was almost that high, at 208. Going back seven years, 10
months and 12 days to July 4, 2005, it was 192. To find activity
beating the May 16 number, we have to go back nearly a decade to
November 1, 2003 when the daily sunspot number was 277. This was on the
downward slide of Solar Cycle 23 -- nine years, six months and 15 days
earlier than our recent high number. Let's hope for many more days like
this. This week, the average daily sunspot numbers this week were down
more than 12 points to 144, while the average daily solar flux declined
nearly 6 points to 134.2. Geomagnetic activity was higher, with the
average daily planetary A index up 3.7 points to 9.7, and the average
daily mid-latitude A index rose 4.4 points to 10.3. The latest
prediction from NOAA/USAF has solar flux at 125 on May 23-24, 130, 135,
140, 145 and 150 on May 25-29, 100 on May 30-31, 105 and 110 on June
1-2, 120 on June 3-5, and then 125 on June 6-8 before rising to a short
term peak of 140 on June 12-13. This prediction is a bit far off, but
it also shows a minimum flux value of 100 on June 26-27. The predicted
planetary A index is 15, 8, 15, 10, 7, 15 and 12 on May 23-29, 5 on May
30-June 10, and then 8, 12 and 8 on June 11-13, 5 on June 14-17, and
then 15, 12, 8 and 5 on June 18-21. Look for more information on the
ARRL website on Friday, May 24. For more information concerning radio
propagation, visit the ARRL Technical Information Service Propagation
page <http://www.arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals>.

==> + ARRL HQ TO CLOSE IN OBSERVANCE OF MEMORIAL DAY

   ARRL Headquarters will be closed Monday, May 27 in observance of the
Memorial Day holiday. There will be no W1AW code practice or bulletin
transmissions <http://www.arrl.org/w1aw-operating-schedule> that day.
ARRL Headquarters will reopen Tuesday, May 28 at 8 AM (EDT). We wish
everyone a safe and enjoyable holiday weekend!

This Week in Radiosport

This week:

- May 24 -- NCCC Sprint Ladder
- May 25 -- Portuguese Navy Day Contest (Digital); QRP ARCI Hootowl
Sprint (local time)
- May 25-26 -- CQ WW WPX Contest (CW)
- May 26 -- SARL Digital Contest
- May 27-28 -- Michigan QRP Memorial Day CW Sprint

Next week:

- May 31 -- NCCC Sprint Ladder
- June 1 -- Maritimes QSO Party; Wake-Up! QRP Sprint
- June 1-2 -- Alabama QSO Party; IARU Region 1 Field Day; 10-10
International Open Season PSK Contest; SEANET Contest; UKSMG Sporadic E
Contest
- June 4 -- ARS Spartan Sprint

All dates, unless otherwise stated, are UTC. See the ARRL Contest
Branch page <http://www.arrl.org/contests>, the ARRL Contest Update
<http://www.arrl.org/The-ARRL-Contest-Update> and the WA7BNM Contest
Calendar <http://www.hornucopia.com/contestcal/index.html> for more
information. Looking for a Special Event station? Be sure to check out
the ARRL Special Event Stations web page
<http://www.arrl.org/special-event-stations>.

==> UPCOMING ARRL SECTION, STATE AND DIVISION CONVENTIONS AND EVENTS

- June 1 -- ARRL Georgia State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/georgia-state-convention-atlanta-hamfest-1>,
Marietta, Georgia
- May 31-June 2 -- ARRL Northwestern Division Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/northwestern-division-convention-seapac-4>,
Seaside, Oregon
- June 7-8 -- ARRL West Gulf Division Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/west-gulf-division-convention-35th-anniversary-ham-com>,
Plano, Texas
- June 8 -- ARRL Delta Division Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/delta-division-convention-2>, Rogers,
Arkansas; ARRL Tennessee State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/tennessee-state-convention-knoxville-hamfest-electronics-convention>,
Knoxville, Tennessee
- June 28-30 -- ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/rocky-mountain-division-convention-hamcon-colorado-2013>,
Estes Park, Colorado
- July 6 -- ARRL Eastern Pennsylvania Section Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/eastern-pennsylvania-section-convention-firecracker-hamfest-electronics-expo>,
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
- July 25-27 -- Central States VHF Society Conference
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/central-states-vhf-society-2013-conference>,
Elk Grove Village, Illinois
- July 26-27 -- ARRL Oklahoma State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/oklahoma-state-convention-ham-holiday-1>,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- August 2-3 -- ARRL Texas State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/texas-state-convention-austin-summerfest-2013>,
Austin, Texas
- August 2-4 -- Pacific Northwest DX Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/pacific-northwest-dx-convention-2>,
Spokane Valley, Washington
- August 17 -- ARRL West Virginia State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/west-virginia-state-convention-3>,
Weston, West Virginia
- August 17-18 -- ARRL Alabama State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/alabama-state-convention-huntsville-hamfest-1>,
Huntsville, Alabama
- August 18 -- ARRL Kansas State Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/kansas-state-convention-3>, Salina,
Kansas
- August 25 -- ARRL Western Pennsylvania Section Convention
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/western-pennsylvania-section-convention-3>,
New Kensington, Pennsylvania

To find a convention or hamfest near you, click here
<http://www.arrl.org/hamfests>.

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