[FPARC] The ARRL Letter Vol. 25, No. 15 April 14, 2006

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Sat Apr 15 08:40:11 EDT 2006


***************
The ARRL Letter
Vol. 25, No. 15
April 14,  2006
***************

IN THIS EDITION:

* +Despite claims to the  contrary, Virginia BPL system still interfering
* +ARRL urges more support  for BPL resolution in US House
* +League inaugurates vanity license renewal  program
* +It's a wrap for ISS Commander Bill McArthur, KC5ACR
* +ISS crew  swap is successful
* +ARES, SATERN participate in major New York City  disaster drill
* +Activity from top-10 most-wanted DXCC entity VU4 to start  April 18
*  Solar Update
*  IN BRIEF: 
This weekend on the radio
ARRL Certification and  Continuing Education course registration
+It's a photo  contest!
World Amateur Radio Day 2006  certificate
FCC statistics suggest minuscule market share  for BPL
VUCC basic operating area expanded for 50 through  1296 MHz
First call for presenters, papers for 2006  AMSAT-UK Colloquium
DXCC Desk approves operation for DXCC  credit

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

===========================================================
==>Delivery  problems (ARRL member direct delivery  only!):
letter-dlvy at arrl.org
==>Editorial questions or comments: Rick  Lindquist, N1RL,  n1rl at arrl.org
===========================================================
NOTE:  ARRL Headquarters is closed Friday, April 14. There will be no W1AW
code  practice or bulletin transmissions that day. This week's editions of
The ARRL  Letter, ARRL Audio News and the propagation bulletin are being
distributed  Thursday, April 13. ARRL Headquarters will reopen Monday, April
17, at 8 AM  EDT. We wish all our members a safe and enjoyable  holiday
weekend!
===========================================================

==>MANASSAS  BPL SYSTEM STILL INTERFERING DESPITE CLAIMS TO THE CONTRARY

Interference  from the Manassas, Virginia, BPL system persists on ham radio
frequencies,  radio amateurs there say. Their reports fly in the face of an
April 7 news  release from system operator COMTek that a recent engineering
survey found  "no interference unique to BPL" in the amateur bands. On April
6, COMTek  filed a report
<http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/files/COMTek.pdf>  with the FCC in
response to an earlier interference complaint from Dwight  Agnew, AI4II.
COMTek said it does not believe the Manassas BPL system caused  the
interference Agnew and other Manassas ham radio operators have heard.  Agnew
told the ARRL this week that the BPL interference  continues.

"Yes, it's still there," Agnew said. "Some days it will blow  your ears off,
other days not," he explained. "It varies. That's what's so  aggravating
about it."

Another Manassas amateur, George Tarnovsky,  K4GVT, who's also complained to
the FCC of BPL interference, echoed Agnew's  report. He told the ARRL the BPL
signal still can be heard along "miles of  road" on 40 meters as well as 20,
17 and 15 meters. "It's everywhere,"  Tarnovsky said. He points out the
interference level varies based on how  heavily the system's approximately
900 customers are using the  system.

In its April 6 filing with the FCC, COMTek--which operates the  BPL system
for the city--said it takes interference complaints seriously and  is
conducting "an ongoing investigation" to determine whether the  "alleged
interference" is coming from its equipment. The Manassas system  uses
Main.net equipment on frequencies between 4 MHz and 30 MHz, according to  the
BPL database.

On March 7, FCC Spectrum Enforcement Division Chief  Joseph P. Casey
requested the city and COMTek to follow up on Agnew's January  19 complaint
citing harmful BPL interference along Virginia Business Route  234. The
Commission told the city to test its system to be sure it complies  with FCC
Part 15 rules and to "resolve any continuing harmful  interference."

COMTek's FCC filing included a test report by Product  Safety Engineering Inc
of Dade City, Florida, outlining BPL system  measurements made on 40 meters
at one location on Route 234. Product Safety  Engineering tempered its
report, however, by saying its measurements "were  not intended to qualify
the system or BPL equipment with respect to  compliance with the FCC rules."
They were intended to "assist the client in  gaining an understanding of the
interference potential" of the BPL equipment  at "a specific location," the
engineering firm said. 

Conceding that  the engineering firm's report was interim and "not fully
compliant with the  FCC's new measurement guidelines," COMTek told the FCC it
would supply a  complete survey by April 14.

The ARRL already has called on the FCC to  shut down the Manassas system
until it complies with FCC Part 15 rules. ARRL  CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ, says
COMTek's April 6 FCC filing failed to provide  what Casey had requested last
month. That included making measurements at  multiple locations Agnew
described in his January complaint. The engineering  report also gives no
indication that the tests were performed during peak  system usage hours, as
the FCC had required.

"No explanation was  provided as to why COMTek was unable to comply with the
FCC requirement to  resolve the interference complaint and to report within
30 days," Sumner  said. "Yet on April 7, COMTek issued a news release that
claimed 'rigorous  FCC-mandated testing' had been completed. In fact, the
testing completed as  of that date failed to comply with FCC requirements, as
acknowledged by  COMTek itself."

Sumner said "the test results are meaningless" as a  measure of the radio
interference emanating from the Manassas BPL system.  "Using the test
equipment described in the test report to check for radio  interference is
like using an oven thermometer to check for a  fever."

Sumner reiterated the League's request that the FCC order the  Manassas BPL
system disabled "until its operation is able to comply fully  with the FCC
rules and instructions."

ARRL Laboratory Manager Ed Hare,  W1RFI, charged COMTek with "trying to fix
interference problems with press  releases." ARRL's technical analysis of the
testing indicates COMTek cannot  show that it's able to meet FCC-required
emission limits, Hare said, and  doesn't even demonstrate that its system is
not causing harmful  interference.

Hare said BPL manufacturers and providers whose technology  can operate
compatibly with Amateur Radio have been working closely with the  ARRL and
local amateurs. "Those that cannot are taking preliminary test  results and
turning them into 'everything-is-wonderful now' news releases,"  he said.
"From a technical point of view, that moves us further from  solutions, not
toward them."

==>SUPPORT STILL NEEDED FOR HOUSE  RESOLUTION 230

The ongoing BPL battles in Manassas, Virginia, and  Briarcliff Manor, New
York, underscore the need for better FCC rules to  protect radiocommunication
systems from BPL interference. House Resolution  230 (H Res 230), introduced
by Rep Mike Ross, WD5DVR, of Arkansas, calls on  the FCC to "conduct a full
and complete analysis" of radio interference from  BPL, particularly with
regard to public safety radio systems.  

"Members of Congress need to hear constituents' concerns about  BPL
interference while they are in their home districts this week and  next,"
ARRL Chief Executive Officer David Sumner, K1ZZ, observed this week.  "Rep
Ross has been joined by six co-sponsors, but more support is needed to  move
this legislation along." 

H Res 230 recently received a boost  when the March issue of NPSTC Spectrum,
the newsletter of the National Public  Safety Telecommunications Council,
carried an article, "Ham Radio and Public  Safety Ask for FCC Reevaluation of
Broadband over Power Lines." The article  notes "significantly high levels of
potential interference in the VHF low  band 30 to 50 MHz range" in several
test locations.

A sample  letter
<http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/HTML/plc/filings/hres230/HRes230-SampleLtr.doc
>  is available for ARRL members to use as a starting point in contacting
their  congressional representatives. ARRL members logging onto the
Members-Only  portion of the ARRL Web site
<http://www.arrl.org/members-only/> will  see contact information for their
Member of Congress. Alternatively, visit  http://www.house.gov/. 

When writing, please send a copy of your letter  to ARRL's Government
Relations firm: Chwat & Company Inc, ATTN: Eric  Heis, KI4NFC, 625 Slaters
Ln--Suite 103 Alexandria, VA 22314; Fax  703-684-7594;
<eric.heis at chwatco.com>.

==>ARRL VEC ANNOUNCES  VANITY CALL SIGN LICENSE RENEWAL PROGRAM

The ARRL VEC now can process  license renewals for vanity call sign holders
for a modest fee. The service  is available to ARRL members and nonmembers,
although League members will pay  less. Routine, non-vanity renewals continue
to be processed at no cost for  ARRL members. In addition, ARRL VEC Manager
Maria Somma, AB1FM, points out  that trustees of club stations with vanity
call signs may renew either via  the Universal Licensing System (ULS) or
through a Club Station Call Sign  Administrator, such as ARRL VEC.

"2006 is an appropriate year for the  ARRL VEC to implement this service,
since the licenses of the many radio  amateurs who obtained their vanity call
signs as a result of the FCC program  that went into effect in 1996 will
expire this year," Somma said. The first  of those licenses are due to expire
in June.

"As the FCC has already  noted, licensees who want to keep their vanity call
signs must pay the  regulatory fee, currently $21.90 for the 10-year license
term, when renewing  their licenses," Somma noted. "Licensees who don't want
to pay the mandatory  regulatory fee to retain a vanity call sign may request
a sequentially issued  call sign at the time of renewal."

The FCC has proposed to reduce the  vanity call sign regulatory fee to $20.10
for the 10-year license term. The  new fee, if adopted, would go into effect
in August or  September.

Amateur Radio licensees may file for renewal only within 90  days of their
license expiration date. All radio amateurs must have an FCC  Registration
Number (FRN) before filing any application with the Commission.  Applicants
can obtain an FRN by going to the ULS  <http://wireless.fcc.gov/uls/> and
clicking on the "New Users Register"  link. You must supply your Social
Security Number to obtain an  FRN.

Those holding specifically requested call signs issued prior to 1996  are
exempt from the vanity call sign regulatory fee. That's because Congress  did
not authorize the FCC to collect regulatory fees until 1993. Such  heritage
call sign holders do not appear as vanity licensees in the ULS  Amateur Radio
database.

Somma says the ARRL's new license  renewal/modification Web pages contain
complete information on license-filing  procedures, including step-by-step
instructions on how to renew or update a  license using the FCC's ULS site
and a schedule of fees.

League  members should visit the "ARRL Member Instructions for License
Renewals or  Changes" page
<http://www.arrl.org/fcc/memberlicenseinstructions.html>.  The "Instructions
for License Renewals or Changes"  page
<http://www.arrl.org/fcc/licenseinstructions.html> covers general  renewal
procedures for nonmembers. There's additional information on the ARRL  VEC's
"FCC License Renewals and ARRL License Expiration Notices"  page
<http://www.arrl.org/arrlvec/renewals.html>.

==>McARTHUR  CALLS IT A WRAP; BRAZIL'S PONTES COMPLETES ONE QSO

Even as he was  preparing to depart the International Space Station April 4,
Expedition 12  Commander Bill McArthur, KC5ACR, took time out to talk one
last time from  NA1SS with some excited students on Earth. The following day,
McArthur's  traveling companion on his April 9 trip home--Brazil's first
astronaut Marcos  Pontes, PY0AEB--answered questions put to him via ham radio
in two languages  by youngsters in Rio de Janeiro. McArthur told students at
Robert McQueen  High School in Reno, Nevada, that ISS Expedition 12 would be
his last space  mission.

"This will be my last flight into space, and I hope to work to  help folks
with future missions," McArthur explained, "and I would very much  like to be
involved with supporting the first mission to go back to the moon  and the
first mission to Mars." The Amateur Radio on the International Space  Station
(ARISS) contact was the 38th and final QSO during Expedition 12,  which began
last October. McArthur handled 37 of the school contacts--a  mission record.

McArthur said his time aboard the ISS has been "awfully  exciting" and he's
never gotten bored. But, besides his family, he does miss  some things.

"What I miss most are beverages with ice in them," McArthur  said. "We have
no ice up here, and so our beverages are never that cold--I  miss that quite
a bit." He said he also misses the smell of coffee, since the  crew must
drink beverages from a bag to keep the liquid from dispersing in  the
microgravity environment.

Darrell Upson, W6ADZ, served as the  control operator for the Reno event.
Upson said student Jordan Anise, KD7OAT,  approached him more than 3 years
ago about arranging a contact with the ISS.  The event attracted some media
coverage, including at least one TV news  report.

Despite his busy research schedule, Brazil's Pontes--who arrived  aboard the
ISS April 1 with Expedition 13 Commander Pavel Vinogradov, RV3BS,  and Flight
Engineer Jeff Williams, KD5TVQ--was able to talk with youngsters  April 5 at
The American School in Rio. The contact was conducted in English  and
Portuguese, and Pontes answered 17 questions.

"We use our free  time mostly to view the earth," Pontes told the students.
"Very beautiful!  It's really beautiful!"

Pontes said he'd thought about becoming an  astronaut since he was a child,
"but my chance was when I was in Monterey  studying for my PhD," he said. All
of his mission was "very exciting," he  added, especially getting to talk to
students on Earth via ham  radio.

Because of his hectic schedule, Pontes was unable to make a second  scheduled
contact with youngsters at a school in Portugal.  

ARISS-Brazil Team coordinator Tadeu Fernandes, PY1KCF, served as the  control
operator for the contact with PY0AEB. The contact attracted  considerable
media attention in addition to a sizeable audience. Contact  audio was
retransmitted via ham radio on HF and VHF as well as via EchoLink.  

ARISS <http://www.rac.ca/ariss> is an international educational  outreach,
with US participation by ARRL, AMSAT and  NASA.

==>EXPEDITION 12 CREW PLUS ONE RETURN SAFELY TO  EARTH

After orbiting Earth more than 3000 times during their six months  aboard the
International Space Station, Expedition 12 Commander Bill  McArthur, KC5ACR,
and Flight Engineer Valery Tokarev have returned to the  planet. With them on
the return trip was Brazilian astronaut Marcos Pontes,  PY0AEB, who had been
the third passenger onboard the Soyuz "taxi flight" that  carried Expedition
13 Commander Pavel Vinogradov, RV3BS, and Flight Engineer  Jeff Williams,
KD5TVQ, to the ISS April 1.

The Soyuz spacecraft with  McArthur, Tokarev and Pontes onboard landed in
central Kazakhstan just before  midnight UTC April 8. McArthur and Tokarev
will remain in Star City for  post-flight debriefings.

The most active radio amateur ever to serve  aboard the ISS, McArthur worked
all continents--including Antarctica--on both  VHF and UHF from NA1SS during
is nearly 190 days in space. He also racked up  QSOs with 130 DXCC entities
and worked all states. The last QSL he needed to  confirm WAS--from
Wyoming--arrived at ARRL Headquarters not long before the  end of McArthur's
duty tour. In all, he put more than 1750 contacts into the  NA1SS log. Since
the WAC, WAS and DXCC programs don't provide for space  contacts, his
certificates will be honorary.

Pontes flew to the space  station as part of a commercial agreement with the
Russian Federal Space  Agency, Roscosmos and conducted experiments during his
eight days on the  ISS.

Vinogradov and Williams will spend this week getting better  acquainted with
their new home for the next six months. No ARISS school  contacts are on the
NA1SS schedule until the week of April 24. During their  duty tour,
Vinogradov and Williams will perform two spacewalks and--if all  goes
according to plan--greet two space shuttle crews.

Scheduled to  join Expedition 13 this summer on the shuttle Discovery's
STS-121 mission  will be European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Reiter,
DF4TR, of Germany.  He'll also be flying under a commercial agreement with
Roscosmos. Reiter will  remain aboard the ISS when Expedition 14 begins in
October, to help provide  some crew continuity aboard the ISS.--some
information from NASA and  ARISS

==>ONLY A TEST: NEW YORK CITY ARES, SATERN TAKE PART IN DISASTER  DRILL

Members of the New York City District Amateur Radio Emergency  Service (ARES)
team and the Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network  (SATERN)
participated in a mass casualty disaster drill March 26. Dubbed  "Operation
Trifecta," the exercise got under way with the mock explosion in  Maspeth,
Queens, of a chemical bomb aboard a freight train that occurrs just  as a
commuter train passes. The scenario called for 100 people dead or  wounded.
Police academy recruits covered in blood acted as victims. The  elaborate
simulation involved 1500 emergency workers. ARES supported the  American Red
Cross.

"We were an integral part of the Red Cross  response, and the folks in charge
were duly impressed with our capabilities  and deeply grateful for our
participation," said NYC ARES District Emergency  Coordinator Mike Lisenco,
N2YBB. ARES' role was to provide communication  support for the Red Cross at
its emergency operations center, its on-site  command vehicle--making its
inaugural run--and a shelter set up to care for  area residents affected by
the incident. ARES also maintained liaison with  SATERN, Lisenco said, "and
we had additional volunteers standing by had there  been a request for more
operators."

Operation Trifecta referred to the  fact that, during the seven-hour drill,
responders not only had to deal with  the explosion and hazardous materials
but potential saboteurs hiding in the  railroad freight cars.

Roger Rischawy, who directs The Salvation Army's  Greater New York
Division-Emergency Disaster Services with assistance from  Carlos Varon,
K2LCV, reports the division assembled two canteen crews, three  staff
vehicles and a SATERN emergency communications van. Greater New York  SATERN
Amateur Radio Liaison Officer Jeff Schneller, N2HPO, managed  communication
activities for The Salvation Army's response.

In the  wake of Amateur Radio's emergency communication role following last
summer's  Gulf Coast hurricanes, emergency responders once again are looking
to ham  radio volunteers as "a resource that is desperately needed in a
disaster  situation," Lisenco said. "To that end, the Red Cross here in New
York City  has redoubled its efforts to maintain a strong working
relationship with  ARES." He said NYC District ARES also has strengthened its
relationship with  The Salvation Army.

"We have become an important cog in the response  wheel, acting as the
communications provider for our clients," Lisenco said.  "That is what we
train to do. Nothing more, nothing less. We are ready when  all else fails."

==>ANDAMANS (VU4) TO BE ACTIVATED IN A BIG WAY  STARTING APRIL 18

Enthusiasm and anticipation have been building within  the DX community this
week as the radio window is about to open once again on  the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands (VU4). The National Institute of Amateur  Radio (NIAR) in
Hyderabad, India, will sponsor a first-of-its-kind event,  "Hamfest - (VU4)
India - 2006," April 18-20 in Port Blair on South Andaman  Island. Dozens of
VU4 stations are expected on the air. 

India's  telecommunication authorities have issued a number of short-term
licenses to  both nationals and foreigners, and operations reportedly will
extend beyond  the three-day festival to April 26. The most recent VU4
DXpedition, led by  Bharathi Prasad, VU2RBI, in December 2004, turned into a
disaster  communication operation after the devastating South Asia earthquake
and  tsunami. Prasad and others involved in the 2004 VU4 DXpedition are
expected  to be active during the Andamans hamfest activity. 

All call signs for  this event will bear the VU4AN prefix followed by an
India mainland call  sign. There will be no operation from Nicobar Island
and, so far, no  operation on 30 meters.

According to The DX Magazine's 2005 survey of  DXers Andaman and Nicobar
Islands was the 10th most-wanted DXCC entity.  There's more information on
the NIAR Web site  <http://www.niar.org>.--The Daily  DX
<http://www.dailydx.com>

==>SOLAR UPDATE

Sunspot  seeker Tad "Hoppin' Down the Bunny Trail" Cook, K7RA, Seattle,
Washington,  reports: Average daily sunspot numbers for the week were up more
than 12  points to 70.7. March 30 through April 5, the daily sunspot number
at the  start of the period was 35, and it rose to 88 by the seventh day.
April 6 it  rose to 105, dropping the next day way down to 65, then 57, then
46 last  Sunday. By Wednesday, April 12, it had risen again to 79.

Geomagnetic  disturbances accompanied the rising solar activity. A solar
windstream from a  coronal hole met the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF)
which was pointing  south, and this leaves Earth vulnerable. On April 9 the
mid-latitude A index  was 27, and the K index rose to 4 and 5. The planetary
A index was 39, with  the planetary K index reaching 5 and 6.

A condition similar to that of  April 9 occurred four days earlier on April
5. But at that time Sunspot 865  was still visible. This is the biggest
sunspot seen the year, and it has  since rotated out of view.

There is a nice peppering of sunspots on the  side of the sun facing Earth,
but they are small. We could see another period  of geomagnetic disturbance
Saturday, April 15. Planetary A index predicted  for the next few days,
Thursday, April 13, through Sunday, April 16, is 10,  25, 40 and 25.

Sunspot numbers may rise again later in the month--perhaps  over 100 again.
This would most likely occur around April 24 through May  4.

Sunspot numbers for April 6 through 12 were 105, 65, 57, 46, 70, 73  and 79,
with a mean of 70.7. The 10.7 cm flux was 98.9, 94.5, 91, 89.2, 88.7,  89.7,
and 81.1, with a mean of 90.4. Estimated planetary A indices were 10,  3, 5,
39, 18, 5 and 2, with a mean of 11.7. Estimated mid-latitude A indices  were
6, 2, 3, 27, 11, 3 and 1, with a mean of  7.6.

__________________________________

==>IN BRIEF:

*  This weekend on the radio: The TARA Skirmish Digital Prefix Contest,  the
Holyland DX Contest, the ES Open HF Championship, the EU Spring  Sprint
(SSB), the Michigan and Ontario QSO parties, the EA-QRP CW Contest and  the
YU DX Contest are the weekend of April 15-16. The ARLHS Annual Spring  Lites
QSO Party is April 15-23. The Run for the Bacon QRP Contest and the  Low
Power Spring Sprint are April 17. The 432 MHz Spring Sprint and the  RSGB
80-Meter Club Championship (Data) are April 20. The Thursday NCCC  Sprint
Ladder is April 21. JUST AHEAD: The DX Colombia International Contest,  the
SP DX RTTY Contest, and the Florida and Nebraska QSO parties are the  weekend
of April 22-23. The Thursday NCCC Sprint Ladder is April 28 (UTC).  See the
ARRL Contest Branch page <http://www.arrl.org/contests/> and  the WA7BNM
Contest Calendar  <http://www.hornucopia.com/contestcal/index.html> for  more
info.

* ARRL Certification and Continuing Education course  registration:
Registration remains open through Sunday, May 7, for these  ARRL
Certification and Continuing Education (CCE) Program on-line  courses:
Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Level 2 (EC-002), Amateur  Radio
Emergency Communications Level 3 (EC-003), Antenna Modeling (EC-004),  HF
Digital Communications (EC-005), VHF/UHF--Life Beyond the Repeater  (EC-008),
and Radio Frequency Propagation (EC-011). Classes begin Friday, May  19. To
learn more, visit the CCE Course Listing  page
<http://www.arrl.org/cce/courses.html> or contact the CCE  Department
<cce at arrl.org>.

* It's a photo contest! Have you ever  wanted to see a photo of yours in QST,
the annual ARRL Amateur Radio calendar  or another ARRL publication? Well,
here's your chance! Not only will your  photographic skill be propagated far
and wide, but we're offering a $100  prize to the winning entry. The winning
photo and three runners-up will be  published in QST. All submitted photos
will also be considered for the 2007  ARRL calendar. Photos must be received
at ARRL Headquarters by May 31, 2006.  Subject matter must relate to Amateur
Radio and be in good taste. Photos will  be judged on overall quality and
composition. Digital images or color prints  are acceptable, but digital,
images must have at least 300 dpi resolution.  E-mail <upfront at arrl.org>
digital images of up to 2 MB or copy to a CD  and mail to ARRL Photo Contest,
225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. All entries  must include caption
information describing where the photo was taken, along  with the names and
call signs of anyone appearing in the photograph. Photos  submitted become
the exclusive property of the ARRL, and decisions of the  judges (QST
editorial and production staff) are final. Only one entry per  person is
allowed. Good luck in the contest!

* World Amateur Radio Day  2006 certificate: World Amateur Radio Day,
Tuesday, April 18, commemorates  the founding of the International Amateur
Radio Union (IARU) in Paris in  1925. The 2006 theme is "Amateur Radio: A
gateway to information and  communications technologies for today's youth."
With support from PZK, the  Polish Amateur Radio Union, MK QTC, the Polish
radio amateurs' journal again  will sponsor the World Amateur Radio Day
(WARD) certificate  <http://ward-award.prv.pl/>. To qualify, stations must
complete 10 HF  contacts or 5 VHF contacts on April 18 between 0000 and 2400
UTC. To obtain  the full-color certificate, send a log extract including the
list of QSOs and  $6 US (?5) to: The Radio Amateurs' Journal MK QTC,
Suchacz-Zamek - Wielmozy  5b, 82-340 Tolkmicko, Poland, on or before May 31,
2006. The World Amateur  Radio Day certificate also is available to SWLs who
log the same number of  reports. 

* FCC statistics suggest minuscule market share for BPL: The  latest FCC
statistics on the status of high-speed Internet services indicate  a
minuscule market share for broadband over power line (BPL). The FCC  Wireline
Competition Bureau report, "High-Speed Services for Internet Access:  Status
as of June 30, 2005," puts at 4872 the number of business and  residential
"Power Line and Other" connections that deliver at speeds greater  than 200
kbps in at least one direction. The total number of high-speed lines  for all
technologies is 42,866,469--the vast majority DSL, cable and  traditional
wireline connections. This puts the share for "Power Line and  Other" at a
bit more than 0.01 percent of the total. The number of  residential BPL
"advanced services" lines--greater than 200 kbps in both  directions--is 3916
out of 34,259,411, the FCC report indicates. Although  some data have been
withheld as proprietary, the FCC report indicates there  are 18 "Power Line
and Other" high-speed providers nationwide.  Facilities-based broadband
providers must report the number of high-speed  connections in service to the
FCC twice a year.

* VUCC basic operating  area expanded for 50 through 1296 MHz: The ARRL
Membership Services  Department has announced an increase in the size of the
basic operating area  for VUCC contacts made between 50 MHz and 1296 MHz.
Effective immediately  VUCC rules allow stations to submit confirmations for
contacts made from  different locations, provided no two locations are more
than 200 km (124  miles) apart. The VUCC operating area for SHF operation
remains unchanged.  The change results from a recommendation of an ad hoc
VHF/UHF Study  Committee, appointed by the then-Membership Services
Committee, chaired by  ARRL New England Division Director Tom Frenaye, K1KI.
The ARRL Awards  Committee recently added its approval to the change. 

* First call for  presenters, papers for 2006 AMSAT-UK Colloquium: AMSAT-UK
has issued a first  call for speakers and papers for its 21st Colloquium,
July 28-30, at Surrey  University, Guildford, Surrey, UK. AMSAT-UK seeks
presentations about Amateur  Radio space activities and related topics.
Speakers/authors also are also  invited to submit papers for publication in
the conference Proceedings.  Submit complete documents by June 15 to David
Johnson, G4DPZ,  <g4dpz at amsat.org>. AMSAT-UK also invites suggestions for
program  topics. More information on this year's event will be available on
the  AMSAT-UK Web  site
<http://www.uk.amsat.org/Colloquium/default.php>.--AMSAT-UK

*  DXCC Desk approves operation for DXCC credit: The ARRL DXCC Desk has
approved  this operation for DXCC credit: TT8PK, Chad, March 15 to May 27,
2004, and  December 27, 2005, to October 3, 2006. For more information, visit
the DXCC  Web page <http://www.arrl.org/awards/dxcc/>. "DXCC Frequently  Asked
Questions" can answer most questions about the DXCC program. ARRL  DX
bulletins are available on the W1AW DX Bulletins  page
<http://www.arrl.org/w1aw/dx/>.

===========================================================  
The ARRL Letter is published Fridays, 50 times each year, by the  American
Radio Relay League--The National Association For Amateur Radio--225  Main St,
Newington, CT 06111; tel 860-594-0200; fax  860-594-0259;
<http://www.arrl.org>. Joel Harrison, W5ZN,  President.

The ARRL Letter offers a weekly e-mail digest of essential  news of interest
to active amateurs. The ARRL Letter strives to be timely,  accurate, concise,
and readable. Visit ARRLWeb <http://www.arrl.org>  for the latest news,
updated as it happens. The ARRL Web site  <http://www.arrl.org/> offers
access to news, informative features and  columns. ARRL Audio News
<http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/> is a  weekly "ham radio newscast"
compiled from The ARRL Letter. 

Material  from The ARRL Letter may be republished or reproduced in whole or
in part in  any form without additional permission. Credit must be given to
The ARRL  Letter and The American Radio Relay League.

==>Delivery problems (ARRL  member direct delivery only!):
letter-dlvy at arrl.org
==>Editorial  questions or comments: Rick Lindquist, N1RL, n1rl at arrl.org
==>ARRL News on  the Web: <http://www.arrl.org>
==>ARRL Audio News:  <http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/> or  call
860-594-0384

==>How to Get The ARRL Letter

The ARRL  Letter is available to ARRL members free of charge directly from
ARRL HQ. To  subscribe, unsubscribe or change your address for e-mail
delivery: 
ARRL  members first must register on the Members Only Web  Site
<http://www.arrl.org/members/>. You'll have an opportunity  during
registration to sign up for e-mail delivery of The ARRL Letter,  W1AW
bulletins, and other material. To change these  selections--including
delivery of The ARRL Letter--registered members should  click on the "Member
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address if necessary. (Check "Temporarily disable all  automatically sent
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modification" to make selections effective. (NOTE: HQ staff  members cannot
change your e-mail delivery address. You must do this yourself  via the
Members Only Web Site.)

The ARRL Letter also is available to  all, free of charge, from these
sources:

* ARRLWeb  <http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/>. (NOTE: The ARRL Letter will  be
posted each Friday when it is distributed via e-mail.)

* The  QTH.net listserver, thanks to volunteers from the Boston Amateur Radio
Club:  Visit Mailing  Lists at QTH.Net
<http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/letter-list>.  (NOTE: The ARRL
cannot assist subscribers who receive The ARRL Letter via  this listserver.) 





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