[FPARC] The ARRL Letter Vol. 25, No. 16 April 21, 2006

W4kkw at aol.com W4kkw at aol.com
Sat Apr 22 06:29:12 EDT 2006


***************
The ARRL Letter
Vol. 25, No. 16
April 21,  2006
***************

IN THIS EDITION:

* ARRL Documents Flaws in  Manassas BPL Interference Report
* Severe Weather Ravages Tennessee, Hams  Heed the Call to Help
* Fires and Local Events Keep New Mexico Hams Busy
*  Iowa Hams Support Tornado Recovery
* New SM Named in Western  Pennsylvania
* Three-Time World Champions Not Participating in WRTC 2006
*  Major Marconi Exhibit Opens April 24 in the UK
* Boy Scout Special Event  April 22
* ARRL Staffer Demos "Magic Trick" for Science Teachers
*  Honoring Excellence in Ham Radio PR: McGan Award Deadline Looms
* Army, Air  Force MARS Announce Leadership Changes
* Solar Update
* IN  BRIEF:
This weekend on the radio
ARRL Certification and Continuing Education course registration
ARRL Headquarters hosts SKYWARN training session
Austria verifies BPL complaints
Paul  Flaherty, N9FZX, SK
YX0A operator reported SK, DXpedition  adopts memorial call sign
Transceiver designer Michael F.  Elliott, W8KRR, SK
David F. Mangels, AC6WO, SK
Ralph Saroyan, W6JPU,  SK


===========================================================
==>Delivery  problems (ARRL member direct delivery  only!):
letter-dlvy at arrl.org
==>Editorial questions or comments: Rick  Lindquist, N1RL,  n1rl at arrl.org
===========================================================
NOTE:  Because of vacation schedules, there will be no edition of our
Web/podcast  ARRL Audio News today, Friday, April 21. ARRL Audio News will
resume April  28. We apologize for any  inconvenience.
===========================================================


==>ARRL  DOCUMENTS FLAWS IN MANASSAS BPL INTERFERENCE REPORT

In response to a  report from BPL operator COMTek that claims its BPL system
in Manassas,  Virginia cannot be shown to be the cause of ongoing
interference complaints  by local amateurs, the ARRL has documented the
report's shortcomings and  again has demanded that the FCC shut down the
system until the interference  problems are solved.

In an April 14, 2006 letter to two FCC officials,  ARRL General Counsel
Christopher D. Imlay, W3KD, concluded: "In light of the  record of
long-standing interference to licensed stations in Manassas, and  the failure
of COMTek and the City of Manassas to comply with Section  15.615(d), the
Commission should require that the BPL system be shut down  immediately, and
not resume its operation until the facility is shown to be  in full
compliance with Commission rules regarding radiated emissions and  the
non-interference requirement of Section 15.5 of the Commission's  rules."

The 10 page letter, addressed to Joseph Casey, Chief, Spectrum  Enforcement
Division, and Katherine Power, of the Spectrum Enforcement  Division, sets
forth in detail the "tortured history of interference  complaints involving
the BPL system." COMTek's report was submitted to the  FCC in response to a
letter from Casey to the City of Manassas and COMTek  requiring a "report of
system compliance and your report of actions taken to  address the alleged
harmful interference." The report states, "COMTek  believes that the current
configuration of the Manassas BPL System is not the  source of interference
to amateur radio licensees." The ARRL response, citing  ongoing interference
complaints, called the study "fatally and obviously  flawed."

Appended to the ARRL letter to the FCC was a detailed analysis  of the
technical study prepared by ARRL Lab Manager Ed Hare, W1RFI. The  analysis
concluded: "…the testing that was performed in no way is sufficient  to reach
any general conclusions about emissions levels." The analysis goes  on to
criticize the methodology and conclusions of the tests, which were  performed
by Product Safety Engineering, Inc. Hare's analysis found a number  of
deficiencies in the PSE report, including:
The testing  was not done in accordance with the FCC's recommended
test  guidelines;
The test equipment used -- a spectrum analyzer and  a passive loop
antenna -- was not sufficient to measure notch depth nor to  measure the
ambient noise levels;
PSE tested only one  amateur band at a single location, which was
insufficient to establish  compliance or non-interference; and
The testing does not follow  good engineering practice and is not
sufficient to have met the requirements  set forth by the FCC for this
testing.

The ARRL letter to the FCC  concluded:

"…The Manassas and COMTek non-responses to the Commission's  directive; their
vague assurances to work with the Amateur Radio operators in  the future; and
their stonewalling on the cause of the harmful interference  should not be
tolerated by the Enforcement Bureau and will not be further  tolerated by the
Amateur Radio community in Manassas, or by  ARRL."


==>SEVERE WEATHER RAVAGES TENNESSEE, HAMS HEED THE CALL TO  HELP

On Friday, April 7, Western Tennessee was ravaged by tornadoes, and  once
again, Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) volunteers were called on  to
help provide emergency communication. According to Tennessee  Section
Emergency Coordinator Jimmy Floyd, NQ4U, more than 70 counties  experienced
the heavy thunderstorms and tornadoes that swept the western part  of the
Volunteer State. In all, the National Weather Service (NWS) issued  more than
130 weather watches and warnings and reported at least 26  tornadoes. Nearly
two dozen counties suffered property damage and loss of  life. Twelve people
died, and more than 160 others were injured as a result  of the severe
weather.

By 1 PM local time, the Middle Tennessee  Emergency Amateur Radio Society
(MTEARS) repeater system carried numerous  reports of severe weather and
damage to many areas of the state. According to  Floyd, the MTEARS UHF system
spans most of Tennessee, with Nashville as its  hub. Both the National
Weather Service (NWS) and the Tennessee Emergency  Management Agency (TEMA)
monitor the system. Local television stations  monitor ARES and SKYWARN
traffic, as well, he said.

The first tornado  watches began in the early afternoon, and by 4:15 PM local
time, the  Tennessee Section ARES was placed on Alert condition "Charlie."
Within 20  minutes, the entire state activated, and hams were monitoring HF
and local  repeaters, remaining on the air to assist in any way until  almost
midnight.

During the storms, the NWS in Old Hickory lost power  as well as telephone
service. NOAA Weather Radio and radar also were  unavailable for a time.
Amateur Radio volunteers stepped up to the plate,  and--thanks to their
emergency/disaster training--were able to relay needed  information.

Wilson County Emergency Coordinator Pete Navarra, K4IWX,  works for the
county's emergency management agency. He said that because of  information
relayed via Amateur Radio, his county was able to dispatch three  ambulances,
two rescue trucks, one fire engine and a host of Community  Emergency
Response Team (CERT) search-and-rescue responders and their mobile  command
post to hard-hit Sumner County.

Amateur Radio also helped to  dramatically decrease emergency personnel
response times, Navarra said. "It  was interesting to hear several calls from
the Metro Nashville Office of  Emergency Management, Tennessee Emergency
Management Agency and other local  agencies trying to communicate," he
recounted. "Conventional methods of  communication did not work--even cell
phone service in Wilson County had gone  out. Amateur Radio is needed and it
works!"

Floyd agreed. "This has  been a big test of the ARES system in Tennessee, but
rest assured, we will be  ready to go when needed."


==>FIRES AND LOCAL EVENTS KEEP NEW  MEXICO HAMS BUSY

With a dry spring underway, fire season is in full swing  in New Mexico, and
Amateur Radio operators have been on the front lines. What  started out as a
small 150 acre fire near Mora on April 12, roared into a  10,000 acre blaze
overnight. ARES personnel in Santa Fe, Taos, Los Alamos and  Sandoval
Counties were place on alert in the afternoon of April 13. Mora  County was
in danger, as well, but does not have an ARES support  group.

Winds were gusting to more than 35 miles per hour and the humidity  hovering
under 10%. The fire spread rapidly and evacuations were ordered for  Ojo
Feliz, Los Hueros, Ocate and numerous ranches in northern New Mexico  for
what is now called the Ojo Feliz Fire. Investigators believe the fire  was
human-caused.

Once Gov Bill Richardson signed an Emergency  Declaration Order for the
affected area, local hams jumped into action. Mike  Scales, K5SCA, Gary
Surad, K5BIQ, Andrew Parker, KC5ZYF, Jay Miller, WA5WHN,  and Don Scott,
N5UJT, all from the Sandoval County ARES, went to assist Mora  County Rd
Cross shelters and the New Mexico State Police Mobile Command  Center. All
traffic was handled via voice through the 147.30 MHz Elk Mountain  Repeater,
allowing direct communications with Santa Fe and Rio Rancho, or VHF  simplex.

By noon on Friday, April 14, the shelters had closed and Amateur  Radio
operations were suspended, but once again, ARES groups were placed on  alert
for yet another fire that began near Vaughn, New Mexico (Guadalupe  County).
Fortunately, fire crews were able to jump on that fire and get it  under
control quickly.

In addition to the fire, ARES groups from Taos  and Los Alamos assisted with
safety communications for the annual Pilgrimage  to Chimayo. Starting in the
darkness before Good Friday (April 14), pilgrims  line the highways north of
Santa Fe carrying crosses and glow sticks. By  Easter Sunday, 65,000
worshipers pass through the doors of El Santuario de  Chimayo, a little
chapel built almost 200 years ago on a site that is sacred  to many Pueblo
Indians and descendants of Spanish settlers. Many walked more  than 100 miles
on the pilgrimage carrying crosses and other religious items.  ARES
volunteers monitored the pilgrims along the journey that  traditionally
follows US highway 84/285. Due to construction, the pedestrians  had to be
detoured through Village of Tesuque.

Grants County Amateur  Radio operators were involved in a Search and Rescue
mission on April 14, and  Sandoval County ARES was involved the week before
in a Hazmat spill in Cuba,  New Mexico. -- Charlie Christmann, K5CEC, ARRL
PIO, New Mexico  Section


==>IOWA HAMS SUPPORT TORNADO RECOVERY

Multiple  tornadoes struck Iowa City on April 13, and local Amateur Radio
operators put  their emergency and disaster training to use. Hams from the
Iowa City Amateur  Radio Club's HamRad group provided communications between
the Johnson County  Emergency Management Agency (JCEMA) Emergency Operations
Center (EOC) and Red  Cross shelters set up in the area. HamRad is organized
to work with Johnson  County in emergencies.

Over 25 hams were in action as weather spotters,  managed by Rich Bingham,
WW0Q, and Jeff Dodd, KI0JP. Regis Johanns, KB0VDO,  and Jim Meade, NO0B,
established a net control station at the EOC, sending  two communications
teams to shelters, with Robert Seemuth, KC0TIK, and Dodd  leading these
teams.

Once the tornadoes had passed through the area,  HamRad teams stayed on the
job until the next day, when National Guard units  could take over
responsibility, ensuring that shelter management and the EOC  could keep in
touch and serve those in need.


==>NEW SECTION  MANAGER NAMED IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA

Larry O'Toole, K3LBP, has been  appointed as the new ARRL Section Manager of
Western Pennsylvania effective  April 20.

Larry takes over the Section Manager reins from Rich Beaver,  N3SRJ, who
recently stepped down because of increasing work demands and  personal
reasons.  Rich will continue to remain active as a District  Emergency
Coordinator.

O'Toole, who lives in Mt. Pleasant,  Pennsylvania, was appointed by ARRL
Field and Educational Services Manager  Dave Patton, NN1N.  His background
has been in public service and  emergency communications where is presently
the ARRL Emergency Coordinator  for Westmoreland County and has served as a
District Emergency Coordinator.  Larry also holds the Official Relay Station
and Official Emergency Station  appointments. For May QST's Public Service
column, O'Toole was the author of  the article describing Amateur Radio's
role in last summer's large-scale  emergency exercise in Western
Pennsylvania.


==>THREE-TIME WORLD  CHAMPIONS NOT PARTICIPATING IN WRTC 2006

The sponsors of World Radiosport  Team Championship 2006 (WRTC 2006) in
Brazil this week announced team  pairings
<http://www.wrtc2006.com/release42.html> for the event this  summer. Last
held in Finland in July 2002, the WRTC is a competition among  two-person
teams drawn from among the world's top Amateur Radio contest  operators.
Among the missing for this year's running, however, will be the  team that
topped the field in the last three WRTCs--Dan Street, K1TO, and  Jeff
Steinman, N5TJ.

"We have prior work commitments," Street told  ARRL. "We certainly wish them
well and hope that the WRTC continues on  successfully both this time and
well beyond." Street and Steinman took home  the WRTC gold for the third time
at the 2002 event in Finland. They also  placed first among some 50 teams in
WRTC 2000 in Slovenia as well as at WRTC  96 in the San Francisco Bay area.

The team pairings in the six WRTC 2006  categories contain many familiar call
signs. This year's world competition  will take place July 8-9 in the
vicinity of Florianopolis, capital of the  state of Santa Catarina in
southern Brazil. The on-the-air portion of the  event is held in conjunction
with the International Amateur Radio Union  (IARU) HF World Championship,
although WRTC rules differ in some respects  from those of the IARU event,
and scoring is separate.

The event  brings competitors together in a single geographical area. The
guiding  concept is to minimize the variables associated with radio
contesting and  instead emphasize each team's operating skills.

Among other changes, WRTC  2006 also has created a new "Multi-National
Multi-Single" category as well as  three positions for younger operators.

Brazil's IARU member-society LABRE  (Liga de Amadores Brasileiros de Radio
Emissão) and the Araucária DX Group  are coordinating WRTC 2006 all with
support from DX groups and contesters.  Atilano de Oms, PY5EG, heads the WRTC
2006 Steering Committee. For more  information, visit the WRTC 2006 Web  site
<http://www.wrtc2006.com/>.


==>MAJOR MARCONI EXHIBIT  OPENS APRIL 24 IN THE UK

Guglielmo Marconi's grandson Guglielmo and his  daughter Princess Elettra
will attend the opening of a major new Marconi  exhibition at the Museum of
the History of Science in Oxford, England on  April 24. The exhibition --
called "Wireless World: Marconi and the Making of  Radio" -- covers the
history of radio from Marconi's early demonstrations in  the 1880s to the
beginning of regular public broadcasts in the 1920s. It will  be open until
October 1, 2006.


==>BOY SCOUT SPECIAL EVENT APRIL  22

The Sierra Amateur Radio Club (SARC) in Ridgecrest, California, will  be
offering an Amateur Radio demonstration at the Kern Area Boy Scout  Camporall
on Saturday, April 22. They will be using call sign  K2BSA/6.

SARC plans to set up a solar-powered low power HF station with a  multi-band
antenna. They will be using the 40 and 20 meter bands, and if  conditions
permit, the 17 meter band, along with the SO-50 and VO-52  satellites.

Boys ages 11-18 will be participating, as well as adults, and  for many of
them this will be their fist exposure to ham radio. With your  help and
participation, this is a great way to get the younger generation  involved in
Amateur Radio.

QSLs can be sent via WA6ARA. -- Mike Herr,  WA6ARA


==>ARRL STAFFER DEMOS "MAGIC TRICK" FOR SCIENCE  TEACHERS

ARRL Education and Technology Program ("The Big  Project")
<http://www.arrl.org/FandES/tbp/> Coordinator Mark Spencer,  WA8SME (left),
shone the spotlight on Amateur Radio and the ARRL during the  National
Science Teachers Association (NSTA) 54th national conference April  6-8 in
Anaheim, California. Spencer reports some 15,000 teachers stopped by  the
ARRL booth, and most picked up a brochure.

"I talked with probably  300 educators specifically about ARRL-related
programs such as the Teachers  Institutes, 'The Big Project' and Amateur
Radio on the International Space  Station (ARISS)," he said.

After he'd demonstrated what happens when you  drop a magnet through a length
of non-ferrous metal pipe, one teacher  returned the next day with his wife
"so I could show her the 'magic trick,'"  said Spencer.

The magic trick demonstrates two fundamentals Spencer uses  when teaching
electronics and electricity: (1) Moving magnetic fields cause  electrons to
move, and (2) Moving electrons create magnetic fields. "When the  magnet
falls through a non-ferrous metal pipe, the moving magnetic field  causes the
electrons in the conductor to move," Spencer explains. "Those  moving
electrons in turn create an opposing magnetic field that prevents the  magnet
from falling right through, giving it a 'slow motion'  effect."

Spencer says the magnet moves more slowly in a copper pipe than  in an
aluminum pipe because copper is a better conductor. It falls  straight
through a PVC pipe because PVC is an insulator. "All of electronics  and
radio boils down to how we manipulate these two fundamental principles,"  he
concluded.


==>HONORING EXCELLENCE IN HAM RADIO PR: McGAN  AWARD DEADLINE LOOMS

The ARRL is encouraging nominations for the 2006  Philip J. McGan Memorial
Silver Antenna Award. The annual honor goes to a  radio amateur who has
demonstrated excellence in Amateur Radio public  relations (PR). The deadline
to submit nominations is Monday, May 22. The  McGan Award recognizes an
individual who best exemplifies the volunteer  spirit of its namesake, Phil
McGan, WA2MBQ (SK). As the first chairman of the  ARRL Public Relations
Committee, he helped to reinvigorate the League's  commitment to public
relations.

"Our entire PR program, including the  "Hello" campaign, is based on the work
of the hundreds of ARRL volunteer  public information officers, who invest so
much time, effort and creativity  to advance Amateur Radio for everyone,"
says ARRL Media and Public Relations  Manager Allen Pitts, W1AGP. "There's
only one McGan Award, however, and it's  reserved for the person determined
to be the best of the very best. It's a  major recognition to be nominated.
It's a great honor to be  named."

Pitts is careful to point out the distinction between  public
relations--essentially getting Amateur Radio's message to the  public--and
public service, which is Amateur Radio activity on behalf of the  public,
such as supporting emergency communication. The McGan Award  honors
achievement in public relations.

Public relations activities  the McGan Award recognizes include efforts
specifically directed at bringing  Amateur Radio to the public's
attention--and most often to the news  media's--in a positive light. These
may include such traditional methods as  news releases or less-traditional
methods as hosting a radio show or being an  active public speaker.

Unfortunately, McGan never got to see how well his  own PR efforts paid off.
In his honor, his friends in the New Hampshire  Amateur Radio Association
joined with the ARRL Board of Directors to pay a  lasting tribute to the
important contributions he made on behalf of Amateur  Radio by establishing
this annual award.

The individual chosen to  receive the McGan Award must be a full ARRL member
in good standing and may  not be regularly compensated for public relations
work involving Amateur  Radio--including payment for articles. A committee of
volunteers  knowledgeable about Amateur Radio public relations will pick the
winner from  among the nominees, subject to approval by the ARRL Board of
Directors at its  July meeting.

Pitts says recognizing someone's public relations  achievements by nominating
him or her for the McGan Award is "the perfect way  to say 'thank you.'"

Nominations must be received at ARRL Headquarters in  by 5 PM Eastern Time on
Monday, May 22, 2006. The committee will not consider  nominations that
arrive after the deadline or without an entry  form.

Complete details on McGan Award eligibility and how to nominate  someone,
plus a link to the official nomination form, are on the ARRL Web  site
<http://www.arrl.org/pio/mcgan/>. Return the completed entry forms  and
supporting materials to Philip J. McGan Memorial Silver Antenna Award,  c/o
Allen Pitts, W1AGP, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT  06111.


==>ARMY, AIR FORCE MARS ANNOUNCE LEADERSHIP  CHANGES

Past Army MARS Eastern Area Director Kathy Harrison has been  appointed to
take the reins of the Army Military Affiliate Radio System  (MARS) program.
She succeeds Bob Sutton, N7UZY, who is recuperating from an  illness. Lt Col
Gregory Harris had been named in January to fill in during  Sutton's absence;
now it appears that Sutton will not be  returning.

"While I will be getting up to speed on the MARS program over  the next few
weeks, I am hitting the ground running," Harrison said in an  announcement to
the MARS community. "I have been working with LTC Harris on  MARS issues for
the past few weeks and have not forgotten everything I  learned during my
tenure as eastern area director."

Harrison said MARS  faces "many new challenges" over the next year in meeting
its mission on a  reduced budget, but she said she believes the organization
is up to the task.  Harrison inherits the AAA9A MARS call sign. Her
appointment was effective  March 21. Army MARS is headquartered at Ft
Huachuca in Arizona.

Sutton  retired from federal service April 3. His long career as a US Air
Force  communicator and his subsequent employment as a Department of the  Army
civilian employee spanned 46 years. Sutton was chief of Army MARS for  16
years. He says he plans to remain active in the program.

Meanwhile,  Air Force Military Affiliate Radio System (MARS) Chief Ray
Collins, AGA3C,  announced his retirement from federal service effective
March 31 and said  he'd be stepping down as chief of Air Force MARS.
According to Collins's  announcement, the chief's position will remain vacant
for a while.

In  the interim, Collins said, regional MARS directors will take over issuing
and  signing MARS licenses for new and renewing members as well as many  other
duties. The Air Force MARS office is located at the Headquarters of the  Air
Force Communications Agency (AFCA), Scott Air Force Base,  Illinois.

==>SOLAR UPDATE

Astral aficionado Tad "Sunshine  Superman" Cook, K7RA, Seattle, Washington,
reports: Geomagnetic activity was  higher over the past week, with the
average daily planetary A index rising  over six points to 18. The most
active days were Friday and Saturday, April  14 and 15, when the planetary A
index was 58 and 29.

Otherwise,  geomagnetic activity has been low and should stay that way.
Sunspot numbers  and solar flux should rise gradually, reaching a peak around
April 29 through  May 3.

Predicted planetary A index for April 21-25 is 8, 8, 10, 8 and  8.
Geophysical Institute Prague predicts quiet to unsettled conditions  for
April 21, unsettled conditions April 22-23, quiet to unsettled April  24-25,
and quiet conditions April 26-27.

Sunspot numbers for April 13  through 19 were 69, 62, 45, 45, 48, 46 and 38
with a mean of 50.4. 10.7 cm  flux was 80, 78.9, 78.4, 76.5, 77.9, 75.1, and
75.8, with a mean of 77.5.  Estimated planetary A indices were 13, 58, 29,
10, 6, 6 and 4 with a mean of  18. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 9,
32, 18, 8, 4, 5 and 2, with a  mean of 11.1.

__________________________________


==>IN  BRIEF:

* This weekend on the radio: 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). JUST AHEAD:
The North America High Speed Meteor Scatter Spring Rally  is April 29 until
May 7. The SBMS 2 GHz and Up World Wide Club Contest, the  Helvetia Contest
and the Alabama QSO Party are the weekend of April 29-30.  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>.

* ARRL Headquarters hosts SKYWARN  training session: More than a dozen League
staffers completed SKYWARN  <http://www.skywarn.org> weather-spotter training
April 7 at ARRL  Headquarters. National Weather Service (NWS)
<http://www.nws.noaa.gov/>  Warning Coordination Meteorologist Glenn Field,
KB1GHX, and SKYWARN Program  Leader Bill Babcock--both of the NWS office in
Taunton, Massachusetts--led  the four-hour class. The ARRL and NWS have a
longstanding memorandum of  understanding, and the training session was just
one example of their mutual  cooperation. Coordinating the training session
with ARRL were Roger  Jeanfaivre, K1PAI, Hartford-Tolland County (CT) SKYWARN
coordinator, and Rob  Macedo, KD1CY, ARES SKYWARN Coordinator for NWS Taunton
and ARRL Eastern  Massachusetts Section Emergency Coordinator. Training
session topics included  severe thunderstorms, tornadoes, winter storms and
hurricanes. Jeanfaivre  also briefed attendees on SKYWARN nets in
Hartford-Tolland county region,  pointing out that SKYWARN activates on a
moment's notice to support the NWS.  Macedo discussed how volunteers--many of
them radio amateurs--serve a  critical role as the eyes and ears of the NWS
SKYWARN program. Around 90  percent of the reports NWS-Taunton receives come
from Amateur Radio  operators. The NWS offers SKYWARN training through many
of its  offices.

* Austria verifies BPL complaints: Austria's Ministry for  Transport,
Innovation and Technology (BMVIT) has verified the interference  complaints
of HF users in Linz, where a BPL (PLC, or power line  communication) system
is being operated on a commercial basis. In a report  prepared for the
February 21-22 meeting of the CENELEC/ETSI Joint Working  Group on EMC of
Conducted Transmission Networks, the ministry said the  measured emission of
PLC installations in the Linz region is approximately 42  dB higher than the
relevant limit according to CEPT ECC Recommendation  (05)04, "Criteria for
the Assessment of Radio Interferences Caused by  Radiated Disturbances from
Wire-Line Telecommunication Networks"  [ECC/REC(05)04]. The report says
ECC/REC(05)04 "reflects the state of the art  in Austria." The limit used by
the ministry for the 1-30 MHz range, measured  3 meters from the source, is
40 dBuV/m peak at 1 MHz, decreasing to 27 dBuV/m  at 30 MHz. This is roughly
comparable to the FCC Part 15 BPL emission limit  lowered by 40 dB and
applying the 40 dB-per-decade distance factor FCC  measurements call for.
Other major differences between the Austrian  regulations and Part 15 include
distance between source and antenna, use of a  peak detector and a
logarithmic factor in the limit. The report is intended  to inform the Joint
Working Group about measurements of PLC systems and  harmful interference
they can cause in the HF bands, and to trigger a  discussion to adopt
ECC/REC/(05)04 as the document describing the  state-of-the-art for wireline
telecommunication networks such as PLC networks  within Europe. The BMVIT
report is available on the  Internet
<http://www.bmvit.at/telekommunikation/plt/download/etsijwg16td09.pdf>.

*  Paul Flaherty, N9FZX, SK: Paul A. Flaherty, N9FZX, of Belmont,  California,
died unexpectedly March 16. He had turned 42 just two days  earlier. A
co-inventor of the Alta Vista search engine, Flaherty, who was  born in
Milwaukee, developed his lifelong interest in computers and radio  after his
family moved to Minnesota. A summa cum laude graduate of  Marquette
University with degrees in electrical engineering and mathematics,  Flaherty
went on to earn master's and doctoral degrees at Stanford. In 1995,  while
working as a research scientist for Digital Equipment Corp, Flaherty  was
part of the team that developed the Alta Vista search engine, which  became
the most popular of the early Internet indexing utilities. (Its Babel  Fish
translation site remains popular.) In addition to Amateur Radio,  Flaherty
had an abiding interest in railfanning--train chasing--and had  earned a
reputation as a railroad photographer.--some information from the  San
Francisco Chronicle

* YX0A operator reported SK, DXpedition adopts  memorial call sign: YX0A Aves
Island DXpedition team member José "Joe" Manuel  Valdés Rodriguez, YV5LIX,
reportedly died on the tiny Caribbean island April  21. He was 57. A radio
amateur since 1987, Valdés was well known around the  world as a DXer and
contester on HF and VHF. Esteban Romagni, W4DTA/YV5DTA,  reports in an e-mail
shared with ARRL that his longtime friend suffered a  heart attack, and the
two physicians with the DXpedition team were unable to  resuscitate him.
Valdés' death, at around 0400 UTC, occurred shortly after  the YX0A
DXpedition got under way. The Aves Island DXpedition reportedly has  obtained
permission to use the memorial call sign YX0LIX until the DXpedition  ends on
or about May 1. Members of the Association of Radioamateurs of  Venezuela and
the Grupo DX Caracas are sponsoring the Aves Island (Isla de  Aves)
DXpedition. Valdés was the DXpedition's digital modes coordinator  and
reportedly was planning to concentrate on digital modes during the last  few
days of operation.

* Transceiver designer Michael F. Elliott,  W8KRR, SK: The man behind the
development of the Heathkit SB-104 and Drake  TR-7 transceivers, Michael
Elliott, W8KRR, 66, of Centerville, Ohio, died  April 14. The Heathkit
SB-104, released in 1974, was the first transceiver to  incorporate
solid-state design, come with a digital frequency readout and be  priced for
the mass market. The SB-104 was a mainstay until 1982, when radios  that
covered the new WARC bands superseded it. It was one of the last  Amateur
Radio kits that Heathkit developed. Elliott was also influential in  the
design of the Drake TR-7, the standard for competition-grade transceivers  in
the late 1970s and early 1980s.

* David F. Mangels, AC6WO, SK:  Author and Amateur Radio instructor Dave
Mangels, AC6WO, of Temple City,  California, died March 24. He was 63. An
ARRL member, instructor and  volunteer examiner, Mangels taught Amateur Radio
licensing classes for a fee  at the Technician, General and Amateur Extra
levels. In 2001, CQ  Communications published his book The Mobile DXer--Your
Practical Guide to  Successful Mobile DXing. Mangels had 302 DXCC entities
confirmed on SSB, no  doubt many of them worked while he was operating mobile
or portable.  Survivors include his wife, Fran, AD6DC, and a son, Gary,
AD6CD.

*  Ralph Saroyan, W6JPU, SK: Former ARRL Section Communications Manager  Ralph
Saroyan, W6JPU, of Fresno, died April 5. He was 88. Saroyan served as  San
Joaquin Valley SCM (now called Section Manager) from 1955 until 1976.  An
ARRL Life Member, Saroyan was first licensed in 1934. During World War  II,
he served in the US Navy as an electronics technician. San Joaquin Valley  SM
Charles McConnell, W6DPD, says Saroyan was an Amateur Radio pioneer  who
promoted the adoption of single sideband and established the first  repeater
in the  valley.

===========================================================
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