[SFDXA] The ARRL Letter for April 17, 2014

Bill bmarx at bellsouth.net
Thu Apr 17 15:27:49 EDT 2014


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The ARRL Letter

April 17, 2014
Editor: Rick Lindquist, WW1ME <mailto:ww1me 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/>

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&i=2014-04-17&t=t>

  * /International/: World Amateur Radio Day is Friday, April 18 <#toc01>
  * /Regulatory/: ARRL Asks FCC to Dismiss "Fatally Flawed" /Petition
    for Rule Making/ Affecting 10 GHz <#toc02>
  * /Public Service/: Amateur Radio Volunteers Provide Critical Support
    for 30th Challenge Cup Relay <#toc03>
  * /Ham Radio in Space/: Astronaut Emcees Live Amateur Radio Digital TV
    Test from the ISS <#toc04>
  * /Ham Radio in Space/: FUNcube/AO-73 Transponder Will Be Active Each
    Weekend <#toc05>
  * /Ham Radio in Space/: KickSat Project Announces Telemetry Download
    Competition <#toc06>
  * /Your League/: Deadline is May 1 to Apply for ARRL Teachers
    Institute <#toc07>
  * /Centennial/: W1AW Centennial Operations are in Mississippi and
    North Dakota until April 23 (UTC) <#toc08>
  * /Technology/: HAARP Facility in Danger of Being Dismantled <#toc09>
  * /Feature/: A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL<#toc10>
  * In Brief... <#toc11>
  * Getting It Right! <#toc12>
  * The K7RA Solar Update <#toc13>
  * Just Ahead in Radiosport <#toc14>
  * Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events
    <#toc15>

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

*ARRL Headquarters Closed on April 18*: ARRL Headquarters will be closed 
on Good Friday, April 18. There will be no W1AW 
<http://www.arrl.org/w1aw-operating-schedule> bulletin or code practice 
transmissions and no /ARRL Audio News/ 
<http://www.arrl.org/arrl-audio-news> on April 18. ARRL Headquarters 
will reopen Monday, April 21, at 8 AM Eastern Daylight Time. We wish 
everyone a safe and enjoyable holiday!

------------------------------------------------------------------------
/International/: World Amateur Radio Day is Friday, April 18

"Amateur Radio: Your Gateway to Wireless Communication" is the theme for 
World Amateur Radio Day 2014, Friday, April 18. Radio amateurs celebrate 
World Amateur Radio Day each year on April 18 to recognize the 
anniversary of the founding of the International Amateur Radio Union 
(IARU <http://www.iaru.org/>) in Paris in 1925. ARRL Co-Founder Hiram 
Percy Maxim, 1AW, was its first president. The primary purpose of World 
Amateur Radio Day is to highlight Amateur Radio and its benefits to 
countries and communities. This year the IARU and its more than 150 
member-societies are marking the organization's 89th anniversary.

The 1925 IARU Congress. [/QST/ photo]

"Amateur radio has truly entered the 21st century. In less than 100 
years Amateur Radio communication has evolved from crude spark-gap 
technology to digital signal processing and software-defined radios," 
the IARU has pointed out. "The amateur's HF choice between voice and CW 
has been expanded to a broad range of communication choices from 
television to spread spectrum."

Amateur Radio experimenters were the first to discover that the short 
wave spectrum -- far from being a wasteland -- could support worldwide 
propagation. As the rush to shorter wavelengths ensued, however, Amateur 
Radio was "in grave danger of being pushed aside," the IARU's history 
has noted. So, Amateur Radio pioneers met in Paris in 1925 and created 
the IARU to support Amateur Radio worldwide.

World Amateur Radio Day activities and special events are an opportunity 
to spread the word about what radio amateurs are doing in the 21st 
century. Several IARU member-societies and associated clubs are expected 
to sponsor special event stations to mark the occasion this weekend. 
Among them will be the Puerto Rico Field Day Group, which plans to 
activate KP4FD on April 18. Others to listen for include HZ14WARD in 
Saudi Arabia, SK89WARD in Sweden, and A91WARD in Bahrain. ****

/Regulatory/: ARRL Asks FCC to Dismiss "Fatally Flawed" /Petition for 
Rule Making/ Affecting 10 GHz

The ARRL has told the FCC that a /Petition for Rule Making /(RM-11715 
<http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/document/view?id=7022310834>) from Mimosa 
Networks to permit unlicensed Part 15 wireless broadband services in the 
10.0-10.5 GHz band is "fatally flawed" and should be dismissed. Mimosa 
filed the /Petition/ in May 2013, and the FCC invited public comments 
last month. The /Petition/ includes a band plan for 10.0 to 10.5 GHz 
that would cede Amateur Radio and Amateur-Satellite users access to just 
two small segments of the present allocation. The League told the FCC 
that, among other things, the Mimosa /Petition/ is inconsistent with a 
US footnote in the domestic /Table of Allocations/, and that fact alone 
is sufficient reason for the Commission to quash Mimosa's request.

"Footnote US128 very clearly and without equivocation prohibits all 
non-Federal services in the band 10-10.5 GHz except for the Amateur 
Service, the Amateur-Satellite Service, and the non-Federal 
radiolocation service," the ARRL said in its comments. The FCC "is not 
at liberty to ignore" the US footnote, the League said, and is obliged 
on that basis alone to dismiss the /Petition/, "because it hasn't the 
authority to grant it."

Approval of the Mimosa /Petition/ hinges on FCC adoption of rule changes 
that would put the 10 GHz band under Subpart Z of the Commission's Part 
90 rules. Subpart Z currently sets out regulations governing wireless 
licensing, technical standards, and operational standards in the 3650 to 
3700 MHz band. Mimosa told the FCC that the "application of the 
coordination procedures and requirements provided in Subpart Z will 
ensure that Amateur Radio operations in the band will not be disrupted." 
Its proposed band plan, the company said, would protect frequencies in 
the band "that are most often used by Amateur Radio operators," but the 
plan itself would carry no weight, since Mimosa failed to mention it 
among the rules changes it proposed. The plan would specify 10.350 to 
10.370 GHz as an "Amateur Calling Band," and 10.450 to 10.500 GHz for 
Amateur-Satellite operations in the midst of 21 wireless broadband 
channels and a small guard band.

"[T]here is no 'sharing' between allocated radio services and Part 15 
devices," the ARRL said. "Part 15 unlicensed devices have no allocation 
status...and are prohibited from causing interference to any authorized 
radio service. That is not the regulatory paradigm proposed by Mimosa 
for the 10.0-10.5 GHz band."

The League pointed out that Amateur Radio operations exist throughout 
the 10.0 to 10.5 GHz band now, and that Mimosa's protocols for avoiding 
interference would not protect repeater input frequencies or 
interference to receivers used in "weak-signal" amateur operation. 
"Increases in the noise floor in this band that would result from 
wireless broadband operations as proposed would simply foreclose most or 
all amateur use of the band on an ongoing basis," the ARRL asserted.

Even if the FCC could proceed with the proposed allocation, the League 
said, it would be "premature" to do so, because the US is now developing 
positions in advance of World Radiocommunication Conference 2015 (WRC-15 
<http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-R/conferences/wrc/2015/Pages/default.aspx>). 
The League said WRC-15 agenda item 1.12 could have "a profound effect" 
on the 10.0-10.5 GHz band in ITU Region 2. "Action domestically on the 
Mimosa /Petition/ now would foreclose certain options that the United 
States may wish to advocate at WRC-15, and the WRC-15 final acts may 
have an effect on this band as well," the League explained.

"[I]t is quite obvious that Mimosa has propounded a seriously flawed 
proposal which fails to justify the allocation," the League concluded. 
"The /Petition/ should be dismissed without action by the Commission 
without delay." Read more 
<http://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-asks-fcc-to-dismiss-fatally-flawed-petition-for-rule-making-affecting-10-ghz>.

/Public Service/: Amateur Radio Volunteers Provide Critical Support for 
30th Challenge Cup Relay

Amateur Radio volunteers were key to maintaining safety and security for 
the thousands of law enforcement personnel who took part in the

Baker to Vegas Challenge Cup Relay <http://www.bakervegas.com/> (B2V) 
race on March 22. This year marked the 30th anniversary of the event, 
sometimes called "The world's longest police foot pursuit." The relay 
event covers some 120 miles of remote territory, from the Mojave Desert 
near Baker, California -- the gateway to Death Valley -- to Las Vegas, 
Nevada.

"This year we started 261 teams over a span of 9 hours," B2V 
Communications DirectorJoy Matlack, KD6FJV, told ARRL. "All of the teams 
that started the race finished, which sometimes is not the case. We had 
a minimal level of injuries this year -- only five airlifts -- so that 
made this year's race all the better."

The grueling route tests human endurance in an environment where 
rattlesnakes thrive and the temperature has topped 130° F. The race 
course winds through the Mojave Desert, crosses the Spring Mountains at 
Mountain Springs Pass (elevation 5530 feet) and descends into Las Vegas. 
The terrain and race logistics also challenge the communication system, 
which needs to cover some 8100 square miles. Given a lack of 
conventional telecommunication services, the vast impromptu 
telecommunication infrastructure incorporates ham radio as well as 
business band, aeronautical, and public safety systems.

"We have multiple layers of communications, and most are tied into an 
integrated ham radio network," Matlack explained. Many teams bring along 
their own ham radio teams to provide logistical support for their 
runners, she added.

Matlack said the B2V starts out with some 325 or so volunteers, who 
support communication with and for the race director and other officials 
as well as provide information to and from each of the 22 baton exchange 
points. She said individual teams that use ham radio bring out another 
325 hams along the course. The primary mission of the Amateur Radio 
volunteers is the protection and safety of runners and their 
support-vehicle staff members.

To keep a close eye on the early part of the course, where runners face 
the most severe conditions, Matlack dispatches a smaller Safety Patrol 
consisting of a coordinator and trained radio amateurs. The Safety 
Patrol checks the condition of each runner, while keeping in contact 
with race officials and medical personnel as necessary.

The race takes place in 20 stages, where the teams change runners. 
Amateur Radio operators serve as the race staff at these stages, provide 
scoring and timing functions, handle the PA system, call in the medics 
if necessary, and handle all routine and emergency event radio traffic.

The B2V is sponsored by the Los Angeles Police Revolver and Athletic 
Club, which has limited the number of entries to 270 teams. With family, 
friends and onlookers the crowd can grow to more than 10,000 people. 
Read more 
<http://www.arrl.org/news/amateur-radio-volunteers-provide-critical-support-for-30th-challenge-cup-relay>. 
-- /Thanks to Joy Matlack, KD6FJV; John Bigley, N7UR/, Nevada Amateur 
Radio Newswire

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&t=i&i=2014-04-17&p=0>
/Ham Radio in Space/: Astronaut Emcees Live Amateur Radio Digital TV 
Test from the ISS

Japanese Astronaut Koichi Wakata, KC5ZTA, served as the host for a 
successful final commissioning test pass April 13 for the Amateur Radio 
on the International Space Station (ARISS <http://www.ariss.org>) "Ham 
Video <http://www.ariss-eu.org/HamVideo.pdf>" transmitter and camera. 
Operating as OR4ISS from the ISS /Columbus/ module, Wakata transmitted 
digital video and audio, as ground stations in France and Italy tracked 
the station. G4KLB, F6DZP, and IK1SLD were among those receiving clear 
video and audio during the approximately 6 minute pass. They streamed 
the signal over the Internet via the British Amateur Television Club 
(BATC <http://www.batc.tv/>) server. The test used so-called 
"configuration 4" -- 2395 MHz with ARISS antenna 43.

JAXA Astronaut Koichi Wakata, KC5ZTA, is on the air live April 13 during 
a final commissioning pass of the ARISS ham radio digital TV system 
onboard the International Space Station. [G4KLB image via BATC server]

"The final Ham Video commissioning pass was performed flawlessly Sunday, 
April 13, at 1823 UTC," ARISS Europe Chairman Gaston Bertels, ON4WF, 
proclaimed. "Congratulations to the Ham Video team for this outstanding 
performance. Next step should be a video-enhanced ARISS school contact."

During the pass, Wakata congratulated ARISS for its achievement and 
answered a series of questions "in the manner of a school contact," 
Bertels explained. He also conducted a microgravity experiment.

In early March, as one of his final actions during his duty tour aboard 
the International Space Station, NASA Astronaut Mike Hopkins, KF5LJG, 
installed and commissioned the ARISS Ham Video transmitter and camera. 
He also was the first member of an ISS crew to transmit his image to 
Earth using the Amateur Radio digital television (DATV) setup.

The ARISS project, led by ARISS-EU <http://www.ariss-eu.org>, 
AMSAT-Italy <http://www.amsat.it>, and the European Space Agency (ESA 
<http://www.esa.int>), eventually will enhance ARISS school contacts by 
providing a video and audio downlink plus an audio-only uplink.

Commissioning of the overall "Ham TV" Amateur Radio DATV system marked 
the culmination of more than a decade of planning and preparation within 
ARISS. Although there are no immediate plans to employ Ham TV for 
educational contacts with schools in North America, ARISS International 
President Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, said several US radio amateurs are 
testing this capability.

"If this shows educational value," he said, "it will be employed in the US."

The Ham Video transmitter has downlink frequencies of 2.422, 2.437, 
2.369 and 2.395 GHz in a DVB-S type format (symbol rates of 1.3 Ms/s and 
2.0 Ms/s). The two patch antennas, ARISS 41 and ARISS 43, are located on 
the nadir of the /Columbus/ module. The Ham Video transmitter puts out 
approximately 10 W EIRP. The camera is a Canon XF-305. -- /Thanks to 
ARISS International President Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, and ARISS-EU Chairman 
Gaston Bertels, ON4WF/

/Ham Radio in Space/: FUNcube/AO-73 Transponder Will Be Active Each Weekend

The FUNcube/AO-73 Amateur Radio transponder will be active full time 
(with low-power beacon) on weekends.

FUNcube's controllers will switch to full-time transponder mode during 
the first suitable pass over the UK on Friday, typically between 1930 
and 22:30 UTC. (If this is not possible, the switch will be made on the 
first suitable pass on Saturday, typically between 0930 and 1200 UTC. 
Controllers will switch off full-time transponder mode during a suitable 
pass on Sunday evening, typically between 1930 and 2230 UTC. (If this is 
not possible, the switch will be made during the first suitable pass on 
Monday, typically between 0930 and 1200 UTC.

This schedule is totally reliant on the availability of command stations.

AO-73's telemetry downlink frequency is 145.935 MHz BPSK. The SSB/CW 
inverting transponder uplink is 435.150-435.130 MHz LSB, and the 
downlink is 145.950-145.970 MHz USB. Use a maximum uplink power of 5 W 
into a 7 dBi gain antenna.

More information <http://www.funcube.org.uk/news> is available on the 
FUNcube website. Comments are user reports are welcome 
<mailto:g3wgm at amsat.org>./-- Thanks to Jim Heck, G3WGM, via AMSAT News 
Service/

/Ham Radio in Space/: KickSat Project Announces Telemetry Download 
Competition

Zac Manchester, KD2BHC, of the KickSat project is offering prizes to the 
first stations to copy telemetry from KickSat and the "Sprite" 
satellites it will deploy.

"I'll be offering prizes to the first several people who receive 
telemetry packets from KickSat as well as the first few who receive 
signals from the Sprites," the Cornell University aerospace engineering 
graduate student has announced 
<http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zacinaction/kicksat-your-personal-spacecraft-in-space/posts>. 
"The prizes will include souvenir Sprites, and CRS-3 and ELaNa 
<http://www.nasa.gov/offices/education/centers/kennedy/technology/elana_feature.html>-V 
mission patches."

KickSat's Zac Manchester, KD2BHC, offers a whimsical boost to the 
delayed SpaceX launcher at Cape Canaveral.

The KickSat will go into space with the third SpaceX ISS resupply 
mission, which was delayed at least until April 18. If all goes 
according to plan, the 3U KickSat CubeSat subsequently will release more 
than 100 Sprite satellites -- each about the size of a small cracker -- 
into orbit. They will become the smallest Earth-orbiting satellites ever.

For KickSat telemetry (437.505 MHz and 2401-2436.2 MHz), Manchester 
wants the raw hex or ASCII packet data, "and I have to be able to 
successfully decode it." For the Sprites, he wants a raw baseband 
recording, "and I have to be able to decode at least one Sprite signal 
from it." All of the Sprites are on the same frequency -- 437.240 MHz. 
Manchester said he is the final judge on winners, and he'll continue to 
offer prizes, "until I run out of cool swag." To get in on the fun, 
Manchester said, visit the KickSat Wiki 
<https://github.com/zacinaction/kicksat/wiki> and sign up for the 
KickSat mailing list 
<https://groups.google.com/forum/#%21forum/kicksat-gs>. AMSAT-UK also 
has posted a report 
<http://amsat-uk.org/2014/04/10/kicksat-sprites-radio-competition/>.//

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&t=i&i=2014-04-17&p=1>
/Your League/: Deadline is May 1 to Apply for ARRL Teachers Institute

The ARRL Education & Technology Program (ETP 
<http://www.arrl.org/education-technology-program>) is still accepting 
applications for all sessions of the ARRL Teachers Institute this 
summer. /The //application/ 
<http://www.arrl.org/teachers-institute-application>/deadline is May 1. 
/Admission decisions will be made by May 9.

Learn how to integrate science and mathematics with engineering and 
technology by exploring wireless technology!

Now in its 11th year, the ARRL Teachers Institute is a 4-day, expenses 
paid, intensive professional development opportunity for educators who 
want to receive training and resources to explore wireless technology in 
the classroom. ARRL will offer two sessions of the "Introductory 
Teachers Institute on Wireless Technology" (TI-1) this summer. Topics 
include basic electronics, radio science, microcontroller programming 
and basic robotics.

ARRL also will offer an advanced Teachers Institute (TI-2), "Remote 
Sensing and Data Gathering."

For more details see the announcement 
<http://www.arrl.org/files/file/Teachers%20Institute/2014%20Teachers%20Institute%20Scheduled.pdf> 
in the March issue of /QST/ or visit 
<http://www.arrl.org/teachers-institute-on-wireless-technology> the 
Teachers Institute on Wireless Technology website. Download 
<http://www.arrl.org/teachers-institute-application> applications for 
both Teachers Institutes from the ARRL website. Scroll down to the "2014 
TI Applications" tab.

/Centennial/: W1AW Centennial Operations are in Mississippi and North 
Dakota until April 23 (UTC)

The ARRL Centennial W1AW WAS 
<http://www.arrl.org/files/file/On%20the%20Air/W1AW_2014_sked.pdf> 
operations taking place throughout 2014 from each of the 50 states now 
are in Mississippi (W1AW/5) and North Dakota (W1AW/0). They will 
relocate at 0000 UTC on Wednesday, April 23 (the evening of April 22 in 
US time zones), to New Jersey (W1AW/2) and New Hampshire (W1AW/1). 
During 2014 W1AW will be on the air from every state (at least twice) 
and most US territories, and it will be easy to work all states solely 
by contacting W1AW portable operations.

In conjunction with the 100th anniversary of the ARRL, the ARRL 
Centennial QSO Party <http://www.arrl.org/centennial-qso-party> kicked 
off January 1 for a year-long operating event in which participants can 
accumulate points and win awards. The event is open to all, although 
only ARRL members and appointees, elected officials, HQ staff and W1AW 
are worth ARRL Centennial QSO Party points 
<http://www.arrl.org/centennial-qso-party#Table>. Working W1AW/x from 
each state is worth 5 points per contact.

To earn the "Worked all States with W1AW Award," work W1AW operating 
portable from all 50 states. (Working W1AW or W100AW in Connecticut does 
/not/ count for Connecticut, however. For award credit, participants 
must work W1AW/1 in Connecticut.) A W1AW WAS certificate and plaque will 
be available (pricing not yet available).

Some schedule changes have been made, and the schedule has been updated 
to reflect these. Maine and New Mexico have swapped weeks. New Mexico's 
second week will start September 24, and Maine's second week will begin 
December 3. The District of Columbia's week has been moved to the week 
of October 1. North Dakota's second week has been shifted to the week of 
August 20. Puerto Rico will now have a second week of operation starting 
November 26.

The ARRL has posted an ARRL Centennial QSO Party leader board 
<https://centennial-qp.arrl.org> that participants can use to determine 
how many points they have accumulated in the Centennial QSO Party and in 
the W1AW WAS operations. Log in using your Logbook of The World (LoTW 
<http://www.arrl.org/logbook-of-the-world>) user name and password, and 
your position will appear at the top of the leader boards. Results are 
updated daily, based on contacts entered into LoTW.

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

*W1AW/x Portables, W100AW, and W1HQ **Can QSL via Bureau*

You may request that QSL cards be delivered via the ARRL QSL Bureau 
system <http://www.arrl.org/incoming-qsl-service> for contacts with the 
W1AW/x portable operations, W100AW, and W1HQ, now underway during the 
ARRL Centennial. You must first have an account with the QSL Bureau that 
handles your cards and have sufficient postage or envelopes on file with 
that bureau. Any cards that cannot be delivered will not be held or stored.

Please do */not/* send any cards for W1AW/x portable operations, W100AW, 
or W1HQ to ARRL via the bureau. While we appreciate the thought, we do 
not have room to store or file them and would rather you have fun 
working all the Centennial stations!

This is a one-time only use of the QSL Bureau for this purpose. QSLs to 
stations outside the US via the QSL Bureau will be handled normally. 
Click here <http://www.arrl.org/AW-BureauQSLs>, enter your call sign, 
and click SUBMIT to request delivery of W1AW/x portable operations, 
W100AW, or W1HQ QSL cards via the Bureau. -- /Thanks to Membership and 
Volunteer Programs Manager Dave Patton, NN1N/

------------------------------------------------------------------------
/Technology/: HAARP Facility in Danger of Being Dismantled

According to an April 9 /Alaska Dispatch /report 
<http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/20140409/air-force-predicts-summer-shutdown-powerful-haarp-transmitter-alaska>, 
the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) facility near 
Gakona, Alaska, could be decommissioned and dismantled altogether this 
year, unless the US Air Force can find a new prime contractor to take 
over the sprawling, 35-acre facility. The report said the Geophysical 
Institute at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks is hoping to pull 
together a plan to run the facility, which has long been a subject of 
fascination for hams and the target of conspiracy theorists. The 
facility shut down last year and, with the exception of some 
contract-funded research, it has essentially remained in standby.

Part of the HAARP facility's array of antennas.

Money is one major issue. The US Air Force Research Laboratory wants to 
see HAARP survive, "but only if someone else pays the bills, estimated 
at about $5 million a year," the article said.

The University of Alaska Geophysical Institute is said to be trying to 
come up with a plan to keep HAARP up and running to continue ionospheric 
research. A White House Office of Science and Technology Policy meeting 
in February of federal agencies interested in ionospheric research came 
up with no viable candidates to run HAARP, however.

The news account cited an Air Force spokesman as saying that final 
research experiments funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects 
Agency (DARPA) are set to wrap up next month.

HAARP had indicated 3 years ago that it would be shutting down, and it 
did not submit a budget request for FY 15, but that attracted scant 
attention at the time.

Jointly funded by the US Air Force Research Laboratory 
<http://www.wpafb.af.mil/AFRL/> and the US Naval Research Laboratory 
<http://www.nrl.navy.mil/media/news-releases/2013/nrl-scientists-produce-densest-artificial-ionospheric-plasma-clouds-using-haarp>, 
the HAARP ionospheric research facility. Its best-known for its 3.6 MW 
HF (approximately 3 to 10 MHz) ionospheric research instrument (IRI) -- 
a transmitter feeding an extensive system of 180 gain antennas and used 
to "excite" sections of the ionosphere. Other onsite equipment is used 
to evaluate the effects.

The ultra-high power facility long has intrigued hams, even outside of 
Alaska. In 1997, HAARP transmitted test signals on HF (3.4 MHz and 6.99 
MHz) and solicited reports from hams and short-wave listeners in the 
"Lower 48" to determine how well the HAARP transmissions could be heard 
to the south. In 2007 HAARP succeeded 
<http://www.nrl.navy.mil/media/news-releases/2008/scientists-detect-lowest-frequency-radar-echo-from-the-moon> 
in bouncing a 40 meter signal off the moon. Early last year, HAARP 
scientists successfully produced 
<http://www.nrl.navy.mil/media/news-releases/2013/nrl-scientists-produce-densest-artificial-ionospheric-plasma-clouds-using-haarp> 
a sustained high-density plasma cloud in Earth's upper atmosphere.

While the Air Force has possession for now, the unique facility will be 
dismantled if no other agency steps forward to take it over.

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&t=i&i=2014-04-17&p=2>
/Feature/: A Century of Amateur Radio and the ARRL

By 1945, when it became certain that the Allies would win the war, 
attention turned toward post-war hamming. Articles in /QST/ described 
modern VFO and transmitter construction, small portable stations, 
antenna advances, and VHF/UHF equipment and techniques. Everyone was 
ready to return to "normal," and the League was pushing for that return!

In May 1945, the FCC announced its plan for the Amateur Radio bands when 
the war was over. Among other things the 2½ and 1¼ meter bands would be 
shifted to the frequencies they occupy today. In June, the FCC announced 
that it would delete the 5 meter band and replace it with 6 meters.

The July 1946 /QST/ contained plans for "A Beginner's Two-Stage 
Transmitter."

And then, the war was over! The documents were signed on August 14, 
1945, to formally end hostilities. On August 15, ARRL asked the FCC to 
re-open the ham bands. The very next day, the FCC announced that the 112 
MHz (2½ meter) band would be immediately opened for ham use. Slashing 
through miles of red tape, the band was opened on August 21. We were 
back on the air, even though it was on only one VHF band that would 
shortly become another!

Other bands were opened to ham operation as quickly as possible, but 
military communications first had to be moved away from the amateur 
bands. Making all those military frequency changes was not an easy task, 
but it was done as quickly as possible. After military circuits had been 
moved from a given ham band, the FCC would release it for ham use.

The 160 meter band remained closed to hams. During the war, a 
then-secret navigation system called LORAN (for "Long-Range Aid to 
Navigation") had been developed and placed in the 1.8 to 2.0 MHz band. 
After the war it continued to be widely used for maritime navigation. 
Hams eventually were allowed back on 160 -- at first with reduced power 
limits but ultimately, after LORAN went away, with normal power limits.

In another change that came with post-war Amateur Radio, the FCC rezoned 
the 48 states into 10 call areas, rather than the previous 9. New 
W0-prefix call signs started showing up on the air. Those were /new/ 
licensees. Hams who had been living in the new 10th call area before the 
war could continue to use their W9-prefix call signs until renewal time, 
at which time their call signs were switched to the W0-prefix.

By early 1946, 10 meters had been reopened for amateur use, and the ARRL 
threw a "Band-Warming Party" in February and March 1946. The 
Band-Warming Party was a worldwide QSO party, with both CW and phone 
operation. It was a nice way to celebrate being back on the air! /-- Al 
Brogdon, W1AB/

In Brief...

*VK9MT Okayed for DXCC Credit:* The April 2014 VK9MT Mellish Reef 
DXpedition has been approved for DXCC credit. DXCC is Amateur Radio's 
premier award that hams can earn by confirming on-the-air contacts with 
100 DXCC "entities <http://www.arrl.org/country-lists-prefixes>," most 
of which are countries in the traditional sense. You can begin with the 
basic DXCC award and work your way up to the DXCC Honor Roll. Learn more 
<http://www.arrl.org/rules>. /-- ARRL Awards Branch Manager Bill Moore, 
NC1L/

*ARRL Field Day Locator Now Active:* ARRL Field Day 2014 is not far off. 
Let the world know about /your/ ARRL Field Day Operation via the ARRL 
Field Day Locator <http://www.arrl.org/field-day-locator>. It's easy to 
use. The web page is intended to show only /public/ Field Day sites that 
members of the public and media can visit. If you're planning to operate 
from at a private, residential location, do not add your site to the 
map. Field Day 2014 is June 28-29.

Getting It Right!

ZS1AN (left) and ZS1AU celebrate. [Dennis Wells, ZS1AU, photo]

The article "Mellish Reef DXpedition Yields to Weather," which appeared 
in the April 10, 2014, edition of /The ARRL Letter/, contained incorrect 
information. The article should have read, "Team Mellish said that 
before shutting down, it was able to give an elderly South Africa radio 
amateur his last one for top of the DXCC Honor Roll." The unnamed South 
African ham was Dennis Wells, ZS1AU, a member of both the South African 
Radio League (SARL <http://www.sarl.org.za>) and the ARRL, and he has 
been licensed since 1950. /-- Thanks to Dennis Wells, ZS1AU/

The announcement "W1AW Centennial Operations Shift States on April 9," 
which appeared in the April 10 edition of /The ARRL Letter/, should have 
read "...Shift States on April 16" and indicated that the ARRL 
Centennial W1AW WAS 
<http://www.arrl.org/files/file/On%20the%20Air/W1AW_2014_sked.pdf> 
operations in Massachusetts, Virginia, and Puerto Rico would relocate at 
0000 UTC on Wednesday, April 16 (the evening of April 15 in US time 
zones), to Mississippi (W1AW/5) and North Dakota (W1AW/0).

------------------------------------------------------------------------
The K7RA Solar Update

After a few days in the doldrums April 8-13, solar activity made a 
strong recovery over the 3 days following, with daily sunspot numbers of 
105, 149, and 245. Sunspot numbers have topped 200 several times in the 
past 12 months. For example, on February 28, the daily sunspot number 
reached 279, and last November 17, it hit 282.

The average daily sunspot number was actually down this week compared to 
last -- from 129.3 to 118.4. Average daily solar flux rose from 142.2 to 
149.1. April 12 was geomagnetically active, and the planetary A index 
reached 25, the result of a solar wind stream.

[SOHO image]

Solar flux was predicted to be 190 for April 17-19, 185, 180, and 175 
for April 20-22, 170 for April 23-24, 140 for April 25-27, 130 for April 
28-29, 125 for April 30, 120 on May 1-2, 125 for May 3-5, and then 
peaking at 145 for May 12-19.

Predicted planetary A index is 8 for April 17-18, 5 for April 19-May 10, 
8 for May 11-12, and then 5 for the remaining days of the 45 day 
forecast period.

For the first time in many years, WWV again is transmitting on 25 MHz on 
an experimental basis. David Crawford, KF4VXJ, in North Carolina 
reported hearing the 25 MHz signal on April 10 at 2118 UTC with some 
fading, the signal strength varying from S-5 to S-8. He included this in 
a reception report to WWV.

In its reply NIST recounted that WWV first began broadcasting on 25 MHz 
in 1946, but suspended that broadcast in 1977. "Due to listener interest 
and changes in broadcasting technology, NIST is pleased to be able to 
provide this service on a limited basis once again," NIST said. Visit 
the WWV website <http://www.nist.gov/pml/div688/grp40/wwv.cfm> for the 
latest status of the 25 MHz transmission.

Sunspot numbers for April 10-16 were 78, 83, 74, 95, 105, 149, and 245, 
with a mean of 118.4. The 10.7 cm flux was 136.7, 137.6, 135.9, 137.1, 
150.3, 161.9, and 183.9, with a mean of 149.1.

Estimated planetary A indices were 3, 8, 25, 16, 8, 6, and 5, with a 
mean of 10.1. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 4, 7, 16, 13, 7, 5, 
and 5, with a mean of 8.1.

The latest bulletin and an archive 
<http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation> of past propagation 
bulletins are on the ARRL website.

Send <mailto:k7ra at arrl.net> me /your/ reports and observations.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Just Ahead in Radiosport

Apr 18-19 -- Holyland DX Contest

Apr 19 -- TARA Skirmish Digital Prefix Contest

Apr 19 -- ES Open HF Championship

Apr 19 -- EU Spring Sprints

Apr 19 -- Ontario QSO Party

Apr 19 -- Feld-Hell New Member Sprint

Apr 19-20 -- YU DX Contest

Apr 19-20 -- Worked All Provinces of China

Apr 19-20 -- CQMM DX Contest

Apr 19-20 -- Michigan QSO Party

Apr 19-20 -- EA QRP Contest

Apr 19-20 -- Nebraska QSO Party

Apr 19-20 -- North Dakota QSO Party

*Apr 20 -- ARRL Rookie Roundup (SSB)*

Apr 21 -- Run For the Bacon

Apr 21 -- Low Power Spring Sprint

Apr 23 -- VHF Spring Sprints

Apr 26 -- Florida QSO Party

Apr 26-27 -- Ten-Ten Spring Digital Contest

Apr 26-27 -- SP DX RTTY Contest

Apr 26-27 -- Helvetia Contest

Apr 27 -- BARTG 75 Sprint

Visit the Contest Calendar <http://www.arrl.org/contest-calendar> for 
details.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upcoming ARRL Section, State and Division Conventions and Events

April 19 -- Roanoke Division Convention <http://www.rars.org/hamfest>, 
Raleigh, North Carolina

April 25-27 -- Idaho State Convention 
<http://www.idahostateconvention.com/>, Boise, Idaho

April 26 -- Aurora '14 Conference <http://www.nlrs.org/>, White Bear 
Lake, Minnesota

May 3 -- South Carolina Section Convention <http://www.brars.org/>, 
Spartanburg, South Carolina

May 16-18 -- Dayton Hamvention <http://www.hamvention.org/> -- Regional 
ARRL Centennial Event, Dayton, Ohio

May 30-Jun 1 Nevada State Convention <http://nvcon.org/>, Virginia City, 
Nevada

Jun 6-8 Northwestern Division Convention <http://www.seapac.org/> 
(SeaPac) -- Regional ARRL Centennial Event, Seaside, Oregon

Jun 7 Georgia Section Convention <http://www.atlantahamfest.org/> 
(Atlanta Hamfest), Marietta, Georgia

Jun 13-14 Ham-Com <http://www.hamcom.org/>, Regional ARRL Centennial 
Event, Plano, Texas

Jun 14 Western Pennsylvania ARES Emcomm Conference 
<http://wpaares.org/>, Johnstown, Pennsylvania

Jun 14 Tennessee State Convention <http://www.w4bbb.org/> (Knoxville 
Hamfest), Knoxville, Tennessee

Jun 27-29 HAM RADIO International Exhibition for Radio Amateurs 
<http://www.hamradio-friedrichshafen.de/ham-en/>, Friedrichshafen, Germany

July 5 Eastern Pennsylvania Section Convention <http://www.w3uu.org>, 
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

July 9-12 Mobile Amateur Radio Awards National Convention 
<http://marac.org/2014registration.pdf>, Visalia, California

July 17-19 ARRL National Centennial Convention <http://arrl2014.org>, 
Hartford, Connecticut

July 18-19 Arizona State Convention <http://www.arca-az.org>, Williams, 
Arizona

July 18-20 Montana State Convention <http://www.gwhamfest.org/>, East 
Glacier, Montana

July 24-27 Central States VHF Society Convention 
<http://www.csvhfs.org/2014conference/>, Austin, Texas

July 25-26 Oklahoma State Convention <http://www.hamholiday.org>, 
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Find conventions and hamfests in your area <http://www.arrl.org/hamfests>.

**

**

*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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