[SFDXA] The ARRL Letter for September 22, 2016

Bill bmarx at bellsouth.net
Fri Sep 23 08:34:40 EDT 2016


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The ARRL Letter

September 22, 2016
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/>

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  * Momentum Building to Urge Senate Passage of the Amateur Radio Parity
    Act <#toc01>
  * AT&T's New "AirGig" is /Not/ Your Father's BPL <#toc02>
  * /Get Set for the SET/ : ARRL 2016 Simulated Emergency Test is
    October 1-2 Weekend <#toc03>
  * The Doctor Will See You Now! <#toc04>
  * National Parks on the Air Update <#toc05>
  * A Record Breaker on 630 Meters! <#toc06>
  * "Cows Over the World" DXpedition Tour to Resume <#toc07>
  * FCC Updates Notice on Amateur Radio Operation in CEPT Countries <#toc08>
  * Limor Fried, AC2SN, Named Among Most Influential Women in Internet
    of Things Industry <#toc09>
  * World War II Norwegian Resistance Member Haakon Sørbye, LA8Y, SK
    <#toc10>
  * Past ARRL Oregon Section Manager Randy Stimson, KZ7T, SK <#toc11>
  * In Brief... <#toc12>
  * The K7RA Solar Update <#toc13>
  * Just Ahead in Radiosport <#toc14>
  * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions <#toc15>

Momentum Building to Urge Senate Passage of the Amateur Radio Parity Act

The response to ARRL's call to action urging the support of US Senators 
for the Amateur Radio Parity Act, H.R. 1301 
<http://www.arrl.org/amateur-radio-parity-act>, has been gratifying -- 
although the campaign continues. More than 50,000 e-mails have been sent 
to Capitol Hill via Rally Congress 
<https://arrl.rallycongress.net/ctas/urge-senate-to-support-amateur-radio-parity-act>, 
and all 100 US Senate members have been contacted. The League continues 
to encourage members of the Amateur Radio community who have not yet 
done so to reach out to their two US Senators seeking their support. 
Just where things stand with respect to the bill's future in the US 
Senate is not yet entirely clear.

"As of this moment, we have no date set for action by the Senate," said 
ARRL Hudson Division Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB, who has been deeply 
involved in promoting passage of the legislation. "The Senate will 
adjourn the September work period soon and members will return home to 
campaign. If we do not achieve consideration before they go into hiatus, 
we will have to wait until they return after Election Day."

On September 12, the US House of Representatives approved 
<https://soundcloud.com/user-731126960/house-vote-on-hr-1301-sept-12-2016-from-cspan> 
H.R. 1301 on a voice vote under a suspension of the rules, culminating 
many years of effort on ARRL's part to gain legislation that would 
enable radio amateurs living in deed-restricted communities to erect 
antennas that support Amateur Radio communication. The bill calls on the 
FCC to amend its Part 97 rules "to prohibit the application to amateur 
stations of certain private land-use restrictions, and for other purposes."

Shepherded by ARRL, the overwhelming grassroots support for H.R. 1301 
from the Amateur Radio community was credited for getting the bill 
through the US House, but it faces significant obstacles to passage in 
the US Senate. The earlier US Senate version of the bill, S. 1685, no 
longer is in play, and the Senate is expected to vote on the version of 
H.R. 1301 that the House adopted this month. The vote came after ARRL 
worked with the Community Association Institute -- which represents 
homeowners associations -- to develop language that both organizations 
could support.

Rally Congress makes it easy to generate letters to Senators in support 
of The Amateur Radio Parity Act. The entire process takes just a couple 
of minutes.

"So it is critical that ARRL members continue to write their Senators," 
Lisenco urged. "To those who have already written, thank you! If you 
haven't done so already, please do so today. We can only do so much. 
After that, it becomes the responsibility of the membership to participate."

As the amended bill 
<http://www.arrl.org/files/file/Regulatory/ParityAct-SubstituteBill-Official-2016.pdf> 
provides, "Community associations should fairly administer private 
land-use regulations in the interest of their communities, while 
nevertheless permitting the installation and maintenance of effective 
outdoor Amateur Radio antennas. There exist antenna designs and 
installations that can be consistent with the aesthetics and physical 
characteristics of land and structures in community associations while 
accommodating communications in the Amateur Radio services."

More information <http://www.arrl.org/amateur-radio-parity-act> on The 
Amateur Radio Parity Act is on the ARRL website.

AT&T's New "AirGig" is /Not/ Your Father's BPL

Recalling the earlier efforts of the FCC and telecommunications and 
utility interests to roll out "Broadband over Power Line" (BPL 
<http://www.arrl.org/broadband-over-powerline-bpl>) technology, the 
Amateur Radio community has been buzzing with questions about AT&T's 
just-announced "AirGig 
<http://about.att.com/newsroom/att_to_test_delivering_multi_gigabit_wireless_internet_speeds_using_power_lines.html>" 
BPL plan to make broadband available via apparently similar technology. 
ARRL's earlier anti-BPL campaign, and market forces, eventually led to 
the demise of the prior BPL initiative. ARRL Laboratory Manager Ed Hare, 
W1RFI, who spearheaded the earlier effort to quantify BPL's threat to 
Amateur Radio's HF spectrum and remains the resident expert on the 
subject, said this newest BPL incarnation should /not/ pose an 
interference issue for radio amateurs.

*The "old" BPL technology, seen here, employed frequencies in the HF range.*

"This technology uses millimeter-wave RF signals (30 GHz to 300 GHz) 
coupled onto the surface of power lines to transmit the signal along the 
line with relatively low losses," Hare explained. "After looking at this 
technology, it looks nothing like the type of HF and VHF BPL that caused 
us so many problems years ago. The sky is not falling."

Hare added that it is not likely that the AT&T technology will even use 
Amateur Radio bands, so there is little reason for concern even among 
those amateurs who use spectrum above 24 GHz.

According to AT&T's September 20 announcement, the company is "deep in 
the experimentation phase" of the developing technology, which it says 
would be "easier to deploy than fiber, can run over license-free 
spectrum, and can deliver ultra-fast wireless connectivity to any home 
or handheld wireless device." AT&T said its initial -- and continuing -- 
testing at AT&T outdoor facilities "has been positive," and initial 
field trials are set to begin in 2017.

Hare said the League will keep an eye and ear out for interference 
problems, but he believes that the frequencies involved and the fact 
that these signals should not propagate far from the lines will pose 
little risk to the Amateur Radio Service. Read more 
<http://www.arrl.org/news/at-t-s-new-airgig-not-your-father-s-bpl>.

/Get Set for the SET/: ARRL 2016 Simulated Emergency Test is October 1-2 
Weekend

The primary focal point of the 2016 ARRL Simulated Emergency Test (SET) 
is just ahead -- Saturday and Sunday, October 1 and 2. The national 
emergency exercise is aimed at testing the skills and preparedness of 
the Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) and other organizations that 
are called into action in actual emergency situations.

"Every local ARES team and/or ARRL Section will come up with their own 
scenarios and work with served agencies and partner organizations 
<http://www.arrl.org/served-agencies-and-partners> during the SET," ARRL 
Field Organization Team Supervisor Steve Ewald, WV1X, said, noting that 
not all SETs will take place on October 1 and 2.

*During the Cascadia Rising earthquake exercise in the Pacific 
Northwest, Island County Amateur Radio Club members John Acton, K7ACT 
(seated, in yellow vest), types a Red Cross emergency message via a 2 
meter packet link, while Bill Frederick, KF7BMK (standing, with 
handheld), monitors a VHF simplex voice net at a field triage and 
treatment facility on Whidbey Island. Red Cross volunteers Kendra 
O'Bryan (left) and Patty Cheek (right) help coordinate the message 
traffic flow. [Vince Bond, K7NA, photo]*

"SETs can be scheduled at the local and Section levels and conducted 
throughout the fall to help maximize participation," he said. "But ARRL 
Field Organization leaders have the option of conducting their SETs on 
another weekend, if October 1 and 2 is not convenient."

ARRL Field Organization leaders are among those tasked with developing 
plans and scenarios for this year's SET, Ewald explained.

"The SET invites all radio amateurs to become aware of emergency 
preparedness and available training," Ewald said. "ARES, Radio Amateur 
Civil Emergency Service (RACES), National Traffic System^™ , SKYWARN, 
Community Emergency Response Team (CERT), Salvation Army Team Emergency 
Radio Network (SATERN), and other allied groups and public 
service-oriented radio amateurs are encouraged to participate."

The object of the annual nationwide exercise is to test training and 
skills and to try out new methods.

"It's a time to work with partner organizations and served agencies to 
get to know them better and to determine their needs /before/ an 
emergency or disaster strikes," Ewald said. "Knowing who to contact 
within partner groups and knowing the planned procedures will help 
everyone to accomplish their goals and succeed in their missions.

To get involved, contact your local ARRL Emergency Coordinator or Net 
Manager. See the ARRL Sections <http://www.arrl.org/groups/sections> web 
pages or your ARRL Section Manager (see page 16 of /QST/ for contact 
information). Read more 
<http://www.arrl.org/news/get-set-for-the-set-arrl-2016-simulated-emergency-test-is-october-1-2-weekend>.

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The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Coping with the Solar Minimum" is the topic of the latest (September 
22) episode of the "ARRL The Doctor is In <http://www.arrl.org/doctor>" 
podcast. Listen...and learn!

Sponsored by DX Engineering <http://www.dxengineering.com/>, "ARRL The 
Doctor is In" is an informative discussion of all things technical. 
Listen on your computer, tablet, or smartphone -- whenever and wherever 
you like!

Every 2 weeks, your host, /QST/ Editor in Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and 
the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of 
technical topics. You can also e-mail your questions to doctor at arrl.org 
<mailto:doctor at arrl.org>, and the Doctor may answer them in a future 
podcast.

Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes 
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/arrl-the-doctor-is-in/id1096749595?mt=2>, 
or by using your iPhone or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The 
Doctor is In"). You can also listen online at Blubrry 
<https://www.blubrry.com/arrl_the_doctor_is_in/>, or at Stitcher 
<https://www.stitcher.com/> (free registration required, or browse the 
site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher app for iOS, Kindle, or 
Android devices.

If you've never listened to a podcast before, download our beginner's 
guide <http://www.arrl.org/doctor>.

National Parks on the Air Update

More than 650,000 contacts have been logged for ARRL's National Parks on 
the Air (NPOTA <https://npota.arrl.org/>) program. This comes from over 
12,000 different activations of over 450 eligible NPOTA units from 1,178 
Activators.

One of those activators is Bob Voss, N4CD. Bob is incredibly active in 
county hunting, and has transmitted from all 3077 US counties /twice/. 
Bob has also been an NPOTA road warrior, activating better than 230 
unique NPOTA units from his mobile station. Bob is wrapping up another 
of his multi-state trips, with activations from Louisiana to the Eastern 
Seaboard. Look for him this weekend from the Washington, DC area; he 
says he'll probably head out on another NPOTA adventure in November.

Fifty activations are slated for September 22-28, including Chaco 
Culture National Historical Park in New Mexico, and Canyonlands National 
Park in Utah.

Details <https://npota.arrl.org/nps-events.php> about these and other 
upcoming activations can be found on the NPOTA Activations calendar.

Keep up with the latest NPOTA news on Facebook 
<https://www.facebook.com/groups/NPOTA/>. Follow NPOTA on Twitter 
<http://www.twitter.com/> (@ARRL_NPOTA).

A Record Breaker on 630 Meters!

Although US radio amateurs do not yet have access to 630 meters, 
Canadian licensees do, and one of them was on the North American end of 
the first two-way contact on that band between Canada and Australia. 
Steve McDonald, VE7SL, in British Columbia, and Roger Crofts, VK4YB, in 
Queensland, completed a contact on September 15 between 1225 and 1319 
UTC using JT9 <http://www.arrl.org/have-a-great-time-with-jt9> digital 
mode. The distance covered was on the order of 7000 miles.

*The /WJST/ screen and waterfall at the VE7SL end of the 630 meter contact.*

"This morning a historic QSO for the Amateur Service was completed!" 
commented John Langridge, KB5NJD, who also holds an FCC Part 5 
Experimental license, WG2XIQ. "This is also the longest two-way QSO on 
630 meters ever completed." The contact took place on 474.300 kHz.

McDonald said band conditions were just good enough to get the job done. 
"Well, it wasn't pretty as in 'pretty-quick,' but it's done," he told 
Langridge in recounting the contact. McDonald told ARRL that the band 
"was not particularly good this far north and was much better just a few 
hundred miles to my south," but had been improving "little by little."

Crofts agreed that he and McDonald had a tough time of it. "It was a 
real struggle, but finally got there," he told Langridge in an e-mail. 
"I thought we were going to miss out, because all the big signals had 
taken a dive. Obviously the path to VE7 was still hanging in there."

*The modest MF antenna at VE7SL. [Steve McDonald, VE7SL, photo]*

McDonald said his antenna is "basically about the size of a 160 meter 
inverted L, but over extremely poor ground," while Crofts, with what 
McDonald described as "a monster antenna" was doing the heavy lifting 
for the contact. McDonald was using a transverter that VK4YB had sent 
him for beta testing, driving an LF MOSFET amplifier converted for 630 
meter use.

Meanwhile. Joe Lowe, NU6O, in California, reports that VK4YB also heard 
his WI2XBQ Experimental Service beacon on September 14. "I was running 
0.5 W ERP, 50 W TPO, into a 43-foot vertical in the backyard," he told 
ARRL. "Very low power and simple equipment are capable of DX on 630 
meters!" Lowe said he was using /WSPR/ mode.

An April 2015 FCC /Report and Order, Order, and Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking /(/R&O/NPRM/ 
<http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/comment/view?id=60001030137>) proposed a new 
secondary 630 meter MF allocation at 472 to 479 kHz to Amateur Radio, 
implementing decisions made at WRC-12. It also allocated 135.7 to 137.8 
kHz to the Amateur Service on a secondary basis. A /Report and Order/ is 
pending.

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&t=i&i=2016-09-22&p=1>
"Cows Over the World" DXpedition Tour to Resume

Tom Callas, KC0W, reports his all-CW "Cows Over the World" DXpeditions 
will resume with his T30COW operation from Western Kiribati, September 
25-October 24.

"My proposed 'Top 25 Most Wanted' DXpeditions is not going to happen," 
he said on his QRZ.com page <https://www.qrz.com/db/kc0w>. "Sorry for 
getting anyone's hopes up."

He's still awaiting permission to operate from Tokelau and Nauru. Callas 
said all requests to visit Tokelau (ZK3) are reviewed by tribal elders, 
a process that "takes a long time," he said in a September 20 update to 
his QRZ.com page.

"If no firm progress has been made by December, I will DX from Nauru 
until -- hopefully -- I receive the official okay to visit Tokelau," he 
said. If he has to wait longer than that, he will operate from Fiji, 
taking advantage of the 3D2KOW license he's been issued for a DXpedition 
in 2017.

He expects to be in the Solomon Islands, operating as H44COW from 
October 25 to November 26.

Callas runs 500 W into vertical antennas over salt water, and is active 
in all major CW contests. He updates his activities on QRZ.com. QSL 
direct via KC0W only. A log search will be available on ClubLog 
<http://www.clublog.org/>./-- Thanks to Southgate Amateur Radio News via 
OPDX; /The Daily DX <http://www.dailydx.com>

FCC Updates Notice on Amateur Radio Operation in CEPT Countries

The FCC has updated its /Public Notice 
<https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-16-1048A1.pdf>/ on 
Amateur Radio operation in European Conference of Postal and 
Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT <http://www.cept.org/>) 
countries that have adopted certain recommendations regarding the US. 
The updated notice, in English, German, and French, includes some 
additional countries where operation is permitted. Licensees operating 
in CEPT countries must have a copy of the /Public Notice/, proof of US 
citizenship, and evidence of an FCC Amateur Radio license grant. These 
must be shown to "proper authorities" upon request.

Subject to regulations in force in the country visited, a US citizen 
holding an FCC General, Advanced, or Amateur Extra Class Amateur Radio 
license grant "is authorized to utilize temporarily an Amateur Station 
in a [CEPT] country that has implemented certain recommendations with 
respect to the United States."

Advanced or Amateur Extra class operators are granted CEPT Radio Amateur 
License privileges, in accordance with CEPT /Recommendation T/R 61-01 
<http://www.erodocdb.dk/docs/doc98/official/pdf/TR6101.pdf>/ (as 
amended). General class operators are granted CEPT Novice Radio Amateur 
License privileges, in accordance with ECC /Recommendation (05)06 
<http://www.erodocdb.dk/docs/doc98/official/pdf/rec0506.pdf>/ (as amended).

The /Public Notice 
<https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-16-1048A1.pdf> 
/includes complete details. Read more 
<http://www.arrl.org/news/fcc-updates-notice-on-amateur-radio-operation-in-cept-countries>.

Limor Fried, AC2SN, Named Among Most Influential Women in Internet of 
Things Industry

The Internet of Things (IoT) Institute has named ARRL member Limor 
Fried, AC2SN, of New York City as one of the 25 most influential women 
<http://www.ioti.com/iot-trends-and-analysis/25-most-influential-women-iot> 
in the IoT industry. IoT embraces the concept of connecting devices from 
cell phones to appliances and machine components to the Internet and/or 
to each other. Individuals were named on the basis of attainment of 
leadership roles related to IoT, hands-on experience developing IoT 
technology, outstanding research related to IoT, and social reach, among 
other factors.

*Limor Fried, AC2SN, during a tour of her factory in 2015.*

Fried founded the open-source hardware firm Adafruit 
<https://www.adafruit.com/about> from her MIT dorm room in 2005. The 
Manhattan-based company, which now employs more than 50 people, offers 
tools, equipment, and electronic components targeted at the "maker" 
audience, including IoT technology. She was the first female engineer to 
appear on the cover of /WIRED /and was /Entrepreneur/ magazine's 
Entrepreneur of the Year for 2012.

In June, Fried was designated as a White House Champion of Change. As 
Adafruit's sole owner, Fried has become known for creating resources for 
and supporting the learning of electronics for makers of all ages and 
skill levels.

Ad <http://www.arrl.org/nladclick.php?n=al&t=i&i=2016-09-22&p=2>
World War II Norwegian Resistance Member Haakon Sørbye, LA8Y, SK

World War II Norwegian resistance activist Haakon Sørbye, LA8Y, of 
Trondheim, Norway, died on September 15. He was 96. In 1939, the year 
after World War II erupted in Europe, Sørbye, then an engineering 
student and young radio amateur, first enlisted as a telegrapher in the 
Norwegian military.

*Haakon Sørbye, LA8Y.*

After Norway surrendered to the Nazis, he joined the Norwegian 
resistance and became part of the "Skylark B" group -- one of two radio 
communication teams that relayed to London information on the movement 
of German troops and supplies. The mostly student Skylark B team also 
alerted London when the Germans captured the world's first plant to 
mass-produce heavy water -- a building block for the atomic bomb.

Most Skylark B members eventually were arrested by the Nazis, and seven 
of them died in extermination camps. Sørbye survived, however, and was 
rescued by the "White Buses" -- an operation carried out by Swedish Red 
Cross members in early 1945 that saved more than 15,000 concentration 
camp survivors.

Following the war, Sørbye returned to school, eventually becoming a 
professor of telematics at the Norwegian Institute of Technology. In 
addition to the Defence Medal awarded to military and civilian personnel 
who took part in fighting the German invasion and occupation of Norway, 
he was decorated with the King's Medal for Courage in the Cause of 
Freedom./-- Thanks to Pete Varounis, NL7XM/

Past ARRL Oregon Section Manager Randy Stimson, KZ7T, SK

Former ARRL Oregon Section Manager Randy Stimson, KZ7T, died on 
September 10, after a period of declining health. He was 82. Stimson 
served as Oregon SM from 1987 until 1998. In 2003, he was appointed to 
fill a vacancy in the SM post.

He was elected to the position in 2004, and he served until 2006, making 
him Oregon's longest-serving SM. In addition to ham radio, Stimson was 
active for many years in Cycle Oregon.

A service will be held in Spokane, Washington, on September 24. /-- 
Thanks to Everett Curry, W6ABM/

In Brief...

*Amateur Radio-Military Interoperability Exercise Set for October 
31-November 1:* An Amateur Radio-military interoperability exercise will 
take place October 31-November 1. The event will begin at 1200 UTC on 
October 31 and continue through 2359 UTC on November 1 on 60 meter 
channels 1-4 --5.3305 MHz, 5.3465 MHz, 5.357 MHz, and 5.3715 MHz, 
respectively. During this exercise, military stations will attempt to 
make radio contact with stations in as many of the 3077 US counties as 
possible. Radio amateurs providing "county status" information will 
receive a US Department of Defense "interoperability QSL card." For more 
information, contact <mailto:mars.exercises at gmail.com> the Military 
Auxiliary Radio Service (MARS).

*New Section Manager Appointed in Northern New Jersey:* Steve Ostrove, 
K2SO, of Elizabeth, New Jersey, was appointed as ARRL Northern New 
Jersey Section Manager, effective September 16. He takes the reins of 
the Northern New Jersey Field Organization after Richard Krohn, N2SMV, 
announced his resignation after serving as SM since July 2008. ARRL 
Field Services and Radiosport Manager Dave Patton, NN1N, received 
Krohn's resignation and recommendation for his replacement and consulted 
with ARRL Hudson Division Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB, before making 
the appointment. Ostrove will complete the current term of office that 
extends until June 30, 2017. Ostrove has served as Assistant Section 
Manager in Northern New Jersey since 2009, and was the Section Emergency 
Coordinator from 2001 through 2008. He is a District Emergency 
Coordinator, Official Emergency Station, and Official Relay Station.

*Kentucky Lieutenant Governor and Radio Amateur Talks Ham Radio during 
Hamfest, Interview:* ARRL member Jenean Hampton, K5EIB, the relatively 
new Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky, was a guest of honor at the Greater 
Louisville Hamfest <http://louisvillehamfest.com/> on September 10. She 
told attendees that her duties as Lieutenant Governor did not let her be 
as involved in ham radio as she would like, but she does keep a 2 meter 
handheld transceiver with her because, she explained, "It's important to 
always be prepared in the event of an emergency." Lt Gov Hampton was 
interviewed <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lb3gg6ommXE> by Katie 
Allen, WY7YL, for /Amateur Radio Roundtable/ on August 23. She told 
Allen that she's really looking forward to getting some "serious 
equipment" and that not having time for ham radio is one of the things 
she regrets about her life in politics.

*Expedition 49 crew members (L-R) Shane Kimbrough, KE5HOD; Sergey 
Ryzhikov, and Andrey Borisenko. [NASA photo by Victor Zelentsov]*

*One Radio Amateur Among Expedition 49/50 Crew Members Headed to ISS:* 
Three Expedition 49/50 crew members will head to the International Space 
Station on Friday, September 23. Astronaut Shane Kimbrough, KE5HOD, and 
cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko will head into space 
from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. They will spend 
approximately 5 months aboard the orbital complex before returning to 
Earth in late February. Kimbrough, Ryzhikov, and Borisenko will join 
Expedition 49 Commander Anatoly Ivanishin and his crewmates -- Kate 
Rubins, KG5FYJ, and Takuya Onishi, KF5LKS, who have been on station 
since July. Between launch and docking, the trio will spend 2 days in 
the /Soyuz/ MS-02, testing system upgrades. NASA TV 
<http://www.nasa.gov/nasatv> will provide live coverage of the launch 
and docking.

*ARRL November Sweepstakes Operating Period is 30 Hours:* The 2016 ARRL 
November Sweepstakes <http://www.arrl.org/sweepstakes> announcement that 
appears on page 94 of the October 2016 issue of /QST /incorrectly 
indicates the period of the event. The ARRL November Sweepstakes runs 
for 30 hours, and participants may operate for 24 out of the 30 hours. 
The CW event is November 5-7; the phone event is November 19-21.

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

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Sunspot numbers and solar flux were 
down over our September 15-21 reporting week. The average daily sunspot 
number was 29.9, down from 50.1 during the previous 7 days. Average 
daily solar flux dipped from 88.9 to 83.4.

Geomagnetic indices were up a bit, with the average daily planetary A 
index rising from 6.7 to 8.9, and the average daily mid-latitude A index 
moving from 6.1 to 7.6. The predicted average planetary A index for the 
next 7 days is expected to rise to 13.1, and the average solar flux to 
86.4, according to the latest 45-day outlook.

Predicted solar flux is 85 on September 22-24; 90 on September 25-26; 85 
on September 27-29; 95 on September 30-October 2; 90 on October 3-6; 85 
on October 7-13; 80 on October 14-15; 85 on October 16-20; 88, 90, and 
95 on October 21-23; 100 on October 24-27, and 95 on October 28-29.

The predicted planetary A index is 8 on September 22-23; 5, 8, 18, and 
10 on October 24-27; 35 on September 28-29; 32 on September 30; 30 and 
18 on October 1-2; 15 on October 3-5; 5 on October 6-15; 18, 20, 12, and 
8 on October 16-19; 5 on October 20-22; 15 and 10 on October 23-24, and 
35 on October 25-27.

Thursday, September 22 is the autumnal equinox, and the first day of 
fall. This should herald better HF propagation than we've seen in the 
past couple of months, and Spaceweather.com 
<http://www.spaceweather.com/> reports 
<http://news.spaceweather.com/autumn-is-aurora-season/> that this is 
also the start of the aurora season.

Sunspot numbers for September 15 through 21 were 12, 13, 14, 47, 56, 32, 
and 35, with a mean of 29.9. The 10.7 centimeter flux was 84.4, 83.7, 
80.3, 83, 82.6, 84.5, and 85.5, with a mean of 83.4. Estimated planetary 
A indices were 7, 3, 4, 9, 10, 19, and 10, with a mean of 8.9. Estimated 
mid-latitude A indices were 6, 3, 4, 8, 8, 15, and 9, with a mean of 7.6.

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

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

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Just Ahead in Radiosport

  *

    September 24 -- RSGB International Sprint (CW)

  *

    September 24 -- AGCW VHF/UHF Contest (CW)

  *

    *September 24-25 -- **ARRL EME Contest
    <http://www.arrl.org/eme-contest>**(CW, phone, digital)*

  *

    September 24-25 --CQ World Wide DX Contest (RTTY)

  *

    September 24-25 -- Maine QSO Party (CW, phone)

  *

    September 24-25 -- Texas QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

  *

    September 25 -- UBA ON Contest, 6 meters (CW, phone)

  *

    September 25-28 -- Classic Exchange (Phone)

  *

    September 25 -- Peanut Power QRP Sprint (CW, phone)

  *

    September 27 -- 220 MHz Fall Sprint (CW, phone)

  *

    September 28 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)

  *

    September 28 -- UKEICC 80 Meter Contest (CW)

  *

    September 29 -- RSGB 80 Meter Club Sprint (CW)

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

  *

    September 23-24 -- W4DXCC Convention <http://www.w4dxcc.com/>,
    Pigeon Forge, Tennessee

  *

    September 24 -- San Joaquin Valley Section Convention
    <http://www.fcemcomm.org/>, Modesto, California

  *

    September 24 -- North Dakota State Convention
    <http://www.rrra.org/>, West Fargo, North Dakota

  *

    September 24 -- Washington State Convention <http://kbara.org/>,
    Spokane Valley, Washington

  *

    October 7-8 -- Florida State Convention <http://pcars.org/>,
    Melbourne, Florida

  *

    October 7-8 -- Pacific Northwest VHF Conference
    <http://pnwvhfs.org/>, Bend, Oregon

  *

    October 13-15 -- Microwave Update Conference
    <http://www.microwaveupdate.org/>, St Louis, Missouri

  *

    October 14-16 -- Pacific Division Convention
    <http://www.pacificon.org/>, San Ramon, California

  *

    October 16 -- Connecticut State Convention
    <http://nutmeghamfest.com/>, Meriden, Connecticut

  *

    October 21-22 -- Arizona State Convention <http://copahams.org/>,
    Maricopa, Arizona

  *

    October 22 -- Wisconsin ARES/RACES Conference
    <http://www.wi-aresraces.org/>, Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin

  *

    November 5 -- TechFest Convention <http://na0tc.org/>, Lakewood,
    Colorado

  *

    November 5-6 -- Georgia State Convention
    <http://www.stonemountainhamfest.com/>, Lawrenceville, Georgia

  *

    November 12-13 -- Indiana State Convention
    <http://www.fortwaynehamfest.com/>, Fort Wayne, Indiana

  *

    November 19 -- Alabama State Convention
    <http://www.w4ap.org/news/Hamfest.htm>, Montgomery, Alabama

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

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

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