From w8ter at bex.net Thu Oct 16 05:55:21 2014
From: w8ter at bex.net (Stephen Bellner)
Date: Thu, 16 Oct 2014 05:55:21 -0400
Subject: [TMRA] Test MARS-ARES Interoperability
Message-ID: <543F9609.3000702@bex.net>
Late October Exercise to Test MARS-ARES Interoperability
US Army and Air Force Military Auxiliary Radio Service (MARS) stations
will participate in a 48-hour nationwide contingency communication
exercise on October 27 and 28 as part of an effort to develop greater
cooperation between the Department of Defense (DoD) sponsored MARS
program and the Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES). MARS is
encouraging its members to discuss communication interoperability in
advance of the exercise with their ARES section and district or local
emergency coordinators.
"This communications exercise is sponsored by the DoD to provide MARS
operators the opportunity to develop and train interoperability
procedures with their state/local ARES emergency coordinators and their
Amateur Radio colleagues," explained Army MARS Program Manager Paul
English, WD8DBY. He told ARRL that the DoD/MARS exercise has "full
participation" from Army and Air Force MARS, and that he anticipates
that some individual Navy MARS members may participate as well.
The plan calls for MARS members, using their Amateur Radio call signs
and operating on amateur frequencies, to establish two-way communication
with ARES leadership or members in as many US counties as possible by
using VHF/UHF simplex channels or local repeaters or near vertical
incidence skywave (NVIS) propagation on HF. "The contact can be with any
amateur in the county, if an ARES member or leader is not available,"
English added.
"Ultimately we would like the MARS operator to join an existing ARES
net, if one is operational during the exercise," English said. If no net
is available, MARS members should come up on local repeaters or check
into HF traffic nets to see what amateurs are available and to determine
their counties. "We want to use existing net times and frequencies to
the extent possible," English continued. "Any mode of operation is fine."
Only one ARES/Amateur Radio contact per county is needed, but more are
okay. The contact must be person to person and cannot rely on
Internet-linked repeaters, Internet connectivity systems, or
store-and-forward e-mail systems, such as /Winlink/
, English said.
The information exchange requested from ARES for each county is the
county name and the county Federal Information Processing Standards
(FIPS ) code, if
available.
There are two preferred windows of opportunity to conduct the
interoperability exercise. These are from 1201 to 1800 UTC on October
27, and from 0001 to 0600 UTC on October 28.
Contact Paul English, WD8DBY, for
more information. - /Thanks to the ARRL Letter/