[v7arcssbnet] Fwd: [PPRAANet] Armed Forces Day Crossband Test
Steve Schaarschmidt
shakeastick at gmail.com
Thu May 12 00:06:03 EDT 2022
Further info... continued thanks to KDØSFY... 73, Steve KØCI
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: John Bloodgood <johnbloodgood at hotmail.com>
Date: Wed, May 11, 2022 at 12:34 PM
Subject: Re: [PPRAANet] Armed Forces Day Crossband Test
To: Frank Skinner <f_skinner at yahoo.com>, PPRAA Reflector <
ppraanet at mailman.qth.net>
Thanks for the clarification, Frank. 60 meters is indeed unique and I
should probably have used 6,897.5 kHz in my example.
Hope you get lots of contacts!
John Bloodgood, KD0SFY
________________________________
From: Frank Skinner <f_skinner at yahoo.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2022 11:48 AM
To: PPRAA Reflector <ppraanet at mailman.qth.net>; John Bloodgood <
johnbloodgood at hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: [PPRAANet] Armed Forces Day Crossband Test
John, that is a very good explanation. The exception to the Split Operation
is the 60 meter channels. These are used by Federal Agencies on a primary
basis and Amateurs on a secondary basis. The Military stations have been
granted the authority to operate on those channels for this event so it
will not be split in that case. Military stations will call and listen on
the 60 meter channel listed. This is often done during the DOD/MARS
Communication Exercises in order to reach out to the Amateur community for
information that cannot be obtained by a MARS station for various reasons.
In addition to just getting on the air and being able to talk to military
and amateur radio stations this is also somewhat of a recruiting event for
Air Force and Army MARS.
Our station at HQ NORAD / USNORTHCOM will start on the 60 meter channel
listed in the document you sent out and will move up as the day goes on.
73 Frank
K0JQZ
f_skinner at yahoo.com
On Wednesday, May 11, 2022, 11:18:03 AM MDT, John Bloodgood <
johnbloodgood at hotmail.com> wrote:
I have gotten a few messages from folks about this. Let me see if I can
provide some answers.
In the message below, it is divided into a couple parts.
The first listing of stations, call signs, and frequencies is for Voice
with a couple CW also mixed in. This is the section where it says, "The
following stations will be making two-way radiotelephone contacts with
stations in the ARS between the time periods listed on the frequencies
listed in Kilohertz below", and then it lists stations AAZ thru
SCHOOLHOUSE. This part is for two-way contacts.
The second part is a listing for CW and data modes, beginning where it says
"An AFD message will be transmitted utilizing....". This could be the M110
mode, RTTY, or CW. This part will be a broadcast.
For the two-way contacts in the first part of the message, the military
operators will be transmitting on the military/government frequencies
listed below and using their call signs. They will announce what Amateur
Radio frequencies that they will be listening to.
You would respond on that Amateur Radio frequency using your Amateur Radio
call sign.
You will need to be able to run "split" mode on your transceiver. Most
Amateur Radio HF transceivers should be able to do this. This is like
during contests or special events where the person is transmitting on one
frequency and listening "up" or "down" a specified shift.
Example: You hear AGA0WJ (NAS WHIDBEY ISLAND, WA) on 5,346.5 kHz USB. They
announce that they will be listening on 7,150.0 kHz LSB. Tune your
transmit side to 7,150 and if you have a tuner, set it for that. Receive
will stay on 5,346.5.
Hope that helps.
John Bloodgood, KD0SFY
________________________________
From: John Bloodgood
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2022 10:25 PM
To: PPRAA Reflector <ppraanet at mailman.qth.net<mailto:
ppraanet at mailman.qth.net>>
Subject: Armed Forces Day Crossband Test
ANNUAL ARMED FORCES DAY CROSSBAND TEST (14 May 2022)
The Department of Defense will host this year’s Armed Forces Day (AFD)
Crossband Test, scheduled for May
14, 2022. This annual event is open to all licensed amateur radio operators
and will not impact any public or
private communications. For more than 50 years, military and amateur
stations have taken part in this event,
which is an interoperability exercise between hobbyist and government radio
stations.
The AFD Crossband Test is a unique opportunity to test two-way
communications between military
communicators and radio stations in the Amateur Radio Service (ARS), as
authorized in 47 CFR 97.111. These
tests provide opportunities and challenges for radio operators to
demonstrate individual technical skills in a tightly
controlled exercise scenario that does not impact any public or private
communications.
Military stations will transmit on selected military frequencies and will
announce the specific ARS frequencies
monitored. All times are ZULU (Z), and all frequencies are Upper Side Band
(USB) unless otherwise noted. The
frequencies used for the test will not impact any public or private
communications and will not stray outside the
confines of the exercise.
The following stations will be making two-way radiotelephone contacts with
stations in the ARS between the
time periods listed on the frequencies listed in Kilohertz below.
AAZ / FT HUACHUCA, AZ
1500Z - 2359Z 5,330.5 kHz USB 14,579.0 kHz USB 18,211.0 kHz USB
AAC / BARROW ARMY RESERVE CENTER, KY (USB + RTTY)
1100Z - 2259Z 5,346.5 kHz USB 6,968.5 kHz USB 13,963.5 kHz USB
AAN / U.S. NORTHERN COMMAND, CO
1300Z - 1800Z 5,357.0 kHz USB 6,970.5 kHz USB 14,550.5 kHz USB
AAU / HQ US ARMY GARRISON FORT KNOX, KY (USB + RTTY)
1400Z - 1800Z 5,346.5 kHz US 7,493.5 kHz USB 14,441.5 kHz USB 18,281.5 kHz
USB
ABH / SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, HI
1900Z - 0200Z 14,512.5 kHz USB 18,254.0 kHz USB 20,997.0 kHz USB
ADB / CAMP FOSTER, OKINAWA
1500Z - 2400Z 14,487.0 kHz USB 20,994.0 kHz USB
AGA0WJ / NAS WHIDBEY ISLAND, WA
1500Z – 2400Z 5,346.5 kHz USB 6,897.5 kHz USB 13,538.5 kHz USB
AFM4NPD / NAVAL SUPPORT ACTIVITY MID-SOUTH, MILLINGTON, TN
1200Z – 2000Z 4,575.0 kHz USB 7,540.0 kHz USB 15,807.0 kHz USB 20,740.0 kHz
UBS
AAM3D / DISA CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS DIRECTORATE, FT MEADE, MD
1300Z - 2000Z 5,403.5 kHz USB 13,509.0 kHz USB 18,272.5 kHz USB
WAR / PENTAGON WASHINGTON, DC (USB + CW + RTTY)
1200Z - 2400Z 5,357.0 kHz USB 7,357.0 kHz USB 13,910.5 kHz USB 20,920.0 kHz
USB
AIR / ANDREWS AFB
1200Z - 2359Z 4,517.0 kHz USB 7,305.0 kHz USB 15,807.0 kHz USB 20,740.0 kHz
USB
AGA2SY / HANCOCK FIELD, NY
1200Z - 2359Z 4,575.0 kHz USB 7,540.0 kHz USB 13,993.0 kHz USB
AGA5SC / SCOTT AFB, IL
1600Z - 2300Z 7,305.0 kHz U 7,915.0 kHz USB 14,832.0 kHz USB 27,736.0 kHz
USB
AGA5TR / TRAVIS AFB, CA
1600Z - 2359MARSZ 4,017.0 kHz USB 7,329.0 kHz USB 13,996.0 kHz USB 14,411.0
kHz USB
MARSRADIO /
1400Z –0100Z 4,557.0 kHz USB 7,460.0 kHz USB 14,606.0 kHz USB
MARSCOMM /
1400Z – 0100Z 4,448.5 kHz USB 6,994.5.0 kHz USB 14,877.0 kHz USB
NBKJ / USS YORKTOWN PATRIOTS POINT, SC
1300Z - 2200Z 4,027.0 kHz USB 7,360.0 kHz USB 14,438.5 kHz USB
NEPM / USS IOWA BB 61 LOS ANGELES, CA (USB + CW)
1400Z - 2359Z 4,018.0 kHz USB 5,371.5 kHz USB 7,360.0 kHz USB 13,506.5 kHz
USB
18,639 kHz USB 20,518.5 kHz USB
NIIW / USS MIDWAY CV-41 SAN DIEGO, CA (USB + CW + RTTY)
0000Z – 0600Z & 1401Z -2359Z 4,003.5 kHz USB 5,403.5 kHz USB 7,357.0 kHz USB
14,383.5 kHz USB 18,293.0 kHz USB
NWVC / LST-325 EVANSVILLE, IN (USB + CW)
1200Z - 0300Z 3,325.0 kHz USB 6,913.0 kHz USB 9,988.5 kHz USB 13,974.0 kHz
USB
NSS / US NAVAL ACADEMY ANNAPOLIS, MD (USB + CW)
1300Z - 0200Z 4,038.5 kHz USB 5,330.5 kHz USB 7,533.5 kHz USB 9,947.0 kHz
USB 14,487.0 kHz USB
NAF / NEWPORT NAVAL RADIO STATION MUSEUM NEWPORT, RI (USB + CW)
1300Z - 2300Z 7,498.5 kHz USB 14,463.5 kHz USB
NMC1/ US COAST GUARD BASE ALAMEDA, CA
1700Z - 2359Z 7,351.5 kHz USB 14,459.5 kHz USB
SCHOOLHOUSE/ SAVANNAH CYBER TRAINING CENTER SAVANNAH, GA
1200Z - 1900Z 5,371.5 kHz USB 7,431.5 kHz USB 13,528.5 kHz USB
An AFD message will be transmitted utilizing the Military Standard
(MIL-STD) Serial PSK waveform
(M110) followed by MIL-STD Wide Shift FSK (850 Hz RTTY) as described in
MIL-STD 188-110A/B.
Technical information regarding these waveforms is provided at:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1pYDj7kQbm-QAyY4RPtx0dOXKohjaEjq9?usp=sharing
The AFD Sec Def Message will also be sent in Continuous Wave (CW) mode and
Radio Teletype (RRTY) at
1400Z and 2000Z on the frequency designated below.
AAZ: MILSTD110 14,579.0 kHz USB
AAU: MILSTD110 14,441.5 kHz USB
AAC: MILSTD110/RTTY 13,963.5 kHz USB
AGA0WJ: MILSTD110 13,538.5 kHz USB
ADB: MILSTD110 20,994.0 kHz USB
WAR: MILSTD110/RTTY/CW 13,910.5 kHz USB
AAM3D: MILSTD110 13,509.0 kHz USB
NEPM: RTTY 13,506.5 kHz USB
NWVC: CW 13,974.0 kHz USB
NIIW: MILSTD110/RTTY/CW 14,383.5 kHz USB
For those who wish to document their contacts with a QSL card, go to
https://www.usarmymars.org/events and
complete the request form.
>From https://www.dodmars.org/mars-comex-information-website/armed-forces-day
John Bloodgood, KD0SFY
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