• Weekly ARRL Letter

    From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to All on Friday, August 09, 2019 06:05:03
    The ARRL Letter
    August 8, 2019

    * Cape Cod ARES and SKYWARN Provide Support in Rare Cape Cod
    Tornado Event
    * Arizona ARES Volunteers Support Communication during Arizona
    Wildland Fire
    * ARRL Member Had Role in Promising RF Treatment Device for
    Alzheimer's
    * So Now What? Podcast
    * AMSAT and ARISS Designing Amateur Radio System for Lunar Gateway
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Global Institutions Support Amateur Radio Communication and
    Experimentation
    * Centenarian Mentor and Multiple Award Recipient "Fritz" Nitsch,
    W4NTO, SK
    * In Brief...
    * Getting It Right!
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
    Cape Cod ARES and SKYWARN Provide Support in Rare Cape Cod Tornado
    Event

    Cape Cod, Massachusetts, ARES, and SKYWARN Amateur Radio volunteers
    were promptly pressed into action as a storm system on July 23
    produced severe thunderstorms that spawned three tornadoes over the
    Cape. Hurricane-force wind also resulted in significant tree and
    utility wire damage across Cape Cod. Some pockets of wind damage also
    occurred in the northwest corner of Martha's Vineyard.

    Amateur Radio SKYWARN spotters were the first to provide critical
    ground truth information. Under the direction of Cape Cod District
    Emergency Coordinator Frank O'Laughlin, WQ1O, and Eastern
    Massachusetts SEC Rob Macedo, KD1CY, a SKYWARN net ran for several
    hours on a Barnstable VHF repeater, receiving numerous damage
    reports.

    Amateur Radio operations shifted to an ARES net supporting
    communication between a shelter at the Dennis-Yarmouth School and the
    Barnstable County Emergency Operations Center, which serves as the
    Multiagency Coordination Center (MACC).

    "Dozens of reports of trees and wires down and some structural damage
    reports were received during the SKYWARN net, and Amateur Radio
    operators supported initial damage assessment in the hardest hit
    areas and provided photos and videos that were shared via social
    media and other outlets," Macedo said. "This provided critical
    situational awareness and disaster information to the National
    Weather Service (NWS), state emergency management, and local media
    outlets, and helped to diagnose the areas for NWS meteorologists to
    survey to determine whether a tornado or straight-line wind damage
    occurred."

    ARES support for the Dennis-Yarmouth shelter as well as Amateur Radio
    operations at the Barnstable County MACC continued around the clock,
    with six radio amateurs engaged in shelter and EOC communications
    over the course of about 2 days. The severe weather knocked out power
    for some 53,000 customers on Cape Cod, and it took utilities several
    days to repair the damage and restore service.

    "Traffic that was handled focused on the logistics of taking care of
    people who stayed in the shelter until power restoration efforts were
    near completion," O'Laughlin explained.

    A NWS-Norton survey team consisting of several meteorologists
    surveyed the damage and confirmed three tornadoes on Cape Cod in
    addition to destructive straight-line winds. Since tornado records
    have been kept, starting in 1950, only three tornadoes have been
    recorded on Cape Cod up until last year. -- Thanks to Rob Macedo,
    KD1CY
    Arizona ARES Volunteers Support Communication during Arizona Wildland
    Fire

    Members of the Coconino County Amateur Radio Club (CARC) in Arizona
    activated on July 21 as winds accelerated the Museum Fire beyond 50
    acres, triggering the activation of the county's Emergency Operations
    Center (EOC). Members of the club, many of them ARES volunteers,
    staffed the EOC.

    Smoke from the Museum
    Fire is in the distance
    as CARC members complete
    a temporary radio setup
    for more effective
    communication. [Ken Held,
    KF7DUR, photo]

    "The club has a great working relationship with Coconino County,"
    said CARC's Public Information Officer Dan Shearer, N7YIQ. "CARC's
    ARES component has a dedicated position in the EOC structure and has
    assisted on many incidents over the last few years, providing
    communications to field personnel when cell and radio coverage is
    limited or nonexistent."

    Shearer said Amateur Radio equipment and antennas are stored at the
    EOC, and CARC members have been trained to set it up and have
    everything operational within an hour of activation.

    The fire, of undetermined origin, soon grew larger than 500 acres and
    became a top fire-fighting priority. A Type 1 incident management
    team took over management of the fire-fighting effort late on July
    22, and more than 12 Hotshot crews (teams highly trained in all
    aspects of fire management), fire engines, water tenders, and
    aircraft were engaged in suppressing the blaze. Residents in some
    neighborhoods were ordered to evacuate, although no homes and
    structures were lost. There were fears that the fire might overrun
    communications sites on Mount Elden, which include public service,
    private, and Amateur Radio repeaters.

    "The loss of one or both of these complexes would have been
    catastrophic," Shearer said. CARC members were prepared for the risk
    and quickly assembled spare equipment, including extra radios and
    repeaters.

    A very large air tanker
    completing its run
    dropping retardant on the
    radio complexes atop Mount
    Elden. [CB Johnson, NQ9C,
    photo]

    Air tankers dropped many loads of fire retardant around the repeater
    sites, and the exceptional work of the fire crews prevented the fire
    from running up the slopes to the complexes, Shearer said.

    A midweek change in the weather with substantial rain gave
    firefighters a chance to keep the blaze from crossing a fire line
    they constructed. ARES resources were released on July 26 and placed
    on standby as the fire risk was substantially reduced.

    Shearer said there is now a risk of flash flooding across the
    burned-over areas from the region's summer rainy period, and the City
    of Flagstaff and Coconino County are providing sandbags.

    "CARC personnel provided well over 250 hours in support of the Museum
    Fire in direct support of the joint EOC," Shearer said, adding that
    the EOC team and Arizona Governor Doug Ducey expressed their
    appreciation when the governor visited the fire operations.

    The Museum Fire grew to nearly 2,000 acres before it was brought
    under control.

    ARRL Member Had Role in Promising RF Treatment Device for Alzheimer's

    ARRL member Eric Knight, KB1EHE, played a role in the development of
    an RF-based Alzheimer's disease treatment that now shows great
    promise. A study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
    following a months-long FDA clinical trial of the treatment protocol
    concluded that memory decline in most patients "appeared to have been
    reversed to cognitive levels equivalent to 12 months earlier" after 2
    months of treatment. The clinical trial concluded last December 31
    and focused on the initial efficacy of what NeuroEM Therapeutics,
    Inc. -- the company developing the device -- calls "transcranial
    electromagnetic treatment" (TEMT), using a noninvasive head-worn
    device called the MemorEMƒ*›.

    An unidentified clinical trial
    participant wearing the MemorEM
    cap. [Photo courtesy of NeuroEM
    Therapeutics]

    "Results from the trial demonstrate that TEMT was safe in all eight
    participating patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, and
    enhanced cognitive performance in seven of them, as measured by
    standard cognition scales," said a news release from NeuroEM
    Therapeutics. Seven of the eight clinical trial patients agreed to
    take part in a 4-month extension study, based on the findings and the
    positive feedback from all participants.

    "This pioneering study suggests that TEMT may be an entirely new
    therapeutic intervention against Alzheimer's disease," said NeuroEM
    CEO Dr. Gary Arendash. "Our bioengineering technology may be
    succeeding where drug therapy against this devastating disease has
    thus far failed. TEMT appears to be affecting the Alzheimer's disease
    process through several actions directly inside neurons (brain
    cells), which is where we believe the disease process needs to be
    stopped and hopefully reversed." Arendash has explained that TEMT in
    the 900 MHz range breaks down the small protein aggregates (amyloid
    oligomers) in brain cells that are thought to initiate Alzheimer's
    development.

    Eric Knight, KB1EHE

    Knight, of Unionville, Connecticut, is the president of Remarkable
    Technolgies. He has no medical background, but several years ago, he
    learned of experiments that Arendash had carried out on mice
    specially bred to have Alzheimer's disease, in which the mice were
    exposed to low levels of RF for therapeutic purposes. The effects
    were dramatic, sometimes even reversing the disease's effects.
    Borrowing some concepts from earlier experiments with small rockets
    and avionics, Knight set about developing -- and later patenting -- a
    wearable device that could deliver requisite low levels of RF to a
    human head. NeuroEM was also developing a device, which it patented
    as well, and NeuroEM has filed multiple patents since then, Knight
    explained to ARRL. NeuroEM has an exclusive license to Knight's
    patent, and his contribution is now part of the overall mix of
    applied technology.

    "As an inventor and entrepreneur, all you can hope for is to have a
    positive impact on society, and this is about as important as it
    gets," Knight told ARRL. Read more.
    So Now What? Podcast

    "SATERN'S involvement in the hurricane season using Amateur Radio"
    will be the focus of the new (August 8) episode of the So Now What?
    podcast for Amateur Radio newcomers.

    If you're a newly licensed Amateur Radio operator, chances are you
    have lots of questions. This biweekly podcast has answers! So Now
    What? offers insights from those who've been just where you are now.
    New episodes will be posted every other Thursday, alternating
    new-episode weeks with the ARRL The Doctor is In podcast.

    So Now What? is sponsored by LDG Electronics, a family owned and
    operated business with laboratories in southern Maryland that offers
    a wide array of antenna tuners and other Amateur Radio products.

    ARRL Communications Content Producer Michelle Patnode, W3MVP, and
    ARRL Station Manager Joe Carcia, NJ1Q, co-host the podcast. Presented
    as a lively conversation, with Patnode representing newer hams and
    Carcia the veteran operators, the podcast will explore questions that
    newer hams may have and the issues that keep participants from
    staying active in the hobby. Some episodes will feature guests to
    answer questions on specific topic areas.

    Listeners can find So Now What? on Apple iTunes, Blubrry, Stitcher
    (free registration required, or browse the site as a guest) and
    through the free Stitcher app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices.
    Episodes will be archived on the ARRL website.

    AMSAT and ARISS Designing Amateur Radio System for Lunar Gateway

    Details are still being fleshed out, but AMSAT and ARISS are working
    on the design of an Amateur Radio system for NASA's Lunar Gateway. As
    NASA explains, the Gateway "will be a small spaceship in orbit around
    the moon that will provide access to more of the lunar surface than
    ever before with living quarters for astronauts, a lab for science
    and research, ports for visiting spacecraft, and more." For NASA, the
    Lunar Gateway is "a spaceport for human and robotic exploration to
    the moon and beyond." For radio amateurs, the Lunar Gateway will
    represent the next step in moving ham radio away from low-Earth orbit
    and into deep space. Under the current timeline, initial sections of
    the Gateway are scheduled to launch in 2022, with the Gateway in
    lunar orbit by 2026.

    "To make this happen, we are leveraging the work and expertise of the
    worldwide AMSAT organizations and the international ARISS community,"
    ARISS-International Chair and AMSAT Vice President for Human
    Spaceflight Programs Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, said. "We have an
    international team working on this and are meeting twice a month to
    mature the concept." The ARISS concept was presented to NASA in May
    and got positive feedback, and was favorably received a few weeks
    later at the ARISS-International meeting in Montreal from the
    Canadian Space Agency's Gateway Program Manager.

    "The Amateur Radio Exploration (AREx) team has done some really good
    work," Bauer continued. "The challenge for amateurs will be on the
    order of a 30 dB signal path loss as compared to LEO."

    The Lunar Gateway will serve as a solar-powered communication hub,
    science lab, short-term habitation module, and a holding area for
    rovers and other robots that may be bound for the moon or for other
    planets. NASA is leading the project in collaboration with commercial
    and international partners, including all of the International Space
    Station partners.

    "We need to develop a block diagram of a system and subsystems and
    find team members who want to work on each," Bauer said when the
    ARISS-International team met in Montreal. "We must set up
    requirements and interface documentation. We need to solidify the
    frequencies to use, working with the International Space Frequency
    Coordination Group."

    ARISS ARRL Representative Rosalie White, K1STO, said that ARISS is
    working to spread the word about the new initiative. She also hopes
    the new project may inspire the generosity of the Amateur Radio
    community. Read more.
    The K7RA Solar Update

    Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: A new sunspot group from Cycle 24
    appeared only briefly, August 7 - 8. Sunspot numbers on Monday and
    Tuesday were 11 and 12. The average daily solar flux shifted slightly
    from last week, from 67 to 67.2. The average planetary A index, an
    aggregate geomagnetic indicator, more than doubled, from 5 to 10.3,
    due to solar wind that raised the planetary A index to 35 on Monday.
    Alaska's high-latitude college A index reached 61 on Monday and 24 on
    Tuesday.

    Predicted solar flux is 68 on August 8 - 12, and 67 on August 13 -
    September 21.

    Predicted planetary A index is 5 on August 8 - 9; 6 and 8 on August
    10 - 11; 5 on August 12 - 16; 8 on August 17 - 18; 5 on August 19 -
    25; 8 on August 26 - 28; 5 on August 29 - 30; 12, 25, 25, 16, and 8
    on August 31 - September 4; 5, 8, and 8 on September 5 - 7; 5 on
    September 8 - 12; 8 on September 13 - 14, and 5 on September 15 - 22.

    Sunspot numbers for August 1 - 7 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 12, 11, and 0, with
    a mean of 3.3. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 66.8, 66.9, 65.7, 66.9,
    68.1, 68.1, and 68, with a mean of 67.2. Estimated planetary A
    indices were 8, 4, 3, 4, 35, 12, and 6 with a mean of 10.3. The
    middle latitude A index was 8, 4, 4, 6, 20, 10, and 6, with a mean of
    8.3.

    A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL
    website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit the
    ARRL Technical Information Service, read "What the Numbers Mean...,"
    and check out K9LA's Propagation Page.

    A propagation bulletin archive is available. Monthly charts offer
    propagation projections between the US and a dozen DX locations.

    Share your reports and observations.

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


    Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * August 10 -- QRP ARCI European Sprint (CW)
    * August 10 - 11 -- WAE DX Contest, CW
    * August 10 - 11 -- SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)
    * August 10 - 11 -- Maryland-DC QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
    * August 12 -- 4 States QRP Group Second Sunday Sprint (CW, phone)
    * August 12 - 14 -- MMMonVHF/DUBUS 144 MHz Meteorscatter Sprint
    (CW, phone, digital)
    * August 14 -- NAQCC CW Sprint (CW)

    See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information. For in-depth
    reporting on Amateur Radio contesting, subscribe to The ARRL Contest
    Update via your ARRL member profile email preferences.
    Global Institutions Support Amateur Radio Communication and
    Experimentation

    Former ARRL CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ, has contributed to the latest
    edition of ITU News Magazine -- published by the International
    Telecommunication Union. The issue is devoted to "terrestrial
    wireless communications," which includes the Amateur Radio and
    Amateur Satellite services. Sumner's article, "Self-training,
    intercommunication and technical investigations: the amateur service
    in the 21st Century," discusses Amateur Radio within the context of a
    global network of experimenters and communicators who, in Sumner's
    words, "expand the body of human knowledge and technical skills that
    are essential to development and offer a resource that can literally
    save lives when natural disasters disrupt normal communications
    channels."

    "Amateur licensees are grateful that ITU member-states continue to
    recognize the benefits of providing direct access to the radio
    spectrum to qualified individuals," said Sumner, who now serves as
    secretary of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU), an ITU
    sector member.

    Sumner points out that access to frequency bands "spaced throughout
    the radio spectrum" is critical to Amateur Radio's future. He notes
    that the initial pattern of ham allocations dates back to 1927 and
    the International Radiotelegraph Conference. Allocations have been
    expanded at subsequent conferences, most recently at World
    Radiocomunication Conference 2015 (WRC-15), when ham radio obtained a
    tiny secondary band near 5.3 MHz. (An earlier WRC was responsible for
    the Amateur Service's two lowest-frequency allocations, 135.7 - 137.8
    kHz and 472 - 479 kHz.) The 1979 World Administrative Radio
    Conference (WARC) extended terrestrial allocations above 40 GHz to
    include amateur allocations.

    "If a future World Radiocommunication Conference extends allocations
    above 275 GHz, adequate provisions for amateur experimentation should
    be made," Sumner observed.

    The first item on the agenda for WRC-19, which takes place this fall
    in Egypt, calls on delegates to consider an allocation at 50 MHz to
    the Amateur Service in ITU Region 1 (Europe, Africa, and the Middle
    East) that aligns with existing allocations in Regions 2 and 3.

    IARU Secretary David
    Sumner, K1ZZ

    Sumner notes that ITU "plays an essential role" in keeping the
    spectrum clear of unwanted interference and emissions, an effort he
    said is "especially vital to the Amateur Service, which uses
    sensitive receivers to compensate for practical and regulatory
    limitations on antennas and transmitter power levels."

    Sumner also pointed to the role radio amateurs can play in developing
    and refining communication protocols, including digital techniques,
    to improve weak-signal performance. He noted that Joseph Taylor, K1JT
    -- a codeveloper of such digital modes as FT8, FT4, and JT65 --
    received an ITU Gold Medal in recognition of his outstanding
    contributions to radiocommunication.

    As Sumner explained, the IARU -- a federation of more than 140
    member-societies --represents the interests of radio amateurs around
    the world before ITU. IARU's contribution to the work of ITU began in
    1932 with its admission to participate in the work of the
    International Radiocommmunicaiton Consultative Committee (CCIR). IARU
    is a member of the ITU Radiocommunication and Development sectors.

    "The IARU is proud to be an active member of the ITU community,"
    Sumner said.

    Centenarian Mentor and Multiple Award Recipient "Fritz" Nitsch,
    W4NTO, SK

    ARRL Life Member and honoree Reynold L. "Fritz" Nitsch, W4NTO, of
    Spartanburg, South Carolina, died on August 5 following a brief
    illness. He turned 100 on July 21. Nitsch was the first recipient of
    the ARRL Board of Directors' Centurion Award in recognition of his
    centenarian status and of his almost half-century of continuous
    activity in the ARRL Field Organization as an Official Observer, an
    Official Emergency Station, and an Official Relay Station. Nitsch
    received the ARRL George Hart Distinguished Service Award in 2012,
    and was an earlier recipient of the Roanoke Division Service Award
    (the Vic Clark, W4KFC, Award) for his contributions to the public
    through Amateur Radio.

    A decorated World War II veteran, Nitsch served as a radio station
    engineer for about a decade after the war before going to work for
    the Federal Aviation Administration, where he remained until
    retirement.

    He was a charter member of the Spartanburg Amateur Radio Club,
    founded in 1952. Affectionately known as the "Godfather of Hams in
    Spartanburg County," Nitsch was known to have tutored and mentored
    many radio amateurs in the region. Nitsch had taught Morse code while
    in the Army and was an avid CW operator.

    Other awards and recognitions he received over the years include the
    Clara Barton Award for Meritorious Volunteer Service, recognizing his
    more than 30 years of service to the local American Red Cross chapter
    assisting in disaster responses.
    In Brief...

    An APRS Amateur Radio balloon, call sign NA1WJ-5, launched from the
    recent World Scout Jamboree, has floated across the Atlantic. The
    Scouting Magazine blog reports: "You can reach practically any corner
    of the globe via Amateur Radio. That's the message K2BSA wanted to
    show Scouts at the World Scout Jamboree. Those in the Amateur Radio
    association launched four Mylar balloons from the Summit Bechtel
    Reserve in West Virginia, in hopes that one would catch the jet
    stream and end up on the other side of the world. One did." Each
    balloon, approximately 3 feet in diameter, was equipped with GPS, a
    ham radio transmitter, and solar panels. The balloon payload could
    relay weather, movement, and location information. Each helium-filled
    balloon was capable of attaining an altitude of between 28,000 and
    32,000 feet -- nearly as high as most commercial planes fly.

    A new web tool can tell how active you have been over the past 12
    months. Plug your call sign into this website to review your station
    activity. This tool from DJ1YFK uses the Reverse Beacon Network (RBN)
    data to generate an activity report (a "heat map") showing the
    activity for any call sign. -- The ARRL Contest Update

    The 9th YOTA Summer Camp Gets Under Way on August 11.Up to 80 young
    radio amateurs, primarily from IARU Region 1 but including
    participants from other parts of the world, will gather in Bulgaria
    for the 9th annual Youngsters on the Air (YOTA) Summer Camp. Special
    call sign LZ19YOTA will be on the air during the weeklong event,
    hosted by the Bulgarian Federation of Radio Amateurs (BFRA). The
    event offers an opportunity for the participants to foster
    international friendships and goodwill and learn new Amateur Radio
    skills. The main theme will be "train the trainer" (TTT).
    Participants will be working on the future of Amateur Radio and be
    involved in workshops to gain skills to start similar ham radio youth
    events when they get back home. "We are aiming to create a snowball
    effect," the YOTA announcement said. "There will be more and more
    YOTA events all over the world. This also allows other youngsters and
    newcomers to enjoy Amateur Radio." Activities will include kit
    building and an opportunity to visit the surrounding region,
    including the ACOM amplifier factory. QSL LZ19YOTA via the bureau to
    LZ1BJ.
    Getting It Right!

    Regarding the article, "One Dead, One Injured in New Hampshire Ham
    Radio Tower Mishap," which appeared in the August 1 edition of The
    ARRL Letter, Audra Wilder, KD3K, the niece of the Michael Rancourt,
    K1EEE, the owner of the collapsed tower who was seriously injured in
    the mishap, wishes to amend some aspects of our report. According to
    Wilder, (1) Rancourt had already sold his house; (2) the tower
    involved was a 40-footer and not a tilt-over design; (3) the
    gathering at the house was a work party, with four people on the
    ground and two on the tower, and Rancourt's wife looking on; (4) when
    Wilder was visiting Rancourt's for Field Day, no visible wear on the
    tower was obvious, and (5) Rancourt had climbed the tower 24 hours
    prior to its collapse.

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

    Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
    * August 8 - 10 -- Rocky Mountain Division Convention, Ogden, Utah
    * August 9 - 11 -- Pacific Northwest DX Convention, Everett,
    Washington
    * August 17 - 18 -- Huntsville Hamfest, Alabama State Convention,
    Huntsville, Alabama
    * August 24 -- Society of Midwest Contesters Specialty Convention,
    Normal, Illinois
    * August 23 - 25 -- West Virginia State Convention, Weston, West
    Virginia
    * September 6 - 7 -- Arkansas State Convention, Mena, Arkansas
    * September 6 - 7 -- Wyoming State Convention, Gillette, Wyoming
    * September 6 - 8 -- New England Division Convention, Boxborough,
    Massachusetts
    * September 7 -- Virginia Section Convention, Virginia Beach,
    Virginia
    * September 13 - 14 -- W9DXCC 2019, St. Charles, Illinois
    * September 21 - 22 -- New Mexico State Convention, Albuquerque,
    New Mexico
    * September 27 - 28 -- Central Division Convention, Milwaukee,
    Wisconsin
    * September 28 -- Dakota Division Convention, West Fargo, North
    Dakota
    * September 28 -- Washington State Convention, Spokane Valley,
    Washington
    * October 6 -- Iowa State Convention, Liberty, Iowa
    * October 11 - 12 -- PNWVHFS Conference and Meeting, Issaquah,
    Washington
    * October 11 - 12 -- Florida State Convention, Melbourne, Florida
    * October 13 -- Connecticut State Convention, Meriden, Connecticut
    * October 18 - 20 -- Pacific Division Convention, San Ramon,
    California

    Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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

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    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.12 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to All on Friday, August 16, 2019 06:05:25


    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.12 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)
  • From Daryl Stout@1:19/33 to SEAN DENNIS on Saturday, August 17, 2019 10:40:00
    --- MBSE BBS v1.0.7.12 (GNU/Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)


    I guess this was to be sent via on the air digital modes instead. <G>

    Daryl, WX4QZ

    ===
    ž OLX 1.53 ž Change is good; especially when it relates to underwear.
    --- SBBSecho 3.08-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (1:19/33)
  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to Daryl Stout on Sunday, August 18, 2019 09:48:00
    Hello Daryl.

    17 Aug 19 10:40, you wrote to me:

    I guess this was to be sent via on the air digital modes instead.


    No, I lost my DSL for three days because lightning hit the lines. The script runs whether or not there's an Internet connection.

    73,
    Sean KD5COL

    --- GoldED/2 3.0.1
    * Origin: Outpost BBS * bbs.outpostbbs.net:2304 (1:18/200)
  • From Daryl Stout@1:19/33 to SEAN DENNIS on Monday, August 19, 2019 16:27:00
    Hello Daryl.

    Hi, Sean...

    I guess this was to be sent via on the air digital modes instead.


    No, I lost my DSL for three days because lightning hit the lines. The scrip SD>runs whether or not there's an Internet connection.

    Well, I didn't think you were using invisible ink in the message (hi
    hi).

    Daryl, WX4QZ

    ===
    ž OLX 1.53 ž Yesterday was the deadline for all complaints.
    --- SBBSecho 3.08-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (1:19/33)
  • From Sean Dennis@1:18/200 to All on Tuesday, November 07, 2023 14:00:08

    ARRL Home Page ARRL Letter Archive Audio News

    Mexico
    * Veterans Day 2023 Special Events
    * Great California ShakeOut Drill Reported a Success
    * Amateur Radio in the News
    * ARRL Podcasts
    * Announcements
    * In Brief...
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Upcoming Section, State, and Division Conventions
    Deadline Extended Until November 28 for 60-Meter-Band Comments

    The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has extended the deadline
    to file comments on the 60-meter band proposal to November 28, 2023.
    Replies to comments will be due December 28, 2023. The public comment
    period was originally scheduled to close October 30, 2023.

    ARRL strongly encourages all amateurs to submit comments expressing
    support to the FCC for the current 100 W ERP power limit (instead of
    reducing the power limit to 15 W EIRP) and continuing secondary access
    to the current channels.

    ARRL has assembled a web page with instructions on how to submit your
    comments, as well as background information on the issue:
    www.arrl.org/60-meter-band.
    Amateur Radio Operators Provide Post-Hurricane Communications in Mexico

    Radio Amateurs are providing communication services to and from the
    affected areas in and around Acapulco, Mexico.

    On the morning of Wednesday, October 25, 165 mile-per-hour winds from
    Hurricane Otis knocked out all communications and unleashed a nightmare
    scenario in Acapulco.

    Prior to landfall, the Visible
    Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite
    (VIIRS) sensor on the NOAA-20
    satellite captured this false-color
    image of the storm at about 08:30
    Universal Time (2:30 AM in Acapulco)
    on October 24, 2023.

    The area is home to roughly 800,000 people.

    Radio Club Queretaro member Ruben Navarrete Galvan, XE1EC, told ARRL
    News that amateur radio operators are still active with multiple
    operations, and they are receiving citizen requests to obtain
    information on the whereabouts of their relatives.

    "We keep an online database with these requests that we share with the
    different hams participating in the operation. Read-only access to this
    database is provided to the authorities who might need it, too. We also
    transmit this information to hams deployed in the Acapulco area via
    HF," Galvan said.

    ditionally, hams in the Acapulco area are trying to locate civilians
    using their own resources. Some of these hams are operating their
    equipment on battery power, while others have access to generators.
    Accessing many areas in the region has been a challenge due to the
    amount of debris blocking travel

    Amateur radio operators have also been receiving requests from Acapulco
    residents to call their relatives and let them know they are fine.
    Those requests are transmitted via HF to the Emergency Net Operator,
    and then the call is made to the family members.

    Galvan also reported that hams have been providing communication
    between state agencies and their field personnel deployed in the
    Acapulco area. "At least three state agencies have hams on their teams.
    This is the case for the state of Durango, Morelos, and Santiago de
    QuerA(c)taro. We have been communicating their messages to their
    central coordination via HF relays. Requests for specific requirements
    have been escalated to the support teams. Air medical services have
    been directed to areas that were not being attended," he said.

    Hams are also helping in other areas, including:
    * Repairing a damaged repeater on Altzomoni at the Izta-Popo
    Zoquiapan National Park to support communication efforts in certain
    areas of Guerrero
    * Deploying donations from a ham in Arizona, including a UHF
    repeater, solar panels, and 50 handhelds, to the affected areas.
    * Getting the state agency's mobile stations back on the air and
    reinstalling the HF antennas that were damaged

    Emergency Communications Coordinator International Amateur Radio Union
    Region 2 Emergency Communications Coordinator Carlos Alberto SantamarAa
    GonzA­lez, CO2JC, said frequency protection has been requested for the
    following bands and frequencies
    * 80-meter band: 3690 kHz
    * 40-meter band: 7060 and 7095 kHz
    * 20-meter band: 14.120 kHz

    Veterans Day 2023 Special Events

    Special event stations will offer many opportunities for amateur radio
    operators to honor Veterans and make contacts for Veterans Day.

    The K1USN Radio Club will be on the air on Saturday, November 11, 2023,
    to show their appreciation for those who have served in the military.
    The club station is located at 85 Quincy Avenue in Braintree,
    Massachusetts. K1USN will be on the HF bands on SSB, CW, and FT8, and
    they will begin operating at 1300 UTC and run until 2100 UTC. K1USN QSL
    cards will be available for all who contact the station.

    The American Legion Post 111 Amateur Radio Club, KA4TAL, in South
    Carolina will also operate on November 11 from 10 AM to 3 PM ET on
    14.255, 7.264, 14.275, and 7.185 MHz. Email talarc.ka4tal@gmail.com for
    electronic contact certificates.

    On the same day, the Liberty ship S.S. John W. Brown, K8JWB, will hold
    National Liberty Ship Day. The event honors those who served in the
    military and operated, protected, and built all 2,710 World War II
    Liberty ships, including the Merchant Marines, the Navy Armed Guard,
    and the female shipyard workers recruited during the war. Operations
    will be on 14.250, 7.225, and 21.300 MHz, from 0200Z - 0800Z. QSL cards
    will be available by mail from Project Liberty Ship PO Box 25846 in
    Baltimore, Maryland.

    In Ohio, the Central Ohio Radio Club will hold their third annual
    Veterans Day Check-in Net on November 11, beginning at 11 AM ET. They
    will use their main VHF repeater, W8AIC, on 146.76 MHz (PL tone 123.0
    MHz). All amateurs can check in and share stories about their own
    military experience, or information about family and friends who have
    served. A special QSL card will be mailed to each ham who contacts the
    station.

    The Charles County Amateur Radio Club in Maryland will host their
    special event, The Ghost Fleet at Mallows Bay, on November 11 from
    1400Z - 2100Z. Mallows Bay is the site of more than 100 shipwrecks and
    is now the Mallows Bay-Potomac River National Marine Sanctuary, the
    first national marine sanctuary in the state of Maryland. K3SMD will
    operate on 40 (7.270 Mhz), 20, and 15 meters on phone and FT8. QSL
    cards will be mailed to those who contact the station by Michelle Sack,
    N3YRZ, at PO Box 1182 in Waldorf, Maryland.

    Also on November 11, the United States Marine Corps will celebrate its
    248th anniversary (it was officially formed on 11/10/1775) and Veterans
    Day. The USS Midway CV-41 COMEDTRA amateur radio station, NI6IW, will
    be on the air from 1700Z - 2359Z on 14.320, 7.250, and 14.070 MHz. The
    station will use PSK31, D-STAR, the PAPA System repeaters, and a
    wide-area amateur radio network of 57 additional repeaters on 19
    hilltops. These will provide extensive coverage of the Southern
    California region and beyond. A QSL card will be available for every
    operator who contacts NI6IW.

    A complete list of special event stations, including Veterans Day
    stations, is available at www.arrl.org/special-event-stations. Type
    "Veterans" in the keyword search bar to find the stations.
    Great California ShakeOut Drill Reported a Success

    Editor's Note:

    Tuolumne County Amateur Radio and Electronics Society (TCARES) members
    Rich Combs, KN6HSR; Ned Sudduth, K6NED, and Toni Sudduth, K6TNI
    reported that the October 2023 Great California ShakeOut exercise was
    an "outstanding" success. Here is their story as reported to ARRL News:

    "This is a drill. Drop! Cover! Hold on!" was the mantra for the Great
    ShakeOut exercise on October 19, 2023, at 10:19 AM in Tuolumne County,
    California.

    The Great ShakeOut is an annual international event that promotes
    awareness of how to prepare for and react to an earthquake. For the
    past 2 years, TCARES has used this event as an opportunity to test our
    ability to provide backup communication for the county public safety
    agencies. Considering that over the past year there have been two
    instances where primary communication systems went down -- one due to a
    fire, and the other due to a damaged T1 fiber optic cable -- this was a
    timely opportunity. It is a great chance to partner with first
    responder agencies, build trust, and develop awareness of mutual
    capabilities and needs.

    There was an amateur radio operator stationed at the Tuolumne County
    Emergency Operations Center, which was operated by the Office of
    Emergency Services. After a preparatory simulated 5.0-magnitude San
    Francisco earthquake preamble at 10:19 AM, Ned Sudduth, K6NED, began
    taking check-ins from amateurs throughout the county with his wife
    Toni, K6TNI, who logged the reports. County Geographic Information
    System (GIS) staff loaded the real time of those hams on a map that was
    displayed on a TV. Tuolumne County is fortunate to have a backbone of
    four linked, 2-meter repeaters that cover almost the entire county.

    There were 38 amateur radio operators providing reports on conditions
    throughout the county. In addition, we had four Neighborhood Radio
    Watch (NRW) communities using Family Radio Service radios, General
    Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) radios, and a few GMRS repeaters to add an
    additional 28 reports. Each NRW community has an embedded ham who
    monitors the NRW traffic, and then provides a summary to the Incident
    Commander during their check-in.

    Considering it was a Thursday morning, we felt this was a great
    response. Participation increased from last year's check-ins. Although
    Tuolumne is a large county by area, it has a population of just more
    than 55,000, and it is primarily rural and mountainous in character.
    Nonetheless, the combination of NRW communities with embedded ham radio
    operators and a robust repeater system has shown that even when the
    power and internet are down, first responder operations can continue to
    operate, and communities can immediately communicate and mobilize to
    help themselves.

    During the net, net control began by asking for regional check-ins
    based on repeater location, starting with the most remote corners of
    the county. Roll call was not conducted, but check-ins in small batches
    of three or four allowed for concise reporting with "yes" or "no"
    comments on the availability of grid power and telephone services. Most
    stations checking in had clear audio and delivered their local status
    professionally. Some stations learned they needed to make improvements.
    Stations at sites of interest, like schools or government buildings,
    were asked to state their affiliation with organizations like the
    Community Emergency Response Team, Search and Rescue, Crime Scene Unit,
    etc. Mobile units also checked in and made reports. Those in nearby
    counties checked in, too, and they reported their local situation
    reports.

    Ideas for next year are already underway with plans to assign operators
    to specific locations like the local fairgrounds, hospital, Red Cross,
    fire stations, etc. The Automatic Packet Reporting System can also
    provide value next year with real-time location and status updates from
    mobile operators. Thanks to TCARES, the Tuolumne County Sheriff, the
    Office of Emergency Services, and GIS staff, and the radio operators
    who have made this an outstanding exercise for the last 2 years.

    Thanks to TCARES for the information contained in this report.

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


    Amateur Radio in the News

    ARRL Public Information Officers, Coordinators, and many other
    member-volunteers help keep amateur radio and ARRL in the news.

    "Shooting for the stars: Marietta students speak with astronaut aboard
    International Space Station" / Atlanta News First/ANF (Georgia) October
    24, 2023 -- A.L. Burruss Elementary School in Marietta, Georgia.

    "Detroit Lakes Amateur Radio Club installs commemorative plaque to Mark
    Knutson" / KFGO (North Dakota) October 28, 2023 -- The Detroit Lakes
    Amateur Radio Club is an ARRL Affiliated Club.

    "Community members recognized for helping create Clipper Amateur Radio
    station at Columbiana High School" / Salem News (Ohio) November 1, 2023
    -- Columbiana High School K8LPS Clipper Radio Club project.
    Share any amateur radio media hits you spot with us.

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

    ARRL Podcasts

    On the Air
    Sponsored by Icom

    The Solar Eclipse QSO Party: When Operating is Science

    Gary Mikitin's, AF8A, article, "The Solar Eclipse QSO Party: A Fun Way
    Support Radio Science" in the September/October 2023 issue of On the
    Air details how hams can contribute data to a study on how the
    ionosphere reflects radio signals during the eclipse via an easygoing
    on-air event called the Solar Eclipse QSO Party. Gary, who is the
    Amateur Radio Community Coordinator of HamSCI, joins us on the October
    episode of the On the Air podcast, to talk about just how easy it is to
    participate.

    ARRL Audio News
    Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday. ARRL Audio News is a
    summary of the week's top news stories in the world of amateur radio
    and ARRL, along with interviews and other features.

    The On the Air podcast is available on iTunes. The On the Air podcast
    and ARRL Audio News are also on blubrry -- On the Air | ARRL Audio
    News.

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


    Announcements

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric ministration (NOAA) and the
    National Weather Service (NWS) are finalizing plans for 2023 SKYWARNƒ*›
    Recognition Day. The event is held annually on the first Friday and
    Saturday of December, so this year it will be on Friday, December 1,
    and Saturday, December 2. SKYWARN Recognition Day was developed in 1999
    by the NWS and ARRL. It celebrates the contributions that volunteer
    SKYWARN amateur radio operators make to the NWS. During the event,
    SKYWARN operators visit NWS offices and contact other radio operators
    across the world. More details about the event will be posted on the
    SKYWARNƒ*› Recognition Day and ARRL websites.

    The K1USN Radio Club has announced that due to a direct scheduling
    conflict with the upcoming 2023 CW ARRL Sweepstakes, they will cancel
    their regular November 6 0000 UTC SST session. We wish to take this
    opportunity to thank all of our regular SST participants and to
    encourage everyone to use that time to participate in the CW ARRL
    Sweepstakes, November 4 - 6, 2023. Complete Sweepstakes rules can be
    found here - http://www.arrl.org/sweepstakes. Please note that the ONLY
    K1USN SST session to be cancelled will be the November 6 0000 UTC K1USN
    SST session. All other sessions will take place as scheduled: Fridays
    20:00-21:00 UTC; Mondays 00:00-01:00 UTC

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

    In Brief...

    The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) will hold its 2023
    World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-23) on November 20 - December
    15 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The ITU is the United Nations'
    specialized agency for information and communication technologies.
    Based in Geneva, Switzerland, the ITU includes 193 member states and
    several hundred Sector members and associates. WRC conferences are held
    every three to four years to review and revise, if necessary, the ITU
    Radio Regulations, which is the international treaty governing use of
    the radio frequency spectrum and geostationary satellite and
    non-geostationary satellite orbits. To learn more about the agenda for
    WRC-23, visit WRC-23 Agenda items - WRC-23 (itu.int).

    The ARRL Foundation is accepting applications for scholarships through
    January 10, 2024. The ARRL Foundation Scholarship Program supports
    eligible amateur radio operators pursuing higher education. The ARRL
    Foundation manages more than 100 scholarships established by generous
    donors ranging from $500 to $25,000. Scholarships will be awarded for
    the academic year that will begin no earlier than June 2024 following
    the application deadline. The scholarships vary in eligibility
    requirements.

    ARRL Director of Development Kevin Beal, K8EAL, said the scholarships
    pave the way for amateur radio being a hands-on pathway to STEM
    careers. "We are so thankful to donors who give to ARRL education
    programs because they are investing the future of amateur radio. The
    ARRL Foundation Scholarship Program provides financial support at a
    critical time for students pursuing a college degree and keeps these
    young radio amateurs active in the hobby."

    ditional information and a link to the application can be found at
    www.arrl.org/scholarship-program.

    The ARRL Foundation, celebrating its 50^th year, administers programs
    to support the amateur radio community, and was established in 1973 by
    ARRL.

    Here is a direct link to the application:
    http://www.arrl.org/scholarship-application

    ARRL reminds readers about the ARRL DX Log Archive, founded by JA1BK.
    The DX Log Archive program was created, thanks to an endowment
    established by Kan Mizoguchi, JA1BK, to obtain, preserve, and utilize
    paper logs from rare and significant DXpeditions. Paper logs of
    prominent DXpeditions or logs from stations and operators active from
    more rare locations from the 1950s through the 1980s, are the main
    items which we desire to save from the waste bin and archive at HQ. The
    archive includes pre-1950 paper logs as well as those from interesting
    operations, other documents from DXpeditions, and logs kept by
    long-time residents of rare entities. Logs which are now part of the
    Archive are indexed online and are being digitized and uploaded into
    Logbook of the World (LoTW) over time. Former ARRL Radiosport and Field
    Services Manager Dave Patton, KW9A (ex NN1N), manages the program.
    Patton noted the recent receipt of interesting logs for all the
    Colvin's operations; Fred Laun, K3ZO/HS0ZAR; Roger Western,
    EP2IA/G3TXF; John Snuggerud, LA1VC/3Y1VC (Bouvet Island); and Dick
    Spencely, KV4AA. Contact Patton at dxlogarchive@arrl.org for more
    information about logs or related DXing ephemera that might be of
    interest to the DX Log Archive, or to ask for a LoTW of the World
    confirmation for QSOs made with any of the hundreds of calls whose logs
    are available on the DX Log Archive webpage.

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


    The K7RA Solar Update

    Tad Cook, K7RA, of Seattle, Washington, reports for this week's ARRL
    Propagation Bulletin, ARLP044:

    Solar disk image taken November 2,
    2023. [Photo courtesy of NASA
    SDO/HMI]

    Seven new sunspot groups emerged this reporting week. There were two on
    October 26, one on October 27, another on October 28, two more on
    October 31, and another on November 1.

    Average daily sunspot numbers rose from 41.9 to 76.7, while the average
    daily solar flux increased from 123.5 to 137.5.

    Predicted solar flux is 160, 162, and 162 on November 2 - 4; 160, 157,
    150, 148, 136, 138, 136, and 134 on November 5 - 12; 130 on November 13
    - 15; 125, 123, and 120 on November 16 - 18; 125 on November 19 - 22,
    and 130 on November 23 - 26.

    Predicted planetary A index is 8, 5, 8, 12, 8, and 5 on November 2 - 7;
    12 on November 8 - 9; 8 on November 10; 5 on November 11 - 13; 8 and 10
    on November 14 - 15; 5 on November 16 - 21, and 15, 10, 15, 15, and 20
    on November 22 - 26.

    There might be an early peak of Solar Cycle 25. Read about it at
    https://bit.ly/3FF26jh and https://bit.ly/40ndQQN.

    Sunspot numbers for October 26 through November 1 were 57, 66, 70, 61,
    62, 116, and 105, with a mean of 76.7. The 10.7-centimeter flux was
    126.4, 127.5, 128, 135.2, 139.7, 147.3, and 158.6, with a mean of
    137.5. Estimated planetary A indices were 23, 11, 19, 28, 12, 9, and 9,
    with a mean of 15.9. Middle latitude A index was 18, 9, 13, 21, 10, 6,
    and 6, with a mean of 11.9.

    Send your tips, questions, or comments to k7ra@arrl.net.

    A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL
    website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit the
    ARRL Technical Information Service, read "What the Numbers Mean...,"
    and check out the Propagation Page of Carl Luetzelschwab, K9LA.

    A propagation bulletin archive is available. For customizable
    propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio website.

    Share your reports and observations.

    A weekly, full report is posted on ARRL News.

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

    Just Ahead in Radiosport

    Yearlong -- ARRL Volunteers On the Air (VOTA). See the State
    Activations Schedule for weekly W1AW Portable Operations, including:
    * November 1 - 7 -- West Virginia W1AW/8
    * November 1 - 7 -- Massachusetts W1AW/1
    * November 1 - 7 -- Iowa W1AW/0
    * November 8 - 14 -- Wyoming W1AW/7
    * November 8 - 14 -- Maryland W1AW/3
    * November 8 - 14 -- Kansas W1AW/0


    Upcoming Contests:
    * November 2 - 3 -- Walk for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)
    * November 2 -- NRAU 10-Meter Activity Contest (CW, phone, digital)
    * November 2 -- SKCC Sprint Europe (CW)
    * November 4 -- YB Banggai DX Contest (phone)
    * November 4 -- IPARC Contest (CW)
    * November 4 - 6 -- ARRL Sweepstakes Contest (CW)
    * November 5 -- IPARC Contest, SSB (phone)
    * November 5 -- EANET Sprint (CW, phone, digital)
    * November 5 -- High Speed Club CW Contest (CW)
    * November 6 -- RSGB 80-Meter Autumn Series, Data (digital)
    * November 7 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)

    Visit the ARRL Contest Calendar for more events and information.

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

    Upcoming Section, State, and Division Conventions
    * November 4 | Wisconsin ARES/RACES Conference 2023, hosting the ARRL
    Wisconsin Section Convention, Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin
    * November 4 - 5 | Stone Mountain Hamfest, hosting the ARRL Georgia
    State Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia
    * November 18 - 19 | Fort Wayne Hamfest and Computer Expo, hosting
    the ARRL Central Division Convention, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
    * December 8 - 9 | Tampa Bay Hamfest, hosting the ARRL West Central
    Florida Section Convention, Plant City, Florida
    * January 6 - | Ham Radio University, hosting the ARRL New York
    City-Long Island Section Convention, Brookville, New York

    Search the ARRL Hamfest and Convention Database to find events in your
    area.

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

    Have News for ARRL?

    Submissions for the ARRL Letter and ARRL News can be sent to
    news@arrl.org. -- John E. Ross, KD8IDJ, ARRL News Editor

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

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    Subscribe to...
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    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

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    www.arrl.org



    The ARRL Letter

    The ARRL Letter offers a weekly summary of essential news of interest to
    active amateurs that is available in advance of publication in QST, our
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    Much of the ARRL Letter content is also available in audio form in
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    * Origin: Outpost BBS * Johnson City, TN * bbs.outpostbbs.net:10323 (1:18/200)