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N9PMO  > LETTER   14.10.16 05:24l 640 Lines 29308 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3442
Read: GUEST
Subj: ARRL3442 ARRL Letter
Path: IW8PGT<CX2SA<N9PMO
Sent: 161014/0319Z 5528@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NOAM BPQ6.0.13


Amateur Radio Volunteers Mustered in Response to Hurricane Matthew

Current Rules Holding Hams Back from opting State-of-the-Art
Technology, ARRL Says

The Doctor Will See You Now!

National Parks on the Air Update

Pacific Seafarer's Net Assists in Maritime Rescue of Sailors on
Sinking Sailboat

Donations of Unwanted Amateur Radio, Test Gear Support ARRL's Mission

New ARRL Handbook and Operating Manual Editions are Available!

Get Set for School Club Roundup!

US JOTA Registrations Reach 340 this Year

ARRL Invites Nominations for 2016 International Humanitarian Award

IARU ministrative Council Establishes WRC-19 Priorities and Strategies

"Best 6 Years of My Life" -- Round-the-World Cyclist OZ1AA Back Home
in Denmark

Former ARRL DXCC and Awards Manager Bill Moore, NC1L, SK

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

Amateur Radio Volunteers Mustered in Response to Hurricane Matthew

After the longest activation in its more than 50-year history, the
Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) secured operations for Hurricane Matthew on
October 9 at 0400 UTC. HWN Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, reported that
the net was in continuous operation for 6 days, 7 hours, gathering
real-time ground-truth weather data as the storm passed through the
Caribbean and up along the US Eastern Seaboard, and passing the data
along to WX4NHC at the National Hurricane Center (NHC). Various
Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) nets also activated along the
East Coast. The first major hurricane of the 2016 Atlantic hurricane
season and, at one point, a Category 5 storm, Matthew was downgraded
to a post-tropical cyclone as it headed out into the Atlantic.

"Many have perished in Haiti and Cuba as a result of Matthew, and the
death-toll rises still," Graves noted. "Many residents in the Bahamas
and the US East Coast states of Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and
North Carolina felt the impact of Matthew as well." More than 30 died
in the US. FEMA reports that power remained out for thousands of
Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina residents as of
October 13. Cell service also was affected.

The VoIP SKYWARN/Hurricane Net (VoIPWX) attracted a number of
visitors, according to net managers. "On board Saturday afternoon, in
addition to WX4NHC at the National Hurricane Center, stations
representing a number of FEMA regional offices and the National
Response Coordination Center monitored the net for actionable
intelligence to be used to plan recovery operations," said net Public
Affairs Officer Lloyd Colston, KC5FM. The net also activated on
October 3.

The net said its Georgia Reflector was linked to the WX-Talk
conference, so net managers could help to relay reports to local
National Weather Service offices on NWSchat and the NHC.

According to Chief of Operations Dennis Dura, K2DCD, the net
established a link up the East Coast into North Carolina and continued
to monitor for damage assessment in areas the hurricane had already
passed. The net supported the NHC on the WX-Talk Conference, Node
#7203 on EchoLink.

The Salvation Army Team Emergency Network (SATERN) on 14.265 MHz also
was active for Matthew, handling outbound emergency, priority, or
health-and-welfare traffic from hurricane-affected areas.

Among activities in Georgia, ARES District Emergency Coordinator and
MARS member Tom Holcomb, K5AES, reported that WX4GMA, the Georgia
Emergency Management Agency ARES team station, was activated on
October 7, running 12-hour shifts. Operation was on HF as well as on
D-STAR and EchoLink.

HF message traffic included shelter updates from coastal counties and
periodic NHC weather updates via WX4NHC, which were passed along to
the GEMA director. Coastal county-related traffic and weather updates
also were handled via D-STAR. WinLink was used to pass periodic status
updates from the Georgia State Defense Force, a volunteer component of
the Georgia Department of Defense. The EchoLink Georgia Conference
node provided updates on storm-related conditions. On October 6, ARES
and Army MARS personnel were called on to provide technical assistance
to, and an operator for, a FEMA SHARES station in Atlanta.

Among activities in South Carolina, ARES volunteers staffed evacuation
shelters, with radio amateurs coming from outside the affected areas
to help. "Overall, I believe the radio operators that were available
for the event did an outstanding job and I am proud to know them,"
said South Carolina Section Emergency Coordinator Joe Markey, AJ4QM.

According to FEMA on October 13, mainstream river flooding threatened
the Carolinas, and some dams were breached. Several hospitals remained
closed.

The Hurricane Watch Net activated again for several hours on October
13 for Hurricane Nicole, after a hurricane warning went into effect
for Bermuda. The NHC at one point called Hurricane Nicole an
"extremely dangerous" Category 4 storm, with maximum sustained winds
of 125 MPH. The VoIP Hurricane Net (VoIPWX) also activated to monitor
online weather stations and storm bloggers from the Caribbean
Hurricane Network (stormCARIB), as well as social media.

"While we do hope this is the last hurricane for this season, let us
not forget we are still in Hurricane Season," the HWN's Graves said.
The Atlantic Hurricane Season ends on November 1.

Current Rules Holding Hams Back from opting State-of-the-Art
Technology, ARRL Says

In comments filed on October 12 with the FCC, ARRL reiterated its case
that the FCC should impose a 2.8 kHz limit on symbol rate for digital
modes, arguing that its approach is both balanced and necessary. ARRL
had asked the FCC to change the Part 97 rules to delete the symbol
rate limits in Section 97.307(f) and replace them with a maximum
bandwidth for data emissions of 2.8 kHz on amateur frequencies below
29.7 MHz. In a July Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) in WT Docket
16-239, the FCC proposed to eliminate the current baud rate
limitations for data emissions, consistent with ARRL's Petition, but
it declined to propose a bandwidth limitation for data emissions in
the MF and HF bands to replace the baud rate limitations.

ARRL told the FCC in its comments that the current HF symbol rate
"speed limit" reflects 1980s technology and has no place in an
experimental radio service in which modern protocols could be
efficiently deployed in crowded RTTY/data subbands.

"The symbol rate limit was created in order to maximize the efficient
use and reuse of that crowded, shared spectrum, but the assumptions
made at the time are no longer valid," ARRL said, "and the rules now
prohibit radio amateurs from utilizing state-of-the-art technology,
thus precluding or substantially inhibiting any meaningful
contribution to the advancement of the radio art in this area." ARRL
said earlier assumptions are no longer valid mainly because there is
no correlation between the data rate and the occupied bandwidth in the
rules now.

The League said present rules in the HF data subbands promote
inefficiency, allowing data transmissions of unlimited bandwidth as
long as the symbol rate is sufficiently low, and it stressed that
there must be some limit on occupied bandwidth for HF data emissions.

"Eliminating the symbol rate limitations for data emissions and
substituting a maximum authorized bandwidth would permit the
utilization of all HF data transmission protocols presently legal in
the Amateur Radio Service, as well as state-of-the-art protocols that
fall within the authorized bandwidth," the League said. The deadline
to file reply comments in the proceeding -- i.e. comments on comments
already filed -- is November 10. Read more.

The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Bits vs Baud" is the topic of the latest (October 6) episode of the
"ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!

Sponsored by DX Engineering, "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@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast.

Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone
or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can
also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (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.

National Parks on the Air Update

Of the 489 ARRL National Parks on the Air (NPOTA) units, the real
stars of the event have been the National Scenic and National Historic
Trails. ded to the National Park Service official units list in the
last week of 2015, the trail units have accounted for the majority of
NPOTA activations this year. Nine of the top 10 most-activated NPOTA
units are trails, with nearly 11 percent of all NPOTA contacts (80,580
QSOs) made from an eligible National Scenic or Historic Trail. The
Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail (TR-09) leads the pack, with
nearly 13,000 contacts made from numerous points along the trail.

All told, 121,650 contacts have been made from the 23 trail units in
NPOTA, amounting to slightly less than 17 percent of the 720,000 total
contacts.

The rarest trail unit is the Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail
(TR18) in Hawaii. Only 592 contacts have been made from there.

Thirty-three activations are on the NPOTA calendar for the week of
October 13-20, including the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore in
Michigan, and ams National Historic Park in Massachusetts.

Details about these and other upcoming activations can be found on the
NPOTA Activations calendar.

Keep up with the latest NPOTA news on Facebook. Follow NPOTA on
Twitter (@ARRL_NPOTA).



Pacific Seafarer's Net Assists in Maritime Rescue of Sailors on
Sinking Sailboat

The Pacific Seafarer's Net relayed a call for help and contacted the
US Coast Guard on September 28, after the SV Rafiki began taking on
water some 230 miles south of Cold Bay, Alaska. At approximately 0300
UTC, Charles Houlihan, KD6SPJ, a net relay station, received the
distress call from the sailboat's caption. Houlihan, who was also at
sea in SV Jacaranda, contacted Randy VanLeeuwen, KH6RC, a net relay
station in Hawaii. He, in turn, got in touch with Hawaii USCG District
14 to report the incident and provide Rafiki's location. The Hawaii
USCG district then contacted the 17th USCG District in Alaska, which
handled the rescue. VanLeeuwen kept in constant radio contact with the
Rafiki until contact was lost. Fred Moore, W3ZU, in Florida, and Peter
Mott, ZL1PWM, in New Zealand, also were on frequency and in contact
with the vessel's captain until a US Coast Guard rescue helicopter
arrived.

A crew member of Coast Guard Station Valdez receives a hoist basket
from an MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter during rescue hoist training in Port
Valdez, Alaska, on September 14. [US Coast Guard photo by Bill
Colclough]

The Jayhawk helicopter crew was able to hoist the captain and a crew
member to safety at around 1000 UTC, after dropping survival suits.
Both men were reported to be uninjured, but the vessel was abandoned.
The two men were taken to Kodiak, Alaska, for medical attention.

The incident occurred just before the net's daily roll-call, when a
call is put out for medical, emergency, or priority traffic. The
Pacific Seafarer's Net convenes daily on 14.300 MHz at 0300 UTC to
monitor the progress of maritime Amateur Radio operators sailing in
the Pacific. Read more. -- Thanks to the Pacific Seafarer's Net and
the US Coast Guard

Donations of Unwanted Amateur Radio, Test Gear Support ARRL's Mission

Downsizing your shack? Want your now-unused equipment to help promote
and preserve Amateur Radio for future generations? Consider donating
your used Amateur Radio and test equipment to ARRL.

The ARRL Lab accepts used equipment from radio amateurs and their
families. Once evaluated, much of the donated equipment is sold, and
proceeds help to fund programs that educate, promote, and preserve the
values of Amateur Radio. Assistant ARRL Laboratory Manager Bob
Allison, WB1GCM, is spearheading the donation program.

"A common problem for hams and their families is what to do with
surplus Amateur Radio equipment," Allison said. "We have, for a number
of years, accepted in-kind donations on a limited basis. Now, thanks
to dedicated volunteers in the ARRL Lab, we have additional help to
efficiently clean and test donated equipment. So, we're letting our
members know that the donation door is open; all are welcome!"

Allison said that many donors have expressed satisfaction and, at
times, relief that their equipment is going to a good cause. "An
alarming amount of relatively new equipment has ended up in dumpsters,
because family members had no idea what the equipment was or what to
do with it. That is a shame," he said.

For more information on how to donate used amateur equipment,
accessories, and test equipment, contact the ARRL Laboratory via
e-mail at labdonations@arrl.org or by telephone at (860) 594-0214
during ARRL Headquarters business hours.

ARRL is an IRS-designated 501(c)(3) organization holding federal tax
identification number 06-6000004. While ARRL gladly acknowledges
receipt of all in-kind donations, the League cannot, by law, provide
donors with a dollar value for items donated.

New ARRL Handbook and Operating Manual Editions are Available!

The 2017 edition of The ARRL Handbook and 11th edition of The ARRL
Operating Manual are now shipping. As a special introductory offer,
you can get the hardcover handbook at the softcover price.

The ARRL Handbook for Radio Communications is the standard for applied
theory and practical information concerning the fundamentals of radio
electronics and wire communications. It's filled with the most
up-to-date knowledge representative of the wide and ever-expanding
range of interests among radio amateurs. There are hands-on projects
for all skill levels, from simple accessories and small power
supplies, to legal-limit amplifiers and high-gain antennas.

The ARRL Operating Manual for Radio Amateurs is the most comprehensive
guide to Amateur Radio operating -- everything you need to get
involved, get active, and get on the air. Each topic has been written
and updated by experienced hams. They are happy to share what they
have learned so that you can get involved too.

The ARRL Handbook is available in hardcover and softcover editions
from the ARRL Store or your ARRL Dealer. Hardcover: ARRL Item No.
0635, ISBN 978-1-62595-063-5, $59.95 retail, special offer $49.95
while supplies last. Softcover: ARRL Item No. 0628, ISBN
978-1-62595-062-8, $49.95 retail.

The ARRL Operating Manual is available in softcover from the ARRL
Store or your ARRL Dealer. Softcover: ARRL Item No. 0598, ISBN
978-1-62595-059-8, $24.95 retail. It is also available as a two-part
e-book (Volumes 1 & 2 and Volumes 3 & 4) for the Amazon Kindle.

To order call (860) 594-0355 or, toll-free in the US, (888) 277-5289.
Contact ARRL Publication Sales for more information.

Get Set for School Club Roundup!

With the fall semester well under way, school clubs are at full
throttle. That means it's time for the ARRL School Club Roundup (SCR)
-- fall edition. Propagation typically improves at this time of year,
and clubs should not find it too difficult to make contacts across the
US and around the globe, even with a modest station. Unlike most
contests, this one takes place during the week. SCR 2016 starts on
Monday, October 17, beginning at 1300 UTC, and runs through Friday,
October 21, at 2359 UTC. Stations may operate for up to 24 hours
during the entire contest, and may only operate for 6 hours during any
single 24-hour period.

A trio of operators at the Dresden Elementary Amateur Radio Station
club's KD8NOM took turns calling, logging, and searching for
multipliers in the Spring 2016 running of the School Club Roundup.

There are five participation categories: Elementary/Primary,
Middle/Intermediate/Junior High School, Senior High School,
College/University Club, and Non-School Club. There is also an
Individual category.

If you just want to get on the air and hand out contacts, enter in the
Individual category. Any mode -- SSB, CW, or digital -- is okay. Tune
around and listen for SCR stations calling CQ, or do it yourself and
see who answers (call "CQ School Clubs" if you aren't a club station).
Stations exchange signal report, category (School, Club, or
Individual), and state, province, or DXCC entity. Once the contest is
over, submit your log online (preferred) or on paper.

The most popular time for younger students to be on the air is during
after-school hours, but the older students may be on the air at any
time. All groups are limited to one transmitter on the air.

The School Club Roundup is co-sponsored by ARRL and the Long Island
Mobile Amateur Radio Club (LIMARC), and results appear in QST as well
as online. Logs are due by November 8. Read more.



US JOTA Registrations Reach 340 this Year

With Scouting's Jamboree On The Air (JOTA) just days away, JOTA
Coordinator Jim Wilson, K5ND, said this week that approximately 340 US
Amateur Radio stations have registered for this weekend's event.
That's out of a total JOTA and JOTI (Jamboree on the Internet) count
of 596. The official JOTA-JOTI sign-up system remains open. JOTA will
be on the air October 14-16. Wilson urged all stations that register
to file post-JOTA reports.

Wilson was not optimistic about favorable HF propagation this weekend,
but he is hoping for the best. Most JOTA activity will center around
selected HF frequencies.

More than 1 million Scouts in 150+ countries -- at nearly 18,000
stations -- are expected to take part in JOTA 2016, engaging with
other Scouts to talk about Amateur Radio and their Scouting
experiences.

ARRL Invites Nominations for 2016 International Humanitarian Award

Nominations are open for the 2016 ARRL International Humanitarian
Award. This award is conferred upon an individual radio amateur or
Amateur Radio group that has demonstrated devotion to human welfare,
peace, and international understanding through Amateur Radio. The
League established this annual award to recognize Amateur Radio
operators who have used ham radio to provide extraordinary service to
others in times of crisis or disaster.

A committee appointed by the League's president recommends the award
recipient(s) to the ARRL Board of Directors, which makes the final
decision. The committee is now accepting nominations from Amateur
Radio, governmental, or other organizations that have benefited from
extraordinary service rendered by an Amateur Radio operator or group.

Amateur Radio is one of the few telecommunication services that allow
people throughout the world from all walks of life to meet and talk
with each other, spreading goodwill across political boundaries. The
ARRL International Humanitarian Award recognizes Amateur Radio's
unique role in international communication and the assistance amateurs
regularly provide to people in need.

Nominations should include a summary of the nominee's actions that
qualify the individual (or individuals) for this award, plus verifying
statements from at least two people having first-hand knowledge of the
events warranting the nomination. These statements may be from an
official of a group (for example, the American Red Cross, The
Salvation Army, or a local or state emergency management official)
that benefited from the nominee's particular Amateur Radio
contribution. Nominations should include the names and addresses of
all references.

All nominations and supporting materials for the 2016 ARRL
International Humanitarian Award must be submitted in writing in
English to ARRL International Humanitarian Award, 225 Main St.,
Newington, CT 06111 USA by December 31, 2016. In the event that no
nominations are received, the committee itself may determine a
recipient or decide to make no award.

The winner of the ARRL International Humanitarian Award receives an
engraved plaque and a profile in QST and other ARRL venues.

IARU ministrative Council Establishes WRC-19 Priorities and Strategies

The ministrative Council of the International Amateur Radio Union
(IARU) held its annual in-person meeting on October 7 and 8 in Viņa
del Mar, Chile, prior to the IARU Region 2 (IARU R2) Conference. The
Council is responsible for the policy and management of the IARU and
consists of the three IARU international officers and two
representatives from each of the three IARU regional organizations.

The Council assigned priorities to the agenda items for the 2019 World
Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-19) of the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) and affirmed the adoption of a matrix
approach to Conference preparation, as agreed earlier in the year. The
matrix approach is designed to ensure effective coordination among the
numerous IARU volunteers who participate in and monitor preparatory
meetings of the ITU and regional telecommunication organizations.
Along with several items of potential concern to radio amateurs, the
agenda includes a possible allocation in Region 1 of 50-54 MHz to the
Amateur Service to harmonize with the allocations in the other two
regions.

The permanent working document setting out the long-term spectrum
requirements of the Amateur and Amateur-Satellite services was
reviewed and updated to reflect the outcomes of WRC-15. A strategic
plan to develop support for amateur spectrum allocations between now
and 2020 was adopted.

The Council received reports from coordinators and advisers, including
Peter Jennings, AB6WM/VE3SUN, International Beacon Project
Coordinator; Hans Blondeel Timmerman, PB2T, Satellite visor; Hans
Zimmermann, HB9AQS, International Coordinator for Emergency
Communications, and Thilo Kootz, DL9KCE, EMC Coordinator. The four
volunteers were reappointed for 3-year terms. Read more.

"Best 6 Years of My Life" -- Round-the-World Cyclist OZ1AA Back Home
in Denmark

Round-the-world cyclist Thomas Andersen, OZ1AA/K9DXX, is back home in
Denmark after a little more than 6 1/2 years of on-and-off cycling. On
October 8, Andersen arrived at the spot where his Odyssey began -- the
central square of Copenhagen. Begun in 2010, Andersen's "Cycling the
Globe" adventure covered some 36,000 miles.

A smiling Thomas Andersen, OZ1AA, rides victoriously into Copenhagen,
Denmark, wrapping up his "Cycling the Globe" adventure.

"Best wishes from Copenhagen where I'm resting my legs now," the
33-year-old telecommunications engineer said. "It was very special for
me to cycle into the City Hall Square in Copenhagen -- the exact same
place where I left by bike in October 2010. I was thinking about all
the fascinating places I have seen and all the amazing people I have
met in those 6 years -- the best 6 years of my life."

Andersen said that after his arrival, he went to the local radio club
and, using special event call sign OZ1BIKE, made some 200 contacts
with stations all over Europe and America, including some he had
visited on his trip. "I...imagined their shacks and antennas as they
called in," he said. "So many great memories."

Thomas Andersen, OZ1AA, on his way across Namibia.

Andersen said his bicycle adventure stemmed in part from a desire to
attempt something that he was not entirely sure he could finish. But,
he said, it was an opportunity to combine his favorite activities --
cycling and ham radio.

"For me, the chance to meet new people, to make new friends, and to
see and learn about their way of life is the true highlight of the
trip," Andersen told ARRL in 2015. "Ham radio certainly plays a big
role in making that possible."

"Now it already feels strange not to be cycling anymore," Andersen
said this week, "but the weather has turned cold and rainy here in
Copenhagen, so I enjoy being indoors for now."



Former ARRL DXCC and Awards Manager Bill Moore, NC1L, SK

Former ARRL DXCC and Awards Manager Bill Moore, NC1L (ex-KA1MRR,
KB1UN), of Newington, Connecticut, died on October 6. He was 64. Moore
was seriously injured in a motor vehicle accident in July 2014 that
left him paralyzed from the chest down. He was never able to return to
work at ARRL Headquarters and retired in 2015. An ARRL member, Moore
had worked at League Headquarters for 23 years, starting in 1992.

A Brooklyn, New York native, Moore was a Vietnam-era veteran of the US
Army. A brief service was held on October 12 in Newington. -- Thanks
to The Daily DX, Pete Chamalian, W1RM

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: At 0356 UTC on October 13, the
Australian Space Forecast Centre issued a geomagnetic warning calling
for increased solar wind speed due to coronal hole effects expected
for October 14 and 15, and active conditions, with possible minor
storm periods.

Solar flux and sunspot numbers rose over the past week, while
geomagnetic indicators were down. Average daily sunspot numbers for
October 6-12 rose 34.3 points to 55, and the average daily solar flux
rose 15.2 points to 101.9, referenced to the previous 7 days.

The average planetary A index declined from 21.4 to 6.6, and the
mid-latitude A index dipped from 15.1 to 5.

Predicted solar flux is 95 on October 13-14; 90 on October 15-21; 85
on October 22-26; 80 on October 27-29; 90 and 95 on October 30-31; 100
on November 1-2; 105 on November 3-7; 110 on November 8-9; 105 and 100
on November 10-11; 95 on November 12-14; 90 on November 15-17, and 85
on November 18-22.

Predicted planetary A index is 18, 30, 15, 12, and 15 on October
13-17; 10 on October 18-19; 5 on October 20-22; 20 on October 23; 35
on October 24-26; 20 on October 27; 15 on October 28-30; 25 on October
31; 12 on November 1; 5 on November 2-6; 8 on November 7-8; 5, 12, and
15 on November 9-11; 12, 20, and 8 on November 12-14; 5 on November
15-18; 20 on November 19, and 30 on November 20-22.

Sunspot numbers for October 6 through 12 were 55, 50, 62, 58, 64, 56,
and 40, with a mean of 55. The 10.7 centimeter flux was 101.5, 104.2,
104.3, 104.5, 102, 99.2, and 97.6, with a mean of 101.9. Estimated
planetary A indices were 6, 6, 8, 5, 11, 4, and 6, with a mean of 6.6.
Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 4, 5, 7, 4, 7, 3, and 5, with a
mean of 5.

Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

October 14 -- MCG Autumn Sprint (CW, phone)

October 15 -- Feld Hell Sprint

October 15 -- Iowa QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

October 15-16 -- JARTS WW RTTY Contest

October 15-16 -- 10-10 International Fall Contest (CW)

October 15-16 -- New York QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

October 15-16 -- Worked All Germany Contest (CW, phone)

October 15-16 -- South Dakota QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

October 16 -- Asia-Pacific Fall Sprint (CW)

October 16 -- RSGB RoLo (CW)

October 16-17 -- Illinois QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

October 17 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)

October 17-18 -- Telephone Pioneers QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

October 17-21 -- ARRL School Club Roundup (CW, phone)

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 e-mail preferences.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

October 13-15 -- Microwave Update Conference, St Louis, Missouri

October 14-16 -- Pacific Division Convention, San Ramon, California

October 16 -- Connecticut State Convention, Meriden, Connecticut

October 21-22 -- Arizona State Convention, Maricopa, Arizona

October 21-22 -- Florida State Convention, Melbourne, Florida

October 22 -- Wisconsin ARES/RACES Conference, Wisconsin Rapids,
Wisconsin

November 5 -- TechFest Convention, Lakewood, Colorado

November 5-6 -- Georgia State Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia

November 12-13 -- Indiana State Convention, Fort Wayne, Indiana

November 19 -- Alabama State Convention, Montgomery, Alabama

December 9-10 -- West Central Florida Section Convention, Plant City,
Florida

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for 

Amateur Radio News and Information.

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most popular and informative journal, delivered to your mailbox each
month.

Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday.

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articles by top contesters, letters, hints, statistics, scores, NA
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features technical articles, construction projects, columns, and other
items of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.

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