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N9PMO > LETTER 14.04.17 03:56l 612 Lines 25632 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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ARRL EXPO will Anchor League's Hamvention Presence
World Amateur Radio Day on April 18 Marks IARU's 92nd Anniversary
The Doctor Will See You Now!
Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur Now Available
2017 National Hurricane Conference Set for New Orleans
30th International Marconi Day Event Set for April 22
ARRL 2016 International Humanitarian Award Winners Honored
Radio DARC to Cover IARU Region 1 General Conference on Shortwave this
Fall
Noted Contester Dr. Pat Sonnier, W5WMU, SK
Getting It Right!
In Brief...
Just Ahead in Radiosport
Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
ARRL Headquarters to be Closed on Friday, April 14: ARRL Headquarters
will be closed on Good Friday, April 14. There will be no W1AW
bulletin or code practice transmissions and no ARRL Audio News on that
day. ARRL Headquarters will reopen Monday, April 17, at 8 AM Eastern
Daylight Time. We wish everyone a safe and enjoyable holiday!
ARRL EXPO will Anchor League's Hamvention Presence
At Hamvention® 2017 in Xenia, Ohio, on May 19, 20, and 21, ARRL EXPO
will provide a spacious area focusing on ARRL activities. The ARRL
Store will be the central focus of ARRL EXPO in Building 2 of the
Greene County Fairgrounds and Expo Center, where visitors will be able
to peruse and purchase a wide array of ARRL publications, supplies,
and official League merchandise. They'll also be able to join, renew,
or extend their ARRL memberships. A limited supply of complimentary
ARRL EXPO 2017 pins will be available. With ARRL Field Day (FD)
looming on June 24-25, ARRL will offer an inventory of official ARRL
FD gear, including T-shirts, pins, hats, mugs, and posters. ARRL EXPO
exhibits will include:
ARRL Laboratory: Get Your Handheld Radio Tested!
ARRL Collegiate Amateur Radio Initiative
Amateur Radio and Education -- Meet ARRL Education & Technology
Program (ETP) instructors and explore the resources available for
introducing radio science and wireless technology into classrooms.
Radiosport and DXCC -- DXCC card checking, ARRL contests and awards,
Logbook of The World (LoTW), and QSL Bureau
RFinder -- The Worldwide Repeater Directory
ARRL Development and ARRL Foundation
ARRL Public Service
ARRL Field Organization Volunteers -- Network with ARRL Field
Organization volunteers, hosted by the ARRL Ohio Section.
HamSCI: The Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation
ARRL Visa® card -- U.S. Bank
Representatives of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) will
be on hand to meet and greet visitors.
Hamvention will take place this May at a new venue, the Greene County
Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio. [W8WWV video]
Heading the ARRL delegation will be ARRL President Rick Roderick,
K5UR. On hand to represent ARRL will be Great Lakes Division Director
Dale Williams, WA8EFK; Vice Director Thomas Delaney, W8WTD, and Ohio
Section Manager Scott Yonally, N8SY.
ARRL is seeking college students and high school seniors to help
support the ARRL Collegiate Amateur Radio Initiative booth at ARRL
EXPO. Student volunteers will sign up for one or more shifts working
in the booth -- during which they will visit with Hamvention attendees
and exchange ideas to strengthen radio clubs at our nation's colleges
and universities. Volunteers will receive a Hamvention exhibitor badge
and ARRL Team shirts. Contact Andy Milluzzi, KK4LWR, if interested.
World Amateur Radio Day on April 18 Marks IARU's 92nd Anniversary
World Amateur Radio Day (WARD) on Tuesday, April 18, will mark the
92nd anniversary of the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU), and
radio amateurs around the world will take to the airwaves to celebrate
the day in 1925 that the IARU was formed in Paris. "Celebrating
Amateur Radio's Contribution to Society" is the WARD theme.
Amateur Radio experimenters were the first to discover that the
shortwave spectrum -- far from being a wasteland -- could support
worldwide propagation. In the rush to use these shorter wavelengths,
Amateur Radio was "in grave danger of being pushed aside," IARU's
history notes. Amateur Radio pioneers, including ARRL co-founder Hiram
Percy Maxim, 1AW, met in Paris in 1925 and created the IARU to support
Amateur Radio worldwide.
Just 2 years later, at the International Radiotelegraph Conference,
Amateur Radio gained the allocations still recognized today -- 160,
80, 40, 20, and 10 meters. Since its founding, the IARU has worked
tirelessly to defend and expand the frequency allocations for Amateur
Radio. Thanks to the support of enlightened administrations in every
part of the globe, radio amateurs are now able to experiment and
communicate in frequency bands strategically located throughout the
radio spectrum.
From the 25 countries that formed the IARU in 1925, the IARU has grown
to include 160 member-societies in three regions. IARU Region 1
includes Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Northern Asia. Region 2
covers the Americas, and Region 3 is comprised of Australia, New
Zealand, the Pacific island nations, and most of Asia. The
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has recognized the IARU as
representing the interests of Amateur Radio.
World Amateur Radio Day is the day when IARU member-societies can
demonstrate the capabilities of Amateur Radio to the public and enjoy
global friendship with other radio amateurs around the globe. Read
more.
The Doctor Will See You Now!
"Grounding" is the topic of the current 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.
Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur Now Available
Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur by Ward Silver, N0AX, is
now available from ARRL. Proper station grounding is important! Build
your ham radio station with effective grounding and bonding techniques
for electrical safety, lightning protection, and RF management.
Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur shows you how to make sure
your station follows current standards for lightning protection and
communication systems, not to mention the National Electrical Code.
You'll learn effective grounding and bonding techniques for stations
in a house, condo, or apartment, for portable and temporary
situations, and for towers and outdoor antennas.
Grounding and Bonding for the Radio Amateur is available from the ARRL
Store or your ARRL Dealer. (ARRL Item no. 0659), ISBN: 978-62595-0659,
$25.95 retail, special ARRL member price $22.95). Call 860-594-0355
or, toll-free in the US, 888-277-5289. It is also available as an
e-book for the Amazon Kindle.
2017 National Hurricane Conference Set for New Orleans
Amateur Radio again will have a seat at the table during the 2017
National Hurricane Conference, which gets under way this month in New
Orleans. The conference will offer several presentations of interest
to radio amateurs. The conference theme, as it's been in the past, is
to improve hurricane preparedness. All Amateur Radio sessions are
free. For 2017, all the Amateur Radio sessions will be on Wednesday
morning, April 19, from 8:30 AM until 12:15 PM CDT. There will be two
primary Amateur Radio-related sessions, and all Amateur Radio-focused
presentations will be recorded and streamed live online (alternate
site). These sites include a complete schedule, which will be updated
as required prior to the event, and a social networking stream.
In the first session, Bob Robichaud, VE1MBR, of the Canadian Hurricane
Centre, will present on hurricane meteorological topics and provide a
brief overview of Canadian Hurricane Centre Operations; Assistant
Amateur Radio Station Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4R, will discuss
WX4NHC operations at the National Hurricane Center, and Hurricane
Watch Net (HWN) Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, will offer an overview
of the HWN, as well as talk about personal weather stations, backup
power, and antennas. Louisiana ARRL Assistant Section Manager Matt
Anderson, KD5KNZ, will provide a local ARRL and emergency
communication update.
In the second session, National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb
will speak on the importance of Amateur Radio surface reporting.
Director of Operations for the VoIP Hurricane Net and ARRL ARES
Eastern Massachusetts Assistant SEC Rob Macedo, KD1CY, will discuss
the VoIP Hurricane Net and best practices in SKYWARN for tropical
systems. National SATERN Liaison Bill Feist, WB8BZH, will talk on
Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network (SATERN)
health-and-welfare support during severe weather events.
A question-and-answer session will conclude the Amateur Radio program.
Read more.
30th International Marconi Day Event Set for April 22
Dozens of official "award stations" have registered to take part in
the 2017 International Marconi Day (IMD) event, this year being held
on April 22, 0000-2359 UTC (starting on April 21 in US time zones).
All contacts counting toward the Marconi Award must be made on HF with
registered stations, but other participating stations do not need to
be registered to claim awards. This year marks the 30th IMD, held each
year to mark the anniversary of wireless pioneer Guglielmo Marconi's
birth on April 25, 1874. IMD is observed each year on a Saturday close
to Marconi's birthday. Many special event stations -- some operating
from Marconi-related sites -- will be on the air. Marconi Award
certificates are available for both transmitting stations and
shortwave listeners (SWLs).
The event is not a contest but an opportunity for amateurs around the
world to make point-to-point contact with historic Marconi sites using
HF communication techniques descended from those used by Marconi, and
to earn an award certificate for working or hearing a requisite number
of Marconi stations.
There are two categories. Transmitting amateurs attempt to complete
contacts with 15 of the official award stations, while shortwave
listeners attempt to log two-way communications made by 15 of the
official award stations.
International Marconi Day special event station GB4IMD will be on the
air from Cornwall, helmed by members of the Cornish Amateur Radio
Club, which organizes the IMD event. Cornwall was home to some of
Marconi's early work. A list of participating stations is on the
Cornish Amateur Radio Club's website.
The Kerry Amateur Radio Group in Ireland will be taking part as an IMD
award station. EI6YXQ will be set up on the site of the former Marconi
Station at Ballybunion. The YXQ suffix commemorates the call sign of
the Marconi Station at Ballybunion.
Special event station K2M will be on the air from the site of the
Marconi Tower in Binghamton, New York.
In the US, special event station K2M will be on the air from
Binghamton, New York, the site of the remaining Marconi tower, where
the inventor demonstrated in 1913 that it was possible to communicate
via radio with a fast-moving train.
For the 7th year, the Norfolk Amateur Radio Club (NARC) will be on the
air from special event station GB0CMS at the Caister Lifeboat Visitor
Centre to commemorate the village's original Marconi wireless station,
established in 1900.
Other IMD sites with historical links to the inventor's work include
Cape Cod, Massachusetts (WA1WCC and KM1CC); Nantucket Island
(W1AA/MSC); Glace Bay, Nova Scotia (VE1IMD); Villa Griffone, Bologna,
Italy (IY4FGM), and many others.
A Facebook page is also available.
ARRL 2016 International Humanitarian Award Winners Honored
The recipients of the 2016 ARRL International Humanitarian Award --
Richard Darling, AH7G, and Barbara Darling, NH7FY -- have been honored
in Hawaii. Hawaii County Mayor Harry Kim designated the month of April
as "Roger and Barbara Darling Month" and personally presented a
certificate to the couple at a recent gathering in Hilo.
Hawaii Governor David Ige also sent each a Special Recognition
certificate, congratulating the Darlings on their hard work and
service.
Richard and Barbara Darling.
The International Humanitarian Award recognizes Amateur Radio's unique
role in international communication and the assistance amateurs
regularly provide to people in need. In January, the ARRL Board of
Directors cited the Darlings' work on behalf of past International
Humanitarian Award winner John Bush, KH6DLK/V63JB, and their
"significant material support" to his efforts to assist Yap and the
Federated States of Micronesia.
"[T]hey have supported these ongoing efforts over many years with
on-the-air activities including communication during weather events,
including several typhoons, as well as other emergency activities,
including assistance to boaters in trouble," the Board's resolution
said.
This included monetary support for radio equipment, school supplies,
diapers, medical supplies, food, and shipping. Regular radio contact
via HF and phone patches helped to keep families connected, some of
which had not talked to each other in several years, and to provide
early weather warnings.
On April 8, the award was formally presented to the couple by ARRL
Pacific Section Public Information Officer Stacy Holbrook, KH6OWL, of
Oahu, on behalf of ARRL and Pacific Section Manager Joe Speroni, AH0A.
-- Thanks to Stacy Holbrook, KH6OWL
Radio DARC to Cover IARU Region 1 General Conference on Shortwave this
Fall
Radio DARC -- the shortwave broadcast program of the Deutscher Amateur
Radio Club in Germany (DARC) -- has announced plans to broadcast six
programs during the 24th International Amateur Radio Union Region 1
(IARU-R1) Conference, September 16-22 in Landshut, Germany. IARU
Region 1 includes Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Northern Asia.
Rainer Englert, DF2NU, of Radio DARC said the broadcasts from the
conference, in English, will keep the IARU Region 1 ham radio audience
up to date with news and background reports.
"Although targeted to IARU Region 1, the transmissions are likely to
be heard in North America, too, as 2,000 kW EIRP from a log periodic
antenna will be used for the western European beam in the 31-meter
broadcast band," Englert said.
Radio DARC is the weekly magazine of the German Amateur Radio Club for
radio amateurs and shortwave listeners, with three broadcasts on 6,070
kHz for Europe. Typical programs contain DX news, technical features,
and reports from the DARC, as well as commentary, propagation
forecasts and music from the 1970s and 1980s. After the
discontinuation of Deutsche Welle and other shortwave broadcasters,
the weekly DARC program is one of the few remaining from Germany.
The venue for the 2017 IARU Region 1 General Conference is the
Sparkassenakademie Bayern in Landshut.
"Several transmitters of up to 300 kW and three shortwave bands will
be used to allow reception in different target regions of the world,"
Englert said. In 2015, a group of radio amateurs in Germany obtained a
license to broadcast on the 49-meter band after German national
broadcaster Deutsche Welle closed down a 500 kW shortwave broadcast
transmitter near Munich. Using parts scavenged from the Deutsche Welle
site, the ham group built up its own 10 kW transmitter and launched
Channel 292.
The Austrian Broadcasting Transmitters Corporation (ORS) near Vienna
is a broadcast partner for the IARU R1 General Conference, and
broadcasts covering that event will air via ORS and Channel 292
transmitters.
Preliminary Schedule: Sunday, September 17 through Friday, September
22, 2017
1730-1800 UTC: 13,775 kHz @ 300 kW for Africa
1730-1800 UTC: 9,790 kHz @ 100 kW for eastern Europe / Russia / Middle
East
1800-1830 UTC: 6,070 kHz @ 100 kW for central, northern, and southern
Europe
1800-1830 UTC: 9,540 kHz @ 100 kW for western Europe
Noted Contester Dr. Pat Sonnier, W5WMU, SK
A well-known contest signal has gone silent. Dr. Pat Sonnier, W5WMU,
of Lafayette, Louisiana, died on April 6 after suffering an apparent
heart attack. An ARRL Life Member, he was 78. Sonnier had been
licensed since the early 1950s.
Pat Sonnier, W5WMU. [Rick Lindquist, WW1ME, photo]
A graduate of the Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New
Orleans, Sonnier practiced family medicine in Lafayette. His always
enviable signal from W5WMU -- and later from W1WMU at his summer home
in Lubec, Maine -- were testament to his technical skill. In domestic
events such as ARRL November Sweepstakes, Sonnier often provided the
semi-rare LA or ME multiplier. Champion contester Scott Redd, K0DQ,
met W5WMU when Redd and his wife were vacationing in Lubec and spotted
the substantial W1WMU antenna farm.
"I had known of and heard Pat, W5WMU, for as long as I can remember,"
Redd told ARRL. "His signal from his swampland QTH in Louisiana was
always booming on any band, and a review of his antenna farm revealed
his seriousness in pursuing dB."
Sonnier frequently invited others to operate from his station, and he
and his wife Alice were gracious hosts. "Operating from Pat's place in
Maine was one of the most enjoyable experiences I've had in
contesting," Kevin Stockton, N5DX, said on the CQ-Contest Reflector.
"It wasn't the on-air time that stuck with me, but what happened
before and after the contests that made both trips so memorable."
Sonnier hosted multiple winning ARRL November Sweepstakes CW efforts,
with Tree Tyree, N6TR, at the helm, and an all-W5 operating team won
the 2013 CQ World Wide DX CW from W1WMU in the Multi-Single category.
"Age tried to slow Pat down, but he didn't know the word 'surrender,'"
Stockton added.
A view of the W1WMU antennas in Lubec, Maine. [Rick Lindquist, WW1ME,
photo]
Redd said his most salient impression of Sonnier was his zest for ham
radio and contesting. "Well into his 8th decade, he undertook to
build, maintain, and operate a serious station," he said.
Dan Street, K1TO, who helped install the W1WMU antenna farm, recalled,
"His station in low-lying southern Louisiana is legendary, with many
towers and large arrays." Street said Sonnier had an insatiable
curiosity about all things and was unwaveringly generous.
Sonnier was a founding member and a director of the ARRL-affiliated
Louisiana Contest Club. He was the last US radio amateur to host
Thomas Andersen, OZ1AA, during Andersen's globe-circling bicycle
journey.
"Pat Sonnier was stellar example of a lifetime spent enjoying our
wonderful and ageless hobby," Redd said.
Getting It Right!
The article "New Rookie Roundup Rules Go into Effect for SSB Event on
April 17" in the April 6 edition of The ARRL Letter contained the
incorrect date for the contest. The Rookie Roundup SSB will take place
on Sunday, April 16.
In Brief...
DX Code of Conduct Pioneer, Proponent Randy Johnson, W6SJ, SK: One of
the driving forces behind the DX Code of Conduct, Randy Johnson, W6SJ,
of Corona del Mar, California, died on March 27 following
complications of heart surgery. A member of ARRL and the First Class
CW Operators Club (FOC), he was 79. Licensed the first time in 1951,
Johnson let his ticket lapse when his interests wandered, but then, 50
years after he was first licensed, he took and passed all four US
licensing levels in place at the time (2001) and became AE6AX. The
following year, he obtained W6SJ. He described his location as "an
antenna-challenged environment" but said that made his DXing successes
"all the sweeter." In 2010, Johnson penned an Op-Ed "DX Etiquette"
that appeared in the March 2010 issue of QST. He said the positive
feedback led him and "a good-sized band of DXers" to try to do
something about poor operating by DXers, especially in DXpedition
pileups. They developed the DX Code of Conduct. "We hope that
ultimately when every ham gets on the air, he will remember the
ethical operating practices that make our hobby so enjoyable," Johnson
said on his QRZ.com profile. -- Thanks to the The Daily DX for some
information
2017 ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference Issues Call for
Papers: Technical papers are solicited for presentation at the 36th
Annual ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC), set for
September 15-17 in St. Louis, Missouri, at the Holiday Inn Airport
West in Earth City. Papers will also be published in the Conference
Proceedings. Authors do not need to attend the conference to have
their papers included in the Proceedings. The submission deadline is
July 31, 2017. Submit papers via e-mail or via post to Maty Weinberg,
KB1EIB, ARRL, 225 Main St., Newington, CT 06111. Papers will be
published exactly as submitted, and authors will retain all rights.
The Chinese "Foghorn" jumps between 7,128 and 7,187 kHz. [Wolf Hadel,
DK2OM, image]
Russian "Buzzer" Disappears, Chinese "Foghorn" Returns: The
International Amateur Radio Union Region 1 (IARU-R1) Monitoring System
(IARUMS) March newsletter reports that the Russian "buzzer" on 6,998.0
kHz has disappeared. For a long time the system interfered with the
lower edge of the 40-meter band. In addition, a Russian F1B
transmission on 7,193 kHz -- believed to be emanating from Kaliningrad
-- has ceased. IARUMS credits German telecoms authorities for
submitting complaints and the Russian military. The IARUMS March
newsletter further reports that a Chinese over-the-horizon (OTH) burst
system radar "foghorn" signal is being heard again on both 40 meters
(jumping between 7,128 and 7,187 kHz) and on 20 meters (14,218 kHz).
The signals are 10 kHz wide with burst durations of 3.8 and 7.6
seconds. A "numbers" station said to be from the Ukraine SZRU
intelligence agency was reported on March 30 on AM (female voice) on
14,212 kHz
Just Ahead in Radiosport
April 14-15 -- Holyland DX Contest (CW, phone, digital)
April 15 -- Feld Hell Sprint
April 15 -- ES Open HF Championship (CW, phone)
April 15-16 -- Worked All Provinces of China (CW, phone)
April 15-16 -- YU DX Contest (CW)
April 15-16 -- CQ Manchester Mineira DX Contest (CW)
April 15-16 -- Michigan QSO Party (CW, phone)
April 15-16 -- EA-QRP CW Contest
April 15-16 -- Ontario QSO Party (CW, phone)
April 15-16 -- North Dakota QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
April 16 -- WAB 3.5/7/14 MHz Data Modes Contest
April 16 -- ARRL Rookie Roundup (SSB)
April 17 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)
April 17 -- Low Power Spring Sprint (CW)
April 17 -- 144 MHz Spring Sprint (CW, phone, digital)
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
April 15 -- Roanoke Division Convention, Raleigh, North Carolina
Apr 21-23 -- International DX Convention, Visalia, California
April 21-23 -- Eastern VHF-UHF Microwave Conference, Manchester,
Connecticut
April 21-23 -- Idaho State Convention, Boise, Idaho
April 22 -- Delaware State Convention, Georgetown, Delaware
April 22 -- Aurora '17 Convention, White Bear Lake, Minnesota
Apr 22-23 -- Communications Academy XIX, Seattle, Washington
April 28-29 -- Southeastern VHF Society Conference, Charlotte, North
Carolina
April 29 -- Louisiana Section Convention, West Monroe, Louisiana
May 4-6 -- Military Radio Collector's Group Convention, San Luis
Obispo, California
May 7 -- Eastern Pennsylvania Section Convention, Bristol,
Pennsylvania
May 13 -- Iowa Section Convention, Boone, Iowa
May 19-21 -- Ohio State Convention (Dayton Hamvention), Xenia, Ohio
May 27-28 -- Rocky Mountain Division Convention, Cody, Wyoming
June 2-4 -- Northwestern Division Convention, Seaside, Oregon
June 3 -- Georgia Section Convention, Marietta, Georgia
June 4 -- Western Pennsylvania Section Convention, Prospect,
Pennsylvania
June 9-10 -- West Gulf Division Convention, Irving, Texas
June 16-18 -- Utah State Convention, Garden City, Utah
June 17 -- Tennessee State Convention, Knoxville, Tennessee
Find conventions and hamfests in your area.
ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for
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