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N9PMO  > LETTER   08.05.17 00:06l 665 Lines 29267 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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Sent: 170507/2301Z 17484@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NOAM BPQ6.0.13


Carole Perry, WB2MGP, Set to Host Her 30th Hamvention® Youth Forum

Amateur Radio Volunteers Support 2017 Boston Marathon

Important Notice -- New MF and LF Bands are Not Yet Available to Use!

The Doctor Will See You Now!

FCC Personal Radio Service Revisions Will Affect GMRS, FRS, CB, Other
Part 95 Devices

More Arduino Projects for Ham Radio by Glen Popiel, KW5GP, Now
Available

Harvard Wireless Club Sponsors Inaugural Amateur Radio Symposium

Broadcast Industry Radio Amateurs Gather at Annual NAB Convention in
Vegas

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

Carole Perry, WB2MGP, Set to Host Her 30th Hamvention® Youth Forum

Carole Perry, WB2MGP, who may be Amateur Radio's premier supporter of
youth, will moderate her 30th Hamvention Youth Forum later this month,
when Hamvention® convenes for the first time at its new venue in
Xenia, Ohio, May 19-21. And she is showing no signs of slowing down.
The Youth Forum is set for Saturday, May 20, 9:15 AM until noon, in
Room 2. She's lined up nine young presenters who will speak on a
variety of topics of interest to radio amateurs of all ages. The Youth
Forum is open to all.

"To say I am super excited about my upcoming Hamvention forums is a
huge understatement," Perry told ARRL. "While I am always looking
forward to my 'Dayton ventures' every year, this year is especially
unique and important to me."

Perry praised Hamvention's sponsor, the Dayton Amateur Radio
Association (DARA), with setting up her forum in a room where the many
loyal Youth Forum followers will be able to support the young
presenters in comfort.

Here's the 2017 Hamvention Youth Forum lineup:

Lucas Schroeder, W6LDS (15) -- "The SharkRF openSPOT"

Carissa Ferguson, KJ4EZA (17) -- "Robotics and Ham Radio"

Dakota Krzysik, KE8CVK (17) -- "Activations: Islands, Lighthouses, and
Ships"

Grace Lea, KM4TXT (9) -- "Solar Power Mania"

Jerome Dinakar, KE0BBQ (16) -- "Tribute to Ellie Van Winkle"

Evan Markowitz, KD2IZW (18) "Balloon Based Repeater for Emergency
Applications"

Ruth Willet, KM4LAO (18) -- "Plugging into Your Valuable Club
Resources"

Chris Brault, KD8YVJ (14) -- "Getting Started with SDR"

Dhruv Rebba, KC9ZJX (13) -- "Community Services with Ham Radio
Communications"

"Space Weather Woman" Tamitha Skov.

"Space Weather Woman" Tamitha Skov will speak on "Teaching Space
Weather" at the Instructors' Forum on Friday, and about "Space Weather
and the Mars Generation" at the Youth Forum on Saturday.

Reflecting on her soon-to-be 3 decades of Youth Forum events, Perry
said she continues to be impressed at the talented and creative young
hams who have spoken at the forum over the years.

"Many of them have stayed in touch and report about their school
choices and careers, and how their appearance at the Youth Forum
influenced those choices," she said.

Carole Perry, WB2MGP, with astronaut Mike Fincke, KE5AIT, at
Hamvention 2015.

A "Where Are They Now" video presentation will showcase the post-Youth
Forum experiences of those who have participated in the forum over the
years. "Mary Alestra, KB2IGG, is part of the video introduced by TV
producer John Amodeo, NN6JA," Perry said. "Mary is a former ham radio
student of mine. Also on the video, among others, is Don Lafreniere,
W8PSP, who met his future wife at the Youth Forum."

Perry expressed her gratitude to the many Youth Forum sponsors. As in
the past, there will be plenty of prizes. "We promise there will be
fun for all and a chance for everyone to show support for our bright
and talented young hams," Perry said. "Please join us in supporting
the future of ham radio!"

Perry will conduct her Hamvention Instructors' Forum on Friday, May
19, 10:30-11:30 AM, in Room 3.

Amateur Radio Volunteers Support 2017 Boston Marathon

On April 17, nearly 280 Amateur Radio communication volunteers
participated in the 2017 Boston Marathon, the 121st running of the
event organized by the Boston Athletic Association (BAA).
Warmer-than-typical temperatures for the Patriots' Day race raised
concern for increased medical issues, but lower humidity and some
cloud cover later in the afternoon mitigated the potential for
problems.

Amateur Radio operators assisted in the State Emergency Operations
Center (EOC). [Jim Palmer, KB1KQW, photo]

Amateur Radio's primary communication role involved logistics.
Operations included relaying medical resupply requests, picking up
runners via medical sweep buses, conveying medical statistics as
required by the Red Cross and Massachusetts Department of Public
Health, and providing situational awareness as needed along the entire
26-mile route. Amateur Radio also backed up EMS communications, and
the team relayed several ambulance requests along the route. Brett
Smith, AB1RL, one of the BAA Organizational Committee representatives,
said Marathon organizers were very pleased with the efforts of Amateur
Radio operators.

"Congratulations to everyone on a job very well done," Smith said
afterward. "We were braced for a busy day, and our preparation helped
see us through to make sure it was never anything we couldn't handle."
Smith said that many volunteers enjoyed spending their day supporting
the Marathon this year.

"We're already seeing e-mails from our volunteers thanking us for our
work too. So the work was appreciated not only by organizers from the
BAA, but the volunteers as well," he said.

Course volunteer Matt Knowles, KC1AEI, was among them. "I feel like
Amateur Radio plays an important role in the safety and security of
the Boston Marathon," he said. "Our net operators were succinct,
clear, and very patient as we took care of our individual
responsibilities on the course. All of the communications volunteers
put forth a unified effort on Monday, which made for another
successful race."

Rob Macedo, KD1CY, the other BAA Organizational Committee
representative, reported that state emergency managers were very
pleased with the logistics and situational awareness support from
Amateur Radio operators. He was stationed at the Multi-Agency
Coordination Center (MACC), located at the State Emergency Operations
Center (EOC) in Framingham.

"At one point mid-afternoon, one of the two finish line medical tents
was filled to capacity," Macedo recounted. "The BAA and EMS
representatives at the MACC were impressed at receiving the on- and
off-diversion reports in a timely fashion from Finish Segment
Coordinator Matt Brennan, NM1B."

Nearly 280 Amateur Radio volunteers turned out to assist in Boston
Marathon communications. [Jim Palmer, KB1KQW, photo]

Start Segment Coordinator Mark Richards, K1MGY, said all of the
planning and setup at the race's starting point of Hopkinton paid off.
"We provided BAA organizers at the start with an analysis that looks
to correlate the planned and actual times of the start of the race
very well," he said.

Course Field Operations/Course Net Control Segment Coordinator Jim
Palmer, KB1KQW, said he was pleased with the performance of the
Amateur Radio teams throughout the event. "Numerous course Amateur
Radio volunteers have already expressed their appreciation for a
well-run, highly organized event, and are already looking toward
volunteering at the 2018 Marathon," he said. Course volunteers logged
an estimated nearly 1,000 volunteer hours, and Palmer said their
support was instrumental to the success of the communication support
mission.

At the Course Net Control Operations Center in Brookline, students
from Dexter-Southfield School provided support to net control
operators during the event. Numerous nets cover the Marathon course,
and all are run from this single location. Students regularly updated
status boards, informing both local net control operators and the
other net control operations centers of each ham radio volunteer's
location. Veteran net control operators dedicated some time to work
with the students to teach them how marathon nets operate, providing a
robust ham radio learning experience in an educational setting.

Amateur Radio is one of three radio communication systems used for the
Boston Marathon. Eight Amateur Radio representatives, including
segment coordinators, sit on the BAA Communications Committee with BAA
officials and representatives of the Massachusetts State Police and a
commercial communications contractor. Boston Marathon Medical
Coordinator Chris Troyanos, who chairs the Communications Committee,
has let the Amateur Radio community know that it is -- and will remain
-- a vital component of Marathon communication support. -- Thanks to
Rob Macedo, KD1CY



Important Notice -- New MF and LF Bands are Not Yet Available to Use!

The new 630-meter and 2,200-meter bands are not yet available for
Amateur Radio use. The effective date of the recent FCC Report & Order
(R&O) granting these allocations has not yet been determined, and
until the start date has been set, it is not legal under an Amateur
Radio license to transmit on either band.

The fact that the new rules contain a new information-collection
requirement -- notification of operation to the United Telecoms
Council (UTC) -- complicates the matter of determining an effective
date. According to the FCC R&O, the Office of Management and Budget
(under the Paperwork Reduction Act) must first approve the
information-collection requirements in §97.303(g)(2), which must be
in place before radio amateurs can use the new bands.

Once that happens, the FCC will publish a notice in The Federal
Register "announcing such approval and the relevant effective date,"
the R&O said. ARRL will announce the UTC notification procedures and
the effective date to use these new bands as soon as these are known.

The Doctor Will See You Now!

"End-Fed Antennas" 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.

Just ahead: "Optimizing Receiver Performance."

Support ARRL as You Shop for Mom

Mother's Day is Sunday, May 14. If you're looking for the perfect
gift, we invite you to shop at AmazonSmile and choose American Radio
Relay League Inc. (ARRL) as your charity. With every purchase you make
at AmazonSmile, Amazon will make a contribution to ARRL. This helps
the League to extend its reach in public service, advocacy, education,
technology, and membership. Make Mom smile, get her something special
this year, while supporting Amateur Radio and ARRL. Bookmark ARRL's
link and support Amateur Radio and ARRL every time you shop online.



FCC Personal Radio Service Revisions Will Affect GMRS, FRS, CB, Other
Part 95 Devices

Soon it will be legal for CBers to work DX on 11 meters. In a lengthy
Report and Order (R&O) in a proceeding (WT Docket No. 10-119) dating
back 7 years, the FCC has announced rule changes affecting the General
Mobile Radio Service (GMRS), the Family Radio Service (FRS), the
Citizens Band Radio Service (CBRS or "CB"), and other applications
that fall under the FCC's Part 95 Personal Radio Services (PRS) rules
and regulations. Part 95 devices typically are low-power units that
communicate over shared spectrum and, with some exceptions, do not
require a license.

"This draft Report and Order completes a thorough review of the PRS
rules in order to modernize them, remove outdated requirements, and
reorganize them to make it easier to find information," the FCC said
in a summary attached to the R&O.

GMRS and FRS devices are used for personal communication over several
miles; compact FRS handhelds, often sold in pairs, are widely
available. While GMRS and FRS share spectrum, GMRS provides for
greater communications range and requires an FCC license; FRS does
not.

"The rules will increase the number of communications channels for
both GMRS and FRS, expand digital capabilities to GMRS (currently
allowed for FRS), and increase the power/range for certain FRS
channels to meet consumer demands for longer range communications
(while maintaining higher power capabilities for licensed GMRS)," the
FCC explained.

The amended rules eventually will eliminate combination FRS/GMRS
radios for the most part, but allow up to 2 W PEP output for FRS
transceivers. "[M]any current users of GMRS/FRS combination radios do
not obtain licenses to operate over the GMRS frequencies in those
radios," the FCC said. "Much of this problem likely arises as a result
of the mass consumer marketing of combination devices for sale to the
public in large quantities to users who do not know about or do not
understand the licensing requirements attached to such radios and
obligations associated with operating in the GMRS."

Inexpensive Family Radio Service handhelds are widely available. [Rick
Lindquist, WW1ME, photo]

The FCC said it no longer will certify FRS devices that incorporate
GMRS capabilities or capabilities of other services. Existing GMRS/FRS
combination radios that operate at power levels of less than 2 W ERP
will be reclassified as FRS devices; existing GMRS/FRS radios that
operate above that power level will be reclassified as GMRS devices,
requiring an individual license. Radios that can transmit on GMRS
repeater input channels will continue to be licensed individually and
not by rule.

The FCC said changes to the decades-old Citizens Band (CB) rules will
remove outdated requirements, including certain labeling requirements.
DXing on Citizens Band will become legal too. Once the new rules are
effective, CBers will be allowed to contact stations outside of the
FCC-imposed -- but widely disregarded -- 155.3-mile distance limit.
The revised CB rules further clarify how hands-free devices can be
used with CB radios and will allow the use of wireless microphones
with CB radios. The FCC left in place the current power limits for the
CB Radio Service.

Most of the new Part 95 rules will become effective 30 days after
their publication in The Federal Register. Read more.

More Arduino Projects for Ham Radio by Glen Popiel, KW5GP, Now
Available

The new book More Arduino Projects for Ham Radio by popular author and
experimenter Glen Popiel, KW5GP, builds on the success of his Arduino
for Ham Radio. His latest offering includes 15 completely new
practical and functional Arduino projects for your station.

This time, Popiel branches out to use some of the newer Arduino
variants and devices. Each project is complete and functional as-is,
but the author leaves room for your personal touches and enhancements.
That's part of the fun of the Arduino and Open Source communities --
building on the work of others, and then sharing your designs and
innovations for others to learn, modify, and improve.

"When it comes to the Arduino, you're only limited by your
imagination," Popiel said. More Arduino Projects for Ham Radio starts
by building a solid foundation through descriptions of the many new
Arduino boards and add-on components, followed by a collection of
practical ham radio-related projects that showcase a wide variety of
applications. There is something here for everyone.

More Arduino Projects for Amateur Radio is available from the ARRL
Store or your ARRL Dealer. (ARRL Item No. 0703), ISBN: 978-62595-0703,
$39.95 retail, special ARRL Member Price $34.95). Call (860) 594-0355
or, toll-free in the US, (888) 277-5289.



Harvard Wireless Club Sponsors Inaugural Amateur Radio Symposium

The Harvard Wireless Club (W1AF) sponsored its first Amateur Radio
Symposium on April 29 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The symposium
featured speakers from the University and elsewhere, including
appearances by W1AF's incoming president Ben Lee, K7JS, and the club's
outgoing president Douglas Maggs, KK4UHK. They were joined by Yale
University Amateur Radio Club (W1YU) President Scott Matheson, N3NFP;
First Vice President James Surprenant, AB1DQ, and past president
Martin Ewing, AA6E, in recounting the distinguished histories of these
two collegiate Amateur Radio clubs.

Harvard Wireless Club's outgoing president Douglas Maggs, KK4UHK.

Flavio Jorge, CT7ATQ, of the University of Aveiro in Portugal,
discussed microwave propagation for space systems in his presentation,
"Knocking down walls, changing mentalities and breaking rules -- a
case study on radiowave propagation for space systems."

Emeritus professor of electrical engineering Paul Horowitz, W1HFA,
delivered a thoroughly enjoyable presentation and discussion of the
ultimate DX -- monitoring the universe in a search for
extraterrestrial intelligence. Matheson and Ewing participated in a
roundtable forum, "Youth in Amateur Radio."

That group was joined later via Skype by Martin Atherton, G3ZAY, the
master of Cambridge University's Wireless Society (G6UW), and two of
his student colleagues. Vasiljie Perovic, M0HZC, spoke on "Extremely
Low Frequency meteor detection," while William Eustace, M0WJE,
discussed "LoRaâä¢ spread spectrum radio."

Flavio Jorge, CT7ATQ, of the University of Aveiro, discussed microwave
propagation for space systems.

Others taking part were Daniela Marcelino, CR7AQM, and Micael Rebelo,
CR7AQL, of the University of Aveiro, and Nicolas Weninger, KC1GLI, and
Saahil Mehta, KG5HEW, both of Harvard.

Also on hand was ARRL CEO Tom Gallagher, NY2RF, who presented a
progress report from League Headquarters and emphasized the need to
welcome new hams into the Amateur Radio community. Attorney Fred
Hopengarten, K1VR, shared some of his career highlights in his talk,
"Ham radio pays my mortgage and other thoughts." Hopengarten is the
author of the book Antenna Zoning for the Radio Amateur.

"The Harvard Wireless Club made a strong showing on Saturday,"
Gallagher said afterward. "They combined excellent material with a
fast-paced program that never bogged down -- from Professor Paul
Horowitz's description of chasing DX across the universe to live
transatlantic conversations with Cambridge University's radio club
members."

An enthusiastic Paul Horowitz, W1HFA, discussed the search for
extraterrestrial intelligence.

Attendee George Allison, K1IG, summed up the proceedings this way: "A
full day with no fluff...accomplished and proficient
speakers...absorbing and enlightening...wholehearted League
support...and all-you-can-eat free ice cream is always a winner!"

Last fall, ARRL announced its Collegiate Amateur Radio Initiative
(CARI) to assist college and university ham radio clubs in
collaborating and networking. The community has grown rapidly since
then, with membership in the Facebook CARI group growing fivefold to
nearly 500 individuals.

ARRL will sponsor a CARI forum at Hamvention later this month in
Xenia, Ohio (Saturday, May 20, at 12:30 PM in Room 4).

Broadcast Industry Radio Amateurs Gather at Annual NAB Convention in
Vegas

A few thousand of the more than 103,000 broadcasting industry
professionals from around the world that gathered in Las Vegas April
22-27 for the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) convention
were radio amateurs. Nevada Section ARRL volunteers, under the
guidance of Section Manager John Bigley, N7UR, and assisted by Section
Public Information Coordinator Chuck Farnham, WD6CHC, were on hand to
greet visitors and answer any questions they might have about ARRL
membership and benefits, FCC regulations, licensing, operating
activities, and other Amateur Radio topics.

Nevada SM John Bigley, N7UR (left), holds the Emblem of India,
presented by Ajaya Gupta, VU2DED.

"A large number of those hams stopping by the ARRL booth were
international visitors, including Ajaya Gupta, VU2DED, of Mumbai,
India, who presented the Nevada hams with a statuette of the State
Emblem of India, which was adopted when India became a republic in
1950," recounted Bigley. "The statuette was displayed in the booth for
the duration of the convention."

Bigley said booth visitors also came from Germany, Italy, the United
Kingdom, China, South Korea, Brazil, the Netherlands, Japan, Canada,
Mexico, Australia, and New Zealand.

On Wednesday, April 26, Nevada amateurs also joined hundreds of their
colleagues from around the world at the annual Amateur Radio Operators
Reception hosted by the NAB, DX Engineering, Broadcast Supply
Worldwide, and Turner Engineering. Bigley welcomed the visitors to Las
Vegas, acknowledged the hard work of the ARRL volunteers staffing the
booth, and thanked attendees for their continued support of the NAB
convention, and for making Las Vegas and the ARRL Nevada Section a
part of their event.

An article in the Las Vegas Review Journal focused on the Amateur
Radio reception. "People say that Amateur Radio is dead," Farnham told
reporter Todd Prince. "Well, there are ham radio operators every 3
feet on the NAB floor." Read more.



In Brief...

ARRL Website Outage Set for May 8: The ARRL website will be down for
essential maintenance on Monday, May 8, starting around 2100 UTC. The
ARRL website will become unavailable for approximately 90 minutes.
During that time, the website will be offline, and visitors will see a
"Down for Maintenance" message. ARRL e-mail services and reflectors
will remain in operation. We regret any inconvenience.

Deadline for the QST Antenna Design Competition is June 1! The
deadline to submit entries for the 2017 QST Antenna Design Competition
is Thursday, June 1. Enter in one of three categories -- 160 meters,
LF, or VLF; 80 through 10 meters, and 6 meters and higher bands. Only
one entry per person or team will be accepted. First-place winners
(individuals or teams) in each category will receive $500 each.
Second- and third-place winners in each category will receive $250 and
$100, respectively. Winning designs will also be eligible for
publication in QST. Send entries to QST, Attn: Antenna Design
Competition, 225 Main St., Newington, CT 06111. Or e-mail your entry
to qst@arrl.org. The subject line should include your call sign and
the words "Antenna Design Competition" (without quotes). Complete
rules are on the ARRL website.

Storm-Related Mishap Claims Life of Volunteer Fire Chief Doug Deckard,
KC5PLA: Scotty Douglas "Doug" Deckard, KC5PLA, of Quitman, Arkansas,
died on April 30 after being struck by a car during torrential
rainfall while checking water lines in his community. Deckard, an ARRL
member, was 51. He served as Cove Creek/Pearson Volunteer Fire Chief.
Arkansas State Police say Deckard had pulled off the roadway along
Highway 25 near Quitman and was working outside of his vehicle when he
was hit. He had served as a firefighter for more than 30 years and was
the coordinator of the Cleburne County Search and Rescue Team. Deckard
also was a dealer for Hytera radio products. "He was a wonderful
member of our community, and his kindness, work ethic, and enthusiasm
will be sorely missed," the Cleburne County Sheriff's Office said in a
statement. "His willingness to serve our community should be a shining
example to us all." -- Thanks to Roger Gray, N5QS, for some
information

May 9 is Puerto Rico Amateur Radio Operator Day: On Tuesday, May 9,
Radio Amateurs in Puerto Rico will celebrate Puerto Rico Amateur Radio
Operator Day (Dia del Radioaficionado), observed each year on the
second Tuesday in May. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the
first celebration. The Amateur Radio Operator Day proclamation, signed
by Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rossello and Secretary of State Luis
Marin, recognizes Amateur Radio's public service contributions; Puerto
Rico's status as an ARRL Section, home to more than 4,000 radio
amateurs and nine ARRL-affiliated clubs, and the 5th ARRL Puerto Rico
State Convention. The proclamation makes special mention of Joaquin
Agusty Ramirez y Arellano, 4JE, a broadcasting pioneer (WKAQ) and
radio amateur, who, with Jesus T. Pinero, 4KT, co-founded the Porto
Rico Radio Club in 1922. Pinero would become Puerto Rico's first
governor in 1948.

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Each of the weekly solar and
geomagnetic indicators that we track were lower this week. The average
daily sunspot number dropped 10.6 points to 25.1, and the average
daily solar flux was 4.5 points lower than the previous week at 76.9.

We have not witnessed a day with zero sunspots since April 17. The
average planetary and mid-latitude A indices were both 5.6, down from
the previous week, when the numbers were 26.4 and 18.4, respectively.

As of May 3, the predicted solar flux is 75 on May 4-7; 74 on May 8;
75 on May 9-11; 73 on May 12; 75 on May 13-14; 80 on May 15-18; 85 on
May 19-21; 80 on May 22-23; 77 on May 24-27; 75 on May 28-30; 73 on
May 31-June 8; 75 on June 9-10; and 80 on June 11-14.

Predicted planetary A index is 12, 8, 8, 5, and 10 on May 4-8; 5 on
May 9-14; 8, 15, 30, and 25 on May 15-18; 45, 50, 15, 10, and 8 on May
19-23; 5 on May 24-27; 12 and 8 on May 28-29; 5 on May 30-June 1; 8 on
June 2-4; 5 on June 5-10; 8, 15, 30, 25, 45, and 50 on June 11-16.

Bob Kile, W7RH, of Las Vegas, Nevada, took advantage of a 6-meter
sporadic-E opening on May 3, working stations in Texas, Wyoming,
Idaho, and Colorado. Two Wyoming stations were "solid copy for several
hours" before the band closed. (Bob also has a 160-meter remote base
in the Northern Arizona desert. More information is on his website.)

Sunspot numbers for April 27 through May 3, 2017 were 23, 35, 34, 33,
11, 25, and 15, with a mean of 25.1. The 10.7-centimeter flux was
78.2, 78, 77, 77.4, 75.3, 77.2, and 74.9, with a mean of 76.9.
Estimated planetary A indices were 7, 6, 6, 6, 5, 5, and 4, with a
mean of 5.6. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 10, 6, 6, 6, 5, 4,
and 2, with a mean of 5.6.

Send me your reports and observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

May 6 -- Microwave Spring Sprint (Any mode)

May 6 -- FISTS Spring Slow Speed Sprint (CW)

May 6-7 -- New England QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

May 6-7 -- 7th Call Area QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

May 6-7 -- Indiana QSO Party (CW, phone)

May 6-7 -- Delaware QSO Party (CW, phone)

May 6-7 -- 10-10 International Spring Contest (CW)

May 6-7 -- SBMS 2.3 GHz and Up Contest (CW, phone, digital)

May 6-7 -- ARI International DX Contest (CW, phone, digital)

May 6-7 -- F9AA Cup (PSK)

May 10 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (Data)

May 11 -- 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 e-mail preferences.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

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

July 14-16 -- Montana State Convention, Essex, Montana

July 21-22 -- Oklahoma State Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

July 27-30 -- Central States VHF Society Conference, Albuquerque, New
Mexico

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for 

Amateur Radio News and Information.

Join or Renew Today! ARRL membership includes QST, Amateur Radio's
most popular and informative journal, delivered to your mailbox each
month.

Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday.

Subscribe to...

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articles by top contesters, letters, hints, statistics, scores, NA
Sprint, and QSO Parties.

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features technical articles, construction projects, columns, and other
items of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.

Free of charge to ARRL members...

Subscribe to the ARES E-Letter (monthly public service and emergency
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