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N9PMO  > LETTER   13.05.17 02:50l 596 Lines 25628 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3519
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Subj: ARRL3519 ARRL Letter
Path: IW8PGT<IZ3LSV<I0OJJ<N9PMO
Sent: 170513/0143Z 17749@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NOAM BPQ6.0.13


Hamvention Organizers "Counting Down the Hours," Anticipating up to
35,000 Visitors

Registration Now Open for USA ARDF Championships

ARRL Field Day Site Locator is Live for 2017, Public Service
Announcements Available

The Doctor Will See You Now!

RadFxSat (Fox-1B) Passes Mission Readiness Review, Could Launch in
September

IEEE-EMC Society Chicago Chapter Meeting Attendees Give to Spectrum
Defense Fund

Yasme Foundation Grants will Support Youth Involvement in Amateur
Radio

Ham Volunteers Urgently Needed to Support Communication for NYC NAMI
5K Walk

Historic NSS Call Sign to be Reactivated for First Time in More than
40 Years

W5KUB Again to Offer Next Best Thing to Being at Hamvention

"Frequency," "Last Man Standing" QRT

Getting It Right!

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

Hamvention Organizers "Counting Down the Hours," Anticipating up to
35,000 Visitors

Dayton Amateur Radio Association (DARA) treasurer and Hamvention®
spokesperson Mike Kalter, W8CI, says that everything is falling into
place for "a five-star event" at Hamvention's new venue, the Greene
County Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio, May 19-21.

"We're counting down the hours," Kalter told DX Engineering's Tim
Duffy, K3LR, in a May 2 video, produced by DX Engineering. The theme
for Hamvention 2017 is "Same friends, new home."

Kalter revealed to Duffy that after Hara Arena announced it would be
closing last year, the Hamvention Organizing Committee pondered not
staging a show at all in 2017. "We had thought we might not even have
the event for another year and take more time and get it all set,"
Kalter said, "but our team was determined to do this."

The flea market at the new venue turned out to be "one of our more
difficult areas," Kalter said. The Hamvention flea market will have
the same number of booth spaces as in 2016. "It's looking like it will
sell out, but we're not there yet," he told Duffy. Inside exhibitor
booth space is in very good shape, he noted.

Kalter said he does not anticipate any problems with parking,
explaining that free on- and off-site parking will be available, with
shuttle bus service to and from Hamvention for off-site lots. Maps are
now online to help visitors navigate what will be unfamiliar territory
for most.

Tim Duffy, K3LR, and Mike Kalter, W8CI.

Kalter also told Duffy that he's expecting a bumper crop of attendees
at Hamvention 2017. "The way ticket sales are going, and with most of
the hotel/motel space sold out by mid-February...we're expecting
between 30,000 and 35,000 people," he said. It's still possible to buy
tickets online through May 17 and pick them up at the show.

Kalter said there was a lot of demand for forums this year, and
Hamvention will be unable to accommodate any repeat sessions. Duffy
noted that 2017 will mark his 35th year moderating the antenna forum.

"We're going to learn a lot this year," Kalter said. Some 600 DARA
volunteers are involved in making Hamvention 2017 happen. "My hat's
off to the whole team," he said. "It's a huge undertaking." Read more.

Registration Now Open for USA ARDF Championships

Registration is now under way for the 2017 USA and International
Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Region 2 championships of Amateur Radio
Direction Finding (ARDF), which will take place August 3-6 near
Harrison, Ohio, northwest of Cincinnati near the Indiana state line.
Three optional training days are planned for Monday through Wednesday,
July 31-August 2 near Harrison, just prior to the championships. If
you have never experienced a full ARDF course, this is your chance to
do so in a friendly environment. Your only opponent will be the clock.

Thursday, August 3, will be devoted to the sprint event, a short
course with 12-second fox transmissions instead of the usual 60
seconds each. Friday morning will be foxoring, a combination of radio
direction finding and classic orienteering, followed by a model event
for equipment testing and a competitor briefing.

Classic 2-meter and 80-meter competitions take place Saturday and
Sunday, respectively. There will be an awards banquet on Saturday
evening for presentation of medals for foxoring, sprint, and 2-meter
classic. Awards for 80-meter classic will be presented Sunday
afternoon, immediately after the competition.

Organizers of the 2017 USA and IARU Region 2 Championships are members
of the OH-KY-IN Amateur Radio Society. They are experienced
radio-orienteers who organized the successful national championships
of 2003 and 2010. Assisting them will be members of Orienteering
Cincinnati.

ARDF Championship rules are set by the IARU. For scoring and awards,
participants are divided into 11 age/gender categories. In the classic
ARDF events, competitors start in small groups made up of different
categories. As they seek the hidden transmitters, they navigate
through the forest from the starting corridor to the finish line, a
distance of 4 to 10 kilometers. They plot their direction-finding
bearings on orienteering maps that show terrain features, elevation
contours, and vegetation type.

Ruth Bromer, WB4QZG, was Team USA Captain at the 2016 World ARDF
Championships. [Ken Harker, WM5R, photo]

The USA ARDF Championships are open to anyone who can safely navigate
the woods alone. A ham radio license is not required. Each participant
competes as an individual; teamwork and GPS use are forbidden.
Competitors bring their own direction-finding gear to the events,
although extra gear is sometimes available for loan from other
attendees. Competitors may not transmit on the course, except in
emergencies.

USA's ARDF Championships are an ideal opportunity to watch and learn
from the best radio-orienteers in the US and from around the world,
because visiting competitors from numerous other countries are
expected to attend.

Full information is on the ARDF USA website, including a schedule,
technical details, lodging, site embargoes, tourism, weather, and much
more. An e-mail reflector is available for Q&A with the organizers, as
well as for coordinating transportation and arranging equipment loans.
Read more. -- Thanks to ARRL Amateur Radio Direction Finding
Coordinator Joe Moell, K0OV

ARRL Field Day Site Locator is Live for 2017, Public Service
Announcements Available

ARRL Field Day is June 24-25 -- always the fourth weekend in June. The
Field Day site locator is now up and running, and, to date, around 400
sites are already in the database. To find a Field Day site near you,
type in your town and state in the "Location or Call Sign" box at the
upper left. Listings are also available by state or Canadian province.
To add a site, visit the d Field Day Station page. The 2017 Field Day
public service announcements (PSAs) for event publicity are now
available in audio or video formats. There are two versions of each --
"national" (generic) and local MP3 audio spots, and generic and local
MP4 video spots. The local versions have room at the end for clubs to
add a tag that includes contact information. Each spot is 29 seconds.

Please notify the ARRL Public Relations Department, if you are able to
place these PSAs for radio, TV, or cable system airtime.

The Field Day 2017 packet is available from the ARRL website. There
have been no significant rule changes from 2016. The Field Day packet
contains everything you or your club will need to succeed in June,
including explanations, FAQs, articles from experts, and even a log
page template, if you log on paper for Field Day.

For more information on Field Day, contact the ARRL Contest Branch.
See the May issue of QST, page 93, for the Field Day announcement.



The Doctor Will See You Now!

"Optimizing Receiver Performance" is the topic of the latest 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."

RadFxSat (Fox-1B) Passes Mission Readiness Review, Could Launch in
September

RadFxSat (Fox-1B) has successfully cleared another hurdle. A Mission
Readiness Review was held April 29, at the Cal Poly campus before a
board representing Tyvak, Cal Poly, and NASA, to verify that all
requirements have been met for a safe and successful launch and
deployment. AMSAT Vice President for Engineering Jerry Buxton, N0JY,
presented 81 PowerPoint slides covering all Interface Control Document
(ICD) requirements, mission, operations, and deorbit. Following the
presentation and a question-and-answer session, the panel unanimously
approved RadFxSat as ready for flight.

The next milestone will be integration of the CubeSat into the Poly
Picosat Orbital Deployer (P-POD). Launch is set for no earlier than
September 21, 2017, aboard a Delta II launcher from Vandenberg Air
Force Base in California.

A partnership with Vanderbilt University ISDE, RadFxSat hosts four
payloads for the study of radiation effects on commercial
off-the-shelf components. It's one of four CubeSats making up the NASA
ELaNa XIV mission, riding as secondary payloads aboard the Joint Polar
Satellite System JPSS-1 mission.

RadFxSat features the Fox-1 style Amateur Radio FM U/V repeater, with
an uplink on 435.250 MHz (67.0 Hz CTCSS) and a downlink on 145.960
MHz. Satellite and experiment telemetry will be downlinked via the
"DUV" (data under voice) subaudible telemetry stream and can be
decoded with the FoxTelem software. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service
via Jerry Buxton, N0JY

IEEE-EMC Society Chicago Chapter Meeting Attendees Give to Spectrum
Defense Fund

The more than 200 attendees at the April IEEE-EMC Society Chicago
Chapter meeting donated $756 to the ARRL Spectrum Defense Fund. ARRL
Central Division Director Kermit Carlson, W9XA, called the
contributions "spontaneous and voluntary." The Society meeting was a
special event at Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois, to which local Amateur
Radio operators had been invited.

"This donation is a small showing of the collective deep appreciation
that all attendees at this meeting expressed for the ongoing efforts
of the League in the furtherance of the protection of the Amateur
Radio spectrum," Carlson said in a letter to ARRL CEO Tom Gallagher,
NY2RF, accompanying the donation check.

The meeting presentation, "Man-Made Noise and the Impact to Radio
Communications -- The Changing Environment," featured Greg lapin,
N9GL, co-chair of the Spectrum and Receiver Performance Working Group,
FCC Technical visory Council, and ARRL Lab Manager Ed Hare, W1RFI,
IEEE-EMC Society Vice President of Standards.

Over the years, the ARRL Spectrum Defense Fund has helped to defeat
the threat that Little LEO satellites posed to the 2-meter and
70-centimeter bands; remove high-power international broadcasters from
the heart of 40 meters, doubling the size of the worldwide band; gain
global allocations at 135 kHz and 472 kHz; battle Broadband Over
PowerLine (BPL); defend microwave allocations against commercial
wireless broadband interests, and obtain an international allocation
at 60 meters.

Your contribution is welcome!



Yasme Foundation Grants will Support Youth Involvement in Amateur
Radio

The Yasme Foundation has announced several grants aimed at encouraging
and promoting youth participation in Amateur Radio and advancing
activities that result in new licensees around the world.

Yasme has designated grants that will allow young radio amateurs to
attend the 7th Youngsters on the Air (YOTA) UK 2017 conference this
August in England. More than 100 young radio amateurs from all three
IARU regions will gather to participate in Amateur Radio programs and
workshops as well as cross-cultural exchanges and social interaction.

"Gatherings such as YOTA exemplify the ability of amateurs to work
together across national borders and ethnicities in the best 'ham
spirit' of friendship," the Yasme Board said in announcing the grant.
The Yasme Foundation will continue its support of YOTA by assisting
two young radio amateurs each from Ethiopia, Tunisia, and Kosovo to
attend YOTA UK 2017 this summer.

The Yasme board also made a grant to Kevin Richardson, G0PEK, and his
daughter Lauren, M6HLR, for the purchase of Amateur Radio direction
finding, HF, VHF, and UHF portable radio equipment in support of their
activities to encourage youth involvement in Amateur Radio in the UK.

Yasme has been a frequent supporter of Contest University (CTU), and
the Foundation has designated a grant to CTU to facilitate the
attendance of Dr. Tamitha Skov at the CTU session held in conjunction
with Hamvention 2017. At the CTU in Dayton, she will discuss "The
Wonderful World of Space Weather." A research scientist at The
Aerospace Corporation of El Segundo, California, Skov is a frequent
lecturer in the fields of solar and space physics. She posts her
"Space Weather Woman" presentations on YouTube. Skov also will appear
at the Hamvention Instructors Forum, moderated by Carole Perry,
WB2MGP.

The Yasme Foundation is a not-for-profit corporation organized to
conduct scientific and educational projects related to Amateur Radio,
including DXing and the introduction and promotion of Amateur Radio in
developing countries.

Ham Volunteers Urgently Needed to Support Communication for NYC NAMI
5K Walk

Amateur Radio volunteers are urgently needed to assist with
communications during the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
Walk on Saturday, May 13, at the South Street Seaport Promenade in New
York City. Jose Lugo, KD2CJP, who is coordinating the NAMI event, said
his team needs "all available hands on deck." Contact him with
availability as soon as possible. Only reply if you are able to help!

Volunteers will be needed starting at about 8:30 AM. The event begins
at 10 AM. This is the 11th annual mental health fundraising and
awareness 5K walk.

Through advocacy and fundraising efforts, NAMI supports 16,000 New
Yorkers living with mental illness. Support provides for veteran
caregiver training, programs for middle and high school students to
raise awareness and change perceptions around mental illness, programs
to support Spanish-speaking caregivers, and support for the NAMI Young
ult Support Group to reinforce that NAMI-NYC is a place for young
adults to gain support during major life transitions. -- Thanks to
Deborah M. Kerr, KC2GPV, Amateur Radio Communications Director for the
NYC Marathon, Half Marathon, and Triathlon/President, ARC Emergency
Communications Service

Historic NSS Call Sign to be Reactivated for First Time in More than
40 Years

Operators from the US Naval Academy Radio Club (W3ADO) and the Potomac
Valley Radio Club (W3GRF) will reactivate the historic NSS call sign
on May 13-14 during the Armed Forces Day Crossband Military/Amateur
Radio Communications Test.

Operation from the former NSS Naval Radio Station sit on Greenbury
Point in Annapolis, Maryland, will begin at 1300 UTC on Saturday, May
13, and continue until 0200 UTC on Sunday, May 14.

The Naval Radio Station at Greenbury Point in Annapolis in 1994.

NSS will transmit on CW and SSB on 4,038.5, 7,533.5, 14,487, 17,545,
and 20,994 kHz and listen for callers on announced Amateur Radio
frequencies. All stations contacting NSS will receive a QSL card.

NSS began operation in 1918 as the Annapolis High Power Radio Station
using a Federal Telegraph Company 500 kW arc transmitter and four
600-foot towers, operating in the VLF spectrum. NSS HF operation began
about 10 years later, although VLF operation continued into the 1990s.
The HF mission was transferred in 1976 to NAM in Norfolk, Virginia.
While some of the towers were removed, three lighted, self-supporting
towers remain to serve as local landmarks and as navigation aids to
boaters on Chesapeake Bay. A brief video history of NSS is on YouTube.
-- Thanks to Frank Donovan, W3LPL



W5KUB Again to Offer Next Best Thing to Being at Hamvention

Tom Medlin, W5KUB, of Amateur Radio Roundtable webcast fame, will
offer more than 48 hours of live webcasting for Hamvention®, starting
on May 17 and continuing through May 22 (to include the road trips out
and back). This will mark his 15th year of live streaming the show,
and this year's webcast will be called "Hamvention 2017 Marathon by
Medlin."

Astronaut Douglas Wheelock, KF5BOC, will join Medlin as co-host. "This
live event is structured to make you feel that you are there," Medlin
said. Webcast viewers will be able to communicate with other viewers
logged into the chat room and can even chat directly with the webcast
team at Hamvention. Medlin also promises nonstop prize giveaways.

"You will see many familiar people and celebrities drop by and get on
camera and say hello to you," Medlin said. Over the course of his
Hamvention webcasts, he interviews visitors and offers a view of the
show from his particular perch, which will be in booth 5006 at the
Greene County Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio.

"Frequency," "Last Man Standing" QRT

Hollywood Reporter reports that The CW television network has pulled
the plug on the Amateur Radio-themed show "Frequency," which stars
Peyton List as young police detective and radio amateur Raimy
Sullivan. "Frequency was a combination of two of the season's most
popular trends: time travel and movie reboots," Hollywood Reporter
said, noting that the show had been averaging 1.5 million viewers.

As in the 2000 movie Frequency that inspired the TV show, Amateur
Radio provides a means for the protagonist to reconnect over time with
her late estranged father Frank Sullivan. NBC had initially expressed
interest in launching a "Frequency" TV reprise, but ultimately passed
on the idea.

Tim Allen in his role as Mike Baxter, KA0XTT, with TV grandson played
by Flynn Morrison.

"Frequency" had joined ABC's "Last Man Standing," starring real-life
radio amateur Tim Allen as Mike Baxter, KA0XTT, in providing Amateur
Radio some small-screen exposure, albeit fictional. News on May 10
from Variety is that ABC has now canceled "Last Man Standing" after
six seasons. Occasional scenes on "Last Man" showed Allen's character
at his ham station.

The show's producer is John Amodeo, NN6JA, and real-life Amateur Radio
special events have been staged from the show's Hollywood set.

Getting It Right!

In the May 4 edition of The ARRL Letter, the article "Harvard Wireless
Club Sponsors Inaugural Amateur Radio Symposium" contained an
incorrect call sign for one of the speakers, Flavio Jorge. His call
sign is CT7AQK.



In Brief...

Midway and Kure Islands Reinstated as DXCC Entities: On March 31,
2017, the DXCC desk announced the deletion of Midway Island and Kure
Island from the DXCC entities list. The stated reason for this action
was because of changes in the administration resulting from changes in
Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, formerly known as the
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument, of which the
Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge and the Battle of Midway
National Memorial, the Hawaii State Seabird Sanctuary at Kure Atoll,
and the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands State Marine Refuge, of which
they are all included. After further review, it has been found that
the deletion of these two entities is not supported by the changes
that were made to the relevant administrations. Therefore, the
deletions from the DXCC list should not have occurred, and the two
entities, Midway Island KH4 and Kure Island KH7K, will return to the
DXCC list as separate entities.

QSL Wall to be Available at Hamvention: Hamvention® May 19-21 in
Xenia, Ohio, will borrow a tradition from Friedrichshafen, Germany's
Ham Radio event -- a QSL wall, where visitors can tack up their QSL
cards for all to see. "The big wall at Friedrichshafen is very popular
and covered with hundreds and hundreds of cards by the end of the
show," said ARRL Marketing Manager Bob Inderbitzen, NQ1R. The
Hamvention QSL wall will be in Building 1 near the Hamvention prize
booth; ARRL EXPO will be in Building 2 of the Greene County
Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio. Don't forget your QSL for
the wall!

NOAA Seeks Comments on Discontinuing WWV-WWVH North Atlantic and North
Pacific Marine Storm Warnings: NOAA is considering ending the North
Atlantic and North Pacific marine storm warning announcements at
minutes 8, 9, and 10 for WWV, and at minutes 48, 49, 50, and 51 for
WWVH. Termination would be on October 1, 2017. NOAA wants to hear from
as many interested parties as possible. Comments need to be received
by NOAA by May 31. Send all comments or issues concerning this
proposed action via e-mail with "MARINE WARNING" in the subject line.
WWV and WWVH are services of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST). -- Thanks to Matt Deutch, N0RGT

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Average daily sunspot numbers over
the May 4-10 reporting week were 17.1, down from 25.1 the previous
week. Average daily solar flux declined from 76.9 to 71.5.

There were two days with zero sunspots -- May 9 and 10.
Spaceweather.com noted that Wednesday was the 32nd day with no
sunspots in 2017; that's as many as during all of 2016. Because it's
early May, this indicates an acceleration of the decline of the
current solar cycle.

Predicted solar flux is 70 on May 11; 71 on May 12-13; 70 on May
14-17; 80 on May 18-23; 77 on May 24-27; 75 on May 28-June 1; 73 on
June 2; 72 on June 3-4; 70 on June 5-8; 72 on June 9-10; 75 on June
11, and 80 on June 12-19.

Predicted planetary A index is 10 on May 11-12; 5 on May 13-16; 15 on
May 17-18; 8, 15, 30, 20, 10, and 8 on May 19-24; 5 on May 25-June 3;
8 on June 4; 5 on June 5-7; 8, 5, 5, and 8 on June 8-11; 15, 30, 15,
and 8 on June 12-15.

Sunspot numbers for May 4 through 10, were 29, 31, 26, 23, 11, 0, and
0, with a mean of 17.1. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 74.2, 73.5, 72.8,
71.7, 70.5, 68.9, and 68.6, with a mean of 71.5. Estimated planetary A
indices were 7, 6, 5, 8, 6, 6, and 6, with a mean of 6.3. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 6, 5, 5, 7, 7, 5, and 6, with a mean of
5.9.

Send me your reports or observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

May 13 -- FISTS Spring Unlimited Sprint (CW)

May 13 -- Jakarta DX Contest, 40 Meters (Phone)

May 13-14 -- CQ-M International DX Contest (CW, phone)

May 13-14 -- HPC World Wide DX Contest (Digital)

May 13-14 -- VOLTA WW RTTY Contest (Digital)

May 13-14 -- Arkansas QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)

May 13-14 -- SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)

May 13-14 -- MARAC County Hunters Contest (CW)

May 13-14 -- Portuguese Navy Day Contest (CW, phone)

May 13-14 -- 50 MHz Spring Sprint

May 14 -- WAB 7 MHz (Phone)

May 14 -- UA2 QSO Party (CW, phone)

May 15 -- 4 States QRP Group Second Sunday Sprint

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 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.

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