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N9PMO  > LETTER   18.05.18 18:12l 598 Lines 27086 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3620
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Subj: ARRL3620 ARRL Letter
Path: IW8PGT<CX2SA<N9PMO
Sent: 180518/1659Z 44055@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NA BPQ6.0.16

Amateur Radio Parity Act Language Inserted in National Defense
Authorization Act

FT8 Activity Bumping Up at Some Expense to Other Modes

Hamvention® to Use AM Information Radio Station to Communicate with
Inbound Traffic

The Doctor Will See You Now!

ARRL to Show Off Ham Radio at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2018

Space Station Digital Amateur Television Signal Not Being Seen on the
Ground

Informal Amateur Radio Nets Being Maintained in Wake of Volcanic
Eruptions in Hawaii

National Hurricane Center's WX4NHC will be On the Air for Annual
Station Test

Maritime Radio Historical Society's Museum Station K6KPH is Back

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

Amateur Radio Parity Act Language Inserted in National Defense
Authorization Act

ARRL has praised the work of US Representatives Joe Courtney (D-CT/2),
Vicky Hartzler (R-MO/4), and Mike Rogers (R-AL/3) for their successful
efforts in securing language in the FY 2019 National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA) that asks the FCC to grant radio amateurs
living in restricted communities the right to install effective
outdoor antennas. Text from the proposed Amateur Radio Parity Act (HR
555) formed the basis for the Courtney-Hartzler-Rogers Amendment to
the NDAA.

"The bill does entitle each and every Amateur Radio operator living in
a deed-restricted community to erect an effective outdoor antenna.
Full stop. That is the principal benefit of this legislation," ARRL
General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, stressed. "There are tens of
thousands of ham radio licensees who now, absent the legislation,
cannot erect any outdoor antenna at all. This enables them in the same
way PRB-1 has enabled hams to address unreasonably restrictive zoning
ordinances during the past 33 years."

Imlay pointed out, though, that certain conditions apply. Prior to
erecting an antenna in a deed-restricted community, an applicant for
an outdoor antenna may have to apply to the homeowners association
(HOA) for prior approval of the particular antenna system proposed by
the ham. The Act would not empower an HOA to deny approval of all
outdoor antennas. But neither does it entitle radio amateurs residing
in deed-restricted subdivisions to erect whatever antennas they want.

"This legislation is a good, solid balance that favors hams and, as I
say, allows tens of thousands of hams to erect effective antennas that
they have no right to erect now," Imlay said.

The amendment, offered by the bipartisan trio and accepted by the
House Armed Services Committee by voice vote, will ensure that Amateur
Radio operators will continue to play a vital role in supporting
communications in a disaster or emergency. Amateur Radio has
long-standing relationships with the Department of Defense through the
Military Auxiliary Radio Service (MARS) and spectrum sharing.

The Armed Services Committee passed the NDAA by a 60-to-1 voice vote
after a 14-hour markup that ran well into the night. The bill now
awaits House floor action. The Senate will begin its markup of the
NDAA during the week of May 21.

Representatives Courtney and am Kinzinger (R-IL/16) spearheaded the
effort to include the Parity Act language in the NDAA. Both are
cosponsors of the Parity Act, which has passed the House by voice vote
twice in the past 2 years.

Recognizing the long-standing relationship between Amateur Radio and
the Department of Defense, Congressman Kinzinger -- who served
multiple tours for the USAF as a fighter pilot and is still a Major in
the Air National Guard -- and Courtney have been champions of the
legislation in Congress.

"The steadfast support of the Amateur Radio community continually
demonstrated by Congressmen Kinzinger and Courtney has been a
godsend," said Hudson Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB. "The Parity Act
wouldn't be anywhere close to this stage without their strong support,
and our organization is extremely grateful."

ARRL has pledged to continue pressing for support to enact the Amateur
Radio Parity Act throughout the legislative process. Read more.

FT8 Activity Bumping Up at Some Expense to Other Modes

Despite largely dismal HF conditions, there is no doubt that the
recent FT8 digital protocol has hams on the air. The mode has caught
on so quickly that co-developer Joe Taylor expressed surprise last
fall at the rapid uptake of FT8 for making contacts on HF bands.
Judging by Logbook of The World (LoTW) data, more than 2.3 million FT8
contacts were uploaded in 1 month -- a net gain of 1.2 million
contacts on all modes over the same month last year, ARRL Radiosport
Manager Norm Fusaro, W3IZ, said. Over the same period, activity in
some of the other modes has declined.

"Year-to-date DXCC applications are up by 11% over the same period
last year," Fusaro said. "So far, we have processed 898 Worked All
States (WAS) applications -- a 72% increase over the same period last
year. Of those applications, 347 -- or 39% -- were FT8 endorsements.
Application for VUCC are also up by 33% over 2017."

Fusaro said that while some feel that FT8 is "taking over the world,"
subsuming all other modes, that's not the case. "Activity in the
traditional modes of SSB and CW has decreased only slightly, by 10%,"
he said. "The real decrease is in RTTY and PSK activity and in the
other WSJT-X modes. I believe poor propagation would have cut into SSB
and CW activity, regardless of the new mode." Anecdotal reports
support Fusaro's hard numbers, with wall-to-wall signals surrounding
the FT8 watering holes.

Denny Berg, WB9MSM, completed DXCC on FT8.

Late last year, Denny Berg, WB9MSM, achieved his goal of completing
DXCC using FT8. It took him just 4 months.

"I can tell all of you that this mode is spreading like wildfire
throughout all the HF bands," Berg told The Daily DX at the time. He
said he was able to work all states on FT8 in about 6 weeks of
operating.

Taylor has characterized SSB and CW as "general-purpose modes" that
are good for ragchewing, DXing, contesting, disaster communication,
and other purposes. On the other hand, he has said, FT8 and the other
protocols in the WSJT-X suite are "special-purpose modes," designed
for making reliable, error-free contacts using signals that may be too
weak to work using more traditional modes -- and sometimes even too
far down in the noise even to hear.



Hamvention® to Use AM Information Radio Station to Communicate with
Inbound Traffic

To avoid the first-day traffic tangles of its 2017 debut in Xenia,
Ohio, Hamvention® 2018 will utilize a low-power Information Radio
Station on 1620 kHz AM to get out the word on traffic, parking, and
event details to visitors as they approach the city. The town is
bracing to host an influx of some 25,000 Amateur Radio operators,
exhibitors, and the curious, nearly doubling Xenia's population while
the event is under way, May 19 - 21. Hamvention sponsor, the Dayton
Amateur Radio Association (DARA) is hoping things will go more
smoothly this year.

Due to the web of two-lane roads that serves the venue -- the Greene
County Fairgrounds and Expo Center -- Hamvention established
shuttle-bus operation to alleviate traffic congestion. The hope is
that the information station will persuade visitors to park at the
shuttle lots, and take a shuttle to the venue.

According to the Michigan firm providing the Information Radio
Station, its signal "will blanket Xenia and 3 - 5 miles into
surrounding Greene County, directing approaching motorists to the five
special parking facilities." The founder of Information Station
Specialists, Bill Baker, hails from Xenia. His company also is
broadcasting and exhibiting at Hamvention (Building 6, Booth 6503) to
introduce visitors to Information Station technology, which is used
nationwide.

Hamvention 2017 reported the second-largest attendance in its 67-year
history. -- Thanks to Information Station Specialists, Inc.

The Doctor Will See You Now!

"RF Loss" is the topic of the current (May 10) 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: "Coping with Poor HF Conditions."

"Extra, Extra! Hear All about Hamvention! ARRL Audio News will post
Extra Hamvention Editions Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May18 - 20,
offering news and interviews from the Big Show in Xenia. Subscribers
to the ARRL Audio News podcast will receive these Extra editions
automatically. Anyone can hear them online. ARRL Audio News is a
summary of the week's top news stories from the world of Amateur
Radio, along with interviews and other features. It's posted every
Friday in weeks during which The ARRL Letter is published.



ARRL to Show Off Ham Radio at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2018

With support from member volunteers, ARRL will put Amateur Radio on
display for visitors to EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2018 -- the giant,
annual airshow July 23 - 29 in Wisconsin, organized by the
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA). The event attracted more than
10,000 aircraft and nearly 600,000 visitors in 2017 to enjoy
aerobatics displays, informative programs, hands-on workshops, and
diverse aircraft spanning all eras of flight.

"The cross-over between Amateur Radio operators and pilots, aviation
enthusiasts, and air show attendees has a strong correlation," said
ARRL Central Division Director Kermit Carlson, W9XA, who is part of
the volunteer team organizing the ham radio exhibit at AirVenture.
"Attendees include many licensed and prospective Amateur Radio
operators."

ARRL's exhibit will promote Amateur Radio to newcomers and inform all
attendees of the similarly diverse technology and innovation enjoyed
by both hams and pilots.

Last summer, Brian Lloyd, WB6RQN, of Texas, successfully flew his
single-engine aircraft Spirit on a solo, round-the-world adventure to
commemorate Amelia Earhart's attempted circumnavigation 80 years
earlier.

"Ham pilots are doing all sorts of things from the sky, including
long-distance HF communications, aircraft tracking using APRS beacons,
and search and rescue," Carlson said. "Developing the capability to
communicate from your aircraft to a ham on the ground is also fun!"

ARRL has posted a short survey that invites pilots who are radio
amateurs to share their ideas for exhibiting at EAA AirVenture 2018.
The ARRL display will build upon existing ham radio demonstrations at
the show, including EAA Amateur Radio Special Event station W9ZL,
organized annually by the Fox Cities Amateur Radio Club in Appleton,
Wisconsin, and set up at the Pioneer Airport airstrip in Oshkosh. W9ZL
will be on the air throughout the week of the Oshkosh air show.

Space Station Digital Amateur Television Signal Not Being Seen on the
Ground

The signal from the digital amateur television (DATV) transmitter
aboard the International Space Station (ISS) cannot be detected on the
ground, the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS)
has reported. The unit indicates that it is functioning. So far, ARISS
has not been able to pin down the problem.

The live DATV image of Astronaut Tim Peake, KG5BVI, was projected on a
screen during the inaugural Ham TV school contact with Royal Masonic
School in England.

"A series of steps are currently being undertaken to try to diagnose
the problem," a May 10 announcement from ARISS said. "However, if an
actual failure occurred, only a ground-based evaluation will fully
diagnose the problem. The ARISS International team is working
diligently to bring [the system] back to full operation as soon as
practical." The DATV system is known variously as "HamVideo" and
"HamTV."

ARISS said it has begun coordination with its space agency partners
and sponsors to "expeditiously troubleshoot the issue onboard and, if
necessary, troubleshoot and repair the device on the ground."

The DATV transmitter has proved to be a valuable educational asset
that ISS crew members have enjoyed employing during ARISS school and
group contacts. In particular, astronauts Tim Peake, KG5BVI; Paolo
Nespoli, IZ0JPA, and Thomas Pesquet, KG5FYG, made routine use of the
DATV system to enhance the ham radio contact experience for students
and educators.

Ground stations in Australia and Europe have functioned to receive and
distribute the Amateur Radio TV signal from the ISS. Ground stations
are under development in the US. Several hams in Japan have set up
ground stations that have received the DATV signal from the ISS.

Peake inaugurated formal use of the DATV system for a 2016 ARISS
school contact with students at a school in Rickmansworth, England.
The DATV system, located in the Columbus module of the ISS, allowed
students at Royal Masonic School to both watch and listen as Peake,
operating under the ISS call sign GB1SS, answered their questions
about life in space. The one-way DATV downlink took place near 2.4
GHz, while the two-way FM audio component was maintained on 2 meters.

The DATV system was first proposed more than 17 years ago. It was
commissioned during a series of tests in 2014.



Informal Amateur Radio Nets Being Maintained in Wake of Volcanic
Eruptions in Hawaii

Two informal informational nets remain open on the island of Hawaii
("The Big Island") in the wake of recent and ongoing volcanic
eruptions and seismic activity, Pacific Section Emergency Coordinator
Clement Jung, KH7HO, reports. No formal traffic has been passed, but
frequencies are being monitored.

The Mount Kilauea volcano.

"All normal communications, such as cell, landline phones, internet,
and public safety, are operational," Jung told ARRL. Fissures
associated with the Kilauea volcano on The Big Island began erupting
on May 3, spewing lava and venting high levels of sulfur dioxide.

An Amateur Radio net is in operation on 7.088 MHz (SSB), and the
Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD) 146.720 MHz repeater
(100 Hz tone) on Mauna Kea was activated after Hawaii's governor
issued an emergency declaration. A federal disaster declaration has
been approved.

The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory reports active venting of lava and
hazardous fumes continues, with no end in sight. The Hawaii Volcanoes
National Park closed after roads and trails were damaged. The
Observatory this week increased the Aviation Color Code to RED, due to
increased ash emission.

FEMA reports some 360 evacuees are staying in emergency shelters. Some
2,000 residents have been evacuated in all. "Twenty fissure vents have
formed in and around the Leilani estates subdivision," the agency said
in its May 17 report. "Air quality in the southeast area of Lanipuna
Gardens has been rated 'condition red' (immediate danger to health)
for high levels of sulfur dioxide. Volcanic-tectonic seismicity
continues."

The US Geodetic Survey has warned that new lava outbreaks could happen
"at any time," as well as "more energetic ash emissions."

National Hurricane Center's WX4NHC will be On the Air for Annual
Station Test

WX4NHC, the Amateur Radio station at the National Hurricane Center
(NHC) in Miami, will be on the air for the annual station test on
Saturday, May 26, 1300 until 2100 UTC. This will be the station's 38th
year of public service at the NHC. The purpose of the annual event is
to test Amateur Radio station equipment, antennas, and computers in
advance of the Atlantic Hurricane season -- June 1 through November
30.

"This event is good practice for ham radio operators worldwide as well
as for National Weather Service (NWS) staff to become familiar with
the Amateur Radio communications available during times of severe
weather," said WX4NHC Assistant Coordinator Julio Ripoll, WD4R. "We
will be making brief contacts on many frequencies and modes,
exchanging signal reports and basic weather data (sunny, rain, etc.)
with any station in any location."

WX4NHC will be on the air on HF, VHF, UHF, 2- and 30-meter APRS and
WinLink; subject must contain "//WL2K". The Hurricane Watch Net
frequency of 14.325 MHz will be primary for WX4NHC. Operation also
will take place on the VoIP Hurricane Net 2000-2100 UTC. (IRLP node
9219; EchoLink WX-TALK Conference node 7203). Florida Statewide SARNET
and local VHF and UHF repeaters will be contacted.

QSLs are available via WD4R, with an S.A.S.E.



Maritime Radio Historical Society's Museum Station K6KPH is Back

Maritime Radio Historical Society (MRHS) Amateur Radio station K6KPH
is back on the air after a brief hiatus, although still at a minimal
level at this point. K6KPH, intended as a tribute to KPH, the
"wireless giant of the Pacific," relays the W1AW Field Day Bulletin,
and W1AW Morse code practice qualifying runs for west coast amateurs.

The north lead "H-Frame" temporary repair: Feed lines to about half
the antennas go through this frame. Cracking boards were causing wires
to touch the frame, risking collapse. A final rebuild will be done
later this year.

"Not all the K6KPH frequencies were back on at first, as we had to
change antenna assignments to get the minimum service we have now,"
said Steve Hawes, WB6UZX, who explains that K6KPH is "sort of" back,
as some repair work is pending.

Hawes said the crew of K6KPH volunteers made some temporary repairs to
get some antennas back in service, and the station now is usable on
80, 40, 20, 17, and 15 meters. He said K6KPH expects to be ready to
handle the qualifying run transmissions starting with June's, and also
will be transmitting the ARRL Field Day bulletins.

"For the [Field Day] digital transmissions, I'll have to wrestle
7/8-inch Heliax between two different transmitters on 7 and 14 MHz,"
Hawes noted.

K6KPH uses the original KPH transmitters, receivers, and antennas; no
amateur equipment is employed. The transmitters for most bands are
Henry HF-5000 commercial units, but the 1950s-vintage RCA commercial
units, known as "K" and "L" sets, are used on special occasions.
Transmitting antennas are double extended Zepps for frequencies below
12 MHz (K6KPH and KPH prefer megacycles to megahertz), and H over 2
for 12 MHz and above, all fed with open-wire line.

The Bolinas, California, site that's now home to K6KPH and KPH
originally was a 1914 Marconi Company facility with a 350-kW
low-frequency rotary-gap transmitter for overseas radiotelegraph
traffic.

The south lead H-frame was severely damaged when a large tree branch
fell on it, and about half of the feed lines are not usable. It will
be rebuilt later. This photo shows one of the poles that is farther
out. Line spacers now have been added and the line "dress" adjusted
for maximum clearance of cross-arms. The wire is #4 solid copper.

Hawes said the Bolinas/Point Reyes sites were dark until the Maritime
Radio Historical Society made a proposal in 2000 to the National Park
Service -- Point Reyes National Seashore -- to restore and "interpret"
the site, which would include putting it on the air.

"The NPS does maintain the building and pay for the power, but there
isn't a regular budget for radio and antenna maintenance," Hawes
explained. "MRHS has been buying tubes and parts and paying for some
antenna repairs and tree trimming. The park has obtained grants over
the years for major antenna work, and there is another one pending for
later this year to rebuild some of the 'H-Frames' -- transmission line
supports. The work we did -- and paid for -- was to get back on the
air until the full rebuild work is done." Read more.

In Brief...

JK Antennas Donates New Multiband Yagi to W1HQ ARRL Club Station: JK
Antennas, which recently donated a new two-element, 40-meter Yagi to
Maxim Memorial Station W1AW at ARRL Headquarters, has followed up with
a XR5-JK antenna for use by the Laird Campbell Memorial HQ Operators
Club station W1HQ, located adjacent to the ARRL Laboratory. The
five-band XR5-JK replaces a multiband antenna that was no longer
functional. Matt Strelow, KC1XX, and Andrew Toth -- both of XX Towers,
Inc. -- were on hand on May 2 to finalize the construction and
installation of the new Yagi, donated by JK Antennas proprietor Ken
Garg, W3JK. The balun used for this antenna was donated by Balun
Designs, LLC, which manufactures the baluns used by JK Antennas based
on their specifications. Headquarters staffers Bob Allison, WB1GCM,
and Joe Carcia, NJ1Q, picked up the new antenna from JK Antennas'
distribution site in Brookfield, Connecticut, on May 1.

Three CubeSats with Amateur Radio Payloads Deployed from ISS: The
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has announced that three
CubeSats carrying Amateur Radio payloads, including one with a V/U
linear transponder, were deployed from the International Space Station
(ISS) on May 11 at around 1030 UTC. Irazú (Costa Rica) and 1KUNS-PF
(Kenya) carry beacon/telemetry in the 70-centimeter Amateur Radio
band, while UBAKUSAT (Turkey) carries an Amateur Radio linear
transponder for SSB and CW, in addition to CW and telemetry beacons.
Irazú is a 1U CubeSat developed by students at the Costa Rica
Institute of Technology, with a telemetry beacon at 436.500 MHz.
1KUNS-PF is a 3U CubeSat developed by students at the University of
Nairobi, with a telemetry beacon (9.6 kbps) at 437.300 MHz. UBAKUSAT,
a 3U CubeSat developed by students at the Istanbul Technical
University, has a CW beacon at 437.225 MHz, and a telemetry beacon at
437.325 MHz. The linear transponder downlink is 435.200 - 435.250 MHz;
the uplink is 145.940 - 145.990 MHz. -- Thanks to Masa Arai, JN1GKZ,
via AMSAT-UK

Tim Allen as Mike Baxter, KA0XTT, with his stage grandson, played by
Flynn Morrison, in a 2014 episode.

Last Man Standing Moving to Fox Network There will be a season 7 of
the TV show Last Man Standing, in which Tim Allen -- a real radio
amateur -- plays Mike Baxter, KA0XTT. The primary difference is that
the show now will appear on the Fox Network. A year ago, ABC axed Last
Man Standing, which had attracted more than 8.3 million viewers. The
network did not own the show but was licensing it from 20th Century
Fox. John Amodeo, NN6JA, has been a co-executive producer, producer,
or supervising producer of the comedy and was instrumental in Allen's
getting his ham radio license in 2014; more than 2 dozen members of
the crew were also inspired by the show's Amateur Radio component, and
got licensed. Allen tweeted news of the Fox reboot on May 11. "Thanks
to all you guys for the support," Allen said. "We are back."

The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Weak solar activity continues, with
sunspots returning on May 4-14, then departing again. From May 3 to
May 9, the average daily sunspot number declined from 14.6 to 6.4,
while average daily solar flux increased from 68.3 to 70.2.

Earlier in the week, geomagnetic indicators showed unrest from a solar
wind stream. The average daily planetary A index declined to 8.4 in
this reporting week compared to 15.1 over the previous 7 days. The
mid-latitude A index declined from 11.7 to 9.

Predicted solar flux is 70 on May 17-20; 69 on May 21-23; 70 on May
24-29; 68 on May 30 - June 2; 70 on June 3-8; 71 on June 9-14; 70 on
June 15-25; 68 on June 26-29, and 70 on June 30.

Predicted planetary A index is 18, 14, and 8 on May 17-19; 5 on May
20-31; 18 and 28 on June 1-2; 16 on June 3-4; 14, 12, and 8 on June
5-7; 5 on June 8-12; 18, 15, and, 10 on June 13-15; 5 on June 16-27,
and 18, 28, and 16 on June 28-30.

Sunspot numbers for May 10 - 16 were 11, 11, 12, 11, 0, 0, and 0, with
a mean of 6.4. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 69.6, 70.3, 69.8, 70.9,
70.3, 70.3, and 69.9, with a mean of 70.2. Estimated planetary A
indices were 12, 16, 10, 8, 5, 4, and 4, with a mean of 8.4. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 11, 19, 10, 10, 5, 5, and 3, with a mean
of 9.

Send me your reports or observations.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

May 18 -- Slobozhansky Sprint Contest (CW, phone)

May 18-20 -- Portuguese Navy Day Contest (CW, phone, digital)

May 19 -- Feld Hell Sprint

May 19 -- UN DX Contest (CW, phone)

May 19-20 -- NZART Sangster Shield Contest (CW)

May 19-20 -- His Majesty King of Spain Contest (CW)

May 19-20 -- EU PSK DX Contest

May 19-20 -- Aegean RTTY Contest

May 19-20 -- Baltic Contest (CW, phone)

May 21 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)

May 23 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)

May 24 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (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 18-20 -- Great Lakes Division Convention (Hamvention®), Xenia,
Ohio

June 1-2 -- Arizona State Convention, Prescott, Arizona

June 1-3 -- Northwestern Division Convention (SEA-PAC), Seaside,
Oregon

June 2 -- Georgia State Convention (Atlanta Hamfest), Marietta,
Georgia

June 2-3 -- Western Pennsylvania Section Convention, Prospect,
Pennsylvania

June 8-10 -- West Gulf Division Convention (Ham-Com), Plano, Texas

July 13-14 -- Indiana State Convention, Indianapolis, Indiana

July 20-22 -- Nevada State Convention, Reno, Nevada

July 27-28 -- Oklahoma Section Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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