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N9PMO  > LETTER   20.11.15 06:22l 628 Lines 29276 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : ARRL3347
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Subj: ARRL3347 ARRL Letter
Path: IW8PGT<CX2SA<N9PMO
Sent: 151120/0416Z 2748@N9PMO.#SEWI.WI.USA.NOAM BPQ1.4.65

Amateur Radio Parity Act Passes Senate Committee, Gains Cosponsors

World Radiocommunication Conference Approves Global 60 Meter
Allocation!

FCC Not Processing License and Exam Session Files Again

ARRL Reiterates Call for FCC to Make Historical Licensee Data
Available

VY1AAA Hopes for Better Conditions in Phone Sweepstakes

National Parks on the Air (NPOTA) Map Now Available

AO-85 Commissioned and Turned Over to AMSAT-NA Operations

New UK/EI DX Contest to Launch in December

Support ARRL as You Shop this Holiday Season!

Willis Island VK9WA DXpedition Going Smoothly

Oregon SM Pledges Continued Cooperation with Office of Emergency
Management After Rift

Ham Radio Accessory Dealer, Publisher Idiom Press Changing Hands

Past Pacific Division Director Bradley W. "Brad" Wyatt, K6WR, SK

In Brief...

The K7RA Solar Update

Just Ahead in Radiosport

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

ARRL Headquarters Will Be Closed on November 26-27: ARRL Headquarters
will be closed for the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday and Friday,
November 26-27. The ARRL Letter will not be published on Thanksgiving
Day, Thursday, November 26, and there will be no edition of ARRL Audio
News on Friday, November 27. In addition, there will be no W1AW
bulletins or code practice on those days. We wish all our members a
safe and enjoyable holiday!

Amateur Radio Parity Act Passes Senate Committee, Gains Cosponsors

The Amateur Radio Parity Act S. 1685 took an essential step forward on
November 18, when the US Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation voted to report the bill favorably and without
amendment. It was one of a half-dozen bills that were approved by the
committee in a brief markup session. S. 1685 was approved on a voice
vote, with two Senators -- Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Brian Schatz (D-HI)
-- asked to be recorded as voting "no."

"Our work is not finished on the Senate side of Capitol Hill, although
this is a huge step forward," said ARRL President Kay Craigie, N3KN.
She urged ARRL members to continue to write, call and e-mail their
Senators about S. 1685 to build up its support for the future, saying,
"We know that members' response to the call for a communications blast
last week made all the difference for some Senators on the committee."

S. 1685 picked up another Senate cosponsor on November 18, when
Senator Jerry Moran (R-KS), who sits on the Commerce Committee, signed
aboard the bill. "ARRL members in Kansas should contact his office to
say thanks," President Craigie said. "Having an additional cosponsor
who's on the Committee is especially good news."

On hand to observe the Committee mark-up session were ARRL Hudson
Division Director Mike Lisenco, N2YBB; ARRL CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ,
and ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD.

President Craigie encouraged ARRL members in Florida and Hawaii to
keep contacting Senators Schatz and Nelson, urging them to change
their minds about the legislation. "Don't be harsh or angry," she
advised. "Keep it factual and courteous, and don't give up."

(L-R) ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD; Hudson Division Director
Mike Lisenco, N2YBB, and ARRL CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ, were on hand to
observe the Senate committee markup session on November 18.

On November 5, US Senator Al Franken (D-MN) signed on as the second
cosponsor of S. 1685. That legislation and its US House twin, H.R.
1301, call on the FCC to extend the limited federal pre-emption of
PRB-1 to cover private land-use restrictions such as deed covenants,
conditions, and restrictions (CC&Rs).

H.R. 1301 has 114 cosponsors as of November 18. President Craigie said
ARRL members should continue to urge their Representatives to
cosponsor H.R. 1301 and to thank those who already have signed on.

The Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015 page on the ARRL website has more
information on how you can become involved. Read more.

World Radiocommunication Conference Approves Global 60 Meter
Allocation!

The Plenary Meeting of the 2015 World Radiocommunication Conference
(WRC-15) in Geneva has approved an allocation of 5351.5-5366.5 kHz to
the Amateur Service on a secondary basis, with a power limit of 15 W
effective isotropic radiated power (EIRP). The November 18 decision on
Agenda Item 1.4 was adopted on two back-to-back readings. Some Region
2 countries -- but not the US -- will be permitted up to 25 W EIRP.
With this action, and despite conditions that are more restrictive
than had been hoped at the start of the Conference, the Amateur
Service has obtained its first new global HF allocation since 1979.
While the Final Acts of the conference are expected to take effect on
January 1, 2017, the new band will not become available to amateurs
until their national telecommunications administration amends its
rules and licensing conditions. Those administrations that already
permit amateurs to operate in the 5 MHz range under certain conditions
and on a not-to-interfere basis, including the FCC, will be
considering whether, how, and when to modify those arrangements in
light of the international allocation.

The International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) team is doing what it can
to influence the agenda for WRC-19. The agenda could include
addressing amateur spectrum requirements in the 50-54 MHz band in
Region 1, which could lead to at least partial harmonization of the 6
meter band worldwide. A proposed agenda item to align the 160 meter
allocation in Region 1 with the rest of the world is no longer under
active consideration.

The WRC-19 agenda will also likely pose spectrum defense challenges,
including possible consideration of the 420-450 MHz band to
accommodate a new allocation to the space operations service for
satellites in non-geostationary orbit that are described as "small
satellites" or "satellites with short duration missions." One or more
bands above 10 GHz may be up for consideration for 5G smartphone use.
The bounds of these potential defensive items, however, are still
under discussion by the conference and will not be settled until its
final week.

The IARU team continues to monitor several other WRC-15 items that
appear to be headed toward acceptable conclusions. WRC-15 continues
through the signing of the Final Acts on November 27.

FCC Not Processing License and Exam Session Files Again

The FCC Universal Licensing System (ULS) electronic batch filing (EBF)
system was working for a brief window of time yesterday after being
down since Friday November 13. Some files were processed through the
system Wednesday, but the FCC is having a problem processing all VEC
license and examination session files today. ARRL VEC Manager Maria
Somma, AB1FM, said her office again had to alert the FCC IT staff,
which are said to be looking into the issue but did not estimate how
long the system would be down. Somma said it was the third time the
EBF system has gone down since late September, when the FCC said a
process had stopped running on an FCC server.

The FCC doesn't have a long term fix in place yet and it appears the
same issue is happening again with more frequency. The amateur
community should expect delays in exam license processing until the
FCC can get this resolved. The FCC apologies for the continued
inconvenience this is causing the community. "We transmit the exam
sessions to FCC as soon as possible, which is usually 24 to 48 hours
from the day received in our office," Somma said. "We make every
effort to process each session quickly and efficiently while following
FCC rules. Unless there is missing candidate information or paperwork,
we normally aim to send the session to the FCC within a few days,
because most of the VEC staff understands what it feels like to wait
for your call sign to be issued." Somma expressed the hope that
applicants and VEs will be understanding and patient while the FCC
resolves the problem.

ARRL Reiterates Call for FCC to Make Historical Licensee Data
Available

At the request of the FCC, the ARRL on November 13 filed supplemental
comments urging the Commission to continue to make available via the
Universal Licensing System (ULS) historical Amateur Radio license
information not associated with a current licensee or a pending
application. The League filed its initial comments in the proceeding,
WT Docket 15-81, last June. In its earlier comments, the ARRL argued
that historical license data not associated with a current license is
a primary means for volunteer examiner coordinators (VECs) to research
the validity of exam credit on the basis of a license once held by the
candidate. ARRL General Counsel Chris Imlay, W3KD, who filed the
supplemental comments on November 13, said the Commission now wanted
to know how many applicants were taking advantage of lifetime
examination credit, which went into effect in the summer of 2014.

ARRL told the FCC that its VEC currently transmits an average of five
applications with expired license credits each week, and has handled
some 300 such applications since July 2014. The W5YI VEC told ARRL
that it relies heavily on historical license information too. ARRL
argued that the number could grow, as word of the expanded opportunity
for exam element credit continues to spread.

"The Commission, having obligated VECs to validate claims of former
licensee status and the data associated therewith cannot fairly take
away a key resource for objectively evaluating the validity of
applicants' claims and documentation," the League said in its
supplemental comments. "To do so decreases substantially the ability
of VECs to maintain the historically high degree of integrity of the
Amateur Radio licensing process. Since the Commission clearly has no
intention of assuming any of the burden of the validation process --
and is ill equipped to do so in any case -- the proposal is both
unfair and illogical."

ARRL said that researching expired license credit is just one of
several instances in which VECs might need to access historical
license data. Other possibilities, the League said, could include
using historical data to validate a candidate's identification, and to
research exam credit for pre-1987 Technician licenses.

The League concluded by again asking the FCC to continue to make
available historical license data at least to VECs, if not the general
public.

Ad

VY1AAA Hopes for Better Conditions in Phone Sweepstakes

If you missed working one of the two stations handing out the
super-rare Northern Territories multiplier in the CW weekend of the
2015 ARRL November Sweepstakes, you may have better luck during the
phone event, November 21-23. VY1AAA logged 335 contacts in 73 ARRL/RAC
sections during the CW event. Hal Offutt, W1NN, and J Allen, VY1JA,
operated VY1AAA from VY1JA, near Whitehorse, Yukon Territory. Offutt
operated remotely from within the US, while Allen operated locally.
VY1AAA spent 18 hours battling rough conditions during the CW weekend
in the multioperator, high-power category, logging the lion's share of
its contacts on 20 meters.

"Knowing how popular and needed the NT mult is, I hoped to put at
least 1000 contacts in the log and enjoy some fun pileups all
weekend," Offutt said in a post on 3830scores.com. "I was not counting
on something called a coronal mass ejection (CME)." The CME threw the
proverbial monkey wrench into the plans of many operators in the US
and Canada, although a lot of other stations reported favorable
conditions.

"Friday night J sent some pictures of the aurora that was visible from
his QTH in Whitehorse, and it began to sink in that I might not have
those pileups I had been hoping for," Offutt said. He reported missing
the NH, RI, SFL, PR, QC, ONE, GTA, MB, AB, and NL multipliers.

Hal Offutt, W1NN, has operated VY1AAA from the US and Japan.

VY1AAA is the call sign of the Yukon CanAm Contest Club (YCACC),
established by Allen and Gerry Hull, W1VE. Its primary purpose is to
support Allen in making the Yukon Territory multiplier available in
major contests. Hull will helm VY1AAA for the SSB event, hanging out
near band edges and following the MUF during the day. At his gray
line, he'll shift to 40 meters, and will be on 40 early in the morning
for the US East Coast too.

John Boudreau, VE8EV, in Inuvik, Northwest Territories, was planning
an all-out effort this year, but yielded to poor conditions and to the
VY1AAA operation, and only spent an hour on the air. "When conditions
picked up a bit Sunday afternoon, I ran for an hour just to prove I
could do it," he said in a 3830 post. "I'm expecting much better
conditions...for SS Phone. See you then!"

At the other end of Canada, Gus Samuelson, VO1MP, in the also-rare NL
multiplier, said, "Conditions [were] about as poor as I have ever
heard for Sweeps." He missed NNY, ID, NE, WY, NT, and PAC. Roughly
one-half of his contacts were on 15 meters.

The phone weekend of the 2015 ARRL November Sweepstakes gets under way
at 2100 UTC on Saturday, November 21, and runs through 0259 UTC on
Monday, November 23. The 2015 ARRL November Sweepstakes operating
guide is available on the ARRL website.

National Parks on the Air (NPOTA) Map Now Available

In cooperation with ARRL, CQmaps has introduced a 2016 National Parks
on the Air (NPOTA) map. The full-color map includes all NPOTA units
within the US, including Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, US Virgin
Islands, Guam, Saipan, and American Samoa. All sites are clearly
labeled and include the park name along with the ARRL park designator.

Each 24 × 36 inch map is offered in either a laminated heavyweight
paper or DuPont Tyvek.

The NPOTA laminated map is well suited for using a dry-erase marker to
check off your progress in chasing the parks. The map is personalized
with your Amateur Radio call sign. The price is $25, including US
shipping. Add $10 for international orders.

AO-85 Commissioned and Turned Over to AMSAT-NA Operations

Fox-1A (AO-85) has been formally commissioned and turned over to AMSAT
Operations, which is now responsible for the scheduling and modes.
Fox-1A is AMSAT-NA's first CubeSat.

Many new techniques are incorporated, and lessons will be learned, as
with any new 'product,'" said AMSAT Vice President-Engineering Jerry
Buxton, N0JY. "We will incorporate changes from what we learn in each
launch, to the extent possible, in subsequent Fox-1 CubeSats. To our
members, we want to say that the Fox Team is very proud and pleased
that our first CubeSat is very successful and hopefully will be for
some time."

The Fox-1 Project is a series of CubeSats. A total of five will be
built and flown. Launches already have been scheduled for three more,
and a new NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative proposal will be submitted
for the fifth launch.

The Fox Team noted that an apparent lack of receiver sensitivity and
difficulty in turning or holding on the repeater with the 67 Hz CTCSS
tone are probably the most notable observations about AO-85.

"We have determined a probable cause for the sensitivity issue, and
while that can't be fixed on AO-85, we are taking steps to prevent
similar issues on the rest of the Fox-1 CubeSats," Buxton assured. The
November/December edition of AMSAT Journal will include full details
on these technical issues. Read more. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service
via Jerry Buxton, N0JY

New UK/EI DX Contest to Launch in December

A new contest to promote activity between stations in the UK and in
Ireland (UK/EI) and the rest of the world debuts with an SSB event in
December 5-6 and a CW event January 23-24. Both get under way at 1200
on Saturday and end 24 hours later. The United Kingdom and Ireland
Contest Club (UKEICC) is sponsoring the new contest.

"All UK and EI contesters, including those with modest stations and
antennas, will experience the fun of being a multiplier in a worldwide
contest," the announcement said. While the eventual goal is to have
UK/EI stations work the rest of the world, all entrants may work all
other entrants for points and multipliers.

"For the first year or two we have to take into account that UK/EI
participation may take time to build up and that there are long
periods when DX stations cannot work UK/EI stations, because there is
no propagation," the announcement pointed out. "Accordingly, we are
initially allowing DX-to-DX contacts, which will make the contest more
interesting for DX stations." Full information is on the UK/EI DX
Contest web page. Read more.

Ad

Support ARRL as You Shop this Holiday Season!

As you browse for great deals online this Black Friday and Cyber
Monday, we invite you to shop at AmazonSmile, choosing the ARRL as
your charity of choice. With every qualifying purchase you make
through AmazonSmile, Amazon will make a contribution to ARRL. When you
shop at AmazonSmile, you will be helping the League to extend its
reach in public service, advocacy, education, technology, and
membership. Bookmark the link and support ARRL every time you shop.
ARRL wishes you a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday and hopes you'll
remember us when you shop on Amazon this season.

AmazonSmile allows shoppers to enjoy the same wide selection of
products, low prices, and convenient shopping features as on
Amazon.com. When customers shop on AmazonSmile, the AmazonSmile
Foundation will donate 0.5 percent of the price of eligible purchases
to the charitable organizations selected by customers. As a 501(c)(3)
organization, ARRL -- the national association for Amateur Radio® is a
registered charity of AmazonSmile.

Willis Island VK9WA DXpedition Going Smoothly

The eight-member international team now activating VK9WA from Willis
Island November 14-23 reports the DXpedition is going smoothly for the
most part. VK9WA has generated substantial pileups over the past week
and had logged some 24,000 contacts as of November 18. The 160 meter
receiving antenna has been repaired, and the team said that its new
frequency on that band will be 1827 kHz. The team is operating from
the 4-acre Middle Cay, some 280 miles off the eastern coast of
Australia. Operation is on all bands, 160-10 meters, SSB, CW, and
RTTY. The team has begun running RTTY on 10.142 MHz.

"Our primary focus will be providing new contacts with this highly
demanded, rarely activated entity with an emphasis on difficult paths
-- primarily US East Coast, Europe, and Africa," the DXpedition
website states.

The DXpedition team will be on the island until November 22 and plans
to tear down all but two stations the afternoon prior to leaving. Two
stations will run overnight before departure. VK9WA has been arriving
via long path to the US on 17 and 20 and via short path on 15, 12, and
10. They are using verticals plus one two-element Yagi. Signals into
South America and southern Africa "have not been good," the team
reported this week.

Willis Island, which has not had a significant activation since 2008,
is number #32 on the ClubLog Most Wanted DXCC list. The weather there,
where it is spring, is reported to be "extremely hot." ClubLog
statistics show fairly even contact percentages for Asia, Europe, and
North America.

A reminder to those hoping to work VK9WA (or any other major
DXpedition): Do not call the DX station on its frequency; you must
operate split. Pay attention to the operator's instructions.

Oregon SM Pledges Continued Cooperation with Office of Emergency
Management After Rift

ARRL Oregon Section Manager Everett Curry, W6ABM, has told the
Section's Amateur Radio Emergency Service Emergency Coordinators that
Oregon ARES/RACES will continue to work with the Oregon Office of
Emergency Management (OOEM). Curry's statement comes nearly a week
after the OOEM severed its working relationship with Oregon Section
Emergency Coordinator Vince Van Der Hyde, K7VV. Van Der Hyde remains
as SEC.

"Nothing that OOEM has done alters your commitment to your served
agency -- in most cases your county -- and the commitments of Oregon
ARES/RACES to work with you in meeting the commitments made to your
county," Curry told the ECs. "I will work with OOEM for the present."

State Communications officer and Oregon RACES Officer Terry Pietras,
W7JOC, wrote Van Der Hyde on November 9, informing him that OOEM had
decided to sever the relationship between Van Der Hyde and the OEM
Amateur Radio (ARES) Unit. Pietras cited Van Der Hyde's decision not
to participate in a November 12 OOEM drill to test RACES emergency
communications capabilities and operations.

In a November 16 joint OOEM/ARRL Oregon Section statement, the OOEM
stressed that its relationship with Oregon ARES/RACES continues.
"We...are committed to work with and develop this relationship to
enhance emergency communications capabilities throughout Oregon," said
the statement, signed by Curry and OOEM Manager, Operations and
Preparedness Section Matthew T. Marheine.

Curry was scheduled to meet with Marheine this week. "It is my
expectation that we will achieve the mutual and respectful working
relationship that we desire," he said. He said he hopes to appoint an
Emergency Coordinator for the OOEM Amateur Radio Unit soon.

Ham Radio Accessory Dealer, Publisher Idiom Press Changing Hands

Idiom Press of Merlin, Oregon, has announced the sale of its assets to
Ham Supply of Elizabeth, Colorado. Owned by Wayne Ordakowski, N0UN,
Ham Supply is a new business formed to manufacture and distribute the
products previously offered by Idiom Press, as well as other new
Amateur Radio products.

Ham Supply will honor warranties for existing Idiom Press products,
and once production is resumed, Ham Supply will honor all existing
orders placed with Idiom Press after reconfirming them with the
customer. Ordakowski has said he intends to have the new business in
full operation by the first week of January 2016, although some
previously placed orders may ship earlier.

Idiom Press published The Complete DXer by Bob Locher, W9KNI, who
started the business before turning it over to his son Rob, W7GH, who
is returning to the computer programming field.

Ad

Past Pacific Division Director Bradley W. "Brad" Wyatt, K6WR, SK

Past ARRL Pacific Division Director Brad Wyatt, K6WR, of Los Gatos,
California, died on November 10 after an illness. He was 86. An ARRL

Past Pacific Division Director Brad Wyatt, K6WR.

Life Member, Wyatt served as the Pacific Division Director from 1994
until 2000, when he decided not to run for another term. He previously
served as Vice Director of the Pacific Division from 1992 until 1994.

Wyatt retired from IBM in 1984. He received bachelor's and master's
(MBA) degrees from Stanford University. Wyatt was a past president of
the Los Gatos Kiwanis Club.

In November 2001, Wyatt's article, "Remote Controlled HF Operation
over the Internet," appeared in QST. A year later, Wyatt and
co-authors Stan Schretter, W4MQ, and Keith Lamonica, W7DXX, won the
QST Cover Plaque Award for their collaboration on the article, "A Ham
Radio Public Utility HF Station."

In Brief...

Special Event W1Q will Mark QST Centennial: Special Event station W1Q
will be on the air December 1-15 to celebrate QST's 100th anniversary.
The first issue of QST was published in December 1915. ARRL COO Harold
Kramer, WJ1B, and volunteer operators will be on the air. This is not
an official ARRL operation, and Kramer will handle all details, QSL
cards, and LoTW entries. He will post additional information on his
WJ1B QRZ.com page. -- Thanks to Harold Kramer, WJ1B

Astronaut Kjell Lindgren, KO5MOS, Tweets Anniversary Greetings to
ARISS: Astronaut Kjell Lindgren, KO5MOS, has tweeted greetings to the
Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) program on
the 15th anniversary of the first Amateur Radio contacts between the
ISS and Earth. "First QSOs conducted from the ISS ham radio station 15
years this weekend. Happy Anniversary ARISS! 73!" Lindgren tweeted on
November 15. ARISS International Chair Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, noted the
auspicious occasion on November 13, in a post to the AMSAT-BB. "15
years ago today the ARISS team inaugurated the ham station on ISS with
the first set of QSOs with the crew," Bauer recounted. "These contacts
were conducted on this date in Moscow, Russia; Greenbelt, Maryland,
and Houston, Texas. Lou McFadin, W5DID, and I were on the mic at the
Greenbelt, Maryland location." That occasion marked the first use of
the NA1SS call sign from space. Lindgren, who arrived at the ISS in
July, will return to Earth in late December. During his duty tour, he
has participated in several ARISS school contacts.

Fall 2015 Issue of Radio Waves is Now Available: The fall 2015 edition
of Radio Waves is now available via the ARRL website. This issue
includes such articles as "Using Sensors to Explore Terraforming,"
"STEM School and Academy ARC Builds Repeater," and "Community
College's DIY Spirit Shines for ARISS Contact." Published quarterly by
ARRL Education Services, the fall 2015 edition also looks at how ham
radio can help Boy Scouts to earn the Radio merit badge; news, ideas,
and support for instructors; ham radio instruction for people with
disabilities, and the evolution of a licensing class. Current and back
issues of Radio Waves are available on the ARRL website. Radio Waves
is available free as a PDF.


The K7RA Solar Update

Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports:

Solar activity declined again this week, with average daily sunspot
numbers for the November 12-18 reporting week at 43.3, down from 72.3
during the previous seven days. Average daily solar flux was 105.5,
down from 109.4.

Geomagnetic A indices were down, which is generally a good thing for
HF propagation. The average daily planetary A index slipped from 25 to
11 and average daily mid-latitude A index from 19 to 9. All four of
these average A indexes being whole integers is an odd occurrence.

Predicted solar flux is 108, 106, 104, and 105 on November 19-22, 103
on November 23-24, then 100, 105, and 110 on November 25-27, 115 on
November 28-29, 120 on November 30 and December 1, 115 on December 2,
110 on December 3-4, and 105 on December 5-14. Flux values then drop
to a low of 95 on December 17-18, then rise back to 120 on December
27-28.

Predicted planetary A index is 18 and 10 on November 19-20, 8 on
November 21-22, 5 on November 23-25, 8 and 5 on November 26-27, 8 on
November 28-29, 25 in November 30 and December 1, then 15, 8, 5, 12,
20, and 25 on December 2-7.

Sunspot numbers for November 12 through 18 were 29, 50, 48, 63, 44,
33, and 36, with a mean of 43.3. 10.7 cm flux was 103.5, 102.9, 106.3,
105.8, 105.6, 107.1, and 107.6, with a mean of 105.5. Estimated
planetary A indices were 5, 14, 10, 9, 14, 8, and 17, with a mean of
11. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 4, 12, 10, 7, 9, 7, and 14,
with a mean of 9.

Please send your reports and observations to k7ra@arrl.net.

Just Ahead in Radiosport

November 20 -- YO International PSK31 Contest

November 21-22 -- 1.8 All Austrian 160 Meter Contest (CW)

November 21-22 -- ARRL November Sweepstakes (SSB)

November 21-22 -- NA Collegiate ARC Championship (SSB)

November 25 -- SKCC Sprint CW

November 25 -- UKEICC 80 Meter Contest (CW)

November 26 -- RSGB 80 Meter Club Sprint (CW)

November 28-29 -- ARRL EME Contest (CW, phone, digital)

November 28-29 -- CQ World Wide DX Contest (CW)

See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information.

Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions and Events

December 11-12 -- West Central Florida Section Convention, Plant City,
Florida

January 9 -- TECHFEST, Lawrenceville, Georgia

January 10 -- New York City-Long Island Section Convention, Bethpage,
New York

January 15-16 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Fort Myers,
Florida

January 15-16 -- North Texas Section Convention, Forest Hill, Texas

January 17-23 -- Quartzfest, Quartzsite, Arizona

January 29-30 -- Mississippi State Convention, Jackson, Mississippi

January 29-31 -- Puerto Rico State Convention, Hatillo, Puerto Rico

February 6 -- South Carolina State Convention, N. Charleston, South
Carolina

February 12-14 -- ARRL National Convention, Orlando, Florida

February 19-20 -- Southwestern Division Convention, Yuma, Arizona

February 27 WCF Section Technical Conference, Tampa, Florida

February 27 New Mexico TechFest, Albuquerque, New Mexico

February 27 Vermont State Convention, S. Burlington, Vermont

Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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