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I0OJJ  > DX       10.04.22 03:33l 267 Lines 14773 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 62008I0OJJ
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Subj: CQ Newsroom: $35 FCC License Fee Kicks in April 19
Path: IW8PGT<I3XTY<GB7COW<GB7CIP<JE7YGF<LU4ECL<I0OJJ
Sent: 220409/1626z @:I0OJJ.ITA.EU [Rome] $:62008I0OJJ

CQ Newsroom

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$35 FCC License Fee Kicks in April 19 - License Upgrades Excluded

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 01:21 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/35-fcc-license-fee-kicks-in-april-19.html


The FCC's new $35 filing fee for nearly all amateur radio license  
applications takes effect on April 19. The fee was among many adopted in  
December of 2020 but the effective date was delayed until the Commission's  
computer systems could be upgraded to handle the changes.

The new fee applies to most license-related applications, including new  
licenses, renewals and vanity call sign requests. It does not apply to  
license upgrades or purely administrative filings, such as a change of name  
or address.
The fee is separate from the exam fee collected by most volunteer exam  
teams and is paid directly to the FCC via its Universal Licensing System  
website, <https://tinyurl.com/s799xxaw>. For more details, visit  
<https://tinyurl.com/44m8dmxt>.

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  Dayton Awards Announced - KF8J, VA7OJ/AB4OJ, N6IZW, Highland ARC Honored

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 01:18 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/dayton-awards-announced-kf8j-va7ojab4oj.html

The Dayton Hamvention® Awards Committee has announce its 2022 honorees. The  
Dayton awards are considered among the most prestigious in amateur radio.  
The Amateur of the Year award goes to the Hamvention's own Jim Simpson,  
KF8J. A member of the Hamvention Committee continuously since 1973, Simpson  
twice served as General Chairman and has held a variety of other posts both  
within the Hamvention Committee and the parent Dayton Amateur Radio  
Association. He also founded the Xenia Weather Radio Network after the town  
that now hosts the Hamvention was devastated by a tornado in 1974, and has  
been instrumental in forming and continuing to help with the 4-H Amateur  
Radio Club in Xenia.
  This year's Technical Achievement award goes to Adam Farson, VA7OJ/AB4OJ,  
in recognition of his decades of service in providing independent technical  
support for various HF radios, particularly ICOMs. He also conducts and  
reports on independent measurements of nearly all new radios, and has  
produced the only data radio for hobbyists that clearly delineates the  
performance of software defined radios (SDRs) across the spectrum of band  
noise levels. The Hamvention's Special Achievement award this year goes to  
Kerry Banke, N6IZW. A microwave RF engineer, Banke has been a key  
contributor to the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS)  
program, designing and building both flight hardware and test equipment to  
certify the spaceworthiness of ARISS gear. The 2022 Club of the Year is  
Ohio's Highland Amateur Radio Association, based in rural Highland County.  
The club has nearly 150 members, maintains five repeaters, hosts two weekly  
nets with average attendance of 28 hams, and holds both monthly and  
bi-monthly programs. Members are involved with emergency communications,  
Parks on the Air, and volunteer examining. The awards will be presented at  
the Dayton Hamvention in May, the first in-person gathering for the event  
since 2019.

///////////////////////////////////////////
Friedrichshafen On, "HamCamp" Off

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 01:13 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/friedrichshafen-on-hamcamp-off.html



The organizers of Europe's largest hamfest, "Hamradio" in Friedrichshafen,  
Germany, say the show will return in-person this year, but the co-located  
youth "HamCamp" will not be held.

According to the Deutscher Amateur Radio Club (DARC), the available  
facilities could not safely house over 100 young hams and adult supervisors  
in accordance with Covid protocols. DARC says it hopes to resume HamCamp in  
2023..

///////////////////////////////////////////
SP9FIH, 3DA0RU, Win 2021 Cass Awards

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 01:05 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/sp9fih-3da0ru-win-2021-cass-awards.html


Janusz Wegrzyn, SP9FIH, has been named the single-op winner of the 2021  
Cass Award, presented by ClubLog, DXLab and the Northern California DX Club  
to the DXpeditions that work the greatest number of different amateurs.

Wegrzyn was honored for contacting 9684 unique stations during his two-week  
one-man DXpedition to Sint Maarten, where he operated as PJ7P. This is his  
fifth consecutive Cass Single-Op award. The 2021 Unlimited Cass Award,  
which goes to DXpedition groups, was awarded to 3DA0ARU for its October  
operation from Eswatini. The group of eight Russian, Czech and Polish hams  
made contact with 24,985 separate stations during the operation, a new  
record for this award category. Complete rules are available at  
<www.cassaward.com>.

///////////////////////////////////////////
Radio Fallout from Ukraine Invasion Expands

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:59 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/radio-fallout-from-ukraine-invasion.html


Newsline reports that Russia and Belarus have been indefinitely suspended  
from the CEPT, the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications  
Administrations, in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine. This affects  
amateur radio operation in Europe, as CEPT members accept amateur licenses  
from other member countries.

This action suspends the automatic authority of hams from Russia and  
Belarus to operate in other parts of Europe, and of hams from other CEPT  
signatories (including the U.S.) to operate in Russia and Belarus.

///////////////////////////////////////////
Spratlys Get Even More Dangerous for Hams

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:57 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/spratlys-get-even-more-dangerous-for.html

The Spratly Islands
(Map courtesy CIA World Factbook)
The Spratly Islands in the South China Sea have long been on ham radio  
DXers' most-wanted lists, and getting there to operate has always been  
dangerous because of competing claims to the islands by various countries.  
Now, the Associated Press reports that China has "fully militarized" at  
least three of the islands in the region, quoting a top U.S. military  
commander as saying the islands have been equipped with anti-ship and  
anti-aircraft missile systems, fighter jets and laser and jamming  
equipment. According to U.S. Indo-Pacific Commander Adm. John C. Aquilino,  
this is part of what he describes as China's largest military buildup since  
World War II. DXpeditions to the area are strongly discouraged…

///////////////////////////////////////////
There's Gotta Be a Ham on This Team!

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:44 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/theres-gotta-be-ham-on-this-team.html

SEAQUE will be hosted on the International Space
Station by the Nanoracks Bishop airlock. The blue-and-
gold brackets attached to the side of the airlock are for
external payloads. The technology demonstration will
be installed at one of those sites. (NASA photo)NASA's Jet Propulsion  
Laboratory is coordinating a project involving scientists from three  
universities and two commercial companies to test a device that JPL says  
could set the stage for a future global quantum network …and we're pretty  
sure there's at least one ham on the team that's developing it. The  
milk-carton-sized technology demonstration experiment, scheduled for launch  
to the International Space Station later this year, is named the Space  
Entanglement and Annealing Quantum Experiment, abbreviated by the acronym  
SEAQUE (say it out loud and you'll understand the connection!).  Quantum  
computers have the potential of operating millions of times faster than  
conventional computers, according to JPL, and SEAQUE will test two new  
communication technologies to create quantum networks in the space  
environment. Building such a network would require the use of space-based  
nodes – essentially quantum repeaters – to securely receive and transmit  
quantum data from and to the ground using free-space optical  
communications. This experiment would test a technique for producing and  
detecting pairs of entangled photons which would carry the quantum data.  
The photon source on SEAQUE would split individual photons into  
entangled "daughter photons," according to JPL, and measuring one of them  
immediately results in changes in the measurement of the other, even if  
they are widely separated from each other. The photon source would use a  
waveguide – familiar to microwave-active hams – to split and transmit the  
entangled photons. The second experiment would involve the use of an  
internal laser to repair damage caused by high-energy radiation in the  
space environment. It will use a process known as annealing to "bubble  
away" radiation-caused defects and reduce unwanted noise in the detector.  
The SEAQUE module will be attached to the outside of the ISS, mounted on  
brackets already installed on the Bishop airlock, which is owned and  
operated by Nanoracks, a commercial participant in this experiment. The  
earliest possible launch date for SEAQUE is this coming August.  For more  
information, see <https://tinyurl.com/yek9smtk>.

///////////////////////////////////////////
    Milestones: JH1AJT, W2RS, Silent Keys

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:37 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/milestones-jh1ajt-w2rs-silent-keys.html

CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame member "Zorro" Miyazawa, JH1AJT, became a  
Silent Key in late March, according to DXNews.com. In addition to his DXing  
activities around the world, which included bringing along groups of other  
operators to be on the air while he conducted business in various  
locations, Zorro was the founder of the Foundation for Global Children, an  
international humanitarian organization focused on helping provide basic  
supplies and educational opportunities for children around the world. Also  
leaving us in March was amateur satellite pioneer Ray Soifer, W2RS. In  
1960, he was on one end of the first known amateur radio contact via  
satellite ionization trail reflection, according to the AMSAT News Service.  
In addition, Ray was at one end of the first-ever intersatellite relay  
communication between two earth stations – using OSCARs 6 and 7 – in any  
radio service. Soifer held many positions in the AMSAT organization,  
including Executive Vice President and acting President. He also served as  
chair of the IARU (International Amateur Radio Union) satellite forum and  
the IARU Region 2 VHF/UHF Committee.

///////////////////////////////////////////
EmComm Exercise on QO-100

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:36 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/emcomm-exercise-on-qo-100.html


        Normal  0          false  false  false    EN-US  X-NONE   
AR-SA                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
                                                                
 Amateur  
radio emergency communications exercises don't typically include  
satellites, but QO-100 isn't your typical amateur satellire. It is  
geostationary, appearing to remain in the same spot overhead at all times,  
meaning that access from all stations within its "footprint" is continuous.  
That footprint covers much of Europe, all of Africa and parts of Asia and  
South America. In late February, according to the AMSAT News Service, 22  
amateurs from 14 countries in IARU Region 1 (Europe, Africa and the Middle  
East) took part in a short-notice EmComm exercise using the QO-100  
satellite. The coverage area extended from South Africa to the United  
Kingdom, providing an avenue for communication in a wide-ranging disaster  
situation without dependence on either the internet or the ionosphere. A  
follow-up exercise is planned for this fall.


///////////////////////////////////////////
MARS and RRI to Conduct Monthlong Drill

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:29 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/mars-and-rri-to-conduct-monthlong-drill.html

Radio Relay International (RRI), in cooperation with U.S. Army MARS Region  
2, will be conducting a joint interoperability exercise from April 15 to  
May 15, 2022. According to RRI Director of Emergency Management Jim Wades,  
WB8SIW, the exercise will consist of two phases, starting with a limited  
infrastructure test and training phase, followed by a test utilizing  
RRI/NTS (ARRL National Traffic System) assets through the last mile in  
selected states.  Messages addressed to various emergency service  
organizations will originate within the Army MARS Region 2 network from  
which they will be transferred to the RRI Digital Traffic Network for  
routing to their destinations. Replies will return via a similar path.
  RRI operates an international infrastructure of layered communications  
networks including both manual mode systems and a hybrid mesh network  
utilizing high frequency resources. More information regarding the exercise  
and the organization may be found at the RRI website, <www.radio-relay.org>.

///////////////////////////////////////////
AMSAT Receives Major Grant for Spaceframe Development

Posted: 07 Apr 2022 12:24 PM PDT
http://cqnewsroom.blogspot.com/2022/04/amsat-receives-major-grant-for.html


The AMSAT News Service reports that the amateur satellite group has been  
awarded a grant of close to $100,000 by ARDC (Amateur Radio Digital  
Communications) for development of a "3U" spaceframe with deployable solar  
panels. This structure – the size of three standard cubesats – will serve  
as the mechanical platform for AMSAT's GOLF series of high-altitude  
satellites and a new generation of low-orbit FM satellites, according to  
ANS.
The GOLF satellites are intended for higher elliptical orbits, providing  
longer access times and greater coverage areas for hams here on the planet.  
AMSAT stressed, though, that as generous as the ARDC grant is, another  
$231,000 is needed to cover additional hardware development and launch  
preparation costs for just one GOLF satellite.





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