• ARRL3729 ARRL Letter

    From N9PMO@21:5/101 to LETTER on Sat Jul 20 13:50:14 2019
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    No Consensus Reached for FCC on "Symbol Rate" Issues
    HWN and National Hurricane Center's WX4NHC Activate for Tropical Storm
    Barry
    Centenarian Radio Amateur's Efforts Helped Pave the Way to the Moon
    The Doctor Will See You Now!
    Major WSJT-X Upgrade Boosts FT4 into "a Finished Protocol for HF
    Contesting"
    The K7RA Solar Update
    Just Ahead in Radiosport
    New Summer EURAO Party to Premier FT4
    World Wide Radio Operators Foundation Announces Global Digital DX
    Contest
    Dayton Hamvention 2019 Attendance Approaches All-Time Peak
    IARU Represents Amateur Radio at CEPT Meetings
    2018 Leonard Award for Outstanding Video Journalism Presented
    In Brief...
    Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
    No Consensus Reached for FCC on "Symbol Rate" Issues
    ARRL-initiated efforts for rival parties to reach consensus on issues
    raised in the so-called "Symbol Rate" proceeding have ended. In April,
    the FCC granted ARRL's request for a 90-day hold in the proceeding, FCC
    Docket WT 16-239, to provide an opportunity for ARRL to lead an effort
    to determine whether consensus could be reached on some or all of the
    issues that commenters raised in the FCC's proceeding. The FCC already
    has issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in WT 16-239, which stemmed
    from ARRL's rulemaking petition RM-11708.

    Discussions were since widened to include issues raised in another
    Petition for Rule Making, RM-11831, filed by Ron Kolarik, K0IDT, that
    seeks, "to ensure Amateur Radio digital modes remain openly decodable
    and available for monitoring" by the FCC and by other third parties,
    including other radio amateurs. His petition also aims to limit
    Automatically Controlled Digital Stations (ACDS) to identified subbands
    on HF, to reduce interference. Last month, ARRL filed an interim report
    with the FCC summarizing its efforts to bring all sides to the table,
    and on June 28, ARRL requested an additional 60-day pause to pursue
    promising talks.

    "In seeking the delay, it was the ARRL's intent to facilitate
    discussions between the opposing parties in an effort to explore the possibility of an agreed resolution that would better protect users of
    the Amateur Radio spectrum from interference and would permit all
    members of the Amateur Radio service to continue to contribute to the advancement of the radio art," ARRL Washington Counsel David Siddall,
    K3ZJ, said, summarizing the situation in a July 15 letter to the FCC.
    "The end purpose, if a binding agreement between the opposing parties
    could not be reached, was to provide the strongest possible basis for
    the ARRL to file its recommendations on a fair and equitable resolution
    of the issues."

    Siddall said that despite difficulties "partially attributable to the
    passions of the respective parties," ARRL was able to schedule meetings
    with both sides and, eventually, facilitate joint discussions among the respective parties.

    Siddall said in his letter, "At the beginning of our meetings there
    emerged consensus on the issues to be discussed. By the end, the parties
    had reached consensus on some of the issues, but not all. Despite our
    best efforts, some of the parties did not agree to submit to the
    Commission any of the recommendations on which there had been an
    apparent consensus, having negotiated with an 'all or nothing'
    approach."

    Despite the disappointing conclusion, Siddall expressed confidence that
    a better understanding of issues and positions of the various interests
    exists among all of the parties who participated in the in-person
    meetings and teleconferences, and that this will have an overall
    positive effect upon the outcome of the proceeding. Read more.

    HWN and National Hurricane Center's WX4NHC Activate for Tropical Storm
    Barry
    Responding to then-Tropical Storm Barry, the Hurricane Watch Net (HWN)
    and WX4NHC -- the Amateur Radio station at the National Hurricane Center
    (NHC) in Miami -- activated on July 12. The HWN's primary frequency is
    14.325 MHz with 7.268 MHz as a secondary channel, depending upon
    propagation. This time, the HWN fired up on both bands.

    Net Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, noted that the HWN would be available
    to provide back-up communication to official agencies in the affected
    area and would collect and report "significant damage assessment data"
    to FEMA officials at the National Hurricane Center.

    The HWN works in concert with WX4NHC at the NHC to help forecasters get
    a better sense of ground-level meteorological data such as wind speed, barometric pressure, and rainfall.

    Forecasters predicted that Barry would develop into a Category 1
    hurricane before making landfall, and the storm lived up to those
    expectations. Dangerous storm surge, heavy rainfall, and high wind
    conditions were expected across the north-central Gulf Coast.

    The major fear was that heavy rainfall could generate additional
    flooding in the region. NHC forecasters said Barry was expected to
    produce total rain accumulations of 10 to 20 inches over south-central
    and southeast Louisiana, as well as over southwest Mississippi, with
    isolated maximum amounts of 25 inches. The actual rainfall was somewhat
    less but still significant.


    WX4NHC volunteers Susie Blank, WX2L (left), and Alan Wolfe, WB4L
    (right), with WX4NHC Coordinator John McHugh, K4AG, at the Hurricane
    Barry activation. [Julio Ripoll, WD4R, photo]

    The HWN officially secured operations for Hurricane Barry on July 13,
    after the storm made landfall on the Louisiana coast. Graves said the activation for Barry "proved to be a good training platform for our
    newest members" and an opportunity to test new systems.

    WX4NHC remained active for 2 days, gathering surface reports from
    stations located in the affected areas for use by forecasters. "We
    received many reports about the flooding, downed trees, road closures,
    and power outages," said WX4NHC Assistant Coordinator Julio Ripoll,
    WD4R. He expressed gratitude for the support of the Hurricane Watch Net
    and the EchoLink VoIP Hurricane Net (WX_TALK).

    "Remember, the season is still young, so please, don't drop your guard,"
    Graves advised

    Ad
    Centenarian Radio Amateur's Efforts Helped Pave the Way to the Moon
    The Nashville Tennessean newspaper recently featured the story of a 104-year-old ARRL member who contributed to NASA's effort to put the
    first humans on the moon 50 years ago this month. Cary Nettles, W5SRR,
    of Columbia, Tennessee -- who calls himself the nation's oldest rocket scientist still alive -- was a NASA project manager and research
    engineer on rocket propulsion systems in the 1950s and 1960s.

    While working on the Centaur second-stage rocket program, Nettles
    determined that the rocket engine failures NASA was experiencing were a
    result of misdirected exhaust destroying the vehicles' engines. Nettles
    told the Tennessean he came up with an "exhaust pipe" that solved the
    problem. In May 1966, an Atlas-Centaur launcher propelled the first
    Surveyor lander toward the moon. That year, NASA awarded Nettles and
    colleague Ed Jonash with its Distinguished Service Medal for "their
    superhuman effort in turning the troubled rocket into a reliable upper
    stage," according to a 2004 NASA publication, "Taming Liquid Hydrogen --
    The Centaur Upper Stage Rocket 1958 - 2002."

    On July 16, 1969, a Saturn V rocket with a liquid hydrogen-fueled second
    stage carried astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael
    Collins to their rendezvous with the moon. Nettles retired from NASA the following year.

    Nettles got his Amateur Radio license in 1945 and remains active on 40
    meters as well as on VHF and UHF repeaters. He is a member of the Maury
    Amateur Radio Club. In addition to sustaining his interest in ham radio
    over the decades, Nettles is an enthusiast of "large-scale" steam
    trains, which he works on in his basement. Look for him Tuesdays at 1400
    UTC on 7.215 MHz on the Steam Railroad Net.

    In 2015, the year he turned 100, the ARRL Tennessee Section presented
    Nettles with its Elder Statesman Award.

    The Doctor Will See You Now!
    "Antenna Polarization" is the topic of the new (July 18) 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 email 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.

    Ad
    Major WSJT-X Upgrade Boosts FT4 into "a Finished Protocol for HF
    Contesting"
    The WSJT Development Group has announced the "general availability"
    release of WSJT-X version 2.1.0. This major upgrade formally introduces
    FT4 as "a finished protocol for HF contesting." Users have been advised
    to discontinue using any "release candidate" (beta) versions of the
    software that WSJT-X version 2.1.0 supplants. The latest edition of the
    popular digital software suite also includes improvements and bug fixes
    in several areas, including FT8. The list includes:

    FT8 waveform generated with GMSK and fully backward compatible

    User options for waterfall and spectrum display

    Contest logging

    Rig control

    User interface

    The WSJT-X Development Group is providing a separate WSJT-X version
    2.1.0 installation package for 64-bit Windows that offers significant improvements in decoding speed.

    A detailed list of program changes since WSJT-X version 2.0.1 is
    included in the cumulative release notes. Upgrading from earlier
    versions of WSJT-X should be seamless, with no need to uninstall a
    previous version or to move any files.

    Installation packages for Windows, Linux, and Macintosh are available.

    Visit the FT8/FT4/JT9: WSJT 2-Way Narrow Modes for Amateur Radio
    Facebook page for additional information. Read more.

    The K7RA Solar Update
    Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Very low solar activity continues;
    there were no sunspots. Over the past week, average daily solar flux
    changed insignificantly, from 67.1 to 67. Average daily planetary A
    index changed from 8.4 to 5.9, while mid-latitude A index changed from
    8.6 to 6.7. Conditions remain quiet. Predicted solar flux is 68 for July
    18 - 24, and 67 for July 25 - August 31.

    The predicted planetary A index is 5 on July 18 - 22; 8 on July 23; 5 on
    July 24 - 27; 8 on July 28; 5 on July 29 - August 3; 8, 15, 15, and 8 on
    August 4 - 7; 5 on August 8 - 10; 10, 12, and 8 on August 11 - 13; 5 on
    August 14 - 23; 8 on August 24; 5 on August 25 - 30, and 8 on August
    31.

    On July 17, Spaceweather.com reported a coronal hole spewing a stream of
    solar wind, with arrival expected to cause minor geomagnetic upset in
    the July 19 - 20 time frame. Spaceweather also reported that, so far
    this calendar year, 64% of all days were without sunspots. Last year the
    total percentage of spotless days was 61%, 28% in 2017, 9% in 2016, and
    nearly 0% in 2011 - 2015.

    N4SO in Alabama reported some success on July 13 running FT8 with 15 W
    while testing a new antenna. He contacted stations in Texas, California, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Oregon, and Guatemala.

    On July 12, KD4SR reported contacting Puerto Rico, Haiti, Hawaii,
    Brazil, and Canada from central Florida on 6 meters, running FT8 and 100
    W to modest antennas.

    Sunspot numbers for July 11 - 17 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with a
    mean of 0. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 67.1, 66.8, 66, 67.2, 67.1,
    67.2, and 67.8, with a mean of 67. Estimated planetary A indices were 8,
    5, 6, 5, 7, 4, and 6, with a mean of 5.9. Middle latitude A index was 9,
    5, 6, 6, 8, 5, and 8, with a mean of 6.7.

    A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL website.
    For more information concerning radio propagation, visit the ARRL
    Technical Information Service, read "What the Numbers Mean...," and
    check out K9LA's Propagation Page.

    A propagation bulletin archive is available. Monthly charts offer
    propagation projections between the US and a dozen DX locations.

    Share your reports and observations.

    Ad
    Just Ahead in Radiosport
    July 20 -- NAQCC CW Sprint

    July 20 -- Russian Radio Team Championship (CW, phone)

    July 20 -- Trans-Tasman Low-Bands Challenge (CW, phone, digital)

    July 20 -- Feld Hell Sprint

    July 20 -- SA Sprint Contest (CW, phone)

    July 20 - 21 -- North American QSO Party, RTTY

    July 20 - 21 -- CQ Worldwide VHF Contest (CW, phone, digital)

    July 21 -- RSGB Low Power Contest (CW)

    July 21 -- CQC Great Colorado Gold Rush (CW)

    July 22 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)

    July 24 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)

    July 25 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (Digital)

    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 email preferences.

    New Summer EURAO Party to Premier FT4
    The motto of the new European Radio Amateurs' Organization (EURAO)
    Summer Party is "Premiering FT4." This is not a contest but an
    on-the-air radio gathering with some suggested guidelines. The event is
    set for July 27 - 28 UTC.

    A new "general availability" release of WSJT-X that includes the latest
    FT4 protocol for HF contesting was released on July 15 as part of WSJT-X
    2.1.0. FT4 is designed to be suitable for contesting in a manner similar
    to RTTY. Recommended frequencies for FT4 are 3.595, 7.090, 10.140,
    14.140, 18.104, 21.140, 24.919, 28.180, 50.318, and 144.170 MHz.

    Exchanges are limited to what FT4 can accommodate, such as call sign,
    grid square, and signal report. For statistical purposes, EURAO is
    asking participants to submit logs in ADIF format, with your call sign
    as the file name. No results will be published, only statistical
    information.

    Ad
    World Wide Radio Operators Foundation Announces Global Digital DX
    Contest
    The World Wide Radio Operators Foundation (WWROF), in collaboration with
    the Slovenia Contest Club (SCC), has announced the World Wide Digi DX
    Contest (WW Digi), which it hopes will become an annual event. The
    inaugural running of the 24-hour contest will take place on August 31 - September 1. The new contest aims to tap into the enthusiasm being
    generated by the new digital modes pioneered by Joe Taylor, K1JT, and
    the WSJT-X Development Group. Participants will use FT4 and FT8 on 160,
    80, 40, 20, 15, and 10 meters. The WW Digi will utilize a distance-based scoring system, with participants earning points based on the distance
    between grid square centers of the two stations in a given contact.

    "This will encourage operators to seek out long-distance, weak-signal
    contacts that highlight the technical advantages of the new digital
    modes," WWROF's announcement said.

    To encourage activity across all bands, each new two-character grid
    field contacted on each band will be a multiplier. The final score will
    the product of total contact points and grid field (i.e., the initial
    two letters) contacts. Single-operator and multioperator entries are
    invited to take part.

    "The contest has been designed to enable making contacts utilizing
    standard WSJT-X software behavior, making it easy for non-contesters to participate," the announcement said. "At the same time, the contest
    supports some new techniques that will encourage operating innovation,
    such as permitting stations to work up to three 'QSO streams' on a band
    at one time. Robotic operation is specifically prohibited in order to
    keep the human element as part of the game."

    Plaques will be awarded to top scorers. Read more.

    Dayton Hamvention 2019 Attendance Approaches All-Time Peak
    The Hamvention Executive Team announced July 15 that attendance at
    Dayton Hamvention« 2019 was 32,472, the second-largest ever. This marks
    the highest attendance recorded since Hamvention moved from Hara Arena
    to the Greene County Fairgrounds and Exposition Center in Xenia, Ohio.
    This year's attendance also approached an all-time Hamvention high.
    Attendance at the show peaked in 1993, while Hamvention was still being
    held at Hara Arena, at 33,669, before the 1996 change in date from April
    to May. Last year, Hamvention welcomed 28,417 visitors in its second
    year in Xenia. Attendance in 2016 for the show's final year at Hara was
    25,364. Hamvention hosted the ARRL 2019 National Convention, and both
    embraced the theme of "Mentoring the Next Generation."

    "Our early indications were that 2019 would be a big year, and it lived
    up to our expectations," Hamvention General Chair Jack Gerbs, WB8SCT,
    said. "Our more than 700 volunteers worked hard to ensure that we
    presented a great show for our visitors. It wouldn't have been possible
    without them. I also want to thank all our vendors and visitors and hope
    they will all be back next year."

    Hamvention officials suggested that a small factor behind the increased attendance might have been the free admission on Sunday, an effort to
    allow local non-hams to experience Hamvention. Free Sunday admission is expected to be continued next year.

    The world's largest Amateur Radio exposition, Dayton Hamvention is
    sponsored by the Dayton Amateur Radio Association (DARA) every third
    full weekend in May. Hamvention 2020 will take place on May 15, 16, and
    17. Read more.

    IARU Represents Amateur Radio at CEPT Meetings
    International Amateur Radio Union Region 1 (IARU R1) reports that a
    further meeting to address the topic of Wireless Power Transmission
    (WPT) took place earlier this month. A subgroup of the European
    Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT)
    Committee SE24, charged with work on a report on generic WPT devices,
    met in Copenhagen, Denmark in early July. IARU Region 1 President Don
    Beattie, G3BJ, provided input on projections of harmful emissions from
    WPT systems -- both generic and WPT for electric vehicles -- operating
    at existing harmonic emission limits.

    IARU also reported on tests carried out on small WPT devices, and a full
    report is to be considered at the next meeting in September. IARU
    continues to argue for tighter emission limits on harmonics and other
    spurious emissions from WPT systems, which have the potential to cause sustained harmful interference to incumbent radio services.

    IARU also was represented at a recent meeting in Switzerland of the CEPT Project Team D. This was the last of the CEPT project team meetings
    preparing European Common Proposals (ECP) for a number of agenda items
    for World Radiocommunication Conference 2019 (WRC-19) this fall in
    Egypt.

    WRC-19 agenda item 1.1, which addresses the possibility of a
    "harmonized" Region 1 allocation at 50 MHz, was the key issue to be
    resolved. The project team agreed on the text of an ECP for WRC-19,
    which, if adopted by the delegates, would see an entry in the
    International Table of Allocations for Region 1 and allocate 50 - 52 MHz
    to Amateur Radio on a secondary basis.

    In addition, the team agreed upon the addition of a footnote to the International Table to permit individual CEPT countries to introduce a
    national primary allocation in the 50.0 - 50.5 MHz subband.

    IARU will attend the final meeting of CEPT's Conference Preparatory
    Group (CPG) in late August and finalize CEPT's input to WRC-19. That
    meeting will consider a proposal by France to allocate 144 - 146 MHz to
    the Aeronautical Service on a primary basis.

    2018 Leonard Award for Outstanding Video Journalism Presented
    ARRL Hudson Division Director Ria Jairam, N2RJ, and Vice Director Bill
    Hudzik, W2UDT, recently presented the ARRL 2018 Leonard Award for
    Outstanding Video Journalism to NJTV public television correspondent
    Andrew Schmertz. The presentation took place in at NJTV in Newark, New
    Jersey.


    2018 Leonard Award for Outstanding Video Journalism recipient Andrew
    Schmertz of NJTV is flanked by Hudson Division Director Ria Jairam, N2RJ (left), and Vice Director Bill Hudzik, W2UDT.

    Schmertz was recognized for his story that featured interviews with New
    Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) Assistant Research Professor
    Nathan Frissell, W2NAF, co-founder of HamSCI and the Solar Eclipse QSO
    Party, as well as numerous faculty members, members of the NJIT Amateur
    Radio station K2MFF, and attendees at a February 2018 HamSCI conference
    at NJIT that Frissell spearheaded. The conference focused on the
    significance of measuring the effects of solar activity on radio
    communication. Through HamSCI, Frissell was instrumental in enlisting
    the global Amateur Radio community to gauge the effects of the August
    2017 solar eclipse on propagation.

    The ARRL Board of Directors conferred the Leonard Award on Schmertz upon recommendation of the ARRL Public Relations Committee, which oversees
    the Leonard Awards for Outstanding Journalism in print, audio, and
    video. The award's namesake is the late CBS News President Bill Leonard,
    W2SKE.

    In Brief...
    The ARRL Board of Directors will meet July 19 - 20 in Windsor,
    Connecticut, for its second meeting of 2019. According to the agenda,
    the Board will hear reports from officers and committees as well as from
    some Headquarters staff managers. Representatives of the International
    Amateur Radio Union (IARU) and Radio Amateurs of Canada (RAC) are
    expected to attend as guests of the Board.

    Language in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Reauthorization
    Act of 2018 will exclude all but a small number of Amateur Radio towers
    from marking requirements. Thanks to action taken in 2017 and 2018 by
    ARRL, the bill's original language was amended to the extent that
    amateur towers, as well as residential towers used for over-the-air TV reception, were effectively exempted from marking requirements. The
    topic was addressed at the annual "Ham Radio and the Law" forum at the
    Dayton Hamvention« this past May. Some key points from that
    presentation: (1) Towers covered by the rules are structures at least 50
    feet tall that support an antenna and are located in a rural area or on farmland or immediately adjacent to such land. (2) According to the Act,
    the term "covered tower" does not include any structure that is adjacent
    to a house, barn, or other building, and "is within the curtilage of a farmstead or adjacent to another building or visible structure." ARRL Regulatory Information Manager Dan Henderson, N1ND, explains that, while
    a few Amateur Radio towers will fall under the Act's marking
    requirements and will have to be registered, towers in residential yards
    or within farmland are specifically exempted. More information is on the
    ARRL website.

    AMSAT has issued a first call for papers for its anniversary symposium
    this fall. The 50th anniversary AMSAT Annual Meeting and Space Symposium
    will be held October 18 - 20 at The Hilton Arlington, 950 North Stafford Street, Arlington, Virginia. Proposals for papers, symposium
    presentations, and poster presentations are invited on any topic of
    interest to the Amateur Satellite community. AMSAT request a working
    title for presentations, with final presentations submitted by September
    23 for inclusion in the printed proceedings. Send abstracts and papers
    to Dan Schultz, N8FGV. -- Thanks to AMSAT

    Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
    July 19 - 21 -- Nevada State Convention, Reno, Nevada

    July 25 - 27 -- Central States VHF Conference, Lincoln, Nebraska

    July 26 - 27 -- Ham Holiday, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

    August 2 - 3 -- Austin Summerfest, Austin, Texas

    August 3 - 4 -- Cedar Valley ARC Hamfest/Midwest STEM Techfest, Central
    City, Iowa

    August 8 - 10 -- Rocky Mountain Division Convention, Ogden, Utah

    August 9 - 11 -- Pacific Northwest DX Convention, Everett, Washington

    August 17 - 18 -- Huntsville Hamfest, Alabama State Convention,
    Huntsville, Alabama

    August 24 -- Society of Midwest Contesters Specialty Convention, Normal, Illinois

    August 23 - 25 -- West Virginia State Convention, Weston, West Virginia

    September 6 - 7 -- Arkansas State Convention, Mena, Arkansas

    September 6 - 7 -- Wyoming State Convention, Gillette, Wyoming

    September 6 - 8 -- New England Division Convention, Boxborough,
    Massachusetts

    September 7 -- Virginia Section Convention, Virginia Beach, Virginia

    September 13 - 14 -- W9DXCC 2019, St. Charles, Illinois

    September 21 - 22 -- New Mexico State Convention, Albuquerque, New
    Mexico

    September 27 - 28 -- Central Division Convention, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

    September 28 -- Dakota Division Convention, West Fargo, North Dakota

    September 28 -- Washington State Convention, Spokane Valley, Washington

    Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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