Subj : The Weekly ARRL Letter
To   : All
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Fri Sep 04 2020 09:05 am

  The ARRL Letter
  September 3, 2020

    * FCC Proposes to Institute Amateur Radio Application Fees
    * First Element of ARISS Next-Generation Radio System Installed and
      Operating on ISS
    * Solar Minimum Most Likely Occurred in December 2019
    * ARRL Podcasts Schedule
    * Hurricane Watch Net Logs More than 29 Hours of Continuous Operation
      for Laura
    * Historic Winlink Gateway KH6SP Ceases Operation
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Launch of Satellites Carrying Ham Radio Payloads Postponed Again
    * Announcements
    * 2016 ARRL International Humanitarian Award Co-Recipient Richard
      Darling, AH7G, SK
    * In Brief...
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
  FCC Proposes to Institute Amateur Radio Application Fees

  Amateur radio licensees would pay a $50 fee for each amateur radio
  license application if the FCC adopts rules it proposed last week.
  Included in the FCC's fee proposal are applications for new licenses,
  renewal and upgrades to existing licenses, and vanity call sign
  requests. Excluded are applications for administrative updates, such as
  changes of address, and annual regulatory fees.

  The FCC proposal is contained in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM)
  in MD Docket 20-270, which was adopted to implement portions of the
  "Repack Airwaves Yielding Better Access for Users of Modern Services
  Act" of 2018 -- the so-called "Ray Baum's Act."

  The Act requires that the FCC switch from a Congressionally-mandated
  fee structure to a cost-based system of assessment. In its NPRM, the
  FCC proposed application fees for a broad range of services that use
  the FCC's Universal Licensing System (ULS), including the Amateur Radio
  Service that had been excluded by an earlier statute. The new statute
  excludes the Amateur Service from annual regulatory fees, but not from
  application fees.

  "[A]pplications for personal licenses are mostly automated and do not
  have individualized staff costs for data input or review," the FCC said
  in its NPRM. "For these automated processes -- new/major modifications,
  renewal, and minor modifications -- we propose a nominal application
  fee of $50 due to automating the processes, routine ULS maintenance,
  and limited instances where staff input is required."

  The same $50 fee would apply to all Amateur Service applications,
  including those for vanity call signs. "Although there is currently no
  fee for vanity call signs in the Amateur Radio Service, we find that
  such applications impose similar costs in aggregate on Commission
  resources as new applications and therefore propose a $50 fee," the FCC
  said.

  The FCC is not proposing to charge for administrative updates such as
  mailing address changes, and amateur radio will remain exempt from
  annual regulatory fees. "For administrative updates [and]
  modifications, which also are highly automated, we find that it is in
  the public interest to encourage licensees to update their [own]
  information without a charge," the FCC said.

  The FCC also proposes to assess a $50 fee for individuals who want a
  printed copy of their license. "The Commission has proposed to
  eliminate these services -- but to the extent the Commission does not
  do so, we propose a fee of $50 to cover the costs of these services,"
  the FCC said.

  The FCC dropped assessment of fees for vanity call signs several years
  ago, but the Ray Baum's Act does not exempt filing fees in the Amateur
  Radio Service.

  ARRL is reviewing the matter and intends to file comments in
  opposition.

  Deadlines for comments and reply comments will be determined once the
  NPRM appears in the Federal Register. File comments by using the FCC's
  Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS), posting to MD Docket No.
  20-270. This docket is already open for accepting comments, even though
  deadlines have not yet been set.
  First Element of ARISS Next-Generation Radio System Installed and
  Operating on ISS

  The initial element of the Amateur Radio on the International Space
  Station (ARISS) next-generation radio system has been installed onboard
  the ISS, and operations using the new gear are now under way. The first
  element, dubbed the InterOperable Radio System (IORS), was installed in
  the ISS Columbus module. The IORS replaces the Ericsson radio system
  and packet module originally certified for spaceflight in mid-2000.

  "Finally! It's been a scramble the last few days with coordination over
  the weekend and yesterday with astronaut Chris Cassidy, KF5KDR,"
  ARISS-US Delegate for ARRL Rosalie White, K1STO, said. "But the new
  ARISS radio system is now installed, set up, and functioning. What a
  long road we've traveled over the past 5 years!"

  Part of the ARISS InterOperable Radio
  System -- the multi-voltage power supply
  -- being put through its paces during one
  of its many NASA tests. [Photo courtesy of
  ARISS]

  Initial operation of the new radio system is in FM cross-band repeater
  mode using an uplink of 145.99 MHz (CTCSS 67 Hz) and a downlink of
  437.800 MHz. Special operations will continue to be announced, ARISS
  said.

  Launched from Kennedy Space Center last March, the IORS consists of a
  "space-modified" JVC-Kenwood D710GA transceiver, an ARISS-developed
  multi-voltage power supply, and interconnecting cables. The design,
  development, fabrication, testing, and launch of the first IORS
  culminated a 5-year engineering effort by the ARISS hardware team of
  volunteers.

  ARISS says the new system offers a higher-power radio, voice repeater,
  digital packet radio (APRS) capabilities, and a Kenwood VC-H1 slow-scan
  television (SSTV) system.

  A second IORS will undergo flight certification for later launch and
  installation in the Russian Service Module. "Next-gen development
  efforts continue," ARISS said. "For the IORS, parts are being procured
  and a total of 10 systems are being fabricated

  to support flight, additional flight spares, ground testing, and
  astronaut training." Follow-on next-generation radio system elements
  include L-band repeater uplink capability -- currently in development
  -- and a flight Raspberry Pi, dubbed "ARISS-Pi," still in the design
  phase. The ARISS-Pi promises operations autonomy and enhanced SSTV
  operations, ARISS explained.

  This year, ARISS marks 20 years of continuous amateur radio operations
  on the ISS. The largely volunteer organization welcomes donations to
  the ARISS program for next-generation hardware development, operation,
  education, and administration. Read more.

  Solar Minimum Most Likely Occurred in December 2019

  Sunspot Index and Long-Term Solar Observations (SILSO) in Belgium said
  this month that the minimum between Solar Cycles 24 and 25 "most
  probably" took place last December. SILSO, a part of the Royal
  Observatory of Belgium and formerly known as SIDC, cited as evidence
  the January 2020 increase in the 13-month smoothed sunspot number --
  the first upswing since the Cycle 24 maximum in April 2014.

  "[F]or now, this latest smoothed value in January 2020 is the very
  first point indicating a rise of the activity. So, the date of the
  minimum still needs a full confirmation over the coming months," SILSO
  said on its website. "For now, preliminary smoothed values, limited to
  less than 13 months, hint at increasing values over coming months. If
  the rising trend indeed continues, this [December 2019] date will
  become fully definitive."

  SILSO said another indication of the transition between the two solar
  cycles can be drawn from counting individual sunspot groups that belong
  to either the old or new solar cycle. "While most sunspot groups
  belonged to the last solar cycle [Cycle 24] until September 2019, the
  dominance switched to groups of the new cycle in November 2019," SILSO
  said.

  SILSO said that in terms of the number of active regions, the minimum
  between Cycle 24 and Cycle 25 falls in October 2019. "This is close to
  December 2019," SILSO said. It attributes the difference to three
  factors:

  The sunspot number also takes into account the total number of spots,
  and the size of the emerging active regions.

  The time of the minimum depends on the respective trends of the
  declining phase of the past cycle, and of the rising phase of the new
  cycle, over the 12 months surrounding the minimum.

  The date of the minimum has a significant uncertainty range. Near
  minimum, activity hardly varies and is close to minimum for a few
  months. "The date of the minimum is thus always less sharply defined
  than the date of the maximum of the cycles, which are more sharply
  peaked," SILSO explained.

  SILSO noted "a steady stream" of small, active regions since last
  December, but that activity stagnated at a constant low level.
  "However, since July -- and even more in the course of August 2020 --
  the activity seems to truly take off, with at least one sunspot group
  visible on almost all days. Such a level of activity had not been
  reached since early 2019."

  "This late-breaking upward trend is now expected to accelerate over the
  coming months," SILSO predicted. "So be prepared for a more eruptive
  and interesting sun!"
  ARRL Podcasts Schedule

  The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 8) features an
  interview with brothers Andy, KK4LWR, and Tony, KD8RTT, Milluzzi about
  the ARRL Collegiate Amateur Radio Initiative. The On the Air podcast is
  a monthly companion to On the Air magazine, ARRL's magazine for
  beginner-to-intermediate ham radio operators.

  The latest episode of the Eclectic Tech podcast (Episode 15) features a
  chat with Bob Allison, WB1GCM, about HF transceiver shopping -- getting
  the best performance for the money.

  The On the Air and Eclectic Tech podcasts are sponsored by Icom. Both
  podcasts are available on iTunes (iOS) and Stitcher (Android), as well
  as on Blubrry -- On the Air | Eclectic Tech.

  Hurricane Watch Net Logs More than 29 Hours of Continuous Operation for
  Laura

  The Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) logged 29.5 hours of continuous operation
  in advance of Hurricane Laura, beginning at 1300 UTC on August 26. One
  primary function of the HWN is to obtain real-time ground-level weather
  conditions and initial damage assessments from amateur radio operators
  in the affected area and relay that information to the National
  Hurricane Center (NHC) by way of WX4NHC.

  "Since Laura had become a Major Hurricane (Category 3) overnight, well
  ahead of earlier forecasts, we opened our net on both 14.325 MHz and
  7.268 MHz," said HWN Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV. "We did this for two
  reasons. HF propagation was horrible on both bands, and we wanted to
  make sure anyone trying to contact us would be able to do so." Graves
  said it strained resources, but the net was able to get its job done.
  The HWN remained in continuous operation until Thursday, August 27, at
  1830 UTC, well after Hurricane Laura made landfall in Louisiana, near
  the Texas border.

  "In many ways, Laura seemed similar to Hurricane Michael in 2018, as it
  rapidly intensified close to landfall, nearly becoming a Category 5
  hurricane," Graves said. "ditionally, with major hurricanes, you
  normally have a few eye-wall replacement cycles. I don't recall there
  ever being one [with Laura], and meteorologists I know agree."

  Graves noted that on Wednesday afternoon, forecasters at the NHC used a
  phrase not typically heard, in order to get a point across --
  "unsurvivable storm surge." The ominous prediction certainly caught on
  with the media and was widely repeated.

  "Given the terrain for the projected impact of Laura, the storm surge
  was expected to move well inland, as far as 40 miles, with depths as
  high as 15 to 20 feet in some areas," he said.

  Throughout its more than 29 hours of operation, the HWN collected and
  forwarded numerous surface reports to the NHC. Graves said that
  Emergency Management in Louisiana checked in with the net on 14.325 MHz
  to announce its presence on 7.255 MHz.

  "After Laura was downgraded to a tropical storm, we shifted gears and
  began asking for post-storm reports from those affected by Laura,"
  Graves recounted. "We also called for emergency or priority traffic."

  Graves expressed his appreciation to other stations for moving aside
  for the net to use 14.325 and 7.268 MHz.

  Graves noted that the forecast for this year's hurricane season is
  reminiscent to that of 2005, when Hurricane Katrina struck. "It is
  forecast to be a very busy season," he said. "When it comes to
  hurricane seasons, never drop your guard." Families should have plans
  in place ahead of a major storm, and factor the COVID-19 pandemic into
  those plans, he advised. Read more.
  Historic Winlink Gateway KH6SP Ceases Operation

  The last amateur radio digital gateway -- KH6SP -- at the Navy site in
  Wahiawa, Hawaii, went silent on August 1. The site housed two amateur
  radio gateways donated by a group of Hawaii amateurs led by Thomas
  Overman, W2AIT -- KH6UL and KH6SP. For more than 8 years, Overman
  maintained the Winlink software running them. The system had high-gain
  log-periodic arrays with low-angle radiation that provided the maritime
  community with email service across the Pacific and later handled
  inter-island traffic. Station trustee Gus MacFeeley, NH7J, introduced
  and demonstrated the stations to local amateur radio operators 5 years
  ago, pointing to the future of amateur radio digital mode emergency
  communications in the Pacific Section. MacFeeley handled necessary
  on-site work. The multi-node operation provides continuous
  Winlink/Winmor service across the Pacific Ocean for many maritime
  mobile stations that have come to rely on it as their critical link to
  the world.

  The US Department of Homeland Security took possession of the site a
  few years ago and is now extending its intergovernmental use. All of
  the antenna quadrants are now needed by the government, including
  SHARES Winlink.

  Since MacFeeley introduced the Hawaii amateur radio community to
  Winlink, the Hawaii network has grown to five HF gateways providing
  inter-island communication, and 18 VHF gateways serving local
  communities. More are planned. During the past few years, the cost of
  interfacing amateur equipment to Winlink has dropped significantly with
  the development of PC software sound card modems, which can rival the
  performance of PACTOR modems.

  "We can expect to see an explosion of applications in the future making
  amateur radio increasingly relevant to our communities," said ARRL
  Pacific Section Manager Joseph Speroni, AH0A, as he bid "a fond
  farewell to KH6UL and KH6SP and the group of amateurs that started this
  revolution in Hawaii." -- Thanks to ARRL Pacific Section Manager Joe
  Speroni, AH0A

  The K7RA Solar Update

  Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: No sunspots have appeared for the
  past 12 days. We're all hoping for more sunspots, and I'm sure they'll
  return soon. The trends for this newly awakening solar cycle seem to
  favor it. The autumnal equinox on September 22 should favor worldwide
  HF propagation.

  Average daily solar flux declined over the August 27 - September 2
  reporting week, from 70.4 to 69.6.

  Geomagnetic indicators showed quite a bit more activity than they have
  in some time now. Average daily planetary A index rose from 5.1 to
  13.1. The most active day was August 31, when the planetary A index
  reached 26. The cause was a vigorous solar wind spewing from holes in
  the solar corona.

  A solar flux of 70 is forecast for every one of the next 45 days. The
  predicted planetary A index is 10 on September 3; 5 on September 4 -
  17; 8 on September 18 - 19; 5 on September 20 - 22; 8, 10, and 14 on
  September 23 - 25; 10 on September 26 - 27; 12 and 10 on September 28 -
  29, and 5 on September 30 - October 17.

  Sunspot numbers for August 27 - September 2 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, and
  0, with a mean of 0. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70, 70.1, 70.2, 70,
  69.2, 69.5, and 68.3, with a mean of 69.6. Estimated planetary A
  indices were 8, 10, 14, 9, 26, 16, and 9, with a mean of 13.1. Middle
  latitude A index was 7, 8, 14, 8, 19, 16, and 8, with a mean of 11.4.

  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. For customizable
  propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio website.

  Share your reports and observations.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

  Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * September 5 -- CWOps CW Open
    * September 5 -- Wake-Up! QRP Sprint (CW)
    * September 5 - 6 -- All Asian DX Contest (Phone)
    * September 5 - 6 -- Colorado QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
    * September 5 - 6 -- IARU Region 1 Field Day, SSB
    * September 5 - 6 -- RSGB SSB Field Day (Phone)
    * September 5 - 6 -- IARU Region 1 145 MHz Contest (CW, phone,
      digital)
    * September 5 - 6 -- PODXS 070 Club Jay Hudak Memorial 80-Meter
      Sprint (Digital)
    * September 5 - 7 -- AGCW Straight Key Party
    * September 6 -- WAB 144 MHz QRO Phone
    * September 6 - 7 -- Tennessee QSO Party (CW, phone, digital)
    * September 7 -- RSGB 80-Meter Autumn Series, SSB
    * September 7 - 8 -- MI QRP Labor Day CW Sprint
    * September 8 -- ARS Spartan Sprint CW
    * September 9 -- VHF-UHF FT8 Activity Contest

  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.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------


  Launch of Satellites Carrying Ham Radio Payloads Postponed Again

  The scheduled September 2 launch of three satellites carrying amateur
  radio payloads from the European Space Agency Spaceport in Korou,
  French Guiana, was postponed again because a typhoon was threatening a
  tracking station in South Korea. The launch of the Arianespace Vega
  vehicle will be rescheduled for later this month. The Vega is set to
  carry a total of 53 satellites into orbit. AMSAT-France Chair
  Christophe Mercier said in an AMSAT-BB post that the AmicalSat,
  UPMSat-2, and TTU100 satellites will carry ham radio payloads.

  AmicalSat

  The AmicalSat CubeSat was built by students at the Grenoble University
  Space Center (CSUG). "The measurements made by the satellite will be
  available to all," Mercier said. "They will allow radio amateurs to use
  them for propagation predictions." He said AMSAT-F supported the
  AmicalSat project. Software for Linux and Windows platforms is
  available for decoding the telemetry and posting it to the SatNOGS
  database.

  According to the AmicalSat website, the CubeSat will focus on space
  weather, monitoring the auroral oval, and photographing the aurora.
  "Scientifically, the data will be used to reconstruct the flux of
  particles coming into the atmosphere, especially the electrons in the
  range of 20 eV - 10 keV," the website said.

  AmicalSat will transmit 1,2k AFSK on 436.1 MHz (as RS17S), and 1,000k
  GFSK on 2.415.3 MHz. Reports are welcome via email.

  UPMSat-2, a project of the Polytechnic University of Madrid, will
  transmit 1,2k AFSK on 437.405 MHz (as UPMST2). TTU100 (H�marik), a
  project of Tallinn (Estonia) University of Technology, will transmit
  1,2k and 9,6k AFSK and CW on 435.450 MHz (primary) and 62.5 kbs and 20
  Mbs OQPSK on 10,465 MHz (secondary).

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

  Announcements
    * A ham radio special event during November will celebrate the 100th
      anniversary of Pittsburgh's KDKA as the first commercial radio
      broadcast station. Using both temporary call sign 8ZZ and KDKA
      (because the KDKA license had not arrived in time), the station
      broadcast the 1920 presidential election results. Many Pittsburgh
      area amateur radio clubs will participate. Look for special event
      call signs K3K, K3D, W8XK, and K3A (check QRZ.com for QSL
      information).
    * September 1 marked the 161st anniversary of the so-called
      "Carrington Event," when a massive coronal mass ejection from the
      sun disrupted telegraph systems and generated auroral displays into
      tropical latitudes. It's said that the light generated during that
      1859 event was nearly as bright as daylight. According to Frank
      Donovan, W3LPL, the Carrington Event took place less than 4 years
      after solar minimum and 1 year before solar maximum.
    * Over the next 6 years, GB5ST will celebrate 54 years of the Star
      Trek TV show, spinoffs, and movies. This event will take place
      until the series' 60th anniversary in 2026. QSL direct or via the
      RSGB bureau.
    * The YASME Foundation Board of Directors has awarded a grant to
      DokuFunk of Austria, a research and documentation center for the
      history of radio communications and electronic media. The funds
      will support DokuFunk's hosting of the Lloyd and Iris Colvin
      DXpedition materials and develop a presentation from photos, video,
      and audio. YASME also will fund the HZ1AB QSL collection transfer
      and provide support for amateur exams by the Seychelles Amateur
      Radio Association (SARA).
    * NASA's Johnson Space Center has produced a video of an Amateur
      Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) contact between a
      Canadian student group and astronaut Chris Cassidy, KF5KDR, last
      May.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

  2016 ARRL International Humanitarian Award Co-Recipient Richard
  Darling, AH7G, SK

  The co-recipient of the 2016 ARRL International Humanitarian Award
  Richard Darling, AH7G, of Keaau, Hawaii, died on August 19. An ARRL
  Life Member, he was 86 and had been a radio amateur for 67 years.

  Richard and his wife Barbara, NH7FY, shared the 2016 ARRL International
  Humanitarian of the Year Award. The award was

  conferred on the couple for having provided support in the form of
  money and materials that included books, food, clothing, sanitary
  supplies, and equipment such as hardware, antennas, and solar panels
  sent to the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The couple also
  regularly purchased, packed, and mailed "care packages" to Yap,
  containing food, clothing, medical supplies, diapers, and other items
  not otherwise easily available to FSM islanders.

  Richard Darling attended Newark College of Engineering in New Jersey
  and Capital Radio Engineering Institute, and then joined IBM as an
  electronics technician. During a duty tour in the US Army, he was in
  the Nike missile program and spent a lot of time on the air from Fort
  Bliss, Texas. He later worked for Lockheed.

  Over the years, Richard and Barbara provided weather warnings prior to
  several typhoons, most recently Maysak and No'ul, keeping
  communications going in the aftermath of storms. -- Thanks to Assistant
  Hawaii Section Manager Bob Schneider, AH6J
  In Brief...

  The 2020 ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference (DCC) on September
  11 - 12 will be streamed live on YouTube. No registration is needed;
  the URL will be announced via the TAPR website. The preliminary
  schedule has been posted. The 39th Annual ARRL/TAPR DCC will employ the
  Zoom video communications and YouTube video-sharing platforms.
  Registered DCC attendees participating via Zoom will be able to
  interact with presenters and other attendees via a chatroom, as well as
  raise "a virtual hand" to ask questions, TAPR said. Non-registered DCC
  attendees may watch the livestream on YouTube, but won't be able to ask
  questions or chat. DCC registration is free for TAPR members and $30
  for non-members, who will receive a 100% discount at checkout.
  Non-members who would like to join TAPR and receive the free DCC pass
  can simply add TAPR membership and DCC registration to their shopping
  carts. After checkout, they will receive the free DCC pass when their
  membership is processed.

  Scouting's Jamboree on the Air (JOTA) and Jamboree on the Internet
  (JOTI) will be held this year on October 16, 17, and 18. Register
  online as an individual or as a group. Jamboree on the Air is the
  largest Scouting event in the world. In a typical year, more than 1
  million Scouts participate in JOTA, with over 11,000 stations operated
  by 20,000+ young radio amateurs from 150+ countries around the world.
  JOTA details are available on the K2BSA website. The website menu will
  direct users to additional supporting information. K2BSA's Jim Wilson,
  K5ND, says many locations are already offering virtual radio merit
  badge classes "and no doubt will be using similar approaches for
  Jamboree on the Air."

  4U1UN has been active and ready to make contacts on 60 meters (5357
  kHz). Some 400 contacts in about 30 DXCC entities were made on FT8 on 5
  MHz earlier this week. Pending unforeseen events, such as equipment
  failure or difficulties accessing the station, activity on 60 meters
  will continue, said rian Ciuperca, KO8SCA. 4U1UN is running about 35
  W on 60 meters on FT8. 4U1UN may also operate CW on 5373 kHz. Activity
  could start around 2300 UTC. QSL via HB9BOU. -- Thanks to The Daily DX
  Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

  Note: Many conventions and hamfests have been canceled or postponed due
  to the coronavirus pandemic. Check the calendar of canceled events on
  the ARRL website.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------

    * November 14 - 15 -- Central Division Convention, Fort Wayne,
      Indiana
    * November 21 -- Alabama State Convention, Montgomery, Alabama
    * December 11 - 12 -- Florida State Convention, Plant City, Florida

  Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

  -----------------------------------------------------------------------

  ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for
  Amateur Radio News and Information.

  .

  .
    * Join or Renew Today! Eligible US-based members can elect to receive
      QST or On the Air magazine in print when they join ARRL or when
      they renew their membership. All members can access digital
      editions of all four ARRL magazines: QST, On the Air, QEX, and NCJ.

    * Listen to ARRL Audio News, available every Friday.

  Subscribe to...
    * NCJ -- National Contest Journal. Published bimonthly, features
      articles by top contesters, letters, hints, statistics, scores, NA
      Sprint, and QSO parties.
    * QEX -- A Forum for Communications Experimenters. Published
      bimonthly, features technical articles, construction projects,
      columns, and other items of interest to radio amateurs and
      communications professionals.

  Free of charge to ARRL members...
    * Subscribe to the ARES E-Letter (monthly public service and
      emergency communications news), the ARRL Contest Update (biweekly
      contest newsletter), Division and Section news alerts -- and much
      more!
    * Find ARRL on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter and Instagram!
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

  The ARRL Letter is published Thursdays, 50 times each year. ARRL members
  and registered guests may subscribe at no cost or unsubscribe by editing
  their profile.

  Copyright (c) 2020 American Radio Relay League, Incorporated. Use and
  distribution of this publication, or any portion thereof, is permitted for
  non-commercial or educational purposes, with attribution. All other
  purposes require written permission.


--- SendMsg/2

--- Squish/386 v1.11
* Origin: Outpost [email protected]:10123 (1:18/200)