Subj : The Weekly ARRL Letter
To   : All
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Fri Jun 12 2020 09:05 am

  The ARRL Letter
  June 11, 2020

    * ARRL Contest Program Issues Field Day 2020 FAQ
    * ARRL Volunteer Monitor Program Recognizes Good Operators
    * UK Special Events to Recognize Historic Marconi Factory Radio
      Broadcast
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * ARRL Announces Updated Features on Contest Portal
    * Deadline is June 15 for 2020 McGan Silver Antenna Award Nominations
    * ARISS Establishes Itself as an Independent Organization
    * Announcements
    * Youth Working Group in IARU Region 1 Inaugurates YOTA Online
    * Indian Amateur Radio Volunteers Support Communication During
      Cyclones
    * In Brief...
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
  ARRL Contest Program Issues Field Day 2020 FAQ

  The ARRL Contest Program has released some Frequently Asked Questions
  related to the temporary rule waivers for Field Day. On May 28, the
  ARRL Programs and Services Committee (PSC) adopted these provisions
  only for the June 27 - 28, 2020, event: (1) Class D stations may work
  all other Field Day stations, including other Class D stations, for
  points, and (2) an aggregate club score will be published, which will
  be the sum of all individual entries that indicate a specific club.
  Contact the ARRL Contest Program with any questions related to Field
  Day 2020.

  Q: Several of our club members are going to operate independently and
  wish to attribute their scores to the aggregate club score. What call
  sign should they use?

  A: Participants should use their own call signs. Except for Class C
  (mobile) entries, all transmitters, receivers, and antennas located
  within a 1,000-foot-diameter circle may operate using a single call
  sign. This prohibits the use of a single call sign from more than one
  location. Under the 2020 waiver, those operating from home, including
  backyard operations, must use their own station call signs. Multiple
  home stations operating with a club call sign or modified club call
  sign, such as W1AW-1, W1AW-2, W1AW-3, etc., are not allowed.

  Q: How does my club submit an aggregate club score?  Does the club need
  to add up each participating member's scores and submit a club entry
  with the aggregate score under the club call sign?

  A: Each participant will submit his or her own independent entry under
  his or her call sign. ARRL will calculate the aggregate score based
  upon the club name entered on the official Field Day entry form via the
  web applet (preferred method) or on the paper Field Day entry form. In
  order for results to be tabulated correctly, all club participants must
  enter the club's official name exactly the same, avoiding abbreviations
  or acronyms. This is important!

  Q: Our group is still planning to operate at the usual Field Day site,
  but some members do not feel comfortable gathering in a large group
  this year. Can we still submit an entry using the club call sign, as
  well as have members operating from home using their own call signs?

  A: Yes. If your club is still hosting a group Field Day effort, it will
  submit an entry as usual, using the club call sign. Club members
  operating at home will submit separate entries with their own call
  signs and will enter the club name on the entry form for club aggregate
  scoring.

  Q: Can a club member operate from home using the club call sign?

  A: Yes, but the call sign may only be used in one location. The member
  must receive permission from the trustee of the club call sign.

  Q: Our club normally enters Field Day in Class A. If we operate from
  our home stations, in which class should individual members enter in
  order to be included in the aggregate club score?

  A: Each member will operate independently and will submit the entry
  using whatever class applies to their operation. Typically, home
  stations running on commercial ac power are Class D, while home
  stations running on battery, solar, generator, or the like (i.e., not
  from ac mains) are Class E. When the results are published, each club
  member will be listed in the results under the class in which they
  operated. For 2020 only, aggregate club scores will be listed by the
  club name in a separate listing. Read more.

  Refer to the complete rules to determine eligibility for bonus points.
  -- Thanks to ARRL Contest Program Manager Paul Bourque, N1SFE,
  ARRL Volunteer Monitor Program Recognizes Good Operators

  Volunteer Monitor Program Coordinator Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH, said
  the program has recognized numerous radio amateurs with Good Operator
  Notices.

  "One facet of the ARRL and FCC agreement that set up the Volunteer
  Monitor Program calls for ARRL to recognize especially good amateur
  radio behavior, in order to encourage compliance with FCC rules and
  further the efficiency of the Amateur Radio Service," Hollingsworth

  said. "Seventeen operators in 15 states received Good Operator Notices
  in the first quarter of 2020. The Good Operator Notices went to veteran
  operators as well as newcomers, including a 13-year-old in North
  Carolina for CW operation during the Youth on the Air Special Event,
  and a 14-year-old in Wyoming for SSB operation."

  Hollingsworth also said that a 2-meter repeater operator received a
  Good Operator Report for establishing and managing a COVID-19 net in
  Pennsylvania, while other operators of various license classes received
  notices for everyday SSB and CW operation on the HF bands. Recipients
  were nominated on the basis of operation observed by Volunteer Monitors
  (VMs).

  According to Hollingsworth, Volunteer Monitors reported 2,035 hours
  monitoring on HF, and 2,856 hours monitoring on VHF/UHF and other
  frequencies during May.

  After kicking off on January 1, the new Volunteer Monitor Program
  ramped up to operational status earlier this spring, starting with a
  "soft rollout" that started on February 1, designed to familiarize VMs
  with issues on the bands and to put into practice what to report and
  what to ignore, based on their training.

  Hollingsworth uses a system called VMTRAC -- developed by a VM -- to
  measure the work of VMs and determine instances that qualify for good
  operator or discrepancy notices, referral to the FCC, or follow-up with
  FCC requests to the VM program. -- Thanks to Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH

  UK Special Events to Recognize Historic Marconi Factory Radio Broadcast

  Two special events in June will mark the centennial of the first
  entertainment radio broadcast. England's Chelmsford Amateur Radio
  Society (CARS) will operate special event GB100MZX on June 13 - 20, and
  Wales' Dragon Amateur Radio Club will operate special event GB0MZX on
  June 12 - 21. Both will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the live
  radio recital by well-known Australian soprano Dame Nellie Melba, on
  June 15, 1920. These special events open the door to some interesting
  radio history.

                                     MZX was the call sign at Marconi's
                                     factory on New Street in Chelmsford.

  MZX was the call sign at Marconi's second Chelmsford radio factory on
  New Street, built in 1912. A CARS history recounts that after 1913, all
  G- and M-prefix call signs were allocated to the UK, with the M prefix
  being associated with Marconi. The Marconi factory received a general
  experimental license in late 1919 with the MZX call sign.

  According CARS, in order to test transmitters manufactured in the new
  plant, it became common practice to power them into an antenna and
  invite people to read "railway timetables or similar mundane material"
  over the air.

  Listeners who wrote Marconi suggested that he air more enlightening
  material, so some locals were informally invited into the factory to
  tell stories or even sing from a makeshift studio. Two 750-foot towers
  at the factory supported wire antennas for MZX, which by the time of
  the historic broadcast was running a 15 kW transmitter.

  Dame Nellie Melba. [BBC archive]

  Sensing a potential profit, The Daily Mail newspaper paid Dame Nellie
  Melba to travel to Chelmsford by train, where she was picked up in a
  chauffeur-driven car and taken the long way around Chelmsford on a
  route advertised beforehand to waving crowds before arriving at the
  studio in New Street, just a few hundred meters away.

  The CARS account continues, "Her historic performance was very well
  received, although she realized that possibly future (paid) public
  performances may suffer if she was often 'on the radio,' [and] she
  never made a radio broadcast again.

  "The Postmaster-General was not amused by such trivial use and withdrew
  the license in November 1920 on 'interference grounds,' in particular
  with Croydon airfield. The public clamor for reinstatement was
  substantial, and due to pressure from the Wireless Society of London
  and the House of Commons, the Post Office eventually relented."

  The Wireless Society of London eventually became the Radio Society of
  Great Britain (RSGB), the International Amateur Radio Union
  member-society.

  ditional history of Marconi's manufacturing and broadcasting in the
  UK appears on the CARS website.
  The K7RA Solar Update

  Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Sunspots made a solid reappearance
  over the June 4 - 10 reporting week, with average daily sunspot number
  rising from 3.3 to 14. As expected, the average 10.7-centimeter solar
  flux rose from 69.6 to 71.3.

  The average daily planetary A index dipped from 6 to 5.1, while average
  daily middle latitude A index changed from 5.7 to 6.1.

  The outlook for the next 45 days has solar flux at 72 on June 11; 70 on
  June 12 - 17; 68 on June 18 - 24; 70 on June 25 - 26; 72 on June 27 -
  July 11; 70 on July 12 - 13; 68 on July 14 - 21; 70 on July 22 - 23,
  and 72 on July 14 - 25.

  Predicted planetary A index is 5 on June 11 - July 3, then 8 and 12 on
  July 4 - 5, and 5 on July 6 - 25.

  Sunspot numbers for June 4 through 10 were 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 14, and
  11, with a mean of 14. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.1, 71.1, 71.6,
  71.6, 71, 72.4, and 71, with a mean of 71.3. Estimated planetary A
  indices were 4, 4, 3, 9, 4, 5, and 7, with a mean of 5.1. The middle
  latitude A index was 5, 4, 2, 10, 6, 5, and 11, with a mean of 6.1.

  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.

  Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * June 13 -- Asia-Pacific Sprint (SSB)
    * June 13 -- AGCW VHF/UHF Contest (CW)
    * June 13 - 14 -- DRCG WW RTTY Contest
    * June 13 - 14 -- SMIRK Contest (CW)
    * June 13 - 14 -- Portugal Day Contest (CW, phone)
    * June 13 - 14 -- SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)
    * June 13 - 14 -- GACW WWSA CW DX Contest
    * June 13 - 14 -- REF DDFM 6 Meter Contest (CW, phone)
    * June 13 - 15 -- ARRL June VHF Contest (CW, phone, digital)
    * June 15 -- 4 States QRP Group Second Sunday Sprint (CW, phone)
    * June 15 -- RSGB FT4 Contest Series
    * June 16 -- SARL Youth Sprint (Phone)
    * June 17 -- NAQCC CW Sprint

  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.
  ARRL Announces Updated Features on Contest Portal

  The much-anticipated updated features at the ARRL Contest portal are
  here! These web-based tools provide an updated interface to contest
  data for all ARRL-sponsored contest events, including:
    * Contest Score viewer, including a searchable call history and
      records
    * Submitted logs and raw scores for recent events
    * Downloadable Comma Separated Values (CSV) files of contest results
    * Club Competition scores, including total and individual scores
    * Soapbox page for posting and viewing contest stories, photos, and
      other media
    * Downloadable, printable certificates suitable for framing
    * Log Checking Reports (LCRs)
    * Access to public logs
    * Contest results articles and line scores

  ARRL Contest portal users will notice other minor changes to the site,
  as some functions have been moved on the page for better functionality
  and flow. The ARRL Contest portal is now a one-stop shop for all
  ARRL-sponsored contests. From the site, you can access everything, from
  the start time of a contest to your post-event certificate of
  accomplishment. All ARRL contest information is now conveniently
  located in one centralized location. Contact the Contest Program
  Manager for more information on the updated features and on ARRL
  contests in general.

  Deadline is June 15 for 2020 McGan Silver Antenna Award Nominations

  The deadline is Monday, June 15, to submit nominations for the 2020
  Philip J. McGan Memorial Silver Antenna Award, presented annually to a
  radio amateur who has demonstrated success in public relations on
  behalf of amateur radio and who best exemplifies the volunteer spirit
  of Philip McGan, WA2MBQ (SK).

  A journalist, McGan was the first chairman of the ARRL's Public
  Relations Committee, which helped reinvigorate ARRL's commitment to
  public relations, and he served as ARRL PIO for the New Hampshire
  Section.

  Activities for which the McGan Award is presented include those
  specifically directed at bringing amateur radio to the media's and the
  public's attention in a positive light. This may include such
  traditional methods as news releases or interviews, or less traditional
  methods, such as hosting a radio show or being an active public
  speaker. Nominees must be ARRL members.

  The ARRL Board of Directors will choose the award winner at its July
  2020 meeting.

  Nominations must be received at ARRL Headquarters by the close of
  business on Friday, June 15, 2020. Nominations must be on an official
  entry form. Anyone may make a nomination. Read more.
  ARISS Establishes Itself as an Independent Organization

  Going forward, the US arm of the Amateur Radio on the International
  Space Station International working group will be known as ARISS-USA,
  an independent organization. ARISS serves as the intermediary to
  arrange contacts between schools and organizations on Earth and ISS
  crew members. ARISS-USA incorporated as a non-profit entity in Maryland
  in late May. The move will allow ARISS-USA to work independently,
  soliciting grants and donations. ARISS-USA will continue promoting
  amateur radio and science, technology, engineering, arts, and math
  (STEAM) goals within schools and educational organizations. ARISS-USA
  lead Frank Bauer, KA3HDO, noted that the scope and reach of what ARISS
  accomplishes has grown significantly since its modest start in 1996.

  "Our working group status made it cumbersome to establish partnerships,
  sign agreements, and solicit grants," Bauer said. "These can only be
  done as an established organization."

  The move toward becoming an independent organization has been discussed
  for quite a while, ARISS-USA said in announcing the change.

  "ARISS-USA will maintain its collaborative work with ARISS
  International as well as with US sponsors, partners, and interest
  groups," the announcement said. "The main goal of ARISS-USA remains as
  connecting educational groups with opportunities to interact with
  astronauts aboard the [space station]. ARISS-USA will expand its human
  spaceflight opportunities with the space agencies beyond low-Earth
  orbit, starting with lunar opportunities including the Lunar Gateway.
  ARISS-USA will continue to review and accept proposals for ISS contacts
  and expand its other educational opportunities to increase interest in
  space sciences and radio communications."

  AMSAT President Clayton Coleman, W5PFG, said AMSAT would work with
  ARISS-USA to ensure a smooth transition for operations and funding.
  "Many of AMSAT's members are an integral part of the ARISS team," he
  said. "The human spaceflight element of AMSAT's vision has been
  realized through these contributions."

  ARISS-USA can accept tax-deductible contributions via AMSAT-NA through
  the ARISS website. Read more.

  Announcements
    * The 38th Annual AMSAT Space Symposium and Annual General Meeting
      in-person event set to be held in Bloomington, Minnesota, in
      October will be shifted to a virtual, online platform, in response
      to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
    * Astronaut Kate Rubins, KG5FYJ, in mid-October will head to the ISS
      for a 6-month mission as a flight engineer. She will launch with
      Cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov.
    * The FCC has announced a $5 million settlement with
      voice-over-internet protocol (VoIP) telephone service provider
      magicJack regarding the company's failure to report its interstate
      revenues and to contribute to the Universal Service Fund.
    * Kylee Shirbroun, KE0WPA, of Worthington, Minnesota, has posted a
      portion of the science fair video she made about amateur radio
      satellites.
    * China's Harbin Institute of Technology has released a short cartoon
      video, Longjiang-2: Journey to the Moon, which tells the story of
      LO-94, the world's smallest spacecraft, which entered lunar orbit
      independently. The video is narrated in Chinese with English
      subtitles.
    * The 2020 edition of AMSAT's Getting Started with Amateur Satellites
      is now available for download on the AMSAT store.

  Youth Working Group in IARU Region 1 Inaugurates YOTA Online

  The International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Region 1 Youth Working
  Group inaugurated YOTA (Youngsters on the Air) Online in late May. The
  program is an opportunity for young radio amateurs from Region 1
  (Europe, Africa, and the Middle East) to gather online each month. For
  each session, a YOTA team will present various topics; the initial
  session focused on the Youth Contesting Program (YCP) in Region 1, in
  which young radiosport enthusiasts operate from well-equipped contest
  stations for various events. The sessions, which are open to all and
  conducted in English, also offer the opportunity for participants to
  get answers to questions addressed to the online community. Each
  session wraps up with a prize raffle.

  Region 1 Youth Working Group chair Lisa Leenders, PA2LS, moderated the
  May 28 gathering. She said the YOTA Online approach evolved because a
  lot of activities fell victim to the COVID-19 pandemic. Beyond that,
  she said, YOTA Online provides an interactive venue for those who might
  be unable to attend even in-person activities. The inaugural YOTA
  Online session ran about 1 hour. In addition to social media platforms
  Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and Twitch, Leenders said the session was
  streamed on Amateur Television via the Es'hail QO-100 geostationary
  satellite from a location in Belgium, with good reports.

                                            Lisa Leenders, PA2LS,
                                            moderated the YOTA Online
                                            inaugural session.

  "A huge thanks to everyone watching the first YOTA Online session,"
  Leenders said. "The successful session gathered more than 600 unique
  viewers from all continents except Oceania and Antarctica, as far as we
  could track. Considering this, we can say that the event was indeed
  taking place worldwide."

  YOTA Online was created by a team of young hams from six European
  countries. The first event involved dozens of hours of planning, with
  several team sessions held in advance to make the free YOTA broadcast
  available around the world.

  Leenders asked all who watched the event or viewed it after the fact
  for any feedback. The form also gives viewers a chance to suggest
  topics for future YOTA Online gatherings. The second YOTA Online
  session is set for Thursday, June 25, at 1800 UTC.
  Indian Amateur Radio Volunteers Support Communication During Cyclones

  News media in India report that amateur radio volunteers came to the
  aid of district officials during Cyclone Nisarga. The storm made
  landfall on India's west coast on June 3, leaving at least one person
  dead, but sparing the densely populated city of Mumbai.

  "As all modes of communication collapsed in less than half an hour
  after severe Cyclone Nisarga made landfall, a group of nine independent
  ham radio operators using wireless communication became the eyes and
  ears for the district administration," The Hindustan Times reported.
  The paper said hams were on duty until the evening of June 5, when
  mobile networks returned in some areas. Hams were able to relay
  information regarding deaths, injuries, evacuations, and damage. The
  storm was reported to be the worst in decades.

  In May, The Hindu reported that radio amateurs worked hand in hand with
  the Odisha Disaster Rapid Action Force (ODRAF) ahead of Cyclone Amphan.

  "Amphan tested what we had learnt from a simulation of a real-life
  situation during calamity on an uninhabited island without power and
  conventional telecommunication in Chilika Lake in 2019 and 2020," said
  Gurudatta Panda, VU3GDP, a member of the Amateur Radio Society of
  Odisha (ARSO).

  ARSO members told the newspaper that the Odisha government should
  support and promote amateur radio to increase preparedness at the time
  of communication failure. ARSO has 25 members who regularly update
  their technology and operating skills, the paper said.

  In early May during Cyclone Fani, ARSO members provided support to the
  public in Puri, when conventional telecommunications were cut after the
  storm made landfall. The hams were even able to set up an internet
  connection via ham radio to reach out to social media.

  ARSO said an increase in the amateur population in Odish would benefit
  the government and the public in the cyclone- and flood-prone state.

  "Educated youths, retired communication experts, and non-government
  organizations in all parts of Odisha can be motivated to take up
  amateur radio as a hobby to help their own community at the time of
  need," ARSO President Chandra Sekhar Patnaik, VU2CSF, said.
  In Brief...

  Richard Budd, W0TF, has been appointed as North Dakota ARRL Section
  Manager. He succeeds Nancy Yoshida, K0YL, who resigned on June 2 after
  serving since January 2018. Yoshida will become the vice president of
  the YL International Single Sideband System this year and felt she
  could not do justice to both leadership roles. Budd, who lives in York,
  will complete the remainder of Yoshida's term, which extends through
  September 30. Because Budd was also the only nominee to submit a
  petition to run for the next term of office as the North Dakota Section
  Manager by the June 5 deadline, he will continue as Section Manager for
  the 2-year term that starts on October 1, 2020. A ham since 1980, Budd
  had served as a North Dakota Assistant Section Manager since 2019, was
  Section Emergency Coordinator in 2018, and previously served as North
  Dakota's Official Observer Coordinator. ARRL Radiosport and Field
  Services Manager Bart Jahnke, W9JJ, made the appointment after
  consulting with ARRL Dakota Division Director Matt Holden, K0BBC.

  The Yasme Foundation has made a supporting grant to the Open Research
  Institute (ORI). The grant will enable completion of ORI's Phase 4
  Ground Station Project. ORI is a non-profit IRS 501(c)(3) research and
  development organization that provides all of its work to the general
  public under the principles of open source and open access to research.
  The Phase 4 Ground Station Project is an open-source satellite ground
  station for the amateur satellite service. Phase 4 would provide
  designs and equipment for future 5 GHz uplink and 10 GHz downlink
  satellites -- the so-called "five and dime" paradigm that AMSAT has
  embraced for its future microwave satellites. Michelle Thompson, W5NYV,
  leads the Phase 4 Ground project.

  The IARU has developed a paper addressing increasing noise from digital
  devices. International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) electromagnetic
  compatibility (EMC) specialists Tore Worren, LA9QL, and Martin Sach,
  G8KDF, submitted the paper to the International Special Committee on
  Radio Interference (CISPR) concerning the increasing impact of multiple
  digital devices on noise levels in the radio spectrum. The paper was
  considered at the CISPR Steering Committee in late May, and it was
  adopted for circulation to the CISPR National Committee for comment as
  a Committee Draft, with a view toward its becoming a CISPR Report.
  "IARU hopes that the result of this will be amendments to the way in
  which standards are developed to recognize the need to properly
  consider the cumulative impact of multiple devices," said IARU Region 1
  President Don Beattie, G3BJ, in an IARU news brief. -- Thanks to IARU
  Region 1

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

  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.

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

    * July 16 - 19 -- Montana State Convention, Essex, Montana
    * July 24 - 25 -- Oklahoma State Convention, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

  Find conventions and hamfests in your area

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

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

  .

  .
    * Join or Renew Today! ARRL membership includes QST, amateur radio's
      most popular and informative journal, and On the Air, a new
      bimonthly magazine for beginner hams. ARRL members can choose which
      magazine to receive in print, and can view the digital editions of
      both magazines online.
    * 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)