Subj : The Weekly ARRL Letter
To   : All
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Fri Jul 17 2020 09:05 am

  The ARRL Letter
  July 16, 2020

    * AMSAT-DL Submits Lunar Lander Proposal to European Space Agency
    * DXCC Entities in Play as US Rejects China's Significant South China
      Sea Claims
    * Field Day 2020 is Shaping Up to be One for the Record Books
    * ARRL Podcasts Schedule
    * Radio Amateurs Respond to Flooding in Indonesia
    * Russian-Ukrainian Radio War May be Escalating
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Announcements
    * AMSAT VP Says Husky-1 CubeSat Project Helped Pave the Way for
      Future Missions
    * In Brief...
    * Getting It Right
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
  AMSAT-DL Submits Lunar Lander Proposal to European Space Agency

  Germany's amateur satellite organization AMSAT-DL has submitted a
  comprehensive proposal to the European Space Agency (ESA) for its Lunar
  Amateur Radio Transponder (LunART) lunar lander -- a communications
  platform on the Large European Lander to support communication and
  payload experiments. AMSAT-DL's Peter Guelzow, DB2OS, and Matthias
  Bopp, DD1US, say that a LunART (called "LunaART" in the AMSAT-DL
  proposal) would support direct communication with Earth via amateur
  radio, support university and student payloads and offer direct access
  to their experiments, and expand the reach of radio science. It could
  also provide backup communication capability and capacity during an
  emergency, or when the ESA network is busy.

  The comprehensive radio platform would use the European frequency
  protocol of 2.4 GHz up and 10.45 GHz down (approximately 100 W),
  pioneered in the QO-100 satellite, the first geosynchronous amateur
  radio payload. The platform would also include a VHF/UHF transponder.
  AMSAT-DL would develop and build the necessary hardware and software
  and provide ground station support via the 20-meter dish at AMSAT-DL
  headquarters in Bochum, Germany. They envision developing a smaller
  ground station with an approximately 1-meter dish to support groups,
  including schools and universities. Low-power beacons would transmit on
  various frequencies from VHF (145 MHz) through SHF (up to 24 GHz or
  even 47 GHz), AMSAT-DL's proposal says.

  "This transponder would also be an ideal platform to develop new
  transmission schemes with novel modulation and coding techniques
  optimized for long-distance communications with the corresponding high
  latency (long delays)," AMSAT-DL said. "This would provide essential
  knowledge in preparation of a future Mars mission." In addition, LunART
  could include the capability to transmit still or slow-scan television
  images and video to schools "from cameras attached to the lander
  monitoring the moon surface and perhaps the Earth in the background
  [which] would be ideal stimuli for getting school kids and STEM
  organizations further interested in space."

  The proposal is on open access at the ESA website and is now being
  evaluated. AMSAT-DL's LunART follows the Lunar Amateur Radio
  Interaction Experiment (LARIE) proposal from Andy Thomas, G0SFJ. Both
  refer to weak signal modes and suggest the same frequency bands. Thomas
  said he welcomes LunART as a well-developed proposal and hopes ESA will
  support it as well. -- Thanks to Southgate Amateur Radio News
  DXCC Entities in Play as US Rejects China's Significant South China Sea
  Claims

  To radio amateurs, Scarborough Reef or the Spratly Islands are DX
  locations, occasionally activated to provide needy DXers with "a new
  one." The Spratlys are #53 on the Club Log DXCC Most-Wanted List, but
  Scarborough Reef -- a much more difficult piece of real estate to
  access -- is #4. These South China Sea Islands are once again in the
  news, as the US has begun putting heat on China by rejecting nearly all
  of its significant land claims in the region. Secretary of State Mike
  Pompeo this week said that the US now regards virtually all Chinese
  maritime claims outside of its internationally recognized waters to be
  illegitimate.

  "The world will not allow Beijing to treat the South China Sea as its
  maritime empire," Pompeo said. "America stands with our Southeast Asian
  allies and partners in protecting their sovereign rights to offshore
  resources, consistent with their rights and obligations under
  international law. We stand with the international community in defense
  of freedom of the seas and respect for sovereignty and reject any push
  to impose 'might makes right' in the South China Sea or the wider
  region."

  A 2016 ruling from an international tribunal discounted China's claims
  with respect to Scarborough Reef -- also known as Scarborough Shoal --
  and the Spratlys, but it did not rule on the matter of sovereignty. In
  addition to China's claim, Malaysia, Taiwan, Vietnam, and the
  Philippines have asserted ownership of the Spratlys. Scarborough Reef
  is claimed by China, the Philippines, and Taiwan. The Permanent Court
  of Arbitration in the Hague ruled in favor of the Philippines in a
  dispute with China over Scarborough Reef. The tribunal said that
  although navigators and fishermen from China and other states have
  historically made use of South China Sea Islands, there was no evidence
  that China had historically exercised exclusive

  Bob Vallio, W6RGG, was one of the
  operators on the 2007 BS7H
  Scarborough Reef DXpedition.

  control over the waters or resources. The tribunal said China had
  violated the Philippines' sovereign rights and had caused "severe harm
  to the coral reef environment" by building artificial islands and an
  air strip.

  In 2015, a Chinese naval vessel "harassed a Philippine Air Force patrol
  flight in the Spratlys," one news account reported, by firing an
  illumination round. The incident postponed a Philippine Navy flight
  that was to evacuate an ailing participant of the then-just-ended DX0P
  DXpedition. The Chinese Navy has also warned off private aircraft. DX0P
  was issued by the Philippines. Last week, China complained about the US
  conducting joint exercises with two US aircraft carrier groups in the
  region.

  A May 2007 DXpedition to Scarborough Reef used the call sign BS7H,
  granted by China. DXpedition team members operated from wooden
  platforms mounted atop each of the reef's four rocks that were exposed
  during high tide. The ARRL Board of Directors voted in 1996 to add
  Scarborough Reef to the ARRL DXCC List.

  Field Day 2020 is Shaping Up to be One for the Record Books

  ARRL Contest Program Manager Paul Bourque, N1SFE, reported this week
  that ARRL has received more than 8,700 online Field Day entries, and
  paper-only entries have started arriving too.

  "As many participants chose to operate from home this year, and given
  the 2020 rules waivers, we have seen a tremendous increase in entries
  over last year's event," Bourque said. "Most of the entries received
  have been through the online web app, and Headquarters staffers have
  begun processing the paper entries this week." The 2020 waivers allowed
  individual club members to attribute their scores to their clubs.

  Participants who submitted entries online are encouraged to check the
  Field Day entries received page to verify that their entries are marked
  as complete, and that the club name entered is correct. Entries with a
  status of "pending" are incomplete entries that are missing one or more
  items, and these need to be completed for an official entry.

  Share your stories and photos using the ARRL soapbox page or via social
  media, such as on the ARRL Field Day Facebook group.
  ARRL Podcasts Schedule

  The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 7) features tips
  for soldering a PL-259 connector onto the end of a coaxial cable, and
  information on beginner courses for hams who want to serve their
  communities during disasters and other incidents. 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 12), available
  on Thursday, July 16, will feature a discussion with Bob Allison,
  WB1GCM, about low-frequency activities, plus an update on the status of
  NextGen TV.

  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.

  Radio Amateurs Respond to Flooding in Indonesia

  Indonesia's International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) member-society
  ORARI and the National Institute of Aeronautics and Space of Indonesia
  (LAPAN) have activated the IO-86 amateur radio satellite to facilitate
  emergency communication in the South Sulawesi province in the wake of
  flooding on July 13. The disaster has affected nearly 5,000 families,
  according to Indonesia's National Disaster Management Authority (BNPB).

  Heavy rains early this week swelled rivers and sent floodwaters, mud,
  and debris across roads and into thousands of homes, submerging many of
  them. IARU Region 3 Disaster Communication Coordinator Dani Halim,
  YB2TJV, reports an emergency post was established near the scene of the
  flooding. Some traffic is being handled on HF, and radio amateurs in
  Region 3 are asked to keep 7.110 MHz free for emergency communications.

  Repairs to the power grid are under way. Local emergency managers and
  the Indonesian Red Cross have conducted a quick assessment in the
  field. The provincial road is covered in mud, preventing access to the
  main command post and the affected location.

  As of July 15, at least 16 people died, and 46 other individuals are
  missing. ORARI Local Soroako participated in activating the Masamba
  flash flood disaster relief program and proceeded directly to the
  disaster site. Carrying out communication support at the disaster site,
  ORARI Local Soroako -- with Andi Baharuddin, YC8BR, who had first
  headed for the disaster site -- and ORARI Local Luwu Utara were
  establishing emergency communication.
  Russian-Ukrainian Radio War May be Escalating

  The June newsletter of the International Amateur Radio Union Region 1
  Monitoring System (IARUMS) reports that what's being called "the
  Russian-Ukrainian radio war" continues apace.

  "The Russian-Ukrainian radio war remained on a high escalation level
  also in June," IARUMS Region 1 Coordinator Peter Jost, HB9CET, said.
  "Almost every day, we heard the massive spiteful and provocative
  broadcasts. In June, they used more frequencies than before, affecting
  our bands very hard. It is a great annoyance and a big shame!"

  Jost points out that the IARU Monitoring System has little opportunity
  to stop the on-the-air conflict. "Only national authorities can
  hopefully do something against international complaints," he said. "It
  is very important and very helpful that many other [IARU]
  member-societies also observe these frequencies and make complaints to
  their regulators. We have to coordinate this well within IARU and act
  together. This is the only way we have a certain power."

  In May, Jost reported that the radio war has raged "for years" at 7055
  kHz LSB (as well as on 7050 or 7060 kHz). Jost also reported continued
  daily transmissions from the Russian over-the-horizon radar known as
  "Contayner" in the 40- and 20-meter amateur bands and elsewhere. The
  Chinese "V" has been reported on 20 meters, from 14,246 to 14,256 kHz.

  The K7RA Solar Update

  Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Over the July 9 - 15 reporting week,
  we only saw sunspot activity on July 10, when the daily sunspot number
  was 12. The sunspot was designated as number 2766, returning for a
  second appearance from Solar Cycle 24. From last week to this, the
  average daily sunspot number declined from 3.3 to 1.7, but average
  daily solar flux remained at 68.5.

  Predicted solar flux remains low, further evidence of this long, deep
  solar minimum. All flux values for the next 45 days are predicted to
  stay below 70. The predicted 10.7-centimeter solar flux is 69 on July
  16 - 22; 68 on July 23 - 24; 69 on July 25 - August 1, 68 on August 2 -
  20; 69 on August 21 - 28, and 68 on August 29.

  Predicted planetary A index is 5 on July 16 - 30; 8 and 10 on July 31 -
  August 1; 5 on August 2 - 8; 8 on August 9 - 10; 5 on August 11 - 26; 8
  on August 27 - 28, and 5 on August 29.

  George Hall, N2CG, in Northern New Jersey reported an extensive 6-meter
  opening, which we will cover in Friday's bulletin.

  Sunspot numbers for July 9 - 15 were 0, 12, 0, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with a
  mean of 1.7. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 68.7, 68.8, 68.7, 67.6, 68.2,
  68.9, and 68.4, with a mean of 68.5. Estimated planetary A indices were
  4, 3, 3, 3, 6, 11, and 5, with a mean of 5. Middle latitude A index was
  4, 3, 2, 3, 7, 9, and 6, with a mean of 4.9.

  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
    * July 18 -- Feld Hell Sprint
    * July 18 -- Russian Radio Team Championship (CW, phone)
    * July 18 -- Trans-Tasman Low-Bands Challenge (CW, phone)
    * July 18 - 19 -- North American QSO Party, RTTY
    * July 18 - 19 -- CQ Worldwide VHF Contest (CW, phone)
    * July 19 -- RSGB Low Power Contest (CW)
    * July 19 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)
    * July 19 -- CQC Great Colorado Gold Rush (CW)
    * July 22 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)
    * July 23 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship, Data

  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.

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


  Announcements
    * The ARRL Board of Directors will meet July 17 - 18 in virtual
      session for its second regular meeting of the year. The Board will
      hear reports from committees, including the CEO Search Committee,
      chaired by Central Division Director Kermit Carlson, W9XA; consider
      committee reports and recommendations, and proposals for amendments
      to the Articles of Association and Bylaws.
    * ARRL has a new way to let members know when the digital editions of
      QST and other publications are available. Distributed via email,
      The ARRL Current offers a monthly overview of ARRL publications and
      member benefits. The inaugural edition launched in June. Subscribe
      now to receive each issue going forward. Manage your email
      preferences from your ARRL account (members must first be
      registered on the ARRL website). Go to the Edit Email Subscriptions
      page, select The ARRL Current, and then click Save.
    * Volunteer Monitor (VM) program coordinator Riley Hollingsworth,
      K4ZDH, reported that monitoring hours increased significantly from
      the first quarter to the second quarter of the year. VMs logged
      first-quarter HF hours at 3,533, and VHF/UHF/Other hours at 2,258.
      They logged second-quarter HF hours at 5,930, and VHF/UHF/Other at
      7,478.
    * "The Uncertain Future of Ham Radio" is the title of an IEEE
      Spectrum article by Julianne Pepitone that addresses a range of
      topics, from ARRL to spectrum allocation and ham radio
      demographics. The author interviewed both young and old radio
      amateurs to glean their individual perspectives on how to grow
      amateur radio and keep it alive for future generations.
    * The European Space Agency (ESA) has released a new video, "How to
      get pictures from the International Space Station via Amateur
      Radio." The video features radio amateur David Honess, 2E0XDO
      (ex-M6DNT). An article on the same topic, "Pictures from space via
      ham radio," appeared last year in The MagPi, the Raspberry Pi
      magazine.
    * The first DX Engineering (DXE) Virtual Hamfest and DX Academy takes
      place on Saturday, July 25, Both virtual events are free. Register
      for the Zoom platform presentations or watch live on the DXE
      YouTube channel. The DXE hamfest starts at 9 AM. The DX Academy
      starts at 1 PM. Visit the DXE Facebook page or On All Bands blog
      for more information.
    * Brazil's IARU member-society LABRE has released an analysis of
      radio amateurs by numbers, class, and state. With a population of
      212 million, Brazil boasted 39,539 radio amateurs (36,919 men and
      2,620 women) in 2019. By way of comparison, the UK, with a
      population of 67 million, is believed to have some 78,000
      individual amateur licensees as of mid-July 2020.

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

  AMSAT VP Says Husky-1 CubeSat Project Helped Pave the Way for Future
  Missions

  AMSAT Vice President of Engineering Jerry Buxton, N0JY, said that while
  it was disappointing that the amateur transponder on HuskySat-1
  (HO-107) was not available any longer, following the satellite's
  science missions, the overall HuskySat-1 project and mission "were
  quite beneficial for our partner and for AMSAT." The linear transponder
  module (LTM) on HuskySat-1 was operational for more than 3 months,
  failing during or just after a period of full sun when LTM temperatures
  topped 80 �C (176 �F). HuskySat-1 was the first CubeSat from the Husky
  Satellite Lab at the University of Washington (UW) and the first
  mission with AMSAT's LTM V/u transponder onboard. University
  researchers conducted their work using an FCC Part 5 Experimental
  license.

  "The HuskySat-1 team was able to command their satellite and
  experiments and receive the telemetry they sought, and AMSAT was able
  to work through the extensive process of making a new design for a
  'black box' radio module that can be integrated into a non-AMSAT
  spacecraft and fly in the space environment," Buxton said in a recent
  post to the AMSAT-BB reflector. "While licensed and operated as an
  amateur radio satellite by AMSAT during the transponder use, some facts
  set HO-107 apart from our Fox-1 CubeSats and other AMSAT satellites,"
  Buxton explained, pointing out that HuskySat-1 was not an AMSAT
  satellite.

  "We have no control and may not have any insight into how a partner
  actually uses the LTM," he said. "While we see the LTM temperatures and
  many of the other typical data fields that we downlink to FoxTelem
  regarding LTM health, data such as temperature of the host environment
  as well as other specific information like power and the state of the
  other systems in a host satellite may or may not be available to us.
  Whether LTM is operated within design limits is entirely up to the
  host."

  Buxton said the HuskySat team and AMSAT cooperated smoothly on the
  mission. The HuskySat-1 team is processing and studying its data for
  use in their thesis and classes and preparing it for release "in a
  specific way typical of such an institution today," he said. "AMSAT is
  generally more forthcoming with information about our missions, but
  what we can and have said about this mission is determined by UW."

  Buxton said the LTM concept is now becoming available for other
  non-AMSAT CubeSats to fly amateur radio on their mission.

  "HO-107 is the pilot production of LTM and was developed in partnership
  with UW HuskySat-1," Buxton explained. "It was the first CubeSat radio
  module designed and built by AMSAT for use in other host CubeSats, and
  UW was key in working with us through the design and processes needed
  to provide such a module. They did not buy it as such, nor did we give
  it to them as an 'off-the-shelf' product, as we plan to for future LTM
  production."

  LTM was developed from the Fox-1E linear transponder design. "Overall,
  the HuskySat-1 team was quite happy with the telemetry and command
  performance, even with the LTM anomalies showing up toward the end of
  their experiments," Buxton said. "In the process of getting HuskySat-1
  to orbit, several students became interested in amateur radio, and we
  have already had preliminary discussions of future joint mission
  plans."

  "There is no doubt that HO-107 was a success in many ways beyond the
  operational life of the transponder," Buxton added. -- Thanks to AMSAT
  News Service
  In Brief...

  Former North Texas Section Manager Tom Blackwell, N5GAR, of Dallas,
  Texas, died on May 14. An ARRL Life Member, he was 65. Blackwell served
  as North Texas SM from 2005 until 2009. Blackwell graduated from the
  University of Texas at Austin in the College of Business
  ministration. He attended graduate school at the University of Texas
  at Dallas. He was an original petitioner in the Petition for Rule
  Making that resulted in a new FCC rule that allowed radio amateurs who
  are employees of public safety agencies and other entities, such as
  hospitals, to participate in drills, tests, and exercises in
  preparation for such emergency situations and to transmit messages on
  behalf of their employers during such drills and tests under "certain
  limited conditions." During his tenure as Section Manager, Blackwell
  served as State Government Liaison, Public Information Officer, and
  Technical Specialist.

  International Lighthouse Lightship Weekend is on track for 2020.
  Registrations for this year's popular International Lighthouse
  Lightship Weekend (ILLW) appear to have been largely unaffected by the
  current COVID-19 pandemic. The event will take place this year over the
  August 22 - 23 weekend. By mid-July, more than 200 entries had been
  received, and some 400 are expected to have signed up by the event
  weekend. New to this year's event is Corsica at Phare d'Alistro, which
  for ILLW purposes carries the French number of FR0030. Two lighthouses
  in Ghana will be on the air for the first time, as well as Buck Island
  Lighthouse in the US Virgin Islands (VI0001). Germany is well in the
  lead with 54 entries, followed by Australia with 29 entries, and the US
  with 27 entries. This event is designed as a fun weekend to encourage
  exposure to amateur radio and lighthouses to the visiting public, and
  ILLW stresses that contacts should be more than just an exchange of
  signal reports. All participants are urged to observe local COVID-19
  safety guidelines. --Thanks to Kevin Mulcahy, VK2CE

  The Reverse Beacon Network (RBN) will gain 15 new nodes, thanks to a
  Yasme Foundation supporting grant. These new nodes will be added in
  regions where there is a need for reception reports to support amateur
  radio operation and where those reports will also have scientific value
  for geophysical research. Yasme was assisted in this effort by
  supporting grants from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) and
  by scientific advice from HamSCI researchers. Node locations will be
  available after a final list of hosts is available.
  Getting It Right

  In the July 9 edition of The ARRL Letter, a "slight" miscalculation in
  an announcement about a new KiwiSDR in Iceland led to an incorrect
  metric-to-English conversion. The item should have said, "at an
  altitude of 690 meters (about 2,298 feet)."

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

  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
      (now a free Zoom-based online event)
    * August 21 - 23 -- West Virginia State Convention, Weston, West
      Virginia (now a free Zoom-based online event)

  Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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

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