Subj : The Weekly ARRL Letter
To   : All
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Fri Jul 24 2020 09:05 am

  The ARRL Letter
  July 23, 2020

    * ARRL Members to Lead New 30-Minute Amateur Radio Webinar Series
    * More than 12,000 Register Early for QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo
    * Winlink Developers Use Arduino-Based Simulator to Evaluate Digital
      Modes
    * ARRL Podcasts Schedule
    * High School Marine Buoy Transmitter Now Active on 20-Meter WSPR
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Radio Amateurs Help Air Ambulance
    * Announcements
    * Chris Brault, KD8YVJ, is 2020 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of
      the Year
    * In Brief...
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
  ARRL Members to Lead New 30-Minute Amateur Radio Webinar Series

  ARRL is launching a new webinar series to help introduce more members
  to the variety of activities and opportunities that radio amateurs
  enjoy. The ARRL Learning Network will offer live presentations by
  member-volunteers, for members. Like hamfest forums and radio club
  presentations, the webinars are intended to help participants get more
  active, involved, and engaged in amateur radio.

  Presentations are 30 minutes each, making them easy to fit into a lunch
  break or as a short evening activity. A 15-minute question-and-answer
  period follows each presentation for those who can participate longer.
  The webinars will be hosted initially using GoToWebinar. Webinars will
  be recorded, and some presentations will be available for future
  viewing by members and ARRL-affiliated radio clubs as part of an ARRL
  Learning Network library.

  A running list of upcoming live presentations is available. The web
  page is the place to register to attend each webinar and requires
  members to log onto the ARRL website. Some presentations:

  Relay Stations and the Art of Traffic Handling

  Aaron Hulett, K8AMH, Section Traffic Manager for ARRL North Texas
  Section

  Tuesday, July 28, 2020, 10 AM PDT / 1 PM EDT (1700 UTC)

  Fun with Digital Signal Modes FT4 and FT8

  Anthony Luscre, K8ZT

  Thursday, July 30, 2020, 12:30 PM PDT / 3:30 PM EDT (1930 UTC)

  HF Wire Antennas

  George Cooley, NG7A, ARRL Life Member

  Thursday, August 6, 2020, 12:30 PM PDT / 3:30 PM EDT (1930 UTC)

  Introduction to Digital FM Modes

  Korey Chandler, Sr., WA5RR

  Tuesday, August 11, 2020, 5 PM PDT / 8 PM EDT (0000 UTC on Wednesday,
  August 12)

  Introduction to Computer Logging

  Steven Lott Smith, KG5VK

  Thursday, August 13, 2020, 12:30 PM PDT / 3:30 PM EDT (1930 UTC)

  Capture the Magic of 6 Meters

  Jim Wilson, K5ND

  Tuesday, August 18, 2020, 10 AM PDT / 1 PM EDT (1700 UTC)

  The Sport of Finding Hidden Transmitters on Foot

  Robert Frey, WA6EZV, ARRL Amateur Radio Direction Finding Committee

  Thursday, August 20, 2020, 12:30 PM PDT / 3:30 PM EDT (1930 UTC)

  The webinars continue a string of new ARRL benefits introduced in 2020
  that has included On the Air magazine, expanded member access to all
  ARRL digital magazines, and the new On the Air and Eclectic Tech
  podcasts.

  "The ARRL Learning Network puts experienced member-volunteers at the
  forefront as a regular source of knowledge-sharing in amateur radio,"
  ARRL Lifelong Learning Manager Kris Bickell, K1BIC, said. "We hope
  members participating in the ARRL Learning Network, including
  presenters, will find it particularly rewarding to share experiences
  and learning that will motivate more of our community toward lifelong
  journeys as radio amateurs."

  Members who would like to be considered for future ARRL Learning
  Network webinars should have experience in delivering presentations,
  including familiarity with online webinar technology, live video, and
  screen sharing. Prospective presenters may complete a Call for Speakers
  form.
  More than 12,000 Register Early for QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo

  More than 12,000 have registered to attend the first QSO Today Virtual
  Ham Expo, August 8 - 9, QSO Today host Eric Guth, 4Z1UG, said this
  week.

  "Since the Expo is a completely new experience for the ham radio
  community, it's great that so many people are excited and already
  registered," he said. "And with almost 3 weeks before the event, the
  number of registrants continues to increase." Attendance is free and
  there are early-bird prize incentives for registering by July 24.

  More than a typical web meeting, the Expo is built on a live virtual
  platform commonly used by Fortune 500 companies and major universities.
  The platform simulates a convention experience with an exhibit hall and
  booths staffed by live attendants, a speaker auditorium, and even a
  lobby. Attendance just requires an internet connection and a computer,
  tablet, or smartphone.

  The Expo will offer four separate speaker tracks focusing on a range of
  topics. Speakers will also be able to provide related material, such as
  slides and white papers, that attendees can download. Every session
  will have a Q&A where attendees can submit questions in real time via
  chat.

  More than 30 booths will be open for attendees to visit, and exhibitors
  will have different options to engage with attendees. Exhibitor booths
  can provide downloadable content, such as videos, spec sheets, and
  manuals, and attendees can save content in a virtual briefcase to read
  later. Visitors will also be able to interact one-on-one with booth
  representatives, using a Skype-like system.

  "The experience of a virtual expo is not meant to replace in-person
  conventions," Guth said. "However, I strongly believe that virtual
  events in our community are here to stay. Given COVID-19 and its likely
  lasting impact on travel, especially given our demographic, this
  virtual expo enables the ham community to continue coming together to
  learn and engage."

  Guth said that younger hams who have grown up with the internet will
  feel comfortable with the Expo platform, "making it easier for them to
  participate and find their place in this remarkable hobby."

  Access to all speaker presentations and exhibitor booth content will
  remain on the Expo site for 30 days following the event.

  The QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo is an ARRL-sanctioned hamfest.

  Winlink Developers Use Arduino-Based Simulator to Evaluate Digital
  Modes

  Winlink development team members Rick Muething, KN6KB, and Tom Lafleur,
  KA6IQA, have evaluated various digital modes using the Teensy IONOS
  Simulator, which is based on the Arduino Teensy. A summary of the study
  by Thomas Whiteside, N5TW, indicates steady improvements in performance
  as software algorithms have evolved.

  "Simulator testing is important for creating and evaluating digital
  mode performance in a consistent, repeatable way that simply cannot be
  done with over-the-air testing where conditions are always changing,"
  Whiteside said in the study's overview. "These simulators have been
  quite expensive in the past, typically costing thousands of dollars.
  With today's single-chip micros and DSP libraries, Rick and Tom were
  able to create this simulator with a total parts cost of less than
  $200."

  The simulator was used to evaluate digital modes supported on the
  Winlink system over statistically standardized channels of white
  Gaussian noise and multipath, with noise cases across a range of
  signal-to-noise values.

  For HF, both wideband (>2 kHz) modes (PACTOR 3, PACTOR 4, VARA 2300,
  ARDOP 2000, and WINMOR 1600) and 500 Hz modes (PACTOR 2, ARDOP 500,
  WINMOR 500, and an all-new VARA 500 mode) were tested. For VHF,
  AX.25-based packet, FX.25-based packet, and VARA FM were tested.

  Muething and Lafleur said that their Teensy IONOS Simulator offers a
  wide variety of HF multipath test cases. "In the real world, all
  signals experience some degree of multipath distortion, whether it is a
  local VHF/UHF signal arriving directly, as well as reflections off
  various objects, or an HF signal experiencing different effects from
  the ionosphere and/or arriving via different headings," the study
  notes.

  The simulator has four levels of multipath models: good conditions,
  moderate conditions, poor conditions, and disturbed conditions. The
  19-page report includes signal-to-noise graphs of the various modes
  simulated under a variety of these scenarios.

  "No simulator can create all the band conditions, [interference from
  other stations], aurora, and other effects we can encounter, but these
  results should be a good comparison of performance over a wide range of
  conditions," the study's authors advised.

  Whiteside concluded, "I believe the Teensy IONOS Simulator is a useful
  tool for evaluating the various digital modes in use today and adds
  depth perception to over-the-air experience. For digital mode
  developers, this tool would be quite useful for evaluating new versions
  and experiments to supplement on-the-air testing. Specifically, I think
  the data presented here is a useful comparison of the various digital
  modes in use with the Winlink system today."
  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) features 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.

  High School Marine Buoy Transmitter Now Active on 20-Meter WSPR

  Phil Karn, KA9Q; Randy Standke, KQ6RS, and members of the Mount Carmel
  High School Amateur Radio Club (MCHSARC) in San Diego have constructed
  and deployed an amateur radio marine buoy in the Pacific. The buoy,
  which transmits WSPR on 14.0956 MHz USB, has already been heard around
  the continental US, Brazil, Hawaii, Japan, Costa Rica, Australia, and
  South Africa.

  "Over the past year, Randy and I have mentored the MCHSARC in designing
  and constructing a simple marine buoy that was deployed from the RV
  Sally Ride [on July 16], about 700 kilometers off the coast of southern
  California," Karn said in a post on the AMSAT Bulletin Board. "It is up
  and transmitting WSPR on 20 meters using the call sign KQ6RS, and is
  being received all over the US and into Canada and Brazil." Karn is
  blogging about the project with updates.

  The electronics are the 20-meter WSPR version of the WB8ELK "pico
  tracker" that has been flown on long-duration balloons. "We removed the
  solar panels and substituted 21 ordinary alkaline D cells, wired to
  supply 4.5 V," Karn explained. "We estimate battery lifetime will be 6
  months."

  Karn said that the project made use of everyday hardware. The buoy --
  essentially a spar buoy -- was constructed using a 5-foot section of
  4-inch PVC pipe, with sufficient ballast in one end of the pipe to
  permit it to float vertically in the water. The top is closed using a
  sewer pressure test plug, which has a bolt in the center that acts as a
  convenient feed-through and antenna mounting point. The antenna is a
  stainless-steel CB whip with a matching network.

  "We use the sea as a counterpoise, but to avoid direct metal/sea water
  contact, we lined the inside of the pipe with copper tape to form a
  capacitive connection," Karn said.

  During initial flotation testing, the project team found that the
  ballasted pipe alone was remarkably stable in pitch, roll, sway, and
  surge, but oscillated a lot in heave -- i.e., up and down movement.
  Cross arms were at the water line to add drag in the vertical
  direction, to counter the issue. Because sea water was required to tune
  the antenna, Standke floated the buoy off a dock in Mission Bay.

  "We tried to make this thing as rugged as we could," Karn recounted,
  offering his favorite saying to the students: "The sea always wins in
  the end, but we can delay that long enough to be useful."

  Deployment was to be from a NOAA vessel in April, but the trip was
  canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Standke secured a trip on the RV
  Sally Ride, a research vessel operated by Scripps Institute of
  Oceanography.

  The first reception report was on July 16 at 12:52:30 UTC from grid
  square CL89eu, although the current carried the buoy east into CL89fu
  at 20:32:30 UTC. The buoy (KQ6RS-1) can be tracked on the APRS and
  WSPRnet sites.

  Karn said the project team is already planning its second buoy, which
  may include two-way links, satellite tracking, and sensors.
  The K7RA Solar Update

  Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Another Solar Cycle 25 sunspot (AR
  2767) appeared this week, with a minimum non-zero sunspot number of 11
  on July 21 - 22. The average daily sunspot number for the July 16 - 22
  reporting week was 3.1, up from 1.7 over the previous 7 days.

  Geomagnetic indicators remain very quiet, with average daily planetary
  A index declining from 5 to 3.9.

  This sunspot cycle minimum remains surprisingly inactive. I keep
  expecting it to perk up, but all indicators remain quiet.

  Predicted solar flux, which roughly correlates to sunspot activity,
  also looks quite dull. The 45-day outlook predicts the solar flux won't
  hit 70. Predicted flux values are 69 on July 23 - August 1; 68 on
  August 2 - 20; 69 on August 21 - 28, and 68 on August 29 - September 5.

  Predicted planetary A index is 8, 8, 12, and 8 on July 23 - 26; 5 on
  July 27; 8 on July 28 - 29; 5, 8, and 10 on July 30 - August 1; 5 on
  August 2 - 18; 8 on August 19 - 20, and 5 on August 21 - September 5.

  Spaceweather.com reports a possible coronal mass ejection impact this
  week. The faint CME left the sun on July 19 and may cause a minor
  disturbance on July 24 - 25. This is reflected in the planetary A index
  forecast.

  Wade Blake, N7LGK, shared this Solar Cycle Progression graph from NOAA.

  Sunspot numbers for July 16 through 22 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 11, and 11,
  with a mean of 3.1. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 68.7, 69, 67.8, 68.9,
  69.3, 69.8, and 70, with a mean of 69.1. Estimated planetary A indices
  were 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, and 3, with a mean of 3.9. Middle latitude A
  index was 4, 5, 4, 4, 3, 5, and 5, with a mean of 4.3.

  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
    * July 25 - RSGB IOTA Contest (CW, phone)
    * July 26 -- ARS Flight of the Bumblebees (CW)
    * July 27 -- QCX Challenge (CW)
    * July 27 -- RSGB FT4 Contest Series
    * July 28 -- QCX Challenge (CW)

  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.

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

  Radio Amateurs Help Air Ambulance

  Peru's Radio Club Peruano (RCP) reports that Guillermo Guerra,
  OA4DTU/XQ3SA, and the Peruvian Relief Net MHz assisted an air ambulance
  en route to Easter Island on July 9 after its satellite communication
  equipment failed. The aircraft was about 1,000 nautical miles from the
  continent, so the pilot tuned to the Peruvian Relief Net on 7100 kHz.

  Net control station OA4DTU and Giancarlo Passalacqua, OA4DSN, were
  still on frequency, and communication was established with the
  aircraft. The pilot detailed its tenuous connection and requested
  support to communicate via telephone with Ocean Air Control, a service
  of the Directorate General of Aeronautics of Chile, which watches over
  32 million square kilometers of air space off the Chilean coast in the
  Pacific. Authorities were already on alert for the aircraft because of
  the communication loss, plus the HF at the Easter Island tower was
  inoperative.

  About 10 phone calls were made to point out the aircraft's position and
  route schedule, as well as any additional information needed. Other
  hams in Peru were listening in and standing by. Guerra remained in
  contact with the aircraft until he was sure that it would reach its
  destination. At approximately 2330 UTC, the pilot reported making VHF
  contact with the Easter Island control tower for landing instructions.
  -- Thanks to Radio Club Peruano

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


  Announcements
    * The ARRL Foundation has announced its 2020 scholarship recipients.
      There were 103 awards this year, totaling $144,450. The non-profit
      Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) has generously awarded
      a grant to the ARRL Foundation to match each scholarship award
      dollar-for-dollar, lifting the grand total of scholarships awarded
      to $288,900.
    * ARRL Field Day entries are due by Tuesday, July 28. Entries must
      include any documentation for bonus points.
    * The Radio Club of America (RCA) has announced its 2020 award
      recipients and fellows, several of whom are radio amateurs.
      Recipients and fellows will be celebrated at RCA's 111th Banquet &
      Awards Presentation on Friday, November 20, in Pittsburgh,
      Pennsylvania.
    * Winlink developer Phil Sherrod, W4PHS, has delivered a Zoom
      presentation on how to use Winlink on June 6.
    * The YASME Foundation has announced a supporting grant to the
      Greenlandic Amateur Radio Club's OX3NUK, in Nuuk, Greenland, for
      upgrading equipment. The station promotes amateur radio through
      outreach to local schools and Scouts during Jamboree on the Air
      (JOTA) each fall.
    * The Japan Amateur Radio League (JARL) has announced the
      cancellation of Tokyo Ham Fair 2020, which was scheduled to be held
      October 31 - November 1. JARL said it could not guarantee the
      safety of attendees during the coronavirus pandemic. -- Thanks to
      Ken Yamamoto, JA1CJP
    * The 10th annual New England SDR Group's NEWSDR 2020 conference will
      be online on August 12. NEWSDR 2020 welcomes both experienced SDR
      enthusiasts and individuals interested in getting started with SDR.
      The conference is free, but registration is required by August 9.
    * According to The Daily DX, D1- and DO/-prefix stations are said to
      be located in the Donetsk Republic -- a pro-Russian separatist
      organization operating from within Donetsk, Ukraine. Contacts with
      these stations do not count toward DXCC.

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

  Chris Brault, KD8YVJ, is 2020 Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the
  Year

  Christopher "Chris" Brault, KD8YVJ, of Liberty Township, Ohio, has been
  selected as the 2020 Bill Pasternak WA6ITF Memorial Amateur Radio
  Newsline Young Ham of the Year (YHOTY). The son of Jocelyn, KD8VRX, and
  Kimberly Brault, Chris, 18, was the recipient of the 2015 ARRL Hiram
  Percy Maxim Award. A ham since 2014, he credits his father for being
  his guide into amateur radio, recalling watching and listening to his
  dad operating mobile.

  "We would be on a road trip somewhere," Chris said. "We'd be talking to
  people along the way, it seemed like fun." Chris is a member of the
  Dayton Amateur Radio Association, the West Chester Amateur Radio
  Association, and the Ohio Valley Experimenters Club.

  A senior and honor student at Saint Xavier High School in Cincinnati,
  Chris helped restart the school's amateur radio club, W8GYH. He has
  also been recognized as the 2017 ARRL Great Lakes Division Young
  Amateur of the Year, and he took part in the 2017 Dave Kalter Youth DX
  venture to Costa Rica with other up-and-coming young radio amateurs.
  In 2017, he was a Youth Forum presenter at Dayton Hamvention^(R) and
  HamCation in Orlando.

  Chris serves as social media director for the Youth on the Air
  organization and is a contesting mentor for young hams involved in its
  programs. He is a tour guide for the National Voice of America Museum
  of Broadcasting in West Chester, Ohio, and assists in mentoring young
  operators at its ham station, WC8VOA. He participates with his dad in
  Scouting's Jamboree on the Air (JOTA) each October.

  The YHOTY award is traditionally presented during the Huntsville
  Hamfest in August, but the event was canceled this year because of the
  COVID-19 pandemic. The Young Ham of the Year Award was established in
  1986 by Newsline editor Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF, who died in 2015. --
  Thanks to CQ Communications
  In Brief...

  A July 9 Nature Communications article describes the
  Longjiang-2/Lunar-OSCAR 94 (LO-94) spacecraft, which carried the first
  amateur radio communication system into lunar orbit. "Design and flight
  results of the VHF/UHF communication system of Longjiang lunar
  microsatellites" recounts how, as part of China's Chang'e-4 lunar far
  side mission, two lunar microsatellites for low-frequency radio
  astronomy, amateur radio, and education -- Longjiang-1 and Longjiang-2
  -- were launched as secondary payloads on May 20, 2018, along with the
  Queqiao L2 relay satellite. Five days later, Longjiang-2 successfully
  inserted itself into an elliptical lunar orbit of 357 * 13,704
  kilometers (221 * 8,496 miles) to become the smallest spacecraft to
  enter lunar orbit with its own propulsion system. The satellite carried
  a VHF/UHF SDR, designed for operation with small ground stations. The
  article describes and evaluates the design of the VHF/UHF radio and the
  modes used. Flight results of the VHF/UHF radio are also presented,
  including operation of the radio, performance analysis of downlink
  signals, and the first lunar orbit UHF very-long-baseline
  interferometry (VLBI) experiment.

  The Deutscher Amateur Radio Club (DARC) reported unauthorized
  transmissions in the 144 MHz satellite segment of the 2-meter amateur
  radio primary allocation. DARC said that signals from illegal
  transmitters in the 144.010 to 144.020 MHz range are coming from "water
  vitalizers" or "water energizers." The manufacturer specifies 144.015
  MHz as the transmit frequency in its product description. The DARC
  Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Department seeks further details
  and location information in preparation to file a complaint. "The
  devices apparently generate fields with considerable field strength and
  a long range," DARC said. "The signals appear increasingly in the
  morning or in the evening. The illegal transmitters are typically in
  operation from 5 to 60 minutes (in multiples of 5 minutes). The signal
  is generally very stable in frequency, but occasionally shows
  short-term fluctuations of up to a few hundred hertz." The carrier is
  not modulated. The 144.000 - 146.000 MHz band is allocated globally to
  the Amateur Radio and Amateur Satellite Services on a primary basis,
  and is the only globally harmonized amateur radio VHF band. DARC has
  posted a video of the unauthorized transmission.

  An EME SSTV Party could become an annual event. Many stations are
  reported to have made Earth-moon-Earth (EME) SSTV transmissions on last
  year's 50th anniversary celebration of the moon landing. "We could only
  do it on the exact date 50 years later, and EME conditions were not
  very good last year," said Jan van Muijlwijk, PA3FXB, of the PI9CAM
  team at Dwingeloo Astronomic Observatory. "[W]e saw many stations
  joining the SSTV party, and we were surprised to see what is possible
  even with small dishes. Because of that, we would like to try to make
  it an annual EME SSTV party." A lunar landing EME SSTV party is set for
  July 26. "Moon conditions will be better than last year," van Muijlwijk
  said. "The moon is not very high in the northern hemisphere but much
  closer than last year, so we expect stronger signals and better images.
  The PI9CAM team will transmit several lunar landing and space-related
  images on 1296.110 MHz using Martin 2 mode.
  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 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)
    * September 18 - 20 -- New Mexico State Convention, Albuquerque, New
      Mexico

  Find conventions and hamfests in your area.

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

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