Subj : The Weekly ARRL Letter
To   : All
From : Sean Dennis
Date : Fri May 29 2020 09:05 am

  The ARRL Letter
  May 28, 2020

    * Temporary Rule Waivers Announced for 2020 ARRL Field Day
    * Social Distancing Exam Sessions Demonstrate Pent-Up Demand for
      Testing
    * Global COVID-19 Radio Event Set for June 6 - 7
    * ARRL Podcasts Schedule
    * Another New Beta Version of WSJT-X is Available
    * The K7RA Solar Update
    * Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * Announcements
    * Moonbounce Contact via FT8 Could be a First
    * Rocky Mountain Vice Director Resigns to Accept Appointment as
      Colorado Section Manager
    * In Brief...
    * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

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

  COVID-19 Impact & News

  Find the latest news and information on the impact of the coronavirus
  pandemic to ARRL members and our global amateur radio community.

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

  Temporary Rule Waivers Announced for 2020 ARRL Field Day

  With one month to go before 2020 ARRL Field Day, June 27 - 28, the ARRL
  Programs and Services Committee (PSC) has adopted two temporary rule
  waivers for the event:

  1) For Field Day 2020 only, Class D stations may work all other Field
  Day stations, including other Class D stations, for points.

  Field Day rule 4.6 defines Class D stations as "Home stations,"
  including stations operating from permanent or licensed station
  locations using commercial power. Class D stations ordinarily may only
  count contacts made with Class A, B, C, E, and F Field Day stations,
  but the temporary rule waiver for 2020 allows Class D stations to count
  contacts with other Class D stations for QSO credit.

  2) In addition, for 2020 only, an aggregate club score will be
  published, which will be the sum of all individual entries indicating a
  specific club (similar to the aggregate score totals used in ARRL
  affiliated club competitions).

  Ordinarily, club names are only published in the results for Class A
  and Class F entries, but the temporary rule waiver for 2020 allows
  participants from any Class to optionally include a single club name
  with their submitted results following Field Day.

  For example, if Podunk Hollow Radio Club members Becky, W1BXY, and
  Hiram, W1AW, both participate in 2020 Field Day -- Hiram from his Class
  D home station, and Becky from her Class C mobile station -- both can
  include the radio club's name when reporting their individual results.
  The published results listing will include individual scores for Hiram
  and Becky, plus a combined score for all entries identified as Podunk
  Hollow Radio Club.

  The temporary rule waivers were adopted by the PSC on May 27, 2020.

  ARRL Field Day is one of the biggest events on the amateur radio
  calendar, with over 36,000 participants in 2019, including entries from
  3,113 radio clubs and emergency operations centers. In most years,
  Field Day is also the largest annual demonstration of ham radio,
  because many radio clubs organize their participation in public places
  such as parks and schools.

  Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many radio clubs have made decisions to
  cancel their group participation in ARRL Field Day this year due to
  public health recommendations and/or requirements, or to significantly
  modify their participation for safe social distancing practices. The
  temporary rule waivers allow greater flexibility in recognizing the
  value of individual and club participation regardless of entry class.

  ARRL is contacting logging program developers about the temporary rule
  waivers so developers can release updated versions of their software
  prior to Field Day weekend.

  Participants are reminded that the preferred method of submitting
  entries after Field Day is via the web applet. The ARRL Field Day rules
  include instructions for submitting entries after the event. Entries
  must be submitted or postmarked by Tuesday, July 28, 2020.

  The ARRL Field Day web page includes a series of articles with ideas
  and advice for adapting participation this year.
  Social Distancing Exam Sessions Demonstrate Pent-Up Demand for Testing

  A recent in-person "social-distancing" amateur radio exam session in
  Indiana and a "drive-in" session in California are representative of
  those that are relieving some of the pent-up demand for testing. As the
  COVID-19 pandemic continues, in-person exam sessions have begun to
  resume across the US and elsewhere in the world.

  "With in-person sessions starting up again around the country, we are
  hearing the same story from volunteer examiner (VE) teams everywhere,"
  said ARRL Volunteer Examiner Coordinator (VEC) Maria Somma, AB1FM.
  "Large numbers of candidates who have been waiting to test are
  contacting teams and are thankful for the opportunity to sit for an
  exam. So far, we've heard mostly positive results. Candidates are very
  prepared, as they've had extra time to study. VE teams and candidates
  are following CDC and state guidelines for social distancing."

  Anderson (IN) Repeater Club VE Team Liaison Steve Riley, WA9CWE, told
  ARRL earlier this month that his club has been conducting test sessions
  every month since 2011, typically serving four or five candidates each
  session, but the May 19 session attracted 14 individuals.

  "We were unable to test in April, but were able to get back in for the
  May session," Riley said. "Several candidates were from Central
  Indiana, and we had a fellow drive down from Chicago, a couple from the
  Dayton, Ohio, area, and also from Fort Wayne, Indiana." The team
  limited participation until it could conduct the trial run.

  VEs and examinees alike wore face masks, and the test room was
  configured to accommodate the necessary spacing between individuals.
  "We questioned everyone entering with the usual health questions," he
  added.

  "Our VE paperwork became a serial flow for grading instead of our prior
  'huddle' of the three VEs over the answer sheet," Riley recounted. "As
  a result, things were a bit slower than in the past. The tables,
  pencils, and pens were disinfected."

  The result for the session was 11 new radio amateurs and three
  upgrades. "All went well, although we identified a couple improvements
  in paperwork flow for next month's test," Riley added.

  "There is quite a pent-up demand for new amateur licenses and upgrades
  as a result of the number of test sessions that have been canceled," he
  continued. "I hope that as sessions resume, they have the success that
  we had." Riley said he's already been contacted by six people who plan
  to sit for the exam in June.

  In California, VE Larry Loomer, KI6LNB, told the ARRL VEC that his team
  conducted a successful drive-in license testing session on May 16 at
  the Concord Bay Area Rapid Transit Station.

  Loomer explained that candidates fill out their paperwork in their
  cars. "I have circled in pencil all of the boxes on [Form] 605, the
  answer sheet, and the CSCE (Certificate of Successful Completion of
  Exam) that the candidates need to fill in, to minimize the face-to-face
  time." Once paperwork is completed, candidates take a test booklet and
  answer sheet on a clipboard and sit in a chair in front of their cars,
  taking the test in front of the VEs.

  Completed tests go into a box on the VE table, and candidates back
  their cars into a holding area, to let other cars park by the testing
  chairs. Once a test is scored and signed, the CSCE goes to the waiting
  candidate, who may then drive away.

  "I'm seeing videos of remote test-taking sessions, and they still look
  labor intensive to me," Loomer said. "We are sticking with the drive-in
  format for the present time."

  Somma said, "Our VE teams are doing a great job! I'm impressed with
  their attention to safety, their professionalism, and their innovative
  tactics."

  Global COVID-19 Radio Event Set for June 6 - 7

  Stations bearing call signs that promote the "stay-at-home" message and
  the value of social distancing and isolation have sprung up during the
  COVID-19 pandemic, with some 150,000 messages of support shared around
  the world. An on-air gathering over the June 6 - 7 weekend will offer a
  further opportunity for stay-at-home stations and radio amateurs to
  share greetings in a contest-like framework, looking toward the day
  that restrictions will ease, eventually making the stay-at-home
  injunction obsolete. The patron of the STAYHOME radio campaign is
  Finland's Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto, and the worldwide activity
  has the endorsement of International Amateur Radio Union (IARU)
  President Tim Ellam, VE6SH/G4HUA, and the United Nations Amateur Radio
  Club.

  "Amateur radio operators across the world are experiencing something we
  have never seen before, with the current COVID-19 pandemic," Ellam
  said. "In times like this, on-the-air activities can benefit our
  communities and ourselves. Events such as this are important to improve
  operating skills. It is also encouraging us to get on the air and keep
  active, as well as promoting social distancing." Ellam expressed thanks
  to the national regulators in more than three dozen countries that made
  special stay-at-home-suffix call signs available for amateur use.

  Sponsoring the event and campaign are the Finnish Amateur Radio League
  (SRAL), in cooperation with Araucaria DX Group (ADXG) of Brazil, and
  Radio Arcala (OH8X) in Finland.

  UN Amateur Radio Club President James Sarte, K2QI, has said that 4U1UN
  will be on the air to support of the global STAY HOME movement, as will
  sister stations 4U1GSC (operated as 4U9STAYHOME) and 4U1A (operated as
  4U2STAYHOME).

  Special event station W2I/STAYHOME, helmed by Ria Jairam, N2RJ, and
  Peter Dougherty, W2IRT, will also be on the air, operating CW, SSB, and
  FT8 simultaneously. (Jairam is ARRL Hudson Division Director.)

  The STAYHOME event gets under way at 1000 UTC on Saturday, June 6,
  concluding 24 hours later. Bands will include 80, 40, 20, 15, and 10
  meters, with CW, SSB, and digital (FT4/FT8 only). Exchange is a signal
  report and operator age, except for FT4/FT8 reports. Awards and
  certificates in the various operating categories will be available.
  Email for more information.
  ARRL Podcasts Schedule

  The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 5) focuses on the
  various types of modulation and tips on go-kits. 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 8) includes a
  discussion of 10-meter FM and an interview with Pascal Villeneuve,
  VA2PV, about "hotspots" for DMR, D-STAR, and Yaesu Fusion.

  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.

  Another New Beta Version of WSJT-X is Available

  A new beta ("release candidate"), WSJT-X version 2.2.0-rc2, is now
  available for downloading from the WSJT-X website, along with a list of
  new features. The WSJT-X development team has also published additional
  FT8 "overflow" frequencies, as the WSJT-X 2.2.0-rc2 Release Notes
  explain.

  "Increasing FT8 usage on 40, 30, and 20 meters means that the default 3
  kHz subbands are often wall-to-wall with signals. Overcrowding
  encourages some to turn on their amplifiers, which only makes things
  worse. On a trial basis, and in response to numerous suggestions from
  around the world, we have added a second set of suggested dial
  frequencies for FT8 on three HF bands and also on 6 meters...7.071,
  10.133, 14.071, and 50.310 MHz.

  "These frequencies will appear in your dropdown band-selector list
  after you go to the 'Settings | Frequencies' tab, right-click on the
  frequency table, and select 'Reset.' Alternatively, you can add the new
  FT8 frequencies manually. When the conventional FT8 subband on 6, 20,
  30, or 40 meters seems too full, please try moving your dial frequency
  down 3 kHz! [A]s currently implemented, WSJT-X will set your dial to
  the lowest frequency for the selected mode and band, when you switch
  bands."

  The latest "general availability" (GA) release is WSJT-X 2.1.2.
  The K7RA Solar Update

  Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: No significant solar activity over
  the past week, and still no sunspots observed since the end of April.
  According to Spaceweather.com, the percentage of spotless days in 2020
  has inched up to 79%. The percentage of days showing no sunspots for
  all of 2019 was 77%.

  Average daily solar flux for last week was 69.6, up from 69 during the
  previous week. Average mid-latitude A index was 5.7, it was 4 during
  the previous week, and average planetary A index was 4.6, up from 3.7
  during the previous 7 days.

  Predicted solar flux for the next 45 days sits at 70, on every day,
  just as it did in last week's forecast. Predicted planetary A index is
  5 on May 28; 8 on May 29 - 31; 5 on June 1 - 14; 8 on June 15 - 16, and
  5 on June 17 - July 11.

  On May 27, Spaceweather.com pointed toward an active region, possibly a
  sunspot, just over our sun's eastern horizon. You can see it via the
  STEREO observatory. In solar images, east is toward the left, from
  Earth's perspective. It is expected to come over the horizon and begin
  to point toward Earth on May 29.

  Sunspot numbers for May 21 - 27 were 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, and 0, with a
  mean of 0. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.2, 70.8, 69.1, 68.8, 70.3,
  69.7, and 68, with a mean of 69.6. Estimated planetary A indices were
  5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 4, and 3, with a mean of 4.6. The middle latitude A
  index was 8, 7, 4, 5, 7, 3, and 6, with a mean of 5.7.

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

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

  Share your reports and observations.

  Just Ahead in Radiosport
    * May 29 - 31 -- PODXS 070 Club 3-Day Weekend Contest (Digital)
    * May 30 - 31 -- CQ World Wide WPX Contest (CW)
    * June 1 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (Digital)
    * June 2 -- ARS Spartan Sprint CW
    * June 4 -- NRAU 10-Meter Activity Contest (CW, phone, digital)
    * June 4 -- SKCC Sprint Europe (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.

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

  Announcements
    * The 2019 ARRL DXCC Yearbook is now available for viewing and
      downloading.
    * Dan Romanchik, KB6NU, is maintaining a "Compendium of online
      amateur radio club meetings," which effectively makes any radio
      club meeting easy to "attend." It's suggested to secure an
      invitation from the club rather than just showing up.
    * Citing public health concerns, DX Engineering has canceled its
      second annual DXE Hamfest, which was to be held on August 8 at its
      headquarters near Akron, Ohio. This year's event was planned in
      conjunction with ARRL's Ohio Section Convention. The logistics of
      safely managing an anticipated large crowd played a role in DX
      Engineering's decision.
    * The MicroHAMS Digital Conference (MHDC) was held virtually this
      year, offering an opportunity to reach out to speakers who might
      otherwise been unable to attend. Typical attendance at the
      in-person conference is around 100 people. The virtual event
      attracted between 300 and 500 viewers actively watching the
      livestream. The 2,000 unique views during the conference indicated
      that some only attended a portion of the day or specific sessions.
      The 13th annual MHDC is available on the MicroHAMS website.
    * According to a reader report in The Daily DX, a signal on various
      20-meter frequencies has been jamming "everything for about 10 kHz"
      with a strong signal. The signal is believed to be that of a
      Chinese over-the-horizon radar. The signal has been centered on
      14.174, 14.193, 14.240, and 14.267, "moving around."
    * David Cripe, NM0S, is the new president of the QRP-Amateur Radio
      Club International (QRP-ARCI). He succeeds Preston Douglas, WJ2V,
      who had served as the club's president for more than 3 years.


  Moonbounce Contact via FT8 Could be a First

  FT8 codeveloper Joe Taylor, K1JT, has reported what is possibly the
  first FT8 contact via moonbouce (Earth-Moon-Earth or EME) on May 21
  between Paul Andrews, W2HRO, in New York, and Peter Gouweleeuw, PA2V,
  in the Netherlands. The contact was made possible using the currently
  available beta-release candidate of WSJT-X, version 2.2-rc1.

  "Why might you want to use FT8 instead of 'Old Reliable JT65' for EME
  QSOs?" Taylor asked in a subsequent Moon-Net post. "FT8 is about 4 dB
  less sensitive than JT65, but with 15-second T/R [transmit/receive]
  sequences it's four times faster, and it doesn't use Deep Search," he
  said, answering his own question.

  The FT8 protocol included in the beta version of WSJT-X has an optional
  user setting to work around the 2.5-second path delay. "For terrestrial
  use, the FT8 decoder searches over the range -2.5 to +2.4 seconds for
  clock offset DT between transmitting and receiving stations," Taylor
  explained. "DT" represents the difference between the transmission time
  and actual time. "When 'Decode after EME delay' is checked on the
  WSJT-X 'Settings' screen, the accessible DT range becomes -0.5 to +4.4
  seconds. Just right for EME."

  As Taylor explained in his post, FT8 uses 8-GFSK modulation with tones
  separated by 6.25 Hz. At the time of the contact, the expected Doppler
  spread on the W2HRO - PA2V EME path was 8 Hz, which would cause some
  additional loss in sensitivity. Despite the path losses, however, copy
  between W2HRO and PA2V was "solid in both directions," Taylor said.

  Taylor said that when he was active in EME contests on 144 MHz, he was
  always frustrated that, even with reasonably strong signals, the
  maximum JT65 contact rate is about 12 per hour. "With FT8, you can do
  40 per hour, as long as workable stations are available," he said.

  As for using FT8 for EME contacts on 1296 MHz, Taylor said it "might
  sometimes work, but Doppler spread will probably make standard FT8 a
  problem." Given sufficient interest, however, he said the WSJT-X
  development team could design an FT8B or FT8C with wider tone

                                              Joe Taylor, K1JT. [Bob
                                              Inderbitzen, NQ1R, photo]

  spacing. He encouraged the use of FT8 for moonbounce on 144, 432, and
  1296 MHz and asked users to report their results to the development
  team.

  "A 'slow FT8' mode is indeed a sensitivity winner on suitable
  propagation paths," he said in a later Moon-Net post. "We are busy
  implementing such a mode, but with particular emphasis on its use on
  the LF and MF bands."

  Taylor said FT8 has the operational advantage of putting all users in
  one (or a few) narrow spectral slices on each band. "So, it's easy to
  find QSO partners without skeds or chat rooms," he said. "Everything is
  done over the air, with no 'side channels' needed."

  Taylor also remarked in response to posts from those who, like him,
  "love CW."

  "I agree it's a thrill to hear your own lunar echo, and to make CW EME
  QSOs," he said. "Sometimes I pine for the bygone world of commercial
  sailing ships, which happen to be very much a part of my family's
  history," Taylor concluded. "But I know that technologies evolve, and
  the world does not stand still."
  Rocky Mountain Vice Director Resigns to Accept Appointment as Colorado
  Section Manager

  ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Vice Director Robert Wareham, N0ESQ, has
  stepped down from that post to accept appointment as Colorado Section
  Manager. Wareham would succeed veteran Colorado SM Jack Ciaccia, WM0G,
  who resigned effective on June 1 after serving since 2011.

  Robert Wareham, N0ESQ.

  "Jack will be moving to the East Coast to be closer to family and I
  wish him only the best as he transitions to this next phase of his
  life," ARRL Rocky Mountain Division Director Jeff Ryan, K0RM, said in a
  message to his Division. "At the same time, I am sorry to lose such an
  outstanding leader, who has been instrumental in the creation and
  maintenance of the vibrant amateur radio community that exists across
  Colorado today. Jack has been a personal friend and advisor to me for
  many years and I shall miss his thoughtful guidance and his quick
  humor."

  Ciaccia, who is relocating to New Hampshire, said his decision was
  bittersweet. "I am really proud of our accomplishments in the Colorado
  Section during the past 9 years," he said. "I will miss the hams I have
  met here in Colorado and their friendship. I am looking forward to now
  being able to just spend the rest of my days continuing with the
  satisfaction and enjoyment that ham radio has given me over the past 63
  years."

  Wareham would complete Ciaccia's current term, which runs until
  September 30, 2021. An ARRL Life Member, Wareham served as Colorado
  Section Emergency Coordinator since 2011, prior to his appointment as
  Rocky Mountain Vice Director in 2018. He previously served in the Field
  Organization as Colorado's State Government Liaison and as Public
  Information Officer. An attorney, Wareham assisted in drafting the bill
  that created the Colorado Auxiliary Emergency Communications Unit
  (AuxComm) in 2016.

  Ryan said that, while he's sorry to lose Wareham's counsel as Vice
  Director, "I'm certain he will provide for a virtually seamless
  transition."

  A new Rocky Mountain Division Vice Director will be appointed.
  In Brief...

  Islands On The Air (IOTA) users may now obtain contact credits via
  ARRL's Logbook of The World (LoTW). "Islands On The Air (IOTA) Ltd. is
  delighted to announce the implementation of the ARRL application, which
  allows the use of QSO-matching via LoTW," IOTA's Roger Balister, G3KMA,
  said. ARRL Director of Operations Norm Fusaro, W3IZ, points out that
  LoTW has, for years, allowed award sponsors access to a utility that
  lets them verify contacts in LoTW. "The IOTA folks have begun using
  this utility, but still check the QSOs against known IOTA operations,"
  he explained, noting that applicants cannot apply for IOTA awards
  through LoTW. See Instructions for LoTW QSO Matching for details.
  Direct correspondence to the IOTA Support Desk. Read more.

  Several satellite operators have reported that the FM repeater on the
  vintage AO-27 satellite recently has been active for brief intervals.
  When commanded on by control operators, the transponder is active for
  about 2 minutes before it reverts to telemetry transmission only.
  Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK, points out that AO-27 was never designed to
  be an FM satellite; it lacks the audio filtering typically used in an
  FM receiver, since AO-7's uplink receiver was going to be used for
  data. With the lack of audio filtering on the uplink receiver, AO-27
  was used for tests with D-STAR radios. (The Wayback Machine has
  captures of the former ao27.org website, detailing how those tests were
  done. Two radios were used for those D-STAR contacts -- one for uplink
  and the other for downlink.) Many hope that control stations will
  eventually be able to recover the satellite sufficiently to provide
  more regular FM operation. In the meantime, if you hear the satellite
  active, make your contacts quickly! -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service via
  Patrick Stoddard, WD9EWK

  A pre-hurricane season exercise was carried out on May 16 for radio
  amateurs and the National Weather Service (NWS) in the southeastern US.
  The scenario was a Category 3 - 4 storm making landfall at Panama City
  on Florida's panhandle, and moving through Alabama and Georgia. The
  Tallahassee NWS Office asked amateur radio operators for weather and
  storm damage reports. Exercise nets opened on HF and on a VHF repeater
  (HF turned out to be a disappointment), with stations using Winlink for
  reporting. Stations' weather observations were submitted to the NWS via
  the nets using the NWSChat utility. The Atlantic Hurricane Season
  starts on June 1. -- Thanks to The ARRL ARES E-Letter

  AMSAT has spelled out its GOLF program objectives. AMSAT says the aim
  of its developing "Greater Orbit, Larger Footprint" (GOLF) satellite
  program is to place amateur radio transponders in low-Earth orbit
  (LEO), medium-Earth orbit (MEO), and eventually high-Earth orbit (HEO).
  "The goal of the GOLF program is to work by steps through a series of
  increasingly capable spacecraft to learn skills and systems for which
  we do not yet have any low-risk experience. Among these are active
  attitude control, deployable/steerable solar panels, radiation
  tolerance for commercial off-the-shelf components in higher orbits, and
  propulsion," AMSAT explained. "The first step is to be one or more LEO
  satellites similar to the existing AO-91 and AO-92, but with
  technologies needed for higher orbits." AMSAT says the eventual goal is
  an HEO satellite similar to AO-10, AO-13, and AO-40, "but at a
  currently affordable cost combined with significantly enhanced
  capabilities."

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

  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

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

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--- SendMsg/2

--- Squish/386 v1.11
* Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200)