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"jaurge" <at@xxxxxxx> a écrit dans le message de news:
mn.c33f7d6b0922d215.42120@xxxxxxxxxx
> ***************
> The ARRL Letter
> Vol. 19, No. 45
> November 24, 2000
> ***************
>
> IN THIS EDITION:
>
> * +Limited AO-40 use possible soon
> * +ARRL Board to consider Morse policy review
> * +First ISS ham contacts made
> * +ARRL VEC anticipates higher 2001 test fee
> * +SMs elected in 10 ARRL sections
> * +Nominations still open for ARRL awards
> * Solar Update
> * IN BRIEF:
> This weekend on the radio
> CQ WW CW announced operations list
> +ULS scheduled to be down
> +Hatfield announces retirement from FCC
> +Coast Guard to honor MARS operator
> Ham help solicited in owl searches
> Prairie DX Group on air from Vanuatu
> DSP satellite transceiver project reflector open
> Badger State Smoke Signals to be delayed
>
> +Available on ARRL Audio News
>
> ===========================================================
> EDITOR's NOTE: Because ARRL Headquarters is closed November 23-24 for the
> Thanksgiving holiday, the November 24 editions of The ARRL Letter and ARRL
> Audio News are being posted Wednesday, November 22. The ARRL Letter and
> ARRL
> Audio News will resume their normal Friday schedule on December 1. We wish
> everyone a safe and enjoyable Thanksgiving holiday!--Rick Lindquist, N1RL
> ===========================================================
>
> ==> LIMITED AO-40 USE POSSIBLE IN NEAR FUTURE
>
> AMSAT-NA President Robin Haighton, VE3FRH, says plans are in place to make
> AO-40 available for a limited period of general amateur use "possibly
> within
> a week or two." Launched November 16, the next-generation Amateur Radio
> satellite formerly known as Phase 3D remains for now in a geostationary
> transfer orbit while initial housekeeping and checkout procedures are
> under
> way. The satellite's final high elliptical orbit will not be established
> for
> another nine months.
>
> Just when and how the "limited operation" will occur is up to the ground
> controllers, Haigton said. The provisional operation would involve "one or
> two bands at a time," he said. Since the satellite's solar panels will not
> be deployed until AO-40 is in its final orbit, full power will not be
> available.
>
> Details of the limited test period will be announced via AMSAT bulletins
> and
> via the AO-40 telemetry beacon on 2 meters, which also is transmitting
> text
> messages. (For more information on receiving AO-40 telemetry, visit the
> AMSAT-NA "AO-40 Telemetry" page,
> http://www.amsat.org/amsat/sats/ao40/ao40-tlm.html.)
>
> In a bulletin released Monday, AMSAT stressed that the Phase 3D/AO-40
> controllers were closely monitoring the power budget and the satellite's
> current orbital parameters. "These two areas will be among the most
> important factors that determine what happens with P3D in the near
> future,"
> the AMSAT bulletin said.
>
> From all indications, most AO-40 systems are working properly at this
> point,
> with the possible exception of the 70-cm transmitter. According to a
> status
> report from Phase 3D Project Manager Karl Meinzer, DJ4ZC, "a problem with
> the 70 cm transmitter" led controllers to shift the telemetry downlink
> from
> 70 cm to 2 meters (145.898 MHz). Meinzer said AO-40's two 2.4 GHz
> transmitters were operated and are okay.
>
> Haighton said the most likely configurations for the limited test period
> would be Mode U/V (Mode B)--70 cm up and 2 meters down--and Mode L/S--1.2
> GHz up and 2.4 GHz down, SSB and CW.
>
> AMSAT says there's still a lot of work to do until AO-40 will be fully
> ready
> for general Amateur Radio use. AO-40's geostationary transfer orbit puts
> it
> some 500 km from Earth at its nearest point, and 35,000 km at the
> farthest.
> AMSAT says that AO-40's attitude is being changed to prepare for the first
> motor burn. Meinzer's report says the 400-Newton motor will be used to put
> AO-40 into a 50,000 km apogee. The first orbital maneuver should be
> completed in a few days. Other orbital adjustments will follow over the
> next
> 270 days.
>
> AO-40's solar panels will not be deployed until the satellite is in its
> final orbital configuration. Once that happens, the satellite should
> become
> available for full Amateur Radio use.
>
> ==>BOARD TO CONSIDER MORSE CODE POLICY REVIEW
>
> The ARRL Board of Directors will review the League's position on the Morse
> code as an international licensing requirement when it gathers for its
> annual meeting in January. Because the issue is expected to come up at the
> IARU Region 2 Conference next October, the ARRL Executive Committee
> decided
> at its November 11 meeting in Irving, Texas, to place the issue on the
> Board's January agenda.
>
> The ARRL's Morse policy was formalized by Board resolution in 1993. It
> supports the retention in the International Radio Regulations of the
> provision obliging administrations to require that applicants demonstrate
> ability to send and receive Morse code before they may operate below 30
> MHz.
> Consistent with that policy, ARRL International Affairs Vice President Rod
> Stafford, W6ROD, cast the lone dissenting vote earlier this year at the
> IARU
> Region 3 Conference in Australia on a motion calling for the eventual
> elimination of Morse as an ITU requirement for HF operation.
>
> In January, the Board may decide to reaffirm this policy, to modify it, or
> to seek additional input from members. In the past, a majority of members
> has supported the policy.
>
> The Executive Committee also proposed that the Board determine a process
> for
> soliciting membership input on possible repartitioning of the HF bands in
> restructuring's wake. As part of its original restructuring package, the
> League had proposed "refarming" the current Novice bands to allow for more
> efficient use of the most crowded HF allocations. The FCC has declined to
> take up any possible repartitioning, however, until it's had a chance to
> gauge the effects of restructuring. Amateur Radio license restructuring
> became effective last April 15.
>
> In other action, Stafford and ARRL Executive Vice President David Sumner,
> K1ZZ, reported briefly on preparations for WRC-2003. Stafford is focusing
> on
> developing support for the Amateur Radio 7 MHz position within Region 2.
> The
> IARU seeks a 300-kHz worldwide amateur allocation in the vicinity of 7
> MHz.
> Sumner has been named to the core IARU delegation to that conference.
>
> The Executive Committee also heard a wide-ranging update of other FCC
> matters, including the League's efforts to gain primary amateur status at
> 2400 to 2402 MHz and at 2300 to 2305 MHz.
>
> Sumner observed during the meeting that the Amateur Radio Spectrum
> Protection Act bills--HR 783 and S 2183--were not likely to be enacted
> during the "lame duck" session of Congress that's just ahead. Principal
> sponsors of both bills are returning to Congress in January and may be
> asked
> to reintroduce the legislation.
>
> The Executive Committee also briefly discussed legislative restrictions on
> the use of cell phones that have been popping up in various localities.
> Hudson Division Director Frank Fallon, N2FF, noted that an effort is under
> way in New Jersey to exempt Amateur Radio operation from the effects of
> such
> legislation.
>
> ==>SHEPHERD MAKES FIRST CASUAL QSOs FROM ISS
>
> The Amateur Radio on the International Space Station program has announced
> that Commander William "Shep" Shepherd, KD5GSL, made the first casual
> Amateur Radio contacts from Space Station Alpha last week. Details were
> not
> available.
>
> Shepherd reports that he was able to take a few minutes out of his busy
> schedule last Friday, November 17, to engage in contacts with a few lucky
> hams. Before then, the only Amateur Radio contacts involved engineering
> test
> passes between the ISS and Russian and US amateur facilities.
>
> ARISS spokesman Will Marchant, KC6ROL, says that with the recent arrival
> at
> ISS of a Progress cargo craft, the crew will have to redouble its work
> pace.
> The space shuttle Endeavour STS-97 mission to the ISS will launch November
> 30, so the Expedition 1 crew will continue to put in some long hours
> preparing for its arrival. Endeavour is carrying a large new solar panel
> for
> the ISS that will permit the station to be fully powered for the first
> time.
>
> More information about Amateur Radio on the International Space Station is
> available on the ARISS Web site, ariss.gsfc.nasa.gov/">http://ariss.gsfc.nasa.gov/ .--ARISS news
> release
>
> ==>ARRL VEC ANTICIPATES $10 TEST FEE FOR 2001
>
> ARRL VEC Manager Bart Jahnke, W9JJ, says the ARRL VEC plans to set its
> test
> fee for calendar year 2001 at $10. The current fee of $6.65 is based on a
> provision in the Communications Act, adopted in 1984, that established a
> $4
> cap on reimbursement of out-of-pocket costs with an annual adjustment
> based
> on the Consumer Price Index. More recent legislation removed this cap. An
> FCC announcement of changes in its rules, reflecting the change in the
> law,
> is expected toward the end of the year.
>
> ARRL Executive Vice President David Sumner, K1ZZ, says the higher fee
> reflects the fact that the ARRL VEC is doing more of the work on behalf of
> the FCC than was envisioned at the time Congress set the original cap.
> "We're doing the data entry for all new and upgrade license applications
> that are handled by the ARRL Volunteer Examiners," Sumner explained.
> "Originally, we simply reviewed and organized the paperwork and the FCC
> staff did the data entry. The current system is better for the applicants
> because they get their licenses faster, but it's also more costly for us."
>
> Jahnke said a $10 ARRL VEC test fee will be formalized as soon as the FCC
> gives the word that it has made the necessary adjustments to Part 97 to
> bring it in line with the updated Communications Act. As soon as that
> happens, the ARRL VEC will make a formal announcement to establish the new
> fee. Until then, ARRL VEC volunteer examiners will continue to charge
> applicants at the 2000 test fee rate of $6.65.
>
> ==>SECTION MANAGERS ELECTED IN TEN ARRL SECTIONS
>
> The ballots have been counted, and ARRL section managers have been elected
> in races in Eastern Massachusetts and South Carolina. Incumbent SMs were
> returned to office in eight other ARRL sections without opposition.
>
> In the Eastern Massachusetts Section, Phillip E. Temples, K9HI, of
> Watertown
> outpolled Stan Laine, WA1ECF, 781 to 351. Temples replaces Joel Magid,
> WU1F,
> who did not seek re-election.
>
> In the South Carolina Section, Patricia M. Hensley, N4ROS, of Richburg
> topped a field of three candidates. She received 301 votes, to 229 for
> James
> Boehner, N2ZZ, and 188 for Laurie Sansbury Jr, KV4C. Hensley was tapped
> earlier this year to take over the South Carolina SM job when former SM
> Les
> Shattuck, K4NK, was elevated to Roanoke Division Vice Director.
>
> Candidates in eight other ARRL sections were unopposed. All were
> incumbents.
> Returning to office are Dale Bagley, K0KY, Missouri; Bill McCollum, KE0XQ,
> Nebraska; George Tranos, N2GA, New York City-Long Island; Thomas Dick,
> KF2GC, Northern New York; Jean Priestley, KA2YKN, Southern New Jersey;
> David
> Armbrust, AE4MR, West Central Florida; John Rodgers, N3MSE, Western
> Pennsylvania; and Bob DeVarney, WE1U, Vermont.
>
> Ballots were counted November 21 at ARRL Headquarters. The terms of office
> for all successful candidates are two years, beginning January 1, 2001.
>
> ==>NOMINATIONS CLOSE JANUARY 31 FOR ARRL INSTRUCTOR, RECRUITER, EDUCATOR
> AWARDS
>
> Nominations close January 31 for the ARRL Herb S. Brier Instructor of the
> Year, Professional Educator of the Year, Professional Instructor of the
> Year, and Excellence in Recruiting awards for 2000.
>
> The ARRL Herb S. Brief Instructor of the Year Award goes each year to a
> volunteer Amateur Radio instructor. Last year's winner was ARRL Life
> Member
> Allen Wolff, KC7O, who has been teaching ham radio classes for 15 years.
>
> The ARRL Professional Educator of the Year award goes to a professional
> teacher who has incorporated Amateur Radio into his or her class
> curriculum.
> Dan Calzaretta, NX9C, was the 1999 winner. He's been teaching ham radio
> for
> more than 20 years.
>
> The ARRL Professional Instructor of the Year award is presented to a paid,
> non-state certified ham radio instructor, such as those teaching classes
> offered through adult education programs.
>
> The ARRL Excellence in Recruiting Award goes to a ham who exemplifies
> outstanding recruiting enthusiasm and technique and has gone the extra
> mile
> to introduce others to Amateur Radio. Activities include, but are not
> limited to, school and public ham radio demonstrations, participation in
> the
> Jamboree On The Air or similar activity, or assuming a non-teaching role
> in
> organizing ham radio licensing classes.
>
> All winners receive beautifully engraved plaques, which may be sponsored
> by
> clubs.
>
> Complete information and nomination forms are available on the ARRL Web
> site
> at www.arrl.org/ead/award/">http://www.arrl.org/ead/award/. Completed forms go to section managers
> before January 31.
>
> For more information on any of these awards, contact Jean Wolfgang,
> WB3IOS,
> jwolfgang@xxxxxxxxx
>
> ==>SOLAR UPDATE
>
> Propagation prognosticator Tad Cook, K7VVV, Seattle, Washington, reports:
> This bulletin is written a day and a half earlier than usual because of
> the
> Thanksgiving holiday. For that reason, the projected solar flux and A
> indices expected for this weekend will not be quite as up to date as
> usual.
> Also, it is too early to include the sunspot number for Wednesday, the end
> of our normal reporting week, so next week's bulletin will have two week's
> worth of solar flux, sunspot numbers and planetary A indices.
>
> Geomagnetic indices have been very quiet this week, with both the
> planetary
> and Boulder A indices in the single digits. The quietest day was Thursday,
> November 16, when the Boulder A index was one, and the Boulder K index was
> zero for most of the day. This indicates a very stable geomagnetic
> environment. The planetary A index was four on that day and on the next.
>
> Solar flux has been rising after reaching a near term minimum on November
> 14. It was 173.7 on Monday, 185.4 on Tuesday, and today on Wednesday, the
> three daily readings were 192.4, 194.9 and 203.5. The noon reading of
> 194.9
> is the official number.
>
> The current projection has the 10.7 cm flux rising above 200 on
> Thanksgiving, peaking at 210 on Friday, then 205 on Saturday and 200 on
> Sunday through next Thursday. This looks good for the big DX contest this
> weekend, although generally the Maximum Usable Frequency is more dependent
> upon the average solar flux for the previous week or 10 days rather than a
> value on the day of interest. The predicted planetary A index also looks
> good, which currently is projected to be ten for Thursday through
> Saturday,
> and twelve for Sunday and Monday.
>
> There was a full-halo coronal mass ejection November 16, but it was on the
> back side of the sun, projecting the energy away from Earth. The region
> that
> produced that activity will be rotating into view sometime soon, but not
> soon enough to affect the contest weekend.
>
> N0AX pointed out that last week's bulletin mentioned something called a
> solar "flair." Of course, your author was only demonstrating a "flair" for
> erroneous homonyms. That thing coming out of the sun is still a flare, no
> matter what's written here. Senior moments seem to be increasing weekly,
> solar flares notwithstanding. Happy Thanksgiving to all!
> __________________________________
>
> ==>IN BRIEF:
>
> * This weekend on the radio: The CQ WW DX Contest (CW) is the weekend of
> November 25-26. See October QST, page 101, for more information. JUST
> AHEAD:
> The ARRL 160 Meter Contest is the weekend of December 2-3. See November
> QST,
> page 98, for the rules. Also the weekend of December 2-3 are the QRP ARCI
> Holiday Spirits Homebrew Sprint (CW), the Ninth Annual TARA RTTY Sprint,
> and
> the TOPS Activity 3.5 MHz CW Contest. See December QST, p 97, for more
> information.
>
> * CQ WW CW announced operations list: Contest watcher Bill Feidt, NG3K,
> offers his annual listing of announced operations for the CQ Worldwide DX
> Contest (CW) November 24-25 weekend at
> www.ng3k.com/Misc/cqc2000.html">http://www.ng3k.com/Misc/cqc2000.html.
>
> * ULS scheduled to be down: The FCC Universal Licensing System and Antenna
> Structure Registration will be unavailable from noon (Eastern) Wednesday,
> November 22, until 8 AM (Eastern) Monday, November 27 and again from 5 PM
> (Eastern) Friday, December 1 until 8 AM (Eastern) Monday, December 4. Both
> outages are to accommodate the Land Mobile Phase 3 conversion. The task
> involves the conversion of more than 350,000 licenses and 5200 pending
> applications.
>
> * Hatfield announces retirement from FCC: Dale Hatfield, W0IFO, the head
> of
> the FCC's Office of Engineering and Technology has announced plans to
> retire
> from that post December 8. Hatfield hopes to return to academia at the
> University of Colorado at Boulder, teaching graduate courses in
> telecommunications. Hatfield spent much of his time at the FCC working on
> spectrum issues, including the possible establishment of a secondary
> market
> for underused channels. Earlier this year, Hatfield predicted a bright
> future for Amateur Radio but said that amateurs "will be under a certain
> amount of pressure" to justify their free use of the radio spectrum. As a
> result, he said, it will be more important than ever that hams actually
> fulfill their service, good will and educational roles--not just talk
> about
> them. He offered those observations June 17 as keynote speaker for AMRAD's
> 25th anniversary dinner. Hatfield is not slowing down. A few days before
> his
> departure from the FCC, he'll take part in a The Federal Communications
> Bar
> Association seminar on technology issues facing the FCC, "Technology and
> the
> FCC: What Every Advocate Should Know," on December 5. This marked
> Hatfield's
> second stint at the FCC. For the past three years, he's been commuting
> between Colorado and Washington, DC, while his family continued to live in
> Boulder.--reported by Reuters
>
> * Coast Guard to honor MARS operator: An ARRL member will receive the
> Coast
> Guard's second highest civilian award later this month for his MARS
> service.
> Richard C. Johnson, W3BI/NNN0GKF, will receive the USCG's Meritorious
> Public
> Service Award in a ceremony November 28 in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. The
> award
> is in recognition of Johnson's 37 years of voluntary service as a Military
> Affiliate Radio System operator. The award, reserved for civilians not
> employed by the Coast Guard who make a significant contribution to the
> service, will be presented by Capt Wayne K. Gibson, Chief of Operations
> for
> the Coast Guard Atlantic Area command in Portsmouth, Virginia. Johnson is
> being honored for his participation in the Department of Defense-sponsored
> MARS program. MARS participants provide auxiliary or emergency
> communications on a local, national and international basis as an adjunct
> to
> normal communications. Since 1963, Johnson has conducted thousands of
> ship-to-shore phone patches for deployed Coast Guard men and women. Last
> January, Johnson also volunteered to join the MARS High Frequency e-mail
> program supporting Atlantic Area Coast Guard cutters. Since then, he has
> processed 500 to 600 e-mails a day supporting crews aboard the Coast Guard
> cutters Mohawk, Decisive, Forward, Tampa, and Thetis. Department of
> Defense
> MARS coordinators say Johnson's efforts have recently inspired other MARS
> operators in Virginia, Georgia and Texas to join the HF e-mail program.
> The
> program allows Coast Guard personnel at sea aboard cutters to send and
> receive e-mail messages to and from family and friends. The Coast Guard
> says
> the program "greatly improves the quality of life for shipboard crews" and
> has been "a welcomed benefit for crews stationed aboard cutters operating
> in
> the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and throughout the Caribbean." Johnson is the
> only MARS operator participating in the e-mail program in the Atlantic
> Area
> and has operated nearly around-the-clock to meet the needs of Coast
> Guardsmen at sea.--USCG news release
>
> * Ham help solicited in owl searches: ARRL Amateur Radio Direction Finding
> Coordinator Joe Moell, K0OV, says hams in the Central US found an unusual
> form of ham radio public service this fall. Many have been listening
> intently just above 172 MHz for brief transmissions from radio tags on 52
> endangered burrowing owls. The rare birds have left Saskatchewan and
> Alberta
> in Canada for warmer weather in the south, probably in southern Texas and
> northern Mexico. Burrowing owls were seen in Texas in late October,
> according to the latest report from Canadian biologists, but no leg bands
> have been spotted. Now that the fall migration is complete, hams in Texas
> and surrounding states are being asked to monitor for the tags this
> winter.
> Meanwhile, biologist Scott Weidensaul of the Ned Smith Center for Nature
> and
> Art in Pennsylvania wants hams from Maryland to South Carolina and points
> west to listen for tags now being put on northern saw-whet owls. For
> details
> of both owl-tracking efforts, visit Moell's Web site,
> www.homingin.com">http://www.homingin.com. The site lists all of the tag frequencies as well
> as histories of the monitoring efforts and interesting information about
> these bird species, plus suggestions for equipment for monitoring and
> direction-finding on 172 MHz.
>
> * Prairie DX Group on air from Vanuatu: Mike Wolfe, N9WM, reports from
> Vanuatu that the Prairie DX Group is on the air for its fully wired
> DXpedition that features real-time logs and even a live Web cam. The
> Prairie
> DX team plans to operate through November 29 including operation as YJ0V
> during the CW Worldwide CW contest. At other times, the group will use
> YJ0PD. Wolfe says the group arrived in Vanuatu with no casualties and is
> now
> on the air using two rigs. "Internet connections are active and stable
> with
> logging application working beautifully," he said. "Also the Web cam is on
> line and is currently pointed at our CW position." In 1998, The Prairie DX
> Group operation as FP/N9PD from St Pierre et Miquelon became the
> first--and
> still the only--DXpedition to have its logs available on the Web in
> real-time. QSLs go via N9PD direct (include SASE, IRC or cash to help
> defray
> costs) or via the bureau. For details, visit the Prairie DX site,
> www.n9pd.com">http://www.n9pd.com.
>
> * DSP satellite transceiver project reflector open: An e-mail reflector
> for
> those interested in designing a DSP-based satellite communications
> transceiver project has been established. To join the list, visit
> www.qth.net">http://www.qth.net. The list name is dsp-radio. Technical skills are not a
> prerequisite for membership. The list is a discussion area for RF,
> software,
> and other system-related project discussion. For more information, contact
> Simon Lewis, GM4PLM, simon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For starters, the list
> will collect information on previous and current work done on
> software-defined radios and DSP radios, then focus on a wish list of
> features and specifications.--Simon Lewis, GM4PLM, and Darrell Bellerive,
> VE7CLA, via SpaceNews
>
> ===========================================================
> The ARRL Letter is published Fridays, 50 times each year, by the American
> Radio Relay League--The National Association For Amateur Radio--225 Main
> St,
> Newington, CT 06111; tel 860-594-0200; fax 860-594-0259;
> www.arrl.org">http://www.arrl.org. Jim Haynie, W5JBP, President
>
> The ARRL Letter offers a weekly e-mail digest of essential news of
> interest
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>
> ==>Delivery problems (ARRL member direct delivery only!):
> letter-dlvy@xxxxxxxx
> ==>Editorial questions or comments: Rick Lindquist, N1RL, n1rl@xxxxxxxx
> ==>ARRL News on the Web: www.arrl.org">http://www.arrl.org
> ==>ARRL Audio News: www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/">http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/ or call
> 860-594-0384
>
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