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Ärende: The Weekly ARRL Letter
==============================
   The ARRL Letter                                                         
   February 6, 2020                                                        
                                                                           
     * ARRL HF Band Planning Committee Seeks Comments on Recommendations    
     * "The Auroral Connection" to Be Focus of 2020 HamSCI Workshop         
     * Undersea Expedition Planned to Retrieve Titanic's Radio Gear         
     * The K7RA Solar Update                                                
     * Just Ahead in Radiosport                                             
     * Clayton Coleman, W5PFG, Elected AMSAT President                     
     * ARISS Announces Hosts for Space Station Ham Radio Contacts          
     * 7X7X DXpedition Showcases Cooperation and Youth                     
     * President Signs PIRATE Act to Combat Illegal Broadcasting           
     * In Brief...                                                         
     * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions              
   ARRL HF Band Planning Committee Seeks Comments on Recommendations       
                                                                           
   The ARRL HF Band Planning Committee is seeking comments and suggestions 
   from the amateur radio community on its report to the ARRL Board of     
   Directors. At the Board's January meeting, the committee presented its  
   specific recommendations in graphical form for each HF band and each US 
   license class, with the goal of increasing harmony on the HF bands,     
   particularly between CW and digital users.                              
                                                                           
   "In general, the committee is of the opinion that there is              
   justification for additional space to become available for digital      
   modes, as well as for the operation of digital stations under automatic 
   control," the committee told the Board. "The very changes in spectrum   
   usage that have required our committee's resurgence indicate that       
   digital modes of communication are already increasing in popularity,    
   and the trend is expected to continue or even accelerate. To this end,  
   we have tried to ensure that digital allocations are sufficient for at  
   least a modicum of growth."                                             
                                                                           
   The committee also anticipates an increase in automatically controlled  
   digital stations (ACDS). The report further points to "significant use" 
   of modern data modes in emergency communication and said its            
   recommendations provide significant support for the evolution and       
   continued relevance of amateur radio. "Our failure to adapt to these    
   needs could consign amateur radio to the technological scrap heap," the 
   report said.                                                            
                                                                           
   The committee was revived last summer to consider conflicts between FT  
   and JT modes and other modes. The panel's approach has been to          
   designate distinct assignments for CW, narrowband (NB) data <500 Hz,    
   wideband (WB) data <2800 Hz, and ACDS. For its work, the committee      
   presumed approval of three ARRL petitions to the FCC: RM-11708 (WT      
   Docket WT 16-239 -- "symbol rate" proceeding), RM-11759 (80/75 meter    
   allocations), and RM-11828 (enhanced Technician privileges). The        
   committee also assumed that users can agree to sharing arrangements     
   within a given allocation -- narrowband versus wideband sharing within  
   the ACDS allocation, for example. It also took into consideration how   
   mode usage is regulated or planned elsewhere in the world.              
                                                                           
   In terms of mode classes, the committee agreed on CW, NB data, WB data, 
   NB with ACDS, and WB with ACDS. The committee said it considered these  
   mode classes incompatible and that they should not have overlapping     
   allocations, with the exception of CW, which is authorized within any   
   amateur radio allocation. The committee's approach would maintain the   
   existing low-end 25 kHz CW-only sub-bands for exclusive use by Amateur  
   Extra-class licensees.                                                  
                                                                           
   The panel encouraged CW identification and a listen-before-transmitting 
   protocol for ACDS, if feasible. It also decided that a single           
   allocation for ACDS without regard to bandwidth would be the best       
   approach. "We note that this will put responsibility on the digital     
   community to hold an effective dialog on the issue and to then          
   self-regulate the users of this segment to adhere to the eventual       
   agreement." A need for flexibility in allocations is desirable, the     
   committee said, and considered whether allocations might be time-of-day 
   or time-of-week dependent, for example.                                 
                                                                           
   "Modern amateurs must expect to adapt to this kind of fluid assignment  
   of spectrum to incompatible uses, using time-based sharing, rather than 
   only a single assignment," the committee said, expressing the hope that 
   as band plan/sharing agreements are reached that they consider the      
   advantage of "non-simultaneous sharing possibilities."                  
                                                                           
   Reiterating the position ARRL has taken in recent FCC filings, the      
   committee said it sees encryption and open-source enforcement matters   
   as being outside the scope of the Band Planning Committee.              
                                                                           
   The Committee would like comments by February 19.                       
   "The Auroral Connection" to Be Focus of 2020 HamSCI Workshop            
                                                                           
   Registration is open for the third annual HamSCI Workshop for amateur   
   radio operators and professional scientists, Friday and Saturday, March 
   20 - 21, at The University of Scranton. The theme of this year's        
   workshop is "The Auroral Connection," and will include addresses by     
   guest speakers, poster presentations, and demonstrations of relevant    
   instrumentation and software. All radio amateurs, scientists, and       
   anyone interested in ionospheric and space physics are welcome.         
                                                                           
   The workshop will serve as a team meeting for the HamSCI Personal Space 
   Weather Station project, a National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded     
   project awarded to University of Scranton physics and electrical        
   engineering professor Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF. The project seeks to   
   harness the power of a network of radio amateurs to better understand   
   and measure the effects of weather in the upper levels of Earth's       
   atmosphere. Through the grant, Frissell, a space physicist, will lead a 
   collaborative team that will develop modular, multi-instrument,         
   ground-based space science observation equipment and data collection    
   and analysis software. He will also recruit multiple universities and   
   ham radio users to operate the network of Personal Space Weather        
   Stations developed.                                                     
                                                                           
   In addition to Scranton, the Personal Space Weather Station project     
   includes participation from TAPR; the Case Western Reserve University   
   Amateur Radio Club, W8EDU; the University of Alabama; the New Jersey    
   Institute of Technology Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research; MIT      
   Haystack Observatory; Dartmouth College, and the ham radio community at 
   large.                                                                  
                                                                           
   Noted contester and DXer Tim Duffy, K3LR, will deliver the keynote      
   address. The chief operating officer and general manager at DX          
   Engineering, Duffy chairs Contest University, the Dayton Contest        
   Dinner, and the Top Band Dinner, as well as coordinates the Contest     
   Super Suite. He is the founder and moderator of the popular RFI         
   Reflector. Duffy serves on the ARRL Foundation Board of Directors as    
   well as on the board of the World Wide Radio Operators Foundation       
   (WWROF), and as chairman and president emeritus of the Radio Club of    
   America.                                                                
                                                                           
   Other speakers at the workshop include Elizabeth MacDonald, the NASA    
   researcher who founded and leads the Aurorasaurus project. She will     
   discuss fundamentals of auroral physics, its optical signatures, and    
   the Aurorasaurus citizen science project. James LaBelle, a professor of 
   physics and astronomy at Dartmouth University and auroral radio         
   physicist, and David Hallidy, K2DH, a retired microwave engineer who is 
   also well-known for his work in auroral-mode propagation will also      
   speak.                                                                  
                                                                           
   ditional information on the conference is available on the HamSCI     
   Workshop 2020 website.                                                  
                                                                         
   Undersea Expedition Planned to Retrieve Titanic's Radio Gear            
                                                                           
   The company with sole rights to salvage artifacts from the RMS Titanic  
   has gone to court to gain permission to carry out a "surgical removal   
   and retrieval" of the Marconi radio equipment on the ship, a Washington 
   Post article reports. The Titanic sank in 1912 on its maiden voyage     
   after striking an iceberg in the North Atlantic. As the radio room      
   filled with water, radio operator Jack Phillips transmitted, "Come at   
   once. We have struck a berg. It's a CQD, old man," and other frantic    
   messages for help, using the spark transmitter on board. CQD was        
   ultimately replaced with SOS -- which Phillips also used -- as the      
   universal distress call. The passenger liner RMS Carpathia responded    
   and rescued 705 of the passengers.                                      
                                                                           
   A recreation of the Titanic radio                                       
   room.                                                                   
                                                                           
   As might be expected, the deteriorating Marconi equipment is in poor    
   shape after more than a century under water. The undersea retrieval     
   would mark the first time an artifact was collected from within the     
   Titanic, which many believe should remain undisturbed as the final      
   resting place of some 1,500 victims of the maritime disaster, including 
   Phillips. The wreck sits on the ocean floor some 2 1/2 miles beneath    
   the surface, remaining undiscovered until 1985.                         
                                                                           
   A just-signed treaty between the UK and the US grants both countries    
   authority to allow or deny access to the wreck and to remove items      
   found outside the vessel. "This momentous agreement with the United     
   States to preserve the wreck means it will be treated with the          
   sensitivity and respect owed to the final resting place of more than    
   1,500 lives," British Transport and Maritime Minister Nusrat Ghani said 
   in a statement.                                                         
                                                                           
   The request to enter the rapidly disintegrating wreck was filed in US   
   District Court in Eastern Virginia by RMS Titanic, Inc. of Atlanta,     
   Georgia, which said that it hopes to restore the Titanic radio          
   transmitter to operating condition, if it is allowed to go forward.     
                                                                           
   The company plans to use a manned submarine to reach the wreck and then 
   deploy a remotely controlled sub that would perforate the hull and      
   retrieve the radio equipment.                                           
   The K7RA Solar Update                                                   
                                                                           
   Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: We saw a nice run of Cycle 24 and     
   Cycle 25 sunspots from January 24 through February 1. The daily sunspot 
   number reached a short-term peak of 18 on January 26.                   
                                                                           
   Average daily sunspot numbers declined from the 11.1 reported last week 
   to 4.7 during the current reporting week, January 30 - February 5.      
                                                                           
   Predicted solar flux for the next 45 days is 70 on February 6 - 13; 72  
   on February 14 - 20; 73 on February 21 - 22; 74 on February 23 - 29; 72 
   on March 1 - 3; 71 on March 4 - 11; 72 on March 12 - 18; 73 on March 19 
   - 20, and 74 on March 21.                                               
                                                                           
   Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 8 on February 6 - 7; 5 on         
   February 8 - 24; 10 on February 25 - 26; 5 on February 27 - 29; 8 on    
   March 1 - 3, and 5 on March 4 - 21.                                     
                                                                           
   Sunspot numbers for January 30 through February 5 were 11, 11, 11, 0,   
   0, 0, and 0, with a mean of 4.7. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 74.1,     
   73.9, 72.5, 72.2, 72.1, 70.3, and 70.6, with a mean of 72.2. Estimated  
   planetary A indices were 12, 8, 6, 6, 5, 5, and 5, with a mean of 6.7.  
   Middle latitude A index was 9, 6, 4, 4, 3, 5, and 4, with a mean of 5.  
                                                                           
   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                                                
     * February 8 -- FISTS Winter Unlimited Sprint (CW)                    
     * February 8 -- RSGB 1.8 MHz Contest (CW)                             
     * February 8 -- Asia-Pacific Spring Sprint (CW)                       
     * February 8 - 9 -- CQ World Wide RTTY WPX Contest                    
     * February 8 - 9 -- SARL Field Day Contest (CW, phone, digital)       
     * February 8 - 9 -- KCJ Topband Contest (CW)                          
     * February 8 - 9 -- Dutch PACC Contest (CW, phone)                    
     * February 8 - 9 -- SKCC Weekend Sprintathon (CW)                     
     * February 8 - 10 -- YLRL YL-OM Contest (CW, phone, digital)          
     * February 8 - 9 -- OMISS QSO Party (Phone)                           
     * February 9 -- Balkan HF Contest (CW, phone)                         
     * February 9 - 12 -- Classic Exchange, Phone                          
     * February 10 -- CQC Winter QSO Party (CW)                            
     * February 10 -- 4 States QRP Group Second Sunday Sprint (CW, phone)  
     * February 10 - 14 -- ARRL School Club Roundup (CW, phone)            
     * February 12 -- NAQCC CW Sprint                                      
     * February 12 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (Digital)            
                                                                           
   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.                  
   Clayton Coleman, W5PFG, Elected AMSAT President                         
                                                                           
   During a teleconference meeting this week, the AMSAT Board of Directors 
   elected Clayton Coleman, W5PFG, of Granbury, Texas, as AMSAT President. 
   Coleman had served as a member of the Board of Directors and as AMSAT   
   Secretary from 2017 until 2019, and he has volunteered in several other 
   capacities for AMSAT, including as chair of the 2016 AMSAT Space        
   Symposium. He succeeds Joe Spier, K6WAO, who resigned recently, citing  
   personal reasons, after being in office since October 2017.             
                                                                           
   Coleman was introduced to amateur radio in space through the SAREX      
   program -- the forerunner to ARISS -- and the Russian Mir space         
   station. His interest in setting up an AX.25 BBS and nodes in the early 
   1990s led him to try making contacts via the Mir Personal Message       
   System (PMS) and digipeater. In 2011, Coleman became interested in      
   OSCAR satellites and began chasing operating awards.                    
                                                                           
   Coleman's focus as president will be working with members to improve    
   organizational processes and aligning them with strategic goals.        
   Professionally, Coleman works in the industrial process control sector  
   both as a consultant and business development manager.                  
                                                                           
   AMSAT members will have an opportunity to meet Coleman at Orlando       
   HamCation on Saturday, February 8, when he will greet visitors at the   
   AMSAT booth from 9:30 - 10:30 AM and 2 - 3 PM. He will also speak at    
   the AMSAT Forum at 12:30 PM on Saturday in Room CS III at the Lakeside  
   Pavilion. -- Thanks to AMSAT News Service                               
                                                                         
   ARISS Announces Hosts for Space Station Ham Radio Contacts              
                                                                           
   Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) has announced  
   the names of schools and organizations selected to host amateur radio   
   contacts with International Space Station crew members during the       
   second half of 2020.                                                    
                                                                           
   Ten proposals were accepted to move forward in the selection process    
   and placed in a scheduling queue for an amateur radio contact between   
   July and December 2020. Although ARISS expects to schedule all 10       
   during this period, changes to NASA crew availability may force         
   postponement of some contact opportunities until the first half of      
   2021.                                                                   
                                                                           
   The schools and host organizations are:                                 
     * Estes Park Elementary School, Estes Park, Colorado                  
     * Green Bank Elementary-Middle School, Green Bank, West Virginia      
     * Tecumseh Public School, Tecumseh, Oklahoma                          
     * Regional School Unit 21, Kennebunk, Maine                           
     * John F. Kennedy High School, Denver, Colorado                       
     * Oregon Charter School, Mill City, Oregon                            
     * Newcastle High School; Newcastle, Wyoming                           
     * Tarwater Elementary School, Chandler, Arizona                       
     * Kopernik Observatory and Science Center, Vestal, New York           
     * Salem-South Lyon District Library, South Lyon, Michigan             
                                                                           
   7X7X DXpedition Showcases Cooperation and Youth                         
                                                                           
   A cooperative agreement the Algerian and Tunisian IARU member-societies 
   signed in 2014 to reinforce relations through joint activities bore     
   fruit with the 7X7X DXpedition to Algeria late last year. Preparations  
   began in late October 2019, with the goal of activating Algeria on the  
   low bands to benefit from the slump in the solar cycle.                 
                                                                           
   Co-leader Ash Chaabane, 3V8SF/KF5EYY, said organizers wanted to take    
   advantage of the DXpedition to boost interest among younger hams. Four  
   young people were involved in the event as a result: Sarra, 7X2QV;      
   Lotfi Kara, 7X2QC; Marwa, 3V8CB, and Ahmed Boubaker, 3V1B/KG5OUE, who   
   are all in their 20s. Three of them have participated in Youngsters On  
   The Air (YOTA) events sponsored by the International Amateur Radio      
   Union (IARU). Chaabane said the youthful contingent was involved from   
   setup to tear down, in addition to operating.                           
                                                                           
   In addition to Chaabane, the team included co-leader Afif Ben Lagha,    
   7X2RO; Brahim Mohamed, 7X3TL; Redha el Bahi, 7X5QB, and Abdelghani      
   Mesbah, 7X2TT/M0NPT. The Tunisian team flew from Tunis to Algiers,      
   arriving on December 28 in Bejaia to join the Algerian team. "We        
   immediately started putting up antennas," Chaabane said.                
                                                                           
   7X2TT kicked off the operation through the Es'hail satellite,           
   demonstrating for the benefit of the younger operators how ham radio    
   satellites work. The rest of the team built a nearly 40-foot tall       
   inverted L for 160 meters; a full quarter-wave vertical for 80 meters;  
   a two-element Fritzel Yagi for the high bands; a seven-element Yagi for 
   VHF; a K9AY receiving loop, and a ground plane for 30 meters, which     
   operated on 40 meters as well with the addition of a loading coil.      
                                                                           
   "We did our best to operate two stations at a time," Chaabane           
   recounted. "We had quite few technical issues, but we overcame them."   
   7X7X ended up logging 5,800 contacts in 4 days, and the operating       
   schedule was intentionally flexible.                                    
                                                                           
   The mode breakdown showed 38% CW, 55% SSB, and 7% FT8. "We had 1,121    
   QSOs on 160 and 798 on 80," Chaabane said, with 356 US and 30 JA        
   contacts on 160 meters.                                                 
                                                                           
   One objective of the DXpedition was to bond and form a strong team      
   capable of larger operations in the future, Chaabane said.              
                                                                           
   The DXpedition team expressed its appreciation for the support from the 
   Northern California DX Foundation (NCDXF), the Lone Star DX Association 
   (LSDXA), and the Mediterraneo DX Club (MDXC), as well as some           
   individual hams. "This support is a solid investment into the future of 
   the ham radio hobby," Chaabane said. "We urge all DXpeditioners to      
   involve youngsters in their future trips and do their best to make it   
   easy and least costly for them." -- Thanks to IARU                      
                                                                         
   President Signs PIRATE Act to Combat Illegal Broadcasting               
                                                                           
   On January 24, President Donald Trump signed into law the "Preventing   
   Illegal Radio Abuse Through Enforcement Act," or the PIRATE Act. The    
   measure, which amends the Communications Act of 1934, authorizes        
   enhanced penalties for violators. Under the new law, pirate radio       
   broadcasters would be subject to a fine of not more than $2 million,    
   and violators could be fined up to $100,000 for each day during which   
   an offense occurs. The new law stipulates that the FCC "shall not       
   decrease or diminish the regular enforcement efforts targeted to pirate 
   radio broadcast stations for other times of the year."                  
                                                                           
   The FCC is to submit to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and  
   the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation a report  
   summarizing the implementation of this section and associated           
   enforcement activities for the previous fiscal year. The new law also   
   requires "annual sweeps," during which FCC personnel will be assigned   
   to "focus specific and sustained attention on the elimination of pirate 
   radio broadcasting within the top five radio markets identified as      
   prevalent for such broadcasts." The Commission also "shall conduct      
   monitoring sweeps to ascertain whether the pirate radio broadcasting    
   identified by enforcement sweeps is continuing and whether additional   
   pirate radio broadcasting is occurring."                                
                                                                           
   Under the new law, the FCC will change its rules so that it proceeds    
   directly to issuance of a Notice of Apparent Liability (NAL) without    
   first issuing a Notice of Unlicensed Operation (NOUO).                  
                                                                           
   The FCC will develop and publish a database of all licensed AM and FM   
   broadcasters, accessible directly from the FCC home page. The FCC is    
   also required to publish a list of "all entities that have received a   
   Notice of Unlicensed Operation, Notice of Apparent Liability, or        
   forfeiture order," as well as "each entity...operating without a        
   Commission license or authorization."                                   
                                                                           
   The law defines pirate radio broadcasting as transmitting within the AM 
   and FM bands without an FCC license, but excluding unlicensed           
   operations in compliance with Part 15.                                  
   In Brief...                                                             
                                                                           
   Brief Interruptions of ARRL Headquarters Systems are planned for        
   Thursday, February 13. The ARRL IT Department anticipates two short     
   interruptions to these Headquarters-based systems: Logbook of The       
   World; Online DXCC; International Grid Chase Archive; National Parks on 
   the Air Archive; Centennial QSO Party Archive, and the W1AW EchoLink    
   Conference Server. The interruptions should occur on Thursday, February 
   13, between 1200 - 2200 UTC. Each interruption should be less than 10   
   minutes in length.                                                      
                                                                           
   Former ARRL East Bay Section Manager Ti-Michelle Connelly, NJ6T, of     
   Yuma, Arizona, died late last week. She served as SM from 2003 until    
   2007. An ARRL Life Member, she was 72. The California native also held  
   other Field Organization appointments, including Net Manager,           
   Affiliated Club Coordinator, Assistant Section Manager, and Official    
   Emergency Station. Connelly was also an ARRL VEC and W5YI VEC Volunteer 
   Examiner. "Her spirit and fun will be sorely missed by many of us this  
   year," said a friend, Kristen McIntyre, K6WX.                           
                                                                           
   The International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) has completed the makeover 
   of its main website and the three regional websites -- all with the     
   same basic design. The three regional sites can be accessed directly    
   from the IARU home page. All of the updated pages are organized to      
   broadly mirror the structure of the International Telecommunication     
   Union (ITU) and its related regional telecommunication organizations.   
   The Region 2 web page is available in English or Spanish. Each page     
   offers a look at recent IARU news and events. -- Thanks to IARU         
   Secretary David Sumner, K1ZZ                                            
                                                                           
   Amateur radio volunteers in Turkey supported the response to a powerful 
   magnitude 6.8 earthquake that struck the province of Elazig on January  
   24. Radio amateurs affiliated with the national International Amateur   
   Radio Union member-society TRAC assisted in the response. Aziz Sasa,    
   TA1E, at TRAC Headquarters reported, "The affected area was very small  
   and the intensity limited; our involvement was also limited." He said   
   two TRAC branches in the affected area stepped in, assisting by         
   providing tactical communication in the affected area and supporting    
   the Ministry of Health by installing and getting their mountaintop      
   repeater operational. "Due to the relatively limited scale of the       
   disaster, foreign assistance was not needed," he told IARU Region 1     
   Emergency Communications Coordinator Greg Mossop, G0DUB. The earthquake 
   caused about 40 deaths and more than 1,600 injuries as well as          
   considerable property damage.                                           
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions                  
     * February 7 - 9 -- Northern Florida Section Convention, Orlando,     
       Florida                                                             
     * February 14 - 15 -- Southwest Division Convention, Yuma, Arizona    
     * March 7 - Delta Division Convention, Russellville, Arkansas         
     * March 13 - 14 -- North Carolina Section Convention, Concord, North  
       Carolina                                                            
     * March 14 - 15 -- Great Lakes Division Convention, Perrysburg, Ohio  
     * March 14 -- Nebraska State Convention, Lincoln, Nebraska            
     * March 14 -- West Virginia Section Convention, Charleston, West      
       Virginia                                                            
     * March 21 -- West Texas Section Convention, Midland, Texas           
     * April 10 - 11 -- Oklahoma State Convention, Claremore, Oklahoma     
     * April 11 -- Roanoke Division Convention, Raleigh, North Carolina    
     * April 18 -- Delaware State Convention, Georgetown, Delaware         
                                                                           
   Find conventions and hamfests in your area.                             
                                                                           
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