
ARRL
Preparations Underway for WRC-12
Approximately 200 participants came together in an ITU preliminary meeting that ended September 16 in Geneva, Switzerland in preparation for the 2012 World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-12). The six regional telecommunications organizations -- APT (Asia-Pacific), ASMG (Arab States), ATU (Africa), CEPT (Europe), CITEL (the Americas) and RCC (independent states of the former Soviet Union) -- were represented at the meeting. This meeting was part of a series of ongoing international and regional preparatory meetings to allow government and industry to address the far-reaching and complex agenda of WRC-12. ARRL Technical Relations Specialist Jonathan Siverling, WB3ERA, and IARU Region 1 Vice President Tafa Diop, 6W1KI, were among the participants.
Amateur Radio and ARRL Now Part of Massachusetts' Interoperability Plan
In 2007, Massachusetts Governor Duvall Patrick signed Executive Order 493, calling for the establishment of a State Interoperability Executive Committee. The Massachusetts SIEC includes the Secretary of Transportation and Public Works, the Director of the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency, the Adjutant General of the Massachusetts National Guard, the Colonel of the State Police and the State Fire Marshal, as well as representatives from local emergency service providers, local health officials, local transportation agencies, local emergency management agencies, public safety dispatch communications and non-governmental charitable organizations. "This year, the SIEC decided to tap the ARRL to represent the non-governmental charitable organizations category area, due in part to its expertise in communication matters and close working relationships with its client organizations, such as the American Red Cross," said ARRL Eastern Massachusetts Public Information Coordinator Bob Salow, WA1IDA.
Reflections on My First Dayton Hamvention
I arrived on Friday afternoon and was amazed at how big the Hamvention was. There were hundreds of commercial vendors in the several indoor arenas and even more private vendors in the outdoor flea market. In addition, there were numerous seminars covering topics such as contesting, emergency communications, bicycle mobile, spectrum enforcement, ham station audio, various digital modes, Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS), amateur satellite communication AMSAT and many more. The ARRL national convention also took place at Dayton, making 2009 the year to attend. You could even get your license or upgrade at Hamvention. Finally, there were dinners, banquets, other gatherings and door prizes, and many outside activities such as visits to the National Museum of the United States Air Force.
ARRL Audio News: Sep 18, 2009; Vol 28 Number 37
ARRL Audio News--OPEN--In this edition . . .; Changes in Store for The ARRL Letter, ARRL Audio News; New Product Review Tests to Begin in October QST; ARRL Audio News ID--Satellite Update--BREAK; Nominations Now Being Accepted for the George Hart Distinguished Service Award; Part 2 of the 10 GHz and Up Contest Is This Weekend; Smithsonian Curator to Speak at AMSAT-NA Banquet; ARRL Audio News--News Briefs--CLOSE
The K7RA Solar Update
The STEREO mission (Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory) Web site shows a new display, where the Sun is visible via an animated image that rotates to show the whole Sun. The small portion on the Sun's far side -- which is not yet visible to the spacecraft -- is shown as a dark area. Currently (early Friday, September 18) the animation shows an emerging bright spot, just beyond the direct view from Earth.
South African Amateur Radio Payload Reaches Orbit
After several delays, South Africa's SumbandilaSat satellite finally blasted to orbit aboard a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on September 17. The main payload is a multi-spectral imager, but the satellite also carries an Amateur Radio component consisting of a 2 meter/70 cm FM repeater. After SumbandilaSat is fully commissioned, the repeater will be activated with an uplink at 145.880 MHz and a downlink at 435.350 MHz; there will also be a voice beacon at 435.300 MHz. The transponder mode will be controlled by a CTCSS tone on the uplink frequency. The CTCSS tone frequencies have yet to be announced. SumbandilaSat was sponsored by the Department of Science and Technology and was built at SunSpace in cooperation with the Stellenbosch University. In addition to the SA-AMSAT amateur module, the satellite carries Stellenbosch University's radiation experiment and software defined radio (SDR) project, an experiment from Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University and a VLF radio module from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
Surfin': Antennas in High Places
This week, Surfin' explores the Internet looking for the highest radio antennas on Earth.
ARRL/TAPR Digital Communications Conference Next Weekend
ARRL and the Tucson Amateur Packet Radio Group (TAPR) will jointly host the 28th Annual Digital Communications Conference (DCC) September 25-27 in Chicago. The DCC has something for everyone from those new to digital modes to those experienced with digital communications including technical and introductory forums. According to DCC Co-host Mark Thompson, WB9QZB, one of the highlights of this year's DCC will be Bob Bruninga, WB4APR, presenting "Universal Ham Radio Text Messaging." The Saturday night banquet speaker will be Bill Brown, WB8ELK, a pioneer in flying balloons with payloads including Amateur Radio digital communication technologies. Brown is the publisher and editor of Amateur Television Quarterly magazine. ARRL Technical Relations Manager Brennan Price, N4QX, will be on hand to discuss the upcoming World Radiocommunications Conference in his talk "WRC-12 Agenda Item 1.19: Shaping the International Regulatory Framework for Software Defined and Cognitive Radio Systems." QEX Editor Larry Wolfgang, WR1B, and ARRL Central Division Director Dick Isely, W9GIG, will also be in attendance. The 2009 DCC forum and speaker schedule is available online. TAPR provides leadership and resources to radio amateurs for the purpose of advancing the radio art and is a research and development oriented group offering kits, assembled products and publications related to the intersection of Amateur Radio and digital technology.
Alpha Radio Products Now RF Concepts
On September 15, Michael Seedman, AA6DY, announced that his company, RF Concepts, had purchased Boulder, Colorado-based Alpha Radio Products. Seedman explained in a press release that when he contacted Alpha to purchase a new amplifier, he was "disappointed to learn that I would not receive it for months." He was told that as each amplifier is made by hand, there was not enough shelf inventory to send a new one right away. Working with Alpha Products president Molly Hardman, W0MOM, "we created a way to capitalize the company in order to put amplifiers in inventory for immediate availability. Customers will no longer have to wait weeks or months to add an Alpha product to their station." Seedman said that RF Concepts "will focus on shipping our backlog of Alpha amplifiers and building sufficient product to ship from stock. We will honor our existing customer commitments -- including warranties, customer and technical support and repairs -- and keep our extensive parts inventories to support the more than 10,000 Alpha amplifiers in the market." Hardman will be staying on as Vice President of Sales for RF Concepts.
ARRL Continuing Education Online Course Registration
Registration remains open through Sunday, October 25, 2009, for these online course sessions beginning on Friday, November 6, 2009: Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Level 1; Antenna Modeling; Radio Frequency Interference; Antenna Design and Construction; Ham Radio (Technician) License Course; Propagation; Analog Electronics, and Digital Electronics.
The ARRL Letter, ARRL Audio News to Move to Thursdays
ARRL members who subscribe to The ARRL Letter will be getting their issues a day early. Beginning Thursday, September 24, The ARRL Letter and the ARRL Audio News will now be available on Thursdays instead of Fridays. The ARRL Letter is published 50 times each year and offers a weekly summary of essential news of interest to active amateurs. It is available on the ARRL Web site and is sent free of charge to ARRL members via e-mail. The ARRL Audio News is compiled and edited from The ARRL Letter and is available on the ARRL Web site, via phone at 860-594-0384 and on more than 250 repeater systems around the world.
Nominations Now Being Accepted for the George Hart Distinguished Service Award
At its July 2009 meeting, the ARRL Board of Directors established the George Hart Distinguished Service Award to be given to an ARRL member whose service to the League's Field Organization is of the most exemplary nature. The Distinguished Service Award is named in honor of George Hart, W1NJM. Hart was a long-time Communications Manager at ARRL Headquarters and chief developer of the National Traffic System (NTS). Upon learning that the ARRL Board of Directors had established this award named after him, Hart called his namesake award "a great honor."
Smithsonian Curator to Speak at AMSAT-NA Banquet
Dr Martin Collins, a curator in the Space History Division at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, will be the featured speaker at the AMSAT-NA Symposium banquet on Saturday, October 10, at the Four Points Sheraton Hotel at Baltimore-Washington International Airport. The title of his presentation will be Making the Space Age: The First 50 Years.
ARRL Audio News: Sep 11, 2009; Vol 28 Number 36
ARRL Audio News--OPEN--In this edition . . .; National Safety Council Responds to ARRL: No Evidence of "Significant Crash Risks" While Operating Mobile; Amateurs with General Class Licenses to be Granted Reciprocal Licenses in Some CEPT Countries; ARRL Audio News ID--Satellite Update--BREAK; IARU, ARRL Officials Attend Ham Fair; Delegates Descend on Tokyo for GAREC 09; Look for the October Issue of QST in Your Mailbox; ARRL Audio News--News Briefs--CLOSE
HR 2160 Gains Three More Cosponsors
On September 10, three more Congressmen -- Geoff Davis (R-KY-4), Bill Posey (R-FL-15) and Michael Turner (R-OH-3) -- pledged their support for HR 2160, The Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Enhancement Act of 2009, bringing the total number of cosponsors to 24, including original sponsor Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX-18). HR 2160 is also sponsored by W. Todd Akin (R-MO-2), Michael Arcuri (D-NY-24), Roscoe Bartlett (R-MD-6), John Boozman (R-AR-3), Madeleine Bordallo (D-Guam), Bob Filner (D-CA-51), Bart Gordon (D-TN-6), Brett Guthrie (R-KY-02), Maurice Hinchey (D-NY-22), Michael Honda (D-CA-15), Mary Jo Kilroy (D-OH-15), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA-16), Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-MO-9), Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI-11), Charlie Melancon (D-LA-3), Dennis Moore (D-KS-3), Bennie Thompson (D-MS-2), Peter Welch (D-VT), David Wu (D-OR-1) and Don Young (R-AK). Click here for information on how to encourage your Congressional representative to sponsor HR 2160.
National Safety Council Responds to ARRL: No Evidence of "Significant Crash Risks" While Operating Mobile
ARRL President Joel Harrison, W5ZN, wrote a letter to National Safety Council (NSC) President Janet Froetscher in July expressing the ARRL's concerns that Amateur Radio not become an unintended victim of the growing public debate over what to do about distracted drivers. Froetscher has now replied, saying the NSC does not support bans or prohibitions on the use of Amateur Radios while driving.
The Amateur Radio Crossword Puzzler
Spot Not
The K7RA Solar Update
No new sunspot activity this week, and no emerging sunspots are visible on the far side of the Sun. Sunspot region 1025 (or 11025) that appeared over August 31 and September 1 faded more than a week ago, and the area in which it appeared has just rotated over the Sun's western limb.
Surfin': Don't Forget the Integrated Circuit
This week, Surfin' visits a Web site that remembers the component that shrunk the radio even more than the transistor did.
Amateurs with General Class Licenses to be Granted Reciprocal Licenses in Some CEPT Countries
On Thursday, September 10, the Federal Communications Commission released a new Public Notice implementing changes in CEPT reciprocal operating arrangements for US citizens who hold an FCC-issued General, Advanced or Amateur Extra class Amateur Radio licenses. DA-09-2031 continues to allows US licensees "to utilize temporarily an amateur station in a European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT) country that has implemented certain recommendations with respect to the United States," subject to the regulations in that country and implements recent changes in the agreement.

