![]() April 27, 2018 John E. Ross, KD8IDJ, Editor
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ARRL Website, Some Services to be Down Briefly on Tuesday, May 1: The ARRL website and some services will be down for maintenance for up to 1 hour on Tuesday, May 1, starting at approximately 0900 UTC. During this period some or all systems may be temporarily inaccessible. This includes all content on www.arrl.org (including the ARRL Store), http://contest-clubs.arrl.org, and http://contest-log-submission.arrl.org. Logbook of the World (LoTW) and e-mail will not be affected. We apologize for any inconvenience. JK Antennas Donates 40-Meter Yagi to W1AW JK Antennas of Connecticut has generously donated and assembled a new two-element, 40-meter Yagi on site at Maxim Memorial Station W1AW at ARRL Headquarters. JK Antennas' Ken Garg, W3JK, and his assistant Craig Finley transported the new Yagi to W1AW on April 24 for assembly and installation.
"I am very grateful for Ken's generosity," said W1AW Station Manager Joe Carcia, NJ1Q. "His kindness toward W1AW, his technical expertise, and pride in his product is most refreshing." Carcia said the new antenna replaces an antenna that had not been performing as needed and had failed a couple of times in the past. "What we did on April 24 was remove the old two-element, 40-meter Yagi -- fixed to the south-southwest and used for all of our 40-meter code practice and bulletin transmissions -- and replaced it with the JK402T two-element, 40 meter Yagi," Carcia explained.
Taking down the old antenna were Andrew Toth -- who works with antenna pro Matt Strelow, KC1XX (XX Towers Inc.) -- and Finley. Carcia pitched in to tram the old antenna down a line and off the tower. Strelow and Toth, who handle most of W1AW's antenna maintenance, were at W1AW to perform spring antenna and tower inspections. "The installation of the JK402T was a bonus! The timing just worked out," Carcia said, adding that the pair also installed a second 6-meter loop for scheduled transmissions on that band. Strelow, Carcia, and Finley hoisted the new antenna into place with Toth pulling from the tower and then affixing the new Yagi and making the necessary feed-line connections. Garg oversaw the process of assembling the antenna and trimming the elements to W1AW's specification.
Carcia recounted that the old antenna could not provide full band coverage right out of the box, and required the user to pick a band segment for operation. "I had to compromise and tune it for the CW/digital segment," Carcia said, but when it came to either end of 40 meters, the amplifier was not happy." In contrast, Carcia said the JK402T offers wide bandwidth, keeping the SWR below 2:1 across the entire 40-meter band. The entire enterprise -- from removing the old antenna to assembling the new one and putting it in place on the tower -- took about 9 hours, Carcia estimated. Look for "Ham Radio 2.0 -- Innovation and Discovery" at Hamvention At this year's Hamvention, the Yasme Foundation will sponsor "Ham Radio 2.0 -- Innovation and Discovery," which Foundation President Ward Silver, N0AX, describes as "a deliberately low-structure affair, affectionately dubbed '2.0 Row'" that's intended to be a gathering spot for innovative groups and organizations.
Representatives of the HamSCI (Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation) group will be adjacent to the Yasme Foundation's booth. Along with the HamSCI Forum, researchers and participants in HamSCI will be making short presentations in the 2.0 Row area. A schedule will be posted on the HamSCI website. Results of the recent Solar Eclipse QSO Party (SEQP) and some of the papers it generated will be on display as well.
Other organizations located in the Volta Building (Building 4) near the entrance to the Flea Market will include FIRST Robotics and Hamvention's Youth Tech area, just across the walkway. NSIradio will be exhibiting software-defined radio equipment by Expert Electronics. The Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers (SARA) will be co-located with the NASA Radio JOVE exhibit. Stop by to learn about how a radio amateur and amateur astronomer, Scott Tilley, VE7TIL/VA7LF, of British Columbia, discovered that a long-dead satellite had returned to life. The schedule of subject, speakers, and times will be posted on the HamSCI website. "I encourage Hamvention visitors to stop by and leave a QSL card," Silver said. "We invite college clubs to hang their colors, makers and builders to demonstrate their latest projects, vendors and individuals to put on short demonstrations, and for everyone to make connections and friends. There will also be some short presentations interleaved with presentations by HamSCI researchers. We hope to see a lot of new faces at 2.0 Row!" The Doctor Will See You Now! "Kits and Kit Building" is the topic of the new (April 26) episode of the "ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!
Every 2 weeks, your host, QST Editor-in-Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of technical topics. You can also e-mail your questions to doctor@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast. Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (free registration required, or browse the site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices. If you've never listened to a podcast before, download our beginner's guide. Hams on Dominica Conduct "Preparedness" Field Day in Advance of Hurricane Season Members of the Dominica Amateur Radio Club Incorporated (DARCI) held a second Field Day-style emergency preparedness, awareness, and recruiting exercise on April 21. Radio amateurs on the Caribbean island are continuing the process of taking on a larger role in emergency preparedness and response for the Atlantic Hurricane Season, which begins June 1. Dominica suffered severe damage from Hurricane Maria last September, and, using their remaining resources in the storm's aftermath, radio amateurs there played a leading role in establishing communication links and providing necessary information to the public. Brian Machesney, K1LI, is among those assisting Dominica's Amateur Radio community in forming a stronger position for response to future emergencies that may affect the small island nation. The Yasme Foundation, Yaesu, the Foundation for Amateur International Radio Service (FAIRS), the CDAC Network, and GoFundMe contributors have donated equipment, provided material support, or delivered training.
"The purpose of the field day was to exercise our state of preparedness, expose the novice class and students to a field day, get hands-on experience in setting up equipment, and make contact with the other field day stations," said Roger Blanchard, J73MBQ, of DARCI, in a post on the Caribbean Emergency and Weather Net (CEWN) website. DARCI blanketed the country, hosting some 150 visitors of all ages at stations set up at the J73Z club site in Canefield, the Botanical Gardens and Police Headquarters in the capital of Roseau, and at high-visibility sites in Grand Bay, Goodwill, Castle Bruce, Portsmouth, Salisbury, and Capuchin. The 6-hour exercise involved an exchange of communications among all participating stations on 75 and 40 meters, as well as on VHF and UHF.
Following last year's storms, the Dominican government has been working to establish a stronger partnership with DARCI with the goal of ensuring that future disaster communication is not entirely dependent on commercial telecommunication providers. Machesney and his wife, Michelle, are planning to get additional complete Amateur Radio stations where they are needed on Dominica.
"With the next storm season just over the horizon, the government of Dominica seems to be responding to recommendations made by non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that worked on the ground after Hurricane Maria," Machesney said earlier this month. "Despite continuing challenges with commercial power and telecommunication services on Dominica, we have been able to establish somewhat regular channels with people we know in-country and have helped kindle training and equipping programs in several outlying areas." Amateur Radio on Dominica is not new -- DARCI celebrated its 55th anniversary last fall -- and radio amateurs have always pitched in to provide emergency communication. The Dominican government wants to tighten up its relationship with DARCI to establish a plan that would include trained radio amateurs being strategically located within governmental organizations, hospitals, and elsewhere. "DARCI has embarked on an ambitious recruiting drive to be sure there are hams in every corner of the country," Machesney told ARRL. He's also hoping to get hams on Dominica and elsewhere in the Caribbean Basin more involved in ARRL Field Day, June 23 - 24. ARRL Raises Amateur Radio's Profile at 2018 National Association of Broadcasters Convention Radio amateurs were among some 600 global visitors signing in at ARRL's booth at the 2018 National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) convention in Las Vegas April 7 - 12. Those stopping by hailed from many countries, including Australia, South Korea, Israel, Norway, Canada, England, Ireland, Peru, Brazil, Argentina, Japan, New Zealand, Germany, Belgium, Tanzania, Greenland, the US Virgin Islands, Poland, South Africa, Bulgaria, and Spain. Nevada Section Manager John Bigley, N7UR, who said many visitors never signed the register, managed the booth with the help of volunteers from various Nevada Amateur Radio groups. ARRL Second Vice President Bob Vallio, W6RGG, and East Bay Section Manager-Elect Jim Siemons, AF6PU, were also on hand to assist.
"When you have more than 100,000 broadcasting, electronics, and communications professionals under one roof, it's easy to assume that promoting Amateur Radio is kind of like preaching to the choir," Bigley said. "Yet, even in this environment I was surprised by the large number of people who have never heard of Amateur Radio." Bigley said the booth's enthusiastic volunteers successfully enlightened and informed many visitors. New to the booth this year was a kiosk with three screens continuously playing informational videos on such topics as the ARRL Teachers Institute, Amateur Radio's response to Hurricane Maria, young radio amateurs handling health-and-welfare traffic for Puerto Rico, the "Land Ops" Amateur Radio activity [see "Land Ops -- Off Road and On the Air" by Jim Biram, K6JKB, in the May 2018 issue of QST -- Ed.], and information on local ham radio resources and activities. Booth visitors were able to get help with licensing, renewing their ARRL memberships, accessing ARRL services and programs, and locating classes and examination sites. League members also discussed issues important to their personal enjoyment of Amateur Radio. NAB traditionally sponsors an Amateur Radio reception at the annual industry gathering. Former "Coast to Coast AM" Radio Show Host Art Bell, W6OBB, SK Former "Coast to Coast AM" and "Dreamland" radio host Art Bell, W6OBB, of Pahrump, Nevada, died on Friday, April 13, at his home, the Nye County Sheriff's Office announced. He was 72. A KSNV news report indicated that Bell's family was with him when he died. The Sheriff's Office said an autopsy would be performed. Bell's long-running radio show trafficked in conspiracy theories, the paranormal, and "dark matter." Ham radio came up too, from time to time. In early 2004, Bell aired an extensive live interview with then-ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP (SK).
Bell retired from "Coast to Coast AM" in the early 2000s, although he had served as a guest host as recently as 2010. He briefly returned to the air with "Art Bell's Dark Matter," which lasted several weeks on the SiriusXM satellite network, but he subsequently got involved with another radio program, "Midnight in the Desert," streamed via the Internet. He quit that show in 2015, however, citing "security concerns" at his home. Bell was the author of the books The Art of Talk, The Quickening, and The Coming Global Superstorm. Read more. -- Thanks to KSNV and International Business Times In Brief...
The K7RA Solar Update Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Solar activity increased over the past week, with average daily sunspot numbers up from 5.4 to 20, and average daily solar flux rallying from 69.9 to 73.4. The previous week saw 4 days with no sunspots, but this week had sunspots on every day. New sunspot groups emerged on April 19 and 21.
Predicted planetary A index is 8 and 12 on April 26-27; 5 on April 28-May 1; 8 on May 2; 5 on May 3-5; 10, 15, 12, 10, and 8 on May 6-10; 5 on May 11-16; 42, 12, and 8 on May 17-19; 5 on May 20-22; 8 and 12 on May 23-24; 5 on May 25-June 1; 10, 15, 12, 10, and 8 on June 2-6, and 5 on June 7-9. Sunspot numbers for April 19-25 were 14, 14, 34, 20, 22, 19, and 17, with a mean of 20. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.8, 73, 76.8, 75.7, 73.9, 72.9, and 70.8, with a mean of 73.4. Estimated planetary A indices were 3, 47, 12, 5, 6, 5, and 5, with a mean of 11.9. Estimated mid-latitude A indices were 2, 29, 10, 5, 6, 4, and 4, with a mean of 8.6. Send me your reports or observations. Getting It Right In The ARRL Letter of April 19, the article, "New 630-Meter Band Reported 'Very Busy'" contained an incorrect call sign. The sentence should have said, "NO3M, who also operates as W8CDX, reports eight DXCC entities worked on the new band." A photo caption in the same article indicated that NO3M was using a modified Heathkit amplifier for his amateur work on 630 meters. NO3M said the modified tube amp was one he'd used while operating under an FCC Part 5 Experimental license for generating sufficient power to obtain the 100 W ERP permitted under that grant. His current solid-state amp for amateur work is much more modest. Just Ahead in Radiosport
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