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Subject: The Weekly ARRL Letter Date: Fri Nov 27 2020 09:05 am
From: Sean Dennis To: All

   The ARRL Letter                                                         
   November 19, 2020                                                       
                                                                           
     * ARRL Seeks Waiver of Proposed FCC Amateur Application Fees           
     * Arizona Congresswoman Introduces National Amateur Radio Operators    
       Day Resolution                                                       
     * International Broadcast Station Interference Overwhelms Hurricane    
       Watch Net                                                            
     * Academic Paper Predicts Sunspot Cycle 25 Could be Among the         
       Strongest Ever                                                      
     * ARRL Podcasts Schedule                                              
     * SpaceX Dragon Capsule Resilience Ferries Four Radio Amateurs to the 
       ISS                                                                 
     * SKYWARN Recognition Day 2020 justs for COVID-19                   
     * ARRL Learning Network Webinars                                      
     * Announcements                                                       
     * Time to Try for an SS "Clean Sweep" on Phone                        
     * The K7RA Solar Update                                               
     * In Brief...                                                         
     * Just Ahead in Radiosport                                            
     * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions              
                                                                           
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   Note: The ARRL Letter will not be published on November 26 because of   
   the Thanksgiving holiday, and ARRL Audio News will be on hiatus. The    
   ARRL Letter will return on December 3, and ARRL Audio News on December  
   4. We wish everyone a safe and happy holiday.                           
                                                                           
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   ARRL Seeks Waiver of Proposed FCC Amateur Application Fees              
                                                                           
   ARRL has urged the FCC to waive its proposed $50 amateur radio          
   application fee. The Commission proposal was made last month in a       
   Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in MD 20-270. The proposal has     
   already drawn more than 3,200 individual comments overwhelmingly        
   opposed to the plan. The fees, directed by Congress and imposed on all  
   FCC-regulated services, are to recover the FCC's costs of handling and  
   processing applications.                                                
                                                                           
   "Amateur radio applications were not listed when the Congress adopted   
   its 1985 fee schedule for applications, and therefore amateur license   
   applications were excluded from the collection of fees," ARRL said on   
   November 16 in its formal comments on the proposal. "Similarly, a       
   decade later when regulatory fees were authorized, the Amateur Service  
   was excluded, except for the costs associated with issuing vanity call  
   signs." The new statutory provisions are similar. Amateur radio license 
   applications are not addressed in the application fees section and      
   explicitly excluded from regulatory fees," ARRL said, and there is "no  
   evidence of any intent by Congress to change the exempt status of       
   amateur applications and instead subject them to new fees."             
                                                                           
   ARRL argued that the FCC has explicit authority to waive the fees if it 
   would be in the public interest, and should do so for the Amateur Radio 
   Service. Unlike other FCC services, the Amateur Radio Service is all    
   volunteer and largely self-governing, with examination preparation,     
   administration, and grading handled by volunteers, who submit licensing 
   paperwork to the FCC, ARRL pointed out.                                 
                                                                           
   "Increasingly, the required information is uploaded to the Commission's 
   database, further freeing personnel from licensing paperwork as well as 
   [from] day-to-day examination processes," ARRL said.                    
                                                                           
   The Communications Act, ARRL noted, also permits the FCC to accept the  
   volunteer services of individual radio amateurs and organizations in    
   monitoring for rules violations. In 2019, ARRL and the FCC signed a     
   memorandum of understanding to renew and enhance the ARRL's Volunteer   
   Monitor program, relieving the Commission of significant time-consuming 
   aspects of enforcement.                                                 
                                                                           
   These volunteer services lessen the regulatory burden -- including the  
   application burden -- on the Commission's resources and budget in ways  
   that licensees in other services do not, ARRL said.                     
                                                                           
   Amateur radio's role in providing emergency and disaster communication, 
   education, and other volunteer services also justifies exempting radio  
   amateurs from FCC application fees.                                     
                                                                           
   ditionally, amateur radio has also motivated many students to develop 
   critical science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)       
   skills. ARRL noted that the Amateur Radio Service contributes to the    
   advancement of the radio art, advances skills in communication and      
   technology, and expands the existing reservoir of trained operators,    
   technicians, and electronics experts -- all expressed bases and         
   purposes of the Amateur Radio Service.                                  
                                                                           
   "Accomplishing these purposes entails working with young people, many   
   of whom may have difficulty paying the proposed application fees," ARRL 
   said.                                                                   
                                                                           
   ARRL concluded that the FCC should exercise its authority to exempt     
   amateur radio from application fees generally. If the FCC cannot see    
   its way clear to waive fees altogether, it should waive them for        
   applicants age 26 and younger. Read more.                               
                                                                           
   Arizona Congresswoman Introduces National Amateur Radio Operators Day   
   Resolution                                                              
                                                                           
   US Representative Debbie Lesko of Arizona has introduced a resolution   
   to designate April 18, 2021, as National Amateur Radio Operators Day,   
   to recognize the important contributions of amateur radio operators.    
                                                                           
   "Amateur radio operators are critical in times of crisis and our        
   communities are safer thanks to their dedication to sharing important   
   information with the public," Lesko said. She was approached to         
   introduce the resolution by 12-year-old Raymond, N7KCB, from Peoria,    
   Arizona.                                                                
                                                                           
   "I started Long Distance Responders so I can help prepare the community 
   for emergencies with amateur radio," said Raymond. "There might be a    
   price for a radio, but the ability and knowledge to help someone is     
   truly priceless."                                                       
                                                                           
   As Lesko's resolution notes, World Amateur Radio Day (WARD) is          
   celebrated annually on April 18 to commemorate the founding of the      
   International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) in 1925, and she said her      
   resolution recognizes the amateur radio community with a national day   
   in the United States in 2021. The resolution cites the Amateur Radio    
   Emergency Service (ARES^A(R)) for providing "invaluable emergency       
   communications services following recent natural disasters, including   
   but not limited to helping coordinate disaster relief efforts following 
   Hurricanes Katrina, Wilma, and Maria and other extreme weather          
   disasters."                                                             
                                                                         
   International Broadcast Station Interference Overwhelms Hurricane Watch 
   Net                                                                     
                                                                           
   As Category 4 Hurricane Iota neared landfall in Central America on      
   November 16, the Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) was forced to suspend        
   operations at 0300 UTC because of what HWN Manager Bobby Graves,        
   KB5HAV, described as "deafening interference from a foreign AM          
   broadcast station that came out of nowhere at 0200 UTC." At the time,   
   the net had shifted to its 40-meter frequency of 7.268 kHz, collecting  
   real-time weather and damage reports via amateur radio.                 
                                                                           
   "This was heartbreaking for our team, as the eyewall of Iota was just   
   barely offshore," Graves said. "The storm had weakened slightly to a    
   Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 155 MPH." After activating 
   at 1300 UTC, the net was able to collect and forward reports from       
   various parts of Nicaragua and Honduras via WX4NHC throughout the day   
   for relay to forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.     
   Iota was the most powerful storm on record to make landfall this late   
   in the hurricane season.                                                
                                                                           
   Graves said the very strong AM signal was on 7.265 MHz. "From my        
   location, it was S-9," he told ARRL. "You could not hear anything but   
   the BC station." Graves noted that other foreign broadcast stations     
   were heard from 7.265 to 7.300 MHz and splattering close by.            
                                                                           
   The offending signal appeared to be from a 500 kW broadcaster in        
   Turkey. Graves said the HWN has a long history on 7.268 MHz, but that   
   the net is now considering a 40-meter frequency below 7.2 MHz.          
                                                                           
   Stations handling emergency traffic during the response to Category 5   
   Hurricane Iota had requested clear frequencies on November 16 to avoid  
   interfering with the HWN and with WX4NHC, as well as with a Honduran    
   emergency net operation on 7.180 MHz and a Nicaraguan emergency net     
   operating on 7.098 MHz. It's not known if those nets were also affected 
   by interference from the numerous broadcasters on 40 meters.            
                                                                           
   "Thank you to all who allowed us a clear frequency," Graves said on     
   behalf of the HWN.                                                      
   Academic Paper Predicts Sunspot Cycle 25 Could be Among the Strongest   
   Ever                                                                    
                                                                           
   A research paper, "Overlapping Magnetic Activity Cycles and the Sunspot 
   Number: Forecasting Sunspot Cycle 25 Amplitude," by Scott W. McIntosh,  
   Deputy Director of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in      
   Boulder, et al., has concluded that Solar Cycle 25 could be among the   
   strongest sunspot cycles ever observed, and will almost certainly be    
   stronger than the just-ended Solar Cycle 24 (sunspot number of 116).    
   The scientists say it will also most likely be stronger than Solar      
   Cycle 23 (sunspot number of 180). As the abstract explains:             
                                                                           
   Sunspot cycle graph dating to 1700.                                     
   [SILSO Graphic]                                                         
                                                                           
   "The sun exhibits a well-observed modulation in the number of spots on  
   its disk over a period of about 11 years. From the dawn of modern       
   observational astronomy, sunspots have presented a challenge to         
   understanding -- their quasi-periodic variation in number, first noted  
   175 years ago, stimulates community-wide interest to this day. A large  
   number of techniques are able to explain the temporal landmarks,        
   (geometric) shape, and amplitude of sunspot 'cycles;' however,          
   forecasting these features accurately in advance remains elusive.       
                                                                           
   "Recent observationally motivated studies have illustrated a            
   relationship between the sun's 22-year magnetic cycle and the           
   production of the sunspot cycle landmarks and patterns, but not the     
   amplitude of the sunspot cycle. Using (discrete) Hilbert transforms on  
   more than 270 years of (monthly) sunspot numbers, we robustly identify  
   the so-called 'termination' events that mark the end of the previous    
   11-year sunspot cycle, the enhancement/acceleration of the present      
   cycle, and the end of 22-year magnetic activity cycles. Using these, we 
   extract a relationship between the temporal spacing of terminators and  
   the magnitude of sunspot cycles.                                        
                                                                           
   "Given this relationship and our prediction of a terminator event in    
   2020, we deduce that Sunspot Cycle 25 could have a magnitude that       
   rivals the top few since records began. This outcome would be in stark  
   contrast to the community consensus estimate of Sunspot Cycle 25        
   magnitude."                                                             
                                                                           
   McIntosh's recorded presentation of the paper is available. Use         
   passcode z7qCn@3G.                                                      
                                                                           
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   ARRL Podcasts Schedule                                                  
                                                                           
   The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 11) discusses how 
   to choose the right antenna for your station, considering several       
   aspects that go beyond cost and complexity.                             
                                                                           
   The latest episode of Eclectic Tech (Episode 21) features a discussion  
   about undersea homes for data servers, and a chat with Nigel Vander     
   Houwen, K7NVH, about HamWAN networks.                                   
                                                                           
   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.                            
                                                                           
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   SpaceX Dragon Capsule Resilience Ferries Four Radio Amateurs to the ISS 
                                                                           
   A SpaceX Dragon capsule carrying four radio amateurs autonomously       
   docked on November 17 at 0401 UTC with the International Space Station  
   (ISS). A SpaceX Falcon 9 launcher carrying the precious payload went    
   into space on Sunday, November 15, from NASA's Kennedy Space Center.    
   They comprise the ISS Expedition 64/65 crew.                            
                                                                           
   "Well, the ISS is loaded with hams now," Amateur Radio on the           
   International Space Station (ARISS) US Delegate for ARRL Rosalie White, 
   K1STO, said on Tuesday. "These four arrived very early this             
                                                                           
                                      From left to right: Shannon Walker,  
                                      KD5DXB; Victor Glover, KI5BKC; Mike  
                                      Hopkins, KF5LJG, and Soichi Noguchi, 
                                      KD5TVP.                              
                                                                           
   morning Eastern Time: NASA astronauts Victor Glover, KI5BKC; Mike       
   Hopkins, KF5LJG, and Shannon Walker, KD5DXB, as well as Japan Aerospace 
   Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Soichi Noguchi, KD5TVP." This marks 
   Glover's first time in space. The others all are ISS veterans.          
                                                                           
   Earlier this year, NASA ISS Ham Project Coordinator Kenneth Ransom,     
   N5VHO, held amateur radio licensing study sessions for Glover, who      
   passed the Technician-class exam on August 20.                          
                                                                           
   The four will remain on station until next spring. They joined          
   Expedition 64 Commander Sergey Ryzhikov and Flight Engineer Sergey      
   Kud-Sverchkov of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, on the ISS.        
                                                                           
   White said all but Noguchi likely will take part in ARISS contacts with 
   schools. White said the first school contact is tentatively scheduled   
   for                                                                     
                                                                           
   Three members of the Expedition                                         
   64/65 crew on board Resilience.                                         
                                                                           
   December 4 with Tecumseh High School in Oklahoma, home of the Tecumseh  
   High School Amateur Radio Club, K5THS. She said the students have       
   earned their ham licenses, and the club has built an antenna and is     
   learning about satellites and circuits. Members of the South Canadian   
   Amateur Radio Society of Norman, Oklahoma, are providing support and    
   mentoring assistance.                                                   
                                                                           
   The Sunday launch from Kennedy Space Center marked only the second      
   crewed-flight for the SpaceX Crew Dragon, which became the first        
   commercial vehicle to put humans into orbit when astronauts Doug Hurley 
   and Bob Behnken, KE5GGX, launched in May, and NASA gave SpaceX the go   
   for future such launches.                                               
                                                                           
   "The return of human spaceflight to the United States with one of the   
   safest, most advanced systems ever built is a turning point for         
   America's future space exploration," SpaceX claimed, "and it lays the   
   groundwork for missions to the moon, Mars, and beyond."                 
                                                                         
   SKYWARN Recognition Day 2020 justs for COVID-19                       
                                                                           
   Since 1999, the annual SKYWARN^â*¢ Recognition Day (SRD) has celebrated 
   the long relationship between the amateur community and the National    
   Weather Service (NWS). SKYWARN Recognition Day 2020 will take place     
   from 0000 UTC to 2400 UTC on December 5. Amateur radio operators        
   comprise a large percentage of SKYWARN volunteers across the country.   
                                                                           
   The purpose of the event is to recognize amateurs for the vital public  
   service they perform during times of severe weather and to strengthen   
   the bond between radio amateurs and local NWS offices. The event is     
   cosponsored by ARRL and the NWS.                                        
                                                                           
   Normally, each year, radio amateurs participate from home stations and  
   from stations at NWS forecast offices with the goal of making contact   
   with as many offices as possible. This year, due to COVID-19            
   restrictions, participation from NWS forecast offices is expected to be 
   minimal, so the focus will shift this year to contacting as many        
   trained SKYWARN spotters as possible.                                   
                                                                           
   During the event, operators are encouraged to exchange their name, home 
   station, SRD number, and current weather conditions with other          
   participating stations. The event website provides complete operating   
   guidelines.                                                             
                                                                           
   Radio amateurs may sign up for a SKYWARN Recognition Day number by      
   completing a participant sign-up form. A SKYWARN Recognition Day        
   Facebook page has been created and will host a variety of live and      
   recorded segments throughout the day.                                   
                                                                           
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   ARRL Learning Network Webinars                                          
                                                                           
   Visit the ARRL Learning Network website (a members-only benefit) to     
   register for upcoming sessions and to view previously recorded          
   sessions. The schedule is subject to change.                            
                                                                           
   Amateur Radio's Role at the Boston Marathon Bombing: Steve Schwarm,     
   W3EVE                                                                   
                                                                           
   Amateur radio has played a significant role in public service           
   communications for  the Boston Marathon for several decades. That role  
   was put to the test in 2013 when two bombs were exploded near the       
   finish line. This presentation will describe the role that ham radio    
   played at the Marathon and how that role changed due to the bombing.    
                                                                           
   Tuesday, December 8, 2020, 10 AM PST / 1 PM EST (1800 UTC)              
                                                                           
   Learn and Have Fun with Morse Code: Howard Bernstein, WB2UZE, and Jim   
   Crites, W6JIM                                                           
                                                                           
   Morse code, or "CW," is a popular ham radio operating mode. Learning CW 
   does not have to be an arduous or lonely experience. Learn, practice,   
   and enjoy CW with the methods used by the Long Island CW Club.          
                                                                           
   Thursday, December 17, 2020, 5 PM PST / 8 PM EST (0100 UTC on Friday,   
   December 18)                                                            
                                                                           
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   Announcements                                                           
     * ARISS has posted a special anniversary message and a video          
       celebrating its 20th anniversary on the ARISS website.              
     * Open Research Institute (ORI) has announced that it will formally   
       sponsor M17, an open-source digital radio protocol, code, voice     
       codec, and hardware project. The designs and technology are highly  
       useful for digital radio uplinks for a wide variety of amateur      
       satellite projects.                                                 
     * The FCC has announced that funding through the Connect USVI Fund    
       Stage 2 Competitive Process will bring 1 Gbps fixed broadband       
       service to all locations in the US Virgin Islands. All of Puerto    
       Rico will now have access to fixed voice and broadband service with 
       speeds of at least 100 Mbps as a result of Stage 2 of Uniendo a     
       Puerto Rico Fund, with nearly one-third of locations to have access 
       to fixed broadband at speeds of at least 1 Gbps.                    
     * [IMG]HamSCI is looking for radio amateurs around the world to help  
       collect propagation data during the December 14 eclipse. Data       
       collection requires an HF radio connected to a computer.            
       Twenty-four-hour practice runs will be on November 21 and December  
       5. The data recording will run from December 9 until December 16.   
       Details of the HamSCI 2020 Eclipse Festival of Frequency            
       Measurement are on the HamSCI website. Those interested may sign up 
       online, or contact Kristina Collins, KD8OXT.                        
                                                                           
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   Time to Try for an SS "Clean Sweep" on Phone                            
                                                                           
   The ARRL November Sweepstakes (SS) phone weekend is upon us, and this   
   year, participants will have to search out an additional Section. The   
   SSB event is from November 20 - 22 (UTC), getting under way at 2100 UTC 
   on Saturday and continuing through 0259 UTC on Monday. Stations may     
   operate 24 of the available 30 hours. The SS Operating Guide package,   
   available for download, includes all rules and examples of log          
   formatting. The deadline to submit SS phone entries is November 29.     
                                                                           
   The number of ARRL and Radio Amateurs of Canada (RAC) sections rose to  
   84 earlier this year with the addition of Prince Edward Island (PE) as  
   a separate entity. The objective of SS -- or "sweeps" -- is to work as  
   many stations in as many of the 84 sections as possible within 24 hours 
   of operating. The number of sections worked is a score multiplier, and  
   working all of them is a "clean sweep."                                 
                                                                           
   The SS contest exchange has deep roots in message-handling protocol and 
   replicates a radiogram preamble. In SS, stations exchange:              
     * A consecutive Serial Number. Operators do not have to add zeros     
       ahead of numbers less than 100.                                     
     * Operating category (Precedence) -- Q for Single Op, QRP; A for      
       Single Op, Low Power (up to 150 W output); B for Single Op, High    
       Power (greater than 150 W output); U for Single Op, Unlimited,      
       r
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