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EHAM QTH QRZ ARRL HRO ICOM KENWOOD YAESU ELBO ROOM
TUESDAY EDITION: It was 5 degrees here this morning, the Vermont Casting stove is humming along and keeping us nice and warm...hell, it's winter, no big deal. The weathermen love to make this seem worse than it is.... Secret listeners – revealing the life of amateur radio heroes (UK)The story of the WW2 codebreakers at Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes, the cracking of the German Enigma and Lorenz cypher machines and the role of supreme mathematicians such as Alan Turing is increasingly well known. However the role of the Voluntary Interceptors is equally important but more obscure. Prior to the outbreak of WW1 in August 1914, many of the techniques to be used in later years for radio communications had already been invented. During the interwar years amateur radio enthusiasts began to emerge in the UK and by 1922 there were 6,986 wireless licences issued to receive transmissions and 286 giving permission to transmit. Vanishing Culture: Digital Library of Amateur Radio and CommunicationsAmateur Radio has been a hobby for well over 100 years. For as long as there has been an understanding of electricity and radio waves, people have been experimenting with these technologies and advancing the state of the art. As a result, the world has moved from wired telegraphy to tube radios to telephones—fast forward a century—to GPS and high-speed digital communication devices that fit in your pocket. Advances made by amateur radio experimenters have propelled the work of NASA, satellites, television, the internet, and every communications company in existence today. People fiddling with radios have pushed forward technological advances the world around, time and time again. And yet, the people making these efforts, doing these feats, aren’t always the best at documenting and preserving their work for the future. That’s where Internet Archive comes in. I’m the curator of the Digital Library of Amateur Radio and Communications. DLARC is a project of the Internet Archive, and my job is to find and preserve this rich history of radio and communications. DLARC collects resources related to amateur radio, satellite communications, television, shortwave radio, pirate radio, experimental communications, and related communications. In the two years since the project launched, DLARC has preserved thousands of magazines and journals, manuals, product catalogs, radio programs, and conference proceedings. These materials were scattered worldwide, often inaccessible and in obsolete formats. We’ve digitized material that was on paper, cassette tape, reel-to-reel tape, CD-ROMs, DVDs. We’ve digitized video from 16mm film, VHS, U-Matic, Betacam and even more obscure video formats. We’ve built a collection of more than 140,000 items and made them available to the world. Researchers, academics, and hobbyists use the library to learn from the rich history of this 100-year-old hobby. Learn more about DLARC One reason this preservation is necessary is that the people creating history don’t always realize at the time that they’re creating history. In 1977, the creators of Amateur Radio Newsline—a weekly audio news bulletin—probably didn’t realize that their project would still be going on in 2024, 47 years later. And for all of their amazing work, if they had realized they were documenting history, they might have made more effort to save those recordings: the first 20 years of their work are missing. (DLARC has found some recordings from 1996, then most of them since 2012.) Sometimes creators do recognize the importance of their effort. For more than six years, Len Winkler hosted Ham Radio & More, a radio show about amateur radio. Winker recorded every episode on cassette tape and managed to digitize many of the shows himself. However, the process of digitizing hundreds of episodes is tedious and he wasn’t able to complete it. With his approval, DLARC stepped in to finish the job. They’re all online now, more than 300 episodes including interviews with many notable names in the radio community. There have been other huge successes: the entire 43-year run of 73 Magazine is digitized and online thanks to the publisher, Wayne Green, who donated the collection to Internet Archive before his death. Most issues of The W5YI Report, a ham radio newsletter that was published for 25 years, are online as well. Attempting to preserve material years, or sometimes decades, after the fact makes systematic preservation nearly impossible. For every success story of content saved and archived, there is a heartbreaking story of loss. When amateur radio enthusiasts die, their media collections are often disposed of by survivors who don’t have any connection to amateur radio. File cabinets and bookcases full of (sometimes irreplaceable) materials are emptied into recycle bins. Another challenge to preservation and access is membership organizations that keep their material behind paywalls. They sometimes prevent any of their information from being lent in an online library, which it is their right to do. However while they actively thwart efforts at preservation, it remains unclear whether those groups are adequately preserving their own history. Some material is preserved intentionally, but a good amount was saved purely by accident. The material we recover and digitize has come from attics and basements, from libraries discarding obsolete material, from long-forgotten FTP sites, from scratched CD-ROMs, and from the estates of people who have passed. So we float where the radio waves take us, trying to preserve the past as much as possible, while encouraging today’s content creators to consider how to make their material accessible to future generations. About the authorKay Savetz is curator of Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications. DLARC is funded by a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications to create a free digital library for the radio community, researchers, educators, and students. If you have questions about the project or material to contribute, contact kay@archive.org. Paso Robles Amateur Radio Club tests emergency readiness with public eventAmateur radio operators to gather for winter field day event– The Paso Robles Amateur Radio Club will host the 2025 American Radio Relay League Winter Field Day on Saturday, Jan. 25, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Estrella Warbirds Museum, located at 4251 Dry Creek Road in Paso Robles. he event invites the public to join one of the most popular on-the-air activities across the United States and Canada. Thousands of amateur radio operators will gather with clubs, groups, or friends to operate from remote locations. The event provides an opportunity for radio operators to test their equipment in case of emergencies or disasters, familiarize themselves with setup and takedown procedures in challenging conditions, and demonstrate capabilities to the public and the organizations they serve. Participants will also compete to contact the most other stations during the event. Amateur radio has been relied upon during crises despite advancements in modern communication technologies, such as cell phones and the internet. During large-scale disasters, these systems are often among the first to fail. Examples of amateur radio use include responses to the Lahaina wildfire, hurricanes Milton and Helene, and recent wildfires in Los Angeles. The American Radio Relay League, the national association for amateur radio in the United States, represents over 170,000 licensed operators. Often called “ham radio,” the amateur radio service has been active for over a century, evolving into a global community of licensed operators who transmit voice, data, and images through the airwaves without depending on commercial systems. Participants range from young children to seniors, and the community includes professionals like rocket scientists and musicians, as well as everyday individuals. Are You a Genuine Radio Collector, Investor Collector (Flipper), Hoarder, Socialite or User?
4. A Socialite uses his equipment to develop networks of fellow collectors, give talks at clubs. writing articles, generating polls, etc.
TRUMP DAY: Fitting day, 5 inches of snow, bitter cold out, and I just can't wait to get outside and plow...Looks like KC vs the Bills, that shoud be a good game... No Ham License? Listen Anyway in Your BrowserFull disclosure: ham radio isn’t for everyone, and there are many different facets to it. What appeals to one person might bore another to death. One area of ham radio that has changed a lot in the last few years is more or less local and typically mobile operation on VHF or UHF. Not long ago, hams used HTs (walky-talkies or handi-talkies) or mobile radios via repeaters to talk to each other and — the golden prize back then — make phone calls from their cars. Cell phones have made that much less interesting, but there is still an active community of operators talking on repeaters. However, the traffic has gone digital, the Internet is involved, and people with inexpensive, low-powered radios can talk to each other across the globe. This is nothing new, of course. However, having digital services means that operators with special interests can congregate in what amounts to radio chat rooms organized by region or topic. There’s a long history of people listening to ham radio conversations with shortwave radios, SDRs, and scanners. But with so much activity now carried on the Internet, you can listen in using nothing more than your web browser or a phone app. I’ll show you how. If you get interested enough, it is easy enough to get your license. You don’t need any Morse code anymore, and a simple Technician class license in the United States is all you need to get going. A Quick DMR PrimerThere are several digital ham networks around and like real networks, you can have different physical transport layers and then build on top of that. For the purposes of this post, I’m going to focus on DMR (digital mobile radio) on the Brandmeister network which is very large and popular ham network. You won’t need a license nor will you need to sign up for anything as long as you are content to just listen. Here’s how it works: Brandmeister operates a large number of servers worldwide that communicate with each other and provide calling services, including group calls. So, if we set up a Hackaday talk group (fictitious, by the way) on group 1337, interested people could connect to that talk group and have a conversation. Since we are just going to listen, I’m going to skip some of the details, but the trick is how people get to talk to these networks. In general, there are three ways. The classic way is to use a digital radio to talk to a repeater that is connected to the network. The repeater may have one or more talk groups on all the time, or you might request access to one. However, another way to connect your radio to a “hotspot” connected to the Internet. That is, more or less, a special form of repeater that is very low power, and you have complete control over it compared to a repeater on some faraway hill. However, if you don’t mind operating using just a computer, you don’t need a radio at all. You simply talk directly to the nearest server, and you are on the network. Some of your audio will go to other computers, and it may go over the airwaves via someone else’s hotspot or repeater. The Brandmeister website has a lot of info and you don’t need to be logged in to see it. Head over to their site and you’ll see a lot of info including a network map and statistics about repeaters and hotspots. You can get an idea of who has been talking lately by clicking Last Heard link. While this is interesting, it isn’t as interesting as you’d think, because you really want to focus on talk groups, not individual users. To see a list of all the talk groups on the system, you can click Information and then Talkgroups. You can filter the list and you can also download the dataset in different formats if you want to browse it in a different format. There are three buttons on each row of the database. The LH button shows you the last heard stations for that group. The Wiki button takes you to a Wiki page that, for some groups, has more information about it. But the really interesting button is the one marked Hoseline. You can also open the Hoseline directly which is what I usually do. What’s the Hoseline? It shows activity across the network as a bunch of boxes indicating recently active talk groups. Boxes with red lines around them have people actively talking on them. The others have been recently active. It is visually interesting, yes, but that’s not the big selling point. If you click on a box, you will hear the activity on that talk group. That’s all there is to it. OverwhelmingThere are a lot of talk groups. You can filter at the top left part of the page where it says “Everything.” You’ll have to drop the list down and unselect Everything. Then, you can select any countries or areas you want to follow. If you are brave, you can click RegEx mode and enter regular expressions to match talk group numbers (e.g. ^310.*). The “Player” button at the top right gives you more control. You can add multiple groups from a list, see information about who is talking, and stop or start the audio. If you prefer to do your listening mobile, you can also get the hoseline on your Android device. Just install the app, and you’ll find it works the same way. Finding Something InterestingLord Nelson once said, “The greatest difficulty in war is not to win the battle, but to find the enemy.” That’s accurate here, too. Finding an interesting conversation out of all those talk groups is somewhat a needle in a haystack. A quick look around at the talk group lists might help. The 91 and 93 groups stay busy but generally with short exchanges since they cover a wide area. The USA bridge at 3100 sometimes has traffic, too. If you look at the group’s listing on the Web, you can click the group number and see what stations are connected to it. Keep in mind, some of these may be repeaters or gateways that could have no one on the other side, or could have dozens of people on the other side. But it can give you an idea if the talkgroup has any users at all. You can also search the Internet for DMR nets and repeaters. Sometimes, it is interesting to listen to local repeaters. Sometimes, it is fun to listen to repeaters in other places. Want to find out what’s going on at your next vacation spot? Practice your French? You can find many DMR repeaters using the RepeaterBook search page. There are also man lists of DMR nets. Next StepsThere are many other similar networks, but they may not have a way to listen that doesn’t require some software, registration, or licenses. There’s plenty on Brandmeister to keep you busy. If you worry about people listening in, that’s no different than regular radio has been since the beginning. You can always get your ham license and join in. Even without a radio, there are ways to talk on the network. [Dan Maloney] has advice for getting your “ticket.” It is easier than you think, and you can do a lot more with a license, including talking through satellites, sending TV signals over the air, and bouncing signals of meteors or the moon. If you want to listen to more traditional ham radio in your browser, try a Web-based SDR. When cell towers and internet fail, ham radio operators can still talk. How to get involvedWhen Helene swept across the Southeast on Sept. 27, including Western North Carolina, cell phones and internet-based communication became unusable. People still needed a way to talk — to check on friends and family or receive updates on the storm’s aftermath — especially as roads and bridges were washed away, isolating communities. But there’s a way to communicate without cell signals or internet, and about 750,000 people across the country know how to use it: amateur radio. Also known as ham radio, this old-school method of technology allows people separated by large distances to stay in touch.
“People might think
that cell phones
have made amateur
radio obsolete,”
said Chuck Till, the
vice president of
the Raleigh
Amateur Radio
Society. “As you
can see, that’s far
from the truth.” RARS, which has more than 450 members, is a nonprofit organization and one of many radio clubs across the country. While the club offers many services, helping the public during times of emergency is among its goals. “It’s a tireless activity, and these hams are so dedicated to it,” said Fin Gold, the president of RARS. “And people don’t realize that they’re out there, and they’re there to help.” How hams help during disastersAcross North Carolina, amateur radio operators have helped with search and rescue efforts and condition reports, Gold said. Many of the repeaters, which are automated relay stations that have broad coverage, were offline because of Helene. But one repeater on Mount Mitchell, the highest peak in North Carolina, was still operational, and the hams on the mountain were able to help check on people and pass along radio messages, Gold said. There’s a program called AUXCOMM, developed by the Department of Homeland Security, in which certain hams work with government agencies including North Carolina Emergency Management, Till said. Other hams may assist with health and welfare messaging. “The more people that join us, the more we can help,” Gold said. WEEKEND EDITION: ARRL VHF Contest this weekend, I am going over to the club and give the new 2 and 6 meter beam a workout with the Kenwood TS2000 and see how it works on SSB....what to expect for programs at Hamcation in Orlando Carnarvon’s Decommissioned NASA Satellite Dish Back In Service After 40 YearsRecently the 29.8 meter parabolic antenna at the Australian OTC (overseas telecommunications commission) station came back to life again after nearly forty years spent in decommissioning limbo. This parabolic dish antenna shares an illustrious history together with the older 12.8 meter Casshorn antenna in that together they assisted with many NASA missions over the decades. These not only include the Apollo 11 Moon landing with the small antenna, but joined by the larger parabolic dish (in 1969) the station performed tracking duty for NASA, ESA and many other missions. Yet in 1987 the station was decommissioned, with scrapping mostly averted due to the site being designated a heritage site, with a local museum. Then in 2022 the 29.8 meter parabolic dish antenna was purchased by by ThotX Australia, who together with the rest of ThotX’s world-wide presence will be integrating this latest addition into a satellite tracking system that seems to have the interest of various (military, sigh) clients. Putting this decommissioned dish back into service wasn’t simply a matter of flipping a few switches. Having sat mostly neglected for decades it requires extensive refurbishing, but this most recent milestone demonstrates that the dish is capable of locking onto a satellites. This opens the way for a top-to-bottom refurbishment, the installation of new equipment and also a lick of paint on the dish itself, a process that will still take many years but beats watching such a historic landmark rust away by many lightyears. A Weekend of January ContestsThere are two great contests for amateur radio operators this weekend, January 18 - 20, 2025, and a bonus opportunity for a college club station to win a national championship. Whether you’re interested in contesting on the HF bands, the VHF bands of 50 MHz and above, or both, there’s likely a contest to fit your needs this weekend. ARRL Contest Program Manager Paul Bourque, N1SFE, said there is time to enjoy both the SSB weekend of the North American QSO Party (NAQP) and the ARRL January VHF Contest. “If you’re an operator like me, who enjoys phone contests on the HF bands, and an avid VHF contester, this weekend offers an opportunity to enjoy both,” said Bourque. “After the NAQP wraps up early Sunday morning, there’s still plenty of time on Sunday afternoon and evening to join in the fun on the frequencies above 50 MHz when the VHF contesters are seeking contacts from new stations who hadn’t been on the air earlier in the contest.” The North American QSO Party (NAQP) SSB, begins at 1800 UTC on Saturday, January 18, and concludes at 0559 UTC on Sunday, January 19. The NAQP is a low-power only event, which makes for a lot more breathing room on the bands. The 12-hour format of the NAQP allows participants to do some great contesting, yet still have time for other activities during the weekend. Some operators choose to participate in the NAQP on Saturday, and then get on the VHF bands for the January VHF contest on Sunday. For complete rules, visit ncjweb.com/NAQP-Rules.pdf (PDF), and logs are due no later than 7 days after the contest is over. Colleges and universities in North America can also compete in the 2025 NA Collegiate Championship, which takes place as part of the NAQP. Stations will use their college club call sign and the station must be located on the college’s physical campus. See the rules on the Society of Midwest Contesters website at www.w9smc.com/nacc/ including details for registering your college or university via the Contest Online Scoreboard and setting up logging software to report your scores. The ARRL January VHF Contest begins 1900 UTC Saturday, January 18 and ends 0359 UTC Monday, January 20. For amateurs in the US and Canada (and their possessions), the goal is to work as many amateur stations in as many different 2 degrees x 1 degree Maidenhead grid squares as possible using authorized frequencies above 50 MHz. Stations in the rest of the world may only work stations in the US (and its possessions) and Canada. All legal modes are permitted. For complete contest rules, visit contests.arrl.org/ContestRules/JanJunSep-VHF-Rules.pdf (PDF), and logs are due within 10 days after the event is over.
Amateur
Radio Newsline Report Is a Cheap Frequency Standard Worth It?
In the quest for an accurate frequency standard there are many options depending on your budget, but one of the most affordable is an oven controlled crystal oscillator (OCXO). [RF Burns] has a video looking at one of the cheapest of these, a sub ten dollar AliExpress module. A crystal oven is a simple enough device — essentially just a small box containing a crystal oscillator and a thermostatic heater. By keeping the crystal at a constant temperature it has the aim of removing thermal drift from its output frequency, meaning that once it is calibrated it can be used as a reasonably good frequency standard. The one in question is a 10 MHz part on a small PCB with power supply regulator and frequency trimming voltage potentiometer, and aside from seeing it mounted in an old PSU case we also are treated to an evaluation of its adjustment and calibration. Back in the day such an oscillator would have been calibrated by generating an audible beat with a broadcast standard such as WWV, but in 2024 he uses an off-air GPS standard to calibrate a counter before measuring the oven crystal. It’s pretty good out of the box, but still a fraction of a Hertz off, thus requiring a small modification to the trimmer circuit. We’d be happy with that. For the price, we can see that one of these makes sense as a bench standard, and we say this from the standpoint of a recovering frequency standard nut. CONTESTS...
We
have some
big contests
coming up
this
weekend.
Some folks
will use the
North
American QSO
Party as a
warm up for
Winter Field
Day. The
ARRL January
VHF Contest
is always an
option for
technicians
and more
advanced
operators.
The college
clubs will
be calling
CQ as well.
Check it out
THURSDAY EDITION: 17° and blowing here on Cape Ann, it's winter without the snow here...only 62 days until spring....Will someone please enlighten the boob on 3919 that a 1/2 wavelength on 75 meters is not thirty feet.. AA Battery Performances Tested, So Get The Most For Your Money[Project Farm] has a video in which a wide variety of AA cells are analyzed and compared in terms of capacity, internal resistance, ability to deliver voltage under load, and ability to perform in sub-freezing temperatures. Alkaline, lithium, and even some mature rechargeable cells with a couple thousand cycles under their belt were all compared. There are a few interesting results that will can help you get the most from your money the next time you’re battery shopping. The video embedded below demonstrates a set of tests that we recommend you check out, but the short version is that more expensive (non-rechargeable) lithium cells outperform their alkaline peers, especially when it comes to overall longevity, ability to perform under high-drain conditions, and low temperatures. Lithium cells also cost more, but they’re the right choice for some applications. As for how different brands stack up against one another, many of them are more or less in the same ballpark when it comes to performance. Certainly there are better and worse performers, but outside of a couple of stinkers the rest measure up reasonably well. Another interesting finding was that among rechargeable cells that were all several years (and roughly 2,200 charge-discharge cycles) old, a good number of them still performed like new. Probably the single most striking difference among the different cells is cost — and we’re not just talking about whether lithium versus alkaline AAs are more cost-effective in the long run. Some brands simply cost twice as much (or more!) than others with comparable performance. If you’re in a hurry, jump to [Project Farm] presenting the final ranked results at 19:45 in. Relying on brand recognition may save you from buying complete junk, but it’s clearly not the most cost-effective way to go about buying batteries. These findings are similar to an earlier effort at wide-scale battery testing which also determined that factoring in price-per-cell was too significant to ignore. Blog – Hackaday Read More EMAIL:
I took the time
to read this…
Wow what a write
up.
https://www.amateurradio.com/the-decline-in-arrl-membership-and-market-share-2001-2023/
And this
https://sites.google.com/site/amateurradiodata/home
Hi Jon,
Far be it
from me to
say the ARRL
management
is being
paid too
much, but
are we
getting our
14 million
dollars
worth at
current
proposed
budget?.
I was there
to meet Tom
Gallagher in
2016, at the
Nashua
Public
Library.
About a
quarter of
the room was
respectful,
but 1/2 that
was left..
was not
happy with
the way ARRL
was being
run.
Tom
Gallagher
was not
ready for
the
questions
being asked,
and look
very out of
touch with
average
members
concerns.
He could not
answer a lot
of simple
questions…
The breaking
point for me
was dropping
may printed
CQ magazine
months early
on Jan 2024
- which I
had already
paid for in
June 2023.
If that was
not so bad
getting my
Kindle to
login to
ARRL to see
my CQ
magazine was
super
difficult. (
keep in mind
I work with
computers )
For me, the
magazine was
the only
tangible
thing I got
from the
ARRL dues…
I think what
was not
mentioned in
the writeup
was the cost
value of
having a
membership.
For 4/5th of
the license
operators
the ARRL is
missing the
mark (
that’s
593,283 non
members! )
Magazine's
that have
survived the
great 2020
crash cost
between
12.00-29.00
a year. (
Yes there
are more
expensive
ones too )
Well with
152,000
regular ARRL
members
paying 59.00
this year
that give
them a base
$8,968,000
leaving them
$5,032,000
short of the
14,000,000
budget…
Here at home
when we come
up short we
stop
spending &
cut what is
not needed…
Thank you
for todays
writeup on
your site.
Ari - WB1ABC
24 DEGREE WEDNESDAY EDITION: The ARRL screws up yet again by raising the dues and charging extra for the paper magazine, check the membership trends.....
With the growth in amateur licenses—shown above for this century—the League has simply sunk like a stone in garnering market share. The highest market share was at the beginning of this period under Dave Sumner’s tenure as CEO, some 23.6% of the licensed hams at that time. Once he left the building, the market share has plummeted under each successive CEO that has a corporate management background. (I’ll comment on this element in the conclusions below.) Due to the decline in licenses from 2022-23, the share actually ticked back up but this was based on about 2,000 fewer members. But is the ARRL alone in this lack of the membership market? Dan KB6NU’s column comparing the ARRL to Germany shows how far the situation has declined in the U.S. The DARC has about 50 percent of all licensed hams as members. Dan noted that the former membership director at ARRL left to take a similar position in a professional academic, membership-focused, non-profit. The Gerontological Society of America is a group of which I’m familiar as a former Professor of Sociology. Out of the 7,500 licensed geriatricians in the U.S., there are over 5,500 members in the GSA. This is at least 73 percent of their market. Their professional members must get licensed and maintain it, not too dissimilar to amateur radio where hams take incremental exams and undergo periodic license renewal. The GSA serves the membership and lobbies to support policies that favor the conditions of their professionals and their clients. Both DARC in amateur radio and the GSA in the field of gerontology are clearly more valued by the market base to which they address. Do the dramatic declines in market share by the League associated with each successor CEO to the long-term David Sumner K1ZZ suggest that these executives are to blame? Well, the buck does stop on that desk. But I do not think that the root problem per se lies with the individual residing in that office. All three post-Sumner CEOs were hired from for-profit corporate management candidates. The ARRL is a non-profit, tax-exempt membership-driven corporation. Is this an optimal candidate pool for a Chief Executive Officer position at the ARRL? There is the related organizational structure issue of governance authority lines for the position. The CEO is only answerable to the whole Board after a contract period is nearing an end (although these actions are not made publicly available). A single Board member has little authority over the sitting CEO unless s/he can get a majority of the Board to concur on a complete change in the position at the end of the “elected” contract period. There is an insular barrier around the CEO with regard to the operational HQ staff as Board members are instructed to not give directions to staff members. They must go through the “insulated” CEO who can just say no without any immediate consequences. Moreover, lower-level elected representatives like Section Managers have NO authority over HQ staff, as they all report TO the Field Services Manager and CEO. I ask if the reader was aware of that inverted power relationship when voting for their SM. Very few I’ve talked to about this said yes. The President of the League is not elected by the membership but the Board of Directors for a specified term, with possible succession. The Gerontological Society of America, mentioned above, elects it’s President from a simple vote of the membership. The same occurs for the DARC in Germany. Same for the Radio Society of Great Britain. Ditto for the Radio Amateur Society of Australia and the South African Amateur Radio Society. The only two that I’ve found who follow the pattern followed by the ARRL of the President being elected by the Board membership is the WIA in Australia and RAC in Canada. Note that RAC was formerly a Section of the ARRL and patterned most of it’s organization after the League. Thus, the ARRL is in a minority among these other national amateur radio groups in the authority given to the grassroots membership. Of the three ARRL officers elected, only the Division Director/Board Member has any authority based on membership election. They have little direct-line authority except through majority Board action. The President is elected by the Board, not the membership. The Section Manager is elected but is subservient to a manager of Field Services at HQ that is hired and managed by the CEO. The Board technically renews the CEO’s contract through an “election” vote but the CEO is effectively an unelected Executive of the League without direct recourse by dues-paying members. No wonder so many former members took a hike from paying dues to an organization where they have no say in how the services they are supposed to receive from being a dues-paying member are managed! But let’s leave the organizational chart to a future column for now. (It’s already being drafted.) Some Thoughts on the National Association for Amateur RadioThere are few alternate conclusions to draw upon here. From a statistical viewpoint alone, the ARRL is NOT the National Association for Amateur Radio if the hobby market is the focus. As the 2023 Annual Report describes, the League does engage many hams into their activities: 7,000 volunteer staff (I am one); 26,000 Volunteer Examiners; about 200 Volunteer Monitors (I am also one who helped Riley Hollingsworth organized it); and various others totaling some 57,000 volunteers within its membership. Some, like me, are duplicates. But this engagement is very small compared to the hobbyist market to which the League claims to organize, lead and protect. The myARRL Voice group has argued over the past few years that the “protect” element has morphed into strong authoritarian behavior by the “inner circle” of the League. Whether the reader agrees or disagrees with that interpretation, there is no ignoring the fact that the organizational lines of authority do lend themselves to that potential. Unfortunately, one of the key leaders of the current Strategic Planning Working Group, Division Director Fred Kemmerer AB1OC, was recently not re-elected to his Board position. I tried contacting him for some related information for this article, as directed by CEO Minster but he has not replied after two tries. I will address that issue in a later blog post. I can’t actually blame Fred AB1OC per se but this is not a good footing for internal operations when the CEO refuses to answer a question about a factual statement made by the President in the Annual Report, a fiduciary document. The extant conditions surrounding the ARRL do not lead me to think that there will be a bull-market turnaround in membership. There is a dire need to rethink how the HQ operates to serve members and the hobby market. The latter is strong, the not very well-known aging problem notwithstanding, but the organizing association is not doing well.
The League’s standing among licensed hams, the current CEO’s attempt to paint only within the lines of an unknown “radio-active” segment to the contrary, is very poor. There is ample online media commentary to elaborate on this as well as an outsider group that provides critique to League actions, largely over governance issues. As just mentioned, the Board of Directors has recently assigned a group to develop a strategic plan for the future. It is an insider-driven committee which is a an all-too-frequent and major mistake in program evaluation. Insiders already have vested-interest solutions whereas knowledgeable outsiders can more likely see the forest over the trees. Engaging non-member hams as well as members who do not hold office to give insights is key in this situation. But this tends to frighten the extant power structure so there are many fool-hardy reasons to not include this type of free and unfettered input. My take as a volunteer “flunky” in a Division under the two previous Directors is that it is not necessarily personal but positional in terms of leadership failure at HQ. A wonderful drill bit will make the wrong hole if the hole in question requires a different geometry to be a good fit. Ask any homebrewer who builds things. A CEO from a for-profit career line just may not have the membership-focused, non-profit fit to be effective. From the management literature (obtained from a simple Google search for “management in corporate versus non-profit organizations”), a brief reminder of the different emphases might be useful. As a side note, I learned much of this information back in the 1990s while in the US Department of Agriculture’s Administration School, the largest one in the world since USDA programs are imbued with local volunteers. This stuff is far from new.
Does the reader see the difference in how a CEO candidate, as currently situated in the non-profit corporation of the ARRL, might operate very differently if s/he comes from a for-profit corporate vs a non-profit career background? Does that help us in understanding the membership data? I think so. DXCC Application Processing Caught UpDXCC® application processing is back to typical processing times. In October, we reported that the ARRL DXCC® System had been returned to service following work that was completed to ensure the security and integrity of the system following the cyber-attack in May. Over 4,000 DXCC applications have been logged into the system for processing since returning the system to service. We are currently processing applications submitted in December, and we continue to mail orders for paper DXCC certificates and endorsement stickers. There were 315 certificates mailed between December 27, 2024, and January 13, 2025. Dennis Motschenbacher, K7BV, Silent KeyFormer ARRL and Yaesu employee, World Radiosport Team Championship competitor, and award-winning radio amateur Dennis Motschenbacher, K7BV, has become a Silent Key. Motschenbacher passed away on January 9, 2025, after a long illness. Motschenbacher was first licensed at the age of 13. According to his obituary, “His Amateur Radio activities took him to 35 countries and his ham radio call sign, K… Read more American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources – Read More
TUESDAY EDITION: Still freezing here, bring it on.....I am replacing my palstar 2K tuner in excellent condition with a LDG AT1000, any interest fro $400 before I eBay it.... Handie-Talkie or Walkie-Talkie?In ham radio, we often use Handie-Talkie or HT to describe a compact, handheld transceiver. My first exposure to the term Handie-Talkie was when I became a licensed radio amateur in 1977. As a student at Purdue University (W9YB), the absolute coolest VHF radio to have was the Motorola HT-220. Even a used one commanded a high price so they were out of my price range and I never owned one. These were 6-channel crystal-controlled transceivers…back then you had to set up the radio with the particular 2m frequencies you wanted to use. Because it was such an iconic radio, there are many HT-220 enthusiasts still around with websites with tons of useful information. See the HT-220 Page. Motorola trademarked the name Handie-Talkie and used that nomenclature for many years with its line of portable radios. However, this trademark has expired, so now Handie-Talkie is a generic term. Read more – K0NR: https://bit.ly/40vdMQP Ham Radio Operators Serving During California FirestormsAs the firestorms across Southern California continue to threaten millions of residents, trained amateur radio operators are serving critical volunteer roles to help officials spot fires before they get out of control. Dry conditions and wind gusts of 100 miles per hour have fueled days of devastating wildfires. Entire neighborhoods have been leveled by infernos. The Eaton fire burned to the top of Mount Wilson, a critical logistical post for broadcast radio and television stations, as well as communications across the Southland. Federal agencies, air traffic control, local emergency responders, radio amateurs, and others all share tower space on the mountain. While the main fires have been burning north and northwest of the central section of Los Angeles, just to the south, hams are standing watch. Orange County Fire Watch (OCFW) is a program locally organized by the Orange County Parks Department and the Irvine Conservancy. During severe fire weather, volunteers go to preassigned locations within parks and open spaces to report conditions. Many of them are hams, using the amateur radio bands to fill in mobile network weak zones. ARRL National Instructor Gordon West, WB6NOA, is among the deployed volunteers. He said hams are stepping up. “We’re all over the ARRL Orange Section on hilltops, reporting the wind and humidity, ash seen coming down, scanning for spot fires (none so far), smoke from the LA fires, guest activity at the parks, and being a presence at trailheads with reflective vests and vehicle signs indicating Fire Watch,” he said. Ray Hutchinson, AE6H, is a retired Firefighter who serves as the chief radio officer for Fire Watch. He says local clubs are key to providing the needed RF infrastructure. “Our local club, the South Orange Amateur Radio Association (SOARA), an ARRL Special Service Club, provides linked 2-meter and 70-centimeter repeaters: one high level and one coastal, for use by OCFW hams during deployments. There is a formal OCFW Net Control Station (NCS) for the entirety of these events," he said. Radio amateurs are also ready and able to serve at evacuation centers, providing support as needed. Members of ARRL Headquarters staff have been in touch with ARRL volunteers and other ham radio groups around the affected area, and are offering material support for any activations. “It has been a busy start to the year for ham volunteers,” said ARRL Public Relations and Outreach Manager Sierra Harrop, W5DX. “Whether it’s firestorms or ice storms or any other need, ARRL volunteers selflessly serve their communities. We’re mindful that large-scale events like this impact the hams who are active serving,” she said. ARRL Director of Emergency Management Josh Johnston, KE5MHV, has been on calls with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and other served agencies, offering ARRL resources. Efforts are being coordinated locally by Emergency Network Los Angeles (ENLA), the Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD) group in Southern California. Johnston urges hams in the affected regions to be ready to take care of themselves and their families before needing to deploy. He points to resources shared by ARRL’s Amateur Radio Emergency Service® (ARES®) during National Preparedness Month. “These are stressful events for everyone, and being a ham volunteer is really second to keeping yourself and your family safe,” said Johnston. Winter Field Day: Amateur radio operators seek the right frequency during emergency
Watching the images of charred devastation around Los Angeles, as well as recalling the chaos that enveloped the area amidst local wildfires a couple years ago, it’s not hard to imagine scenarios that could be much, much worse. Fortunately, there’s a secret weapon in the arsenal of communication and assistance in Clackamas County – and you’re invited to see what it’s all about. See what your neighbors can do when there is no power and confusion is in the air during the upcoming Winter Field Day, courtesy of the Clackamas Amateur Radio Emergency Service (CARES) and Cascade Amateur Radio Society. Amateur radio enthusiasts will be running through various disaster scenarios, and how they can use their short-wave radio set-ups to fill important gaps should disaster strike. The field day is Jan. 25-26 at Lonny Johnson Farm, 19768 S. Harper Road in Colton. “For a limited amount of time, we will establish radio communications systems, staffed by licensed amateur radio operators, to replace existing damaged, disrupted, or saturated systems, or to establish radio communications where no systems previously existed, on relatively short notice, at no cost to served agencies, until we are authorized to demobilize,” explained Lonny Johnson, who is the public information officer for the Clackamas County Amateur Radio Emergency Services. Johnson noted that the vision for the group is “to continually evolve into highly skilled amateur radio operators who, as a group, are recognized as an effective and reliable organization that is capable of providing multimode communications for served agencies during emergencies and disasters.” Johnson said the group has towers on Highland Butte, Goat Mountain and Mount Hood for local contacts, as well as long wire antennas for around the world contact. These radio operators can send photos, do Morse code, send emails and chat with folks from around the world. The Winter Field Day is a chance to see how well the system can work should disaster render normal modes of communication inoperable. “Winter Field Day is really all about operating in less-than-ideal conditions and testing ourselves and gear,” explained Ryan Poteet, assistant emergency coordinator, south county. “As emergency communicators in western Oregon, the chances of an ‘incident’ happening on a cool rainy day are pretty high. We will operate using emergency power and portable antennas simulating a field deployment to assist our served agency, Clackamas County. We hope to have 4-5 stations on the air making contacts all over North America, Canada, and likely around the world.” Set-up is Friday, Jan. 24, from noon to 9 p.m., with the action starting early on Saturday, Jan. 25, and lasting all day long. On Jan. 26 things roll from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Poteet said that the field day is open to anyone who is interested in participating or learning about what amateur radio is all about. For more information, check out the Winter Field Day website at https://winterfieldday.org.
MONDAY EDITION: Starting to feel like the winters of old, no complaints.....Look What You Can Do With Ohm’s Law....
That's what it looks like here... Have you ever thought about contacting an astronaut as you see the International Space Station (ISS) pass overhead? No? Well, neither have I, but a man called Doug managed to do exactly that using his ham radio back in July 2023. For those that don't know, a ham radio is simply just hobby that involves people using radio frequencies to try and communicate with other people without the need of a cell phone or the internet - it's pretty cool, and is also known as amateur radio. Of all the contacts you can make through your homemade ham radio, it doesn't get much better than the ISS. But doing so was a task - in fact, he had long wanted to make contact but his previous attempt came to no avail. Alas, his hard work paid off, as he managed to make contact with the space station as it flew overhead, with astronaut Woody Hoburg picking up. In the video, shared to his YouTube page, Doug can be seen saying his call sign: “Kilo Bravo 8 Mike,” a number of times before he was finally successful. Hoburg then replies: “Kilo Bravo 8 Mike, NA1SS got you loud and clear aboard the Space Station, welcome aboard.” Underneath his video, Doug wrote: "I've made numerous voice and APRS [Automatic Packet Reporting System] contacts over the FM satellites and the ISS repeater. "But I've always wanted to talk to an astronaut. Over the Memorial Day weekend I finally made that contact. I made contact with the ISS and talked to Woody Hoburg. What a thrill." Many astronauts on the ISS also have ham radio licences, and often host scheduled contact sessions with people back on Earth. NASA, ESA, CSA, and Roscosmos all participate in Amateur Radio on the International Space Station, a program which encourages children to reach out to the station to encourage interest in science. But occasionally, amateur operators do manage to make it through and speak to the astronauts using their own equipment. If you hadn't already guessed, this is no easy feat to carry out. You can't just start spinning the dials on any old radio and hope for the best. In fact, it's only really possible when the ISS is in certain positions, so even if you have equipment capable of reaching it you'll have to wait for it to pass overhead. It's no use trying to contact from the US when the ISS is over Australia. Ham radio operator Matt Payne and his daughter Isabella also managed to contact the ISS, chatting to astronaut Kjell Lindgren in August 2022. Matt told IFLScience: “It's pretty rare to speak to an astronaut outside of a scheduled educational contact. There are several factors that need to align for it to happen.” He added: “The ISS must be passing within LOS [Line Of Sight]... at a time that coincides with an astronauts ‘down time,’ as in they must not be working doing an official scheduled task. "There must be an astronaut who is actively using the Amateur Radio equipment to make unscheduled contacts."
WEEKEND EDITION: Famous ham celebrities....22 degrees here but the bitter wind is gone, we got 2.5 inches of fluffy snow...the club got a donation yesterday, a Kenwood TS-820S. I plugged it in and the display does not work and while there is audio there is no RX. What a great donation! I love it when people donate shit that doesn't work so we can throw it out for them. The other gem was a Ameco PT-3 preamplifier, I bet someone on Ebay is drooling over this find. He also gave us the desk mike which actually has some value and we can hang on to it....We sold over $3000 worth of donated gear last year and kept over $5000 worth of gear for our use. We have 8 working hf stations, all fairly modern equipment, and compatible antennas, not bad for a little club that owns their own clubhouse building. Harvey Laidman (W8DX), Director on ‘The Waltons’ and ‘Matlock,’ Dies at 82Harvey Laidman, a veteran TV director who helmed multiple episodes of such series as The Waltons, Scarecrow and Mrs. King, the original Matlock and 7th Heaven, has died. He was 82. Laidman died of cancer on Jan. 3 in a hospice facility in Simi Valley, his son, Dan Laidman, told The Hollywood Reporter. During his three-decade-plus career, he also directed installments of The Blue Knight, Family, Hawaii Five-O, Hunter, Kojak, Eight Is Enough, The Incredible Hulk, Lou Grant, Knots Landing, Falcon Crest, Airwolf, Knight Rider, Magnum, P.I., Jake and the Fatman, Silk Stalkings and JAG. Read more – Hollywood Reporter: https://bit.ly/3DNOtk7 FCC Upholds Record $34,000 Forfeiture Against Amateur Licensee
01/10/2025
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) assessed a record $34,000 forfeiture against an amateur radio licensee for “willfully and repeatedly operating a radio station without authorization and interfering with the radio communications of the United States Forest Service … while the U.S. Forest Service and the Idaho Department of Lands were attempting to direct the operations of fire suppression aircraft working a 1,000-acre wildfire on national forest land outside of Elk River, Idaho.” As ARRL News first reported in 2022, the FCC proposed the fine against Jason Frawley of Lewiston, Idaho, for allegedly interfering with radio operations of the U.S. Forest Service during firefighting activities for the Johnson Creek Fire near Elk River in July 2021. The FCC stated in the Notice of Apparent Liability (NAL) that Frawley holds an Extra-class Amateur Radio Service license, WA7CQ, and is the owner/operator of Leader Communications LLC, licensee of eight microwave licenses and one business license. In response, Frawley acknowledged that he operated on a frequency reserved for government use and for which he lacked authorization but argues that he did not cause interference to the government’s fire suppression activities that were being coordinated on the channel and acted with “good faith and non-malicious intent to help.” Frawley requested a reduction or cancellation of the proposed forfeiture based on the number and duration of the unauthorized transmissions, his history of compliance and corrective measures, and his inability to pay the proposed forfeiture. Amateur Radio Daily: On-air Event Introduces Marines to Ham Radiopecial event station PA25MC will be on the air January 23rd to introduce members of the Royal Army to amateur radio. Sponsored by the Royal Netherlands Army Signal Regiment, the event will utilize military equipment using as many bands as possible on SSB. QSL info: Source: VE7SAR FCC Issues Warning for Illegal Pirate Radio Signal Using WMLN’s Frequency (Massachusetts)The Federal Communications Commission has issued a warning to a Dorchester man to shut down his radio station, which the FCC said is illegally using the same frequency as Curry College’s FM radio station, 91.5 WMLN. According to the FCC, the station was broadcasting from Otisfield Street in Dorchester. In a letter to Roy Owens of Otisfield Street, the FCC said they had confirmed in August of 2024 that he was using the 91.5 frequency. Dorchester’s proximity to the transmitting tower for WMLN, which is on the Milton campus, was a concern. WMLN Radio Director, Professor Kenneth Carberry, told The Currier Times it was an issue that could impact WMLN’s operations. “Parts of Dorchester are certainly within our coverage area,” said Carberry. “With a pirate radio station on 91.5 FM, WMLN listeners in the Dorchester and Mattapan sections of Boston could hear interference or even lose our signal completely.” The FCC’s letter to Owens further explained he could face millions in fines. “Accordingly, you are hereby notified and warned that the FCC may issue a fine of up to $2,391,097 if, following the response period set forth below, we determine that you have continued to permit any individual or entity to engage in pirate radio broadcasting from the property that you own or manage,” said the FCC in the letter. Owens has ten days from January 6th to respond to the FCC warning. A website listed a gospel radio station as operating on 91.5 in the Dorchester area. It is unclear if the station is still operating today. Read more – The Currier Times: https://bit.ly/3DMbeVj HamCation POTA Meet-up February 6thThe 3rd annual HamCation POTA Meet-up will take place in Apopka, Florida on February 6th. Participants will gather at Wekiwa Springs State Park from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM. The event will include a park activation, door prizes, lunch, and more. More information is available from the event flyer [PDF]. Source: HamCation Amateur Radio Daily – Read More QuartzFest 2025 Takes Place January 19-25
Special events include:
Speaker sessions include:
Amateur Radio Newsline Report
UNPRECEDENTED FINE
FOR HAM IN
EMERGENCY-INTERFERENCE
CASE WORSE THAN COLD THURSDAY EDITION: Joe-JEK and friends will be at HRO today if you want to stop in and have a Chinese lunch and shoot the shit, too cold for me to venture out today....single digits this morning and wind howling, below zero windchill to start the day on the island...Wild fires gone crazy in CA, if Glenn K1MAN was still alive he would have sent out an emergency team, lol...I worked few contacts on 20 meters using slow scan tv mode- good for a few laughs.... YAESU FTM-300 DONE FOR ACCORDING TO THIS REPORTCA Club hosting ham radio Field Day in SurpriseHave you ever wondered what all those funny looking antennas on your neighbor’s house are all about? The West Valley Amateur Radio Club will be hosting its Winter Field Day, an annual event for ham radio enthusiasts on the last full weekend of January at the Surprise Regional Library, 16089 N. Bullard Ave. Field Day offers a unique opportunity for radio operators to set up field operations in remote locations, enabling them to connect with other participants worldwide. The Winter Field Day event also aims to help participants improve their preparedness for disasters and enhance their operational abilities in adverse conditions. The Field Day will be “on the air” from 9 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 25 around the clock until 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 26. Users may choose to participate solo or get friends, family or a whole club involved. Ham radio operators should practice portable emergency communications in winter environments. This is because freezing temperatures, snow, ice, and other hazards pose unique operational concerns. Here in Arizona’s warm weather, the group will be making radio contacts with other hams operating outdoors, in tents, or trailers in freezing weather. All will be using portable or “compromised” antennas to make contact with others around the globe. Ham radio operators are licensed by the Federal Government to use frequencies on the HF, VHF, or UHF bands while employing voice, Morse Code, and digital transmissions. The event designates specific objectives to encourage a diverse range of activities, including the use of non-commercial power sources, the deployment of multiple antennas, establishing satellite contacts and more. This is a contest to make as many contacts with other hams worldwide as possible within the time frame allowed. Pi Pico Makes SSTV Reception a Snap
There’s a paradox in amateur radio: after all the time and effort spent getting a license and all the expense of getting some gear together, some new hams suddenly find that they don’t have a lot to talk about when they get in front of the mic. While that can be awkward, it’s not a deal-breaker by any means, especially when this Pi Pico SSTV decoder makes it cheap and easy to get into slow-scan television. There’s not much to [Jon Dawson]’s SSTV decoder. Audio from a single-sideband receiver goes through a biasing network and into the Pico’s A/D input. The decoder can handle both Martin and Scottie SSTV protocols, with results displayed on a TFT LCD screen. The magic is in the software, of course, and [Jon] provides a good explanation of the algorithms he used, as well as some of the challenges he faced, such as reliably detecting which protocol is being used. He also implemented correction for “slant,” which occurs when the transmitter sample rate drifts relative to the receiver. Fixing that requires measuring the time it took to transmit each line and adjusting the timing of the decoder to match. The results are dramatic, and it clears up one of the main sources of SSTV artifacts. We think this is a great build, and simple enough that anyone can try it. The best part is that since it’s receive-only, it doesn’t require a license, although [Jon] says he’s working on an encoder and transmitter too. We’re looking forward to that, but in the meantime, you might just be able to use this to capture some space memes. 38C3: Taking Down the Power Grid Over RadioYou know how you can fall down a rabbit hole when you start on a project? [Fabian Bräunlein] and [Luca Melette] were looking at a box on a broken streetlamp in Berlin. The box looked like a relay, and it contained a radio. It was a Funkrundsteueremfänger – a radio controlled power controller – made by a company called EFR. It turns out that these boxes are on many streetlamps in many cities, and like you do, they thought about how cool it would be to make lights blink, but on a city-wide basis. Haha, right? So they bought a bunch of these EFR devices on the used market and started hacking. They did a lot of background digging, and found out that they could talk to the devices, both over their local built-in IR port, but also over radio. Ironically, one of the best sources of help they found in reversing the protocol was in the form of actually pressing F1 in the manufacturer’s configuration application – a program’s help page actually helped someone! They discovered that once they knew some particulars about how a node was addressed, they could turn on and off a device like a street lamp, which they demo with a toy on stage. So far, so cute. But it turns out that these boxes are present on all sorts of power consumers and producers around central Europe, used to control and counteract regional imbalances to keep the electrical grid stable. Which is to say that with the same setup as they had, maybe multiplied to a network of a thousand transmitters, you could turn off enough power generation, and turn on enough load, to bring the entire power grid down to its knees. Needless to say, this is when they contacted both the manufacturer and the government. The good news is that there’s a plan to transition to a better system that uses authenticated transmissions, and that plan has been underway since 2017. The bad news is that progress has been very slow, and in some cases stalled out completely. The pair view their work here as providing regulators with some extra incentive to help get this important infrastructure modernization back on the front burner. For instance, it turns out that large power plants shouldn’t be using these devices for control at all, and they estimate that fixing this oversight could take care of most of the threat with the least effort. National power grids are complicated machines, to say the least, and the impact of a failure can be very serious. Just take a look at what happened in 2023 in the US northeast, for instance. And in the case of real grid failure, getting everything back online isn’t as simple a just turning the switches back on again. As [Fabian] and [Luca] point out here, it’s important to discover and disclose when legacy systems put the grid in potential danger. Blog – Hackaday Read More FRICKEN COLD TUESDAY: It is some cold here on the rock they call Cape Ann, 0 degrees with the wind chill factor..... Ham Operator Must Pay in First-Responder Interference CaseArguing good intentions, Jason Frawley also said he can’t afford the penalty A ham radio operator in Idaho must pay a record $34,000 penalty for causing interference with communications during a fire suppression effort. That’s the ruling from the Federal Communications Commission in the case of Jason Frawley, licensee of amateur station WA7CQ. When the commission issued its notice of liability 2-1/2 years ago, Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel wrote: “You can’t interfere with public safety communications. Full stop. So today we propose the largest fine of its type for this interference that put fire suppression and public safety itself at risk.” Frawley acknowledged that he operated on a frequency without authorization but argued that he did not interfere with government communications and was trying to help. He asked for a cancellation or reduction but the commission has rejected his appeal. It’s not clear why the FCC took so long to finalize the penalty. When the forfeiture finally was adopted the day after Christmas, Commissioner Nathan Simington dissented but did not release a reason. Radio World has followed up with his office and will report any response. The detailsThe FCC said that in 2021, Frawley willfully and repeatedly operated without authorization and interfered with radio communications of the U.S. Forest Service, which was attempting to direct operations of fire suppression aircraft working a 1,000-acre wildfire on national forest land near Elk River, Idaho. The FCC said that over a two-day period, Frawley transmitted eight times without authorization on a frequency allocated to government use. The Forest Service complained about transmissions on 151.145 MHz. According to its case summary, the frequency is in the Public Safety Pool that was being used by the Forest Service and the Idaho Department of Lands to coordinate the firefighting. “The complaint stated that the individual had caused radio frequency interference to communications with the U.S. Forest Service firefighter’s fire suppression aircraft,” the FCC wrote. “The complaint alleged that, on July 17 and 18, 2021, the individual had interrupted fire suppression activities and had begun advising the firefighters and aircraft personnel of hazards at a radio repeater site located at Elk Butte. The complaint also stated that the individual had identified himself on the radio as ‘comm tech’ and his location as the Elk River airstrip.” The FCC said that on July 18, the fire operations section chief left the scene of the fire, drove to the airstrip and told Frawley to cease operations on the frequency. In 2022 the FCC issued its notice of liability, as we reported at the time. In response, Frawley did not contest that he had operated unauthorized on a government frequency. But he said he made six transmissions, not eight; that the total duration of the transmissions including the firefighters’ responses was less than one minute; and that he did not cause interference to ongoing communications. He said he made the transmissions with “good faith and non-malicious intent to help,” that he hadn’t been given a warning before being fined, that he had a history of compliance, and that he can’t afford to pay the penalty. He submitted tax forms as evidence. Frawley said his actions should not be handled like those of someone who had malicious intent or deliberately jammed signals. Instead an admonishment would be more appropriate. Decision upheldBut the FCC is unmoved: “We have fully considered the arguments and accompanying financial information set forth in Frawley’s NAL response and subsequent filings, but we find none of them persuasive,” the commission has ruled. It said the base forfeiture is $10,000 per violation for each of the two days that Frawley operated without a license on 151.145 MHz and $7,000 for each of the two days that he caused interference to authorized stations. It added that it had actually chosen not to adjust the penalty upwards, as it has done in certain past cases. Further, while the FCC acknowledged that one of its criteria for reducing a penalty is “good faith or voluntary disclosure,” it said it has no precedent for applying “good faith” intention in a case involving first responders. Even if it had, the commission ruled, this instance “was particularly serious and could have had significant negative consequences for first responders, who were fighting a significant wildfire.” Also, “Frawley asserts that he is no longer engaging in unauthorized transmissions on public safety frequencies and, moreover, that the ‘wide publicity’ surrounding this matter has already deterred similar behavior by himself and others.” But the FCC said his case is different from those where a violator took affirmative steps to remedy an ongoing or persistent violation, like providing a missing application or installing missing equipment. “We decline to grant a downward adjustment based solely on a violator’s inaction.” And the commission said that although Frawley’s financial documents on their own could support a reduction, “given the totality of the circumstances and facts before us, we find his ability to pay is outweighed by the nature of the violations themselves and their potential threat to public safety communications.”
MONDAY EDITION: Hmmm, 13 degrees here right now at 8am not mentioning the wind chill factor...I just got a nice pay raise, my social is going up 66% and retro for a year. I was one of the ones that fell under the WEP bill. If you had a government job for retirement, you lost 66 percent of your social, Biden signed a bill that eliminated WEP- he did one thing right.... ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio Launches Dream Station SweepstakesNewington, CT – January 3, 2025 – ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio® has introduced a sweepstakes, offering members the chance to win an Icom Dream Station including a limited-edition IC-7760 HF/50 MHz transceiver, IC-PW2 amplifier, and microphone, generously donated by Icom America.
Go to the
ARRL Sweepstakes
Now > The ARRL Sweepstakes will run from January 3 to December 31, 2025. It is an exciting centerpiece of a year-long campaign to encourage new membership, and a fun way for current members to extend their support for ARRL. Dream Big! The lucky winner will receive one grand prize that includes a dream station comprised of the latest amateur radio equipment from Icom:
The winner will also receive a limited-edition Seiko watch celebrating Icom’s 60th Anniversary. Dream Now! Participation in the sweepstakes is open to ARRL Full members in the US (see Official Rules). Members will automatically earn sweepstakes entries when they:
Members can earn up to six (6) entries during the year-long campaign. For more information about the ARRL Sweepstakes, and Official Rules, visit the ARRL website at www.arrl.org/DreamStation 555 Timers Bring Christmas Charm to Miniature VillageThe miniature Christmas village is a tradition in many families — a tiny idyllic world filled happy people, shops, and of course, snow. It’s common to see various miniature buildings for sale around the holidays just for this purpose, and since LEDs are small and cheap, they’ll almost always have some switch on the bottom to light up the windows. This year, [Braden Sunwold] and his wife started their own village with an eye towards making it a family tradition. But to his surprise, the scale lamp posts they bought to dot along their snowy main street were hollow and didn’t actually light up. Seeing it was up to him to save Christmas, [Braden] got to work adding LEDs to the otherwise inert lamps. Now in a pinch, this project could have been done with nothing more than some coin cells and a suitably sized LED. But seeing as the lamp posts were clearly designed in the Victorian style, [Braden] felt they should softly flicker to mimic a burning gas flame. Blinking would be way too harsh, and in his own words, look more like a Halloween decoration. This could have been an excuse to drag out a microcontroller. But instead, [Braden] did as any good little Hackaday reader should do, and called on Old Saint 555 to save Christmas. After doing some research, he determined that a trio of 555s rigged as relaxation oscillators could be used to produce quasi-random triangle waves. When fed into a transistor controlling the LED, the result would be a random flickering instead of a more aggressive strobe effect. It took a little tweaking of values, but eventually he got it locked down and sent away to have custom PCBs made of the circuit. With the flicker driver done, the rest of the project was pretty simple. Since the lamp posts were already hollow, feeding the LEDs up into them was easy enough. The electronics went into a 3D printed base, and we particularly liked the magnetic connectors [Braden] used so that the lamps could easily be taken off the base when it was time to pack the village away. We can’t wait to see what new tricks [Braden] uses tothe village alive for Christmas 2025. Perhaps the building lighting could do with a bit of automation? FRIDAY EDITION: I loaded the trial edition of Ham Radio Deluxe and got it configured, it has a 30 day free trial and then it's $100 bucks. I think I will let this one go, I am not impressed.... 9X2AW to be Active from RwandaDF2WO will be active in Rwanda as 9X2AW January 27th through February 15th. This is a single operator “holiday-style” activity. Interruptions may occur during the activation window. 9X2AW will be active from grid square KI48XB on 10 meters through 160 meters as well as on the QO-100 satellite. Source: QRZ Amateur Radio Daily – Read More Holmesburg Amateur Radio Club’s Service Project Recognized Around the WorldSince 2014 the Holmesburg Amateur Radio Club has participated in the Stamps for the Wounded program. Stamps for the Wounded (SFTW) is a service organization dedicated to providing comfort and stimulating activity to U.S. veterans through stamp collecting. SFTW sends stamps, covers, supplies and literature to enable veterans to begin, or continue to collect stamps. Stamp collecting is an activity that provides comfort, meaningful activity and social connections... it is not physically challenging and very stimulating. SFTW has been helping veterans since 1942 and welcomes any U.S. veteran who would like to begin, or continue collecting stamps, to join our program to receive stamps and philatelic materials. The Club originally got involved with the SFTW program when they received about 1000 QSL card requests following members participation in the annual 13 Colonies Special Event held each July. HARC’s Club call, WM3PEN, is a bonus station during that event. The question came up as to what, if anything, could be done with all of the cancelled stamps on the envelopes. Upon learning of the program club members began inserting a brief note about the program with the QSL card request. Soon envelopes, both large and small, started to arrive from around the U.S. We even got packages from England and Germany. Stamps came from individuals, sports clubs, businesses, etc. Many asked how could their school or business get involved. Bob Josuweit, WA3PZO, trustee of the WM3PEN callsign, says this has provided a way to introduce people to ham radio. Rich Shivers, K3UJ, who coordinates the shipping of the stamps to SFTW says that the Club has shipped about 74 pounds of stamps so far. That’s a lot of stamps when you consider stamps are shipped with about a ¼ inch border. Rob Jenson, president of Stamps for the Wounded recently thanked HARC for “coordinating outreach among your members, and other amateur radio operators around the world. We have received donations from others who have seen info with your QSL cards and on your web site.” Following a recent HARC shipment to SFTW, Jenson said “We gratefully acknowledge receipt of your box of US and foreign used stamps, and some US mint postage stamps. On behalf of our veterans, and our all volunteer staff, we thank you all for promoting us, and encouraging your members and other radio operators to send us stamps from QSL cards, which we forward to the veterans.” He continued, “We have plenty of material to share, so if any of your members, or radio contacts are veterans or active-duty military who collect stamps or covers, or who are interested in adding stamp collecting to their hobbies, please point them to our web site at https://stampsforthewounded.org/for-veterans and we will get them set up.” Some of the items the SFTW program can use include: Undamaged, used stamps from the USA or a foreign country except for common stamps that have “Non Profit” or “Bulk Rate” printed on them or stamps with the US Flag as their entire design. Other types of stamps and envelopes that are acceptable can be found on the stampsforthewounded.org website. For further information contact Bob Josuweit, WA3PZO at WM3PEN@AOL.COM.
HAMS YOU MIGHT KNOW- ALIVE AND SK K1TP-
Jon....Editor of As The World
Turns....
SILENT KEYS Silet Key
KA1BXB-Don...Regular
on 3900 mornings....just
don't
mention
politics
to
him,
please! |