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<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> Volume 84 Number 11<br />

CONTENTS<br />

David Sumner, K1ZZ<br />

Publisher<br />

Mark J. Wilson, K1RO<br />

Editor<br />

Steve Ford, WB8IMY<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Joel P. Kleinman, N1BKE<br />

Associate Technical Editor<br />

Larry D. Wolfgang, WR1B; Dean Straw, N6BV;<br />

Robert Schetgen, KU7G; Charles L.<br />

Hutchinson, K8CH; Paul Pagel, N1FB<br />

Senior Assistant Technical Editors<br />

Joe Bottiglieri, AA1GW<br />

Assistant Technical Editor<br />

Ed Hare, W1RFI; Zack Lau, W1VT;<br />

Mike Tracy, KC1SX; Al Alvareztorres, AA1DO<br />

Laboratory Staff<br />

Rick Lindquist, N1RL<br />

Senior News Editor<br />

Rosalie White, K1STO<br />

Public Service<br />

Dan Henderson, N1ND<br />

Contests<br />

Mary E. Lau, N7IAL<br />

At the Foundation<br />

Bernie McClenny, W3UR<br />

How’s DX<br />

Bill Moore, NC1L<br />

DXCC, VUCC<br />

John Hennessee, N1KB<br />

Washington Mailbox<br />

John Troster, W6ISQ; Emil Pocock, W3EP;<br />

Diane Ortiz, K2DO; Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU;<br />

Paul L. Rinaldo, W4RI; Al Brogdon, W1AB;<br />

George Fremin III, K5TR; Roger Burch, WF4N;<br />

John Dilks, K2TQN; Rich Arland, K7SZ;<br />

H. Ward Silver, N0AX; Kirk Kleinschmidt, NT0Z<br />

Contributing Editors<br />

Michelle Bloom, WB1ENT<br />

Production Supervisor<br />

Jodi Morin, KA1JPA<br />

Assistant Production Supervisor/Layout<br />

Sue Fagan<br />

Graphic Design Supervisor<br />

David Pingree, N1NAS<br />

Senior Technical Illustrator<br />

Michael Daniels<br />

Technical Illustrator<br />

Joe Shea, Paul Lappen<br />

Production Assistants<br />

Steffie Nelson, KA1IFB<br />

Proofreader<br />

John Bee, N1GNV<br />

Advertising Manager<br />

Hanan Al-Rayyashi, KB1AFX<br />

Advertising Production Coordinator<br />

Melissa Yrayta<br />

Advertising Assistant<br />

Debra Jahnke<br />

Circulation Manager<br />

Kathy Capodicasa, N1GZO<br />

Deputy Circulation Manager<br />

In order to ensure prompt delivery, we ask that<br />

you periodically check the address information<br />

on your mailing label. If you find any inaccuracies,<br />

please contact the Circulation Department<br />

immediately. Thank you for your assistance.<br />

See page 10 for detailed contact information.<br />

Telephone: 860-594-0200<br />

Fax: 860-594-0259<br />

Technical<br />

28 Utilizing the Constant Bombardment of Cosmic Shelby Ennis, W8WN<br />

Debris for Routine Communication<br />

Rocks are raining down from the heavens every day. Why not put them to use<br />

34 A Beginner’s Guide to Modeling with NEC L. B. Cebik, W4RNL<br />

“Build” your next antenna on your computer.<br />

39 A Flexible Digital-Mode Interface Jim Mitrenga, N9ART<br />

Here’s a digital communication interface that does double duty: You can use<br />

it with your sound card software, or with software that requires an<br />

external modem.<br />

64 Product Review Joe Bottiglieri, AA1GW<br />

From one end of the price scale to the other: this month we explore the Yaesu<br />

MARK-V FT-1000MP transceiver and NorCal’s SMK-1 QRP transceiver.<br />

64<br />

News and Features<br />

9 “It Seems to Us. . .” Forty Meters: A Gordian Knot<br />

15 DC Currents Steve Mansfield, N1MZA<br />

ARRL luncheon honors Beltway hams; ARRL President Haynie visits the FCC.<br />

33 No Power No Problem! A Vacation Expedition to The Gambia<br />

A relaxing DXpedition to an African paradise. Henryk Kotowski, SM0JHF<br />

43 Discover the Wonderful World of Contesting Dick Green, WC1M<br />

Find a good contest and jump in. The “water” is fine!<br />

47 ARRL <strong>2000</strong> Technical Awards Jean Wolfgang, WB3IOS<br />

It’s time to nominate this year’s winners.<br />

71 Happenings Rick Lindquist, N1RL<br />

Balloting under way in three ARRL divisions; Phase 3D set for a Halloween<br />

launch; Quiat named Honorary Vice President; Morton named Vice Director;<br />

ham gear delivered to ISS; UK-Canada crossband LF contact completed;<br />

FCC turns down CB DX petition; more...<br />

<strong>QST</strong> (ISSN:0033-4812) is published monthly as its official journal by the American Radio Relay<br />

League, 225 Main Street, Newington, CT 06111-1494. ARRL yearly membership dues (including a<br />

subscription to <strong>QST</strong>), are $34 worldwide. To compensate for additional postage for mailing outside<br />

the US, please remit $47 for Canada and $54 for other countries. Complete membership information<br />

is shown on page 5. Periodicals postage paid at Hartford, CT, and at additional mailing offices.<br />

POSTMASTER: Form 3579 requested. Send address changes to:<br />

<strong>QST</strong>, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111-1494 Volume 84, Number 11<br />

34<br />

4 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


<strong>QST</strong> Workbench<br />

48 The Doctor is IN<br />

G5RV antennas on 6 meters; SWR bandwidth; bouncing LEDs; more!<br />

50 Help Desk<br />

Ham harmonics vs CATV and other services.<br />

51 Short Takes Steve Ford, WB8IMY<br />

DXTelnet 4.7<br />

52 Short Takes Dan Miller, K3UFG<br />

Ham University<br />

53 An Inexpensive KISS-Mode TNC John Hansen, W2FS<br />

A PIC and a few parts make a handy packet terminal node controller (TNC).<br />

57 Short Takes Michael Tracy, KC1SX<br />

LogWindows 3.07.30<br />

58 Short Takes Steve Ford, WB8IMY<br />

RITTY 4.0<br />

59 Another Look At Tower Work Rod Peterson, K4QG<br />

Tips for successful (and safe) maintenance.<br />

61 Test Your Knowledge! H. Ward Silver, N0AX<br />

62 Hints & Kinks Bob Schetgen, KU7G<br />

Strengthen your Cushcraft D40; an “arm holster” for your H-T...<br />

Amateur Radio World ........................ 87<br />

At the Foundation .............................. 85<br />

Contest Corral.................................... 93<br />

Coming Conventions ......................... 91<br />

Correspondence................................ 24<br />

Digital Dimension .............................. 83<br />

Feedback .................................... 38, 93<br />

Ham Ads.......................................... 150<br />

Hamfest Calendar ............................. 91<br />

How’s DX .......................................... 77<br />

Index of Advertisers ........................ 174<br />

New Products ......................... 63, 89, 98<br />

New Books .................................. 42, 82<br />

Operating<br />

45 Coping with Cabrillo Dave Pruett, K8CC<br />

The hows and whys of this new contest-logging format.<br />

94 General Rules for ARRL Contests<br />

97 <strong>2000</strong> ARRL 10-Meter Contest Rules<br />

98 <strong>2000</strong> ARRL 160-Meter Contest Rules<br />

99 <strong>2000</strong> ARRL International DX Contest Phone Results<br />

Dan Henderson, N1ND<br />

52<br />

Departments<br />

Old Radio ........................................... 86<br />

Public Service .................................... 75<br />

QRP Power ......................................... 88<br />

Radios to Go ...................................... 84<br />

Section News .................................. 107<br />

Silent Keys ......................................... 89<br />

Special Events ................................... 92<br />

Strays ............................... 38, 92, 93, 98<br />

The World Above 50 MHz ................. 79<br />

Up Front in <strong>QST</strong> ................................. 19<br />

W1AW Schedule ................................ 90<br />

We’re at Your Service ........................ 10<br />

75, 50 and 25 Years Ago ..................90<br />

Our Cover<br />

The mere mention of “antenna modeling” is<br />

enough to chill the blood of many amateurs,<br />

but this software approach to designing<br />

antennas is now easier than ever. Learn how<br />

in the first of our four-part series, “A<br />

Beginner’s Guide to Modeling with NEC” by<br />

L. B. Cebik, W4RNL, on page 34. In our cover<br />

photo, Joe Carcia, NJ1Q, W1AW Station<br />

Manager, works with EZNEC for Windows.<br />

Membership in the ARRL, including a subscription<br />

to <strong>QST</strong>, is available to individuals at the following<br />

rates: $34 per year in the US and possessions,<br />

$47 Canada, $54 elsewhere, payable in US funds.<br />

Age 65 and over, with proof of age, $28 (US only).<br />

Licensed radio amateurs age 21 and under may<br />

qualify for special rates; write for application. Life<br />

membership is also available. Membership and<br />

<strong>QST</strong> cannot be separated. Fifty percent of dues is<br />

allocated to <strong>QST</strong>, the balance for membership.<br />

Subscription rate for libraries and institutions:<br />

$34 per year postpaid in the US and possessions,<br />

$47 Canada, $54 elsewhere. Single copies $5 in<br />

the US.<br />

Membership without <strong>QST</strong> is available to the<br />

immediate family of a member living at the same<br />

address, and to anyone who is legally blind,<br />

for $5 per year.<br />

Foreign remittances should be by international<br />

postal or express money order or bank draft<br />

negotiable in the US and for an equivalent amount<br />

in US funds.<br />

Copyright © <strong>2000</strong> by the American Radio Relay<br />

League Inc. Title registered at the US Patent<br />

Office. International copyright secured. All rights<br />

reserved. Quedan reservados todos los derechos.<br />

Printed in the USA.<br />

<strong>QST</strong>®, DXCC®, VUCC® and DX Century Club®<br />

are registered trademarks of the American Radio<br />

Relay League, Inc.<br />

The ARRL and <strong>QST</strong> in no way warrant the<br />

products described or reviewed herein.<br />

<strong>QST</strong> is available to blind and physically handicapped<br />

individuals on audio cassette from the<br />

Library of Congress, National Library Service<br />

for the Blind and Physically Handicapped.<br />

Call 1-800-424-8567.<br />

Indexed by Applied Science and Technology Index,<br />

Library of Congress Catalog Card No: 21-9421<br />

Reprint Permission<br />

For permission to quote or reprint material from<br />

<strong>QST</strong> or any ARRL publication, send a written<br />

request including the issue date (or book title),<br />

article, page numbers and a description of where<br />

you intend to use the reprinted material. Send the<br />

request to the office of the Publications Manager<br />

(e-mail permission@arrl.org).<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 5


THE AMERICAN RADIO<br />

RELAY LEAGUE INC<br />

The American Radio Relay League Inc is a<br />

noncommercial association of radio amateurs,<br />

organized for the promotion of interest in<br />

Amateur Radio communication and experimentation,<br />

for the establishment of networks to provide<br />

communication in the event of disasters or other<br />

emergencies, for the advancement of the radio art<br />

and of the public welfare, for the representation of<br />

the radio amateur in legislative matters, and for the<br />

maintenance of fraternalism and a high standard of<br />

conduct.<br />

ARRL is an incorporated association without<br />

capital stock chartered under the laws of the State<br />

of Connecticut, and is an exempt organization<br />

under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue<br />

Code of 1986. Its affairs are governed by a Board<br />

of Directors, whose voting members are elected<br />

every three years by the general membership. The<br />

officers are elected or appointed by the directors.<br />

The League is noncommercial, and no one who<br />

could gain financially from the shaping of its affairs<br />

is eligible for membership on its Board.<br />

“Of, by, and for the radio amateur,” the ARRL<br />

numbers within its ranks the vast majority of active<br />

amateurs in the nation and has a proud history of<br />

achievement as the standard-bearer in amateur affairs.<br />

A bona fide interest in Amateur Radio is the only<br />

essential qualification of membership; an Amateur<br />

Radio license is not a prerequisite, although full<br />

voting membership is granted only to licensed<br />

amateurs in the US.<br />

Membership inquiries and general correspondence<br />

should be addressed to the administrative<br />

headquarters; see page 10 for detailed contact<br />

information.<br />

Founding President (1914-1936)<br />

Hiram Percy Maxim, W1AW<br />

Officers<br />

President: JIM D. HAYNIE,* W5JBP,<br />

3226 Newcastle Dr, Dallas, TX 75220-1640;<br />

(214-366-9400); w5jbp@arrl.org<br />

First Vice President: JOEL M. HARRISON,*<br />

W5ZN, 528 Miller Rd, Judsonia, AR 72081;<br />

(501-729-4152); w5zn@arrl.org<br />

Vice President: KAY C. CRAIGIE, WT3P,<br />

5 Faggs Manor Ln, Paoli, PA 19301; (610-993-9623);<br />

wt3p@arrl.org<br />

Vice President: JOHN C. KANODE, N4MM,<br />

1741 Old Chapel Rd, Boyce, VA 22620;<br />

(540-837-1340); n4mm@arrl.org<br />

International Affairs Vice President:<br />

RODNEY STAFFORD, W6ROD, 5155 Shadow<br />

Estates, San Jose, CA 95135; (408-274-0492);<br />

w6rod@arrl.org<br />

Executive Vice President: DAVID SUMNER,* K1ZZ<br />

Secretary: DAVID SUMNER, K1ZZ<br />

Treasurer: JAMES McCOBB Jr, W1LLU<br />

Chief Financial Officer: BARRY J. SHELLEY, N1VXY<br />

Staff<br />

Technical Relations Manager<br />

Paul Rinaldo, W4RI<br />

Legislative and Public Affairs Manager<br />

Steve Mansfield, N1MZA<br />

General Counsel<br />

Christopher Imlay, W3KD<br />

PUBLICATIONS<br />

Manager: Mark Wilson, K1RO<br />

Advertising Department<br />

John Bee, N1GNV, Manager<br />

Circulation Department<br />

Debra Jahnke, Manager<br />

Katherine Capodicasa, N1GZO, Deputy Manager<br />

MEMBERSHIP SERVICES<br />

Manager: Wayne Mills, N7NG<br />

FIELD & EDUCATIONAL SERVICES<br />

Manager: Rosalie White, K1STO<br />

VOLUNTEER EXAMINER DEPARTMENT<br />

Manager: Bart Jahnke, W9JJ<br />

Business Staff<br />

Business Manager: Barry J. Shelley, N1VXY<br />

Comptroller: LouAnn Campanello<br />

Information Services: Don Durand, Manager<br />

Office Manager: Robert Boucher<br />

*Executive Committee Member<br />

“IT SEEMS TO US…”<br />

Forty Meters: A Gordian Knot<br />

On this page in August we explained how<br />

the 40-meter band got the way it is, with amateurs<br />

having to compete with powerful broadcasting<br />

stations outside the Americas in the<br />

upper two-thirds of the band. We reported that<br />

WRC-<strong>2000</strong> in Istanbul had recommended that<br />

the realignment of the amateur and broadcasting<br />

services allocations around 7 MHz be<br />

placed on the agenda of the next such conference,<br />

in 2003.<br />

As expected, the ITU Council accepted this<br />

recommendation. Also on the WRC-2003<br />

agenda are two related items: Changes necessary<br />

to implement digital modulation techniques<br />

in HF broadcasting, and examination of<br />

the adequacy of HF broadcasting allocations<br />

between 4 and 10 MHz. Inclusion of the latter<br />

item is something of a surprise. It was on a short<br />

list of items that WRC-<strong>2000</strong> had recommended<br />

if additional budgetary and conference resources<br />

could be provided, but few thought that<br />

Council would be able to do so in the prevailing<br />

“no budget increase” environment.<br />

The long-standing IARU objective is an exclusive,<br />

worldwide amateur allocation of no<br />

less than 300 kHz in the vicinity of 7 MHz, as<br />

was the case prior to 1938. While the WRC-<br />

2003 agenda offers the possibility of achieving<br />

this objective, let’s not kid ourselves: It will<br />

not be easy. Inclusion of the other HF broadcasting<br />

items makes it more difficult to resolve<br />

the 7-MHz issue. Here’s why.<br />

This will be the third attempt to fix 40 meters.<br />

The first, in 1979, was a part of a bottom-to-top<br />

review of the international radio regulations<br />

and the table of frequency allocations. Several<br />

administrations proposed separate 7-MHz amateur<br />

and broadcasting allocations at WARC-79,<br />

but most of these proposals required reductions<br />

in the adjacent allocations to the fixed service.<br />

At the time, the international broadcasters encountered<br />

strenuous opposition to expansion<br />

from developing countries, many of whom relied<br />

on HF fixed links for basic telecommunications<br />

services. The failure to find a 40-meter<br />

solution satisfactory to amateurs and broadcasters<br />

was not unique; international broadcasters’<br />

gains at WARC-79 were limited to the bands<br />

above 9500 kHz, which are less useful for domestic<br />

fixed services. Below that frequency,<br />

they were shut out.<br />

Broadcasters were only slightly more successful<br />

in 1992. At that conference, they obtained<br />

future access to an additional 200 kHz<br />

below 10 MHz: 5900-5950, 7300-7350, and<br />

9400-9500 kHz. However, the new bands came<br />

with strings attached. They (along with an additional<br />

590 kHz above 10 MHz) were only to<br />

be used for single-sideband (SSB) emissions.<br />

HF broadcasters were also required to complete<br />

the transition from double-sideband to SSB<br />

with all double-sideband transmissions to cease<br />

by the end of 2015.<br />

The SSB envisioned for broadcasting was<br />

not the same SSB that has been the dominant<br />

amateur HF voice mode for the past 35 years.<br />

Instead of completely suppressing the carrier,<br />

broadcasters were to transmit a pilot carrier at<br />

a level about 12 dB below peak envelope power.<br />

The plan was for receiver manufacturers to<br />

design and market SSB receivers with synchronous<br />

detectors.<br />

That was the plan, but somehow it never quite<br />

came together. Most broadcasters’ hearts were<br />

never in it. They didn’t like the idea of having<br />

to buy new transmitters (HF transmitters have<br />

an extremely long service life) and they didn’t<br />

like listeners having to buy new receivers in<br />

exchange for what they generally regarded as<br />

marginal improvements in reception quality. A<br />

WRC-<strong>2000</strong> report said: “No SSB receiver<br />

equipped with a synchronous demodulator has<br />

been identified in the price range up to $200.<br />

Even in the price range from $200 to $600, only<br />

15% of the HF receiver models identified are<br />

equipped with a synchronous detector.” While<br />

exact figures are not available, it is clear that<br />

only a tiny percentage of the estimated 500<br />

million to 700 million HF receivers in the world<br />

are equipped for SSB.<br />

In recent years, some HF broadcasters have<br />

become enthusiastic about digital modulation.<br />

An international consortium, Digital Radio<br />

Mondiale (DRM), has made considerable<br />

progress toward developing a proposed worldwide<br />

standard for digital sound broadcasting<br />

below 30 MHz. An ITU Task Group meeting in<br />

Geneva in mid-October (around the time this<br />

issue of <strong>QST</strong> is mailed) is expected to approve<br />

such a standard. This will set the stage for its<br />

early adoption as an ITU-R Recommendation<br />

as well as for WRC-2003 proposals to abandon<br />

the mandatory transition to SSB in favor of<br />

digital. No doubt some broadcasters will argue<br />

that WRC-2003 should drop the mandate entirely<br />

on the grounds that no one knows how<br />

quickly digital receivers will be available at<br />

reasonable prices.<br />

Thus, HF broadcasters go into WRC-2003<br />

with three objectives. The first is similar to<br />

ours: Separating amateurs from broadcasters at<br />

7100-7300 kHz. For this to be achieved, broadcasters<br />

will have to be accommodated above<br />

7350 kHz or amateurs will have accommodated<br />

below 7000 kHz (or both).<br />

While they (and we) seek concessions from<br />

fixed and mobile interests (including the military)<br />

above 7350 kHz and possibly below 7000<br />

kHz, broadcasters also will be seeking access<br />

to other bands below 10 MHz. Fixed and mobile<br />

interests will be less willing to cooperate to<br />

solve the 7-MHz problem if they feel they are<br />

under the gun elsewhere.<br />

On top of that, HF broadcasters will be defining<br />

their spectrum requirements to include<br />

both digital and double-sideband. And while<br />

there may be advantages to digital broadcasting,<br />

narrow bandwidth is not among them: The<br />

DRM system envisions a bandwidth of 9 or 10<br />

kHz, with 18 to 20 kHz for stereo. The objective<br />

of the transition to SSB was to reduce the<br />

bandwidth required for each HF broadcast; it<br />

remains to be seen whether the rest of the world<br />

will sit still for this objective being turned on<br />

its head.<br />

All this notwithstanding, fixing 40 meters is<br />

not an impossible mission. It is an exceptional<br />

challenge—one that is worthy of our best efforts,<br />

now as in 1979 and 1992. May the third<br />

time be the charm!—David Sumner, K1ZZ<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 9


We’re At Your Service<br />

ARRL Headquarters is open from 8 AM to 5 PM Eastern Time,<br />

Monday through Friday, except holidays. Call toll free to join the ARRL<br />

or order ARRL products: 1-888-277-5289 (US), M-F only, 8 AM to 8 PM<br />

Eastern Time.<br />

If you have a question, try one of these Headquarters departments . . .<br />

Contact Telephone Electronic Mail<br />

Joining ARRL Membership Desk 860-594-0338 circulation@arrl.org<br />

<strong>QST</strong> Delivery Circulation Desk 860-594-0338 circulation@arrl.org<br />

Publication Orders Sales Desk 860-594-0355 pubsales@arrl.org<br />

Regulatory Info John Hennessee 860-594-0236 reginfo@arrl.org<br />

Exams VEC 860-594-0300 vec@arrl.org<br />

Educational Educational 860-594-0301 ead@arrl.org<br />

Materials<br />

Services<br />

Contests Dan Henderson 860-594-0232 n1nd@arrl.org<br />

Technical Questions ARRL Lab 860-594-0214 tis@arrl.org<br />

Awards Eileen Sapko 860-594-0288 awards@arrl.org<br />

DXCC/VUCC Bill Moore 860-594-0234 dxcc@arrl.org<br />

Advertising John Bee 860-594-0207 ads@arrl.org<br />

Media Relations Jennifer Hagy 860-594-0328 newsmedia@arrl.org<br />

QSL Service Martin Cook 860-594-0274 buro@arrl.org<br />

Scholarships Mary Lau 860-594-0230 foundation@arrl.org<br />

Emergency Comm Steve Ewald 860-594-0265 wv1x@arrl.org<br />

Clubs Field Services 860-594-0267 clubs@arrl.org<br />

Hamfests Gail Iannone 860-594-0262 hamfests@arrl.org<br />

You can send e-mail to any ARRL<br />

Headquarters employee if you know<br />

his or her name or call sign. The<br />

second half of every Headquarters<br />

e-mail address is @arrl.org. To<br />

create the first half, simply use the<br />

person’s call sign. If you don’t know<br />

their call sign, use the first letter of<br />

their first name, followed by their<br />

complete last name. For example, to<br />

send a message to John<br />

Hennessee, N1KB, Regulatory<br />

Information Specialist, you could<br />

address it to jhennessee@arrl.org<br />

or N1KB@arrl.org.<br />

If all else fails, send e-mail to<br />

hq@arrl.org and it will be routed to<br />

the right people or departments.<br />

Technical Information Server<br />

If you have Internet e-mail capability,<br />

you can tap into the ARRL Technical<br />

Information Server, otherwise known<br />

as the Info Server. To have user<br />

instructions and a handy index sent to<br />

you automatically, simply address a<br />

plain-text e-mail message to:<br />

info@arrl.org, Subject: Info Request<br />

In the body of your message enter:<br />

HELP<br />

SEND INDEX<br />

QUIT<br />

ARRL on the World Wide Web<br />

You’ll also find the ARRL on the World<br />

Wide Web at:<br />

http://www.arrl.org/<br />

At the ARRL Web page you’ll find the<br />

latest W1AW bulletins, a hamfest<br />

calendar, exam schedules, an on-line<br />

ARRL Publications Catalog and much<br />

more. We’re always adding new features<br />

to our Web page, so check it often!<br />

Members-Only Web Site<br />

As an ARRL member you enjoy<br />

exclusive access to our Members-Only<br />

Web site. Just point your browser to<br />

http://www.arrl.org/members/ and<br />

you’ll open the door to benefits that<br />

you won’t find anywhere else.<br />

• Our on-line Web magazine, the<br />

ARRLWeb Extra with colorful news<br />

and features you won’t see in <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

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sign up quickly at the Members-Only<br />

Web site.<br />

Stopping by for a visit<br />

We offer tours of Headquarters and<br />

W1AW at 9, 10 and 11 AM, and at<br />

1, 2 and 3 PM, Monday to Friday<br />

(except holidays). Special tour times<br />

may be arranged in advance. Bring<br />

your license and you can operate<br />

W1AW anytime between 10 AM and<br />

noon, and 1 to 3:45 PM!<br />

Would you like to write for <strong>QST</strong><br />

We’re always looking for new material<br />

of interest to hams. Send a selfaddressed,<br />

stamped envelope<br />

(55¢ postage) and ask for a copy of<br />

the Author’s Guide. (It’s also available<br />

via the ARRL Info Server, and via the<br />

World Wide Web at<br />

http://www.arrl.org/qst/aguide/.)<br />

Press Releases and<br />

New Products/Books<br />

Send your press releases and new<br />

book announcements to the attention<br />

of the <strong>QST</strong> Editor (e-mail<br />

qst@arrl.org). New product<br />

announcements should be sent to the<br />

Product Review Editor (e-mail<br />

reviews@arrl.org).<br />

ARRL Audio News<br />

The best way to keep up with fastmoving<br />

events in the ham community<br />

is to listen to the ARRL Audio News.<br />

It’s as close as your telephone at<br />

860-594-0384, or on the Web at<br />

http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/<br />

A<br />

Interested in Becoming<br />

a Ham<br />

R R<br />

Just pick up the telephone<br />

and call toll free<br />

L<br />

1-800-326-3942, or send<br />

e-mail to newham@arrl.org.<br />

We’ll provide helpful advice on<br />

obtaining your Amateur Radio<br />

license, and we’ll be happy to<br />

send you our informative<br />

Prospective Ham Package.<br />

ARRL Directors<br />

Atlantic Division<br />

BERNIE FULLER, N3EFN<br />

17668 Price Rd, Saegertown, PA 16433<br />

(814-763-1529);<br />

n3efn@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: William C. Edgar, N3LLR,<br />

22 Jackson Ave., Bradford, PA 16701<br />

(814-362-1250); n3llr@arrl.org<br />

Central Division<br />

EDMOND A. METZGER, W9PRN<br />

1917 Lindsay Rd, Springfield, IL 62704<br />

(217-546-6870);<br />

w9prn@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Howard S. Huntington,<br />

K9KM, 25350 N Marilyn Ln, Hawthorn<br />

Woods, IL 60047 (847-438-3452);<br />

k9km@arrl.org<br />

Dakota Division<br />

JAY BELLOWS, K0QB<br />

997 Portland Ave, St Paul, MN 55104<br />

(651-983-2420); k0qb@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Twila Greenheck, N0JPH,<br />

3333 Owasso Heights Rd,<br />

Shoreview, MN 55126 (651-483-1214);<br />

n0jph@arrl.org<br />

Delta Division<br />

RICK RODERICK, K5UR<br />

PO Box 1463, Little Rock, AR 72203<br />

(501-988-2527); k5ur@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Henry R. Leggette,<br />

WD4Q, 7335 Ginger Snap Cove,<br />

Memphis, TN 38125-4732<br />

(901-757-0444); wd4q@arrl.org<br />

*Executive Committee Member<br />

10 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Great Lakes Division<br />

GEORGE RACE, WB8BGY<br />

3865 Gibbs Rd, Albion, MI 49224<br />

(517-531-4758);<br />

wb8bgy@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Gary L. Johnston,<br />

KI4LA, 3056 Hergott Dr,<br />

Edgewood, KY 41017-3377<br />

(859-341-7477); ki4la@arrl.org<br />

Hudson Division<br />

FRANK FALLON, N2FF*<br />

30 E Williston Ave, East Williston,<br />

NY 11596 (516-746-7652);<br />

n2ff@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: J. P. Kleinhaus, W2XX<br />

PO Box 322, Shrub Oak, NY<br />

10588-0322 (914-528-1604);<br />

w2xx@arrl.org<br />

Midwest Division<br />

WADE WALSTROM, W0EJ<br />

7431 Macon Dr, Cedar Rapids, IA<br />

52411 (319-393-8982); w0ej@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Bruce Frahm, K0BJ,<br />

PO Box DX, Colby, KS 67701<br />

(785-462-7388); k0bj@arrl.org<br />

New England Division<br />

TOM FRENAYE, K1KI*<br />

PO Box 386, West Suffield, CT 06093<br />

(860-668-5444); k1ki@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Mike Raisbeck, K1TWF,<br />

85 High St, Chelmsford, MA 01824<br />

(978-250-1235); k1twf@arrl.org<br />

Northwestern Division<br />

GREG MILNES, W7OZ<br />

740 SE 24th Ave, Hillsboro, OR<br />

97123-7286 (503-648-6990);<br />

w7oz@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Jim Fenstermaker,<br />

K9JF, 10312 NE 161st Ave,<br />

Vancouver, WA 98682 (360-256-<br />

1716); k9jf@arrl.org<br />

Pacific Division<br />

JIM MAXWELL, W6CF,<br />

PO Box 473, Redwood Estates, CA<br />

95044 (408-353-3911);<br />

w6cf@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Bob Vallio, W6RGG,<br />

18655 Sheffield Rd, Castro Valley,<br />

CA 94546 (510-537-6704);<br />

w6rgg@arrl.org<br />

Roanoke Division<br />

DENNIS BODSON, W4PWF<br />

233 N Columbus St, Arlington, VA<br />

22203 (703-243-3743);<br />

w4pwf@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Leslie Shattuck Sr,<br />

K4NK, 127 Henderson St, Greenville,<br />

SC 29611 (864-421-0732);<br />

k4nk@arrl.org<br />

Rocky Mountain Division<br />

WALT STINSON, W0CP,<br />

999 S Logan St, Denver, CO 80209<br />

(303-770-3926); w0cp@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Warren G. “Rev”<br />

Morton, WS7W, 1341 Trojan Dr,<br />

Casper, WY 82609 (307-235-2799);<br />

ws7w@arrl.org<br />

Southeastern Division<br />

FRANK M. BUTLER JR, W4RH*<br />

323 Elliott Rd SE, Ft Walton Beach,<br />

FL 32548 (850-244-5425);<br />

w4rh@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Evelyn Gauzens,<br />

W4WYR, 2780 NW 3rd St, Miami, FL<br />

33125 (305-642-4139);<br />

w4wyr@arrl.org<br />

Southwestern Division<br />

FRIED HEYN, WA6WZO*<br />

962 Cheyenne St, Costa Mesa, CA<br />

92626 (714-549-8516);<br />

wa6wzo@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: Art Goddard, W6XD,<br />

2901 Palau Pl, Costa Mesa, CA<br />

92626 (714-556-4396);<br />

w6xd@arrl.org<br />

West Gulf Division<br />

COY C. DAY, N5OK<br />

RR1, Box 254, Union City, OK<br />

73090-9726 (405-483-5632);<br />

n5ok@arrl.org<br />

Vice Director: David Woolweaver,<br />

K5RAV, 2210 S. 77 Sunshine Strip,<br />

Harlingen, TX 78550 (956-425-3128);<br />

k5rav@arrl.org<br />

As an ARRL member, you elect the<br />

directors and vice directors who<br />

represent your division on ARRL<br />

policy matters. If you have a question<br />

or comment about League policies,<br />

contact your representatives at the<br />

addresses shown.


Get to Know Your Section Manager<br />

The 15 divisions of the League are arranged into 71 administrative sections, each headed by an elected section manager (SM). Your section manager is the<br />

person to contact when you have news about your activities, or those of your club. These news items could find their way into the pages of <strong>QST</strong>! If you need<br />

assistance with a local problem, your section manager is your first point of contact. He or she can put you in touch with various ARRL volunteers who can help<br />

(such as technical specialists).Your section manager is also the person to see if you’d like to become a section volunteer. Whatever your license class, your<br />

SM has an appointment available. If your ARRL section has a Web site, the address can be found at http://www.arrl.org/field/org/smlist.html.<br />

Atlantic Division<br />

Delaware<br />

Eastern Pennsylvania<br />

Maryland-DC<br />

Northern New York<br />

Southern New Jersey<br />

Western New York<br />

Western Pennsylvania<br />

Randall K. Carlson, WB0JJX, 121 Scarborough Park Dr,<br />

No 10, Wilmington, DE 19804 (302-655-6179);<br />

wb0jjx@arrl.org<br />

Allen R. Breiner Sr, W3TI, 212 Race St, Tamaqua, PA<br />

18252 (570-668-3098); w3ti@arrl.org<br />

William Howard, WB3V, 2304 Snowflake Dr, Odenton,<br />

MD 21113 (410-551-6775); wb3v@arrl.org<br />

Thomas Dick, KF2GC, 4 Jenkins St, Saranac Lake, NY<br />

12983 (518-891-0508); kf2gc@arrl.org<br />

Jean Priestley, KA2YKN, 7158 Chandler Ave,<br />

Pennsauken, NJ 08105 (856-662-3587);<br />

ka2ykn@arrl.org<br />

Scott Bauer, W2LC, 1964 Connors Rd,<br />

Baldwinsville, NY 13027 (315-638-7551); w2lc@arrl.org<br />

John V. Rodgers, N3MSE, 803 S Main St, Butler, PA<br />

16001-6326 (724-287-0424); n3mse@arrl.org<br />

Central Division<br />

Illinois<br />

Bruce Boston, KD9UL, 815 E 3rd St, Beardstown, IL<br />

62618 (217-323-9809); kd9ul@arrl.org<br />

Indiana<br />

Peggy Coulter, W9JUJ, 12330 SCR 200 E, Muncie, IN<br />

47302 (765-288-0481); w9juj@arrl.org<br />

Wisconsin<br />

Donald Michalski, W9IXG, 4214 Mohawk Dr, Madison,<br />

WI 53711 (608-274-1886); w9ixg@arrl.org<br />

Dakota Division<br />

Minnesota Randy “Max” Wendel, KM0D, 8539 Bryant Ave S,<br />

Bloomington, MN 55420-2147 (612-888-5953);<br />

km0d@arrl.org<br />

North Dakota<br />

Roger “Bill” Kurtti, WC0M, RR1, Box 34, Rock Lake,<br />

ND 58365 (701-266-5646); wc0m@arrl.org<br />

South Dakota<br />

Roland Cory, W0YMB, 815 2nd Ave W, Mobridge, SD<br />

57601 (605-845-2400); w0ymb@arrl.org<br />

Delta Division<br />

Arkansas Roger Gray, N5QS, PO Box 166, Searcy, AR 72145<br />

(501-729-5489); n5qs@arrl.org<br />

Louisiana<br />

Mickey Cox, K5MC, 754 Cheniere-Drew Rd, West Monroe,<br />

LA 71291 (318-397-1980); k5mc@arrl.org<br />

Mississippi<br />

Malcolm Keown, W5XX, 14 Lake Circle Dr, Vicksburg, MS<br />

39180 (601-636-0827); w5xx@arrl.org<br />

Tennessee<br />

O. D. Keaton, WA4GLS, 141 Medearis Dr, Old Hickory,<br />

TN 37138 (615-758-2329); wa4gls@arrl.org<br />

Great Lakes Division<br />

Kentucky<br />

Bill Uschan, K4MIS, 800 Leawood Dr #27, Frankfort, KY<br />

40601 (502-226-6784); k4mis@arrl.org<br />

Michigan<br />

Richard Mondro, W8FQT, 800 Dover St, Dearborn Heights,<br />

MI 48127 (313-730-2111); w8fqt@arrl.org<br />

Ohio<br />

Joseph J. Phillips, K8QOE, 2800 Jupiter Dr, Fairfield, OH<br />

45014-5022 (513-874-0006); k8qoe@arrl.org<br />

Hudson Division<br />

Eastern New York Robert Leiden, KR2L, 19 Willowbrook Rd, Glenville, NY<br />

12302 (518-399-9343); kr2l@arrl.org<br />

NYC-Long Island George Tranos, N2GA, PO Box 296, Bellport, NY 11713,<br />

(631-286-7562); n2ga@arrl.org<br />

Northern New Jersey Jeffrey M. Friedman, K3JF, 1 Churchill Dr, Succasunna,<br />

NJ 07876-1803 (973-927-8182); k3jf@arrl.org<br />

Midwest Division<br />

Iowa Jim Lasley, N0JL, PO Box 5, Chillicothe, IA 52548<br />

(515-935-4337); n0jl@arrl.org<br />

Kansas<br />

Orlan Q. Cook, W0OYH, 12110 West 71st St, Shawnee,<br />

KS 66216 (913-631-0423); w0oyh@arrl.org<br />

Missouri Dale C. Bagley, K0KY, PO Box 13, Macon, MO 63552-1822<br />

(660-385-3629); k0ky@arrl.org<br />

Nebraska<br />

Bill McCollum, KE0XQ, 1314 Deer Park Blvd, Omaha, NE<br />

68108 (402-734-3316); ke0xq@arrl.org<br />

New England Division<br />

Connecticut<br />

Betsey Doane, K1EIC, 92 Mohegan Rd, Shelton, CT<br />

06484-2448 (203-929-7759); k1eic@arrl.org<br />

Eastern Massachusetts Joel M. Magid, WU1F, 47 Drumlin Hill Rd, Groton, MA<br />

01450 (978-448-5678); wu1f@arrl.org<br />

Maine William Woodhead, N1KAT, 63 1st Ave, Auburn, ME 04210<br />

(207-782-4862); n1kat@arrl.org<br />

New Hampshire<br />

Michael Graham, K7CTW, 50 Joppa Dr, Merrimack, NH<br />

03054 (603-424-6987); k7ctw@arrl.org<br />

Rhode Island<br />

Armand E. Lambert, K1FLD, 144 Summer St, Woonsocket,<br />

RI 02895 (401-762-0536); k1fld@arrl.org<br />

Vermont Bob DeVarney, WE1U, 43 W Milton Rd, Milton, VT 05468<br />

Western Massachusetts<br />

(802-482-4280); we1u@arrl.org<br />

William Voedisch, W1UD, 240 Main St, Leominster, MA<br />

01453 (978-537-2502); w1ud@arrl.org<br />

Northwestern Division<br />

Alaska<br />

L. Kent Petty, KL5T, 2229 Turnagain Parkway, Anchorage, AK<br />

99517 (907-243-5856); kl5t@arrl.org<br />

Eastern Washington Kyle Pugh, KA7CSP, W 5006 Houston Ave, Spokane, WA<br />

99208 (509-327-5039); ka7csp@arrl.org<br />

Idaho<br />

Michael Elliott, K7BOI, 9832 W Gurdon Ct, Boise, ID<br />

83704-4080 (208-376-3458); k7boi@arrl.org<br />

Montana<br />

Darrell Thomas, N7KOR, 743 33rd Ave NE, Great Falls,<br />

MT 59404 (406-453-8574); n7kor@arrl.org<br />

Oregon<br />

William Sawders, K7ZM, 19821 Ponderosa St, Bend, OR<br />

97702 (541-389-6258); k7zm@arrl.org<br />

Western Washington Harry Lewis, W7JWJ, 10352 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle,<br />

WA 98125 (206-523-9117); w7jwj@arrl.org<br />

Pacific Division<br />

East Bay<br />

Andy Oppel, KF6RCO, 1308 Burbank St, Alameda,<br />

CA 94501-3946 (510-523-3953); kf6rco@arrl.org<br />

Nevada<br />

Jan Welsh, NK7N, 59 Constitution Ave., Henderson, NV<br />

89015-5702 (702-565-0242); nk7n@arrl.org<br />

Pacific<br />

Ronald Phillips, AH6HN, HCR 2 Box 6637, Keaau, HI<br />

96749 (808-982-6513); ah6hn@arrl.org<br />

Sacramento Valley Jerry Boyd, K6BZ, PO Box 252, Igo, CA 96047<br />

(530-396-2256); k6bz@arrl.org<br />

San Joaquin Valley Donald Costello, W7WN, 1900 N Ashby Rd, No. 9,<br />

Merced, CA 95348 (209-383-5739); w7wn@arrl.org<br />

Santa Clara Valley<br />

San Francisco<br />

Glenn Thomas, WB6W, 502 Walnut Dr, Milpitas, CA<br />

95035-4133 (408-263-9450); wb6w@arrl.org<br />

Leonard Gwinn, WA6KLK, 2960 Blackhawk Dr, Willits, CA<br />

95490-9704; wa6klk@arrl.org<br />

Roanoke Division<br />

North Carolina John Covington, W4CC, PO Box 217122, Charlotte, NC<br />

28221(704-577-9405); w4cc@arrl.org<br />

South Carolina Patricia Hensley, N4ROS, 164 N Main St PO Box 70,<br />

Richburg, SC 29729-0070 (803-789-5810); n4ros@arrl.org<br />

Virginia<br />

West Virginia<br />

Lynn Gahagan, AF4CD, 208 Velva Dr, Chesapeake, VA<br />

23325 (757-545-1290); af4cd@arrl.org<br />

O. N. “Olie” Rinehart, WD8V, 1256 Ridge Dr,<br />

South Charleston, WV 25309-2434 (304-768-9534);<br />

wd8v@arrl.org<br />

Rocky Mountain Division<br />

Colorado<br />

Tim Armagost, WB0TUB, 6337 S Lafayette Pl, Littleton, CO<br />

80121 (303-795-9683); wb0tub@arrl.org<br />

New Mexico Joe Knight, W5PDY, 10408 Snow Heights Blvd NE,<br />

Albuquerque, NM 87112 (505-299-4581); w5pdy@arrl.org<br />

Utah Mel Parkes, AC7CP, 2166 E 2100 North, Layton, UT 84040<br />

(801-547-1753); ac7cp@arrl.org<br />

Wyoming Robert Williams, N7LKH, PO Box 130, Wapiti, WY 82450<br />

(307-527-7758); n7lkh@arrl.org<br />

Southeastern Division<br />

Alabama<br />

Bill Cleveland, KR4TZ, 2113 Wildwood Place, Mobile,<br />

AL 36609-2583 (334-661-3892); kr4tz@arrl.org<br />

Georgia Sandy Donahue, W4RU, 15010 Briarhill Ln, Atlanta, GA 30324<br />

(404-315-1443); w4ru@arrl.org<br />

Northern Florida Rudy Hubbard, WA4PUP, PO Box 843, Milton, FL<br />

32572-0843 (850-626-0620); wa4pup@arrl.org<br />

Southern Florida Phyllisan West, KA4FZI, 1410 Shelby Parkway, Cape Coral,<br />

FL 33904 (941-574-3467); ka4fzi@arrl.org<br />

Puerto Rico<br />

Victor Madera, KP4PQ, PO Box 191917, San Juan, PR<br />

00919-1917 (787-789-4998); kp4pq@arrl.org<br />

Virgin Islands John Ellis, NP2B, PO Box 24492, Christiansted, St Croix, VI<br />

00824 (340-773-9643); np2b@arrl.org<br />

West Central Florida Dave Armbrust, AE4MR, 1641 Baywinds Ln, Sarasota, FL<br />

34231-3040; (941-923-1688) ae4mr@arrl.org<br />

Southwestern Division<br />

Arizona<br />

Clifford Hauser, KD6XH, 8741 N Hollybrook Ave, Tucson,<br />

AZ 85742 (520-744-9095); kd6xh@arrl.org<br />

Los Angeles Phineas J. Icenbice Jr, W6BF, 19323 Halsted St,<br />

Northridge, CA 91324 (818-349-3186); w6bf@arrl.org<br />

Orange<br />

Joe H. Brown, W6UBQ, 5444 La Sierra, Riverside, CA<br />

92505 (909-687-8394); w6ubq@arrl.org<br />

San Diego Tuck Miller, NZ6T, 3122 E 2nd St, National City, CA 91950<br />

(619-475-7333); nz6t@arrl.org<br />

Santa Barbara Robert Griffin, K6YR, 1436 Johnson Ave, San Luis Obispo,<br />

CA 93401-3734 (805-543-3346); k6yr@arrl.org<br />

West Gulf Division<br />

North Texas Donald L. Mathis, KB5YAM, 1190 Emerald Sound Blvd,<br />

Oak Point, TX 75068-2236 (972-292-1203); kb5yam@arrl.org<br />

Oklahoma<br />

Charlie Calhoun, K5TTT, 16101 E 98th St N, Owasso, OK<br />

74055 (918-272-9872); k5ttt@arrl.org<br />

South Texas E. Ray Taylor, N5NAV, 688 Comal Ave, New Braunfels, TX<br />

78130 (830-625-1683); n5nav@arrl.org<br />

West Texas<br />

Charles C. Royall, WB5T, 2063 Putter Dr, San Angelo, TX<br />

76904 (915-944-0469); wb5t@arrl.org<br />

12 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


DC Currents<br />

R<br />

A<br />

L<br />

R<br />

By Steve Mansfield, N1MZA<br />

Manager, Legislative and Public Affairs<br />

Just as radio waves aren’t constrained by artificial boundaries, neither is ARRL’s<br />

government relations effort. “DC Currents” covers behind-the-scenes activity you<br />

need to know about in Congress, at the FCC and other regulatory agencies, as<br />

well as at worldwide bodies such as the International Telecommunication Union.<br />

ARRL Luncheon Honors Beltway Hams<br />

About 50 hams from the Washington Beltway areas, most<br />

of whom are professionally employed in private sector or<br />

government telecommunications, met for an ARRL-sponsored<br />

buffet lunch in their honor. In addition to fine food,<br />

they were treated to a discussion on Amateur Radio issues with<br />

ARRL President Jim Haynie and the ARRL staff.<br />

Haynie discussed the League’s “Big Project” and, in explaining<br />

how Amateur Radio continues to be a spawning ground for potential<br />

new RF engineers and other technical careers, asked for help<br />

from attendees who can provide additional ideas on how to promote<br />

the ARRL’s involvement in educational projects. ARRL<br />

Technical Relations Manager, Paul Rinaldo, W4RI, gave a presentation<br />

on the background and history of the efforts on “harmonization<br />

of the 40-meter band” at the upcoming World Radio<br />

Conference. Steve Mansfield, ARRL Manager of Legislative &<br />

Public Information, discussed progress on the House and Senate<br />

versions of the Amateur Radio Spectrum Protection Act.<br />

Attendees included some FCC and NTIA staff, representatives<br />

from Capitol Hill and from the State Department, as well as many<br />

hams who are professionally employed by several major telecommunications<br />

operations headquartered in the Washington area. A<br />

ARRL President Haynie Visits FCC<br />

• ARRL maintains regular relations with the Federal Communications<br />

Commission, but in September ARRL President Jim<br />

Haynie brought “word from the ARRL Board” to Commissioners<br />

and FCC staff. Much of what Haynie had to say was well received<br />

by all.<br />

FCC meetings included a visit with Commissioner Harold<br />

Furchtgott-Roth to discuss the League’s position on CC&Rs and<br />

the ARRL petition to get the FCC to incorporate restrictive covenants<br />

as part of its preemption policy known as PRB-1. The<br />

Commissioner also listened with some interest to the ARRL’s<br />

renewed emphasis on Amateur Radio and education. The ARRL<br />

Attending ARRL’s luncheon in downtown Washington, DC are<br />

(left to right) Bill Cross, W3TN; Hal Grigsby, WB4GRW; Frank<br />

Williams, N4FK; and Sam Garrett, AA0CR. Cross is from FCC’s<br />

Private Wireless Bureau, Grigsby and Williams are from the U.S.<br />

Department of State, and Garrett is a graduate student at<br />

American University.<br />

number of years ago, the ARRL coordinated similar luncheons<br />

on a regular basis, often referred to as the “Washington Watch”<br />

group. The group may continue to meet periodically.<br />

team also met with Private Wireless Division Chief D’Wana<br />

Terry, Bill Cross, W3TN, and other Wireless Telecommunications<br />

Bureau staffers. At that meeting, some of the data from the<br />

ARRL’s CC&R research project was shared (without names, call<br />

signs or other identifying information) to help demonstrate inconsistencies<br />

in contract language in CC&Rs around the US.<br />

The ARRL delegation also met with Clint Odom, wireless<br />

adviser and legal counsel to FCC Chairman William Kennard,<br />

Dale Hatfield, W0IFO, and staff members of the FCC’s Office of<br />

Engineering and Technology that he heads. Software-defined<br />

radios were part of the discussions at OET.<br />

ARRL President and staff discuss “The Big Project” with FCC<br />

Commissioner Harold Furchtgott-Roth. (left to right) Brian<br />

Tramont, Commissioner’s assistant; Commissioner Harold<br />

Furchtgott-Roth; ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP; Steve<br />

Mansfield, ARRL Manager of Legislative & Public Affairs,<br />

N1MZA; and Chris Imlay, ARRL General Counsel, W3KD.<br />

Clint Odom (left), counsel to FCC Chairman William Kennard,<br />

listens while ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP, (center) and Steve<br />

Mansfield, Manager of Legislative & Public Affairs, N1MZA (right),<br />

outline ARRL concerns over CC&Rs and Amateur Radio antennas.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 15


The FCC Office of Engineering and Technology discusses League<br />

spectrum issues. Pictured here, around table left to right, are Bureau<br />

Chief Dale Hatfield, W0IFO, Karen Rackley, Hugh Van Tuyl and<br />

Julius Knapp. Backs to camera are ARRL General Counsel Chris<br />

Imlay, W3KD, and ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP.<br />

DUTCH CONSULATE GENERAL THANKS<br />

HAMS FOR HELP<br />

Dutch Consulate General Alexander C. H. van Schelle took the<br />

opportunity to visit with ARRL President Jim Haynie while he<br />

was in Washington. Van Schelle wanted to express his gratitude<br />

and appreciation to Amateur Radio for the role it played in saving<br />

the life of Dutch citizen Willem van Tuijl, son of Jacco and Janni<br />

van Tuijl, KH2DT and KH2TE, respectively. For those not aware<br />

of the story, Willem was shot by “pirates” attempting to board the<br />

family’s sailboat off the coast of Honduras. Hams monitored the<br />

event over the air, got on-the-air medical advice for the van<br />

Tuijls, and Haynie eventually got word of the event to Congressman<br />

Pete Sessions (D-TX-5th). Congressman Sessions convinced<br />

Dallas Children’s Hospital to fly Willem from Honduras to its<br />

Dallas facility. The Washington meeting was arranged by Sessions’<br />

chief of staff, Jeff Koch, NU5Z.<br />

“I think it’s important that Amateur Radio get involved with that<br />

because of spectrum crowding,” Haynie says. “And besides, we<br />

should be looking at these technological advances.”<br />

During the meeting, OET staff raised the possibility of ARRL<br />

members participating in noise-floor measurement tests in spectrum<br />

occupied by Part 15 devices. There will be more word of this<br />

as the project develops. Discussions also touched on Amateur<br />

Radio exam questions, RF interference issues, spread spectrum and<br />

the League’s pending petition for a low-frequency allocation.<br />

ARRL MEETS WITH PUBLIC SERVICE GROUPS<br />

TO RENEW AGREEMENTS<br />

During a meeting-packed week in Washington, ARRL President Jim<br />

Haynie and the ARRL staff met with several groups to renew memoranda<br />

of agreement establishing how Amateur Radio works together<br />

with served agencies. The first meeting was with Andy Butler, the<br />

Chief Engineer for Public Broadcasting (PBS) who is president of<br />

the Society of Broadcast Engineers. Butler indicated great interest in<br />

the ARRL “Big Project,” as some broadcasters are having an increasingly<br />

difficult time recruiting RF engineers. Haynie and Butler<br />

signed an ARRL/SBE memorandum of agreement on future cooperative<br />

efforts. The ARRL group also met with Paul Reid, N4EKW,<br />

emergency communications manager with the Federal Emergency<br />

Management Agency (FEMA) to discuss renewing the memorandum<br />

of agreement between ARRL and FEMA. Later, the group also met<br />

with John Perry, N1EOD, Manager of Telecommunications Disaster<br />

Services and other representatives of the American Red Cross to<br />

review a new memorandum of agreement with them, and to tour the<br />

Red Cross’s Emergency Communications Center.<br />

ARRL and American Red Cross pause for snapshots during a tour<br />

of the Red Cross Emergency Communications Center in Falls<br />

Church, Virginia. Left to right: Chris Imlay, W3KD; Bev Hoover,<br />

Red Cross Director of External Relations; Steve Mansfield,<br />

N1MZA; John Perry, N1EOD, Manager of Red Cross<br />

Telecommunications Disaster Services; Jim Haynie, W5JBP; and<br />

Bob Bavis, Director of Red Cross Disaster Administration.<br />

16 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

(left to right) Dutch Consulate General Alexander van Schelle<br />

discusses Amateur Radio’s role in rescue operations with Texas<br />

Congressman Pete Sessions and ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP.<br />

Media Hits<br />

• The New York Times was in Newington recently to write about the<br />

League’s efforts to promote Amateur Radio locally. Featured in an<br />

article about license classes at ARRL Headquarters were Dan<br />

Miller, K3UFG, and Al Cohen, W1FXQ.<br />

• Randy Carter, N4AYS, spotted a familiar name in the AOPA Pilot,<br />

a magazine devoted to private aircraft flying. It was none other than<br />

Dick Rutan, KB6LQS, best known for his nonstop round-the-world<br />

flight. In a more recent adventure, Rutan and a flying companion<br />

used Amateur Radio to summon help during a flying trip when they<br />

were stranded at the North Pole.<br />

• The Chico Enterprise-Record featured Chico, California ham<br />

operator Allen Sherwood, K6USN, (he’s a retired Navy commander)<br />

pictured in his radio shack preparing for his next<br />

DXpedition to Dunk Island, in the Coral Sea.<br />

• The Tribune Chronicle, out of Warren, Ohio, showcased local<br />

hams Chris Walker (11 years old), KC8NLR; Bill Craiger, K8UV;<br />

Henry, Kay and Ron Parise, NZ8W, N8WER and WA4SIR; Dan<br />

and Sue Coe, KB8QVS and KB8UXJ; Steve Marshall, N3TPF; and<br />

others at the 43rd annual Warren Amateur Radio Association<br />

hamfest. Does the Ron Parise call sign ring a bell That’s right, he’s<br />

an astronaut!<br />

• The Romney (West Virginia) Hampshire Review went “up close<br />

and personal” with Tom Viselli, K2UOP, of Romney, whose<br />

mountaintop home is an ideal DX location. The paper devoted a<br />

page to Tom’s pursuit of good DX.<br />

• Hal McClamma, NN4US, president of the Tuscaloosa, Alabama,<br />

Amateur Radio Club and Dr Gordon King, W4XI, discussed ham<br />

radio on the local WTBC talk radio station recently. The appearance<br />

was part of their promotion for a Technician license class.


UP FRONT IN<br />

A first day cover to honor 50 years of Amateur Radio in Bosnia-<br />

Herzegovina. Although the Bosnia-Herzegovina Amateur Radio<br />

Association was founded in 1947, the first amateur contact did not<br />

take place until July 6, 1950. Today the ARABiH boasts 3500 very<br />

active members.<br />

Three elements on 80 meters—believe it or<br />

not. Seeing is believing! You’re looking at the<br />

installation of a full-sized 80-meter Yagi at the<br />

station of Kan Inshu, 7J4AAL, in Hiroshima,<br />

Japan. Setting the giant antenna in place on<br />

its 140-foot tower required a heavy-duty construction<br />

crane and a crew of 12.<br />

’Tis the season…for hurricanes. W4EHW, the Amateur Radio<br />

station at the National Hurricane Center, opened the <strong>2000</strong> hurricane<br />

season on June 1 with a special event operation. From left to right,<br />

Julio Ripoll, WD4JR; Max Mayfield, director of the Center (seated)<br />

and John McHugh, KU4GY.<br />

You never know where a contact will take<br />

you. In this case, it took Joe Stephenson,<br />

WA0NUJ, (right) all the way to Provence in<br />

the south of France to meet Lars Brolin,<br />

SM0RSV, at Lars’ vacation home. Their<br />

friendship began 20 years ago during a random<br />

contact on 20 meters. If you enjoy classical<br />

music, you might recognize Lars. He is a<br />

member of the world-famous Drottningholm<br />

Baroque Ensemble.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 19


When it’s Kid’s Day, everyone gets in the act!<br />

William Wynn, KF6ZFR, thoroughly enjoyed both<br />

Kid’s Day events in <strong>2000</strong>—when he could wrestle<br />

the radios away from his grandfather, Larry,<br />

W6AXD, (right) and father, David, N6AXD.<br />

The next Kid’s Day will be coming up in<br />

January 2001. Watch <strong>QST</strong> for details.<br />

Fifty years with the ARRL! Last April the Central Michigan Amateur<br />

Radio Club set up a special event station on the grounds of the Ingham County<br />

Courthouse in Mason, Michigan (left), to celebrate 50 years of affiliation<br />

with the ARRL. Everyone who worked the station received the attractive<br />

certificate shown here. ARRL Great Lakes Division director George Race,<br />

WB8BGY (above, right), showed up to operate and presented the club with<br />

a certificate honoring the event. Among the operators present on the sunny<br />

(but chilly) spring day were Ken, W8HNI, and Pam, KB8PSF (bottom, right).<br />

20 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


Signs<br />

o’ the<br />

Times!<br />

Sumner Weisman, W1VIV, discovered this building in Concord,<br />

New Hampshire. As Sumner observes, “It is obvious to me that a<br />

facility has finally been built where ham radio operators can resolve<br />

their conflicts. Shall it be a duel with 10-meter whips, or perhaps<br />

egg insulators at 20 paces”<br />

If you need a new directional antenna, this<br />

may be the logical place to find it. Bob<br />

Mann, W8LHP, snapped this gem on the way<br />

home from the <strong>2000</strong> Dayton Hamvention.<br />

No, but a “spiral sliced” helical antenna might fit the bill. Someone<br />

at the Hercules Fence Company in Ocala, Florida, has a sense of<br />

humor, according to Fred Bernquist, N2DCP.<br />

Build your dream home and take your CW exam at the<br />

same time. Well, it could happen—especially if the contractor<br />

is a VE. Ron Ifferte, WB2CMI, found this near<br />

Hanover, Pennsylvania.<br />

Travel inexpensively to your next DXpedition destination!<br />

Donn Fuller, AD0N, was shooting a TV commercial<br />

in Richmond, Virginia when he spotted this<br />

intriguing sign.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 21


CORRESPONDENCE<br />

Your opinions count! Send your letters to “Correspondence,” ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111.<br />

You can also submit letters by fax at 860-594-0259, or via e-mail to: qst@arrl.org.<br />

We read every letter received, but we can only publish a few each month. We reserve the right to edit your letter for clarity,<br />

and to fit the available page space. Of course, the publishers of <strong>QST</strong> assume no responsibility for statements made by correspondents.<br />

DTV: HYPE OR PROMISE<br />

Referring to the article by Peter Putman,<br />

KT2B, in the August <strong>QST</strong>, I trust he is enjoying<br />

his very expensive HDTV installation.<br />

As a retired TV engineer following 42<br />

years of broadcast activity, chief engineer<br />

of two TV stations and other radio stations<br />

and full responsibility from the camera lens<br />

to the beacon on the tip of the antenna, I’d<br />

like to offer my reactions to his comments.<br />

The transition from NTSC specs to<br />

HDTV specs is in no way similar to the transition<br />

from black/white TV to color TV. The<br />

B/W sets of the early TV days would still,<br />

with no modification, display B/W pictures<br />

from color broadcasts. A modern NTSC TV<br />

set will not display a DTV signal. Addition<br />

of a converter “box” will not change the<br />

sweep frequencies of the display. Even if the<br />

sync frequency of the broadcast signal is<br />

within the range of the set’s specs, the vertical<br />

resolution will not be improved. The horizontal<br />

resolution may be slightly better but<br />

very little due to the limited IF bandpass. The<br />

picture you will get after spending for the<br />

mandated converter “box” will give you<br />

about the same quality as you are accustomed<br />

to. The FCC has just made obsolete probably<br />

500 million TV sets. But, you say, the<br />

cable people will do the conversion for us.<br />

Yes, at great expense they will be forced to<br />

convert the DTV signals back to NTSC standards<br />

and probably the UHF signals back to<br />

their chosen channels. Does anyone believe<br />

they will do this for free<br />

The general public is not going to spend<br />

$3000, maybe $1000 at least, for a new TV<br />

set when their old one is operating perfectly.<br />

Reception on computers, with a<br />

receiver/converter depends on the sync frequencies<br />

of the broadcast signals, of which<br />

there are four different standards, at least<br />

two of which will not work.<br />

From the broadcaster’s standpoint, the<br />

FCC has mandated the complete junking of<br />

all the station equipment, cameras, microwave<br />

links, transmitters, antennas—the<br />

works. This will bankrupt many stations.<br />

NTSC can broadcast pictures that HDTV<br />

cannot. Visualize a screen full of random<br />

color pixels filling the 3.5-MHz bandwidth<br />

available for NTSC. Now randomly change<br />

the color of the pixels 30 times a second.<br />

NTSC can do that, compressed HDTV can’t.<br />

From an engineering standpoint HDTV<br />

is a stroke of genius. From a public acceptance<br />

standpoint it is going to be a long,<br />

hard climb. From a monetary standpoint it<br />

24 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

will be a flop. The FCC has just pronounced<br />

the death knell of open circuit TV. We will<br />

have to depend on satellite and cable services<br />

and deep pockets.—Rowland Medler,<br />

W4ANN, Gainesville, Florida<br />

CONTESTS DO NOT PREPARE<br />

OPERATORS FOR EMERGENCIES<br />

A letter from Dave Rosen, K2GM, published<br />

in the July, <strong>2000</strong> “Correspondence”<br />

addresses a belief that has been circulating<br />

within the Amateur Radio community for<br />

years. A segment of the Amateur Radio<br />

community has long suggested that contesters<br />

are “well prepared to deal with the operational<br />

demands that arise following disasters.”<br />

Perhaps the time has come to take<br />

a hard look at this belief and offer an alternative<br />

viewpoint.<br />

Unlike contesting, in which the information<br />

exchanged is often identical and<br />

repetitive, true disaster communications is<br />

often complex and lengthy. Few emergency<br />

communicators are afforded the luxury of<br />

transmitting the same message, consisting<br />

of just a few words, repeatedly throughout<br />

a period of extended operations.<br />

While it may be true that DXpeditions<br />

are logistical triumphs, they are nonetheless<br />

logistical triumphs that afforded the<br />

participants the luxury of months, or perhaps<br />

years, of preplanning. Disasters typically<br />

arrive with little, if any, notice.<br />

Furthermore, disasters often require the<br />

emergency communicator to deploy to a<br />

completely unfamiliar location, such as a<br />

hospital, shelter or Incident Command Post.<br />

Unlike most contesters, few emergency<br />

communicators have the luxury of providing<br />

disaster communications from home.<br />

There is no doubt that contesting is an<br />

honorable activity that offers many significant<br />

benefits. However, if one wishes to be<br />

fully prepared to provide emergency communications,<br />

there are activities that offer<br />

specific training for disaster response, including<br />

the League’s own ARES and NTS<br />

programs.<br />

For example, participating in ARES<br />

drills and exercises requires one to set up<br />

portable equipment at command posts,<br />

Emergency Operations Centers, hospitals or<br />

shelters. Such equipment may utilize technologies<br />

uncommon in contesting, such as<br />

APRS, or even ATV. ARES drills require<br />

one to transmit unfamiliar data and tactical<br />

information, such as chemical names, telephone<br />

numbers, addresses, or requests for<br />

supplies and personnel.<br />

Consider NTS nets. The dedicated<br />

traffic handler must meet on schedule, regardless<br />

of conditions. He must receive<br />

unfamiliar messages, many of which contain<br />

unique addresses, texts and signatures,<br />

regardless of propagation conditions or interference.<br />

He must be thoroughly familiar<br />

with a standard phonetic alphabet, the<br />

proper usage of prowords and prosigns, and<br />

the mechanics of net procedures.<br />

Whether intended or not, when one suggests<br />

that contesters are best qualified to<br />

support disaster communications, an implication<br />

is made that participation in ARES<br />

and NTS activities is unnecessary. Let’s<br />

encourage every contester to take time to<br />

register with his ARRL Emergency Coordinator<br />

or his NTS Net Manager instead.—<br />

Jim Wades, WB8SIW, Ypsilanti, Michigan<br />

EVERYTHING DOESN’T WORK<br />

“Everything Works” by Thomas Schiller,<br />

N6BT, in the July <strong>QST</strong>, told an interesting<br />

tale, but it might mislead new hams. It describes<br />

breaking DX pileups using only a<br />

light bulb for an antenna, it being only<br />

18-dB less effective than a dipole. (If the<br />

feed line truly doesn’t radiate, expect about<br />

–100 dB, and not hearing anything at all.)<br />

Figure 2 in the article positions triband trap<br />

Yagis as, on the average, no better performers<br />

than dipoles while according to everyone<br />

else, they are 5 to 8 dB better, not to<br />

mention being multiband. And while the<br />

“enjoyment” axis of the figure suggests the<br />

ultimate is using six of the author’s Force<br />

12 antennas, many hams expand their<br />

pleasure by trying different bands with trap<br />

antennas, exploring the MUF, adding amplifiers,<br />

trying VHF, exploring low-power<br />

portable operation, and by building. Nonetheless,<br />

most of us can relate to the article’s<br />

“path” discussion, and the role of the other<br />

ham’s station, topics that seem to come up<br />

early in a QSO.—Gary Gordon, K6KV,<br />

Saratoga, California<br />

Judging by the article “Everything<br />

Works” in the July, <strong>2000</strong> issue, <strong>QST</strong> has<br />

decided to get into the “irritainment” business.<br />

What bothers me is the idea that your<br />

enjoyment of Amateur Radio is in proportion<br />

to the effectiveness of your antenna.<br />

The article implies that you can’t really<br />

have much fun with anything less than a full<br />

sized dipole in the clear, higher than onethird<br />

wavelength, and even then, you are just<br />

“beginning to experience the fun of radio.”


I have been a ham for 35 years and I have<br />

never been able to put up even the “0 dB”<br />

antenna as outlined in this article.<br />

I think the overwhelming majority of HF<br />

ham installations would fall below this<br />

0-dB mark. Yet I can hear them on the air,<br />

and we all seem to be having a lot of fun.<br />

Those of us who enjoy LPCA, QRP or<br />

mobile operation either by choice or necessity<br />

know that our stations put out signals<br />

inferior to those of a station that costs thousands<br />

of dollars. But, let’s face it, there is a<br />

limit to how far you can talk on this planet,<br />

and you can do it with a few watts CW to a<br />

dipole at a compromise height. I have seen<br />

no evidence that hams with monster stations<br />

have more fun than the rest of us. There<br />

are many ways of enjoying Amateur Radio.<br />

Some of us derive a great deal of pleasure<br />

from busting DX pileups with our crummy<br />

stations. Some of us like learning about<br />

baluns and feed lines.<br />

If I were a prospective ham reading this<br />

article I would think twice about taking the<br />

time to get involved in a hobby that requires<br />

such an enormous expenditure to “enjoy<br />

fully.” On the other hand, it sure seems like<br />

N6BT had a lot of fun with his “light<br />

bulb.”—Anthony Felino, WN6Q, Santa Barbara,<br />

California<br />

POTENTIALLY DAMAGING<br />

RESEARCH<br />

I was quite concerned when I read the<br />

story in the ARRL Letter regarding the<br />

research being conducted by Kenneth<br />

Cantor on Amateur Radio and its effects on<br />

the human body. I was particularly struck<br />

by the remark made by Mr. Cantor regarding<br />

his plans to conduct an “inexpensive<br />

kind of quick study” that would not yield<br />

fine detail. This seems to be potentially<br />

damaging to Amateur Radio and the wireless<br />

community if not carried out properly.<br />

The lack of dependable, well planned and<br />

conclusive research regarding RF exposure<br />

would have the potential to send the FDA,<br />

FCC, and the public into a tailspin over emission<br />

requirements and safeguards for Amateur<br />

Radio and other wireless carriers. While<br />

the concept of performing this research on<br />

the amateur community would be a prime<br />

focus group, Mr. Cantor’s research plan does<br />

not appear to be seeking concrete evidence.<br />

This is not the kind of publicity the wireless<br />

community can afford. Regardless of<br />

PRB-1 and its provisions, a negative review<br />

(research report) could trigger an enormous<br />

avalanche of hysteria and litigation. Major<br />

SAR and MPE restrictions, antenna structure<br />

restrictions, community bans on amateur<br />

operations, Citizens’ Band scares, and<br />

local law enforcement involvement in<br />

health and regulatory matters would just be<br />

the beginning.<br />

Already the prime time news programs<br />

have left irreparable scars on the cellular<br />

phone industry by reporting the theories<br />

about links between the use of cell phones<br />

and brain cancer. One detail that seemed to<br />

be underestimated was the average time the<br />

cancer patients used their cell phones, and<br />

one report even stated that the rate of cancer<br />

in noncell phone users versus cell phone<br />

users was the same.<br />

Where’s the link The sensationalism of<br />

the story seemed to win. I have wondered<br />

how many cell phone owners living and<br />

traveling in high crime districts of America<br />

are now fearful and maybe have even<br />

thrown away their phones due to the sensational<br />

news stories.<br />

Do we want an “inexpensive kind of<br />

quick study” to shape the future of Amateur<br />

Radio I can not safely discard any of<br />

the researchers’ reports and their findings.<br />

Doing anything excessively, whether good<br />

or bad, creates a “cause and effect” situation.<br />

The difficulty seems to start with the<br />

inability to define safe RF exposure limits<br />

with regard to our individual body chemistry.<br />

We’re not created equally!<br />

I propose that the amateur community<br />

not only work with Mr. Cantor in finding<br />

the facts about RF exposure, but that we<br />

insist on an intensive study. If we as amateurs<br />

are to be the proving grounds for such<br />

research, we owe it to ourselves and the<br />

public to ensure that the facts are accurately<br />

researched and reported…whatever the results<br />

may be!—John P. Barnard, N4NB,<br />

Altavista, Virginia<br />

The FCC made the ARRL RF Safety<br />

Committee aware of Dr. Cantor’s epidemiological<br />

study of hams while it was in its<br />

early stages. We welcomed this study since<br />

a similar study performed in the mid-1980s<br />

was misrepresented as being conclusive of<br />

a connection between Amateur Radio operation<br />

and leukemia, something that the<br />

study design and its results did not support.<br />

We wanted to make sure that the new study<br />

was performed as accurately as possible<br />

and that its results and their implications<br />

would be properly presented. We met with<br />

Dr. Cantor at ARRL HQ in Newington in<br />

order to assure ourselves that he would be<br />

sensitive to the issues that Mr. Barnard so<br />

correctly stated. The RFSC continues to<br />

maintain contact with Dr. Cantor and has<br />

already helped to improve the accuracy of<br />

the data. The “inexpensive kind of quick<br />

study” is the way this field does its business,<br />

and appropriately so. There is no justification<br />

for mounting an expensive study<br />

if no relationship can be found in a preliminary<br />

study. We are satisfied that Dr. Cantor<br />

is highly qualified to perform a valid study,<br />

and that he is sensitive to the fears of a public<br />

that may misunderstand the results.—Dr<br />

Gregory D. Lapin, N9GL, Chairperson,<br />

ARRL RF Safety Committee<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 25


By Shelby Ennis, W8WN<br />

Utilizing the Constant<br />

Bombardment of Cosmic Debris<br />

for Routine Communication<br />

Thanks to sophisticated software and high-speed CW (HSCW), you can make<br />

meteor-scatter QSOs on just about any (and every) day of the year. SSB may reign<br />

supreme during meteor showers, but HSCW has made its way from Europe and is<br />

now alive and well in North America.<br />

Confidential:<br />

“Your mission, Mr. Phelps, should you<br />

choose to accept it, is to complete a contact<br />

on 144 MHz over a 600-1000 mile (960-<br />

1610 km) path in less than 20 minutes every<br />

morning of the year while developing<br />

techniques to help others do the same. As<br />

always, should you or members of your<br />

2-m force fail, the Secretary will disavow<br />

any knowledge of your operation. It is<br />

suggested that you recruit a top-notch team<br />

for this operation. This tape will selfdestruct<br />

in 15 seconds. Good luck.”<br />

Report—For Eyes Only:<br />

“Mr Secretary: After a slow start, we are<br />

now approaching the goal. Between January<br />

1999 and April <strong>2000</strong>, 172 out of 215 144-<br />

MHz schedules were completed with K0XP,<br />

for an 80% completion rate, usually within<br />

15 minutes, over an 813-mile (1308 km)<br />

path, which included schedules during the<br />

poorest time of the year.<br />

During the period of February through<br />

April <strong>2000</strong>, 21 of 22 attempts were also<br />

completed with K1JT on 144 MHz, and 11<br />

of 11 were completed on 50 MHz over a 650-<br />

mile (1050 km) path. Details to follow.”<br />

While the above might sound like an<br />

opening scene from a Mission Impossible<br />

episode, it’s actually is a brief summary of<br />

what’s been happening during the past three<br />

years. Long-distance 144-MHz contacts<br />

have become so routine that we’re now<br />

surprised when a schedule isn’t successful.<br />

Exotic propagation modes and satellites<br />

aren’t even in the picture. What we’re using<br />

28 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

is a modern variation of 1950’s ham<br />

technology—meteor scatter.<br />

A Brief History of<br />

Meteor Scatter Operation<br />

Meteor-scatter operation began in 1953<br />

when Paul Wilson, W4HHK, 1 (in western<br />

Tennessee), and Ross Bateman, W4AO<br />

(northeastern Virginia), kept hearing signal<br />

bursts while trying to work during a<br />

widespread tropospheric opening. They,<br />

along with W2UK, W5RCI, W2NLY,<br />

W2AZL, W1HDQ, W1FZJ and others were<br />

soon running tests to determine how<br />

communication could be accomplished<br />

using this mode. 2,3<br />

With the publication of two <strong>QST</strong> articles<br />

by Walt Bain, W4LTU, 4,5 meteor scatter soon<br />

became a popular mode for making contacts<br />

beyond the normal extended-tropo range.<br />

1 Notes appear on page 32.<br />

During the annual Perseids meteor shower,<br />

although stations were spread out, enough<br />

were active that QRM became a problem at<br />

times. (Everyone was crystal-controlled and<br />

there was no way to use a calling frequency<br />

in those days). Using various keying methods<br />

and multi-speed reel-to-reel tape recorders,<br />

some ops managed to work at speeds of up<br />

to 100 WPM (slowing the tape for copying).<br />

Most of the time the “pings” were few<br />

and short. As SSB operation became more<br />

common on VHF in the 1970s, North<br />

American hams were able to exchange more<br />

information in the same amount of time, but<br />

SSB operation still required pings of one<br />

second or longer to be really useful. On 144<br />

MHz, these seldom occurred except during<br />

major meteor showers. (On 50 MHz, where<br />

pings are longer, SSB MS contacts are<br />

routine for well-equipped stations.) Nearly<br />

all North American 144-MHz meteor<br />

scatter operation occurred only during the<br />

“big three” meteor showers each year (the<br />

August Perseids, December Geminids and<br />

January Quadrantids).<br />

Meanwhile, the Europeans developed a<br />

different approach. SSB meteor-scatter<br />

operation was still much too slow to utilize<br />

the barrage of tiny meteors that constantly<br />

strike the earth’s protective atmosphere.<br />

These pings, while numerous, are usually<br />

weak and very short. The Europeans sent<br />

CW at very high speeds using electronic<br />

keyers, and recorded incoming pings on<br />

modified audio cassette recorders that could<br />

be played back at a readable speed.<br />

This was a brilliant solution. Using this


Antennas at W8WN—quad array of KLM 16 LBXs for 144 MHz,<br />

4-element Yagi for 50 MHz, 10-element X-Yagi for 432 MHz—all<br />

on the same az-el mount.<br />

A full-screen shot showing WinMSDSP and Netscape<br />

Navigator running at the same time.<br />

method, speeds of 400 WPM or more were<br />

quickly achieved. European operators were<br />

soon making routine contacts every<br />

morning of the year and logging dozens<br />

during meteor showers.<br />

Although modifying the cassette<br />

recorders is relatively simple, this style of<br />

meteor-scatter operation, now called highspeed<br />

CW (HSCW) or high-speed meteorscatter<br />

(HSMS), didn’t catch on across the<br />

Atlantic. North American hams felt that<br />

SSB was superior. Several operators<br />

attempted to spur interest in HSCW, but<br />

few, if any, contacts were made.<br />

Across the Atlantic at Last<br />

North American HSCW started almost<br />

by accident when, in May of 1997, Steve,<br />

KO0U (now K0XP), and I learned that we<br />

each had a mutual interest in CW MS.<br />

Coincidentally, DL3JIN’s SBMS (“Sound<br />

Blaster Meteor Scatter”) receiving program,<br />

which used a computer to emulate a variablespeed<br />

tape recorder, had just become<br />

available. We ran several schedules at speeds<br />

up to 80 WPM using programmable keyers<br />

or OH5IY’s MS-Soft program. W8WN was<br />

using SBMS to assist with receiving, while<br />

KO0U copied by ear at speed.<br />

In August of that year, Tihomir<br />

Heidelburg, 9A4GL, a college student in<br />

Croatia, released the first beta version of his<br />

HSCW receiving program, MSDSP (Meteor<br />

Scatter using DSP). It wasn’t as developed<br />

as DL3JIN’s program, but it had several<br />

additional features that showed promise.<br />

E-mail messages began to fly back and forth<br />

across the Atlantic as Tihomir sent us version<br />

after version of MSDSP to test, eventually<br />

adding nearly every feature we requested.<br />

Before the Perseids peak that year, a test<br />

version with transmit capability became<br />

available and speeds jumped to <strong>2000</strong> LPM<br />

or 400 WPM (LPM, letters per minute;<br />

LPM = WPM × 5). Things suddenly became<br />

interesting! Other operators learned of our<br />

HSCW experiments and began to join the<br />

fun. Speeds soon reached 4000 LPM (800<br />

WPM), with one contact between Valerie,<br />

WD8KVD (visiting in EM77), and KO0U<br />

(FN42), topping the charts at a blazing 8600<br />

LPM (1720 WPM), the highest speed then<br />

possible. 6 Next year (1998), again visiting<br />

in Kentucky for Christmas, WD8KVD<br />

and KO0U made a contact on Christmas<br />

Day at the unheard-of speed of 16,000 LPM<br />

(3320 WPM)! 7<br />

Some operators had trouble using the<br />

DOS version of MSDSP, as many were<br />

familiar only with Windows. In 1999,<br />

Tihomir released his first Windows version,<br />

WinMSDSP <strong>2000</strong>. With more features and<br />

capabilities, it was quickly downloaded and<br />

adopted by VHF operators around the world<br />

During 1997 and 1998, another group had<br />

also been testing various techniques for<br />

HSCW MS operation. It soon became<br />

apparent that the procedures used for slow<br />

CW and SSB meteor-scatter QSOs were<br />

inadequate for HSCW. The Europeans, with<br />

their 20 years of HSCW experience, had<br />

developed many additional techniques.<br />

However, some of their procedures were<br />

quite different from ours, however, and it<br />

was challenging to suddenly change 40 years<br />

of North American operating experience.<br />

Many of the schedules between W8WN<br />

and KO0U were devoted to testing various<br />

procedures, speeds, techniques and equipment<br />

settings. This is one reason why the<br />

percentage of completed contacts didn’t<br />

increase as rapidly as we expected,<br />

considering the increase in speeds. 8<br />

Characteristics of<br />

HSCW MS Operation<br />

HSCW meteor scatter operation in North<br />

America is now established, with speeds of<br />

4000 to 10,000 LPM (800-<strong>2000</strong> WPM) in<br />

common use. (All information here pertains<br />

to 144-MHz operation unless otherwise<br />

specified, as this is the most-used band for<br />

all types of MS operation.) Most operation<br />

is by schedule, with few routine CQs except<br />

during the annual North American HSMS<br />

Contest, which coincides with the Southern<br />

Hemisphere Eta Aquarids meteor shower<br />

during the first week of May. The number<br />

of North American stations capable of<br />

HSCW operation is still too small to<br />

provide many random contacts. (The<br />

HSCW calling frequency is 144.100 MHz<br />

in North America. 9 ) Most schedules on this<br />

side of the Atlantic are arranged using the<br />

“MS Rocks Live!” real-time Web page 10 —<br />

often referred to as “Hot Rocks”—or via<br />

the HSCW Reflector. 11 A station equipped<br />

for weak-signal operation on 144 MHz (150<br />

W or more, a 16-element Yagi and a decent<br />

location) has a good chance of completing<br />

a contact nearly any morning of the year<br />

using the underdense pings of sporadic<br />

meteors—if someone at a suitable distance<br />

is available for a schedule.<br />

The equipment needed for HSCW MS<br />

operation can be found in a typical VHF<br />

shack: a multimode transceiver, an<br />

amplifier; a horizontally polarized beam<br />

antenna and computer running Windows 9x.<br />

(There are several other methods of<br />

operating HSCW MS besides using MSDSP<br />

or a modified cassette recorder. For more<br />

information about the alternatives, point<br />

your Web browser to any of the HSCW Web<br />

sites and follow the links.) 12<br />

If your station works reasonably well for<br />

aurora, tropo and other weak-signal modes,<br />

you should be successful with HSCW MS.<br />

For distances greater than about 1250 miles<br />

(<strong>2000</strong> km), a good location and high<br />

antennas are needed. For medium distances<br />

of 600-1200 miles, however, low antennas<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 29


(in the clear) are quite usable. A quiet<br />

location is always an asset.<br />

Don’t worry about hacking up your SSB<br />

rig—no mods are needed. Keying is<br />

accomplished via audio tones (similar to<br />

most digital modes), and standard SSB<br />

filters work fine up to about 10,000 LPM<br />

(<strong>2000</strong> WPM). The emission designator—<br />

J2A—produces keying that is indistinguishable<br />

from keying the main carrier.<br />

It’s the same method used by many rigs to<br />

produce CW. 13<br />

Using standard SSB filters, the bandwidth<br />

of an HSCW signal is about the same as that<br />

of a voice transmission. For more technical<br />

information, see the numerous papers on the<br />

HSCW Web sites and the resources listed in<br />

the article by Jim McMasters, KD5BUR<br />

(now KM5PO). 14<br />

HSCW MS operation is decidedly<br />

different from conventional CW or SSB<br />

meteor-scatter operation. Both require<br />

overdense bursts or good (strong and long)<br />

underdense pings to complete a contact.<br />

SSB and slow CW operators hope for<br />

specular reflections from heavily ionized<br />

trails instead of “the abominable ping,” as<br />

one writer put it. Unfortunately, overdense<br />

bursts are usually observed only during<br />

major meteor showers.<br />

HSCW relies on the numerous subsecond<br />

bursts and the weak pings scattered<br />

from underdense particle trains. Pings of this<br />

type are often produced by the “sporadic”<br />

particles that constantly bombard the earth.<br />

Most of the debris that the earth “sweeps”<br />

into as it orbits the sun are not fragments<br />

from the asteroid belt but are particles from<br />

the dust trails left by ancient comets. The<br />

particles are widely distributed and no<br />

longer dense enough to produce recognizable<br />

showers. Their number may vary<br />

significantly from day to day—and even<br />

minute to minute. Most of these particles are<br />

no larger than grains of sand or specks of<br />

dust, but because of their extreme speed, the<br />

ionization they produce as they burn in the<br />

atmosphere is often enough to scatter or even<br />

refract radio waves. 15<br />

The duration of these pings is usually<br />

very short, but the number of tiny pings<br />

available on many mornings may surprise<br />

you. It’s been estimated that if you have a<br />

5% chance of completing a contact on SSB,<br />

your odds improve to 95% on HSCW. Of<br />

the approximately 215 completed HSCW<br />

contacts between W8WN and KO0U/K0XP,<br />

no more than 10 contacts could have been<br />

accomplished on SSB. Nearly all of those<br />

would have taken place during showers,<br />

when SSB MS comes into its own.<br />

Meteor scatter (using any mode) is<br />

difficult at distances of less than 500 miles<br />

(800 km) or greater than 1400 miles<br />

(2250 km) because of the height of the<br />

meteor trails, antenna characteristics, the<br />

30 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

An 11-element Yagi on telescoping paint<br />

pole for portable operation at our son<br />

Steve’s home near Clio, Michigan.<br />

The “basement-portable” operating<br />

position at Clio, Michigan. The hardware<br />

includes an IC-706 MKII transceiver, 150-W<br />

amp, MFJ switching power supply, Bird<br />

wattmeter, GW2K laptop computer running<br />

WinMSDSP, audio filter and coffee cup!<br />

Notice the very fancy recycled cardboard<br />

box operating table they gave me!<br />

WinMSDSP. Here we have the main MSDSP<br />

screen, and the flutter-type QSB on an<br />

overdense burst (burst length, 8.9 sec).<br />

scattering mechanism, etc. 16 For close-in<br />

communication, back- or side-scatter<br />

techniques (or antennas that can be aimed in<br />

elevation and azimuth) are usually needed.<br />

At distances beyond 1400 miles, a good<br />

location and plenty of power are necessary.<br />

Although difficult, unusually long and short<br />

QSO paths are possible during showers.<br />

Because HSCW relies entirely on signals<br />

scattered from underdense meteor trains, the<br />

typical sporadic ping will be weak and very<br />

short. So, when it comes to output power—<br />

the more the merrier. Does this mean that a<br />

150-W station can’t take advantage of<br />

sporadic underdense pings To see what<br />

could be done, I talked my daughter,<br />

WD8KVD, into letting me operate portable<br />

from her home near Duluth, Minnesota,<br />

when I visited in July of 1999.<br />

My IC-706 transceiver drove a 150-W<br />

amplifier and an 11-element Yagi that was<br />

mounted on a telescoping paint pole about<br />

20 feet (6 meters) above the ground. The<br />

location was merely fair for VHF. I used an<br />

old laptop computer to run the Windows or<br />

DOS version of MSDSP. 17 Compared with<br />

the kilowatt and the large array at home in<br />

Kentucky, contacts were more difficult, of<br />

course, but a number of ops were able to<br />

add a new grid to their logs.<br />

An indoor portable operation was<br />

repeated at Christmas 1999 from my son’s<br />

home near Clio, Michigan (EN83). Using<br />

the same equipment but with very flat<br />

terrain, contacts between 500 and 1000<br />

miles were easily made. (Details and photos<br />

from both operations are available on the<br />

W8WN Web site. 18 )<br />

Since then, K9KNW/MM has completed<br />

a number HSCW contacts from his boat,<br />

running either a halo or a small beam.<br />

During May of <strong>2000</strong>, K9KNW completed<br />

28 HSCW contacts while sailing in seven<br />

water grids (EL93, FL03, 13, 14, 15, 23 and<br />

24). His 12-element Yagi was only about<br />

three meters above the water, limiting his<br />

maximum QSO distance to about 1250<br />

miles (<strong>2000</strong> km). Stations less than 1100<br />

miles (1775 km) distant found the contacts<br />

to be quite easy, usually taking less than<br />

20 minutes. Those at greater distances were<br />

more difficult. Joe has plans for more trips,<br />

including a possible grid-hopping trip with<br />

much more time devoted to Amateur Radio.<br />

How Fast is Fast<br />

Obviously, higher-speed transmissions<br />

can pack more information into each ping.<br />

MS speeds were originally 25-35 WPM<br />

(still the standard for slow CW operation).<br />

Several pioneer operators could operate at<br />

50 WPM, copying in their heads. When the<br />

Europeans developed HSCW, routine<br />

speeds increased to <strong>2000</strong> LPM (400 WPM)<br />

or more. The current version of WinMSDSP<br />

is capable of speeds up to 20,000 LPM<br />

(4000 WPM). But are these extreme speeds<br />

practicable And what is the maximum<br />

usable speed<br />

Although contacts have been made at<br />

higher speeds, the practical MS speed limit<br />

is about 12,000 LPM (2400 WPM) (using<br />

unmodified SSB transceivers with standard<br />

SSB filters and audio tone keying). At higher<br />

speeds, the signal-to-noise ratio degrades and<br />

the keying begins to sound “soft” and<br />

indistinct. Remember that, using a <strong>2000</strong>-Hz<br />

injection tone and receiving with a 1500-Hz<br />

tone, a single dit may not even occupy a full<br />

audio cycle! By using wider filters and<br />

higher tone frequencies, faster data rates may<br />

be possible, but none of the MSDSP test


HSMS Bounty…K9KNW/MM Provides Rare Caribbean Grids to VHF Meteor Enthusiasts<br />

Joe Goggin, K9KNW, is an avid deep sea fisherman. His love for<br />

that sport is second only to his love for VHF meteor-scatter operation.<br />

From May 19 through June 16, <strong>2000</strong>, Joe managed to combine<br />

a fishing expedition with a 2-meter HSCW MS operation and provided<br />

some exciting QSOs and very rare Caribbean grid squares to<br />

North American HSMS operators.<br />

The robust nature of HSMS techniques allowed K9KNW/MM to<br />

operate from seven rare grid squares and complete 29 QSOs. Some<br />

contacts were completed in 20 minutes or less, while others took up<br />

to an hour to complete the required exchange of information (call<br />

signs, signal reports and acknowledgements).<br />

Morning operations were the rule, as sporadic meteors—the<br />

cosmic debris that provides HSMS operators with day-to-day airborne<br />

signal reflectors even in the absence of meteor showers—are<br />

most plentiful during the hours around local sunrise. Simple geometry—the<br />

height of the meteor trails—determined which US stations<br />

were within range of Joe’s reflected signals.<br />

The current North American HSMS distance record (anchored<br />

on one end by K9KNW from his home station) is a little more than<br />

1400 miles. VHF operators located along the Eastern seaboard and<br />

much of the lower Midwest could have—had they been active on<br />

HSMS—picked up a handful of very rare grid squares.<br />

K9KNW/MM activated grid squares FL03, FL13, FL14, FL15,<br />

FL23, FL24 and EL93. Joe worked WB5APD (in EM84) and W5SNX<br />

(in EM73) from every one of those grid squares. “Those two guys<br />

both had good signals, but, Bob Dodson, WB5APD, pounded me<br />

with pings in every grid.”<br />

Dodson and Dick Ray, W5SNX, operate sophisticated 2-meter<br />

stations and use high transmitter power and large antennas. Both<br />

were positioned within ideal MS range of Goggin’s floating station.<br />

“But, I also worked Joe Taylor, K1JT, in FN20 from FL23, a distance<br />

of about 1164 miles,” says Goggin, “and he runs a modest station<br />

(160 W to a single 11-element Yagi), which proves that you don’t<br />

need high power and big antennas to enjoy HSMS.”<br />

The long-distance QSO champ for this voyage was W9FX, located<br />

in EM57. K9KNW/MM was in FL23, and the calculated distance for that<br />

QSO, based on K9KNW’s GPS coordinates, was 1256.1 statute miles.<br />

Other successful HSMS operators were W8WN, K2TXB and W4WSR.<br />

Goggin said he was “a little disappointed in the light turnout of stations<br />

who expressed an interest in working me. But since there wasn’t<br />

any advance publicity for this trip and it was my first time out, I guess<br />

that’s to be expected. For future trips, some of which may be tailored<br />

strictly as HSMS DXpeditions, I’ll try to get the word out in advance<br />

so that more stations will have the opportunity to join in the fun.”<br />

HSMS operations are, for the most part, arranged in advance by<br />

sked. Dean Nickless, W4WHN, served as the primary land-based<br />

contact (‘pilot’ station in DXpedition terms) for the hungry grid hunters.<br />

W9FX filled in when Dean wasn’t available. Sked arrangements<br />

made on the internet by HSMS operators were passed to Joe via<br />

2-meter SSB or 20-meter PSK31. “Not having an internet hookup on<br />

the boat slowed things down. I’m going to have to see about equipping<br />

her with satellite-based internet access,” Goggin stated.<br />

K9KNW/MM operated from a custom-built 65-foot sport fisherman,<br />

the Island Gyspy. The wood hulled, twin diesel beauty with her<br />

20-foot beam provided a relatively stable platform for Joe’s 2-meter<br />

Yagi. Despite the fact that that all of his HSMS operations were<br />

conducted while at anchor, the Caribbean wind and waves did pose<br />

a unique antenna pointing problem. Joe says, “The boat was constantly<br />

changing position. I had to keep one eye on the computer<br />

screen and the other on the compass and rotator.”<br />

“This trip didn’t demand much planning. We simply loaded supplies<br />

on board and took off,” said Goggin. “That’s why I didn’t post an<br />

itinerary or publicize the anticipated HSMS operations in advance.<br />

There was a lot of thought—and work—involved in figuring out how<br />

to mount an effective antenna on the boat without detracting from the<br />

operation of the fishing gear or marine electronics.”<br />

How was the fishing “Great, “ said Joe. “But,” he added, “I had<br />

more fun on 2 meters!”— Brad Pioveson, W9FX, 301 Kirsch St,<br />

Benton, IL 62812-1706; w9fx@arrl.net<br />

stations had this capability, and no one has<br />

had the ambition to purchase new filters or<br />

to modify their rigs. Still, North American<br />

HSCW speeds are quite peppy!<br />

Other Bands<br />

HSCW MS operation in North America<br />

is mostly limited to 2 meters. Most MS<br />

activity takes place there already, and MS<br />

work on other bands is too difficult or rather<br />

easy, eliminating the need for HSCW<br />

altogether.<br />

50 MHz (calling frequency 50.300<br />

MHz): Compared to 2 meters, 6-meter meteor<br />

pings tend to be weaker, last longer and<br />

somewhat more frequent. The lower-gain<br />

antennas and reduced transmitter outputs<br />

typically used on 6 meters apparently account<br />

for the drop in signal strength. On 6,<br />

pings average about one second in length,<br />

with occasional pings of five or more seconds.<br />

This is why SSB MS is possible many<br />

mornings on 6 meters between wellequipped<br />

operators. Also, with E s , F 2, tropo<br />

and other propagation modes, grids can<br />

eventually be worked even without cooperative<br />

meteor fragments.<br />

Surprisingly, HSCW MS isn’t all that<br />

easy on 50 MHz because of the weak<br />

signals. Most operators find 144 MHz to<br />

be more workable, making HSCW a relative<br />

rarity on the magic band.<br />

222 MHz (no random operating;<br />

schedules only): As frequency increases, so<br />

does the difficulty. On 222 MHz, bursts can<br />

be strong but are fewer in number than on 2<br />

meters. One-hour schedules are typical<br />

between well-equipped stations. Little<br />

HSCW operation has been done on this band,<br />

but more is expected this year. In fact, the<br />

first known HSCW MS contact was made on<br />

May 2 between N7STU and N0KQY—as<br />

this article was being prepared. The next day<br />

a second 222-MHz contact was completed<br />

between N7STU and K0GU. N7STU was<br />

running 450 W to a 7-wavelength Yagi, while<br />

K0GU had only 25 W to a 22-element Yagi!<br />

432 MHz (no random operating; schedules<br />

only): MS QSOs on this band are difficult,<br />

but possible. Most 432-MHz MS activity<br />

has taken place in Europe. An MS QSO<br />

between SM3AKW and UA9FAD (some<br />

2141 km) is believed to be the world record.<br />

The North American record (at 2036 km),<br />

held by N6RMJ and W7XU, isn’t far behind.<br />

Working meteor scatter here takes power<br />

and patience. Pings are infrequent and usually<br />

short and weak. Schedules are typically one<br />

or two hours during showers. The most<br />

successful ops elevate their antennas to null<br />

out as much ground noise as possible. Also,<br />

the notes about antenna aiming and using the<br />

“hot spot” should be carefully considered<br />

because of the extremely narrow beamwidth<br />

of 70-cm long Yagis.<br />

Higher frequencies: These bands are<br />

generally considered to be unlikely<br />

candidates for MS operation, although<br />

902 MHz QSOs should be possible between<br />

well-equipped operators during major<br />

showers.<br />

Using WinMSDSP<br />

Although modified cassette recorders<br />

and other means are used for HSCW<br />

operation, WinMSDSP has become the<br />

standard. A limited run-time version<br />

(shareware) can be downloaded from the<br />

9A4GL web site and other locations. The<br />

software requires a computer running<br />

Windows 9x and supporting DirectX<br />

(additional operating system “helper” files<br />

may also need to be downloaded).<br />

WinMSDSP should run with most fullduplex<br />

sound cards that support DirectX.<br />

The program is easy to use and requires<br />

only a few minutes to learn. It’s loaded with<br />

features, however, so refer to the brief<br />

Manual and the Problems paper (actually,<br />

an FAQ) as you do the intial set up.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 31


Many of the HSCW web sites have a few<br />

sample pings that can be downloaded to see<br />

what the different speeds and strengths are<br />

like. After a few minutes spent playing with<br />

the program and learning the main<br />

functions, further “practice” is of little<br />

value. Now it’s time to join the HSCW<br />

Reflector and request a sked. (The meteorscatter<br />

reflector is often used in Europe.)<br />

What can you expect This depends<br />

upon your location, equipment, distance to<br />

the other station, the other op’s equipment,<br />

the time of year, the time of day—and<br />

maybe what your dog had for breakfast! For<br />

two small- or medium-size stations at an<br />

appropriate distance, ping rates may vary<br />

from only a few during any half-hour period<br />

to as many as 20 pings per minute.<br />

Conditions can vary greatly.<br />

Does it work The Europeans knock our<br />

socks off when it comes to routine MS<br />

QSOs. Also, Europe has many more active<br />

HSCW stations The biggest disadvantage<br />

to HSCW in the Western Hemisphere is the<br />

lack of stations—there just aren’t enough<br />

stations using this mode.<br />

Tips and Tricks<br />

Once you start running HSCW<br />

schedules, you may immediately notice<br />

how radically the number of pings varies<br />

from month to month, day to day and even<br />

minute to minute. The best time of year<br />

for sporadic meteors is July to January, with<br />

February to May being the poorest. HSCW<br />

will allow you to complete contacts on<br />

almost any day of the year, although certain<br />

periods will likely be easier than others.<br />

The number of sporadic meteors reaches<br />

a maximum at about 6 AM local time because<br />

the morning side of the earth is facing toward<br />

the direction of its orbital travel, sweeping<br />

up even slow-moving meteors. Around 6 PM<br />

local time, your location is on the trailing<br />

side, so only those meteors fast enough to<br />

overtake the earth will be captured (this is<br />

why MS is much easier in the morning).<br />

Meteor showers may be an exception—as<br />

long as the radiant is above your horizon. For<br />

information on daylight meteor showers, see<br />

the listings on listings the HSCW/MS “Hot<br />

News” Web page. 19<br />

On 144 MHz, one-second pings are<br />

excep-tional. Most pings are shorter than<br />

this, and many are much shorter. Because<br />

HSCW requires pings of at least a tenth of<br />

a second at 10,000 WPM (<strong>2000</strong> WPM),<br />

only a fraction of the total pings are likely<br />

to contain usable information.<br />

Other interesting things to watch for are<br />

Doppler shift, doubles, ionospheric scatter<br />

and—who knows Doppler shift isn’t often<br />

observed on underdense pings, but if you<br />

observe Doppler effects on one ping you’re<br />

more likely to see them on other pings.<br />

Another phenomenon you may notice<br />

32 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Val, WD8KVD, operating W8WN’s rig in<br />

Kentucky in December 1997. This was her<br />

highest-speed-ever contact with KO0U.<br />

(especially during certain showers) is that<br />

pings seem to sometimes come in pairs. At<br />

first glance, this would appear to mean that<br />

some meteors are traveling together,<br />

separated by a second or so. Scientists have<br />

long contended that this is only a statistical<br />

fluke, but hams have noticed the phenomenon<br />

for many years, and visual observers<br />

have recently been reporting it. (It will be<br />

interesting to see what ideas the predictions<br />

of Asher and McNaught eventually bring<br />

to this idea. 20 )<br />

Finally, traces of ionospheric scatter are<br />

sometimes observed when two EME-class<br />

stations are running HSCW schedules. So<br />

when you’re doing this type of operating,<br />

remember to be alert for unusual occurrences!<br />

HSCW MS is much easier than other<br />

types of MS operation and has the advantage<br />

of visually displaying the pings, which<br />

makes it easier to carry out other observations.<br />

MSDSP also gives you the ability<br />

to save particularly interesting pings for later<br />

study. (If it all becomes too easy and you<br />

want a real challenge, see Maj. O. R.<br />

Disaster’s collection of the works of that<br />

great wireless pioneer, Owa Taboo Byam. 21 )<br />

Conclusion<br />

If you’re serious about VHF DX, you<br />

almost certainly have a multimode rig with<br />

an amplifier, a decent antenna and a computer.<br />

Don’t let the “CW” in the HSCW scare you<br />

away. You can slow the received signal down<br />

to any reasonable speed. At least try HSCW<br />

MS. If you’re an active VHF DXer already,<br />

you may be pleasantly surprised!<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

Thanks to everyone who helped me with<br />

this article and to those who helped get HSCW<br />

MS started here in the states. Special thanks<br />

go to my wife Lora, WD8LPN; to Val,<br />

WD8KVD; to Steve and Alisca for the use of<br />

their homes when operating portable in<br />

Minnesota and Michigan; to Steve Harrison,<br />

K0XP, for three years of schedules while we<br />

tested all of the things listed above; to Maarten,<br />

W1FIG, and Joe, K1JT; to the MSDSP Alphatest<br />

group for all of its work with the many<br />

versions of 9A4GL’s program; to Ilkka,<br />

OH5IY, whose multi-part MS-Soft program is<br />

used by nearly every MS operator around the<br />

world; to Peter, DL3JIN, and Tihomir, 9A4GL,<br />

whose programming abilities and hard work<br />

started the modern age of HSCW operation;<br />

and to those HSCW operators in North<br />

America and Europe who have helped with<br />

testing, ideas and operating suggestions.<br />

Notes<br />

1<br />

Rick Lindquist, N1RL, “VHF-UHF Pioneer<br />

Paul M. Wilson, W4HHK, SK,” Happenings,<br />

<strong>QST</strong>, Feb <strong>2000</strong>, p 75.<br />

2 Emil Pocock, W3EP, ed., Beyond Line of<br />

Sight, pp 95-96. (A book of classic propagation<br />

reprints for the VHF DXer, available<br />

from the ARRL.)<br />

3 Emil Pocock, ed., Beyond Line of Sight, pp<br />

104-105.<br />

4 Walter F. Bain, W4LTU, “V. H. F. Meteor<br />

Scatter Propagation,” <strong>QST</strong>, April 1957, pp<br />

20-24, 140, 142, 144.<br />

5<br />

Walter F. Bain, W4LTU, “VHF Propagation<br />

by Meteor-Trail Ionization,” <strong>QST</strong>, May 1974,<br />

pp 41-47, 176. Reprinted in Beyond Line of<br />

Sight, pp 108-115.<br />

6<br />

See the sidebar, “HSCW Meteor Scatter<br />

Records are Made to be Broken,” on page<br />

38 of Apr 1998 <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

7 http://www.qsl.net/w8wn/wd8kvd/<br />

wd8kvd2.html.<br />

8 http://www.qsl.net/w8wn/hscw/papers/<br />

archive.html#w8wn/k0xp.<br />

9 See the North American “Procedures” paper,<br />

available on most of the HSCW Web sites,<br />

for more. (The Region I procedures can be<br />

found at http://www.scit.wlv.uk/vhfc/<br />

iaru.r1.vhfm.4e/5B.html.)<br />

10<br />

http://www.dxworld.com/hsms.html.<br />

11 To join, send a message to “Majordomo@<br />

qth.net” with “subscribe hsms” as the text.<br />

12 Start with the W6/PA0ZN Main NA HSCW<br />

Web Site at http://www.nitehawk.com/<br />

rasmit/ws1_15.html, or the HSCW section<br />

of W8WN’s Web site at http://www.qsl.net/<br />

w8wn/. Both have many links to other sites.<br />

13<br />

For a discussion of keying methods, see The<br />

FCC Rule Book, available from the ARRL.<br />

See the publications ad in this issue.<br />

14 Jim McMasters, KD5BUR “High-Speed CW<br />

and Meteor Scatter - An Exciting VHF DX<br />

Medium!,” <strong>QST</strong>, April 1998, pp 34-39.<br />

15<br />

Kenneth Davies, Ionospheric Radio Propagation,<br />

U.S. Dept. of Commerce, 1965, pp<br />

351-376.<br />

16 See the text files bundled with OH5MS’s<br />

“MS-Soft” meteor program, available at<br />

http://www.sci.fi/~oh5iy/.<br />

17<br />

WinMSDSP is available at http://ham2.<br />

irb.hr/9a4gl/index.php3 or VE5EF’s mirror<br />

site, http:// www3.sk.sympatico.ca/freed/<br />

projects/9A4GL. It and other HSCW material<br />

are also available at the W8WN Web<br />

site.<br />

18<br />

See http://www.qsl.net/w8wn/.<br />

19 http://www.qsl.net/w8wn/hscw/papers/<br />

hot_news.html. Much more also on the<br />

“Archived News” page.<br />

20<br />

See several articles in Sky and Telescope,<br />

June <strong>2000</strong>, pp 30-40. A brief summary of<br />

their predictions is also available at http://<br />

www.qsl.net/w8wn/hscw/prop/<br />

leodust.html.<br />

21 http://www.qsl.net/w8wn/hscw/papers/<br />

lose-qso.html.<br />

You can contact the author at 465<br />

Springfield Rd, Elizabethtown, KY 42701;<br />

w8wn@arrl.net.


By Henryk Kotowski, SM0JHF<br />

No Power No Problem!<br />

A Vacation Expedition to<br />

The Gambia<br />

The best DXpeditions aren’t necessarily<br />

frenzied, frantic or dangerous. Sometimes,<br />

a meandering, casual approach is best!<br />

was a strange coincidence that I<br />

It<br />

was assigned bungalow C5 when<br />

I arrived at the Kotu Strand Hotel<br />

in The Gambia, West Africa. The<br />

fact that my bungalow ID matched the<br />

country’s ITU prefix had to be an<br />

auspicious sign. It was natural, therefore,<br />

that I would follow up and go to Gamtel in<br />

Banjul, the capital city, the next morning<br />

to apply for a ham radio visitor’s permit.<br />

Gamtel is the Gambian telecommunications<br />

company that’s also responsible for<br />

Amateur Radio licensing.<br />

Things couldn’t have been easier. I asked<br />

for call sign C56JHF, and got it in a matter<br />

of minutes. Tourism is an important part of<br />

Gambia’s economy, and accommodating<br />

visiting Amateur Radio operators is viewed<br />

as another service for tourists. I wish more<br />

countries shared this attitude!<br />

When I came to The Gambia in January<br />

<strong>2000</strong> for a short holiday, I packed an ICOM<br />

IC-746 transceiver, a power supply, an<br />

automatic antenna tuner and a reel of<br />

antenna wire. Winters in Scandinavia are<br />

too long, too dark and too cold; I simply<br />

have to go south now and then.<br />

When I got back from Banjul—the C5<br />

licence burning a hole in my pocket—I was<br />

exhausted. It was quite hot, and the sudden<br />

climate change (from Scandinavia to<br />

Africa) made me weak. Still, I immediately<br />

connected the transceiver to the power<br />

supply and the power supply to the mains.<br />

I was lucky. The electricity was on and<br />

bungalow C5 was on the air!<br />

I asked a local “palm climber” to attach<br />

one end of my 150-foot end-fed wire to a<br />

tree growing on the edge of the beach. I<br />

connected the antenna tuner, stuck a<br />

straightened-out wire clothes hanger into the<br />

dry soil outside the bungalow and checked<br />

conditions on 10 meters. The match wasn’t<br />

good, so I inverted a bottle of water and<br />

placed it over my makeshift ground rod. As<br />

the water trickled into the soil I could see<br />

that more HF power was going into the endfed<br />

wire. Thankfully, the antenna worked<br />

well on all bands from 160 to 10 meters.<br />

Watering my ground connection was a<br />

daily event for the next two weeks. Hotel<br />

staffers and guests often asked me to<br />

explain the upside-down bottle and<br />

accepted my explanations without raising<br />

an eyebrow. Everyone is relaxed here<br />

(unless you’re in the marketplace, that is).<br />

The Gambia is one of the smallest<br />

countries in Africa, with arbitrarily drawn<br />

borders inside Senegal. The population of<br />

about one million citizens is scattered<br />

among various tribes and groups. English<br />

is still the official language, although The<br />

Gambia ceased to be a British colony in<br />

mid-’60s. The country is more peaceful and<br />

secure than many of its neighbors.<br />

Propagation is typical for equatorial<br />

regions and completely different from that<br />

of Scandinavia. I was frequently amazed<br />

when hams in Rotuma, Tonga or Hawaii<br />

came back to my CQ while I was using just<br />

100 W and a piece of wire. I made nearly<br />

5000 QSOs with hams in 100 countries in<br />

a very relaxed style. I was often surprised<br />

by the beautiful openings to the West Coast<br />

of the US.<br />

But even the best radio conditions can’t<br />

compete with frequent power outages,<br />

which happened morning, noon and night.<br />

Saturdays and Sundays were the worst. The<br />

hotels have backup diesel generators, but<br />

many don’t bother to run them during the<br />

daytime. Mine didn’t.<br />

When the ac mains were down I walked<br />

along the beach to the nearest store, bought<br />

some gin and tonic or strolled to the<br />

market to buy fruit. Drinking plenty of<br />

fluids is highly recommended, but I found<br />

that the mineral waters available in The<br />

Gambia weren’t too tasty. Gin and tonic,<br />

on the other hand, was better than anything<br />

else and was quite refreshing in the warm,<br />

dry climate (without promoting intoxication).<br />

Otherwise, no power might equal<br />

no fun!<br />

You can contact the author at<br />

Sibeliusg 28 XI, SE-16477 Kista,<br />

Sweden; sm0jhf@arrl.net. All<br />

photos were taken by the author.<br />

Not far from my hotel,<br />

was a radio station<br />

somewhat more<br />

powerful than<br />

my own—<br />

Radio Syd.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 33


By L. B. Cebik, W4RNL<br />

A Beginner’s Guide to<br />

Modeling with NEC<br />

Part 1: Getting settled and getting started<br />

ntenna modeling has become a<br />

A<br />

popular engineering and amateur<br />

activity. You can see the results<br />

in almost any issue of <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

Among the modeling products you might<br />

encounter are azimuth patterns, such as<br />

Figure 1, or elevation patterns, such as<br />

Figure 2, or even an SWR graph, such<br />

shown in Figure 3. Almost every ham knows<br />

that antenna-modeling software is available<br />

at reasonable prices. So only two important<br />

questions remain:<br />

1. Can I model antennas, too Can I<br />

master the software and produce the same<br />

kinds of results that I see in <strong>QST</strong><br />

2. Is antenna modeling worth the effort<br />

Does antenna modeling really offer me any<br />

information that I cannot easily get<br />

elsewhere<br />

The answer to both questions is a<br />

definite “yes.” With a little coaching and a<br />

little practice, virtually any ham can<br />

effectively model many kinds of antennas.<br />

The result will be a better understanding of<br />

one’s own antennas and of antennas in<br />

general. The purpose of this 4-part series is<br />

to provide the “little coaching” part of the<br />

effort. The practice is up to you.<br />

In this first episode, we’ll try to<br />

understand what antenna modeling is and<br />

become oriented to the many parts of a good<br />

antenna model. In future episodes, we’ll take<br />

a closer (but still incomplete) look at crucial<br />

details that will make the task smoother and<br />

the output more understandable.<br />

In all of our work, we’ll focus our<br />

attention on the antenna-modeling core<br />

known as NEC-2. This public domain<br />

software is the heart of numerous commercial<br />

implementations that provide ways for<br />

the user to input data and also that supply<br />

tabular and graphical outputs. There is<br />

another modeling core called MININEC.<br />

Rockway and Logan developed it when PCs<br />

could not handle the Fortran of NEC. There<br />

are two versions available, a public domain<br />

version and a totally revised proprietary<br />

34 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Figure 2—An (EZNEC) elevation pattern<br />

for a dipole at 70 feet above average<br />

ground at 7.15 MHz with an azimuth angle<br />

of 0 degrees.<br />

Figure 3—A (NEC-Win Plus) SWR graph<br />

for a 40-meter dipole at 70 feet above<br />

average ground.<br />

Figure 1—A (NEC-<br />

Win Plus) azimuth<br />

pattern for a dipole<br />

at 70 feet above<br />

average ground at<br />

7.15 MHz with an<br />

elevation angle of<br />

27°.<br />

version. 1 The nature and limitations of<br />

MININEC have been covered in past ARRL<br />

publications, and so they need not be<br />

repeated here. 2<br />

Our focal software, NEC-2 is neither the<br />

newest nor the oldest modeling software. 3 It<br />

is the latest public domain core available and<br />

appears in several commercial implementations,<br />

as well as in “raw” form that one can<br />

download from more than one ftp site. For<br />

the beginner, one of the commercial versions<br />

is recommended, since the raw form requires<br />

that the user develop appropriate input and<br />

output systems. 4 I happen to have two<br />

different commercial versions of NEC-2—<br />

EZNEC 3.0 and NEC-Win Plus. Therefore,<br />

without prejudice toward or against any<br />

version, I shall be illustrating these<br />

guidelines by alternating among the<br />

programs I have. Figure captions will<br />

identify the program used for each graphic.<br />

What is Antenna Modeling<br />

One common misconception of antenna<br />

modeling is that it is similar to making model<br />

boats and cars. The result sort of looks like—<br />

1<br />

Notes appear on page 38.


and may even behave a little like—the real<br />

thing. Still, the model is a pretty but pale<br />

shadow of reality. Nothing could be further<br />

from the truth. So let’s start all over again.<br />

If you have ever referred to a formula to<br />

cut a dipole, you have done some<br />

rudimentary antenna modeling.<br />

L ft = 468 f<br />

Eq 1<br />

MHz<br />

If we choose 7.15 MHz for our design<br />

frequency, then we need an antenna wire<br />

that is 65.45 feet long. Of course, the basic<br />

dipole formula always carries with it the<br />

advice to leave some extra wire and trim<br />

the length for the best SWR.<br />

The formula does not include the<br />

diameter of the wire or the material out of<br />

which it is made. Nor does the formula<br />

account for the height of the antenna above<br />

ground or the properties of the soil that<br />

makes up the ground. Suppose we had a<br />

formula that would account for all of these<br />

factors<br />

We do. The oversimplified cutting<br />

formula for dipoles is just one small extract<br />

from a large body of mathematical analysis<br />

of antennas. If we place all of the most<br />

accurate equations into a single calculating<br />

piece of software, we would achieve much<br />

higher accuracy with our wire cutting. Not<br />

only could we analyze or predict the correct<br />

wire length for a resonant dipole, we could<br />

also calculate the field strength at any<br />

elevation above ground and in any direction<br />

from the antenna. This is exactly what NEC<br />

does. For many antenna types, NEC-2 is as<br />

accurate as engineering mathematics can<br />

make antenna analysis.<br />

The basic antenna analysis used by<br />

NEC-2 relies on the “method of moments,”<br />

a mathematical technique that subdivides<br />

an antenna element into segments,<br />

calculates the correct properties, and then<br />

combines the results to provide a set of<br />

results for the entire element (or an array<br />

of elements). 5 The results can be adjusted<br />

using standard engineering equations for<br />

material resistance, element loading, and<br />

ground effects. For the beginning modeler,<br />

two points are important to remember: (1)<br />

The method, when used within the limits<br />

of the software, is very accurate and (2) we<br />

have to think in terms of segments of our<br />

Figure 4—Several types of antenna<br />

elements with their segmented wire<br />

components.<br />

antenna elements. Instead of dwelling on<br />

the math behind the core, let’s learn how to<br />

think in modeling terms.<br />

The Language of Modeling<br />

Clearly, we’ll have to add some new<br />

terms to our antenna language in order to<br />

get a good grip on antenna modeling. We<br />

have already encountered one of them: the<br />

segment. In fact, we may find it useful to<br />

think of three different terms to sort out<br />

pieces of an antenna and pieces of an<br />

antenna model.<br />

Figure 4 shows several different types of<br />

antenna elements, a dipole, a quad loop, and<br />

a bent element such as might be used in a<br />

half square or a Moxon rectangle. NEC can<br />

only work with individual straight wires,<br />

although we can form complex geometric<br />

shapes by joining straight wires at their ends.<br />

In fact, if we needed to form a circle, we<br />

would have to approximate it with a collection<br />

of straight wires, perhaps an octagon.<br />

Whatever the shape, each wire composing<br />

each antenna element has the dimensions of<br />

that part of the real antenna element. Of<br />

course, the single wire dipole element brings<br />

together the “wire” and the “element,” but<br />

we should always keep the ideas of an<br />

element and a modeling wire separate.<br />

Next, each wire in an element should be<br />

segmented. For beginning modelers, the<br />

following two guidelines are useful to<br />

stay on the safe side of NEC limits for<br />

segmentation:<br />

1. A wire should have at least 9<br />

segments per half wavelength. If a wire is<br />

only a quarter wavelength long, then<br />

perhaps 5 segments is a good minimum<br />

number. We’ll shortly see why we’re using<br />

so many odd numbers.<br />

2. The segment length should be at least<br />

4 times larger than the wire diameter. There<br />

is a complex equation for figuring the<br />

absolute minimum segment length that is<br />

reliable, but in the beginning, the 4:1 ratio<br />

of segment length to wire diameter is a safe<br />

guideline.<br />

Let’s add one more guideline:<br />

3. To the degree possible, make all<br />

segment lengths equal within a model. If<br />

we have a dipole consisting of one wire and<br />

specify 11 segments, then the program will<br />

automatically make them all the same<br />

length. However, for elements consisting of<br />

more than one wire, we’ll have to look at<br />

the number of segments we assign in order<br />

to equalize their lengths. Dividing the wire<br />

length by the number of segments gives the<br />

segment length. If we know the segment<br />

length we want, then dividing the wire<br />

length by the segment length gives the<br />

number of segments.<br />

The next step is to set up a model<br />

element. Let’s remain with our simple<br />

1-dipole wire. In order to model the<br />

element, we must know the orientation of<br />

the dipole. For this first model, we shall<br />

make it horizontal. In fact, let’s play with a<br />

40-meter dipole cut for 7.15 MHz. To<br />

determine the wire’s length, we’ll initially<br />

use our traditional formula and arrive at a<br />

length of 65.46 feet for our antenna.<br />

In order to place the antenna into the<br />

model, we must master the world of 3<br />

dimensions, also called Cartesian coordinates.<br />

This system is just a way of<br />

specifying directions, as shown in Figure<br />

5. Relative to the earth, we can think of the<br />

X-axis and the Y-axis as two lines at 90°<br />

angles, both of which are parallel to the<br />

Earth’s surface. Then, the Z-axis becomes<br />

another word for height above ground.<br />

Since we are going to start with a dipole<br />

above the Earth, the Z-value can never be<br />

below zero, although—as we shall see—it<br />

Figure 5—The<br />

Cartesian<br />

coordinate<br />

system with an<br />

“earth surface”<br />

shown.<br />

Figure 6—The EZNEC wire spreadsheet with 40-meter dipole<br />

components.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 35


might be very close to zero.<br />

As we begin to model, we need to begin<br />

to think systematically about antenna<br />

geometry. One of the most convenient (but<br />

not the only workable) systems for setting<br />

up a horizontal antenna is to place the ends<br />

equal distances along the Y axis. For most<br />

horizontal designs based on 1 /2-wavelength<br />

dipoles, this orientation will result in a<br />

pattern of radiation that is strongest along<br />

the X-axis, and the pattern value of zero<br />

degrees lies along this axis. So let’s center<br />

the antenna on the X-axis and make the<br />

End-1 Y value –33.73 feet with the End-2 Y<br />

value +33.73 feet. Since we have only one<br />

wire, the X-value at both ends can be zero.<br />

However, we must not neglect Z, the<br />

antenna height. Since a fairly common<br />

backyard value for the height of a 40-meter<br />

dipole is about 70 feet, let’s use this value<br />

for Z—at both ends of the wire. Figure 6<br />

shows the EZNEC wire window with<br />

exactly these values plugged in. Note that<br />

we have defined the wire by its end<br />

coordinates. If we had other wires as part<br />

of the same element, we would have added<br />

them by using either the End-1 or End-2<br />

coordinates as the coordinates of one end<br />

of the extra wire. We shall explore more<br />

complex geometries in a future episode. For<br />

now, let’s focus on mastering the language<br />

of the coordinate system of wire entry.<br />

We can check our work for errors by<br />

looking at a diagram of the antenna that we<br />

have just entered. Most NEC programs have<br />

a “view antenna” option. Figure 7 shows the<br />

EZNEC view, with the antenna positioned<br />

above ground on the Z-axis and extending<br />

along the Y-axis on either side of the “origin,”<br />

that is, the 0, 0, 0 point of the coordinate<br />

system.<br />

Although the elements in all of our<br />

figures show feed points as small dots, we<br />

haven’t yet added them to our model. In<br />

modeling language, a feed point is the<br />

source. We will have to specify both the<br />

position and the electrical conditions of the<br />

source. In NEC, the source is always the<br />

position within a segment, and for simplicity,<br />

we take its position to be centered. 6 If we<br />

wish to have a feed point or source positioned<br />

exactly at the center of an element wire, then<br />

we must have an odd number of segments<br />

on the wire. NEC was designed for voltage<br />

sources, so we shall specify a value of 1.0<br />

for the magnitude and 0.0° for the phase for<br />

most common antennas having only a single<br />

feed point. For these kinds of antennas,<br />

changing the values we insert for the source<br />

will make no difference to the antenna<br />

pattern, gain or source impedance. We might<br />

as well keep it simple.<br />

Different commercial implementations of<br />

NEC handle source setting in slightly<br />

different ways. The NEC-Win Plus system<br />

appears in Figure 8. We “drag and drop” the<br />

source symbol onto a picture of the wire that<br />

shows all of the segments. For an 11-segment<br />

dipole, we drop the symbol on segment 6.<br />

We then select the source type and values in<br />

a box that automatically appears. (The<br />

EZNEC system specifies the source position<br />

as a percentage of the wire length. For a<br />

center feed antenna, we specify 50%.)<br />

The Other Parts of the Model<br />

The work we have just done corresponds<br />

to cutting a piece of wire and stringing it up<br />

between supports. With a wire in place and<br />

having the correct dimensions, we can turn<br />

to the other parts of the program that we must<br />

set up before running the model. For<br />

example, the wire has a diameter that we can<br />

express in either the same dimensional units<br />

as the wire length (feet, in this case) or as an<br />

AWG wire gauge. Figure 9 shows the NEC-<br />

Win Plus wire diameter window that allows<br />

us simply to select a common wire gauge or<br />

provide a custom entry.<br />

Not only does the wire have a diameter,<br />

it is also composed of a conductive<br />

material. We need to specify this material<br />

so that the program can account for any<br />

resistive losses in it. In Figure 9, we also<br />

see the separate NEC-Win Plus selection<br />

box for common materials. There is a place<br />

for entering the conductivity of materials<br />

not listed, a topic we shall look at down<br />

the line. For now, checking “copper” will<br />

get us started. Incidentally, the corresponding<br />

materials window in EZNEC will<br />

allow custom entries in terms of resistivity,<br />

which is simply the inverse of conductivity.<br />

Next, let’s look at the ground over which<br />

our antenna hangs. NEC has two “real” ground<br />

systems, but for our modern fast PCs, there is<br />

no reason not to select the better of the two. It<br />

goes under different names in different<br />

implementations of NEC. You can find it as<br />

the “high accuracy” ground, the Sommerfeld-<br />

Norton ground, or simply as SOMNEC, the<br />

name of the calculating module within NEC.<br />

Whatever the program-matic name, it is the<br />

most accurate available system for calculating<br />

the behavior of an antenna above ground.<br />

While other systems tend to become inaccurate<br />

for antennas below 0.1 to 0.2 wavelengths<br />

above ground, the Sommerfeld-Norton system<br />

is accurate down to a tiny fraction of a<br />

wavelength above ground.<br />

Once we have selected the ground type,<br />

we need some values for ground conductivity<br />

(in Siemens per meter) and for the relative<br />

dielectric constant (also called permittivity).<br />

We usually derive these values from maps<br />

of our local area (available in The ARRL<br />

Antenna Book). However, the ground quality<br />

values do not make a big difference in<br />

horizontal dipole performance, so we can<br />

initially use the program default numbers.<br />

Most programs default to what is called<br />

“average” ground, which has a conductivity<br />

of 0.005 S/m and a dielectric constant of 13.<br />

We have neglected the test frequency.<br />

EZNEC is set up for single frequency runs,<br />

so we would just click on the frequency<br />

button and enter 7.15 MHz in the box that<br />

appears. NEC-Win Plus is always setup for<br />

frequency sweeps, that is, multiple runs<br />

defined by start and stop frequencies, plus<br />

a frequency interval between runs. For a<br />

Figure 9—The NEC-Win Plus wire-diameter<br />

window and wire-material window.<br />

Figure 7—The EZNEC<br />

antenna-view of the<br />

40-meter dipole model.<br />

36 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Figure 8—The NEC-Win Plus source-placement window.


Figure 10—The EZNEC elevation pattern data on the main<br />

screen.<br />

Figure 13—A (NEC-Win Plus) azimuth pattern for a dipole at 40<br />

feet above average ground at 7.15 MHz with an elevation angle<br />

of 49°.<br />

single run, we just enter the same frequency<br />

on both the start and stop lines. The interval<br />

or “step” will not matter.<br />

We have now completely specified our<br />

model. We created the wire element and gave<br />

it an environment. Part of the environment<br />

was geometric as we set the coordinates to<br />

position the wire. A second part of the<br />

environment was electrical as we positioned<br />

the source. A further part of the environment<br />

was physical as we specified the wire<br />

Figure 11—The NEC-Win Plus elevation<br />

pattern specification box.<br />

Figure 12—An (EZNEC) elevation pattern<br />

for a dipole at 40 feet above average<br />

ground at 7.15 MHz with an azimuth angle<br />

of 0 degrees.<br />

material and the ground beneath the antenna.<br />

Essentially, we would go through all of these<br />

thinking processes when erecting a real<br />

antenna.<br />

We should notice two things about the<br />

model that may differ somewhat from<br />

reality. First, there is nothing in the model’s<br />

backyard except the antenna. All of the<br />

power lines, trees, and other objects that can<br />

affect antenna performance are missing.<br />

Much of this “ground clutter” can be<br />

modeled, but it takes special techniques that<br />

go beyond the scope of the basics of<br />

modeling. Second, the ground is continuous<br />

to the horizon and homogenous to any depth<br />

beneath the antenna. In advanced modeling,<br />

we can add a second set of ground properties<br />

at a distance from the antenna, but we cannot<br />

capture the stratified nature of the subsurface<br />

ground that occurs in many places. For most<br />

purposes, neither of these limitations of the<br />

modeling program will invalidate the results<br />

of the modeling calculations.<br />

What Output Pattern Do We Want<br />

If we have completely constructed our<br />

model and its environment, we have only one<br />

more step to go before we can hit the RUN<br />

button. We need to tell the program what kind<br />

of output pattern we want to see. The<br />

program will always calculate the source<br />

impedance, but most of us want to see a vivid<br />

graphic that tells us something about the gain<br />

and pattern shape of our antenna.<br />

The entry is called the specification of<br />

a far field radiation pattern for our dipole.<br />

However, we may be initially at sea about<br />

what pattern to call and what specifications<br />

to enter for it. We know that the dipole<br />

radiates broadside to the wire and that this<br />

direction is an azimuth angle of zero (and<br />

180) degrees. Let’s begin, then, with an<br />

elevation pattern along the zero-180-degree<br />

line, usually specified as an azimuth angle<br />

of zero degrees. Most programs have a set<br />

of default values that you can use as<br />

starters. Figure 10 shows the EZNEC<br />

elevation data on the main screen, while<br />

Figure 11 shows the NEC-Win Plus<br />

elevation data selection box.<br />

Now we are finally ready to run the<br />

model. We hit the right button and let the<br />

program do its calculations—very rapidly<br />

for this small model. After the run, EZNEC<br />

will bring up the pattern generated by the<br />

complex calculations, while in NEC-Win<br />

Plus, the design philosophy is to let the user<br />

call up any of the tables, graphs, or patterns<br />

desired. Figure 12 shows the EZNEC<br />

elevation pattern for our dipole.<br />

Notice that the pattern provides us with<br />

several important pieces of information.<br />

First, we can see that low height (just above<br />

1<br />

/4 wavelength) sends much of the radiation<br />

at very high angles, too high for most skip<br />

paths. Looking at the available data gives<br />

us a gain of 5.87 dBi maximum at an angle<br />

of 49 degrees above the horizon. NEC<br />

calculates all gain figures as dBi values, that<br />

is as gain in decibels greater than a<br />

theoretical isotropic radiator that would<br />

send radiation equally in all possible<br />

directions. Since NEC does not have any<br />

built-in range test data or similar baselines,<br />

everything must be calculated against the<br />

isotropic radiator. If we are interested in<br />

using some other standard, we can always<br />

model the standard antenna and compare<br />

gain figures. We add and subtract gain in<br />

decibels, using the same reference standard.<br />

Notice also that the gain is given to two<br />

decimal places. For most operational<br />

purposes, a value of 5.9 dBi would be<br />

sufficient for any comparisons between<br />

antennas. Even so, the difference among<br />

5.5, 5.8, and 6.0 dBi would not be<br />

detectable in amateur operation.<br />

Figure 13 provides a NEC-Win Plus<br />

azimuth pattern taken at the elevation angle<br />

of maximum radiation. Note that there is a<br />

1° difference in the elevation angles of<br />

maximum radiation—sometimes called the<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 37


“take-off” angle—reported by the two<br />

programs. This difference is largely due to<br />

the complexity of the calculations involved<br />

as well as where and how a given program<br />

does its rounding from the long string of<br />

digits that computers use in their calculations.<br />

Also note that there is a 0.03-dB<br />

difference in reported gain, which is also<br />

insignificant. Of far greater importance is the<br />

pattern shape—a broad oval. Signals off the<br />

ends of the antenna will be weaker than those<br />

broadside to the antenna, but they may still<br />

be strong enough for contacts. The classic<br />

figure-8 pattern is nowhere to be seen. The<br />

reason is the relative closeness of the antenna<br />

to the ground.<br />

Before we leave the model, let’s look at<br />

the source impedance data available as a<br />

table in most programs. The impedance<br />

listed is not the classic 72 Ω resistive that<br />

we associate with a resonant dipole.<br />

Instead, it is about 91 + j 20 Ω. The original<br />

cutting formula that we used to create our<br />

dipole model turns out to yield an antenna<br />

that is too long, as indicated by the<br />

inductive reactance at the feed point/source.<br />

As well, the resistive part of the impedance<br />

is considerably above the number used as<br />

the dipole standard. The numbers generated<br />

by NEC may be surprising. Nonetheless,<br />

they are accurate within the limits of the<br />

program, with its homogenous ground and<br />

clutterless field for the radiation.<br />

Even though our main purpose in this<br />

episode was to get oriented to and started<br />

with antenna modeling, that does not mean<br />

that we can’t discover some things about<br />

antennas—even using the simplest antenna<br />

possible. Even the most familiar antennas<br />

have new things to teach us about their<br />

behavior, and antenna modeling is a good<br />

way to learn them.<br />

There remains much to be said about<br />

creating models out of wires and segments.<br />

The more complex the antenna structure,<br />

the more careful we must be. As well, we<br />

should look more closely at the information<br />

that the azimuth and elevation patterns can<br />

present to us, including some pitfalls to<br />

avoid. Next month we’ll look more closely<br />

at the “ins” and “outs” of NEC. 7<br />

Notes<br />

1 Public domain MININEC is available in the<br />

following programs (with Web URLs listed):<br />

NEC4WIN (Windows) from Orion: http://<br />

www.cam.org/~mboukri.<br />

ELNEC (DOS) from W7EL: http://www<br />

.eznec.com.<br />

Another version still used by numerous<br />

modelers is AO from K6STI. AO is a DOS<br />

program. For information e-mail k6sti@n2<br />

.net.<br />

Expert MININEC is a proprietary program<br />

available at various levels from E.M.<br />

Scientific: http://www.emsci.com/.<br />

2 See the following references to using<br />

MININEC in ARRL publications:<br />

John S. Belrose, “Modeling HF Antennas<br />

with MININEC—Guidelines and Tips from a<br />

Code User’s Notebook,” The ARRL Antenna<br />

38 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Compendium, Vol. 3, pp 156-164.<br />

L. B. Cebik, “A Beginner’s Guide to Using<br />

Computer Antenna Modeling Programs,”<br />

The ARRL Antenna Compendium, Vol. 3,<br />

pp 148-155.<br />

Roy Lewallen, “MININEC: The Other<br />

Edge of the Sword,” <strong>QST</strong> (February, 1991),<br />

18-22.<br />

The latter two items are republished in<br />

Vertical Antenna Classics.<br />

3<br />

For a succinct history of method of moments<br />

programs for antenna analysis, see R. P.<br />

Haviland, “Programs for Antenna Analysis<br />

by the Method of Moments,” The ARRL<br />

Antenna Compendium, Vol. 4, pp 69-73.<br />

4<br />

There are at least three commercial implementations<br />

of NEC-2 readily available to<br />

amateurs at reasonable prices:<br />

EZNEC 3.0 (Windows) from W7EL:<br />

http://www.eznec.com (reviewed in the<br />

September <strong>2000</strong> <strong>QST</strong> “Short Takes”).<br />

NEC-Win Plus (Windows) from Nittany<br />

Scientific: http://www.nittany-scientific.<br />

com.<br />

Antenna Solver (Windows) from Grating<br />

Solver Development Co: http://www<br />

.gsolver.com/<br />

5 The actual equations used in developing<br />

antenna characteristics are available in the<br />

NEC-2 manuals. Although most users<br />

encounter only the final “Users” volume, the<br />

foundational volumes are available on-line at<br />

http://www.qsl.net/wb6tpu/swindex.html<br />

and at http://members.home.net/NEC2.<br />

6<br />

In MININEC, the fundamental point of concern<br />

is not within the segment, but at segment<br />

junctions, called pulses. Hence, to center a<br />

source on a wire element, we would use an<br />

even number of segments and specify the<br />

centered junction as the source location.<br />

7 Those interested in pursuing each facet of<br />

basic NEC modeling more thoroughly may<br />

wish to consult Basic Antenna Modeling: A<br />

Hands-On Tutorial, available from Nittany<br />

Scientific (http://www.nittany-scientific<br />

.com). Although written to accompany NEC-<br />

Win Plus, with about 300 exercise files in<br />

.NEC format, the volume can be used with<br />

other implementations. A disk holding all of<br />

the exercise files in .EZ format for use with<br />

EZNEC is available from AntenneX (http://<br />

www.antennex.com).<br />

You can contact the author at 1434 High<br />

Mesa Dr, Knoxville, TN 37938-4443;<br />

cebik@utk.edu.<br />

STRAYS<br />

<strong>QST</strong> Congratulates…<br />

◊ 75 Year Member<br />

Robert Reid, W4TK, Jacksonville, FL<br />

70 Year Members<br />

Kenneth Gardner, W2BGN, Walworth, NY<br />

Alfredo Sambolin, KP4CI, Ponce, PR<br />

Wayne Cooper, AG4R, Alexandria, VA<br />

John Holmes, Jr, W6BUY, Reno, NV<br />

60 Year Members<br />

Robert White, W1CW, Seffner, FL<br />

Robert Wallace, W1HH, Chelmsford, MA<br />

A. Warren Nelson, W1LWB, Hope, RI<br />

William Beal, Jr, W1PNR, Jackson, NH<br />

Fred Albert, W1QP, Fort Myers, FL<br />

Arnold Wilson, N2EZ, Audubon, NJ<br />

Orion Arnold, W2HN, Ho Ho Kus, NJ<br />

Harrison Moore, Jr, W2JQS, Bronxville, NY<br />

Herbert Klein, W2NCM, Brooklyn, NY<br />

Edwin Kephart, W2SPV, Pennsauken, NJ<br />

P. S. Christaldi, W2TF, Montclair, NJ<br />

Douglas Morick, W3NNT, Ocala, FL<br />

Michael Loria, K4CD, Fort Myers, FL<br />

John Pearson, KE4CR, Melbourne, FL<br />

Marc Molyneux, Jr, N4EM, Mobile, AL<br />

Marshall Goldblatt, W4EMB, Miami, FL<br />

John Spark, W4LHP, Lakeland, FL<br />

Lyman Treaster, W6IFC, Visalia, CA<br />

Joseph Roark, W6JGI, Solvang, CA<br />

John Kemper, W6JN, Torrance, CA<br />

Veikko West, K6ORP, San Mateo, CA<br />

George Badger, W6TC, Portola Valley, CA<br />

Howard Shepherd, Jr, W6US, McArthur, CA<br />

Robert Roberts, K6VK, Livingston, TX<br />

Emmett Freitas, AE6Z, San Jose, CA<br />

Robert Leo, W7LR, Bozeman, MT<br />

James Young, W7JL, Long Beach, CA<br />

Nelles Roth, W8UPR, Wauseon, OH<br />

Wayne Flickinger, W9BKJ, Marietta, GA<br />

50 Year Members<br />

Anthony Fiore, W1LKM, Center Ossipee, NH<br />

Guy Gianino, W1OPI, Lynn, MA<br />

Samuel Strauss, W1SS, Royal Palm Beach, FL<br />

Max Norman, W2IQE, Winter Haven, FL<br />

Joseph Flaherty, K2IQM, Port Washington, NY<br />

John Bann, Jr, W2KPV, Garden City, NY<br />

Donald Field, W2UAE, Lawrenceville, NJ<br />

Emery Flinn, Jr, N4DX, Carrollton, GA<br />

Frederick Ritter, W4FI, Longwood, FL<br />

Paul Van Nostrand, W4HVD, Tallahassee, FL<br />

Elbert Wood, W4JFL, Lithia Springs, GA<br />

Frank Butler, Jr, W4RH, Fort Walton Beach,<br />

FL<br />

Wallace Borger, W4VBZ, Trussville, AL<br />

Morris Guzick, W5IO, Sherman, TX<br />

Daniel Droemer, W5KUV, Houston, TX<br />

James Cotten, W5PYI, Weatherford, TX<br />

Fred Ellis, AC5SO, Edinburg, TX<br />

Dean Manley, KH6B, Hilo, HI<br />

Salvatore Teresi, W6EOA, Los Altos, CA<br />

Jay O’Brien, W6GO, Rio Linda, CA<br />

Charles Allessi, W6IEG, Oakhurst, CA<br />

Carl Stengel, W6JEO, Goleta, CA<br />

Paul Williams, W6LHY, Bishop, CA<br />

Stanley Andrews, Jr, K6MO, San Carlos, CA<br />

Sam Lalande, W6OXX, Mammoth Lakes, CA<br />

Donald Burr, AJ6X, Fresno, CA<br />

Herbert Hoover, III, W6ZH, San Marino, CA<br />

Clifford Kurtz, N6ZU, Stockton, CA<br />

Hobart Paine, K7CC, Tucson, AZ<br />

W. Dean Figgins, WA7EPU, La Mesa, NM<br />

James Groll, W7KRW, Avilla, IN<br />

Norman Ray, W7LFA, Kirkland, WA<br />

John Swafford, II, W7MEU, Seattle, WA<br />

H. W. Middleton, Jr, W8CXD, Forest, VA<br />

Kenneth Humbert, W9EDU, Michigan City, IN<br />

Leroy Stalions, K9IEY, West Frankfort, IL<br />

Adolph Jelen, W9IT, Marengo, IL<br />

Edmond Metzger, W9PRN, Springfield, IL<br />

Paul Ripple, W9SIZ, West Bend, WI<br />

Edward Martinson, W0GYH, Mounds View,<br />

MN<br />

Edward Hardt, W0JS, Minneapolis, MN<br />

William Kordik, W0LDO, St. Louis, MO<br />

Emanuel Block, W0PIG, St. Paul, MN<br />

David Robb, W0YRN, Salina, KS<br />

Next Stray<br />

FEEDBACK<br />

◊ Please refer to Rick Littlefield, K1BQT,<br />

“A Wide-Range RF-Survey Meter,” <strong>QST</strong>,<br />

Aug <strong>2000</strong>, p 44, Figure 1. The 0.1 µF capacitor<br />

near C5 should be labeled C6, not<br />

C1.—tnx Rick Littlefield, K1BQT<br />

Next Feedback


By Jim Mitrenga, N9ART<br />

A Flexible Digital-Mode<br />

Interface<br />

One interface, all the<br />

software—here’s how<br />

to do it simply and<br />

inexpensively.<br />

nly a few short years ago, the fax,<br />

O<br />

packet, RTTY and SSTV modes<br />

seemed to be reserved for those<br />

who possessed the means to purchase<br />

and operate sometimes large—and<br />

nearly always expensive—equipment. This<br />

began to change in the early ’90s when software<br />

written for home computers began to<br />

replace the expensive hardware. Programs<br />

such as HamComm 1 allow operation of CW,<br />

RTTY and some ’TOR modes requiring<br />

only a few “junk-box” components to fabricate<br />

a simple comparator modem. JV-<br />

FAX 2 uses the same modem to give us SSTV<br />

with amazing results. These early DOSbased<br />

programs were followed by variations<br />

on the same theme, but eventually gave way<br />

to Windows-based software.<br />

Programmers writing software for Windows<br />

didn’t want to continue with the sometimes-inconsistent<br />

performance of the simple<br />

comparator interfaces, so they looked to using<br />

the sound cards with which most computers<br />

are equipped these days. A sound card<br />

can do most of the signal encoding and decoding<br />

required for these modes. Not only<br />

does the sound card do a fine job in the DSP<br />

department, it eliminates the need for some<br />

hardware. All that’s necessary now is to deliver<br />

the transceiver audio to the sound card’s<br />

input and send the sound card’s output back<br />

to the rig’s mic or accessory input. A means<br />

of keying the rig helps, too. 3<br />

Initially, I hesitated to try any of the<br />

newer SSTV programs because I didn’t<br />

want to tear apart my reliable comparatormodem<br />

setup to reconfigure the audio I/Os<br />

to my computer’s sound card. I wanted to<br />

continue to use the DOS-based programs,<br />

but also wanted to enjoy the new modes<br />

1<br />

Notes appear on page 42.<br />

such as PSK31 4 and MT63 5 with software<br />

running under Windows. Soon I tired of<br />

manually connecting and disconnecting<br />

wires to the rig. I realized then that I needed<br />

an interface that would allow me to use the<br />

comparator modem for DOS applications<br />

and use the same I/Os for the sound card<br />

programs.<br />

Circuit Description<br />

The interface I designed is shown in Figure<br />

1. The comparator section employs a<br />

dual op amp (U1) operating as a limiting<br />

amplifier with full free-run amplification.<br />

This creates the required rectangular waves<br />

at an RS-232-compatible level necessary to<br />

run the DOS-based SSTV and FAX programs.<br />

The four diodes (D1-D4) in the feedback<br />

loop of U1A soft-limit the waveform,<br />

delivering a relatively symmetrical rectangular<br />

wave with rounded tops and bottoms<br />

limiting at about ±2.8 V. U1B is another<br />

maximum-gain stage that ensures correct<br />

amplitude and rectangular waveform symmetry<br />

are presented to the serial port at J1.<br />

Open-loop gain in this stage eliminates the<br />

effects of the soft limiting at U1A. Op-amp<br />

operating voltage is supplied by the<br />

computer’s serial port via the DTR and RTS<br />

lines. Diode matrix D5-D8 (a bridge circuit)<br />

ensures proper voltage polarity at the<br />

JOE BOTTIGLIERI, AA1GW<br />

appropriate op-amp pins regardless of how<br />

the RTS and DTR lines are defined by the<br />

various programs.<br />

To perform at their best, SSTV and FAX<br />

programs such as EZ-SSTV, JV-FAX,<br />

MSCAN 6 and EasyFAX 7 require only a basic<br />

HamComm-style modem. A HamComm<br />

modem can be as simple as a single op-amp<br />

stage, a decoupling capacitor driving the<br />

inverting input and a resistor to ground (see<br />

the inset of Figure 1). These programs can<br />

use such a modest interface because they<br />

determine the audio-input frequency by<br />

counting waveform zero crossings. A few<br />

other SSTV programs, such as GSH-PC, 8<br />

rely heavily on the symmetry and accuracy<br />

of the rectangular wave presented to the serial-port<br />

handshake line (DSR) to produce<br />

their best picture quality. Waveform asymmetry<br />

and inaccuracy can be caused by a<br />

number of variables: A computer’s DTR and<br />

RTS lines are rarely balanced (ie, having<br />

equal voltages of opposite polarity) and op<br />

amps may exhibit a large dc-offset error.<br />

This circuit, however, fulfills the requirements<br />

of all the DOS-based programs<br />

mentioned here by providing a very symmetrical<br />

waveform at proper RS-232 levels.<br />

Q1 is driven by the serial port RTS line<br />

via D10 and R6. K1A is energized when<br />

Q1 turns on. A PTT switch action is pro-<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 39


Figure 1—Schematic of the flexible digital-mode interface. Unless otherwise specified, resistors are 1 /4-W, 5%-tolerance carboncomposition<br />

or metal-film units. RS part numbers in parentheses are RadioShack. (Note: All of the resistors used in this project<br />

can be found in assortment RS 271-312; specific part numbers are also given.) Equivalent parts can be substituted; n.c. indicates<br />

no connection. J1 pin numbers are for a DB9 connector; pin numbers in parentheses apply to a DB25 connector. The inset shows a<br />

basic interface referred to in the text. Note that a different ground symbol is used for the connections labeled MIC HOT, MIC GND,<br />

the bottom end of R10 and the primary of T2. These four connections are purposely isolated from the other grounds (see text) and<br />

should remain isolated from them and from the enclosure if a metal one is used. The other grounds are connected to a common<br />

bus and the FAR Circuits PC-board mounting pads and can be connected to the enclosure.<br />

C1, C2, C4, C6, C7, C11—0.1 µF<br />

(RS 272-135)<br />

C3, C5—22 µF, 35 V electrolytic<br />

(RS 272-1026)<br />

C8, C9—0.0047 µF (RS 272-130)<br />

C10—47 pF (RS 272-121)<br />

C12—100 µF, 35 V (RS 272-1028)<br />

D1-D14, D16-D19—1N914 (RS 276-1122,<br />

package of 10)<br />

D15—1N4001 (RS 276-1101)<br />

40 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

DS1—LED from assortment package<br />

(RS 276-1622)<br />

K1—DPDT 12-V dc PC-mount relay<br />

(RS 275-249)<br />

Q1—2N2222 (RS 276-1617)<br />

R1—3.3 kΩ (RS 271-1328)<br />

R2, R11—100 kΩ (RS 271-1347)<br />

R3, R4—47 Ω (RS 271-312)<br />

R5, R6, R13, R15—10 kΩ (RS 271-1335)<br />

R7—2.2 kΩ (RS 271-1325)<br />

R8—22 kΩ (RS 271-1339)<br />

R9, R12—10-kΩ PC-mount pot<br />

(RS 271-282) or use optional 10-kΩ pot<br />

with SPDT switch (RS 271-215); see text.<br />

R10—560 Ω (RS 271-312)<br />

R14—220 Ω (RS 271-1313)<br />

R16—100 Ω (RS 271-1311)<br />

T1—Audio-output transformer<br />

(RS 273-1380)<br />

T2—1:1 isolation transformer<br />

(RS 273-1374)<br />

U1—TL082 dual op amp (RS 276-1715)


vided by K1B when the software signals<br />

transmit and toggles the RTS line positive.<br />

K1C selects the interface’s modulating<br />

source: the mic, sound card or TxD line of<br />

the computer’s serial port. When RTS is<br />

negative, the mic is selected. When RTS is<br />

positive, the PTT line is actuated and either<br />

the sound card or serial port is selected.<br />

A PTT indicator (optional) is provided by<br />

DS1 at the collector of Q1.<br />

The modulating source of the interface is<br />

selected by S1. In the SP position, that source<br />

is the computer’s serial port. The SC position<br />

selects the sound card LINE output. R8<br />

and pot R9 (SC MOD ADJ) attenuate the<br />

sound card’s LINE output. T2 isolates the interface<br />

and computer grounds from the rig’s<br />

mic ground to minimize RFI problems.<br />

DOS-based digital-mode software provides<br />

modulating tones in the form of<br />

square waves at the serial port’s TxD line.<br />

A brute-force low-pass filter comprised of<br />

C7, R14, C8, R13 and C9 rolls off much of<br />

the square waves to present a waveform<br />

more like a sine wave to the rig’s modulator;<br />

the rig’s filtering does the rest of the<br />

job. R5 and D11-D14 form a limiter stage<br />

that maintains the output of the serial port’s<br />

TxD line at around ±3 V. (This circuit is<br />

not required for the interface to function,<br />

however, and is discussed later.)<br />

C6 and C12 filter the external dc source.<br />

D15 protects the circuit from an incorrectly<br />

polarized power-supply input. R16 and D16<br />

through D19 act as a limiting stage to protect<br />

the sound card input from excessively<br />

high audio input.<br />

Construction<br />

Component values and types are such<br />

that a single trip to RadioShack should be<br />

all that’s necessary if you can’t find the<br />

parts you need in your junk-box or that of<br />

a friend. The FAR Circuits PC board 9 makes<br />

building this project easy. Duplicate holes<br />

are provided on the PC board for various<br />

connections. EXT PTT can be used if an additional<br />

PTT line output is needed.<br />

Using a PC-mounted control at R12 to<br />

adjust the serial-port modulation level is adequate.<br />

Once this level is set, there is seldom<br />

any need for readjustment. On the other<br />

hand, the sound card line output might require<br />

more frequent adjustment if multiple<br />

Windows-based sound card programs are<br />

used; level requirements might vary from one<br />

program to another. Adjusting the sound<br />

card’s mixer panel .WAV output is usually<br />

an acceptable means to ensure proper modulation<br />

level from the sound card’s LINE output.<br />

This could be a minor inconvenience,<br />

but I found an excellent resolution to this<br />

dilemma in a normally stocked item at<br />

RadioShack: a panel-mounted 10-kΩ control<br />

with a SPDT switch (RS 271-215). Using this<br />

control for R12 instead of a PC-mount pot<br />

allows not only line-output adjustment, but<br />

doubles as the modulation-source selection<br />

switch (S1). Rotating the control fully counterclockwise<br />

to the OFF position selects the<br />

serial port (SP) as the modulating source.<br />

Rotating the control clockwise and turning<br />

the switch to its ON position selects the sound<br />

card’s LINE output (SC) as the modulation<br />

source. If frequent sound card LINE outputlevel<br />

adjustment is not necessary, the PCboard-mounted<br />

control should be adequate<br />

for your application.<br />

An external 10 to 15-V dc source applied<br />

via D15 is required to power the relay<br />

and the optional serial port PTT LED,<br />

DS1. If the optional PTT indicator circuit<br />

is not required, omit R7 and DS1.<br />

Component-Value Considerations<br />

A few component values might have to<br />

be changed to accommodate your<br />

equipment’s level requirements. The TxD<br />

data-leveling circuitry (R5, D11-D14) in<br />

conjunction with the insertion losses of the<br />

low-pass filter (C7, C8, C9, R13, R14) and<br />

the attenuation provided by R11, R12 and<br />

R15 sufficiently reduce the amplitude of the<br />

TxD output to microphone level. This level<br />

reduction might be excessive for some applications.<br />

If you find that your rig can’t be<br />

modulated adequately, remove D11 through<br />

D14 and replace R5 with a wire jumper. Adjust<br />

R12 to see if the level has increased sufficiently<br />

to properly modulate your rig. If the<br />

level is still not high enough, you can reduce<br />

the value of R11, but not below a value of 1<br />

kΩ. Similarly, R8’s value may need altering<br />

to ensure proper modulation when the<br />

computer’s sound card is used as the modulation<br />

source. R8 is the only component in<br />

this part of the circuit whose value can be<br />

modified, as your computer’s audio-mixer<br />

controls should be used to set these levels.<br />

Alignment<br />

With all components interconnected and<br />

a dummy load attached to your rig, rotate<br />

S1 to the SP position. Ensure R12 is fully<br />

counterclockwise (minimum resistance). Set<br />

your rig’s microphone-level control as you<br />

normally would. Select a DOS-based SSTV<br />

program and load a picture. From within the<br />

program, select transmit. The rig should key,<br />

but should not be modulating. Slowly adjust<br />

R12 clockwise until the modulation<br />

peaks just enter the ALC region of your rig’s<br />

meter. If the modulation level is high as you<br />

start to open R12, additional attenuation is<br />

required. Select a value for R11 that allows<br />

full modulation at about mid-rotation of<br />

R12. If R12 is full clockwise (minimum resistance)<br />

and your rig lacks full modulation,<br />

try one of the steps mentioned earlier to increase<br />

the level through the TxD low-pass<br />

filter to your rig’s modulating point. Unkey<br />

the transmitter.<br />

A similar procedure is used to adjust R9.<br />

Place S1 in the SC position to select the<br />

sound card as the modulating source. Use<br />

the sound card mixer panel to adjust the<br />

.WAV output level. Set R9 fully counterclockwise<br />

(minimum). Select a sound card<br />

program and set it up to transmit. If you<br />

choose an SSTV program for this adjustment,<br />

load a picture. From within the program,<br />

select transmit. The rig should key,<br />

but should not be modulated. Slowly rotate<br />

R9 clockwise and note how the rig begins<br />

to modulate. If the modulation level is high<br />

as you start to open R9, increase the value<br />

of R8 or decrease the sound card’s .WAV<br />

output level. Select R8’s value such that full<br />

modulation is realized somewhere around<br />

midposition of R9. On the other hand, if<br />

the incoming audio level is insufficient to<br />

properly modulate the rig with R9 at minimum<br />

resistance, decrease the value of R8.<br />

You should easily find a value for R8 that,<br />

in conjunction with adjustment of the .WAV<br />

output of your computer’s sound card mixer<br />

panel, results in proper modulation.<br />

No provisions have been made to adjust<br />

the rig’s audio-output level at the interface.<br />

The input of the comparator (U1A and<br />

U1B) can handle speaker audio levels ranging<br />

from barely audible to full-room volume.<br />

If a fixed audio-level point (such as<br />

the output at an accessory connector) is<br />

connected to this point, that should do. Use<br />

the sound card mixer LINE INPUT control<br />

to control the audio level fed to the sound<br />

card. Some SSTV programs provide a control<br />

for this audio source also.<br />

PC-Board Pin-Out IDs<br />

Most of the connections to the PC board<br />

are obvious, but I thought it might be a good<br />

idea to identify them here as well. The labels<br />

near the PC-board interconnection pads<br />

identify lines from the off-board source.<br />

• RIG SPKR—Connection your rig’s<br />

SPEAKER or LINE output (high side) to<br />

this pad.<br />

• SC LINE IN—Connects to the computer’s<br />

sound card LINE INPUT jack (high side).<br />

• RIG GND, SC LINE GND and PTT GND—<br />

Electrically, these are all the same point<br />

on the interface. These points connect<br />

from the interface to the rig or the sound<br />

card as indicated in the labeling.<br />

• EXT PTT—This pad is connected in parallel<br />

with the relay PTT contacts. This is<br />

convenient if you have a secondary PTT<br />

actuator such as a foot switch or a<br />

grounding switch on the microphone.<br />

• MIC HOT—If you’re using the rig’s mic<br />

input as the modulating point for the interface<br />

and the microphone, connect your<br />

mic to this pad and the mic ground to MIC<br />

GND on the interface.<br />

• RIG MIC IN—From the rig’s modulating input<br />

point; either the mic connector, or the<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 41


accessory jack LINE input. If you’re using<br />

your rig’s accessory connector as the<br />

modulation input to your transceiver, connecting<br />

a microphone to the interface’s MIC<br />

HOT pad (as described earlier) isn’t necessary<br />

as the mic is likely connected directly<br />

to the rig’s mic connector.<br />

• SC LINE OUT—Input from the sound card<br />

LINE OUTPUT jack (high side).<br />

• +10 to +15 V—External power-supply connection.<br />

Serial-port connection labels are on the<br />

component side of the PC board opposite<br />

the rig and sound card I/Os. Pin numbers<br />

indicated are those for a 9-pin (DB9) connector<br />

at J1. If you have a 25-pin serial port<br />

connection, use the pin numbers enclosed<br />

in parentheses in Figure 1.<br />

Summary<br />

Now you have no excuse for not trying<br />

AMTOR, FAX, Hellschreiber, MT63,<br />

PACTOR, PSK31, RTTY and SSTV. With<br />

this interface, you can operate most of the<br />

modes by simply running the appropriate<br />

software (much of which is free) and selecting<br />

the proper interface. You’re sure to<br />

have fun!<br />

Notes<br />

1<br />

K7SZL’s Unofficial HamComm home page<br />

(http://home.att.net/~k7szl) contains information<br />

on nearly every aspect of the popular<br />

HamComm program.<br />

2<br />

The JV-FAX/JV-Comm32 site is http://www.<br />

jvcomm.de.<br />

3<br />

Most sound card SSTV and other digitalmode<br />

software can be found at http://<br />

www.muenster.de/~welp/sb.htm.<br />

4<br />

For PSK31 information and software, visit the<br />

“Official” PSK31 Homepage at http://aintel.<br />

bi.ehu.es/psk31.html.<br />

5 Information on the MT63 experimental mode<br />

and software can be found at http://<br />

members.xoom.com/ZL1BPU/MT63/<br />

MT63.html.<br />

6<br />

All of these DOS SSTV programs (EZ-SSTV,<br />

GSH-PC, JV-FAX, and MSCAN) in addition<br />

to most sound card SSTV software can be<br />

obtained from http://www.ultranet.com/<br />

~sstv/index.html. The EZ-SSTV site is<br />

http://www.ultranet.com/~sstv/<br />

ezsstv.html. MSCAN is available from http:<br />

//www.mscan.com.<br />

7<br />

You can download EasyFAX V1.10 from ftp:<br />

//ftp.funet.fi/pub/ham/fax_sstv<br />

/ef110.exe.<br />

8 GSH-PC is available at http://ourworld.<br />

compuserve.com/homepages/dl4saw<br />

and http://www.pervisell.com/ham/gs1.<br />

htm.<br />

9<br />

PC boards are available from Far Circuits,<br />

18N640 Field Ct, Dundee, IL 60118-9269;<br />

tel 847-836-9148 (voice and fax); http://<br />

www.cl.ais.net/farcir/. PC Board only, $5<br />

plus $1.50 shipping for up to four boards.<br />

Visa and MasterCard accepted with a $3<br />

service charge.<br />

Jim Mitrenga, N9ART, received his Technician<br />

class license in March of 1979; he upgraded to<br />

Amateur Extra class in 1981. Jim’s wife, Sandy,<br />

is KB9MXF. Jim and Sandy are active on VHF<br />

and UHF FM for family communication. HF<br />

CW is Jim’s favorite mode, but he’s active on<br />

AM, FM, SSB, SSTV, PSK31, RTTY and packet,<br />

and enjoys Amateur Radio electronics design.<br />

Jim’s other interests include fishing, hiking, bicycling,<br />

gardening, computers, audio recording<br />

and broadcast engineering. Jim is employed as<br />

a program manager at Motorola, Inc, in<br />

Schaumburg, Illinois, where he started as an RF<br />

design engineer in 1979. Currently he concentrates<br />

on digital communications audio quality.<br />

You can contact Jim at 1013 Chippewa Dr,<br />

Elgin, IL 60120; sstv@hotmail.com and<br />

n9art@arrl.net.<br />

NEW BOOKS<br />

THE ELECTRONICS OF RADIO<br />

By David B. Rutledge, KN6EK<br />

Published by Cambridge University Press, 40<br />

West 20th Street, New York NY 10011-4211;<br />

tel 212-924-3900; fax 212-691-3239; http://<br />

www.cup.org. First edition, 1999, 431 pages<br />

including the index, paperback 10 × 6 7 /8<br />

inches, B&W illustrations, 3 1 /2-inch disk included.<br />

ISBN 0521646456. $44.95.<br />

Reviewed by TA Paul Danzer, N1II<br />

ARRL Technical Advisor<br />

◊ The Electronics of Radio is a college-level<br />

textbook, and the author is a professor of<br />

electrical engineering at the California<br />

Institute of Technology. There is a good deal<br />

of mathematics in many of the chapters, and<br />

knowledge of basic first-year calculus would<br />

be helpful to understand some of the material.<br />

This being the case, why would this book<br />

be of interest to many hams Because there<br />

are some real goodies between the soft covers<br />

of an attractive, well-written text using the<br />

NorCal 40A QRP rig as its example.<br />

The first chapter is a summary of radio<br />

⎯from the Titanic through basic electrical<br />

laws, receiver and transmitter components<br />

and stages, up to the NorCal rig. From this<br />

point onward the following chapters are<br />

more conventional⎯components, transmission<br />

lines, filters, amplifiers and so on. But<br />

included in here are any number of<br />

interesting sidelights and approaches. As an<br />

example of acoustics, in Chapter 7 there is<br />

42 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

a problem (or exercise for the student) using<br />

a resonate tube to change the response of a<br />

loud speaker. Anyone remember some of the<br />

old “Hints And Kinks”<br />

The oscillator chapter of The Electronics<br />

of Radio contains a very nice explanation<br />

of RIT, the NorCal circuit that generated this<br />

function, and a drawing of the components<br />

on the board to show how it is actually built.<br />

For those who like to see actual hardware<br />

along with theory, KN6EK often obliges.<br />

Chapter 12 is devoted to mixers, and there<br />

is a bit of math used. However, for anyone<br />

who is tired of long and inconclusive<br />

discussions of mixers, spurious products and<br />

receiver problems, the material in this<br />

chapter is very much worth<br />

reading. Included is a very precise<br />

explanation of key clicks using a<br />

power spectrum expression ⎯but<br />

with it is a filter and an explanation<br />

of the way the filter works.<br />

The noise chapter a mathematically<br />

based explanation of<br />

what goes on in a receiver. Like<br />

it or not, this is an area where the<br />

math is needed to explain the<br />

operation. Although some<br />

calculus is used, unless you are an engineering<br />

student, you probably won’t miss<br />

much by just passing over the calculus<br />

equations.<br />

Chapter 15, Antennas And Propagation,<br />

contains a very nice section concerning the<br />

Friis Formula. Many technical people will<br />

recognize most of it as the radar range equation,<br />

used to predict how far a radar system<br />

can see a target. Along with it is an explanation<br />

of how to calculate line-of-sight for<br />

VHF, UHF and microwave is an explanation<br />

of why the Earth’s radius is multiplied by<br />

4/3 for calculating line-of-sight.<br />

There are several appendices included.<br />

Appendix B goes through Fourier Series.<br />

But unlike the treatment in most math<br />

handbooks, this one is directed and limited<br />

to radio and electronics applications. The<br />

examples worked out in detail are for a<br />

square wave, rectified cosine (or sine) wave<br />

and narrow pulses.<br />

Another appendix explains the use of<br />

Puff 2.1 and the disk accompanying the<br />

book. Puff 2.1 is a circuit simulator for<br />

linear circuits that also makes microstrip<br />

and stripline layouts. I did not<br />

attempt to use the software.<br />

The final appendix is a very<br />

nice feature I appreciated both as<br />

a reader and teacher ⎯a set of<br />

data sheets for the critical<br />

components used in The<br />

Electronics of Radio, as well as<br />

the Web addresses of many of the<br />

suppliers. Often you see a<br />

transistor or integrated circuit<br />

used in a technical discussion and<br />

you have no clue as to its characteristics.<br />

The appendix thankfully cures this problem.<br />

In summary, The Electronics of Radio<br />

uses the novel approach of making a real ham<br />

rig as the subject of most of its examples. As<br />

a textbook, it is not general light reading for<br />

everyone, but it has a number of goodies in<br />

it, and if you want to see a slightly different<br />

approach to electronics, take a look at The<br />

Electronics of Radio.<br />

Next New Book


By Dick Green, WC1M<br />

Discover the Wonderful<br />

World of Contesting<br />

Sharpen your operating skills and have a blast at the same time!<br />

ontesting is a major operating<br />

C<br />

activity enjoyed by thousands of<br />

amateurs. In fact, it is one of the<br />

fastest-growing areas of our hobby.<br />

One thing that makes contesting special<br />

is that it often combines several aspects of<br />

Amateur Radio at once. For example, the<br />

more you know about antennas, propagation<br />

and pileup techniques, the better your scores<br />

will be in a DX contest. In many ways,<br />

contesting is the ultimate test of knowledge<br />

and skill in Amateur Radio. Best of all,<br />

contesting offers competitive options to suit<br />

just about anyone: you can compete against<br />

other individual operators, you can compete<br />

as part of a team in a multi-operator or club<br />

competition, or you can compete against<br />

yourself to improve your personal best.<br />

What is a Radio Contest<br />

Simply put, most contests are based on<br />

the idea of contacting as many stations as<br />

possible in a fixed amount of time, usually<br />

one or two days. Each contact is brief: often<br />

the stations just exchange call signs, signal<br />

reports and locations. A typical exchange<br />

in a phone contest might go like this:<br />

WC1M: “CQ CONTEST, THIS IS<br />

WHISKEY CHARLIE ONE MIKE.<br />

CONTEST!”<br />

Steve, WB4OMM, prepares to do battle in<br />

the 1999 ARRL <strong>November</strong> phone<br />

Sweepstakes.<br />

KA1LBW: “KILO ALFA ONE LIMA<br />

BRAVO WHISKEY”<br />

WC1M: “KA1LBW, FIVE NINE, NEW<br />

HAMPSHIRE”<br />

KA1LBW: “FIVE NINE, VERMONT”<br />

WC1M: “THANKS. WHISKEY CHARLIE<br />

ONE MIKE, CONTEST!”<br />

The exchange might look like this in a CW<br />

contest:<br />

WC1M: CQ TEST WC1M WC1M<br />

KA1LBW:<br />

KA1LBW<br />

WC1M:<br />

KA1LBW 599 NH<br />

KA1LBW:<br />

599 VT<br />

WC1M:<br />

TU QRZ WC1M<br />

Sound familiar If you’ve participated in<br />

Field Day, you’ve made contacts just like these.<br />

Scoring<br />

All contests have rules about how the<br />

score is computed. Usually, you get one or<br />

more points per QSO. In some contests, you<br />

earn more points for working stations outside<br />

your country or continent, or more points for<br />

working stations on the low bands. It makes<br />

sense to study the rules carefully. For<br />

example, you might be allowed to work the<br />

same station once on each band, or perhaps<br />

only once regardless of band.<br />

The number of QSO points is then<br />

multiplied by the number of different multipliers<br />

you worked. A multiplier is usually<br />

a distinct location, such as a state, ARRL<br />

sec-tion, grid square, ITU or CQ zone or<br />

DXCC entity. In one contest, each unique<br />

call sign prefix (e.g., W1, KH6, DL2) is a<br />

multiplier. Some contests let you work each<br />

multiplier once per band, while other<br />

contests count only the first contact with a<br />

multiplier. Some contests include more than<br />

one type of multiplier, such as zone and<br />

DXCC entity.<br />

Here’s a simple scoring example: let’s<br />

say you get one point per QSO and each<br />

ARRL section counts as a multiplier. If you<br />

contact 500 stations in 50 ARRL sections,<br />

your score would be 25,000 points.<br />

QSO points and multipliers add a<br />

strategic dimension to contesting. They<br />

force you to think about the best way to<br />

optimize your score, given the propagation<br />

conditions, the time of day, your location,<br />

your antennas and your operating<br />

preferences. Should you try for as many<br />

contacts as possible Should you spend<br />

more time looking for multipliers When<br />

should you switch to 80 meters Even the<br />

most experienced contesters debate these<br />

questions endlessly. Finding your own<br />

answer is part of the fun.<br />

Logging and Computers<br />

Computerized logging programs have<br />

had a major impact on contesting, making<br />

it easier and more fun than ever. These<br />

programs allow us to enter just the call sign<br />

and exchange, and then they automatically<br />

Leon, N1XKT, bundles up for a frigid<br />

rover operation during the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL<br />

January VHF Sweepstakes.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 43


fill in other required information such as<br />

date, time, band, prefix, country, etc. The<br />

logging program takes care of “dupe<br />

checking,” too, warning us when we’ve<br />

already worked a station on that band. The<br />

logging program computes your score and<br />

QSO rate throughout the contest, so you<br />

always know how you are doing. At the end<br />

of the contest, you can output your log to a<br />

file and e-mail it to the contest sponsor. The<br />

result is that you get to spend more time<br />

operating in the contest and less time doing<br />

paperwork chores.<br />

The most popular logging programs are<br />

CT, NA, TR-Log and WriteLog. CT, NA and<br />

TR-Log run under MS-DOS, while WriteLog<br />

runs under Microsoft Windows. The MS-<br />

DOS based programs can be run on very<br />

inexpensive IBM-compatible personal<br />

computers with a 286 or greater processor<br />

and minimal configuration. For more<br />

information, get on the Web and go to http:/<br />

/www.contesting.com where you’ll find<br />

links to the home pages for the popular<br />

logging programs.<br />

Entry Categories<br />

Virtually every contest has multiple<br />

entry categories, providing you with many<br />

options for participating. In the standard<br />

Single Operator category, one person does<br />

all of the operating chores, including<br />

sending, receiving and logging, and is<br />

allowed to transmit from only one radio at<br />

a time. Within the Single Operator category<br />

there are usually several power classifications,<br />

including Low Power, High Power<br />

and QRP. The exact power limits vary<br />

depending on the type of contest. In the<br />

Multi-Single category, two or more<br />

operators share the operating chores, but<br />

usually transmit from only one radio at a<br />

time. This is a good choice if you can’t<br />

allocate enough time to work the entire<br />

contest (or can’t stay awake that long!). The<br />

Multi-Two category in the ARRL DX<br />

contest allows two operators to transmit<br />

from up to two radios at a time, on different<br />

bands. The Multi-Multi category allows any<br />

number of operators to use any number of<br />

radios, as long as there is no more than one<br />

transmitted signal on each band.<br />

One of the hot new trends in contesting<br />

is Single Operator Two Radio, or SO2R. This<br />

is a station in which one operator uses two<br />

radios, but only one transmitted signal is on<br />

the air at any time. This allows the station to<br />

compete in the Single Operator category, but<br />

with the advantage of being able to call CQ<br />

on one radio while at the same time tuning a<br />

different band on the other radio. Operating<br />

two radios at the same time is a little like<br />

juggling cats, so I recommend that you get a<br />

lot of experience contesting with one radio<br />

before you try SO2R.<br />

Contest Resources<br />

When you’re ready to get started, the first<br />

thing to do is to get a calendar of upcoming<br />

contests, read the rules, and decide which<br />

contests appeal to you. There’s a contest<br />

calendar in every issue of <strong>QST</strong>, in the<br />

“Contest Corral” department, and the ARRL<br />

Web site at http://www.arrl.org/contests/<br />

has a calendar and rules for all upcoming<br />

ARRL contests. You can also find contest<br />

calendars and rules on various contest<br />

websites, including http://contesting.com,<br />

http://www.sk3bg.se/contest/, http://<br />

www.cq-contest.com/, and http://www<br />

.hornucopia.com/contestcal/. A great<br />

magazine resource for contest news and<br />

information is the National Contest Journal.<br />

You can subscribe by calling toll free at<br />

1-888-277-5289 between 8 AM and 8 PM<br />

Eastern Time, Monday through Friday.<br />

Try “The ARRL Big Three”<br />

Within the next few months you’ll find<br />

three popular contests that are perfect for<br />

beginners:<br />

• ARRL <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes<br />

ARRL <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes is one of<br />

my favorite contests, and I try to participate<br />

every year. Since the contest is limited to the<br />

United States and Canada (W/VE), excellent<br />

scores are possible even from modest stations.<br />

It’s also a great way to accumulate states for<br />

the WAS and 5BWAS awards. The object is<br />

to work as many W and/or VE stations as you<br />

can in no more than 24 of the 30 hours of the<br />

contest (from 2100 UTC Saturday to 0300<br />

UTC Monday). There are separate contest<br />

weekends for CW (<strong>November</strong> 4-6) and Phone<br />

(<strong>November</strong> 18-20). Sweepstakes entry<br />

categories are Single Operator Low Power<br />

(150 W or less), Single Operator High Power<br />

(over 150 W), Single Operator QRP (5 W or<br />

less) and Single Operator Unlimited/Assisted<br />

(use of packet spots is allowed), Multi-Single,<br />

and Club. There’s no Multi-Multi category.<br />

Complete rules for ARRL <strong>November</strong><br />

Sweepstakes may be found elsewhere in this<br />

issue, or on-line at http://www.arrl.org/<br />

contests/announcements/rules-novss.html.<br />

• ARRL 10-Meter Contest<br />

Trying for 10-meter WAS, DXCC or<br />

5BDXCC Then the ARRL 10-Meter<br />

Contest is for you! It’s a great DX contest,<br />

even for small stations. The object of the<br />

contest is to work as many stations as<br />

possible on the 10-meter band in no more<br />

than 36 of the 48 hours of the contest (from<br />

0000 UTC Saturday to 2400 UTC Sunday).<br />

The contest takes place on a single<br />

weekend, December 9-10, so the CW and<br />

Phone portions are combined. The ARRL<br />

10-Meter Contest has Single Operator (Low<br />

Power, High Power, QRP). In the Single<br />

Operator categories you can work CW only,<br />

Phone only, or Mixed (both CW and<br />

Phone). The only other category is Multi-<br />

Single, which is mixed mode only.<br />

You’ll find complete rules for ARRL<br />

10-Meter Contest elsewhere in this issue,<br />

or at http://www.arrl.org/contests/<br />

announcements/rules-10M.html.<br />

• ARRL January VHF Sweepstakes<br />

You don’t have an HF rig or antenna<br />

The ARRL January VHF Sweepstakes may<br />

be just the ticket for you. It’s the big Winter<br />

contest for VHF and UHF enthusiasts, and<br />

you can do very well with modest<br />

equipment and antennas. You can even<br />

operate with your mobile FM rig or an H-T.<br />

The object of this contest is to work as<br />

many stations as possible in as many “grid<br />

squares” as possible using authorized<br />

frequencies above 50 MHz. The contest<br />

lasts 33 hours and takes place the weekend<br />

before the NFL Super Bowl (1900 UTC<br />

Saturday January 20 to 0400 UTC Monday<br />

January 22).<br />

The January VHF Sweepstakes<br />

designates grid squares as multipliers. For<br />

more information on grid squares, see the<br />

April 1994 issue of <strong>QST</strong>, page 86. Even<br />

better, surf to http://www.arrl.org/locate/<br />

gridinfo.html. There you will find a link<br />

to the <strong>QST</strong> article, along with links to a Web<br />

page and a program for your PC that will<br />

compute the grid square for any set of<br />

coordinates. You can work each grid square<br />

once per band for multiplier credit.<br />

A Roving Rover<br />

Rover is a special category unique to<br />

contests above 50 MHz. It’s designed for<br />

operators of mobile stations that move<br />

among two or more grid squares during the<br />

contest. In addition to the grid squares of<br />

stations they work, Rovers can count each<br />

grid square from which they make a<br />

contact as a multiplier. The rules allow<br />

either one or two operators for a Rover<br />

station, so you can hop in the car with a<br />

buddy and have some real fun driving from<br />

one grid square to another making contacts.<br />

Complete rules for ARRL January VHF<br />

Sweepstakes may be found in the December<br />

issue of <strong>QST</strong> or at http://www.arrl.org/<br />

contests/announcements/01vhfss.html.<br />

You can contact the author at 190 Lyme<br />

Rd, Hanover, NH 03755-6602; dick.green<br />

@valley.net.<br />

44 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


By Dave Pruett, K8CC<br />

Coping with Cabrillo<br />

ew developments have affected<br />

F<br />

Amateur Radio contest operating<br />

as much as the development of<br />

logging software for personal<br />

computers. Such programs quickly replaced<br />

paper logs, dupe and multiplier sheets on<br />

the operating desk. These same programs<br />

make it a simple task to submit your log<br />

electronically to the contest sponsor.<br />

Standardization Needed<br />

In early 1999, computer professional Trey<br />

Garlough, N5KO, worked with many of the<br />

major developers of Amateur Radio logging<br />

software to develop a standardized electronic<br />

contest entry specification for the ARRL.<br />

The result was the Cabrillo File Format<br />

Specification, which in late 1999 was<br />

adopted by the ARRL as its standard format<br />

for electronic contest entries. Beginning with<br />

contests in <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>, all logs for<br />

ARRL contests that are electronically<br />

generated must be in the Cabrillo file format.<br />

The ARRL will continue to accept paper<br />

logs written by hand. However, contest<br />

entries generated using a computer must<br />

submit the electronic Cabrillo file.<br />

A Look at Cabrillo<br />

Information about the Cabrillo File<br />

Format Specification is available on-line at:<br />

http://www.kkn.net/~trey/cabrillo. An<br />

example of a Cabrillo file is shown below.<br />

Each line in a Cabrillo file begins with a<br />

keyword ending with a colon. This keyword<br />

identifies the data contained in that line. The<br />

file begins with the “START-OF-LOG:”<br />

keyword. Other keywords identify summary<br />

information defining the contest entry. Non-<br />

QSO data lines can appear anywhere in the<br />

file; however, QSO data lines must appear<br />

in chronological order.<br />

The format of each QSO data field is<br />

defined in the Cabrillo specification, and<br />

there is at least one blank space between<br />

adjacent data fields. These fields must be<br />

positioned in a specific order. The line starts<br />

with the “QSO:” keyword, followed by the<br />

frequency (in whole kilohertz for HF<br />

contests, or a letter designating the band for<br />

VHF/UHF) and mode of the contact. Next<br />

is the date (in YYYY-DD-MM format) and<br />

four-digit UTC time. The entrant’s call sign<br />

and sent information comes next, followed<br />

by the call sign of the station worked and<br />

the received information.<br />

The log file ends with the “END-OF-<br />

LOG:” keyword, which is very important. On<br />

occasion, the ARRL has received electronic<br />

log files that have been cut off or truncated.<br />

This sometimes happens during the e-mail<br />

process, usually beyond the control of either<br />

the entrant or the ARRL. With a Cabrillo log<br />

file, if the “END-OF-LOG:” keyword is<br />

missing, it is obvious that the file has been<br />

truncated and the entrant can be contacted<br />

to send another copy. With the non-Cabrillo<br />

ASCII files generated by the popular logging<br />

programs today, this truncation can be<br />

difficult, if not impossible to detect.<br />

Generating Cabrillo Files<br />

Recent versions of most popular contest<br />

logging programs can generate Cabrillo files.<br />

Specific instructions for these programs and<br />

the Cabrillo-compatible version number<br />

follows. If you have a pre-Cabrillo version,<br />

you should contact your software provider<br />

about obtaining a current version.<br />

• CT by K1EA—As of version 9.49, CT<br />

supports Cabrillo files for the CQWW, ARRL<br />

DX (either domestic or DX), Sweepstakes<br />

and ARRL 10-Meter contests. A Cabrillo file<br />

can be created from within the program by<br />

typing the command WRITELOG in the call<br />

sign field of the logging screen. The Cabrillo<br />

file will be created along with the other log<br />

output files. It will be named yourcall.TXT,<br />

where yourcall is the call sign used during<br />

the contest.<br />

• NA by K8CC—NA has supported<br />

Cabrillo since version 10.43. A Cabrillo file<br />

can be created when exiting the program.<br />

On exit, a screen prompt appears saying<br />

“END PROGRAM: rite Log to Disk,<br />

rint, xit”. Press “W” to write the<br />

log to disk. The Cabrillo file will be created<br />

along with the other log output files in the<br />

NA output directory. It will be named<br />

yourlog.LOG, where yourlog is the base<br />

filename of the NA log being processed.<br />

• TRLog by N6TR—The first Cabrillocompliant<br />

version of TR is 6.50. A Cabrillo<br />

file is created using POST, the separate<br />

post-contest program provided with TR to<br />

generate entry files. Run the POST<br />

program, select “C” from the menu of<br />

commands and follow the prompts on the<br />

screen. The Cabrillo file will be created in<br />

the same directory as the log file being<br />

processed. It will be named yourlog.CBR,<br />

where yourlog is the base filename of the<br />

TR log being processed.<br />

• SD by EI5DI—A Cabrillo file can be<br />

START-OF-LOG: 2.0<br />

CONTEST: ARRL-SS-CW<br />

CALLSIGN: K8CC<br />

ARRL-SECTION: MI<br />

OPERATORS: K8CC, WB8T<br />

CATEGORY: MULTI-SINGLE<br />

CLAIMED-SCORE: 172536<br />

CLUB: Mad River Radio Club<br />

SOAPBOX: Big pileup on KP2N to get last section for sweep!<br />

NAME: Dave Pruett<br />

ADDRESS: 2727 Harris Road<br />

ADDRESS: Ypsilanti, MI 48198 USA<br />

QSO: 28002 CW 1999-11-06 2200 K8CC 1 M 69 MI KH7R 1 A 67 PAC<br />

QSO: 28002 CW 1999-11-06 2200 K8CC 2 M 69 MI KE9I 1 B 75 IN<br />

QSO: 28007 CW 1999-11-06 2201 K8CC 3 M 69 MI N7VM 2 A 76 UT<br />

QSO: 28010 CW 1999-11-06 2203 K8CC 4 M 69 MI N0AH 4 B 95 WY<br />

QSO: 28023 CW 1999-11-06 2204 K8CC 5 M 69 MI W5VX 8 A 59 STX<br />

An example of the Cabrillo file format.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 45


created using SDCHECK, the separate postcontest<br />

program provided with SD to<br />

generate entry files. The first version of<br />

SDCHECK supporting Cabrillo is 9.68. Start<br />

up SDCHECK then select Option 4 - Entry<br />

File. The Cabrillo file will be created in the<br />

same directory as SDCHECK. It will be<br />

named yourlog.LOG, where yourlog is the<br />

base filename of the SD log being processed.<br />

• WriteLog by W5XD—To create a<br />

Cabrillo file with WriteLog, pull down the<br />

Contest menu and click on Cabrillo File.<br />

In the screen that appears, make sure your<br />

sent information (ARRL section, category,<br />

power, etc.) is all entered correctly, then<br />

click OK. The Save As window appears<br />

showing the directory where the Cabrillo<br />

file (named yourcall.LOG) will be created.<br />

Helping The Contest Branch Serve You<br />

By Dan Henderson, N1ND, ARRL Contest Branch Manager<br />

Our goal in the Contest Branch is simple: provide accurate<br />

contest results to our participants. Several changes have been<br />

implemented that have allowed us to make great strides toward that<br />

goal. E-mail addresses for each contest have helped get logs to the<br />

correct queues for processing. A back-up server allows us to archive<br />

all e-mailed contest entries, so that original e-mails can be consulted<br />

if a problem arises. A listing of logs received at http://www.arrl.org/<br />

contests allows participants to verify basic information that affects<br />

their entry. And you, as a participant, can help us avoid problems by<br />

following a few easy guidelines.<br />

While more contesters are using electronic logging, we still<br />

receive approximately one-third of all logs in handwritten paper<br />

form. Handwritten paper logs will continue to be accepted for ARRL<br />

contests. There are generally three major problems we encounter<br />

with handwritten logs—all easily handled at the participant’s end.<br />

First, please make certain that you are using the most current<br />

forms and rules for the contest. Contest rules change occasionally<br />

and all participants need to make certain their information is up-todate.<br />

The latest forms and rules may be obtained three ways: (1)<br />

Send an SASE to the ARRL Contest Branch, 225 Main St,<br />

Newington, CT 06111 and request the forms; (2) download them<br />

from the ARRL Contest homepage at http://www.arrl.org/contest/<br />

forms; (3) request forms by e-mail to the ARRL Info Server (server<br />

guidelines are found in each contest rules announcement).<br />

Another problem we encounter with paper logs is that a<br />

participant may include entries for several contests in the same<br />

envelope. For example, in January 1999, we received one envelope<br />

from a participant, postmarked in late-January, that contained the<br />

following contest logs: ARRL Sweepstakes CW and Phone, ARRL<br />

160 Meter Contest, ARRL 10-Meter Contest and the ARRL RTTY<br />

Round Up. By combining the entries into a single mailing, four of the<br />

five logs were received after contest submission deadlines. Help us<br />

serve you by submitting only one contest entry per envelope (and<br />

clearly marking the contest name on the outside of the envelope).<br />

The final concern with paper logs is illegible handwriting. A<br />

recent handwritten entry included a tough-to-read call sign, which<br />

ended up wrong in the write-up. The entry, written in a sprawling<br />

script, had what appeared to be the letter W, but was in fact the letter<br />

U with an extremely long finishing tail. A simple matter to correct,<br />

but one that could have been avoided.<br />

Electronic logging, while taking contesting to new levels,<br />

nonetheless presents its own pitfalls. E-logs share a common<br />

problem with paper logs when they are either submitted late or sent<br />

to the wrong contest address. But what can the participant do to<br />

help eliminate problems with e-logs<br />

One of the most common problems we encounter is participant<br />

submitting the log and summary for the wrong contest. In fact, in<br />

every major contest we receive at least one such log! Recently a<br />

phone call was received from an individual upset that his 160-Meter<br />

Contest log had been “lost.” A check of the backup revealed that he<br />

had submitted a CQ World Wide summary sheet and an ARRL<br />

<strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes log!<br />

Many contesters will name their log files with some variation of<br />

the contest name and year. Imagine the confusion caused at the<br />

ARRL Contest Branch when lots of people submit files SSCW99.log.<br />

That is why the rules tell you to use your call sign for the file name,<br />

with an extension such as .log (ie N1ND.log). The partici-pant saves<br />

us time—and helps eliminate potential headaches—by using the<br />

required file naming protocols.<br />

The ARRL uses a different e-mail address for each event. E-mail<br />

sent to the wrong address has the potential to be overlooked. You<br />

should only submit the required files. When you send more than the<br />

required log files, you create the potential for saving the wrong file.<br />

You should only submit the file that contains the new Cabrillo log<br />

file! Please do not send other files, such as CTLog .bin files, NALog<br />

.qdf files, breakdown sheets, rate sheets, Excel spread sheets, or<br />

Word document files.<br />

Rules for contests do change. All of the major contest-logging<br />

software programs incorporate rules changes in their latest<br />

versions. If a new ARRL section is added, or if there is a new entry<br />

category, older copies of software may not be correct. You may<br />

miss or lose multipliers, be entered in a wrong category, or your<br />

software may not recognize the exchange that you try to log. The<br />

result is that your entry will have a problem, and your score may not<br />

be accurately reported.<br />

You should always verify that your summary information and log<br />

file are accurate before you submit your entry. Don’t assume that<br />

your software prepares correct summary information. You should<br />

open the log file and verify what it contains before you submit the<br />

entry. If your file doesn’t have all of the required information, your<br />

entry may be entered into a default category.<br />

E-mail is the easiest method of submitting your log. Before you<br />

send that e-mail, take a moment to make certain your file is<br />

complete. Recently, a contest-winning performance ended up with<br />

a major submission problem, one that was not caught until after the<br />

results had been printed. The log file appeared to have been<br />

truncated and, therefore, it was incomplete. In this case, over 500<br />

QSOs of the log were lost in the transmission. This sometimes<br />

happens when sending files over the Internet (I’ll leave it to the net<br />

gurus to explain how this happens). A good way to catch this is to<br />

e-mail yourself a copy of the file as a cc: to your submission to the<br />

League. The new Cabrillo file format (with its End of Log statement)<br />

gives us a way to verify complete logs are received.<br />

The old contest@arrl.org e-mail address is no longer valid.<br />

When you send your log to the correct address, you receive an<br />

automated response indicating that your e-mail has been received.<br />

Hold on to that receipt until the list of “logs received” is posted on<br />

the Contest Web page (or until the results are in print). If there is a<br />

problem with your entry or if it is missing, the response serves as<br />

proof of your submission before the deadline. If you have contest<br />

questions, send them to n1nd@arrl.org instead of the entry<br />

submission address.<br />

To summarize, here is a “Top Ten” list of ways you can assist us<br />

in “getting it right.”<br />

(1) Read and familiarize yourself with the contest rules before<br />

the event.<br />

(2) Use current copies of your logging program or paper<br />

summary sheets.<br />

(3) Verify that your summary information is complete and<br />

accurate.<br />

(4) If using paper summaries and logs, make certain all<br />

information is legible.<br />

(5) If using e-logging, submit the required Cabrillo file.<br />

(6) Send your entry before the 30-day deadline for submission.<br />

(7) Use the correct e-mail or postal mail address for submitting<br />

the entry.<br />

(8) Check to be certain your current mail and e-mail addresses<br />

are on your entry.<br />

(9) Electronically logged contests must submit their Cabrillo<br />

readable log files.<br />

(10) If you have questions, e-mail n1nd@arrl.org or call 860-<br />

594-0232.<br />

46 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


Change the destination directory if desired,<br />

and then click OK.<br />

Preparing the Entry<br />

Cabrillo files can be easily viewed or<br />

edited using the DOS Editor program<br />

(EDIT.EXE) or Windows NotePad. A word<br />

processor program is not recommended<br />

since such programs often insert hidden<br />

formatting characters into the file without<br />

the user’s knowledge.<br />

Opening the Cabrillo file allows the entry<br />

information to be quickly reviewed. One<br />

very important item for the ARRL Contest<br />

Department is the “ARRL-SECTION:” field,<br />

which is used to compile the score listings<br />

in <strong>QST</strong>, which are by ARRL section. Be sure<br />

to check this field to ensure that your score<br />

will appear under the correct section in the<br />

<strong>QST</strong> listings. Remember that some states<br />

have multiple sections, so include the correct<br />

section if you live in one of those areas.<br />

A common problem with electronic logs<br />

is incorrect information. For example,<br />

many popular logging programs allow a<br />

default location (such as your state) to be<br />

set. However, many contests use different<br />

entities for the geographic locator, in which<br />

case the default may be incorrect. Program<br />

bugs can also cause the QSO information<br />

to be incorrect. A few minutes reviewing<br />

the QSO information in your entry file can<br />

catch these types of errors quickly.<br />

Prior to submitting your electronic entry,<br />

it may be necessary to rename the Cabrillo<br />

file. The ARRL requires your entry file to<br />

be named yourcall.LOG, where yourcall is<br />

the call sign used by the entry during the<br />

contest. Some programs name the Cabrillo<br />

file in this way, while some do not (to avoid<br />

the possibility of inadvertently overwriting<br />

a prior copy of yourcall.LOG from another<br />

contest.) If necessary, rename the Cabrillo<br />

file to yourcall.LOG using either the<br />

RENAME command in DOS, or using<br />

Windows Explorer.<br />

One issue with using the call sign as a<br />

file name is that the forward slash character<br />

(/) used in portable call signs is not a valid<br />

file name character. Use the underscore (_)<br />

character as a substitute, or omit the character<br />

entirely.<br />

Submitting the Entry<br />

Your electronic entry may be submitted<br />

one of two ways. One method is to copy the<br />

Cabrillo file to a floppy and send it to the<br />

ARRL via regular mail. However, most<br />

entries are sent as e-mail attachments.<br />

E-mail programs typically support attachments<br />

as a way to send an electronic file as<br />

a separate, detachable part of the e-mail.<br />

To submit your entry, prepare an e-mail<br />

addressed to the ARRL for the specific<br />

contest to be entered. The address is always<br />

found in the rules for each contest or online<br />

at http://www.arrl.org.contests. The<br />

subject line should contain your call sign,<br />

the name of the contest and your entry class.<br />

Nothing needs to be included in the body<br />

of the e-mail because the Cabrillo file is a<br />

complete entry in itself.<br />

Attach the Cabrillo log file, send the<br />

e-mail and you’re done! Don’t send the<br />

files as the text of the e-mail, as this causes<br />

problems in detaching and saving the file<br />

information.<br />

Submitting an electronic log is easy once<br />

you’ve done it a few times. Electronic logs<br />

allow the ARRL logcheckers to do their job<br />

more quickly and accurately, and Cabrillo<br />

allows them to spend less time doing data<br />

translation and more time checking. The<br />

entrant also benefits from Cabrillo through<br />

improved integrity of their entry file.<br />

Electronic log submittal is here to stay, and<br />

it sure beats killing a tree to print your entry!<br />

By Jean Wolfgang, WB3IOS<br />

ARRL <strong>2000</strong> Technical Awards<br />

Call for Nominations<br />

Do<br />

you count yourself among<br />

those who know that technical<br />

advancement is not a lost<br />

ideal in the amateur community<br />

If so, now is the time to nominate yourself<br />

or your colleagues for one or all of the<br />

awards described below.<br />

ARRL members are encouraged to send<br />

nominations to ARRL Headquarters. Please<br />

include basic contact information for both you<br />

and the nominee. Submit support information<br />

along with a nomination letter, including endorsements<br />

of ARRL affiliated clubs and<br />

League officials. Nominations should thoroughly<br />

document the nominee’s record of<br />

technical service and accomplishments.<br />

ARRL Technical Service Award is given<br />

annually to the licensed radio amateur whose<br />

service to the amateur community and/or<br />

society at large is of the most exemplary<br />

nature within the framework of Amateur<br />

Radio technical activities. These include, but<br />

are not limited to:<br />

• Leadership or participation in<br />

technically oriented organizational affairs at<br />

the local or national level.<br />

• Service as an official ARRL technical<br />

volunteer: Technical Advisor, Technical<br />

Coordinator, Technical Specialist.<br />

• Service as a technical advisor to clubs<br />

sponsoring classes to obtain or upgrade<br />

amateur licenses.<br />

The Technical Service Award winner will<br />

receive an engraved plaque and travel expenses<br />

to attend an ARRL convention for<br />

the formal award presentation.<br />

ARRL Technical Innovation Award is<br />

granted annually to the licensed radio<br />

amateur whose accomplishments and<br />

contributions are of the most exemplary<br />

nature within the framework of technical<br />

research, development and application of<br />

new ideas and future systems. These<br />

include, but are not limited to:<br />

• Promotion and development of higherspeed<br />

modems and improved packet radio<br />

protocols.<br />

• Promotion of personal computers in<br />

Amateur Radio applications.<br />

• Activities to increase efficient use of<br />

the amateur spectrum.<br />

• Digital voice experimentation.<br />

The Technical Innovation Award winner<br />

will receive a cash award of $500, an engraved<br />

plaque and travel expenses to attend<br />

an ARRL convention for the formal presentation.<br />

ARRL Microwave Development Award<br />

is given each year to the amateur (individual<br />

or group) whose accomplishments and<br />

contributions are the framework of<br />

microwave development, ie, research and<br />

application of new and refined uses and<br />

activity in the amateur microwave bands. This<br />

includes adaptation of new modes both in<br />

terrestrial formats and satellite techniques.<br />

The Microwave Development Award<br />

winner will receive an engraved plaque and<br />

travel expenses to attend an ARRL convention<br />

for the formal presentation.<br />

Nominate Now!<br />

Send nominations to: ARRL Technical<br />

Awards, 225 Main St, Newington, CT<br />

06111. Nominations must be received at<br />

Headquarters by March 31, 2001. Send any<br />

questions to Headquarters, or e-mail<br />

jwolfgang@arrl.org.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 47


WORKBENCH<br />

PROJECTS AND INFORMATION FOR THE ACTIVE AMATEUR<br />

The Doctor is IN<br />

QDave, WD8DK, asks, “I am using a G5RV on 80-6 meters.<br />

How efficient is this antenna on 6 meters I have been<br />

told that it is very inefficient on this band. In fact, I have been<br />

told that a 1 /2 wavelength dipole is more efficient than the<br />

G5RV on 6 meters. Any comments”<br />

AOn 20 meters, where the G5RV was designed to operate, it<br />

boasts a little gain over a conventional half-wave dipole.<br />

Given a reasonably efficient feed line (450-Ω line) and a good<br />

antenna tuner, there’s no reason why the G5RV can’t be at least<br />

as “efficient” as, say, a coax-fed dipole in the HF bands.<br />

However, on 6 meters the G5RV acts as a long-wire antenna,<br />

with an azimuthal pattern with multiple, very narrow lobes. The<br />

narrow lobes are what give it gain, but also what make its<br />

performance compared with a regular garden-variety dipole<br />

inferior in direc-tions other than the ones it favors. The EZNEC<br />

plot shown in Figure 1 assumes that the antenna is mounted as a<br />

flat top at 50 feet above average ground. The G5RV has<br />

significantly more gain than the simple dipole, but it achieves this<br />

mainly in four, narrow-beamwidth directions. For the rest of the<br />

azimuths, its pattern has nulls that the dipole covers well.<br />

Any multiband antenna is a compromise, but most of us can’t<br />

have five or more dipoles hanging in our backyards. On 6 meters<br />

I would recommend a separate antenna designed for that band.<br />

There are a couple of inexpensive 6-meter wire antenna designs<br />

on the ARRL TIS Web site at http://www.arrl.org/tis/. Go there<br />

and click on “Antenna Projects,” and then “Other VHF Antennas.”<br />

QI have a 10-year-old Realistic 13-inch color TV that I use<br />

with my ATV station. Recently the TV went completely<br />

dead. It won’t turn on when I press the ON button on the front<br />

panel, or when I try to turn it on from the remote. I checked the<br />

power supply fuse and it is okay. The power supply appears to<br />

be working as well. Any ideas<br />

TVs operate in what you might call a “sleep” mode.<br />

AMany That is, there are circuits within the TV that are active<br />

continuously—even when the rest of the TV is off. Usually the<br />

primary microprocessor is always active, waiting for the<br />

command to switch on the rest of the set. If the microprocessor<br />

isn’t responding to manual or remote “on” commands, the<br />

microprocessor could be defective. If you have a volt-ohm meter<br />

and a schematic diagram, measure the voltage at the V cc<br />

pin of the<br />

microprocessor. Is it receiving power from the power supply<br />

(probably 5 V) If so, find the microprocessor pin that produces<br />

the output signal to turn on the rest of the TV. Do you get a<br />

reading at this pin when you press the TV’s “ON” button If not<br />

(and I suspect you won’t), the microprocessor is probably dead.<br />

On the other hand, if you do get a reading, it’s time to troubleshoot<br />

the rest of the circuit that is responsible for switching on the set.<br />

This is likely to include a couple of switching transistors and<br />

possibly an optoisolator.<br />

QLast night I heard a strange CW signal on 6 meters. It was<br />

hissing and buzzing, but I was still able to copy. To my<br />

astonishment, I learned that the station was 500 miles away<br />

from me. Was this sporadic E propagation<br />

AMy guess is that you heard auroral propagation. The clue is<br />

your description of the signal as having a hissing or buzzing<br />

characteristic.<br />

Those of us who reside at the higher latitudes are occasionally<br />

treated to the visual spectacle of the aurora borealis, better known<br />

as the “northern lights.” (Yes, there are “southern lights” as well,<br />

visible occasionally in South America and Africa.) The aurora is<br />

caused when the Earth intercepts a stream of charged particles<br />

Figure 1—This is an EZNEC plot of a G5RV antenna on 6<br />

meters compared to a dipole cut for 6 meters. The solid line<br />

represents the G5RV pattern while the dashed line represents<br />

the dipole. Notice that the G5RV is creating numerous narrow<br />

lobes of radiation.<br />

48 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Figure 2—The auroral “curtain” can function like a giant<br />

mirror in the sky, reflecting radio signals over substantial<br />

distances.


ejected from the Sun, resulting in a “geomagnetic storm.” These<br />

fast-moving particles funnel into the polar regions of the Earth<br />

thanks to our magnetic field. As the particles interact with the<br />

upper atmosphere, the air glows, which we see as an aurora. The<br />

shimmering, ghostly curtain of light is not only a treat for the<br />

eyes, it can reflect radio signals like a giant mirror (see Figure 2).<br />

Like sporadic E, you’ll encounter auroral propagation more<br />

often on 6 meters than on 2 meters. Nevertheless, 2-meter aurora<br />

is far more common than 2-meter sporadic E. You can also work<br />

distant stations using auroral propagation on 222 and 432 MHz.<br />

As you’ve discovered, auroral DX signals are very distorted.<br />

That’s why CW is the most commonly used mode, although you’ll<br />

hear SSB from time to time. Auroral CW signals have the raspy,<br />

buzzing quality you heard. (It sounds like the other guy is<br />

operating an ancient spark-gap transmitter!) Just listen carefully<br />

and you’ll be able to decode the signals.<br />

You do not need directional antennas and high power to work<br />

aurora on 6 meters. The Doctor has done it with dipoles and<br />

100 W. Many hams have even enjoyed success with 6-meter<br />

aurora from mobile stations!<br />

QI live on the top floor of an apartment building. We have<br />

a small balcony, but I can’t hang wire antennas for HF<br />

because they’ll droop onto the balconies below. I also need an<br />

antenna that I can remove quickly. Can you help<br />

AYou actually have more options available than you think.<br />

You could try a compact tuned loop antenna such as those<br />

sold by MFJ. Other extremely compact antennas such as the Bilal<br />

Isotrons (http://www.rayfield.net/isotron) may help. You might<br />

also try using a lightweight mobile antenna such as a Hamstick.<br />

You could mount the Hamstick on the balcony railing, for<br />

example, and attach a counterpoise wire to the ground side of the<br />

antenna mount. (The counterpoise wire should be 1 /4 wavelength<br />

for the desired band.) Just route the counterpoise wire along the<br />

floor of the balcony. Be sure to stay away from the ends of these<br />

counterpoise radials, where high RF voltages can exist even at<br />

modest transmitter power levels.<br />

All of these antenna options are, of course, compromises. They<br />

sacrifice efficiency to save space. Don’t expect any of them to<br />

outperform even a full-sized dipole mounted high in the clear, but<br />

they will get you on the air and provide many enjoyable contacts.<br />

Q<br />

I’m confused about the concept of “SWR bandwidth.”<br />

Can you explain<br />

bandwidth” is a term you’ll often encounter when<br />

A<br />

“SWR<br />

you’re reading about antenna designs, or checking the<br />

specifications of commercial antennas. Basically, the SWR<br />

bandwidth is the frequency range after the antenna has been tuned<br />

at one frequency, over which the SWR is 2:1 or less. This is easier<br />

to explain visually, so take a glance at Figure 3. Let’s say that we<br />

have a 40-meter dipole antenna that is tuned to resonance at 7100<br />

kHz. If our dipole has an SWR bandwidth of 200 kHz, we’d expect<br />

the SWR to rise to 2:1 at 7000 kHz and 7200 kHz.<br />

Some types of antennas such as compact tuned loops have<br />

extremely narrow SWR bandwidths when tuned to resonance. Trap<br />

dipole and vertical antennas will have varying SWR bandwidths<br />

for each band, usually becoming narrower on the lower bands. Be<br />

wary of an antenna that claims a 2:1 SWR bandwidth covering all<br />

of a wide band, such as 80 meters. This band covers 3.5 to<br />

4.0 MHz, a percentage bandwidth of more than 13%. While a wide<br />

SWR bandwidth may seem ideal, it’s often the hallmark of an<br />

inefficient design with high losses. After all, dummy loads have<br />

the “best” SWR bandwidths of all! Read all about broadband<br />

antennas in Chapter 9 of The ARRL Antenna Book.<br />

QDon, WB5UIA, asks, “Can I still find RTTY on the HF<br />

bands What about VHF What do I need to get started<br />

with this mode”<br />

ARTTY as a digital mode is still very much alive, although it<br />

is primarily used for DXing and contesting these days<br />

Figure 3—An SWR vs. frequency plot of a 40-meter dipole<br />

with a 2:1 SWR bandwidth of 200 kHz (see text).<br />

(PSK31 has taken over the lion’s share of the “conversational”<br />

HF digital activity). You’ll find RTTY on just about every HF<br />

band, but it is mostly heard on 20 meters between approximately<br />

14.080 and 14.095 MHz. As far as VHF is concerned, RTTY was<br />

once heard on 2 meters—there were even “RTTY repeaters”—<br />

but VHF RTTY activity today has all but disappeared in the US.<br />

To operate RTTY you have two options: purchase an external<br />

multimode interface for your computer, or purchase software that<br />

will send and receive RTTY signals using your computer’s sound<br />

card. The external interfaces are still popular, but the software<br />

approach is gaining ground. (See our review of RITTY 4.10 by<br />

Brian Beezley, K6STI, elsewhere in this issue.) Beyond that, all<br />

you need is an SSB transceiver and you’re good to go.<br />

To learn more I’d strongly recommend that you pick up a copy<br />

of the ARRL HF Digital Handbook. You can purchase this book<br />

at your favorite dealer, or order directly from the ARRL. See the<br />

ARRL Publications page in this issue.<br />

QI know that VOX is voice-operated switching, but what is<br />

“MOX” I see this popping up in transceiver feature lists<br />

from time to time.<br />

is manually operated switching. It is a front panel<br />

AMOX button that places the rig in the transmit mode. MOX is handy<br />

when you need to transmit, for antenna tuning purposes, for<br />

example, but don’t have a mic or key connected to the transceiver.<br />

QI use a station clock that has large, red LEDs. I’ve noticed<br />

that if I am chewing on something (a mid-contest snack!)<br />

and happen to glance at the clock, the numbers seem to be<br />

jumping or flickering. Assuming that this isn’t the symptom of<br />

some dreaded disease, what really causes the flickering<br />

AIf you’re chewing on something hard (crunchy potato chips,<br />

candy, etc) you set up vibrations in your jaw that propagate<br />

to your eyes, shifting their positions ever so slightly. The LED<br />

segments are “refreshing” themselves at a high rate of speed and,<br />

because of the movement of your eyes, the bright “moving”<br />

segments are in different places from where the visual centers of<br />

your brain expect them to be. You may see the same effect while<br />

watching your computer monitor.<br />

This phenomenon involves something called the critical fusion<br />

frequency, which is the point where we begin to perceive things<br />

that are flickering as if they are solid. Different factors influence<br />

that frequency, including the size of the object, its brightness, and<br />

which part of the retina it is seen by. The brighter the background,<br />

for example, the greater the flicker. The action of chewing jars the<br />

visual axis and changes your line of sight relative to the particular<br />

point you are focused on, moving it far enough off the central<br />

retina to change your ability to perceive a flickering image as a<br />

stable one.<br />

Do you have a question or a problem Ask the doctor! Send<br />

your questions (no telephone calls, please) to: “The Doctor,”<br />

ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111; doctor@arrl.org;<br />

http://www.arrl.org/tis/.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 49


THE HELP DESK<br />

The relationships between fundamental (F) amateur signals, and their harmonics,<br />

and CATV, over-the-air TV and other services.<br />

50 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


DXTelnet 4.7<br />

DX Clusters have become the nerve centers of the HF and VHF<br />

DXing world. The first of these information-sharing networks was<br />

born in the heyday of amateur packet radio. Known as<br />

PacketClusters, the networks consisted of various interconnected<br />

packet switching nodes scattered throughout a state or region. These<br />

nodes functioned as hubs for packet radio connections established<br />

by dozens or even hundreds of DX hunters.<br />

With the advent of the Internet, a few Web-based clusters have<br />

emerged, but radio-based PacketClusters are still very active. In<br />

fact, many PacketClusters have incorporated connections to the<br />

Internet. These are not Web connections in the sense that you might<br />

normally think of them. To access these clusters you need to use<br />

the TCP/IP telnet function. Back in the “old days” of the Internet<br />

(before the Web), this was a straightforward procedure if you knew<br />

the proper TCP/IP commands. Hams today are more accustomed<br />

to navigating the Internet through Web browsers and many Web<br />

browsers lack a telnet plug-in. This makes the process of establishing<br />

a telnet connection a baffling experience.<br />

Enter DXTelnet<br />

DXTelnet is a Windows based software package developed by<br />

Fabrizio Sartoni, IK4VYX. DXTelnet streamlines the process of<br />

connecting to DX clusters via telnet. Now you can connect easily,<br />

and enjoy a number of convenient features to boot!<br />

DXTelnet is really three Windows applications: DXTelnet,<br />

DXPlorer and DXTNC. DXTelnet is the telnet software, DXPlorer is<br />

a kind of specialized Web browser for Web-based clusters and<br />

DXTNC is designed for use with TNCs in radio-based PacketClusters.<br />

So, with one software package, you can choose any method you wish<br />

for connecting to your favorite DX spotting networks.<br />

DXTelnet is much more than a simple terminal program or telnet<br />

client. DXTelnet is overflowing with bells and whistles that add<br />

even greater pleasure to the DXing game, especially for busy hams.<br />

For instance, you can filter DX spots so that duplicate spots (announcements<br />

about the same station posted more than once) are<br />

eliminated. You can set sound alerts that will chime when a spot<br />

for specific station call sign, or a particular entity, appears. You<br />

can even filter the alerts according to band. DXTelnet can export<br />

spot data into almost any log, or even to another cluster.<br />

You can visually monitor the DXTelnet windows, or have<br />

DXTelnet audibly “announce” each incoming spot for you. If your<br />

PC is equipped with a sound card, DXTelnet will speak in a crisp<br />

voice with a slight Italian accent. Best of all—and this is a real<br />

hoot—DXTelnet can be configured to key a transmitter, such as a<br />

Family Radio Service (FRS) unit, and transmit the voice<br />

announcements to remote locations (it even includes an ID function).<br />

I tried this using two tiny Ranger FRS H-Ts and a juryrigged<br />

keying line for the “base” unit. I set up DXTelnet to key<br />

the transmitter using an interface attached to my PC’s printer port.<br />

Whenever a new DX spot showed up on the cluster, DXTelnet<br />

keyed the FRS rig and broadcast the call signs and frequencies to<br />

me while I was working in the yard. If you want to hear what this<br />

sounded like, listen to the audio sample at my personal Web site<br />

at: http://home.att.net/~wb8imy/dxtelnet/dxtelnet.htm.<br />

On the Cluster<br />

For this review I used DXTelnet primarily to connect to various<br />

Internet DX clusters and DX chat areas. You don’t have to<br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

Steve Ford, WB8IMY <strong>QST</strong> Managing Editor<br />

The main DXTelnet window (shown while connected to<br />

N6RT’s popular CQDX-IRC node).<br />

know the IP addresses to make a connection. DXTelnet has its<br />

own list of more than 50 active addresses. You begin by establishing<br />

your connection to the Internet. Once you are on line,<br />

bring up DXTelnet and click on the cluster you wish to try.<br />

As you connect, DXTelnet logs you in automatically. If the<br />

site is active, you’ll begin to see DX spots and other information<br />

within seconds. If you click on any received call sign and go to<br />

the HamInfo menu, you can activate a variety of online services<br />

to gather more information about the call sign. For example, you<br />

can do an address search, QSL manager search and so on.<br />

By double clicking any displayed call you will get a pop-up<br />

window with information including the actual name of the DXCC<br />

country, distance, antenna heading, sunset and sunrise times, and<br />

much more.<br />

I tried DXTNC briefly with a Kantronics KPC-3 TNC and it<br />

also worked very well. The split windows made reading easy and,<br />

once again, the voice announcements were particularly convenient.<br />

(This is especially so if you are puttering around the shack<br />

while trying to keep one ear on the radio.)<br />

Downloading<br />

DXTelnet is shareware and you can give it a try by downloading<br />

a copy at any of the following sites:<br />

http://www.qsl.net/wd4ngb/telnet.htm<br />

http://www.powernetonline.com/~dbald/dxtelnet.html<br />

http://www.qsl.net/ad5xa/dxt.html<br />

The unregistered version will operate for 30 minutes in the<br />

Web or telnet mode before shutting down. The TNC module will<br />

function for 60 minutes before quitting. If you enjoy DXTelnet,<br />

register the software and you’ll not only get rid of the annoying<br />

premature shutdowns, you’ll receive free “lifetime” upgrades as<br />

they become available.<br />

Manufacturer: Fabrizio Sartoni, IK4VYX. $35, payable with<br />

VISA or MasterCard at the on-line ordering site on the Web at:<br />

http://www.golist.net/, or visit http://www.geocities.com/<br />

dxtelnet/other.htm for information on other methods of payment.<br />

Minimum computer requirements: 486-66 or faster PC running<br />

Windows 95, 98 or <strong>2000</strong>.<br />

Next Short Take<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 51


Ham University<br />

As someone who teaches Amateur Radio classes in both theory<br />

and CW, I am constantly seeking new ways to help newcomers<br />

learn what they need to know. Hardly a week goes by without<br />

someone asking for the best way to learn theory, Morse code, or<br />

both. Often they mention specific tools, such as a particular book<br />

or some software they heard about from a friend. Only if I’ve<br />

actually worked with that item will I be able to give an answer<br />

based on anything except hearsay or rumor.<br />

When I was offered an opportunity to try another tool, I couldn’t<br />

refuse. Especially since I’ve heard so much about Ham University<br />

and its designer, Michael F. C. Crick. Over the years, many<br />

programs have been developed in the name of teaching about<br />

Amateur Radio. A few have withstood the test of time. This is one.<br />

Installation and Use<br />

My home computer is a modest 486 PC running Windows 95.<br />

Since I found no mention in the installation and operation manual<br />

of specific computer requirements, I was a little concerned that<br />

my “ancient” machine might be too slow for the task. I was<br />

relieved to discover that program installed perfectly the first time.<br />

The book does say, however, that if you plan on using Ham<br />

University for learning Morse, a properly functioning sound card<br />

is necessary. I knew mine was working well (I’ve used it with<br />

the G3PLX PSK31 software), so I<br />

proceeded.<br />

Using the instruction booklet, I<br />

quickly realized how easy this program<br />

is to use. At the title screen, you can pick<br />

from a variety of tools available under<br />

the “Activity” menu at the top of the<br />

page.<br />

The first two items under the Activity<br />

Menu are FCC Question items. “Quiz”<br />

allows you to pick and choose which<br />

questions and/or topics you wish to be<br />

tested. The entire question pool is<br />

available to browse through, or you can<br />

focus on a particular topic. Each quiz is<br />

automatically given a default name<br />

(.QIZ extension) unless you assign a<br />

specific name. All option settings are<br />

saved when you leave. When you return,<br />

you can pick up right where you left off.<br />

Clicking on FCC Question “Exam”<br />

brings a screen allowing you to either<br />

continue an existing exam or begin a<br />

new exam. All questions and answers<br />

are drawn word-for-word from the new<br />

FCC question pools, in use since April<br />

15, <strong>2000</strong>. At the end, the score shows<br />

exactly how many questions were passed<br />

and how many were missed. You can<br />

review those with incorrect answers.<br />

Exams are saved with .XAM extension,<br />

and can be saved before you start, during<br />

the exam, or after you’ve completed it.<br />

52 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

Morse Training and Testing<br />

Actual Morse code lessons are accessed by clicking on<br />

“Lessons.” You must first put a Lesson Plan together. This is easily<br />

accomplished following the directions guided by Morris the Cat—<br />

an animated cat who assists by describing each function the mouse<br />

pointer indicates.<br />

My favorite method is the “Exercise” approach done by<br />

copying with the keyboard. What you type is shown in the lower<br />

panel. At the end of the exercise, you can compare what you typed<br />

with the sent message displayed in the upper panel. Variables that<br />

you can manually adjust include speed in words per minute,<br />

character speed, message length and word length.<br />

In addition to all this, Ham University offers a Morse game<br />

called PENTODE. The object is to build a large number of points<br />

in a short period of time. These points are received by connecting<br />

two or more tiles (the more the better), each containing the same<br />

character, as a diode (side by side), triode, tetrode or pentode.<br />

Personally, I found the game far less exciting than the speed exercise<br />

to copy Morse on the keyboard in the shortest possible time.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Ham University takes a creative, entertaining<br />

approach to teaching Morse code.<br />

“Morse” the cat grills you on Element 2 of<br />

the Technician exam.<br />

Dan Miller, K3UFG ARRL Certification Specialist<br />

Ham University is an excellent tool for anyone wishing to use<br />

a computer to study for an Amateur Radio license, regardless of<br />

which level they wish to pursue. Of<br />

course, my recommendation is to use<br />

such a program in conjunction with a<br />

class. The interaction of others provides<br />

the additional element of experience,<br />

expertise, and a warm body to answer all<br />

of your questions.<br />

In the absence of such a class, Ham<br />

University provides everything you need<br />

to go from ground zero all the way to<br />

Amateur Extra…in the comfort of your<br />

own living room.<br />

I’d be remiss in this review if I neglected<br />

to mention something else. Displayed<br />

at the top of each page of the instruction<br />

booklet is a flag of a foreign<br />

country. Next to the flag is the appropriate<br />

country name, accompanied by its<br />

latitude and longitude, CQ Zone number<br />

and call sign prefix. This is a very nice<br />

touch, adding to the educational and instructional<br />

factor of the Ham University<br />

program.<br />

Manufacturer: Michael F.C. Crick, MICA,<br />

2845-140th Ave NE, Bellevue, WA 98005;<br />

mica@crick.com; http://crick.com/<br />

hamu/; tel 425-883-2876 (9 AM to 9 PM<br />

PST). $40 with on-disk documentation; $45<br />

with a printed manual (shipping via US<br />

Postal Service included).<br />

Next Short Take


By John Hansen, W2FS<br />

An Inexpensive KISS-Mode TNC<br />

Four ICs on a slice of PC board aren’t<br />

edible, but the combination makes a<br />

deliciously simple TNC!<br />

or some time, I’ve thought it possible to use an inexpensive<br />

PIC microcontroller with an equally cheap modem<br />

F<br />

chip to construct a packet-radio TNC that would be<br />

small, cheap and consume little power. In this project,<br />

that idea became real.<br />

Background<br />

This isn’t a full-featured TNC, but one that is designed to operate<br />

primarily in KISS mode. KISS mode was developed by Mike<br />

Chepponis, K3MC, and Phil Karn, KA9Q, and is one of the modes<br />

now included in almost all commercial TNCs. If you think of the<br />

computer and TNC as the non-RF parts of a data-communication<br />

system, originally almost all of the system’s intelligence was built<br />

into the TNC, not the computer. As a result, it was possible for<br />

completely dumb terminals to be used with TNCs to provide packet<br />

communications. This was done because the personal computers<br />

available when TNCs were first developed weren’t very powerful.<br />

With time, computers became substantially more powerful. Taking<br />

the opposite approach, the Baycom and Poor Man’s Packet<br />

modems move all of the intelligence out of the TNC and into the<br />

computer. KISS mode plows a middle ground, moving a portion<br />

of the intelligence from the TNC to the computer, but leaving<br />

some intelligence in the TNC as well.<br />

A KISS-mode TNC can’t be used in conjunction with just any<br />

terminal program. That’s because certain TNC functions must be<br />

carried out in the computer, not the TNC. However, a significant<br />

amount of software has been created that supports KISS mode,<br />

including APRS, TCP/IP, my own HamWeb software and a range<br />

of other programs. (See the sidebar “KISS Mode Packet-Radio<br />

Software.”)<br />

In addition to being a KISS-mode TNC, this TNC has a second<br />

mode. It can be interfaced with a GPS receiver and used to send<br />

APRS position reports (in Mic-E compressed format) and monitor<br />

incoming unconnected (UI) packet frames. 1 Here, I’ll refer to this<br />

as “APRS Tracker mode.” In this mode, the data can be displayed<br />

using any terminal program available on any computer; it does not<br />

require KISS-compatible software.<br />

Circuit Description<br />

The hardware for this project (see Figure 1) is relatively simple<br />

since most of the heavy lifting is done by the firmware in the PIC.<br />

U1 is a programmed PIC16F877 microcontroller. 2 This chip sends<br />

and receives data from the computer or terminal, formats incoming<br />

and outgoing packets, receives and interprets data from the<br />

GPS stream (if one is used) and drives the modem chip.<br />

Even if the radio channel is busy and transmission is delayed,<br />

data continues to flow from the computer to the TNC. Because<br />

KISS mode does not support hardware or software flow control,<br />

a substantial amount of static memory is required. To avoid losing<br />

1<br />

Notes appear on page 56.<br />

PHOTOS BY JOE BOTTIGLIERI, AA1GW<br />

KISS-Mode Packet-Radio Software<br />

Here’s a listing of just a few of the packet-radio programs<br />

that support KISS. Please note that I have not tested all of these<br />

programs; I list them here solely because they claim to work well<br />

with KISS-mode TNCs.<br />

JNOS (TCP/IP Package):<br />

http://www.tapr.org/tapr/html/softf.html<br />

Pr4Win (general Windows-based Packet program):<br />

http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Vista/9244/<br />

WinTNC (another packet terminal program):<br />

http://www.tapr.org/tapr/html/softf.html<br />

WinAPRS (Windows-based full-featured APRS program):<br />

http://www.tapr.org/tapr/html/sigf.html<br />

CLX (DX Cluster software): http://www.clx.muc.de/<br />

G8BPQ (Packet switch software):<br />

http://www.tapr.org/tapr/html/softf.html<br />

—John Hansen, W2FS<br />

data, it’s necessary to have a sizeable transmit-data buffer. The<br />

PIC itself doesn’t contain enough memory to provide this function.<br />

Fortunately, static RAM chips of sufficient capacity are now<br />

extremely inexpensive. U2, a 62256 32-kB static RAM chip, is<br />

one of these devices. Of the 32 kB of memory contained in the<br />

62256 static RAM, 28 kB are devoted to the transmit buffer. In<br />

addition, there is a 4-kB receive buffer. This buffer is required<br />

because the unit must accumulate an entire receive frame before<br />

it can check to ensure the CRC calculation matches the data in the<br />

receive frame and decide whether to discard it (if there is an error)<br />

or send it on to the computer (if it is not in error).<br />

U3 is a MAX232 level-conversion chip. The PIC microcontroller<br />

communicates at TTL levels (0 to +5 V), while almost<br />

all computer serial ports communicate at RS-232 levels (±12 V).<br />

U3 handles the conversion in both directions. U4 is an MX-Com<br />

MX-614 modem IC. It takes the signals coming from the PIC and<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 53


54 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> Figure 1


Figure 1—Schematic of the KISS TNC circuit. Unless<br />

otherwise specified, resistors are 1 /4-W, 5%-tolerance<br />

carbon-composition or metal-film units. Equivalent parts<br />

can be substituted; n.c. indicates no connection. JDR = JDR<br />

Microdevices, 1850 S 10th St, San Jose, CA 95112-4108; tel<br />

800-538-5000, 408-494-1400, fax 800-538-5005, 408-494-1420;<br />

http://www.jdr.com, Mouser = Mouser Electronics, 958<br />

N Main St, Mansfield, TX 76063-4827; tel 800-346-6873, 817-<br />

483-4422, fax 817-483-0931; sales@mouser.com; http://<br />

www.mouser.com.<br />

C1-C11⎯0.1 µF monolithic (JDR 0.1UF-MONO)<br />

C12⎯220-µF, 35-V electrolytic (JDR 220R35)<br />

DS1-DS3⎯LED<br />

J1⎯PC mount 5-pin DIN socket (Mouser 161-0503)<br />

J2⎯PC mount DB9F (Mouser 152-5609)<br />

Q1⎯2N2222<br />

R6⎯10-kΩ PC-mount trimmer pot<br />

U1⎯Programmed 16F877-20P microcontroller; see Note 2.<br />

U2⎯62256LP 32 kB static RAM (JDR HM62256LP-10)<br />

U3⎯MAX232CPE RS-232 transceiver (JDR MAX232CPE)<br />

U4⎯MX-614 modem (available from http://www.tapr.org)<br />

U5⎯78L05 5-V, 100-mA positive voltage regulator<br />

Y1⎯10-MHz ceramic resonator, with capacitors (Mouser<br />

520-ZTT400MG)<br />

Y2⎯3.58-MHz ceramic resonator, with capacitors (Mouser<br />

520-ZTT358MG)<br />

Misc: Enclosure, PC board (see Note 2), hardware, IC<br />

sockets<br />

A top view of the KISS TNC.<br />

converts them into standard 1200-baud Bell 202 modem tones that<br />

can be fed directly to the radio. It also converts the received tones<br />

into TTL-level signals for interpretation by the PIC.<br />

Operating Instructions<br />

The first time you use the KISS TNC, configure it using a<br />

computer that can run a terminal program. Attach the DB9 connector<br />

to any serial port on your computer using a standard serial<br />

cable. Set the computer’s software to communicate at 1200 baud,<br />

8 bits, no parity. In the terminal program, turn off hardware and<br />

software flow control. Install jumper W1 on the TNC’s board (this<br />

places the TNC in terminal mode). Apply power to the unit. You<br />

should see a menu that looks like this:<br />

Configuration Menu<br />

1 Operating Mode<br />

2 Set TX Delay<br />

3 Set Terminal Baud Rate<br />

4 Set APRS Parameters<br />

E Erase All Parameters<br />

Selection:<br />

The first time you run the KISS TNC, it’s a good idea to choose<br />

E to erase all parameters. Selecting item 1 allows you to determine<br />

whether the device will be operating in KISS mode or APRS<br />

Tracker mode. Menu item 2 allows you to set the TX Delay. Item<br />

3 allows you to set the terminal data rate. This is the rate at which<br />

the TNC communicates with the attached computer both in terminal<br />

mode and when operating in KISS mode. Remember, KISS<br />

mode does not support any type of flow control. If you set the<br />

terminal rate to a level that’s faster than the data can be sent over<br />

the air and then use the device to transmit large files, the TNC’s<br />

memory buffer will eventually be exhausted and data lost. Thus,<br />

it’s probably a good idea to leave this set at the default (1200 baud).<br />

If you are going to use the TNC in APRS mode, you will also<br />

need to select item 4 from the menu to set the appropriate parameters<br />

for APRS. The following menu allows you to set these parameters:<br />

Current APRS Parameters<br />

1 Station Call sign: W2FS<br />

2 First Path Call sign: RELAY<br />

3 Second Path Call sign: WIDE<br />

4 Third Path Call sign: WIDE<br />

Figure 2⎯Using a<br />

Y adapter with<br />

the KISS TNC<br />

allows you to<br />

connect a GPS<br />

receiver and<br />

monitor incoming<br />

packets. A cheap<br />

and easy Y<br />

adapter is shown<br />

in Figure 3.<br />

5 Icon Number: 3E<br />

6 Alt. Icon Table (Y/N): N<br />

7 Delay Between Xmit (×10 seconds): 00<br />

8 Quiet Time (in seconds): 00<br />

9 Message Number: 1<br />

A Set Beacon Rate: 02<br />

B Beacon Text: This is a test of my PIC-based KISS TNC<br />

Select Parameter to Change:<br />

Item 1 allows you to set your call sign. It also allows you to<br />

specify the SSID to be used. The SSID should be entered as a single<br />

digit in hexadecimal format. That is, if you want the call sign W2FS-<br />

10, you should enter that as W2FS with an SSID value of A. In items<br />

2 through 4 you can set a path that is up to three call signs long. The<br />

next two items (5 and 6) allow you to select the icon that is displayed<br />

when your station appears on APRS maps. Item 7 allows you<br />

to specify the length of the period between position beacons. If you<br />

set this value to zero, the unit will never beacon; it will simply<br />

monitor the frequency and display received packets. If you don’t<br />

have a GPS receiver connected, set this value to zero. When the<br />

TNC is preparing to transmit a position report, it waits until it receives<br />

data from the GPS receiver. If no GPS receiver is connected,<br />

make sure that the TNC never tries to beacon, because it would wait<br />

forever to receive data from a nonexistent GPS receiver.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 55


Table 1<br />

KISS TNC DB9 Connector Pin-Out<br />

Pin Number Function<br />

1 Transmit Audio<br />

4 Receive Audio<br />

2 Ground<br />

5 Not Connected<br />

3 PTT<br />

The unit will not transmit an APRS position until the radio<br />

channel is clear. If you decide to delay transmission for a greater<br />

period after the channel is clear, you can set the quiet-time parameter<br />

to some value other than zero. Quiet time specifies the number<br />

of additional seconds that the unit delays transmitting.<br />

Item 9 on the parameter menu specifies the message number<br />

(or “position comment” in Kenwood D700 terminology). You may<br />

select any one of the following:<br />

0 Off Duty<br />

1 Enroute<br />

2 In Service<br />

3 Returning<br />

4 Committed<br />

5 Special<br />

6 Priority<br />

7 Emergency<br />

Menu item A specifies how frequently the unit should transmit<br />

the beacon text. Specifying 02, for example, indicates that the beacon<br />

text should be sent every second transmission. When values are<br />

specified as two digits in the menu, two digits must be entered. Thus,<br />

enter 02, not 2. Item B specifies what the beacon text will be.<br />

When you are satisfied that you have specified all of the parameters<br />

correctly, remove jumper W1 and cycle the power off and on<br />

to force the unit to reboot in the proper mode.<br />

If you want to use the unit in KISS mode, simply connect a standard<br />

serial data cable to the unit’s DB9 connector (J2) and a radio<br />

connector to the DIN socket, J1. The DIN socket pin-outs are identical<br />

to those used on PacComm and MFJ TNCs, so that any existing<br />

cable of this type will work with this TNC as well. The pin-outs (in<br />

the order they appear on the connector) are shown in Table 1.<br />

Usually the KISS program asks you to specify which TNC type<br />

you are using. This is the case with WinAPRS, for example. This<br />

information is required because the software needs to know which<br />

command to send to the TNC to place it in KISS mode. When using<br />

the KISS TNC, this setting is irrelevant because the unit is always<br />

in KISS mode. As a result, it doesn’t matter which type of TNC<br />

you specify. There have been reports of some types of TNCs accidentally<br />

falling out of KISS mode. This should never be a problem<br />

with this TNC because KISS is its primary operating mode.<br />

If you want to use the device to monitor UI frames, but don’t<br />

intend to connect a GPS receiver, you can use the same hardware<br />

configuration that you used for KISS mode. Just remember to set<br />

the mode to APRS and to set the delay between transmissions to<br />

zero. If you want to connect your GPS unit to the KISS TNC, but<br />

don’t care to connect a terminal to monitor incoming packets, you<br />

will need to connect the GPS unit to the TNC’s serial port through<br />

a null-modem adapter. If you want to connect the GPS unit and<br />

also monitor incoming packets, you’ll need to construct a simple<br />

Y adapter as shown in Figures 2 and 3. The adapter routes the GPS<br />

transmit-data line to the TNC’s receive-data line and the TNC’s<br />

transmit-data line to the computer’s serial port receive-data line.<br />

Construction Tips<br />

I’ve built several of these units on pieces of RadioShack<br />

perfboard using point-to-point wiring, but this construction approach<br />

is rather difficult because there are quite a few wires interconnecting<br />

the PIC with the static RAM chip. Consequently, a<br />

56 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Figure 3—This simple Y adapter consists of one female DB9<br />

socket interconnected with two DB9 male jacks, all held<br />

together with noncorrosive sealing compound.<br />

substantial potential for wiring errors exists. A PC board is available<br />

for this project, as is a kit of parts (see Note 2). The PC board<br />

requires the installation of several wire jumpers. To ensure that<br />

the board works properly, install all of the parts, including the IC<br />

sockets, but do not install any ICs. Then, carefully observing<br />

proper polarity, apply power and ensure that approximately 5 V is<br />

present between the following pin pairs:<br />

U1 socket pins 11 and 12 (pin 12 is ground)<br />

U1 socket pins 31 and 32 (pin 31 is ground)<br />

U2 socket pins 14 and 28 (pin 14 is ground)<br />

U3 socket pins 15 and 16 (pin 15 is ground)<br />

U4 socket pins 8 and 16 (pin 8 is ground)<br />

When you’re sure there are no cold solder joints or solder<br />

bridges, install the four ICs and apply power. Total TNC current<br />

consumption is less than 20 mA; most of that is consumed by the<br />

LEDs. You can reduce the current consumption by increasing the<br />

value of the current-limiting resistors (R10-R12), or you can omit<br />

the LEDs altogether. In this case, it should be possible to run the<br />

unit for several days on a 9-V battery.<br />

Summary<br />

PIC microcontrollers have rapidly become a staple of Amateur<br />

Radio construction projects. This project demonstrates one of the<br />

reasons that this has occurred. PICs are extremely flexible devices<br />

that can perform the functions of ICs that are considerably more<br />

expensive and consume much more power. We are just beginning<br />

to explore the range of amateur applications for these inexpensive,<br />

powerful devices.<br />

Notes<br />

1<br />

The APRS Mic-Encoder format compresses the APRS position report and<br />

message bits into the destination address and information fields of a<br />

standard AX.25 UI frame. For more information, see http://www.<br />

tapr.org/tapr/html/mic-e.html.<br />

2<br />

A complete kit of parts including the PC Board, a programmed PIC16F877<br />

and all other parts (except an enclosure) are available for $65 from John<br />

Hansen, W2FS, 49 Maple Ave, Fredonia, NY 14063. A programmed<br />

PIC16F877 only is available for $35. A wired and tested board is also<br />

available for $90. PC boards for this project are available from FAR Circuits,<br />

18N640 Field Ct, Dundee, IL 60118-9269; tel 847-836-9148 (voice<br />

and fax). Price: $8 plus $1.50 shipping for up to four boards. Visa and<br />

MasterCard accepted with a $3 service charge. You can download th es<br />

ource code (KISSTNC.ZIP) for this project at http://www.arrl.org/files/<br />

qst-binaries/.<br />

49 Maple Avenue<br />

Fredonia, NY 14063<br />

john@hansen.net


LogWindows 3.07.30<br />

Although LogWindows is primarily a logging program, it<br />

combines this function with transceiver and rotator control,<br />

PacketCluster monitoring, award tracking and QSL management<br />

into an integrated system. Additionally, the program is frequently updated<br />

to accommodate new hardware and add new features.<br />

The first step in getting acquainted with LogWindows is to crack<br />

open the very thorough 170-page manual. It reminds me of an adage<br />

in public speaking: In order to get your point across, you have to<br />

tell your audience what you will be telling them, then tell it to them<br />

and finally tell them what it was you just told them. In other words,<br />

repetition is one of the best ways to commit something to memory.<br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

Easy Navigation<br />

The program’s main window is well organized. Data to be<br />

entered appears in the top portion, the bottom portion can be either<br />

a “terminal” (PacketCluster display) or a “browser” for contacts<br />

logged, and in between there is a row of boxes and a bar of buttons.<br />

The buttons perform special functions and the row of boxes<br />

indicates the direction and distance to the displayed contact as<br />

well as showing your progress toward earning particular awards.<br />

When the “terminal” is selected, there is also a row of buttons at<br />

the bottom of the terminal portion that are user-defined (typically<br />

used for PacketCluster command shortcuts). At the very bottom<br />

of the main window is a Status Bar showing some current program<br />

settings and messages to the user.<br />

As expected, the data entry section includes fields for Call,<br />

Date, Time, Mode, Freq., RST Sent and Received, plus Power.<br />

Optional fields are available to enter Name, City, State, QTH,<br />

Grid and Remarks, plus QSL status and awards. The Remarks<br />

box is for brief comments; for more detailed comments there is a<br />

255-character Operator Notes window that is opened and closed<br />

as needed (the notes are tied to the call sign, so the same notes<br />

appear for a particular call).<br />

Buttons, More Buttons<br />

The button bar is a row of icon type buttons that are used for<br />

the most common operations. The default buttons are: Clear, Save,<br />

Find, Go to First Record, Go to Previous Record, Go to Next<br />

Record, Go to Last Record, Delete Record, Open Notes Window,<br />

Print Label, Spot DX, Grab DX Spot, List Spots, Rotor Control,<br />

Pop-Up Database Browser, Capture TNC Data, Query Callbook<br />

and Query QSL Manager. Some of these items require appropriate<br />

hardware and/or software. For example, if you don’t have a TNC,<br />

the DX Spot and Capture TNC Data functions will not be active.<br />

For those who prefer keyboard operations, there are also “hotkey”<br />

equivalents for each button.<br />

Naturally, the Clear button empties all the entry fields so you<br />

can log a new contact. (The Date and Time fields are filled in for<br />

you and the Mode and Freq fields remain at their last settings. The<br />

RST and Power fields also receive default values.)The Save button<br />

preserves the data shown and the contact is not logged until the<br />

record is saved (so you can make as many changes as you need to<br />

before saving). To use Find, you clear the entry fields, type in a<br />

callsign or a partial call (with an “*” wildcard character) and click<br />

the magnifying glass. The data entry fields will display the first<br />

matching record and the browser (if selected) will show all matches.<br />

Other fields you can search by are Date, Prefix, State, QTH, Grid,<br />

CQ Zone and Continent. Band and Mode are ignored so you can’t<br />

search for all your CW contacts on 40-meters, but there is another<br />

way to do that (more on this in a minute). You can sort search results<br />

by Band, Call, Zone, Date, Mode, Prefix and State.<br />

The record navigation buttons are very straightforward and they<br />

use arrow symbols similar to those on a VCR. The Delete button (a<br />

trashcan icon) removes the current record from the saved log. However,<br />

if you saved a record with a mistake in it, you don’t have to<br />

delete it and reenter from scratch; instead you use Find to locate<br />

the record, fix the mistake and use Save to update the entry. The<br />

Open Notes window button (notepad with a pencil symbol) pops<br />

open a small window showing the operator notes. The print labels<br />

button (the icon is old style pin-feed address labels) prints labels<br />

for all the contacts you have marked for QSLing.<br />

LogWindow’s Spot, Grab and DX Spots (list) buttons gives<br />

folks with a TNC and access to PacketCluster node easy ways to<br />

log and “spot” DX stations. The Capture TNC Data (a camera<br />

icon) button allows you to save data from the TNC to a file. Lacking<br />

a rotator controller interface, I wasn’t able to test the direction<br />

control (represented by a Yagi icon button).<br />

Database Browser<br />

The Database Browser window (a pair of eyes is the button<br />

for this) opens another window similar to the main window browse<br />

area, but with some additional search capabilities. In this window,<br />

you define a “query” (database lingo for search parameters).<br />

A query can be any combination of Date, Prefix, Zone, State,<br />

Band, Mode, and QSL status, with an additional box that lets you<br />

exclude up to 100 prefixes from the results.<br />

The Callbook lookup button lets you query a callsign CD-ROM<br />

(all the ones I know of are supported) for address information<br />

and the Query QSL Manager button (a QSL card) will search an<br />

external QSL manager database for QSL route info. If you don’t<br />

have a separate QSL manager, you can use the LWQSLMgr that<br />

is included with LogWindows.<br />

Although the number of features included may seem overwhelming,<br />

the organization and screen presentation makes using this program<br />

a snap. LogWindows brings order to your station chaos, and it<br />

is a breeze to use!<br />

Manufacturer: SCO, Inc (Les Scofield, W4SCO) with sales, support<br />

and development by Creative Services Software, 503 West State<br />

St, Suite 4, Muscle Shoals, AL 35661; tel 256-381-6100; fax 256-<br />

381-6121; sales@logwindows.com; http://www.logwindows.<br />

com/. $69.95.<br />

Next Short Take<br />

Michael Tracy, KC1SX ARRL Laboratory Engineer<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 57


RITTY 4.0<br />

Several years ago, Brian Beezley, K6STI, developed one of<br />

the first high-performance RTTY programs for sound-card<br />

equipped PCs. Brian’s RITTY software became extremely popular<br />

in the amateur digital community overnight. Actually, it was a<br />

little too popular. Before long, software pirates had copied RITTY<br />

and posted it on various Internet sites. That was the end of further<br />

RITTY developments—or so we thought.<br />

We’re happy to report that RITTY is back, and with<br />

improvements that make it well worth the wait.<br />

SHORT TAKES<br />

What is RITTY<br />

For the uninitiated, RITTY is software that allows you to send<br />

and receive amateur radioteletype (RTTY) with a 486 DX or<br />

faster PC equipped with a 16-bit SoundBlaster-compatible<br />

sound card. RITTY is DOS software, but it can run in a “DOS<br />

window” in Windows on most Pentium-class PCs.<br />

Instead of relying on an external interface to convert receive<br />

audio to data, and transmit data to audio, RITTY uses the sound<br />

card to perform the same tasks. This means you can send and<br />

receive RTTY with nothing more than your computer (even a<br />

laptop) and an SSB transceiver. Hardware connections for<br />

receiving involve an audio cable between your radio’s line-level<br />

audio output (or external speaker) and the MIC or LINE inputs of<br />

your sound card. To transmit you need another audio cable<br />

between your sound card LINE or SPEAKER outputs and the<br />

auxiliary or microphone input of your radio. In addition, you’ll<br />

need a keying interface (either a simple single-transistor<br />

homebrew circuit, or something more sophisticated such as a<br />

RIGBlaster interface) connected to your computer’s COM port.<br />

Alternatively, you can allow the transceiver’s VOX to do the<br />

keying. (RITTY also supports FSK keying if you can homebrew a<br />

dual-transistor interface for the COM port.)<br />

Turbo DSP<br />

At the heart of RITTY are its high-performance digital signal<br />

processing algorithms. It’s obvious that Brian has spent a great<br />

deal of time devising solutions for the peculiar problems of HF<br />

digital communication. Copying 1s and 0s while dealing with<br />

polar flutter, multipath, interference and noise isn’t easy. Although<br />

RITTY doesn’t claim to have conquered all of these gremlins<br />

completely, Brian has incorporated a number of effective DSP<br />

tools designed for troublesome conditions.<br />

Take polar flutter, for example. Polar flutter amplitudemodulates<br />

a signal, generating incidental sidebands beyond the<br />

standard- or narrow-detector passbands. Depending on the severity,<br />

this can make decoding almost impossible. RITTY provides a<br />

special detector for polar flutter that uses wider channel filters to<br />

recover spread power. Like RITTY’s matched filters, its polar filters<br />

inherently have zero intersymbol interference. This property allows<br />

recovery of bits that flutter right down to the noise floor.<br />

RITTY On the Air<br />

Despite its technical sophistication, RITTY is simple to use on<br />

the air. The left-hand graph shows one of two spectral tuning<br />

indicators. If you opt for the line display, you see a horizontal line<br />

RITTY 4.0 on the air using the 3-D waterfall tuning display<br />

that seems to quiver slightly with the incoming noise. As you tune<br />

across a RTTY signal, the mark and space tones appear as twin<br />

spikes. The higher the spikes, the stronger the signals. RITTY locks<br />

onto the signals immediately and text begins marching across the<br />

black screen. Option two is a three-dimensional “waterfall” display<br />

in which RTTY signals look like ocean waves or mountain peaks<br />

moving from the bottom to the top.<br />

The right hand graph displays one of three waveforms. The<br />

character waveform shows the demodulated mark-minus-space<br />

signal for one character length. The red tic marks locate samples<br />

for the start pulse, the five data bits, and the stop pulse.<br />

When you begin typing, your text appears in the transmit buffer<br />

window, but will not be transmitted until you actually press the<br />

PAUSE button on your keyboard. As the characters are transmitted,<br />

they change from white to blue. You also have up to 12 macro<br />

keys that can be programmed with “canned” messages.<br />

My performance tests were purely subjective, but the results were<br />

impressive just the same. I used RITTY during the SARTG RTTY<br />

Contest last August. In terms of coping with QRM on 20 meters,<br />

RITTY was the clear winner when I put it up against an external<br />

multimode data processor. RITTY also outperformed two other<br />

sound-card based RTTY programs that I had available at the time.<br />

I had an opportunity to try RITTY’s polar flutter decoder when<br />

I attempted to copy BY1DX on 15 meters in the late evening. His<br />

signals were extremely weak and unreadable with either the<br />

external multimode unit or my various sound-card programs.<br />

When I switched to RITTY and activated the polar flutter detector,<br />

the difference was astonishing. I could copy about 75% of<br />

BY1DX’s transmissions, more than enough to make a contest<br />

exchange. Unfortunately, BY1DX couldn’t hear me, but that has<br />

nothing to do with RITTY!<br />

Manufacturer: Brian Beezley, K6STI, 3532 Linda Vista Dr, San<br />

Marcos, CA 92069; k6sti@n2.net. $100 with delivery via e-mail,<br />

$5 additional for postal delivery. Check or money order only.<br />

Steve Ford, WB8IMY <strong>QST</strong> Managing Editor<br />

58 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


By Rod Peterson, K4QG<br />

Another<br />

Look At<br />

Tower Work<br />

Say what You don’t have half-a-lifetime to accumulate tower-climbing experience<br />

Fear not, future climber—K4QG is letting you in on all of his hard-won tips and tricks!<br />

I’ve<br />

been climbing towers for more than 20 years—my<br />

own installations and more than 70 other projects.<br />

During all of those trips up and down the tower, I<br />

picked up a few tips to help you with your upcoming<br />

projects. Some are common sense. Some are related to personal<br />

safety. Some are handy timesavers. And some are things you<br />

probably wouldn’t think of on your own!<br />

Without further ado, let’s get started.<br />

Fall-Arresting Gear<br />

I’ve seen people climbing towers without a belt or harness. My<br />

only comment on that subject is don’t. Life is too short and safety<br />

equipment is too affordable to engage in a task with zero margin<br />

for error. And don’t settle for grandpa’s old lineman’s belt that’s<br />

been slowly rotting in the barn for the past 40 years. If you’re<br />

spending hundreds of dollars on a tower, hundreds more on<br />

antennas and perhaps thousands on equipment, skimping on safety<br />

gear is penny wise and pound foolish.<br />

And when using a belt or body harness, don’t make the mistake<br />

of simply wrapping a lanyard around the tower and declaring<br />

yourself safe. If you slip, you’ll still slide down the tower fast<br />

enough to cause injury or death. Instead, hook the lanyard line<br />

onto the tower, climb, re-hook, and climb again. This is a much<br />

slower climbing process, but hooking the line securely to the tower<br />

is your best insurance for safety.<br />

Teamwork<br />

If you’re lucky, someone in your area will have tower-climbing<br />

experience. Get to know that person and ask a lot of questions.<br />

Perhaps you can volunteer for ground crew duty. That experience<br />

will stand you in good stead later on. If you can get permission,<br />

perhaps you can climb a tower or two as an assistant, gaining<br />

valuable on-the-job training.<br />

New Technology<br />

Several years ago I read about climbing towers while using<br />

carabiners and slings—standard rock-climbing hardware.<br />

Carabiners are rugged, oval-shaped alloy rings with spring-loaded<br />

gates. Slings are pieces of webbing sewn in loops of varying<br />

lengths. Tapping my slush fund, I made a couple of trips to a<br />

mountaineering supply store and stocked up on eight carabiners<br />

and ten slings. You can’t have too many of these versatile items.<br />

They’re incredibly handy for attaching tool pails to towers, hauling<br />

antennas, temporary ties, bracing, carriers, etc. In addition, they<br />

can be used as safety attachments, which is their original purpose.<br />

The ’biners are made of lightweight alloy, so half-a-dozen will<br />

barely add two pounds to the weight of your belt.<br />

Tool Tip No. 1<br />

You should learn early on to organize your tools and equipment<br />

before climbing the tower. Climbing down (and back up again) to<br />

fetch a forgotten tool gets old in a hurry. Of course, your ground<br />

crew can help with that. Most tools and many antenna system parts<br />

can be quickly sent up the tower by merely untwisting a section of<br />

rope, sticking the object between the strands, and releasing. The<br />

tension in the strands will grip a tool or part firmly for the trip up<br />

the tower. Larger items may require a trip in the bucket.<br />

Tool Tip No. 2<br />

To avoid the pitfalls of trial and error, I’ve assembled a standard<br />

kit of tools that is always in the tool pouch of my climbing belt. It<br />

consists of:<br />

•A 3 /8-inch ratchet<br />

• 7 /16, 1 /2 and 9 /16-inch deep sockets<br />

• 7 /16, 1 /2 and 9 /16-inch combination wrenches<br />

•A 5 /16-inch nut driver (fits hose clamps. Sears has some nice<br />

stubby ones.)<br />

• An alignment tool (it looks like a tapered drift punch)<br />

• A small hammer<br />

• A folding knife<br />

• An adjustable wrench<br />

•A 3 /16-inch flat screwdriver<br />

• A roll of plastic tape (Scotch 88 is a good choice)<br />

• An all-purpose Leatherman tool<br />

These tools handle 98% of my tower work. A friend uses a<br />

ratcheting box wrench instead of a combination wrench, but I use<br />

the latter for the odd times that I need the open end wrench.<br />

Compatibility<br />

In today’s international marketplace, your shiny new ham<br />

antenna may have metric bolts and hardware. Be sure to select<br />

your tools accordingly. When building BX-type or 45G towers<br />

(anything besides Rohn 20/25), use the appropriate tools as<br />

necessary. It’s a good practice to note wrench sizes for antennas,<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 59


The ONV fullbody<br />

climbing<br />

harness.<br />

Available from<br />

ONV Safety Belt,<br />

PO Box 404,<br />

Ramsey, NJ<br />

07446;<br />

tel 800-345-5634.<br />

thrust bearings, weatherproof boxes, side-mount hardware, torque<br />

arm assemblies, etc. Document all necessary hardware so you’ll<br />

remember to take the appropriate tools up with you the next time<br />

you work on that particular antenna system. You’ll be amazed at<br />

what you’ll forget over the years...<br />

Specialty Tools<br />

I bought a chain-grip—a chain plier/Vise-Grip combo—to<br />

work on a 40-meter beam that tended to rotate about the boom<br />

when I didn’t want it to. I tried locking the boom with a strap<br />

wrench, which proved unsuitable for a variety of reasons. With the<br />

chain-grip in place, however, things stayed put and I could easily<br />

rotate the antenna in either direction.<br />

Chain grips are also useful when it’s time to orient an antenna<br />

array. Simply loosen the rotator clamp, turn the mast with the<br />

chain-grip and re-clamp. These strange-looking tools are worth<br />

their weight in gold when muscling big, heavy antennas.<br />

Safety Talk<br />

To paraphrase Norm Abram of The New Yankee Workshop,<br />

let’s take a moment to talk more about personal tower safety. I’ve<br />

been wearing a hard hat on the tower for years. I rarely see others<br />

doing so, and people often joke about “tools not falling up.” But<br />

my life has been saved twice because I was wearing a hard hat.<br />

An ONV safety<br />

belt with seat<br />

harness.<br />

They’re cheap and comfortable, and if you take your climbing<br />

seriously enough to invest in a belt, harness and the proper tools,<br />

get a hard hat—no exceptions!<br />

Hot flash: When doing tower work in hot, humid weather, stop<br />

working every now and then and take your hat off to allow heat to<br />

escape from around your head.<br />

Don’t cramp your style: If your fingers or forearms start to<br />

cramp as you’re working, your body is producing lactic acid and<br />

you are at a critical energy juncture. Translation: You’ve done<br />

enough! Tidy up and climb down ASAP—and that doesn’t mean<br />

finishing whatever you were doing. Simply secure things that<br />

could fall or break and start down. And make sure you’re attached<br />

to the tower at all times on the way down. If you’re already<br />

cramping you can no longer depend on your grip. Once you’re<br />

safely on the ground, have an electrolyte-rich sports drink or a<br />

banana or two to replace lost potassium.<br />

Liquid refreshments: In addition to providing refreshments for<br />

your ground team—an accepted part of the “cost” of such a team—<br />

take a bottle of water up the tower with you. There’s nothing worse<br />

than “tower-top cotton mouth.” You generally won’t have to worry<br />

about “disposing” of the water, either. While working hard on a<br />

hot summer day you’ll have little inclination to visit the powder<br />

room. Of course, it goes without saying that “adult beverages” are<br />

strictly off limits.<br />

Razors on the Tower<br />

To avoid nasty gashes and keep your hands free from crud,<br />

always wear leather gloves while climbing towers (up and down).<br />

Did you ever take a close look at a galvanized tower section When<br />

the manufacturer dips the section in molten zinc, some of the zinc<br />

flows off, cooling before it’s completely detached. Some of these<br />

“zinc drips” are extremely sharp and can deliver some nasty cuts<br />

if you slide your hand along the edge. Also, your unprotected hands<br />

will get pretty grimy from the zinc residue, making them slippery.<br />

Tower work with slippery hands is a recipe for disaster!<br />

Footwear is the Foundation of your Sole<br />

Rugged work boots with steel shanks are worth their weight in<br />

gold. Your feet and back will thank you. A trip up a tower in flimsy<br />

shoes (or running shoes) will make that clear in a hurry!<br />

Who’s Running this Operation<br />

The person who generally has the best overall view of things—<br />

and the one who is taking the greatest risk—is the person who is<br />

on top of the tower. He (or she) is the boss. If he says, “stop,” don’t<br />

question or argue, just stop. If he says, “look out,” don’t look up—<br />

move! That doesn’t close the door to suggestions from members<br />

of the ground crew, but there’s only one boss on a tower project,<br />

and if you’re not on the tower, you’re not it.<br />

Last Word<br />

Tower work isn’t for everyone. It can be hard, dangerous and<br />

unforgiving. It requires concentration and attention to detail (such<br />

as attaching safety straps before leaning back). If you aren’t at<br />

least a little uneasy when you’re up on a tower, you aren’t normal.<br />

If your uneasiness gets in the way of working upstairs, however,<br />

the job may not be for you. If you respect the danger and unease<br />

you can work alongside it. If you fear the danger and unease, get<br />

someone else to do your aerial work. There’s certainly no shame<br />

in that. Chances are good that there are several hams in your area<br />

who can handle the high stuff on your behalf.<br />

Stay safe!<br />

2781 Taft Street<br />

#109<br />

Hollywood FL 33020<br />

60 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


By H. Ward Silver, N0AX<br />

Test Your Knowledge!<br />

Are you an Amateur Radio bookworm<br />

The ARRL Handbook is one of the hobby’s great success stories,<br />

and one of the longest running technical publications in history.<br />

But how much do we know about this book and other Amateur<br />

Radio “bibles”<br />

1. When was The ARRL Handbook first published<br />

a. 1915<br />

b. 1926<br />

c. 1935<br />

d. 1946<br />

2. The Handbook begins with what<br />

a. FCC Rules<br />

b. A quote from Hiram Percy Maxim<br />

c. The Amateur’s Code<br />

d. A photo of the Wouff Hong<br />

3. Antennas, a leading text on antenna theory and design, was<br />

written by…<br />

a. Kraus<br />

b. Yagi<br />

c. Lawson<br />

d. McCoy<br />

4. Don Lancaster is the author of a popular series of design guides<br />

with what word in their title<br />

a. About<br />

b. Cookbook<br />

c. Handbook<br />

d. Applications<br />

5. What is the call sign of Bill Orr, author of a series of antenna<br />

design manuals<br />

a. K2GL<br />

b. W0DX<br />

c. W6SAI<br />

d. W1BB<br />

6. Bob Locher, W9KNI, is the author of The Complete…<br />

a. Contester<br />

b. Ragchewer<br />

c. QRPer<br />

d. DXer<br />

7. What type of DXing is covered in ON4UN’s latest book<br />

a. VHF<br />

b. 10 meter<br />

c. Low band<br />

d. Long path<br />

8. Who was the original creator of The Second Op DX reference<br />

aid<br />

a. W9IOP<br />

b. W6AM<br />

c. W4BPD<br />

d. W4KFC<br />

9. Who is the author of The Op-Amp Cookbook<br />

a. Carl Stallings<br />

b. Stephen King<br />

c. Doug DeMaw<br />

d. Walter Jung<br />

10. An early competitor to The ARRL Handbook was…<br />

a. The Radio Handbook<br />

b. CQ World<br />

c. IEE Compendium<br />

d. Radio Experimenter<br />

Total Your Score!<br />

Count one point for each correct answer.<br />

8-10 A literary genius!<br />

4-7 A little dusty between the covers, but okay.<br />

1-3 A visit to the library is in order.<br />

22916 107th Ave SW<br />

Vashon, WA 98070<br />

7. c—John’s first book was 80-Meter DXing and he sits atop the<br />

80-meter DXCC totals today.<br />

8. a—The distinctive wheel of Larry LeKashman’s invention was<br />

an instant hit.<br />

9. d—Walter’s book has launched a million analog designs.<br />

10. a—The Radio Handbook was edited by W6SAI in its later<br />

editions.<br />

Answers<br />

1. b<br />

2. c<br />

3. a—Dr. John Kraus, W8JK, is also the inventor of the wire<br />

antenna of the same name.<br />

4. b—Don’s TTL Cookbook was one of the most popular design<br />

books ever published.<br />

5. c<br />

6. d<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 61


HINTS & KINKS<br />

STRENGTHEN YOUR CUSHCRAFT<br />

D40 ROTATABLE DIPOLE<br />

◊ My Cushcraft D40 has been a very effective antenna in terms of<br />

performance, but I prefer that it be mechanically stronger than it<br />

came from the factory. I was concerned about the physical strength<br />

of the antenna from the time I first purchased it. After I assembled<br />

the antenna, I measured its sag. The ends of the antenna hung<br />

2 1 /2 feet below the center! I recommend purchasing a D40, but I<br />

would reinforce it as described here before installing it.<br />

In truth, the D40 served well for nine years before I finally<br />

decided to do something about it. A windstorm bent one side of<br />

the antenna where the aluminum tubing connects to the center<br />

mounting plate (see Figure 1). Even more ominous was the extreme<br />

distortion where the tubing attaches to the mounting plate<br />

(see Figure 2). Over nine years, the sag had now reached an incredible<br />

four feet from the center to the ends! Here’s the fix.<br />

The Elements<br />

The tubing used in this antenna has a 1 /16-inch-thick wall, and<br />

it is sold in 1 /8-inch OD increments. This very common tubing<br />

should be easy to find. (Tubing with 0.058-inch walls is also available.<br />

It makes for an easier telescopic fit.—Ed.)<br />

The center element sections must withstand the greatest bending<br />

moment, so I strengthen them by doubling the thickness of<br />

the first two sections (from the center out). I used an antioxidant<br />

paste 1 to lubricate the tubing<br />

and had no problem sliding<br />

smaller tubes into the larger<br />

ones. To do this, you will need<br />

two pieces of 1 1 /8-inch-OD<br />

tubing 68 inches long and two<br />

pieces of 1-inch-OD tubing<br />

48 inches long.<br />

The first center section is<br />

a 1 1 /4-inch-OD tube 72 inches<br />

long. The second section<br />

overlaps the first by four<br />

inches, which leaves 68<br />

inches open inside the first<br />

section. I inserted a 1 1 /8 ×<br />

68-inch length of aluminum<br />

tubing inside the 1 1 /4-inch<br />

section.<br />

The second section is<br />

1 1 /8×48 inches. Since the third<br />

(1-inch diameter) section overlaps<br />

the second by four inches,<br />

I used 1×48-inch reinforcing<br />

tube that extends four inches<br />

toward the center from the<br />

splice made by the two 1 1 /8 OD<br />

pieces. This ties everything<br />

together and makes a strong<br />

joint. When the stainless-steel hose clamps that hold the sections<br />

together are tightened, the inserts do not move from their assembled<br />

locations.<br />

Shortly after I erected my first antenna, the screws that hold<br />

the aluminum rods forming the X-shaped loading elements<br />

worked loose and fell off. To save yourself a lot of grief, use jam<br />

nuts and seal the nuts with glue to prevent them from working<br />

loose.<br />

The Center Mounting Plate<br />

The original center mounting plate is 1 /4×4×10-inch aluminum.<br />

It has four plastic “clamps” to attach the elements to the plate,<br />

two on each side. These plastic clamps had become severely distorted.<br />

I replaced the original mounting plate with a larger one<br />

measuring 1 /4×4×24 inches and purchased four more clamps, for<br />

a total of four on each side.<br />

I discovered that the plastic clamps are manufactured by Stauff<br />

Company and are used for pipe clamps in industrial applications.<br />

My local distributor sells them for much less than Cushcraft does.<br />

They will sell them by mail order and send them out by UPS. 2<br />

The part number for the plastic clamps is 5320-PA. That is the<br />

part number for polyamide plastic, profiled inside, with tension<br />

2<br />

Carrier-Oehler Company,16965 Vincennes, PO Box 40, South<br />

Holland, IL 60473-0040; tel 708-339-8200.<br />

Figure 2—This extreme distortion where the tubing attaches<br />

to the mounting plate is ominous.<br />

Figure 1—This bent tubing<br />

at the center mounting plate<br />

resulted from a windstorm.<br />

1<br />

Ox-Gard by GB Electrical. This<br />

is available at electrical supply<br />

houses. Any similar product<br />

would work as well.<br />

Figure 3—Broken plastic parts were evident when I took my<br />

antenna apart.<br />

Bob Schetgen, KU7G Senior Assistant Technical Editor<br />

62 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


Figure 4—The strengthened antenna mounted on my<br />

improved mounting assembly.<br />

clearance, for 1 1 /4-inch OD tubing. The part number for the stainless<br />

steel cover plates is DP-5/SS. For four clamps, order eight<br />

5320-PA and four DP-5/SS. Order them without weld plates and<br />

bolts, because the clamps will be bolted to the mounting plate<br />

with nuts on the back side of the plate. This application is different<br />

from the typical fastening method used with this product. You<br />

will need to purchase stainless steel bolts and nuts separately.<br />

They should be available in most hardware stores.<br />

When I took my antenna apart, I discovered that some of the<br />

plastic pieces were actually broken (see Figure 3). The new clamps<br />

were of a slightly different height than the originals, but I compensated<br />

for the difference with stainless-steel washers between<br />

the clamps and the mounting plate.<br />

The new mounting plate can be seen in Figure 4. The four<br />

larger clamps are the new ones. Notice that I also added a 1 /4×20<br />

screw at the center of the plate, which extends into a matching<br />

hole, drilled in the wall of the mast. This prevents the antenna<br />

from turning in the wind. The plate is threaded to accept the screw.<br />

After tightening, the screw is held in place with a jam nut.<br />

After my antenna had been up for a number of years, I had a<br />

problem with the coax connections loosening at the antenna. The<br />

problem was caused by birds sitting on the coax. My cure is to<br />

use jam nuts on the antenna terminal and tape a brace from the<br />

mast to the coax that supports the birds. The birds love to sit on<br />

my antennas! Before you put your antenna up, make sure that the<br />

terminal screws you got from Cushcraft are long enough for jam<br />

nuts. Mine were not and had to be replaced.<br />

The Finished Product<br />

When the modifications were complete, the sag at the antenna<br />

ends was slightly under one foot! This appears to be a very worthwhile<br />

and cost-effective way to improve the strength of a very<br />

good antenna. I am very pleased with the results that I’ve gotten<br />

with my D40 in the last nine years and I would buy another one,<br />

but I would strengthen it before erecting it.—George Zurbuchen,<br />

K9CC, 10515 Hillcrest Dr, Palos Park, IL 60464;<br />

George.Zurbuchen@cognis-us.com<br />

FEEDBACK<br />

DOX CONTROL FOR A YAESU FT-847<br />

◊ I just got my first e-mail from an observant DOX constructor (<strong>QST</strong>,<br />

Sep <strong>2000</strong>, p 68). He points out that R1 is incorrectly labeled R21 in<br />

the hint. Another and more grievous error is that the tip and sleeve<br />

connections on J3 are reversed on the schematic. Pin 1 should be<br />

the tip and pin 2 the sleeve of J3. (My fault—KU7G.) In my circuit,<br />

I did not use jacks at all, but cut the RadioShack cable in half,<br />

stripped the cut ends and soldered them directly to the circuit. (I<br />

hate using connectors if they are not necessary, especially for lowlevel<br />

audio.)<br />

In addition, I want to point out that this interface is also useful<br />

on rigs that require a separate PTT line. In that case, connect the<br />

right-hand (+) terminal of C1 to the mic input, omit R3, and connect<br />

the drain of Q1 to the PTT line.—David Smoler, AD6KI, 19982<br />

Charters Ct, Saratoga, CA 95070-4458; ad6ki@earthlink.net<br />

Starting Screws in Tight Places<br />

◊ My aging eyes introduced a typographic error in Hugh Inness-<br />

Brown’s call sign (<strong>QST</strong>, Sep<br />

<strong>2000</strong>, p 69). It should read<br />

W2IB.—Bob Schetgen, KU7G<br />

AN “ARM HOLSTER” FOR<br />

YOUR H-T<br />

Figure 5—W7VEW’s “arm<br />

holster” for small H-Ts.<br />

◊ What a treat to see all the<br />

tiny H-Ts on the market. The<br />

problem with these little gems<br />

is where to carry them. While<br />

they easily fit in a shirt pocket,<br />

the display is not visible there<br />

and the antenna is often<br />

against your body. Because<br />

they’re so light, it’s possible to<br />

carry them right on your arm<br />

in my “arm holster.”<br />

What’s an arm holster It’s<br />

the best thing to hold your<br />

lightweight H-T: a simple elastic<br />

strap that snugly fits your<br />

biceps. (See Figure 5.) A friction<br />

buckle lets one strap adjust<br />

to fit many arm sizes. With the strap in place, slide the radio<br />

belt clip over it. The radio is held safely with the display near eye<br />

level and the antenna at shoulder height. With the antenna so high<br />

and clear, reception is much better than with the radio on your<br />

belt or in a pocket. It is so nice to see the display, and be able to<br />

change frequencies without removing the radio from my belt.<br />

Some radios—such as the Alinco D series—have no belt clip.<br />

To accommodate them, sew a two-inch strip of hook-and-loop<br />

fastener (hook side) onto the strap and install a similar loop-side<br />

self-stick strip on the radio.<br />

For larger radios, increase the width of the elastic strap. A twoinch<br />

wide strap works great for the larger units.—Steve Kimber,<br />

W7VEW, 180 N 1100 E #12, Washington, UT 84780; ckimber@<br />

infowest.com<br />

Hints and Kinks items have not been tested by <strong>QST</strong> or the ARRL unless<br />

otherwise stated. Although we can’t guarantee that a given hint will work<br />

for your situation, we make every effort to screen out harmful information.<br />

Send technical questions directly to the hint’s author.<br />

<strong>QST</strong> invites you to share your hints with fellow hams. Send them to<br />

“Attn: Hints and Kinks” at ARRL Headquarters (see page 10), or via e-<br />

mail to rschetgen@arrl.org. Please include your name, call sign,<br />

complete mailing address, daytime telephone number and e-mail<br />

address on all correspondence. Whether praising or criticizing an item,<br />

please send the author(s) a copy of your comments.<br />

NEW PRODUCTS<br />

PHILLIPS ECG LAUNCHES NEW LINE OF CHEMICALS<br />

◊ Philips ECG, in an alliance with ITW/Chemtronics, has expanded<br />

their selection of electronic specialty chemicals.<br />

In addition to the chemicals, swabs, wipes, solders and<br />

desoldering wicks previously offered, the recently added products<br />

include new lines of dusters, cleaner/degreasers, contact cleaners, flux<br />

removers, freeze sprays and conformal coatings.<br />

For more information on these new offerings or to locate an ECG<br />

distributor in your area, call 800-526-9354 or visit their Web site at http:<br />

//www.ecgproducts.com/. Phillips ECG, 1001 Snapps Ferry Rd,<br />

Greenville, TN 37744; tel 423-636-5688, fax 423-636-5809.<br />

Next New Product<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 63


PRODUCT REVIEW<br />

Yaesu MARK-V FT-1000MP HF Transceiver<br />

Reviewed by Rick Lindquist, N1RL<br />

Senior News Editor<br />

When we first spotted the MARK-V<br />

FT-1000MP at the Yaesu booth at Dayton<br />

Hamvention <strong>2000</strong>, we immediately began<br />

puzzling over the model nomenclature. We<br />

initially wondered what had happened to<br />

the MARK-I, II, III and IV. Had there been<br />

protypes of these models that never made<br />

it into production<br />

The mystery was soon solved. Glossy<br />

advertising brochures on the MARK-V<br />

touted five major refinements in the new<br />

version: higher RF power output (200 W),<br />

a 75 W Class-A mode, interlocked digital/<br />

analog bandwidth tracking, a receive<br />

preselector and enhanced ergonomics.<br />

It has been five years since the original<br />

’MP appeared on the market (see “Product<br />

Review,” <strong>QST</strong> Apr 1996). In the intervening<br />

years, the (MARK-0) FT-1000MP has<br />

become the reputed gold standard among<br />

many serious DXers and contesters. A<br />

proven “competition-grade” performer, the<br />

FT-1000MP is a veteran of the last two<br />

World Radiosport Team Championship<br />

events and countless contests.<br />

When it comes to new gear, expectations<br />

always are high and frequently vastly overblown.<br />

The amateur community’s elite<br />

corps naturally wants to know what Yaesu<br />

has brought to the table this time around.<br />

It’s a lot like software. Is the MARK-V a<br />

major upgrade or an incremental one<br />

Or, perhaps more to the point: Did Yaesu<br />

incorporate all the things I longed for (but<br />

didn't find) in my original ’MP (or the earlier<br />

FT-1000) And—the burning question<br />

of questions in hamdom—how much is my<br />

’MP (or my FT-1000) worth now if I decide<br />

to trade up<br />

Without reiterating what some readers<br />

already will know, the original FT-1000MP<br />

is a full-featured competition-grade transceiver.<br />

It incorporates a main receiver and<br />

an in-band-only sub-receiver, digital signal<br />

processing, a vast arsenal of QRM-fighting<br />

features including crystal and mechanical<br />

filters, and lots and lots of flexibility.<br />

The MARK-V is not fundamentally<br />

different in terms of its overall design architecture.<br />

If the original ’MP were a threescoop<br />

ice cream sundae, the MARK-V is<br />

all that plus whipped cream with a cherry<br />

on top. In a real china dish, not a plastic<br />

cup.<br />

Since we’re looking at an upgrade of an<br />

existing product model here, this review<br />

64 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

will concentrate on how the MARK-V differs<br />

from—or stacks up against—the original<br />

’MP. We would encourage readers to<br />

consult the original FT-1000MP product<br />

review for our insights and perspectives on<br />

the ’MP platform.<br />

Technology Marches On<br />

Five years is an eternity in the current<br />

technological environment. It would not<br />

be unreasonable to have expected the<br />

MARK-V to be a complete retooling of the<br />

FT-1000MP. A lot of very neat transceivers<br />

with myriad you-just-gotta-have-this features<br />

have come down the pike in the intervening<br />

years. We’ve seen significant<br />

improvements in the area of transceiver<br />

displays, digital signal processing technology,<br />

physical and ergonomic design, and<br />

flexibility through various user-settable<br />

adjustments.<br />

When it was the new kid on the block in<br />

1995, the original ’MP was among similar<br />

peers—the IC-775DSP and the TS-870—<br />

and DSP was still golly-gee-whiz stuff. At<br />

this point, it will be interesting to see how<br />

this unit stacks up in a marketplace awash<br />

with products bearing innovations that have<br />

appeared since the ’MP was a youngster.<br />

So, where does the MARK-V fit into the<br />

lengthy technology parade The MARK-V<br />

is a joy to behold with its slightly bolder<br />

styling and plethora of front-panel knobs<br />

and buttons—92 in all. This impressive new<br />

model has retained and, in some instances,<br />

significantly enhanced the performance of<br />

its predecessor while also retaining a few<br />

of its shortcomings.<br />

Bottom Line<br />

With a number of subtle enhancements,<br />

refined ergonomics and an all-new 200 W<br />

(Class A-B)/75 W (Class-A) MOSFET final<br />

amplifier, the MARK-V version of the<br />

FT-1000MP breathes new life into this<br />

proven competition-grade transceiver.<br />

Joe Bottiglieri, AA1GW Assistant Technical Editor<br />

“I do think the Yaesu engineers tried to<br />

provide every feature needed for a competitive<br />

radio,” one reviewer asserted.<br />

While a few features failed to make the<br />

transition intact from the original ’MP to<br />

the MARK-V, the new radio incorporates<br />

some terrific technological advances. Like<br />

the original FT-1000, the MARK-V also<br />

puts 200 W of output power at your fingertips<br />

(that genetic trait must have skipped a<br />

generation). As one user said, “Having 200<br />

W actually made it seem okay to just run<br />

barefoot.”<br />

All of this is built upon the solid (classic)<br />

FT-1000MP foundation that serious<br />

operators have come to know and appreciate.<br />

The experiences of newcomers to this<br />

entry in the ’MP line likely will parallel<br />

those of the original FT-1000MP review<br />

team. This MARK-V ’MP is a transceiver<br />

with a steep learning curve and you still must<br />

learn to love it. By and large, our reviewers<br />

warmed to the MARK-V once they began<br />

to get a handle on it. It’s quite a bit of radio.<br />

Technological Innovation vs<br />

Window Dressing<br />

Okay, so does the MARK-V represent<br />

real improvement or just so much window<br />

dressing aimed at getting additional mileage<br />

out of a proven platform Inquiring<br />

minds want to know. Actually, it’s a little<br />

of both.<br />

We’re sure Yaesu will want users to love<br />

the MARK-V for its mind, but let’s focus<br />

on its looks and its ergonomics for a bit. This<br />

new ’MP at once looks a lot like the original—especially<br />

in the front panel—and yet<br />

different. The Euro look of its predecessor<br />

is still there. The more subtle differences<br />

become obvious upon closer inspection—<br />

and comparison with the original ’MP.<br />

Perhaps the most striking physical feature<br />

is the obvious addition of the louvered<br />

heat sink cooling fins that occupy the top<br />

left-hand rear quadrant of the cabinet.


Table 1<br />

Yaesu MARK-V FT-1000MP, serial number 0F020049<br />

Manufacturer’s Claimed Specifications<br />

Measured in the ARRL Lab<br />

Frequency coverage: Receive, 0.1-30 MHz; Receive, as specified; transmit, 1.5-2, 3.5-4, 7-7.5,<br />

transmit, 1.8-2, 3.5-4, 7-7.3, 10.1-10.15, 10-10.5, 14-14.5, 18-18.5, 21-21.5, 24.5-25, 28-30 MHz.<br />

14-14.35,18.068-18.168, 21-21.45,<br />

24.89-24.99, 28-29.7 MHz.<br />

Power requirement: Receive, 2.3 A, 13.8 V dc; transmit,<br />

As specified.<br />

14.5 A, 30 V dc and 2.2 A, 13.8 V dc (200 W output).<br />

Modes of operation: SSB, CW, AM, FM, AFSK.<br />

As specified.<br />

Receiver<br />

Receiver Dynamic Testing<br />

SSB/CW sensitivity, 2 kHz bandwidth,<br />

Noise floor (MDS), 500 Hz filter:<br />

10 dB S/N: 0.5-1.8 MHz,


0<br />

–10<br />

–20<br />

–30<br />

–40<br />

–50<br />

–60<br />

–70<br />

Reference Level: 0 dB PEP<br />

–80<br />

–10 –8 –6 –4 –2 0 2 4 6 8 10<br />

Frequency Offset (kHz)<br />

0<br />

–10<br />

–20<br />

–30<br />

–40<br />

–50<br />

–60<br />

–70<br />

–80<br />

–90<br />

Reference Level: 0 dB PEP<br />

–100<br />

–10 –8 –6 –4 –2 0 2 4 6 8 10<br />

Frequency Offset (kHz)<br />

–60<br />

–70<br />

–80<br />

–90<br />

–100<br />

–110<br />

–120<br />

–130<br />

Reference Level: - 60 dBc/Hz<br />

Vertical Scale: dBc/Hz<br />

–140<br />

2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22<br />

Frequency Sweep: 2 to 22 kHz from Carrier<br />

Figure 1—Worst-case spectral display of<br />

the MARK-V FT-1000MP transmitter<br />

during two-tone intermodulation distortion<br />

(IMD) testing. The worst-case thirdorder<br />

product is approximately 27 dB<br />

below PEP output, and the worst-case<br />

fifth-order product is approximately<br />

48 dB down. The transmitter was being<br />

operated at 200 W output at 21.250 MHz.<br />

These, in combination with thermostatically<br />

controlled internal cooling fans, help<br />

dissipate the heat generated by the Philips<br />

BLF147 power MOSFETs that crank out<br />

the 200 W of RF. Less obvious is that the<br />

MARK-V is slightly smaller than the original<br />

’MP, but not by much. We’re talking<br />

fractions of inches here. And it’s lighter by<br />

about two pounds—not counting the external<br />

power supply. More on that in a bit.<br />

It just might be a subjective observation,<br />

but the MARK-V seems more hale and<br />

hearty than its predecessor.<br />

MARK-V users liked the newly styled,<br />

slightly larger “rubberized” tuning knobs<br />

and the updated, larger, easier to grip anodized<br />

SHUTTLE JOG ring on the MAIN VFO-<br />

A TUNING KNOB. They also gave Yaesu high<br />

marks for replacing some of the smaller<br />

front-panel controls on the original ’MP<br />

with larger, rubber-grip units with calibrated<br />

knob aprons on the MARK-V. These<br />

small changes make a huge difference in<br />

the “look” of the front panel. The updates<br />

to the MAIN VFO-A TUNING KNOB and<br />

SHUTTLE JOG ring make it more pleasant<br />

to make large frequency excursions and to<br />

troll the band. The idea is you grasp the JOG<br />

ring on either side and twist it clockwise<br />

(to move up in frequency) or counterclockwise<br />

(to move down in frequency). Using<br />

the SHUTTLE JOG ring still takes a bit of<br />

practice to keep it under control.<br />

A prime reason for the huskier SHUTTLE<br />

JOG ring on the MARK-V is that it now is<br />

home to two new control buttons. One button<br />

enables the new Variable RF Front-End<br />

Filter (preselector); the other the new Interlocking<br />

Digital Bandwidth Tracking system—both<br />

of which we’ll discuss in greater<br />

detail. “I didn’t like the VRF and IDBT buttons<br />

on the SHUTTLE JOG ring,” one ergonomics-conscious<br />

user said. “I kept thinking<br />

I was going to bump the dial if I tried<br />

66 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Figure 2—Worst-case spectral display of<br />

the MARK-V FT-1000MP transmitter<br />

during two-tone intermodulation distortion<br />

(IMD) testing in the Class A mode.<br />

The worst-case third-order product is<br />

approximately 45 dB below PEP output,<br />

and the worst-case fifth-order product<br />

is approximately 64 dB down (see text).<br />

The transmitter was being operated at<br />

75 W output at 1.850 MHz. Note that the<br />

spectrum analyzer was set to a narrower<br />

scan bandwidth and a greater dynamic<br />

range (100 dB vs the 80 dB range that is<br />

normally used).<br />

Figure 4—CW keying waveform for the<br />

MARK-V FT-1000MP showing the first<br />

two dits in full-break-in (QSK) mode. The<br />

equivalent keying speed is 60 WPM. The<br />

upper trace is the actual key closure;<br />

the lower trace is the RF envelope.<br />

Horizontal divisions are 10 ms. The<br />

transceiver was being operated at 200 W<br />

output at 14.2 MHz.<br />

to use them.” They take some acclimation.<br />

On the subject of tuning: the direct digital<br />

synthesizers in the local oscillator are<br />

all driven from a single temperature-compensated<br />

master crystal oscillator. The resulting<br />

high stability, along with 13 userselectable<br />

tuning steps that can be as fine<br />

as 0.625 Hz, should make the MARK-V<br />

popular with digital mode operators.<br />

The display has undergone some minor<br />

but needed improvement. In the original<br />

’MP, we’d noted that the inactive segments<br />

of the fluorescent discharge units “glowed<br />

faintly, especially at the high-intensity setting,<br />

making readability troublesome at<br />

most viewing angles.” It appears that Yaesu<br />

has toned down the brightness of the fluorescent<br />

discharge display modules and used<br />

a darker lens to better hide the background.<br />

Figure 3—Worst-case spectral display<br />

of the MARK-V FT-1000MP transmitter<br />

during composite-noise testing at 3.520<br />

MHz. Power output is 200 W. The carrier,<br />

off the left edge of the plot, is not<br />

shown. The plot shows composite<br />

transmitted noise 2 to 22 MHz from the<br />

carrier. Composite-noise testing in the<br />

Class-A mode provided similar results.<br />

As we’d mentioned in the original ’MP review,<br />

the display is extremely busy—if<br />

you’re not careful, it’s easy to overlook that<br />

one function or another is enabled—or not.<br />

Another change worth mentioning: In the<br />

’MP, the AF gain controls for the main receiver<br />

and the sub receiver were concentric<br />

front-panel controls. In the MARK-V, Yaesu<br />

put the RF GAIN and AF GAIN controls for the<br />

main receiver on concentric knobs. The SUB<br />

AF gain control (which can also be set via a<br />

menu selection to serve as a main/sub balance<br />

control) has been relocated to the frontpanel<br />

apron, where the RF GAIN control resides<br />

on the ’MP. Once they get the hang of<br />

where it is, most ops should find the new location<br />

more convenient (not all hams appreciate<br />

concentric controls), since the SUB AF<br />

knob is a control you’ll use a lot in order to<br />

take maximum advantage of this transceiver.<br />

We’d grumbled in the ’MP review that<br />

the proliferation of front-panel controls<br />

made some smaller controls hard to reach<br />

next to larger ones. The restyled knobs and<br />

some front-panel redesign has eliminated<br />

this issue. Reviewers also had complained<br />

that while using the concentric DSP and<br />

noise-reduction controls on the original<br />

’MP, the RIT and sub-receiver knobs got in<br />

the way. This problem has gone away with<br />

the MARK-V, which has reconfigured the<br />

way you access the DSP functions to eliminate<br />

the rotary-style control. We’ll discuss<br />

this further when we talk about how Yaesu<br />

has updated—and somewhat automated—<br />

the way DSP works in this newer ’MP.<br />

Now For Something That’s Really<br />

Different<br />

In its advertising, Yaesu has been touting<br />

several brand-new aspects of the<br />

MARK-V not the least of which is the<br />

higher output power. As one user put it, “It’s<br />

amazing what the feeling of an extra 3 dB


will do to your attitude.” Another biggie is<br />

the Interlocked Digital Bandwidth Tracking<br />

System—or IDBT for short—which is<br />

aimed at simplifying and automating receiver<br />

DSP filtering. Then there are Yaesu’s<br />

Variable RF—or VRF—front-end filter and<br />

the Class-A feature, both new with this<br />

model. Let’s take a look at what Yaesu has<br />

added to the ’MP mix with this generation.<br />

Interlocked Digital Bandwidth Tracking<br />

System<br />

There’s really not a whole lot you can<br />

say about the IDBT system because it pretty<br />

much does its thing without operator intervention.<br />

All you have to do is press the IDBT<br />

button on the SHUTTLE JOG ring. It’s worth<br />

noting—because the Operating Manual<br />

does not—that IDBT only works in SSB.<br />

The idea is that IDBT automatically<br />

matches up the bandwidth of the MARK-V’s<br />

DSP passband with that of the IF filter passband.<br />

In practical terms, this means the DSP<br />

tracks the settings of the already very effective<br />

SHIFT and WIDTH knobs on the<br />

MARK-V. Yaesu says the idea is to eliminate<br />

having to make separate analog and<br />

DSP filter adjustments. In fact, Yaesu<br />

dropped the “bandpass” DSP filter selection<br />

on the MARK-V because IDBT makes<br />

it unnecessary.<br />

The net effect is that with IDBT enabled,<br />

the MARK-V harnesses both digital and<br />

analog IF filtering for optimal impact on<br />

QRM. As one operator confronted with<br />

fools to the left and jokers to the right on a<br />

very busy 40-meter band described it: “I<br />

was able to work around loud signals about<br />

1.8 kHz on either side just by using the<br />

SHIFT and WIDTH controls without IDBT,<br />

but switching in the IDBT cleaned up the<br />

annoying remnants.”<br />

Yaesu says the IDBT only works in SSB<br />

because that’s where the greatest likelihood<br />

of a collision between wider and narrower<br />

bandwidths exists. On CW, Yaesu’s philosophy<br />

is that the IF filters will do the job of<br />

rejecting QRM—assuming you’ve made the<br />

right selection and/or have the most effective<br />

filters installed—and you can resort to<br />

the narrow DSP CW Peaking Filter to bring<br />

very weak signals up out of the noise.<br />

Enhanced Digital Signal Processing<br />

Enhancements<br />

The number of EDSP “contours” in the<br />

MARK-V has been reduced from four to<br />

three, the “bandpass” setting largely obviated<br />

by the IDBT. Yaesu says the three available<br />

contours are “preset for different audio<br />

emphasis, using mathematical algorithms<br />

developed after thousands of hours of onthe-air<br />

testing.” Pushing the contour buttons<br />

yields a visual cue: green for low-cut, orange<br />

for mid-cut and red for high-cut.<br />

“The contour function was a good idea,”<br />

one user proclaimed. “It’s cool to listen to<br />

a pileup of stations and punch through the<br />

various contour options. You really hear stations<br />

come and go depending on where they<br />

are in the passband.”<br />

The EDSP APF (audio peaking filter) is<br />

great for weak-signal CW or data work. In<br />

CW, you can select from among 240, 120 or<br />

60 Hz bandwidths. Somewhat like the CON-<br />

TOUR settings for bandwidth, the NR (noise<br />

reduction) system permits the operator to<br />

pick one of four NR settings. One of these<br />

typically was more effective than the others<br />

in cutting back noise—even atmospherics.<br />

Some users still may wish for the sort of<br />

continuous adjustment available on other<br />

radios or on outboard DSP boxes, but these<br />

presets make for more snappy operating.<br />

The EDSP functions, such as autonotching,<br />

remain outside the AGC loop in<br />

the MARK-V. But in the case of notching,<br />

there’s more than immediately meets the<br />

eye.<br />

In addition to its DSP auto-notching<br />

capability, the MARK-V also lets you select<br />

a manual IF notch filter through the<br />

menu, and the DSP and IF notch filters can<br />

be cascaded. The manual IF notch is very<br />

effective and allows additional flexibility<br />

by letting you perform some filter shaping<br />

“on the fly.” It can take a strong carrier out<br />

of the AGC loop, and the cascaded DSP<br />

auto-notch will eliminate any residual carrier<br />

audio bleeding through. The combination<br />

is quite formidable.<br />

The EDSP still employs the 16-bit digital<br />

signal processing of the earlier ’MP,<br />

which runs at a 33-MHz clock speed.<br />

EDSP is available in transmit as well,<br />

and the effects on your audio can be significant<br />

and even startling. It’s possible to<br />

fashion everything from “contest” audio to<br />

“broadcast quality” by using the various<br />

EDSP menu settings in conjunction with<br />

tweaking the carrier frequency—also a<br />

menu option—to parameters that best suit<br />

your particular voice characteristics.<br />

“The DSP feature was a plus,” raved one<br />

reviewer. “I also had several unsolicited<br />

comments about the quality of the audio.”<br />

Variable RF Front-End Filter<br />

This is a neat innovation that is another<br />

Yaesu exclusive, introduced with this<br />

model. Basically, VRF inserts a<br />

“preselector”—a tunable bandpass filter<br />

stage between the antenna and the fixed<br />

bandpass filters with their switching diodes—that’s<br />

designed to offer additional<br />

protection from nearby strong signals in the<br />

bands from 160 through 20 meters. Yaesu<br />

says VRF is “ideal for multioperator contest<br />

environments.” Although we did not<br />

have the opportunity to try it in one, we did<br />

find the VRF could be very effective—on<br />

the order of a few S units—in reducing<br />

“noise” from a very strong signal—even<br />

one in the same band. To get the maximum<br />

effect you might need to detune the VRF a<br />

bit away from peak sensitivity for the desired<br />

frequency. This will attenuate the signal,<br />

but the enhanced readability is worth<br />

the tradeoff. In the same regard, the VRF<br />

could be effective in cutting back “splatter”<br />

from a loud in-band signal too, although<br />

in most cases the other QRM weapons<br />

on board the MARK-V should do the<br />

trick as well or better.<br />

Class-A SSB Operation<br />

We’ve been particularly fussy over the<br />

years about how well transmitters are able<br />

to contain their higher-order intermodulation<br />

products on SSB. This aspect<br />

of performance can spell the difference between<br />

a transmitter that splatters and one<br />

that is kind to its neighbors. Yaesu’s new<br />

Class-A function, available at the touch of<br />

a button, puts the RF output amplifier stage<br />

into IMD-friendly Class A mode. The idea<br />

here is that if you’re driving a linear using<br />

a signal that exhibits superior IMD characteristics,<br />

you won’t be making things unnecessarily<br />

worse when you crank up the<br />

amp. Class A mode on the MARK-V limits<br />

the output power to 75 W PEP.<br />

The original ’MP did pretty well in the<br />

IMD department, with worst-case third order<br />

products down about 27 dB and fifth<br />

order products down about 43 dB (this was<br />

on 24.95 MHz). The MARK-V in Class A<br />

mode was considerably better, dropping the<br />

worst-case fifth-order products (observed<br />

this time on the 160-meter band) to –64 dB<br />

at 75 W PEP. On the other bands, fifth-order<br />

IMD was 74 dB down on 40 meters and<br />

a very impressive 85 dB down on 17 meters!<br />

Either way, with 200 W in Class A-B or<br />

75 W in Class A, you’ll have plenty of<br />

power to drive an amplifier. “The 200 W is<br />

great!” one user enthused. “But the 75 W<br />

Class-A mode actually worked perfectly for<br />

me since my Alpha really only needs 80 W<br />

to get to full output.”<br />

Powering Up<br />

To deliver the 30 V dc needed for the<br />

RF MOSFETs in Class A, Yaesu has paired<br />

the MARK-V up with a compact, external<br />

switching power supply. The lightweight<br />

model FP-29 dual-voltage unit comes with<br />

its own power switch and cooling fan.<br />

Given the supply’s trim profile, it begs<br />

the question why Yaesu didn’t just incorporate<br />

the unit into the MARK-V and save<br />

the nuisance of having to route yet another<br />

cable in the shack. After all, the FT-1000<br />

has a built-in supply, and one was an option<br />

on the original ’MP.<br />

While one may reasonably assume that<br />

the engineers at Yaesu were concerned<br />

about heat dissipation and/or switching<br />

noise, the Operating Manual mentions a<br />

third consideration, stating that the power<br />

supply was kept separate “for safe trans-<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 67


portation” of the MARK-V during shipping<br />

or on a DXpedition. “The reduced weight<br />

inside the transceiver case provides a<br />

greater safety margin during the shipment<br />

of your MARK-V.”<br />

MARK-V Menuing<br />

The strength of the MARK-V menu system<br />

is that the 80+ options allow tremendous<br />

flexibility in configuring the radio<br />

“your way.” Its weakness is that in the years<br />

since the original ’MP (and a lot of other<br />

otherwise excellent transceivers) was designed,<br />

the menu system the MARK-V<br />

employs has not changed a whole lot from<br />

the original model. It’s certainly utilitarian,<br />

but compared to what’s out there in the<br />

market today, it’s neither very elegant nor<br />

intuitive, and it no longer can be considered<br />

state-of-the-art. It’s a bit like going<br />

back to DOS after years of working with<br />

Windows. By the same token, a lot of contesters<br />

continue to use DOS-based logging<br />

software, so maybe they won’t really care.<br />

As one reviewer remarked, “There are a<br />

lot of configurable options. It’s too bad the<br />

user interface isn’t more friendly.” He suggested<br />

that Yaesu market a Windows software<br />

package that would allow the user to<br />

set all the necessary parameters via a PC.<br />

“Now that would be cool!” he concluded.<br />

In the years since the original ’MP hit<br />

the market, some manufacturers have come<br />

out with user interfaces that feature plain<br />

English menu descriptions on an LCD<br />

graphical display. With the MARK-V,<br />

there’s still no single “menu” button—you<br />

press FAST plus ENT to get into the menus—<br />

and you’d better keep the Operating<br />

Manual—or at least the thoughtful Quick<br />

Code Sheet—handy to “master the menu<br />

possibilities,” to borrow a phrase.<br />

As a result, fully customizing the<br />

MARK-V can take some time, and may try<br />

your patience. There is a veritable surfeit<br />

(that means “beaucoup”) of user-settable<br />

items, from CW weighting to defining<br />

memory groups and setting the AGC for the<br />

sub-receiver. (Yes, the MARK-V offers 99<br />

memory channels and scanning capabilities<br />

too.)<br />

One reviewer began to acclimate to the<br />

MARK-V after a day or so of trying to bend<br />

the radio to his will. “I liked the radio better<br />

and began to see the potential,” he conceded.<br />

Filter Flexibility<br />

The MARK-V boasts a whole new way<br />

to select filters. It was not a hit with everyone.<br />

As mentioned, the ’MP filter matrix<br />

has been supplanted by the EDSP APF, NR,<br />

and CONTOUR button panel. Filter selection<br />

has been reduced to three BANDWIDTH buttons<br />

to the right of the display: NOR, NAR1<br />

and NAR2. These three buttons determine<br />

filter selections for the 8.215 MHz second<br />

IF and the 455 kHz third IF.<br />

68 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Discerning readers likely already have<br />

done the math and figured out that you<br />

don’t get quite as much flexibility in filter<br />

selection with three buttons and up to five<br />

optional filters on board. The original<br />

’MP’s filter matrix let you pick one from<br />

column A and one from column B—mixn-match<br />

style. It was a feature many users<br />

appreciated. With the MARK-V, you predefine<br />

the filters you want assigned to each<br />

button via menus, which can be a bit baffling.<br />

Be careful: if you don’t get it right,<br />

you might hear nothing at all when you<br />

press one of those BANDWIDTH buttons.<br />

In the MARK-V filter selection scheme,<br />

you would, for instance, be able to define<br />

2.4 and 6 kHz filters for the NOR selection,<br />

a pair of 2.4 kHz filters or a 2.4 and an optional<br />

2.0 kHz filter for the NAR1 position,<br />

and a pair of optional 2.0 kHz filters for the<br />

NAR2 position on SSB. In CW, you might<br />

have a combination of 2.4 or 2.0 kHz and<br />

500 or 250 Hz units in ascending degrees of<br />

selectivity. Some operators may find this<br />

limiting compared to the original ’MP, while<br />

others may find it more efficient.<br />

Yaesu concedes that there is slightly less<br />

flexibility in filter selection in the MARK-V,<br />

in that you don’t have on-the-fly ability to<br />

set a 250-Hz bandwidth by selecting, for<br />

example 500 and 250 Hz or 250 and 250<br />

Hz filters in the 8.2 MHz and 455 kHz IFs.<br />

“You need to predefine the selections<br />

you are most likely to want to make, and<br />

these then become the NOR, NAR1 and<br />

NAR2 selections,” Yaesu told us. “The thinking<br />

was to free up that matrix slot on the<br />

left hand side of the main tuning knob and<br />

to make the radio easier to use at 4 in the<br />

morning at the same time.”<br />

The MARK-V offers stock 500 Hz crystal<br />

CW and 2.4 kHz SSB filters in the 8.215<br />

MHz IF and a new 10-pole 2.4 kHz Collins<br />

mechanical SSB filter in the 455 kHz IF<br />

(the original ’MP used an 8-pole Collins<br />

SSB filter).<br />

“With the filtering available, it was<br />

much easier to carve a hole in a very<br />

crowded 20-meter band,” said one reviewer,<br />

relating his contesting experience with the<br />

radio. “I was also able to squeeze into a<br />

small opening on the upper end of 40 and<br />

actually have a decent run.”<br />

Held Over<br />

Several really handy features survive in<br />

this ’MP incarnation. The MARK-V still<br />

offers the choice of two antennas via the<br />

ANT A/B front-panel button plus availability<br />

of a separate receive antenna. “It’s nice<br />

to have two antenna inputs and a Beverage<br />

input,” one well-known contester opined.<br />

“It worked just the way it should.”<br />

The MARK-V’s flexible CLARifier<br />

(RIT) permits excursions of up to 9.9 kHz.<br />

There are separate TX, RX and CLEAR buttons,<br />

making the RIT available for quick<br />

split-frequency operation, such as working<br />

DX that’s listening “up 2.”<br />

We’ve already received questions from<br />

members about whether Yaesu made any<br />

changes with respect to full-break-in (QSK)<br />

CW operation. The answer is no, nor did<br />

Yaesu include the capability to key the radio<br />

from an external source, such as a PC, while<br />

still providing access to the radio’s internal<br />

memory keyer. The “bug” option has mysteriously<br />

disappeared from the keyer menu as<br />

well. A search is under way for the critter.<br />

Speaking of the internal memory keyer,<br />

the MARK-V does not provide front-panel<br />

access to program this integrated accessory<br />

that offers six message memories and includes<br />

contest-style incremental numbering<br />

(even “cut numbers” if you want them). As<br />

with the earlier ’MP, accessing or programming<br />

the memory keyer functions requires the<br />

outboard accessory FH-1 Remote Control<br />

Keypad (or a homebrew keypad) that connects<br />

via a cable to the rear-panel REMOTE<br />

jack.<br />

On a related note, the MARK-V also<br />

does not incorporate any sort of “tune” button<br />

(neither did the ’MP), but one is available<br />

via the FH-1 keypad. A digital voice<br />

recorder also remains an accessory. The<br />

optional DVS-2 Digital Voice Recorder has<br />

two 8-second or four 4-second messages.<br />

You also can record up to 16 seconds of<br />

incoming receiver audio for later playback.<br />

The MARK-V’s super off-the-air monitor<br />

works in all modes, including CW! The<br />

MONI button and level control are on the<br />

lower front-panel apron. The radio picks off<br />

the signal as it leaves the driver stage using<br />

the sub-receiver as a monitor. This is<br />

especially convenient to have when tailoring<br />

your audio using the MARK-V’s manifold<br />

DSP capabilities.<br />

The MARK-V’s double-stacking register<br />

BAND keypad gives quick access to the<br />

last two frequencies (and mode and filter<br />

settings) you visited on a given band. It also<br />

permits direct keypad entry of a frequency.<br />

Pressing the SUB button then a BAND key<br />

lets you change bands or set frequencies<br />

and modes on the sub-receiver.<br />

We’d complained in our earlier review<br />

about another front-panel characteristic that<br />

the original ’MP had carried over from the<br />

FT-1000—the row of smallish knobs and buttons<br />

along the lower apron. The MARK-V<br />

continues this tradition, but Yaesu swapped<br />

one control location and replaced another<br />

with the CLASS-A button.<br />

Control legends for this lower tier of<br />

front-panel controls still tend to be a bit<br />

difficult to read, however, and the knobs<br />

still are the same shade as the front panel.<br />

The “trap door” trimpot controls in<br />

the top of the radio still are there in the<br />

MARK-V. These still include the TUN-M<br />

control that you’re not supposed to adjust<br />

(misadjustment could necessitate a factory


ealignment). These require using a small<br />

Phillips’ head screwdriver. Controls include<br />

such functions as audio levels to the headphone<br />

jacks; FM mike gain; VOX gain, delay<br />

and anti-vox; and the tuning meter adjustments<br />

for CW, packet and RTTY. One<br />

user wondered aloud why the CW VOX<br />

delay was set via the menu while the SSB<br />

VOX delay was set via a trimpot. “Why are<br />

they so hard to get to,” he asked. He said<br />

he’d rather see the two delay adjustments<br />

on the front-panel apron instead of the two<br />

squelch controls that he deemed much less<br />

likely to be needed.<br />

The MARK-V still offers a menusettable<br />

choice of flat or tuned preamps.<br />

There are three preamps in all—one a general-purpose<br />

“flat” amplifier and dual tuned<br />

units, one optimized for 1.8 to 7 MHz and<br />

the other for 24 to 30 MHz. (Yaesu says<br />

that on 14 MHz, the tuned and flat preamps<br />

have approximately the same gain, so<br />

there’s not much difference between them.)<br />

To turn off the preamp, you turn on the IPO<br />

(intercept point optimization). While this<br />

may seem like backwards logic, Yaesu is<br />

not the only manufacturer use this kind of<br />

nomenclature.<br />

Gone But Not Necessarily Forgotten<br />

Some up-front items on the ’MP have<br />

been consigned all or in part to the menu.<br />

For example, the USER button has disappeared<br />

from the front panel and now lives<br />

in the menu. This function lets the operator<br />

set up a “custom environment” for a<br />

given user or type of operation. In the<br />

MARK-V, pressing and holding the PKT<br />

button accesses this menu to configure custom<br />

settings.<br />

The NB1 and NB2 noise blanker buttons<br />

on the ’MP have been replaced by a single<br />

NB button on the MARK-V. You now go to<br />

the menu to select the type of noise blanker<br />

you prefer—depending upon the noise—<br />

and the desired blanking level. There’s a<br />

menu shortcut to make changes on the fly—<br />

press and hold FAST and press NB.<br />

The SPLIT button also is no more on the<br />

MARK-V. You go into split-frequency mode<br />

by pressing the appropriate red and green TX<br />

and RX LEDs near the main and sub-receiver<br />

tuning knobs. Not everyone was wild about<br />

the departure of the SPLIT button. Some operators<br />

thought it made operating the<br />

MARK-V more confusing and could lead to<br />

transmitting on the wrong VFO during the<br />

wee hours of a contest. The “SPLt-SEt” menu<br />

offers three split operating modes that vary<br />

largely in the degree of automation applied.<br />

The A=B mode, for example, applies a preset<br />

frequency offset to the sub VFO B when<br />

that VFO is enabled for transmit.<br />

Performance Perspectives<br />

How does the ’MP stack up where the<br />

rubber meets the road—on the air Well, if<br />

there were any doubts that the new MARK-V<br />

offers some performance enhancements over<br />

the original ’MP, a look at the most critical<br />

lab testing numbers will quickly dispel them.<br />

Some quick comparison highlights:<br />

• Two-tone, third-order IMD dynamic range<br />

in the MARK-V was about 4 dB better on<br />

the amateur bands, topping out at 101 dB<br />

on 14 MHz (preamp off). This is, like, totally<br />

excellent performance, dudes. Dynamic<br />

range defines the receiver’s ability<br />

to distinguish and reflect the difference between<br />

weak and strong signals.<br />

• The MARK-V’s third-order intercept numbers<br />

were in the vicinity of +25 dBm<br />

(based on S5 reference), the highest we’ve<br />

seen for any receiver; the original ’MP’s<br />

numbers were in the range of +14 dBm on<br />

the ham bands (preamp off in both cases).<br />

• The second-order intercept numbers,<br />

around +68 dBm with the preamp on or<br />

off, although very respectable, were not<br />

as high as those we measured on the<br />

original ’MP. With the VRF feature activated<br />

however, the MARK-V managed to<br />

achieve another new high-water mark—<br />

+112 dBm with the preamp on and +110<br />

dBm with the preamp off—the best we’ve<br />

seen by a wide margin.<br />

• The typical transmitter high-order IMD<br />

numbers during Class-A operation are<br />

significantly better than any transceiver<br />

we’ve tested.<br />

• The MARK-V’s SSB/CW receiver sensitivity<br />

on the ham bands was within<br />

1 dB of the original ’MP’s.<br />

• The MARK-V’s blocking dynamic range<br />

(preamp off) was 11 dB worse, at 3.5 MHz<br />

and 13 dB worse at 14 MHz but at<br />

129 dB, these are still excellent numbers.<br />

• The MARK-V’s AM sensitivity was slightly<br />

worse (by 1.7 µV) at 1.0 MHz (preamp off)<br />

and approximately the same everywhere<br />

else; FM sensitivity (preamp off) was<br />

slightly better (by 0.18 µV) at 29 MHz.<br />

• FM adjacent channel rejection and twotone,<br />

third-order IMD dynamic range<br />

numbers were 10 dB and 4 dB better on<br />

the MARK-V respectively (preamp on).<br />

• The CW keyer range in the MARK-V tested<br />

out at from 9 to 39 WPM; the range of the<br />

original ’MP keyer was 6 to 120 WPM.<br />

Puffs and Pans<br />

Some user comments and observations, in<br />

no particular order:<br />

• “Features seemed very similar to the<br />

original FT-1000MP, and it was not very<br />

hard to get used to them.”<br />

• “The notch filter is deep! But it has some<br />

menu-driven modes that require some<br />

practice.”<br />

• “The internal fan(s) in the MARK-V are<br />

pretty loud once the radio starts to break<br />

a sweat. The fan noise is audible even<br />

while wearing headphones.”<br />

• “Diversity reception is possible because<br />

of the flexibility offered via the menu for<br />

stereo headphone operation. You can listen<br />

to the main receiver in one ear, the subreceiver<br />

in the other or to all of one or all<br />

of the other or even attenuated audio in<br />

the other ear from the other receiver.”<br />

• “The AF output jack on the back panel is a<br />

plus. Its constant level is great for grabbing<br />

audio for your sound card for digital<br />

modes or for just recording. You can plug<br />

in, set the levels, and then forget about it.”<br />

• “The dual receiver is well-done and very<br />

cool!”<br />

• “The top-cover adjustments are not much<br />

better than the old FT-1000MP—ie, not<br />

very good.”<br />

• “The manual seemed to have more extensive<br />

explanations.”<br />

• “A true contester will learn to love this<br />

radio!”<br />

Conclusion<br />

With the introduction of the MARK-V<br />

FT-1000MP Yaesu has raised the bar, albeit<br />

incrementally in some cases, in the top-end<br />

transceiver marketplace. Have no doubt.<br />

This is a very fine radio that will hold its<br />

own in a competitive environment, and its<br />

enhanced DSP features are superb. A lot of<br />

current ’MP owners may be tempted to upgrade,<br />

and newcomers who are not intimidated<br />

by the challenge of a complex, feature-rich<br />

radio will give serious consideration<br />

to jumping aboard the FT-1000MP<br />

bandwagon with the MARK-V. Hams in the<br />

strong-signal areas of the world (Europe for<br />

example) should be particularly interested<br />

in this transceiver’s strong-signal-handling<br />

capabilities.<br />

While some may wonder why Yaesu<br />

didn’t go further in some aspects of the redesign<br />

of the original ’MP into this<br />

MARK-V version, the new transceiver<br />

does offer several significant performance<br />

enhancements to a proven platform that has<br />

earned and continues to hold the respect<br />

of discerning contesters and DXers.<br />

Thanks go to Randy Thompson, K5ZD;<br />

Dan Henderson, N1ND; Tom Frenaye, K1KI;<br />

and Dave Patton, NT1N, for using the radio<br />

and providing comments for this review.<br />

Manufacturer: Yaesu USA, 17210<br />

Edwards Rd, Cerritos, CA 90703; 562-404-<br />

2700; fax 562-404-1210; http://www.<br />

yaesu.com.<br />

Manufacturer’s suggested retail price,<br />

$4,200. Typical current street price: $3,300.<br />

List prices of selected optional accessories:<br />

DVS-2 Digital Voice Recorder, $238; FH-1<br />

Remote Control Keypad, $88. The YF-<br />

114SN 2.0 kHz SSB filter, YF-114CN 250<br />

Hz CW filter, YF-110SN 2.0 kHz SSB filter<br />

and YF-115C 500 Hz CW filter all list for<br />

$157.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 69


The NorCal SMK-1 QRP Transceiver Kit<br />

Reviewed by Joe Bottiglieri, AA1GW<br />

Assistant Technical Editor<br />

Since its inception in 1993, the Northern<br />

California QRP Club—better known as<br />

NorCal—has grown to be an extremely well<br />

known organization of low power Amateur<br />

Radio enthusiasts.<br />

A few months ago NorCal announced<br />

something new: a full-featured 10-meter<br />

CW QRP transceiver kit that would use<br />

mostly surface mount components.<br />

There has been enthusiastic response to<br />

that news, but several folks expressed a<br />

desire for a simpler project that would provide<br />

them an opportunity to gain some surface<br />

mount construction experience. The<br />

result was the SMK-1.<br />

The SMK-1 was quickly developed by<br />

Dave Fifield, AD6A (of Red Hot Radio),<br />

and Doug Hendricks, KI6DS, not so much<br />

as a QRP transceiver kit but as an electronics<br />

construction project that would expose<br />

the builder to working with a variety of surface<br />

mount component packages. Most of<br />

the 84 parts that make up the kit are surface<br />

mount, but there’s also a few throughhole<br />

components.<br />

Noble Lineage<br />

The SMK-1 40-meter CW transceiver<br />

consists of a transmitter section based on<br />

the late Doug DeMaw’s (W1CER/W1FB)<br />

now legendary Tuna Tin 2 (see March <strong>2000</strong><br />

<strong>QST</strong> for a complete retrospective on this<br />

QRP classic) integrated with a receiver<br />

modeled after Steve Bornstein’s (K8IDN)<br />

MRX-40 direct-conversion receiver (featured<br />

in the September 1997 issue). Electronic<br />

transmit/receive switching, JFET receiver<br />

muting, VXO RIT and XIT circuitry,<br />

and a few additional modifications cooked<br />

up by Dave were incorporated, and surfacemount<br />

equivalents of virtually every component<br />

were substituted.<br />

As was the case with W1FB’s and<br />

K8IDN’s projects, the resulting transceiver<br />

was never intended to be a high performance<br />

piece of radio equipment—a primary objective<br />

shared by all three is circuit simplicity.<br />

It’s a Small World, After All<br />

Surface mount parts are available in a<br />

range of sizes. The components used in this<br />

kit are considered to be “the big ones.”<br />

Designated 1206, the equivalents of conventional<br />

“two lead” parts—resistors, capacitors,<br />

inductors and diodes—measure<br />

about 0.12 × 0.06 inches.<br />

There are also three surface mount 8-<br />

pin ICs, and a handful of surface mount<br />

transistors and electrolytic capacitors.<br />

The tiny 2 1 /2 × 2 1 /4-inch circuit board is<br />

top quality. It’s double-sided, solder<br />

masked and silk screened with the part<br />

70 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

numbers and location outlines. All of the<br />

on-board components are provided in the<br />

kit. The builder will need to supply an enclosure<br />

and knobs, and connectors for external<br />

dc power, key or keyer, ’phones and<br />

antenna. A separate kit that includes predrilled<br />

enclosure panels, jacks, knobs and<br />

rubber feet—courtesy of the New Jersey<br />

QRP Club—is also available. (See NorCal’s<br />

Web site for details.)<br />

Let’s Get It Together<br />

As you can well imagine, the biggest<br />

challenge of surface mount construction is<br />

the handling and positioning of these tiny<br />

parts. Identifying a particular part can also<br />

be difficult—some don’t carry any markings<br />

whatsoever.<br />

The NorCal gang came up with a great<br />

solution to the identification problem. The<br />

parts are packaged in two clear plastic bags<br />

that are divided by a heat-sealer into a grid<br />

of 21 compartments, each containing specific<br />

components. “Grid maps” printed in<br />

the documentation act as a key.<br />

I found surface mount part handling<br />

quickly became easier as assembly progressed.<br />

I used a large pair of surgical tweezers<br />

for handling and positioning the parts<br />

for soldering, and only really needed a<br />

magnifying lens for inspecting the finished<br />

solder connections. Your particular methods<br />

and needs, of course, may vary.<br />

For some tips and techniques, visit<br />

NorCal’s Web site, http://www.fix.net/<br />

~jparker/norcal.html. Also be sure to<br />

check out the ARRL Technical Information<br />

Service’s information on this topic<br />

at http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/<br />

surface.html. (Copies of recent <strong>QST</strong> articles<br />

on this subject are posted here.)<br />

The 8-page Construction Manual consists<br />

of four 8 1 /2 × 11-inch stapled sheets.<br />

There’s not a tremendous amount of<br />

handholding offered in the assembly descriptions—the<br />

instructions walk you<br />

through installing the contents of the first<br />

pocket of “Bag #1” and then instruct you<br />

to proceed likewise down through the bags.<br />

The final few assembly steps involve<br />

winding and mounting a 6-turn bifilar toroid<br />

and installing the through-hole components.<br />

Alignment is easy—I used my main<br />

station transceiver to listen for the transmitted<br />

signal, to peak the receiver, and to<br />

“calibrate” the XIT and RIT controls.<br />

I’ve got to admit, although surface<br />

mount construction does present a unique<br />

set of challenges, I found it to be considerably<br />

easier than I had anticipated. I’m now<br />

eager to attempt a more sophisticated surface<br />

mount project.<br />

Let’s Get it On<br />

I’ve used the transceiver to make several<br />

contacts with stations up and down the<br />

east coast and into the midwest—not bad<br />

considering it puts out about 350 mW and<br />

my antenna is an attic dipole! I’ve received<br />

reasonably good signal reports and noted<br />

only a very small amount of drift.<br />

Spot checks of the SMK-1 by the ARRL<br />

Lab show a transmitter tuning range of approximately<br />

7.038 to 7.039 MHz and a receiver<br />

tuning range between 7.035 and 7.040<br />

MHz. The noise floor—or minimum<br />

discernable signal—measures –110 dBm at<br />

3 kHz bandwidth. While this may seem a bit<br />

low, this is due to the essentially “wide-open”<br />

front end of the receiver. There’s more than<br />

enough CW sensitivity available for typical<br />

40-meter QRP operation.<br />

The current draw (at 13.8 V) is about 20<br />

mA on receive and 110 mA on transmit. The<br />

blocking dynamic range came in at a noiselimited<br />

74 dB. Spurious signal and harmonic<br />

suppression was better than 30 dB.<br />

Unlike the original Tuna Tin 2, this transmitter<br />

does not require additional filtering<br />

to meet current FCC spectral requirements<br />

for a transmitter of this power level.<br />

Conclusion<br />

Let’s face it, sooner or later the electronics<br />

hobbyist will have to accept the fact that<br />

technology marches on. Surface mount<br />

components will continue to supplant conventional<br />

leaded components in both consumer<br />

electronics products and commercially<br />

produced Amateur Radio gear. With<br />

the SMK-1, NorCal is providing us a great<br />

opportunity to learn the basic techniques<br />

and further develop the home construction<br />

methods that we’ll need to work with them.<br />

Manufacturer: The Northern California<br />

QRP Club; http://www.fix.net/~jparker/<br />

norcal.html.<br />

The SMK-1 sells for $30 plus $4 shipping<br />

and handling. To order one, send a<br />

check or money order for $34 (made out to<br />

Jim Cates) along with a note indicating that<br />

you are ordering an SMK-1 to Jim Cates,<br />

WA6GER, 3241 Eastwood Rd, Sacramento,<br />

CA 95821. If possible, also follow this with<br />

an e-mail with “SMK-1” in the subject line<br />

to Doug Hendricks, KI6DS (ki6ds@<br />

dospalos.org), so that he can maintain an<br />

adequate parts inventory.


HAPPENINGS<br />

Balloting Under Way in Three ARRL Divisions<br />

Members in five ARRL divisions have<br />

nominated candidates for ARRL Director<br />

and Vice Director, and balloting is under<br />

way for contested positions in three<br />

divisions. The ARRL Election Committee<br />

has declared all candidates to be eligible.<br />

All unopposed candidates have been<br />

declared elected. All terms are for three<br />

years beginning at noon January 1, 2001.<br />

Balloting for Director will occur in the<br />

Central and Northwestern divisions;<br />

balloting for Vice Director in the<br />

Northwestern and Hudson divisions.<br />

There’s a three-way race for the<br />

Director’s seat in the Central Division.<br />

Running are incumbent Director Edmond<br />

A. Metzger, W9PRN, and challengers<br />

Richard David Klatzco Jr, N9TQA, and<br />

George R. “Dick” Isely, W9GIG. Vice<br />

Director Howard Huntington, K9KM, is<br />

unopposed for reelection.<br />

In the Northwestern Division,<br />

incumbent Director Greg Milnes, W7OZ,<br />

will face Mary E. Lewis, W7QGP, a twotime<br />

former director. Incumbent<br />

Northwestern Division Vice Director Jim<br />

Fenstermaker, K9JF, is being challenged<br />

by Edward W. Bruette, N7NVP.<br />

In the Hudson Division incumbent Vice<br />

Director J.P. Kleinhaus, W2XX, faces a<br />

challenge from former ARRL First Vice<br />

President and Hudson Division Director<br />

Steve Mendelsohn, W2ML. Director Frank<br />

Fallon, N2FF, is running unopposed.<br />

Also without opposition are New<br />

England Division Director Tom Frenaye,<br />

K1KI, and Vice Director Mike Raisbeck,<br />

K1TWF, and Roanoke Division Director<br />

Dennis Bodson, W4PWF, and Vice<br />

Director Les Shattuck, K4NK.<br />

ARRL full members of record in the<br />

Central, Hudson and Northwestern<br />

divisions as of September 10, <strong>2000</strong>, were<br />

to be sent ballots by October 1. The deadline<br />

to receive completed ballots is noon Friday,<br />

<strong>November</strong> 17, when the votes will be<br />

counted. Any eligible member not receiving<br />

a ballot should contact ARRL Headquarters.<br />

PHASE 3D SET FOR HALLOWEEN<br />

LAUNCH<br />

The next-generation Phase 3D Amateur<br />

Radio satellite is set to go into space on<br />

Halloween! At press time, the launch<br />

agency Arianespace said that in addition to<br />

Phase 3D, an Ariane 5 rocket would attempt<br />

to orbit three commercial satellites on Tuesday,<br />

October 31. The launch will take place<br />

at the European Spaceport in Kourou,<br />

French Guiana, South America.<br />

Arianespace says the October 31 mission<br />

will be the first to use the Ariane Structure<br />

for Auxiliary Payloads platform designed to<br />

carry mini or microsatellites as secondary<br />

payloads. The Ariane 507 flight also is to<br />

be the initial liftoff performed from the second<br />

Ariane 5 mobile launch table, which<br />

recently was qualified for service.<br />

Launch preparations for the Phase 3D<br />

flight officially got under way September<br />

18 and were proceeding “on target,” according<br />

to AMSAT-Germany Executive Vice<br />

President Peter Gülzow, DB2OS. Gülzow<br />

has been heading the launch team at the<br />

European Spaceport in the absence of Phase<br />

3D Project Leader Karl Meinzer, DJ4ZC,<br />

who was unable to make the trip. An advance<br />

P3D launch team arrived in Kourou<br />

September 9. By late September, the group<br />

had swelled to more than a dozen.<br />

AMSAT-NA President Keith Baker,<br />

KB1SF, said Phase 3D was “doing just fine.”<br />

As of press time, the satellite’s batteries had<br />

been recharged, and RF testing of transmitter<br />

and receiver systems had been successfully<br />

completed. The team also carried out<br />

propulsion system pressure tests.<br />

AMSAT officials were encouraged by<br />

success of a September 14 Ariane 5 launch<br />

that they’d been keeping an eye on as a bellwether<br />

for the next-in-line Phase 3D<br />

launch. That mission put two communication<br />

satellites into orbit.<br />

More information about Phase 3D is on<br />

the AMSAT-NA Web site, http://www.<br />

amsat.org/.<br />

QUIAT NAMED HONORARY VICE<br />

PRESIDENT; MORTON NAMED VICE<br />

DIRECTOR<br />

The ARRL Board of Directors has<br />

elected Marshall Quiat,<br />

AG0X, of Denver,<br />

Colorado, as an Honorary<br />

Vice President. Quiat, 78,<br />

stepped down as Rocky<br />

Mountain Vice Director<br />

this summer for health<br />

reasons. The vote of the<br />

15-member board was<br />

unanimous.<br />

ARRL President Jim<br />

Haynie, W5JBP, called<br />

Marshall<br />

Quiat, AG0X<br />

Quiat August 30 to inform him of his<br />

election. “There’s no one more deserving<br />

of this honor than Marshall,” Haynie said.<br />

“I’m happy for him.”<br />

ARRL PHOTO<br />

An attorney and an ARRL Life Member,<br />

Quiat served as Vice Director from 1981 until<br />

1987, as Director from 1987 until last year,<br />

and as Vice Director until August. In<br />

addition, he served as an ARRL Foundation<br />

Director from 1994 until 1999. As a director<br />

and vice director, Quiat logged a long record<br />

of service. Among other accomplishments,<br />

he chaired the Legal Strategy Committee<br />

appointed in 1986 and served as a member<br />

of the Part 97 Rewrite Committee in 1988.<br />

He also was instrumental in the success of<br />

the League’s PRB-1 effort.<br />

Haynie has named Warren G. “Rev”<br />

Morton, WS7W, of Casper, Wyoming, to<br />

complete Quiat’s term of office as vice<br />

director, which runs<br />

through next year.<br />

Morton served two<br />

terms as Wyoming Section<br />

Manager, from 1993 until<br />

1997. While in that office,<br />

he spearheaded the successful<br />

effort to enact a<br />

PRB-1 bill in his state.<br />

(Morton’s efforts are detailed<br />

in “Wyoming Hams WS7W<br />

Warren G.<br />

Morton,<br />

Corral City and County<br />

Antenna Restrictions,” <strong>QST</strong>, Jul 1998.)<br />

HAM GEAR DELIVERED TO ISS<br />

The Amateur Radio on the International<br />

Space Station initial station equipment was<br />

delivered to the ISS in September. Shuttle<br />

Atlantis mission STS-106 also dropped off<br />

supplies that the ISS Expedition 1 crew will<br />

need this fall. After opening the station, the<br />

STS-106 team of astronauts and<br />

cosmonauts, which included three hams,<br />

unloaded the cargo—including the ham<br />

ARRL PHOTO<br />

Rick Lindquist, N1RL Senior News Editor<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 71


Astronaut Ed Lu, KC5WKJ, checks supplies inside the shuttle prior to his spacewalk.<br />

gear—from Atlantis and from a docked<br />

Russian Progress rocket and set the ISS up<br />

for its first crew.<br />

The initial station gear now stowed<br />

aboard the ISS includes amateur VHF and<br />

UHF hand-held transceivers as well as a<br />

TNC for packet, a special headset and<br />

signal adapter module, and power adapters<br />

and interconnecting cables.<br />

No Amateur Radio operation will take<br />

place from the ISS until the Expedition 1<br />

crew of US astronaut Bill Shepherd,<br />

KD5GSL, and Russian Cosmonauts Sergei<br />

Krikalev, U5MIR, and Yuri Gaidzenko<br />

comes aboard in early <strong>November</strong>.<br />

As part of the shuttle Atlantis mission,<br />

US astronaut Ed Lu, KC5WKJ, and<br />

Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko<br />

completed a more than six-hour space walk<br />

on September 11. Lu and Malenchenko<br />

attached nine power, data and communication<br />

cables to the Russian-built Zvezda<br />

service module Zarya control module.<br />

Other amateurs aboard Atlantis included<br />

astronauts Dan Burbank, KC5ZSX, and<br />

Richard Mastracchio, KC5ZTE.<br />

The ARISS initial station gear will be<br />

installed temporarily aboard Zarya and use<br />

an existing antenna that’s being adapted to<br />

support FM voice and packet on 2 meters.<br />

The gear will be re-installed in the Zvezda<br />

Service Module next year, and it will have<br />

both 2-meter and 70-cm capabilities. The<br />

gear has been certified to operate from the<br />

Russian sector of the ISS, where a Russian<br />

call sign, RZ3DZR, will be used. German<br />

call sign DL0ISS has been issued, and US<br />

call signs for use aboard the ISS are pending.<br />

For more information visit the ARISS<br />

Web site, http://ariss.gsfc.nasa.gov/.<br />

TWO AMATEURS DIE IN WEST<br />

TIMOR VIOLENCE<br />

Two of the three United Nations workers<br />

killed by a mob September 6 in West Timor,<br />

Indonesia, were Amateur Radio operators.<br />

72 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

NASA<br />

Pero Simundza, 9A4SP, of Split, Croatia,<br />

had been in West Timor for nearly one year<br />

and had been active as 4W/9A4SP and as<br />

4W6SP. He was 29. Carlos Luis Caceres,<br />

KD4SYB, a Technician licensee from<br />

Jacksonville, Florida, was 33. He was an<br />

ARRL member and a native of Puerto Rico.<br />

Simundza, Caceres, and Samson<br />

Aregahegn of Ethiopia died when thousands<br />

of armed pro-Indonesian militiamen and<br />

their supporters stormed a UN office in<br />

Atambua, West Timor. Witnesses say the<br />

mob beat the three UN workers to death then<br />

burned their bodies in the street while<br />

Indonesian security forces stood by and did<br />

nothing to stop the violence.<br />

The UN staffers, who all worked for the<br />

UN High Commissioner for Refugees, had<br />

been involved in helping refugees from the<br />

conflict with East Timor, which voted last<br />

year to break away from Indonesia.<br />

Prior to his service in West Timor,<br />

Simundza had been working for the UNHCR<br />

in his native Croatia and in Bosnia-<br />

Herzegovina. Simundza managed communications<br />

for the Atambua UNHCR office.<br />

In an eerie e-mail message said to have<br />

been sent by Caceres to UNHCR<br />

Headquarters the day he was killed, Caceres<br />

spoke of the UN workers’ being barricaded<br />

at their stations waiting for “a wave of<br />

violence” to hit. “The militias are on the<br />

way,” he wrote, “and I am sure they will do<br />

their best to demolish this office.” Caceres<br />

told his colleague that the remaining UN<br />

staff members were “like bait, unarmed,<br />

waiting for the wave to hit.”<br />

Caceres’ sister, Elba M. Caceres, was<br />

among those wanting to know why no one was<br />

there to protect the workers who stayed behind.<br />

Caceres’ father, Gregorio Caceres,<br />

KA4UXJ, said his son was fluent in several<br />

languages and held degrees in journalism<br />

and law.<br />

Memorial Web sites for the two<br />

In Brief<br />

• Question Pool Committee chair steps down: Ray Adams, W4CPA, has resigned as the<br />

chairman of the National Conference of Volunteer Examiners’ Question Pool Committee.<br />

“After pondering over the situation for an extended period of time, it is my firm conclusion<br />

that the best interests of Amateur Radio will be served by my resigning as a member of<br />

the Question Pool Committee,” said Adams, 64, in an announcement to the nation’s VECs<br />

and others. NCVEC Chairman Win Guin, W2GLJ, said Adams’ decision came as a surprise.<br />

“Ray has done an outstanding job, and we will surely miss him in that important role.”<br />

Guin asked that QPC vice chairman Scotty Neustadter, W4WW, of the Central America<br />

VEC assume the chairmanship. An ARRL Life Member, Adams had served as a member<br />

of the QPC since its inception in 1986 and had been chairman since 1989.<br />

• AO-27 is back on the air! The AO-27 satellite has returned to analog Amateur Radio<br />

service. AO-27 ground controller Chuck Wyrick, KM4NZ, advises operators to wait<br />

until they hear the satellite in analog mode—ie, no data being sent—before transmitting<br />

on the 145.850 MHz uplink frequency. AO-27’s downlink is 436.800 MHz. AO-27’s<br />

computer crashed July 31, and it took more than one attempt to reload the software and<br />

get the satellite up and running again. “A lot of work has saved AO-27 for many more<br />

enjoyable amateur QSOs,” Wyrick said in a posting to the AMSAT bulletin board.<br />

• New W6 Incoming QSL Bureau manager: ARRL W6 Incoming QSL Bureau Manager<br />

Archie Willis, W6LPJ, has retired after almost 27 years on the job. Steve Frick, N6QEK,<br />

is the new manager. The new W6 Incoming QSL Bureau address will be: ARRL Sixth<br />

District Incoming QSL Bureau, PO Box 900069, San Diego, CA 92190-0069.<br />

• RAC seeks elimination of 12 WPM Morse requirement: Radio Amateurs of Canada<br />

has asked Industry Canada—the Canadian equivalent of the FCC—to discontinue that<br />

country’s 12 WPM Morse code requirement in favor of a 5 WPM test. The RAC Board<br />

says it’s concluded that a majority of Canadian Amateurs support dropping the 12 WPM<br />

Morse test—although it acknowledges that many are against the change. “A decision<br />

by Canada to drop the 12 WPM test would be in harmony with what is happening in<br />

other parts of the world and would simplify the negotiation and implementation of<br />

reciprocal operating agreements,” the RAC said. In a letter to Industry Canada, RAC<br />

President Kenneth Oelke, VE6AFO, recommended full HF operating privileges to amateurs<br />

passing a 5 WPM Morse test and written exams. At the same time, Oelke requested<br />

that the IC consider beefing up written tests.—RAC


FCC News<br />

FCC TURNS DOWN CB DX PETITION<br />

The FCC in August denied a petition that<br />

would have amended the FCC’s Part 95<br />

rules to permit DXing on the 11-meter<br />

Citizens Band. The petition sought to<br />

amend §95.413 of the rules that prohibits<br />

communications or attempts to communicate<br />

with CB stations more than 250 km<br />

away and to contact stations in other<br />

countries.<br />

Designated RM-9807, the petition was<br />

filed by Popular Communications<br />

Contributing Editor Alan Dixon, N3HOE.<br />

“Dixon’s request is inconsistent with the<br />

purpose of the CB Radio Service and could<br />

fundamentally alter the nature of the<br />

service,” the FCC said in turning town the<br />

petition.<br />

The FCC said CB operators generally<br />

supported the proposal, asserting that the<br />

present rule was unenforceable. The ARRL<br />

commented in opposition to the petition.<br />

“The Amateur Radio Service is the proper<br />

forum for the desired long-distance<br />

communications sought by the Dixon<br />

petition,” the League told the FCC.<br />

The FCC agreed with the ARRL and said<br />

it did not intend to create a service<br />

paralleling the Amateur Service when it<br />

authorized the Citizens Radio Service.<br />

The National Association of Broadcasters<br />

also opposed Dixon’s petition. The<br />

NAB said consumers must be protected<br />

from illegal CB transmissions that interfere<br />

with radio, TV and other consumer<br />

electronics.<br />

RF SAFETY RULES NOW IN FORCE<br />

FOR ALL AMATEURS<br />

The time has come! September 1 was the<br />

date for all US amateurs to fully comply<br />

with the FCC’s RF safety rules.<br />

The regulations, which went into effect<br />

January 1, 1998, require US Amateur Radio<br />

operators to read and understand the<br />

rules and, where necessary, perform technical<br />

evaluations to determine that their<br />

stations are compliant with the new regulations.<br />

Before September 1, only hams filing<br />

an Amateur Radio application with the<br />

FCC had to certify compliance. Under the<br />

regulations, an amateur station must not<br />

exceed the maximum permissible exposure<br />

limits for transmitter operation. MPEs are<br />

both frequency and power-dependent.<br />

ARRL Lab Supervisor Ed Hare, W1RFI,<br />

said the regulations do not impose a major<br />

burden on amateurs. “Most hams are already<br />

in compliance with the MPE requirements;<br />

some hams will need to conduct a<br />

simple station evaluation,” he said.<br />

A complete description of the rules and<br />

station evaluation resources are available on<br />

the ARRL Web site at http://www.arrl .org<br />

/news/rfsafety/.<br />

The topic of RF exposure and safety also<br />

has been covered extensively in <strong>QST</strong> (see<br />

“FCC RF-Exposure Regulations—the Station<br />

Evaluation” by Ed Hare, W1RFI, <strong>QST</strong>,<br />

Jan 1998). Hare also wrote the standard<br />

Amateur Radio reference on the topic of RF<br />

exposure, RF Exposure and You ($15; order<br />

item #6621 from ARRL). The book includes<br />

step-by-step worksheets to help determine<br />

if a station complies with the rules—and, if<br />

not, how to correct the problem.<br />

Address questions about RF safety to Ed<br />

Hare, W1RFI, ehare@arrl.org.<br />

Amateur Enforcement News<br />

• FCC cancels license of “Captain Truth”<br />

suspect: The FCC has canceled the license<br />

of the individual it strongly suspects was<br />

“Captain Truth.” The Commission notified<br />

John M. Yount of Newton, North Carolina,<br />

on September 5 that it was canceling his<br />

Amateur Extra class ticket, K4QIJ, because<br />

he failed to appear for re-examination. The<br />

FCC zeroed in on Yount last spring as a<br />

prime suspect in its “Captain Truth”<br />

investigation into unidentified Amateur<br />

Radio transmissions and malicious<br />

interference. FCC Special Counsel for<br />

Amateur Radio Enforcement Riley<br />

Hollingsworth had written Yount on March<br />

29, citing FCC and other close-in monitoring<br />

evidence that indicated Yount’s station was<br />

the source of “malicious interference and<br />

jamming” on 20 and 75 meters. “Captain<br />

Truth” has not been heard on the air since<br />

the FCC’s initial letter. The FCC says radiodirection<br />

finding bearings led to Yount’s<br />

residence and antenna. Part of its monitoring<br />

evidence resulted from work done by the<br />

FCC’s High-Frequency Direction Finding<br />

facility. Yount suggested in his only reply<br />

to the FCC that there were a lot of vehicles<br />

and other houses on his property and that<br />

someone else could have been responsible<br />

for the transmissions the FCC had monitored<br />

and tracked. Hollingsworth said he wrote<br />

Yount again on June 1 to seek clarification<br />

and additional information in the ongoing<br />

investigation. “I never heard from him<br />

again,” Hollingsworth told the ARRL. After<br />

failing to get a reply, Hollingsworth wrote<br />

Yount on July 17 requesting that he retake<br />

his examinations by September 1. “And he<br />

never showed up,” he said. Hollingsworth<br />

warned Yount that continued operation of<br />

radio transmitting equipment after<br />

September 5 could result in criminal<br />

prosecution.<br />

• FCC sets aside VE team leader’s<br />

renewal: The FCC wrote Amateur Extra<br />

licensee Julian Sanchez Colon, KP4RA, on<br />

August 14, setting aside the July 28 renewal<br />

of his license. The application has reverted<br />

to pending status. “This action was based<br />

on allegations of irregularities in an<br />

Amateur Radio examination that you, as VE<br />

team leader, administered on March 18,<br />

<strong>2000</strong>, in Salinas, Puerto Rico,” wrote FCC<br />

Special Counsel for Amateur Radio<br />

Enforcement Riley Hollingsworth. The<br />

session was held under the auspices of the<br />

W5YI-VEC. Hollingsworth said the FCC<br />

would be requesting that Sanchez Colon<br />

provide specific information and<br />

documentation needed to investigate the<br />

allegations and to make a decision on his<br />

renewal application. The W5YI-VEC last<br />

April decertified all of its volunteer<br />

examiners in Puerto Rico and put its<br />

program there under the administration of<br />

the Arecibo Observatory Amateur Radio<br />

Club.<br />

amateurs killed were established at http://<br />

www.qsl.net/kd4syb and http://www<br />

.qsl.net/9a4sp.<br />

UK-CANADA CROSSBAND LF QSO<br />

COMPLETED<br />

Getting a leg up on the Transatlantic II<br />

LF tests planned for <strong>November</strong>, amateurs<br />

in the UK and in Canada completed a<br />

crossband LF-HF contact September 10.<br />

The contact involved well-known “LowFer”<br />

Dave Bowman, G0MRF, operating on<br />

135.711 kHz and John Currie, VE1ZJ, on<br />

Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada,<br />

operating on 20 meters.<br />

“Dave had a surprisingly strong signal<br />

into FN95, Cape Breton Island,” Currie said<br />

in an e-mail message to André Kesteloot,<br />

N4ICK, who’s involved with the Amateur<br />

Radio Research and Development Corporation—AMRAD—LF<br />

experiment in the US.<br />

Using Spectrogram software, Currie reported<br />

observing “weak dashes” from<br />

G0MRF just after 2205 UTC on September<br />

9. Currie said he had “solid copy” on<br />

G0MRF by 2245 UTC, and the crossband<br />

QSO was completed on September 10 at<br />

0008 UTC. “I could see every dot and<br />

dash,” he reported.<br />

Bowman says he was operating from a<br />

fifteenth-floor West London flat. The antenna<br />

was two sloping 250-foot long wires<br />

about 80 degrees apart. Grounding was via<br />

the building’s plumbing. Loading involved<br />

fixed and variable inductors. Bowman estimated<br />

maximum power into the antenna<br />

at 700 W, but at one point, he dropped his<br />

power to about 320 W and VE1ZJ was still<br />

copying. “Even allowing for the large antenna,<br />

I believe this shows that many UK/<br />

EU stations will be able to make the transatlantic<br />

path this winter,” Bowman said.<br />

Canada has not yet authorized Amateur<br />

Radio operation at 136 kHz, but some stations<br />

have been given permission to experi-<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 73


ment there. Larry Kayser, VA3LK, and Mitch<br />

Powell, VE3OT, completed the first two-way<br />

LF contact in Canada on July 22 on 136 kHz,<br />

using very slow-speed CW (dubbed “QRSS”)<br />

in preparation for TransAtlantic II.<br />

TransAtlantic II will attempt to span the<br />

Atlantic in both directions on LF. The tests<br />

are set to occur <strong>November</strong> 10-27 from<br />

Newfoundland. Details are available at<br />

http://www.rac.ca/vlftest.htm.<br />

AMRAD has been conducting LF beacon<br />

tests on 136.75 kHz from 12 Northern Virginia<br />

sites using the experimental call sign<br />

WA2XTF. Visit the AMRAD Web page for<br />

more information, http://www.amrad .org/.<br />

The ARRL is awaiting an FCC decision<br />

on its petition to the FCC for two lowfrequency<br />

amateur allocations.<br />

ARRL AND REACT STEP TOGETHER<br />

ARRL and REACT—Radio Emergency<br />

Associated Communications Teams—took<br />

some first steps together this summer. The<br />

ARRL Board of Directors in July approved<br />

a memorandum of understanding between<br />

the two radio organizations, and League<br />

officials were on hand for the REACT <strong>2000</strong><br />

International Convention in Kissimmee,<br />

Florida, later that same month.<br />

“REACT folks are dedicated to public<br />

NOTABLE SILENT KEYS<br />

GUILLERMO SCHWARZ, KP3S, SK<br />

service, responding dependably to cover<br />

emergencies, marathons and other charity<br />

events,” said ARRL Southern Florida<br />

Section Manager Phyllisan West, KA4FZI,<br />

who set up and staffed an ARRL exhibit<br />

table for REACT’s 25th annual convention.<br />

“They operate mainly on GMRS and FRS<br />

to avoid problems of unlicensed CB<br />

channels, and are excited about working<br />

more closely with hams.”<br />

West said REACT conventioneers<br />

snapped up copies of The ARRL Public<br />

Service Communications Manual at the<br />

ARRL table.West said she encouraged those<br />

not already licensed to get their tickets “to<br />

enhance their ability to participate in<br />

emergency communications.”<br />

While REACT has been associated<br />

primarily with Citizens Band in the past,<br />

the organization has broadened its focus to<br />

embrace amateur and other services. Convention<br />

chairman Walt Young called<br />

REACT “just another radio group that is<br />

doing the same basic job as ham radio<br />

operators” that provides emergency<br />

communications when and where needed.<br />

“The trick is to get various groups to work<br />

together,” he said.<br />

REACT International has a Web site at<br />

http://www.reactintl.org/.<br />

Former ARRL Puerto Rico Section Manager Guillermo M.<br />

Schwarz, KP3S, and his wife, Hildelisa, died July 29 after Schwarz’s<br />

single-engine experimental aircraft crashed while attempting a final<br />

landing approach at Wayne County Airport near Wooster, Ohio. The<br />

Federal Aviation Administration is investigating. The couple had<br />

flown to the mainland on vacation.<br />

Schwarz, 49, was Puerto Rico’s Section Manager from October<br />

1994 until September 1998 and had been serving as a Southeastern<br />

Division Assistant Director since 1996.<br />

Former ARRL Field Services Manager Rick Palm, K1CE, remembered<br />

Schwarz as an enthusiastic volunteer who inspired others.<br />

Puerto Rico SM Victor Madera, KP4PQ, called Guillermo<br />

Schwarz “an excellent ham, a good friend.” He said that Schwarz,<br />

who had piloted B-52s in the service, had only completed building the aircraft a few weeks<br />

earlier.<br />

In addition to the couple’s four children, survivors include Guillermo Schwarz’ father,<br />

William Schwarz, KP4EEB.<br />

ALFREDO LUCIANO, LU6DJX, SK<br />

World-class DXer Alfredo Luciano, LU6DJX, died August 7. He was 91. <strong>QST</strong> DX Editor<br />

Bernie McClenny, W3UR, described Luciano as “the top DXer from South America and the<br />

leading DXer outside of the USA.” First licensed in 1928, he was on the DXCC Honor Roll with<br />

384 countries confirmed (mixed). During the 1999 Dayton DX dinner, Luciano was awarded<br />

a special plaque in honor of his accomplishments.—Mario dos Santos, LW1EWY; Bernie<br />

McClenny, W3UR<br />

GEORGE D. “DEWEY” WILSON SR, W7HF, SK<br />

The ARRL’s most senior member has died. George “Dewey” Wilson, W7HF, of Aberdeen,<br />

Washington, died July 8. He was 102 and had been a member of the League and an active<br />

amateur for more than 70 years. “Besides being a tremendous Amateur Radio supporter and<br />

enthusiast, he was also the last of a local pioneer lumber family of Aberdeen,” said Bob<br />

Maxfield, W7LEO, president of the Grays Harbor Amateur Radio Club to which Wilson belonged.<br />

Wilson also was an active QCWA member. Born in 1897, he was first licensed as 7GW<br />

in 1913—although he admitted to a little bootlegging before that time—making him among the<br />

nation’s earliest licensed amateurs.—Bob Maxfield, W7LEO<br />

SECTION MANAGER ELECTION<br />

NOTICE<br />

To all ARRL members in the Arizona,<br />

Arkansas, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi,<br />

Montana, North Texas, Orange, and Wyoming.<br />

You are hereby solicited for nominating<br />

petitions pursuant to an election for<br />

Section Manager (SM). Incumbents are<br />

listed on page 12 of this issue.<br />

To be valid, a petition must contain the<br />

signatures of five or more full ARRL<br />

members residing in the section concerned.<br />

Photocopied signatures are not acceptable.<br />

No petition is valid without at<br />

least five signatures, and it is advisable<br />

to have a few more than five signatures<br />

on each petition. Petition forms (FSD-<br />

129) are available on request from ARRL<br />

Headquarters but are not required. We<br />

suggest the following format:<br />

(Place and Date)<br />

Field & Educational Services Manager,<br />

ARRL<br />

225 Main St<br />

Newington, CT 06111<br />

We, the undersigned full members of<br />

the ______ ARRL section of the ______<br />

division, hereby nominate ______ as candidate<br />

for Section Manager for this section<br />

for the next two-year term of office.<br />

(Signature___ Call Sign___ City__ ZIP___)<br />

Any candidate for the office of Section<br />

Manager must be a resident of the<br />

section, a licensed amateur of Technician<br />

class or higher and a full member of the<br />

League for a continuous term of at least<br />

two years immediately preceding receipt<br />

of a petition for nomination. Petitions<br />

must be received at Headquarters by 4 PM<br />

Eastern Time on December 8, <strong>2000</strong>.<br />

Whenever more than one member is nominated<br />

in a single section, ballots will be<br />

mailed from Headquarters on or before<br />

January 2, 2001, to full members of record<br />

as of December 8, <strong>2000</strong>, which is the closing<br />

date for nominations. Returns will be<br />

counted February 20, 2001. Section Managers<br />

elected as a result of the above procedure<br />

will take office April 1, 2001.<br />

If only one valid petition is received<br />

from a section, that nominee shall be declared<br />

elected without opposition for a<br />

two-year term beginning April 1, 2001. If<br />

no petitions are received from a section<br />

by the specified closing date, such section<br />

will be resolicited in the April 2001<br />

<strong>QST</strong>. A Section Manager elected through<br />

the resolicitation will serve a term of 18<br />

months. Vacancies in any Section<br />

Manager’s office between elections are<br />

filled by the Field & Educational Services<br />

Manager. You are urged to take the initiative<br />

and file a nomination petition immediately.—Rosalie<br />

White, K1STO, Field &<br />

Educational Services Manager<br />

REPEAT NOMINATING SOLICITATION<br />

Since no petitions were received for<br />

the Minnesota and North Dakota Section<br />

Manager elections by the deadline of June<br />

9, <strong>2000</strong>, nominating petitions are herewith<br />

resolicited. See the above details on how<br />

to nominate.<br />

74 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


PUBLIC SERVICE<br />

National Weather Service/ARRL Special Event<br />

Mark your calendars! On December 2,<br />

<strong>2000</strong>, the National Weather Service (NWS)<br />

and the ARRL will co-sponsor an on-theair<br />

special event from 0000 UTC to 2400<br />

(Friday night through Saturday).<br />

There are four main objectives for the<br />

National Weather Service Special Event<br />

(NWSSE): Most importantly, the special<br />

event stations will commemorate the<br />

contributions that Amateur Radio operators<br />

make during times of threatening weather.<br />

Second, it would create an opportunity for<br />

NWS personnel to meet Amateur Radio<br />

operators, and it would also give Amateur<br />

Radio operators an opportunity to examine<br />

NWS operations. Third, it will encourage<br />

NWS personnel to actually get on the radio<br />

(under the supervision of a control operator)<br />

and, hopefully, encourage them to acquire<br />

an operating license. Fourth, it will be fun!<br />

The NWSSE Web site has complete<br />

operating instructions, a list of participating<br />

NWS stations and QSL information. Log<br />

onto http://www.nws.noaa.gov/event<strong>2000</strong>/<br />

for complete details.<br />

Operating Event Guidelines<br />

The objective is for Amateur Radio<br />

operators at NWS sites to work as many<br />

other amateur stations as possible. If<br />

you would like to set up a special event at<br />

a National Weather Service office, it will<br />

be the responsibility of the local Amateur<br />

Radio club or group to provide equipment<br />

and configure your operating area with<br />

appropriate antennas. Please coordinate<br />

with your local NWS office, and register<br />

the station with Scott Mentzer,<br />

KB0WP, at scott.mentzer@noaa.gov by<br />

<strong>November</strong> 15.<br />

The NWS Special Event will take place<br />

in the General and/or Technician part of the<br />

bands. VHF operations are encouraged and<br />

repeater contacts are allowed. Most<br />

contacts will occur on the bands between<br />

80 and 10 meters. Entities that utilize<br />

specific frequencies on a routine basis (eg,<br />

National Hurricane Center) are encouraged<br />

to use those frequencies during the event.<br />

The actual frequency from which a NWSSE<br />

station operates is left to the local<br />

operator’s discretion. (The ARRL 160-<br />

Meter Contest will run during the NWS<br />

Special Event. Therefore, special event<br />

stations will not operate on that band.)<br />

Although phone will be the primary<br />

operating mode, event stations will be<br />

encouraged to use the following digital<br />

modes: CW, PSK-31, APRS and RTTY.<br />

NWS Special Event operators will append<br />

“NWS” to the end of their call signs (eg,<br />

W0A/NWS) when using digital modes. The<br />

QSO exchange will include call sign, signal<br />

report, location, and a one or two-word<br />

description of the weather occurring at your<br />

site (“sunny,” “partly cloudy,” “windy,”<br />

etc).<br />

Certificate with Endorsements<br />

The National Weather Service Special<br />

Event will award a certificate with<br />

endorsements. An endorsement is basically<br />

a sticker that is placed on the certificate if<br />

certain goals are reached. To obtain your<br />

certificate, create a handwritten log of NWS<br />

stations worked and indicate the endorsements<br />

you are applying for. You may also<br />

link to the certificate endorsement log at<br />

this address: http://www.nws.noaa.gov/<br />

event<strong>2000</strong>/SpecialEvent<strong>2000</strong>.PDF.<br />

Enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope,<br />

and mail both items to:<br />

National Weather Service Special Event<br />

920 Armory Rd<br />

Goodland, KS 67735<br />

Here’s a list of the endorsements and<br />

qualifying criteria:<br />

Blizzard: Work 5 NWS offices in the<br />

northern plains<br />

Fire Weather: Work 5 NWS offices with<br />

fire weather support<br />

Hurricane Hunter: Work 7 NWS offices<br />

along the Atlantic or Gulf coast<br />

Hydrology: Work 7 NWS offices or<br />

River Forecast Centers<br />

Lake Effect Snow: Work 5 NWS offices<br />

near the Great Lakes<br />

Mighty Mississippi: Work 5 NWS offices<br />

with Mississippi River responsibility<br />

Monsoon: Work 3 NWS offices in the<br />

Southwest<br />

Noreaster: Work 5 NWS offices in the<br />

Northeast<br />

NWS Support: Work 3 National Center<br />

or Headquarter Offices<br />

Pacific Rim: Work 3 NWS offices along<br />

the West Coast, in the Pacific, and/or in<br />

Alaska<br />

Rocky Mountain: Work 7 NWS offices<br />

with mountain weather responsibility<br />

Tornado Alley: Work 7 NWS offices in<br />

tornado alley<br />

Digital: Work any 5 NWS offices using<br />

a non-phone mode<br />

What About QSL Cards<br />

In addition to the event certificate, a<br />

number of individual stations are offering<br />

QSL cards. A list of those offices accepting<br />

QSL cards can be found on the NWSSE<br />

Web site by clicking “QSL Card Info” on<br />

the menu.<br />

NWS contact: Scott Mentzer, KB0WPY,<br />

scott.mentzer@noaa.gov. Telephone: 785-<br />

899-2360. ARRL contact: Steve Ewald,<br />

WV1X, sewald@arrl.org. Telephone: 860-<br />

594-0200.<br />

COMMUNICATIONS FOR AN<br />

ENDURO<br />

By Ken Wilhoit, W4OCW<br />

Where did it all begin The request for<br />

communications for a Union Point, Georgia,<br />

motorcycle Enduro race began with a visit by<br />

Sam Shaw to a Kennehoochee Amateur Radio<br />

Club (KARC) breakfast. Sam’s request was<br />

special because his son had broken a leg in a<br />

previous Enduro, and had lain in the woods 45<br />

minutes before emergency aid could get to<br />

him. Sam next solicited our services by attending<br />

our hamfest with his Enduro bike and<br />

full safety gear.<br />

The Georgia Crackers Motorcycle Club<br />

sponsored the Enduro. Their members spent<br />

1500 hours laying out (using GPS units on bike<br />

handlebars) and clearing the hilly, forested<br />

trails on land measuring 2 by 4 miles. The digital<br />

data was downloaded to a digital USGS map,<br />

producing a topographic map showing trail location<br />

and incremental mileage. The result was<br />

49 miles of trails with a race goal of maintaining<br />

24 mph throughout the course.<br />

Rene Campbell, KF4ZYN, Ben Dasher,<br />

KE4YZX, Ian Gaffner, KG4GWR, Lee<br />

Gassett, KF4OLO, Charles Golsen, N4TZM,<br />

Dusty Rhodes, W8LJE, Marj Rhodes,<br />

N4REW, and Ken Wilhoit, W4OCW, drove<br />

for hours on a cold Sunday morning to the race<br />

site. They met with Sam to go over assignments<br />

and the trail layout.<br />

The 285 riders ranged in age from 16 to over<br />

70, and rode in 57 rows, five riders in each.<br />

They were released at one-minute intervals.<br />

KARC members leapfrogged along the course<br />

as the 25-mile long procession of racers progressed.<br />

The longest spacing between radio<br />

operators was 5 miles. As riders came to an<br />

operator they could report injured riders and at<br />

what mileage marker, so emergency medical<br />

technicians could go directly to the spot. One<br />

morning report resulted in rescuers arriving to<br />

aid a rider in 10 minutes. An afternoon report<br />

resulted in assistance within 5 minutes.<br />

The combination of the map and the communications<br />

expertise of KARC made a highly<br />

successful operation, and the radio amateurs<br />

received good training in emergency communications.<br />

Lots of riders said “thank you,” and<br />

that made for a pleasant experience. It was<br />

Rosalie White, K1STO Field & Educational Services Manager<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 75


excellent exposure for Amateur Radio. Just<br />

another public service You decide, and then<br />

volunteer for the next event!<br />

THOUGHTS ON A SUCCESSFUL<br />

ARES STRIKE TEAM<br />

By Rob Macedo, KD1CY, ARES SKYWARN<br />

Coordinator (NWS Taunton) and EC, New<br />

Bedford, Massachusetts<br />

I think the key requirement for any<br />

successful ARES strike team is that they<br />

should have an agency to serve. SKYWARN<br />

is very active in Eastern Massachusetts<br />

because we’ve crossed what I like to call the<br />

“hidden barrier.” Amateur Radio operators<br />

are viewed as “a necessity” instead of a “nice<br />

thing to have.” That, to me, is the hardest<br />

thing to accomplish. Our local NWS office<br />

demands more of us because we deliver, and<br />

that’s the key to getting a served agency to<br />

work closely with the hams. You must<br />

demonstrate that the benefit of ham<br />

involvement is superior to agency’s cost (in<br />

time and money) to mount an equivalent<br />

response. Whether it’s emergency<br />

management, Red Cross, Salvation Army or<br />

the National Weather Service, you must<br />

establish a need and get the agency to realize<br />

Public Service Stats<br />

Field Organization Reports<br />

Public Service Honor Roll<br />

August <strong>2000</strong><br />

This listing is to recognize amateurs whose public service<br />

performance during the month indicated qualifies for 70 or<br />

more total points in the following 8 categories (as reported<br />

to their Section Managers). Please note the maximum<br />

points for each category: 1) Checking into a public service<br />

net, using any mode, 1 point each; maximum 60. 2)<br />

Performing as Net Control Station (NCS) for a public service<br />

net, using any mode, 3 points each; maximum 24. 3)<br />

Performing assigned liaison between public service nets, 3<br />

points each; maximum 24. 4) Delivering a formal message<br />

to a third party, 1 point each; no limit. 5) Originating a<br />

formal message from a third party, 1 point each; no limit. 6)<br />

Serving as an ARRL field appointee or Section Manager, 10<br />

points each appointment; maximum 30. 7) Participating in<br />

a communications network for a public service event, 10<br />

points each event; no limit. 8) Providing and maintaining<br />

an automated digital system that handles ARRL radiogramformatted<br />

messages; 30 points. Stations that qualify for<br />

PSHR 12 consecutive months, or 18 out of a 24-month<br />

period, will be awarded a certificate from HQ on written<br />

notification of qualifying months to the Public Service Branch<br />

at HQ.<br />

934<br />

NM1K<br />

549<br />

K9JPS<br />

448<br />

N5JZ<br />

391<br />

K5NHJ<br />

318<br />

W9RCW<br />

290<br />

KK5GY<br />

280<br />

WA5OUV<br />

271<br />

KJ3E<br />

266<br />

KB5WEE<br />

248<br />

KF4NFP<br />

246<br />

KB2RTZ<br />

231<br />

KA2ZNZ<br />

222<br />

W7TVA<br />

221<br />

WD8V<br />

212<br />

KC5OZT<br />

207<br />

KK3F<br />

WB5ZED<br />

K7BDU<br />

206<br />

W6DOB<br />

202<br />

N2LTC<br />

198<br />

KA4FZI<br />

197<br />

W4ZJY<br />

195<br />

K7VVC<br />

193<br />

WA9VND<br />

186<br />

KB8ZYY<br />

KA5KLU<br />

183<br />

NN7H<br />

182<br />

N2OPJ<br />

178<br />

K9FHI<br />

176<br />

KC4ZHF<br />

AA4BN<br />

172<br />

K2UL<br />

171<br />

W4EAT<br />

WA3HJC<br />

N2RPI<br />

170<br />

W6IVV<br />

169<br />

KA2GJV<br />

168<br />

K6YR<br />

164<br />

W5ZX<br />

WB2UVB<br />

AD4DO<br />

163<br />

WB4GM<br />

N2JBA<br />

162<br />

W8YS<br />

161<br />

K5IQZ<br />

160<br />

W3YVQ<br />

KB2VRO<br />

76 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

K1JPG<br />

159<br />

N8JGS<br />

158<br />

KC4TLG<br />

KB2VVB<br />

157<br />

K0IBS<br />

156<br />

N5XGI<br />

155<br />

WA1JVV<br />

154<br />

K2DN<br />

WN0Y<br />

152<br />

K4IWW<br />

151<br />

WA4QXT<br />

N8FPN<br />

N8IO<br />

N2YJZ<br />

150<br />

W4CAC<br />

N7YSS<br />

149<br />

NY2V<br />

WA5I<br />

148<br />

WA1FNM<br />

WB5NKC<br />

147<br />

W0OYH<br />

146<br />

WB2ZCM<br />

K4SCL<br />

145<br />

W2RJL<br />

144<br />

K8GA<br />

KJ4N/2<br />

143<br />

KB2KLH<br />

142<br />

W5GKH<br />

KB5W<br />

KC2AHS<br />

141<br />

N8BV<br />

140<br />

WA4DOX<br />

W0LAW<br />

W7NWP<br />

KT4PM<br />

139<br />

W2MTA<br />

W7GB<br />

WO0A<br />

The Yavapai County, Arizona, Amateur Radio Club, in cooperation with Yavapai<br />

County ARES/RACES, provided public safety communications for the Prescott<br />

Frontier Days Parade on July 1, <strong>2000</strong>. Net control was conducted from their<br />

communications van, and the van itself was also an entry in the parade. District<br />

Emergency Coordinator and Radio Officer Lloyd Halgunseth, WA6ZZJ, is the driver.<br />

that your group is ideally suited to meet it.<br />

The steps to success are fourfold: (1)<br />

Work in parallel with one or two served<br />

agencies. Work toward using the tools of<br />

technology (e-mail as well as regular mail),<br />

and generate interest among local clubs; (2)<br />

Meld a working relationship between the<br />

agencies you choose to serve and the hams<br />

N9BDL<br />

NR2F<br />

W7ZIW<br />

AD4IH<br />

K4RBR<br />

138<br />

N2KPR<br />

N5OUJ<br />

W2EAG<br />

KT6A<br />

N5IKN<br />

KD4GR<br />

137<br />

KA1GWE<br />

AF4GF<br />

136<br />

WB2GTG<br />

135<br />

W0WWR<br />

AA3SB<br />

W3VK<br />

WD4JJ<br />

KC2DAA<br />

134<br />

KC4PZA<br />

W9YCV<br />

KC5VLW<br />

133<br />

KE4JHJ<br />

WX8Y<br />

W3BBQ<br />

N3WK<br />

KB2ETO<br />

N2AKZ<br />

132<br />

KC7SRL<br />

131<br />

AA3GV<br />

W9CBE<br />

130<br />

WA2YBM<br />

K9LGU<br />

AF4PU<br />

W7BO<br />

129<br />

N0SU<br />

WA0TFC<br />

WB2FGL<br />

W7LG<br />

128<br />

AF4NS<br />

K2GTS<br />

NN2H<br />

WA2UKX<br />

WB2QIX<br />

N5NAV<br />

K5VV<br />

NZ1D<br />

WD8DHC<br />

KB5TCH<br />

127<br />

K7GXZ<br />

126<br />

KK1A<br />

N3ZKP<br />

W1PEX<br />

125<br />

K8KV<br />

W4NTI<br />

W1ALE<br />

WX4H<br />

124<br />

WD9FLJ<br />

123<br />

AA8SN<br />

N2WDS<br />

W5CDX<br />

KF6OIF<br />

N1LKJ<br />

N7AIK<br />

122<br />

W3CB<br />

AF4QZ<br />

WA8SSI<br />

W2JHO<br />

KD1LE<br />

121<br />

W2FR<br />

AA2SV<br />

KE1AI<br />

120<br />

KC2EOT<br />

KG2D<br />

K5DPG<br />

N9TVT<br />

K4DMH<br />

KA7AID<br />

W2PII<br />

119<br />

W4UC<br />

K0PIZ<br />

KA4UIV<br />

N9MN<br />

118<br />

KI4YV<br />

NC4ML<br />

W4CKS<br />

K4MTX<br />

AA4AT<br />

N7DRP<br />

N3WKE<br />

KA2DBD<br />

AD6LW<br />

KJ9J<br />

W9ZY<br />

K9GBR<br />

KA8WNO<br />

K7MQF<br />

116<br />

KB0DTI<br />

WB4TVY<br />

W1JX<br />

WB2IIV<br />

AB4XK<br />

115<br />

WA8EYQ<br />

114<br />

K4YVX<br />

K5MC<br />

WD9HII<br />

K2VX<br />

W8SZU<br />

113<br />

K2PB<br />

WA4EIC<br />

112<br />

AF2K<br />

WD0GUF<br />

N8DD<br />

AG9G<br />

WB5NKD<br />

111<br />

KC6NBI<br />

W1QU<br />

W2AKT<br />

KB4DXN<br />

K4FQU<br />

110<br />

AB4E<br />

KO4OL<br />

K4BG<br />

109<br />

W4WXA<br />

K4WKT<br />

108<br />

KB2WII<br />

W2MTO<br />

107<br />

K8VFZ<br />

106<br />

KF4KSN<br />

105<br />

W4DGH<br />

104<br />

N5JUU<br />

103<br />

N1JBD<br />

102<br />

WI2G<br />

101<br />

KT4TD<br />

KE4VBA<br />

100<br />

WI8K<br />

W2LC<br />

99<br />

AA4YW<br />

KR4MU<br />

KE6MIW<br />

KC8CON<br />

W5AYX<br />

W5MEN<br />

KJ7SI<br />

W4AUN<br />

98<br />

W4XI<br />

KA2CQX<br />

97<br />

KA2BCE<br />

KG5GE<br />

KF5A<br />

KE4WBI<br />

96<br />

KB1DSB<br />

W2JG<br />

95<br />

W1JTH<br />

KC8HTP<br />

WA2CUW<br />

KC8GMT<br />

KC3Y<br />

94<br />

WA2GUP<br />

KE4GYR<br />

W5XX<br />

WB4PAM<br />

KG4CHW<br />

93<br />

W4CC<br />

N3WAV<br />

92<br />

KA4LRM<br />

91<br />

AA8PI<br />

W8IVF<br />

KE4DNO<br />

90<br />

WA4GLS<br />

W7QM<br />

WB2LEZ<br />

KD4HGU<br />

89<br />

KA1VEC<br />

AF4CD<br />

88<br />

AD4XV<br />

N1CPX<br />

87<br />

K8ZJU<br />

W4QHU<br />

N9KNJ<br />

KA2ZKM<br />

86<br />

WB4ZNB<br />

KB3AMO<br />

KE0K<br />

85<br />

WA8DHB<br />

84<br />

W4PIM<br />

K1SEC<br />

83<br />

W7VSE<br />

K8LEN<br />

K9ZVT<br />

KM5VA<br />

82<br />

WB9GIU<br />

81<br />

KC7SGM<br />

80<br />

WB4UHC<br />

WA4EYU<br />

78<br />

KC7SGL<br />

WA2YOW<br />

76<br />

K3CSX<br />

W2CC<br />

N5GG<br />

75<br />

WA1QAA<br />

W2GUT<br />

74<br />

K3UWO<br />

N4JAQ<br />

73<br />

KJ5YY<br />

N1SGB<br />

72<br />

KE3FL<br />

N1IST<br />

70<br />

AE4MR<br />

The following stations qualified for PSHR in previous months,<br />

but their call signs and scores were not listed in this column:<br />

(July) K7VVC 252, N2KPR 148, W2FR 109, KE0K 100,<br />

KB2WII 85. (Jun) K7VVC 202. (May) K7VVC 234.<br />

that is based on a business/real job model;<br />

(3) Have an activation structure that will<br />

activate regardless of whether the main<br />

coordinators are available and (4) Work<br />

Public Service events as practice for ARES<br />

activations. If you do these things over a<br />

period of time, you can build a program that<br />

will be solid for years to come.<br />

Section Traffic Manager Reports<br />

August <strong>2000</strong><br />

The following ARRL Section Traffic Managers reported: AL,<br />

AR, AK, CO, CT, ENY, EPA, EWA, GA, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY,<br />

LA, MDC, MI, MN, NC, NFL, NH, NNJ, NTX, NV, OH, OK,<br />

OR, SBAR, SC, SD, SDG, SFL, SNJ, STX, TN, VA, VT,<br />

WCF, WI, WMA, WNY, WPA, WWA, WY.<br />

Section Emergency Coordinator Reports<br />

August <strong>2000</strong><br />

The following ARRL Section Emergency Coordinators<br />

reported: ENY, EWA, IN, KY, KS, LA, MDC, MI, MN, MO,<br />

NFL, NLI, OH, SD, SFL, STX, SV (North), TN, VA, WCF,<br />

WNY, WMA.<br />

Brass Pounders League<br />

August <strong>2000</strong><br />

The BPL is open to all amateurs in the US, Canada and US<br />

possessions who report to their SMs a total of 500 points or<br />

a sum of 100 or more origination and delivery points for any<br />

calendar month. All messages must be handled on amateur<br />

frequencies within 48 hours of receipt in standard ARRL<br />

radiogram format.<br />

Call Orig Rcvd Sent Dlvd Total<br />

NM1K 775 1001 913 1 2710<br />

KK3F 19 1200 1160 40 2419<br />

WB5ZED 11 548 591 28 1178<br />

WX4H 6 500 510 13 1029<br />

K9JPS 0 465 43 452 960<br />

W9IHW 0 444 38 397 879<br />

W1PEX 0 138 712 12 862<br />

W5SEG 33 388 418 0 839<br />

K7VVC 19 376 422 8 825<br />

N2LTC 0 362 413 24 799<br />

N5JZ 298 66 308 12 684<br />

W6DOB 0 298 300 68 666<br />

N5IKN 0 329 329 0 658<br />

KA2ZNZ 22 299 239 71 631<br />

WA9VND 8 371 250 7 626<br />

K7BDU 33 306 269 6 614<br />

WA5OUV 0 272 56 276 604<br />

K5NHJ 242 61 273 21 597<br />

K6YR 0 283 302 0 585<br />

KK5GY 0 216 40 216 575<br />

W9YPY 0 259 293 0 552<br />

KC5OZT 2 242 200 62 506<br />

KA1VEC 10 237 245 8 500<br />

BPL for 100 or more originations plus deliveries: K9GU<br />

188, WZ7V 164, KJ3E 143, KB5WEE 125.<br />

PATTI HALGUNSETH


HOW’S DX<br />

Pero Simundza, 9A4SP, March 18, 1971 – September 6, <strong>2000</strong><br />

This month’s column is dedicated to the<br />

Amateur Radio men and women of the<br />

United Nations and their agencies throughout<br />

the world, and to the memory of a fallen<br />

hero: Pero Simundza.—Bernie, W3UR<br />

As we go to press<br />

I’ve received the sad<br />

news of the passing<br />

of Pero Simundza,<br />

9A4SP/4W6SP, a<br />

29-year-old Amateur<br />

Radio operator<br />

from Split, Croatia.<br />

Pero started working in East Timor in April<br />

<strong>2000</strong> for the United Nations High Commissioner<br />

for Refugees (UNHCR), very close<br />

to the East Timor/West Timor border. On<br />

September 6, <strong>2000</strong>, Pero was working in<br />

the UNHCR building in Atambua, West<br />

Timor, Indonesia when an angry mob attacked<br />

the building, killing him and two<br />

other innocent workers. The Associated<br />

Press reported, “Thousands of pro<br />

Indonesian militiamen and their supporters<br />

stormed a UN office in West Timor Wednesday,<br />

killing an American and two other foreign<br />

UN staffers and burning their bodies.”<br />

Amazingly, approximately 30 other<br />

UNHCR people made it out alive and were<br />

later evacuated from West Timor. Pero was<br />

a radio operator and had been working for<br />

UNHCR since 1992. In 1996 he was working<br />

in Mostar, Bosnia Herzegovina, and was<br />

active as T98P. During late 1999 Pero was<br />

stationed in Tirana, Albania and operated<br />

as ZA/9A4SP.<br />

Pero was not the only amateur killed in<br />

Atambua on that fateful day. An American,<br />

Carlos Caceres, KD4SYB, was also among<br />

the staff who died at the UNHCR building.<br />

Perhaps we should all take this time to<br />

reflect on the difficult situations that some<br />

of the DX operators who bring us great joy<br />

are faced with every day. The next time you<br />

find yourself sitting in your shack trying to<br />

work one of those rare or semi-rare countries,<br />

think about the people on the other<br />

ends of the pileups. Having been in East<br />

Timor earlier this year, I can understand<br />

some of the difficulties the UN personnel<br />

have to live with. They face long hours,<br />

sometimes without family, and they don’t<br />

get paid nearly enough. Amateur Radio and<br />

the world have surely lost a true humanitarian.<br />

Rest in peace, Pero Simundza. Our sincere<br />

condolences to the Simundza family.<br />

Pero Simundza, 9A4SP, operating as<br />

4W6SP from East Timor, very close to<br />

the East/West border.<br />

9A2AA<br />

CAPE VERDE ISLANDS—D4<br />

The Cape Verde Islands are a republic consisting<br />

of 12 volcanic islands in the Atlantic<br />

Ocean, most of which are inhabited. Praia is<br />

the capital city located on Sao Tiago Island,<br />

which is located at 14° 47' North 23° 35' West,<br />

just off the west coast of Africa. Ca’da Mosto,<br />

a Venetian navigator in service of Prince<br />

Henry of Portugal, discovered the islands in<br />

1456. Settlement did not take place until 1462<br />

by the Portuguese, who made it an official<br />

colony. Over the years both the French and<br />

English fought over the islands. In 1951, Cape<br />

Verde became a Portuguese overseas province<br />

and on July 5, 1975, became independent.<br />

There are about 350,000 residents on the<br />

islands, of which only three are Amateur Radio<br />

operators. Carlos, D44CA, is located in<br />

Mindela on Sao Vicente Island (AF-086).<br />

Angelo, D44BS, and his wife Zizi, D44BW,<br />

live in the capital. Old timers will remember<br />

working Julio, D44BC, who became a Silent<br />

Key last year.<br />

Spanish operators Manuel, EA8BYG and<br />

Jose, EA8EE/EA5CPU, have announced they<br />

will be active from the Cape Verde Islands in<br />

early <strong>November</strong>. The two will be operating<br />

The Cape Verde<br />

Islands are made<br />

up of 12 islands<br />

with some 350,000<br />

inhabitants, of<br />

which only three<br />

are Amateur Radio<br />

operators.<br />

from the home of Carlos, D44CA, on the Island<br />

of Sao Vicente from <strong>November</strong> 1 to 8.<br />

They plan to be active on all bands, including<br />

6 meters. Look for them to be QRV on CW,<br />

SSB, RTTY, PSK31, HELL, MFSK16, MT63,<br />

SSTV and PACTOR. IC-706 MKIIG and TS-<br />

440 transceivers will be used along with an<br />

A4S beam and a vertical antenna. The logs will<br />

be updated daily on http://www.qsl.net/<br />

dxgrancanaria/. QSL cards will be handled<br />

by EA8URL.<br />

TUNISIA—3V<br />

It’s hard to believe, with all the recent activity,<br />

that Tunisia remains on the 100 Most<br />

Wanted list. For those who still need this one<br />

you’ll get another chance this month as a<br />

mostly German team will activate TS7N from<br />

Kerkennah Island (AS-NEW). This is good<br />

news for both IOTA and WPX chasers as this<br />

will be an all-time new one for both awards.<br />

DL1BDF<br />

Mustapha Landoulsi (right), DL1BDF,<br />

hands a 3V8CB QSL card to Mr. Lzahar<br />

(left), director of the center for the new<br />

Boy Scout station in Tunisia.<br />

Bernie McClenny, W3UR 3025 Hobbs Rd, Glenwood, MD 21738-9728 w3ur@arrl.org<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 77


The team will be QRV from the island starting<br />

<strong>November</strong> 14 and ending on the 28. One of<br />

their goals for this operation is to concentrate on<br />

W6/W7, JA and VK. The operators include<br />

Andy, DJ7IK; Mustapha, DL1BDF; Andi,<br />

DL9USA; Tom, DL1GGT; Gunter, DJ9CB;<br />

Ruth, IT9ESZ; Britt, DL6BCF; Jun, JH4RHF;<br />

Ralf, DL3EA; Carsten, DL1EFD; Walter,<br />

DL6SAQ; Falk, DK7YY; Fernanda, I2RLX and<br />

Michael, DL2EBX.<br />

This IOTA DXpedition plans to do something<br />

a little different. They will display the<br />

status of their operations live on the Internet.<br />

The Web page will show the station number,<br />

frequency they are transmitting on, mode, operator<br />

call, beam direction, pictures and other<br />

comments. Check out their home page at<br />

http://qsy.to/ts7n/.<br />

While on the island they will participate in<br />

the CQ World Wide CW DX Contest as a multisingle.<br />

Before and after the contest they will be<br />

active on all bands from 6 to 160 meters on CW,<br />

SSB and the digital modes. QSL via DL6BCF<br />

either via the DARC Bureau, or direct to Britt<br />

Koester, Pützstr 9, 45144 Essen, Germany.<br />

MACQUARIE ISLAND—VK0<br />

Macquarie Island is an Australian sub-Antarctic<br />

island located 1,368 kilometers (850<br />

miles) southeast of Tasmania in the Southern<br />

Pacific Ocean. For those trying to find it on the<br />

map, it can be found at 54° 30' South 158° 57'<br />

East. The island is administered by Tasmanian<br />

Parks and Wildlife Service and is 34 kilometers<br />

long by 5 kilometers wide. Captain Frederick<br />

Hasselborough was credited as the discoverer<br />

of this remote island while sailing the Perseverance<br />

on a sealing<br />

voyage. He was the<br />

first to record the<br />

sighting of Macquarie<br />

Island on July 11,<br />

1810, and named the<br />

island after Governor<br />

Lachlan Macquarie of<br />

New South Wales,<br />

Australia.<br />

The island was<br />

mostly used for sealing<br />

until 1919 when<br />

seal oil production<br />

ceased. Many scientific<br />

expeditions have<br />

taken place on the island throughout the years.<br />

In 1948 the Australian government established<br />

the first permanent scientific station. The Australian<br />

National Antarctic Research Expedition<br />

(ANARE) designated the island as a state reserve<br />

in 1972, then renamed it as the Macquarie<br />

Island Nature Reserve in 1978. This makes it<br />

impossible for any DXpedition to operate from<br />

the 11th most wanted country on the ARRL<br />

DXCC list.<br />

The only operations from Macquarie Island<br />

must be those of ANARE employees. Over the<br />

past twenty or so years, minor operations have<br />

taken place from Robyn, VK0AE; Alan,<br />

VK0AN; Graeme, VK0GC; Graeme, VK0NE;<br />

Tom, VK0TS; and Warren, VK0WH. Typically<br />

the operators are usually the radio technicians on<br />

the island and stay for a 12-month stint.<br />

The latest operator is Alan A. Cheshire,<br />

VK0MM, who is the island’s Co-coordinating<br />

Communications Technical Officer. He arrived<br />

on Macquarie Island in <strong>November</strong> 1999<br />

and took to the airwaves as VK0LD. To celebrate<br />

the new millennium he changed calls to<br />

VK0MM on January 1, <strong>2000</strong>. Alan was active<br />

for 24 hours as AX0LD in late January. He is<br />

probably one of the more interesting operators<br />

78 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

we have seen on the air in recent years. All of<br />

his scheduled operations have been listed on<br />

his Web site at http://www.geocities.com/<br />

vk0ld/.<br />

Alan expects to leave the island on <strong>November</strong><br />

12 when the<br />

ANARE <strong>2000</strong> team departs<br />

and the ANARE<br />

2001 crew takes over.<br />

He has made more<br />

QSOs from Macquarie<br />

Island than all of the<br />

previous operators<br />

combined, although he<br />

would not say how<br />

many contacts he has<br />

made. QSL information<br />

will not be available<br />

until closer to the<br />

end of his assignment.<br />

If you still need this<br />

one, you’d better hurry.<br />

Alan says that there<br />

will not be an Amateur<br />

Radio operator among<br />

the 2001 crew. On top<br />

Alan A. Cheshire,<br />

VK0MM, has also<br />

operated as<br />

VK6CQ, VK8AC,<br />

A4XYF, VP8PT,<br />

G4EEL, VS5AC/<br />

V85AC and<br />

P29AC.<br />

of that Alan says, “It is now ANARE policy to<br />

discourage amateur operations from the Australian<br />

Antarctic stations (Mawson, Davis,<br />

Casey & Macquarie Island).” In the weeks that<br />

remain, look for Alan to be only on 30 meters<br />

CW and 20 meters CW and SSB. For those<br />

who were fortunate to work Alan as AX0LD<br />

on January 25 or 26, you may QSL to the Sao<br />

Paulo CW Group (CWSP), PO Box 1807, Sao<br />

Paulo SP 01059–970, Brazil.<br />

MAURITIUS ISLAND—3B8<br />

Sigi, DL7DF, and Tom, DL7BO, just can’t<br />

get enough of the DXpedition scene. In<br />

October they wrapped up their 5V7 and<br />

XT2OW operations. This month they will operate<br />

from the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius.<br />

No call was mentioned at press time, but more<br />

than likely they will sign 3B8/home calls. They<br />

plan to be active on 6 through 160 meters on<br />

CW, SSB and RTTY. Sigi and his operators are<br />

topnotch and they always put in a great effort<br />

on the low bands. Suggested frequencies are as<br />

follows: SSB—1847, 3777, 7077, 14177,<br />

18137, 21277, 24937, 28477 and 50123; CW—<br />

1824, 3511, 7011, 10111, 14011, 18087, 21011,<br />

24907 and 28011; RTTY—14087, 21087 and<br />

28087. A Web site has been set up at http://<br />

www.qsl.net/dl7df/. QSL to DL7DF via the<br />

DARC QSL bureau, or direct to Sigi Presch,<br />

Wilhelmsmuehlenweg 123, D-12621 Berlin,<br />

Germany.<br />

VIETNAM—3W<br />

Hans Glista, WA1LWS, says he is planning<br />

another trip to Vietnam this month. If all<br />

goes well, he will be on the air as 3W2LSW<br />

from <strong>November</strong> 9 to <strong>November</strong> 26 and plans to<br />

participate in the CQ World Wide CW DX<br />

Contest. As before, Hans will operate exclusively<br />

CW and make as many QSOs as band<br />

conditions permit. He is applying for operating<br />

privileges on 10, 15, 20, 40 and 80 meters.<br />

However, authorization for 80 and 40 may not<br />

be granted. We will have to wait and see.<br />

VATICAN—HV<br />

ARRL Contest Manger Dan Henderson,<br />

N1ND, will be attending the Pescara DX Convention<br />

in Italy on <strong>November</strong> 25 and 26. Before<br />

the convention he plans to spend a few days<br />

operating from the Vatican. He’ll be using<br />

HV0A, a special Jubilee <strong>2000</strong> call sign, around<br />

<strong>November</strong> 22 to 24. Look for him mostly on<br />

SSB with some CW on all the bands, but mostly<br />

10, 15 and 20 meters. QSL via IK0FVC.<br />

ALSO THIS MONTH…<br />

<strong>November</strong> 4 and 5 Amateur Radio operators<br />

from South Korea will be attending the HL DX<br />

Convention in Cheonan (130 km south of Seoul).<br />

One of the topics will be a talk of a future operation<br />

with their DX brothers and sisters in<br />

Pyongyang. They anticipate some 150 DXers<br />

from HL. DXCC Field checking will be done<br />

also. For more information contact Lee,<br />

DS1BHE, by e-mail at centaurs@hitel.net. This<br />

year’s SEANET Convention will be held on<br />

<strong>November</strong> 17 through 19 in Pattaya, Thailand.<br />

Those interested may contact Ray Gerrard, HS0/<br />

G3NOM by e-mail at g3nom@ibm.net, or by<br />

writing to PO Box 1300, Bangkok 10112, Thailand.<br />

The CQ World Wide CW DX Contest will<br />

be held on <strong>November</strong> 25 and 26. Keep an ear on<br />

the bands starting around <strong>November</strong> 19 for contest<br />

DXpeditions to start testing their equipment<br />

and antennas. This is one of the best contests for<br />

working DX, and so is the week prior! Watch<br />

your favorite DX bulletin for more contest<br />

DXpeditions.<br />

W5 QSL BUREAU ON THE INTERNET<br />

Remember hearing people on the air saying<br />

the Internet would be the end of Amateur Radio.<br />

Boy, were they wrong! In fact, it’s actually enhanced<br />

the hobby. One of those enhancements is<br />

the W5 QSL Bureau on-line. Yep, the members<br />

of the Magnolia DX Association (MDXA) have<br />

thrown out the gauntlet at http://www.mdxa<br />

.org/buro.html. If you’re a W5 and on the<br />

Internet, this is not new news to you, but those of<br />

us not in W5 land should see what these guys<br />

have done. Just like most of the other US QSL<br />

bureaus, the W5 QSL bureau has 26 sorters, one<br />

for each letter, and all with e-mail. 20 of the sorters<br />

have databases that are available on-line, listing<br />

the calls of the stations they are responsible<br />

for, the cards they are holding, the envelopes on<br />

file, the last mailing, and additional information.<br />

The site has all the information needed to claim<br />

cards, QSL bureau tips, monthly statistics and<br />

even a complaint department. Hats off to the guys<br />

and gals in the MDXA.<br />

ARRL OUTGOING QSL SERVICE<br />

Just a reminder that all QSL cards going to<br />

the ARRL Outgoing QSL Service must be<br />

sorted in alphabetical order by country prefix<br />

& the correct fee enclosed. Full details can be<br />

obtained at http://www.arrl.org/qsl/qslout<br />

.html, or in the September <strong>2000</strong> issue of <strong>QST</strong><br />

page 67, or by writing the ARRL.<br />

DXCC MILLENNIUM AWARD<br />

This is just a reminder concerning the DXCC<br />

<strong>2000</strong> Millennium Award, which is available to<br />

anyone working 100 DXCC entities on the<br />

ARRL DXCC List this year. No cards are<br />

needed for this separate and distinct award. For<br />

complete details check out the December 1999<br />

issue of <strong>QST</strong>, page 47. Applications can be obtained<br />

on-line at http://www.arrl.org/awards/<br />

dxcc, or by writing the ARRL.<br />

WRAP UP<br />

This month’s column could not have<br />

been possible without the help of D44BS,<br />

DJ7UC, DL1BDF, DL7DF, EA8EE, G3NOM,<br />

N1ND, N5FG, T93Y, The Daily DX, VK0MM,<br />

WA1LWS and WC7N. Please keep sending<br />

those newsletters, pictures and DX information.<br />

Until next month, see you in the pileups!—<br />

Bernie, W3UR


VHF in China<br />

THE WORLD ABOVE 50 MHZ<br />

China is an immense country halfway<br />

around the globe, with an area greater than<br />

the 48 United States and a population of<br />

more than 1.2 billion. Amateur Radio in<br />

China has a long history, stretching back<br />

more than sixty years, but during the past<br />

decade, activity has increased noticeably on<br />

all bands, including VHF.<br />

Like many other areas of Chinese life,<br />

Amateur Radio was transformed during the<br />

reforms of the early 1990s. One significant<br />

change has been the licensing of private<br />

home stations for the first time in many<br />

years. By the end of 1999, there were 850<br />

individual stations and as many licensed<br />

operators in China, along with 140 club stations<br />

(BY prefixes). With prior authorization,<br />

foreign Radio Amateurs may operate<br />

club stations only, and several Americans<br />

have done so in recent years. It is now common<br />

enough to hear Chinese calls on all the<br />

HF bands, and there is growing interest in<br />

VHF as well.<br />

Chinese amateurs in each of three license<br />

classes (BA, BD and BG prefixes)<br />

have access to the 6- and 2-meter, 70- and<br />

23-cm bands. (See Table 1 for details.) Sixmeter<br />

operation is generally permitted only<br />

in the southernmost province, Guangdong<br />

(with its population of 60 million), largely<br />

due to the continued presence of television<br />

broadcasting near 49.750 MHz elsewhere<br />

in the country.<br />

About 10 stations have been active on<br />

6-meter SSB/CW from Guangdong in recent<br />

years, with a few others reported occasionally<br />

from other provinces.<br />

Guangdong call signs include the number<br />

“7” with suffixes beginning with the letters<br />

I through P, such as BA7JG, BD7IB<br />

and BG7LP. Any other 6-meter operations<br />

presumably have special permission. BI4X<br />

and similar calls with the BI prefix are reserved<br />

for special island expeditions, some<br />

of which have included 6-meter stations.<br />

The most active 6-meter operator in all<br />

of China is probably Mars Liu, BG7OH, of<br />

Shenzhen. Liu operates primarily on SSB<br />

using a JRC JST-245 and a 4-element<br />

6-meter Yagi perched on the roof of his<br />

seven-story apartment building. In little<br />

more than two years of operating, Liu has<br />

already accumulated 40 DXCC entities,<br />

including such rare catches as 9N6CT,<br />

A45ZN, EY8CQ and S21YJ. He can also<br />

be found on 28.330 MHz using a 3-element<br />

Yagi, but Liu’s license does not allow him<br />

Mars Liu, BG7OH, welcomed W3EP, the first overseas foreign Radio Amateur ever<br />

to visit his station in Shenzhen, on July 1. Liu has been the most active of the<br />

dozen or so 6-meter operators in China. Several enthusiastic 6-meter operators<br />

from Hong Kong kindly accompanied me on this visit. From left to right are VR2IL,<br />

BG7OH, VR2XMT, W3EP, VR2XRW and VR2PM. For more photos, set your browser to<br />

http://www.qsl.net/vr2dxa/w3ep.htm.<br />

to operate on 28.885, the 6-meter liaison<br />

frequency.<br />

Two-meter activity is just getting started<br />

in China. Apparently, there are no FM repeaters,<br />

although Chinese Radio Amateurs<br />

sometimes show up on the Hong Kong<br />

machines. BY4BJA has been reported on<br />

AO10, and further interest in satellites may<br />

provide an avenue to expand SSB/CW activities<br />

on the higher VHF bands. During<br />

spring 1998, the club station BY1QH (with<br />

the aid of SM0KAK) made quite a number<br />

of 2-meter moonbounce contacts, and this<br />

activity may have inspired some continuing<br />

interest in EME.<br />

Hong Kong<br />

Hong Kong and the New Territories,<br />

with a population of about seven million,<br />

have constituted a Special Administrative<br />

This Month<br />

<strong>November</strong> 17-18<br />

<strong>November</strong> 19<br />

<strong>November</strong> 18-19<br />

Leonids meteor<br />

shower peaks<br />

Very good EME<br />

conditions<br />

ARRL EME Contest<br />

(second weekend)<br />

Region of China since 1997. Hong Kong<br />

has about 1500 licensed radio amateurs and<br />

a well-established tradition of VHF activity.<br />

The Hong Kong Amateur Radio DX<br />

Association (HARDXA) provides the primary<br />

focus for organized VHF activity. See<br />

the HARDXA Web site at http://www<br />

.qsl.net/vr2dxa/.<br />

At least two dozen operators are active<br />

on 6-meter SSB and CW, including VR2IL,<br />

VR2PM, VR2LC, VR2EQ, VR2XMT,<br />

VR2XMQ, VR2XRW and VR2ZYJ. Typical<br />

stations run 150 W and 5-element Yagis,<br />

although VHF operating conditions are often<br />

hampered by crowded conditions, hilly<br />

local topography, many tall buildings and<br />

urban RFI problems. Six-meter operators<br />

follow the Japanese DX Packet Cluster<br />

spots, but they sometimes feel lost in the<br />

huge pileups of Japanese stations during<br />

openings to East Asia. Nevertheless, they<br />

are eager DXers, and most of them are still<br />

looking forward to their first contacts with<br />

Europe and North America. The VR2SIX<br />

beacon runs 10 W to a 1 /2λ vertical on<br />

50.075 MHz.<br />

Local activity on 2 meters is even more<br />

popular, aided by four FM repeaters and<br />

two packet digipeaters. There is even some<br />

VR2IL PHOTO<br />

Emil Pocock, W3EP Box 100, Lebanon, CT 06249 (Voice 860-642-4347, fax 860-594-0259) w3ep@arrl.org<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 79


2-meter FM DXing. Taiwanese 2-meter FM<br />

operators sometimes make the 700 km<br />

stretch to Hong Kong repeaters via tropospheric<br />

paths across the South China Sea.<br />

These contacts provide Hong Kong operators<br />

with some DX excitement and<br />

propagation news, especially concerning<br />

conditions to Japan.<br />

Two-meter SSB and CW activity has<br />

been modest, primarily due to Hong Kong’s<br />

relative isolation and challenging operating<br />

conditions. HARDXA members have<br />

set up a VHF Field Day-style station on the<br />

relative isolation of Tate’s Cairn, just north<br />

of Kowloon. From there, they participate<br />

in the annual Two Meter SSB Whole Country<br />

Migration Communication and the Pan-<br />

Asian 2-Meter SSB Propagation Test.<br />

VHFers in Japan, Russia, Korea, China,<br />

Taiwan, Australia, the Philippines, as well<br />

as Hong Kong, participate in these events.<br />

In the 26th running of the Whole Country<br />

Migration Communication this past<br />

July, for example, the HARDXA station<br />

VR2K heard nothing beyond Hong Kong<br />

on 2 meters, but Taiwanese stations made a<br />

flurry of 2-meter sporadic-E contacts into<br />

Japan. VR2K had to settle for 150 QSOs<br />

via 6-meter E-skip to Japan and Korea. For<br />

more information and photos of the activities<br />

from Hong Kong perspective, browse<br />

the HARDXA Web site.<br />

Several operators, including Charlie Ho,<br />

VR2XMT, and Steve Beesley, VR2XMQ,<br />

have 2 meter and 70 cm SSB/CW equipment<br />

set up at home primarily for satellite<br />

work, but they are willing to use their stations<br />

for terrestrial contacts and even EME.<br />

One additional problem is that 2-meter<br />

weak-signal activity in both Hong Kong<br />

and China has been frustrated by interference<br />

from pagers in the low end of the band.<br />

Despite the difficulties, both Charlie and<br />

Steve are keen to expand their VHF horizons.<br />

What big gun will give them their first<br />

EME contacts<br />

Taiwan<br />

There is also significant VHF activity<br />

from Taiwan, the island nation of 22 million<br />

population and 68,000 licensed radio<br />

amateurs 150 km from the Chinese mainland.<br />

Several Taiwanese stations, including<br />

BX2AB, BO2YA, BX4AG and BM6ADL<br />

have been active on 6 meters during the past<br />

several years. The Taiwanese maintain a<br />

number of 2-meter repeaters, and many<br />

operators have FM equipment. BV3CE and<br />

BV1AL have also been active on the satellites,<br />

especially AO10, but there is only a<br />

modest amount SSB/CW activity on the<br />

band.<br />

Sporadic-E has provided the greatest DX<br />

opportunities for Taiwan 2-meter operators.<br />

In addition to successes during the 26th<br />

Whole Country Migration Communication,<br />

80 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Table 1<br />

VHF/UHF Allocations in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan<br />

Band China Hong Kong Taiwan<br />

6 m 50.000—50.100* 50.050—51.500 50.000—50.012.5<br />

50.100—54.000 52.025—52.110 50.110—50.122.5<br />

2 m 144.000—144.100* 144.000—146.000 144.000—146.000<br />

144.100—148.000<br />

70 cm 430.000—430.100* 430.000—431.000 430.000—432.000<br />

430.100—440.000 435.000—436.000<br />

437.000—437.200<br />

23 cm 1260.000—1300.000 None 1260.000—1265.000<br />

*CW only. China has exclusive subbands for satellite and television in the 2m, 70 cm,<br />

and 23 cm bands. Hong Kong also has allocations at 5 cm (5.725—5.850 GHz), 12<br />

mm (22.00—24.25 GHz), 6 mm (47.0—47.2 GHz), 4 mm (75.5—76.0 and 76.0—81.0<br />

GHz), and 2 mm (142.0—144.0 GHz). Taiwan also has an allocation at 13 cm (2.440—<br />

2.450 GHz).<br />

BW0VHF made 21 QSOs with Japan during<br />

an E-skip opening on June 3, according<br />

to Hatsuo Yoshida, JA1VOK. Hatsuo’s<br />

2-meter contact with BW0VHF during that<br />

opening was his first with Taiwan, completed<br />

over an respectable 2100-km path.<br />

Macau<br />

There are relatively few active stations<br />

in Macau, a Special Administrative Region<br />

of China since 1999, located 60 km west<br />

of Hong Kong. Aside from local 2-meter<br />

FM activity, there have been few sustained<br />

VHF operations from this enclave of not<br />

quite half a million. XX9TSS, XX9TRR<br />

and XX9TVP have made 6-meter contacts<br />

recently, but Hong Kong VHFers are under<br />

the impression that much of the 6 meter<br />

activity over the past dozen years has been<br />

by foreign visitors.<br />

Prospects<br />

Long-term prospects for VHF and UHF<br />

in China are good, especially as the number<br />

of radio amateurs in China is bound to<br />

increase. Current band allocations through<br />

23 cm are sufficient to support many different<br />

activities, including FM and FM repeaters,<br />

television, digital modes, satellite,<br />

EME and weak-signal DX. Stations capable<br />

of making worldwide SSB/CW contacts<br />

through Earth satellites hold special promise,<br />

as they can also be used to take advantage<br />

of favorable terrestrial propagation and<br />

even to complete EME contacts.<br />

The highest incidence of sporadic-E<br />

propagation anywhere in the world occurs<br />

over Southeast Asia, ideally situated for stations<br />

in China and surrounding countries.<br />

There are good indications that tropospheric<br />

ducting is common across the South<br />

China Sea, perhaps supporting contacts into<br />

the 3000-km range from China as far as the<br />

Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and even<br />

Indonesia. The possibilities of VHF ducting<br />

across the Pacific to Guam (over<br />

3000 km) and even farther may be<br />

comparable to the California–Hawaii path.<br />

Perhaps in the near future we will be<br />

reading about extraordinary VHF and UHF<br />

activity from China, with its huge population,<br />

vast area and a nearly ideal geographic<br />

location to take advantage of a variety of<br />

DX propagation modes. Many thanks to<br />

BG7OH, VR2XMT, VR2XMQ, VR2IL and<br />

JA1VOK for their generous help in answering<br />

questions and providing information for<br />

this article.<br />

ON THE BANDS<br />

August is normally a transitional month<br />

for VHF propagation modes, especially during<br />

solar-cycle peaks. Sporadic-E declines<br />

from its long summer season just as tropospheric<br />

ducting becomes more widespread.<br />

There is a greater chance for aurora, auroral-<br />

E and transequatorial propagation as the<br />

autumnal equinox approaches. The reliable<br />

Perseids meteor shower completes the August<br />

menu. This August, there was a good deal of<br />

each kind of propagation to keep VHFers<br />

busy. Indeed, on August 12, large areas of the<br />

country experienced aurora, auroral E, tropospheric<br />

ducting and meteor scatter simultaneously.<br />

In addition to calls mentioned in the summaries,<br />

many thanks to WA2EZG, WB2AMU,<br />

WV2V, K3IB, KU4WW, N5TIF, W7GJ,<br />

W8RU, KB7WW and XE2EED for their valuable<br />

reports. Dates and times are all UTC.<br />

Six Meter DX<br />

A mixture of late-season sporadic-E to<br />

Europe and a number of surprisingly earlyseason<br />

north-south F-layer contacts provided<br />

DX thrills for August. At the same time,<br />

Europeans were already making great runs<br />

into Africa, the adjacent Indian Ocean and<br />

even to South America. Activity in the<br />

western Pacific also picked up as August progressed.<br />

All this occurred about a month earlier<br />

than in previous peak-sunspot years.<br />

Stations as widely scattered as KQ1V<br />

(FN43), N8II (FM19) and W9/VE2CDP<br />

(EM48) made a few sporadic-E contacts with<br />

Spain and Portugal on August 4, between <strong>2000</strong><br />

and 2120. This was undoubtedly the last opening<br />

of a most productive transatlantic E-skip<br />

season.<br />

On August 29 around 2230, Mick<br />

McManus, W1JJM (FN31), WB8XX (EM79)<br />

and N8KOL (EN80) hooked up with ZD8KW<br />

on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic. The


propagation mode was not clear, but it was<br />

probably a sporadic-E link to a dense F-layer<br />

region off the West African coast. Europeans<br />

were also working ZD8KW and South Africa<br />

about the same time. On August 30 at 1640,<br />

N5KME posted a contact with 3C5I (Equatorial<br />

Guinea) on the DX Packetcluster.<br />

Activity from the Pacific got an early start.<br />

On August 3 around 0140, VK3HK made a<br />

lone contact with W8JI/4 (EM73) and was<br />

heard by W3CMP (FN11). After 2345 on both<br />

August 3 and 4, VP6PAC (Pitcairn Island),<br />

worked K5XX (EM21), K5SW (EM25),<br />

N8KOL (EN80) and others in Ohio, Maryland<br />

and Virginia, at least. XE2EED, N6XQ and<br />

W6BYA worked ZL3TIC, ZL3FOX, ZL4WA<br />

and ZL3GS on August 20 between 2250 and<br />

2310.<br />

The biggest flurry of contacts came from<br />

South America, the usual source of early-season<br />

F-layer DX. Jose Carbini, LU6DRV, and<br />

other Argentines made widely scattered contacts<br />

across the US on the late afternoons of<br />

August 3 (New Mexico), 4 (Texas), 20 (Idaho,<br />

California and Arizona), 21 (Georgia) and 31<br />

(New England).<br />

Other South Americans made it into the<br />

US during the month. K5SW and K5IX<br />

(EL29) were among the lucky few to find<br />

CE3SAD on August 3 and 4. K5CM (EM25)<br />

reported HC8GR/b on August 28, but no live<br />

stations. YV4DDK heard KB4TEQ and other<br />

W4s on August 30, but no contacts resulted.<br />

PX2XB worked W3JO (FM29), W1RA<br />

(FN41), W3BO (FN20), N4MM (FM17) and<br />

several others on August 31 after 2300. This<br />

was all just a teaser for what undoubtedly has<br />

already been an exciting September and<br />

October.<br />

Sporadic E<br />

Six-meter operators enjoyed E-skip openings<br />

on August 4, 5, 15-18 and 22 somewhere<br />

across the US and Canada. The openings of<br />

the 4th and 5th were notable for double-hop<br />

conditions, especially between the W1 and<br />

W7 call areas. Several stations scattered<br />

through the Pacific Northwest reported C6,<br />

CO, XE and ZF stations on August 4 after<br />

0200.<br />

Two-meter operators also had opportunities<br />

to make E-skip contacts during rare openings<br />

on August 4 and 5. Shuler Ringley,<br />

KB4DFK (EM86), in southwestern Virginia,<br />

made three such contacts into southeastern<br />

Texas after 0100 on the fourth. Other reported<br />

paths that evening were Kansas to Florida, and<br />

Iowa and Nebraska to New York and New<br />

England states.<br />

Two meters opened again for sporadic E<br />

the next evening for more than two hours beginning<br />

around 0030. In general, activity<br />

seemed to move northward over the eastern<br />

half of the country during this period. Ken<br />

Reecy, AC4TO (EM70), in the Florida panhandle,<br />

ran 13 QSOs into Texas, Oklahoma,<br />

Kansas, Arkansas and Missouri after 0035. By<br />

0100, stations in South Dakota, Minnesota,<br />

Iowa and Nebraska were making a flurry of<br />

contacts into all of the New England states,<br />

New York and New Jersey, including W0ZQ<br />

(EN34), who made 14 contacts with the Northeast.<br />

Dave Johnston, KQ1V (FN43), gave<br />

Maine to three happy Iowa and Nebraska stations.<br />

WB0LUX (EN04, South Dakota) provided<br />

a new state to W3EP (FN31) with a<br />

2200 km QSO, perhaps the longest of the<br />

opening.<br />

Aurora and Auroral E<br />

August 10 through 12 provided some of<br />

the most intense and widespread aurora and<br />

auroral-E activity since—well, since July 15-<br />

16. These events were spaced just about 27<br />

days apart, or one solar rotation, suggesting<br />

that the same active region of the sun was responsible.<br />

It is too early to tell as this was<br />

being written whether there was a third great<br />

aurora around September 8-9, just before the<br />

September VHF Contest.<br />

The August 10-11 aurora began late in the<br />

evening. The K index hit five at 2100 on<br />

August 10 and rose to seven by 0600 before<br />

falling throughout the morning. Russ<br />

Holshouser, K4QI (FM06), heard a few raspy<br />

2-meter stations peaking due north after 2330,<br />

but activity was low. W3EP made 10 auroral<br />

QSOs on 2 meters between 0035 and 0245,<br />

but none farther south than New Jersey.<br />

The main excitement that morning was the<br />

strong auroral-E opening on 6 meters, which<br />

became evident by 0200 and persisted through<br />

0630. Soon after 0200, Arliss Thompson,<br />

W7XU/0 (EN13), copied the OX3VHF<br />

(HP15), VE8BY (FP53), VE4/KG0VL<br />

(EO26) and VE8WD (DP22) beacons, as did<br />

many stations from New England across the<br />

Midwest. Big things were expected, and stations<br />

across Alaska, Canada and the northern<br />

third of the US did not have long to wait.<br />

Within the hour, VE9AA (FN65), VO1GO<br />

(FN95), VO1TJM (GN08) and other Maritime<br />

Canadians were running stations all the way<br />

to the West Coast. VO2/DL2KG (FO93), who<br />

had brought an FT-100 and a 2-element Yagi<br />

while on temporary assignment in Goose Bay,<br />

provided added excitement. His best DX of<br />

the morning was with VE7SL (CN88) at about<br />

4235 km.<br />

Simultaneously, KL7RG (CO35), KL7NO<br />

(BP54), KL7FH (BP51), NL7Z (BP51) and<br />

perhaps other Alaskans were working into the<br />

lower 48 states as far eastward as New England.<br />

Some long contacts included NL7Z to VE9AA<br />

(5335 km) and KL7NO to W3EP (5250 km).<br />

Aurora returned with even greater intensity<br />

the next evening. The K index was five at<br />

0000 August 12, seven at 0300, and then nine<br />

(the highest on the scale) at 0600. It remained<br />

at seven during the next three reporting intervals<br />

before declining to five at 1800. All this<br />

made for an intense geomagnetic storm, but<br />

unfortunately, auroral signals were not evident<br />

until 0430. Most operators had probably<br />

called it quits for the evening or were napping<br />

in anticipation of running meteor scatter in<br />

the early morning.<br />

What a surprise greeted those hearty<br />

VHFers who got on the air after 0500! Twometer<br />

aurora signals were strong as far south<br />

as a line from southern Utah, through Arkansas,<br />

to central Georgia. K4QI (FM06) was<br />

among those who got up intending to work<br />

meteor scatter, but ended up instead making<br />

75 aurora contacts on 144 and 222 MHz. His<br />

longest 2-meter QSO was with N0KQY<br />

(DM98), 1980 km distant.<br />

K7ICW (DM37) was delighted to work<br />

K0QMS (EN31) in Iowa at 0843, also over a<br />

1900-km path. “I was astonished,” Al wrote.<br />

“This was my first aurora QSO from my vacation<br />

get-away near Duck Creek Village, Utah<br />

. . . I can’t ever remember hearing aurora out<br />

here in the West in August! Dick’s signals<br />

were 55A and he gave me 53A.” Ironically,<br />

the pair duplicated the contact via meteor scatter<br />

within an hour.<br />

Others had equally good success on 2<br />

meters. VE2PIJ (FN35), who was making contacts<br />

as early as 0435, worked west to EN40<br />

and south to FM19. Herb Krumich, WA2FGK<br />

(FN21), made 50 QSOs west to EN10 and south<br />

to EM44. Dave Calvert, KB0BE (EM48), made<br />

19 contacts from central Missouri, most of them<br />

to more northerly stations. Likewise, nearly all<br />

of N0LL’s contacts from EM09 were stations<br />

at higher latitudes as far eastward as FN02,<br />

1700 km away. N0KQY (DM98, in western<br />

Kansas) found numerous contacts from Washington<br />

to Virginia. VE3AX (FN02) had a string<br />

of notable 222 MHz contacts with N0LL,<br />

KM0T (EN13), K5UR (EM35), W5RCI<br />

(EM44) and K4QI.<br />

The subsequent auroral-E propagation,<br />

which became evident for most 6-meter operators<br />

after 0745, was not nearly as strong or<br />

as extensive as the previous morning. Northeastern<br />

stations heard the OX3VHF and<br />

VE8WD beacons and made a few contacts into<br />

the Pacific Northwest, but Alaskans were limited<br />

to single-hop contacts to the West and<br />

upper Midwest.<br />

Perseids Meteor Shower<br />

Experienced meteor-scatter operators<br />

were not inspired by the <strong>2000</strong> Perseids. “Meteor<br />

scatter scheduling and random activity on<br />

SSB/CW seemed down from recent years,”<br />

according to W0AH’s comments on the<br />

Stanford VHF e-mail reflector. K7ICW wrote<br />

that “this shower was not one of the better<br />

Perseids that I have worked from Utah or<br />

Nevada.” Others attached similar comments<br />

to their reports. “The shower turned out to be<br />

a real dud,” according to N0LL. K0MQS<br />

concluded that “the Perseids was a disappointment<br />

again this year.”<br />

There may have been a reason for the<br />

noticeable decline in activity. As W8WN<br />

commented, everyone was working the strong<br />

aurora on the morning of the 12th and not<br />

paying attention to random meteor scatter. It<br />

was even possible that the aurora diminished<br />

the effects of meteor scatter, as meteors<br />

typically leave their ionized trails in the same<br />

region of the E-layer where aurora has its<br />

greatest effects on VHF radio propagation.<br />

Even so, persistent operators did made<br />

contacts on 144 and 222 MHz. K0GU, for<br />

example, completed four of eight schedules<br />

on 222 MHz on the morning of the 12th and<br />

found conditions best between 0730 and 0930.<br />

Shelby Ennis, W8WN, identified several flurries<br />

of activity to the northeast on August 12<br />

between 1415 and 1515, while Europeans reported<br />

good success during the predicted peak<br />

times around 0530 and 1000.<br />

The most interesting results may have come<br />

from the growing crowd using high-speed CW<br />

(HSCW) techniques. Computer-assisted highspeed<br />

CW makes it easier to use shorter pings<br />

and perhaps weaker signals, thus often cutting<br />

down the time necessary to complete a contact.<br />

It may also be easier to complete contacts near<br />

the theoretical limit of about 2350 km for meteor-scatter<br />

paths. Indeed, NJ0M and K9KNW<br />

completed a notable 2-meter contact over a<br />

2360 km path during this year’s Perseids using<br />

HSCW techniques. This may be the longest<br />

such contact yet reported.<br />

At least 22 stations also participated in the<br />

such contact yet reported. At least 22 stations<br />

also participated in the North American<br />

HSMS Contest, run just prior to predicted<br />

Perseids peak. N0KQY, N7STU and K0GU<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 81


completed the first-ever 222 HSCW meteor<br />

contacts during the contest, according to<br />

K0XP. Complete results of the North American<br />

HSMS Contest, sponsored by the Western<br />

States Weak Signal Society, can be found at<br />

http://www.qsl.net/k0xp/.<br />

Tropospheric Ducting<br />

Tropospheric conditions were quite good<br />

across the Mississippi Valley through much of<br />

August, as the central part of the country stagnated<br />

under a blocking high-pressure system and<br />

generally hot, dry conditions. Typical 144<br />

through 1296 MHz contacts were in the 1000- to<br />

1500-km range from South Dakota, Minnesota,<br />

Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas to western New<br />

York, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama.<br />

N0KQY made some of the longest reported<br />

contacts from his western Kansas location.<br />

For several hours after 0000 on August 19,<br />

Gary found many strong 144, 222, 432 and<br />

1296 MHz signals eastward as far as Ohio. He<br />

made 144 and 222 contacts with K8TQK<br />

(EM89) at about 1580 km and with AA4H<br />

(EM86) at nearly 1700 km.<br />

Favorable tropospheric ducting conditions<br />

continued right to the end of August, when<br />

K2AXX (FN12) worked 1600 km west to EN13<br />

on 2 meters. Randy Ebers, WA0I (EM47), who<br />

just got on 2 meter SSB/CW earlier in the<br />

month, worked all the way to western New York<br />

and Canada. Randy has accumulated 82 grids<br />

on the band in just one month of operating.<br />

NOTES FROM ALL OVER<br />

New 10 GHz DX Record<br />

Congratulations to DJ4AM and DJ3KM,<br />

who made a record-breaking 2079 km contact<br />

on 10 GHz this past June 15. According to the<br />

July/August issue of Israel Ham News, Dieter<br />

Doerfler, DJ4AM, set up his station on one<br />

of the upper floors of the Residence Hotel<br />

in Netanya, Israel (KM72kh). Adalbert<br />

Kaufmann, DJ3KM, operated from the Italian<br />

island of Lampedusa (JM65hm) off the North<br />

African coast. The pair was able to maintain<br />

their trans-Mediterranean QSO for about an<br />

hour.<br />

The Mediterranean Sea, site of the July<br />

1983 10 GHz record contact of 1666 km (which<br />

stood for 11 years), is well known for its strong,<br />

stable ducts. The pair chose their operating<br />

locations carefully and made lengthy calculations<br />

in order to orient their 60-cm dishes with<br />

the 1° tolerance required. Both used identical<br />

5 W transverters built and designed by DL1RQ.<br />

This contact broke the existing 1912 km<br />

record established in Australia during<br />

December 1994. It is likely a longer 10 GHz<br />

mark will be set before another six years passes,<br />

perhaps across the twice-proven Mediterranean<br />

once again, or from Hawaii to California.<br />

VHF/UHF/MICROWAVE NEWS<br />

Awards<br />

The ARRL Board of Directors selected Al<br />

Ward, W5LUA, as the recipient of the ARRL<br />

Microwave Development Award at its July 21<br />

meeting. Al has made notable contributions<br />

over the years in microwave circuit design,<br />

especially of receiver preamplifiers.<br />

At its July meeting in Winnipeg, the<br />

Central States VHF Society presented Steve<br />

Kostro, N2CEI, with its annual Wilson Award<br />

and named Kent Britain, WA5VJB, as recipient<br />

of the annual John T. Chambers Award for<br />

technical achievement.<br />

The Northeast VHF Conference honored<br />

Ron Whitsel, W3RJW (ex-WA3AXV) as recipient<br />

of its annual Tom Kirby Award at its<br />

annual August meeting in Enfield, Connecticut.<br />

Congratulations to all those honored for<br />

their dedication to the world above 50 MHz.<br />

FEEDBACK<br />

The most notable 6-meter transatlantic<br />

contact for the month of June was left out of<br />

Table 2 in the September column. On June 24<br />

at 1631, VE9AA made a contact with 9J2BO<br />

over an 11,530 km path. Similarly odd contacts<br />

from eastern North America to Tanzania<br />

and Malawi have been reported in previous<br />

years.<br />

NEW BOOKS<br />

A PHONE OF OUR OWN: THE DEAF<br />

INSURRECTION AGAINST MA BELL<br />

By Harry G. Lang<br />

Published by Gallaudet University Press, 800<br />

Florida Ave NE, Washington, DC <strong>2000</strong>2-3695;<br />

tel 800-621-2736; TTY 888-630-9347; http://<br />

gupress.gallaudet.edu. Hardcover, 6 × 9 inches,<br />

256 pages. ISBN 1-56368-090-4. $29.95.<br />

Reviewed by Steve Ford, WB8IMY<br />

<strong>QST</strong> Managing Editor<br />

◊ If you’re compiling a list of technological<br />

achievements pioneered by Amateur<br />

Radio operators, don’t forget to include<br />

teletype (TTY) terminals for the deaf—the<br />

forerunners of modern TDDs (Telecommunications<br />

Devices for the Deaf). As<br />

chronicled by Harry G. Lang in A Phone of<br />

Our Own: The Deaf Insurrection Against Ma<br />

Bell, the creation of versatile communication<br />

devices for the deaf was hardly a straightforward<br />

process. It’s a story of innovation and<br />

frustration that spans two decades.<br />

The late Robert Weitbrecht, W6NRM, was<br />

a major player in the early days of Amateur<br />

Radio radioteletype, or RTTY. He was<br />

instrumental in getting the FCC to expand ham<br />

RTTY privileges after World War II.<br />

Weitbrecht was born deaf, so he was<br />

well aware of the difficulties deaf individuals<br />

faced when attempting to use non-visual<br />

communication devices, such as telephones. In<br />

addition to his fascination with sending teletype<br />

over radio, he experimented with sending<br />

teletype signals over ordinary telephone lines.<br />

By the early 1960s, Weitbrecht had developed<br />

a dual-tone audio modem and an acoustic<br />

coupler to translate signals between his<br />

82 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

telephone line and his teletype machinery.<br />

Weitbrecht’s accomplishment soon came to<br />

the attention of Dr James Marsters, a deaf<br />

orthodontist who had also been exploring the<br />

idea of developing a better telephone<br />

communication tool for the deaf community.<br />

At the time, AT&T offered crude devices that<br />

relied on flashing lights or vibrations to<br />

communicate just three pieces of information:<br />

“no,” “yes” and “please repeat.” (AT&T also<br />

provided their TWX data service, but the cost<br />

was well beyond the reach of the average deaf<br />

person.) When Marsters saw Weitbrecht’s<br />

teletype setup, he was astonished—Weitbrecht<br />

had invented an affordable device that allowed<br />

printed text to be sent from one telephone to<br />

another. Recognizing the huge<br />

potential benefit to the deaf, Marsters<br />

and Weitbrecht formed a business<br />

partnership with wealthy deaf<br />

businessman Andrew Saks.<br />

The tale that unfolds in A Phone<br />

of Our Own: The Deaf Insurrection<br />

Against Ma Bell has all of the<br />

elements of a Greek tragedy,<br />

complete with a doomed hero.<br />

Initially the trio worked at converting<br />

cast-off teletype terminals<br />

for use by the deaf, but these were<br />

difficult to acquire because AT&T made it a<br />

practice to destroy old TTYs as a method of<br />

“competition control.” To make matters<br />

worse, AT&T claimed the right to terminate<br />

service to anyone who connected a non-AT&T<br />

device to their telephone line. It took a lawsuit<br />

brought by another company to finally remove<br />

this obstacle in the late ‘60s.<br />

Weitbrecht, Marsters and Saks attempted to<br />

convince AT&T to adopt their telephone<br />

teletype design for deaf customers, but the<br />

corporation steadfastly refused. So, they<br />

continued their conversion business and, under<br />

the engineering guidance of Weitbrecht,<br />

developed more sophisticated (and much<br />

smaller) solid-state terminal units.<br />

Their company, known as APCOM,<br />

enjoyed considerable success through the<br />

mid-70s, but it wasn’t to last. Other deaf<br />

entrepreneurs invented even more compact<br />

devices. Larger companies were focusing<br />

their attentions on the market as well. By the<br />

end of the ‘70s, APCOM folded.<br />

Harry Lang spins a story that is unflinching<br />

in its honesty. Although he praises Weitbrecht<br />

for his accomplishments, Lang stops short of<br />

elevating him to sainthood. Weitbrecht was as<br />

neurotic as he was brilliant, and his personality<br />

quirks often got in the way of<br />

business. Extremely awkward in<br />

social settings, Weitbrecht preferred<br />

to communicate with his partners and<br />

others through a constant barrage of<br />

written notes. These notes became<br />

increasingly bitter and paranoid as the<br />

years wore on. According to A Phone<br />

of Our Own: The Deaf Insurrection<br />

Against Ma Bell, Weitbrecht’s<br />

behavior was largely responsible for<br />

the ultimate demise of APCOM and<br />

the dissolution of the partnership.<br />

Weitbrecht’s prospects seemed to improve in<br />

the APCOM aftermath, but his life came to a<br />

violent end when he was struck and killed by a<br />

car in 1983.<br />

This book is compelling technological<br />

history, with a heavy “ham emphasis” throughout.<br />

You don’t have to be deaf to be intrigued<br />

by A Phone of Our Own: The Deaf Insurrection<br />

Against Ma Bell. On the contrary, you’ll<br />

come away with a deeper appreciation of<br />

this little-known struggle for equal<br />

communication access.


DIGITAL DIMENSION<br />

The Leonids Meteor Shower Packet Experiment Q&A<br />

According to the folks who predict such<br />

things, <strong>November</strong> 17-18 will be the peak of<br />

the biggest meteor-shower event of the year.<br />

As in past showers in past years, ham radio<br />

operators will try to bounce signals off the<br />

ionized trails that follow each shooting star.<br />

SSB and high speed CW are usually the<br />

weapons of choice when gunning for meteor-shower<br />

contacts, but over the years,<br />

there has been a growing number of hams<br />

who use FM packet radio to ping the falling<br />

space debris. One of the most active<br />

groups of packet pingers is PropNET, a coordinated<br />

network of hams using their computers<br />

hand-in-hand with their TNCs and<br />

radios to track the signals propagated by<br />

meteors. PropNET will be active during<br />

Leonids and if you are interested in joining<br />

them in their quest for space communications,<br />

read the following Q&A dialog<br />

written by their faithful leader, Ev Tupis,<br />

W2EV.<br />

Conventional wisdom dictates that FM<br />

packet is not suitable for meteor scatter<br />

work. Why bother<br />

The state of the art continues to evolve.<br />

Conventional wisdom once dictated that<br />

flight in “heavier than air” craft was impossible.<br />

Past successes prove that FM-based<br />

packet radio may indeed be used for longdistance<br />

communication via meteor-trail<br />

refraction at Amateur Radio power levels.<br />

Was the 1999 Leonids meteor-shower<br />

packet experiment a success<br />

Absolutely! Especially if you gauge success<br />

by learning lessons and using that<br />

learned knowledge to establish a vision for<br />

fine-tuning the process for future attempts.<br />

Dozens of participants announced the receipt<br />

of at least one DX packet attributable<br />

to meteor-trail refraction.<br />

I participated, but didn’t see any icons on<br />

my screen, yet my neighbor just 20 miles<br />

away received two DX stations. What gives<br />

Welcome to the world of meteor-scatter<br />

communications. The geometry of RF propagation<br />

by meteor-trail refraction is such that<br />

what you describe is actually quite typical,<br />

especially as operating frequency increases.<br />

That is to say, you will experience this phenomenon<br />

more on 2 meters (147.585 MHz)<br />

than on 6 meters (53.53 MHz).<br />

Of everyone that I know who participated,<br />

no one had a screen full of icons like what<br />

I saw in <strong>QST</strong>. Who were the lucky people<br />

with those screens<br />

No one person had the “screen full of<br />

icons” that you saw in <strong>QST</strong>. As noted in the<br />

<strong>November</strong> 1999 <strong>QST</strong> article, those maps<br />

were composites of all reported successes,<br />

that is, a pictorial representation of all reported<br />

successes.<br />

The frequency was clogged in my (urban)<br />

area. Why<br />

Urban areas typically have a higher density<br />

of hams to potentially participate in any<br />

activity. Couple that with a small, but very<br />

costly mistake that was made in the instructions<br />

for participating, and you have a very<br />

clogged frequency in high-population areas.<br />

One TNC parameter was inadvertently<br />

omitted from the directions. TNCs operate<br />

in a Carrier Sense Multiple Access (CSMA)<br />

mode, that is, they wait to transmit until<br />

after they detect that the channel is clear of<br />

other signals. Invoking the TNC command<br />

“FULLDUP ON” would have disabled the<br />

CSMA function and doing so would have<br />

opened the frequency significantly.<br />

What was the most common setup error that<br />

participants encountered<br />

Most folks that experienced operation<br />

problems did so because they failed to<br />

reset their TNC to the factory defaults prior<br />

to configuring it for meteor-scatter work.<br />

What kind of power does it take to assure<br />

success<br />

With no reported exception, 2-meter participants<br />

required a minimum 500 W of ef-<br />

The PropNET Web<br />

site (http://go.to/<br />

PropNET) has full<br />

instructions on<br />

how you can<br />

participate in this<br />

year’s Leonids<br />

meteor shower<br />

packet experiment.<br />

fective radiated power (ERP); 6-meter stations<br />

required a minimum 100 W ERP. This<br />

is the classic example of “more is better.”<br />

Transmit with as much RF power as you<br />

can muster. Small beam antennas seem better<br />

than omnidirectional antennas or large<br />

beams, as they bathe the sky with a broad<br />

pattern, while providing a fair amount of<br />

receive “gain” as well.<br />

What frequencies will be used for the experiment<br />

this year<br />

Almost everyone will be on 53.53 MHz<br />

and 147.585 MHz just like last year.<br />

How can I best stay in contact with other<br />

packet propagation enthusiasts<br />

Subscribe to an Internet e-mail list that<br />

caters to packet propagation enthusiasts.<br />

Visit the TAPR Web site (http://www.tapr<br />

.org) and subscribe to the PropNET special<br />

interest group (SIG). Activity peaks around<br />

meteor showers and during the summer tropospheric-ducting/inversion<br />

season. This is<br />

a low-volume e-mail list. Don’t worry about<br />

your e-mail box filling daily. Just remember,<br />

PropNETers and BEACONeters are<br />

pioneering experimenters. Come and learn<br />

right along with them!<br />

I cannot find my <strong>November</strong> 1999 <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

Where can I go to get instructions for participating<br />

in this year’s round of packet<br />

meteor-scatter experiments<br />

Instructions are available at http://go.to/<br />

PropNET or http://go.to/BEACONet,<br />

while <strong>November</strong> 1999 <strong>QST</strong> is available on<br />

the ARRL Periodicals CD-ROM 1999 from<br />

ARRL headquarters (http://www.arrl.org/<br />

shop/).<br />

Stan Horzepa, WA1LOU One Glen Ave, Wolcott, CT 06716-1442 wa1lou@arrl.net, www.tapr.org/~wa1lou<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 83


RADIOS TO GO<br />

The Good and The Bad<br />

In my May column, I asked readers to tell<br />

me about their “Radio Friendly/Unfriendly”<br />

vehicles. Response has been excellent, and I<br />

really appreciate everyone who took the time<br />

to send details (and pictures) of their mobile<br />

installations and experiences—good or bad.<br />

This month, I’m going to share a few of<br />

those responses with you. As you read, keep<br />

in mind that no attempt is being made to endorse<br />

or condemn any particular vehicle, radio<br />

or antenna. Just because someone else<br />

is/isn’t having RFI problems with a specific<br />

vehicle doesn’t guarantee you’ll experience<br />

the same results. As one reader aptly pointed<br />

out, not all installations are created equal.<br />

Remember, too, that some vehicles,<br />

though villainous generators of RFI, can be<br />

squelched with simple suppression methods.<br />

Others cannot. Some auto manufacturers<br />

are willing to assist owners in dealing<br />

with RFI/EMI problems. Some are not.<br />

Many don’t address the use of radio transmitting<br />

equipment, while some consider it<br />

unacceptable in any case. Bottom line The<br />

best approach is to thoroughly research the<br />

RFI/EMI issue before you buy a vehicle.<br />

After all, it’s your money!<br />

Tom Hybiske, K3GM<br />

I recently purchased a <strong>2000</strong> Chevrolet<br />

Impala, and 3 days following delivery, proceeded<br />

to “leave my mark” by punching a<br />

nice 3 /4-inch hole in the trunk and installing<br />

a Larson NMO mount dual-band antenna.<br />

I did some investigation before my<br />

vehicle purchase and found the Impala to<br />

be very antenna friendly. Open the trunk<br />

lid, and you will find oval cutouts in the<br />

ribs at both center and side locations. The<br />

trunk lid will easily hold three antennas.<br />

Also, the designers seemed to locate the rib<br />

cutout so that you can open the trunk without<br />

having the antenna tip smack the roof<br />

of the car; it just misses! I installed my<br />

ICOM IC-207H in the trunk and used the<br />

umbilical cable to connect to the front<br />

panel, which is located nicely in the<br />

Impala’s front console. I connected the radio<br />

directly to the battery using 8 AWG<br />

wire. There is a grommet in the firewall<br />

directly behind the engine. It’s quite low,<br />

but very accessible. I have had no engine<br />

computer or broadcast radio problems on 2<br />

meters or 70 cm at any power level.<br />

Michael Gollihue, KC8NRG<br />

I operate mobile from a 1999 Pontiac<br />

Grand Am GT1 with ABS, power locks and<br />

windows, power seats, 8 speaker CD/cassette<br />

radio and an automatic transmission<br />

with a 3.4L V6. I use an ICOM IC-2800H<br />

with a Larsen dual-band mag-mount antenna<br />

placed on the roof. I generally stay<br />

on 2 meters while mobile, monitoring the<br />

local repeaters and 146.52 MHz. There are<br />

no noticeable RFI problems during transmit,<br />

but I do hear a slight bit of noise on<br />

receive. I believe that poorly shielded coax<br />

and its proximity to the vehicle wiring may<br />

cause this. (A problem I plan to address.)<br />

The radio is installed under the center console<br />

in a large space beneath the radio, out<br />

of the way of heating ducts, in front of the<br />

shifter. The “head” of the radio is mounted<br />

above the rear-view mirror.<br />

I tried grounding a fan motor<br />

case and burned up the motor!<br />

It is obviously not meant to be<br />

grounded!<br />

Jon Zaimes, AA1K<br />

I started HF mobile operation with a<br />

Kenwood TS-180S in my 1991 Jeep Cherokee,<br />

equipped with 6-cylinder engine. I<br />

used a roof-mounted Pro-Am antenna for<br />

20 meters, switching to a steel whip for 10<br />

meters. The TS-180S was eventually replaced<br />

with an ICOM IC-706MK2. The<br />

Jeep was fairly quiet, but there was a definite<br />

increase in noise floor as soon as I<br />

would switch on the ignition (even before<br />

starting the engine). The noise was S2-3 on<br />

most bands, but on 15 meters it was the<br />

worst, perhaps S5-6. There was some ignition<br />

noise, but I was still able to work 100<br />

countries, mostly on CW.<br />

I recently purchased a new <strong>2000</strong><br />

Volkswagen Jetta TDI with a 5-speed transmission,<br />

ABS, sunroof and air conditioning.<br />

Since it’s a diesel, there are no spark<br />

plugs and no ignition noise! Now I have an<br />

extremely quiet noise floor; the S meter<br />

doesn’t move. I do observe slight RFI when<br />

I switch on the headlights. This produces<br />

some slight interference every few kHz on<br />

24 and 28 MHz. The car has daytime running<br />

lights, but the noise is only present<br />

when the light switch is on, which illuminates<br />

the panel and taillights. I haven’t<br />

experienced any incidents with radio transmissions,<br />

HF or VHF, causing any problems<br />

with vehicle operation.<br />

Dave, KD3PC<br />

I drive a 1997 Mustang, V6 electronic<br />

fuel injection with all the options—ABS,<br />

airbags, power seats, upgraded CD player<br />

(Alpine), power windows, seats and cell<br />

phone. I run a Kenwood TM-261 at 50 W<br />

with only one problem: a slight buzz that<br />

is picked up in the rear amplified speakers<br />

at high volume with no audio (ie, between<br />

tracks). No other problems.<br />

Bob, WD6L<br />

I have a 1997 Ford F350 diesel truck<br />

plagued with an S-5 or greater noise level<br />

on the 160-10 meter bands. After some detective<br />

work, I determined the noise is from<br />

the control unit for the fuel injection pump.<br />

The noise it generates sounds like a 60-Hz<br />

buzz. I contacted Ford and spoke to a ham<br />

there who says that Ford is well aware of<br />

the problem (they had to modify their<br />

AM-FM radio to make it work in the<br />

vehicle).<br />

Joe Shreve, WD5EGK<br />

I have a ’96 Ford Taurus SE with electric<br />

windows and door locks and the V6 engine.<br />

I run the Ten-Tec Scout with a Hamstick vertical<br />

and the matching coil and mount from<br />

the Lakeview Company. Normal operation<br />

is on 40 meters. I have lots of noise from the<br />

twin radiator cooling fans. I tried grounding<br />

a fan motor case and burned up the motor! It<br />

is obviously not meant to be grounded! A<br />

0.22 µF capacitor across the fan motor leads<br />

knocked down some of the noise, but it is<br />

still extremely strong on 20 meters and<br />

above, making those bands nearly unusable.<br />

There is also a hash-type noise that I believe<br />

is from the ignition. I grounded the trunk lid<br />

and tailpipe to the body using coax braid and<br />

that seemed to reduce this particular noise<br />

source by several dB.<br />

Perry Churgin, KB2MBE<br />

My 1996 Ford Windstar states in the<br />

manual: “No transmitters allowed!”<br />

QRZ<br />

It isn’t too late to send me your “Radio<br />

Friendly/Unfriendly Vehicle” info. As before,<br />

specify vehicle make and model, radios<br />

used, problems encountered and if/how they<br />

were solved.<br />

FAUX PAS…<br />

In the July column, I incorrectly listed<br />

the URL for the home page of the Mobile<br />

Amateur Radio Awards Club. The correct<br />

link is: http://marac.org/marac/. Thanks<br />

to Dennis, KK7X, for pointing out the<br />

error.<br />

84 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Roger Burch, WF4N Box 100, Island, KY 42350 wf4n@arrl.org


AT THE FOUNDATION<br />

Victor C. Clark Program Now Offering $1000 Minigrants!<br />

We’re happy to announce that the<br />

Victor C. Clark Youth Incentive Program<br />

(http://www.arrl.org/arrlf/vicyip.html) is<br />

now able to offer up to $1000 in matching<br />

funds to Amateur Radio youth groups. This<br />

successful program has, over the years,<br />

helped youth clubs acquire station equipment,<br />

fund community radio displays, purchase<br />

needed study materials or kits, and a<br />

wide range of creative Amateur Radio activities<br />

that have brought other youngsters<br />

into the hobby. The incentive part of the<br />

program is that which young people provide<br />

directly—hands-on, youth-led leadership.<br />

They learn, teach, and apply what they<br />

know to make hamming fun for themselves,<br />

while opening their minds to future possibilities.<br />

The seeds of productive, enjoyable<br />

careers are often sown in young carefree<br />

minds pursuing hobbies they love.<br />

Reginald Higginbotom, KB0UOJ, tells us<br />

about one such group: “Our program, the<br />

Centerville Area Amateur Radio Youth Program,<br />

was blessed with a $300 minigrant<br />

that was used for educational materials and<br />

equipment for our initial group (8 boys from<br />

the local Boy Scout Troop #32 and the<br />

Moulton Christian Church). We hope to<br />

eventually offer classes for both boys and<br />

girls and participate in Field Day and Bunny<br />

Hunting activities. The youth are very grateful<br />

for this grant.”<br />

(Right) Members of the Centerville Area<br />

Amateur Radio Youth Program include:<br />

Front row, l-r: Chaz Welch, Chris Welch.<br />

Middle row, l-r: Travis Knowler, Kyle<br />

Kauzlarich, Calvin Welch. Back row, l-r:<br />

Reg Higginbottom, KB0UOJ, and Randy<br />

Welch. Not shown: Michael Kauzlarich,<br />

Marshal Jay, and Chad Spurgeon.<br />

REG HIGGINBOTOM, KB0UOJ.<br />

JOSEPH GUTWEIN, WA9RIJ<br />

The Six Meter Club of Chicago was happy to<br />

celebrate with this year’s Six Meter Club<br />

scholarship winner, Alan Schwab, KB9REU.<br />

On hand for the festivities were: Ray Stair,<br />

W9CEJ, President of the Club; Ed Metzger,<br />

W9PRN, ARRL Foundation President; Larry<br />

Schwab, KB9REV, Alan’s Dad; Alan; Jim<br />

Novak, WA9FIH, Vice President of Six Meter<br />

Club; and ARRL Vice Director Howard<br />

Huntington, K9KM.<br />

Contributor’s Corner<br />

We wish to thank the following for their generous contributions to:<br />

The Victor C. Clark Youth Incentive<br />

Program<br />

Jackson County ARC (Mississippi),<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Hazel Orman, KC5RIB<br />

Rich Greenwald, N7GHE,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Len E. Graf, WA7JID<br />

Patricia M. Maier, in loving memory of<br />

Tom Maier, W1EQG<br />

Larry J. Shima, W0PAN*<br />

Dottie Shima*, in fond memory of<br />

Riley Dunn, W0CEL<br />

Charles J. Valek, Jr, KA6RRZ,<br />

in loving memory of<br />

Geneva A. Valek, KB6CRP<br />

Robert L. Happel, N4LGX,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

William F. Norris, Jr, W4IPR<br />

Charles A. Higgins, N3NQX<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Charles Cleveland, W2DII<br />

The Jesse Bieberman Meritorious<br />

Membership Fund<br />

Steel City ARC, Inc, in fond memory of<br />

Joseph E. Lawrence, N3VDL, and<br />

George M. Gaydos, Jr, KS3I.<br />

Kenneth D. Hopper, KD7KH**<br />

Barbara O. Hopper**<br />

** in fond memory of<br />

Samuel N. Barbara, W2KFI,<br />

Carl A. Felt, Jr, N2XJ,<br />

Ernest D. Kolb, N2EFR, and<br />

Harry C. Snyder, W7HC<br />

Claude Parker, KE6DXJ,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Howard L. Schreck, N6MFL<br />

PHD ARA Scholarship Fund<br />

PHD ARA (Missouri), in fond memory of<br />

Lile Corval, N0BBJ<br />

Edmond A. Metzger Scholarship Fund<br />

Richard D. Cox & Company for<br />

Paul H. Davis<br />

John L. Swartz<br />

The Tom and Judith Comstock<br />

Scholarship Fund<br />

Tom and Judith Comstock, N5TC and<br />

K5JRC<br />

The Paul and Helen L. Grauer<br />

Scholarship Fund<br />

Northwest Missouri Winter Hamfest<br />

(Missouri)<br />

The General Fund<br />

Emmett F. Freitas, AE6Z, in fond memory<br />

of Walter A. Mitchell, WB6ODL<br />

Ava R. Barnes, in fond memory of<br />

Robert W. Kelly, N4OBQ<br />

David R. Pennes, MD, WA3LKN,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

John B. Beck, KA0LGN<br />

Lee D. Kjelland, KD6KQR,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

George H. Griffin, WB6JNB<br />

Vance E. Rutter, W3HG,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Fred L. Fetherolf, W8YFK<br />

West Jackson County ARC, Inc<br />

(Mississippi), in fond memory of<br />

Hazel W. Orman, KC5RIB<br />

Harry A. Mills, Jr, in loving memory of<br />

Harry A. Mills, II, W4FD<br />

Anne J. Rogers, in loving memory of<br />

Clark L. Rogers, K4BGN<br />

James R. Hillier, N3VUW,<br />

in loving memory of<br />

Royal D. Hillier, W8NOF<br />

Rowan ARC (North Carolina),<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Marvin Clark, WA4IAU<br />

Bob Benwitz, N9JAX, in fond memory of<br />

Allan H. Utter, N9SOK<br />

Max T. Douglas, W4VJV,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Hardy T. Keller, WB5UBK<br />

Emerald ARS (Oregon),<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Byron Rainwater, KT7T, and<br />

Fred Guiol, WD4AER.<br />

Theresa Elmendorf, KA2CQZ<br />

Eugene Cummings, W9CMO<br />

John D. Baer, W6SL<br />

John V. Boehme, K4PRK<br />

Santiam Canyon ARE (Oregon)<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Cal Culbertson, W7SAN<br />

Frank Czaza, W9XZ, in fond memory of<br />

Roy Hawkins, WA9KEC<br />

David R. Anderson, WA3WZX<br />

Janice R. Scheuerman, KJ4N,<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Carl A. Felt, Jr, N2XJ<br />

Eric Shuler, in fond memory of<br />

Frederick Crum, W2NIA<br />

Mary R. Cantrell, in loving memory of<br />

Hazel B. Russell, WD5GLG<br />

Ruth Smith, in loving memory of<br />

Frank O. Smith, III, N4UVA<br />

Greg Harris, WB9MII, in fond memory of<br />

E.E. Slim Ellsworth, W9JMG<br />

John G. Troster, W6ISQ<br />

Friends of Al Duncan, W4BHF<br />

Dade Radio Club of Miami, Inc (Florida)<br />

in fond memory of<br />

Daniel Carlin, KE4YNC<br />

As received and acknowledged during<br />

the months of May, June, July and<br />

August.<br />

Mary E. Lau, N7IAL Secretary, ARRL Foundation, Inc<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 85


The Hallicrafters S-1<br />

OLD RADIO<br />

One of the best known and respected<br />

names in ham radio is Hallicrafters.<br />

Founded in 1932 by William J. Halligan,<br />

the company name was chosen as a composite<br />

of the two words: “Halligan” and<br />

“handcrafted.” “Handcraft Makes Perfect”<br />

was the first logo of his enterprise.<br />

In 1933 Halligan acquired the use of the<br />

bankrupt Silver-Marshall company’s name,<br />

factory, and most important, the use of their<br />

RCA license. With the help of Kendall<br />

Clough, former engineer from Silver-<br />

Marshall, they designed the first of a new<br />

line of ham radio receivers. First announced<br />

in the April 1934 issue of Radio News, the<br />

“S-1 Skyrider” sold for $39.95, about the<br />

same price as popular kit radios. A few were<br />

built in small production runs of 50 or 100<br />

sets. Each one was handcrafted and signed<br />

by the assembler.<br />

To become a successful manufacturer in<br />

the Depression, cost had to be kept to a<br />

minimum. The 4-tube circuit was a tried<br />

and well-tested design. It had one stage of<br />

tuned RF (using a 6D6), a regenerative detector<br />

(another 6D6) and two stages of resistive-coupled<br />

audio (a 6C6 followed by a<br />

42 in the output). The set was built in a<br />

small cabinet complete with a speaker and<br />

a built-in ac power supply using an 80 tube.<br />

The S-1 introduced several innovations<br />

into ham radio receivers. Most receivers up<br />

until then had plug-in coils. Alternatively,<br />

the S-1 offered band switching. Four positions<br />

covered from 1.6 to 22 MHz.<br />

Micro-vernier, anti-backlash tuning was<br />

introduced with a reduction ratio of 18:1.<br />

Tuning was accomplished by turning the<br />

lower left horizontal tuning knob with your<br />

left thumb, the rest of your hand wrapped<br />

around the left side of the cabinet. It is a<br />

comfortable tuning position for a righthanded<br />

person. This allowed the other hand<br />

to be used for adjusting the dual controls<br />

for RF sensitivity and audio gain.<br />

The antenna input circuitry was designed<br />

for use with standard antennas, or<br />

to utilize the advantages of “doublet” antennas.<br />

An additional ground wire was provided<br />

for easy attachment.<br />

Because so few S-1s were built, not many<br />

survive today. I’m happy to tell you that my<br />

Old Radio Museum will have the<br />

S-1 on display starting late this fall. For more<br />

information, you can read a radio magazine<br />

engineering report on the S-1, see additional<br />

photos and some early Hallicrafters S-1<br />

advertising on my Web site: http://<br />

www.eht.com/oldradio/arrl/index.html.<br />

The S-1 model was quickly followed by<br />

the S-2, which added a bandspread control<br />

and a send-receive switch to the front panel.<br />

The S-1 through S-6, made in small quantities,<br />

took Hallicrafters into 1935. By late<br />

1935, they started producing communica-<br />

tions receivers with the name “Hallicrafters”<br />

in their new factory. The 1935-36 SX-9<br />

“Super Skyrider” was the first model to<br />

be produced in significant quantities. By<br />

1938, Hallicrafters had produced 23 different<br />

models.<br />

My thanks to Chuck Dachis, author of<br />

Radios by Hallicrafters, for his personal<br />

help with the history of this radio and the<br />

Hallicrafters company.—K2TQN<br />

Old Radio Auction<br />

Every so often, you hear about radio<br />

auctions. This is a short report on<br />

one.<br />

I just returned from the annual Antique<br />

Wireless Association meet near<br />

Rochester, New York. It is held every<br />

year around Labor Day. You will always<br />

find a large 3-day flea market,<br />

interesting radio presentations, an old<br />

equipment contest, seminars and two<br />

auctions there.<br />

The first auction is the Communication<br />

Equipment Auction for ham radios and boatanchors only. AWA Museum Curator “Col”<br />

Ed Gable, K2MP, is the Auctioneer.<br />

Radios and their selling prices in the accompanying, are from left: an RCA ACR-136 went<br />

for $70; the National NC-57 with the slant base and meter went for $22 and the Howard 663<br />

went for $47. That’s Ed taking the bids in the accompanying photo.<br />

The second auction is the main auction, held in three parts. First, there is a vacuum<br />

tube auction, then a paper collectables auction, and last, the general auction. Here you<br />

will find rare and expensive items, as well as early ham radio gear.<br />

If you are interested in the results, check my Web page.<br />

John Dilks, K2TQN 125 Warf Road, Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234-8501 k2tqn@arrl.org<br />

86 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


AMATEUR RADIO WORLD<br />

IARU Region 3 Conference Calls for Morse Testing<br />

Phaseout<br />

The 11th International Amateur Radio<br />

Union Region 3 Conference in Darwin,<br />

Australia, ended September 1 by resolving<br />

to seek the ultimate removal of Morse code<br />

proficiency as an International Telecommunication<br />

Union licensing requirement for<br />

HF operation. As “an interim measure,” the<br />

conference agreed to support the reduction<br />

of all Morse code testing speeds to 5 WPM.<br />

“IARU Region 3 strongly supports<br />

Morse code as an effective and efficient<br />

mode of communication,” the resolution<br />

said in its preamble. “However, it believes<br />

that the position of Morse as a qualifying<br />

criterion for an HF amateur license is not<br />

relevant to the healthy future of Amateur<br />

Radio.”<br />

The resolution urged IARU Region 3<br />

member societies to seek an interim<br />

5-WPM Morse code testing requirement<br />

while looking toward eventually eliminating<br />

the Morse requirement altogether.<br />

“We recommend that, setting aside any<br />

previous relevant decisions of earlier<br />

Conferences, a policy of the removal of<br />

Morse code testing as an ITU requirement<br />

for an amateur license to operate on<br />

frequencies below 30 MHz be adopted by<br />

IARU Region 3,” the Conference resolution<br />

declared.<br />

Voting in accordance with ARRL Board<br />

policy, International Affairs Vice President<br />

Rod Stafford, W6ROD, cast the lone dissenting<br />

vote on the League’s behalf,<br />

although he voted in favor of an earlier motion<br />

to support 5 WPM as the top code<br />

speed for testing. The Hong Kong Amateur<br />

Radio Transmitting Society abstained. The<br />

Asian and Pacific region’s 11 other member<br />

societies who were present at the<br />

Conference favored the resolution.<br />

The Region 3 Conference recommended<br />

that the IARU Administrative Council<br />

adopt its position as IARU policy. Meeting<br />

September 3-4 in Darwin, the Administrative<br />

Council declined to act on the policy<br />

recommendation, however, until after the<br />

Region 2 conference next October in<br />

Guatemala.<br />

Conference delegates addressed another<br />

concern related to ITU Radio Regulation<br />

S25, which requires that applicants demonstrate<br />

Morse proficiency to operate below<br />

30 MHz. Some delegates worried over<br />

wording in a preliminary draft recommendation<br />

that includes reference to “radio<br />

telegraphy” among amateur license oper-<br />

Left to right: David Sumner, K1ZZ, Rod<br />

Stafford, W6ROD, and Paul Rinaldo,<br />

W4RI, at the IARU Region 3 Conference.<br />

ating skills. Delegates were told that the<br />

ITU defines “radio telegraphy” to mean<br />

RTTY and facsimile as well as Morse. In a<br />

motion proposed by the Radio Society of<br />

Great Britain and seconded by the ARRL,<br />

the conference requested that the IARU Region<br />

3 representatives to the IARU Administrative<br />

Council propose replacing the term<br />

“operating skills” with “methods of communication.”<br />

The Conference also reaffirmed the<br />

IARU’s determination to obtain an exclusive<br />

worldwide allocation of no less than<br />

300 kHz in the vicinity of 7 MHz. The conference<br />

instructed the Region 3 IARU<br />

directors to “treat achievement of this objective<br />

as a matter of the highest priority,”<br />

and Region 3 member societies were encouraged<br />

to do all they can to support the<br />

IARU goal at 40 meters.<br />

In other business, the Conference<br />

elected Peter Naish, VK2BPN, and K.C.<br />

“Selva” Selvadurai, 9V1UV, as new IARU<br />

Region 3 directors and re-elected Fred<br />

Johnson, ZL2AMJ, who was appointed<br />

chairman, Yong S. Park, HL1IFM, and<br />

Yoshiji Sekido, JJ1OEY—all for three-year<br />

terms.<br />

In addition to Stafford, those on hand<br />

from the US included IARU President<br />

Larry Price, W4RA, ARRL Executive Vice<br />

President and IARU Secretary David<br />

Sumner, K1ZZ, and ARRL Technical Relations<br />

Manager Paul Rinaldo, W4RI.<br />

The next IARU Region 3 Conference<br />

will be held in Taipei, Taiwan, in September<br />

2003.<br />

IARU ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL<br />

ALSO MEETS IN DARWIN<br />

The Administrative Council of the International<br />

Amateur Radio Union met on 3-4<br />

September <strong>2000</strong> in Darwin following the<br />

IARU Region 3 conference. The principal<br />

business at the meeting was to begin preparations<br />

for WRC-2003, which has several items<br />

of importance to the amateur services on its<br />

agenda.<br />

At its Darwin meeting the Administrative<br />

Council:<br />

1.…thanked the IARU WRC-<strong>2000</strong> delegation<br />

for its diligent work on behalf of Amateur<br />

Radio at WRC-<strong>2000</strong> in Istanbul.<br />

2.…identified and reviewed the WRC-<br />

2003 agenda items of relevance to the amateur<br />

and amateur-satellite services.<br />

3.…appointed a five-member core delegation<br />

for WRC-2003 that was given responsibility<br />

for preparation for WRC-2003 agenda<br />

items relating to 7 MHz.<br />

4.…identified the ITU meetings at which<br />

IARU representation will be required for the<br />

coming year; accepted the recommendations<br />

of the President and International Secretariat<br />

with regard to representatives to attend these<br />

meetings.<br />

5.…noted the update on the progress towards<br />

its policy of transferring into an ITU-R<br />

Recommendation the operational and technical<br />

qualifications for an amateur license and<br />

acknowledged the input of Region 1 membersocieties<br />

and the Region 3 Conference on the<br />

subject. This input will be taken into account<br />

in the formulation of further IARU input on<br />

the subject to ITU Working Party 8A.<br />

6.…reviewed, updated, and approved the<br />

present and anticipated future requirements<br />

for radio spectrum allocations to the Amateur<br />

and Amateur-Satellite Services, with special<br />

emphasis on the frequencies in the upper part<br />

of the spectrum.<br />

7.…reviewed and approved an updated<br />

Action Plan for the development of support<br />

for Amateur Radio in Africa. The Plan includes<br />

several courses in Amateur Radio Administration<br />

to be taught under the joint sponsorship<br />

of the ITU and the IARU.<br />

8.…adopted a budget for 2001-2003, as<br />

submitted by the International Secretariat.<br />

9.…asked the International Secretariat to<br />

prepare a document highlighting the need for<br />

radio amateurs to support the IARU through<br />

membership in their member society in order<br />

to protect the amateur spectrum and to maintain<br />

the vitality of the Amateur Services.<br />

10.…received and noted the report of the<br />

Committee on IARU Structure and comment<br />

from the Region 3 Conference. The topic of<br />

possible constitutional changes to the IARU<br />

structure remains open for further consideration.<br />

11.…expressed its thanks to the IARU<br />

Monitoring System International Coordinator,<br />

Bob Knowles, ZL1BAD, and his colleagues<br />

for their continued excellent service<br />

to the amateur community.<br />

12.…selected “Providing Disaster Communications:<br />

Amateur Radio in the 21st Century”<br />

as the theme for World Amateur Radio<br />

Day, April 18, 2001.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 87


QRP POWER<br />

The NorCal 40A—an Instant Classic<br />

The current plethora of QRP kit radios<br />

owes their existence to one rig: the NorCal<br />

40, a monoband, 40-meter transceiver, first<br />

presented as kit by the Northern California<br />

QRP Club in 1994. The success of this kit<br />

was a surprise to the NorCal folks and the<br />

rig’s designer, Wayne Burdick, N6KR<br />

(designer of the Sierra, SST, K1 and K2<br />

transceiver kits). It was such a success that<br />

Wayne and Bob “QRP Bob” Dyer,<br />

KD6VIO, formed Wilderness Radio to<br />

commercially market a redesigned (and<br />

greatly improved) version, the NC-40A.<br />

What makes this kit so unique First is<br />

the price versus performance factor. The kit<br />

still sells for $129.00 (plus shipping and<br />

handling), which is the price it sold for from<br />

the very beginning. This includes case, knobs,<br />

printed circuit board and all parts. You have<br />

a completely finished high performance,<br />

portable QRP transceiver for $129. Second,<br />

all the parts, controls, jacks and connectors<br />

are board mounted with no off-board wiring<br />

required. This greatly simplifies construction<br />

and reduces errors in building.<br />

The NC-40A’s Performance<br />

Set the Standard<br />

Performance is outstanding, considering<br />

the simplicity of the design. June 1996 <strong>QST</strong><br />

features an overview of the Wilderness NC-<br />

40A along with several other QRP kit<br />

transceivers. 1 The receiver sensitivity and the<br />

dynamic range are terrific for such a simple<br />

design using minimal parts. The QRP<br />

fraternity received the NC-40A with open<br />

arms. QRP Bob tells me that Wilderness<br />

Radio has sold over 1000 NC-40A kits to<br />

date. The rig has become a standard at Cal<br />

Tech’s Electrical Engineering Department as<br />

a project for undergrad engineering<br />

students. 2 I obtained a copy of Dr. Rutledge’s<br />

book, The Electronics of Radio, and found a<br />

fascinating (but somewhat math intensive)<br />

text that details the inner workings of the<br />

NC-40A. If you want to really understand<br />

how this rig works, spend the money and buy<br />

Dr. Rutledge’s book.<br />

Speaking of receiver performance, this<br />

is the one area that has been a big stumbling<br />

block in past efforts to produce a QRP<br />

transceiver kit for the masses. By providing<br />

enough amplification at the receiver<br />

front end, extremely good Minimum<br />

Discernible Signal (MDS) characteristics<br />

are achiev-able. However, it is what happens<br />

to the signal after the RF front end that<br />

dictates overall receiver performance.<br />

Unless your mixer and IF stages can reject<br />

unwanted signals while amplifying the<br />

desired signal with minimal distortion, you<br />

can have the most sensitive receiver front<br />

in the world, but it won’t do you much good.<br />

Two key parameters in assessing receiver<br />

performance, in addition to MDS, are<br />

Blocking Dynamic Range and Two-Tone<br />

Dynamic Range. 3 Looking at the ARRL lab<br />

results of the Wilderness NC-40A, the MDS<br />

is –137 dBm (which is very good) while the<br />

BDR is 108 dB and the T-TDR calculates out<br />

at 89 dB, also quite good. Obviously these<br />

specs are not as good as the better commercially<br />

manufactured receivers available today.<br />

But when is the last time you saw any of these<br />

radios available in kit form for under $130<br />

A True Battery Miser<br />

Another area where the NC-40A really<br />

shines is power consumption. When Wayne<br />

Burdick initially designed this kit, one of his<br />

primary concerns was to make the rig battery<br />

friendly in order to provide a compact backpacking<br />

transceiver for those who wanted to<br />

take their ham radio hobby on the trail.<br />

Therefore, Wayne paid particular attention<br />

to insure the rig’s overall current drain was<br />

small. My unmodified NC-40A (s/n 1000)<br />

has a receive idle current of only 18 mA at<br />

full volume with no signal input! Now that<br />

is battery friendly.<br />

Of all the rigs reviewed in June 1996 <strong>QST</strong>,<br />

the Wilderness Radio NC-40A (a highly<br />

modified version, I might add) offers the best<br />

receiver idle current 28 mA (max volume,<br />

no signal at 13.8 Vdc). Transmit current for<br />

3 W output was measured at 300 mA (key<br />

down, 50-Ω load, at 13.8 V dc. While a<br />

number of the other transceivers were<br />

capable of higher RF outputs (some up to<br />

7 W!) their transmit current drain was also<br />

considerably higher. Again, Wayne’s design<br />

philosophy was such that what could be<br />

accomplished at 5 W (the QRP “legal limit”)<br />

could also be done at the 2-3 W level.<br />

Varactor Tuning<br />

Tuning in the NC-40A is accomplished<br />

via a varactor diode. The main tuning<br />

control is a 10-kΩ potentiometer that varies<br />

the reverse bias of the MVAM108 varactor<br />

diode in the oscillator circuit. While this is<br />

crude by some standards, resulting in a<br />

limited tuning range of about 45-60 kHz, it<br />

is simple and quite easy to use. Modifications<br />

exist to greatly expand this tuning,<br />

but dial accuracy then becomes critical.<br />

Some QRPers have substituted a precision<br />

10-turn, 10-kΩ pot in place of the standard<br />

10-kΩ pot with good results.<br />

Born to be Modified<br />

The NC-40A was made to be “played<br />

with” and modified. After all, what’s the fun<br />

of building a homebrew rig if you can’t<br />

experiment a bit The inside of the rig offers<br />

a lot of room for add-ons. Anyone for digital<br />

readout Wilderness Radio sells their KC-1<br />

memory keyer/audio digital readout<br />

specifically for the NC-40A. Small Wonder<br />

Labs 4 also sells their FreqMite audio digital<br />

frequency readout on a small PC board that<br />

can be easily installed. In addition,<br />

Embedderd Research 5 and K1EL 6 offer PIC<br />

memory keyers on tiny PC boards that will<br />

easily fit inside the NC-40A case. Add a small<br />

two-port RF power bridge and miniature<br />

meter for measuring forward and reverse<br />

power 7 and you have a very respectable<br />

homebrew rig that will go anywhere.<br />

Notes<br />

1<br />

Rick Lindquist, KX4V (now N1RL), “Low Cost<br />

Transceiver Kits You Can Build,” <strong>QST</strong>, June<br />

1996, p. 45.<br />

2<br />

Dr. David Rutledge, The Electronics of Radio<br />

ISBN: 0-521-64645-6. Available from Cambridge<br />

University Press, 110 Midland Ave,<br />

Port Chester, NY 10573-4930; tel 914-937-<br />

9600.<br />

3<br />

ARRL Web site: http://www.arrl.org/tis/<br />

info/rigbuy.htm and http://www.arrl.org/<br />

members-only/prodrev/testproc.pdf.<br />

4<br />

Small Wonder Labs, 80 East Robbins Ave,<br />

Newington, CT 06111; http://smallwonderlabs<br />

.com.<br />

5<br />

Embedded Research, PO Box 92492,<br />

Rochester, NY 14692; http://www.frontier<br />

.net/~embres/.<br />

6<br />

K1EL, Steve T. Elliot, 43 Meadowcrest Dr,<br />

Bedford, NH 03110; http://members.aol<br />

.com/k1el/.<br />

7<br />

Zack Lau, W1VT, <strong>2000</strong> ARRL Handbook, “A<br />

30/40 Watt 20-M Transceiver.”<br />

88 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

Rich Arland, K7SZ 25 Amherst Ave, Wilkes Barre, PA 18702 k7sz@arrl.org


It is with deep regret that we record<br />

the passing of these amateurs.<br />

KA1CR, James H. Bonney, Stratford, CT<br />

W1ISH, Michael J. Gallo, Blue Hill, ME<br />

KA1LYG, Wendell M. McLaughlin, Whiting, ME<br />

K1NPA, Frank W. Wells, Gardner, MA<br />

WA1QDO, Dorothy A. Dunn, Port Orange, FL<br />

W1QXX, John C. Wilson, Arlington, MA<br />

K1UOV, Salvatore N. Feola, Trumbull, CT<br />

W2BPU, John E. Triesner, Teaneck, NJ<br />

WA2EAQ, Raymond G. Frowd, La Grangeville,<br />

NY<br />

*N2EFR, Ernest D. Kolb, New Providence, NJ<br />

N2EUA, Joseph S. Banach, Jamesburg, NJ<br />

N2GMB, Giles T. Blossom, Glenford, NY<br />

W2HIY, Paul F. Bragger, Watertown, NY<br />

W2HSA, Charles M. Snyder, Oak Ridge, NJ<br />

N2IMS, James L. Miller, Henrietta, NY<br />

N2KEN, K.E. North, Chesapeake, VA<br />

*WA2KLZ, Thomas G. Kelley, Williamstown, NJ<br />

N2MQU, Arthur Gordon, Forest Hills, NY<br />

W2MRB, Frank F. Pollino, Eggertsville, NY<br />

W2NIA, Frederick C. Crum, Bogota, NJ<br />

WA2RQO, Gordon A. Atwater, New Rochelle, NY<br />

W2ZNR, John T. Rice, Ocean View, NJ<br />

W3AAB, Russell L. Parker, Annapolis, MD<br />

W3AHF, Paul F. Naftzinger, Reading, PA<br />

W3CW, R. Hirsch, New Hope, PA<br />

W3DYB, John W. Hartman, Edgewater, MD<br />

K3FTE, Harry Schoene, Labelle, FL<br />

N3GZE, Chester A. Gardner, Ellicott City, MD<br />

WA3IVJ, Michael Puchir, Spring Lake, NJ<br />

WB3JJL, John B. Twist, Baltimore, MD<br />

WB3KSY, Wilmer F. Bennett, Evansville, IN<br />

W3MIB, Roy W. Bryson, Cockeysville, MD<br />

WA3NPB, Margaret Steininger, Bethlehem, PA<br />

AA3O, Gregg A. Houck, Bellefonte, PA<br />

N3QDA, Michael S. Lubline, Dresher, PA<br />

KA3UIJ, John T. Miller, Harrisburg, PA<br />

KF4AAO, William H. Jones, Woodbridge, VA<br />

KD4CHE, Trenton R. McCall, Sumter, SC<br />

WD4DXE, Charles D. Edwards, Cartersville, GA<br />

WW4F, Wilbur C. Dempsey, Plant City, FL<br />

N4IXY, Getson Roberts, Manchester, KY<br />

KA4JAW, William A. Weems, Millport, AL<br />

KC4LYP, Dempsey L. Poole, Gray Court, SC<br />

WA4PSJ, Jerry C. Mills, Macon, GA<br />

WD4PVH, Bobbie K. Webb, Walling, TN<br />

WA4QKC, Edward W. Crawford, Albertville, AL<br />

KF4SIW, Joseph P. Pocius, Safety Harbor, FL<br />

WB4UDK, Clarence A. Hinds, Florence, SC<br />

W4UIQ, Paul M. Jenkins, Melbourne, FL<br />

KE4YNC, Daniel L. Carlin, Miami, FL<br />

SILENT KEYS<br />

KB4ZNR, Cecil W. Bruton, Charlotte, NC<br />

W4ZXK, Lois A. Spencer, Inverness, FL<br />

W5DCK, Charles W. Caccamise, Jackson, MS<br />

W5DHF, Ansley H. Colvin, Jonesboro, LA<br />

N5GVU, Lowell E. Davis, Mcallen, TX<br />

WV5K, Charles E. Hamm, Magnolia, TX<br />

W5KWU, Edwin N. Lowe, Albuquerque, NM<br />

KB5LAD, Covin L. Chaffin, Hamilton, MS<br />

W5NCB, Walker J. Coffey, Oxford, MS<br />

*WA5NYG, Richard W. Thimmesch, Belle<br />

Chasse, LA<br />

K5OCN, Charles R. Rummel, Clifton, TX<br />

*W5ODF, John M. Gavin, Little Rock, AR<br />

KA5REC, Ray Kindred, Shreveport, LA<br />

W5VRJ, John J. Kaiser, Chester, CA<br />

KA5VYX, Bernard D. Getto, Seabrook, TX<br />

KC5YZ, W. R. Estep, Fort Worth, TX<br />

W6BVR, Russell C. Lunn, Westlake Village, CA<br />

W6CTD, James L. Syrett, Placentia, CA<br />

*N6EA, Robert C. Schmidt, Sonora, CA<br />

*W6EFB, James S. Evans, Ridgecrest, CA<br />

*WD6GEV, Charles A. Torbit, Jr., Fountain, CO<br />

WB6JOT, Carl F. Alger, Redding, CA<br />

W6JUU, Carl L. Perry, La Mirada, CA<br />

W6KSI, Sidney A. Burnett, Imperial Beach, CA<br />

*W6LOE, Charles B. Eder, Citrus Heights, CA<br />

N6MCW, Donald F. Scott, Santa Maria, CA<br />

KC6MKA, James F. Rogers, Fresno, CA<br />

AE6T, William E. Ziegler, Reseda, CA<br />

W6YBI, Hugh B. Davis, Orange, CA<br />

WA6YTB, Harold W. Bingham, Camino, CA<br />

*K6YZR, David B. Anderson, Atascadero, CA<br />

K6ZTK, Roger Brackney, Long Beach, CA<br />

N7CEY, Edgar A. Smith, Vancouver, WA<br />

KL7CMQ, Charles T. Coleman, Anchorage, AK<br />

W7DXI, Julian C. Whaley, Seattle, WA<br />

KB7GBM, Fred A. Rupp, Capitola, CA<br />

W7GTJ, Sig L. Elaeson, Electric City, WA<br />

W7GZN, Ezra J. Adams, Yakima, WA<br />

W7HC, Harry C. Snyder, Carefree, AZ<br />

W7HF, George D. Wilson, Aberdeen, WA<br />

WA7HGS, Francis J. Torney, Salt Lake City, UT<br />

W7KIU, Walter Lochmiller, Talent, OR<br />

W7PJO, Lester W. Redman, King City, OR<br />

W7QLG, Merle D. Handy, Puyallup, WA<br />

*K7RM, Donald R. Kelly, Scappoose, OR<br />

NA7U, Jerry L. Chavers, Boise, ID<br />

W7WRT, Paul J. Beringer, Spokane, WA<br />

WB8BUF, Raymond H. Clark, Cincinnati, OH<br />

N8CVK, William J. Butler, Findlay, OH<br />

W8DRW, Francis J. Antinone, Steubenville, OH<br />

W8ESQ, Robert D. Hough, Elkins, WV<br />

K8ISM, Stephen C. Iacono, Columbus, OH<br />

KG8KM, Hal R. Heisler, Clinton Township, MI<br />

W8LRE, Richard R. Sando, Greenville, OH<br />

W8MOB, John C. Sutherland, Livonia, MI<br />

WD8MTP, James C. Gardner, Wheeling, WV<br />

W8PQZ, Edgar O. Fisher, Dayton, OH<br />

WA8THG, Lowell A. Behner, Grafton, OH<br />

WB8UOR, Robert G. Fisher, Springfield, OH<br />

W8VSL, Eileen M. Stuber, Munroe Falls, OH<br />

NN8Y, Louis F. Heline, Rockford, MI<br />

K8YYR, Paul L. Magnuson, Lancaster, OH<br />

W9ASC, Philip P. Porter, Kokomo, IN<br />

WA9BSK, Robert J. Scott, Indianapolis, IN<br />

W9CRC, Russell B. Rennaker, Kokomo, IN<br />

K9CRS, Edwin J. Ward, Carmel, IN<br />

KC9KM, Leo D. Mueller, Sandwich, IL<br />

KA9LYR, Richard Kaitchuck, Des Plaines, IL<br />

N9MEK, August Blissmer, Lowell, IN<br />

K9MMQ, John W. Holden, Warsaw, IN<br />

NT9T, Ronald J. LaMothe, Michigan City, IN<br />

N9VBB, Carol A. Aughey, Creve Coeur, MO<br />

NQ9X, Edward L. Van Sickle, Whitehall, WI<br />

N0BBJ, Corval Lile, Kansas City, MO<br />

KC0GLT, Todd D. Humphrey, Fort Calhoun, NE<br />

NX0K, John S. Lynch, Grand Forks, ND<br />

W0OZO, Max A. Albee, Cedar Rapids, IA<br />

W0PJ, Glenn D. Johnson, Knoxville, IA<br />

K0PSZ, Val L. Wilson, Sunrise Beach, MO<br />

N0PTA, Frank J. Stelter, Hastings, MN<br />

W0UYS, Arthur D. Sinning, Edina, MN<br />

F9YZ, Jacques Cartier, Merignac, France<br />

G3LWY, Frances E. Woolley, Surrey, Great Britain<br />

G4OO, Dennis Hoult, Lincolnshire, Great Britain<br />

*VE3CRU, Hans D. Peters, Cobourg, ON, Canada<br />

*Life Member, ARRL<br />

‡Call sign has been re-issued through the<br />

vanity call sign program.<br />

Note: Silent Key reports must confirm the death<br />

by one of the following means: a letter or note<br />

from a family member, a copy of a newspaper<br />

obituary notice, a copy of the death certificate,<br />

or a letter from the family lawyer or the executor.<br />

Please be sure to include the amateur’s<br />

name, address and call sign. Allow several<br />

months for the listing to appear in this column.<br />

Many hams remember a Silent Key with a memorial<br />

contribution to the ARRL Foundation. If you<br />

wish to make a contribution in a friend or relative’s<br />

memory, you can designate it for an existing youth<br />

scholarship, the Jesse A. Bieberman Meritorious<br />

Membership Fund, the Victor C. Clark Youth Incentive<br />

Program Fund, or the General Fund. Contributions<br />

to the Foundation are tax-deductible to<br />

the extent permitted under current tax law. Our<br />

address is: The ARRL Foundation Inc, 225 Main<br />

St, Newington, CT 06111.<br />

Kathy Capodicasa, N1GZO Silent Key Administrator<br />

NEW PRODUCTS<br />

SMA TO BNC ADAPTERS<br />

BY KC2BHO<br />

◊ Stephen G. Gulyas, KC2BHO, has introduced<br />

a series of SMA-to-BNC Rubber<br />

Covered Antenna Adapters for handheld<br />

transceivers.<br />

The new adapters allow the use of male<br />

BNC-terminated antennas and cables on<br />

handheld transceivers that employ SMAtype<br />

connectors. The manufacturer states<br />

that the adapters will “…prevent expensive,<br />

difficult-to-repair damage to radios<br />

that use an SMA-style antenna connection<br />

that can occur over time as the result of repeatedly<br />

changing antennas, such as when<br />

alternating between portable, mobile and<br />

base operation. The adapter takes all the<br />

wear and tear, instead of the radio’s SMA<br />

connector.”<br />

The low profile adapters are said to fit all<br />

BNC antennas and connectors. The adapters<br />

feature gold-plated contacts and teflon<br />

insulators and are rubber covered for a factory<br />

antenna look. Once screwed on, the<br />

rubber cover makes contact with the top of<br />

the radio. No additional spacers are required<br />

for moisture and dirt protection, and the<br />

design provides additional mechanical support<br />

for the antenna or coax connector.<br />

Different versions are available for use<br />

with most of the current SMA-equipped<br />

transceivers. These include Yaesu’s VX-5,<br />

VX-1, VX-10 and FT-50R; ICOM’s IC-<br />

Q7A, IC-T8A, IC-T81A and IC-R2;<br />

Kenwood’s TH-D7A and TH-G71;<br />

Alinco’s DJ-V5; Standard’s C508A and<br />

C510A; and RadioShack’s HTX-200,<br />

HTX-400 and HTX-245 handhelds.<br />

The SMA-to-BNC adapters are $11.95<br />

each plus $1.50 shipping and handling.<br />

(Check or money order only. Please specify<br />

your radio’s brand and model number when<br />

ordering.) For more information contact<br />

Stephen G. Gulyas, KC2BHO, 706 Lalor<br />

St, Trenton, NJ 08610; tel 609-393-6476;<br />

gulyas@netzero.net.<br />

Next New Product<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 89


<strong>November</strong> 1925<br />

◊ The cover illustration<br />

by Clyde Darr, 8ZZ,<br />

shows a young ham<br />

demonstrating the<br />

magic of radio to an<br />

older man, who is listening<br />

to the receiver with<br />

earphones. Under the<br />

heading “Do You Tell<br />

the Truth,” the editorial<br />

advises amateurs to give<br />

accurate signal reports,<br />

while “Make a Brass<br />

Pounder” urges hams to<br />

work toward bringing<br />

broadcast listeners into the ham radio fold.<br />

John Clayton urges hams to use “Crystal Control<br />

for Amateur Transmitters,” citing the proven<br />

success of NKF of the Naval Research Laboratory.<br />

“KFUH,” by Ralph Heintz, describes the<br />

radio equipment used on the yacht Kaimiloa,<br />

which will be used for scientific research in the<br />

South Seas; P. J. Townsend tells about “KFUH’s<br />

Receiver.” “The One-Stage R. F. Amplifier,” by<br />

P. L. Pendleton, discusses experimental work on<br />

receiver R. F. amplifier circuits. “Schnell Returns”<br />

reports the return of the US Battle Fleet<br />

from its Australian cruise, and the fine performance<br />

of ARRL Traffic Manager Schnell, who<br />

was in charge of short-wave communications<br />

from NRRL on the flagship USS Seattle.<br />

“The Making of a Radio Receiver,” by Virgil<br />

Graham, describes how receivers are produced at<br />

the Stromberg, Carlson Telephone Mfg. Co. plant.<br />

Assistant Traffic Manager A. L. Budlong in<br />

“Keeping a Log,” stresses the importance of keeping<br />

accurate station records. “Navy Developments<br />

in Crystal-Controlled Transmitters” details the<br />

pioneering work of the Naval Research Laboratory<br />

in that field.<br />

W1AW Schedule<br />

90 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

75, 50 AND 25 YEARS AGO<br />

Al Brogdon, W1AB<br />

W1AW Schedule<br />

PACIFIC MTN CENT EAST MON TUE WED THU FRI<br />

6 AM 7 AM 8 AM 9 AM FAST SLOW FAST SLOW<br />

CODE CODE CODE CODE<br />

7 AM- 8 AM- 9 AM- 10 AM- VISITING OPERATOR TIME<br />

1 PM 2 PM 3 PM 4 PM (12 PM - 1 PM CLOSED FOR LUNCH)<br />

1 PM 2 PM 3 PM 4 PM FAST SLOW FAST SLOW FAST<br />

CODE CODE CODE CODE CODE<br />

2 PM 3 PM 4 PM 5 PM CODE BULLETIN<br />

3 PM 4 PM 5 PM 6 PM TELEPRINTER BULLETIN<br />

4 PM 5 PM 6 PM 7 PM SLOW FAST SLOW FAST SLOW<br />

CODE CODE CODE CODE CODE<br />

5 PM 6 PM 7 PM 8 PM CODE BULLETIN<br />

6 PM 7 PM 8 PM 9 PM TELEPRINTER BULLETIN<br />

6 45 PM 7 45 PM 8 45 PM 9 45 PM VOICE BULLETIN<br />

7 PM 8 PM 9 PM 10 PM FAST SLOW FAST SLOW FAST<br />

CODE CODE CODE CODE CODE<br />

8 PM 9 PM 10 PM 11 PM CODE BULLETIN<br />

W1AW’s schedule is at the same local time throughout the year. The schedule according<br />

to your local time will change if your local time does not have seasonal adjustments that<br />

are made at the same time as North American time changes between standard time and<br />

daylight time. From the first Sunday in April to the last Sunday in October, UTC = Eastern<br />

Time + 4 hours. For the rest of the year, UTC = Eastern Time + 5 hours.<br />

Contributing Editor<br />

<strong>November</strong> 1950<br />

◊ The cover photo<br />

shows the mobile installation<br />

of W1LOP, with a<br />

homebrew bandswitching<br />

converter (described<br />

in this issue) and a companion<br />

bandswitching<br />

transmitter. The editorial<br />

provides a look at<br />

the National Security<br />

Resources Board’s new<br />

report, United States<br />

Civil Defense, pointing<br />

out that when a Civil<br />

Defense plan is developed and implemented<br />

sometime in the near future, hams are sure to be<br />

called on for emergency communications support.<br />

F. E. Edmunds, W1JEO/9, describes “A Crystal-Filter<br />

S.S.B. Exciter” to help hams get started<br />

on this new mode of ham communication. Don<br />

Mix, W1TS, and Julius Galin, W1LOP, tell about<br />

“A Bandswitching Mobile Converter,” which is<br />

shown in the cover photo. Two looks at transmitter<br />

speech processing are presented in<br />

“Premodulation Clipping and Filtering,” by<br />

Stephen Stuntz, W1RXX, and “Cut-Off Frequencies<br />

and Audio Quality,” by J. P. Neil, VE3PN.<br />

“Technical Topics” continues that area of discussion<br />

with “Frequency Response and Intelligibility.”<br />

The column “Military Amateur Radio<br />

System” describes the newly installed MARS station<br />

at the Pentagon. That station will sign WAR<br />

and AIR on military frequencies, and K4USA and<br />

K4AIR on the ham bands. Continuing the ARRL<br />

series of articles on amateur operating, John<br />

Huntoon, W1LVQ, discusses “General Operating.”<br />

G. Franklin Montgomery, W3FQB, tells<br />

about “‘Corkey—A Tubeless Automatic Keyer”<br />

that uses only a battery, two diodes, one fixed<br />

resistor, three fixed capacitors, three variable resistors,<br />

and two relays! Rex Hess, W7NJ, reports<br />

on ARRL Emergency Corps participation in “The<br />

Seattle A-Bomb Test,” a simulated attack on the<br />

city with two nuclear bombs. Because the military<br />

surplus T-23/ARC-5 v.h.f. transmitter is so<br />

popular with hams, O. W. H. Jonson, W2ZYX,<br />

describes his techniques for “TVI-Proofing the<br />

ARC-5 V.H.F. Transmitter.”<br />

<strong>November</strong> 1975<br />

◊ The moody cover<br />

photo shows a tent and<br />

an HF beam and tower<br />

silhouetted against<br />

the setting sun, as<br />

W9UMU/9 rounds up<br />

Field Day contacts. The<br />

editorial beats the publicity<br />

drum again—it<br />

seems that hams never<br />

have (and possible never<br />

will) get the publicity for<br />

Amateur Radio that only<br />

they can provide.<br />

Ed Tilton, W1HDQ, presents his “Ideas on<br />

2-Meter FM Mobile & Portable Antennas.” Jerry<br />

Sevick, W2FMI, describes “A Resistive Antenna<br />

Bridge…Simplified.” Hardy Landskov, W7KAR,<br />

discusses “Pattern Factors for Elevated Horizontal<br />

Antennas over Real Earth.” Jay Rusgrove,<br />

WA1LNQ, tells about “The Trombone Trimmer,”<br />

describing how to build your own variable capacitors.<br />

“Linear Tuning—What Price” by Donn<br />

Shankland, W8WVS, discusses making variable<br />

capacitors with an offset rotor shaft for nearly<br />

linear frequency-versus-rotation tuning. Interestingly,<br />

this concept was announced in <strong>QST</strong>’s<br />

pages almost exactly 50 years earlier, when a<br />

commercial manufacturer started making such<br />

capacitors.<br />

Morse code transmissions:<br />

Frequencies are 1.818, 3.5815, 7.0475, 14.0475, 18.0975, 21.0675, 28.0675 and<br />

147.555 MHz.<br />

Slow Code = practice sent at 5, 7 1 / 2 , 10, 13 and 15 wpm.<br />

Fast Code = practice sent at 35, 30, 25, 20, 15, 13 and 10 wpm.<br />

Code practice text is from the pages of <strong>QST</strong>. The source is given at the beginning of<br />

each practice session and alternate speeds within each session. For example, “Text<br />

is from July 1992 <strong>QST</strong>, pages 9 and 81,” indicates that the plain text is from the article<br />

on page 9 and mixed number/letter groups are from page 81.<br />

Code bulletins are sent at 18 wpm.<br />

W1AW qualifying runs are sent on the same frequencies as the Morse code transmissions.<br />

West Coast qualifying runs are transmitted on approximately 3.590 MHz by<br />

K6YR. At the beginning of each code practice session, the schedule for the next<br />

qualifying run is presented. Underline one minute of the highest speed you<br />

copied, certify that your copy was made without aid, and send it to ARRL for grading.<br />

Please include your name, call sign (if any) and complete mailing address. Send a<br />

9×12-inch SASE for a certificate, or a business-size SASE for an endorsement.<br />

Teleprinter transmissions:<br />

Frequencies are 3.625, 7.095, 14.095, 18.1025, 21.095, 28.095 and 147.555 MHz.<br />

Bulletins are sent at 45.45-baud Baudot and 100-baud AMTOR, FEC Mode B. 110-<br />

baud ASCII will be sent only as time allows.<br />

On Tuesdays and Fridays at 6:30 PM Eastern Time, Keplerian elements for many<br />

amateur satellites are sent on the regular teleprinter frequencies.<br />

Voice transmissions:<br />

Frequencies are 1.855, 3.99, 7.29, 14.29, 18.16, 21.39, 28.59 and 147.555 MHz.<br />

Miscellanea:<br />

On Fridays, UTC, a DX bulletin replaces the regular bulletins.<br />

W1AW is open to visitors from 10 AM until noon and from 1 PM until 3:45 PM on<br />

Monday through Friday. FCC licensed amateurs may operate the station during that<br />

time. Be sure to bring your current FCC amateur license or a photocopy.<br />

In a communication emergency, monitor W1AW for special bulletins as follows:<br />

voice on the hour, teleprinter at 15 minutes past the hour, and CW on the half hour.<br />

Headquarters and W1AW are closed on New Year’s Day, President’s Day, Good<br />

Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and the following<br />

Friday, and Christmas Day.


COMING CONVENTIONS<br />

INDIANA STATE CONVENTION<br />

<strong>November</strong> 18-19, Fort Wayne<br />

The Indiana State Convention (28th Annual Fort<br />

Wayne Hamfest and Computer Expo), sponsored<br />

by the Allen County AR Technical Society, will<br />

be held at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum<br />

and Expo Center, 4000 Parnell Ave; at the<br />

corner of Indiana 930 (Coliseum Blvd) and Parnell<br />

Ave. Doors are open for setup on Friday evening<br />

and Saturday morning; public Saturday 9 AM to<br />

4 PM, Sunday 9 AM to 3 PM. Features include<br />

over 1100 commercial and flea market tables; new<br />

and used radio, computer, and general electronics<br />

items; vendors; international ham equipment<br />

manufacturers; forums and meetings; VE sessions<br />

(Saturday); parking ($2). Talk-in on 146.88. Admission<br />

is $5, under 12 free with adult (good both<br />

days). Tables: 8-ft $20 for flea market, $40 for<br />

premium, $27.50 for electricity (219-483-8163).<br />

Send SASE to AC-ARTS/Fort Wayne Hamfest,<br />

Box 10342, Fort Wayne, IN 46851; or contact<br />

James Boyer, KB9IH, 219-489-6700 or 219-484-<br />

1314, jboyer@aol.com; http://www.acarts.com.<br />

WEST CENTRAL FLORIDA SECTION<br />

CONVENTION<br />

December 2-3, Palmetto/Bradenton<br />

The West Central Florida Section Convention (25th<br />

Annual Tampa Bay Hamfest), sponsored by the<br />

Florida Gulf Coast AR Council, will be held at the<br />

Manatee County Convention and Civic Center, 1<br />

October 20-22<br />

Pacific Division, Concord, CA*<br />

October 27-29<br />

AMSAT-NA Space Symposium and Annual<br />

Meeting*<br />

* See October <strong>QST</strong> for details.<br />

Haben Blvd, US 301/US 41 and Haben Blvd; 3<br />

miles W of I-75 from Exit 43. Doors are open Saturday<br />

9 AM to 5 PM, Sunday 9 AM to 3 PM. Features<br />

include commerical exhibitors (Bob Laus,<br />

K4RJL, 727-539-8627; k4rjl@arrl.net), swap<br />

tables (Dan Hawthorne, AI4ET, 727-586-0497;<br />

ai4et@arrl.net), tailgating ($10 per space; Sam<br />

Everts, KE4BXF, ke4bxf@tampabay.rr.com), forums<br />

and programs (ARRL, Skywarn, contesting,<br />

digital topics), VE sessions (9:30 AM both days,<br />

on a walk-in basis, no preregistration), special<br />

guests Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH (FCC Special<br />

Council for AR Enforcement) and Jim Haynie,<br />

W5JBP (ARRL President), limited number of onsite<br />

camping spaces (100% self-contained, no hookups<br />

or facilities; Frank Morton, AC4MK,<br />

ac4mk@arrl.net), free parking, refreshments.<br />

Talk-in on 146.73 (146.82 backup), info loop<br />

147.555 MHz. Admission is $5 in advance, $7 at<br />

the door (good both days). Tables are $25 each for<br />

the entire weekend (electricity is available for $32).<br />

Make checks payable to FGCARC Tampa Bay<br />

Hamfest, Box 48725, St Petersburg, FL 33743.<br />

Contact Fred Hendershot, N3BUL, 813-671-9556,<br />

n3bul@arrl.net; http://www.fgcarc.org.<br />

Attention Hamfest and Convention Sponsors:<br />

ARRL HQ maintains a date register of scheduled<br />

events that may assist you in picking a<br />

suitable date for your event. You’re encouraged<br />

to register your event with HQ as far in advance<br />

as your planning permits. Hamfest and convention<br />

approval procedures for ARRL sanction<br />

are separate and distinct from the date<br />

register. Registering dates with ARRL HQ<br />

doesn’t constitute League sanction, nor does it<br />

guarantee there will not be a conflict with another<br />

established event in the same area.<br />

We at ARRL HQ are not able to approve<br />

dates for sanctioned hamfests and conventions.<br />

For hamfests, this must be done by your<br />

division director. For conventions, approval<br />

must be made by your director and by the executive<br />

committee. Application forms can be<br />

obtained by writing to or calling the ARRL convention<br />

program manager, tel 860-594-0262.<br />

Note: Sponsors of large gatherings should<br />

check with League HQ for an advisory on possible<br />

date conflicts before contracting for meeting<br />

space. Dates may be recorded at ARRL HQ<br />

for up to two years in advance.<br />

Gail Iannone Convention Program Manager<br />

HAMFEST CALENDAR<br />

Attention: The deadline for receipt of items for<br />

this column is the 1st of the second month<br />

preceding publication date. For example, your<br />

information must arrive at HQ by <strong>November</strong> 1<br />

to be listed in the January issue. Hamfest information<br />

is accurate as of our deadline; contact<br />

sponsor for possible late changes. For those<br />

who send in items for Hamfest Calendar and<br />

Coming Conventions: Postal regulations prohibit<br />

mention in <strong>QST</strong> of prizes or any kind of games<br />

of chance such as raffles or bingo.<br />

(Abbreviations: Spr = Sponsor, TI = Talk-in frequency,<br />

Adm = Admission.)<br />

Alabama (Montgomery)—Nov 11. Phil Salley,<br />

K4OZN, 334-272-7980.<br />

†<br />

Colorado (Golden)—Nov 11, 8 AM to 2 PM.<br />

Spr: Rocky Mountain Radio League. Jefferson<br />

County Fairgrounds, 15200 W 6th Ave; Indiana<br />

Exit from 6th Ave. ARRL forum, VE sessions, refreshments.<br />

TI: 145.22. Adm: $4. Tables: $10. Ron<br />

Rose, N0MQJ, 13481 W Alaska Pl, Lakewood, CO<br />

80228, 303-985-8692, n0mqj@arrl.net; http://<br />

rmrl.hamradios.com.<br />

Florida (Coral Gables)—Nov 18. Bill Moore,<br />

WA4TEJ, 305-264-4465.<br />

Florida (Palmetto/Bradenton)—Dec 2-3, West<br />

Central Florida Section Convention. See “Coming<br />

Conventions.”<br />

†<br />

Florida (Port St Lucie)—Nov 11, 8 AM to 2 PM.<br />

Spr: Port St Lucie ARA. St Andrew Lutheran<br />

Church, 295 N Prima Vista Blvd; Exit 63C off<br />

I-95, then E 3.1 miles. Tailgating ($2), refreshments.<br />

TI: 146.955, 146.52. Adm: $2. Roy Cox,<br />

KT4PA, 412 NW Cornell Ave, Port St Lucie, FL<br />

†<br />

ARRL Hamfest<br />

34983, 561-340-4319, roycox@ecqual.net; http:<br />

//www.qsl.net/pslara.<br />

†<br />

Georgia (Claxton)—Dec 2; set up Friday 1-6 PM;<br />

public Saturday 8 AM to 4 PM. Spr: Claxton ARES.<br />

Veterans Community Center, W of downtown<br />

Claxton on Hwy 280 W; intersection of Hwys 301<br />

and 280, travel W on Hwy 280 for 2 miles, building<br />

on S side. VE sessions, forums (ARES, MARS,<br />

ARRL). TI: 147.075. Adm: advance $4, door $5.<br />

Tables: $5 each (with electricity). Mr. Ellie Waters,<br />

W4CJB, Box 231, Pembroke, GA 31321, 912-653-<br />

4939; w4cjb@g-net.net.<br />

Hawaii (Honolulu/Oahu)—Nov 11. Walt<br />

Niemczura, AH6OZ, 808-263-3872.<br />

†<br />

Indiana (Evansville)—Nov 25; set up Friday<br />

5-9 PM, Saturday 6-8 AM; public 8 AM to 2 PM.<br />

Spr: EARS. Vanderburgh County 4-H Center, Fairgrounds<br />

Auditorium, 202 W Boonville-New Harmony<br />

Rd; US Hwy 41 at Boonville-New Harmony<br />

Rd, 5 miles S of I-64, 2 miles N of Evansville Airport.<br />

Indoor flea market, new and used equipment,<br />

free tailgating (weather permitting), commercial<br />

dealers, vendors, free parking, refreshments. TI:<br />

145.15, 146.925, 443.925, 145.11 (107.2 Hz on<br />

all frequencies listed). Adm: $5. Tables: advance<br />

$8 (flea market), $10 (wall space); after Nov 15<br />

$10 (flea market), $12 (wall space). Neil Rapp,<br />

WB9VPG, 1506 S Parker Dr, Evansville, IN<br />

47714, 812-479-5741, ears@w9ear.org; http://<br />

w9ear.org/hamfest.htm.<br />

Indiana (Fort Wayne)—Nov 18-19, Indiana State<br />

Convention. See “Coming Conventions.”<br />

†<br />

Louisiana (Monroe)—Nov 17-18; set up Friday<br />

2-5 PM; public Friday 5-7 PM (social cookout on<br />

site), Saturday 8 AM to 3 PM. Spr: Twin City Ham<br />

Club. Barak Shrine Temple, 6620 Frontage Rd;<br />

from I-20 take Exit 120 (Garrett Rd), go S on<br />

Garrett Rd, turn left at first traffic light (Frontage<br />

Rd), Shrine Temple is about 1 mile on the right.<br />

Vendors, limited number of RV hookups available<br />

($16 per night), VE sessions (Saturday, 9 AM),<br />

card checking for DXCC and VUCC awards, forums<br />

(ARRL, AMSAT, PSK31), refreshments. TI:<br />

146.85. Adm: $5. Tables: $10 (electricity $10 additional).<br />

Jim Ragsdale, W5LA, 111 Eagle Lake<br />

Dr, W Monroe, LA 71291, 318-396-9529, hamfest<br />

@tchams.org; http://www.tchams.org/users/<br />

hamfest.<br />

†<br />

Massachusetts (Newtonville)—Nov 18; sellers<br />

9:30 AM; public 11 AM to 4 PM. Sprs: Waltham<br />

ARA and 1200 RC. Newton Masonic Hall, 460<br />

Newtonville Ave; at the corner of Walnut St and<br />

Newtonville Ave, near the Star Market which<br />

straddles the Mass Pike. Amateur Radio and Electronics<br />

Auction. TI: 146.64. Adm: $2. Eliot Mayer,<br />

W1MJ, 24 Hamilton Rd, Belmont, MA 02478,<br />

617-484-1089, w1mj@amsat.org; http://www<br />

.wara64.org/wara/auction.htm.<br />

† Michigan (Mt Clemens)—Dec 3, 8 AM to 2 PM.<br />

Spr: L’Anse Creuse ARC. L’Anse Creuse High<br />

School, 38495 L’Anse Creuse Rd, Harrison Twp;<br />

I-94 to Exit 236 (Metro Beach Pkwy), E to Crocker,<br />

N to Reimold, E to L’Anse Creuse Rd. Hamfest/<br />

Computer Show, tailgating (weather permitting),<br />

vendors, seminars, forums, VE sessions, free parking,<br />

refreshments. TI: 147.08. 146.52. Adm: advance<br />

$1, door $5. Tables: $10. Donna Luh, KA8QBD,<br />

732 Brookwood Ln E, Rochester Hills, MI 48309,<br />

248-651-7387, jrluh@aol.com; http://www<br />

.ameritech.net/users/lc_arc/index.html.<br />

† Mississippi (Ocean Springs)—Nov 17-18; set up<br />

Friday 1 PM; public Friday 5-9 PM, Saturday<br />

8 AM to 2 PM. Spr: West Jackson County ARC.<br />

St Martin Community Center; take Exit 50, S from<br />

Gail Iannone Convention Program Manager<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 91


I-10, follow Hwy 609 S to second light, turn right<br />

onto Lemoyne Blvd, Center is 1 1 /2 miles on right.<br />

Hamfest/Swapfest, VE sessions (Saturday, 11 AM;<br />

bring photo ID, original and photo copy of license,<br />

$6.65 test fee), self-contained overnight RV parking<br />

(no hookups), free paved parking. TI: 145.11.<br />

Adm: $2. Tables: $5. Phil Hunsberger, W9NZ,<br />

1207 Lancelot Ln, Ocean Springs, MS 39564,<br />

228-872-1499, w9nzl@juno.com; or Ernie<br />

Orman, W5OXA, 228-392-2816, w5oxa@<br />

datasync.com.<br />

New Hampshire (Londonderry)—Nov 4. Paul<br />

Gifford, K1LL, 603-883-3308.<br />

New Jersey (Lawrenceville)—Nov 4. W2ZQ,<br />

609-882-2240.<br />

†<br />

North Carolina (Benson)—Nov 19, 6 AM to<br />

4 PM. Spr: Johnston ARS. American Legion Complex,<br />

US Hwy 301 N, near the intersection of I-95<br />

and I-40. Indoor flea market, vendors, dealers, tailgating,<br />

VE sessions. TI: 147.27. Adm: advance $4,<br />

door $5. Bill Lambert, AK4H, 8917 NC Hwy 50<br />

N, Benson, NC 27504, 919-894-3352 or 919-894-<br />

3100 (7-10 PM), blambert@interpath.com;<br />

http://www.jars.net.<br />

†<br />

Ohio (Georgetown)—Nov 18, 8 AM to 3 PM.<br />

Spr: Grant ARC. Adams and Brown Community<br />

Action Building, 200 S Green St; I-275 to Rte 125,<br />

E on Rte 125 to Georgetown; or Rte 68 to Rte 125,<br />

W on Rte 125 to Georgetown. Flea market, onstage<br />

auction for charity, refreshments. TI: 146.73.<br />

Adm: $2. Tables: $3 each (plus admission). Dorothy<br />

Silman, KB8TQU, 502 Waynoka Dr,<br />

Sardinia, OH 45171, 937-446-2234, huggee@<br />

bright.net; http://www.qsl.net/~n1djs.<br />

Oklahoma (Enid)—Nov 4. Tom Worth, N5LWT,<br />

580-233-8473.<br />

Pennsylvania (Linglestown)—Nov 5. Harold<br />

Baer, KE3TM, 717-566-8895.<br />

†<br />

Texas (Azle)—Nov 11. Spr: Tri-County ARC of<br />

NTX. Heritage RV Park, 501 Beaver Creek; FM<br />

730, 5 miles S of Hwy 199 in Azle or 9 miles N of<br />

Weatherford. Flea market, vendors, APRS presentation,<br />

emergency communications displays,<br />

AMSAT, VE sessions. TI: 147.16 (110.9 Hz). Adm:<br />

$2. Tables: $10 (indoor), $5 (outdoor). Jerry<br />

Buxton, N0JY, 129 PR 3803, Springtown, TX<br />

76082, 817-523-4426, n0jy@arrl.net; http://<br />

www.qsl.net/tcarc-ntx/nctech.html.<br />

Texas (Houston)—Nov 25. Bill Krampe,<br />

KC5GYD, 281-579-7232.<br />

†<br />

Washington (Ferndale)—Nov 4, 9 AM to 2 PM.<br />

Spr: Mount Baker ARC. Ferndale Band Boosters<br />

Bingo Hall, 5330 Labounty Dr; Exit 262 off I-5,<br />

westbound to second light, left at light onto<br />

Labounty Dr, hall about 1 /2 mile. Dealers, country<br />

store, overnight RV parking, free parking. TI:<br />

146.74. Adm: $3. Tables: advance $15, door $20.<br />

Al Norton, K7IEY, 1008 Liberty St, Lynden, WA<br />

98264, 360-354-4622, k7iey@netscape.net.<br />

Attention All Hamfest Committees!<br />

Get official ARRL sanction for your event<br />

and receive special benefits such as free<br />

prizes, handouts, and other support.<br />

It’s easy to become sanctioned. Contact<br />

the Convention and Hamfest Branch at<br />

ARRL Headquarters, 225 Main St,<br />

Newington, CT 06111. Or send e-mail to<br />

giannone@arrl.org.<br />

SPECIAL EVENTS<br />

James Bay, QC: Zone 2 Contest Group, VB2R,<br />

0000Z Oct 21 to 0000Z Nov 4, celebrating the 100th<br />

birthday of Canadian radio pioneer E.S. Rogers.<br />

28.450 21.250 14.170 7.065. QSL. Carl Styan,<br />

VE3BY, RR#1, Glencairn, ON, L0M 1K0, Canada.<br />

Rock Springs, WY: Sweetwater Amateur Radio<br />

Club, WY7U, 1500 to <strong>2000</strong>Z Nov 4, celebrating<br />

UPRR steam engine 3985, one of two surviving.<br />

14.240 21.325 28.350 7.250. Certificate. Dave<br />

Gregory, 1000 South Dakota, Green River, WY<br />

82935.<br />

Greenville, SC: Experimenters Group ARC,<br />

N4ISS, 1500Z Nov 4 to <strong>2000</strong>Z Nov 5, operating<br />

from the Super Flying Fortress CAF B-29 “FIFI.”<br />

7.290 14.290 28.429 AO-27. Certificate. Al Lark,<br />

301 Shannon Dr, Greenville, SC 29615.<br />

Huntington, WV: Tri-State Amateur Radio Association,<br />

WV8MRT, 1700Z Nov 4 to 1700Z Nov 5,<br />

as the Museum of Radio & Technology honors 100<br />

years of radio. 7.240 14.240 21.340 28.340. Certificate.<br />

Tri-State ARA, PO Box 4120, Huntington,<br />

WV 25729.<br />

Georgetown, DE: Sussex Amateur Radio Assoc.,<br />

N3N, 1200 to 2200Z Nov 9, for the Sussex County<br />

Returns Day celebration. 14.260 28.400 3.900.<br />

Certificate. Tom McDougall, N3JRB, 18572<br />

Whaleys Corner Rd, Georgetown, DE 19947.<br />

Arlington Heights, IL: Armored Force Amateur<br />

Radio Net, KA9NLX, 1500Z Nov 10 to <strong>2000</strong>Z<br />

Nov 12, as AFAR member stations remember all<br />

military veterans. 7.030 7.283 14.325 21.375. Certificate.<br />

John Paskevicz, 1423 North Ridge<br />

Ave, Arlington Heights, IL 60004-4606.<br />

Whitefish Point, MI: Stu Rockafellow Amateur<br />

Radio Society, N8F, 1300Z Nov 10 to 1700Z Nov<br />

12, on the 25th anniversary of the Edmund<br />

Fitzgerald tragedy—operating from the Great<br />

Lakes Shipwreck Museum. 7.270 14.270 21.370<br />

28.370. Certificate. Dave Langston, KB8RAP,<br />

Maritz, 1000 Town Center, Suite 1200, Southfield,<br />

MI 48075.<br />

Reisterstown, MD: Baltimore Amateur Radio<br />

Club, W3FT, 1700-2359Z Nov 11 and Nov 12, to<br />

celebrate the first anniversary of moving into our<br />

meeting and training facility. 7.230 14.260 52.150<br />

146.67. Certificate. BARC, c/o Awards Manager,<br />

PO Box 120, Reisterstown, MD 21136.<br />

Hackensack, NJ: 10-70 Repeater Assn & NJ Naval<br />

Museum/USS Ling, NX2ND, 1400 to 2130Z<br />

Nov 11, to commemorate the resurrection of the<br />

Ling Navy call: NX2ND. 7.260 7.039 14.260<br />

14.039. Certificate. William Stagg, KC2BLN, 38<br />

Rutgers Dr, Oakland, NJ 07436.<br />

Nutley, NJ: Robert D. Grant United Labor Amateur<br />

Radio Association, N2UL, 1200 to 2400Z<br />

Nov 11, during “CQ Veterans Day,” honoring the<br />

veterans of our great country. 18.120 21.375<br />

28.420. Certificate. RDULARA, PO Box 716,<br />

Nutley, NJ 07110-0716.<br />

Guthrie, OK: Edmond Amateur Radio Society,<br />

N5OK, 1400 to 2200Z Nov 18, recognizing Oklahoma<br />

Statehood Day. 7.289 14.289 21.289 28.389.<br />

QSL. EARS, PO Box 48, Edmond, OK 73083.<br />

Plymouth, MA: Whitman Amateur Radio Club,<br />

Inc, WA1NPO, 1400Z Nov 25 to 2100Z Nov 26,<br />

to commemorate our forefather’s first successful<br />

settlement in America. 3.970 7.270 14.270 24.970.<br />

Certificate. Whitman ARC, PO Box 48, Whitman,<br />

MA 02382.<br />

Certificates and QSL cards: To obtain a certificate<br />

from any of the special-event stations offering<br />

them, send your QSO information along with a 9×12<br />

inch self-addressed, stamped envelope with two<br />

units of First Class postage to the address listed in<br />

the announcement. To receive a special event QSL<br />

card (when offered), be sure to include a self-addressed,<br />

stamped business envelope along with<br />

your QSL card and QSO information.<br />

Special Events Announcements: For items to be<br />

listed in this column, you must be an Amateur<br />

Radio club, and use the ARRL Special Events Listing<br />

Form. Copies of this form are available via<br />

Internet (info@arrl.org), or for a SASE (send to<br />

Special Requests, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington,<br />

CT 06111) and write “Special Requests Form” in<br />

the lower left-hand corner. You can also submit your<br />

special event information on-line at http://www.arrl<br />

.org/contests/spevform.html. Submissions must<br />

be received by ARRL HQ no later than the 1st of<br />

the second month preceding the publication date;<br />

ie, a special event listing for Jan <strong>QST</strong> would have<br />

to be received by Nov 1. Submissions may be mailed<br />

to George Fremin III, K5TR, at the address shown<br />

on this page; faxed to ARRL HQ at 860-594-0259;<br />

or e-mailed to events@arrl.org.<br />

George Fremin III, K5TR 624 Lost Oak Trail, Johnson City, TX 78636 k5tr@arrl.org<br />

STRAYS<br />

LOOKING FOR QSL COLLECTORS<br />

◊ I would like to hear from any hams interested<br />

in participating in an Internet trading club dedicated<br />

to collecting pre-1939 vintage QSL cards.<br />

Please e-mail Tony Ricicki, W2VRK, at<br />

tpllrs@eclipse.net.<br />

WANTED: HF SKEDS<br />

◊ The Starved Rock Radio Club is offering a<br />

Technician class at our local LaSalle Illinois Veterans’<br />

Home this fall. We would like to set up<br />

92 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

evening HF skeds with other Veteran facilities<br />

to help introduce our students to Amateur Radio.<br />

Please e-mail Joe Tokarz, KB9EZZ, at<br />

kb9ezz@arrl.net.<br />

OPERATION CQ<br />

◊ The Amateur Vanity Call Sign Headquarters<br />

Web site at http://www.carroll-usa.com/vanity<br />

has inaugurated a program known as “Operation<br />

CQ.” This project will enable hams across the<br />

US to document their formerly held call signs<br />

and license information. The intent is to build a<br />

searchable, historical database and make it available,<br />

online, with no fees, in 2001. Operation CQ<br />

provides instructions and an 11-step online form<br />

which hams can use to supply details concerning<br />

their former call signs. Call sign registration<br />

will continue into next year.<br />

LOOKING FOR ACP-131<br />

◊ While I was a cryptologist in the US Navy<br />

(1980-86), I often used a publication that I very<br />

much wish to find again. This publication had<br />

a complete listing of all Q & Z abbreviations<br />

used in Morse code. It was titled ACP-131. If<br />

anyone has a copy, or knows where I can find<br />

one, please e-mail Mark Linafelter, NL7AS,<br />

at mjlinafe@visi.com.<br />

Next Stray


CONTEST CORRAL<br />

Feedback<br />

In the 1999 ARRL Ten-Meter Contest,<br />

G0MRH should be shown with 14,080 points, 80<br />

QSOs and 44 multipliers in the Single-Op, CW-<br />

Only, Low-Power, Category. N0FW should be<br />

listed in the ND section, making him the section<br />

winner in the Mixed-Mode, High-Band category. A<br />

resolved file problem changes the score of W6SD to<br />

127,410 points on 410 QSOs with 105 multipliers.<br />

The San Fernando Valley ARC should be shown in<br />

the Local Club Category with a score of 335,866.<br />

K0DAT should appear in the Missouri section instead<br />

of the Michigan section. The operators for the<br />

K6HAI entry in the San Diego section should be<br />

KD7BC, WB6BDY, WA6EOO, AB6EZ, W6JXA,<br />

WB6LLO, KC6QHQ, KA6UCD, N6UN, KQ6XJ,<br />

KK6XY and W6ZBE.<br />

In the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL RTTY Round-Up, N8LRG<br />

should be listed as the Seventh Place finisher in the<br />

W/VE Multioperator Low-Power category. The<br />

call sign of KF8KW is incorrectly shown as<br />

KF8MK in the KY section.<br />

In the 1999 <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes, after reverifying<br />

the entry category, the Single-Operator,<br />

Low-Power Phone Canadian winner should be<br />

listed as VE4GV.<br />

In the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL International DX CW<br />

Contest, W3CP is a Single-Band 10-Meter entry<br />

in the MDC section.<br />

W1AW Qualifying Runs are 9 AM EST, Thursday,<br />

<strong>November</strong> 2, and 7 PM EST Friday, <strong>November</strong><br />

17. The K6YR West Coast Qualifying Run<br />

will be at 9 PM PST on Wednesday, <strong>November</strong> 1.<br />

Check the W1AW schedule for details.<br />

4-6<br />

ARRL <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes, CW. See<br />

October <strong>QST</strong>, page 102.<br />

Seventh Annual North American Collegiate<br />

ARC Championship, CW, 2100Z Nov 4 to 0300Z<br />

Nov 6 (phone is 2100Z Nov 18 to 0300Z Nov 20).<br />

Both sections run concurrently with the ARRL <strong>November</strong><br />

Sweepstakes contest. Participation limited<br />

to clubs at institutions of higher learning beyond<br />

the high school level. Colleges may enter Sweepstakes<br />

in any of the valid Sweepstakes entry categories<br />

and abide by all of the ARRL Sweepstakes<br />

rules. In an effort to encourage club station improvements<br />

all contacts must be made from the established<br />

club radio station located on a college<br />

campus, if one exists. (No “portable” operation<br />

from a nearby contest “super station.”) A club may<br />

operate from a member’s station provided that a<br />

club station does not exist on campus. Official results<br />

will be based on those published in <strong>QST</strong>, so all<br />

contestants must submit a valid log to the ARRL.<br />

The combined champion is based on a points system<br />

whereby each CW and phone score is divided<br />

by the highest scoring collegiate score for that<br />

mode and multiplied by 1000. The overall combined<br />

score is the sum of the CW and phone points.<br />

Separate champions will be determined for CW,<br />

phone and combined scores. Contestants must also<br />

submit a score summary (the contest summary<br />

sheet, not a complete log) to: Collegiate Championship,<br />

c/o Ken Harker, WM5R, 927 E 46th St,<br />

Apt 102, Austin, TX 78751; wm5r@arrl.net. Provisional<br />

scores and winners will be available on<br />

the Collegiate Championship home page at http:<br />

//www.collegiatechampionship.org/.<br />

IPA Contest, Phone and CW, sponsored by The<br />

International Police Association Radio Club, CW<br />

Nov 4, 0600Z-1000Z and 1400Z-1800Z; Phone<br />

Nov 5 0600Z-1000Z and 1400Z-1800Z; 80 40 20<br />

15 10 meters. Single op, Multi-single, Multi-multi<br />

and SWL. Exchange RST and serial number.<br />

IPARC members give their membership number.<br />

Count 1 point per QSO; 5 points for every QSO<br />

with an IPARC member. Multipliers are DXCC<br />

entities and US states per band. Final score is QSO<br />

points × total multipliers per band. Add band totals<br />

together to get final score. Send logs by Dec 31 to:<br />

Uwe Greggersen, DL8KCG, Hurststr. 9, D-51645<br />

Gummersbach, Germany; dl8kcg@talknet.de;<br />

http://www.iparc.com/Contests/contests.html.<br />

10-12<br />

Worked All Europe Contest, RTTY, from 0000Z<br />

Nov 10 to 2400Z Nov 11. 80 40 20 15 10 meters.<br />

Single-op all band, multiop, single transmitter and<br />

SWL. DX cluster assistance allowed for all classes.<br />

Single ops must take 12 hours of “off” time (consisting<br />

of periods lasting no more than three hours)<br />

during the contest. Exchange RST and QSO serial<br />

number. Work stations once per band. Count 1<br />

point for each QSO and 1 point for each QTC. A<br />

QTC is a report of confirmed QSOs that took place<br />

earlier in the contest that is sent back to a station.<br />

A QTC contains the time, call sign and QSO number<br />

of the station being reported (eg, 1307/<br />

DL1AA/346). A QSO may only be reported once,<br />

and not back to the originating station. A maximum<br />

of 10 QTCs can be sent to the same station,<br />

the same station can be worked several times to<br />

complete this quota. Count 1 point for each QTC<br />

reported to any station not on your own continent.<br />

Each station may both send and receive QTCs, but<br />

the sum of QTCs exchanged between two stations<br />

(sent plus received) must not exceed 10. A uniform<br />

list of QTCs sent must be kept. QTC 3/7 indicates<br />

that this is the 3rd series and 7 QTCs are now being<br />

sent. Record all received QTCs on a separate sheet<br />

with a clear indication of the sender. Multipliers<br />

are DXCC/WAE countries per band. Each multiplier<br />

counts as follows: 80 meters × 4; 40 meters ×<br />

3; 20 15 10 meters × 2. Score is total number of<br />

QSOs + QTCs × total number of multipliers.<br />

Awards. Send logs by December 15, to WAEDC<br />

Contest Committee, Durerring 7, PO Box 1126, D-<br />

74370, Sersheim, Germany; waedc@darc.de;<br />

http://server.darc.de/referate/dx/xedcwr.htm.<br />

Japan International DX Contest, phone. sponsored<br />

by Five-Nine Magazine, from 2300Z Nov 10<br />

until 2300Z Nov 12. Work JAs only. 80 40 20 15<br />

10 meters. Operate no more than 30 hours (JAs<br />

operate full 48). Single operator multi/single band,<br />

high (>100 W) or low (


General Rules for All ARRL Contests<br />

1. Precedence of Rules:<br />

1.1. Rules for individual contests or events, including Field Day,<br />

take precedence over all General Rules.<br />

1.2. General Rules for HF and VHF contests take precedence over<br />

General Rules for all contests.<br />

2. Conditions of Entry: Entrants agree to be bound by:<br />

2.1. The provisions and intent of ARRL contest rules;<br />

2.2. The regulations of the national licensing authority;<br />

2.3. The decisions of the ARRL Awards Committee.<br />

3. General Rules:<br />

3.1. All operators must observe the limitations of their operator<br />

licenses and station licenses at all times.<br />

3.2. All signs and exchange information must be sent, received,<br />

acknowledged and logged correctly by each station for a complete QSO.<br />

3.3. One operator may not use more than one call sign from any<br />

given location during the contest period.<br />

3.4. The same station may be worked only once per band for<br />

contest credit.<br />

3.5. A transmitter used to contact one or more stations may not be<br />

subsequently used under any other call during the contest period, except<br />

for family stations where more than one call has been issued, and then<br />

only if the second call sign is used by a different operator. (The intent<br />

of this rule is to accommodate family members who must share a rig,<br />

and to prohibit manufactured or artificial contacts.)<br />

3.6. For the purposes of ARRL contests, maritime mobile is defined<br />

as shipboard operation on the high seas, outside of the territorial waters<br />

of the country (defined for these purposes only as 12 miles).<br />

3.7. All transmitters and receivers must be located within a 500-<br />

meter diameter circle, excluding antennas.<br />

3.7.1. This prohibits the use of remote receiving installations.<br />

3.7.2. Exceptions:<br />

3.7.2.1. Stations remotely controlled by radio link may use<br />

necessary equipment at the control point. This does not include using<br />

the control point as another receiving location.<br />

3.7.2.2. Multioperator and Single Operator Assisted stations may<br />

use spotting nets.<br />

3.8. Cross-band contacts are not permitted.<br />

3.9. Contacts made through repeaters, digipeaters, or gateways are<br />

not permitted.<br />

3.9.1. This applies to all forms of active relays or repeaters.<br />

3.9.2. Satellite contacts, where allowed, are not subject to this<br />

rule.<br />

3.10. The use of non-Amateur Radio means of communication (for<br />

example, Internet or telephone) to solicit a contact (or contacts) during<br />

the contest period is not permitted.<br />

3.11. Entrants who qualify for unsponsored plaques may purchase<br />

them from the ARRL Contest Branch.<br />

3.12. General contest queries should be directed to the Contest<br />

Branch Manager via e-mail at n1nd@arrl.org or by telephone at 860-<br />

594-0232.<br />

3.13. All logs (electronic or paper) submitted to the ARRL for<br />

any contest must be in chronological order, in a single log (file).<br />

Separate band-by-band files or logs are subject to being classified<br />

as checklogs and ineligible for competition.<br />

3.14. In contests where packet or spotting nets are allowed,<br />

spotting your own station or requesting another station to spot you<br />

is not permitted.<br />

4. ARRL Standard File Format for Electronic Submission of<br />

Entries.<br />

4.1 The official ARRL File Format for electronic submissions<br />

is the Cabrillo format (effective <strong>November</strong> 1, <strong>2000</strong>).<br />

4.2. All electronic files must be standard ASCII text.<br />

4.3. Cabrillo format specifications are available:<br />

4.3.1. On the ARRL Contest homepage at: http://<br />

www.arrl.org/contests.<br />

4.3.2. On the Internet at http://www.kkn.net/~trey/cabrillo/.<br />

4.3.3. By sending an SASE with two units of postage and $1<br />

to: Cabrillo File Specs, Contest Branch, ARRL, 225 Main St,<br />

Newington, CT 06111.<br />

4.4. Electronic files may be submitted either via the Internet<br />

as e-mail or on diskette.<br />

4.4.1. Files sent via e-mail must be sent as attachments, not<br />

as the text of the e-mail, and sent to the appropriate e-mail address<br />

from the following list:<br />

94 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

4.4.1.1. 10GHZ@arrl.org<br />

10Meter@arrl.org<br />

160Meter@arrl.org<br />

AugustUHF@arrl.org<br />

DXCW@arrl.org<br />

DXPhone@arrl.org<br />

EMEContest@arrl.org<br />

FieldDay@arrl.org<br />

IARUHF@iaru.org<br />

JanuaryVHF@arrl.org<br />

JuneVHF@arrl.org<br />

RTTYRU@arrl.org<br />

SeptemberVHF@arrl.org<br />

SSCW@arrl.org<br />

SSPhone@arrl.org<br />

StraightKey@arrl.org<br />

4.4.2. E-mails must include the participant’s call sign, contest<br />

name and year in the Subject line of the e-mail. Electronic files<br />

must be names with the operator’s call sign and the file extension<br />

.log. Files that are sent using a filename other than the operator’s<br />

call sign are subject to being classified checklogs.<br />

4.5. Electronic logs are assumed to be signed when submitted.<br />

4.6. Any log that is computer generated must submit the<br />

electronic file of the log in ARRL file format. Failure to submit the<br />

required electronic file can result in the entry being designated a<br />

checklog, and thereby ineligible for competition. A paper printout<br />

of the log file is not an acceptable substitute.<br />

4.7. Only one entry may be included in each submission<br />

(e-mail or diskette). CW and Phone weekends of the <strong>November</strong><br />

Sweepstakes and International DX Contest are considered separate<br />

contests and must be submitted separately.<br />

4.8. All diskettes submitted become property of the ARRL and<br />

are not returnable.<br />

4.9. Multioperator Two Transmitter category entries must<br />

indicate which transmitter makes each QSO in the log file.<br />

4.10. In contests that require rest periods, the “ON” and<br />

“OFF” times must be listed in the Soapbox (comments) section of<br />

the Cabrillo Summary sheet. Do not list them in the main body of<br />

the Cabrillo log file itself.<br />

4.11. Any electronic file that does not include complete entry<br />

information (category, power, etc) will have the missing data<br />

recorded at a default value.<br />

4.12. Diskettes sent via postal service should be mailed to: ARRL,<br />

225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111 with the contest name clearly<br />

marked on the envelope/mailer.<br />

5. Paper Logs:<br />

5.1. Entrants must use official Contest Forms or acceptable<br />

facsimile.<br />

5.2. The most current forms should be used, as scoring rules,<br />

ARRL sections, etc, do change periodically.<br />

5.3. Handwritten logs files, showing required QSO information,<br />

are accepted for all ARRL contests.<br />

5.4. Handwritten logs that have been transcribed after the<br />

contest to a word processor, database, or contest-logging program<br />

are considered electronic logs and must meet Cabrillo file format<br />

and submission requirements.<br />

5.5. Paper entries with more than 500 QSOs must include band<br />

by band dupe sheets.<br />

5.6. Paper entries should be submitted to: ARRL, 225 Main St,<br />

Newington, CT 06111 with the contest name clearly marked on the<br />

envelope.<br />

5.7. Only one contest entry may be included in each envelope<br />

mailed to ARRL.<br />

6. Reporting:<br />

6.1. Entries must be sent to the ARRL within 30 days after the<br />

end of the contest. For electronic submissions, this is determined by<br />

the date the e-mail is sent. For regular mail, this is determined from the<br />

postmark.<br />

6.2. Logs not submitted by the contest deadline will be classified<br />

as checklogs: no extensions, no exceptions.<br />

6.3. Entries received at the ARRL more than 30 days after the<br />

contest submission deadline may not be included in <strong>QST</strong> listings.<br />

6.4. Only one entry per e-mail / envelope is allowed.<br />

6.5. All entries must include complete summary information.


7. Disqualification and Penalties:<br />

7.1. If the claimed score of a participant is reduced by 2% or more,<br />

the entry may be disqualified. Score reduction does not include<br />

correction of arithmetic errors.<br />

7.2. Score reduction may be made for taking credit for unconfirmed<br />

QSOs or multipliers, duplicate contacts or other scoring discrepancies.<br />

7.3. An entry with more than two-percent duplicate contacts left<br />

in the log or an entry in which more than 2% “rubber clocking” (altering<br />

the actual time to increase the operating time so that it is greater than<br />

the allowable limit) is detected will be automatically disqualified.<br />

7.4. Participants that are disqualified will be barred from<br />

submitting an entry in the next annual running of that specific contest;<br />

for example, disqualification from the <strong>2000</strong> phone SS prohibits<br />

submission of an entry for the 2001 phone SS, but 2001 CW SS<br />

participation is allowable.<br />

7.5. Call signs of all disqualified partici-pants will be listed in the<br />

<strong>QST</strong> contest report.<br />

7.6. Any participant on the borderline of disqualification, but not<br />

actually disqualified may receive a warning letter.<br />

7.7. In a paper log, for each duplicate contact that is claimed for<br />

credit, each miscopied call sign or each busted exchange that is removed<br />

from the log by HQ, three additional contacts will be deleted as a<br />

penalty. In electronic logs, for each duplicate contact that is claimed<br />

for credit, each miscopied call sign or each busted exchange that is<br />

removed from the log by HQ, one additional contact will be deleted as<br />

a penalty. The penalty will not be considered part of the 2%<br />

disqualification criteria.<br />

7.8. In all cases, the decisions of the ARRL Awards Committee<br />

are final.<br />

8. Club Competition:<br />

8.1. Six ARRL-sponsored contests include an ARRL affiliated club<br />

competition:<br />

8.1.1. January VHF Sweepstakes<br />

8.1.2. (February and March) International DX Contest<br />

8.1.3. September VHF QSO Party<br />

8.1.4. <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes<br />

8.1.5. (December) 160-Meter Contest<br />

8.1.6. (December) 10-Meter Contest<br />

8.2. Only clubs actively affiliated with the ARRL may participate<br />

in the club competition. This means the club:<br />

8.2.1. Is affiliated with the ARRL, and<br />

8.2.2. Has filed an annual report with the Field Services<br />

Department of ARRL HQ within the last two years.<br />

8.3. For a club to be listed, the following conditions must be met:<br />

8.3.1. Entries from three different members of the club must be<br />

submitted.<br />

8.3.2. The entry must clearly indicate the club name on the<br />

summary sheet.<br />

8.3.3. The club secretary must send a list of all club members<br />

eligible to compete for the club (not a club roster) and which level<br />

(unlimited, medium, local) they wish to enter for each competition<br />

within 30 days after the contest.<br />

8.3.4. A member’s score must be shown in the contest results to<br />

be counted for a club. Only that score shown in the results (or in<br />

subsequent corrections) will count for the club competition.<br />

8.4. There are three categories of club competition:<br />

8.4.1. Unlimited<br />

8.4.1.1. Club submits 51 or more entries.<br />

8.4.1.2. One station can submit two entries—one on CW and<br />

one on phone in the <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes and the DX Contest.<br />

8.4.1.3. All stations and all operators must reside within 175<br />

miles (282 km) of the club’s center.<br />

8.4.1.4. All members must attend at least 2 club meetings per<br />

year to be eligible to submit an entry. (However, if the person has not<br />

been a member for a year’s time, they must have attended one meeting<br />

as a member prior to the contest.)<br />

8.4.1.5. Those club members who are disabled to the extent that<br />

they are unable to travel are exempt from the two meetings per year<br />

rule. However, they must be regularly active in club affairs.<br />

8.4.1.6. To be considered bona fide, a member must be active in<br />

club affairs.<br />

8.4.1.7. Members living outside 175 miles and members that<br />

operate stations outside 175 miles may not compete in the club<br />

competition. (See rule 8.6.)<br />

8.4.2. Medium<br />

8.4.2.1. Club submits 50 or fewer entries and does not qualify<br />

under the local club criteria.<br />

8.4.2.2. One station can submit two entries—one on CW and one<br />

on phone in the <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes and the DX Contest.<br />

8.4.2.3. The same mileage and attendance requirements apply<br />

as the unlimited class club.<br />

8.4.2.4. Members living outside 175 miles and members that<br />

operate stations outside 175 miles may not compete in the club<br />

competition. (See rule 8.6.)<br />

8.4.3. Local<br />

8.4.3.1. Club submits 10 or fewer entries.<br />

8.4.3.2. (One station can submit two entries—one on CW and<br />

one on phone in the <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes and the DX Contest.)<br />

8.4.3.3. All members must reside and operate within 35 miles of<br />

the club’s center.<br />

8.4.3.4. There is no attendance require-ment.<br />

8.5. Single Operator and Multioperator station scores may be<br />

counted:<br />

8.5.1. At a guest-operated single-operator station, both the guest<br />

operator and the station licensee must be members of the same club in<br />

order to count the score for that club.<br />

8.5.2. At multioperator stations, at least 66% of the operators must<br />

be members of the same club for the score to count for that club.<br />

8.5.3. A multioperator entry may (optional) utilize non-member<br />

operators licensed one year or less without including such operators in<br />

the above 66% calculation. (The intent here is to encourage clubs to<br />

recruit contesters from newer amateurs without adversely affecting the<br />

club aggregate score.)<br />

8.6.For the ARRL International DX Contest, DXpedition<br />

(operating outside the United States and Canada) scores may be counted<br />

for either single operator or multioperator stations even though the<br />

operation is outside the club’s area.<br />

8.6.1. For single guest operators at a DX station, only the operator<br />

must be a club member and meet all other criteria.<br />

8.6.2. For multioperator stations, the score counts for only one<br />

club and at least 66% of the operators must be members of that club<br />

and meet all other criteria.<br />

8.7. In conjunction with the two meetings per year rule, the club<br />

must hold at least four in-person meetings per year.<br />

8.8. A club’s entry classification may be changed if, in the opinion<br />

of the ARRL Awards Committee, the club has manipulated its number<br />

of entries to allow the club to enter a lower classification. (For example,<br />

if a club with 100 members submits only the 10 highest scores, even if<br />

more than 10 of its members wish to compete.)<br />

8.9. It is not within the intent of these rules that a club should vote<br />

out a member or that a member resign and then be voted back into the<br />

club later so the member-attendance rule can be met.<br />

8.10. The highest scoring active affiliated club entry in each<br />

category (unlimited, medium, local) will be awarded a gavel.<br />

General Rules for ARRL Contests on bands below 30 MHz (HF)<br />

1. General Rules:<br />

1.1. See General Rules for All ARRL Contests.<br />

1.2. Cross-mode contacts are not permitted.<br />

2. Entry Categories: The following categories are defined for<br />

ARRL contests on bands below 30 MHz. See the rules for each contest<br />

to determine which categories apply, and whether additional<br />

categories exist for that contest.<br />

2.1. Single Operator: One person performs all transmitting,<br />

receiving, spotting, and logging functions as well as equipment and<br />

antenna adjustments.<br />

2.1.1. Use of spotting assistance or nets (operating<br />

arrangements involving other individuals, DX-alerting nets, packet,<br />

Internet, etc) is not permitted.<br />

2.1.2. Single-Operator stations are allowed only one<br />

transmitted signal at any given time.<br />

2.1.3. Single Operators may be divided into subcategories<br />

based on power output:<br />

2.1.3.1. QRP: 5-W PEP output or less.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 95


2.1.3.2. Low Power: 150-W PEP output or less.<br />

2.1.3.3. High Power: More than 150-W PEP output.<br />

2.2. Single Operator Assisted: One person performs all<br />

transmitting, receiving, and logging functions as well as equipment<br />

and antenna adjustments.<br />

2.2.1. Use of spotting assistance or nets (operating arrangements<br />

involving other individuals, DX-alerting nets, packet, etc) not physically<br />

located at the station is permitted.<br />

2.2.2. Single Operator Assisted stations are allowed only one<br />

transmitted signal at any given time, not including transmissions on<br />

a spotting net.<br />

2.3. Multioperator: More than one person performs<br />

transmitting, receiving and logging functions, etc. Multioperator<br />

stations are divided into subcategories:<br />

2.3.1. Multioperator, Single Transmitter: Stations are<br />

allowed only one transmitted signal at any given time.<br />

2.3.1.1. In those contests that do not have Single Operator<br />

Assisted class, this category includes those single operators that use<br />

any form of spotting assistance such as from nets or packet.<br />

2.3.1.2. Includes those that receive assistance with logging or<br />

relief operators, etc.<br />

2.3.1.3. Limited to 6 band changes (maximum) in any clock<br />

hour.<br />

2.3.1.3.1. The clock hour is from zero through 59 minutes.<br />

2.3.1.3.2. Band changes are defined so that, for example, a<br />

change from 20 meters to 40 meters and then back to 20 meters<br />

constitutes two band changes.<br />

2.3.1.4. Violation of the 6 band changes rule or improper<br />

logging will result in an entry reclassification to the Multi-operator<br />

Multitransmitter class.<br />

2.3.2. Multioperator, Two Transmitter:<br />

2.3.2.1. A maximum of two trans-mitted signals at any given<br />

time, on different bands.<br />

2.3.2.2. Each transmitter is limited to 6 band changes<br />

(maximum) in any clock hour.<br />

2.3.2.2.1. The clock hour is from zero through 59 minutes.<br />

2.3.2.2.2. Band changes are defined so that, for example, a<br />

change from 20 meters to 40 meters and then back to 20 meters<br />

constitutes two band changes.<br />

2.3.2.2.3. Violation of the 6 band changes rule or improper<br />

logging will result in an entry reclassification to the Multi-operator<br />

Multitransmitter class.<br />

2.3.2.3. Both transmitters may work any and all stations; the<br />

second transmitter is not limited to working new multipliers only.<br />

However, a station may only be worked once per band regardless of<br />

which transmitter is used.<br />

2.3.2.4. Each of the two transmitters must keep a separate,<br />

chronological log for the entire contest period.<br />

2.3.2.5. The Cabrillo log must indicate which transmitter<br />

made each QSO in this category.<br />

2.3.3. Multioperator, Multitransmitter:<br />

2.3.3.1. A maximum of one transmitted signal per band at<br />

any given time.<br />

2.3.3.2. Multioperator, Multitransmitter stations must keep<br />

a separate, chrono-logical log for each band for the entire contest<br />

period.<br />

General Rules for ARRL Contests on bands above 50 MHz<br />

1. General Rules:<br />

1.1. See General Rules for All ARRL Contests.<br />

1.2. Individuals and stations are limited to one entry per contest.<br />

1.3. A transmitter, receiver, or antenna used to contact one or<br />

more stations may not subsequently be used under any other call<br />

during the contest period, except as provided for in General Rules<br />

for All ARRL Contests number 3.5.<br />

1.4. Stations may be worked for credit only once per band from<br />

any given grid square, regardless of mode. This does not prohibit<br />

working a station from more than one grid square with the same call<br />

sign (such as a Rover).<br />

1.5. Crossband QSOs do not count.<br />

1.6. Aeronautical mobile contacts do not count.<br />

1.7. Retransmitting either or both stations, or use of repeater<br />

frequencies, is not permitted.<br />

1.7.1. This prohibits use of all repeater frequencies.<br />

1.7.2. Contest entrants may not transmit on repeaters or<br />

repeater frequencies for the purpose of soliciting contacts.<br />

1.8. Use of the national simplex frequency, 146.52 MHz, or<br />

immediately adjacent guard frequencies, is prohibited.<br />

1.8.1. Contest entrants may not transmit on 146.52 for the<br />

purpose of making or soliciting QSOs.<br />

1.8.2. The intent of this rule is to protect the national simplex<br />

frequency from contest monopolization.<br />

1.8.3. There are no restrictions on the use of 223.50 MHz.<br />

1.9. Only recognized FM simplex frequencies may be used, such<br />

as 144.90 to 145.00; 146.49, .55 and .58, and 147.42, .45, .48, .51,<br />

.54 and .57 MHz on the 2-meter band.<br />

1.9.1. Local-option simplex channels and frequencies adjacent<br />

to the above that do not violate the intent of the above rules, or the<br />

spirit and intent of the band plans as recommended in the ARRL<br />

Repeater Directory, may be used for contest purposes.<br />

1.10. While no minimum distance is specified for contacts,<br />

equipment should be capable of communications at a range of at least<br />

1 km.<br />

1.11. A station located precisely on a dividing line between grid<br />

squares must select only one as the location for exchange purposes. A<br />

different grid-square multiplier cannot be given without moving the<br />

complete station (including antennas) at least 100 meters.<br />

1.12. Above 300 GHz, contacts are permitted for contest credit<br />

only between licensed amateurs using coherent radiation on<br />

transmission (for example, laser) and employing at least one stage of<br />

electronic detection on receive.<br />

96 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

1.13. Marine Mobile (and Maritime) entries will be listed<br />

separately as “Marine Mobile” in the listings and compete separately<br />

for awards.<br />

1.14. Participants are reminded that the segment 50.100-50.125<br />

MHz should be used for intercontinental QSOs only, using 50.125<br />

MHz as a calling frequency, then QSY after contact is established.<br />

2. Entry Categories: The following categories are defined for<br />

ARRL contests on bands above 50 MHz. See the rules for each contest<br />

to determine which categories apply, and whether additional<br />

categories exist for that contest.<br />

2.1. Single Operator: One person performs all transmitting,<br />

receiving, spotting, and logging functions as well as equipment and<br />

antenna adjustments.<br />

2.1.1. Single Operator Low Power:<br />

2.1.1.1 Power limits on any band may not exceed the<br />

following:<br />

2.1.1.1.1. 50 MHz and 144 MHz—200 W PEP.<br />

2.1.1.1.2. 222 MHz and 432 MHz—100 W PEP.<br />

2.1.1.1.3. 902 MHz and above—10 W PEP.<br />

2.1.2. Single Operator High Power: Power limits on any band<br />

exceeds the limits for the Single Operator Low power.<br />

2.1.3. Use of spotting assistance or nets (operating<br />

arrangements involving other individuals, DX-alerting nets, packet,<br />

etc) is not permitted.<br />

2.1.4. Single Operator stations are allowed only one transmitted<br />

signal at any given time.<br />

2.1.5. Both categories of Single Operator stations compete for<br />

all-band and single-band awards.<br />

2.1.6. Overall and single-band winners are recognized both in<br />

<strong>QST</strong> score listings and in awards offered.<br />

2.2. Single Operator Portable: (formerly QRP Portable)<br />

2.2. 10 W PEP output or less.<br />

2.2.1. Portable power source.<br />

2.2.2. Portable equipment and antennas.<br />

2.2.3. Single Operator Portable stations must operate from<br />

a location other than a permanent station location.<br />

2.2.4. Single Operator Portable stations may not change<br />

locations during the contest period outside of the original 500<br />

meter diameter permitted circle.<br />

2.3. Rover: One or two operators of a single station that moves<br />

among two or more grid squares during the course of a contest.<br />

2.3.1. A rover vehicle may transport only one station using a<br />

single call sign.


2.3.2. A rover may not operate with more than one call sign.<br />

2.3.3. Rover vehicles must transport all the equipment, power<br />

supplies, and antennas used at each operating site.<br />

2.3.4. Rovers sign “rover” on phone and /R on CW after their<br />

call sign.<br />

2.3.5. All Rovers are encouraged to adopt operating practices<br />

that allow as many stations as possible to contact them.<br />

2.3.6. Rover operators may submit separate logs for single<br />

operator (fixed station) in addition to their rover entries. Rovers<br />

submitting a score for inclusion in a club competition must also<br />

include a secondary summary sheet indicating the portion of the score<br />

which counts for the club score if any of the QSOs submitted take<br />

place outside of their club’s territory.<br />

2.4. Multioperator: More than one person performs<br />

transmitting, receiving and logging functions, etc. Stations must locate<br />

all equipment (including antennas) within a circle whose diameter<br />

does not exceed 300 meters (1,000 feet). Multioperator stations may<br />

be divided into subcategories:<br />

2.4.1. Multioperator (Unlimited): Stations submit logs with<br />

more than four bands used.<br />

2.4.2. Limited Multioperator: Stations submit logs with a<br />

maximum of four bands used. (Logs from additional bands used, if<br />

any, should be included as checklogs.)<br />

<strong>2000</strong> ARRL 10-Meter Contest Rules<br />

1. Object: For Amateurs worldwide to exchange QSO information<br />

with as many stations as possible on the 10-meter band.<br />

2. Date and Contest Period: Second full weekend of December.<br />

Starts 0000 UTC Saturday; ends 2400 UTC Sunday (December 9–<br />

10, <strong>2000</strong>).<br />

2.1. All stations operate no more than 36 hours out of the 48-<br />

hour period.<br />

2.2. Listening time counts as operating time.<br />

3. Entry Categories:<br />

3.1. Single Operator: (9 categories)<br />

3.1.1. QRP.<br />

3.1.1.1. Mixed Mode (Phone and CW).<br />

3.1.1.2. Phone only.<br />

3.1.1.3. CW only.<br />

3.1.2. Low Power.<br />

3.1.2.1. Mixed Mode (Phone and CW).<br />

3.1.2.2. Phone only.<br />

3.1.2.3. CW only.<br />

3.1.3. High Power.<br />

3.1.3.1. Mixed Mode (Phone and CW).<br />

3.1.3.2. Phone only.<br />

3.1.3.3. CW only.<br />

3.2. Multioperator, Single Transmitter, mixed mode (only).<br />

3.2.1. Includes single operators using packet or spotting<br />

assistance.<br />

4. Contest Exchange:<br />

4.1. W/VE stations (including Hawaii and Alaska) send signal<br />

report and state or province (District of Columbia stations send signal<br />

report and DC).<br />

4.1.1. KH6 and KL7 participate as W/VE, not DXCC entities<br />

in this contest.<br />

4.2.1. Novice and Technician stations sign /N or /T on CW. If<br />

used, you must indicate /N or /T on your summary sheet.<br />

4.2. DX stations (including KH2, KP4, etc, but not including<br />

KH6 or KL7) transmit signal report and sequential serial number<br />

starting with 001.<br />

4.3. Maritime mobile stations send signal report and ITU Region<br />

(1, 2 or 3).<br />

5. Scoring:<br />

5.1. QSO points:<br />

5.1.1. Count two points for each complete two-way phone<br />

QSO.<br />

5.1.2. Count four points for each two-way CW QSO.<br />

5.1.3. Count eight points for CW QSOs with US Novice or<br />

Technician stations signing /N or /T (28.1 to 28.3 MHz only).<br />

5.2. Multipliers: (per mode, phone and CW).<br />

5.2.1. The fifty US states (plus District of Columbia).<br />

5.2.2. Canada NB (VE1, 9), NS (VE1), QC (VE2), ON (VE3),<br />

MB (VE4), SK (VE5), AB (VE6), BC (VE7), NT (VE8), NF (VO1),<br />

LB (VO2), YT (VY1), PE (VY2), and NU (VY0).<br />

5.2.3. DXCC entities (except the mainland US, Canada,<br />

Alaska and Hawaii).<br />

5.2.4. ITU regions (maritime mobiles only).<br />

5.3. Final Score: Multiply QSO points by total multipliers (the<br />

sum of states/VE provinces/DXCC entities/ITU regions per mode).<br />

Example: KA1RWY works 2245 stations including 1305 phone QSOs,<br />

930 non-Novice CW QSOs, 10 Novice CW QSOs, for a total of 6410<br />

QSO points. She works 49 states, 10 Canadian provinces, 23 DXCC<br />

entities and a maritime mobile station in Region 2 on phone and 30<br />

states, 8 Canadian provinces, and 19 DXCC entities on CW for a total<br />

multiplier of 140. Final score = 6410 (QSO points) × 140 (multiplier)<br />

= 897,400 points.<br />

6. Miscellaneous:<br />

6.1. Single operator mixed-mode and multioperator stations may<br />

work stations once on CW and once on SSB.<br />

6.2. If participating as DX, your call sign must indicate your<br />

DXCC entity (N6TR in Oregon does not send N6TR/7, but K6GSS<br />

in Puerto Rico must send K6GSS/KP4).<br />

6.3. All entrants may transmit only one signal on the air at any<br />

given time.<br />

6.4. All CW contacts must take place below 28.3 MHz.<br />

7. Awards: Certificates will be awarded to:<br />

7.1. The highest-scoring single-operator station (in each<br />

category) from each ARRL/RAC Section and DXCC country.<br />

7.2. Top scoring Novice/Technician station (each category) in<br />

ARRL Sections.<br />

7.3. Top multioperator entries in each ARRL Division, Canada<br />

and each continent.<br />

7.4. Additional certificates will be awarded as participation<br />

warrants.<br />

8. Miscellaneous:<br />

8.1. All electronic logs (computer generated) must submit<br />

an ASCII text file of the log information in Cabrillo file format.<br />

Paper printouts of the electronic file are not acceptable<br />

substitutes.<br />

8.2 Handwritten paper logs are acceptable submissions.<br />

8.3. All entries must be e-mailed or postmarked by January<br />

10, 2001.<br />

8.4. E-mail entries only to: 10meter@arrl.org. Submissions<br />

require Cabrillo log file with all required information (including<br />

exchange sent, category entered, power, and ARRL/RAC section—<br />

see General Rules for specific file format).<br />

8.5. Electronic files not in Cabrillo file format may be<br />

designated as checklogs.<br />

8.6. Paper entries should be mailed to 10 Meter Contest, ARRL,<br />

225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111.<br />

8.7. Paper entries must be submitted on current ARRL entry<br />

forms or an acceptable facsimile.<br />

8.7.1. Forms are available for downloading at the Contest<br />

Branch Web page at http://www.arrl.org/contests/forms/.<br />

8.7.2. Forms are available for an SASE sent to the Contest<br />

Branch.<br />

8.7.3. Forms may be received by sending the following<br />

message to info@arrl.org.<br />

HELP<br />

SEND 10M.RLS<br />

SEND 10M.FRM<br />

8.8. See “General Rules for All ARRL Contests” and “General<br />

Rules for ARRL Contests on bands below 30 MHz (HF)” in this issue<br />

of <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

8.9. General queries should be directed to the Contest Branch<br />

at N1ND@arrl.org or by calling 860-594-0232.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 97


<strong>2000</strong> ARRL 160-Meter Contest Rules<br />

1. Object: For Amateurs worldwide to exchange information with<br />

W/VE amateurs on the 160-meter band CW only. DX-to-DX QSOs<br />

do not count for contest credit.<br />

2. Date and Contest Period: First full weekend of December.<br />

Starts 2200 UTC Friday, ends 1600 UTC Sunday (December 1-3,<br />

<strong>2000</strong>). This is a forty-two hour period with no time limitation.<br />

3. Entry Categories:<br />

3.1. Single Operator:<br />

3.1.1. QRP.<br />

3.1.2. Low Power.<br />

3.1.3. High Power.<br />

3.2. Multi-operator, Single Transmitter (only).<br />

3.2.1. This includes single operators using packet or spotting<br />

assistance.<br />

4. Contest Exchange:<br />

4.1. W/VE: Signal report and ARRL/RAC Section.<br />

4.2. DX: Signal report. Country name is obvious from the<br />

callsign. Send ITU Region if maritime mobile.<br />

5. Scoring:<br />

5.1. QSO Points:<br />

5.1.1. Two points for QSOs with amateurs in an ARRL/RAC<br />

Section.<br />

5.1.2. W/VE stations count five points for DX QSOs.<br />

5.2. Multipliers: ARRL/RAC Sections (maximum of 80) and<br />

DXCC countries (W/VE participants only).<br />

5.2.1. Northwest Territory multi-plier includes the Yukon<br />

(VY1) and Nunavut (VY0).<br />

5.3. Final Score: Multiply QSO points by multiplier. Example:<br />

KA1TRF works 357 stations, including 13 DX stations, and has a<br />

multiplier of 67. His score would be 753 QSO points [(344 × 2) + (13<br />

× 5)] multiplied by 67 for 50,451 points.<br />

6. Miscellaneous:<br />

6.1. Participants are reminded that the segment 1.830 to 1.835<br />

should be used for intercontinental QSOs only, in compliance with<br />

the ARRL band plan.<br />

7. Awards: Certificates will be awarded to the top-scoring QRP,<br />

low-power and high-power single-operator stations in each<br />

ARRL/RAC Section and DXCC country, and to the top-scoring<br />

multioperator stations in each ARRL Division and continent.<br />

8. Miscellaneous:<br />

8.1 All logs that are generated using a computer must submit<br />

an ASCII text file of the log information in approved ARRL file format<br />

(Cabrillo). Paper logs in lieu of the electronic file are not acceptable<br />

substitutes. Handwritten paper logs are still acceptable.<br />

8.2. All entries for this contest must be emailed or<br />

postmarked by January 3, 2001.<br />

8.3. E-mail entries only to: 160meter@arrl.org. Electronic<br />

submissions require a Cabrillo format summary file (combined<br />

summary and log). (See “General Rules” for specific file format.)<br />

8.4. Electronic files not in Cabrillo format may be designated<br />

as checklogs not eligible for awards.<br />

8.5. Handwritten paper entries should be mailed to 160 Meter<br />

Contest, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111.<br />

8.6. Paper entries must be submitted on current ARRL entry<br />

forms or on an acceptable facsimile.<br />

8.6.1. Forms are available for downloading at the Contest<br />

Branch Web page at http://www.arrl.org/contests/forms/.<br />

8.6.2. Forms are available for an SASE sent to the Contest<br />

Branch.<br />

8.6.3. Forms may be received by sending the following<br />

message to info@arrl.org.<br />

HELP<br />

SEND 160M.RLS<br />

SEND 160M.FRM<br />

QUIT<br />

8.7. See “General Rules for All ARRL Contests” and “General<br />

Rules for ARRL Contests on bands below 30 MHz (HF)” in this issue<br />

of <strong>QST</strong>.<br />

8.8. General queries should be directed to the Contest Branch<br />

at N1ND@arrl.org, or by calling 860-594-0232.<br />

NEW PRODUCTS<br />

AUDIO ENHANCING PRODUCTS<br />

FROM K 2 RF<br />

◊ K 2 RF offers two products intended to enhance<br />

the audio quality of repeaters, links<br />

and remote base radios.<br />

The DSL-100 Dynamic Speech Limiter<br />

is designed to maintain the voice quality<br />

through a system by ensuring that the audio<br />

fed to the transmitter is at the proper<br />

level. Once calibrated, the DSL-100 will<br />

automatically apply up to 12 dB of gain or<br />

attenuation to the audio supplied to the<br />

transmitter, resulting in lower distortion and<br />

reducing the audio clipping that can result<br />

from over-deviation.<br />

Ideal for HF, VHF and UHF link transmitter<br />

applications, the DSL-100 ensures that all<br />

the audio received from those who access the<br />

radio repeater system will be input into the<br />

system’s transmitter at a consistent audio<br />

level. This is an important consideration for<br />

telemetry/mixed signal systems as well.<br />

The DSL-100 meets Telephony B-302<br />

specifications and operates from 10 to 18<br />

V dc at 10 mA. The total harmonic distortion<br />

is specified at less than 1% and the 3<br />

dB bandwidth is specified at 50 Hz to 15<br />

kHz (with an input impedance of 10 kΩ and<br />

98 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

an output impedance of 600 Ω). The DSL-<br />

100 is constructed on a PC board and comes<br />

assembled and tested. It measures 1 3 /8 ×<br />

2 3 /8 × 1 /2 inches.<br />

The SAGE-300 is a 3-band speech audio<br />

gain equalizer that is designed to enhance<br />

and balance the tone quality of a<br />

communications system by enabling the<br />

user to cut or boost, by up to 10 dB, three<br />

audio ranges.<br />

The low frequency cutoff is at 250 Hz,<br />

which prevents sub-audible CTCSS tones<br />

from being passed on for equalization.<br />

Measured at the –3 dB points, the audio<br />

passband is from 275 to 4,400 Hz. Three<br />

trim potentiometers enable the user to control<br />

the amplitude of the low (275-1,000<br />

Hz), mid (1,000-2,600 Hz), and high<br />

(2,000-4,400 Hz) audio ranges. Total harmonic<br />

distortion is specified at under 0.01%<br />

at 1 kHz.<br />

When used for telemetry purposes, the<br />

SAGE-300 allows the audio path to be<br />

bandwidth limited and can reduce DTMF<br />

twist problems associated with interconnected<br />

systems. The SAGE-300 also allows<br />

adjustment of Narrow Band FM radios to<br />

meet the new EIA de-emphasis specification<br />

(6 dB per octave de-emphasis curve).<br />

The SAGE-300 operates from 10 to 18<br />

V dc at 12 mA. The maximum input amplitude<br />

is specified at 8.0 V P-P (with an<br />

input impedance of 10 kΩ and an output<br />

impedance of 150 Ω). The SAGE-300 is<br />

constructed on a PC board and comes assembled<br />

and tested. It measures 1 1 /2 × 2 ×<br />

1<br />

/2 inches.<br />

Price: DSL-100 Dynamic Speech Limiter,<br />

$95; SAGE-300 3-Band Speech Audio<br />

Gain Equalizer, $95. For additional information<br />

contact K 2 RF Communications<br />

Products, 11725 SW Timerline Ct,<br />

Beaverton, OR 97008; tel 800-268-1516;<br />

fax 503-642-5678; KenS@k2rf.com;<br />

http://www.k2rf.com.<br />

STRAYS<br />

<strong>QST</strong> Congratulates…<br />

◊…Dan Ringer, K8WV, who was presented<br />

with the American Bar Association’s “Sole<br />

Practitioner of the Year” award. Ringer is<br />

an attorney in Morgantown, West Virginia.<br />

The annual award recognizes the meritorious<br />

achievement or accomplishment of a<br />

sole legal practitioner who is widely accepted<br />

by peers as having consistently<br />

achieved distinction, and who epitomizes<br />

the ideals of the legal profession. Ringer is<br />

an ARRL Volunteer Counsel and an ARRL<br />

Volunteer Examiner.


<strong>2000</strong> ARRL International<br />

DX Contest Phone Results<br />

By Dan Henderson, N1ND<br />

Contest Branch Manager<br />

T<br />

uning across the bands during any<br />

contest weekend could probably be<br />

compared to visiting a world-class<br />

art museum on any busy tourist<br />

weekend. Picture yourself hurrying through<br />

gallery after gallery (band after band),<br />

trying to take in (work) masterpiece after<br />

masterpiece (QSO after QSO). Throw in a<br />

wonderful piece of symphonic music, say<br />

Mussorgsky’s “Pictures in an Exhibition” (to<br />

simulate the sound involved) and you might<br />

have the visual, aural and mental experience<br />

that comes with a world-class contest.<br />

It would take one of the grand masters<br />

of the arts to fully capture the excitement<br />

that was the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL International DX<br />

Phone Contest, which was run March 4-5.<br />

A total of 2172 competitive entries were<br />

received. With the inclusion of 102 check<br />

logs, we received a record number of entries<br />

for the combined ARRL <strong>2000</strong> International<br />

DX Contest—a total of almost<br />

4700 logs processed between the two contest<br />

weekends. As you might expect, record<br />

breaking participation brought about record<br />

breaking efforts from the US and Canada<br />

and near-record performances from the rest<br />

of the globe.<br />

It has become apparent that operating<br />

from HC8 provides a tremendous advantage<br />

for a DX station. With George, K5TR, serving<br />

as the “guest artist,” the DX Single Op<br />

High Power category was won from HC8N.<br />

George survived a stiff challenge from<br />

WP3R, with Jim, KB3AFT, serving as the<br />

operator. Top honors from Oceania go to<br />

Mike, KH6ND, operating from KH7R,<br />

while Pekka, EA8AH, took top honors<br />

among African entries. M6T with Andy,<br />

G4PIQ, wielding the “brush” took top honors<br />

in Europe while Igor, UA0ZBK, finished<br />

as “best in show” from Asia.<br />

The DX Single Op Low Power winner<br />

was Bob, KQ3V, who “painted the airways”<br />

operating as VP5A, who handily defeated<br />

second place and South American continental<br />

winner Ed, OA4SS. Kazuo, JL1ARF,<br />

took top honors from Asia, while Janez,<br />

S57J, led the way in Europe. Jaro, SU9ZZ,<br />

took top honor for Africa while Craig,<br />

3D2TC, won Oceania.<br />

In the DX Single Op QRP category<br />

Peter, HA2A, emerged as the victor while<br />

Girts, YL2KL, operated YL8M to top honors<br />

in the DX Single Op Assisted category.<br />

DX Single Band winners were KV4FZ<br />

(160), YV3AZC (80), ZF2JB with KK9A<br />

as op (40), IQ3A with IV3TAN as op (20),<br />

TG0AA with IK2NCJ op (15) and ZF2AH<br />

(10). While great efforts were put forth, no<br />

overall DX scoring records were established<br />

during the contest weekend.<br />

Zbyszek, 9K2/SQ5DAK, managed to make<br />

several ops happy with a great multiplier<br />

in his limited operating time.<br />

Craig, 3D2TC, made quite an impact from<br />

Fiji, completing a WAS on 10 meters and<br />

only missing Wyoming on 15 meters.<br />

W/VE<br />

Single Operator<br />

QRP<br />

KR2Q 1,110,600<br />

N0KE 641,556<br />

(at WB0GAZ)<br />

WA8RCN 442,035<br />

KB3TS 435,024<br />

N7VY 430,992<br />

W6QU 378,144<br />

(W8QZA, op)<br />

WA0JYC 375,959<br />

N0UR 313,992<br />

W6CN 312,360<br />

N0HJZ 277,656<br />

W/VE<br />

Single Operator<br />

Assisted<br />

KI1G 5,790,720<br />

K3WW 5,080,320<br />

W2RE 4,722,771<br />

N2TX 4,667,646<br />

KS1L 4,344,480<br />

K2XA 3,922,425<br />

K3MM 3,753,468<br />

N3AD 3,665,382<br />

K2BU 3,562,299<br />

N2NT 3,382,950<br />

(W2GD,op)<br />

DX<br />

Single Operator<br />

QRP<br />

HA2A 320,991<br />

F5BEG 226,044<br />

JR4DAH 184,710<br />

JH1HRJ 163,674<br />

JA2JSF 163,350<br />

JA1YNE 140,301<br />

(JP1OGL, op)<br />

JA6GCE 124,830<br />

LU1VK 88,200<br />

UA0KCL 85,284<br />

G3FNM 63,516<br />

DX<br />

Single Operator<br />

Assisted<br />

YL8M 2,352,987<br />

(YL2KL, op)<br />

JH4UYB 1,095,219<br />

OK1DG 668,682<br />

JQ1BVI 642,546<br />

IZ5AXA 581,976<br />

7L4IOU 560,628<br />

JR2DOL 495,900<br />

RV3BR 474,306<br />

JH4NMT 438,840<br />

PA3EWP 366,366<br />

The DX Multioperator categories saw<br />

both exciting competition and a run-away<br />

winner. Riding an outstanding 4K QSO total<br />

on a wide-open 10-meter band, the “artists<br />

known as VP5B” were able to compensate<br />

for being out-QSOed on three other bands to<br />

win the Multi-Single category over P40V.<br />

Also using a superior rate on 10 meters, the<br />

crew at KL7RA held off the RW2F ops to win<br />

the DX Multioperator Unlimited category.<br />

W/VE Single Band Top 10<br />

160 Meters<br />

WW2Y 10,206<br />

K1ZM 9,198<br />

AA1BU 4,002<br />

W2VO 912<br />

W8WEJ 855<br />

(W8BAR, op)<br />

80 Meters<br />

KE1Y 58,140<br />

K3SV 13,965<br />

VA3POS 6,498<br />

AG4W 4,998<br />

AA9IV 576<br />

40 Meters<br />

K4XS 245,127<br />

K7EM 210,105<br />

K5MR 207,834<br />

W4MR 149,592<br />

(AA4NC, op)<br />

N5DO 77,964<br />

W5FO 30,030<br />

W4JKC 29,388<br />

N2WK 26,226<br />

W9GXR 24,840<br />

KZ2I 23,664<br />

20 Meters<br />

WA2QNW 391,524<br />

W5WMU 324,060<br />

VA3MG 320,358<br />

DX Single Band Top 10<br />

160 Meters<br />

KV4FZ 28,098<br />

V26P 21,480<br />

(W5AJ, op)<br />

S54E 1,680<br />

EA1DVY 48<br />

80 Meters<br />

YV3AZC 127,716<br />

CO8ZZ 85,800<br />

OT0T 58,926<br />

(ON4UN, op)<br />

I4AVG 34,194<br />

S57O 18,135<br />

EF1CFD 18,135<br />

DL3LAB 15,480<br />

4N1K 15,066<br />

(YU1XA, op)<br />

OM7M 10,800<br />

(OM5ZW, op)<br />

YT0T 7,488<br />

(YU1FJK, op)<br />

40 Meters<br />

ZF2JB 269,748<br />

(KK9A, op)<br />

4M5E 133,209<br />

(YV5NWG, op)<br />

SP7VC 118,674<br />

(at SP7GIQ)<br />

S53M 109,725<br />

(S55OO, op)<br />

PY5EG 107,358<br />

LY3BS 74,850<br />

JA8NFV 72,663<br />

F5RZJ 49,446<br />

YT7A 47,400<br />

9A4X 36,270<br />

20 Meters<br />

IQ3A 538,842<br />

(IV3TAN, op)<br />

DJ7AA 513,132<br />

N9HCA 102,240<br />

W2AY 100,440<br />

WA1MKS 71,799<br />

W0TM 55,440<br />

N8LIQ 50,172<br />

K7NAV 41,958<br />

KB3AGZ 38,391<br />

15 Meters<br />

K8DX 1,239,540<br />

W7WA 987,228<br />

VA7RR 935,280<br />

VE6JY 863,232<br />

W7EJ 806,577<br />

VE3KZ 749,439<br />

K4VUD 592,455<br />

W7EB 419,580<br />

ND8DX 358,020<br />

W7FP 275,880<br />

10 Meters<br />

W4ZV 981,837<br />

K5RX 890,760<br />

K0CL 882,279<br />

K4WI 721,806<br />

VA3UZ 699,696<br />

NA5B 648,000<br />

(W5AO, op)<br />

KG9X 645,840<br />

NY1E 634,056<br />

K5AM 623,025<br />

N7DF 596,403<br />

3E1AA 437,721<br />

SP2PIK 408,273<br />

(SP2WKB, op)<br />

YU1JW 381,189<br />

YT1BB 378,993<br />

ZX5J 308,700<br />

(PP5JR, op)<br />

YZ9A 303,378<br />

LY2BM 252,900<br />

RM4W 245,700<br />

(RW4WR, op)<br />

15 Meters<br />

TG0AA 549,585<br />

(IK2NCJ, op)<br />

ZW5B 392,055<br />

(PY2KC, op)<br />

S57AW 381,555<br />

PY0FF 370,992<br />

SP7GIQ 360,540<br />

5N0W 331,740<br />

(OK1RK, op)<br />

PQ5W 328,686<br />

OE8SKQ 304,263<br />

IR2W 296,322<br />

(I2EOW, op)<br />

IK2DUU 279,540<br />

10 Meters<br />

ZF2AH 495,030<br />

OK2RZ 483,669<br />

DF9ZP 471,060<br />

7J2YAF 465,687<br />

(JA1KSO,op)<br />

CT1DVV 456,402<br />

ON4UN 448,899<br />

(ON4MA, op)<br />

LU4FM 447,987<br />

9AY2K 438,480<br />

(9A9A, op)<br />

GM7R 437,190<br />

(GM0NAI, op)<br />

S50K 434,700<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 99


Yoshi, JF2FIU, is putting together a good<br />

station and has become a familiar JA<br />

QSO in many logs.<br />

In the DX Multioperator Two-Transmitter<br />

class, the ops at 6D2X showed why they<br />

are a major force in contesting. Using their<br />

location advantage on the low bands and<br />

great conditions on the high bands, they<br />

outdistanced KL7Y, though they did fall<br />

short of setting a new category record.<br />

In the W/VE “gallery,” similar to the DX<br />

CW contest, record-breaking efforts were<br />

“on display” to be admired. Leading the<br />

way was Bob, KQ2M, in the W/VE Single<br />

Op High Power category. Bob used his radio<br />

“palette” to become the first to break<br />

the 6-million-point barrier, mirroring his<br />

record setting DX CW performance, also<br />

set this year. Also breaking the old mark<br />

was second place finisher John,VE3EJ.<br />

In the W/VE Single Op QRP and Single<br />

Op Assisted categories, we also found two<br />

more artists pulling off a record-setting<br />

“doublet.” Doug, KR2Q, added the Single<br />

Op QRP record to his growing contest vitae,<br />

as he easily outdistanced Philip, N0KE,<br />

operating from WB0GAZ’s station. While<br />

four stations broke the existing Single Op<br />

Assisted mark, it was Rick, KI1G, edging<br />

out Chas, K3WW, as he did in the CW contest<br />

to set the new standard for the category.<br />

Congratulations also go to Ray, W2RE, and<br />

Mike, N2TX, who also bettered the old<br />

standard.<br />

Bill, AC0W, led the way in the W/VE<br />

Single Op Low Power category, as he edged<br />

out 3 challengers—Henry, N4VHK (operating<br />

W4WS), Tom, WD5K, and Fred,<br />

W2TZ—by less than 83,000 points. Though<br />

no record was set in the category, it provided<br />

the best overall competitive finish.<br />

W/VE Single Band scoring records were<br />

set by K4XS (40), K8DX (15), and W4ZV<br />

(10). Of special note is the performance of<br />

W2WA and VA7RR on 15 meters and<br />

K5RX and K0CL on 10 meters, who all<br />

managed to break old category records<br />

while finishing as runner-ups in the catego-<br />

100 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

W/VE Single Op Low Power<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

AC0W 1,491,963 12/9 25/16 60/39 248/75 331/85 883/95<br />

W4WS (N4VHK, op) 1,456,389 2/2 26/20 88/48 468/80 332/75 635/88<br />

WD5K 1,434,510 0/0 31/20 58/26 369/89 312/87 715/100<br />

W2TZ 1,409,676 4/3 29/24 109/52 214/71 342/77 789/89<br />

K1SD 1,347,192 2/2 40/31 112/47 306/75 442/79 556/74<br />

KS1J 1,296,759 5/5 21/19 45/42 250/69 393/85 667/93<br />

K6RO 1,292,760 8/4 39/18 79/38 291/84 286/82 627/98<br />

K1NU1,175,070 0/0 14/14 45/37 197/71 313/84 741/93<br />

WS1A 1,138,977 0/0 13/11 83/52 224/70 295/78 638/92<br />

VE3XN 1,117,665 2/2 9/7 23/21 339/69 390/73 698/83<br />

W/VE Single Op High Power<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

KQ2M 6,400,260 10/11 69/36 127/58 1178/119 1546/123 1658/118<br />

VE3EJ 5,513,712 21/15 71/50 148/70 807/117 1359/124 1322/117<br />

W9RE 4,949,697 18/14 53/35 131/60 1098/99 848/106 1771/107<br />

K4ZW 4,621,194 8/8 84/39 142/61 1123/105 1168/106 1169/98<br />

WB9Z 4,178,310 21/17 81/44 113/61 566/81 969/114 1489/113<br />

K4AB 3,288,480 19/14 58/40 121/55 680/91 647/102 1195/101<br />

N2LT 3,439,146 12/9 66/32 75/45 356/79 945/106 1547/111<br />

K3ZO 2,926,458 5/6 33/24 93/48 585/82 928/104 1014/103<br />

N4RV 2,828,601 23/17 59/41 102/54 499/92 412/102 1134/117<br />

W7GG 2,709,720 19/14 60/21 315/50 484/81 565/93 1066/101<br />

W/VE Multioperator Single Transmitter<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

K5ZD 6,730,380 26/21 172/58 253/83 1145/124 1180/127 1394/125<br />

W3BGN 6,285,270 30/23 149/59 171/72 1287/116 1014/133 1302/127<br />

KV1W 6,199,875 22/17 87/51 227/75 1067/114 1167/123 1555/121<br />

K8AZ 5,961,684 19/17 57/51 114/72 1213/129 927/128 1448/129<br />

W0GU (at N2IC) 4,924,920 15/11 53/35 284/65 681/106 930/114 1645/124<br />

W/VE Multioperator Two Transmitters<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

K1AR (at K1EA) 11,435,802 18/16 159/57 417/86 1709/134 2167/145 2171/136<br />

N3RS 9,557,757 22/18 89/50 398/81 1457/136 1545/137 2168/139<br />

N2RM 5,958,596 13/13 94/46 135/63 1277/116 999/127 1534/126<br />

KB1H 5,742,492 12/11 101/49 170/72 993/119 1145/127 1415/121<br />

K9XD 5,499,711 5/4 31/23 171/65 847/109 1504/119 1599/121<br />

W/VE Multioperator Unlimited Transmitters<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

KC1XX 19,610,580 45/29 406/85 632/103 2700/164 2777/159 2900/151<br />

W3LPL 18,015,732 58/34 344/80 698/104 2542/161 2596/162 2516/145<br />

K3LR 17,744,616 37/23 237/72 631/108 2746/165 2581/162 2492/148<br />

K9NS 14,225,484 37/24 137/63 395/87 1568/155 2406/160 2901/148<br />

W1GQ 12,589,776 18/18 163/60 637/104 2399/148 1893/140 1838/134<br />

DX Single Op Low Power<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

VP5A (KQ3V, op) 4,257,162 120/30 231/46 482/52 664/56 903/57 2346/58<br />

OA4SS 2,620,026 0/0 33/21 265/50 849/56 1121/57 1326/59<br />

VP6BR 1,503,000 0/0 1/1 304/49 143/40 478/53 1579/57<br />

V73CW (AC4G, op) 1,410,750 2/2 18/14 315/49 351/50 580/53 824/57<br />

JL1ARF 1,214,022 0/0 34/12 161/41 222/52 366/52 1108/57<br />

JA1CG 1,141,920 0/0 0/0 41/19 380/53 421/55 1238/56<br />

ZX2B (PY2MNL, op) 1,093,176 0/0 0/0 0/0 386/54 644/56 1139/58<br />

CO2II 995,565 0/0 0/0 0/0 497/52 708/52 936/51<br />

JM1LPN 780,084 0/0 5/3 79/27 248/44 495/56 571/56<br />

S57J 735,435 0/0 24/11 19/13 187/38 483/58 672/57<br />

DX Single Op High Power<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

HC8N (K5TR, op) 7,645,056 189/49 337/56 548/59 889/60 1489/60 3956/60<br />

WP3R (KB3AFT, op) 7,254,090 164/42 458/59 518/57 1686/59 1444/59 2948/59<br />

KH7R (KH6ND, op) 6,676,188 167/47 359/53 551/56 1155/56 1240/60 3231/60<br />

ZF2NT (N6NT, op) 6,435,558 220/49 464/56 327/51 1391/60 1566/58 2474/59<br />

V31JP 5,815,071 30/18 344/55 718/56 1100/60 1464/60 2617/60<br />

HU1A (YT1AD, op) 5,686,092 107/47 446/58 561/57 697/60 731/60 3000/60<br />

ZF2DR (K5RQ, op) 5,238,477 98/35 229/48 204/49 1378/58 1328/60 2414/59<br />

V47KP 5,090,715 115/32 337/54 513/52 1259/59 1439/59 1724/59<br />

EA8AH 4,916,430 6/6 267/50 330/46 1712/59 1414/58 2166/59<br />

P40B (P43P, op) 4,766,400 138/43 316/55 439/53 713/59 936/61 2258/60<br />

DX Multioperator Single Transmitter<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

VP5B 8,498,052 171/47 377/57 651/57 1651/59 1452/59 4054/60<br />

P40V 7,419,015 228/48 542/58 611/57 1268/57 1762/60 2884/59<br />

8P9Z 6,627,060 145/38 599/57 611/54 1609/59 1097/61 2633/61<br />

PJ4G 6,059,724 104/33 393/57 485/52 1197/59 1474/59 2679/59<br />

TM1C 4,907,646 8/7 419/42 526/54 1106/59 1573/60 2169/69<br />

DX Multioperator Two Transmitters<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

6D2X 11,223,927 324/53 703/58 1229/59 2205/60 2995/61 3203/60<br />

KL7Y 7,062,198 46/15 248/38 970/56 1463/59 2780/59 2724/59<br />

WP2Z 6,871,005 105/34 404/52 545/56 1451/59 1898/60 2732/60<br />

IR4T 6,189,336 41/13 185/30 636/57 2010/61 1913/61 2531/60<br />

RU1A 4,476,150 0/0 22/10 498/57 2032/59 1781/60 1757/59<br />

DX Multioperator Unlimited Transmitters<br />

Score 160 80 40 20 15 10<br />

KL7RA 5,989,440 15/7 244/31 621/56 1369/59 2179/59 2912/60<br />

RW2F 5,148,729 3/3 176/26 739/60 1845/61 1772/61 1798/60<br />

T48RAC 4,471,602 130/35 649/58 512/56 920/57 1743/60 748/51<br />

9A7A 4,093,164 14/8 163/26 518/51 1562/61 1256/61 1578/61<br />

JH7PKU3,195,801 0/0 154/30 414/53 778/58 1150/60 1617/58


W/VE Region Leaders<br />

Boxes list call sign, score, and power (A = QRP, B = Low Power, C = High Power).<br />

Northeast Region<br />

(New England, Hudson and<br />

Atlantic Divisions;<br />

Maritime and Quebec<br />

Sections)<br />

KR2Q 1,110,600 A<br />

KB3TS 435,024 A<br />

N1TM 97,512 A<br />

W2JEK 10,626 A<br />

W1XV 1,872 A<br />

W2TZ 1,409,676 B<br />

K1SD 1,347,192 B<br />

KS1J 1,296,759 B<br />

K1NU 1,175,070 B<br />

WS1A 1,138,977 B<br />

KQ2M 6,400,260 C<br />

N2LT 3,439,146 C<br />

K3ZO 2,926,458 C<br />

K2PLF 2,285,490 C<br />

K2WK 2,284,200 C<br />

Southeast Region<br />

(Delta, Roanoke and<br />

Southeastern Divisions)<br />

W3MGL 23,598 A<br />

AD4TJ 13,776 A<br />

W4WS 1,456,389 B<br />

N4IG 946,950 B<br />

WA4IMC 892,440 B<br />

K4BEV 563,562 B<br />

WA1EHL 561,792 B<br />

K4ZW 4,621,194 C<br />

K4AB 3,288,480 C<br />

N4RV 2,828,601 C<br />

K4DLJ 1,668,009 C<br />

K2UOP 1,326,645 C<br />

Central Region<br />

(Central and Great Lakes<br />

Divisions; Ontario Section)<br />

WA8RCN 442,035 A<br />

N8XA 223,200 A<br />

AF9J 7,626 A<br />

VE3XN 1,117,665 B<br />

N4TZ 1,041,768 B<br />

VE3WIB 782,100 B<br />

KI8CS 681,429 B<br />

KF8K 681,138 B<br />

W9RE 4,949,697 C<br />

WB9Z 4,178,310 C<br />

K9BGL 1,827,660 C<br />

KE8GG 1,371,249 C<br />

WQ7B 1,343,991 C<br />

Midwest Region<br />

(Dakota, Midwest, Rocky<br />

Mountain and West Gulf<br />

Divisions; Manitoba and<br />

Saskatchewan Sections)<br />

N0KE 641,556 A<br />

(at WB0GAZ)<br />

WA0JYC 375,114 A<br />

N0UR 313,992 A<br />

N0HJZ 277,656 A<br />

WA0VBW 179,772 A<br />

AC0W 1,491,963 B<br />

WD5K 1,434,510 B<br />

VE5SF 786,255 B<br />

KW4T 494,730 B<br />

WA5IYX 478,470 B<br />

NR0X 1,834,668 C<br />

N6ZZ 1,401,456 C<br />

N5JR 1,279,608 C<br />

K5OT 1,171,200 C<br />

K5ZO 1,142,856 C<br />

West Coast Region<br />

(Pacific, Northwestern and<br />

Southwestern Divisions;<br />

Alberta, British Columbia<br />

and NWT/Yukon Sections)<br />

N7VY 430,992 A<br />

W6QU 378,144 A<br />

(W8QZA, op)<br />

W6CN 312,360 A<br />

NQ7X 80,154 A<br />

N6WR 30,996 A<br />

K6RO 1,292,760 B<br />

W7YAQ 950,880 B<br />

WN6K 681,750 B<br />

AE6Y 537,732 B<br />

WN7J 514,800 B<br />

W7GG 2,709,720 C<br />

WC6H 2,511,495 C<br />

(NU6S, op)<br />

N6ED 2,195,559 C<br />

N7TT 1,620,402 C<br />

AK6R 1,084,455 C<br />

Plaque Winners<br />

Category Winner Sponsor<br />

W/VE All Band Phone KQ2M Frankford Radio Club<br />

W/VE 1.8 MHz Phone WW2Y Butch Greve,<br />

W9EWC Memorial<br />

W/VE 14 MHz Phone WA2QNW William F. Beyer Jr., N2WB<br />

W/VE Low Power Phone AC0W Dauberville DX Association<br />

W/VE Single Operator Assisted KI1G Pete Carter, K3VW Memorial<br />

W/VE Multi-Single K5ZD Steve Adams K4RF<br />

W/VE Multi-Unlimited Phone KC1XX Western New York<br />

DX Association<br />

World Single Operator Phone HC8N (K5TR, op) North Jersey DX Association<br />

Asia Single Operator Phone UA0ZBK Tim Coad, NU6S<br />

Europe Single Operator Phone M6T (G4PIQ, op) Jerry Griffin, K6MD<br />

Oceania Single Operator Phone KH7R (KH6ND, op) W7EW in honor of W7IYW<br />

World 1.8 MHz Phone KV4FZ In Memory of ZL2BT<br />

World 3.5 Mhz Phone YV3AZC K1ZM Communications, Inc<br />

World 14 MHz Phone IQ3A (IV3TAN, op) Central California DX Club<br />

World 21 MHz Phone TG0AA (IK2NCJ, op) Long Island DX Association<br />

World 28 MHz Phone ZF2AH North Shenandoah<br />

DX Association NS4DX<br />

Category Winner Sponsor<br />

World QRP Phone HA2A Southern Arizona<br />

DX Association<br />

World Single Operator Assisted YL8M Willamette Valley DX Club<br />

(YL2KL, op)<br />

World Multi-Single Phone VP5B Carl Cook, AI6V/P49V<br />

Asia Multi-Operator Single JA7YAA Yankee Clipper Contest Club<br />

North America Multi-Single Phone 8P9Z * Nick Lash, K9KLR<br />

World Multi-Two Phone 6D2X W6NL and K6BL<br />

World Multi-Multi Phone KL7RA Stanley Cohen, W8QDQ<br />

Europe Multi-Multi Phone RW2F Operators at K1TTT<br />

Oceania Multi-Multi Phone AH0P David Brandenburg, K5RQ<br />

South America Multi-Two Phone PY3MHZ Operators at K1TTT<br />

Great Lakes Div. Single Operator KE8GG Livonia (MI) Amateur Radio<br />

Club<br />

Japan All Band Phone JA1ELY Communication Ham Club<br />

Japan Low Power All Band Phone JL1ARF Western Washington DX Club<br />

Seventh Call Area All Band Phone W7GG Willamette Valley DX Club<br />

*Asterisk indicates plaque is awarded to runner-up when winner has been awarded<br />

an overall plaque.<br />

ries. The remaining W/VE Single Band<br />

winners were WW2Y (160), KE1Y (80),<br />

and WA2QNW (20).<br />

Perhaps this year’s phone contest will be<br />

remembered as the “Year of the Multioperator<br />

Station.” Every W/VE multioperator<br />

record was broken during the contest. The<br />

first five finishers in the Multioperator Single<br />

Transmitter category each broke the old<br />

Affiliated Club Competition<br />

Unlimited Category Score Entries<br />

Yankee Clipper Contest Club 394,997,526 253<br />

Frankford Radio Club 322,686,531 164<br />

Potomac Valley Radio Club 173,331,348 119<br />

Medium Category<br />

Society of Midwest Contesters 73,709,229 42<br />

Northern California Contest Club 63,166,662 43<br />

North Coast Contesters 54,085,131 13<br />

Mad River Radio Club 36,717,858 20<br />

North Texas Contest Club 34,653,282 29<br />

Southern California Contest Club 34,355,163 34<br />

Central Texas DX and Contest Club 32, 023,164 8<br />

Minnesota Wireless Assn 28,993,308 27<br />

South East Contest Club 27,797,874 16<br />

Tennessee Contest Group 26,286,204 33<br />

Florida Contest Group 25,265,535 27<br />

Mother Lode DX/Contest Club 14,571,768 15<br />

Western Washington DX Club 13,982,358 27<br />

Order of Boiled Owls of New York 11,782,317 10<br />

Rochester (NY) DX Assn 10,343,655 20<br />

Western New York DX Assn 5,942,889 16<br />

Southwest Ohio DX Assn 5,920,266 3<br />

Central Arizona DX Assn 5,565,087 12<br />

Willamette Valley DX Club 4,736,517 7<br />

Oklahoma DX Assn 4,537,266 5<br />

Eastern Iowa DX Assn 3,985,536 4<br />

Mile High DX Assn 3,975,699 3<br />

Cajun Contest Club 3,861,324 3<br />

Carolina DX Assn 3,547,737 10<br />

Grand Mesa Contesters 2,910,171 9<br />

Kansas City DX Club 2,851,200 9<br />

Ozark Contest Club 2,761,779 5<br />

Texas DX Society 2,517,357 8<br />

Magnolia DX Assn 2,265,636 4<br />

record. Congratulations to the ops at K5ZD<br />

for leading the charge on the record book.<br />

In the W/VE Multi-Two category the<br />

team of K1AR, operating at K1EA’s station,<br />

broke the existing category record substantially<br />

(by almost two megs) and painted a<br />

victory over second place N3RS on their<br />

canvas. In the W/VE Multi-Unlimited<br />

category, the familiar calls of KC1XX,<br />

Score Entries<br />

Southern California DX Club 1,939,329 5<br />

Salt City DX Assn 1,898,760 9<br />

Worldradio Staff ARC 1,695,351 10<br />

Mississippi Valley DX/Contest Club 1,592,658 4<br />

West Park Radiops 1,388,358 11<br />

Twin City Ham Club 1,265,037 5<br />

Bay Area Wireless Assn 1,198,836 3<br />

Northern Arizona DX Assn 1,181,211 7<br />

California Central Coast DX Club 1,177,752 3<br />

Northrop Grumman Radio Club 1,130,175 7<br />

Poughkeepsie ARC 901,473 3<br />

Northern California DX Club 626,238 3<br />

Wabasha Area RC 440,790 3<br />

Ozaukee Radio Club 410,250 4<br />

Green River Valley ARS 324,063 3<br />

Kentucky Contest Group 315,933 3<br />

Woodbridge Wireless 225,162 3<br />

South Jersey Radio Assn 109,476 6<br />

Local Category<br />

Hudson Valley Contesters and DXers 17,514,624 8<br />

River City Contesters 5,233,869 3<br />

Great Falls Area ARC 2,483,880 5<br />

American Red Cross Emergency 1,729,245 7<br />

Midwest Contest Club 1,481,067 3<br />

Western Illinois ARC 1,036,485 3<br />

Heartland DX Association 868,803 7<br />

Metro DX Club 550,320 3<br />

Northern New York Contest Club 369,603 4<br />

Sturdy Memorial Hospital ARC 253,008 3<br />

CT RI Contest Group 114,540 3<br />

W3LPL, K3LR and K9NS are found leading<br />

the way. Using towers and antenna<br />

arrays worthy to be called sculptures, the<br />

quartet of stations all broke the existing<br />

category record. In the end, the crew<br />

at KC1XX emerged as the category<br />

winner.<br />

The Affiliated Club Competition saw<br />

each category emerge with a definitive winner.<br />

At times, quantity definitely has an impact.<br />

But don’t overlook the quality of the<br />

entries. The Unlimited competition saw the<br />

Yankee Clipper Contest Club emerge as<br />

champion over the Frankford Radio club.<br />

FRC’s average log size was over 1.9 million<br />

points—compared to YCCC’s 1.5 million.<br />

However, YCCC members submitted<br />

90 more logs than FRC to tip the balance<br />

in their favor.<br />

In the Medium Club competition, the<br />

Society of Midwest Contesters staged a<br />

heated battle with the Northern California<br />

Contest Club. The number of submissions<br />

was almost identical (42 to 43) but SMC’s<br />

points per log average of 1.75 million was<br />

around 280 thousand points more per log<br />

than NCCC, and gave them a decisive victory.<br />

In the Local Club category, top honors<br />

go to the Hudson Valley Contesters and<br />

DXers, who used their East Coast advantage<br />

to outdistance runner-up River City<br />

Contesters.<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 101


All artists look for ways to expand their<br />

talents. Some play in new mediums – canvas<br />

or sculpture or clay for example. Now<br />

is the time for contesters, to also try new<br />

skills and talents. Maybe adding a new band<br />

to your collection will help you create a new<br />

personal best score. Changing the “canvas”<br />

(a new radio or antenna perhaps) might help<br />

you increase your potential. Start thinking<br />

about new skills and strategies for this contest.<br />

Remember that Cabrillo will be the<br />

only official ARRL electronic file format<br />

by the time this contest rolls around in<br />

2001. Whether the “picture” you paint to<br />

exhibit your talent next year is just for personal<br />

pleasure, or becomes an award winning<br />

“masterpiece,” we are certain that the<br />

many “brushstrokes” across the bands will<br />

paint an overall picture worthy to be admired<br />

by all.<br />

Soapbox<br />

First time over a meg in ARRL DX and first time for<br />

DXCC on 2 bands. Conditions on 10 and 15 were<br />

unbelievable and 40 was open to everywhere in the<br />

hour before sunrise on Sunday. WOW! (AA1QD)…<br />

We are always full of fight! (AH0P)…First time for<br />

SO2R What a thrill to hear Ghana in one ear and the<br />

Ivory Coast in the other! (AK6R)…The contest was<br />

Revised ARRL International DX CW Contest Scores<br />

After the October issue of <strong>QST</strong> went to press, an error was discovered in the log<br />

checking software for the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL International DX CW Contest results. The error<br />

caused multiplier totals for all electronically submitted logs (DX and W/VE) to be<br />

undercounted. The problem has been corrected and the revised scores will be used to<br />

determine all awards and certificates. Since all electronic logs were affected by the same<br />

order, you should notice very little change in the final standings in the contest. The<br />

complete revised article will be posted on the ARRL Contest Branch Web Page at: http:/<br />

/www.arrl.org/contests in Adobe PDF format and may be downloaded from that site.<br />

For those without Internet access, a printout of the revised article is available upon<br />

request to: ARRL Contest Branch, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. An SASE with 2<br />

units of postage would be appreciated.<br />

On behalf of the log checking volunteers and Contest Branch employees, I apologize<br />

for the error and any inconvenience it may cause.—Dan Henderson, N1ND, ARRL Contest<br />

Branch Manager.<br />

fun. A big thank you to N5KO for letting me play<br />

radio. (K5TR at HC8N)…Wow!! What great conditions.<br />

Wish there were more hours in a day<br />

(K1MV)…Heard stations up to 28.950 (K3NCO)…<br />

My first ARRL DX Contest in 40+ years. Great!<br />

(K5EJL)…DXCC on 10 and I only operated Sunday—hello<br />

sunspots! (K7BG)…My first 200 hour<br />

contest! (K8DX)…Worked all continents very soon<br />

after starting contest! (KC0FUD)…Most contacts<br />

ever including 20 new ones for me! (KC7WUE)…<br />

Being able to put out the DC multiplier was great<br />

fun, but the best moments were being called a “rare”<br />

one by T32B and finally working Suriname!<br />

(KE3VV)…Thanks to VY1JA for going to a lot of<br />

extra effort in giving us YT on all six bands. Jay,<br />

you’re a real gentleman! (KH7R)…Conditions were<br />

almost too good. Low band activity suffered. USA<br />

operators were pointed at population centers, not at<br />

the South Pacific. The 10 meters runs were terrific,<br />

though, with 277 the first hour (T32B)…80 and 160<br />

were terrible with static over the pain barrier! Ten<br />

was as good as it gets! Fantastic! The contest was<br />

great fun and it demonstrates for those of us at the<br />

ends of the earth what it must be like to be close to<br />

the big population centers of the US and Europe.<br />

(VK5GN)<br />

Scores<br />

Scores are listed by DXCC Entity and ARRL\RAC Sections. Within each Country or Section, scores are listed in descending order, Single Op by power<br />

categories, then Single Band entries. All Single Assisted and Multioperator entries then follow. Line scores list call sign, score, QSOs, multipliers, power<br />

(A = QRP, B = Low Power, C = High Power, D = Multioperator), and band.<br />

W/VE<br />

Single Operator<br />

1<br />

Connecticut<br />

N1TM 97,512 239 136 A<br />

W1CTN 1,024,830 1158 295 B<br />

K1RO 534,264 788 226 B<br />

KA1JVR 204,282 351 194 B<br />

W1AZT 127,872 288 148 B<br />

KA1RWY 79,629 209 127 B<br />

KE1AU 15,405 79 65 B<br />

W1XF 8,694 69 42 B<br />

KQ2M 6,400,260 4588 465 C<br />

W1NG 2,130,096 1592 446 C<br />

K1VDF 1,140,795 1515 251 C<br />

KE1IH 967,308 1082 298 C<br />

NT1N 910,296 1128 269 C<br />

N4XR 601,398 602 333 C<br />

W1AW (N1ND, op)<br />

344,112 536 214 C<br />

W1QK 271,029 473 191 C<br />

W1CRS (W1RPG, op)<br />

136,710 310 147 C<br />

KA1DSQ 100,980 306 110 C<br />

K1IM 64,974 238 91 C<br />

W1TS 40,158 138 97 C<br />

KA1VMG 38,391 191 67 C<br />

K8CH 17,160 88 65 C<br />

W1AMF 221,805 795 93 B 10<br />

Eastern Massachusetts<br />

K1NU 1,175,070 1310 299 B<br />

K1HT 734,046 893 274 B<br />

KA1DZV 681,651 851 267 B<br />

W1VIV 420,552 649 216 B<br />

N3KCJ 387,855 585 221 B<br />

N1DS 264,438 498 177 B<br />

K1TEX 252,495 465 181 B<br />

K1WCC 198,897 397 167 B<br />

N1ZZN 187,110 378 165 B<br />

N1EDM 136,851 319 143 B<br />

WT1O 98,298 258 127 B<br />

K1VUT 82,800 240 115 B<br />

WG1Z 73,080 290 84 B<br />

K1IX 66,738 227 98 B<br />

W1EWN 37,728 131 96 B<br />

WA1WFH 36,864 128 96 B<br />

KC1WD 24,948 108 77 B<br />

N1CX 2,084,850 1695 410 C<br />

K5MA 1,719,360 1592 360 C<br />

NZ1Q 1,223,928 1146 356 C<br />

W1RY 773,424 984 262 C<br />

W1KRS 653,310 854 255 C<br />

KA1UQ 442,656 696 212 C<br />

K1TWF 351,876 497 236 C<br />

W1OHM 256,056 454 188 C<br />

W1AZ 229,890 395 194 C<br />

K1GU 205,320 472 145 C<br />

W1TE 179,400 325 184 C<br />

W1DO 63,075 145 145 C<br />

W1CC 13,158 86 51 C<br />

K1ZM 9,198 73 42 C 160<br />

AA1BU 4,002 46 29 C 160<br />

KE1Y 58,140 285 68 C 80<br />

W1ZZ 89,964 357 84 B 10<br />

KY1B 26,304 137 64 B 10<br />

Maine<br />

KA1IS 598,302 773 258 B<br />

N1AO 219,474 411 178 B<br />

K1MY 951,345 1215 261 C<br />

W1CEK 224,472 398 188 C<br />

K1MV 56,661 187 101 C<br />

NY1E 634,056 1822 116 C 10<br />

KA1PRD 88,695 365 81 A 10<br />

KA1RLI 74,646 319 78 B 10<br />

KA1AIF 19,470 118 55 C 10<br />

New Hampshire<br />

W1XV 1,872 26 24 A<br />

WS1A 1,138,977 1253 303 B<br />

KG1V 294,120 516 190 B<br />

WB1EDI 277,905 485 191 B<br />

WA1ZYX 98,829 237 139 B<br />

K1HI 1,514,412 1426 354 C<br />

N1SP 657,804 764 287 C<br />

K1BD 520,446 683 254 C<br />

WQ1H 396,717 593 223 C<br />

WE1USA 346,185 1099 105 B 10<br />

K1BV 67,275 325 69 B 10<br />

Rhode Island<br />

K1SD 1,347,192 1458 308 B<br />

KS1J 1,296,759 1381 313 B<br />

K1VSJ 567,162 778 243 B<br />

KB1LN 73,530 215 114 B<br />

W1OP 560,070 762 245 C<br />

W1WFZ 314,766 402 261 C<br />

WA1MKS 71,799 263 91 C 20<br />

W1RFQ 54,000 225 80 C 10<br />

N1YKH 4,836 52 31 B 10<br />

Vermont<br />

W1ECH 246,279 439 187 B<br />

AA1SU 200,700 446 150 B<br />

K1KD 163,485 315 173 B<br />

W1WS 68,688 212 108 B<br />

W1ZS 68,688 212 108 B<br />

K2MME 20,460 110 62 B<br />

KA1LDS 11,760 70 56 B<br />

W1ZK 927,447 1007 307 C<br />

WB1GQR (W1SJ, op)<br />

527,055 857 205 C<br />

KK1L 169,440 353 160 C<br />

N1PEA 167,904 352 159 C<br />

Western Massachusetts<br />

W1KT 729,261 813 299 B<br />

KX1X 465,570 739 210 B<br />

AE1B 393,720 680 193 B<br />

W1TO 59,388 202 98 B<br />

W1RZF 1,418,055 1411 335 C<br />

KK1DX 944,520 926 340 C<br />

KD1KI 599,949 749 267 C<br />

W1SRG 454,176 608 249 C<br />

N1FUS 74,100 325 76 B 10<br />

N1HHQ 10,824 88 41 B 10<br />

2<br />

Eastern New York<br />

W2ENY 304,500 500 203 B<br />

WT2JG 236,991 401 197 B<br />

K2SIG 212,925 425 167 B<br />

WF2B 133,245 329 135 B<br />

N2MTG 66,744 206 108 B<br />

W2PS 869,934 1174 247 C<br />

K2XF 842,499 933 301 C<br />

N1JP 719,862 839 286 C<br />

W2YK 718,815 865 277 C<br />

K2EP 645,606 806 267 C<br />

W2ZU 361,152 576 209 C<br />

NA2M 348,090 566 205 C<br />

N2LH 27,612 156 59 C 20<br />

WX2N 36,783 183 67 B 15<br />

K2ANT 40,068 212 63 B 10<br />

N2VZA 37,572 202 62 B 10<br />

KC2CRO 15,228 94 54 B 10<br />

W2WHO 5,301 57 31 B 10<br />

NYC-Long Island<br />

K2DO 765,765 1155 221 B<br />

WB2AYQ 421,104 566 248 B<br />

KG2FH 204,180 410 166 B<br />

N2LEB 203,625 375 181 B<br />

K2TV 180,180 429 140 B<br />

N2LDV 43,488 151 96 B<br />

K2DL 5,733 49 39 B<br />

W2YG 160,962 386 139 C<br />

N2GC 3,960 40 33 C<br />

WB2AMU 14,688 96 51 B 40<br />

NS2W 22,743 133 57 B 20<br />

K2MFY 219,024 676 108 B 10<br />

N2UN 165,870 582 95 C 10<br />

W3EH 34,944 182 64 B 10<br />

Northern New Jersey<br />

KR2Q 1,110,600 1234 300 A<br />

W2JEK 10,626 77 46 A<br />

K2WA 335,400 559 200 B<br />

W2QU 139,524 302 154 B<br />

N2NYR 22,365 105 71 B<br />

N2LT 3,439,146 3001 382 C<br />

K2WK 2,284,200 2350 324 C<br />

N7UN 1,661,352 1624 341 C<br />

W2EN 1,380,030 1465 314 C<br />

N2TTT 212,148 332 213 C<br />

W2UDT 211,041 393 179 C<br />

W2YR 202,404 404 167 C<br />

N2MH 188,475 359 175 C<br />

W2AZK 134,064 294 152 C<br />

N2ST 99,960 238 140 C<br />

WA2QNW 391,524 1106 118 C 20<br />

AE2JL 24,864 148 56 B 15<br />

WA2BKN 34,368 179 64 C 10<br />

K2YSY 25,560 142 60 C 10<br />

N2OPJ 7,881 71 37 C 10<br />

Northern New York<br />

NG2C 36,855 189 65 B 10<br />

N2JNZ 25,110 155 54 A 10<br />

Southern New Jersey<br />

K1JT 192,780 378 170 B<br />

N1IBM 123,930 270 153 B<br />

KA2YKN 67,098 211 106 B<br />

W2FGY 24,000 100 80 B<br />

KC2DPV 9,522 69 46 B<br />

K2JF 2,610 30 29 B<br />

N2MR 601,020 795 252 C<br />

WW2Y 10,206 81 42 C 160<br />

K2BQW 103,761 427 81 B 10<br />

Western New York<br />

W2TZ 1,409,676 1487 316 B<br />

K2CS 435,960 692 210 B<br />

WB2ABD 272,244 463 196 B<br />

N2LQQ 147,030 338 145 B<br />

KM2L 117,612 297 132 B<br />

W2FUI 111,930 287 130 B<br />

K2QO 47,526 178 89 B<br />

W2IV 17,487 87 67 B<br />

W2LU 1,125,072 1202 312 C<br />

NA2A 474,240 608 260 C<br />

WR2V 296,814 518 191 C<br />

K2FR 292,617 533 183 C<br />

AA2MU 280,125 375 249 C<br />

WF2Y 182,712 331 184 C<br />

KW2J 160,866 331 162 C<br />

WE2T 75,582 247 102 C<br />

W2VO 912 19 16 C 160<br />

N2WK 26,226 141 62 C 40<br />

N2CU 15,600 100 52 B 15<br />

K2ZJ 354,456 1094 108 C 10<br />

NA2X 85,860 318 90 C 10<br />

N2USB 35,685 183 65 B 10<br />

KB2QCW 19,398 122 53 B 10<br />

N2OPW 13,671 93 49 B 10<br />

KC2DGC 4,107 37 37 B 10<br />

KB2SG 2,178 33 22 B 10<br />

K2CY 1,440 24 20 A 10<br />

3<br />

Delaware<br />

N9GG 31,188 113 92 B<br />

KC3AJ 178,893 417 143 C<br />

Eastern Pennsylvania<br />

KB3TS 435,024 636 228 A<br />

W3NTD 139,062 301 154 B<br />

KQ3F 2,170,800 2160 335 C<br />

N3DL 1,399,032 1143 408 C<br />

WT3W 1,234,548 1278 322 C<br />

K3ZA 750,741 997 251 C<br />

K3KFD 607,431 869 233 C<br />

N3KR 508,152 683 248 C<br />

N3RJ 436,800 700 208 C<br />

W3BYX 313,548 493 212 C<br />

K4JLD 225,498 413 182 C<br />

WB3JIS 186,000 400 155 C<br />

AD3Z 179,172 316 189 C<br />

NN3Q 174,420 306 190 C<br />

W3KV 172,368 378 152 C<br />

W3BEN 153,057 313 163 C<br />

W3JRY 128,652 302 142 C<br />

KC3TL 98,640 411 80 C<br />

K3SV 13,965 95 49 C 80<br />

KB3AGZ 38,391 191 67 B 20<br />

K1DS 12,150 81 50 B 10<br />

Maryland-DC<br />

W3UJ 675,552 908 248 B<br />

KE3VV 506,112 659 256 B<br />

N3UR 212,226 434 163 B<br />

N3UMA 210,330 342 205 B<br />

K1EFI 159,858 321 166 B<br />

N3FX 103,983 253 137 B<br />

N3EYB 94,878 251 126 B<br />

W3DF 88,773 233 127 B<br />

W3EE 54,693 177 103 B<br />

N3SEO 19,998 101 66 B<br />

NN3SI (WA4FXX, op)<br />

14,076 92 51 B<br />

K3ZO 2,926,458 2658 367 C<br />

K2PLF 2,285,490 2059 370 C<br />

N3AM 1,735,650 1450 399 C<br />

K3SA 768,600 840 305 C<br />

AJ3M 618,744 812 254 C<br />

KF3BE 576,975 785 245 C<br />

W3YD 323,748 529 204 C<br />

W3AZ 321,048 546 196 C<br />

W3UL 311,178 478 217 C<br />

N3HXQ 282,240 480 196 C<br />

K3UG 214,968 424 169 C<br />

N3GBP 186,507 391 159 C<br />

W3CP 50,292 254 66 B 10<br />

K3NCO 45,360 216 70 B 10<br />

W3INK 41,856 218 64 C 10<br />

W2BZR/3 28,608 149 64 C 10<br />

WA3EEE 26,550 150 59 B 10<br />

WA3SWA 5,508 51 36 B 10<br />

Western Pennsylvania<br />

WA3SES 128,736 288 149 B<br />

WA3GPP 60,375 175 115 B<br />

WA3EQJ 10,098 66 51 B<br />

AB4XS 407,694 571 238 C<br />

WN3VAW 219,441 379 193 C<br />

W3IQ 123,009 313 131 C<br />

K3RON 89,250 250 119 C<br />

WB3EPE 74,061 211 117 C<br />

WB0IWG 66,576 304 73 A 10<br />

N3WAV 23,433 107 73 C 10<br />

4<br />

Alabama<br />

W4AUB 57,942 222 87 B<br />

K4AB 3,288,480 2720 403 C<br />

W4NTI 394,680 598 220 C<br />

AG4W 4,998 49 34 C 80<br />

K4WI 721,806 2039 118 C 10<br />

Georgia<br />

KU4OH 461,538 666 231 B<br />

KT4ZB 249,039 413 201 B<br />

K4OGG 34,020 140 81 B<br />

KB4BBC 28,548 122 78 B<br />

WA4TII 1,128,750 1075 350 C<br />

K4BAI 236,052 474 166 C<br />

W4CEB 66,171 161 137 C<br />

K4GSX 4,608 48 32 A 20<br />

K6EID 142,506 522 91 B 10<br />

WF9B 24,420 148 55 B 10<br />

Kentucky<br />

W4LC 76,692 308 83 B<br />

N4HT 890,400 1120 265 C<br />

K4IU 214,668 402 178 C<br />

N4XM 828 23 12 C<br />

KG4BIG 34,200 200 57 B 10<br />

KD4CSW 18,360 120 51 B 10<br />

102 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


North Carolina<br />

W4WS (N4VHK, op)<br />

1,456,389 1551 313 B<br />

WA1EHL 561,792 836 224 B<br />

W2CS 188,502 353 178 B<br />

KF4OAD 127,395 285 149 B<br />

KE4WZY 122,688 288 142 B<br />

AA0KO 116,724 274 142 B<br />

K4WES 106,920 264 135 B<br />

KF4VMT 101,844 276 123 B<br />

KV4CN 69,030 195 118 B<br />

AE4EC 35,904 136 88 B<br />

NC4NC 551,001 649 283 C<br />

N4UH 447,675 635 235 C<br />

N4CW 403,176 628 214 C<br />

N4AA 300,696 536 187 C<br />

NW6S 297,228 527 188 C<br />

N4TL 126,900 282 150 C<br />

W4WNT 117,963 257 153 C<br />

KA8FSM 107,004 241 148 C<br />

KV4N 71,955 205 117 C<br />

W4YDY 62,916 196 107 C<br />

NC4MI 61,380 186 110 C<br />

K4MGN 54,516 154 118 C<br />

W4MR (AA4NC, op)<br />

149,592 542 92 C 40<br />

KZ2I 23,664 136 58 C 40<br />

W2AY 100,440 372 90 C 20<br />

W4ZV 981,837 2577 127 C 10<br />

N5FPW 45,792 212 72 B 10<br />

WA4DWC 16,218 106 51 B 10<br />

KG4CCX 4,704 49 32 B 10<br />

K5LZT 741 19 13 B 10<br />

Northern Florida<br />

WA4IMC 892,440 1110 268 B<br />

AD4RE 242,694 417 194 B<br />

N4IPH 38,916 138 94 B<br />

W9WGN 30,240 120 84 B<br />

WA8NAZ 260,253 459 189 C<br />

W7QF 140,448 304 154 C<br />

N4EK 20,193 127 53 C 20<br />

KX2J 19,764 108 61 B 20<br />

KC4JE 5,565 53 35 B 20<br />

K4VUD 592,455 1555 127 C 15<br />

KC4LJD 38,025 195 65 A 10<br />

South Carolina<br />

W4HGW 139,500 300 155 B<br />

KR4PB 33,150 130 85 B<br />

W1WEF/4 2,916 36 27 B<br />

K4DLJ 1,668,009 1621 343 C<br />

W3VT 555,891 721 257 C<br />

AA4V 506,325 785 215 C<br />

K0COP 79,500 250 106 C<br />

W4JKC 29,388 158 62 C 40<br />

WB4NRI 20,904 104 67 C 20<br />

K4TSU 33,750 150 75 B 10<br />

N2FY 23,940 140 57 C 10<br />

Southern Florida<br />

WA2CPP 127,890 290 147 B<br />

KB1HC 425,019 547 259 C<br />

N4BG 38,352 188 68 C 10<br />

Tennessee<br />

K4BEV 563,562 786 239 B<br />

W4GMM 548,775 813 225 B<br />

N5TWV 147,423 313 157 B<br />

N2BR 145,290 290 167 B<br />

WD4OHD 135,864 306 148 B<br />

W4NI 32,994 141 78 B<br />

N4JN 8,190 70 39 B<br />

K4LTA 618,540 793 260 C<br />

KE4OAR 30,825 137 75 C<br />

W4OGG 25,272 117 72 C<br />

KF4ZR 1,242 23 18 B 15<br />

WD4K 426,624 1408 101 C 10<br />

K4WX 372,402 1217 102 B 10<br />

WD4PTJ 45,120 235 64 B 10<br />

KG4CKX 24,696 147 56 B 10<br />

Virginia<br />

W3MGL 23,598 114 69 A<br />

AD4TJ 13,776 82 56 A<br />

K4UVT 229,146 422 181 B<br />

K4EP 131,355 315 139 B<br />

N3ZYU 85,050 225 126 B<br />

N3TG 70,272 192 122 B<br />

K1SO 64,233 183 117 B<br />

KS4JB 41,118 154 89 B<br />

WB4DNL 31,740 115 92 B<br />

W4PWF 22,113 91 81 B<br />

KV4DJ 18,360 90 68 B<br />

K4ZW 4,621,194 3694 417 C<br />

N4RV 2,828,601 2229 423 C<br />

N4MM 889,878 1067 278 C<br />

W4JVN 701,475 995 235 C<br />

N4GU 358,794 643 186 C<br />

W2YE 270,237 431 209 C<br />

W0YR 181,902 427 142 C<br />

K4VV 178,398 374 159 C<br />

W4NYY 151,392 332 152 C<br />

N6MW 117,585 201 195 C<br />

W4YE 110,922 278 133 C<br />

W4IF 96,750 258 125 C<br />

K5VG 72,192 188 128 C<br />

N8CH 27,720 120 77 C<br />

WA4MA 27,594 146 63 B 20<br />

N4BJB 3,150 42 25 B 15<br />

KD4HZG 1,500 25 20 B 15<br />

N4EUK 2,508 38 22 A 10<br />

W4IM 1,173 23 17 A 10<br />

West Central Florida<br />

N4IG 946,950 1070 295 B<br />

WC4E 527,085 795 221 C<br />

K4XS 245,127 809 101 C 40<br />

K4LQ 17,649 111 53 C 40<br />

KF4KSN 17,712 123 48 B 10<br />

5<br />

Arkansas<br />

KF5PN 111,000 250 148 B<br />

KG5RM 30,879 141 73 B<br />

WD5CNC 10,080 80 42 B<br />

W5RZ 149,760 312 160 C<br />

N5QYC 33,456 164 68 C 20<br />

KD5GDA 12,726 101 42 B 10<br />

KB5EKX 5,880 56 35 B 10<br />

Louisiana<br />

KM5QG 292,803 511 191 B<br />

W5WZ 270,864 513 176 B<br />

W5LA 149,952 352 142 B<br />

KZ5D 1,055,814 1181 298 C<br />

WM9M 11,214 89 42 C 40<br />

W5WMU 324,060 982 110 C 20<br />

W5CTV 8,190 70 39 C 10<br />

N8OO 487,179 1463 111 B 10<br />

Mississippi<br />

N5PA 129,183 289 149 B<br />

KB5FET 104,544 288 121 B<br />

WA5SWX 33,930 130 87 B<br />

W5EHM 516,177 691 249 C<br />

K2FF 1,650 50 11 C 10<br />

KE6JGJ 429 13 11 B 10<br />

New Mexico<br />

W5GZ 263,088 464 189 B<br />

KM5WP 29,970 135 74 B<br />

N6ZZ 1,401,456 1552 301 C<br />

W5JRP 37,386 186 67 B 20<br />

K5AM 623,025 1775 117 C 10<br />

N7DF 596,403 1791 111 C 10<br />

KC5LFV 16,377 103 53 A 10<br />

K5OI 4,230 47 30 A 10<br />

North Texas<br />

WD5K 1,434,510 1485 322 B<br />

K5RA 255,816 408 209 B<br />

NF5W 255,558 446 191 B<br />

NN5T 125,955 311 135 B<br />

WK5K 38,610 130 99 B<br />

N5JR 1,279,608 1628 262 C<br />

K5OT 1,171,200 1280 305 C<br />

K5ZO 1,142,856 1221 312 C<br />

N5TY 362,889 661 183 C<br />

W5GN 299,292 509 196 C<br />

N1QXV 25,935 133 65 C<br />

K5MR 207,834 737 94 C 40<br />

W5FO 30,030 154 65 C 40<br />

KN5L 47,328 232 68 B 15<br />

W5RNF 45,696 224 68 B 15<br />

K5RX 890,760 2284 130 C 10<br />

W5KQJ 65,100 310 70 C 10<br />

KM5LO 14,208 128 37 B 10<br />

K6AZA 2,772 44 21 C 10<br />

Oklahoma<br />

K0CIE 375,132 727 172 B<br />

N5RXF 327,600 525 208 B<br />

WD0GTY 36,579 137 89 B<br />

W0PAN 24,816 94 88 B<br />

NA5B (W5AO, op)<br />

648,000 1728 125 C 10<br />

South Texas<br />

KA5PVB 77,172 218 118 A<br />

WA5IYX 478,470 778 205 B<br />

KE5LQ 407,043 637 213 B<br />

N5DD 330,837 499 221 B<br />

W9DX 237,357 447 177 B<br />

WA5SAJ 142,065 287 165 B<br />

W5QCL 122,256 283 144 B<br />

N5RLQ 104,148 263 132 B<br />

AJ4F 42,333 137 103 B<br />

K5EJL 37,392 152 82 B<br />

KD5EDO 24,720 103 80 B<br />

W5GCX 513,765 735 233 C<br />

KM5TY 87,912 264 111 C<br />

KB2RRV 19,251 93 69 C<br />

N5KC (W5ASP, op)<br />

57,000 250 76 C 15<br />

N5AW 209,475 665 105 B 10<br />

West Texas<br />

KE5OG 45,264 164 92 B<br />

N5DO 77,964 356 73 C 40<br />

NZ5M 1,404 26 18 B 20<br />

6<br />

East Bay<br />

K6XV 107,061 281 127 B<br />

KF6BIR 54,120 220 82 B<br />

KF6PKG 50,676 206 82 B<br />

KE6QR 16,497 141 39 B<br />

KE6ZSN 208,953 639 109 C<br />

N6NG 126,948 298 142 C<br />

KG6HM 9,240 88 35 B 10<br />

Los Angeles<br />

K6RO 1,292,760 1330 324 B<br />

WB6NFO 180,000 400 150 B<br />

K6ASK 152,736 344 148 B<br />

KQ6MU 93,720 284 110 B<br />

KN6DQ 80,649 261 103 B<br />

W6FFH 62,418 206 101 B<br />

W6RCL 35,280 147 80 B<br />

N6ED 2,195,559 2097 349 C<br />

N6AA 500,556 707 236 C<br />

W7RF 182,628 356 171 C<br />

N6OPR 175,422 346 169 C<br />

N6IC 136,710 310 147 C<br />

KB6FB 122,484 346 118 C<br />

K6SE 61,275 215 95 C<br />

K6TV 54,378 171 106 C<br />

N6UB 7,638 67 38 C<br />

KU6T 28,416 148 64 B 20<br />

W6AFA 321,930 1022 105 C 10<br />

KF6YAN 5,760 64 30 C 10<br />

K6CEO 1,728 32 18 B 10<br />

KD6LME 36 4 3 B 10<br />

Orange<br />

W6SA 201,465 407 165 B<br />

KQ6VQ 129,744 318 136 B<br />

W6ZQ 38,628 174 74 B<br />

AC6TK 19,008 99 64 B<br />

AA6PW 455,532 748 203 C<br />

WW6O 402,936 652 206 C<br />

K6ACZ 374,247 501 249 C<br />

WA6BFW 147,960 360 137 C<br />

K6HRT 77,559 251 103 C<br />

AC6WD 83,664 336 83 B 15<br />

Santa Barbara<br />

WA6FGV 217,503 429 169 B<br />

KW6PE 23,220 180 43 B<br />

W6TK 1,060,080 1262 280 C<br />

WA5VGI 625,464 876 238 C<br />

NN6DX 46,182 179 86 C<br />

N6HK 19,488 116 56 C 20<br />

W7CB 171,000 600 95 C 10<br />

W6HYK 44,019 219 67 B 10<br />

NV6I 14,985 111 45 B 10<br />

KD6PQF 13,734 109 42 B 10<br />

Santa Clara Valley<br />

AE6Y 537,732 766 234 B<br />

N6NF 448,140 770 194 B<br />

W6PLJ 305,520 536 190 B<br />

N6IJ (NI6FW, op)<br />

63,765 195 109 B<br />

K6ITL 40,977 157 87 B<br />

N6IV 1,587 23 23 B<br />

N2ALE 780 20 13 B<br />

NN6XX 638,316 894 238 C<br />

K6GT 457,074 758 201 C<br />

AJ6V 347,328 576 201 C<br />

W6ISO 289,737 511 189 C<br />

K6XX 228,000 608 125 C<br />

K6III 194,922 357 182 C<br />

W6ISQ 99,750 266 125 C<br />

K6HNZ 325,152 1129 96 C 10<br />

San Diego<br />

W6QU (W8QZA, op)<br />

378,144 624 202 A<br />

W6CN 312,360 548 190 A<br />

WN6K 681,750 1010 225 B<br />

W6JVA 104,394 274 127 B<br />

AA6EE 16,929 99 57 B<br />

AK6R 1,084,455 1385 261 C<br />

San Francisco<br />

K6UM 260,058 487 178 B<br />

AD6G 64,020 220 97 B<br />

W6ESJ 29,760 155 64 B 15<br />

San Joaquin Valley<br />

AD6JK 85,800 260 110 B<br />

K6CSL 62,379 239 87 B<br />

WC6H (NU6S, op)<br />

2,511,495 2499 335 C<br />

N6TNX 47,436 134 118 C<br />

WB6QVI 31,758 158 67 C<br />

N6TNW 13,104 78 56 C<br />

KA6BIM 511,302 1397 122 C 10<br />

Sacramento Valley<br />

N6WR 30,996 164 63 A<br />

N6JM 450,870 665 226 B<br />

WF6O 123,984 328 126 B<br />

W6EO 9,417 73 43 B<br />

W6QEU 467,625 725 215 C<br />

W6IXP 344,568 586 196 C<br />

KO6IS 174,654 313 186 C<br />

K6DB 106,038 258 137 C<br />

K6BEW 88,179 247 119 C<br />

K6RN 56,772 249 76 C 15<br />

W6RKC 29,412 172 57 C 15<br />

K6KAY 142,881 491 97 B 10<br />

KF6OBS 14,472 134 36 C 10<br />

7<br />

Arizona<br />

N7VY 430,992 656 219 A<br />

NQ7X 80,154 219 122 A<br />

WN7J 514,800 780 220 B<br />

KX7J 62,496 217 96 B<br />

K2DI 4,680 40 39 B<br />

K7TR 309,288 526 196 C<br />

NF7E 287,832 536 179 C<br />

N7JXS 100,224 288 116 C<br />

K7ON 99,735 305 109 C<br />

KN5H 85,542 269 106 C<br />

KC7V 77,400 258 100 C<br />

K6TIM 17,787 77 77 C<br />

W7UPF 98,208 372 88 C 15<br />

AA7A 469,368 1272 123 C 10<br />

W7ZMD 129,600 450 96 C 10<br />

W7AYY 81,000 360 75 C 10<br />

W7YS 47,436 236 67 C 10<br />

KE4GDQ 27,258 154 59 B 10<br />

W7/VA3FP 7,866 69 38 B 10<br />

Eastern Washington<br />

WS7V 448,560 712 210 B<br />

KC7WUE 41,580 210 66 B<br />

KI7AO/M 34,560 144 80 B<br />

KD7CPO 32,922 186 59 C<br />

W7LGG 44,712 207 72 C 10<br />

Idaho<br />

KW7N 158,685 355 149 B<br />

KJ7TH 676,044 844 267 C<br />

K0TO 195,978 367 178 C<br />

W7II 190,920 344 185 C<br />

Montana<br />

KE7NO 213,942 394 181 B<br />

KK7QJ 71,100 237 100 B<br />

KS7T 283,140 660 143 C<br />

KC7UP 252,753 487 173 C<br />

KK7VC 98,532 276 119 C<br />

K7BG 160,800 536 100 C 10<br />

K7ABV 84,315 385 73 C 10<br />

KC7NX 28,014 161 58 B 10<br />

Nevada<br />

KC7DB 281,220 545 172 B<br />

N7ZT 588,708 828 237 C<br />

W7EB 419,580 1295 108 C 15<br />

Oregon<br />

W7YAQ 950,880 1120 283 B<br />

W7YVK 122,223 311 131 B<br />

N7EMC 67,830 238 95 B<br />

KR7X 67,200 224 100 B<br />

K7AIA 33,864 166 68 B<br />

W7GG 2,709,720 2509 360 C<br />

K0JJ 368,280 558 220 C<br />

W7PXL 36,480 152 80 C<br />

KK7CG 8,514 66 43 C<br />

K7EM 210,105 805 87 C 40<br />

W7EJ 806,577 2117 127 C 15<br />

W7FP 275,880 836 110 C 15<br />

KA7FEF 8,640 96 30 B 10<br />

Utah<br />

W0DET 89,232 286 104 B<br />

NT7Y 74,256 221 112 B<br />

KJ7CU 517,104 798 216 C<br />

K8EI 115,710 290 133 C<br />

W8EQA 65,520 280 78 C 15<br />

Western Washington<br />

W7/JR1NKN 9,912 118 28 A<br />

AA7PM 306,432 532 192 B<br />

N7FL 274,890 539 170 B<br />

KB7PKC 158,760 378 140 B<br />

W7GTO 74,052 242 102 B<br />

AB7RW 47,214 183 86 B<br />

NA7R 34,875 155 75 B<br />

N6TPT 28,320 118 80 B<br />

KC7WDL 21,384 162 44 B<br />

N7TT 1,620,402 1882 287 C<br />

W7QN 273,525 521 175 C<br />

WA2OCG 63,504 216 98 C<br />

K7NAV 41,958 222 63 C 20<br />

W7WA 987,228 2493 132 C 15<br />

KV7X 47,925 225 71 A 15<br />

W7CL 41,790 199 70 A 10<br />

AD7U 26,796 203 44 B 10<br />

W7SAW 15,525 115 45 B 10<br />

Wyoming<br />

NQ7Q 39,690 147 90 A<br />

KD7RX 38,280 145 88 B<br />

N7JT 35,784 142 84 C<br />

8<br />

Michigan<br />

N8CN 618,894 942 219 B<br />

K8CV 225,720 456 165 B<br />

KE8FO 144,096 316 152 B<br />

KT8X 105,444 348 101 B<br />

WA8OLD 57,600 192 100 B<br />

N8NX 53,298 189 94 B<br />

AA8U 39,564 157 84 B<br />

N8WTH 19,890 102 65 B<br />

KE8GG 1,371,249 1539 297 C<br />

WQ7B 1,343,991 1529 293 C<br />

NE8I 905,472 1048 288 C<br />

AA8PA 595,560 709 280 C<br />

W8TWA 205,590 385 178 C<br />

N8LIQ 50,172 226 74 B 20<br />

W8UD 345,555 1097 105 C 10<br />

K8IR 93,480 380 82 B 10<br />

KC8LTL 14,628 106 46 B 10<br />

Ohio<br />

WA8RCN 442,035 705 209 A<br />

N8XA 223,200 372 200 A<br />

KI8CS 681,429 877 259 B<br />

KF8K 681,138 958 237 B<br />

W8UPH 380,289 637 199 B<br />

W8TTS 192,348 411 156 B<br />

W8DD 167,739 391 143 B<br />

K8MR 164,565 345 159 B<br />

W8IDM 162,855 329 165 B<br />

KC8HWV 149,205 343 145 B<br />

AF8C 139,830 395 118 B<br />

N8SSE 123,624 303 136 B<br />

N8WEL 98,952 248 133 B<br />

WT8P 88,854 251 118 B<br />

KA8PTT 88,452 234 126 B<br />

N8TXI 75,327 211 119 B<br />

N8FWA 75,285 239 105 B<br />

K8VUS 63,936 192 111 B<br />

AA8BV 44,550 165 90 B<br />

KG8DH 30,000 125 80 B<br />

W8JGU 743,166 1007 246 C<br />

KF8JW 185,310 355 174 C<br />

K8KH 167,772 341 164 C<br />

K8LN 128,877 323 133 C<br />

N2DPF 61,425 225 91 C<br />

W8MHB 50,787 171 99 C<br />

KB8BTA 21,168 112 63 C<br />

WB8ZWY 546 14 13 C<br />

K8DX 1,239,540 2830 146 C 15<br />

ND8DX 358,020 1020 117 C 15<br />

KU8E 435,456 1344 108 C 10<br />

KA8NRC 53,460 220 81 A 10<br />

WA8RJF 45,582 214 71 A 10<br />

AA8IV 31,842 174 61 B 10<br />

WA8NVW 9,240 77 40 C 10<br />

KC8CSD 9,048 58 52 B 10<br />

KI8FB 3,354 43 26 B 10<br />

West Virginia<br />

W8OP 194,544 386 168 B<br />

K2UOP 1,326,645 1395 317 C<br />

K3JT 1,255,248 1516 276 C<br />

KB3AUG 1,028,775 1075 319 C<br />

W8WEJ (W8BAR, op)<br />

855 19 15 C 160<br />

N4SEA 171,456 608 94 C 10<br />

9<br />

Illinois<br />

K9JE 349,632 607 192 B<br />

K9YA 296,769 529 187 B<br />

W9FGH 216,300 412 175 B<br />

N9BBM 197,802 407 162 B<br />

AA9QT 169,248 344 164 B<br />

N9NW 99,060 254 130 B<br />

KG9JP 63,648 156 136 B<br />

K9OWC 58,032 156 124 B<br />

W9LYN 49,050 150 109 B<br />

W9HL 42,471 143 99 B<br />

KB9CYL 37,800 175 72 B<br />

KB9HGI 31,185 135 77 B<br />

WD9FEN 27,900 124 75 B<br />

KE9EX 26,334 114 77 B<br />

K9NA 25,086 113 74 B<br />

W9DY 16,821 89 63 B<br />

W9GB 16,770 86 65 B<br />

WB9Z 4,178,310 3239 430 C<br />

K9BGL 1,827,660 1835 332 C<br />

WA9TPQ 517,806 774 223 C<br />

K9DN 480,816 742 216 C<br />

K9UQN 365,370 641 190 C<br />

W9GIG 198,648 372 178 C<br />

N9WKW 189,024 358 176 C<br />

K0RL 163,215 351 155 C<br />

N9NT 147,840 320 154 C<br />

W9OA 128,232 312 137 C<br />

AA9DM 95,940 260 123 C<br />

WA9CCQ 67,035 205 109 C<br />

AA9IV 576 16 12 C 80<br />

N9HCA 102,240 426 80 C 20<br />

W9BNR 29,700 165 60 C 20<br />

W9CY 26,412 142 62 C 20<br />

W9OF 79,980 310 86 C 15<br />

KG9X 645,840 1794 120 C 10<br />

N9JF 331,200 1104 100 B 10<br />

K9ZO 306,612 1002 102 C 10<br />

N9LCR 177,612 722 82 C 10<br />

K9QVB 158,886 582 91 B 10<br />

NN9K 143,598 526 91 B 10<br />

KB9PPT 59,736 262 76 B 10<br />

N9MBK 46,575 225 69 C 10<br />

KB9JIZ 22,185 145 51 B 10<br />

Indiana<br />

N4TZ 1,041,768 1113 312 B<br />

K9SH 463,887 621 249 B<br />

N9DR 161,370 326 165 B<br />

K9LVK 104,784 296 118 B<br />

K9TSM 73,179 519 47 B<br />

W9RE 4,949,697 3919 421 C<br />

W9BS 788,085 1055 249 C<br />

WB9LRK 49,536 172 96 C<br />

KC9TV 7,038 51 46 C<br />

KB5EAM 44,064 216 68 B 10<br />

WA9PYH 3,360 40 28 B 10<br />

Wisconsin<br />

AF9J 7,626 62 41 A<br />

K9OP 214,863 383 187 B<br />

AA9TB 140,580 330 142 B<br />

WI9M 106,896 262 136 B<br />

WQ9N 23,010 118 65 B<br />

K9QH 1,500 25 20 B<br />

W9OP 749,844 954 262 C<br />

KB9BUM 630,168 868 242 C<br />

KB9KEG 262,269 483 181 C<br />

W9GXR 24,840 138 60 C 40<br />

KF9VJ 29,829 163 61 B 15<br />

K9CAN 154,656 537 96 C 10<br />

KB9NIV 38,391 191 67 B 10<br />

0<br />

Colorado<br />

N0KE (at WB0GAZ)<br />

641,556 852 251 A<br />

WA0JYC 375,114 619 202 A<br />

WB0HZL 169,218 357 158 A<br />

W0HEP 91,806 214 143 A<br />

KI0II 47,736 156 102 A<br />

W0ETT 354,564 588 201 B<br />

N0NR 80,196 164 163 B<br />

K0GAS 453,456 752 201 C<br />

W0OSK 287,424 499 192 C<br />

AB0IO 69,597 209 111 C<br />

W0ZP 37,386 201 62 C<br />

K0DE 2,592 32 27 C<br />

K0RI 7,524 76 33 B 40<br />

W0TM 55,440 240 77 C 20<br />

KG0ZI 274,815 985 93 C 15<br />

K0CL 882,279 2391 123 C 10<br />

N0IBT 36,714 211 58 B 10<br />

Iowa<br />

N0RKX 341,532 537 212 B<br />

WN0G 228,657 451 169 B<br />

AA0AI 89,271 273 109 B<br />

KB2FSK 66,792 184 121 B<br />

NR0X 1,834,668 1804 339 C<br />

W0PPF 159,408 369 144 C<br />

W0NFL 93,534 238 131 C<br />

W0ETC 408,888 1262 108 C 10<br />

NE0P 15,141 103 49 C 10<br />

AB0HF 14,508 124 39 B 10<br />

Kansas<br />

KB0WPY 122,544 296 138 B<br />

K1LR 414,480 628 220 C<br />

KA0EIC 27,492 116 79 C<br />

N0UU 63,600 265 80 C 15<br />

KB0MZG 156,729 587 89 B 10<br />

K0LLS 6,360 53 40 B 10<br />

N0NB 5,355 51 35 C 10<br />

WA5BOW 4,332 38 38 B 10<br />

Minnesota<br />

N0UR 313,992 588 178 A<br />

N0HJZ 277,656 503 184 A<br />

WA0VBW 179,772 422 142 A<br />

AC0W 1,491,963 1559 319 B<br />

KW4T 494,730 690 239 B<br />

WB0GGM 220,836 478 154 B<br />

KC0CN 202,860 420 161 B<br />

KT0R 864,300 1075 268 C<br />

N5IN 769,014 909 282 C<br />

W0MRD 321,480 564 190 C<br />

WA0MHJ 221,943 443 167 C<br />

K0AD 26,880 112 80 C<br />

K0IHG 5,040 56 30 B 15<br />

K0CAT (K9WIE, op)<br />

357,237 1179 101 C 10<br />

KF0GX 16,224 104 52 A 10<br />

Missouri<br />

KI0MB 299,505 487 205 B<br />

KI7WO 185,808 392 158 B<br />

K2HT/0 164,160 320 171 B<br />

KI9A 1,041,150 1262 275 C<br />

K0DAN 434,079 699 207 C<br />

W0TT 174,432 316 184 C<br />

K0DAT 150,249 319 157 C<br />

North Dakota<br />

WI9H 132,714 303 146 C<br />

Nebraska<br />

NF0N 275,049 501 183 B<br />

K0SZ 198,534 406 163 B<br />

NU0C 102,000 250 136 B<br />

KC0FUD 91,770 230 133 B<br />

KB0WHY 14,691 83 59 B<br />

WA6POZ 188,877 377 167 C<br />

N0LGU 40,044 188 71 B 10<br />

N0OFR 28,731 157 61 B 10<br />

South Dakota<br />

KD0EE 341,940 556 205 C<br />

WD0BMR 33,858 114 99 C<br />

WB0ULX 40,110 191 70 B 10<br />

KA0VME 22,194 137 54 B 10<br />

N0VEK 5,292 42 42 B 10<br />

Maritime-Newfoundland<br />

VE1JS 655,557 1007 217 B<br />

New Brunswick<br />

VE9WH 89,253 211 141 B<br />

VE9MY 404,670 658 205 C<br />

Nova Scotia<br />

VE1RX 37,440 240 52 C 15<br />

Newfoundland-Labrador<br />

VO1BC 474,912 776 204 B<br />

VO1WET 1,578,720 2080 253 C<br />

Quebec<br />

VE2AWR 584,766 819 238 B<br />

VE2GWL 170,307 381 149 B<br />

VE2LHP 14,151 89 53 B<br />

VE2EM 12,750 85 50 B<br />

VE2AYU 1,703,130 1985 286 C<br />

VA2FB 378,624 986 128 C 10<br />

VE2PIJ 24,966 146 57 B 10<br />

VE2XL 19,305 143 45 B 10<br />

Ontario<br />

VE3XN 1,117,665 1461 255 B<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 103


VE3WIB 782,100 1100 237 B<br />

VE3BUC 496,587 749 221 B<br />

VA3SWG 334,560 680 164 B<br />

VE3STT 320,370 590 181 B<br />

VE3GD 146,010 310 157 B<br />

VE3SKX 110,802 313 118 B<br />

VA3IX 40,890 235 58 B<br />

VA3TEE 31,356 134 78 B<br />

VE3YQY 13,440 70 64 B<br />

VA3TE 12,012 77 52 B<br />

VE3XDT 8,319 59 47 B<br />

VE3EJ 5,513,712 3728 493 C<br />

VE3KPU 522,291 833 209 C<br />

VA3POS 6,498 57 38 C 80<br />

VA3MG 320,358 998 107 C 20<br />

VE3KZ 749,439 2031 123 C 15<br />

VE3MQW 93,138 361 86 B 15<br />

VE3HG 27,081 153 59 C 15<br />

VA3UZ 699,696 1808 129 C 10<br />

VE3RM 475,956 1469 108 C 10<br />

VA3DX 240,759 723 111 B 10<br />

VE3PPN 6,771 61 37 B 10<br />

Manitoba<br />

VE4RA 110,418 239 154 B<br />

VE4IM 588,240 817 240 C<br />

VC4X (VE4VV, op)<br />

294,210 934 105 B 10<br />

Saskatchewan<br />

VE5SF 786,255 989 265 B<br />

VE5CPU 612,591 941 217 C<br />

VE5AAD 6,222 61 34 B 15<br />

Alberta<br />

VE6BF 17,472 91 64 A<br />

VE5UA/6 748,272 1048 238 C<br />

VE6EPK 94,920 280 113 C<br />

VE6EX 31,464 184 57 B 20<br />

VE6JY 863,232 2248 128 C 15<br />

British Columbia<br />

VE7ZBK 258,960 520 166 B<br />

VE7VR 124,440 305 136 B<br />

VE7NA 101,016 276 122 B<br />

VE7IN 47,724 194 82 B<br />

VE7HA 2,040 34 20 B<br />

VE7QO 284,820 505 188 C<br />

VE7XO 221,712 496 149 C<br />

VA7CC 8,775 75 39 C 40<br />

VA7RR 935,280 2598 120 C 15<br />

VE7VF 77,976 342 76 B 10<br />

VE7NS 74,640 311 80 B 10<br />

VA7DX 67,275 299 75 B 10<br />

VA7TK 56,826 287 66 B 10<br />

Northwest Territories<br />

VY1JA 193,284 364 177 C<br />

Single Operator Assisted<br />

1<br />

KI1G 5,790,720 3770 512 C<br />

KS1L 4,344,480 3360 431 C<br />

AA1QD 1,972,116 1889 348 C<br />

N1DG 1,708,488 1464 389 C<br />

K5MA 1,678,896 1572 356 C<br />

K1JN 1,438,815 1351 355 C<br />

AA1V 1,313,280 1216 360 C<br />

N1DD 1,279,386 1258 339 C<br />

N8RA 1,089,012 1202 302 C<br />

K1JE 997,857 1011 329 C<br />

N1NQD 991,230 893 370 C<br />

W1LLU 914,544 1044 292 C<br />

KE1KD 869,022 847 342 C<br />

K1ST 722,085 805 299 C<br />

K1OA 661,887 879 251 B<br />

W1HR (W1JCC, op)<br />

647,856 818 264 C<br />

NR1DX 633,759 721 293 C<br />

WO1N 519,480 585 296 B<br />

K1TS 429,312 688 208 B<br />

W1BIH 426,888 539 264 C<br />

W6FC 411,546 607 226 B<br />

K1RV 306,999 443 231 C<br />

KV1J 279,300 475 196 C<br />

K1TW 271,872 472 192 B<br />

K1TH 249,600 416 200 C<br />

K1AE 245,964 398 206 C<br />

NC1N 199,287 363 183 B<br />

K1SF 73,776 212 116 C<br />

K1KU 61,236 189 108 C<br />

K1VV 17,472 91 64 C<br />

2<br />

W2RE 4,722,771 3371 467 C<br />

N2TX 4,667,646 3118 499 C<br />

K2XA 3,922,425 2925 447 C<br />

K2BU 3,562,299 2587 459 C<br />

N2NT 3,382,950 2374 475 C<br />

W1GD 3,111,552 2336 444 C<br />

K2TR 2,123,970 1706 415 C<br />

N2ED 1,671,588 1574 354 C<br />

N1EU 1,599,156 1326 402 C<br />

KD2KS 1,469,412 1372 357 C<br />

W2TV 1,373,886 1202 381 C<br />

K2ONP 1,320,384 1196 368 C<br />

N2MG 1,224,468 1204 339 C<br />

W2GDJ 1,158,522 1318 293 C<br />

K2BX 1,029,447 1069 321 C<br />

KF2O 843,741 723 389 C<br />

AA2WN 819,918 902 303 C<br />

K2WB 809,190 810 333 C<br />

N2WKS 730,800 725 336 C<br />

WB2WPM 701,190 795 294 C<br />

WT4Q 668,997 861 259 C<br />

N2ATX 631,584 774 272 C<br />

K5KG 607,560 610 332 C<br />

N2VW 602,556 674 298 C<br />

W2LE 511,161 707 241 C<br />

K2QMF 322,728 476 226 C<br />

NA2U 226,872 274 276 C<br />

WA3RHW 112,230 290 129 C<br />

KG2MY 89,700 230 130 C<br />

KD2P 71,595 185 129 C<br />

KF2VX 68,817 203 113 B<br />

N2BIM 24,219 117 69 C<br />

K2FL 22,776 104 73 C<br />

3<br />

K3WW 5,080,320 3360 504 C<br />

K3MM 3,753,468 2543 492 C<br />

N3AD 3,665,382 2758 443 C<br />

K3PP 3,217,044 2362 454 C<br />

AA3B 2,938,614 2257 434 C<br />

K3NZ 2,676,636 1996 447 C<br />

W3FV 2,046,780 1644 415 C<br />

104 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong><br />

K3NW 1,927,116 1614 398 C<br />

W3MF 1,915,176 1604 398 C<br />

KE3VN 1,587,627 1389 381 C<br />

N3ZA 1,380,540 1211 380 C<br />

W3IZ 1,298,187 1269 341 C<br />

K3ND 1,246,332 1132 367 C<br />

W3MM 1,065,300 1060 335 C<br />

K3CP 1,041,078 1039 334 C<br />

W3EKT 1,016,232 1052 322 C<br />

WB3CIW 909,450 1075 282 C<br />

AA3RC 720,792 846 284 C<br />

W3CC 674,583 637 353 C<br />

K3BSA 518,580 645 268 C<br />

W3OU 481,185 629 255 C<br />

K3TG 219,300 425 172 C<br />

W8FJ 139,440 280 166 C<br />

K3IXD 50,958 149 114 C<br />

4<br />

K3KO 409,224 578 236 C<br />

N4JED 252,948 428 197 B<br />

KB7UV 215,172 417 172 B<br />

KO4MR 68,052 214 106 C<br />

KR4QI 22,050 105 70 C<br />

5<br />

K5NA 2,612,814 1966 443 C<br />

KR5V 1,405,773 1433 327 C<br />

N5ER 1,000,980 1005 332 C<br />

K5NZ 414,036 636 217 C<br />

K1DW 13,020 70 62 B<br />

6<br />

N6ER 452,880 740 204 C<br />

KI6T 340,032 506 224 C<br />

K6FO 192,168 314 204 C<br />

K6JAT 161,370 326 165 C<br />

NF6R 70,329 197 119 C<br />

NK6A 23,427 137 57 B<br />

7<br />

W7OM 1,008,045 1179 285 C<br />

K7ZO 559,062 918 203 C<br />

N7RO 350,532 642 182 B<br />

W7CT 229,770 414 185 C<br />

W7HS 136,800 285 160 B<br />

8<br />

N8TR 2,975,700 2275 436 C<br />

NC8V 380,562 697 182 C<br />

N8PCN 355,914 507 234 B<br />

KI8IZ 158,100 310 170 B<br />

K8DJC 41,400 184 75 C<br />

9<br />

K9NR 1,079,121 1019 353 C<br />

WO9S 567,675 841 225 C<br />

N9PQU 294,336 438 224 C<br />

KF9ZZ 246,078 434 189 B<br />

0<br />

N0AT 1,576,368 1424 369 C<br />

K0OB 777,480 1045 248 C<br />

K0IL 367,164 564 217 B<br />

KB0VVT 61,740 196 105 B<br />

KG0US 53,856 187 96 B<br />

KK0DX 14,430 74 65 B<br />

VE<br />

VE5CMA 73,872 216 114 B<br />

VE3SYB 14,760 82 60 B<br />

Multioperator Single<br />

Transmitter<br />

1<br />

K5ZD (+W2SC,K1XM)<br />

6,730,380 4170 538 C<br />

KV1W (+W1CSM,N6RFM,<br />

K1MBO,W1NR)<br />

6,199,875 4125 501 C<br />

AA1ON (+W1RH,AA1IZ,KC1YR)<br />

4,045,743 2977 453 C<br />

K1VR (+AA1AA,K1EP)<br />

2,276,703 1769 429 C<br />

KA1ZD (+K1ZZ)<br />

1,636,635 1417 385 C<br />

K1GW (+K1KA,W6PH,KB1T)<br />

1,371,942 1353 338 C<br />

AA1JD (+AA1LH,NC1M,K1GWB)<br />

1,294,650 1370 315 C<br />

NC1I (+N1SR)<br />

838,500 1075 260 C<br />

N1AU (+K1GU)<br />

814,500 905 300 C<br />

W1YK (W1NT,N2YHK, ops)<br />

507,654 714 237 C<br />

WB1GEX (+KB1DFG)<br />

225,144 424 177 C<br />

2<br />

KY2J (+NA2N,WA2JQK)<br />

4,293,999 3231 443 C<br />

K2KV (+WM2V,N2GA,KS2G,N2QW,<br />

KA2D) 2,676,048 2264 394 C<br />

W2RD (+W2XT,KB5U,N2VM)<br />

2,583,315 2065 417 C<br />

K2KQ (+W2WB)<br />

2,128,950 1710 415 C<br />

W2MU (at W2XL) (W2XL,N2SA,N2MFZ,<br />

KD2NE,WB2AQU, ops)<br />

1,677,312 1456 384 C<br />

AB2DE (N2KPB,N2ZR,KC2AVE,N2ZAS,<br />

KB2IZB, ops)<br />

1,187,472 1144 346 C<br />

N2LBR (+WA1KKM)<br />

832,464 984 282 C<br />

WB2KHO (+KB2NOW)<br />

662,640 880 251 C<br />

N1XL (+K3GH,KC2DKD)<br />

466,293 697 223 B<br />

AA2UP (+N2XBD)<br />

284,073 529 179 C<br />

N2CK (+N2UIO)<br />

215,712 428 168 B<br />

WB2ELW (W2IV,KD2QV,KD2KK,<br />

KC2DGC,K2CF, ops)<br />

36,192 208 58 C<br />

WB2JSM (+KC2CBA)<br />

26,460 126 70 C<br />

3<br />

W3BGN (+K2TW)<br />

6,285,270 3953 530 C<br />

NE3F (+KS3F,NT3V,K3ATO)<br />

2,993,076 2342 426 C<br />

N1WR (+N3WZR)<br />

1,424,136 1372 346 C<br />

N3PUR (+K3MD)<br />

834,000 1000 278 C<br />

WX3B (+N3SB,KA3BGZ)<br />

779,688 1092 238 C<br />

4<br />

K4RF (+K4EA,K4SZ)<br />

2,912,055 2339 415 C<br />

NT4D (+KS4XG,N3QYE)<br />

2,204,235 2013 365 C<br />

KU4FP (+KG4EWV)<br />

265,800 443 200 B<br />

5<br />

AA5NT (+N5NJ,WD5FLK,W5WW,N5EE)<br />

3,258,072 2446 444 C<br />

N5YA (+WXOB,N5KB,K5WO,N5KR,<br />

N5UM,KM5UB,KK7JS, OH7WV)<br />

3,198,624 2563 416 C<br />

N5CQ (+KM5FA,AB5K)<br />

3,186,549 2523 421 C<br />

N1LN (+WD0BCE,K7LEX,KM5LA,<br />

WA5MLT)<br />

1,775,928 1736 341 C<br />

W5JE (+W5NF,WB5OFN,K5JUC,<br />

K5JMB,KC5TMU)<br />

303,774 514 197 C<br />

6<br />

W6YX (W6KNS,W6LD,N7MH, ops)<br />

1,546,452 1591 324 C<br />

K6ZM (K6WG,RA0FC,RWOFC, ops)<br />

1,530,372 1747 292 C<br />

KR6RF (+ops)<br />

1,320,123 1699 259 C<br />

W6OVO (+N4DLA/6)<br />

222,906 383 194 C<br />

W6TDM (N7FF,KA6AUR,KA6KGI,<br />

W6SKI, ops)<br />

102,480 305 112 C<br />

W6YRA (AC6YV,KU6T, ops)<br />

5,976 83 24 C<br />

7<br />

K7RI (+ops)<br />

1,476,468 1764 279 C<br />

K7MZ (+NY4I)<br />

49,644 197 84 C<br />

W7FIO (KA5IMS,W7EYL,KD7GKB,<br />

KB7SKA,KC7LVS,W7ACC, ops)<br />

44,988 163 92 C<br />

8<br />

K8AZ (+K8NZ,ND8L,NW7Q,W8GN,<br />

W8KIC,WB8K,WT8C)<br />

5,961,684 3778 526 C<br />

K8CC (+KE8OC,W8MJ,WD8S)<br />

4,211,736 3106 452 C<br />

N8NR (+N8NR,N8BJQ,N8TPS)<br />

3,847,140 3190 402 C<br />

W8LBZ (WA8VOE,WA1FXT,N8MQB,<br />

KI8BV,KC8BOM, ops)<br />

29,682 194 51 B<br />

9<br />

WN9O (+W9IU)<br />

2,685,312 2072 432 C<br />

KD9ST (+KA9SQR,KA9SQS,KB9EXE)<br />

1,900,080 1680 377 C<br />

0<br />

W0GU (N2IC,K0KR, ops)<br />

4,924,920 3608 455 C<br />

KF0FN (+WD0T)<br />

1,821,204 1971 308 C<br />

N0FW (+KE0A,KC0BUD,KE0T)<br />

1,707,264 1976 288 C<br />

KF0GV (+N0LIW)<br />

1,179,261 1389 283 C<br />

K0OU (+KB0RTH)<br />

456,912 668 228 C<br />

K0BJ (+KC0HBR)<br />

322,224 548 196 C<br />

VE<br />

VE6AO (VE6JO,VE6KC,VE6TC,<br />

VE6WSI, ops)<br />

1,629,360 1860 292 C<br />

Multioperator Two Transmitters<br />

K1AR (at K1EA)<br />

(+K1DG,W1MD,W1JCC)<br />

11,435,802 6641 574 C<br />

N3RS (+N3RD,N3ED,N2SR,NZ3O)<br />

9,557,757 5679 561 C<br />

N2RM (+WM2H)<br />

5,968,596 4052 491 C<br />

KB1H (+KB1DFB,NB1U,AA1CE,<br />

N1XS,N1BU,N1LYA,W3TB,K1EBY)<br />

5,742,492 3836 499 C<br />

K9XD (+N9VVV,JK3GAD)<br />

5,499,711 4157 441 C<br />

N2MM (+K2UT,KD2P,KG2MY,N2SC,<br />

WA2VUY,K2PS)<br />

5,368,950 3690 485 C<br />

K2RD (+W1CU)<br />

4,782,585 3287 485 C<br />

N1RR (+WM1K,KM1P,K2CIW,KU4BP)<br />

4,603,704 3272 469 C<br />

W6XR (+ops)<br />

4,556,748 3191 476 C<br />

W3GNQ (+N3OC,W2ZZ,WR3Z,WI2T,<br />

W3RFC,W3GNQ)<br />

4,480,428 3268 457 C<br />

N5TW (+NA4M,W5TD,KE9IT,WQ5G,<br />

K5TM,WS4G,N5XD,N5IW,<br />

K5EWS,K5PI)<br />

4,270,779 3303 431 C<br />

K2DM (+K3ZM)<br />

4,052,511 2943 459 C<br />

W8ZA (+K3DNE,K3UG,K8OQL,N8II)<br />

3,454,491 2623 439 C<br />

W6EEN (+PA5AT,N6RT,W6SR,W6ORD)<br />

3,242,160 2736 395 C<br />

W2CG (+W2NO,K2WJ)<br />

3,142,512 2512 417 C<br />

W4CAT (KG4ENY, N4JN, K4OOO,<br />

W4NI, K3CQ, KE4OAR, W9WI, W4PA,<br />

K4RO, K1KY, KQ6I, ops)<br />

3,004,680 2555 392 C<br />

N0MJ (+N0MAJ,W0PRJ,N0CMJ,<br />

KC0GHQ,KC0HGK,W0GJ,KL7YL,<br />

N0WBS)<br />

2,711,700 2300 393 C<br />

K1ZO (+ops)<br />

2,098,497 1789 391 C<br />

VE1JF (+VE1AMJ,VE1MOO,VE1MR,<br />

VE1HS) 1,648,017 1813 303 C<br />

K6NO (+K6SG,K6RC)<br />

1,388,577 1433 323 C<br />

VE5RI (VE5FN,VE5WI,VE6EZ,VE6FW,<br />

ops) 1,167,480 1410 276 C<br />

VE3MIS (VE3XAP,VE3IMG,VE3HEE,<br />

VE3TKI,VE3JMY,VA3UA, ops)<br />

763,830 1035 246 B<br />

K4WPM (+AK5E,AD4QB,K4QFF,<br />

KS4CG) 719,082 878 273 B<br />

WR4F (+W4UDX)<br />

508,326 637 266 C<br />

K8DAC (KB8QO,KC8JMX,KC8LBH, ops)<br />

480,240 696 230 C<br />

WR3L (+N3NT,AA3SC)<br />

132,912 426 104 C<br />

KZ1O (+KB8BAL)<br />

56,160 160 117 B<br />

Multioperator Unlimited<br />

Transmitters<br />

KC1XX (+K1GQ,W1FV,KC1F,AD1C,<br />

KB1AWE,KM3T)<br />

19,610,580 9460 691 C<br />

W3LPL (+K1HTV,K1RA,K1RZ,W2GG,<br />

ND3F,K3MQH,KE3Q,K3RA,W3UR,<br />

KD4D,N4QQ,N5OKR)<br />

18,015,732 8754 686 C<br />

K3LR (+N3GJ,K8GL,K9VV,N9RV,<br />

W2RQ,K3UA,N3RA,N2NT,N2NC)<br />

17,744,616 8724 678 C<br />

K9NS (K9DX,K9GS,K9HMB,K9PW,<br />

K9RO,K9RS,KS9W,N9FH,W9RM,ops)<br />

14,225,484 7444 637 C<br />

W1GQ (+KB1SO,KW1DX,N1SNB,<br />

K2TE,K1ZR)<br />

12,589,776 6948 604 C<br />

K1RX (+KR1G,KF1V,WA1S,K1EPJ,<br />

WC1M,AA1SI)<br />

10,974,651 6169 593 C<br />

K1TTT (+W1TO,K1MK,NJ1F,NT2X,<br />

N9KAU,JJ4HNN,K2SIG)<br />

10,927,683 6357 573 C<br />

W4MYA (+K4MA,K4WMA,KF4QQY,<br />

N4DEN,N4ZJ,W4DR,W5HJ,W4HZ,<br />

W4NM,WB4GVZ,WK4Y)<br />

10,745,880 6010 596 C<br />

W3PP (+AA1K,N3KW,KD3UC,W2GJ,<br />

N3HUV,W3OR,KW3Z,K3FT)<br />

9,792,372 5924 551 C<br />

W1FJ (+ops)<br />

8,756,748 5103 572 C<br />

N6RO (+K3EST,N6BV,K6AW,KM6F,<br />

KG6B,K6EP,N6BZA)<br />

7,993,566 5194 513 C<br />

W3EEE (+N3BNA)<br />

5,010,780 3631 460 C<br />

W0AIH (+WR0DK,AC0X,NE9U,<br />

KB9TTO,AA0ZZ,KB0VRV,AE9D,<br />

N9ISN,KB9UIC,K0TG)<br />

4,964,478 3398 487 C<br />

K3ANS (+WF3H,K3YD,W3ZL,KC3WX,<br />

K3ZTJ) 4,862,430 3335 486 C<br />

W3CF (+N3MKZ)<br />

4,699,695 3443 455 C<br />

K3II (+K3CT,K3NG)<br />

2,293,680 2012 380 C<br />

AD4TR (+WB2QLP,KE4FGH,KF4WZH)<br />

1,006,848 1216 276 C<br />

K6IDX (+KH8A,W6OAT)<br />

780,498 786 331 C<br />

NM3K (+AA2D)<br />

759,600 844 300 C<br />

KB5TX (W5XW,KM5SY,KD5OEG,<br />

AB5UE,KK5RZ,KD5ILM,KE5GL, ops)<br />

81,270 258 105 B<br />

W4MOT (KN4HX,KE4ESU,N3CU,<br />

KT4XK,KN4HX,KG5CHW,<br />

WA4CSQ,KN4FA,KD4EXN, ops)<br />

70,686 187 126 C<br />

DX<br />

Single Operator<br />

Africa<br />

Tanzania<br />

5H3US (K8MN, op)<br />

454,260 1130 134 C<br />

Nigeria<br />

5N0W (OK1RK, op)<br />

331,740 1843 60 C 15<br />

Senegal<br />

6V6U (K3IPK, op)<br />

4,035,582 5154 261 C<br />

Ghana<br />

9G5ZW (OK2ZW, op)<br />

307,272 1736 59 C 10<br />

Zambia<br />

9J2FR 873,735 1879 155 C<br />

Morocco<br />

CN8NK 121,128 721 56 B 15<br />

Madeira Island<br />

CT3KY 11,223 87 43 B<br />

CT3KN 502,647 1279 131 C<br />

Canary Islands<br />

EA8AH 4,916,430 5895 278 C<br />

Egypt<br />

SU9ZZ 735,423 1417 173 B<br />

Mali<br />

TZ6DX (K4RB, op)<br />

246,183 617 133 C<br />

Asia<br />

Israel<br />

4Z5FW 19,032 122 52 B<br />

4Z5JQ 8,487 69 41 B<br />

4Z5FL 4,371 47 31 B<br />

4Z1GY 33,441 157 71 C<br />

4X1VF 44,352 308 48 C 10<br />

Kuwait<br />

9K2/SQ5DAK 31,464 184 57 C<br />

West Malaysia<br />

9M2JI 4,368 52 28 B<br />

Singapore<br />

9V1RH 2,952 41 24 C<br />

Taiwan<br />

BV2TL 17,496 108 54 B<br />

BV7FF 3,780 60 21 C 15<br />

China<br />

BY4BNS (KT8X, op)<br />

91,476 308 99 B<br />

BA4DW 2,394 38 21 B 20<br />

Armenia<br />

EK4JJ 18,603 159 39 B 20<br />

Kyrgyzstan<br />

EX2T 127,413 429 99 C<br />

EX2X 50,880 320 53 C 20<br />

EX0Y 93,240 555 56 B 15<br />

EX8MIO 44,556 316 47 B 10<br />

EX8MDA 9,744 116 28 B 10<br />

Turkmenistan<br />

EZ8CW 390 13 10 B<br />

South Korea<br />

HL5UOG 19,824 112 59 B<br />

DS5ACV 3,525 47 25 B 10<br />

Thailand<br />

HS1CKC 189 9 7 C 20<br />

Japan<br />

JR4DAH 184,710 470 131 A<br />

JH1HRJ 163,674 433 126 A<br />

JA2JSF 163,350 450 121 A<br />

JA1YNE (JP1OGL, op)<br />

140,301 393 119 A<br />

JA6GCE 124,830 365 114 A<br />

JL1ARF 1,214,022 1891 214 B<br />

JA1CG 1,141,920 2080 183 B<br />

JM1LPN 780,084 1398 186 B<br />

JA5EO 213,828 692 103 B<br />

JA2BY 194,292 514 126 B<br />

JH6OPP 137,352 388 118 B<br />

JH6FTJ 131,943 427 103 B<br />

JE7DOT 121,473 409 99 B<br />

JA1XRH 112,860 342 110 B<br />

JD1BIA 88,704 336 88 B<br />

JR1MRG 67,338 261 86 B<br />

JA1BUI 60,543 217 93 B<br />

JA1XUY 58,650 230 85 B<br />

JA0BMS/1 55,902 242 77 B<br />

JA2BQX 53,784 216 83 B<br />

JH6TYD 49,164 241 68 B<br />

JG2REJ 48,843 201 81 B<br />

JA2OJ 48,672 208 78 B<br />

JA4KTE 46,413 191 81 B<br />

JA3ARM 43,575 175 83 B<br />

JF2SKV 41,625 185 75 B<br />

JA1AB 40,482 173 78 B<br />

JP1PZE 33,522 151 74 B<br />

JJ3TBB 33,453 177 63 B<br />

JA1OZK 32,640 170 64 B<br />

JA2GHP 30,615 157 65 B<br />

JH8KYU/1 30,450 175 58 B<br />

JA5GSG 30,096 176 57 B<br />

JP1SPV 27,258 154 59 B<br />

JA5ATN 26,895 163 55 B<br />

JH1RDU 26,838 126 71 B<br />

JA3HPD 24,192 128 63 B<br />

JH1RMH 15,759 103 51 B<br />

JA1XPU 13,500 90 50 B<br />

JG1OWV 11,178 81 46 B<br />

JA2BEY 10,320 80 43 B<br />

JH2WHS 10,062 78 43 B<br />

JH2QZA 8,733 71 41 B<br />

JA1KK 8,640 72 40 B<br />

7K2GMJ 6,336 64 33 B<br />

JL3RDC 4,374 54 27 B<br />

JI2VLM 3,780 45 28 B<br />

JF7GDF 3,402 42 27 B<br />

JJ1GWF 3,192 38 28 B<br />

JA9EJG 2,625 35 25 B<br />

JA3WFQ 2,553 37 23 B<br />

JA1STY 660 22 10 B<br />

JF7PHE 585 15 13 B<br />

JM2RUV 168 8 7 B<br />

JM3HYL 120 8 5 B<br />

JA1ELY 2,110,275 2825 249 C<br />

JA8RWU 2,101,344 2968 236 C<br />

JA0JHA 2,023,932 2972 227 C<br />

JH7DNO 2,014,053 2809 239 C<br />

JH7AFR 1,811,700 2684 225 C<br />

JR3NZC 1,277,151 2161 197 C<br />

JI2KVW 1,266,912 1992 212 C<br />

JA2FJP 687,918 1489 154 C<br />

JA2BNN 662,460 1220 181 C<br />

JA1CPY 498,960 1080 154 C<br />

JA2FSM 490,728 1016 161 C<br />

JA1PCY 490,644 1062 154 C<br />

JF2FIU 377,400 925 136 C<br />

JR1LEV 82,368 264 104 C<br />

JH1HIC 74,676 254 98 C<br />

JA1KAL 70,587 253 93 C<br />

JE0EHE 57,420 220 87 C<br />

7J1ABD (WA6URY, op)<br />

54,549 209 87 C<br />

JA8TEZ 31,680 165 64 C<br />

JR1WYV 18,150 121 50 C<br />

JA5IP 10,764 78 46 C<br />

JA1QCQ 9,159 71 43 C<br />

JT1FBB 1,122 22 17 C<br />

JM1NKT 720 24 10 B 80<br />

JA8NFV 72,663 457 53 C 40<br />

JA3CE 972 27 12 C 40<br />

7M4BEN 91,206 563 54 C 20<br />

JF2BDK 47,628 294 54 C 20<br />

JH0EPI 12,876 116 37 B 20<br />

JR7OMD/2 7,290 81 30 B 20<br />

JH1UUT 5,832 72 27 B 20<br />

JE1GZB 3,933 57 23 B 20<br />

JH0HON 2,394 42 19 B 20<br />

JA9PPC 197,334 1154 57 C 15


JR1MQT 178,416 1008 59 C 15<br />

JH7NPF 129,276 756 57 B 15<br />

JH9URT 95,370 578 55 B 15<br />

JH7QXJ 82,152 489 56 C 15<br />

JI3OPA 76,608 456 56 C 15<br />

JA5APU 37,728 262 48 C 15<br />

JL3VUL 23,760 180 44 B 15<br />

JA1EM 11,124 103 36 B 15<br />

JA3LEZ 10,404 102 34 B 15<br />

JI8BUR 7,347 79 31 B 15<br />

JI8GZS 5,832 72 27 B 15<br />

JH1JNR 5,664 59 32 C 15<br />

JJ1JRH 4,698 58 27 C 15<br />

JF0EBM 3,243 47 23 B 15<br />

JH2BTM 2,835 45 21 B 15<br />

JK1BII 2,280 40 19 B 15<br />

JQ1AHZ 1,683 33 17 B 15<br />

JA6YAI (JQ6PNK, op)<br />

1,536 32 16 C 15<br />

JA9SCB 1,512 28 18 A 15<br />

7L3DGP 1,218 29 14 B 15<br />

JG1GCO 507 13 13 B 15<br />

JE0VFV 405 15 9 B 15<br />

JA7ADV 351 13 9 B 15<br />

JF1OZL 273 13 7 A 15<br />

JR1BSV 264 11 8 B 15<br />

JE3BMU 252 14 6 C 15<br />

JF2FKJ 72 6 4 B 15<br />

7J2YAF (JA1KSO, op)<br />

465,687 2631 59 C 10<br />

JH5FXP 328,320 1920 57 C 10<br />

JA3ZOH (JR4ISF, op)<br />

280,314 1611 58 C 10<br />

JF1SQC 179,037 1047 57 B 10<br />

JR1UJX 176,436 1014 58 C 10<br />

JF8OGB 158,862 913 58 C 10<br />

JR8OGB 157,992 908 58 C 10<br />

JH0BDK 149,655 907 55 B 10<br />

JF3BFS 141,588 828 57 B 10<br />

JH8SLS 141,417 827 57 C 10<br />

JR4PMX/1 132,588 762 58 B 10<br />

JA7BEW 128,466 793 54 B 10<br />

JA0QWO 128,184 763 56 C 10<br />

JA7NVF 127,848 761 56 B 10<br />

JA3MDG 111,888 666 56 B 10<br />

JA7ERJ 88,881 559 53 C 10<br />

JG2TKH 86,295 523 55 B 10<br />

JQ1UXN 80,136 477 56 B 10<br />

JA1CQT 57,105 405 47 B 10<br />

JR4GPA 53,214 362 49 B 10<br />

JI3ERI/1 36,576 254 48 B 10<br />

JA1EEG 31,536 219 48 B 10<br />

JA6UBK 31,455 233 45 C 10<br />

JH2AVO 25,530 185 46 B 10<br />

JI1HFJ 23,100 175 44 B 10<br />

JA7AMK 21,294 169 42 B 10<br />

JH1CML 20,868 148 47 B 10<br />

JG3KIV 17,958 146 41 C 10<br />

JA6EFT 17,280 144 40 B 10<br />

JR3CVO 17,220 140 41 B 10<br />

JA1ALX/9 12,096 144 28 B 10<br />

JG1TVK 10,500 100 35 B 10<br />

JH1HPH 9,690 95 34 B 10<br />

JF2AII 9,603 97 33 C 10<br />

JH3DMQ 9,078 89 34 A 10<br />

JR2TRC 7,440 80 31 B 10<br />

JA6IP 7,035 67 35 B 10<br />

JK7QYZ 6,351 73 29 B 10<br />

JF1OIJ 5,760 64 30 B 10<br />

JJ3APB 5,427 67 27 B 10<br />

JA1DOY 5,292 63 28 B 10<br />

JA6QDU 4,455 55 27 B 10<br />

JQ3UDL 4,437 51 29 B 10<br />

JJ3OOZ 3,450 46 25 B 10<br />

JH1PXY 3,105 45 23 B 10<br />

JJ2PUG 2,268 36 21 C 10<br />

JA3BBG 1,596 28 19 B 10<br />

JH1TUX 1,440 30 16 B 10<br />

JF3WNO 1,176 28 14 A 10<br />

JF2VAX 450 15 10 B 10<br />

JA1AAT 147 7 7 B 10<br />

7K2PBB 120 8 5 B 10<br />

JA9XAT 75 5 5 B 10<br />

JM4UZM 36 4 3 B 10<br />

JI7NHE 30 5 2 B 10<br />

Mongolia<br />

JT1CS 54,750 250 73 B<br />

Lebanon<br />

OD5/OK1MU 74,817 489 51 C 10<br />

Turkey<br />

TA3BN 40,200 200 67 B<br />

TA3J 450 15 10 B 40<br />

TA3YJ 12 2 2 B 40<br />

Asiatic Russia<br />

UA0KCL 85,284 309 92 A<br />

RZ0SR 272,640 710 128 B<br />

RZ9OU 219,996 582 126 B<br />

RA0FN 65,928 268 82 B<br />

RA9AN 51,543 207 83 B<br />

UA9CR 5,814 57 34 B<br />

RU0AT 5,766 62 31 B<br />

RW9QA 810 18 15 B<br />

UA0ZBK 2,482,704 3284 252 C<br />

RK9JWV (RA9JP, op)<br />

224,790 590 127 C<br />

RA0AM 192,546 563 114 C<br />

RV9BB 152,490 442 115 C<br />

UA9JDP 133,920 465 96 C<br />

UA0ANW 119,952 392 102 C<br />

RZ9UA 225,330 1295 58 C 20<br />

RI9C (UA9CDV, op)<br />

154,926 906 57 C 20<br />

RK9KWB 73,428 422 58 C 20<br />

RA0BA 40,560 260 52 C 20<br />

UA9LAC 31,443 223 47 C 20<br />

UA9MAZ 2,214 41 18 B 20<br />

UA0FDX 169,650 975 58 B 15<br />

RA0FF 97,128 568 57 C 15<br />

UA0SJ 10,146 89 38 B 15<br />

UA0APP 5,670 63 30 B 15<br />

RV9SV 41,184 312 44 B 10<br />

UA9OW 41,040 304 45 C 10<br />

RA0CCV/3 7,728 92 28 A 10<br />

RW0QJ 4,692 68 23 C 10<br />

Kazakhstan<br />

UP6F (UN7FZ, op)<br />

129,780 420 103 B<br />

UN9FD 663 17 13 B<br />

UP4L (UN7LZ, op)<br />

614,265 1321 155 C<br />

UP6P (UN6P, op)<br />

462,462 1001 154 C<br />

UN7D (UN7DA, op)<br />

4,071 59 23 B 20<br />

UN8DG 4,134 53 26 B 15<br />

UN9GC 55,650 371 50 B 10<br />

Hong Kong<br />

VR2BG 44,469 183 81 C<br />

Europe<br />

Croatia<br />

9A1CMS (9A5AHD, op)<br />

183,000 488 125 B<br />

9A3CY 43,200 225 64 B<br />

9A4SS 216,150 550 131 C<br />

9A2YC 153,816 442 116 C<br />

9A2VR 5,880 98 20 C 80<br />

9A5YA 3,456 64 18 C 80<br />

9A4X 36,270 310 39 C 40<br />

9A7R 124,758 717 58 C 20<br />

9A2L (9A2VJ, op)<br />

140,592 808 58 C 15<br />

9A4BT 12,765 115 37 B 15<br />

9AY2K (9A9A, op)<br />

438,480 2436 60 C 10<br />

9A5K 287,271 1623 59 C 10<br />

9A5V 215,055 1215 59 B 10<br />

9A2RD 138,504 796 58 B 10<br />

Malta<br />

9H1DE 107,868 356 101 B<br />

Portugal<br />

CT1EAT 604,992 1096 184 B<br />

CT1DYV 183,396 527 116 B<br />

CT1AOZ 244,440 1358 60 C 20<br />

CT1BWW 50,250 335 50 B 15<br />

CT1ETE 17,160 130 44 B 15<br />

CT1DVV 456,402 2494 61 C 10<br />

CT1GFK 297 11 9 B 10<br />

Fed. Rep. of Germany<br />

DK7ZH 149,076 404 123 B<br />

DL8SDC 119,382 394 101 B<br />

DL3DRN 113,184 288 131 B<br />

DK6BT 88,596 276 107 B<br />

DL4WA 82,344 292 94 B<br />

DL5WS 77,556 281 92 B<br />

DL7QU 46,842 211 74 B<br />

DL1DWT 46,209 211 73 B<br />

DL3ZAI 37,446 158 79 B<br />

DJ0TP 35,856 166 72 B<br />

DF5PP 29,502 149 66 B<br />

DK1YY 16,638 94 59 B<br />

DL3YEI 9,198 73 42 B<br />

DL4VAB 7,056 56 42 B<br />

DL1HSR 2,997 37 27 B<br />

DL8SDI 2,793 49 19 B<br />

DL3KDC 1,581 31 17 B<br />

DL8PC 1,545,600 2300 224 C<br />

DL2DX 1,257,498 2117 198 C<br />

DJ3HJ 879,600 1466 200 C<br />

DL9NDS 632,100 1204 175 C<br />

DF6QV 404,916 823 164 C<br />

DL6RDR 313,182 822 127 C<br />

DL1PT 63,840 266 80 C<br />

DJ1XT 59,532 242 82 C<br />

DL6DVU 35,577 177 67 C<br />

DL6AG 23,364 132 59 C<br />

DL3LAB 15,480 172 30 C 80<br />

DJ7AA 513,132 2804 61 C 20<br />

DF7YU 88,290 545 54 B 20<br />

DL4JYT 2,142 42 17 B 20<br />

DK2OY 263,703 1441 61 C 15<br />

DL7PP 140,007 791 59 C 15<br />

DL5ME 92,220 530 58 C 15<br />

DF9ZP 471,060 2617 60 C 10<br />

DL8UD 384,267 2171 59 C 10<br />

DL2DBH 268,308 1542 58 C 10<br />

DK3KD 253,464 1432 59 C 10<br />

DL7ANR 183,396 1054 58 C 10<br />

DL6NDN 95,160 610 52 C 10<br />

DL4FAY 69,984 432 54 B 10<br />

DL6UNF 59,280 380 52 C 10<br />

DL2DN 47,664 331 48 C 10<br />

DL7VXX 22,197 151 49 C 10<br />

DL9ZWG 20,862 183 38 B 10<br />

DJ0BX 19,680 164 40 B 10<br />

DK7AN 7,161 77 31 B 10<br />

DL6EG 6,048 84 24 B 10<br />

DL0GDS 5,670 70 27 C 10<br />

DL1FMG 4,608 64 24 B 10<br />

DL4JTW 3,744 52 24 B 10<br />

DL3ME 2,835 45 21 B 10<br />

DF5RF 6 2 1 A 10<br />

Spain<br />

EA4ABW 7,488 64 39 A<br />

EA3GHZ 332,055 785 141 B<br />

EA4TX 144,432 472 102 B<br />

EA3NA 69,192 248 93 B<br />

EA3OP 67,518 242 93 B<br />

EA3EVR 39,960 180 74 B<br />

EA1APS 35,280 210 56 B<br />

EA5AFH 32,832 152 72 B<br />

EA3ESJ 23,187 131 59 B<br />

EA7CWV 17,577 93 63 B<br />

EC3AHT 10,260 90 38 B<br />

EA3AAW 8,748 81 36 B<br />

EA2LB 7,854 77 34 B<br />

EA3DVJ 6,786 87 26 B<br />

EA1BVP 4,752 44 36 B<br />

EA5FWW 504 14 12 B<br />

EC2BAH 243 9 9 B<br />

EA5BHK 849,750 1375 206 C<br />

EA5FID 294,309 617 159 C<br />

EA1BPO 141,456 421 112 C<br />

EA3GHQ 104,328 414 84 C<br />

EA1GL 67,584 256 88 C<br />

EA3FAJ 50,298 202 83 C<br />

EA1ZH 36,855 195 63 C<br />

EA3BTJ 10,440 116 30 C<br />

EA5CMQ 4,554 46 33 C<br />

EA1DVY 48 4 4 B 160<br />

EF1CFD 18,135 195 31 B 80<br />

EA3BHB 86,625 525 55 C 20<br />

EA3QP 58,512 368 53 C 20<br />

EA1AAW 9,408 98 32 C 20<br />

EA3CT 3,213 51 21 B 20<br />

EA1AUT 216 9 8 C 20<br />

EA1DLU 178,425 975 61 C 15<br />

EA3KT 30,870 210 49 B 15<br />

EA5TN 2,538 47 18 B 15<br />

EA4WF 354,960 1972 60 C 10<br />

EA3AR 241,920 1344 60 C 10<br />

EA7FTR 153,990 885 58 B 10<br />

EA4ET 139,896 804 58 C 10<br />

EA5DWS 119,187 697 57 C 10<br />

EA5AVD 64,638 399 54 B 10<br />

EA1ACP 45,900 300 51 B 10<br />

EA7AKJ 28,980 210 46 B 10<br />

EA3DUZ 27,048 196 46 C 10<br />

EA3ATM 19,782 157 42 C 10<br />

EA4CWN 10,914 107 34 B 10<br />

EA7GSU 7,290 81 30 C 10<br />

EA1GA 828 23 12 C 10<br />

Ireland<br />

EI4DW 839,232 1488 188 C<br />

EI/EA3BOX 179,832 508 118 C<br />

EI8GP 170,145 995 57 B 10<br />

Moldova<br />

ER5DX 62,220 244 85 B<br />

ER1LW 741 19 13 B 40<br />

Estonia<br />

ES5RW 275,724 666 138 C<br />

ES5CX 2,178 33 22 B 15<br />

ES4RO 26,838 213 42 C 10<br />

ES6PZ 26,445 215 41 C 10<br />

Belarus<br />

EW8DA 12,600 100 42 B<br />

EU1UN 212,760 788 90 C<br />

EW2AA 117,315 495 79 C<br />

EW3EW 1,053 27 13 C 80<br />

EU6DX 48 4 4 B 80<br />

EW6AF 13,566 119 38 C 20<br />

EU1SA 105,300 650 54 C 10<br />

EW6DF 17,664 184 32 B 10<br />

EW6DX 17,205 155 37 B 10<br />

EU6FF 8,280 92 30 B 10<br />

EU4EU 3,456 48 24 B 10<br />

EW1AAV 1,836 34 18 C 10<br />

France<br />

F5BEG 226,044 546 138 A<br />

F5TDK 593,607 1229 161 B<br />

F8BJI 211,689 547 129 B<br />

F5TVG 87,318 231 126 B<br />

F5ICC 68,523 251 91 B<br />

F5TYY 41,004 204 67 B<br />

F5MFL 30,396 149 68 B<br />

F5PBL 16,038 99 54 B<br />

F5MLJ 14,700 100 49 B<br />

F5JX 4,590 45 34 B<br />

F5BBD 199,800 555 120 C<br />

F5NBK 97,002 317 102 C<br />

F5RZJ 49,446 402 41 C 40<br />

F5NBX 31,302 282 37 C 40<br />

F5CCX 8,064 96 28 C 20<br />

F8CMZ 1,092 26 14 B 20<br />

F6HMQ 269,100 1495 60 C 15<br />

F8BPN 212,580 1181 60 C 15<br />

F6DRP 5,175 75 23 B 15<br />

F5LBL 238,950 1350 59 C 10<br />

FB1BON 146,376 856 57 B 10<br />

F8CNR 23,865 185 43 B 10<br />

F8PMO 10,656 96 37 B 10<br />

F5NQL 9,600 100 32 B 10<br />

F6FTB 6,144 64 32 A 10<br />

England<br />

G3FNM 63,516 268 79 A<br />

G0MTN 319,005 765 139 B<br />

G3VAO 235,152 568 138 B<br />

M0CQS (N0KV, op)<br />

135,930 394 115 B<br />

G4NXG 97,200 300 108 B<br />

M0BEX 66,339 273 81 B<br />

G3NAS 49,392 168 98 B<br />

M6T (G4PIQ, op)<br />

3,121,284 3956 263 C<br />

G3TMA 692,244 1407 164 C<br />

G4IUF 86,130 290 99 C<br />

G3UFY 24,570 130 63 C<br />

G2VJ 5,124 61 28 B 20<br />

M4T (G0VQR, op)<br />

3,420 60 19 B 20<br />

G0EYO 7,176 92 26 B 15<br />

G4JVG 103,797 607 57 C 10<br />

G2QT 49,200 328 50 C 10<br />

G0NWY 39,312 312 42 B 10<br />

G4AHJ 17,160 130 44 B 10<br />

Northern Ireland<br />

GI0KVQ 183,732 502 122 B<br />

GI0OUM 21,417 121 59 B<br />

Jersey<br />

GJ2A (K2WR, op)<br />

345,693 829 139 C<br />

Scotland<br />

MM/W3LEO 72,390 254 95 B<br />

GM3POI 444,150 1175 126 C<br />

GM3BCL 215,946 558 129 C<br />

GM7R (GM0NAI, op)<br />

437,190 2470 59 C 10<br />

GM0EGI 34,050 227 50 A 10<br />

Wales<br />

GW0AJI 70,716 284 83 B<br />

Hungary<br />

HA2A 320,991 781 137 A<br />

HA6PX 305,460 1697 60 C 10<br />

HA0NAR 236,826 1338 59 C 10<br />

HA0IT 51,606 366 47 B 10<br />

Switzerland<br />

HB2FAP 1,213,461 1917 211 C<br />

Italy<br />

I8OCA 256,212 647 132 B<br />

IK4QJM 180,375 481 125 B<br />

IZ2ABN 115,551 347 111 B<br />

IK2WZQ 102,678 314 109 B<br />

IO3Z 88,266 313 94 B<br />

IK5WGK 83,808 291 96 B<br />

IK1ZOE 78,936 286 92 B<br />

IK1RQQ 76,995 295 87 B<br />

IK2SVF 71,724 278 86 B<br />

IK2WYI 46,200 220 70 B<br />

IK4RQJ 41,514 187 74 B<br />

IK7RVY 38,304 304 42 B<br />

IZ2BHQ 27,864 129 72 B<br />

IK5YJK 21,375 125 57 B<br />

IK7YZF 18,471 131 47 B<br />

IK7WUE 17,496 108 54 B<br />

II3L (IV3KAS, op)<br />

11,466 91 42 B<br />

IU0K (IK0STM, op)<br />

7,998 62 43 B<br />

I2WIJ 6,612 58 38 B<br />

IK4CBM 4,209 61 23 B<br />

IN3PEE 900 20 15 B<br />

IZ4COW 987,189 1621 203 C<br />

IK6GPZ 407,040 848 160 C<br />

IT9WPO 115,938 339 114 C<br />

IK2RJZ 98,700 350 94 C<br />

IK4QIB 70,029 251 93 C<br />

IZ5BRO 69,960 440 53 C<br />

IV3EPO 57,519 231 83 C<br />

IZ6BTN 49,275 225 73 C<br />

IK2BCP 38,178 202 63 C<br />

IQ2X 33,984 177 64 C<br />

IZ1ANZ 15,120 112 45 C<br />

IZ0BPI 5,100 50 34 C<br />

I4AVG 34,194 278 41 C 80<br />

IQ3A (IV3TAN, op)<br />

538,842 2897 62 C 20<br />

IT9ICS 81,276 521 52 C 20<br />

IK8WEJ 52,650 351 50 C 20<br />

IZ4AQL 3,150 50 21 C 20<br />

IR2W (I2EOW, op)<br />

296,322 1703 58 C 15<br />

IK2DUU 279,540 1553 60 C 15<br />

IK3STG 20,160 168 40 B 15<br />

IZ2DAY 3,528 49 24 B 15<br />

IY4W 374,040 2078 60 C 10<br />

IR1A (IK1GPG, op)<br />

359,460 1997 60 C 10<br />

II2Y 195,078 1066 61 C 10<br />

IT9ZTX 171,738 987 58 C 10<br />

IK1HSS 141,417 827 57 C 10<br />

IT9EQO 140,940 810 58 C 10<br />

I8UZA 136,116 796 57 C 10<br />

I1COB 110,385 669 55 C 10<br />

IU1W (I1WXY, op)<br />

105,336 627 56 B 10<br />

II2K (IK2UCK, op)<br />

66,462 418 53 C 10<br />

IK2ODD 61,200 400 51 B 10<br />

IQ0A (IK0XBX, op)<br />

25,461 207 41 B 10<br />

IZ7CDB 13,500 125 36 B 10<br />

IV3KSE 8,712 88 33 B 10<br />

IK1ZOF 3,645 45 27 B 10<br />

IK4VFB 3,168 44 24 B 10<br />

Sardinia<br />

IS0IGV 123,384 388 106 B<br />

IS0VBH 37,386 201 62 B<br />

IS0FBK 2,106 39 18 B<br />

IS0GSR 169,974 994 57 C 10<br />

Svalbard<br />

JW5NM 109,230 662 55 C 15<br />

Norway<br />

LA2HFA 20,178 118 57 B<br />

LA9AU 21,504 112 64 C<br />

LA5JX 71,766 443 54 B 10<br />

LA6YEA 63,666 393 54 C 10<br />

LA2JR 29,172 221 44 B 10<br />

LA3JT 8,256 86 32 B 10<br />

Luxembourg<br />

LX1JH 372,150 827 150 B<br />

LX0RL 372,141 1253 99 C<br />

LX2SM 141,417 827 57 C 10<br />

Lithuania<br />

LY2LA 543,585 1085 167 B<br />

LY3CY 48,825 217 75 B<br />

LY1DS 15,453 101 51 B<br />

LY3BH 9,108 69 44 C<br />

LY3BS 74,850 499 50 C 40<br />

LY2BM 252,900 1405 60 C 20<br />

LY2BLQ 13,776 112 41 B 15<br />

LY2ZZ 354,060 1967 60 C 10<br />

LY2HM 48,384 336 48 B 10<br />

LY3BY 13,950 155 30 B 10<br />

Bulgaria<br />

LZ2AU 65,175 275 79 B<br />

LZ2JE 21,672 172 42 B<br />

LZ1AQ 10,455 85 41 B<br />

LZ2WM 105,060 340 103 C<br />

LZ1HB 85,956 551 52 B 10<br />

LZ1PM 33,354 218 51 C 10<br />

LZ2GS 1,845 41 15 B 10<br />

Austria<br />

OE7AJT 20,790 126 55 B<br />

OE8SKQ 304,263 1719 59 C 15<br />

OE1EMS 346,320 1924 60 C 10<br />

Aland Islands<br />

OH0B 2,291,832 3336 229 C<br />

Finland<br />

OH2LYP 124,926 443 94 B<br />

OH1MM 6,120 60 34 B<br />

OH8RQ 4,050 45 30 B<br />

OH5LF (OH1WZ, op)<br />

3,072,000 4096 250 C<br />

OH3JR 127,125 375 113 C<br />

OH9W (OH6EI, op)<br />

76,500 340 75 C<br />

OH3GD 210 10 7 B 40<br />

OH1BOI 1,680 35 16 C 20<br />

OH6AC (OH6CS, op)<br />

258,042 1483 58 C 15<br />

OH6Y (OH6YF, op)<br />

203,904 1152 59 C 10<br />

OH9MM 158,205 995 53 C 10<br />

OH1XT 101,598 574 59 C 10<br />

OH3RR 95,076 556 57 C 10<br />

OH1NOA 7,020 90 26 B 10<br />

OH5PA 6,888 82 28 B 10<br />

Czech Republic<br />

OK1BA 175,392 504 116 B<br />

OK1TC 155,430 471 110 B<br />

OK1FHI 101,268 348 97 B<br />

OK2SGY 46,410 238 65 B<br />

OK2TBC 43,200 200 72 B<br />

OK2SPS 14,364 114 42 B<br />

OK2BHE 2,016 32 21 B<br />

OK2FD 1,714,518 2586 221 C<br />

OK1DUO 559,872 1152 162 C<br />

OK1JAX 4,158 77 18 C 80<br />

OK1FPS 1,440 32 15 C 80<br />

OK1IE 17,544 172 34 C 40<br />

OK/K3TW 3,213 51 21 B 20<br />

OK1CAZ 378 14 9 B 20<br />

OK1MD 190,800 1060 60 C 15<br />

OK2HZ 29,892 212 47 B 15<br />

OK1GW 24,510 190 43 A 15<br />

OK1DVK 243 9 9 B 15<br />

OK2RZ 483,669 2643 61 C 10<br />

OK8ANM (at OK5H,UR4LRQ, op)<br />

196,968 1132 58 C 10<br />

OK1KT 114,015 691 55 C 10<br />

OK2ABU 96,831 609 53 C 10<br />

OK1AVY 81,648 486 56 C 10<br />

OK1TD 57,081 359 53 B 10<br />

OK1XC 52,938 346 51 B 10<br />

OK1DSZ 51,597 351 49 B 10<br />

OK1DEK 39,345 305 43 C 10<br />

OK2BJT 37,224 264 47 C 10<br />

OK1SI 34,560 256 45 B 10<br />

OK2ZJ 27,984 212 44 B 10<br />

OK1FUA 27,600 200 46 A 10<br />

OK2VP 11,256 134 28 B 10<br />

OK1AIJ 2,322 43 18 A 10<br />

Slovakia<br />

OM5NL 133,227 393 113 B<br />

OM4DN 126,873 381 111 B<br />

OM3YK 105,294 322 109 B<br />

OM3NA 1,753,110 2718 215 C<br />

OM7M (OM5ZW, op)<br />

10,800 144 25 C 80<br />

OM7RC 720 20 12 C 20<br />

OM4KK 34,524 274 42 B 10<br />

OM3KWZ (OM7AC, op)<br />

27,594 219 42 B 10<br />

OM6AR 5,382 69 26 B 10<br />

Belgium<br />

ON6ML 85,728 304 94 B<br />

ON5UM 55,860 196 95 B<br />

ON4BG 22,680 126 60 B<br />

ON5JD 8,712 66 44 B<br />

OT0T (ON4UN, op)<br />

58,926 427 46 C 80<br />

ON4UN (ON4MA, op)<br />

448,899 2453 61 C 10<br />

ON7NQ 244,122 1403 58 B 10<br />

ON4TO 97,440 580 56 B 10<br />

ON4CAS 88,275 535 55 B 10<br />

ON4XG 22,698 194 39 B 10<br />

Denmark<br />

OZ1ACB 120,870 395 102 B<br />

OZ7RJ 94,575 325 97 B<br />

OZ9Y 330,774 1901 58 C 10<br />

OZ7HVI (OZ1AA, op)<br />

7,476 89 28 B 10<br />

OZ1AKN 756 21 12 B 10<br />

Netherlands<br />

PA9RZ 17,640 105 56 A<br />

PA1TT 95,160 305 104 B<br />

PA0RBS 60,945 239 85 B<br />

PA2NJN 27,648 144 64 B<br />

PA3HGF 13,920 80 58 B<br />

PA0IJM 248,400 600 138 C<br />

PA1BX 70,125 275 85 C<br />

PA3CAL 7,776 81 32 B 15<br />

PI4TUE (PA3EZL, op)<br />

313,290 1770 59 C 10<br />

Slovenia<br />

S57J 735,435 1385 177 B<br />

S59D 57,780 214 90 B<br />

S50S 2,688,924 3766 238 C<br />

S51TA 1,500,948 2892 173 C<br />

S55A 910,035 1605 189 C<br />

S53Z 502,080 1046 160 C<br />

S54E 1,680 40 14 C 160<br />

S57O 18,135 195 31 C 80<br />

S53M (S55OO, op)<br />

109,725 665 55 C 40<br />

S51CK 142,395 863 55 C 20<br />

S57AW 381,555 2085 61 C 15<br />

S57IIO 160,362 906 59 B 15<br />

S57JUN 6,699 77 29 B 15<br />

S50K 434,700 2415 60 C 10<br />

S58D 325,680 1840 59 C 10<br />

S50Q 303,300 1685 60 C 10<br />

S51AY 291,042 1702 57 C 10<br />

S57NWG 150,684 866 58 C 10<br />

S58WW 129,276 756 57 B 10<br />

S52GP 107,250 650 55 C 10<br />

S57NMQ 106,344 633 56 B 10<br />

Sweden<br />

SM6B (SM6AGR, op)<br />

157,563 427 123 B<br />

SM4AIO 152,490 442 115 B<br />

SM0FM 21,306 106 67 B<br />

SM5TSP 18,315 111 55 B<br />

SM7HSP 9,960 83 40 B<br />

SM3ARR 9,240 77 40 B<br />

SM5UFB 2,886 37 26 B<br />

8S0W (SM0NJO, op)<br />

2,484 36 23 B<br />

SK3W (SM5IMO, op)<br />

2,980,152 4088 243 C<br />

8S4Z (SM4SET, op)<br />

447,921 951 157 C<br />

SM6WQB 359,127 849 141 C<br />

7S4A (SM4ATJ, op)<br />

204,216 536 127 C<br />

SM7BJW 123,120 380 108 C<br />

SM0J 27,690 142 65 C<br />

SM7DXQ 26,820 149 60 C<br />

7S2E (SM2DMU, op)<br />

34,443 267 43 C 40<br />

SK0HB (SM0WKA, op)<br />

16,380 156 35 B 20<br />

SM0GKF 288 12 8 A 20<br />

SM2CEW 129,108 742 58 C 15<br />

SM2T (SM2EZT, op)<br />

97,104 578 56 C 15<br />

SM6ADW 33,354 218 51 C 15<br />

8S7A (SM7CRW, op)<br />

288,360 1602 60 C 10<br />

SM3D (SM3WMU, op)<br />

8,484 101 28 B 10<br />

SM7FTG 4,002 58 23 B 10<br />

SM0BWM 84 7 4 B 10<br />

Poland<br />

SP1EOI 150,228 428 117 B<br />

3Z6V (SP6DVP, op)<br />

72,900 243 100 B<br />

SP7A (SP7FQI, op)<br />

49,275 219 75 B<br />

SQ4CUX 36,924 181 68 B<br />

SP9HQC 31,482 159 66 B<br />

SP7LHX 27,300 140 65 B<br />

SP3XR 23,616 192 41 B<br />

SP3IMM 15,300 102 50 B<br />

SP3GHK 14,478 127 38 B<br />

SQ7BCG 14,076 92 51 B<br />

SP5BNB 11,466 98 39 B<br />

SP9MCU 5,796 69 28 B<br />

SP3BVI 5,220 58 30 B<br />

SP9ELM 5,184 54 32 B<br />

SP2FGO 44,526 181 82 C<br />

SP7FDV 41,208 202 68 C<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 105


SP9VRY 828 23 12 C<br />

SP7VC (at SP7GIQ)<br />

118,674 694 57 C 40<br />

SN6O (SP6IHE, op)<br />

9,720 120 27 C 40<br />

SP2PIK (SP2WKB, op)<br />

408,273 2231 61 C 20<br />

SP6RGC 2,400 40 20 B 20<br />

SP4SHD 1,485 33 15 B 20<br />

SP7GIQ 360,540 2003 60 C 15<br />

SP9XCN 54,600 325 56 B 15<br />

SP9RVD 26,226 186 47 B 15<br />

SP5BB 16,899 131 43 B 15<br />

SP6IXF 304,200 1690 60 C 10<br />

SP9LJD 230,100 1300 59 C 10<br />

SP5LCC 30,624 232 44 B 10<br />

SQ9IET 12,576 131 32 A 10<br />

SP5CGN 10,464 109 32 B 10<br />

SQ8GBN 3,000 50 20 B 10<br />

SO7VH 378 14 9 B 10<br />

Greece<br />

SV2AEL 24,750 150 55 B<br />

SW1W 17,640 120 49 B<br />

SV1DPI 84 7 4 B 80<br />

Bosnia-Herzegovina<br />

T94MZ 64,680 392 55 C 15<br />

T94DO 59,517 389 51 C 10<br />

T92M 15,000 125 40 B 10<br />

European Russia<br />

RV3AR 34,506 162 71 A<br />

RA3WA 297,000 660 150 B<br />

UA4LU 247,248 606 136 B<br />

RA3DNC 104,178 358 97 B<br />

RV4LC 44,688 196 76 B<br />

RZ6BR 39,237 319 41 B<br />

RA3AF 36,234 198 61 B<br />

RA4UAT 22,869 121 63 B<br />

UA4RF 18,315 111 55 B<br />

UA1WAL 18,207 119 51 B<br />

RW4YA 9,180 85 36 B<br />

RV3YR 2,376 33 24 B<br />

UA3BL 376,650 775 162 C<br />

RK6AW 200,880 540 124 C<br />

RN3RQ 156,366 438 119 C<br />

RV1CC 107,568 332 108 C<br />

RK3DH 67,770 251 90 C<br />

UA3BZ 25,404 146 58 C<br />

RZ1AZ 11,988 74 54 C<br />

RA4NF 11,316 82 46 C<br />

UA6ART 1,404 26 18 C<br />

UA3UND 12 1 4 C<br />

RW3DU 60 4 5 B 80<br />

RM4W (RW4WR, op)<br />

245,700 1365 60 C 20<br />

UA3QDX 146,910 830 59 C 20<br />

RA4LW 120,384 704 57 C 20<br />

UA4LDP 1,092 26 14 B 20<br />

RA1AKE 1,050 25 14 B 20<br />

RN3QY 185,745 1015 61 C 15<br />

UA4HTT 180,804 988 61 C 15<br />

UA3ABJ 94,080 560 56 B 15<br />

RA3RCL 70,896 422 56 B 15<br />

RV3ACA 45,150 301 50 C 15<br />

RX1CQ 16,974 138 41 B 15<br />

UA6LP 2,052 36 19 B 15<br />

RA3AJ 173,178 1069 54 C 10<br />

UA6LV 140,418 807 58 C 10<br />

RK6CZ 100,980 612 55 C 10<br />

RN3QO 71,850 479 50 B 10<br />

RA4CC 62,550 417 50 C 10<br />

UA3LHL 28,782 234 41 B 10<br />

RU3DVR 20,241 173 39 B 10<br />

RU3DD 19,656 168 39 B 10<br />

RU3WR 15,660 145 36 C 10<br />

RA3OU 15,228 141 36 C 10<br />

RA3XO 13,320 120 37 B 10<br />

RV3LO 7,857 97 27 B 10<br />

RA3DGH 4,968 69 24 B 10<br />

UA3AD 390 13 10 B 10<br />

Ukraine<br />

UT1UA 97,566 322 101 B<br />

UU4JO 49,896 216 77 B<br />

UY5TE 2,886 37 26 B<br />

UT4MW 1,740 29 20 B<br />

UR3IWA 630,720 1460 144 C<br />

UT3UA 79,248 254 104 C<br />

UT5JAP 12,798 79 54 C<br />

UT4EK 9,417 73 43 C<br />

UT7MD 4,929 53 31 C<br />

UR3QCW 936 24 13 C<br />

UT1T (UR7TZ, op)<br />

28,500 250 38 B 20<br />

UR8MA 200,751 1097 61 C 15<br />

UT0U (UT5UDX, op)<br />

179,100 995 60 C 15<br />

UU2JZ 160,362 906 59 C 15<br />

UR6MX 92,736 552 56 C 15<br />

EN7M (UX2MM, op)<br />

89,712 534 56 C 15<br />

UX7MM 36,000 240 50 B 15<br />

UT5UGR 15,120 140 36 C 15<br />

UT0D 225,207 1317 57 C 10<br />

UU0JX 199,125 1125 59 C 10<br />

UT7L (UR4QKD, op)<br />

94,122 581 54 C 10<br />

UT8IM 75,816 468 54 C 10<br />

UZ5U (UT4UO, op)<br />

61,620 395 52 C 10<br />

UY9VY 29,040 220 44 C 10<br />

UR5FGN 27,477 213 43 B 10<br />

UT7QL 26,199 213 41 C 10<br />

UU4JMG 22,113 189 39 B 10<br />

US5EAE 2,655 59 15 B 10<br />

UR5YDX 1,260 30 14 A 10<br />

UR5XAJ 1,248 26 16 C 10<br />

UR5FCM 900 20 15 A 10<br />

UR5YDZ 510 17 10 A 10<br />

Latvia<br />

YL2MF 9,768 88 37 A<br />

YL2KO 1,052,025 2075 169 C<br />

YL2SM 18,810 165 38 C 10<br />

YL3BZ 11,232 117 32 B 10<br />

Romania<br />

YO3APJ 587,385 1145 171 B<br />

YO5KTK 201,495 505 133 B<br />

YO8FR 98,196 334 98 B<br />

YO7ARY 58,968 252 78 B<br />

YO9AHX 3,000 40 25 B<br />

YO6SD 2,886 37 26 B<br />

YO8DHD 12,600 100 42 C<br />

YO6BZL 32,226 262 41 B 20<br />

YO8ROO 6,966 86 27 B 20<br />

YO8DDP 20,538 163 42 B 15<br />

YO4AAC 216 9 8 A 15<br />

YO9GZU 1,386 33 14 A 10<br />

Yugoslavia<br />

YU7KWX 667,332 1332 167 B<br />

YU1OJ 231,813 599 129 B<br />

YU7AM 45,144 198 76 B<br />

YZ1SG 1,716 26 22 B<br />

4N1K (YU1XA, op)<br />

15,066 162 31 C 80<br />

YT0T (YU1FJK, op)<br />

7,488 104 24 C 80<br />

YT7A 47,400 395 40 C 40<br />

YU7BW 25,863 233 37 C 40<br />

YU1JW 381,189 2083 61 C 20<br />

YT1BB 378,993 2071 61 C 20<br />

YZ9A 303,378 1714 59 C 20<br />

YU1BX 1,302 31 14 B 20<br />

YU7JX 241,782 1366 59 C 15<br />

YT7KF 200,364 1132 59 C 15<br />

YU1HFG 43,299 283 51 B 15<br />

YZ1U (YU1QD, op)<br />

293,580 1631 60 C 10<br />

YU7GMN (4N7DW, op)<br />

208,506 1178 59 C 10<br />

YU7AL (4N7RGH, op)<br />

201,840 1160 58 C 10<br />

YU7KMN (YZ7DM, op)<br />

200,622 1153 58 B 10<br />

YT7W (4N7TW, op)<br />

164,640 980 56 C 10<br />

YU1NW 128,142 791 54 B 10<br />

YU1ANT (YU1YV, op)<br />

97,344 624 52 C 10<br />

4N1N (4N1LB, op)<br />

63,492 407 52 B 10<br />

YU7KM 32,637 253 43 B 10<br />

YU7SF 14,652 148 33 B 10<br />

4N1JA 5,751 71 27 C 10<br />

Macedonia<br />

Z31JA 1,144,410 2062 185 C<br />

Z32AF 17,157 133 43 C 20<br />

Z31GX 175,044 1006 58 C 10<br />

North America<br />

Barbados<br />

8P6EX 420,432 922 152 C<br />

Cuba<br />

CO2II 995,565 2141 155 B<br />

CO8ZZ 85,800 520 55 B 80<br />

Saint Martin<br />

FS/K8HTP 174,405 1057 55 C 10<br />

Panama<br />

HO3A (HP3XUG, op)<br />

64,320 268 80 B<br />

3E1AA 437,721 2473 59 C 20<br />

Alaska<br />

WL7CMK 400,932 1036 129 B<br />

KL7/NO7F 130,626 738 59 C 15<br />

Virgin Islands<br />

NP2DJ 37,536 184 68 B<br />

KV4FZ 28,098 223 42 C 160<br />

Puerto Rico<br />

WP3R (KB3AFT, op)<br />

7,254,090 7218 335 C<br />

KP4VP 247,296 896 92 C<br />

St Maarten Saba St Eustatius<br />

PJ8/W1USN 27,720 210 44 B 10<br />

Guatemala<br />

TG0AA (IK2NCJ, op)<br />

549,585 3105 59 C 15<br />

Costa Rica<br />

TI7/N4MO 293,643 1659 59 B 10<br />

TI2DLL 173,394 1014 57 B 10<br />

Antigua & Barbuda<br />

V26P (W5AJ, op)<br />

21,480 179 40 C 160<br />

Belize<br />

V31JP 5,815,071 6273 309 C<br />

St Kitts & Nevis<br />

V47KP 5,090,715 5387 315 C<br />

V44NK 243,939 1333 61 C 10<br />

British Virgin Islands<br />

VP2VF 422,994 2431 58 B 10<br />

Turks & Caicos Islands<br />

VP5A (KQ3V, op)<br />

4,257,162 4746 299 B<br />

Mexico<br />

XE2AUB 373,191 1367 91 B<br />

XE1BEF 62,100 345 60 C<br />

XE1L 106,920 660 54 B 10<br />

El Salvador<br />

HU1A (YT1AD, op)<br />

5,686,092 5542 342 C<br />

Cayman Islands<br />

ZF2NT (N6NT, op)<br />

6,435,558 6442 333 C<br />

ZF2DR (K5RQ, op)<br />

5,238,477 5651 309 C<br />

ZF2JB (KK9A, op)<br />

269,748 1524 59 C 40<br />

ZF2AH 495,030 2845 58 C 10<br />

Oceania<br />

Fiji<br />

3D2TC 697,221 1519 153 B<br />

Philippines<br />

DU1SAN 144,054 453 106 C<br />

DU1ODD 9,021 97 31 C 20<br />

4F9EAQ 2,016 32 21 B 15<br />

DU1LER 5,022 62 27 B 10<br />

Hawaii<br />

KH7R (KH6ND, op)<br />

6,676,188 6703 332 C<br />

NH7A 4,017,402 4362 307 C<br />

AH6IM 120,042 702 57 B 15<br />

Marshall Islands<br />

V73CW (AC4G, op)<br />

1,410,750 2090 225 B<br />

Australia<br />

VK4EJ 370,188 1092 113 B<br />

VK5EMI 2,142 34 21 B<br />

VK5GN 1,393,821 2223 209 C<br />

VK8AV 4,080 40 34 C<br />

VK3GK 3,588 46 26 B 15<br />

VK2KPP 328,140 1823 60 C 10<br />

VK4UC 146,682 843 58 C 10<br />

VK2UZ 75,600 450 56 C 10<br />

Pitcairn Island<br />

VP6BR (OH2BR, op)<br />

1,503,000 2505 200 B<br />

Indonesia<br />

YB1XUR 35,292 173 68 B<br />

YC8TXW 936 24 13 B<br />

YB3ASQ/9 275,274 746 123 C<br />

YB0ZAD 504 14 12 B 20<br />

YC8RRK 10,944 114 32 C 15<br />

YC0LOW 22,440 170 44 B 10<br />

New Zealand<br />

ZL1ANJ 1,018,455 1579 215 C<br />

South America<br />

Chile<br />

CE8EIO 1,127,448 2237 168 C<br />

CE6ABC 173,106 978 59 C 15<br />

CE8SFG 244,440 1358 60 C 10<br />

XQ3ZW 4,860 60 27 B 10<br />

Bolivia<br />

CP1FF 82,296 381 72 C<br />

Uruguay<br />

CX9AU 44,583 193 77 B<br />

CX8CP 424,800 2400 59 C 10<br />

Ecuador<br />

HC1HC 364,266 2058 59 C 10<br />

Galapagos Islands<br />

HC8N (K5TR, op)<br />

7,645,056 7408 344 C<br />

Colombia<br />

HK6PSG 462,510 1142 135 B<br />

Argentina<br />

LU1VK 88,200 300 98 A<br />

LU9HO 705,087 1497 157 B<br />

LO7H 581,202 1374 141 B<br />

LU2NI 452,640 943 160 B<br />

L44D (LU4DA, op)<br />

105,444 404 87 B<br />

LU5FF 35,670 205 58 B<br />

LU1BR 496,350 1103 150 C<br />

LU1FAM 191,052 1098 58 B 20<br />

LU2FT 156,078 897 58 B 15<br />

LU6FF 43,920 305 48 C 15<br />

LU4FM 447,987 2531 59 C 10<br />

LT1A (LU3CT, op)<br />

393,588 2262 58 C 10<br />

LU6FUQ 332,688 1912 58 C 10<br />

LP1F 262,740 1510 58 B 10<br />

LU1VEW 174,174 1001 58 B 10<br />

LW1EGD 166,896 976 57 B 10<br />

LU1FC 159,030 930 57 B 10<br />

LU1FGE 105,840 630 56 B 10<br />

LU5EVK 98,484 566 58 B 10<br />

LW9DAH 61,902 362 57 B 10<br />

LU7VCH 25,944 188 46 A 10<br />

LU5JKG 13,038 106 41 B 10<br />

Peru<br />

OA4SS 2,620,026 3594 243 B<br />

OA4CVT 14,934 131 38 C 40<br />

OA4AHW 4,500 60 25 B 10<br />

Aruba<br />

P40B (P43P, op)<br />

4,766,400 4800 331 C<br />

Brazil<br />

ZX2B (PY2MNL, op)<br />

1,093,176 2169 168 B<br />

PT2AW 119,394 402 99 B<br />

PY2YU 78,936 286 92 B<br />

PY7YL 48,462 197 82 B<br />

PY3FBI 39,690 210 63 B<br />

PR7FN 4,752 48 33 B<br />

PY2WVT 297 11 9 B<br />

PY2NY 331,632 784 141 C<br />

PV8IG 684 19 12 C<br />

PY5EG 107,358 617 58 C 40<br />

ZX5J (PP5JR, op)<br />

308,700 1715 60 C 20<br />

PR7AR 363 11 11 B 20<br />

ZW5B (PY2KC, op)<br />

392,055 2215 59 C 15<br />

PQ5W 328,686 1889 58 C 15<br />

PY2APQ 29,970 222 45 A 15<br />

PP5UA 410,988 2362 58 C 10<br />

ZV5A (PY5GU, op)<br />

382,800 2200 58 C 10<br />

ZX4Y (PY4OY, op)<br />

282,138 1594 59 C 10<br />

PY5HSD 150,684 866 58 B 10<br />

PY2NDX 55,890 345 54 B 10<br />

PY2EDY 24,564 178 46 B 10<br />

PY2LED 8,019 99 27 B 10<br />

PY3BM 6,177 71 29 B 10<br />

PY2TST 3,762 57 22 B 10<br />

Fernando de Noronha<br />

PY0FF 370,992 2096 59 C 15<br />

Venezuela<br />

YV5AAX 71,526 262 91 B<br />

YW1A (YV1AVO, op)<br />

325,500 1750 62 C<br />

4M3Y 4,725 63 25 C<br />

YV3AZC 127,716 734 58 C 80<br />

4M5E (YV5NWG, op)<br />

133,209 779 57 C 40<br />

YV3DX 17,433 149 39 C 20<br />

YV2FEQ 58,800 392 50 B 10<br />

Paraguay<br />

ZP5SAT 472,026 1042 151 C<br />

Single Operator Assisted<br />

Asia<br />

JH4UYB 1,095,219 1667 219 B<br />

JQ1BVI 642,546 1467 146 C<br />

7L4IOU 560,628 1074 174 B<br />

JR2DOL 495,900 1102 150 C<br />

JH4NMT 438,840 920 159 C<br />

JQ1NGT 121,662 751 54 C<br />

HL1/JI1EFP 46,053 301 51 B<br />

JH5OXF 21,045 115 61 B<br />

Europe<br />

YL8M (YL2KL, op)<br />

2,352,987 3549 221 C<br />

OK1DG 668,682 1218 183 C<br />

IZ5AXA 581,976 1096 177 C<br />

RV3BR 474,306 982 161 C<br />

PA3EWP 366,366 2002 61 C<br />

OM1CW 301,584 1648 61 C<br />

G4OJH 282,420 1569 60 C<br />

PA7FM 250,560 1392 60 C<br />

DK7ZT 206,226 513 134 C<br />

LY1DR 177,876 486 122 C<br />

I8NHJ 139,374 801 58 C<br />

9A1CHP (9A6NHH, op)<br />

80,028 494 54 B<br />

9A4KA 47,499 223 71 B<br />

PA0MIR 18,963 147 43 B<br />

OM2DX 10,881 117 31 C<br />

Multioperator Single<br />

Transmitter<br />

Asia<br />

JA7YAA (JE7HLZ,JH0ORW,JH0NZN,<br />

JG7PSJ,JM1QPR,7M1JAS,<br />

7K4SHF,+op)<br />

1,987,500 2650 250 C<br />

RK9CZO (RX9CAZ,RA9CDH, ops)<br />

374,517 873 143 C<br />

JA4YPE (JF3EBO,JN4MUC,JI4RDO,<br />

ops) 21,780 121 60 B<br />

JN1YUU (7M4WVB,7M4JVV,7M4NBR,<br />

7M4UVV,7M4WIK,7N4HIL,7M4UUC,<br />

ops) 9,030 70 43 B<br />

Europe<br />

TM1C (F5ITK,F5MUX,F5TRO,F6CTT,<br />

ops) 4,907,646 5801 282 C<br />

DL0WW (DK3GI,DL6RAI, ops)<br />

3,746,376 5118 244 C<br />

EI8IR (+EI8GS)<br />

3,444,720 4630 248 C<br />

DL8OH (+DL1IAO,DL2MEH,DL4NAC)<br />

3,083,184 4212 244 C<br />

OE2S (OE2GEN,OE2LCM,OE2MON,<br />

OE2VEL, ops)<br />

2,799,234 3793 246 C<br />

UZ7Z (UR5ZLY,UR7GG,UR7ZZ,<br />

UT0ZZ,UT4ZO, ops)<br />

2,623,140 3835 228 C<br />

OH3MMM (OH1VR,OH3WW,OH6LI, ops)<br />

2,540,025 3763 225 C<br />

OH7M (OH4XX,OH6LNI,OH7KD,<br />

OH7MHL,ops)<br />

2,463,552 3666 224 C<br />

HB2AUS (+HB9BYT,HB9CXZ,HB9DPD,<br />

HE9EEX, ops)<br />

2,326,338 2994 259 C<br />

OH8L (OH8LQ,OH8MCT, ops)<br />

2,314,575 3429 225 C<br />

DL1FEL (+DJ6QT)<br />

2,018,457 3381 199 C<br />

M2H (G0REP,G3MXH, ops)<br />

1,841,562 3054 201 C<br />

OL5Q (OK1HRA,OK1FLC,OK1VSL,<br />

OK1INC,OK1FFU, ops)<br />

1,743,147 2807 207 C<br />

RI3A (RA3DKE,RK3FM,RK3FT,<br />

RU3DGD,UA3ASZ,RV3BA, ops)<br />

1,687,578 2666 211 C<br />

LX1NO (+TF3CW)<br />

1,682,928 2697 208 C<br />

GW8GT (GW0MAW,GW4JBQ, ops)<br />

1,354,197 2671 169 C<br />

IK1SLE (+ops)<br />

1,342,653 2249 199 C<br />

SK0UX (SM0TQX,SM0JHF,SM0DRD,<br />

SM0XEU,SM5CCT, ops)<br />

1,267,680 2224 190 C<br />

TF3IRA (TF3AO,TF3HP,TF3MLT,<br />

TF3RJT,TF3VGT, ops)<br />

1,120,977 2211 169 C<br />

S50R (+ops)<br />

1,084,710 1730 209 C<br />

SK3IK (+ops)<br />

994,788 1812 183 C<br />

R3K (RV3FF,RX3DCX,RN3DC, ops)<br />

834,678 1599 174 C<br />

IO2L (I2OKW,IZ2ACZ,IZ2AVK,IZ2HAJ,<br />

ops) 731,601 1443 169 C<br />

IQ3X (IV3HAX,IV3SKB, ops)<br />

545,280 1136 160 C<br />

M4U (G0DVJ,G4EYE,G4YJQ,M0CGE,<br />

G4WHK,G3YYZ,G0OZS,M1DSY,<br />

G7HOW, ops)<br />

478,710 985 162 C<br />

IV3HYD (+IV3RAV,IV3RCH)<br />

468,639 1021 153 C<br />

3Z0I (+ops)<br />

459,795 1057 145 C<br />

EA5FFC (+EA5BX,EA5GMO,EA5ZI,<br />

EA7IO) 447,525 975 153 C<br />

LZ2K (LZ2NP,LZ2YO,LZ4HM,LZ4QY,<br />

ops) 440,628 1006 146 C<br />

DL0BKR (DJ3PY,DH2PK,DJ1ER,<br />

DH1PRA,DL6EN,DL5WJ, ops)<br />

438,672 988 148 B<br />

RK6AYN (+RN6BP,RU6AV,RW6ACM,<br />

UA6AH,RV6ARU)<br />

364,104 778 156 C<br />

SP9KDU (SP9AVZ,SQ9FMU, ops)<br />

89,817 329 91 B<br />

EJ3RCW (EI7IG,EI4FBB+ops)<br />

59,280 260 76 B<br />

UR4RWO (UT5RQ,UT0RW,<br />

UR5RMO, op)<br />

24,978 181 46 C<br />

UT4UWL (+ops)<br />

6,696 72 31 C 15<br />

DN1MA (+logger)<br />

6,375 85 25 C 10<br />

North America<br />

VP5B (K4ISV,K4CN, ops)<br />

8,498,052 8356 339 C<br />

8P9Z (K3KG,K4FJ, ops)<br />

6,627,060 6694 330 C<br />

XE2MX (+XE2L,N6KI,K6AM)<br />

4,343,922 4686 309 C<br />

XE2EBE (N6RT,AA6DP, ops)<br />

3,089,736 3301 312 C<br />

V31DX (+ops)<br />

2,779,308 3228 287 C<br />

VP9ID (+N2KJM,N2TTP)<br />

1,197,003 1891 211 B<br />

Oceania<br />

T32B (W0CP,KK0T)<br />

3,619,809 4623 261 C<br />

South America<br />

P40V (AI6V,P43A, ops)<br />

7,419,015 7295 339 C<br />

PJ4G (K2NG,NO2R, ops)<br />

6,059,724 6332 319 C<br />

LU1NF (LU8NA,LU1NDC,LU1NAF,<br />

LU2NAA,LU4NAZ+ops)<br />

1,509,453 2607 193 C<br />

Multioperator Two Transmitters<br />

Europe<br />

IR4T (I4UFH,I4JMY,IK4UPB,IK4MHB,<br />

IK2SGC,IK2QEI, ops)<br />

6,189,336 7316 282 C<br />

RU1A (RW1AC,RA3AUU,RV1AW,<br />

RX1AA,RA1ARZ, ops)<br />

4,476,150 6090 245 C<br />

LA8W (LA4DCA,LA5KO,LA9HW, ops)<br />

3,983,376 5354 248 C<br />

EA5DFV (+EA5ON,EC5CPL)<br />

2,609,334 3717 234 C<br />

RM6A (RA6CO,RA6CM,UA6AN, ops)<br />

2,562,672 3682 232 C<br />

North America<br />

6D2X (K2UA,K5TSQ,K9NW,W5VW,<br />

WE9V,XE2XDX,XE2YNE,XE2YNS, ops)<br />

11,223,927 10659 351 C<br />

KL7Y (+KL7FH,WA2GO,KL9A,AL7PJ,<br />

NL7Z) 7,062,198 8231 286 C<br />

WP2Z (N2TK,K3OO, ops)<br />

6,871,005 7135 321 C<br />

PJ8A (ND5S,W8EB, ops)<br />

613,536 1232 166 B<br />

Oceania<br />

DX3T (DU3AR,DU3JFK,DU3MIB,<br />

DU3KQA,DY3XEX, ops)<br />

6,633 67 33 B<br />

South America<br />

PY3MHZ (PY3AFS,PY3ADY,PY3BZA,<br />

PY3FOX,PY3MM,PY3PAZ,PY3TMR,<br />

PY3YY, ops)<br />

122,268 443 92 C<br />

PY2ECP (+PU2NYV)<br />

57,069 373 51 B<br />

Multioperator Unlimited<br />

Transmitters<br />

Asia<br />

JH7PKU (+JA9SSY,JG1ILF,JN3PYQ,<br />

JO1BMV,JR5KDR)<br />

3,195,801 4113 259 C<br />

JA6ZLI (JJ6WYS+op)<br />

193,929 509 127 C<br />

Europe<br />

RW2F (LY4AA,RA2FA,RN2FA,UA2FB,<br />

UA2FF,UA2FM,UA2FZ, ops)<br />

5,148,729 6333 271 C<br />

9A7A (9A7V,9A8A,9A2ME,9A3OS,<br />

9A3TR,9A4PA,9A4RX,9A6DM, ops)<br />

4,093,164 5091 268 C<br />

LY7A (LY3IT,LY3RJ,LY3HD,LY2NKJ,<br />

LY2KZ,LY3DA,LY1EE,LY2NK,<br />

LYB-26,LYR-346, ops)<br />

1,739,835 2829 205 C<br />

PI4CC (PA3BAG,PA3EPD,PA4LA,<br />

PB0AIU,PB4CC, ops)<br />

752,199 2107 119 C<br />

SY1D (SV1DNW,SV1DKL,SV1DKR,<br />

SV1DZB, ops)<br />

218,784 688 106 C<br />

North America<br />

KL7RA (+AL7IF,N1TX,NL7Y,KL7TC,<br />

KL7XD, ops)<br />

5,989,440 7340 272 C<br />

T48RAC (+ops)<br />

4,471,602 4702 317 B<br />

Oceania<br />

AH0P (JM1LTA,JG2CEZ,JH0SPE, ops)<br />

263,064 776 113 C<br />

Checklogs:<br />

4Z5GV, 8P6SH, CT1GWC, CT2GZT,<br />

DH5MM, DL1ARD, DL1DQJ, DL2ZAV,<br />

DL3TD, DL4VBS, DL5NA, DL6HTA,<br />

DL6NEJ, DL7BY, DL8DZV, EA1BOI,<br />

EA1OT, EA1OZ, EA3BJM, EA3URR,<br />

EA5CMQ, EA5DCL, EA5FXS, EA5TS,<br />

EC2AFA, ER1IM, EW6DI, EX8W,<br />

HA3UU, IK3XTY, IK4GRO, IV3BKH,<br />

JA1BMJ, JH7LRS, JK2VOC, K2LP,<br />

K7EFB, K9RSW, KC4KFT, KG8XQ,<br />

LB8AE, LU9APM, LY1DT, M0CJA,<br />

N4KG, N7WI, N9HDE, OK1DMP,<br />

OK1GS, OK2PCX, OK2PPM, PA0RBO,<br />

PP7ZZ, PS8ET, PS8NF, PT7WA,<br />

PY1NX, PY2KPY, PY2TVQ, RA0CAH,<br />

RA3AD, RA3DPD, RA3MB, RA9FF,<br />

RM4W, RN3FT, RU6LA, RW3DDG,<br />

RW4WE, RW6AML, RW9MZ, RW9TA,<br />

RW9TA, S57M, S59DBC (S55OO, op),<br />

SM0BNK, SM0UGV, SM5OK, SP1BLE,<br />

SP1DMD, SP2JJD, SP3CUG, SP9GFI,<br />

SQ4GXO, SV/OK1YM, UA0YAY,<br />

US7MQ, VP8ON, W0RTK, W2UH,<br />

W3FQE, W7GSW, W8VE, WA2BMH,<br />

WA3WFW, WA4IUN, WW3S, YC0IEM,<br />

YL2LY, YL2SW, YO6BGT, YU7CB,<br />

9A3GW, OD5NJ, YV5USB, K7CAR,<br />

KB6LEA, N1PGA, N8WK, W1FM,<br />

WB2ZTH<br />

Disqualification: HG1S<br />

106 <strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong>


SECTION NEWS<br />

The ARRL Field Organization Forum<br />

ATLANTIC DIVISION<br />

DELAWARE: SM, Randall K. Carlson, WBØJJX—Soon the<br />

holidays will be upon us, and folks will be taking to the<br />

road to visit friends and relatives. During this time of year<br />

the weather becomes increasingly harsh and trouble on<br />

the road can be a dangerous thing. Ham radio puts us in a<br />

unique position to be able to help our fellow hams and travelers<br />

in times of difficulty. So as the seasons turn colder,<br />

how about helping out and make an effort to monitor your<br />

local repeater on a regular basis for those that who might<br />

be having difficulty. Nothing feels better than being able to<br />

do something to help someone out of tough situation. Tfc:<br />

(Aug) DTN: QNI 179 QTC 14 in 23 sess. DEPN: QNI 25<br />

QTC 2 in 4 session. 73 Randall.<br />

EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA: SM, Allen R. Breiner, W3TI—<br />

SEC: Eric Olena, WB3FPL. ACC: Steve Maslin, N3ORH.<br />

OOC: Alan Maslin, N3EA. STM: Paul Craig, N3YSI. SGL:<br />

Allen Breiner, W3ZRQ. TC: Lawrence Thomas, AA3PX.<br />

ASMs: Ron Creitz, KB3CFV, Vince Banville, WB2YGA,<br />

Dave Heller, K3TX, George Law, N3KYZ, J. Yogi Bear,<br />

WB3FQY, Harry Thomas, W3KOD. It took quite a while<br />

before I got an e-mail address and find that it has its advantages.<br />

If the sender fails to enter their call letters, QTH<br />

and address, it becomes extremely difficult for the SM to<br />

reply. KB3CWG and K3BSX have volunteered their service<br />

as an LGL. W3ZRQ, the SGL, is receiving communications<br />

from area operators who are beginning to see advantages<br />

of having a Local Government Liaison appointee<br />

in their area who can assist with local zoning regulations<br />

before getting involved in a tower erection hassle. NG3F<br />

has accepted the Emergency Coordinator position for<br />

Juniata Co. It’s that time of the year when radio clubs nominate<br />

and elect new officers. Don’t forget to report the names<br />

and address of your newly-elected officials and keep them<br />

current with the SM. League affiliated clubs must file a report<br />

annually and Special Service Clubs every two years.<br />

Those members of the Delaware-Lehigh ARC who supplied<br />

communications for the 10 th annual Red Cross Lehigh Run<br />

were KA3ONZ, KE3AW, KB3CSS, N3QZT, KB3DEC,<br />

N2DH, KB3CSR, N3SNZ and W3JD. Montgomery RACES<br />

members WA3AKK, N3OMA, W3GSC, W3BNQ and<br />

WDØESL assisted their local Fire police with communications<br />

for the Methodist Church Bikeathon. Thanks and kudos<br />

to all the club bulletins we receive with information<br />

about your club activities. With the beginning of school, it<br />

is time for clubs to think about setting up their license instruction<br />

classes. The EPA section traffikers under the leadership<br />

of STM N3YSI, held their annual family picnic at New<br />

Ringgold and noted their QRP rigs work out great from that<br />

location. Next year’s picnic will be held at the same location<br />

on Saturday, July 19. STM Paul says, if you want to try<br />

something different in Amateur Radio, check into the PTTN<br />

training net that meets every evening on 3610 kHz at 6:30<br />

PM. Or you might try your hand at sideband phone traffic<br />

by calling into the EPA emergency phoine and traffic net<br />

that meets every evening at 6:00 PM on 3917 kHz. You<br />

could even meet our youngest and newest net control,<br />

KB3BBR, who operates in the traffic nets between her<br />

school homework. 73, N3YSI. Tfc: W3IPX 187, N3YSI 154,<br />

N3EFW 86, W3IVS 62, W3UAQ 51, W3NNL 33, KB3CEZ<br />

28, W3JKX 27, N3JSO 14, AD3X 14, W3TTW 13, KA3LVP<br />

10, W3HK 7, KB3DDL 7, N3ZXE 7, N3AO 6, N3AS 6, W3TI<br />

5, N3IRN 4, KB3BBR 3, W3BNR 2, KB3CKD 2, N3KYZ 2,<br />

W3DAB 1, W3KOD 1, K3ARR 1. Net Reports: EPA 95,<br />

EPAEP&T 69, PFN 27, PTTN 24, SEPTTN 21, D3ARES<br />

13, MARCTN 7, MCOES 4, LCARES 3.<br />

MARYLAND/DC: SM, Bill Howard, WB3V, 410-551-6775<br />

wb3v@arrl.org— MDC Section Web homepage http://<br />

users.erols.com/wb3v/mdc/. CARR EC N3JIA rpts 64 members,<br />

3 sessions of the Net which meets on 145.410 MHz<br />

with liaison to MEPN, MDD, and MSN by KE3FL, and to<br />

BTN, WVPN, DTN, MEPN, Central Net, and Western Net<br />

by W3VK. Rich rpts contact with the Maryland Wine Festival<br />

Bike Tour. An AEC report recvd fm W3V and OES rpts<br />

recvd fm KE3FL 21 net ck ins on emer pwr. WX3F 3 net ck<br />

ins on emer pwr; N3JIA 2 net ck ins on emer pwr. HOWA<br />

RO WA1QAA rpts the training classes in directed net operation<br />

and formal traffic for new ARES/RACES members<br />

and those who desire a refresher. 5 members attended.<br />

CHAR EC W3TOM rpts 28 members, 4 sessions of the<br />

Charles County Amateur Radio Emer Service Net on<br />

145.390 MHz with liaison to MEPN, and 1 SKYWARN training<br />

class. In Basic I training class were: KB3EFS N3QHC<br />

N3YR N3OK KB3DXT N3JDG N9TSA N3IPN WA3ZGD<br />

N3YSY, D Kincaid, WB8OYG K3DSP KB3EKU K3MZV<br />

N3QXX, K Martin, N3YZU N3JTN, C Norris, N3VIO<br />

KA3ZZH, B Price, N3JTJ N1WR, M Sach Sr., N3YRZ<br />

WR3Z, J Smith, N8AVX N3ZIY N3WZU N3IDX N3YYF<br />

KB3BWR, and KA3ZYG. In Basic II were KA3VNF W3TOM<br />

KB3EFS KF3AA N3QHC KB3EPA N3JTG N3ZIZ N3YR<br />

N3OK K3GRG KB3DXT N3JDG N9TSA N3IPN WA3ZGD<br />

N3YSY, D Kincaid, WB8OYG KR3A K3DSP KB3EKU<br />

K3MZV N3QXX, K Martin, N3YZU N3JTN, C Norris, N3VIO<br />

KE3RE KA3ZZH N1GOD, B & D Price, N3JTJ, M Sach Sr.,<br />

N3YRZ WR3Z, J Smith, N8AVX KA3GRW N3ZIY N3WZU<br />

N3IDX N3YYF KB3BWR and KA3ZYG. FRED EC N8AAY<br />

rpts 8 members, 4 sessions of the FRED ARES Net on<br />

147.06. Eric and RO Roy, N2CSQ, resolved the RACES<br />

EOC ant problem. Eric is looking at the new EMCOM training<br />

certification program as a base for future training. WASH<br />

EC KD3JK rpts 41 members, 11 sessions of the WASH<br />

ARES/RACES Net and the Four State Net which maintains<br />

liaison to MEPN. Bob rpts ARES participation in the Hawk<br />

Triathlon, W3YGC was the sweeper for both events. Participants<br />

included N3ODA WB3FHV N3MVR N3VGS<br />

KB8ZQM KB8WHW KB3AOO N3NHW K3ABH WA4IBY<br />

KD3JK N8UKC K2AVA and W3YGC. With the nets: NET/<br />

NET MGR/QND/QTC/QNI: MSN/KC3Y/31/54/267,MEPN/<br />

N3WKE/31/48/469, MDD/WJ3K/62/302/875, MDD Top<br />

Brass: KJ3E 238, AA3SB 162, AA3GV 178, BTN/AA3LN/<br />

no report, SMN/KE3OX/no report. Tfc: KK3F 2419, N3QA<br />

425, KJ3E 398, AA3GV 169, W3YVQ 131, AA3SB 92,<br />

N3WK 79, N3DE 68, W3CB 52, KC3Y 46, N3WKE 32,<br />

KB3AMO 28, K3CSX 25, N3ZKP 15, N3EGF 14, N3KGM<br />

10, W3VK 9, WA1QAA 8, WA3WRT 5, KE3FL 2, July<br />

WB4FDT 86. PSHR: KJ3E 271, KK3F 207, W3YVQ 160,<br />

AA3SB 135, W3VK 135, N3WK 133, AA3GV 131, N3ZKP<br />

126, W3CB 122, N3WKE 118, KC3Y 95, KB3AMO 86,<br />

K3CSX 76, WA1QAA 75, KE3FL 72.<br />

SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY: SM, Jean Priestley, KA2YKN,<br />

(@K2AA) e-mail ka2ykn@voicenet.com. ASM: W2BE K2WB<br />

W2OB N2OO N2YAJ. SEC: N2SRO. STM: K2UL. ACC:<br />

KB2ADL. SGL: KB2WKY.OOC: K2PSC. TC: W2EKB. TS:<br />

W2PAU WB2MNF AA2BN KD4HZW WB3IJB WA2NBL<br />

KA1AOR N2QNX N2XFM. As Radio operators, we have<br />

much to be thankful for this holiday season and throughout<br />

the year. Now it is up to us to help keep our bands clean<br />

and respectful. Riley Hollingsworth has taken giant steps.<br />

But he needs us to insure they stay clean. Amateurs mourn<br />

the death of 2 Silent Keys. John Glowacki, WT3V, is mourned<br />

by JSARS. He was dedicated to many aspects of radio including<br />

VE Testing and Packet. Traffic handling has lost “a<br />

great one”, N2XJ. Carl A Felt, Jr a ham’s ham, became a SK<br />

in June at the age of 91. Honor them by helping other hams<br />

and especially new hams just coming into the hobby. Traffic<br />

report, August: QNI rpts; W2CC NJPN 191, K2PB NJSN 73,<br />

WA2OPY NJM 185, AG2R NJN/E 244 and NJN/L 199 (above<br />

with NNJ). JSARS KC2ATQ 396, SJVN WB2UVB 281, KJ4N/<br />

2 158, KB2RTZ 86, AA2SV 75, K2UL 62, K2UL-4, 50<br />

WB2UVB 36, WA2CUW 16, N2VQA 13, KA2CQX 11, W2AZ<br />

6, KB2VYZ 5, KB2VSR, KB2YBM KC2ETU 1. PSHR;<br />

KB2RTZ 246, K2UL 172, WB2UVB 164, KJ4N/2 144 AA2SV<br />

121, KA2CQX 98, WA2CUW 95, N2VQA 61.<br />

WESTERN NEW YORK: SM, Scott Bauer, W2LC — Congratulations<br />

to Vivian Douglas, WA2PUU (Onondaga Cty<br />

EC), the state Amateur Radio communications coordinator,<br />

Nancy Kirch, KF1L (DEC), of Binghamton, the host city communication<br />

chairman, and Jack Smith, KB2YEN, Broome<br />

County EC who organized the emergency communications<br />

for the Empire State Games held from July 27 through July<br />

30, <strong>2000</strong>, in Binghamton, NY. Thanks, K2TDV, for use of<br />

the 146.13/73 and 146.295/895 repeaters, which are linked<br />

together, and were used to cover the Empire State Games<br />

for the duration of the event. There were 120 hams involved<br />

in the operation at 41 venues in Broome, Cortland, Tioga<br />

and Tompkins counties in WNY, including the swimming<br />

events in the Cortland area and the sailing events in the<br />

Ithaca area. All participants were major contributors to the<br />

event. However, a special thanks goes to Andy, KB2LUV,<br />

Howie, N2VJV, Nancy KA2HQF, and Ford, AB2HS, for their<br />

efforts. The Empire State Games is held at a different site<br />

each year. A few dedicated hams have traveled to each location,<br />

they are: Nancy Coe, KA2HQF, of Clay (since the<br />

early 1980s). Vivian, WA2PUU, of Syracuse and Jim<br />

W2BCH of Camillus, who I believe have both worked every<br />

year. For Viv and Jim, this year makes a total of 32 games,<br />

20 summer games and 12 winter games. Thank you, Vivian,<br />

and Jim! Great job to all who participated. You’ve made WNY<br />

very proud of you! Net Summaries:<br />

Net NM Sess QNIQSP Net NM Sess QNIQSP<br />

BRVSN WB2OFU 31 197 7 CHN W2EAG 31 150 22<br />

EBN WB2IJZ 23 372 0<br />

CNYTN WA2PUU 31 381 67<br />

NYPHONE N2LTC 31 193 253<br />

ESS W2WSS 31 312 78<br />

NYS/E WB2QIX 31 302 143<br />

NYPON N2YJZ 31 323 105<br />

NYS/M KA2GJV 31 192 71<br />

NYS/L W2YGW 31 245 238<br />

NYSPTEN KD2V 31 338 43<br />

NYSCN W2MTA 4 17 4<br />

OCTEN/E KA2ZNZ 311696 205<br />

OARCN N2KPR 4 40 5<br />

OMEN K2DYB 1 5 1<br />

OCTEN/L KA2ZNZ 31 699 211<br />

STTHN KC2AWA 9 51 3<br />

STAR N2NCB 28 251 11<br />

WDN/E N2JRS 31 607 75<br />

TIGARDS W2MTA 4 14 3<br />

WDN/M KB2VVD 31 585 44<br />

WDN/L W2GUT 31 549 62<br />

Traffic (August 00), * indicates PSHR, # for BPL: N2LTC*#<br />

799, KA2ZNZ*# 631, KA2GJV* 331, W2MTA* 237, NN2H*<br />

217, W2FR* 148, WB2QIX* 148, N2KPR* 128, WI2G* 93,<br />

NY2V* 89, KG2D* 70, W2PII* 59, W2LC* 55, KC2EOT*<br />

54, W2GUT* 53, KA2DBD* 47, AF2K* 38, N2CCN* 37,<br />

KB2ETO* 28, KA2BCE* 24, K2DN* 22, K2GTS* 19,<br />

N2WDS* 19, KB2WII* 8, WA2UKX* 8, WA2GUP* 1. Digital;<br />

Stn Rx/Tx: N2LTC 161/101, KA2GJV 3/0, K2DN 0/0,<br />

NY2V 0/5.<br />

WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA: SM, John Rodgers, N3MSE.<br />

ASM-ARES: WB3KGT. SEC: N3SRJ. ASM-Packet: KE3ED.<br />

OOC: W3ZPI. PIC: W3CG. STM: N3WAV. TC:WR4W. DEC-<br />

SO: KD3OH. DEC-N1: N3QCR. DEC-N2: KA3UVC. DEC-<br />

S1: KA3HUK. DEC-S2: N3BZW. DEC-Rapid Response:<br />

N3HJY. DEC-OES: K3TB. Chris Robson, KB3A, has resigned<br />

as the OOC for the section due to an increased<br />

volume of work with his business. I want to thank Chris for<br />

his service and especially for his friendship. I have asked<br />

Chris to remain on the section staff in an advisory role.<br />

Ralph Ofchinick,W3ZPI, has been appointed as the new<br />

OOC. As we approach the holiday season I want to take a<br />

moment to thank the many amateurs that volunteer and<br />

promote the Amateur Radio service. Your efforts are indeed<br />

appreciated. Any of the clubs in the section that would<br />

like me to attend a club meeting or event is asked to send<br />

me a request, and I will include the event on my calendar<br />

for the upcoming year. I enjoy the opportunity to meet with<br />

as many amateurs as possible at the various activities and<br />

discuss issues of concern to the members that I represent<br />

here in Western Pennsylvania. As we move into the twenty<br />

first century, let’s continue to build the future of Amateur<br />

Radio. Our future is in the youth of today. I encourage everyone<br />

to do all that is possible to work with young people<br />

to introduce Amateur Radio to them and help to get many<br />

licensed. Offer to work with schools for the “School Club<br />

Roundup.” Contact scout groups and offer a demo or to<br />

assist as an advisor for some of the merit badges. As we<br />

approach the New Year let us all strive to build our future<br />

in amateur radio and work to promote the service to the<br />

young people of today. A Happy Thanksgiving to you and<br />

your families. 73, John Rodgers, N3MSE, WPA-SM,<br />

n3mse@arrl.org.<br />

CENTRAL DIVISION<br />

ILLINOIS: SM, Bruce Boston, KD9UL—SEC: W9QBH.<br />

ACC: N9KP. STM: K9CNP. PIC: N9EWA. TC: N9RF. OOC:<br />

KB9FBI. DEC-Central: N9FNP. DEC-S/W: KB9AIL. Every<br />

two years each nuclear power plant holds a graded exercise.<br />

The Starved Rock RC has been making plans to assist<br />

with the drill set for October 4 in LaSalle. During the<br />

last two exercises, local hams helped out at the Grand<br />

Ridge, Brookfield, Seneca and Manlius townships and also<br />

at the Etna Road EOC. There have been many favorable<br />

comments from local, state and federal officials on the superior<br />

volunteerism and professionalism exhibited by Amateur<br />

Radio Operators. Hamfesters RC reports their 66th<br />

annual hamfest, held August 13 in Peotone, was another<br />

great success. Few radio clubs can trace their annual<br />

events back to the era of FDR. The Peoria Area ARC was<br />

treated to a martial arts demonstration during a recent<br />

meeting by members of the Gillespie family. Tae Kwon Do<br />

karate, weapon demonstrations, and board breaking highlighted<br />

the program. The Schaumburg ARC recently marked<br />

their 25th anniversary with a picnic and fox hunt. A special<br />

event station was also on the air to mark the occasion.<br />

Nearly two dozen repeaters have been de-coordinated this<br />

year according to the Illinois Repeater Association. Another<br />

group of repeaters are facing de-coordination as well. In<br />

some cases this is due to a lack of response from the repeater<br />

trustee. If your club’s coordination status is in doubt,<br />

contact the IRA frequency coordinator, K9VXW via e-mail<br />

at cberg@grayfox.svs.com or visit the IRA Website at<br />

www.enteract.com/~ira. North Shore RC has produced a<br />

nice magnetic sign for members to display on their vehicles.<br />

The new design features the club name and repeater frequency.<br />

NSRC members took a few moments at a recent<br />

meeting to discuss the PSK31 mode, which is growing in<br />

popularity. The Kishwaukee ARC operated special event<br />

station W9S during the Northern Illinois Steam Power Show.<br />

The club operated all four days of the event on 20 and 40<br />

meters. August traffic: K9CNP 115, NN9M 55, W9HLX 39,<br />

WB9TVD 34, ND9T 31, NC9T 24, W9FIF 11, WA9RUM 6.<br />

ISN Report de WB9TVD QNI 198, QTC-83, Sessions 30.<br />

9RN de KB4UBX sessions 62, traffic handled 256, average<br />

per session 4.12, rate of traffic 3.12, total time 80 min.,<br />

percent represented IL 93% check ins NN9M, W9HLX,<br />

N9PLM, NS9F, WB9WOC. W9VEY Memorial Net report de<br />

K9AXS 6 with 200 check-ins.<br />

INDIANA: SM, Peggy Coulter, W9JUJ—ASM for Resources<br />

& Recruitment, W9IH. SEC: K9ZBM. ASEC: WA9ZCE. STM:<br />

W9FU. OOC: KC9V. TC: W9MWY. BM: KA9QWC. ACC:<br />

N9RG. Sympathy extended to the families and friends of<br />

Silent Keys 8/22, Harold A. Pride, W9WQC, Evansville; 9/<br />

5, George McGrath, W2VKY, Evansville: They will be<br />

missed. Art Hopkins, WA9VQO, has resigned as SGL due<br />

to health reasons. He has been one of my faithful<br />

appointee’s since I have been SM (10 yrs). Thank you Art<br />

for all you have done in the past. It has been greatly appreciated.<br />

Hope some of you have attended at least one of<br />

the workshops that W9IH and W8ISH has held. They are<br />

really worth while. There will be another one shortly at New<br />

Castle. Hope you can plan to attend. The 21 Repeater<br />

Group provided communications for the Michiana Bicycle<br />

Club annual tour. Over 1100 registered to ride. This ride<br />

was 52 miles on 1st day and 58 miles 2nd day. Hams taking<br />

part were N9ZTF, KB9HIO, W9BRW, N9VSR, W9EFA,<br />

WA9UGP and KA9KOG. Did you know the Clark Co AR<br />

was organized in 1953. They have been active during parades,<br />

homecoming days and lots of bad wx. For your info,<br />

I am not on the Internet. Only have e-mail, so don’t pass<br />

me anything to retrieve from the Internet. Just can’t do it.<br />

Congratulations to WT9U placing 3rd in the IN division of<br />

the ARRL 10 Meter Contest. Also congratulations to N9CAR<br />

Summitville who was awarded the 1000th Worked All<br />

County Certificate by CQ Magazine. NM’s ITN/W9ZY, QIN/<br />

KJ9J & K9PUI, ICN/K8LEN, WN/AB9AA, VHF/W9FU.<br />

Continued on page 114.<br />

Steve Ewald, WV1X Public Service Specialist<br />

<strong>November</strong> <strong>2000</strong> 107


Net Freq Time/Daily/UTC QNI QTC QTR Sess<br />

ITN 3910 1330/2130/2300 2441 506 1651 93<br />

QIN 3656 1430/0000<br />

July 87 51 387 33<br />

Aug 106 42 434 40<br />

ICN 3705 2315 85 14 325 28<br />

IWN 3910 1310 2298 – 310 31<br />

IWN VHF Bloomington 519 – 465 31<br />

IWN VHF Kokomo 715 – 155 31<br />

IWN VHF Northeast1230 – 620 31<br />

Hoosier VHF nets (13 nets) 1340 34 1208 57<br />

D9RN Total QTC 256 in 62 sessions IN represented by<br />

K9QBR, W9UEM, N9KNJ, WB9QPA, W9WN, KB9NPU and<br />

W9POX. 9RN Total QTC 210 in 62 sessions IN represented<br />

by KJ9J, KO9D, K9PUI, N9HZ, WB9UYU, and W9FC. Tfc:<br />

W9FC 398, W9ZY 113, KJ9J 92, W9UEM 85, WB9QPA 83,<br />

W9FU 79, K9GBR 70, AB9AA 59, KO9D 58, K9PUI 52,<br />

W9JUJ 49, N9KNJ 37, KA9QWC 36, KA9EIV 33, KB9NPU<br />

26, W9BRW 18, K8LEN 14, W9EHY 8, N9HZ 6, K9OUP 5,<br />

K9DIY 5, WB9NCE 5, K9ZBM 4, K9CUN 4, K9RPZ 4, AB9A<br />

4, K9SXM 2.<br />

WISCONSIN: SM, Don Michalski, W9IXG—SEC:<br />

WB9RQR. STM: K9LGU. ACC: K9FHI. SGL: AD9X. OOC:<br />

W9RCW. PIC: K9ZZ. TC: K9GDF. ASM: K9UTQ, W9RCW,<br />

W9CBE. BM: WB9NRK. It is with deep regret to inform you<br />

that W9FZC, John LaBlonde, is a SK. John was a member<br />

of CWRA and was instrumental in starting the popular Swap<br />

Net on the 146.88 repeater. Roy Peterson, K9FHI, has been<br />

appointed the new ACC replacing Bette Kratz, KF9ZU, who<br />

has moved to Arizona. Roy was the previous SM and his<br />

experience will be invaluable in working with the section<br />

clubs. Welcome back! Congratulations to Richard Regent,<br />

K9GDF, current TC and former SM, for receiving the prestigious<br />

ARRL A-1 Operator award! August 9RN report shows<br />

Wisconsin with 96% representation. Thanks, folks! HVARC<br />

reports 105 QSOs for the K9S special event on September<br />

2 & 3. Special events are great fun for clubs and it is real<br />

easy to apply for a 1X1 special event call. Just go to http:<br />

//www.arrl.org/arrlvec/1x1.html to apply. If you need advice<br />

on running these events, contact me. Nels Harvey,<br />

WA9JOB, has been working with the NFCC, National Frequency<br />

Coordination Council, ARRL and FCC. Our deep<br />

appreciation to Nels for his efforts on this tough job! Now<br />

that summer is over, it is time to start ham classes. Our<br />

hats off to clubs that already have them planned. The ARRL<br />

has a very good video series that can help your club instructors.<br />

We’ve run several Technician classes over a<br />

weekend using these tapes and Now You’re Talking so I<br />

can advise you how to start a class based on them. Section<br />

repeaters should consider using the courtesy beep to<br />

indicate weather status: “I” for inclement, “S” for severe,<br />

and “N” when a net is in progress. 73, Don, W9IXG<br />

w9ixg@arrl.org. Tfc: K9JPS 960, W9IHW 879, W9YPY 552,<br />

W9RCW 495, N9TVT 475, K9GU 416, WZ7V 385, W9CBE<br />

148,K9FHI 116, N9BDL 82, K9LGU 77, AG9G 68, KE9VU<br />

61, N9CK 60, W9YCV 59, W9UW 44, KB9ROB 39, N9KHD<br />

34, K9HDF 33, W9BHL 31, AA9BB 30, WB9ICH 26, KG9B<br />

26, KA9BHK 24, N9JIY 17, W9ODV 14, WD9FLJ 14,<br />

KA9FVX 9, K9UTQ 6, W9PVD 1.<br />

DAKOTA DIVISION<br />

MINNESOTA: SM, Randy “Max” Wendel, KMØD—In late<br />

August, I took my family camping to Bemidji and Ely. I met<br />

David Quam, WØCIA, who happened to lives on the lake<br />

we were camping at. He took us on a boat ride on Andrusia<br />

and over to Cass Lake. Saw bald eagles and loons. While<br />

traveling thru Grand Rapids, Blake Rickbeil, NØWSH, gave<br />

me the full tour of the fire cache. They have a room with<br />

full station and a great relationship with the department<br />

there. We had a great trip. I’m ready to upgrade from a tent<br />

to a camper-trailer. After a few thunderstorms, it seems like<br />

a good idea! By now, the MIMS tapes have been making<br />

their way around the ARES groups in MN. Understanding<br />

the incident mgmt structure helps us realize the organizational<br />

efforts behind disaster recovery. ARES in MN is looking<br />

at how we can utilize packet radio statewide especially<br />

during activations by the DEM when comms are beyond<br />

reach of normal VHF/UHF-range and when HF propo is<br />

poor. Reminder to Web users...go to ARRL Web site to your<br />

member-data-page and check the option box to receive Division/Section<br />

e-mails. A reminder to all of our ARRL nets.<br />

Still looking for clubs (ARRL affiliated too) and major cities<br />

to participate. Among various activities on the ARRL nets,<br />

we also provide the resource as a means for handling traffic<br />

as a public svc. Recently within a week’s time, we had<br />

traffic for two highly ham-populated cities in MN (one up<br />

north, the other in the south), but no takers there on the<br />

net. Please participate in your ARRL nets. Silence isn’t<br />

golden on our airwaves. Here they are again: ARRL voice<br />

nets: 3860 kHz 12 noon, 5:30 PM 7 days/week ARRL CW<br />

nets: 3605 kHz 6:30 PM, 9:50 PM 7 days/week. Tfc: WOØA,<br />

WØLAW, WAØTFC, KBØOHI, KBØAII, KØPIZ, WØHPD,<br />

KØWPK, KBØAIJ, W3FAF, WØWVO, KØPSH, KAØIZA,<br />

KN9U, WDØGUF, NØJP.<br />

NORTH DAKOTA: SM, Bill Kurtti, WCØM—I’m sorry to report<br />

that WØPVG is a Silent Key. Norm has been a steady<br />

Data & WX member for as long as I can remember. Enjoyed<br />

attending the Dickinson picnic again, We were glad<br />

to Have KØQB, Dakota Division Director, come up for the<br />

event. We all enjoyed hearing NØQAV sing the Ham Operator<br />

Blues with all that participated in the Saturday night<br />

sing along. Also, the Friday Night gang sang for us Sunday<br />

morning. Sorry that the chicken dance was not performed<br />

as usual. I would not attempt it with my 2 left feet, but it’s a<br />

joy to watch all ages enjoying that event. Tfc: NØRDJ 1. HF<br />

net reports by KBØXT HF Net mgr. Data Net 3937 kc 6:30<br />

PM CST daily 29/591/15. Wx Net 8:30 AM CST M-S 24/<br />

592/38. Goose River Net 1995 kc 8:30 AM CST Sunday 4/<br />

38/0.<br />

SOUTH DAKOTA: SM, R.L. Cory, WØYMB—Pennington Co<br />

ARES was called out on Sunday, Aug 27, to furnish com-<br />

114


munications for the Red Cross and other units at the largest<br />

forest fire in South Dakota history. The fire was near Custer<br />

in the Black Hills of SD. They did 24 hr, around the clock<br />

duty. The fire burned about 90,000 acres. EC KØLEW and<br />

his crew did an excellent job. They deactivated on Tues and<br />

Wed went on standby basis. They also helped fire departments<br />

that had hams and equipment on their trucks. Cell<br />

phones were severely restricted due to hilly terrain. Communications<br />

were to Red Cross shelters in Custer, Hill City and<br />

Rapid City. The fire came within 4 miles of the 146. 85 repeater.<br />

On Aug 19-20, a special-events station commemorating<br />

the end of the WWI was on the air from under the wing<br />

of a B29 at Elsworth Air Base. Over 1000 contacts were made<br />

worldwide. Chapter 102 of QCWA provided some of the operators.<br />

NØIGP has set up a Web page on the Internet. Prairie<br />

Dog ARC also operated a special event station for<br />

Riverboat Days Celebration at Yankton on Aug 18-20.<br />

DELTA DIVISION<br />

ARKANSAS: SM, Roger Gray, N5QS, e-mail n5qs@arrl.org<br />

- I just got back from the Mena hamfest, and as usual had a<br />

really good time with lots of old friends and we met some<br />

new ones. The weather was cool and wet for the first time in<br />

what seems like months. Speaking of the weather, the hot<br />

dry weather has caused a serious fire hazard in most of<br />

Arkansas, and there have been several serious fires around<br />

the state. Remember tornadoes and hurricanes are not the<br />

only natural disasters we need to be ready for. One instance<br />

where we can help is multi-department fires where the different<br />

departments can’t talk to each other on their radios.<br />

We can fill the gap. Another important role we can play is<br />

arranging for refreshments during fires for the firefighters who<br />

can lose a lot of body fluid in 100 + heat while wearing protective<br />

equipment. Providing these services frees up<br />

firefighters to fight fires while we help where we can. It is<br />

time to follow up on the school stations and presentations. I<br />

have good reports from 2 schools in my local area, and would<br />

like to hear from elsewhere in the state. Please let me know<br />

what progress you are making. August reports follow. Tfc:<br />

KC5TMU 175, K5BOC 107, K7ZQR 97, AB5AU 20, W5RXU<br />

17, KO5E 10, W5HDN 9, WB5HIL 8, KA5MGL 6, KC5UEW<br />

3, ARN 84, APN 25, AMBN 16, OZK 4.<br />

LOUISIANA: SM, Mickey Cox, K5MC—ACC: KM5YL. OOC:<br />

WB5CXJ. PIC: K5IQ. SEC: AC5TM. STM: KG5GE. LCW NM:<br />

W4DLZ. LTN NM: WB5ZED. Very sorry to have to report that<br />

WA5LHL is now a Silent Key. Audry was very active on LTN<br />

and DRN5 for many years, including serving as the LTN NCS<br />

on Sundays. He was an Elmer for many and will be missed<br />

by all who knew him. I want to thank AC5TM for joining the<br />

section’s leadership team as the new SEC. All ARES and<br />

NTS participants should assist Tom however possible as he<br />

goes about his new duties. Other new appointments include<br />

W8YFS (Southeast DEC), KD5EWD (Jefferson Parish EC),<br />

WD5DWP (Orleans Parish EC), K5ER (Ouachita Parish EC),<br />

and K5OR (Technical Specialist). New officers for the Southeast<br />

LA ARC are WB5FBS (President), KB5SKW (Vice President),<br />

KI5LH (Secretary), and K5CAV (Treasurer). Thanks<br />

go to SARA for sponsoring a great hamfest this year in<br />

Shreveport. ACC KM5YL is doing an excellent job in helping<br />

many of our clubs keep their paperwork updated at ARRL<br />

HQ. Although we have been hit hard recently by the passing<br />

of WA5LHL and K5WOD, I’m happy to report a number of<br />

new stations checking in to either LTN or LCW or both. Everybody<br />

is invited to check in and join the fun on our section’s<br />

traffic nets. Tfc: WB5ZED 1178 (BPL), K5IQZ 189, W5CDX<br />

180, K5MC 106, KG5GE 43, K5DPG 19, KM5YL 8. PSHR:<br />

WB5ZED 207, K5IQZ 161, W5CDX 123, K5DPG 120, K5MC<br />

114, KG5GE 97, KM5YL 44. Net Reports: sessions/QNI/QTC.<br />

LTN: 31/347/76.<br />

MISSISSIPPI: SM, Malcolm Keown, W5XX—Section Web<br />

Page: www.arrlmiss.org. Web Master: K5IBM at k5ibm@<br />

arrl.net. ASM: N5JCG, N5EZX. ACC: N5JGK. BM: W5EPW.<br />

SGL: AB5WF. STM: KJ5YY. The Tupelo ARC Special Event<br />

Station at the Elvis Presley Festival resulted in over 850<br />

QSOs in 30 counties and 48 states. Good Show! Put the<br />

annual ARRL Day in the Park on your schedule for October<br />

14 from 10:00 until at Pavilion 34 in Paul B. Johnson State<br />

Park south of Hattiesburg on U.S. 49. This year’s festivities<br />

are hosted by the Mississippi DX Association and chaired by<br />

W5OXA. Lunch will be served around noon. Bring a dish!<br />

Bring your pick up full of junk and be ready to tailgate! The<br />

Tupelo ARC is having a picnic on the following weekend at<br />

Veterans Park near Tupelo. Contact WJ5K for details.<br />

W5WAF reports he had a great tour of ARRL Headquarters<br />

hosted by no less than K1STO, the Manager of the Field and<br />

Educational Services Division. Congratulations to K5YG on<br />

placing #7 High Power W/VE in the <strong>2000</strong> ARRL RTTY<br />

Roundup. Also congratulations to the K5MDX Multi-Op Crew<br />

that continues to run up top ten finishes in both US and worldwide<br />

contests. OO Report: K5XQ. PIO Report: W5KWB. EC<br />

Reports: KD5CKP, K5DMC, KD5FUO, WB5OCD, WA5TEF,<br />

KC5TYL, N5ZNT. Net Reports: sessions/QNI/QTC. MSPN 31/<br />

2841/55, MTN 31/89/44, MSN 31/1025/11, PBRA 31/703/10,<br />

Jackson Co ARES/RACES 31/535/23, MSSN 23/80/2, West<br />

Coast 2M ARES 14/140/4, NW MS ARES 5/33/0, JARCEN<br />

5/99/0, MCARA 5/57/0, Lowndes Co ARES 5/79/0, Stone Co<br />

ARES 4/27/0, MBHN 4/24/0. PSHR: N5XGI 156, KB5W 142,<br />

K5VV 128, W5XX 94, KJ5YY 73. Traffic: KB5W 369, K5VV<br />

104, N5XGI 60, W5XX 5.<br />

TENNESSEE: SM, O.D. Keaton, WA4GLS—ACC:<br />

WA4GLS. ASM: WB4DYJ. SEC: WD4JJ. STM: WA4HKU.<br />

PIC: KE4CES. TC: KB4LJV. The Cedars of Lebanon<br />

Hamfest was a success even with the rain that lasted until<br />

mid morning, a goodly number of hams turned out and had<br />

a great time. Bob McGraw, K4TAX, was guest speaker at<br />

the RATS Aug meeting. All enjoyed the discussion on EME<br />

QSO. The <strong>2000</strong>-2001 RACK officers are: Bruce, K4PCK,<br />

Pres; Shella, KB4G, 1 st VP; Wayne, KF4TBY, 2 nd VP; Jim,<br />

KG4CFB, 3 rd VP; H.P., KA4LEO-Sec, Carol, N4LF- Treas,<br />

Steve, KF4BTO, Act Chair; Jack, K4IBP, Edu Chair; David,<br />

K4PTZ, Hamfest Chair; David, AC4JF, Repeater Trustee<br />

Chair. WD4D gave a presentation on rptrlink, N9YNQ and<br />

Internet Radio Linking Project, VE7LTD, at the Aug JCARS<br />

116


club meeting. BARC celebrated the 39 th anniversary of the<br />

Bristol Motor Speedway and 52 nd anniversary of NASCAR<br />

during Aug 16-29 by operating s special event callsign of<br />

W4B. The Transponder reported that the Dayton hamfest<br />

was a smashing success. Roy’s (KE4TG) presentation on<br />

PSK31 was the ORARC’s high point meeting of the year.<br />

Angie’s (N6DWX) and Jerry’s (N4EO) trip to Mexico was<br />

lots of hard work, but also a fulfilling experience. SRARC<br />

has purchased a trailer to be converted into a communications<br />

facility. Funding and work is needed for this project,<br />

so those interested persons should contact K1KY. It is always<br />

good to see hams helping in worthy projects, so congratulations<br />

are due to those SRARC people who assisted<br />

the American Diabetes Association’s “Tour de Cure <strong>2000</strong>”<br />

bike ride. Thanks to DARC members who helped during 4 th<br />

of July celebration: KF4ZGJ, K4TTA, AF4XW & wife, Pat,<br />

WB4LYHP, WM4Q, AA5GX, KC4SXT WA4OVO, KB4KA,<br />

KD4TJO, KU4AW, K4WNY. Net sess/QTC/QNI: TMPN 31/<br />

37/2176; TCWN 27/13/157; TEMPN 23/53/735; TEPN 27/<br />

63/2396; TSCWN 20/13/94. DRN 5: 62 sess, 637 msg, TN<br />

rep 66% by W4OGG, KE4GYR, K4WWQ. Tfc: N4PU 50,<br />

KE4GYR 38, WA4HKU 36, W4SYE 16, WB4DYJ 14,<br />

WA4GLS 11, KI4V 10, WD4JJ 9.<br />

GREAT LAKES DIVISION<br />

KENTUCKY: SM, Bill Uschan, K4MIS—ASM: Tom Lykins,<br />

K4LID. SEC: Ron Dodson, KA4MAP. SGL: Bill Burger,<br />

WB4KY. STM: John Farler, K4ZVX. ACC: Todd Schrader,<br />

KF4WFZ. PIO: Steve McCallum, W2ZBY. TC: Scotty Thompson,<br />

KI4AT. BM: Ernie Pridemore, KC4IVG. At the Central<br />

KY Hamfest held August 20 in Lexington, the ARES operator<br />

of the year award was presented by KY SEC Ron Dodson.<br />

Winner of the award was the Scott County ARES group with<br />

special awards given to three hams. Ted James, WD4KYD,<br />

Gene Glass, WA4QAK, and Eric Westerfield, KE4KWR. At<br />

the Louisville Hamfest held in Bullit Co, Certificates of Merit<br />

will be presented to Joan C. Slayman, KF4SXH, Vernon Nunn,<br />

N4UL, and John Meyers, N4GNL. A Public Service Commendation<br />

is being presented to Stu Kratz, KO4BI. Check out the<br />

pictures on the KY ARES Website. Bob Stephens from the<br />

KY. Division of EM gave a very good presentation about KY<br />

DEM and the new communications system being installed at<br />

the State EOC.<br />

Net QNI QTC Sess NM<br />

KTN 2076 66 62 K4LID<br />

KSN 181 36 31 KO4OL<br />

TSTMN 525 36 31 KG4EAB<br />

CARN 382 28 29 AD4EI<br />

4ARES 553 31 31 WA4RRR<br />

Tfc: K4AVX 41, KO4OL 36. PSHR: KO4OL 110.<br />

MICHIGAN: SM, Dick Mondro, W8FQT (w8fqt@arrl.org).<br />

ASM: Roger Edwards, WB8WJV, (wb8wjv@arrl.net). ASM:<br />

John Freeman, N8ZE (n8ze@arrl.net). SEC: Deborah<br />

Kirkbride, KA8YKK (ka8ykk@arrl.net). STM: James Wades,<br />

WB8SIW (wb8siw@arrl.net). ACC: Sandra Mondro, KG8HM<br />

(kg8hm@arrl.net). OOC: Donald Sefcik, N8NJE (n8nje@arrl<br />

.net). PIC/SNE: David Colangelo, KB8RJI (dcolangelo@<br />

ameritech.net). SGL: John LaRock, K8XD (k8xd@voyager<br />

.net). TC: Dave Smith (DSmith@smithassoc.com). Youth<br />

Activities: Steve Lendzion, KC8MCQ (kc8mcq@arrl.net). BM:<br />

Thomas Durfee, Jr.,WI8W (wi8w@arrl.net). Congratulations<br />

go out this month to the newly elected officers of the Midland<br />

Amateur Radio Club, President Lee Hodges, KC8ITI; Vice<br />

Pres Bill French, N8NGQ; Secretary Mary Branson, KB8QYB;<br />

Treasurer Larry Macklin, N8CGP. Congratulations as well to<br />

the new officers of the Michigan Area Repeater Council, President<br />

Dennis Gaboury, W8DFG; Secretary Ron Huber, N8JAZ;<br />

Treasurer Joel Goldberg, W8HIU; Director Ron Gordon,<br />

W8YUC; Director Bill Kelley, KC8DBG. The new officers will<br />

take office on December 1, <strong>2000</strong>. Bruce Winchell, N8UT has<br />

resigned as MARC Database Manager/Coordinator. My<br />

thanks to Bruce for his fine efforts in keeping the database<br />

current. My thanks to Gerry Crawford, K8GER (k8ger@arrl<br />

.net) of Luzerne for taking on the role as our Section JOTA<br />

Coordinator and don’t forget JOTA is October 21-22 this year<br />

and if you need information please contact Gerry for this opportunity<br />

to introduce radio to our scouts. Traffic reports for<br />

August: KB8ZYY 297, K8GA 266, K8LJG 104, WB8SIW 97,<br />

W8RTN 91, AA8PI 81,N8FPN 75, AA8SN 60, WX8Y 57,<br />

N8JGS 55, K8AE 53, W8RNQ 42, K8KV 41, WI8K 38, K8UPE<br />

32, W8YIQ 22, KC8GMT 21, K8JN 18, K8AI 14, K8ZJU 12,<br />

K3UWO 12, N8TDE 12, WA8DHB 11, KI8GR 8, N8EXS 3.<br />

Please support the following Section Traffic Nets: August <strong>2000</strong><br />

NTS Net Reports.<br />

Net QNI QTC Sess Net Mngt. Freq Time Day<br />

QMN 588 269 62 WB8SIW 3.663 6:30&10 PM Daily<br />

MACS 193 37 30 W8RNQ 3.953 11 AM Daily PM Sun.)<br />

(1<br />

MITN 399 188 31 N8FPN 3.952 7 PM Daily<br />

UPN 1025 35 35 AA8SN 3.921 5 PM Daily (Noon Sun.)<br />

GLETN 601 78 31 VE3SCY 3.932 9 PM Daily<br />

SEMTN 475 62 31 WI8K 146.640 10:15 PM Daily<br />

VHF Nets 629 03 39 KB8ZYY Various<br />

OHIO: SM, Joe Phillips, K8QOE, Fairfield, (to contact me,<br />

see page 12. The Ohio Section Conference at Columbus in<br />

September had plenty of news to report. First Carl Morgan,<br />

K8CM, resigned as OOC after two successful years and introduced<br />

his successor, Richard Kuns, KC8TW, of Fairfield.<br />

PIC Scott Yonally, N8SY, announced that “Zero Beat” newsletter<br />

of Alliance ARC (John Myers, KD8MQ, editor), won<br />

the 9th annual Ohio Ham Radio Newsletter contest. Second<br />

place was “The ZARC Carrier” of Zanesville ARC (Danny<br />

Grandstaff, KB8RIM, editor) and third place was “The Voice<br />

Coil” of Mahoning County (Youngstown) ARC (Andy Brincko,<br />

WA8ZLK, editor). Honorable mention, reported PIC Yonally,<br />

went to “SAARA SPEAKS” (Salem), Coshocton County ARA<br />

and the “Reflector”of the Huber Heights ARC. Then Ralph<br />

McDonough, K8AN of Adena, was introduced as the seventh<br />

winner of the Allan Severson, AB8P, Memorial award<br />

as Ohio Ham of the year. It was quite a news day. Richard<br />

Kuns, KC8TW, who became OOC on October 1, has for 27<br />

118


years been with Procter and Gamble, Inc. and has been<br />

licensed since 1981. He has been an active Official Observer<br />

and runs electronic bulletin boards and Web pages<br />

for several Cincinnati area ham groups. Ralph McDonough,<br />

K8AN, is retired from Kroger Corp., and has held a ham<br />

license for over 50 years. He was the first SEC in the Ohio<br />

Section and ran ARES Forums at the Dayton Hamvention<br />

for more than a dozen years. He currently serves as a DEC<br />

for the 9th region of Ohio. OHIO SECTION CONGRATS...<br />

(A) To Ross Meganthaler, NS8C, Maumee, as the <strong>2000</strong><br />

winner of the OSSBN Merit Award given annually to the<br />

traffic handler who has distinguished himself during the<br />

year, (B) To the Toledo Mobile Radio Association, who recently<br />

renewed Special Service Club in the ARRL. .. If your<br />

Ohio ham radio club isn’t a Special Service Club of the<br />

ARRL, contact ACC Brenda Kurkowski, KB8IUP,<br />

(kb8iup@arrl.net) and see if your group qualifies and you<br />

wish to enjoy its special privileges....OHIO HAMFEST FOR<br />

NOVEMBER; (18) Grant ARC at Georgetown....de K8QOE.<br />

Now for traffic reports for August:<br />

Net QNI QTC QTR Sess Time Freq NM<br />

BN (E) 121 69 239 31 1845 3.577 WD8KFN<br />

BN (L) 162 60 268 30 2200 3.577 NY8V<br />

OSN 136 15 492 31 1810 3.708 WB8KQJ<br />

OSSBN 1638 364 2078 93 1615, 3.9725 KF8DO<br />

1030, 1845<br />

OH Section ARES 1700 Sn 3.875 WD8IHP<br />

Tfc: WD8KFN 200, N8IO 163, W8STX 124, KD8HB 96,<br />

N8TNV 96, N8BV 91, WA8SSI 90, KA8FCC 89, N8DD 87,<br />

KA8CXG 71, N8RRB 64, W8BO 51, WA8HED 50, KC8HJL<br />

48, W8PBX 39, WB8HHZ 38, KI8IM 34, N8CW 33, W8RG<br />

31, WD8KBW 30, NY8V 30, NS8C 29, KA8VWE 27,<br />

KC8DWM 24, N8GP 23, KI8O 20, KD9K 20, N8YWX 19,<br />

KC8JKE 17, N8WLE 17, KC8HTP 11, KB8SBK 11, N8RAK<br />

10, KC8KYP 9, N8GOB 9, N8IBR 9, K8JP 9, KX8B 8,<br />

AA8XS 8, KB8TIA 7, K8QIP 6, KC8HPR 4, WD8SIQ 5, KK8J<br />

4, KB8SIA 3, N7CEU 3, K8WC 1. (Jul) KC8DWM 16, N8HIA<br />

4, KE8FK 1.<br />

HUDSON DIVISION<br />

EASTERN NEW YORK: SM, Rob Leiden, KR2L—STM:<br />

Pete Cecere, N2YJZ. SEC: Ken Akasofu, KL7JCQ. ACC:<br />

Shirley Dahlgren, N2SKP. SGL: Herb Sweet, K2GBH. PIC:<br />

John Farina, WA2QCY. BM: Ed Rubin, N2JBA. OOC: Hal<br />

Post, AK2E. TC: Rudy Dehn W2JVF. ASM: Tom Raffaelli,<br />

WB2NHC. ASM: Bob Chamberlain, N2KBC. ASM: Andrew<br />

Schmidt, N2FTR. ASM: Richard Sandell, WK6R. ASM: Phil<br />

Bradway, KB2HQ. Net Reports (Aug <strong>2000</strong>) Check-ins (QNI)/<br />

Traffic handled (QTC+QSP): AES 43/6 CDN 311/116<br />

CGESN 49/8 ESS 312/156 HVN 549/146 SDN 302/154<br />

NYPHONE 193/507 NYPON 323/219 NYS/E 302/305 NYS/<br />

M 192/161 NYS/L 245/498. Section News: Volunteer for<br />

the NYC Marathon-1st Sunday in Nov! Let’s get ready for<br />

Winter! Charge the batteries, check out the HT, keep blankets<br />

and flashlights in the car and answer the call from the<br />

EOC if it comes! 73 de Rob. PSHR: N2JBA 163, N2YJZ<br />

151, WB2ZCM 146, KC2DAA 135, WA2YBM 130, W2JHO<br />

122, WB2IIV 116, W2AKT 111. Tfc: N2YJZ 144, N2JBA 69,<br />

WB2ZCM 56, WB2IIV 46, KC2BUV 38, KC2DAA 33,<br />

W2JHO 21, W2AKT 19, WA2YBM 17, K2AVV 8, WA2BSS<br />

2, KL7JCQ 1, KC2BUW 1.<br />

NEW YORK CITY / LONG ISLAND: SM, George Tranos,<br />

N2GA. ASM: KA2D, N1XL, K2YEW, W2FX, KB2SCS. SGL:<br />

N2TX. SEC: KA2D. ACC: N2MUN. PIC-East: N2RBU. PIC-<br />

West: K2DO. TC: K2LJH. BM: W2IW. OOC: N1XL. STM:<br />

WA2YOW. Congratulations to Hudson Division Director<br />

Frank Fallon for his re-election to a third term as Director!<br />

Frank has done a great job representing our area on the<br />

ARRL board. Mark your calendars for Ham Radio University<br />

2001 which will be held January 21, 2001, at Babylon<br />

Town Hall Annex in North Babylon. There will be many new<br />

forums and an expanded program. <strong>November</strong> section<br />

hamfests: MIARC on <strong>November</strong> 26 in Patchogue. The NYC<br />

Marathon is Sunday, Nov. 5 - volunteers are needed. Check<br />

the NLI Webpage at www.arrlhudson.org/nli for more information<br />

on upcoming events. NYC/LI VE exam list follows:<br />

Manhattan: BEARS, ABC Cafeteria, 125 West End Ave at<br />

66th Street, Contact Jerry Cudmore W2JRC at 212-456-<br />

5224 for dates & times; East Village ARC, 2nd Friday at 7<br />

PM, Laguardia HS, Amsterdam Ave and West 65th Street,<br />

Manhattan. Contact Robina Asti KD2IZ at 212-838-5995;<br />

Columbia University VE Team, 3rd Monday at 6:30 PM,<br />

Watson Lab, 6th Floor, 612 West 115th Street, Manhattan.<br />

Contact Alan Crosswell, N2YGK, at 212-854-3754; Queens:<br />

Hellenic ARC, 4th Tuesday at 6:30 PM, Pontion Society,<br />

31-25 23rd Ave, Astoria, NY. Contact George Anastasiadis,<br />

KF2PG, at 516-937-0775. Nassau County: Grumman ARC<br />

(W5YI), 2nd Tuesday at 5 PM, Northrop-Grumman Plant 5,<br />

South Oyster Bay Road via Hazel Street, Bethpage, NY.<br />

Contact Bob Wexelbaum, W2ILP, at 631-499-2214;<br />

LIMARC, 2nd Saturday at 9 AM, NY Institute of Technology,<br />

300 Building, Room 311, Northern Blvd, Greenvale,<br />

NY. Contact Al Bender W2QZ at 516-623-6449. Suffolk<br />

County: Great South Bay ARC, 4th Sunday at 12 noon,<br />

Babylon Town Hall, ARES/RACES Room, 200 East Sunrise<br />

Hwy, North Lindenhurst. Contact Tom Carrubba at 631-<br />

422-9594; Larkfield ARC, 2nd Saturday in Feb, May, Sep,<br />

Nov, Huntington Town Hall, Room 114. Contact Stan<br />

Mehlman, N2YKT, at 631-423-7132; Peconic ARC, exams<br />

held January, April, July, and October on next to last Friday<br />

at 6:30 PM at Southold School, Oaklawn Ave, Southold,<br />

NY. Contact Ralph Williams N3VT at 631-323-3646. Mid<br />

Island ARC, last Weds of each month at 7 PM at 36 Dew<br />

Flag Rd, Ridge NY 11961, Contact: Mike Christopher W2IW<br />

at 631-924-3535. Report all changes to N2GA before the<br />

12th of the month. Report all changes to N2GA before the<br />

12th of the month. Tfc: WB2GTG 354, N2AKZ 100, W2RJL<br />

82, KB2KLH 76, WA2YOW 28.<br />

NORTHERN NEW JERSEY: SM, Jeff Friedman, K3JF—<br />

Net and traffic reported by STM Dave, WB2FTX:<br />

120


Net NM Sess QNI QTC QSP<br />

NJM WA2OPY 31 185 43 38<br />

NJPN W2CC 35 191 17 17<br />

NJSN K2PB 30 152 4 4<br />

NJN/E AG2R 31 244 77 64<br />

NJN/L AG2R 31 199 55 51<br />

CJTN KB2VRO 31 247 32 31<br />

NJVN/E N2RPI 31 426 34 29<br />

NJVN/L N2OPJ 31 289 40 35<br />

Tfc: KC2AHS 65, N2OPJ 40, N2RPI 38, W2JG 37, KB2VRO<br />

35, W2MTO 28, K2VX 26, K2PB 20, W2CC 20, N2GJ 9.<br />

MIDWEST DIVISION<br />

IOWA: SM, Jim Lasley, NØJL—ASM: NØLDD. SEC: NAØR.<br />

ACC: NØIJP @ KEØBX. BM: KØIIR @WØCXX. SGL: KØKD.<br />

The monthly breakfast at Country Kitchen for the Ottumwa<br />

group looks to become a monthly no exam, paperwork exam<br />

session. Seems the examiners find the need to eat also!<br />

UHF and VHF have been hopping and NØSM reports good<br />

TV DXing. The Tri-State group in Cresco now has a tone<br />

that they say sounds like an FM station: 103.5! They say to<br />

stay tuned for news! Have you noted that the RF safety<br />

rules are now in effect for all of us. Check the League Web<br />

site for the full rules. I received a newsletter from the Southwest<br />

Iowa Amateur Radio Club of Council Bluffs this month.<br />

I thank you. They report the Red Oak 146.655 machine is<br />

now 1n a much high location and with much improved coverage.<br />

They also provided some beautiful pictures of their<br />

FD. Amazing what you can do with a now with a good color<br />

printer. SEITS is hoping to get more of the members involved<br />

by starting the nomination process for officers earlier<br />

than usual. I understand they are going Nowhere from<br />

FMARC again. How was it out there in Nowhere, Il They<br />

are also trying to do an inventory of club equipment. Wonder<br />

if that is also going nowhere. I regret to report the loss<br />

in early September of KBØDD. From the report, it looks like<br />

the Iowa City club had a great FD. The River City Radio<br />

Rag (RCRR) carries a nice review of the FT-100. CVARC<br />

printed an excerpt from the NEC dealing with our antenna<br />

installations. Most have probably never seen a copy of the<br />

NEC, let alone read it! 73 de NØJL. Newsletters were received<br />

from OARC, TSARC-N, SWIARC, SEITS, FMARC,<br />

ICARC, CVARC. Tfc: WØSS 241, KAØADF 80, NØJL 9.<br />

KANSAS: SM, Orlan Cook, WØOYH— ASM/ACC/OCC:<br />

Robert Summers, KØBXF, SEC Joseph Plankinton,<br />

WDØDMV. STM: Ron Cowan, KBØDTI. SGL: Marshall<br />

Reese, AAØGL. PIC: Scott Slocum, KCØDYA and TC Frank<br />

Neal, N8FN. The ARRL KS State Convention went well<br />

enough to pay the bills with 430 registered. That is 6% of<br />

the KS ham population. Not all were from KS though. 56<br />

ARES/NTS mbrs attended our Section meeting. Wendell,<br />

WØTQ presented Norman Dillman, NØJCC, of Manhattan,<br />

the Kansas Amateur of the Year <strong>2000</strong> Award. See the<br />

“KAR”newsletter for more, available by email orlan@swbell<br />

.net and see http://www.colossus.org/kar/ for Kansas info.<br />

Allow me to recognize our Net Managers: Louie, WBØYWZ,<br />

of 2 weather nets 6:45 AM & 6 PM Dy, Bill NØKFS of KSBN<br />

6:30P Dy & KPN 8AM W,S, S, all 3920 kHz, Jay AB5PA of<br />

CSTN 12:30 PM Dy 7253 kHz, Tom, WBØZNY of 2 CW nets<br />

7 & 10 PM Dy 3610 kHz, Ron, KBØDTI, of the QKS-SS<br />

Kansas slow speed CW net. Jul. Kansas Nets: sessions/<br />

QNI/QTC, KSBN 31/933/85. KPN 23/277/17 KMWN 31/549/<br />

428 KWN 31/625/401 CSTN26/1794/81 QKS 59/280/70<br />

QKS-SS vacation SEC61/640/21 QNS KBØAMY KCØAUH<br />

N ØBTH KØBXF WDØDDG WDØDVM NØLJR WØPBV<br />

KBØWEQ TEN 256 msgs 62 sessions Kans 68% w/KBØDTI<br />

AAØOF KXØI KØPY WØWWR NBØZ WBØZNY WØSS mgr.<br />

DTRN60/593/288 Ks 96% NØKJ KBØAMY WØFE WØOYH<br />

WØWWR KBØDTI BBS W1AW BBS Bul/Per/NTS AAØHJ 15/<br />

426/4. Tfc: WØWWR 129, NBØZ 57, KBØDTI 43, WØOYH<br />

43, NØRZ 5, KXØI 15 NØZIZ 4 OBS WAØDTH 12.<br />

MISSOURI: SM Dale Bagley, KØKY—MO Traffic Nets, Daily:<br />

SSB 3.963 MHz 5:45 PM CW 7:00 PM and 9:45 PM. Kent<br />

Trimble, K9ZTV, was appointed Net Manager for the Missouri<br />

Traffic Net, sometime referred to as the MON net. Kent<br />

is a life member of the ARRL, and has great background in<br />

traffic handling. The month of August was filled with activities<br />

in the MO Section. SMARC in Springfield, MO lead by<br />

Hamfest Chairman Woodie Moore, WØODY, and he SMARC<br />

members produced a fine Hamfest. Which included several<br />

well- attended forums. The Westside Hamsters ARC<br />

were presented their Charter of Affiliation at their regular<br />

meeting. Their efforts are increasing the awareness of<br />

Amateur Radio in the area. The ARRL MO State Convention<br />

in conjunction with the CMRA Hamfest in Columbia,<br />

MO, turned out great. Thanks to the hard work by Dewey<br />

Bennett, WMØH and the CMRA membership. Large numbers<br />

of section appointees attended and participated in<br />

some excellent forums. Steve Ewald, WV1X, of ARRL HQ<br />

staff did a fine job at the ARRL Forum as did Midwest Director<br />

Wade Walstrom, WØEJ. Patrick Boyle, KØJPB MO<br />

SEC, lead the ARES forum and moderated the Red Cross,<br />

MOVAD, & MARS forum. Tom Hammond, NØSS and Rich<br />

Beckwith, WNØX, presented a program on QRP. There was<br />

also a large turn-out for the Missouri Repeater Council<br />

Meeting. The St Charles Hamfest, sponsored by the St.<br />

Charles ARC was a success again this year. The Hamfest<br />

was well ran by the St Charles ARC membership under the<br />

leadership of Ken Fieser, KBØVLN. The Hamfest featured<br />

some excellent forums. In last month’s column, Jason<br />

Tuggle’s call sign was listed incorrectly. His call is N9OOC,<br />

and he has been appointed as an OO. Net/Sess/QNI/QTC:<br />

(Aug) WARRCI 4/100/0; MTN 31/407/67; Audrain ARC 4/<br />

57/1; Rolla Billboard 30/394/8; QCWA 35 5/60/0; MTN (CW)<br />

57/125/26. Tfc: K9ZTV 61, KEØK 68. (Jul) QCWA 35 4/48/<br />

0; WARRCI 5/129/0; MTN 31/385/45; Macon ARC 4/57/0;<br />

NØATH rptr 98 QNI; Rolla Billboard 30/437/7; Jackson Co<br />

ARES 5/50/0. Tfc: KEØK 60.<br />

NEBRASKA: SM, Bill McCollum, KEØXQ—ASMs: WØKVM,<br />

NØMT, WYØF, WBØULH & WBØYWO. There was an excel-<br />

122


lent story in the Kearney Hub on August 21, about KCØHOX<br />

and KCØHIE. KCØHOX has had some health problems recently<br />

and we wish him a speedy recovery. The Lincoln<br />

ARC racked up 1800 man hours of communications support<br />

for the Nebraska State Fair. Seventeen Amateur operators<br />

provided communications support for the Bellevue<br />

Police Department during the Arrows to Aerospace parade<br />

on August 19. This year’s special event station at Pioneer<br />

Village was a success. 205 contacts were made and the<br />

farthest was Japan. The AK-SAR-BEN ARC Flea Market<br />

attracted nearly 350 attendees. Congratulations go to Bill<br />

KAØVXK for winning the $250 gift certificate. Net Reports:<br />

MID NE 2M ARES: QNI 353, QTC 5 & 31 sessions. NE<br />

STORM NET: QNI 1033, QTC 10 & 31 sessions. Lincoln/<br />

Logan ARES: QNI 110, QTC 2 & 12 sessions. WØIRZ Memorial<br />

Net: QNI 57, QTC 3 & 4 sessions. NMPN: QNI 1575,<br />

QTC 5 & 31 sessions. MARES: QNI 206, QTC 2 & 4 sessions.<br />

NE 40M NET: QNI 391, QTC 20 & 30 sessions. Traffic<br />

Totals: KØPTK 98, KEØXQ 18, WØRWA 12, WYØF 8,<br />

KAØDOC 2, WØEXK 2, WØUJI 2, WBØART 2, WØWHY 2.<br />

PSHR: KAØDBK 79, KBØYTM 34, KCØHOX 44.<br />

NEW ENGLAND DIVISION<br />

CONNECTICUT: SM, Betsey Doane, K1EIC—BM: KD1YV.<br />

OOC: WA1TJT. PIC: W1FXQ. SEC: WA1D. SGL: K1AH.<br />

STM: K1HEJ. TC: W1FAI. It was great to see so many of<br />

you at The New England Division Convention in Boxboro.<br />

The committees sure did their usual FB job. To those of<br />

you who have not attended, there’s really something magical<br />

about Boxboro—it’s a wonderful tradition every two<br />

years so mark your calendars now for last weekend in August<br />

2002—it’s worth it! Heck, we even survived the power<br />

outage just before the banquet! It was real nice to see our<br />

old CT friend Luck, KY1T, and catch up on the news.<br />

Michelle, N1PNT, did a wonderful job with the youth forum.<br />

Clubs throughout CT are getting their programs ready for<br />

the fall. The Southern Berkshire ARC operated at the<br />

Goshen Fair for three days. They gave out a record number<br />

of “First Steps to CW Proficiency” certificates to kids<br />

who tapped out their names on a straight key. At this writing,<br />

the Shoreline ARC and members of ARRL Staff are<br />

planning to participate at Scout Show <strong>2000</strong> at<br />

Hammonassett State Park. The Shoreline Club will operate<br />

using the call K2BSA/1. I am hoping to attend this very<br />

fine event—we must encourage young people to join our<br />

ranks! Don’t forget JOTA weekend of October 21. Why not<br />

invite some scouts in your area to your stations and give<br />

someone the thrill of operating! For fast-breaking news,<br />

watch for my on-air bulletins and electronic newsletters<br />

which you may subscribe to on the ARRL Members Page.<br />

C U next month! 73. Net sess/QNI/QTC/NM: WESCON 31/<br />

266/71/ka1gwe; NVTN 23/83/39/KB1CTC; ECTN 31/290/<br />

56/WA4QXT; CPN 31/233/80/N1DIO; CN 24/84/34/N1AEH.<br />

Tfc: NM1K 2710, KA1VEC 500, KE1AI 165, KA1GWE 120,<br />

KB1CTC 113, WA4QXT 80, KB1ETO 8.<br />

EAST MASSACHUSETTS: SM, Joel Magid, WU1F— August<br />

Net and traffic report submitted by STM Bill Wornham, NZ1D.<br />

Net Sess QTC QNI QTR NM<br />

EMRI 62 94 170 452 K1SEC<br />

EMRIPN 29 99 169 545 WA1FNM<br />

EM2MN 3 73 273 386 N1LKJ<br />

HHTN 31 43 265 360 N1IST<br />

CITN 31 68 258 476 N1SGL<br />

WARPSN 4 12 38 NA K1BZD<br />

NEEPN 3 6 10 NA WA1FNM<br />

CHN 31 22 150 285 W2EAG<br />

Tfc: W2EAG 334, NZ1D 149, N1LKJ 107, WA1FNM 83,<br />

WA1LPM 58, K1SEC 56, KD1LE 44, N1IST 32, N1SGB 30,<br />

K1BZD 26, WA1TBY 25, N1LAH 25, N1TPU 23, N1AJJ 23,<br />

WA1VRB 10, KB1EB 9, N1BNG 8, N1TDF 8, N1XQC 6.<br />

MAINE: SM, Bill Woodhead, N1KAT—The summer came<br />

to a spectacular end for me personally with my participation<br />

in the National Lighthouses On the Air event. N1OXA,<br />

KD1OW, and son found ourselves at the most perfect place<br />

anyone could hope to spend 24 hrs. Our assignment from<br />

the Androscoggin ARC was to put the Marshall Point Light<br />

in Port Clyde on the air, and we did in fine style. Once up<br />

and operational, it was a unique experience to find ourselves<br />

on the receiving end of a pile up. Arrangements had<br />

been made to spend the night, and when the morning came,<br />

an RF enhanced double rainbow woke me up. A quick muster<br />

of the rest of the crew drew “Oohs!”&” Ahs!” at the breathtaking<br />

site. Fortunately, we were able to capture the moment<br />

digitally and on film. Other Maine lighthouses were<br />

on the air, but I’m sure none were able to boast such a<br />

sunrise. Congratulations to all who participated, and looking<br />

forward to next year’s event. The next Maine State<br />

Convention is scheduled for Mar 30 & 31 at the Ramada<br />

Inn in Lewiston. Time and space is still available to accommodate<br />

a variety of talks. Express your ideas to Rick,<br />

N1WFO or Ivan, N1OXA. 73, Bill, N1KAT. Tfc: W1KX 103,<br />

W1QU 52, W1JX 33, K1UNQ 24, KA2ZKM 21, KA1RFD<br />

21, N1JBD 20, W1BLT 20, W1JTH 18.<br />

RHODE ISLAND: SM, Armand Lambert, K1FLD—This<br />

year’s Boxboro ARRL Convention was the best yet with<br />

great weather and good friends in attendance. The Wouff<br />

Hong initiation at midnight was well attended, and finally<br />

yours truly and spouse, Simone, KA1YVF, were in the participating<br />

crowd along with Riley Hollingsworth and others<br />

that survived the midnight ordeal. / Riley did mention that<br />

we hams need to recruit new members, and to do the walk<br />

not just the talk that is to get involved in community activities<br />

and promote Amateur Radio. / In the News: The Newport<br />

County Radio Club has rebuilt their repeater setup and<br />

moved it to 145.450 with an S9 signal into Woonsocket,<br />

many thanks to Mike, W1MPB, Mike, K1CW, Charles,<br />

W1CG, John, AA1JS, Bob, AA1LG, Jim, KC1SD, Michael,<br />

W1MFS, and John, W1WLG, for their combined efforts in<br />

support of club activities. /Dan KA1BNO has announced<br />

the availability of a brochure compiled by himself and Bill,<br />

124


WA1RI, listing the ARRL affiliated radio clubs in RI along<br />

with their Web sites, VE sessions and contact persons./<br />

Congratulations to Bill, WA1RI, and Jolene on their granddaughter,<br />

Abigail Lynn Maxwell. 73 till next time, keep hamming<br />

and Happy Thanksgiving to all.<br />

VERMONT: SM, Bob DeVarney, WE1U—As I write this, intense<br />

preparations are going on for communications at the<br />

Burlington Air Show this coming weekend. Amateur Radio<br />

Operators will be helping to support the Red Cross, who<br />

will, in turn, be supporting nearly all EMS and Police operations<br />

throughout the weekend. We will be using a combination<br />

of amateur and commercial frequencies, including<br />

some nifty commercial radio gear we were able to get<br />

from Red Cross National such as a commercial repeater<br />

with a lowband vhf link. Lots of handhelds to program and<br />

distribute to the teams in the field, and to the folks manning<br />

the first aid tents. All in all, a perfect opportunity for us<br />

to show off what we are capable of contributing in times of<br />

need. I also know that hams helped out over the weekend<br />

up here at Shelburne Farms with the Fall Harvest Festival.<br />

I’ve long said that we hams do a super job of communicating<br />

amongst ourselves, but a poor job of communicating to<br />

the general public what we’re doing. If you have a public<br />

service event coming up, and would like some help getting<br />

it publicized, e-mail me, or let me know somehow, and I’ll<br />

do my best to help you get it publicized. You’ll also likely<br />

see it mentioned here in the Section News. 73 de WE1U.<br />

WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS: SM, William C. Voedisch,<br />

W1UD, w1ud@arrl.org—ASM: N1NZC. ASM (digital) KD1SM.<br />

STM: W1SJV. SEC: K1VSG. OOC: WT1W. Molly Bish, a lifeguard,<br />

at the town beach in Warren, MA, was missing and<br />

believed abducted. The Warren area is out of range for most<br />

communications. AA2T and SWC EC N1LKT, with the help<br />

of Qubog ARC pres John, K1UJT, organized a cross-band<br />

link. For three days, until the police and civil service got additional<br />

commo equipment, this was the only communications<br />

for the police and volunteer search and rescue teams.<br />

As usual, WMA was in the forefront. Congrats to all you<br />

people! A job very well done. NOBARC had their Field Day<br />

on Windsor Hill. Their flea market was a success as well. It<br />

seems great to get some news for a change. MARA furnished<br />

a crew for the annual Lonsjo Bicycle Race in Fitchburg and<br />

the TT trails on Mt Wachusett. Bands are in great shape and<br />

people headed over the world on DXpeditions. Looks like<br />

winter and spring will be outstanding for DX operation. Tfc<br />

(July): N1ISB 18, W1ZPB 220, K1TMA 123, N1RLX 1, KD1SM<br />

8, W1SJV 9, W1UD 192. (June) K1TMA 131.<br />

NORTHWESTERN DIVISION<br />

ALASKA: SM, Kent Petty, KL5T — Anchorage and Fairbanks<br />

hamfests were tremendous success! Great job by all, and<br />

special thanks to Greg Milnes, ARRL NW Director, Gordon<br />

West, and others for making the trip. The field organization<br />

is still in need of Boy and Girl Scout liaisons — please contact<br />

KL5T if you feel up to the task…it’s awfully important.<br />

We are still looking for a sponsor for our state PRB-1 effort.<br />

Will your state representative be willing to help Contact your<br />

State Government Liaison, Rob Wilson, AL7KK for input. HF<br />

nets: Sniper’s Net 3920 1800 AST, Bush Net 7093 <strong>2000</strong> AST,<br />

Motley Group 3933 2100 AST, and Alaska Pacific Net 14292<br />

M-F 0830 AST. Please report communication drills and exercises,<br />

emergency communication activations, and public<br />

service activities on FSD-157 to KL5T. Net sess/QTC/QNI/<br />

NM: Alaska Snipers Net 31/0/909/KL7GG; Alaska Morse Wire<br />

Net (July/Aug) 3/3/6/AL7N. Tfc: AD4BL 3.<br />

EASTERN WASHINGTON: SM, Kyle Pugh, KA7CSP—Despite<br />

the high numbers of wildfires this season, amateurs<br />

were only called upon mostly for Red Cross efforts in some<br />

locations. Possibly e-mail kept firefighters in touch with their<br />

families this time. Want to find out if your station is RF exposure<br />

compliant Go to the Radio Club of Tacoma Website at:<br />

www.w7dk.org to bring up a calculator. Simply fill in the blanks<br />

and it tells you if you’re compliant. STM Don W7GB reported<br />

Harvey, KA7EKL, and Harvey, K7GXZ, handled message traffic<br />

on the CW nets from the Idaho State Fair in Boise. In<br />

memoriam: Gary Heden, AB7PI, and Vic Doerrheim,<br />

KD7AHH, both of Spokane became Silent Keys. There were<br />

9 out of 10 OO reports for August. 73/KA7CSP. Net Activity:<br />

WSN: QNI 687, tfc 269; Noontime Net: QNI 8868, tfc 287;<br />

WARTS: QNI 3213, tfc 89. Tfc: K7GXZ 430, W7GB 285,<br />

KA7EKL 260, K7BFL 54. PSHR: W7GB 139, K7GXZ 127.<br />

IDAHO: SM, M.P. Elliott, K7BOI — OOC: N7GHV. SEC:<br />

AA7VR. STM: W7GHT. Once again a GREAT CW exposition<br />

was held during the Western Idaho State Fair with many<br />

area hams participating. The event also attracted TV coverage.<br />

With the messages handled 3 hams made BPL for<br />

Sept. Congratulations to KB7GZU, W7BOI and W7GHT!<br />

The ID Section now has a Web presence! Go to<br />

“id_arrl.homestead.com/mainpage.html” and check it out.<br />

The site will have current ID ARRL news, a staff listing,<br />

club listing, educational programming ideas and other useful<br />

items. If you think of something that should be added to<br />

the Web site let me know. 73 — Mike, K7BOI. Tfc: KB7GZU<br />

682, W7GHT 650, W7BOI 568, W6ZOH 249, WB7VYH 96,<br />

and N7MPS 16. PSHR: W7GHT 198, WB7VYH 104, and<br />

N7MPS 56. Net (SESS/QNI/QTC/ Mgr.): FARM-31/2455/<br />

127/ W7WJH; NWTN-31/1233/62/KC7UND; IDACD-23/<br />

431/41/K7UBC; IMN-31/328/337/W6ZOH.<br />

MONTANA: SM, Darrell Thomas, N7KOR—Amateur Radio<br />

Operators continued to be involved with the massive<br />

wildfire situation in the Montana Section during August.<br />

Several clubs and individuals in Western Montana were<br />

put on standby for a possible RACES Activation and American<br />

Red Cross Shelter support. On August 20th a call was<br />

put out on the local repeater in the Helena area from the<br />

communications director of the 70000 acre fire at<br />

Townsend, MT, for assistance. Dispatchers at the scene<br />

had been on duty in excess of 48 hours without relief. Two<br />

hams K7MT and AA7OG responded within an hour to support<br />

the operation and were joined by KC7NBU and<br />

KC7PSE who handled the night shift. These hams handled<br />

all the normal and emergency communications of the fire.<br />

They spent 2 days at the scene. In Southeast Montana,<br />

126


the members of the Yellowstone Radio Club were called to<br />

the scene of a fire east of Billings MT to coordinate mutual<br />

aid among responding agencies. As the month ends, we<br />

still have hams involved in many ways from handling communications<br />

to hose lines. Thanks and congratulations to<br />

all for a fine job representing the volunteer spirit of Amateur<br />

Radio. Net/QNI/QTC/NM MTN 1701/53 N7AIK IMN<br />

328/337 W6ZOH. PSHR: N7AIK 123.<br />

OREGON: SM, Bill Sawders, K7ZM—ASM: KK7CW. SEC:<br />

WB7NML. STM: W7IZ. SGL: N7QQU. OOC: NB7J. STC:<br />

AB7HB. ACC: K7SQ. Dick Frey, K4XU, has accepted the<br />

position as Official ARRL DXCC Card Checker. Dick, President<br />

of the Central Oregon DX Club, is an avid dx’er and<br />

world-class contester. Many of you remember Dick being the<br />

top design engineer for Ten Tec and the Harris Company. He<br />

is presently in the same prestigious position for Advanced<br />

Power Technology in Bend. Ed Corey, K7OC, of the Hoodview<br />

Amateur Radio Club, has accepted the appointment as HF<br />

Awards Manager, and is responsible for validating WAS and<br />

5-Band WAS applications. Both men have accepted a heavy<br />

responsibility in maintaining the integrity of these prestigious<br />

awards. Lyle Nelson, W6OFF, has resigned from the Official<br />

Observer program. A retired Air Force Colonel, Lyle has<br />

worked on a VE team for many years, and was also a Technical<br />

coordinator for Douglas County before moving to Coos<br />

Bay. Thanks, Lyle, for a job well done. The annual Oregon<br />

QSO Party, will return to its original May weekend. Too many<br />

other contests were on during this years August trial, and<br />

several participants requested the return to Spring. The 2001<br />

event will be a one-day affair, scheduled for Saturday, May<br />

12th. Mark your calendars now, and plan a fun-filled day<br />

operating and representing your county in the 2001 OQP,<br />

and keep in touch. NTS traffic totals for August: W7IZ 169,<br />

N7DRP 167, W7VSE 77, KC7SRL 65, N7YSS 41, KA7AID<br />

10, KC7SGM 7, KK1A 5.<br />

WESTERN WASHINGTON: SM, Harry Lewis, W7JWJ—The<br />

Shoreline ACS team recently participated in a Costco Safety<br />

Fair and during the same week participated in a packet exercise.<br />

This was with the Kirkland, and Bellevue ACS teams.<br />

The disaster scenario was to have a radio transmission tower<br />

into a nursing home creating a mass casualty incident, plus<br />

eliminating all communications enabled by the tower, such<br />

as cell phones. The King Co Medical Services team under<br />

the direction of DEC Marina, N7LSL, has also participated in<br />

helicopter rescue training. Reporting via SEC N7NVP we find<br />

that Don Deadrick, WL7FQ, Whatcom Co EC reports his unit<br />

demonstrated their communication skills at the Ferndale Old<br />

Settler’s Parade and Chuckanut Car Club Rally. They also<br />

demonstrated the communication van for British Petroleum<br />

(BP) Co. In Pacific Co, EC Emily Wolfe, KB7L, is off to a<br />

running start. Her team helped with a Bike Run and a 911<br />

outage. They conducted a bunny hunt to sharpen their DF<br />

skills. The Cowlitz Co fair saw lots of Ham support and even<br />

signed up some people for the next Ham class. Cowlitz Co<br />

members provided base support for the well organized RAW<br />

<strong>2000</strong> (Ride Around Washington) bike ride that starts in<br />

Wahkiakum Co, travels through Cowlitz Co and ends at the<br />

Clark Co Fairgrounds. K7YFJ’s Clark Co team had fun at the<br />

Pedal the Pinchot bike ride and the Evergreen Fly-in. Hopefully<br />

all the training this past summer has sharpened our skills<br />

enough to deal with whatever the up coming winter throws at<br />

us. The recent edition of the RN-7 newsletter looked like a<br />

combined hospital report of all injuries and illnesses of traffic<br />

handlers. Hope everyone will soon be back on the air full<br />

time. The very small number of OO reports recently given<br />

for poor operating skills attests to the excellent behavior of<br />

those who have recently upgraded. To those new to HF, try a<br />

little traffic handling, a different aspect of public service.<br />

PACIFIC DIVISION<br />

EAST BAY: SM: Andy Oppel, KF6RCO—Hats off to Chair<br />

KE6WRE and a crew of over 100 MDARC members for putting<br />

on another excellent Pacificon convention! Congrats to<br />

KC6TYB on her upgrade to Extra. CCC recognized the upgrades<br />

of KE6CQP to Extra and KD6AGA to General. EBARC<br />

congratulated AI3X on becoming a US citizen and welcomed<br />

new members KG6CFU and Andrew McAfee (no call yet).<br />

HRC provided communications for the Skyline 50K Run while<br />

ACSCT did the same for the Run for the Parks in Alameda,<br />

and at the same time on the same repeater! With carefully<br />

selected tactical call signs, it all went smoothly. VVRC conducted<br />

a successful fire watch over the 4th of July with 16<br />

members participating: KF6KFP, KF6VBJ, W6OMF, K6HEW,<br />

N6ZGB, N6WVF, KA6FDI, KF6PQW, KF6VBI, KA6IPE,<br />

WH6AB, NI6V, K6ZU, K6DME, KD6JSB and K6OLL. ORCA<br />

has formed a work group to assemble a new EOC RACES<br />

station: WB6NER, KF6VOG, W6BUR, WA6CUY, KF6GZY,<br />

N6TQS, W6THD, AD6ME, W6UAB, KD6MP, K6JAT and<br />

W6LL. Tfc: W6DOB 666. PSHR: W6DOB. BPL: W6DOB. Tfc<br />

nets: NCN1/3630/7PM; NCN2-SLOW SESSION/3705/9PM;<br />

NCN-VHF/145.21/7:30PM; RN6/3655/7:45pm & 9:30PM;<br />

PAN/3651/7052/8:30 PM.<br />

NEVADA: SM, Jan Welsh, NK7N—ASM: Dick, W6OLD. TC:<br />

Jim, NW7O. OES: Joe, N7JEH. W6LOA - John Ryan was<br />

appointed EC for the Tahoe Basin Area. NV SEC Paul<br />

Cavnar-NN7B and Sacramento Valley S. SEC Bill<br />

Penninton-WA6SLA, worked together on this as the area<br />

includes part of Sacramento Valley, two states, two Pacific<br />

Division sections and six California and Nevada counties.<br />

The NV ARES HF net on 3965 kHz is growing thanks to<br />

AB7WZ. I was able to reach net control with borrowed NVIS<br />

antenna courtesy KE7DB, and am now proud owner of<br />

same. Excellent activity report from AC7EL-EC (was AEC)<br />

on emergency survival course, training in CPR, 1st aid,<br />

light rescue plus demo for Girl Scouts and new AEC, Sam<br />

Musselman-KE7VBU. KB7REO-EC reported on joint ARES<br />

and AF MARS supplying Comm on Indian Springs to Lake<br />

Mead Dr. detail and SKYWARN activities. N7CPP traffic<br />

reports had emphasis on training. N7JEH activity report on<br />

Pony Express event, they used W7LKO repeater and services<br />

of many amateurs. 73, Jan.<br />

PACIFIC: SM, Ron Phillips, AH6HN—ASMs: Harry<br />

Nishiyama, KH6FKG, Lee Wical, KH6BZF.Jim Reid KH7M.<br />

128


Stu Johnston, NH6DR. Dennis Niles, KH6XT. Dan Spears,<br />

KH6UW. SEC: Dennis Carvalho, KH7H. TC: Chuck<br />

Cartwright, AH7Y. PIC: Russ Roberts, KH6JRM. ACC: Bob<br />

Schneider, AH6J. Lee Wical, KH6BZF, reports that the<br />

Battleship USS Missouri Amateur Radio Club has finished<br />

it’s planning and has moved into the implantation phase of<br />

finishing the Missouri’s radio room cleaning up existing<br />

equipment. Lead by USSBMARC President, Ned, KH7JJ,<br />

the existing Missouri radio room, off the port side of the<br />

ship’s main deck, is being readied to install the Amateur<br />

Radio club equipment. A complete station has been provided<br />

by the Navy League, to which the club is very grateful.<br />

John Peters, K1ER/KH6 is the director and trustee of<br />

the club call sign, KH6BB, has worked with Lee, KH6BZF,<br />

who contacted Ms Mae Lowe, widow of KH6BB, to secure<br />

permission to obtain Bola’s old call sign. John worked hard<br />

with the FCC to obtain this call sign in remembrance of<br />

both the USS Missouri and Bola Lows. The “BB” call sign<br />

is in keeping with the ship’s naval number, BB-63. Some<br />

million visitors per year will view the ship’s radio room and<br />

therefore be exposed to Amateur Radio. Thanks, Lee for<br />

the info. Our section OOC, Dan Spears, has been busy<br />

getting new people interested in becoming OOs. Also, Dan<br />

and group have reported MI on Oahu and has forwarded<br />

the info to HQ. Keep up the good work, Dan. Tim Hayes,<br />

NHØH, the new DEC for Saipan reports a total of ARES<br />

members @ 21. Tim has set up a local net for check-ins<br />

and drills. Good work, Tim. The County of Hawaii has<br />

awarded a contract to the Amateur community on the Big<br />

Island for enhanced emergency comm. More on that later.<br />

Thanks to all for the inputs for this report. Mahalo & 73.<br />

SACRAMENTO VALLEY: SM, Jerry Boyd, K6BZ—Congratulations<br />

to the NCCC for another very successful California<br />

QSO Party. Great operating event! Check the Section Web<br />

Page for information concerning the various ARES Nets which<br />

occur weekly. Those nets can be used to discuss general<br />

items of interest as well as emergency communications issues.<br />

Enjoyed visiting with many amateurs from around the<br />

Section and Pacific Division at PACIFICON. Congratulations<br />

to MDARC for another fine convention. A new, cooperative<br />

effort between this Section and the Nevada Section has resulted<br />

in the appointment of a “cross section boundaries”<br />

EC to serve the “Tahoe Basin”. W6LOA has been appointed<br />

to that position by the Nevada SM. This is important because<br />

of the cross over by hams needed when a problem occurs in<br />

the Tahoe Basin on either the CA or NV side. The work on<br />

this project was done by SEC (South) WA6SLA, and NV SEC<br />

NN7B...Thanks! The River City ARC and Sierra Foothills ARC<br />

operated a special event station and Amateur Radio info display<br />

at the California State Fair. Congratulations on a job<br />

well done. Until next month, 73 de K6BZ.<br />

SAN FRANCISCO: SM, Len Gwinn, WA6KLK—ASM:<br />

KH6GJV. SEC: KE6EAQ. KB2ZAK is a new EC in Del Norte<br />

County. He is also becoming active on HF and VHF. In<br />

Humboldt Co W6RA, W6BME, and W6DSB are now active<br />

on VHF SSB. KN6ZU on net/drill participation writes “Only<br />

through participation do we gain experience and insight. So<br />

take the opportunity when one has the chance to run a routine<br />

net and make some small errors rather than one you will<br />

regret forever. This is what Field Day is all about to me. Not<br />

the score in points, but the fact that you learn what it takes<br />

to go non-stop, and copy information accurately and fast.<br />

The fact that one has to set up a temporary station gives you<br />

the chance to learn what you need in your ready bag. Only<br />

through experience do you learn what to expect to go wrong<br />

in a disaster by being involved in practice, study, training,<br />

and the word of others who have been there in a real disaster<br />

and lived to share with you their experience.” EARS of<br />

Sonoma County had a great turnout for their breakfast AND<br />

had a booth at the Sonoma County Air Show with lots of visitors.<br />

Marin County had a big turnout for their annual picnic.<br />

The Pacific Director, W6CF, has been to many of the Section<br />

club meetings lately and will be to more in the future.<br />

SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY: SM, Donald Costello, W7WN—<br />

Where has the year gone so quickly Thank you to all who<br />

attended the National Weather Service Spotter training program.<br />

The training took place in Merced at Mercy Hospital.<br />

Instruction was given by Dan Gudgel and Paul Jones who<br />

are both Amateur Radio operators. There were about 34 persons<br />

in the class. The Spotter program of NWS is yet another<br />

way Amateur Radio operators in the SJV Section can<br />

interface with emergency communications. The NWS office<br />

in Hanford has a very nice VHF/UHF station in the office and<br />

will soon be HF capable as well. The station is operated by<br />

local Amateur Radio operators from the Hanford area. Training<br />

sessions can be set up in other sites in the SJV Section<br />

for those interested. Club presidents are encouraged to send<br />

e-mail to me if interested in having a training session.<br />

w7wn@arrl.org. I will gladly forward your request to the NWS<br />

office in Hanford. I would like to thank Steven Mendenhall,<br />

Dan Gudgel and Paul Jones of the NWS for their work, often<br />

on their own time, in developing the SKYWARN program in<br />

SJV Section. Does your local radio club have an ARES<br />

group If not please consider forming one. Special thanks<br />

go to Howard Watson, N3TNQ, of Merced for arranging for<br />

the use of Mercy Hospital conference facilities for the NWS<br />

training session and for the continuing ARES training sessions.<br />

Radio clubs of SJV please send stories of your clubs<br />

involvement in local public service for publication in the Section<br />

News. Send the stories to w7wn@arrl.org. As this Section<br />

News will break near years end I would like to extend<br />

best wishes for the Holiday Season from myself and the staff<br />

of the ARRL San Joaquin Valley Section.<br />

ROANOKE DIVISION<br />

NORTH CAROLINA: SM, John Covington, W4CC— SEC:<br />

KE4JHJ. STM: NØSU. BM: KD4YTU. TC: K4ITL. PIC:<br />

KN4AQ. OOC: W4ZRA. SGL: AB4W. ACC - vacant. http://<br />

www.ncarrl.org. Congratulations and welcome to our newest<br />

affiliated club, the Guilford Amateur Society. The charter<br />

of affiliation was presented during the ARRL meeting at<br />

the Shelby hamfest. Division Director Dennis Bodson,<br />

W4PWF, presented the charter to President John Shultz,<br />

130


132<br />

K4JBS, with several other club members observing. The<br />

new official name for the club recently formed in Troy is<br />

the Montgomery Amateur Radio Society. Hope to have them<br />

affiliated soon also. Hurricane season reminds me how<br />

much we depend on hams at all levels throughout the state<br />

to help during disasters. In addition to the activity on the<br />

statewide nets, we depend tremendously on local nets to<br />

handle much of our traffic. There are three NTS Local Nets<br />

in NC: Central North Carolina Traffic Net (CNCTN), 146.82<br />

MHz, 9:30 PM; Piedmont Coastal Traffic Net (PCTN),<br />

146.88 MHz, 9:00 PM; and Eastern North Carolina Traffic<br />

Net (ENCTN), 146.685 MHz, 8:30 PM. We also have many<br />

non-NTS local nets that help pass our traffic. We could sure<br />

use some more NTS nets to provide some additional outlets<br />

for traffic, especially in the west and southeast. To become<br />

an NTS net, you must meet daily, have frequent liaison<br />

to section nets, and follow NTS rules during your formal<br />

session. Contact our STM, Don NØSU for more details.<br />

August Traffic: W4EAT 375, AB4E 260, K4IWW 142,<br />

NC4ML 132, NØSU 100, W4IRE 96, AA4YW 95, KI4YV 92,<br />

N4AF 68, W3HL 54, AC4DV 52, KE4JHJ 51, KE4AHC 35,<br />

W4CC 25, WD4MRD 17, NT4K 12, WA2EDN 12, AD4XV<br />

10, KB8VCZ 9, KF4YHG 7, KE4YMA 5, N8UTY 4.<br />

SOUTH CAROLINA: SM, Patricia M. Hensley, N4ROS—<br />

SC ARRL has made history this month by completing our<br />

first election for Section Manager in 14 years. Every prior<br />

SM was appointed or was an incumbent without opposition.<br />

The election results should be announced shortly; congratulations<br />

to that person. My OM, K8AFP, licensed for<br />

nearly forty-five years, has told me about the prestige and<br />

leadership associated with SMs in the past. Almost every<br />

amateur was a member of the ARRL, and the SM was truly<br />

the spokesperson for their Section. Unfortunately, this is<br />

no longer true. Only one-third to one-half the licensed amateurs<br />

are ARRL members, and much misunderstanding of<br />

the purposes and benefits of the ARRL exists among them.<br />

This results in division between groups instead of cohesion<br />

among the amateur fraternity. Many times, individuals<br />

who could make real contributions become frustrated and<br />

remain among the silent majority. The questionable status<br />

of Amateur Radio cannot sustain continual injuries and hope<br />

to exist intact as a viable team. In the future, Amateur Radio<br />

will change. We must ensure that it is a positive change<br />

by, once again, volunteering our individual skills, functioning<br />

cohesively as a group, and by supporting our elected<br />

Section Manager. Tfc: AF4QZ 122, KA4LRM 60, WA4UGD<br />

49, W4DRF 45, KA4UIV 21, K4BG 21, WD4BUH 18.<br />

VIRGINIA: SM, Lynn Gahagan, AF4CD—SEC: OOC:<br />

KR4UQ. STM: W4CAC. ASM/A: KE4MBX. ASM/B: W4TLM.<br />

ASM/C: TC, W4IN. ASM/D: KC4ASF. PIC: W2MG. Once<br />

again the Virginia Section leads the way. Congratulations<br />

to Terry Fox, WB4JFI, of Falls Church on being the recipient<br />

of the ARRL 1999 Technical Innovation Award. As the<br />

recipient of this award, Terry will receive a check for<br />

$500.00, and an engraved plaque to be presented at an<br />

ARRL convention. Are you interested and prepared to provide<br />

your community emergency communications, when the<br />

time is at hand Perhaps you may want to check into one<br />

of the many section level nets to brush up on your NTS<br />

skills or, listen in to learn how to pass traffic. Our STM,<br />

W4CAC has put together a Web site which lists Virginia<br />

Local and Section Nets, the Fourth Region Net and the<br />

Eastern Area Net and their operating schedules. The address<br />

for the site is: http://w4cac.tripod.com/vastm/ The Net<br />

Manager for our Section CW Nets, WA4DOX runs the VSN<br />

(Va. Slow Net) each Tuesday at 7 PM 3680 kHz. The net is<br />

run at 13wpm or slower. Practice NTS messages are<br />

passed and this is a great place to sharpen your CW skills.<br />

Obie reports new operators are visiting the net. In fact he’s<br />

talked me into joining the group and I could sure use the<br />

code practice! I am very pleased the ODEN (Old Dominion<br />

Emergency Net) has grown to where it is today. We have<br />

ARES and NTS members checking in and, now have several<br />

pieces of NTS traffic being brought to the nets. This<br />

shows how the two groups can and should work together<br />

to achieve our mutual goals of preparedness. One of the<br />

problems we are now faced with is time. We have so many<br />

people checking into the ODEN that sometimes everyone<br />

doesn’t have a chance to comment. We are addressing that<br />

issue and look into possible solutions. Meanwhile please<br />

keep in mind that this is a training ground for new NCS. If<br />

you have never run a net before or, if you have and would<br />

like to give it a try, contact one of the Net Managers. The<br />

DXing this year has been great, and it appears that we will<br />

have another two years or so of excellent band conditions.<br />

Oh, and just a reminder don’t forget the ARRL Sweepstakes<br />

coming up in <strong>November</strong>. This is a good time to work towards<br />

your WAS award! Very 73 de AF4CD. Tfc: W3BBQ<br />

210, WA4DOX 138, KR4MU 109, W4CAC 85, K4YVX 70,<br />

AF4CD 60, K4MTX 53, KØIBS 44,WB4ZNB 32, AAA4AT<br />

26,W4VIC 15, W4YE 9, N4FNT 8, W4JLS 8, WB4UHC 6,<br />

W4SEE 5, W4MWC 4, KB4CAU 3, K4JM 3.<br />

WEST VIRGINIA: SM, O.N.(Olie) Rinehart , WD8V— The<br />

“Mill” is history, and it will be recorded as a good part of<br />

history. In my opinion, and I have heard several others express<br />

the same opinion, is that it was a very fruitful and<br />

productive State ARRL Convention and WV State Amateur<br />

Radio Council annual meeting. My thanks to those who conducted<br />

the forums and other meetings, all of which were<br />

well attended. Congratulations are in order for, not necessarily<br />

in any order but, WV Outstanding Amateur of the Year,<br />

Garry H. Ritchie, W8OI; First Place Highest Score Single<br />

Op WV QSO Party Dennis Bombardiere , W8YS; and<br />

WVSARC Field Day Highest Score by club or group registered<br />

with the Council, West Virginia Amateur Radio, Inc.,<br />

WV8AR. A little different slant on the RFE/RFI situation.<br />

Not just that it is mandatory that you have read and understand<br />

the FCC regulations, and that your station remains<br />

in compliance, but “you owe it to your fellow living creatures<br />

to not radiate harmful interference.” It makes it a little<br />

more binding that just satisfying the FCC doesn’t it. At least<br />

once a year, I make an appeal so please if you have news<br />

of amateur radio in WV that is beneficial, or of value to<br />

others, or some group, club, individual has accomplished


something worth while, please let me know by land, sea or<br />

on the air, so that I may include in this column. Contact me<br />

at WVFN 3.865 6:00 PM local; phone (304) 768-9534; fax<br />

(304)766-1068; cell (304)541-WD8V (9388) or e-mail<br />

wd8v@arrl.org. 73. Tfc: KA8WNO 161, WD8V 75, W8YS<br />

170, W8WWF 60, KC8CON 35, N8BP 6, WD8DHC 51.<br />

ROCKY MOUNTAIN DIVISION<br />

COLORADO: SM, Tim Armagost, WBØTUB—ASM: Jeff<br />

Ryan, NØWPA. SEC: Mike Morgan, N5LPZ. STM: Mike<br />

Stansberry, KØTER. ACC: Ron Deutsch, NKØP. PIC: Erik<br />

Dyce, WØERX. OOC: Karen Schultz, KAØCDN & Glenn<br />

Schultz, WØIJR. SGL: Mark Baker, KGØPA. TC: Bob<br />

Armstrong, AEØB. BM: Jerry Cassidy, NØMYY. Rocky Mountain<br />

Division Asst. Director (and former Director) Marshall<br />

Quiat, AGØX, has resigned his position citing health reasons.<br />

Shortly after receiving Marshall’s resignation, the<br />

ARRL Board of Directors named him an honorary Vice<br />

President of the League. An honor well deserved, to be<br />

sure. Those of us residing in the Rocky Mountain division,<br />

and especially those of us here in Colorado have been the<br />

primary beneficiaries of Marshall’s two decades of service<br />

to Amateur Radio, although as an ARRL director, Marshall<br />

has had an influence on ARRL policies and direction, benefiting<br />

hams nationwide. His tireless efforts supporting hams<br />

in need of legal advice is well known and without peer in<br />

our Section. When you run into Marshall at swapfests and<br />

other functions in the coming months, congratulate him on<br />

his League appointment, and thank him for his many years<br />

of service. Swapfests at Jeffco (Denver Radio Club) and<br />

the always popular Campfest (Mountain Amateur Radio<br />

Club) both took place on Aug. 20 th and a few people actually<br />

attended BOTH!! Those are some really dedicated<br />

swappers. The DRC Swap included an ARRL forum hosted<br />

by RM Div Director Walt Stinson, WØCP. These forums are<br />

a great time to share your views with your elected officials<br />

and all should avail themselves of this opportunity. Any<br />

items for the column Please e-mail them to me:<br />

n0wpa@arrl.net 73, de NØWPA. NTS traffic: ADØA 157,<br />

KØTER 64, NØUOD 58, KIØRP 58. CAWN: WØWPD 931,<br />

KØHBZ 561, WØGGP 505, NØFCR 468, K4ARM 404, WØLVI<br />

389, WØNCD 335, WBØVET 266, KIØND 239, NØNMP 217,<br />

NØDKK 114, ADØA 88, KØTER 55, NØUOD 35, KIØRP 30.<br />

CAWN: WØWPD 637, WØLVI 504, WØGGP 460, NØJUS 447,<br />

WØNCD 443, KØHBZ 436, K4ARM 371, WBØVET 316,<br />

NØNMP 299, NØFCR 222, KIØND 196, WDØCKP 158,<br />

AAØZR 121.<br />

NEW MEXICO: SM, Joe T. Knight, W5PDY—ASM: K5BIS<br />

& N5ART. SEC: K6YEJ. STM: N7IOM. NMs: WA5UNO &<br />

W5UWY. TC: W8GY. ACC: N5ART. New Mexico Roadrunner<br />

Net handled 125 msgs with 1199 checkins. New Mexico<br />

Breakfast Club handled 287 msgs with 1085 checkins.<br />

Yucca Net handled 24 msgs with 660 checkins. Caravan<br />

Club Net handled 13 msgs with 57 checkins. SCAT Net<br />

handled 2 msgs with 602 checkins. Four Corners Net<br />

handled 20 msgs with 432 checkins. GARS Net handled<br />

10 msgs with 33 checkins. Rusty’s Net handled 78 msgs<br />

with 783 checkins. Valencia County Net, handled 10 msgs<br />

with 47 checkins. Deming ARC Net handled 11 msgs with<br />

70 checkins. Our NM State ARRL Convention August 26-<br />

27 th went extremely well, and it was a real pleasure to have<br />

Bill Cross, W3TN, of the FCC, Walt Stinson, WØCP, our<br />

ARRL Division Director, and Rosalie White, K1STO, ARRL<br />

Field & Educational Services Manager, as our special<br />

guests. The convention was certainly a success and our<br />

special thanks to KM5EH, and his staff, for their fine job.<br />

Thanks also to our ARES SAR Crew for a very long, but<br />

successful, Rescue Mission from the 10,000 foot shear cliffs<br />

of the Sandia Mountains, during the convention.<br />

Alamogordo Hamfest and Banquet on August 5th. Special<br />

thanks to all their staff for such a nice event. The International<br />

Hamfiesta is scheduled for Oct. 28-29 th . See<br />

“hamfiesta.org.” The Socorro Hamfest is scheduled for Nov.<br />

4 th . So sorry to report the passing of KC7EN. Best 73,<br />

W5PDY.<br />

UTAH: SM, Mel Parkes, AC7CP—I would like to wish everyone<br />

a Happy Thanksgiving, and hope your upcoming<br />

holidays are very eventful. I really enjoyed my visit to the<br />

Dixie Amateur Radio Club in St George last month. It was<br />

a great opportunity for me to meet many of our hams in the<br />

southern part of Utah. I would also like to say thanks to<br />

everyone throughout the state who participated in Jamboree<br />

On the Air this year! Your efforts are a great way to<br />

introduce young people to Amateur Radio. This time of the<br />

year is when most of our clubs begin their annual elections<br />

for officer for the next calendar year, please give some serious<br />

thought about how you can best serve your local club<br />

or Amateur Radio group. Start making plans to attend the<br />

Utah VHF society meet in February, and don’t forget the<br />

Utah Hamfest . 73 de N5UVP.<br />

WYOMING: SM Bob Williams, N7LKH—The Wyoming Section<br />

currently is placing special emphasis on expanding and<br />

refining the Section Emergency organization. The initial<br />

objectives are to have an EC in each county and to encourage<br />

emergency support people to be members of both<br />

ARES and RACES. There have been objections by some<br />

to membership in each of these emergency organizations,<br />

and I have yet to understand why. I would appreciate hearing<br />

from anyone what the objections are because I would<br />

like to fix the problems whatever they are. In addition, we<br />

shall attempt to identify the relationship between the emergency<br />

communications volunteers from the Section Amateur<br />

Radio community and the County Emergency Management<br />

Coordinators appointed by the Wyoming Emergency<br />

Management Agency. At present it seems to be based on<br />

the individual personalities of the EMC and the EC. A series<br />

of meetings is planned over the rest of this year to<br />

work these things. The principals will generally be the Section<br />

SM, ASM, SEC, RACES Coordinator and whoever else<br />

wishes to take part.<br />

134


SOUTHEASTERN DIVISION<br />

ALABAMA: SM, Bill Cleveland, KR4TZ—ASMs: W4XI<br />

WB4GM KB4KOY. SEC: KC4PZA. STM: K4JSJ. BM:<br />

KA4ZXL. OOC: WB4GM. SGL: KU4PY. ACC: KV4CX. TC:<br />

W4OZK. PIC: KA4MGE. The Montgomery ARC will have<br />

its Hamfest on Saturday <strong>November</strong> 11, <strong>2000</strong>, at the Montgomery<br />

Coliseum. Doors will open to the public at 9:00<br />

AM. Talk-in is available from W4AP on the 146.84(-) repeater.<br />

Admission is $5.00 per adult. CAVEC Amateur<br />

Radio License exams start at 8:00 AM. For more information,<br />

please contact Dennis Rumbley, KS4UO (chairman)<br />

by phone at 334-409-9971, or by e-mail at ks4uo@arrl.net.<br />

Don’t forget <strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes is this month. The<br />

CW Sweepstakes is in the first full weekend of <strong>November</strong><br />

(Nov 4-6), and the Phone Sweepstakes is on the third full<br />

weekend in <strong>November</strong> (Nov 18-20.) For more detailed information<br />

look in the October <strong>QST</strong> on page 102 or visit the<br />

<strong>November</strong> Sweepstakes Website at http://www.arrl.org/<br />

contests. Before I end this report, since Thanksgiving is at<br />

the end of the month, I would like to thank everybody for<br />

promoting Amateur Radio and helping me with my section<br />

duties. I would like to thank my Section Staff: KC4PZA,<br />

K4JSJ, WB4GM, KU4PY, KV4CX, W4OZK, KA4MGE,<br />

KA4ZXL, W4XI, and KB4KOY. I would also like to thank<br />

some notable hams in the Section that contribute a lot to<br />

our service: WA4GQS, KC4RNF, AC4CS, AF4HE, and<br />

KE4YZK. Let’s not forget the real important people: all the<br />

active hams in the Alabama Section! And finally, I would<br />

like to thank my family and the families of my staff for your<br />

support while we try our best to contribute to the Alabama<br />

Section. God bless & 73, Bill Cleveland, KR4TZ.<br />

GEORGIA: SM: Sandy Donahue, W4RU—ASM/South Ga:<br />

Marshall Thigpen, W4IS. ASM/Legal: Jim Altman, W4UCK.<br />

SEC: Lowry Rouse, KM4Z. STM: Jim Hanna, AF4NS. SGL:<br />

Charles Griffin, WB4UVW. BM: Eddie Kosobucki, K4JNL,<br />

ACC: Susan Swiderski, AF4FO, OOC: Mike Swiderski,<br />

K4HBI. TC: Fred Runkle, K4KAZ. PIC: Matt Cook,<br />

KG4CAA. It is <strong>November</strong>, a month that has two fine events:<br />

Thanksgiving and the Lawrenceville hamfest sponsored<br />

by the Alford ARC at the Gwinnett County Fairgrounds,<br />

Nov 4-5. This has turned into Georgia’s largest and most<br />

influential ham show and shouldn’t be missed. All the manufacturers<br />

will have exhibits as well as several dealers. A<br />

huge flea market highlights the hamfest as well as forums<br />

for the ARRL, ARES, NTS and others. Also FCC enforcement<br />

guru Riley Hollingsworth, K4ZDH, will make an encore<br />

appearance answering your questions at a special<br />

forum on Saturday. Randy Bassett, KR4NQ, and his outstanding<br />

committee of Alford club volunteers are to be<br />

commended for all the hard work that goes into producing<br />

such an excellent ham radio event. Stop by the ARRL booth<br />

and say hello to W4RH and myself while you are there.<br />

On Labor Day weekend, W4NZJ and myself stopped by<br />

the West GA ARS picnic near Carrollton and thoroughly<br />

enjoyed ourselves. This club is mourning the passing of<br />

member Tony Arrington, KD4UIP. Our condolences to his<br />

family. New officers of the Bill Gremillion ARC (Newnan):<br />

Pres K4QFF, V Pres. N4HIC, Sec N9VRO, Treas K4WPM.<br />

The ARC of Savannah lost a member, Curt Spomer,<br />

WB4FMK, is a silent key. Likewise, the Ga Section sends<br />

our regrets to his family. Which brings up a reminder as<br />

we enter the holiday period. Take it easy on the Georgia<br />

roads this Thanksgiving. We want to see you again next<br />

year. 73 Sandy. Tfc (Aug): AF4NS 100, W4WXA 93,<br />

WB4GGS 93,WU4C 87, W4AET 51, K4WKT 40, AF4PX<br />

17, K4JNL 10.<br />

NORTHERN FLORIDA: SM, Rudy Hubbard, WA4PUP—<br />

ASM, Capital District: K4VRT. ASM-East Central District,<br />

ASM-Florida Crown District: N4UF. ASM-West Central District:<br />

NR2F. ASM-E Panhandle District: WA4NDA. ASM-W<br />

Panhandle District: KO4TT. ASM-Suwannee District:<br />

W2DWR, ACC: WA4B. BM: N4GMU. OOC: W4QV. PIC:<br />

KF4HFC. SEC: WA4NDA. SGL: KC4N. STM: WX4H. TC:<br />

KO4TT. Anyone interested in an ARRL appointment should<br />

contact the staff person in charge of the respective program,<br />

ie, the SEC is the one to contact for an OES. Each one is<br />

listed above as to what program they represent. In this Section,<br />

they are delegated to authority to appoint or cancel the<br />

appointments under their jurisdiction. However, the SEC is<br />

authorized to appoint DEC and EC, and the STM is authorize<br />

to appoint the NM. The PIC appoints the PIO. NOFARS<br />

member Tom Castiglia, NO4A, was named recipient of the<br />

Florida Community College at Jacksonville award for Community<br />

Service for <strong>2000</strong>. Congrats, Tom. City of Jax and JEA<br />

are installing an integrated radio system that will serve all<br />

city agencies including fire, police and JEA. Mike Key,<br />

N4GIH, is supervising construction of the system. National<br />

Weather Service office has a call sign, WX4JAX, now assigned<br />

for the Amateur Radio station. Although hurricane<br />

season so far has been a non-event for the Northern Florida<br />

Section, we may not be so fortunate between now and the<br />

end of the season. Whenever the State Emergency Operations<br />

Center in Tallahassee is activated on a level needing<br />

Amateur Radio, the Northern Florida Emergency Net (NFEN)<br />

will operate on 3950. Advance notices prior to the hurricane<br />

arriving will be given on the 3950 frequency on the NFAN<br />

net each day at 0800 Central and 0900 Eastern Time. Anyone<br />

desiring to become a Net Control Operator is urged to<br />

notify the Net Mangers K4VRT and K4JTD. We should have<br />

a Net Control Operator and an Alternate for each Net. The<br />

Net Managers themselves need some relief, so how about<br />

it Let them know you will be available. 73 de Rudy. Tfc:<br />

KF4NFP 293, KE4DNO 240, K1JPG 188, AF4PU 135, NR2F<br />

110, KE4PRB 107, K4DMH 60, AF4GF 48, K4JTD 36,<br />

AD4DO 36, KE4EZQ 35, AB4PG 32, WB2FGL 28, KB4DXN<br />

28, N9MN 25, KM4WC 24, N4JAQ 22, W8IM 16, KG4EZQ<br />

16, W4KIX 13, KJ4HS 9, WX4J 8, WB9GIU 6, KG4ELJ 3,<br />

WB2IMO 2, WA4EYU 2.<br />

PUERTO RICO: SM, Víctor Madera, KP4PQ— El programa<br />

de exámenes del ARRL/VEC se expande a toda la isla.<br />

Habrá sesiones de exámenes en Arecibo, Aguadilla, San<br />

German, Ponce, Guayama, Fajardo y Barranquitas gracias<br />

a la “Ínter” que nos ha cedido sus facilidades. Los<br />

exámenes en la UPR continúan como siempre. La actividad<br />

del “Lighthouse Weekend” que auspició el PRARL fue<br />

exitosa. Se lograron 2557 QSOs y 118 países. Felicitamos<br />

a WP3A, KP4KOE, KP4RAT, KP4EOP, KP4DX, WP4LNY,<br />

NP3IR y WP4LJG quienes operaron desde la isla de Caja<br />

de Muertos. Enviarán QSLs a todos los que la soliciten.<br />

Visitamos a Adjuntas a una actividad del grupo<br />

Radioaficionados en Acción. El modo PSK31 está tomando<br />

auge entre los radioaficionados del oeste. La actividad<br />

dedicada a Samuel Morse en Arroyo sigue progresando.<br />

Si le interesa operar desde allí en CW comuníquese con<br />

Julio, WP4LNY. Esta actividad la auspicia el PRARL, la<br />

FRA y el Municipio de Arroyo. Envíen información sobre<br />

sus intereses vía email a kp4pq@arrl.org.<br />

SOUTHERN FLORIDA: SM, Phyllisan West, KA4FZI - SEC:<br />

W4SS. STM: KJ4N. ACC: WA4AW. PIC: W4STB. TC: KI4T.<br />

OOC: K4GP. BM: KC4ZHF. SGL: KC4N. DEC/ASM: N4LEM,<br />

WB9SHT, AA4BN, KD4GR, WB2WPA. For expanded Section<br />

News, see www.sflarrl.org or request e-mail. It is with<br />

sincere regret that I must accept the resignation of Joel<br />

Kandel, KI4T, as Technical Coordinator for our section. Joel<br />

was SFL TC for the past 17 years, working hard for our section<br />

in the area of antenna zoning ordinances as well as the<br />

toughest technical problems. Joel’s business activities are<br />

very demanding. Travel outside the country as well as around<br />

the state are limiting his time and energy for ham radio activity.<br />

The section appreciates those 17 years of service, Joel.<br />

You have more that earned a break. We wish you well in<br />

your business endeavors and good health to enjoy your work<br />

and ham radio for many more years! The Indian River ARC<br />

put the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse “on-the-air” for the first<br />

time ever during the “International Lighthouses On-The-Air”<br />

special event. Using the SE call sign of N4L, they were considered<br />

rare DX because it was one of the few lighthouses in<br />

FL never yet on the air. Club members operated from COMM<br />

ONE and the club trailer. The Wellington ARC presented a<br />

timely program on protecting equipment from electrical surges<br />

and transients with MOV’s, gas discharge tubes, LC Circuits,<br />

and zener type semi-conductors. FREE MOVs and installation<br />

instructions were given to attendees! A post-blow surge<br />

protector clinic was held to determine the cause of failure in<br />

items brought in from home. Palm Beach Co ARES has incorporated<br />

PBC ARES as a 501(C)(3). Not-For-Profit corporation<br />

with a 9-member Board of directors and several committees.<br />

The Not-For-Profit status is already opening many<br />

doors, including donations of meeting/training rooms. Manny<br />

and Dave will be presenting the benefits, pitfalls, and process<br />

of incorporation at the Melbourne Section Workshop.<br />

In other emergency activities: Chris, KD4DQY, reports that<br />

Vero Beach has a new G5RV antenna up at the EOC: Broward<br />

has an upcoming airport Certification Drill, which will include<br />

all ARES/RACES members: and Lee County has boosted<br />

emergency net check-in averages to 32. Recently, ARRL<br />

approved hamfests are: WPB Repeater Association in Palm<br />

Beach Gardens Oct. 21, and Port St. Lucie ARC on Nov 11.<br />

Best wishes for a successful event to both. Don’t forget: New<br />

banners are available for use in the section by clubs and<br />

amateur groups for special events and hamfests. DECs and<br />

ASMs are: District 1, Brevard/Indian River/Osceola, N4LEM,<br />

Ray Kassis, DEC/ASM: District 2, Martin/Okeechobee/St<br />

Lucie, WB9SHT, Bruce Reid, DEC/ASM: District 3, Glades/<br />

Hendry/Palm Beach, AA4BN, Jim Sparks, DEC: District 4,<br />

Broward/Dade/Monroe(Keys), KD4GR, Jim Goldsberry, DEC/<br />

ASM: District 5, Collier/Lee/Monroe (Mainland), WB2WPA,<br />

Gary Arnold, DEC: Traffic Totals by KJ4N STM: WA9VND<br />

626, KC4ZHF 350, KB4WBY 288, KA4FZI 231, KD4HGU 164,<br />

KD4GR 158, KE4IFD 125, K4VMC (club) 105, WB4PAM 88,<br />

KD4JMV 66, K4FQU 61, W4WDN 49, KT4XK 47, WB4CSQ<br />

41, W8SZU 38, WA4EIC 32, KE4IDG 32, KG4CHW 21,<br />

KE4UOF 19, AA4BN 18, KE4WBI 17, W4WYR 15, K4OVC<br />

9, K4ENA 2. 73, Phyllisan West, KA4FZI, SM SFL.<br />

VIRGIN ISLANDS: SM, John Ellis, NP2B, St Croix— ASM:<br />

Drew, NP2E, St Thomas. ASM: Mal, NP2L, St John. SEC:<br />

Duane, NP2CY, St Thomas. PIC: Lou, KV4JC, St Croix.<br />

ACC: Debbie, NP2DJ, St Thomas. NM: Bob, VP2VI/WØDX,<br />

Tortola. VI section Website (http://www.viaccess.net/~jellis)<br />

Thursday September 8, a total of 15 people took exams on<br />

St Croix (a record) and 7 either upgraded or received new<br />

licenses. Continued interest in technical and help discussions<br />

on Caribbean Maritime Mobile Net, Sundays at 1130Z,<br />

on 7241 kHz. Bernie, WG3G, Gil, KP2U, and Carol AA2QH,<br />

providing folks using AirMail and WinLink <strong>2000</strong> with needed<br />

guidance. Lou, KV4JC, has new puppy - Curly (locally assigned<br />

call K9WAG). See Lou’s Website (the one for the<br />

Caribbean Maritime Mobile Net) at http://www.viaccess.net/<br />

~KV4JC for info and pix of Curly. Contest season soon to<br />

be upon us, let’s just get past those storms and get the<br />

antennas back up! Send section related e-mail to<br />

NP2B@atthehelm.com. St John repeater 146.63, St Thomas<br />

repeater 146.81 and St Croix machine on 147.25. Enjoy<br />

& 73, John NP2B.<br />

WEST CENTRAL FLORIDA: SM, Dave Armbrust, AE4MR,<br />

ae4mr@arrl.org, http://www.wcfarrl.org— ASM: NA4AR.<br />

ASM-Web: N4PK. ASM-Legal: K4LAW. SEC: KD4E. TC:<br />

KT4WX. BM: KE4WU. STM: AB4XK. SGL: KC4N. ACC:<br />

AC4MK. PIC: AB2V. Please join me in welcoming Dr David<br />

Colburn, KD4E, as the new Section Emergency Coordinator.<br />

Allen Turck, KE4MPQ, has resigned as SEC due to<br />

other personal commitments. Be sure to check in to the<br />

WCF Section Net on 3.911 Sundays at 7:30 PM and the<br />

Informal Net MWF 9:00 PM on 3.911. August:<br />

Net/NM QNI QTC Bulls QND Sess<br />

AIN/WA4ATF 66 3 4 97 3<br />

Polk ARES/KE4VBA 122 0 5 144 6<br />

SPARC/KF4FCW 436 32 0 818 31<br />

Turtle/KT4TD 406 77 0 482 31<br />

HCAN/KD4CQG 75 0 3 63 4<br />

FMSN/KT4PM 282 35 0 417 31<br />

TPTN/AD4IH 729 79 0 436 31<br />

QFNS/KF4KSN 189 46 0 714 31<br />

QFN/AB4XK 843 264 0 1073 62<br />

PSHR: K4SCL 146, KT4PM 140, AD4IH 139, K4RBR 139,<br />

136


AB4XK 116, KF4KSN 106, KE4VBA 101, KT4TD 101,<br />

W4AUN 99, WB2LEZ 90, AE4MR 70, SAR: AB4XK 234,<br />

K4SCL 196, AD4IH 93, KT4PM 47, KF4KSN 44, KE4VBA<br />

38, K4RBR 32, KT4TD 17, W4AUN 15, W4HCS 5, WA4ATF<br />

4, AE4MR 4, WB2LEZ 2. 73, Dave, AE4MR.<br />

SOUTHWESTERN DIVISION<br />

ARIZONA: SM, Clifford Hauser, KD6XH—Summer vacation<br />

is over, and I have gone back to work. Yes, I finally found a<br />

job and can now afford Amateur Radio activities. Rick<br />

Paquette, W7RAP, has been appointed as an assistant section<br />

manager with the purpose of coordination of VE examinations<br />

through the state. I get many calls each month asking<br />

for the next scheduled VE testing and normally don’t have<br />

the up-to-date information. Rick will be my single point of<br />

contact and will keep this data and be able to provide people<br />

with the necessary information. Please give him all the help<br />

he needs to do this important function. Rick can be reached<br />

at 520-794-0387. Ned Stearns, AA7A, has been approved<br />

for DXCC card checking. He is a member of the Central Arizona<br />

DX Association and will be available for card checking<br />

during major hamfest and other times as necessary. The<br />

Kingman hamfest was small but very nice and well done.<br />

Thanks to the Hualapai amateur radio club for a job well done.<br />

As of this date, the Old Pueblo Radio Club (OPRC) will still<br />

have their hamfest on 21 October <strong>2000</strong>. Their president,<br />

George Lynch, KA1TY, was fatally injured in a skiing accident<br />

during the summer and was the primary planner for this<br />

event. I recently received a telephone call from a new operator<br />

asking the question of why repeaters have squelch<br />

tones (PL) listed and how can he modify his radio to be able<br />

to access these repeaters. I explained the concept of tone<br />

squelch and why these different tones were necessary. Then<br />

I helped him program the proper tone into his radio memory.<br />

The point of this is that we have many new operators that<br />

need assistance and help so they can enjoy the hobby. We<br />

need to be available to help these people as necessary. This<br />

will encourage them and also keep our hobby alive. 73,<br />

Clifford Hauser, KD6XH. ATEN 724 QNI, 14 QTC; 31 sess.<br />

Tfc: K7VVC 825, W7EP 14.<br />

LOS ANGELES: SM, Phineas J. Icenbice, Jr. W6BF —<br />

Please welcome our new ACC, Bill Leslie, WA6POK. Bill is<br />

also available at wa6pok@arrl.net for those of you who<br />

want to report club activities. If you are old fashioned, Bill<br />

also has one of those PHONES (626 579 1761). Joe Cira,<br />

KB6AXK, is now re-assigned as our STM. Joe Provenva,<br />

W6UPN, w6upn@arrl.net, is our OOC, and he is doing such<br />

a great job with his crew of OOs that only one or two have<br />

strayed out of the norm in the past month. Riley is writing<br />

to a few of our locals to be certain that they understand his<br />

rules. We also have a couple of unlicensed operators stirring<br />

up the troops. Some comments have been made about<br />

an all out Federal investigation for a multitude of violations.<br />

All FCC type violations should go to Joe, our OOC. Spud,<br />

K6KH, is in charge of planning our next Los Angeles Convention.<br />

Spud and his illustrious crew will be evaluating<br />

potential- future locations such as the “Fairplex” and other<br />

sights near the Burbank airport. Any and all worthwhile suggestions<br />

are welcomed. 73 de W6BF, Phineas.<br />

SAN DIEGO: SM, Tuck Miller, NZ6T, 619-475-7333— Hi<br />

folks, and may I be one of the first to wish you a very happy<br />

Thanksgiving. Please sit back a bit, and reflect on all that<br />

we have that we are thankful for. Our families, our jobs, our<br />

friends, our hobbies. I want to thank all those who give tirelessly,<br />

day in, and day out for public service. On a sad note,<br />

Kazuo, WA6BCC, informed me that over the weekend of<br />

September 9 & 10, that he had a special Olympic event in<br />

Coronado. Some folks from the Filimars should up on Saturday,<br />

which we thank them for, however no one showed up to<br />

help out on Sunday. This is of course very disappointing.<br />

We keep telling folks how Amateur Radio can help and benefit<br />

the public, so when the time comes to shine, we need to<br />

do just that. I have always tried to be upbeat in this column,<br />

however there are times we have to tell it like it is. We need<br />

to keep involved in the public arena. Keep our service out<br />

there, where the public can see us. Show them that we have<br />

earned our right to use the bands that we do. I hope everyone<br />

had a great time at the Southwestern Division Convention<br />

in Scottsdale this past month. Next year’s convention<br />

will be held in Riverside, and then right back here in San<br />

Diego. Seems as if everyone loves coming to San Diego.<br />

Tfc: KT6A 471, KD6YJB 164, KF6YVQ 18, WA6IIK 2 PSHR:<br />

KT6A 138 KO6BU 52 Until next month... Remember, Helping<br />

Others......Always Worthwhile!! 73, Tuck, NZ6T.<br />

SANTA BARBARA: SM, Robert Griffin, K6YR, (k6yr@arrl<br />

.org)—SEC: Jack Hunter, KD6HHG (kd6hhg@arrl.net). STM:<br />

Ed Shaw, KF6SHU. (ed@radshaw.com). SGL: Paul<br />

Lonnquist, NS6V (paul@dock.net). ACC: Michael Atmore,<br />

KE6DKU (jatmore@telis.org). OOC: Howard Coleman,<br />

W6HQA (w6hqa@arrl.net). PIC: Jeff Reinhardt, AA6JR<br />

(jreinh@ix.netcom.com). TC: Warren Glenn, KM6RZ,<br />

(wglennrz@ix.netcom.com). ASM-Ventura: Don Milbury,<br />

W6YN (w6yn@arrl.net). ASM- Internet, Jack Bankson,<br />

AD6AD (ad6ad@arrl.net). DECs: Santa Barb-Dave Lamb,<br />

WA6BRW (wb6brw@arrl.net). SLO-Bill Peirce, KE6FKS<br />

(ke6fks@arrl.net) & Ven-Dave Gilmore, AA6VH (aa6vh@<br />

arrl.net). Ed Shaw, KF6SHU, in San Luis Obispo joins the<br />

ranks of the Amateur Auxiliary. Congrats on your recent OO<br />

appointment! The new ARRL W6 In-coming QSL Bureau<br />

Manager is Steve, N6QEK (neqek@arrl.net). Join the Section<br />

Reflector: Send a blank e-mail to: arrlsb-subscribe@<br />

egroups.com and be part of the Info Hotline. Receive instant<br />

updates on Section news-FREE! SB Sec Web: www.qsl.net/<br />

arrlsb/. Join in our Section NTS traffic nets: SCN slow speed<br />

NTS Net, M-F, at 1915 local on 3598 kHz & SCN/SB at 2100<br />

local on 147.000+(131.8), 224.90- (131.8) & 449.300-(131.8).<br />

PSHR/Tfc: K6YR 168/585, KF6OIF 123/78, KE6MIW 99/32,<br />

KC6NBI 111/2 & AD6LW 118/-. Rob, K6YR.<br />

WEST GULF DIVISION<br />

NORTH TEXAS: SM, Don Mathis, KB5YAM—STM:<br />

KC5OZT. BM: KC5OZT. SEC: K5MWC. SGL: N5GAR.<br />

OOC: WB5UDA.ACC: WN5PFI. ASMs: KX5K, K5RE,<br />

KK5QA, KK5NA, N5JZ, KB5LWZ, KD5HIS, AD5X, W5GPO.<br />

Visit the section Web page at (http://www.lsic.net/net/<br />

ntexas.html) for the most current information. Jerry<br />

Combest, N5JL, now has the newsletter up and going. We<br />

are working on the mail list. There are about 50 or so bad<br />

mail addresses in the list that need to be fixed/purged. Let<br />

us know if you had wanted to be on the list and are not receiving<br />

the newsletter. Had a couple of real good demonstrations<br />

this last month with ATV. I have found that ATV is a<br />

real attention getter with younger potential Hams. I am seeing<br />

some good activities in process and being planned in<br />

the section for working with school agers. I would like to<br />

salute the Plano club, among others, for their planned school<br />

activities. Not only is this area important to our hobby, it is<br />

exciting seeing all of that energy and new ideas being brought<br />

into the hobby. Had a real good meeting at the Gainsville<br />

Hamfest. Thanks, Coy. Tfc: N5JZ 684, K5NHJ 597, KC5OZT<br />

506, KB5WEE 324, W5AYX 123, WA5I 137, KC5VLW 117,<br />

N5GG 54, KB5TCH 54, KB5YAM 8, AC5UZ 4, N8QVT 1.<br />

OKLAHOMA: SM, Charlie Calhoun, K5TTT—ASMs: N6CL,<br />

W6CL. SEC: KA7GLA. ACC: KB5BOB. PIC: WA9AFM. OOC:<br />

WA9VMY. SGL: W5NZS. STM: K5KXL. I want to share a<br />

couple of stories with you this month. First, I would encourage<br />

you all to become an elmer. I had the distinct pleasure<br />

to help a new ham, program his new HT. Howard McCloud,<br />

KC5RGC, spent many hours reading the question pool into<br />

a tape recorder and preparing his student for the exam. By<br />

coincidence, I was at the testing session for my extra upgrade,<br />

when his student Mikey Reiser, KD5LPE, a 12 year<br />

old blind ham, passed his exam. It was a wonderful gift that<br />

Mikey gave Mr. McCloud and myself in return for our assistance.<br />

I know Mikey will have great pleasure from his experiences<br />

with Amateur Radio. Congratulations Mikey! My second<br />

story is one of commendation for public service. On Sep<br />

13, 18:00CDT, a vehicle was stolen in Tulsa with two infants<br />

still in the car. Hams activated almost immediately to assist<br />

the police department in locating the vehicle. Hams from all<br />

over the area assisted in the search. Every bit of information<br />

we could get from the police department encouraged us<br />

to continue the search. We set up grids and worked both<br />

stationary and moving positions until we had canvassed the<br />

entire city and surrounding areas. The search continued past<br />

4:00 AM when there were no more leads from the police and<br />

we had covered everything we could think of. The children<br />

were not found that night. Thankfully, they were discovered<br />

the following morning, unharmed, on a rural road about 90<br />

miles NE of Tulsa. Tfc: N5IKN 658, WA5OUV 604, KK5GY<br />

575, KF5A 411, WB5NKC 148, K5KXL 141, WA5IMO 122,<br />

KM5VA 99, KE5JE 93, KI5LQ 75, WB5NKD 75, W5REC 25,<br />

N5FM 2.<br />

SOUTH TEXAS: Ray Taylor, N5NAV—ASMs: NR5ED,<br />

N5WSW, W5GKH, K5DG, N5LYG, WA5UZB, KK5CA, K5EJL,<br />

W5ZX, WA5TUM, KB5AWM, WA5JYK, K5PFE, K5PNV, and<br />

K5SBU. STM: W5GKH. SEC: W5ZX. ACC: N5WSW. TC:<br />

KJ5YN. BM: W5KLV. OOC: W5JAM. SGL: K5PNV. <strong>November</strong><br />

looks promising for a feast. On August 14 at 2 PM we<br />

activated ARES for Tropical Storm Beryl as it headed for the<br />

lower Texas coast. We were honored to have Jim Haynie,<br />

W5JBP, President of ARRL, as NCS from 6 AM to 7:41 AM,<br />

August 16, when we secured the net after all the EOCs<br />

closed. Beryl went inland in Mexico just below the tip of Texas<br />

causing some flooding and heavy rains in the Texas Rio<br />

Grande Valley. We then had several forest fires in South<br />

Texas. The fire in Newton County used the services of 12<br />

hams to furnish the Red Cross communications from August<br />

30 to September 8. We used 7285 for communications into<br />

Orange Red Cross Office, however most of the communications<br />

was handled on 2 meters in the field. K5SUB, DEC for<br />

the area, was in charge. The grocery stores and cafes in the<br />

area furnished the food (anything you wanted) while HEB<br />

Food Chain furnished bottle water. The Red Cross then delivered<br />

it to the field. I would like to thank all those volunteers<br />

who worked so hard for a week, the firemen, Red Cross<br />

workers, and the ham radio operators. They deserve the highest<br />

of honors. KF5TC became a SK at 1 AM on August 15.<br />

W5CTZ became a SK at 10 PM August 23. Both were very<br />

active on the traffic nets. You should be ready for the big<br />

feast on Thanksgiving Day. If you know someone who is not<br />

as fortunate as you, share a Thanksgiving dinner with them.<br />

Have a great <strong>November</strong>. Tfc: W5SEG 839, KA5KLU 449,<br />

W5KLV 223, W5TUK 185, W5GKH 118, W5ZX 73, N5NAV<br />

38, N5OUJ 33, KØYNW 22, W5OYY 10.<br />

WEST TEXAS: SM, Charlie Royall, WB5T, 915-944-0469,<br />

WB5T@arrl.org—ASMs: Cley, K5TRW. Ron, KB5HGM.<br />

Jerome, K5IS. Fred, W6VPI. Sandy, W5MVJ. SEC: Alex,<br />

N5LRH. OOC: John, KO5D. OBM: Frank, N5WT. New Appointments:<br />

EC, Brewster Co, District 5, Dave Cockrum,<br />

N5DO. EC, El Paso Co, District 5, Lewis Maxwell, KB5HPT.<br />

Traffic report, Region 5, Cycle 1 and 2 for Aug. In 62 sessions,<br />

QTC 637, QTR 1269 minutes @ average rate of .502<br />

WTX represented 21 percent by N5XB. Proposal to be considered<br />

by amateurs in Districts 4 and 5: change the boundary<br />

between these two districts by placing Pecos Co and<br />

Terrell Co in District 5. Please send your comments to the<br />

WTX Section Manager at e-mail listed above, or by postal<br />

mail to 2063 Putter Dr, San Angelo TX 76904. See you at<br />

the Odessa Hamfest 4-5 Nov. The holiday season is fast<br />

approaching. Hope everyone enjoys a fun-filled Thanksgiving<br />

with family and friends. Until next time, 73 de Charlie,<br />

WB5T.<br />

138


Ham Ads<br />

l) Advertising must pertain to products and<br />

services which are related to Amateur Radio.<br />

2) The Ham-Ad rate for commercial firms<br />

offering products or services for sale is $1.00 per word.<br />

Individuals selling or buying personal equipment:<br />

ARRL member 50¢ per word. Non-ARRL member $1<br />

per word. Bolding is available for $1.50 a word.<br />

3) Remittance in full must accompany copy since<br />

Ham-Ads are not carried on our books. Each word,<br />

abbreviation, model number, and group of numbers<br />

counts as one word. Entire telephone numbers count<br />

as one word. No charge for postal Zip code. No cash<br />

or contract discounts or agency commission will be<br />

allowed. Tear sheets or proofs of Ham Ads cannot be<br />

supplied. Submitted ads should be typed or clearly<br />

printed on an 8 1 ⁄2" x 11" sheet of paper.<br />

4) Send ads to: the ARRL, 225 Main St.,<br />

Newington, CT 06111 ATTN: Ham Ads. Or via fax<br />

860-594-0259 or e-mail: hamads@arrl.org Payment<br />

must be included with ads (check or any major credit<br />

card accepted).<br />

5) Closing date for Ham-Ads is the 15th of the<br />

second month preceding publication date. No cancellations<br />

or changes will be accepted after this closing<br />

date. Example: Ads received September 16th through<br />

October 15th will appear in December <strong>QST</strong>. If the 15th<br />

falls on a weekend or holiday, the Ham-Ad deadline is<br />

the previous working day. Please contact Melissa<br />

Yrayta at 860-594-0231 for further information.<br />

6) No Ham-Ad may use more than 100 words. No<br />

advertiser may use more than two ads in one issue. A<br />

last name or call must appear in each ad. Mention of<br />

lotteries, prize drawings, games of chance, etc. is not<br />

permitted in <strong>QST</strong> advertising.<br />

7) New firms or individuals offering products or<br />

services for sale must check with us to determine if a<br />

production sample (which will be returned) should be<br />

submitted for examination. Dealers are exempted,<br />

unless the product is unknown to us. Check with us if<br />

you are in doubt. You must stand by and support all<br />

claims and specifications mentioned in your advertising.<br />

The publisher of <strong>QST</strong> will vouch for the integrity<br />

of advertisers who are obviously commercial in<br />

character, and for the grade or character of their<br />

products and services. Individual advertisers are not<br />

subject to scrutiny.<br />

The American Radio Relay League does not<br />

discriminate in its advertising on the basis of race,<br />

color, religion, age, sex, sexual orientation, marital<br />

status, or national origin.<br />

The League reserves the right to decline or<br />

discontinue advertising for any other reason.<br />

<strong>QST</strong> HAM ADS ON THE WEB — UPDATED MONTHLY<br />

http://www.arrl.org/ads/ham-ads.html<br />

SELL YOUR RADIO TODAY! Check out<br />

RADIOS ON-LINE on the ARRL web site:<br />

http://www.arrl.org/ads/RadiosOnline/<br />

CLUBS/HAMFESTS/NETS<br />

BICYCLE MOBILE HAMS OF AMERICA. We mix<br />

hamming with biking! VHF and HF. 450 members in<br />

46 states, 6 countries. 10th annual forum at<br />

HamVention. To receive more info., sample<br />

newsletter, e-mail your street address to<br />

menicko@avalon.net. Or write to BMHA, Mike<br />

Nickolaus, NF0N, 316 East 32nd St.-Q South Sioux<br />

City, NE 68776.<br />

COUNTY HUNTERS: Worked All Texas Award<br />

Beautiful Certificate. Temple Amateur Radio Club<br />

P.O. Box 616, Temple, TX 76503 www.tarc.org<br />

FRIEND OF BILL W. - Join HAAM net Saturdays at<br />

12:30 Eastern on 14.290; Sundays at 09:00 Pacific<br />

on 7.283.5; Sundays at 09:30 Pacific on 14.340/2.<br />

K6LX.<br />

JOIN the Lambda Amateur Radio Club (LARC)<br />

since 1975, the only open and visible public serviceoriented<br />

ham club for gay and lesbian hams. Monthly<br />

newsletter, HF skeds, internet listserv and IRC,<br />

hamfest meetings, chapters, DXpeditions. Write<br />

LARC, POB 56069, Philadelphia, PA 19130-6069 or<br />

e-mail: lambda-arc@geocities.com<br />

MARCO: Medical Amateur Radio Council, operates<br />

daily and Sunday nets. Grand Rounds: 14.308 MHz<br />

Sunday mornings at 10:00 am Eastern time.<br />

Medically-oriented amateurs (physicians, dentists,<br />

veterinarians, nurses, therapists, etc.) invited to join.<br />

Inquiries to: MARCO, 2650 Head of The Tide Rd, RR<br />

4, Belfast, Maine 04915-9624. Web:http://<br />

www.smbs.buffalo.edu/med/marco/<br />

QCWA—Quarter Century Wireless Association. If<br />

you were first licensed 25 years ago and currently<br />

licensed you are eligible. Be one of us! Write<br />

Dept. T, 159 E 16th Ave, Eugene, OR 97401-<br />

4017. Call 541-683-0987.<br />

RAINBOW AMATEUR RADIO ASSOCIATION - The<br />

gay/lesbian club. Active weekly H.F. nets, monthly<br />

newsletter, e-mail reflector, web page: www.rara.org.<br />

Chat Room. Privacy respected. E-mail: rara@qsl.net<br />

or P.O. Box 191, Chesterland, OH 44026-0191.<br />

THE ARRL LETTER — The League’s news digest for<br />

active amateurs, professionally produced and edited<br />

and now available in a weekly electronic edition via<br />

the World Wide Web at http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter<br />

THE Veteran Wireless Operators Association, a 74-<br />

year old, non-profit organization of communications<br />

professionals invites your inquiries and application<br />

for membership. Write VWOA, Edward Pleuler, Jr.,<br />

Secretary, 46 Murdock Street, Fords, NJ 08863. Visit<br />

our web site for activities, history, membership: http:/<br />

/www.vwoa.org<br />

ANTIQUE/VINTAGE/CLASSIC<br />

ANTIQUE RADIO CLASSIFIED. Free sample copy!<br />

Antique radio’s largest-circulation monthly magazine.<br />

Old radios, TVs, ham equip., 40s & 50s radios,<br />

telegraph, books & more. Ads & articles. Free 20-<br />

word ad monthly. Subscribe today. Six-month trial:<br />

$19.95. Yearly rates: $39.49 ($57.95 by 1st Class).<br />

Foreign: write. ARC, PO Box 802-B22A, Carlisle, MA<br />

01741. Phone: 978-371-0512, Fax: 978-371-7129,<br />

Web: www.antiqueradio.com<br />

BROADCAST MICROPHONES and accessories (call<br />

letter plates, stands) wanted: early carbon,<br />

condenser, ribbon, dynamic models. Cash or trade.<br />

James Steele, Box 620, Kingsland, GA 31548. 912-<br />

729-6106. jsteele@k-bay106.com; http://www.kbay106.com/mics.htm<br />

CLASSIC RADIOS FOR SALE: Good used<br />

equipment wanted. The Radio Finder, 11803 Priscilla<br />

Lane, Plymouth, MI 48170. Tel/Fax 1-734-454-1890.<br />

finder@radiofinder.com or http://<br />

www.radiofinder.com<br />

MANUALS FOR MOST OLD HAM GEAR. Best<br />

source for 20 years and now at lower prices! Most<br />

USA made ham gear. Our catalog “P” ($1 USA/$3<br />

elsewhere) required to order or get free info via<br />

internet at www.hi-manuals.com. Hi-Manuals, Box P-<br />

802, Council Bluffs, IA 51502.<br />

RARE <strong>QST</strong> COLLECTIBLES: 7 hard bound volumes<br />

from Nov. 1920 thru Dec. 1926. In good condition.<br />

Best offer over $900. Also rare IRE collectibles from<br />

Aug. 1918 thru Dec. 1948. Best offer $900. Roland<br />

Kissler W7JVB, 2040 S. Division, Moses Lake WA<br />

98837. 509-765-4240.<br />

“Repair - Restoration - Tube-type receivers,<br />

transmitters, amplifiers. 45 years experience.”<br />

N4PZ/W9OJI, 815-734-4255.<br />

TELEGRAPH KEYS wanted by collector. Bugs and<br />

unusual or unique straight keys or sounders, and<br />

tube electronic keyers. Also pre1950 callbooks.<br />

Vince Thompson, K5VT, 3410 N. 4th Ave., Phoenix,<br />

AZ 85013. 602-840-2653.<br />

TELEGRAPH MUSEUM/COLLECTOR’S<br />

INFORMATION: http://www.w1tp.com<br />

WANTED: Electronic estates, hi-fi, broadcasting.<br />

Cash paid. KB8CCY, 419-782-8591.<br />

WANTED: Electronic estates purchased. Ham<br />

radio, tubes, broadcasting, Hi-Fi, transformers,<br />

military, etc. Top cash paid! McDaniel 800-251-<br />

5454.<br />

WANTED: pre-1925 battery radios, crystal sets, and<br />

vacuum tubes. Also early telegraph keys and pre-<br />

1900 electrical apparatus. Jim Kreuzer, N2GHD, Box<br />

398, Elma, NY 14059. 716-681-3186.<br />

wireless@pce.net<br />

WANTED: Western Electric audio equipment.<br />

Amplifiers, pre-amps, tubes, speakers, parts,<br />

mixing boards, etc. McDaniel 800-251-5454.<br />

150


QSL CARDS / CALLSIGN NOVELTIES<br />

100 QSL Cards $8.50 postpaid. Send Stamp for<br />

Sample. ARTIST, P. O. Box 148652, Nashville, TN<br />

37214.<br />

AFFORDABLE QSL CARDS, available in small<br />

quantities with lots of options. Parma Graphics,<br />

K2BKA, 5 Rondout Harbor, Port Ewen, NY 12466.<br />

914-339-1996.<br />

BRASS BELT BUCKLE with your call letters. Raised/<br />

cast - not engraved. Each one-One of a kind.<br />

View at www.urcall.net<br />

CALL SIGN NAME BADGES. Club logos our specialty.<br />

Certified ARRL engraver. Capital Engraving, 3109 Marigold<br />

St. Longview, Washington 98632-3415. Al, WA7UQE.<br />

capengrave@kalama.com. http://www.open.org/capengrv<br />

DOC’S QSL CARDS. Full color cards - send<br />

SASE for samples & price list. 10630 Lone Star<br />

Way, Knoxville, TN 37932. 865-691-8288, or<br />

docs@icx.net. http://www.user.icx.net/~docs<br />

ENGRAVlNG: Callsign/name badges by WØLQV.<br />

Send for price list. Box 4133, Overland Park, KS<br />

66204-0133. E-mail: lqveng@juno.com<br />

FREE SAMPLES. The QSLMAN®, Box 73, Monetta,<br />

SC 29105. Phone/FAX (803) 685-7117 anytime.<br />

Email: w4mpy@qslman.com. Always 100%<br />

satisfaction guarantee on anything we do. Check the<br />

web site at: http://www.qslman.com<br />

MARCUM’S QSLs: info/order:<br />

www.bisonweb.com/marcumsqsls or POB 456,<br />

Forest Ranch, CA 95942. 1-800-390-2220.<br />

QSL CARDS: Fast quality service. Samples $1<br />

(refundable with order). WordWise Services, 107<br />

Giles Court, Newark, DE 19702.<br />

QSL SAMPLES $1 refundable, Bud Smith, Box<br />

1948, Blaine, WA 98231.<br />

QSLKIT at home micro-perf printing on your ink<br />

jet printer. CardBox filing systems, index cards<br />

and more. www.HamStuff.com by W7NN.<br />

QSLs - Many designs! Custom cards, “Eyeball”<br />

cards. Samples $1, Larger pack $2. Charlie Hansen,<br />

NØTT, 8655 Hwy D, Napoleon, MO 64074.<br />

QUALITY QSLs By WX9X from $18.95. See our<br />

display ad in this issue.<br />

SKYWARN, RACES, MARS patches, decals, caps,<br />

more. Write/fax for info. CAPS Unlimited, PO Box<br />

460118C, Garland, TX 75046. 972-276-0413. E-<br />

Mail:k5hgl@home.com, www.skywarnsupply.com<br />

TRAIN QSL’S www.bisonweb.com/marcumsqsls;<br />

1-800-390-2220.<br />

PROPERTY/VACATION/RENTALS<br />

A RETIREMENT AND FUN HOME FOR SALE!<br />

Located in Mount Dora, Florida, in the hills and lakes<br />

of Lake County a few short miles to all Central<br />

Florida. Attractions. Disney World, Universal, and<br />

Space Center. A prime Central Florida. Location with<br />

a very low HF noise level. 4 br. 2 Bath. 2600 sq.ft.<br />

Living. Completely operational Den / Shack. 400 sq.ft<br />

75 Alumni-tower fold down with TA-53m, and GAP<br />

Challenger vertical. Kenwood TS-940, Henry 3K<br />

Ultra. $225,000. Lou W4EKU. Email:<br />

n4wjv@magicnet.net Phone: 352-383-8457.<br />

ANTENNA FARM for sale. Sunny SE New Mexico<br />

3800’ elevation. 8 Beverages, 3 Towers, 160m<br />

Hloop. 1800sq. ft. 3 br 2ba, 720 sq. ft. garage/shop/<br />

shack. W5DB dbandsjb@gte.net<br />

BAHAMAS RENTAL: Abaco villa w/station. N4JQQ,<br />

407-894-2519 or strutledge@aol.com<br />

BAHAMAS, Treasure Cay Resort. Beach house/<br />

contest station rental. Many world records. 3 BR/2<br />

Bath. KC4SZE, 256-734-7300 or<br />

kennethh@hiwaay.net<br />

BLUE RIDGE MT. of VA. - Build your vacation QTH<br />

on a beautiful mountain top near Blue Ridge<br />

Parkway - Floyd, VA. Info www.public.usit.net/dlarsen<br />

or www.bfrog.com/zig/land/ E-mail: kk4ww@fairs.org.<br />

Dave, KK4WW, phone 540-763-2321.<br />

DXshack FG, J6, 3W, XU, XW. TRX+kWAMP+Beam<br />

ANTs & Bed. Yonezuka, JA2EZD URL://qth.com/<br />

dxshack. DXshack@wwdx.net<br />

152


154<br />

Exceptional Ham Home in beautiful Sun City West,<br />

AZ. Complete with tower and KLM KT34XA beam.<br />

Single level, 3 BR 2 BTH, 2442 sq. ft. upgraded<br />

home w/ a double garage on a large cul-de-sac lot.<br />

Bright open “country” kitchen, new interior paint and<br />

private hot tub make this home unique. Big ham<br />

shack - $169,900. Info: Richard Haworth W7MDQ<br />

(Realtor), 800-967-0383 (24 hrs.) Prudential<br />

Preferred Properties. Email: rhaworthaz@aol.com<br />

For Sale: Beautifully maintained 2BR, 2BA lake-front<br />

HAM-QTH in Inverness, FL. Safe and peaceful area.<br />

72' crank-up with TH11DX, 2-el Yagi 40m, slooper on<br />

80 on 2 acres,$145,000. For details call Erik W4ADP<br />

first three weeks in Nov. or fax (352) 637-4886,<br />

E-mail: seicom@swissonline.ch<br />

FOR SALE: Exceptional Ham home in Sun City<br />

West, AZ. 1391 sq.ft., 2 BR, 1 3/4 BTH, dbl garage.<br />

Del Webb retirement community. New roof, new<br />

paint in and out, new carpet & new dishwasher. Tri-<br />

Ex 54' crank up tower installed. Citrus trees in large<br />

back yard. $125,900. Info: Richard Haworth,<br />

W7MDQ (Realtor), 1-800-967-0383 (24 hrs.)<br />

E-mail: rhaworthaz@aol.com.<br />

Prudential<br />

Preferred Properties.<br />

HAM VACATION-Rent 4 bedroom Chalet in<br />

Spectacular Colorado Rockies. IC-756 (HF) & IC-<br />

706IIG (6&2) plus Alpha 91b, 40, 6, 2 meter<br />

beams. Log Periodic and slopers. 160 & 80. $550<br />

weekly. 55¢ stamp for brochure. WØLSD, Ken,<br />

Box 156, Buena Vista, CO 81211. 719-395-6547.<br />

diverken@chaffee.net.<br />

KH6SQ - http://www.seaqmaui.com<br />

P49V/AI6V’s ARUBA Cottage for rent; 2 bedrooms,<br />

rig and antennas. For info write: Carl Cook, 2191<br />

Empire Ave., Brentwood, CA 94513.<br />

St. Esprit, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. QRP (price,<br />

too) hill acreage, sandy ocean beach and lake, Fleur<br />

d’Lis Trail. N1XOR, Box 1164, Wellfleet, MA 02667.<br />

508-349-3209<br />

SUN CITY AZ: Choice 1832 sq. ft. home, 3 br, 2<br />

ba, with a great hobby room and workshop space.<br />

Free-standing aluminum tower, multiband beam,<br />

etc. America’s premiere 55-and-over community.<br />

Don Steele, Ken Meade Realty, 800-977-1776.<br />

www.VE3PFC@ARRL.NET<br />

TURKS AND CAICOS “HAM-LET” VACATION:<br />

House with station located Providenciales hillside<br />

above ocean. Jody Millspaugh, 649-946-4436 or Box<br />

694800, Miami, Florida 33269 USA. E-mail:<br />

jody@tciway.tc<br />

GENERAL<br />

#1 CALLSIGN CD-ROM. “HamCall” contains U.S.<br />

and International callsigns with lat/long, grid square,<br />

e-mail addresses and more. Updated monthly.<br />

Check/Visa/MC. $50, $5 ship/handling. Buckmaster,<br />

6196 Jefferson Hwy., Mineral, VA 23117. 800-282-<br />

5628 or http://www.buck.com/haminfo.html<br />

“EVERYTHING FOR THE MORSE ENTHUSIAST.”<br />

Morse Express. Keys, keyers, kits, books. 303-752-3382.<br />

http://www.MorseX.com<br />

<strong>2000</strong> Callbook CD-ROM Distributor “59(9) DX<br />

Report” Great price and service on genuine “Flying<br />

Horse” CD $39 to US, $40 to VE, $41 to DX. Order<br />

online http://www.members.aol.com/the599rpt/dx.htm<br />

or E-Mail: the599rpt@aol.com; write P. O. Box 73,<br />

Spring Brook, NY 14140 Tel/Fax - (716) 677-2599.<br />

Check/Visa/MC<br />

2001 CALLBOOK CD-ROM “Flying Horse”: $38.95<br />

POSTPAID (mid-<strong>November</strong>). ARRL: 2001 Handbook<br />

- $30.95; Antenna Book - $28.95. All ARRL items<br />

DISCOUNTED: ,<br />

760-789-3674. Duane Heise, AA6EE, 16832<br />

Whirlwind, Ramona CA 92065. Check/VISA/MC.<br />

http://www.radiodan.com/aa6ee/<strong>2000</strong><br />

40’ Aluminum tower, HyGain TH3-MK 3, Rotator,<br />

cables. K1NJE (781)-593-4834<br />

59(9) DX REPORT Weekly DX and Contest bulletin. SASE<br />

for sample. P. O. Box 73, Spring Brook, NY 14140.<br />

A BEST BUY! Paddlette K-4 iambic keyer @ $48.95<br />

+ $2.25 shipping. 12 functions include two 50<br />

character memories and 4 year battery life. See July<br />

<strong>2000</strong> <strong>QST</strong> page 53 for details. Paddlette Co. P. O.<br />

Box 6036 Edmonds, WA 98026. E-mail:<br />

bham379627@aol.com. Tel: 425-743-1429.<br />

ACOM COMMUNICATIONS Authorized SGC Dealer<br />

order your SG 2020 now for the Holidays. Email:<br />

ACOMATI@USNETWAY.COM for 12V accessories &<br />

used gear. Orders 800-699-5158<br />

ALUMINUM CHASSIS AND CABINET KITS. UHF-<br />

VHF Antenna Parts, Catalog E-mail:<br />

k3iwk@flash.net or http://www.flash.net/~k3iwk


Anderson Powerpole and OEM power connectors.<br />

MasterCard/Visa www.powerwerx.com<br />

ANTENNA DESIGN BOOK, 140 pages, helical, loop<br />

yagi, beams, loops, short antennas, flat tops, and VLF<br />

projects, $12.95. R.A.C., POB 37, Clarksville, AR 72830.<br />

ANTENNA HARDWARE - S.S. “U” bolts, aluminum<br />

saddles, element and boom plates, S.S. hose<br />

clamps. Write for list to Harbach Electronics,<br />

WA4DRU, 2318 S. Country Club Road, Melbourne,<br />

FL 32901-5809. http://www.harbach.com<br />

APPLE I Microcomputer wanted for museum.<br />

KK4WW, 540-763-3311.<br />

ARRL, RSGB, GORDON WEST BOOKS,<br />

CALLBOOK CDs, Code Keys, Oscillators, etc.<br />

Discounts on all. Free catalog. Only $0.75 handling<br />

per order plus actual shipping. Credit cards<br />

accepted. Worldwide service. JWO SERVICES, 12<br />

Hickory Place, Camp Hill, PA 17011; On line catalog,<br />

easy to use shopping cart at www.jwoservices.com.<br />

E-Mail: johnw3is@igateway.com. Call 3-10 p.m.<br />

Eastern, Phone (717)-731-4747; Fax (717)-730-<br />

9373.<br />

ASTRON POWER SUPPLY, Brand new w/warranty,<br />

RS-20m $99, RS-35m $145, RS-50m $209, RS-70m<br />

$249, SS-25m $122, SS-30m $135. Call for other<br />

models, 626-286-0118 or sales@aventrade.com;<br />

www.aventrade.com<br />

ATTENTION SB-200 & SB-220 OWNERS: Restore<br />

and up-grade your tired old amplifier with our parts<br />

and kits. Power supply boards, soft keys, soft starts,<br />

new fans & motors, many more items. Write for<br />

details. Please specify the model. Harbach<br />

Electronics, WA4DRU, 2318 S. Country Club Road,<br />

Melbourne, FL 32901-5809. http://www.harbach.com<br />

ATTENTION YAESU FT-102. Expert repairs. Over<br />

6000 hours servicing the 102. Reasonable rates.<br />

Call evenings, Mal, NC4L, 954-961-2034.<br />

ATTN: CW OPERATORS - Still available! Super<br />

CMOS III Semi-Kit, same features as Logikey K-3.<br />

SASE for details to Idiom Press, 95441-1025.<br />

ATV Video Test Pattern Generators with Character<br />

ID, composite and S-video outputs, audio tone. Many<br />

options. Other video products and kits also available.<br />

Tom Gould, WB6P, GEKCO Labs, Issaquah, WA.<br />

888-435-7221. www.gekco.com<br />

AVVid is an authorized Kenwood and Icom service<br />

center for warranty and non-warranty repairs.<br />

Reasonable rates and fast turnaround. E-Mail to<br />

clif@avvid.com or call 800-214-5779. AVVid, 222 N.<br />

Story Road, Suite 128, Irving, TX 75061.<br />

BATTERY: Sealed lead acid/gel cell and NiMH at<br />

wholesale price. 0.5AH to 100AH, Nexcell NiMH AA<br />

1400mah $2, AAA 600mah $2. 626-286-0118;<br />

www.aventrade.com<br />

Browse our web site and check out the “Monthly<br />

Special” TDL Technology, Inc., www.zianet.com/tdl.<br />

CASH FOR COLLINS. SM-1, 2, 3; 312A-1, 2; 55G-1;<br />

399C-1; KWM-380; 62S-1; KWM-1; 302C-3; 51S-1;<br />

75S-3C; 32S-3A; buy any Collins equipment. Leo,<br />

KJ6HI, ph/fax 310-670-6969. radioleo@earthlink.net<br />

CONTESTER laminated keyboard overlays, QSL<br />

return envelopes, DX Edge and more.<br />

www.HamStuff.com by W7NN.<br />

CQing all DXers, if E & F skip makes your day! Then<br />

check out G & H. For a free tract about tuning in -<br />

Self Ministries, P.O.B. 117, Bristolville, OH 44402<br />

USA.<br />

DIGITAL FIELD strength meters: http://<br />

www.digifield.com<br />

DUSTCOVERS: Sturdy plastic dustcovers for<br />

various cw paddles with callsign engraved. $17<br />

includes S&H. Larry Stamm 28 Topton Rd. Kutztown,<br />

PA 19530 http://www.8.bcity.com/covers<br />

DWM COMMUNICATIONS-SASE brings catalog or<br />

visit: http://www.qth.com/dwm<br />

ELECTRIC RADIO Magazine in our twelfth year.<br />

Articles on vintage ham and military gear, repair/<br />

restoration, history, and AM operation. Large<br />

classified section. $3 for a sample copy, ER, 14643<br />

County Road G, Cortez, CO 81321.<br />

ELECTRON TUBES. Bought and sold. Large<br />

inventory equals fast delivery. Daily Electronics,<br />

10914 NE 39th St. Ste. B-6, Vancouver, WA 98682.<br />

800-346-6667, fax 360-896-5476.<br />

daily@worldaccessnet.com<br />

Electronic Kits/Components/Software - Amateur<br />

radio, internet broadcaster, fiber optic, voice<br />

changers. Diodes, transistors. Schematic / PCB<br />

software. Call J-Tron 888-595-8766, www.j-tron.com<br />

156


158<br />

For Sale: Microwave test equipment. HP8620A<br />

sweep oscillator with HP8621B/86340A 3.2-6.5Ghz<br />

$400, HP5245L frequency counter with HP5254B .2-<br />

3Ghz and HP5255A 3-12.4Ghz plug-ins $700,<br />

Boonton 82AD modulation meter AM/FM 10-<br />

1200Mhz $500, Wavetek 1062 0-400 Mhz sweep<br />

oscillator $500. 219-277-1786 WA9PYH 46637.<br />

FOR SALE: New O.R.P. plus $450; Heathkit SB634<br />

station console $50; Heathkit 2036 power supply<br />

$25. W7OUW, 503-982-0401.<br />

FRACTAL ANTENNAS! Web exclusive ham<br />

articles from pioneer N1IR. See ham page at<br />

http://www.fractenna.com.<br />

FREE Ham Gospel Tracts; youth leaders needed<br />

for national outreach. SASE, W1REZ, P. O. Box<br />

8, Harmony, ME 04942.<br />

FREE!!! Ham Radio and other CD-Roms & Software<br />

disk catalog. MOM ‘N’ POP’S SOFTWARE, P. O. Box<br />

15003-HA, Springhill, FL 34604-0111. 1-352-688-<br />

9108. momnpop@gate.net<br />

FREE: Ham Radio Gospel Tracts, SASE. KW3A, 265<br />

West Ave., Springfield, PA 19064.<br />

GE RADIOS: Mastr II 110w VHF continuous duty<br />

repeater 44” cabinet $1600. Mastr II 100w UHF mobile<br />

repeater $650. Mastr II 100w 42 to 50mc mobiles $135<br />

each. Delta SX 110w VHF wide spaced mobiles $225<br />

each. Motorola Radios: Mitrek 110w mobiles 40 to 50mc<br />

$135 each. Micor 100w mobiles 42 to 50mc $85 each.<br />

Terms of Sale. Prepaid Orders Only. No credit cards, No<br />

C.O.D.’s. All prices plus shipping. NH Communications<br />

Co. P.O. Box 5342, Manchester, NH 03108. Tel: 603-<br />

668-3004.<br />

GREAT CIRCLE MAPS computer generated for your<br />

exact QTH, $20 ppd. worldwide. Printouts $12 ppd.<br />

SASE for info. Bill Johnston, K5ZI, Box 640, Organ,<br />

NM 88052. 505-382-7804.<br />

HALLICRAFTERS Service Manuals. Amateur and SWL.<br />

Write for prices. Specify model numbers desired. Ardco<br />

Electronics, P.O. Box 95, Dept. Q, Berwyn, IL 60402.<br />

HEATHKIT AMATEUR RADIO REPAIR by RTO<br />

Electronics, 7280 Territorial Road, Benton Harbor, MI<br />

49022. 616-468-7780. E-mail:<br />

hamtech@rtoham.com. www.rtoham.com<br />

Heathkit, Yaesu, Kenwood repair, Ed, WA1LJY,<br />

616-429-4295.<br />

HEATHKITS WANTED: Top dollar paid for<br />

unassembled kits. Michael Seedman, 847-831-8823<br />

eve., or mseedman@interaccess.com<br />

HEATHKITS WANTED: Unassembled kits,<br />

catalogs, manuals and older gear. Bill, WA8CDU,<br />

616-375-7978. billrobb@net-link.net<br />

Hygain TX2 antenna Rotor with 100ft of brand new<br />

RG8U and 100ft of heavy duty Control cable $450. 3<br />

Hygain antennas for 10, 15 and 20 meters TH7DXX,<br />

TH6DXX and a 4 Element. All plus shipping 321-725-<br />

0011.<br />

Icom 765 with CR-282 High Stability Crystal, CW<br />

Filter, SM-8 Mike. Recently serviced and updated by<br />

Icom. One owner, mint condition, $1100; K7OM, 360-<br />

417-5505; k7om@prodigy.net<br />

ICOM repair most ICOM radios COMTEK<br />

w7jv@aol.com. Kuni, 360-779-9730<br />

IC-R100 Scanner 0.1-1856 MHZ All mode except<br />

sideband receives cellular accessories and manual<br />

included. $250 wb8zir@freeway.net 517-471-5133<br />

INTERNATIONAL RADIO (Service Division) offers<br />

kits that add new features to your rig! Also<br />

repairs, alignments of Kenwood, Icom, Yaesu,<br />

Atlas equipment. 1118 Raymond Ave., Fort<br />

Pierce, FL 34950. intlradio@juno.com or 561-489-<br />

6302. http://www.qth.com/irsd<br />

K8CX Ham Gallery http://hamgallery.com<br />

KA1INX - www.recycledradio.com<br />

KENWOOD PS940 with Antenna Tuner Speech<br />

Processor and extras, bought HAM-FEST, untested<br />

other interests now. First $950 takes all. 1239 Bluestone<br />

Drive, Bethlehem PA 18017. 610-867-5983 after 6pm.<br />

LEARN CODE by Hypnosis, http://www.qth.com/<br />

cweasy/ or 800-425-2552.<br />

Low Band Dxers. K1FZ receive antenna transformers.<br />

Efficient models for Pennant, EWE, Flag and<br />

Beverages. See web site for more information.<br />

www.qsl.net/k1fz/ Email: k1fz@agate.net Phone<br />

(207) 338-0474<br />

MACINTOSH ham logging program on CD-ROM.<br />

http://www.peachtree-solutions.com<br />

MFJ ALS600 no tune solid state 600 watt HF amplifier. Mint<br />

condition. $750. NN8R, 419-332-0607 before 9 pm ET.


160<br />

MORSE 0-20 WPM 90 days guaranteed!<br />

Codemaster V for IBM compatible PC $29.95. Morse<br />

Express, 800-238-8205. http://www.MorseX.com<br />

PACE Soldering/Desoldering: Replacement<br />

parts, tips, new systems for SMT and Thru-hole<br />

PCB repair are in stock! Also a stocking<br />

distributor of a wide assortment of solders,<br />

fluxes, cutters and hand tools. Technimark, Inc.<br />

847-639-6324. www.technimark-inc.com<br />

PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS for Amateur Radio<br />

projects. Internet: www.cl.ais.net/farcir. E-mail:<br />

farcir@ais.net. List SASE. FAR Circuits, 18N640<br />

Field Ct., Dundee, IL 60118.<br />

ROSS $$$$ Used Specials: Kenwood, LH-4, $22.50;<br />

MB-4, $10.00; PG-3D, $13.50; Yaesu, FP-301, $90.00;<br />

S72, $30.00; E-72L, $25.00; NC-29, $45.00; Icom, 701-<br />

PS, $90.00; AT-100, $249.00; AEA, AT-1000; $200.00<br />

Call or visit our Web page for complete list and more<br />

Specials http://www.rossdist.com Phone (208) 852-<br />

0830 All prices Cash FOB Preston, Ross Distributing<br />

Company, 78 South State Preston, Idaho 83263<br />

Russian Telegraph Keys direct from Ukraine $18.<br />

WB0UYQ - www.qsl.net/kc0afx or jbide@lisco.net<br />

SX88 HALLICRAFTERS receiver wanted. Jim,<br />

W6OU, 714-528-5652.<br />

TELEGRAPH KEYS wanted by collector. Bugs and<br />

unusual or unique straight keys or sounders, and<br />

tube electronic keyers. Also pre1950 callbooks.<br />

Vince Thompson, K5VT, 3410 N. 4th Ave., Phoenix,<br />

AZ 85013. 602-840-2653.<br />

The Dxer’s Control Panel. http://www.HAMDX.com<br />

TRIBANDER COMPARISON REPORT: Find out the<br />

real lowdown on HF antenna performance. K7LXC &<br />

NØAX test the KT34XA, TH7, TH11, C-3 Skyhawk and<br />

more. Over 60 pages. $17 + $3 s/h. CHAMPION<br />

RADIO PRODUCTS, www.championradio.com, 888-<br />

833-3104.<br />

TRYLON SELF-SUPPORTING TOWERS: Steel<br />

towers available up to 96 feet. Terrific value and<br />

reliabilty. The popular T-200 is 96 feet and is only<br />

$1974. CHAMPION RADIO PRODUCTS,<br />

www.championradio.com, 888-833-3104.<br />

TUBES for sale, all kinds. Send SASE for price availability.<br />

K9GTK, 2932 W. 99th St., Evergreen Park, IL 60805.<br />

Phone/fax 708-423-0528. E-mail: tivas@xnet.com<br />

Tubes for sale: New m/p of 6js6c $70.00. M/p of<br />

ge 6jb6a or 6146w $38.00. Other amateur radio<br />

tubes are available. Bob Bieker n9tew E-mail:<br />

tubes@internetbci.com Web-site<br />

www.internetbci.net/tubes Ph: 219-924-0945<br />

TUBES WANTED: Highest prices paid or will trade<br />

for all types of industrial, receiving and transmitter<br />

tubes. D & C Electronics, 3089 Deltona Blvd., Spring<br />

Hill, FL 34606. 800-881-2374.<br />

TUBES WANTED: I pay cash or trade for all types of<br />

transmitting or special purpose tubes. Mike Forman,<br />

1472 MacArthur Blvd., Oakland, CA 94602. 510-530-<br />

8840.<br />

VIBROPLEX BUGS with NY address wanted for<br />

private collection. Especially want bugs with 2.5” or<br />

3” wide base or S/N under 100,000. Also want Martin<br />

or Bunnell-Martin Flash Keys, any old or unusual key<br />

or bug, and collections from estates. Randy Cole,<br />

KN6W, 4540 Fairway, Dallas, TX 75219. 214-521-<br />

7041 or cole@netcom.com<br />

WANTED: 110/220 Vac Leese-Nevelle type motor driver<br />

alternator. Any condition Bill KA7VJO 909-481-7884<br />

WANTED: 75A-1 FRONT PANEL - mint condition.<br />

Attached chassis OK - working or not. No cabinet.<br />

w6pbi@juno.com or 775-265-3966<br />

Wanted: Audio tubes: WE 300B, 274A/B, 262B, 211,<br />

212, 845, 6550, EL34, 12AX7, 6922, etc. John Birck.<br />

(801) 224-1216; fax (801) 224-6059.<br />

WANTED: Hi capacity 12 volt solar panels for<br />

repeater. kk4ww@fairs.org or 540-763-2321.<br />

WANTED: National NC-240D, National NC-183D, National<br />

NC-400, Multi-Elmac PMR 8 and Multi-Elmac AF 68, KB0W,<br />

(916) 635-4994. frankdellechaie@sprintmail.com<br />

WANTED: Tube Testers: TV-2C/U; WE KS-15750-L1;<br />

WESTON 686; Hickok 539C, & RD1575; Triplett<br />

3444, Tektronix 570 curve tracer; RCA WT-100A.<br />

John Birck. (801) 224-1216; fax (801) 224-6059.<br />

WANTED: Tubes. Nobody pays more or faster than<br />

us! Mike Forman, 1472 MacArthur Blvd, Oakland, CA<br />

94602, 510-530-8840.<br />

WANTED: VCO BOARD (0129-#PO162) FOR<br />

ALINCO DR-110T VHF FM Transceiver. W4NDV,<br />

803-534-8865.<br />

WB4AEJ - http://www.hamsearch.com


Index of Advertisers<br />

ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT STAFF<br />

John Bee, N1GNV, Advertising Manager<br />

Hanan Rayyashi, KB1AFX, Production Coordinator<br />

Melissa Yrayta, Advertising Assistant<br />

Direct Line: 860-594-0207 Fax: 860-594-0259<br />

e-mail: ads@arrl.org<br />

http://www.arrl.org/ads<br />

Active: 146<br />

ADI Communications: 8<br />

Advanced Battery Systems, Inc: 155<br />

Advanced Specialties: 145<br />

Alinco Electronics, Inc: 11<br />

All Electronics Corp: 158<br />

Alpha Delta Communications: 132, 142<br />

Amateur & Advanced: 145<br />

Amateur Electronic Supply LLC: 137, 139, 141<br />

Am-Com: 116<br />

ARRL: 118, 140, 144, 155, 157, 164, 166, 170,<br />

171, 172<br />

Ameritron: 167<br />

Antique Electronic Supply: 148<br />

Antique Radio Classified: 122<br />

Associated Radio Communication: 154<br />

Atomic Time: 153<br />

Austin Amateur Radio Supply: 162, 163<br />

Autek Research: 153<br />

Better RF Co., The: 130<br />

Bilal Co: 138<br />

Buckmaster Publishing: 145, 146<br />

Burghardt Amateur Center, Inc: 133<br />

Butternut: 113, 118<br />

Cable X -Perts: 147<br />

Champion Radio Products: 161<br />

Circuit Specialists, Inc: 152<br />

Code Quick: 136<br />

Com Dac: 145<br />

Command Technologies, Inc.: 156<br />

Communication Concepts Inc.: 126<br />

Communication Products: 136<br />

Communications Specialist Inc: 122<br />

Conex Electro Systems: 159<br />

Creative Services Software, Inc: 161<br />

Cubex Company Inc: 156<br />

Cutting Edge: 113<br />

Datamatrix: 130<br />

Davis RF Co.: 148<br />

Denver Amateur Radio Supply: 152<br />

Digital Communications Inc: 158<br />

Elecraft: 134<br />

E-Z Hang, Inc.: 118<br />

Farallon Electronics: 146<br />

First Call Communications, Inc.: 113, 128<br />

Gap Antenna Products Inc.: 143<br />

Glen Martin Engineering: 159<br />

Grundig: 6, 7<br />

Ham Central: 145<br />

Ham Contact, The: 120, 124<br />

Ham Radio Outlet: 108, 109, 110, 111, 112<br />

Ham Station, The: 113<br />

HamTag: 132<br />

Hamtronics: 159<br />

High Sierra Antennas: 158<br />

Hi-Res Communications Inc: 150<br />

Hy-Gain: 165<br />

ICOM America, Inc: Cover II, 1, 3<br />

IIX Equipment Ltd.: 113, 146<br />

International Components: 145<br />

International Crystal Mfg. Co: 148<br />

Intuitive Circuits LLC: 146<br />

J. Martin Systems: 146<br />

Jun’s Electronics: 129<br />

K2AW’s “Silicon Alley”: 122<br />

Kachina Communications Inc: 160<br />

Kangaroo Tabor: 154<br />

Kenwood USA Corp: Cover IV, 18<br />

KJI Electronics: 145<br />

KK7TV Communications: 150<br />

KO6YD Designs: 136<br />

LDG Electronics: 149<br />

Lakeview Co.: 152<br />

Lentini Communications: 162, 163<br />

Levy/Letham Global, LLC: 122<br />

Lewallen, Roy W., W7EL: 136<br />

Lightning Bolt Antennas: 158<br />

Logic: 152<br />

M2 Enterprises: 151<br />

M & S Computer Products Inc: 158<br />

Maha Communications & Elec.: 2<br />

Metal & Cable Corp: 118<br />

MFJ Enterprises: 17, 115, 117, 119, 121, 123, 125,<br />

127, 131<br />

Micro Computer Concepts: 113<br />

Mirage: 13<br />

Mosley: 154<br />

Mr. NiCd: 174<br />

N4XM XMatch Antenna Tuner: 132<br />

NCG Co.: 14<br />

National RF, Inc.: 146<br />

Nemal: 156<br />

North Ohio Amateur Radio: 145<br />

ONV Safety Belt Co.: 118<br />

Orlando HamCation: 126<br />

Pactor: 146<br />

Palomar Engineers: 128<br />

PC Electronics: 157<br />

Peet Brothers Co.: 148<br />

Personal Database Applications: 152<br />

Power Port: 113<br />

Premier Communications: 8<br />

Print Products International: 156<br />

Prolog: 130<br />

QRO Technologies, Inc: 155<br />

QSLs By W4MPY: 161<br />

QSLs by WX9X: 152<br />

R & L Electronics: 173<br />

RF Inquiry, Inc.: 134<br />

RF Parts Co: 25<br />

Radio Amateur Call Book: 142<br />

Radio Bookstore: 157<br />

Radio City: 162, 163<br />

Radio Club Of J.H.S. 22 NYC: 114<br />

Radio Depot: 145<br />

Radio Era Archives: 114<br />

Radio Works: 149<br />

Raibeam: 157<br />

Rapidan Data Systems: 153<br />

Rederring Embroidery: 113<br />

Rohn: 124<br />

Ross Distributing Co: 150<br />

SGC: 130<br />

Spider Antenna: 145<br />

SSB Electronics: 114<br />

Surplus Sales of Nebraska: 120<br />

T.G.M. Comm.: 150<br />

TE Systems: 138<br />

Tennadyne Corp: 160<br />

Ten-Tec Inc: 26, 27<br />

Texas Towers: 175, 176<br />

Tigertronics: 160<br />

Timewave Technology Inc.: 161<br />

Tower * Jack: 138<br />

Traffie Technology: 150<br />

Tropical Hamboree: 126<br />

Universal Radio, Inc.: 162, 163<br />

Universal Manufacturing Co.: 116<br />

Vectronics: 135<br />

Vi-Con, Inc: 128<br />

W & W Manufacturing Co: 155<br />

W2IHY Technologies: 159<br />

W5YI: 148, 153, 161<br />

W7FG Vintage Manuals: 157<br />

W9INN Antennas: 154<br />

Warren Gregoire & Associates: 153<br />

West Mountain Radio: 148<br />

Wheeler Applied Research Lab: 136<br />

Wohlers: 168, 169<br />

Yaesu U.S.A.: Cover III, 22, 23<br />

Yost & Co., E.H.: 174<br />

If your company provides products or services of interest to our Members, please contact the<br />

ARRL Advertising Department today for information on building your business.<br />

Your customers are reading.....<strong>QST</strong>!<br />

December Issue Focus: Holiday Buying Guide/Field Day Results Deadline: October 20 , <strong>2000</strong><br />

January 2001 Issue Focus: HF Digital Communications Deadline: <strong>November</strong> 20 ,<strong>2000</strong>

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