Author: k9hi
Severe Weather & Amateur Radio Field Day Weekend Coordination Message #4
The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has placed much of New England in a marginal risk for severe weather for Sunday afternoon and evening. Strong to damaging winds, hail, and torrential rainfall leading to urban and poor drainage flooding are the main threats. Model trends indicate a greater potential for severe weather on Sunday than today with strong instability, forcing from a cold front and marginally sufficient wind fields. [Full story]
Severe Weather & Amateur Radio Field Day Weekend Coordination Message #3
Billerica ARS VE Team to Resume In-Person Sessions, July 9, 2020
The Billerica Amateur Radio Society‘s ARRL-Affiliated Volunteer Exam (VE) team will resume in-person testing sessions beginning July 9, 2020 at the Chelmsford Bible Church, 128 Gorham Street, in Chelmsford. No walk-ins are allowed; applicants must call or email in advance.
To register, contact Gary Frascarelli, W1GFF, at w1gff -at- arrl -dot- net or call 978-453-1100.
Gary Frascarelli, W1GFF, writes on the Billerica ARS Facebook page on July 5, 2020:
“There will be NO VE Session in July…”
Amateur Radio Meets STEM in Pandemic-Challenged Virtual Classroom
Courtesy K1IR’s The Driven Element:
“In the midst of a global pandemic, classroom learning continues. This is a story about a high school physics class continuing to operate and expand its horizons through exposure to the magic of amateur radio satellites – even while taking on the challenges of social distancing.” [Full story]
Scattered Strong to Severe Storms Possible on Field Day Weekend, June 27-28, 2020
From: BOX Operations – NOAA Service Account <box.operations@noaa.gov>
Date: Fri, Jun 26, 2020 at 2:31 PM
Subject: [2020-06-26 PM] NWS Boston EM Briefing – Scattered Strong to Severe Storms Possible This Weekend
To:
National Weather Service Boston/Norton, MA
46 Commerce Way
National Zoom Meeting: Winlink Express for EmComm, June 25, 2020
Please join the Thursday, June 25, 2020 ARES ZOOM meeting at 0100Z – Zoom info shown below.
9:00 PM AST / 9:00 PM EDT / 8:00 PM CT / 7:00 PM MDT / 6:00 PM PDT / 5:00 PM AKDT / 3:00 PM HST
Topic: Winlink Express for EmComm, from the Winlink Development Team
Speaker: Phil Sherrod, W4PHS
Phil is a career software developer, a member of the Winlink Development Team and BOD member of ARSFI.
His work on the Winlink team involves developing and supporting the Winlink Express client program, and the programs used by RMS (Trimode, RMS Relay, RMS Packet). Phil is the designer of the Winlink Hybrid Network System.
This Zoom meeting is intended for ARRL section emergency coordinators, section managers, district directors, vice directors, and others involved with disaster communications.
June 26, 2020 UPDATE:
Click on the following link to view Thursday June 25 Zoom meeting. https://vimeo.com/432903722
Click on the below link if you choose to download this video instead.
https://vimeo.com/user107547861/download/432903722/91e0b9d70b
Click on the below link to download Thursday’s Winlink presentation by Phil Sherrod, W4PHS
Please note: This Zoom session on Winlink exceeded our Zoom 500 participant limitation quickly, leaving many without access. Please forward this email to make sure everyone that wants to view it, gets a copy.
“Taunton Amateur Radio Enthusiast Still Hamming It Up After Nearly 60 years”
Taunton amateur Ted Figlock, KA1AAT, was the subject of a nice feature story in the June 24, 2020 edition of the Taunton Gazette:
TAUNTON – Dr. Thadeus “Ted” Figlock has been a world traveler for the better part of six decades.
And he’s done most of it from a sitting position.
The 85-year-old, former obstetrician and gynecologist, who unpretentiously describes his medical career as having consisted mainly of “delivering babies and cutting out tumors,” has had a difficult year.
Figlock says he suffered a stroke last February, on Ash Wednesday to be exact, that hit him “like a ton of bricks.” He says he also suffers from the lung disease known as pulmonary fibrosis.
Despite those maladies the Hudson, Pennsylvania, native continues to keep active as an amateur radio operator.
“You do it for the fun of it,” Figlock said during an interview in the backyard of his Winthrop Street home.
“It’s like fishing,” he said. “We go out fishing for people who want to talk to us. It’s a sport.”
Figlock didn’t stop working as a doctor after he closed his practice. He says he worked a while at both the Jamaica Plain VA Medical Center and at a medical marijuana facility in Fall River.
His enthusiasm as an amateur radio operator, or ham, has not wavered, despite adjustments to his routine stemming from his medical challenges.
Figlock used to spend solitary time on his ham radio in a small room of his basement. He no longer ventures down the stairs and instead uses a second setup located on the main floor of his house, which is equipped with two antennas.
He’s also gone mobile. It’s not often that you’ll catch Figlock without his trusty portable, handheld transceiver, otherwise known as his ham-radio walkie talkie. [Full story]
Billerica ARS Saturday Morning Breakfasts Going “Virtual”
Bruce Anderson, W1LUS, writes on the Billerica ARS mailing list:
The BARS regular Saturday morning breakfast was canceled due to the virus. We are now trying a Saturday morning Zoom gathering. You are invited to this Saturday’s Zoom gathering. Join anytime between 8 AM and 9:30 AM. Leave whenever you want. There is no preplanned discussion topic. Feel free to bring up any Amateur radio subject that you would like to talk about.
BARS Saturday Morning Gathering
Time: Jun 27, 2020 08:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting […] [Contact Bruce Anderson, W1LUS at w1lus -at- hotmail -dot- com for conference details]
Field Day Listings on ema.arrl.org
Bill Ricker, N1VUX, writes:
I have created a non-place Site for FD@Home cumulative scoring in the FD Directory (geographic coordinates in Boston Harbor but not on an island; county=mixed, same as “Nowhere”; it will get the Harbor forecast, oops).
Club | Plans |
---|---|
BARC:Boston ARC | Confirmed |
Fal:Falmouth FARA Inc | Confirmed |
Fram:Framingham Amateur Radio Assn Fara.org | Confirmed |
K1USN:K1USN Club | Probable |
MARA:Massasoit ARA Inc | Confirmed |
MITLL:MIT Lincoln Labs | Confirmed |
Msex:Middlesex-Zola ARC | Probable |
NEAR:New England Amateur Radio, Inc. | Confirmed |
PARC:Philips Amateur Radio Club (PARC) | Confirmed |
PART:Police Amateur Radio Team of Westford | Confirmed |
PRA:Pentucket RA | Confirmed |
STARS:Sci-Tech Amateur Radio Society | Confirmed |
Sturdy:Sturdy Memorial Hospital ARC | Confirmed |
WARA64:Waltham ARA | Confirmed |
WARS:Wellesley ARS | Probable |
WhARC:Whitman ARC | Confirmed |
——————
NARC 1B9
AARC 8MA4
Crow 8MA4
CAARA CAARA
WARS NeedWMPk
PilAWA SwanFD
- Only AARC/Crow have been heard from discussing lately.
- CAARA website says FD is still on, but No COVID-19 precautions noted, so suspected stale.
(FB has no posts since October!) Lists dburg101@aol.com - NSRA says NO FD. Do they have FD@Home plans?
- K1USN having Zoom meeting 6/23 to discuss FD. presume FD@home. Site closed per website.
- Sturdy FD@Home confirmed from minutes;
minutes also reports Will N1DPY/SK (Cancer) May 2d or 3d
Nice new website! - Whitman – FD not on Calendar. Common scoring in minutes, so confirmed.
- WARS – Wellesley had an eMeeting to discuss FD last week. Decision?
- Pilgrim AWA – i presume they don’t have their site, but are they doing FD@Home or ??
- NARC could use their locked airport bunker, i suppose, so IDK, maybe, don’t care.
——————————
NEARC 4thCliff true non-public 2020
BEMA BEMALake true kc1kwc
NVARC PepperellOrch true reduced
ng0at ema true CT club on cape
SEMARA wa1bxy false 3D/3E
QRA wa1qzk true 2020 3E
MiddletonEMA wa1qzk false 2020 3E
n1wm wma true NoBARC Windsor MA
w1ddd wma true BlackstoneVARC@NA1Q
——————————
Total: 9
- NEARC @ Fourth Cliff – campground is CLOSED but caretaker in residence so they’re rolling.
- Braintree EMA put a pin on the map recently, so they’re on at their alternate control point on the lake.
- NG0AT, N1WM, W1DDD are non-mapping entries, to reconcile HQ Locator count.
- Ron’s QRA/M’ton EMA 3E home op we got emails on, and is on HQ Locator.
- NVARC has pin on HQ Locator. They spoke about having a small setup in Orchard plus FD@Home ? Are both still on?
- MARC/Zola – their mailing list discusses the audio recordings of their eMeeting but not minutes. And one or more silent keys.
—
New England Sci-Tech Offers Three On-line Technician Class Courses in July, 2020
For anyone interested in wireless communications and electronics, this ON-LINE course will get you ready to take the Amateur Radio TECHNICIAN license exam, the FIRST of three certification levels. Geared toward adults, as well as junior high, high school, and homeschool students.
Topics range from the science of radio electronics to the FCC rules governing the radio spectrum. Some pre-test practice is necessary to get the best results from this course.
This is a FULL course taught by a 40-yr veteran teacher, not a discussion group or video service. You will learn so much more than just watching a video or buying a book.
Current offerings:
- 4 day course: Tu-W-Th-Fri July 7-10, 3-6 pm each day Eastern Time *
- 2 day course: SAT-SUN July 11-12, noon-6 pm each day Eastern Time *
- 4 day course: Tu-W-Th-Fri July 14-17, 3-6 pm each day Eastern Time *
* July courses are specially tailored for kids and families
The FCC Technician test will be scheduled for an upcoming weekday evening or weekend, as an online test, run by our VE team which has authorization to run online tests.
System Requirements: Computer or Chromebook capable of running ZOOM Meeting, either by Zoom app or through a browser, a built-in camera/mic, and a color printer.
Included with course fee: downloadable lecture study guide and charts, free access to our weekly Online Radio Shop Talk sessions, and a guest pass to the NEAR/STARS Radio Rooms and radio club meetings for 3 months once the facility reopens.
Note that the standard $15 license test fee is NOT included and must be registered separately; our VE team is authorized to give ONLINE exams, so you can schedule an exam within a week of the course. (Price is $15 across the country.)
An additional member of the same family may join this course at no extra charge, if sharing one computer and zoom screen.
A few hours before the session you will receive an email with a Zoom link and ID. If you don’t see the email, check your spam filter. If you still don’t see it, call 508-720-4179 for help.
For questions, e-mail bobphinney at nescitech.org or call 508-720-4179.
YCCC SIG: SSB Contesting, June 23, 2020
The Yankee Clipper Contest Club will hold its third in a series Special Interest Group presentations on single-sideband contesting online on Tuesday, June 23, 2020 from 7:00-8:30 PM for its membership. Previous SIG presentations have addressed CW and FT4/8 modes.
New England Sci-Tech General Course, Natick, July 25-26, 2020
For junior high and high school students, homeschool students, and adults who already have a Technician level license, this fast-paced, two-day course will get you ready to take the GENERAL license exam. Topics range from the science of radio electronics to the FCC rules governing the radio spectrum. Some preliminary reading may be helpful to get the best results from this course. Material will be sent approximately a week before the course.
The GENERAL level course runs Saturday, 8:30 am to 5 pm and Sunday, 8:30 am to noon, followed by the FCC General exam at noon, at New England Sci-Tech, 16 Tech Circle, Natick.
Included with course fee: printed handouts, lecture study guide, license fee if tested at our location, a guest pass to the NEAR/STARS Radio Room and radio club meetings for 2 months, and free coffee, tea, or hot chocolate during the course. Up to two members of the same family may take this course for the price of one. Please let me know if there will be two of you attending.
For questions, e-mail bobphinney at nescitech.org or call 508-720-4179.
13 Colonies Event Week, July 1-7, 2020
13 Colonies Event Week
July 1, 9AM to July 7, Midnight, EDT
(1300Z 1 July 2020 to 0400Z 8 July 2020)
Certificate: Only one 13 Colonies QSO gets you a certificate.
For a CLEAN SWEEP, you don’t need to work the Bonus Stations, WM3PEN & GB13COL.
[D-STAR is OK for Bonus Stations]
Working a Colony Station: use DX Summit www.DXSummit.fi to find a 13 Colonies S/E station.
Spotting: after working a colony station, you are encouraged to spot it on DX Summit: i.e., “K2H 13 Col MA.”
Questions? See KU2US & www.13colonies.us.
On This Date in 1840: Samuel Morse Receives Patent for “Morse code” System
On this date in 1840, Samuel Morse received a patent for his “Morse code” system. Morse was a painter, originally. He also studied photography with Louis Daguerre in France, and brought the new technology to America, where he opened a photographic studio in New York City. He became interested in telegraphy after he failed in his bid to become the mayor of New York. During a demonstration of one of his early telegraph machines, he met Alfred Vail, a young mechanical engineer. Vail was fascinated by the telegraph, and he convinced Morse to bring him aboard as an assistant. Vail helped Morse work out some problems with Morse’s original system, and it didn’t hurt that Vail’s father was a wealthy industrialist. Vail put up the money to pay the patent application fees in exchange for a share in whatever resulted.
The telegraph works by sending an electromagnetic signal over a wire. Morse had an idea that the current could be used to move a pencil along a moving strip of paper, but Vail simplified it by suggesting a cheaper and more practical alternative: an arm that would bounce up and down. The pair then had to devise a way to convert a tapping arm into a system of language. It was actually Vail, not Morse, who came up with the first dot-and-dash system, with each letter and number being made up of a different combination of long and short sounds or flashes. Vail’s first message using his code was, “A patient waiter is no loser.” But Morse was the better known of the two inventors, and it was his name on the patents, and that’s why we call it “Morse Code” and not “Vail Code.” -From Garrison Keillor’s The Writer’s Almanac, June 20, 2020.
Web Site Changes
Some minor structural changes were made this weekend to the ema.arrl.org web site.
The “Government” menu and category have been renamed to “Regulation & Advocacy” duplicating the ARRL Hq. web site references. Also, the “Field Day” menu item is now in alphabetical order. (It used to be last on the menu because it was the newest created item.)
Your webmaster has added a “font size” widget (three capital “A” letters of increasing font size) in the upper right corner. (I like the flexibility of changing font size via the plug-in instead of messing with my computer settings.)
Finally, the “share to social media” plug-in was replaced with a better version. The icons appear at the bottom of each story. It’s now easier than ever to share an story to Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, LinkedIn, etc.
K1USN Radio Club On-line Meeting, June 23, 2020
Zola Center ARC On-line Meeting-Presentations, June 20, 2020
The next meeting of the Zola amateur radio group will be held on Saturday, June 20, 2020 beginning at 11AM EDT. The meeting will be held entirely on a Zoom tele-conference. There will be no in-person component. Please see the call in/sign in information below my signature. This month’s agenda:
11 AM – Come to order and introductions
11:05 AM – Announcements and questions
11:15 AM –
Ms. Donna Suskawicz is a founding member of the Zola Amateur Radio Group. Without her vision, dedication, and generosity there would not be such an organization. She will give us a presentation about the history and mission of our organization. Donna is a real inspiration for us, and we look forward to a very informative presentation.
12 Noon –
Mr. Rob Santello is an inventor and engineer. He designs and produces a product known as a Ham Pod. The Ham Pod device communicates through serial protocols to a variety of amateur radio rigs, rotor controllers, and meters. It features an interactive keypad and voice output. Rob will tell us about the history of his invention and the myriad of uses it has.
12:45 PM – New business and topics for the good of our community.
1:30 PM – Adjourn
Sincerely,
Frank Ventura, N1FMV
[Ed: Contact N1FMV for Zoom conference meeting details]
Non-ham Signals on 160 Meters
Art Bernstein, N2KA, writes on the Yankee Clipper Contest Club mailing list:
Some time ago I posted a bit concerning whether or not anyone was hearing a signal on 160 meters, just at and above the FT8 frequency of 1840 kHz. I received some suggestions and also that no one else was hearing it.
After doing a lot of eliminating around the shack and determining it was coming from the outside, I did some research to find out who transmits on 160 meters in addition to Radio Amateurs.
What I found was interesting and brought back some memories from years ago I had never experienced.
Fishnet Buoy Beacons. For those not knowing what they are, they are buoys that help fishermen locate their nets that have been left to catch fish. I would have thought GPS would be used these days. These beacons typically have a range of 10-15 miles over salt water and I probably live around 10 miles or less from the salt water. Normally it wouldn’t be a problem when using narrower bandwidths on CW or SSB, but on FT-8 bandwidths are typically 3-5 kHz wide. At night the zero beat frequency is about 1841.35, during the day I just checked it to be a couple hundred Hz higher (drift due to heating?)
Anyone have any ideas regarding procedures to follow here? It is likely an unlicensed radiator interfering with a licensed service. It has no identifier. Already sent message to ARRL Regulatory desk and to Division Leader.
Thanks.
73,
Art., N2KA
Whitman ARC to Begin Remote Training over Zoom
From the Whitman ARC June 2020 newsletter:
“[Ross Hochstrasser, W1EKG] reported that we will now be able to do remote classes using ZOOM. The first item on the list is to help the folks in the Extra class via Zoom session with additional training and review to allow them to take the Amateur Extra exam before the new question pool takes effect July 1, 2020.
“There is a new training email address that was set up by Randy, KC1EFF. This will be used just for training inquiries and other info. The new email address is Warc.Training@gmail.com.”