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Text 15728, 561 rader
Skriven 2020-10-30 09:05:02 av Sean Dennis (1:18/200.0)
Ärende: The Weekly ARRL Letter
==============================
   The ARRL Letter                                                         
   October 29, 2020                                                        
                                                                           
     * ARRL Urges Members to Join in Strongly Opposing FCC's Application    
       Fees Proposal                                                        
     * It's a Wrap for Hurricane Watch Net, ARES Teams Stand Down           
     * ARRL Podcasts Schedule                                               
     * Guidelines Issued for ARRL DX Contest Multioperator Stations         
     * The K7RA Solar Update                                               
     * Just Ahead in Radiosport                                            
     * New Zealand Radio Amateurs Lose Access to 60 Meters                 
     * ARRL Learning Network Webinars                                      
     * Fldigi Could be a Tool in the November Frequency Measuring Test     
     * Announcements                                                       
     * Radio Amateurs in Western Pennsylvania to Commemorate KDKA          
       Broadcasting Centennial                                             
     * Oldest Known US Radio Amateur, Cliff Kayhart, W4KKP, SK             
     * In Brief...                                                         
     * Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions              
   ARRL Urges Members to Join in Strongly Opposing FCC's Application Fees  
   Proposal                                                                
                                                                           
   ARRL will file comments in firm opposition to an FCC proposal to impose 
   a $50 fee on amateur radio license and application fees. With the       
   November 16 comment deadline fast approaching, ARRL urges members to    
   add their voices to ARRL's by filing opposition comments of their own.  
   The FCC Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) MD Docket 20-270 appeared  
   in the October 15 edition of The Federal Register and sets deadlines of 
   November 16 to comment and November 30 to post reply comments, which    
   are comments on comments already filed. ARRL has prepared a Guide to    
   Filing Comments with the FCC which includes tips for preparing comments 
   and step-by-step filing instructions. File comments on MD Docket 20-270 
   using the FCC's Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS).                
                                                                           
   "We encourage all members to use the ARRL Guide to file comments        
   opposing the imposition of the proposed $50 application fee," ARRL      
   President Rick Roderick, K5UR, said. "Let's highlight amateur radio's   
   long history of public service."                                        
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   From Our Members...                                                     
                                                                           
   Please accept my thanks for the October 27, 2020, special edition of    
   The ARRL Letter, "ARRL Urges Members to Join in Strongly Opposing FCC's 
   Application Fees Proposal." I appreciate ARRL notifying members of the  
   proposal and especially the guidance on submitting a comment. --        
   Charles F. Gottlieb, KM4NTD, Miami, Florida                             
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Under the proposal, amateur radio licensees would pay a $50 fee for     
   each amateur radio application for new licenses, license renewals,      
   upgrades to existing licenses, and vanity call sign requests. The FCC   
   has also proposed a $50 fee to obtain a printed copy of a license.      
   Excluded are applications for administrative updates, such as changes   
   of address, and annual regulatory fees. Amateur Service licensees have  
   been exempt from application fees for several years.                    
                                                                           
   The FCC proposal is contained in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) 
   in MD Docket 20-270, which was adopted to implement portions of the     
   "Repack Airwaves Yielding Better Access for Users of Modern Services    
   Act" of 2018 -- the so-called "Ray Baum's Act." The Act requires that   
   the FCC switch from a congressionally-mandated fee structure to a       
   cost-based system of assessment.                                        
                                                                           
   The FCC NPRM proposes application fees for a broad range of services    
   that use the FCC's Universal Licensing System (ULS), including the      
   Amateur Radio Service. The 2018 statute excludes the Amateur Service    
   from annual regulatory fees, but not from application fees. The         
   proposal affects all FCC services and does not single out amateur       
   radio. As the FCC explained in its NPRM, Congress, through the Ray      
   Baum's Act, is compelling regulatory agencies such as the FCC to        
   recover from applicants the costs involved in filing and handling       
   applications. Read more and visit ARRL's summary page for the           
   proceeding.                                                             
   It's a Wrap for Hurricane Watch Net, ARES Teams Stand Down              
                                                                           
   After an activation that lasted more than 9 hours, the Hurricane Watch  
   Net (HWN ) suspended operations on October 29 at around 0130 UTC.       
                                                                           
   "Although Zeta was still a hurricane just east of Hattiesburg,          
   Mississippi, moving to the northeast at about 30 MPH, we hated to close 
   operations, but propagation on 20 and 40 meters was totally gone," HWN  
   Manager Bobby Graves, KB5HAV, said. "The turnout of reporting stations  
   was great, but we can always use more. Meteorologists love weather      
   data. So, we do our best to collect and forward as much as we can."     
                                                                           
   Zeta left some 2 million                                                
   customers without power. [City                                          
   of New Orleans Twitter photo]                                           
                                                                           
   ARES teams in Louisiana went on standby status on October 27, ready to  
   activate at the request of local emergency management officials or      
   served agencies. At midday on Wednesday, the Louisiana Emergency Net    
   was placed on active standby status on 3.878 and 7.255 MHz, concluding  
   operations at 2100 UTC on Wednesday.                                    
                                                                           
   The Northern Florida ARES Net convened October 28 on 3.950 MHz for      
   about 12 hours in anticipation of tropical storm winds and a risk of    
   tornado activity. "Our HF net shut down this morning," Northern Florida 
   Section Emergency Coordinator Karl Martin, K4HBN, said. "The counties   
   closed shelters and had their ARES groups stand down soon after."       
   Martin said operators did cover three shelters. "We had challenges due  
   to HF conditions, and one of the ARES groups lost a repeater and had to 
   go to a back-up plan."                                                  
                                                                           
   In George County, Mississippi, ARES Emergency Coordinator General       
   Dailey, KD4VVZ, suspended routine net traffic to take storm-related     
   reports such as weather data, property damage, and power status. Daily  
   said repeater net would remain active for 12 hours, and the information 
   would be relayed to weather forecasters. The net prepared to carry      
   occasional digital traffic.                                             
                                                                           
   "As the sun comes up, damage assessments are still ongoing," the George 
   County Sheriff's office announced on the George County ARES Facebook    
   page. "Currently a majority of the county is without power." The        
   sheriff reported many downed trees and power lines and advised against  
   nonessential travel.                                                    
                                                                           
   WX4NHC at the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami activated at     
   1600 UTC on October 28, monitoring HWN's frequencies of 14.325 and      
   7.268 MHz as well as the VoIP Hurricane Net (VoIP WX) and other         
   resources. The net funnels "ground truth" reports to NHC forecasters.   
                                                                           
   Ham Aid emergency communication kits from ARRL had been pre-positioned  
   in Louisiana in preparation for this event. Read more.                  
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
                                                                         
   ARRL Podcasts Schedule                                                  
                                                                           
   The latest episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 10) includes an   
   interview with ARRL Lifelong Learning Manager Kris Bickell, K1BIC,      
   about ARRL's new "Learning Network" webinars.                           
                                                                           
   The latest edition of Eclectic Tech (Episode 19) discusses radiosondes  
   and how hams can receive their telemetry, in addition to a discussion   
   about power supplies with Bob Allison, WB1GCM, of the ARRL Lab.         
                                                                           
   The On the Air and Eclectic Tech podcasts are sponsored by Icom. Both   
   podcasts are available on iTunes (iOS) and Stitcher (Android), as well  
   as on Blubrry -- On the Air | Eclectic Tech.                            
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Guidelines Issued for ARRL DX Contest Multioperator Stations            
                                                                           
   ARRL has issued guidelines for multioperator stations competing in the  
   ARRL DX Contest (CW and phone). With the global pandemic continuing to  
   impose restrictions on social gatherings, multioperator contest         
   stations may not be able to operate normally while still adhering to    
   local social distancing guidelines. ARRL has decided to make temporary  
   accommodations for a multioperator station to participate in these      
   popular ARRL contests, under these guidelines:                          
     * Team members may operate from their home stations in conjunction    
       with the multioperator station.                                     
     * Their home station must be located within a radius of 100           
       kilometers (62 miles) of the multioperator contest station.         
     * Their home station must be located within the same DXCC entity as   
       the multioperator contest station. In the case of US and Canadian   
       stations, all team member stations must be in the same US state or  
       Canadian province.                                                  
     * All team member stations must use the same call sign and exchange   
       as the multioperator contest station for the duration of the        
       contest.                                                            
     * Logging software must be networked, so that all team member         
       stations are using a common log.                                    
     * Individual operators may not work the multioperator contest station 
       or other team member stations using a personal call sign or other   
       call sign.                                                          
     * All multioperator rules, such as band changes and number of signals 
       on a band, still apply. See the full contest rules for details.     
     * The team must determine and control band assignments, ensuring that 
       no more than one team station is transmitting on any given band at  
       a time.                                                             
                                                                           
   The multioperator contest station may be staffed at less than full      
   capacity while maintaining safe practices, so operating with a          
   combination of team members at home stations and team members at the    
   contest station is permissible.                                         
                                                                           
   The CW contest takes place on the third full weekend in February        
   (February 20 - 21, 2021). The phone contest takes place on the first    
   full weekend in March (March 6 - 7, 2021).                              
                                                                           
   For questions, contact the ARRL Contest Branch.                         
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
                                                                         
   The K7RA Solar Update                                                   
                                                                           
   Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Our sun is finally waking up. The     
   average daily sunspot number rose from 15 to 17, which is nothing       
   remarkable, but the reporting week ended on Wednesday with a daily      
   sunspot number of 36. Average daily solar flux rose from 74.5 to 76.9.  
                                                                           
   Predicted solar flux is 88 on October 29 - 31, which is remarkable; 82, 
   78, 75, and 72 on November 1 - 4; 74 on November 5 - 7; 75 on November  
   8 - 12; 72 on November 13; 70 on November 14 - 21; 74 and 72 on         
   November 22 - 23; 70 on November 24 - 26; 72 on November 27; 74 on      
   November 28 - December 4; 75 on December 5 - 9; 72 on December 10, and  
   70 on December 11 - 12.                                                 
                                                                           
   Predicted planetary A index is 8 on October 29; 5 on October 30 - 31;   
   12 and 8 on November 1 - 2; 5 on November 3 - 6; 10 on November 7; 5 on 
   November 8 - 16; 10, 8, and 12 on November 17 - 19; 18, 15, and 20 on   
   November 20 - 22; 15, 10 and 8 on November 23 - 25; 5 on November 26 -  
   27; 8 on November 28; and 5 on November 29 - December 12.               
                                                                           
   Sunspot numbers for October 22 - 28 were 11, 11, 11, 11, 17, 22, and    
   36, with a mean of 17. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 74.9, 72, 72.1,     
   74.2, 75, 82.4, and 87.6, with a mean of 76.9. Estimated planetary A    
   indices were 6, 12, 17, 15, 15, 9, and 12, with a mean of 12.3. Middle  
   latitude A index was 3, 10, 16, 9, 15, 7, and 9, with a mean of 9.9.    
                                                                           
   A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL         
   website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit the   
   ARRL Technical Information Service, read "What the Numbers Mean...,"    
   and check out K9LA's Propagation Page.                                  
                                                                           
   A propagation bulletin archive is available. For customizable           
   propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio website.      
                                                                           
   Share your reports and observations.                                    
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Just Ahead in Radiosport                                                
     * November 1 -- North American SSB Sprint Contest                     
     * November 1 -- Silent Key Memorial Contest (CW)                      
     * November 1 -- High Speed Club CW Contest                            
     * November 1 - 4 -- Classic Exchange (CW)                             
     * November 2 -- K1USN Slow Speed Test CW                              
     * November 2 -- RSGB 80-Meter Autumn Series (Digital)                 
     * November 3 -- Worldwide Sideband Activity Contest                   
     * November 3 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)                               
     * November 4 -- VHF-UHF FT8 Activity Contest                          
     * November 4 -- UKEICC 80-Meter Contest (Phone)                       
     * November 5 -- NRAU 10-Meter Activity Contest (CW, phone, digital)   
     * November 5 -- SKCC Sprint Europe CW                                 
                                                                           
                                                                         
   New Zealand Radio Amateurs Lose Access to 60 Meters                     
                                                                           
   Radio amateurs in New Zealand no longer have access to 60 meters,       
   effective on October 24. Use of the band by radio amateurs in New       
   Zealand was provisional, allowing hams there to use two frequencies in  
   the band -- 5353.0 kHz and 5362.0 kHz -- as part of a "trial."          
                                                                           
   New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters (NZART), the national     
   amateur radio organization, said the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF)   
   advised the organization that it was not willing to approve another     
   renewal of the 5 MHz trial allocation. NZART has indicated that it will 
   continue to work with telecoms regulator RSM to see if other ways may   
   be available to provide access to 5 MHz.                                
                                                                           
   As in the US, the federal government and military are primary on the 5  
   MHz band. According to NZART, the decision was not made lightly by      
   NZDF, but said access to that part of the HF spectrum is necessary to   
   support NZDF's new platforms, tactical radio equipment, and updated HF  
   site equipment in the delivery chain.                                   
                                                                           
   "ditionally, access to HF is a key part of their communications plans 
   both in New Zealand and to support our forces overseas," NZART          
   explained. "While this is a disappointing outcome, NZART would like to  
   thank NZDF for allowing us to take part in the trial, and we look       
   forward to working with them in the future on matters of common         
   interest." -- Thanks to Paul Gaskell, G4MWO/The 5 MHz Newsletter        
   ARRL Learning Network Webinars                                          
                                                                           
   Visit the ARRL Learning Network website (a members-only benefit) to     
   register for upcoming sessions and to view previously recorded session. 
   The schedule is subject to change.                                      
                                                                           
   How to Get Started in Amateur Radio Contesting: Anthony Luscre, K8ZT    
                                                                           
   Why do hams participate in on-air contests? How would I benefit from    
   contesting? What do I need to get started in contesting? What are good  
   contests for beginners? Where can I learn more? This session will       
   answer all of these questions and more.                                 
                                                                           
   Tuesday, November 3, 2020, 10 AM PST / 1 PM EST (1800 UTC)              
                                                                           
   Amateur Radio's Role at the Boston Marathon Bombing: Steve Schwarm,     
   W3EVE                                                                   
                                                                           
   Amateur radio has played a significant role in public service           
   communications for  the Boston Marathon for several decades. That role  
   was put to the test in 2013, when two bombs were exploded near the      
   finish line. This presentation will describe the role that ham radio    
   played at the marathon and how that role changed due to the bombing.    
                                                                           
   Tuesday, December 8, 2020, 10 AM PST / 1 PM EST (1800 UTC)              
                                                                           
   Learn and Have Fun with Morse Code: Howard Bernstein, WB2UZE, and Jim   
   Crites, W6JIM                                                           
                                                                           
   Morse code, or "CW," is a popular ham radio operating mode. Learning CW 
   does not have to be an arduous or lonely experience. Learn, practice,   
   and enjoy CW with the methods used by the Long Island CW Club.          
                                                                           
   Thursday, December 17, 2020, 5 PM PST / 8 PM EST (0100 UTC on Friday,   
   December 18)                                                            
                                                                         
   Fldigi Could be a Tool in the November Frequency Measuring Test         
                                                                           
   A new frequency-measuring test mode added to the digital communication  
   program Fldigi -- developed by Dave Freese, W1HKJ -- makes the program  
   useful for the Frequency Measuring Test (FMT) on November 13. The new   
   test mode replaces frequency analysis mode, making Fldigi useful for    
   FMT participants. Fldigi can still measure an unknown frequency to      
   three decimal places (i.e., to 1 mHz), but it can also use a reference  
   frequency to correct the unknown calculation for inaccuracies of the    
   receiver. (An article by Bob Howard, VE3YX, details the use of Fldigi   
   in the FMT.)                                                            
                                                                           
   Very little equipment is necessary to participate in the FMT. A         
   software-defined radio (SDR) accessed by the internet will work; check  
   out the GPS-stabilized SDRs Kiwi SDRs. A hardware cable or a virtual    
   cable can connect SDR audio to the Fldigi input. Calibration will be    
   required.                                                               
                                                                           
   While older rigs can be used, Fldigi works best with a rig that can be  
   controlled by a serial or USB connection from the PC to set the VFO     
   with 1 Hz resolution. Some rigs display frequency to 1 Hz. Others only  
   display to 10 Hz but can be set by the PC to 1 Hz. Most rigs dating     
   from about 1995 and later will work well. Fldigi needs to know the      
   frequency that the radio thinks it is tuned to or the frequency that    
   you think it is tuned to.                                               
                                                                           
   The new FMT modem works best with a reference signal injected along     
   with the FMT transmitted signal -- the FMT's unknown signal. The        
   reference signal must have some accurately known frequency that can be  
   set near the unknown frequency (within 1 kHz or so). The reference can  
   be a signal generator stabilized by a GPS Disciplined Oscillator        
   (GPSDO) that can easily be set to output a useful frequency. Using      
   Fldigi's new FMT modem without a reference can still provide good       
   results, but requires careful calibration.                              
                                                                           
   ARRL sponsored earlier FMTs. The first ARRL FMT took place in 1931.     
   Back then, it was required that Official Observers participate and meet 
   certain standards.                                                      
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Announcements                                                           
     * The CW weekend of the ARRL November Sweepstakes (SS) takes place    
       November 7 - 9. The hallmark of this very popular operating event   
       is its challenging and lengthy exchange, which has its origins in   
       the National Traffic System (NTS) message format. The ARRL November 
       Sweepstakes SSB weekend is November 21 - 23.                        
     * CQ Magazine has announced that Ohio Section Emergency Coordinator   
       Stan Broadway, N8BHL, has been named as the magazine's Emergency    
       Communications Editor. Licensed for more than 40 years, Broadway    
       first was attracted to ham radio by listening to a VHF severe       
       weather net in Ohio and to the Hurricane Watch Net, for which he    
       currently serves as a board member and net control operator.        
     * Organizers of the 2021 Jan Mayen JX0X DXpedition have announced the 
       cancellation of the operation, due to "too many uncertainties       
       involved in this project." The JX0X team said it will refund all    
       PayPal donations.                                                   
     * "Pre-pre Frequency Measuring Test" (ppFMT) practice sessions will   
       be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays on 30 and 40 meters.              
       [IMG]Schedule and frequency information is on the FMT-nuts page on  
       Groups.io. The FMT takes place on November 13.                      
     * The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) are reminding those who took part   
       in the recent Jamboree on the Air (JOTA) to complete the feedback   
       form. Photos and videos are welcome via the content portal.         
                                                                           
     -------------------------------------------------------------------   
                                                                           
   Radio Amateurs in Western Pennsylvania to Commemorate KDKA Broadcasting 
   Centennial                                                              
                                                                           
   Pittsburgh radio station KDKA will celebrate 100 years of radio         
   broadcasting in November, and Pennsylvania radio amateurs will honor    
   that milestone in a multi-station special event. KDKA dates its         
   broadcasting history to the airing of the Harding-Cox presidential      
   results on November 2, 1920, and the station has been on the air ever   
   since. The special event, which will involve the operation of four      
   stations, will run through the entire month of November.                
                                                                           
   "More than 100 years ago, many experimenters started delving into a new 
   technology known as wireless, or radio," said Bob Bastone, WC3O, Radio  
   Officer for the Skyview Radio Society in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.  
   Bastone explained that many of those early pioneers were radio          
   amateurs. "One hundred plus years later, many amateur radio operators   
   are still contributing to wireless technology, while also serving their 
   communities and enhancing international goodwill. Congratulations to    
   KDKA Radio, also known in the early years as amateur radio stations     
   8XK, 8ZZ, and W8XK."                                                    
                                                                           
   Special event stations K3K, K3D, K3A, and W8XK will set up and operate  
   at several locations in Pennsylvania during November. Stations will     
   determine their own modes and schedules. Visit the W8XK profile on      
   QRZ.com for information on certificates and QSLs.                       
                                                                           
   What became KDKA initially began broadcasting in 1916 as amateur radio  
   station 8XK, licensed by the Federal Radio Commission (FRC), the        
   predecessor to the FCC. At the time, amateurs were not prohibited from  
   broadcasting. The small station was operated by Dr. Frank Conrad, who   
   was Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company assistant chief       
   engineer. The transmitter ran 75 W, and the broadcasts gained some      
   popularity in Pittsburgh. The first transmissions of KDKA originated in 
   a makeshift studio on the roof of Westinghouse K Building in East       
   Pittsburgh.                                                             
                                                                           
   Westinghouse Lodge Building in the                                      
   1920s. Some KDKA personnel are                                          
   wearing hats that bear their ham                                        
   radio call signs.                                                       
                                                                           
   Ham radio clubs participating in the centennial special event include   
   the North Hills Amateur Radio Club in Pittsburgh -- which is planning   
   to operate from KDKA's 1930s transmitter site, where an original tower  
   pier still stands. A 1920s transmitter site, in Forest Hills, will      
   serve as another operating location. Other clubs will take part.        
   Individual radio amateurs will operate from their own stations, and a   
   small group of hams is planning a portable operation from South Park in 
   suburban Pittsburgh.                                                    
                                                                           
   "We amateur radio operators look forward to contacting thousands of     
   other hams around the world to celebrate this huge milestone in the     
   commercial broadcasting industry," said Bastone. Contact him for more   
   information. Read more. -- Thanks to ARRL Public Information Officer    
   and Allegheny County ARES Emergency Coordinator Bob Mente, NU3Q, for    
   providing the information for this story.                               
   Oldest Known US Radio Amateur, Cliff Kayhart, W4KKP, SK                 
                                                                           
   Charles Clifford "Cliff" Kayhart, W4KKP, of White Rock, South Carolina, 
   died on October 26, a few days past his birthday. An ARRL member, he    
   was 109 and the oldest known US radio amateur and possibly the oldest   
   ham in the world.                                                       
                                                                           
   Last November, Roanoke Division Director Bud Hippisley, W2RU; Vice      
   Director Bill Morine, N2COP, and South Carolina Section Manager Marc    
   Tarplee, N4UFP, jointly presented Kayhart with ARRL's Centurion Award,  
   which honors centenarian members who have at least 40 years of ARRL     
   membership. On that occasion, Hippisley interviewed Kayhart.            
                                                                           
   First licensed in 1937 as W2LFE in New Jersey, he also held W9GNQ.      
   According to his obituary, Kayhart built his first radio at the age of  
   nine. After working for New York Telephone Company as a young man, he   
   became enamored with engineering, so he headed off to Tri-State         
   University in Indiana, graduating with a degree in aeronautical         
   engineering. Afterward, he went to work for RCA in New Jersey, becoming 
   a quality control manager. Positions followed at Philco Radio and       
   Bendix Aviation.                                                        
                                                                           
   During World War II, Kayhart joined the US Army Signal Corps, which     
   sent him off to school to study radar. He was assigned to the US Army   
   Air Corps in Georgia and then sent to Hawaii to become part of a Signal 
   Service Battalion. He served at Iwo Jima, shortly after the US victory  
   there, setting up equipment for long-range radio communication and      
   broadcasting, with rhombic antennas in four directions.                 
                                                                           
   Cliff Kayhart, W4KKP, spoke with                                        
   Roanoke Division Director Bud                                           
   Hippisley, W2RU, last November.                                         
                                                                           
   In 1946, Kayhart left the Army with the rank of captain, joining        
   Magnavox the following year as its first field engineer; at the time,   
   Magnavox was about to launch a line of television sets. Eventually, he  
   was transferred to the Customer Acceptance Department in Tennessee.     
   Kayhart traveled to Japan in 1963 in search of Japanese television      
   sets. He retired from Magnavox in 1976.                                 
                                                                           
   In the 1970s, while living in Tennessee, he spearheaded a project that  
   installed a 2-meter FM repeater on the summit of Camp Creek Bald, still 
   in operation on the Tennessee/North Carolina border.                    
                                                                           
   After Kayhart moved into an assisted living facility in 2017, he had an 
   HF station in his room, courtesy of the Dutch Fork Amateur Radio Group, 
   to which he belonged, and the Columbia Amateur Radio Club. Kayhart      
   remained active on the air until shortly before he died. Read more.     
   In Brief...                                                             
                                                                           
   ARRL Logbook of The World has harmonized the designation of FST4        
   Protocol. The Logbook of The World (LoTW) Committee worked with WSJT-X  
   developer Joe Taylor, K1JT, to harmonize the designation of FST4 among  
   WSJT-X, the ADIF standard, and LoTW. At present, FST4 is only supported 
   in a recently released beta version of WSJT-X. The action was to avoid  
   the sort of confusion that cropped up among LoTW users logging contacts 
   in FT4 when that protocol was first included in WSJT-X. The update      
   should help users avoid difficulties and obtain the maximum number of   
   contact matches. The ADIF standard has been updated to support FST4 as  
   a sub-mode of MFSK, and configuration file CONFIG.xml for LoTW has been 
   updated to version 11.13, accordingly, to support FST4. Users will be   
   offered the update when they run TQSL. -- Thanks to Greg Widin, K0GW    
                                                                           
   The FCC has adopted a Report and Order that allows AM radio stations to 
   operate using all-digital broadcast signals. "AM broadcasters will be   
   able to voluntarily choose whether and when to convert to all-digital   
   operation from their current analog or hybrid analog/digital signals,"  
   the FCC said. "All-digital broadcasting offers AM listeners             
   significantly improved audio quality and more reliable coverage over a  
   wider listenable area than analog or hybrid digital broadcasts. It also 
   allows broadcasters to provide additional services to the public, such  
   as song title and artist information."                                  
                                                                           
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   Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions                  
                                                                           
   Note: Many conventions and hamfests have been canceled or postponed due 
   to the coronavirus pandemic. Check the calendar of canceled events on   
   the ARRL website.                                                       
     * November 21 -- Alabama State Convention, Montgomery, Alabama        
     * December 11 - 12 -- Florida State Convention, Plant City, Florida   
                                                                           
   Find conventions and hamfests in your area.                             
                                                                           
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