• The ARRL Letter for July 1, 2021

    From ARRL Web site@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 1 16:52:54 2021
    XPost: rec.radio.amateur.misc, rec.radio.amateur.policy, rec.radio.info

    ********************************************
    The ARRL Letter

    Published by the American Radio Relay League ********************************************

    July 1, 2021

    Editor: Rick Lindquist, WW1ME <ww1me@arrl.org>

    ARRL Home Page <http://www.arrl.org/>ARRL Letter Archive <http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/>Audio News <http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/> IN THIS ISSUE

    - FCC Reaffirms Nearly $3 Million Fine for Marketing Unauthorized Drone Transmitters
    - New Section Managers Appointed in Orange and Eastern Washington
    - ARRL Podcasts Schedule
    - WISA Woodsat Successfully Completes Stratospheric Test Flight
    - Russian Woodpecker Antenna Array Now a Cultural Heritage Site
    - ARRL Learning Network Webinars
    - Youth on the Air Camp 2021 to be On the Air and Streaming Selected
    Events Online
    - The K7RA Solar Update
    - Amateur Radio in the News
    - Announcements
    - In Brief...
    - Just Ahead in Radiosport
    - Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions

    ARRL Headquarters will be closed on Monday, July 5, for the
    Independence Day holiday. There will be no W1AW bulletin or code
    practice transmissions. ARRL HQ will reopen on Tuesday, July 6, at 8 AM
    EDT. Have a safe and enjoyable holiday!

    FCC REAFFIRMS NEARLY $3 MILLION FINE FOR MARKETING UNAUTHORIZED
    DRONE TRANSMITTERS

    In a Memorandum Opinion and Order (MO&O <https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-21-76A1.pdf>) released
    June 17, the FCC denied a Petition for Reconsideration filed by
    HobbyKing of a $2,861,128 fine for marketing noncompliant RF equipment
    and for failing to respond to FCC orders in its investigation of the
    company's practices. In the same step, the FCC enforced its equipment
    marketing rules. The fine resulted from an FCC investigation initiated
    by ARRL's January 2017 complaint <http://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-drone-transmitters-complaint-spurs-proposed-2-8-million-fcc-penalty>

    that the HobbyKing equipment was "blatantly illegal at multiple
    levels."

    A representative of the ARRL Electromagnetic Compatibility Committee
    (ECC) stated, "The Forfeiture Order is the final chapter of a story
    that started with a report to the ARRL Board by the EMC Committee in
    2017, as a result of the discovery that aerial drone TV transmitting
    equipment was being imported and marketed without proper FCC
    authorization under FCC Part 15 rules."

    The Electromagnetic Compatibility Committee was credited in the
    complaint with calling attention to the issue and prompting ARRL's
    action.

    As spelled out in ARRL's 2017 complaint, the ARRL Laboratory had
    documented that the operating frequencies of these drone TV
    transmitters near the 1.3 GHz amateur band were dip-switch selectable
    for frequencies internationally assigned for use by Aeronautical
    Navigation, GPS, GLONASS L1, ATC Mode "S," as well as to both the
    interrogation and reply frequencies used for Air Traffic Control
    Air-Route Surveillance "transponder" radar systems.

    ARRL's complaint noted that given the channel configuration, these
    units would not have a legitimate amateur radio use, and that the
    marketing was directed at drone enthusiasts and not to licensed radio
    amateurs. "ARRL Laboratory tests did prove that only one of the seven
    available channels was within the 1.3 GHz amateur band," the ECC
    representative said.

    "This is another example of ARRL not only affirmatively acting to
    protect our members' interests, but also acting to protect the safety
    and security of vital services and the general public," the ECC
    representative said.

    HobbyKing had denied that it was marketing its drone transmitters to US customers, but as the ARRL January 2017 complaint pointed out, ARRL
    Laboratory Manager Ed Hare, W1RFI, was able to purchase two drone
    transmitters from HobbyKing for testing in the ARRL Lab. "The FCC noted
    that amateur radio equipment used to telecommand model craft are
    limited to 1 W (1,000 mW), but three transmitters included in the FCC investigation operated at significantly higher power levels of 1,500 mW
    and 2,000 mW," ARRL said.

    HobbyKing had told the FCC that it had no notice of the Commission's authorization requirements; that the Fifth Amendment relieved HobbyKing
    of its duty to respond; that the forfeiture amount was inappropriate
    because its parent company, Indubitably, Inc., lacked the ability to
    pay to the Forfeiture Order; and that the Commission was time-barred
    from taking action against ABC Fulfillment Services LLC because it was
    not part of HobbyKing's business.

    "Upon review of HobbyKing's Petition for Reconsideration and the entire
    record, we find no basis for reconsideration because the petition fails
    to present new information warranting reconsideration," the FCC said in
    the MO&O.

    HobbyKing is the trade name of two US-based companies that include ABC Fulfillment Services LLC and Indubitably, Inc. Read an expanded version <http://www.arrl.org/news/fcc-reaffirms-nearly-3-million-fine-for-marketing-unauthorized-drone-transmitters>.


    NEW SECTION MANAGERS APPOINTED IN ORANGE AND EASTERN WASHINGTON

    Carl Gardenias, WU6D, of Perris, California, is retiring as ARRL Orange
    Section Manager (SM) after serving in the position since 2003. His term
    of office had expired at the end of March, but he agreed to continue
    serving as SM until a successor was chosen.

    A re-solicitation for Section Manager nominations in the Orange Section
    was issued this past spring. The only nominee responding by the June 4
    deadline was Bob Turner, W6RHK, also of Perris, California. Turner's
    elected 2-year term of office does not officially begin until October
    1, and Gardenias has said he wished to step down as Section Manager at
    the end of June.

    In accordance with the Rules and Regulations of the ARRL Field
    Organization, ARRL Field Services Manager Mike Walters, W8ZY, has
    appointed Turner to start his term of office as the Orange Section
    Manager earlier than scheduled, with the appointment effective July 1.
    Walters made his decision after consulting with ARRL Southwestern
    Division Director Dick Norton, N6AA, and Gardenias. Turner has been the
    Section Emergency Coordinator for the past 10 years.

    ARRL Eastern Washington Section Manager Jack Tiley, AD7FO, will be
    stepping down early from his term of office that concludes on September
    30, 2021. Tiley, of Spokane Valley, has been Section Manager for 2 and
    a half years.

    Jo Whitney, KA7LJQ, was the only nominee when the June 4 nomination
    deadline arrived, and she was declared elected. Whitney was initially
    scheduled to start her term of office on October 1, but because Tiley
    is stepping down before the end of his term, Walters -- after
    consulting with ARRL Northwestern Division Director Mike Ritz, W7VO --
    has appointed Whitney to start her term of office on July 1

    Whitney, of Yakima, has been an ARRL Emergency Coordinator since 2003,
    and she served as a District Emergency Coordinator in 2018 and 2019.

    ARRL PODCASTS SCHEDULE

    Check out the May episode of the On the Air podcast (Episode 17)
    features a discussion with Ward Silver, N0AX, about the importance of
    station grounding.

    The latest episode of Eclectic Tech (Episode 37) features a discussion
    about the mysterious Schumann Resonances and a chat with Grant Connell,
    WD6CNF, about an interesting Morse sending and receiving application he
    has created for Windows.

    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 <https://blubrry.com/arrlontheair/> |
    Eclectic Tech <https://blubrry.com/eclectictech/>.

    WISA WOODSAT SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETES STRATOSPHERIC TEST FLIGHT

    The world's first wooden CubeSat successfully completed a test flight
    into the stratosphere earlier this month. WISA Woodsat <http://wisawoodsat.space/> is constructed using birch plywood panels
    in a 1U configuration measuring 10 centimeters squared. Nine small
    solar cells will power the satellite, which will orbit at an altitude
    of 500 - 550 kilometers. The novel spacecraft will carry several
    amateur radio experiments, as well as photo downlinking, including
    selfies. A goal of the project is to determine how well wood products
    will perform in space.

    During the recent test, a functional model of the WISA Woodsat climbed
    19 miles into the sky tethered to a weather balloon. The satellite's
    camera captured a selfie video of the balloon bursting. A parachute
    deployed to take the nanosatellite back to Earth, where it was
    recovered intact, lodged in a spruce tree.

    The test satellite and a duplicate "spare" version, were manufactured
    at UPM Plywood's Savonlinna, Finland, factory. The company sells its construction-grade panels under the WISA trademark. The panels were thermo-vacuum dried and processed on a CNC machining center.

    The wooden satellite is based on a basic, versatile CubeSat format,
    Kitsat, which is designed with educational use in mind.

    As the sponsor quipped, "WISA Woodsat will go where no wood has gone
    before. With a mission to gather data on the behavior and durability of
    plywood over an extended period in the harsh temperatures, vacuum, and radiation of space in order to assess the

    use of wood materials in space structures."

    Once in orbit, Woodsat will be able to extend its selfie stick to
    capture photographs of the wooden box as it hurtles through space at
    40,000 kilometers per hour (24,800 miles per hour). This will allow the
    mission leaders to monitor the impact of the environment on the
    plywood.

    The satellite would downlink its telemetry and images from two cameras
    using amateur radio frequencies. In addition to testing plywood, the
    satellite will demonstrate accessible radio amateur satellite
    communication; host several secondary technology experiments; validate
    the Kitsat platform in orbit, and popularize space technology.

    RUSSIAN WOODPECKER ANTENNA ARRAY NOW A CULTURAL HERITAGE SITE

    The massive Duga-1 antenna array that transmitted the obnoxious and
    infuriating "Russian Woodpecker" HF signal from the 1970s until the
    late 1980s is now a cultural heritage site. The array, located near
    Chernobyl in Ukraine, was part of an over-the-horizon radar (OTH-R)
    system designed to detect and offer early warning of incoming ballistic missiles from the US. A complementary receiver site was located some 40
    miles away. While the system was operating, its broad rat-a-tat signal, typically at a 10 Hz rate, caused severe interference in the amateur
    bands. The Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster and the end of the
    Cold War preceded the end of the system and the interference it caused.
    NATO military intelligence discovered and photographed the structure,
    which it dubbed "Steel Yard."

    Nearly 2,300 feet long and more than 450 feet tall, the steel beams of
    the radar array are in the Chernobyl exclusion zone tower above the
    surrounding forest. Seen from a distance, it appears to be a massive
    wall or the start of a cage. As Vice recently reported <https://www.vice.com/amp/en/article/88nagx/a-missile-radar-in-the-chernobyl-exclusion-zone-is-now-a-protected-heritage-site>,

    the Association of Chernobyl Tour Operators was the first to announce
    that Ukraine had made Duga-1 a protected heritage site. The Russian
    Interfax news service later reported the official designation.

    "Our heritage is not only the area around the power plant but also the buildings located on its territory," Oleksandr Tkachenko, Ukraine's
    Minister of Culture and Information Policy, said in a Telegram thread
    about the announcement. "So now we are working on identifying other

    objects that should be part of the list of monuments. Our goal is to
    prevent destruction when possible."

    The Soviet Union deployed two similar OTH-R installations -- known and
    Duga-1 and Duga-2 -- the one near Chernobyl and another in eastern
    Siberia. Transmitter power levels were rumored to be in the 10-megawatt
    EIRP range.

    Duga-1 was the focus of a 2015 documentary, The Russian Woodpecker, by
    Chad Gracia. The film includes interviews with Duga Commander Vladimir
    Musiets and others involved in building and operating the OTH-R system.
    The production was a 2015 Sundance Film Festival winner in the
    documentary category. In recent years, the Duga-1 radar has also played
    a role in other films, as well as in various video games and novels.

    ARRL LEARNING NETWORK WEBINARS

    Visit the ARRL Learning Network
    <http://www.arrl.org/arrl-learning-network> (a members-only benefit) to register, check on upcoming webinars, and to view previously recorded
    sessions.

    Designing Coiled Coax "Ugly" Baluns -- John Portune, W6NBC / Thursday,
    July 8, 2021 @ 8 pm EDT (0000 UTC on Friday July 9)

    Coiled coax baluns are familiar, but not many hams know how to design
    them for maximum efficiency. The many designs available online can be confusing, so this presentation will help you learn the following: (1)
    The main function of a balun; (2) Calculating, and not guessing, at the
    amount of coax needed; (3) Self-resonance and frequency limitations.
    The presenter is the February 2021 QST Cover Plaque Award winner for
    his article "Create Your Own 1:1 Coax Choke Balun." Sponsored by
    PreppComm.

    Learning with High-Altitude Balloons -- Jack McElroy, KM4ZIA, and
    Audrey McElroy, KM4BUN / Thursday, July 22, 2021 @ 3:30 pm EDT (2030
    UTC)

    Jack McElroy, KM4ZIA, and Audrey McElroy, KM4BUN, talk about their
    experiences with high-altitude balloons, explain how others can get
    involved in high-altitude balloons, and discuss launching it
    successfully. Their discussion will include how high-altitude balloons
    are a great way to involve more youth in ham radio and how they can be
    a fantastic learning experience for students.

    ARRL members may register for upcoming presentations and view
    previously recorded Learning Network <http://www.arrl.org/arrl-learning-network> webinars. ARRL-affiliated
    radio clubs may also use the recordings as presentations for club
    meetings, mentoring new and current hams, and discussing amateur radio
    topics. The ARRL Learning Network schedule is subject to change.

    YOUTH ON THE AIR CAMP 2021 TO BE ON THE AIR AND STREAMING SELECTED
    EVENTS ONLINE

    The first Youth on the Air (YOTA <http://www.youthontheair.org/>) camp
    for young radio amateurs in North, Central, and South America begins on
    July 11 in West Chester, Ohio. Among other activities, campers will be operating special event station W8Y from both the National Voice of
    America Museum of Broadcasting in West Chester Township and from the
    camp hotel. The camp will run until July 16.

    "We are at 23 campers," said Camp Director Neil Rapp, WB9VPG. "We are
    very excited to finally bring this program to the Americas. Our young
    people are bringing an incredible lineup of hands-on sessions for their
    peers. We hope this pilot gives us the information we need to replicate
    this camp over multiple locations for years to come. We also hope this
    brings a more robust community of young hams into amateur radio."

    The long-awaited summer camp for up to 30 hams aged 15 through 25 had
    been set to take place in June 2020, but it had to be rescheduled until
    summer 2021 because of COVID-19 pandemic concerns. The camp for young
    hams in the Americas took its cue from the summer Youngsters on the Air
    camps held for the past few years in various IARU Region 1 countries.

    W8Y will be on the air as campers complete projects, between sessions,
    and during free time. Dedicated operating times on HF will be Monday,
    July 12, 0100 - 0330 UTC; Tuesday, July 13, 0000 - 0330 UTC and 1800 -
    2130 UTC. Dedicated satellite station operating times will be Thursday,
    July 15, 1400 - 1700 UTC, and Friday, July 16, 1500 - 1700 UTC.

    An Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS <http://www.ariss.org/>) contact is currently set for either Wednesday,
    July 14, at 1503 UTC, or

    Thursday, July 15, at 1416 UTC. It will be streamed live on the
    Youth on the Air YouTube channel. The camp opening observance on
    Sunday, July 11, 2100 - 2230 UTC, will feature keynote speaker Tim
    Duffy, K3LR. The hour-long closing ceremony on Friday, July 16, will
    get under way at 1700 UTC. The YouTube channel will also feature a
    daily video highlighting the activities of the previous day.

    ARRL and The Yasme Foundation donated project kits for the campers. X
    Tronics provided temperature-controlled soldering stations. The
    brochure on the Youth on the Air website includes more details about
    the camp. For additional information, contact
    <director@youthontheair.org> Camp Director Neil Rapp, WB9VPG.

    THE K7RA SOLAR UPDATE

    Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: Solar activity is strong. Average
    daily sunspot number rose from 14 to 34.7, and average daily solar flux increased from 79.3 to 86.9. Both figures represent a dramatic increase
    in solar activity.

    Planetary A index went from 5.3 to 6.1, while average daily middle
    latitude A index held steady at 6.1.

    Predicted solar flux is 94 on July 1 - 7; 90 on July 8; 85 on July 9 -
    11; 82 on July 12 - 14; 80 on July 15 - 18; 82 on July 19; 85 on July
    20 - 24; 88 on July 25; 90 on July 26 - 28; 92 on July 29 - August 1;
    90 on August 2, and 85 on August 3 - 7.

    Predicted planetary A index is 12, 8, 12, 8, and 10 on July 1 - 5; 5 on
    July 6 - 8; 8 on July 9 - 10; 5, 15, and 12 on July 11 - 13; 5 on July
    14 - 20; 8 on July 21; 5 on July 22 - 26; 10 on July 27; 5 on July 28 -
    30; 12 on July 31; 5 on August 1 - 4, and 8 on August 5 - 6.

    W9NY reported on June 28:

    "The propagation on 20 meters between my Dune Acres, Indiana, station
    and much of Europe and Asiatic Russia beginning last night at 11 PM and continuing for about 2 hours was absolutely amazing. It reminded me of
    10 meters at the peak of prior sunspot cycles. And today there was a
    fair amount of activity on 10 and 6 meters." More details in the Friday
    K7RA Solar Update.

    Sunspot numbers for June 24 - 30 were 11, 25, 16, 32, 50, 56, and 53,
    with a mean of 34.7. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 80.6, 83.4, 82.4, 87,
    88.6, 92.5, and 94.1, with a mean of 86.9. Estimated planetary A
    indices were 5, 7, 4, 4, 4, 5, and 14, with a mean of 6.1. Middle
    latitude A index was 6, 8, 5, 4, 4, 5, and 11, with a mean of 6.1.

    A comprehensive K7RA Solar Update is posted Fridays on the ARRL
    website. For more information concerning radio propagation, visit <http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals> the ARRL Technical
    Information Service, read
    <http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere> "What the Numbers
    Mean...," and check out <http://k9la.us/> this Propagation Page.

    A propagation bulletin archive <http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation> is available. For customizable propagation charts, visit the VOACAP Online for Ham Radio <https://www.voacap.com/hf/> website.

    Share <k7ra@arrl.net> your reports and observations.

    AMATEUR RADIO IN THE NEWS

    ARRL Public Information Officers, Coordinators, and many other member-volunteers help keep amateur radio and ARRL in the news <http://www.arrl.org/media-hits>.

    - Amateur Radio Club holds two-day event at USS Kidd <https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/entertainment_life/article_3d09bf18-cdef-11eb-989a-0b47653fb72b.html>

    / The Advocate (Louisiana) June 27, 2021

    - Amateur radio operators key during Hugo, host field day to practice
    skills <https://www.wltx.com/article/news/local/street-squad/sumter/ham-radio-operators-key-during-hugo-host-field-day-to-practice-skills/101-8413262e-7686-40e9-beaa-45d2efc9a6b3>

    / News 19 - WLTX (South Carolina) June 27, 2021

    - Ham operators prepare for hurricane season with field day <https://www.claytodayonline.com/stories/ham-operators-prepare-for-hurricane-season-with-field-day,27488>

    / Clay Today (Florida) June 23, 2021

    - Searching For a 'Fox' in Jackson Park <https://www.blueridgenow.com/story/news/2021/06/22/radio-club-teaches-radio-signals-map-reading-kids-jackson-park-hendersonville/5304137001/>

    / Times-News (North Carolina) June 22, 2021

    - Ham Radio Operators Provide Vital Information When Storms Disrupt Communications <https://www.mynews13.com/fl/orlando/news/2021/06/22/ham-radio-operators-play-role-when-storms-disrupt-communications?web=1&wdLOR=c01DF709E-1552-4CBA-9BB6-E5A936F64487>

    / Spectrum News Channel 13 (Florida) June 22, 2021

    Share <newsmedia@arrl.org> any amateur radio media hits you spot with
    us.

    ANNOUNCEMENTS

    - The Canadian American Net (CANAM <http://canamnet7153.com/>) aims to
    unite hams in the Eastern US and Canada. Some 40 amateurs from Canada
    and the US typically check in for each session, and the net
    accommodates CW and SSB. The Canadian-American Net operates 7 days a
    week on 7.153 MHz, with check-in starting at 1300 UTC.

    - The next meeting of the ARRL Board of Directors' Executive Committee
    meeting is July 7 at 11 AM EDT. The ARRL Board of Directors will meet
    July 16 - 17 for its second meeting of the year. The agenda <http://www.arrl.org/board-meetings> for the full Board meeting is
    available on the ARRL website.

    - Radio amateurs in Australia soon will be able to obtain and use 2 × 1
    call signs. Regulator ACMA (Australian Communications and Media
    Authority) will release a bulletin concerning implementation plans.

    - Novice stations in the Netherlands (PD-prefix licensees) may now
    operate with 100 W, instead of 25 W, on 40, 20, and 10 meters. They
    also have access to the entire 40- and 20-meter bands. In addition, the Netherlands no longer imposes a minimum age to get a Novice or Full
    License in the Netherlands.

    - EZ Hang has changed ownership. The new proprietor is Chris Fox, NI4L <http://ni4l.com/>, Antennas & Electronics LLC, 3861 Mount Olive Church
    Rd, Moravian Falls, NC 28654. (828) 855-8869.

    - International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Region 1 has announced <https://www.iaru-r1.org/2021/hf-band-plan-revised/> the release of an
    HF band plan <https://www.iaru-r1.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/hf_r1_bandplan.pdf>
    and annex incorporating changes agreed at the General Conference in
    October.

    IN BRIEF...

    Field Day entries are arriving fast and furious. Three days into the
    Field Day entry submission period (June 30), entries already have
    topped 3,000. ARRL Contest Program Manager Paul Bourque, N1SFE, says
    201 of these are three-or-more-operator club entries (Class A); 385 are
    one- or two-person club or group entries (Class B); 33 are mobile
    entries (Class C), and 34 entered as EOC stations (Class F). "2,414
    entrants operated from home stations -- 1,831 as Class D (commercial
    power) and 583 as Class E (emergency power)," Bourque said. "Last year,
    there were 10,213 total entrants -- 611 as Class A; 1,086 as Class B;
    134 Class C; 6,318 Class D; 1,980 Class E, and 84 Class F. In 2019,
    before the pandemic, there were 3,113 total entries." -- Thanks to ARRL
    Contest Program Manager Paul Bourque, N1SFE

    The third QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo <https://www.qsotodayhamexpo.com/>
    will take place August 14 - 15, with presentations available on demand
    for 30 days. Sponsors promise "a flawless experience" that will expose
    visitors to new ideas, equipment, and practical techniques via the
    vFairs platform used successfully in the first QSO Today Virtual Ham
    Expo in August 2020. Some 80 speakers have been lined up to offer
    expert knowledge and information for amateurs at all experience levels.
    A live roundtable video will allow attendees to interact with each
    other and with exhibitors. ARRL is a QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo
    partner. Registration is now under way, and full registration "early
    bird" tickets are $10. Full registration includes access to the entire
    Expo, including presentations and the 30-day on-demand period. Free registration includes access to exhibitors, prizes, general lounge, and lobbies. Those who registered for the March Expo already have a free registration for the August Expo.

    Moonbounce enthusiast Steve McDonald, VE7SL, wanted to determine a back-to-basics equipment complement for making 2-meter EME contacts. He
    came up with a nine-element Yagi, a 120 W amplifier, and an antenna position-control system that offered azimuthal rotation but not
    elevation. The time available to make EME contacts was less than if
    he'd had elevation control. His blog <https://ve7sl.blogspot.com/2021/06/single-yagi-eme.html?spref=cu>
    recounts his experience with single-Yagi moonbounce. His advice, "If
    you haven't given single-Yagi EME a try, I would encourage you to test
    it out, as you might be surprised at your results." The next ARRL EME
    Contest <https://contests.arrl.org/eme/> weekend is October 23 - 24,
    2021.

    JUST AHEAD IN RADIOSPORT

    - July 2 -- NCCC RTTY Sprint

    - July 2 -- NCCC Sprint (CW)

    - July 3 - 4 -- DL-DX RTTY Contest

    - July 3 - 4 -- Marconi Memorial HF Contest (CW)

    - July 3 - 4 -- Original QRP Contest (CW)

    - July 3 - 4 -- PODXS 070 Club 40-Meter Firecracker Sprint (digital)

    - July 5 -- K1USN Slow Speed Test (CW, maximum 20 WPM)

    - July 5 -- RSGB 80-Meter Club Championship (CW)

    - July 6 -- Worldwide Sideband Activity Contest

    - July 6 -- ARS Spartan Sprint (CW)

    - July 6 -- RTTYops Weeksprint

    - July 7 -- CWops Mini-CWT Test

    - July 7 -- VHF-UHF FT8 Activity Contest

    - July 7 -- CWops Mini-CWT Test (CW)

    - July 8 -- CWops Mini-CWT Test (CW)

    - July 8 -- RTTYops Weeksprint

    UPCOMING ARRL SECTION, STATE, AND DIVISION CONVENTIONS

    Many conventions and hamfests have been canceled or postponed due to
    the coronavirus pandemic. Check the calendar of canceled events <http://www.arrl.org/hamfests/search/page:1/keywords:Canceled/model:Event>
    on the ARRL website.

    - August 14 - 15 -- QSO Today Virtual Ham Expo (online) <https://www.qsotodayhamexpo.com/>

    - August 21 - 22 -- ARRL Southeastern Division Convention <https://hamfest.org/> (Huntsville Hamfest), Huntsville, Alabama

    - September 10 - 12 -- ARRL New England Division Convention <https://hamxposition.org/> (Northeast HamXposition), Marlborough, Massachusetts

    - September 25 - ARRL Dakota Division Convention <https://rrra.org/cal/2021/09/25/rrra-hamfest-arrl-dakota-division-convention/>

    (RRRA Hamfest), West Fargo, North Dakota

    Find conventions and hamfests in your area
    <http://www.arrl.org/hamfests>.

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