BCARC begins Coffee Mug fundraiser
Transcription
BCARC begins Coffee Mug fundraiser
A Publication of the Branch County Amateur Radio Club, Coldwater, MI BCARC begins Coffee Mug fundraiser Justin Lopshire, KD8JEL After much discussion in Board Meetings and also at the regular Club Meetings, the Branch County Amateur Radio Club has announced their newest fundraiser effort. Club raised funds for a new 2-meter repeater, currently in operation, and a new antenna for the machine, which will be purchased when pending tower work at the Charter tower site is scheduled to begin. At the May Club Meeting, approval was given to the The mugs, which are priced at $10 each, should be Board to go forward with the purchase of 72 15-ounce available at the June Club Meeting, on Tuesday, June cobalt blue mugs with the 17th, at the H & C Burnside Club’s logo and call sign emSenior Center in Coldwater. blazoned in white. Orders can be made with any As mentioned in previous BCARC Board Member. meetings by Club President, Roy McCloud, KA8VSH, the Club doesn’t receive much revenue outside of yearly dues fees and donations. The monthly 50/50 raffle benefits the Club’s Memorial Fund until it reaches $200. Only after the fund reaches the aforementioned amount will the 50/50 raffle funds go directly into the General Fund. The last time the BCARC undertook a fundraising effort was in 2010, when the The Branch County Emergency Net (BCEN), Tuesdays (except for the third Tuesday) at 7PM Local Time on the WD8KAF repeaters! In this Issue... BCARC begins Coffee Mug fundraiser 1 Notes from the President 2 Eugene (Gene) Miller, KC8PWB, SK BCARC May 3 Meeting Minutes 4 Engagement Photos 4 News from the ARRL 5 Over the Hedges 8 BCARC Calendar 9 BCARC Financial Report 10 BCARC Membership Application 11 Branch Signals Branch Signals is published monthly by the Branch County Busy month ahead for the BCARC A lot has been going on since our last News Letter. The big thing is that our order for the Club Coffee Mugs has been placed and will be arriving soon, should be in time for our next club meeting. If you don't already know, the mug will be Cobalt Blue with our Club logo and Call Sign in white on one side. We purchased 72 mugs and the price is $10.00 each with all profits going into the treasury. This will be a great way for us to raise some money to help with our expenses for the up coming year. So each one bought is going to help all of us, contact any Board member with your order. Amateur Radio Club. At the last Board meeting This publication the majority of the dis- is cussion was spent planposted to our website, ning activities and meetwww.branchcountyarc.com., but can be conveniently emailed to you as well. To subscribe, email the editor, Justin Lopshire, at kd8jel@arrl.net. June 2014 ings for the remainder of this year. The big event for June will be Field Day on June 28th & 29th. Ted Hadfield and Jim King are heading the organizing of this event. Lets have a big turn out for this and have some fun. We will be operating from the club station as we have in the past. With Field Day being the big event, the program for our next meeting 7:00PM on June 17, 2014 at the Burnside Senior Center will be devoted to planning, organizing and answering question for Field Day. This will be an opportunity for your input and a lot of other information. Here are other up coming meetings and events. July's meeting will be the Club picnic, we will having more information about this soon. Gene & Jackie Hesse are chairing this event. August meeting program will focus on Fox hunting because, we are tentatively planning on a Fox Hunt on Saturday August 23, 2014. September & October will be meetings concerning DX & LoTW. For the November meeting you will be getting a multiple choice question to find out your interest for that meeting. And last of all December will be the Club Christmas Party. So Roy McCloud can reached via email, ka8vsh@arrl.net. be at as you can see we have been trying to plan ahead and have a variety of things we hope that will be of interest to you all. At our last meeting Jim Voss put together information for us regarding name badges. An order form is now available for anyone who may be interested in obtaining one. Like many of you I have been having a lot of fun working the W1AW ARRL Centennial stations that have been on the air. Mostly I have just been working them on 20M and 40M phone but, I know others are working all bands and modes. What ever is your choice it is still a lot of fun, so take advantage of this once in a life time opportunity. Some seem to be difficult to get other very See NOTES, page 3 2 NOTES From page 2 Eugene (Gene) KC8PWB, SK easy but, what a kick when you use LoTW and see that confirmation Eugene “Gene” Robert come back it's a great way Miller, 79, of Coldwater, passed away on Thursto get that WAS. day, May 15, 2014 while O n e l a s t surrounded by family at thing, condolences to Maple Lawn Medical Care Justin Lopshire and his Facility. family. Justin's Grandmother passed away at Gene was born January 28, 1935 to Maurice and the end of May. Dorothy (Johns) Miller in Archbold, OH. He graduated from Pettisville High School and attended college prior to moving to Michigan. Gene was selfemployed and mastered many occupations during his career. On July 29, 1961, he married the love of his life, Doris Metzger at Pleasant Hill Church. Gene was a loving family man with many hobbies. He enjoyed spending time building and using 3 Miller, HAM radios. He was a member of the Branch County Flying Club. Gene was an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed hunting and fishing. He also collected antiques, and dabbled in photography. Gene was a tinkerer who liked wood carving, wood working, and metal working. Mr. Miller is survived by his wife Doris Miller of Coldwater; his daughter Diana (Eric) Troldahl of Canton; his sons Kenneth E. Miller of Bronson, Kelly (Dawn) Miller of Quincy, and Ronald (Lori) Miller of Wasilla, AK; his sisters Margaret Wiler of Diamond Head, MS and Helen (Fred) Ingram of New Haven, IN; 7 grand-children; 4 great Gene (SK) Miller, KC8PWB grand-children; 4 step grand-children; 8 step great grand-children; many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; his brother Charles Miller; his brother-in-law DeWayne Wiler and his nephew Robert Wiler. Memorials may be directed to the Quincy Volunteer Fire Dept., Bronson Volunteer Fire Dept., or Jamestown Church. June 2014 May Meeting Minutes from the BCARC Ted Hadfield, KU8F The BCARC Meeting opened at 7:00 pm by president Roy McCloud. The club was led in the recital of the Pledge of Allegiance. more time for information to be submitted and posted in the newsletter, for members to refer to prior to each monthly club meeting. Roy McCloud thanked Larry Camp and Ted Hadfield for installing/ replacing his GR5V antenna. Arnie Hayward had his HF radio repaired and up and running, as well as Jim Voss. Ted mentioned his Dayton trip and the purchase of a Heil headset and foot pedal. Meeting adjourned by Ted Hadfield reported for motion at 7:55 pm. the Field Day Committee needing volunteers to help with planning, food, etc. Pat Beeman volunteered to speak to Tim MONTHLY REPORTS: Miner about the EOC trailer usage. EC, Patrick Beeman, gave a report of Skywarn net OLD BUSINESS: activities along with Bill Slade. Roy McCloud reopened discussions of purchase of Larry Camp reported on 72 coffee mugs with the the activities of the club BCARC and WD8KAF involvement at the annual logo/call-sign. $200.00 Bike 101 Lakes ride, total, approved by motion Michigan section. made by Larry Camp, seconded Bill Justin Lopshire gave an Slade, motion carried by update on the editing of unanimous vote. the newsletter and website. He pointed out that NEW BUSINESS: the calendar on the newsletter is actually a copy of MISCELLANEOUS: On April 27, 2014, Justin the live calendar on the Lopshire, KD8JEL, prowebsite. The web- Patrick Beeman pre- posed to Kayla Strong of site edition is “clickable” s e n t e d to t h e Charlotte. for more detail. club, a framed picture of the local participants of Justin is the son of GregRoy McCloud reported our W1AW/8 air time ory and Tammy Lopshire that the club officers de- along with copies of the of Coldwater, and is a cided to hold their FCC License for the 1999 graduate of Coldmonthly meeting the last event. water High School. Thursday of each month rather than the first Justin Lopshire an- Kayla is the daughter of Thursday. This will facili- nounced his engagement. Robert and Martha The previous months financial and Treasurers report were referred to as listed in the newsletter and Website of BCARC. June 2014 Strong of Charlotte, and is a 2004 graduate of Olivet High School and a 2008 graduate from Adrian College. The couple is planning a wedding ceremony on Saturday, September 13th, 2014 in Coldwater. CONGRATS! 4 FCC okays changes to Amateur FCC Releases Warning Notices Radio exam credit, test admini- to Several Radio Amateurs stration, emission type rules The FCC Enforcement call sign, in violation of In a wide-ranging Report and Order (R&O) released June 9 that takes various proceedings into consideration, the FCC has revised the Amateur Service Part 97 rules to grant credit for written examination elements 3 (General) and 4 (Amateur Extra) to holders of “expired licenses that required passage of those elements.” The FCC will require former licensees — those falling outside the 2-year grace period — to pass Element 2 (Technician) in order to be relicensed, however. The Commission declined to give examination credit to the holder of an expired Certificate of Successful Completion of Examination (CSCE) or to extend its validity to the holder’s lifetime. “Our decision to grant credit for written examination Elements 3 and 4 for expired licenses that required passage [of those elements] will pro- 5 vide some relief for former General, Advanced, and Amateur Extra class licensees,” the FCC said, “and is consistent with how we treat expired pre1987 Technician class licensees who want to reenter the Amateur Service.” Pre-1987 Techs can get Element 3 credit, since the Technician and General class written examinations in that era were identical. The Commission said current rules and procedures that apply to expired pre-1987 Technician licenses “are sufficient to verify that an individual is a former licensee under our new rules.” Bureau has made public several warning notices issued over the past few months to radio amateurs. A couple of the letters from Special Counsel Laura Smith involved alleged infractions on 20 meters. On April 15, the FCC wrote Larry S. King, KI8NGS, of Owosso, Michigan, regarding failure to properly follow station identification rules on March 21. Smith told King that he was monitored by staffers at the FCC High Frequency Direction Finding Center (HFDFC) “operating your Amateur Radio on 14.313 MHz for 20 minutes without identifying in a timely manner.” Smith said the HFDFC used direction-finding equipment to confirm that the transmissions were coming from his location. She said the Center recorded the transmissions. The Commission said that requiring applicants holding expired licenses to pass Element 2 in order to relicense “will address commenters’ concerns about lost proficiency and knowledge, because a former licensee will have to “This incident constitutes demonstrate that he or a failure to properly See CHANGES, page 6 transmit your assigned the Comission’s rules,” Smith wrote. “Your operation as described is contrary to the basis and purpose of the Amateur Radio Service, as set out in Section 97.1 and is a violation of Section 97.11 (a) of the Commission’s rules.” On March 31, Smith sent a warning notice to Daniel G.Churovich, N9RSY, of Ripley, Tennessee, alleging that Churovich engaged in an extended communication on 14.313 MHz with a station that may not have been operating in the Amateur Service. “On Friday, March 28, 2014, you were heard by staff at the Commission's High Frequency Direction Finding (HFDF) Center communicating repeatedly on 14.313 MHz with an individual who you identify only as ‘cowboy,’” Smith wrote. “This individual failed to provide See NOTICES, page 7 June 2014 CHANGES higher accuracy and lower fraud that would be the case with two VEs.” In From page 5 a related matter, though, she has retained knowl- the Commission emedge of technical and braced the use of remote regulatory matters.” The testing methods. FCC said the Element 2 requirement also would “Allowing VEs and VECs deter any attempts by the option of administersomeone with the same ing examinations at locaname as a former licensee tions remote from the to obtain a ham ticket VEs is warranted,” the without examination. FCC said. The National Conference of Volunteer In 1997 the FCC, in the Examiner Coordinators face of opposition, (NCVEC) in 2002 endropped a proposal that dorsed experimental use would have generally al- of videoconferencing lowed examination ele- technology to conduct ment credit for expired Amateur Radio testing in amateur operator li- remote areas of Alaska. censes. In the past, the The Anchorage VEC has FCC has maintained that long pushed for the its procedures “provide change, citing the example notification and pense to provide Amateur opportunity for license Radio test sessions to renewal” and that retest- Alaska residents living in ing did not impose an un- remote areas. reasonable burden. The issue arose again in 2011, The FCC declined to adwith a request from the dress “the mechanics” of Anchorage Volunteer Ex- remote testing, which, it aminer Coordinator. said, “will vary from location to location and sesThe FCC pulled back from sion to session.” The its own proposal to re- Commission said specific duce from three to two rules spelling out how to the minimum number of administer exam sessions volunteer examiners re- remotely “could limit the quired to proctor an flexibility of VEs and Amateur Radio examina- VECs.” The FCC stressed tion session. The ARRL, the obligation on the part the W5YI-VEC and “a of VECs and VEs “to adclear majority of com- minister examinations menters” opposed the responsibly” applies “in change, the FCC said. The full” to remote testing. FCC said it found commenters’ arguments per- The FCC amended the suasive that that the use rules to provide that VEs of three VEs “results in administering examina- June 2014 tions remotely be required to grade such examinations “at the earliest practical opportunity,” r a t h e r t h a n “immediately,” as the rule for conventional exam sessions requires. Finally, the FCC has adopted an ARRL proposal to authorize certain Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) emissions in the Amateur Service. The Wireless Telecommunications Bureau in 2013 granted an ARRL request for a temporary blanket waiver to permit radio amateurs to transmit emissions with designators FXD, FXE, and F7E, pending resolution of the rulemaking petition. “Commenters strongly support amendment of the rules to permit these addit ional emission types,” the FCC noted. “The commenters assert that the proposed rule change ‘is consistent with the basis and purpose of the Amateur Service,’” and will allow repurposing surplus mobile relay equipment from other radio services in the Amateur Service, the Commission added. The FCC said it also will make “certain minor, non -substantive amendments to the Amateur Service rules.” It is amending Part 97 “to reflect that the Commission amended its rules to eliminate the requirement that certain Amateur Radio Service licensees pass a Morse code examination,” the FCC said in the R&O. It also said it was correcting “certain typographical or other errors” in Part 97. The new rules become effective 30 days after their publication in The Federal Register. The Moon is moving away from us by 1.48 inches a year! (Make those EME contacts while the Moon’s still here!) 6 NOTICES From page 5 his call sign during your conversation, a fact that you were aware of as you repeatedly demanded that he provide his name, call sign, and location. Despite being aware of the rule violation on the part of this other individual, you continued communicating with him for an extended period of time.” or control operator that you stay off [the repeater] — and any other similar requests to cease operations on any other repeaters by any other repeater licensees, control operators or trustees.” The warnings went out on March 31 to Robert J. Doll, WQ4E, and Todd W. Phillips, N4QWZ, both of Greenbrier, Tennessee; Bryan K. Waddell, W9MUP, of Monroe, Wisconsin, and Stacy Hunt, KB8RNN, of Yale, Smith told Churovich that Michigan. the incident constituted “unauthorized transmis- Smith advised all recipisions” in violation of ents that any recurrence Commission rules that of the alleged violation permit radio amateur to after receipt of the warnengage in two-way com- ing letter could subject munications with “other them to “severe penalties, stations in the Amateur including license revocaService. tion, monetary forfeiture (fines), or a modification “There is no evidence that proceeding to restrict the the individual with whom frequencies upon which you were communicating you may operate.” with on March 28 was an Amateur Radio operator, “Fines normally range as he failed to provide his from $7500 to $10,000,” call sign as required by she concluded. Co mm i ss io n ru l e s,” Smith pointed out. W1AW Portable Station Schedule (all times listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) June 4, 0000-June 10, 2359—Alabama (W1AW/4) & Louisiana (W1AW/5) June 11, 0000-June 17, 2359—Arkansas (W1AW/5) & Minnesota (W1AW/0) June 18, 0000-June 24, 2359—Alaska (W1AW/KL7) & Montana (W1AW/7) June 25, 0000-July 1, 2359—Illinois (W1AW/9) & Maryland (W1AW/3) July 2, 0000-July 8, 2359—Wisconsin (W1AW/9) & Utah (W1AW/7) Smith also wrote to Amateur Radio licensees in Tennessee, Michigan, and Wisconsin, to note that they all had failed to comply with formal written requests not to use local repeater systems. Smith advised four licensees that the FCC expected them to “abide by the request of the trustee and/ 7 June 2014 THANK YOU! Your board has been busy since the beginning of the year planning interesting activities that our members would enjoy for both monthly club meetings and any additional activities. Recently, many of us completed the club membership form and radio interests’ survey. We are very much interested in your input and ideas, so if you didn’t get an opportunity to complete a survey and would like to do so, please contact our club Secretary/ Treasurer, Ted Hadfield for the form. We’d like to review the survey data with you in this article. Figure 1 shows the overall top level graph for all categories listed on the form. As you can see, HF interests was the most rated choice with 80% selected out of 14 returned forms followed by UHF-VHF and DX with 65%. We recognized that HF type activities are numer- June 2014 VHF activities are numerous, so we broke the data down for activities that could be considered With that level of interest, Patrick should not have difficulty getting volunteers for the monthly siren test. It also helps explain the good turnout we have for the Tuesday night emergency net. Computer-Digital modes was 2nd place at 36%. Another category of interest of the hobby is any Hands-on activities. Some like to have a sol- Figure 1 ous, so we attempted to go a little deeper in the data. On the right, in Figure 2, we sorted the data for those types of activities that fall into HF type activities. Chasing DX was the most chosen interest of the club with 65%. Following DX was a 4 way tie of Volunteer Examiner, working special events, CW and just plain ole rag chewing at 43%. It’s Figure 2 no wonder that we enjoy Saturday morning break- UHF-VHF. In Figure 3 fast at the Prop Blast!! (next page), you see that Emergency CommuThe 2nd most top level nications is the top inrated activity was UHF- terest for the club at 57%. VHF. Once again, we That data point just put a recognized that UHF- smile on Patrick’s face! dering iron in their hands! As you will see in Figure 4 (next page), Antenna building or antenna experimenting was at the top of the chart at 43% followed by QRP-Low power building. 8 We also looked at the level of licenses that make up the club. It was no surprise that 69% have their Extra license followed up with 23% for General. This data is current and includes Nick’s, KD8WEO accomplishment to General. Congrats Nick! Although we Amateur Radio operators get involved for many reasons, your specific interests are very important to us so that we can collectively attempt to identify and select those topics and activities that keep us engaged. We welcome your thoughts, ideas and Figure 3 hope to see you soon. Figure 4 9 BCARC CALENDAR-JUNE 2014 June 2014 MAY 2014 Previous Balance of report given ending 4/30/2014: $1875.32 5/21 deposit-50/50 fund +18.00 5/21 deposit-membership dues +30.00 Ending bal verified by bank statement $1923.32 statement closing date, 5/30/2014 SIGNED James T Hadfield Treasurer