~terry
Tue, Nov 10, 1998 (11:31)
seed
This topic will help you get your ham radio license.
~terry
Tue, Nov 10, 1998 (11:31)
#1
The questions are available on the
internet (as are LOTS of other ham-related sites).
AA9PW's Amateur Radio Exam Practice Page is the best I've found:
http://www.biochem.mcw.edu/Postdocs/Simon/radio/exam.html
~wer
Sun, Apr 25, 1999 (00:49)
#2
(this is a test...had to kill this topic in another conf,
wanted to make sure it still worked in here...)
~aschuth
Mon, Apr 26, 1999 (10:34)
#3
But isn't there a difference between amateur radio and trucker's ole ham radio?
~terry
Mon, Apr 26, 1999 (12:59)
#4
You mean CB, good buddy! Yep, they're night and day. CB is noisy,
crowded, rude, boisterous, profane and crude. Ham (amateur) radio is much
more civilized.
~aschuth
Mon, Apr 26, 1999 (13:03)
#5
I know amateur radio well (didn't know amateur=ham). My grandfather was a very enthusiastic Amateurfunker.
Did you see the B92 topic? Got a contact to them; wonder if that would be topic for somebody in Austin? What do you think?
~terry
Tue, Apr 27, 1999 (17:34)
#6
Mel Riser is getting his ham ticket, he's our guy at DDC who keeps our
network up and running.
~MarciaH
Fri, Jan 14, 2000 (15:21)
#7
ZCZC AG03
QST de W1AW
ARRL Bulletin 3 ARLB003
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington CT January 14, 2000
To all radio amateurs
SB QST ARL ARLB003
ARLB003 Question Pool Committee Eyes February 1 Release Date
A revised Amateur Radio question pool that reflects the April 15,
2000, restructuring rules could be out by February 1. Chairman Ray
Adams, W4CPA, of the National Conference of Volunteer Examiner
Coordinators' Question Pool Committee says workable question pools
for the new Technician, General and Amateur Extra written exams will
be made public by February 1 or ''very shortly thereafter.''
Adams says that a Technician class syllabus already has been drafted
and approved. The various QPC members have been keeping in touch by
telephone and e-mail since the FCC announced the restructuring rules
December 30.
Adams says that the QPC plans to further refine and update the newly
configured pools in the future, after it has an opportunity to meet
and formulate a plan. He said the revised question pools will follow
the established format.
After April 15, 2000, the FCC will only issue Technician, General,
and Amateur Extra class licenses. Novice and Advanced licensees will
retain current operating privileges and may renew indefinitely.
Applicants desiring HF privileges will only have to pass a 5 WPM
Morse code test. Current Amateur Radio study materials remain valid
at least until the new rules become effective in April.
There are four examination elements in the new licensing system.
Element 1 is the 5 WPM Morse code test; Element 2 is a 35-question
Technician test; Element 3 is a 35-question General test, and
Element 4 is a 50-question Amateur Extra test.
Frequently Asked Questions and other information on restructuring is
available on the ARRL Web site. NNNN/EE
~MarciaH
Mon, Jan 17, 2000 (15:49)
#8
From Mobile Aeronautics Education Laboratory
WHAT ARE KEPLERIAN ELEMENTS?
Satellite-tracking computer software use Keplerian elements (also known as
"orbital" or "tracking" elements) to pinpoint the location of a satellite
at any given time.
The Keplerian elements provide the software with a snapshot of a
satellite's orbital track, which the computer uses to calculate the future
whereabouts of the satellite.
Using such a computer tracking program allows an observer to determine when
a satellite is to appear about his or her horizon.
AMSAT
The AMSAT News Service publishes weekly bulletins containing information of
interest to amateur satellite operators, including Keplerian element
postings for the
shuttle and popular amateur satellites. These bulletins are distributed
electronically through amateur satellites, the terrestrial amateur packet
radio network, and
through various landline networks. Their World Wide Web site is:
http://www.amsat.org.
AMSAT also maintains public mailing lists (email) to deliver Keplerian
elements and other information. To subscribe to one or more mailing lists
from AMSAT, send
a message with your request to listserv@amsat.org. Be sure to include your
call sign (if any), your correct email address, and the proper names (shown
below) of the
mailing lists you wish to receive. Put the word "subscribe" followed by one
of the following in the text of the message (not the subject line):
ANS - AMSAT News Service
AMSAT-BB - AMSAT Bulletin Board
KEPS - Keplerian Elements mailing list
NASAINFO - NASA related information mailing list
SAREX - Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment mailing list
Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT)
This ftp site is available 24 hours a day with current satellite keplerian
elements and software. The latest elements are available in:
ftp://archive.afit.af.mil/pub/space/tle.new
Format of the 2-line keplerian element files can be found in their tle.doc file.
NASA Spacelink
NASA's electronic information system, Spacelink, carries current shuttle
mission status reports and Keplerian elements for low earth orbit
satellites. The internet site
name is "spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov" with TCP/IP address 192.149.89.61. Access
can be gained through any of the following:
World Wide Web:
http://spacelink.msfc.nasa.gov/Instructional.Materials/Software/Tracking.Ele
ments
This site also has Gopher, Anonymous FTP, and Telnet access.
Modem line (205) 895-0028, Terminal emulation VT-100, Data format 8-N-1
Goddard ARC
The Goddard Amateur Radio Club, WA3NAN, maintains a BBS which carries
Keplerian orbital elements updated daily, and daily SAREX bulletins and space
shuttle mission information.
Modem line (301) 286-4137
telnet: telnet://wa3nan.gsfc.nasa.gov
TCP/IP address 128.183.105.17
Packet radio - WA3NAN on 145.090 MHz in the Maryland/DC area
Johnson Space Center ARC
The Johnson Space Center Amateur Radio Club maintains a BBS with the latest
element sets available during a shuttle flight.
Modem line (713) 244-5625
Celestial BBS
Current orbital elements for SAREX and other Amateur Radio satellites are
carried on the Celestial BBS. Keplerian elements are updated daily, when
possible. Documentation and tracking software are also available on this system.
Modem line (205) 409-9280
~MarciaH
Mon, Jan 17, 2000 (18:24)
#9
I posted last week's Keplerian numbers on the Short Wave topic.
~MarciaH
Mon, Jan 24, 2000 (17:50)
#10
ARLX001 Hedy Lamarr, actress and inventor, SK.
Hedy Lamarr, the sultry, sexy screen star of the 1930s and 1940s who
also conceived the frequency-hopping technique now known as spread
spectrum, has died. Lamarr was found dead in her suburban Orlando,
Florida, home January 19. She was believed to be 86.
Born Hedwig Kiesler in Austria, Lamarr came to the US in 1937 after
being signed by MGM. Among her most successful films was the 1949,
directed Cecil B. DeMille classic, Samson and Delilah.
In her 1992 book Feminine Ingenuity, Lamarr described how she came
up with the idea of a signaling device for radio-controlled
torpedoes that would minimize the danger of detection or jamming by
randomly shifting the frequency. She and composer George Antheil
developed the concept and received a patent for it in 1942.
The concept was not developed during World War II, but when the
patent expired, Sylvania put the idea to use in satellites. Spread
spectrum also has found applications in wireless telephones,
military radios, wireless computer links, and Amateur Radio
experimentation.
A more-detailed version of Lamarr's role in spread spectrum is
described in the IEEE book Spread Spectrum Communications, published
in 1983.
NNNN
/EX
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 9, 2000 (20:41)
#11
Virginia General Assembly praises hams
The Virginia General Assembly has approved a joint House-Senate
resolution praising the Amateur Radio response to Hurricane Floyd.
The resolution unanimously passed both chambers on January 27. A
signing ceremony has been set for February 17, 11:30 AM, at the
Capitol in Richmond.
The resolution praises the work of Virginia's ARES/RACES members
last September when Hurricane Floyd totally isolated the City of
Franklin, and rising flood waters forced city officials to abandon
their Emergency Operations Center, forcing the city to rely
completely on Amateur Radio for communication with the outside.
''With traditional lines of communication inoperable, the Amateur
Radio operators, members of the Amateur Radio Emergency Service
(ARES) and the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service (RACES),
provided the only reliable communication into and out of the
flood-ravaged Franklin area,'' the resolution says.
According to the resolution, the Hurricane Floyd activation was ''the
widest geographical and longest-running ARES/RACES activation in
Virginia's history'' and involved nearly 150 ARES/RACES volunteers
who put in some 9500 hours of duty to help coordinate emergency
operations in Franklin.
''Due to the tireless efforts of amateur radio volunteers, the tragic
effects of Hurricane Floyd were mitigated, the lives of those in the
flood zone safeguarded, and the suffering of Franklin's residents
alleviated,'' the resolution said in expressing the General
Assembly's ''admiration and gratitude for the vital contributions of
Virginia's amateur radio operators.''
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 9, 2000 (20:46)
#12
My ISP was created by Hams during Hurricane Iniki which devastated Kauai. It was the only means of getting information in and out of the mess the storm left until the military managed to get in some days later. I know some of these men, personally!
~MarciaH
Wed, Feb 9, 2000 (21:01)
#13
Maxim Memorial Station W1AW will be active during the 14th Annual
School Club Roundup, February 14-18. This event is geared towards
young amateurs, and school clubs. Certificates are available for
various entry levels.
Complete information can be found on the ARRL Web site,
http://www.arrl.org/contests/announcements/00/scr.html.
W1AW also will participate for the first time in the annual Guides
on the Air (GOTA) event, February 19-20. During GOTA, Canadian and
US amateurs help young women learn about Amateur Radio by making it
possible for them to get on the air and communicate with their peers
via Amateur Radio.
Although this event originated in Canada, it has gained popularity
in the US. Invite a few Girl Scouts (Daisy Scouts to Senior Girl
Scouts and leaders) to your shack for that weekend. GOTA stations
will be using all HF bands plus 2 meters on frequencies that end in
''33'' and ''88.''
More information on GOTA is available on the web at
http://www.guidezone.skl.com/i_ha_index.htm.
~MarciaH
Tue, Feb 15, 2000 (19:04)
#14
Georgia Amateurs Respond to Tornado Disaster
Amateur Radio operators are responding in force in the wake of
tornadoes that struck rural extreme southwestern Georgia this week,
killing more than a dozen people and injuring many more. Georgia
Section Emergency Coordinator Tom Rogers, KR4OL, reports that hams
from nearby communities including Moultrie and Albany have turned
out to help.
Twisters late Sunday and early Monday leveled a housing development
in the town of Camilla, in Mitchell County. The town was one of the
worst-hit areas. The storm also tore roofs from houses and flattened
mobile homes. The storm caught many residents by surprise since
warnings were not issued until after they'd already gone to bed for
the night.
Georgia Gov. Roy Barnes has declared a state of emergency in
Colquitt, Grady, Mitchell and Tift counties. Georgia Emergency
Management Agency reports emergency shelters have been set up in
Camilla and Moultrie.
''Shelters are open, and the Georgia Baptist Hams are setting up
feeding locations and assisting with the cleanup,'' Rogers said.
An HF emergency net is running on 3975 kHz to coordinate activities.
Rogers advised all participating stations to monitor that frequency.
If relief operators are requested, operators should coordinate
through the emergency net on 3975 kHz before attempting to enter the
disaster area.
Thousands were left without power in Georgia and elsewhere. The
storm that wreaked havoc on Georgia was part of a system that also
struck Arkansas, Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama before moving
into Georgia, Northeastern Florida and the Carolinas.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 1, 2000 (14:14)
#15
Phase 3D Could Launch in July!
The Phase 3D next-generation Amateur Radio satellite has been
tentatively scheduled to launch in late July. The launch is listed
in the ''Provisional Ariane Launch Manifest'' for February through
July of this year appearing in the February edition of the
Arianespace newsletter,
(http://www.arianespace.com/news_espace.html).
If the schedule holds, the Phase 3D satellite would be sent aloft on
Ariane 507, flight V132. A specific date in July was not available.
The Phase 3D satellite now is at the European Spaceport in Kourou,
French Guiana. Phase 3D will be stored in its shipping container,
housed in an air-conditioned integration building at the launch
complex until launch preparations commence. All systems have been
shut down and the batteries left uncharged.
A launch contract accepting Phase 3D as a payload for the first
suitable Ariane 5 launch vehicle was signed last October.
For more information about Phase 3D, visit the AMSAT-NA Web site,
http://www.amsat.org/.
NNNN
~sprin5
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (04:33)
#16
What's this bird going to do specifically for hams?
~MarciaH
Sat, Mar 4, 2000 (15:35)
#17
Good question. I'll check and get back to you. Apparently it is (Having checked the website) it carries dial-up bulletin boards and other things exclusively for hams like packet transmissions. If you are not into those...you probably will not make much use of it. There are excellent links listed in the URLs in my last post above.
~MarciaH
Wed, Mar 15, 2000 (16:44)
#18
ARRL invites input on new Certification and Continuing Education Program
ARRL members are invited to offer their suggestions on the shape and
scope of the new ARRL Certification and Continuing Education
Program. A Web-based forum now is ''live'' to collect member input on
how the program should be designed and what it should include. ARRL
Educational and Technical Advisor L.B. Cebik, W4RNL, is serving as
interim forum moderator-facilitator.
The forum site is
http://www.arrl.org/members-only/forums/index.php3. It's being
moderated to ensure that all member input is acknowledged and
integrated as fully as possible into the developing program. Members
are being asked to suggest specific programs and areas of study or
skills development they would like to see as part of the
Certification Program.
The ARRL Board of Directors approved the development and
implementation of the self-education program for radio amateurs at
its January meeting. The program is aimed at inspiring amateurs to
continue acquiring technical knowledge and operating expertise
beyond that required to become licensed.
The League will roll out the initial phase of the Certification and
Continuing Education Program later this year.
~MarciaH
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (16:58)
#19
ARRL Bulletin 22
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington CT April 19, 2000
FCC says Generals not allowed in Advanced subbands
The FCC says newly upgraded General class licensees may not operate
in the current Advanced class subbands under the new amateur rules.
Bill Cross, W3TN, of the FCC's Public Safety and Private Wireless
Division notes that no privileges changed for any license class.
The Advanced class license continues to exist under restructuring,
which became effective April 15, although the FCC no longer accepts
applications for Novice or Advanced class licenses. Current Generals
do not earn Advanced class privileges until they upgrade to Amateur
Extra class, when they earn both Advanced and Extra privileges.
The FCC also says General class operators may hold only Group C
(1x3) or Group D (2x3) call signs, as it was under the old rules.
Generals remain ineligible to apply for or hold Group B (2x2) call
signs.
Newly upgraded licensees were cautioned to check the revised Part 97
rules carefully to make sure they're not operating beyond their
privileges. FCC Part 97 rules are available on the ARRL Web site at
http://www.arrl.org/field/regulations/news/part97/.
The FCC today released the Errata to its December 30, 1999, Report
and Order on restructuring. The Errata incorporate minor errors
contained in the original R&O and already made in the version of the
new rules that appeared in The Federal Register earlier this year.
~sprin5
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (21:44)
#20
Not good news, for a potential upgrader like me.
I was hoping to get all those extra class freqs without much sweat.
~MarciaH
Wed, Apr 19, 2000 (21:55)
#21
Waited to long, Huh?! Hustle and take the exam before it goes into effect...
~sprin5
Thu, Apr 20, 2000 (09:06)
#22
OK!
~MarciaH
Thu, Apr 20, 2000 (12:08)
#23
Wish I could be of more help than to cheer you on. It is a very hard row to hoe by yourself. I know...!
~sprin5
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (00:13)
#24
You can help if you run across a url to the question pool for going from general to extra.
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (20:15)
#25
Gotch. I just might search for it...Google came up with all sorts of pool questions just by putting arrl pool questions on the search for line.
http://www2.arrl.org/arrlvec/advanced.html is one I found...
~sprin5
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (20:25)
#26
"Last updated 10:37 AM EDT on 04/19/96 "
A bit old, eh?
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (20:31)
#27
Of course, and I noted that before I posted it. I also commented that there are so many urls listed...I'll do better nex time...
How often do they update the question pool?
(going back to search for updated questions)
~MarciaH
Fri, Apr 21, 2000 (20:33)
#28
This is the url you want http://www.arrl.org/arrlvec/pools.html
This is for use after April 15, 2000 for Extra class license
http://www.arrl.org/arrlvec/El4-2000.txt
~sprin5
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (19:34)
#29
Thanks, I'll go there and see if I know the stuff.
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 23, 2000 (19:43)
#30
Good - I'll keep checking for updates, but that seems to be the current one.
~sprin5
Mon, Apr 24, 2000 (08:57)
#31
Thanks for the heads up.
~MarciaH
Tue, May 9, 2000 (15:35)
#32
FCC opens ULS to Web applications
Amateurs now can file ULS applications via the Web. The FCC opened
ULS to Internet filers on April 29 and formally announced the system
this week.
FCC Wireless Telecommunications Bureau Chief Thomas Sugrue announced
that ULS users now can file applications and notifications via the
Internet for all services previously only available by dial-up
connection to the Commission's Wide Area Network. To access the new
capability, visit the ULS home page at http://www.fcc.gov/wtb/uls
and click on ''Online Filing.''
The ULS--the FCC's interactive on-line licensing application,
modification and renewal system for wireless telecommunications
services--was deployed for the Amateur Service last August 16.
Sugrue noted that many ULS users had requested the ability to access
ULS through the Internet in order to utilize their high speed
Internet connectivity. He also addressed concerns about the security
of transactions handled via the Internet.
''We now have the technology in place that assures the integrity and
security of data transmitted over the Internet along with high speed
connectivity,'' he said. ''This is another step forward in the
expanding functionality of ULS.''
The FCC says that to make online payments requires that users be
running the 128-bit encryption version of Netscape, Ver 4.73. The
FCC currently supports only recent versions of Netscape for online
filing tasks but says that support for other browsers and platforms
is in the works and should be available shortly.
Dial-up access continues to be available.
~MarciaH
Wed, May 10, 2000 (21:32)
#33
New Mexico amateurs assisting in evacuation
Hams in the Los Alamos, New Mexico, area are assisting local
authorities and relief agencies in a mass evacuation as a result of
wind-driven wildfires. ARRL New Mexico Section Manager Joe Knight,
W5PDY, in Albuquerque reports the National Forest Service advised
the City of Los Alamos and Los Alamos National Lab on May 10 to
evacuate Los Alamos city limits by 5 PM Mountain Time. Knight was
not sure how many hams were directly involved in the fire emergency
response at this point.
''This affects approximately 12,000 to 15,000 people who will
require immediate shelter,'' Knight said. The Red Cross is
requesting additional medical personnel, as the evacuation includes
hospital patients and staff.
Amateur Radio Emergency Service and Radio Amateur Civil Emergency
Service personnel in Los Alamos have been activated for the past
three days as a result of the ongoing fire situation. Knight said
three repeaters in the fire zone have been put into use to handle
emergency traffic, although the W5PDO Los Alamos Amateur Radio Club
repeater at the fire station apparently has been shut down. ARES and
RACES teams elsewhere in New Mexico are on standby to assist if
needed.
Knight reports that winds in the vicinity are currently gusting to
40 MPH and the flames are jumping treetop-to-treetop. ''It's a
firestorm,'' Knight said. ''It's a bad situation.''
Standby emergency personnel from the Albuquerque Fire Department
have been called to immediate duty, Knight reports, to assist in Los
Alamos some 80 miles away.
Meanwhile, Knight says the City of Alto, northeast of Ruidoso,
already has been evacuated, and a number of houses east of Alto
reportedly have been consumed by flames. The fire is spreading
rapidly northeast of Ruidoso and already has consumed more than 6000
acres of forest.
Citizens have been placed on alert in the Ruidoso area.
ARRL Amateur Radio emergency and section personnel will continue to
monitor the fire situation in New Mexico.
~MarciaH
Fri, May 26, 2000 (22:07)
#34
FCC says ULS registration can protect license record
Registering now on the FCC's Universal Licensing System can benefit
amateurs, even if they have no plans to file an application anytime
soon. FCC staffer Steve Linn, N4CAK, says that ULS registration
''protects your call sign within the system'' and could prevent it
from inadvertently being deleted or reissued due to a filing error.
Linn also pointed out that amateurs filing for a change of address
should file an ''administrative update'' (AU) and not request a
''modification.'' The ULS will not renew an amateur's license unless
it is within the 90-day window of expiration or within the two-year
grace period after expiration. The same applies for those upgrading
under restructuring.
Linn said the FCC continues to work out the bugs in the ULS. He said
that support for the Mac platform and other browsers, such as
Internet Explorer, should be available soon.
The FCC in late April opened the ULS to Web filing. Linn advised
filers to use the on-line system whenever possible, since it helps
users to avoid errors that will not get trapped when filing on paper
and could lead to delays or errors in your FCC record. Visit
http://www.fcc.gov/wtb/uls for more information or to access the ULS.
~MarciaH
Wed, Jun 14, 2000 (20:12)
#35
Tentative Phase 3D Launch Date Reset
The Phase 3D Amateur Radio satellite will not launch until September
at the earliest. Under the latest tentative Arianespace launch
schedule, P3D now could go up on the Ariane Flight 507 as early as
mid-September, but the launch could be as late as the end of
October.
Arianespace recently announced a resumption of Ariane flights.
Flight 507 had been on the schedule to go into space in July, but
concerns over potentially defective thrusters had caused some major
customers to delay flight preparations. AMSAT-NA President Keith
Baker, KB1SF, called the Arianespace announcement ''very good news''
for the Phase 3D program.
The Phase 3D satellite is at the European Spaceport in Kourou,
French Guiana, awaiting the start of its launch campaign.
Arianespace representatives met recently with Phase 3D
representatives at AMSAT-DL headquarters in Marburg, Germany, to
discuss preparations for the P3D launch campaign. The exact date of
the Phase 3D mission's launch depends on the Ariane 506 launch, set
for July, and the availability of the other satellites flying with
P3D.
A launch contract accepting Phase 3D as a payload for the first
suitable Ariane 5 launch vehicle was signed last October.
~MarciaH
Fri, Sep 1, 2000 (16:39)
#36
RF safety rules now in force for all amateurs
ARRL Bulletin 37 - September 1, 2000
Starting September 1, every US amateur is required to fully comply
with the FCC's RF exposure guidelines.
The regulations, which went into effect January 1, 1998, require US
Amateur Radio operators to read and understand the rules and, where
necessary, perform technical evaluations to determine that their
stations are compliant with the new regulations. Up until now, only
hams who have had to file an Amateur Radio application with the FCC
have had to certify compliance with the RF exposure rules. As of
September 1, all amateurs must comply.
Under the regulations, an amateur station must not exceed the
maximum permissible exposure limits for transmitter operation.
''These regulations are not a major burden on the Amateur Radio
Service,'' said ARRL Lab Supervisor Ed Hare, W1RFI. ''Most hams are
already in compliance with the MPE requirements; some hams will need
to conduct a simple station evaluation.''
A complete description of the rules is available on the ARRL Web
site at http://www.arrl.org/news/rfsafety/. The site also contains
resources to make your station evaluation quite painless.
Address questions about RF safety and the FCC exposure guidelines to
ARRL Lab Supervisor Ed Hare, W1RFI, ehare@arrl.org.
~sociolingo
Sat, Sep 2, 2000 (05:07)
#37
Marcia, you gonna radio me in Mali???
~MarciaH
Fri, Sep 29, 2000 (00:26)
#38
Alas, m'love I am a listener, not a transmitter. I climb the trees to put the antennas up and help wind transformers. However, there must be a way to interface with the internet. We MUST talk!!!
~MarciaH
Tue, Jun 19, 2001 (16:49)
#39
Amateur Morse Testing Changes Effective July 1, 2001
New Morse code exam standards go into effect July 1 for all
Volunteer Examiner Coordinators. The new standards call for
Farnsworth character speed in the 13-to-15 WPM range and the end of
multiple-choice questions for routine Morse code exams.
In the wake of restructuring and the establishment of 5 WPM as the
sole amateur Morse requirement, the National Conference of Volunteer
Examiner Coordinators voted last July to set up the revised
standards for the administration of Morse code examinations in the
US.
ARRL VEC Manager Bart Jahnke, W9JJ, points out the required change
to the Farnsworth protocol replaces the 18-WPM character speed ARRL
VEC has used since 1989. ''Standard 5 WPM messages with 5 WPM
characters are available as an accommodation,'' he said. ''Standard
(non-Farnsworth) speed messages are available upon special request
from the ARRL VEC for ARRL VE teams.''
In addition, the Morse exam audio frequency range should be between
700 and 1000 Hz for routine exams. Consistent with the revised
standards, Jahnke said, ARRL VEC has set 15-WPM characters as its
Farnsworth setting and 750 Hz as its audio-frequency standard.
Code practice transmissions from Maxim Memorial Station W1AW will
reflect the new Farnsworth standard. W1AW Station Manager Joe
Carcia, NJ1Q, says transmissions using the new protocol will begin
Monday, July 2. Code transmissions at speeds below 18 WPM will drop
from 18 WPM to 15 WPM character speed. W1AW Web code practice files,
at http://www.arrl.org/w1aw/morse.html, will mirror the new
standards too.
The new Morse examination standards also affect test administration.
After July 1, Morse examinees will have to supply fill-in-the-blank
answers for the 10-question Element 1 quiz. Multiple-choice type
examinations no longer will be acceptable. Under the new testing
regime, Morse code examinees must either correctly answer seven of
the ten fill-in-the-blanks questions or correctly copy 25
consecutive characters.
Changes are on the horizon for the written examinations as well.
Revised Amateur Extra question pool will go into effect July 1,
2002. Reworked Technician and General question pools will become
effective on July 1 2003 and 2004 respectively.