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1994-06-05
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The ARRL Letter
Vol. 12, No. 6
March 24, 1993
W2HD is "Ham of the Year"
Former ARRL president gets top Hamvention award
For the third time in the past four years an ARRL
dignitary has been named the Dayton Hamvention Ham of the
Year. This year the winner is Harry J. Dannals, W2HD, ARRL
president from 1972 to 1982. Dannals was cited for his three
decades of volunteer work on behalf of Amateur Radio in ARRL
positions ranging from section manager to the top spot as
president.
The Hamvention's Technical Excellence Award this
year goes to AMSAT Vice President of Engineering and ARRL
Technical Advisor Richard Jansson, WD4FAB. Jansson has
volunteered his engineering expertise to a number of ARRL
book and magazine presentations, and for AMSAT has helped in
the design of several Oscar satellites.
Robert Adams, WA9ZMO, was picked for the
Hamvention's Special Achievement Award, for his 3,328 phone
patches run for military personnel during the 1991 Gulf war.
That work earned Adams a place in the Guiness Book of World
Records, according to the Hamvention Awards Committee.
Adams, 46, is a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War. He
lives in Palos Heights, Illinois.
Harry Dannals, 65, was first licensed in 1946 as a
teen-ager with W2TUK, a call sign he held until receiving
W2HD in 1976. His father was W2GG/K4GG (now a Silent Key)
and a brother, Frank, is W2DRL.
Dannals learned the Morse code at age 10 and was
sending code practice to Naval Communications reservists a
few laters later; his father was commanding officer of a
USNR communications unit on Long Island. Dannals says he
probably wouldn't have waited quite so long (9 years) to get
his first amateur ticket if the family hadn't moved quite so
often and the Second World War hadn't intervened. After
moves from Long Island to Pennsylvania, then Virginia, then
to Balboa in the U.S. Canal Zone, Dannals joined the Navy
three days after graduating from Balboa High School.
Dannals served two years in the Navy as a Radioman
Second Class and was the youngest supervisor of the watch at
a major Navy shore station, NBA. After discharge in 1946 he
went to the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn to earn a B.S.
in electrical engineering. During his freshman year he
joined the ranks of amateurs as W2TUK.
Dannals first worked for ERCO Radio Labs on Long
Island, a small company owned by W2GYL and whose chief
engineer was W2FI. He then went to work for Sperry (now
called Unisys), where he met his wife, Kay, and from where
he retired 38 years later.
Harry Dannals has been an integral part of the ARRL
for nearly 40 years, beginning with election as NYC-LI
Section Communications Manager in 1955 through Hudson
Division vice director (1961-64), division director (1965-
72), and culminating in ARRL president from 1972 to 1982.
Since 1984 he has been ARRL President Emeritus.
During his 10 years as president Dannals logged more
than half a million miles of air travel and visited all 50
states as well as Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, Canada, and
Mexico.
Dannals is most proud of the ARRL success at the
World Administrative Radio Conference in 1979, although he
did not attend. "Such a trip wouldhave been a waste of
money," he said, "just to wave the League flag when there
were so many talented and experienced staff people and
others doing the job so capably."
Today, W2HD is in his second term as president of
the Quarter Century Wireless Club. Locally, he's a director
of the Albemarle Amateur Radio Club, and a volunteer
examiner. In 1992 he received the club's Elmer of the Year
award.
Busy in retirement
When Dick Jansson, WD4FAB, took a medical retirement
from Martin Marietta Aerospace in 1982, at age 52, Amateur
Radio was the boost he needed at what he describes as a "low
point" in his life, enabling him to continue challenging
work on behalf of other amateurs. That work has now been
recognized by the Hamvention awards committee.
As a senior staff engineer at Martin Marietta,
Jansson did research in "cryogenic thermal design," as he
told *QST* in early 1982. He simultaneously was helping
AMSAT in the thermal design of the Phase 3 satellites.
Jansson has now channeled his mechanical engineering
pursuits into a high-tech hobby, and notes that he has more
analytic capability at home today with his personal
computers than was available professionally to him ten years
with a mainframe computer.
Jansson uses three computers for his AMSAT efforts
from his home in Maitland, Florida: a 80486/DX2-66 for "the
heavy-hitting number crunching" of engineering analyses; a
'386 for the "mundane tasks of word processing"; and and a
'386 notebook p.c. for use on the road. All are LAN-
connected.
Interestingly, Dick Jansson was picked by the
Hamvention for his *mechanical* (not electrical)
achievements, possibly a "first" in our electronics hobby.
Other recent Hamvention Ham of the Year winners
include former ARRL General Manager and International
Affairs Vice President Richard Baldwin, W1RU, in 1992; John
Johnston, W3BE, chief of the FCC's Personal Radio Branch, in
1991; and ARRL Hudson Division Director Steve Mendelsohn,
WA2DHF, in 1990.
The 1993 winners will receive their awards at the
Hamvention banquet on April 24, 1993.
Ham with scanner hears apparent death plot
An Arizona amateur has been credited with helping
expose an apparent plot by two teen-agers to poison a
teacher and classmate.
Wayne Spaulding, KB7JYG, of Mesa, Arizona, east of
Phoenix, overheard a cordless telephone conversation on the
46 MHz band on the evening of March 10, in which poisoning
was mentioned. Spaulding taped the conversation and the next
day called the police.
Police played the tape for the Mesa High School
track coach, Gary Butler, who identified the two voices on
the tape as those of students in his home room, one a 16-
year-old, the other 17 years old. Butler one of the youths'
targets, as was a 15-year-old girl.
Police have booked both teen-agers on suspicion of
conspiracy to commit murder. Police said one of the teens
had a "sizable amount" of poisonous drain cleaner with him
at the time of his arrest, according to *The Arizona
Republic*.
Police told the newspaper that eavesdropping on
cordless telephones is not illegal but implied that the
reception was made on a "ham radio," when in fact Spaulding
was listening on a ordinary consumer scanner radio.
The two youths are scheduled for hearings in early
April to determine whether they should be tried as adults on
the conspiracy charges.
Wayne Spaulding has been a licensed amateur for
about two and a half years and his primary interests are on
the UHF amateur bands. He and his wife, Cheri, both hold
Technician class licenses. Cheri is N7PHR.
Wayne Spaulding, coincidentally, works for the Mesa
school system, designing and building electronic equipment
to enable disabled students to use computers.
FCC PROPOSES GREATER USE
OF 902-928 MHz SPECTRUM
The FCC has proposed new rules to allow greater use
of the 902-928 MHz band for so-called automatic vehicle
monitoring systems. The proposed new rules would replace
interim rules adopted in 1974.
An FCC news release says "The Commission proposed to
expand the service to encompass location of all objects,
animate and inanimate, and to allow licensees to provide
service on a private carrier basis to individuals, the
Federal Government, and Part 90 eligibles. The Commission
also proposed to rename the AVM service as the Location and
Monitoring Service (LMS) and to define LMS as the use of
non-voice signalling methods from and to radio units to
make known the location of such units.
"Comments are requested on this proposal and on
whether LMS systems and other entities currently occupying
the 902-928 MHz band will be capable of handling any
increased congestion.
"In the 902-928 MHz band, the Commission proposed
that wide-band and narrow-band LMS systems not be licensed
on the same spectrum. The Commission proposed the wide-band
LMS systems be licensed on the 904-912 and 918-926 MHz bands
and the narrow-band LMS systems be licensed on the 902-904,
912-918, and 926-928 MHz bands. The Commission believes that
wideband systems are capable of operating in a shared
environment, with cooperation among the various licensees,
but solicits comments on the need and desirability of
providing for exclusivity for some period of
time...."
FCC PLANS 449-MHZ NPRM
ON WIND PROFILER SYSTEMS
Tthe FCC on March 10 agreed to issue a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking and Notice of Inquiry on the subject of
wind profiler radars (ET Docket 93-59).
The FCC said it "has proposed to allocate the 449
MHz band for wind profiler radar systems (wind profilers)
and requested comment on whether wind profilers also should
be accommodated in the 915 MHz band, as proposed by Radian
Corporation, or in some other frequency band .... The 449
MHz band that the Commission is proposing for wind profiler
radars currently is allocated on a primary basis for
Government radiolocation operations by the military.
"In addition, the 449 MHz band is allocated on a
secondary basis to the Amateur Radio Service and to
Government and non-Government radiolocation systems for
coastal radars."
A major topic of the docket proceeding is expected
to be the exact nature of the sharing arrangement.
FCC PROPOSES NEW GUIDES
ON EFFECTS OF RADIATION
The FCC has proposed changing its guidelines for
evaluating environmental RF radiation, to reflect the
guidelines adopted in 1992 by the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) and the Institute of Electrical
and Electronic Engineers, Inc. (IEEE).
"The new guidelines differ significantly from those
they replace," the Commission said. "For example two
'tiers' of exposure levels are now recommended, one for
'controlled' environments, and another, generally more
restrictive, for 'uncontrolled' environments. Also, new
restrictions are placed on currents induced in the human
body by RF fields below 100 MHz.
"Another significant change is the imposition of
stricter limitations on automatic exclusions for low-power
devices, such as hand-held radios and telephones, based on
operating power. The 1982 guidelines generally excluded
such devices with powers of seven watts or less. The new
guidelines contain more complex and more restrictive
criteria for such exclusions, with allowable
power decreasing as frequency increases."
FCC Issues formal 219-220 MHZ proposal
The FCC has issued a Notice of Proposed Rule Making
in its proposal to create a new shared band for amateurs at
219-220 MHz. In RM-7747 to Commission would allocate 219-220
MHz to amateurs on a secondary basis for amateur auxiliary
station (point-to-point) packet backbone networks and other
amateur point-to-point fixed communications.
"The proposed allocation would allocate," the FCC
says, "frequency congestion that amateurs are experiencing
in certain areas of the country in the 222-225 MHz band and
would facilitate establishment of regional and nationwide
backbone networks for amateur packet communications."
The FCC also proposes requirements "to ensure that
secondary use of the 219-220 MHz band by amateurs does not
interfee with primary and existing secondary licensees in
this and adjacent bands.
"These proposals," the FCC's NPRM continues, "are in
response to a petition for rule making (RM-7747) filed by
the American Radio Relay League." A detailed report on the
League's filing appears in *QST* for August, 1991, page 58.
The FCC's proposal acknowledges that most outside
parties responding to the League's petition support it,
including amateur groups; the Chief Regulatory Counsel of
the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA, on behalf of
the National Communications System; and the New Hampshire
Office of Emergency Management.
The 216-218 and 219-220 MHz bands currently are
occupied on a primary basis by the maritime mobile service
for Automated Maritime Telecommunications Systems (AMTS) and
the 218-219 MHz band is allocated on a primary basis to
Interactive Video and Data Services (IVDS). Additional
frequencies between 216 and 220 MHz are allocated on a
secondary basis to wildlife telemetry, radiolocation, fixed
and land mobile services, and the aeronautical mobile
service.
The only service to oppose the petition was the
Association for Maximum Service Television (MSTV), saying
that no amateur operations should be allowed in the 216-220
MHz range because of a potential for interference to TV
channel 13 (at 210-216 MHz).
The FCC has concluded that amateur access to 216-219
MHz range is not feasible because of potential interference
to other point-to-point services, and to TV channel 13.
The FCC does, however, support amateur use of 219-
220, saying that amateurs can divide the one megahertz into
ten 100-kHz channels, allowing them the additional packet
backbones they need. The FCC also says it believes amateurs
have the technical expertise to design their packet systems
to operate in the 219-220 MHz band without interference to
other services.
The FCC also agreed that power limits suggested by
the ARRL in its petition 25 watts PEP for Novices, 50 watts
PEP for all others) "are appropriate and reasonable."
In 1991 the ARRL and Watercom (an AMTS service) had
suggested mandatory coordination of amateur operations, but
the FCC said such an arrangement would not be permissible
under the Communications Act.
As for possible amateur interference to AMTS
stations, the FCC proposes a notification plan similar to
one originally proposed by Watercom for its service.
Amateurs would be required to notify the appropriate AMTS
licensee of any amateur station that would be within 240 km
(150 miles) of an AMTS station. The FCC also proposes to
require amateurs to obtain written approval from the
appropriate AMTS licensee before operating within 80 km (50
miles) of an AMTS station.
Finally, amateur operation in the 219-220 MHz band
would be limited to 56 kilobauds and a maximum bandwidth of
100 kHz.
The Comment deadline for this NPRM is June 15, 1993.
The Reply Comment deadline is July 15, 1993.
More information on this NPRM will appear in May
*QST*.
BRIEFS
* The FCC has dropped the station location address
from amateur licenses, effective with new license Form 660,
introduced in February. The mailing address now becomes the
only means for the FCC to communicate with amateur
licensees. For now Volunteer Examiner Coordinators are being
told to ignore the station location information asked for on
current FCC Form 610s (Section I, Line 8).
"We expect this will improve the processing time at
FCC for applications," ARRL VEC Manager Bart Jahnke, KB9NM
said. Jahnke also said he expects that FCC will drop the
station location box from future printings of the Form 610.
* A southern California amateur has won his antenna
lawsuit after a three year battle. Jeff Wolf, WA6DAL, of
Palos Verdes Estates was found by a judge in a non-binding
arbitration hearing to have been in full compliance with
1989 plans for his antenna system approved by both the PV
Homes Association and the city of Palos Verdes Estates.
When several neighbors complained after Wolf's tower
went up, the homes association began challenging the
installation.
Wolf was represented by his brother Andrew, a lawyer
at the hearing.
"Before I could even call my brother to the stand,"
Andrew told the Palos Verdes *Peninsula News*, "the judge
turned and said 'What are we doing here?'"
* In our last issue we noted three new members of
the ARRL Headquarters 10-Year-Club but inadvertently left
out a fourth -- Nao Akiyama, NX1L. Nao is International
Programs Manager and, in his spare time, one of the
building's most active DXers.
* September, 1992 *QST* reported on FCC action
against James Winstead, KK6SM, who admitted causing
intentional interference to both amateur and commercial
channels in the San Francisco Bay area from October, 1990
through July, 1991. The story reported that Winstead was hit
with a Notice of Apparent Liability for $15,000, which was
issued May 18, 1992.
According to the FCC's David Hartshorn, Winstead
appealed the fine, and it was reduced to $2,000 in July,
1992. In addition, Winstead's amateur and commercial
licenses were suspended for one year, beginning September
24, 1991.
* Amateurs in Vermont will get a break on their call
sign auto plates if a bill before the state's house of
representatives passes. The bill, H.377, would repeal a
current law that requires those holding special plates for
"safety organizations" to pay $20 *every year* at renewal
time.
Democratic State Rep. John Freidin introduced the
bill, saying "amateur radio operators make a valuable
contributin to Vermont and charge nothing for their
services, while the state's cost for re-issuing special
plates is no greater than its cost for re-issuing regular
plates."
Vermont amateurs are being asked to contact their
representatives to urge them to co-sponsor H.377.
* Former FCC Chairman Alfred E. Sikes has joined the
Hearst Corporation to, according to the *New York Times*,
"head [its] efforts to marry its journalistic resources with
satellite, computer and other emerging technologies," as
head of Hearst's new Media and Technology Group.
Sikes, 53, said that his new job was not to be a
lobbyist. "This job is a business job," Sikes told the
*Times*.
* The ARRL Awards Committee has unanimously voted,
on recommendation of the DX Advisory Committee, to delete
the Abu Ail Islands from the ARRL DXCC Countries List,
effective March 31, 1991 -- the date when the islands became
"unadministered."
* 2-meter DXCC Number 3 has been issued, to Kjell
Rasmusson, SM7BAE, of Staffanstorp, Sweden. He submitted 102
QSLs, following in the footsteps of winners Number 1, W5UN,
and Number 2, KB8RQ.
* The rules for "rover" entries in ARRL VHF contests
have been changed, effective with the June VHF QSO Party,
for which full rules will appear in May *QST*.