SB SPCL @ ARL $ARLX007
ARLX007 WWV Centennial Committee Prepares for Trial
Run of WW0WWV
Special Event
ZCZC AX07
QST de W1AW
Special
Bulletin 7 ARLX007
From ARRL Headquarters
Newington CT August 20,
2019
To all radio amateurs
SB SPCL ARL ARLX007
ARLX007 WWV
Centennial Committee Prepares for Trial Run of WW0WWV
Special
Event
The WWV Centennial Committee reports that it will conduct a
trial
run of special event station WW0WWV over the August 24/25
weekend.
Radios and antennas began arriving last week, and a tower and
beam
will be erected, along with several vertical antennas. WW0WWV will
be
set up adjacent to the WWV transmitter site in Fort Collins,
Colorado. WWV
turns 100 years old on October 1.
"We'll be testing band and notch
filtering, in an attempt to reign
in the extreme RF environment created by
WWV and WWVB," said Dave
Swartz, W0DAS, of the Northern Colorado Amateur
Radio Club (NCARC).
The club will carry out the special event operation
in conjunction
with the WWV Amateur Radio Club and the National Institute
of
Standards and Technology (NIST), which operates WWV/WWVH/WWVB.
The
special event site is within 1/3 of a mile of all six WWV
transmitters and
the 50 kW WWVB transmitter. "On-air tests will
start Saturday afternoon,
August 24, and run through Sunday, August
25," Swartz said, adding that
organizers will post specific times
and frequencies on the WWV Centennial
Committee website.
The WWV Centennial special event is set to run from
September 28
through October 2, and round-the-clock operation will take place
on
CW, SSB, and digital modes. Operations will shift among HF
bands
following typical propagation and will include 160 meters as well
as
satellites (SO-50, AO-91, and AO-92) and 6-meter meteor scatter.
Up
to four stations will be on the air for routine operations. A
fifth station
will schedule contacts with schools, universities, and
museums, as well as
conducting unscheduled contacts. The additional
station will periodically
broadcast an AM carrier from a radio
locked with WWV's 10 MHz
signal.
"At this point we have filled our operator's slots and met
equipment
goals, but we need more financial resources to cover basic
operating
expenses, return shipping, and site logistics," Swartz said.
Members
of the Amateur Radio industry have contributed equipment,
including
radios, amplifiers, and antennas.
NIST has announced that it
will not be able to open the doors of WWV
to the public for the event. "Due
to a number of reasons, the scope
of the formal celebration will be limited
to only 100 invited
participants," the WWV Centennial Committee announced.
"WW0WWV will
be the main public event for the centennial
celebration."
Visit the WWV Centennial Committee website at http://wwv100.com/ to
see how you can get
involved.
NNNN
/EX
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