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ARRL Products:
Circuit Design

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Introduction to Radio Frequency Design -- Basic RF concepts (with some related analog subjects) for the amateur or engineer.

Power Supply Handbook -- Gain the knowledge and confidence you need to build and use power supplies. A must have for your bookshelf!

ARRL's Hands-On Radio Experiments -- Over 60 basic electronics experiments from the pages of QST!

ARRL's RF Amplifier Classics -- Turn dreams of constructing your first amp or next brick into reality!

Digital Signal Processing Technology -- Essentials of the Communications Revolution. An understandable presentation and reference on DSP in contemporary communications technology.

   

FCC Declares Communications Emergency for Gulf Coast

WASHINGTON, DC, Sep 24, 2002--At the request of ARRL Mississippi Section Manager Malcolm Keown, W5XX, the FCC has declared that a general communications emergency exists for Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. After striking the western tip of Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, Isidore--at present a tropical storm--is headed for the US Gulf Coast. Forecasters believe that Isidore could regain hurricane strength over the Gulf of Mexico and reach landfall Thursday morning (see "Hurricane Watch Net, W4EHW, Stand Down, Maintain Vigilance" for further details).

Invoking the authority of §97.401 of the FCC's rules and regulations, Technical and Public Safety Division Chief Joseph P. Casey of the Enforcement Bureau issued a declaration that requires amateurs to refrain from using 3873 kHz during hours of darkness and 7285 kHz during hours of daylight effective immediately and until rescinded. The FCC said the communications emergency could last as long as 14 days. Both frequencies are to be protected plus or minus 3 kHz unless amateurs are taking part in the handling of emergency traffic.


   



Page last modified: 06:27 PM, 24 Sep 2002 ET
Page author: awextra@arrl.org
Copyright © 2002, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.