• Annual Armed Forces Day Cross-Band Exercise Set for May 14

    From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Thursday, March 10, 2022 16:29:02
    03/10/2022

    The 2022 running of the Armed Forces Day (AFD) Cross-Band exercise will be held on May 14, 1300 - 2200 UTC. A complete list of participating stations, modes, frequencies, times, and other details will be announced[1] on April 1. The event is open to all radio amateurs. Armed Forces Day is May 21, but the AFD Cross-band military-amateur radio event traditionally takes place 1 week earlier, in order to avoid conflicting with Dayton Hamvention¨. During the exercise, radio amateurs listen for stations on military operating frequencies and transmit on frequencies in adjacent amateur bands.

    Military and amateur stations have taken part in this event for more than 50 years. It's an exercise scenario, designed to include ham radio and government radio operators alike.

    Per previous announcements: "The AFD Cross-band Test is a unique opportunity to test two-way communications between military communicators and radio stations in the Amateur Radio Service, as authorized in 47 CFR 97.111. These tests provide opportunities and challenges for radio operators to demonstrate individual technical skills in a tightly controlled exercise scenario that does not impact any public or private communications."

    Military stations in various locations will transmit on selected military frequencies and announce the specific ham band frequencies they are monitoring.

    An AFD message will be transmitted utilizing the Military Standard (MIL-STD) serial PSK waveform (M110), followed by MIL-STD Wide Shift FSK (850 Hz RTTY), as described in MIL-STD 188-110A/B. The AFD message will also be sent in CW and RTTY.

    Full details will be released on April 1.


    [1] https://www.dodmars.org/mars-comex-information-website/armed-forces-day

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  • From ARRL de WD1CKS@VERT/WLARB to QST on Thursday, May 12, 2022 20:12:38
    05/12/2022

    The US Department of Defense will host this year's Armed Forces Day (AFD) Cross-Band Test on Saturday, May 14. While Armed Forces Day is May 21, the AFD cross-band military-amateur radio event traditionally takes place 1 week earlier to avoid any conflict with the Dayton Hamvention¨. The event is open to all radio amateurs.

    The AFD Cross-Band Test is two-way communications exercise between military and amateur radio stations, as authorized under FCC Part 97 rules (47 CFR
    ¨ÿ97.111), and Department of Defense Instruction 4650.02 which establishes the Military Auxiliary Radio System (MARS).ÿDuring the exercise, radio amateurs listen for stations on military operating frequencies and transmit on frequencies in adjacent amateur bands.

    ARRLÿ The National Association for Amateur Radio[1]¨ÿhas promoted the participation of military and amateur radio stations in the AFD event for more than 50 years. In the August 1950 issue of ARRL's membership journal,ÿQST[2], it was noted that "232 persons made perfect copy of the 'Greeting to Amateurs' broadcast at 25 w.p.m. over 13 military frequencies and have received a Certificate of Merit signed by the Secretary of Defense, the Honorable Louis Johnson."

    There are 24 military stations registered across the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, that will be participating in the 2022 event. Several of those stations will be using the 60-meter interoperative channels during this exercise. All operations will be on a not-to-interfere basis, in case there are real-world missions being supported during the event timeframe.

    An AFD Secretary of Defense message will also be sent in CW and RTTY, and an AFD message will also be transmitted utilizing the Military Standard (MIL-STD) serial PSK waveform (M110), followed by MIL-STD Wide Shift FSK (850 Hz RTTY), as described in MIL-STD 188-110A/B.

    A detailed list of modes and frequencies forÿmilitary/government stations taking part in the Armed Forces Day Cross-Band Test and information on the AFD message is available atÿwww.dodmars.org[3]. In the upper right corner is a dropdown with all the information.

    Complete the request form to obtain a QSL card at www.usarmymars.org/armed-forces-day-qsl-card-request[4].


    [1] http://www.arrl.org/
    [2] http://www.arrl.org/qst
    [3] https://www.dodmars.org/mars-comex-information-website/armed-forces-day
    [4] https://www.usarmymars.org/armed-forces-day-qsl-card-request

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