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From: ikluft@kluft.com (Ian Kluft)
Subject: rec.radio.amateur.misc Frequently Asked Questions (Part 2 of 3)
Keywords: FAQ RADIO AMATEUR HAM
References: <ham-radio-faq-1-755232182@kluft.com> 
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X-Content-Currency: This FAQ changes regularly.  When a saved or printed copy
   is over 6 months old, please obtain a new one.  Instructions in Part 2
   indicate where to find them via NetNews, FTP, and e-mail.
Organization: Kluft Consulting
Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1993 02:43:07 GMT
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Posted-By: auto-faq 3.1.1.4
Archive-name: radio/ham-radio/faq/part2
Revision: 3.1 1993/11/07 21:28:33

Rec.radio.amateur.misc Frequently Asked Questions
Part 2 - Amateur Radio Organizations, Services, and Information Sources
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Questions discussed in Part 2: (dates indicate last modification)
**  Where can I find Ham Radio information with a computer? (11/92)
    * The rec.radio.* newsgroups (6/93)
    * The ARRL e-mail server (1/93)
    * The KA6ETB e-mail "HAM-server" (new 9/93)
    * The Internet File Transfer Protocol (FTP) (9/93)
    * Access to FTP archives via electronic mail (1/93)
    * The Ham-Radio mail list: rec.radio.amateur.misc by mail (9/93)
    * Telephone BBS's with Ham-related information (9/93)
    * Callsign servers and geographical name servers (11/92)
    * FTP access to FCC Part 97 and FCC Amateur Radio question pools (9/93)
    * Lists of radio modifications and extensions (11/92)
**  Can I send ARRL or W5YI electronic mail? (11/92)
**  "Why doesn't the ARRL do...?" (11/92)
**  What magazines are available for Ham Radio? (pre-4/92)
**  How do I use the incoming and outgoing QSL bureau? (11/92)
**  Are there any news groups for CAP? (11/92)
**  What's the name of the QRP club that issues QRP numbers? (9/93)
**  How do I become a 10-10 member? (9/93)
**  How do I join MARS? (9/93)
**  How do I join RACES? (pre-4/92)
**  What organizations are available to help handicapped hams? (pre-4/92)
**  I am looking for a specific ham, can anyone help me find him? (6/93)
**  Can I post my neat new ham related program on rec.radio.amateur.misc?
    (pre-4/92)
**  Where can I get ham radio software for my computer? (9/93)
**  Are there Dialup News services or BBSs for Amateur Radio? (4/92)
**  Where can I find VE sessions in my local area? (9/93)
**  Why isn't XXX available electronically? (4/92)

--Rec.radio.amateur.misc Frequently-asked Questions------------------Part 2--

**  Where can I find Ham Radio information with a computer?
 This question has many answers spanning several electronic media
 including UseNet, electronic mail, the Internet, dialup bulletin board
 systems (BBS) and others.  Various electronic information sources are
 summarized under the subheadings that follow.

 All electronic mail addresses listed are in Internet format.  If your
 site is not connected to the Internet and does not support Internet-
 style mail addresses, you will need to contact either your system
 administrators or a local "guru" to find out how or if you can send
 mail to the sites listed.  Ask them, "how can I get mail to the
 Internet?" and show them the address you're interested in.

    * The rec.radio.* newsgroups
 The primary distribution mechanism for this FAQ is UseNet.  There
 are several newsgroups dealing with Amateur Radio and other aspects
 of radio.  The full list is as follows:

 rec.radio.amateur.misc (*)     Ham Radio - misc/general topics
        rec.radio.amateur.antenna      Ham Radio - antenna construction/theory
        rec.radio.amateur.equipment    Ham Radio - manufactured equipment/mods
 rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc Ham Radio - digital radio modes: packet/
      AMTOR/RTTY/etc (formerly r.r.a.packet)
        rec.radio.amateur.homebrew     Ham Radio - radio experimentation, kits
 rec.radio.amateur.policy       Ham Radio - policy & regulation
        rec.radio.amateur.space        Ham Radio - satellites, EME, shuttle/MIR
 rec.radio.broadcasting         public broadcast radio
 rec.radio.cb                   Citizens' Band Radio
 rec.radio.info (*)             periodic info from all rec.radio groups
 rec.radio.noncomm              misc non-commercial radio topics
 rec.radio.shortwave            Shortwave Radio
 rec.radio.swap                 radio equipment wanted and for sale

 Country- or region-specific newsgroups include the following:
 aus.radio                      Australia (misc radio topics)
 aus.radio.amsat                Australia (amateur satellites)
 aus.radio.packet               Australia (packet radio)
 de.comm.ham                    Deutschland/Germany
 fj.comm.ham                    Japan
 uk.radio.amateur               United Kingdom
 in.ham-radio                   USA, Indiana
 sbay.hams                      USA, CA, South Bay Area/Silicon Valley
 triangle.radio                 USA, NC, Research Triangle area

 This FAQ is cross-posted to the newsgroups marked with asterisks (*).
 It is also cross-posted to rec.answers (the archive for FAQs in the
 rec.* newsgroups) and to news.answers (UseNet's general repository for
 FAQs.)  These should be the first places to look for new current
 copies of the FAQ.

 Most of the rec.radio newsgroups have their own FAQs as well.

    * The ARRL e-mail server
 ARRL is the American Radio Relay League, representing and promoting
 Amateur Radio in the USA.  They have established an automated file
 server which responds to information requests via electronic mail.
 To use the server, send mail to info@arrl.org with any number of
 one-line commands in your message.  Valid commands are as follows:

 help        sends more detailed instructions about the e-mail server
 index       sends a list of the files currently available
 send file   sends a file (replace "file" with the file's name)
      several files are referenced by name in parts of this FAQ
 quit        ends command processing - use it if a signature will be
      appended to your message

 The server program will respond to the commands, each in a separate
 message.  Among many other informative files, a current copy of the
 FAQ (updated monthly) can be obtained from the ARRL e-mail server.
 Other parts of this FAQ refer to specific files on the ARRL server.

    * The KA6ETB e-mail "HAM-server"
        Steve Harding KA6ETB has an e-mail server on his 386 PC at home with
 over 40 megabytes of Ham Radio-related files (at the time of this
 writing.)  You can request any of those files with an e-mail message
 to the HAM-server at ham-server@grafex.cupertino.ca.us.  This site
 has a mostly-different selection of files than the ARRL, though some
 overlap is unavoidable.  The HAM-server seems to have more emphasis
 on MS-DOS programs and binary files though there are many plain-text
 articles as well.

 Use these commands to send requests to the KA6ETB HAM-server.
 HELP            instructions and info about the HAM-server
 INDEX           list of files available from the system
 GET <file>      send a file (see the HELP notes for more info on
   getting binary files in uuencode or xxencode format)
 NEWFILES <date> list of new files since the given date
 PING            used for testing your path to the HAM-server, it just
   sends a simple reply so you can look at the path data
 QUIT            makes the HAM-server stop reading the message (so it
   won't try to read your .signature)

    * The Internet File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
 Sites connected to the Internet can access large amounts of data
 almost anywhere in the world, often at high speeds.  One common way
 to transfer the data you want is FTP.  Some sites offer a service
 called "anonymous FTP" which allows remote users to access a set of
 public files without requiring a password.

 Tom Czarnik coordinates a fairly definitive list of anonymous FTP 
 sites, their IP numbers, time zones, general contents, and access 
 policies which he posts to the comp.misc, comp.sources.wanted, 
 alt.sources.wanted, and news.answers newsgroups.  It is itself 
 available via anonymous FTP (how about that?? :-) from (among other 
 places) rtfm.mit.edu under directory /pub/usenet/news.answers/ftp-list. 

 For specific information about exact locations of files by name, 
 the Archie database server may be of help.  First check if anyone has
 installed the "archie" program on your machine and use it.  Archie may
 also be accessed by telnetting to one of the following sites (use the
 one closest to you):

 Finland/Europe: archie.funet.fi
 Canada: archie.mcgill.ca
 Australia/New Zealand: archie.au
 Israel: cs.huji.ac.il
 UK/Ireland: raquel.doc.ic.ac.uk
 USA (Maryland): archie.sura.net
 USA (Nebraska): archie.unl.edu
 USA (New York): archie.ans.net
 USA (New Jersey): archie.rutgers.edu

 Login is archie.  Type "help" at the prompt for a description of all 
 server commands.

 For those without telnet capability, the database may be accessed non-
 interactively via mail server.  Send E-mail with the word "help" to 
 archie@host where host is one of the Archie sites above. 

 The above two resources (the FTP list and the Archie server) are 
 extremely powerful tools for finding out "what's out there" at various 
 FTP sites around the world.  *PLEASE* exhaust their capabilities 
 before posting requests to the net. 

 The following is a brief summary of major ham-related FTP sites and
 places where you can obtain a current copy of this FAQ:

 ftp.cs.buffalo.edu
  (submissions to this ftp site should be made to
  bowen@cs.buffalo.edu) - contains many ham radio files, 
  including the FAQs, Elmer list, SWL and scanner info, Packet
  FAQ, examination opportunities, information on various
  regulations, information on commercial radios (i.e. GE or
  Motorola), SSTV (slow-scan TV), HTs (handheld transceivers)
  and the KA2UGQ worldwide BBS list.  See ~pub/ham-radio.  This
  FAQ is updated monthly here.
 grivel.une.edu.au
  This site contains a mirror of ftp.cs.buffalo.edu's Ham Radio
  archives.  It provides a shorter distance if you're in
  Australia or if Australia is a shorter net.path for you than
  New York.
 nic.funet.fi
  This is one of the largest FTP sites in Europe and maybe the
  most popular.  There are many directories of Ham-related files
  in /pub/ham.  /pub/ham/info contains a mirror of Buffalo.
  Other topics available here include amiga, antenna, HF, packet,
  satellite, scanners, program sources, VHF and others.
 ftp.uu.net
  A large FTP site in the USA - UUNET contains sources and
  binaries for many different types of computers.
 wsmr-simtel20.army.mil
  Keith Peterson, W8SDZ, has apparently returned as the 
  maintainer of this huge repository of ham-radio (software and 
  modifications), MS-DOS, and CP/M files.  To find out how 
  to submit files to this archive, please read his informational 
  posts to the comp.binaries.ibm.pc.archives newsgroup. If you 
  cannot directly FTP from wsmr-simtel20, there is a mail server 
  that can help.  Send mail with the text "help" to 
  listserv@vm.ecs.rpi.edu. 
 wuarchive.wustl.edu
  A "mirror" of the files available on Simtel20, plus a *LOT* 
  more.  A more user-friendly Unix environment (plus a faster 
  net connection) makes this site preferred over Simtel20.
  If you are on a Unix box locally, see if your system 
  administrator will "NFS-mount" these files for faster/easier 
  access.
 ucsd.edu
  The "home" site (with the most recent versions for the largest
  number of different computer platforms) of the KA9Q TCP/IP 
  Network Operating System (NOS), other ham-related software, 
  and the archives for the Info-Hams, Packet-Radio, Ham-Policy, 
  Radio-Info and TCP-Group digests. 
 uxc.cso.uiuc.edu
  cd pub/ham-radio - This site contains the HyperCard Hamstacks 
  written by Diana Carlson as well as ASCII readable ham radio 
  question pools. 
 ftp.apple.com
  cd pub/ham-radio - Ham software and information, especially
  Macintosh software
 wolfen.cc.uow.edu.au
 athene.uni-paderborn.de
  ham radio files and software for the Amiga computer system 
 rtfm.mit.edu
  cd pub/usenet/news.answers - all participating FAQs and
  periodic informational postings are archived here, including
  those from the rec.radio.* newsgroups which can be found in
  pub/usenet/news.answers/radio.  Participating FAQs are
  automatically archived here when they are posted on UseNet.
 ftp.amdahl.com
  cd pub/radio/amateur - the most up-to-date copy of the FAQ
  (updated nightly when changes are made)

 See also the file FTP-INFO on the ARRL e-mail server.

 If you experience difficulty connecting to the above FTP sites, some
 troubleshooting hints are shown below.  The unfortunate situation here
 is that Netnews is far more prevalent than direct Internet hookups,
 accurate name servers, smart mailers and routers, and of course,
 telnet and FTP client services.  What this means is that your trouble
 may be caused by MANY factors.

 Here's some hints to check what's wrong:
 * It may very well be that your newsfeed and email are via dialup line
   and UUCP (Unix-to-Unix copy) in the wee hours of the morning.  If
   this is the case, then you have no direct connection to the Internet
   and thus cannot use real-time interactive services like FTP and
   telnet.
 * If you are at a college or university, your host (ie, the computer
   you are logged onto) may be on the Bitnet network, which has an
   email gateway to the Internet, but no direct connect capability.
 * If you do have a direct connection to the Internet, does your host
   have telnet and/or FTP client programs?  (ie, if you type "ftp" or
   "telnet" at your command prompt, do you get anything?)  Many hosts,
   particularly IBM mainframes not running Unix, do not support these
   services!
 * Can you telnet to other hosts and get a login prompt?
   It may very well be that some hosts are "not recognized" due to
   misconfigured connections and inaccurate host tables/name servers
   (*.mil computers are *NOTORIOUS* for this!)
 * If you get "host not in host table" or "host unknown" or similar
   error, try telnetting via the IP number, a set of four 1-3-digit
   numbers separated by periods (eg, 198.137.220.1).  The exact IP
   number for the site can be obtained via the nslookup utility, if
   your computer supports it.  (The FAQ does not print IP addresses any
   more because they change so often.)  Your system may not recognize
   the "fully-qualified domain name" (like callsign.cs.buffalo.edu),
   but it should ALWAYS recognize an IP number if their network is
   reachable from yours.
 * If you get "network unreachable" check with some more knowledgeable
   users if your site is actually connected to the Internet.  If it is,
   a link in the network may be temporarily disconnected for maintenance
   (or by accident.)
 * In the case of telnetting to a non-default port (as in the case
   with the callbook servers), if telnet <host> <port#> doesn't work,
   but you can telnet to the default login port (ie, no qualifiers),
   then the manner at which the port qualifier is entered may be
   system dependent.
 * Syntax for telnetting from different operating systems differ.  
   Some common command syntaxes are:  (angle brackets are for 
   readability, do not type these in literally)
   Berkeley Unix or VMS with Wollongong TCP/IP uses syntax:
  telnet <host> <socket#>
   Other possibilities to try:
  telnet console <host> (for 2000 port)
  telnet <CR> open <host>:<port#>
  telnet <host>/<port#>
  telnet <host>/port=<port#> (for Multinet on VMS)
 * Compression techniques are different for different operating systems.
   However, these hints should help:
     foo.sit needs Macintosh UnStuffit to unstuff
     foo.hqx needs Macintosh BinHex to uncompress
     foo.tar needs Unix or GNU tar utility to extract archived files
     foo.Z needs Unix 'uncompress' to uncompress or VMS
        compress_vms.exe (on gatekeeper.dec.com) will work too.
     foo.z needs the GNU gzip utility (from prep.ai.mit.edu) to
        uncompress it.  gzip will also uncompress *.Z files.
   If more than one method was used,
   like for foo.hqx.Z, start at the outside and work in (so uncompress
   on Unix with 'uncompress' first, transfer to MacIntosh, then 
   uncompress with BinHex to get uncompressed file).
 * There is an excellent introduction to FTP and archiving software
   regularly posted to comp.binaries.ibm.pc and news.answers.
 * If all else fails, ASK your system administrator or check system
   documentation.

    * Access to FTP archives via electronic mail
 ANY BITNET, EARN, or NorthNET site can access the Princeton mail 
 server.  It will be most efficient if you know the complete path
 and filename for anything you wish to transfer, but you can use 
 'cd' and 'ls -l' commands to move about and browse the remote site's
 directories.  The Archie database server may also be useful to search
 for files and their directory locations on FTP sites around the world 
 (see below).  Please be patient when using non-interactive mail 
 servers such as BITFTP as each request may take several hours (or 
 longer) to be fulfilled. 

 For access to the FTP server, send email to bitftp@pucc.bitnet (for 
 BITNET, EARN and NorthNET users ONLY!).  Subject doesn't matter.  
 The text of the email is the FTP commands one after another.  For 
 example, suppose you wanted to access the FTP site lcs.mit.edu:
     FTP lcs.mit.edu
     USER anonymous
     PASS yourname@yoursite (not required)
     ASCII
     CD telecom-archives
     GET filenames
     BYE
 A help file is available giving detailed instructions by putting
 the single word HELP into the text of the email.

 For nonBITNET users, there is also a FTPMAIL server at 
 ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com.  Commands include:  REPLY <mailaddr>,
 CONNECT [HOST [user [pass]]], ASCII, BINARY, COMPRESS, COMPACT,
 UUENCODE, BTOA, LS <directory>, DIR <directory>, GET <file>, QUIT,
 HELP.  Get the help file for more information by sending mail with
 the single line "help".  The ftpmail site may complain if you try 
 try to get more than 1 file per email request.  Here is an example of 
 a request: 
     reply your_name@your_site
     connect uxc.cso.uiuc.edu
     binary
     uuencode
     get pub/ham-radio/Tech.v3.3.sit.hqx.Z
     quit

 A note on the use of FTP mailservers:  If you want to use FTP
 mailservers, like FTPMAIL, please be considerate of any systems that
 your mail must pass through.  The quickest way to find yourself cut 
 off from the world is to make the admins of sites that pass your mail
 pass 60Mb of X11 graphics system source.  If you need large amounts
 of information from a mailserver, contact your admin for help -- it 
 may already be available, or he may know a better way to get it.

    * The UCSD Ham-Radio mail list: rec.radio.amateur.misc by mail
 You can use rec.radio.amateur.misc even if your site has no NetNews
 feed.  To subscribe to rec.radio.amateur.misc, send email to:
  Ham-Radio-Request@ucsd.edu
 In the body of the message, write:
  subscribe Ham-Radio
 If your local e-mail software does not provide a valid return address
 (i.e. Bitnet, many Milnet sites, and many non-Unix e-mail packages)
 you can provide your return address between the "subscribe" and the
 name of the mailing list (i.e. "subscribe myname@here.org Ham-Radio".)

 Similarly, to subscribe to some other rec.radio.* newsgroups, use
 the following directions: (all addresses here are @ucsd.edu)
 Request address  List address Newsgroup
 Ham-Radio-Request Ham-Radio rec.radio.amateur.misc
 Ham-Digital-Request Ham-Digital rec.radio.amateur.digital.misc
 Ham-Policy-Request Ham-Policy rec.radio.amateur.policy
 Ham-Equip-Request Ham-Equip rec.radio.amateur.equipment
 Ham-Ant-Request  Ham-Ant  rec.radio.amateur.antenna
 Ham-Homebrew-Policy Ham-Homebrew rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
 Ham-Space-Request Ham-Space rec.radio.amateur.space
 Radio-Info-Request Radio-Info rec.radio.info

 IMPORTANT NETIQUETTE NOTE: never ever send a request to subscribe
 or unsubscribe from *any* mail list to the list itself.  Always use
 the REQUEST address.  Otherwise you'll end up broadcasting your
 request to everyone on the list and getting lots of people angry at
 you.  (Seriously - this is a completely avoidable mistake and it
 does irritate a lot of people.)

 TO UNSUBSCRIBE, follow directions above, changing the command word 
 "subscribe" to "unsubscribe"
    DON'T POST TO THE NEWSGROUP ITSELF!  USE THE REQUEST ADDRESS!
 Help is available by using the command word "help".  Note that command
 words MUST be the first word on each line of the message.

 You can post to rec.radio.amateur.* by sending your posting email to
 the mail list addresses at ucsd.edu.  Since rec.radio.info is a
 moderated newsgroup, requests to post to it may be sent to Radio-Info
 but they will be mailed to the moderator,
 rec-radio-info@ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca, for posting.
 
 All of the Amateur radio newsgroups are archived for FTP on ucsd.edu
 under subdirectory mailarchives/{mail-list-name}.  However, Radio-Info
 is not archived at UCSD because almost everything is either on one of
 the other lists or in the news.answers archives at rtfm.mit.edu.

 To subscribe to rec.radio.shortwave, send email to 
 listserv@cuvma.columbia.edu, message is "subscribe swl-l (your name)"

    * Telephone BBS's with Ham-related information
 Among many, a large one is WB3FFV.  Use 8/N/1.  The phone numbers are
 (410)-661-2475 1200-38400/MNP5/V32bis/V42bis
 (410)-661-2598 1200-38400/MNP5/V32bis/V42bis/PEP
 (410)-661-2648 1200-19200/MNP5/V42bis/PEP
 Login is bbs, no password.  This BBS is also available via UUCP,
 login is uucpanon, no password.  For a list of available files, try:
 uucp wb3ffv!~/FILES /usr/spool/uucppublic

 Another one is N8EMR at phone 614-895-2553, login hbbs.  Data settings
 are 8 bits, NO parity, 1 stop bit.  N8EMR has a comprehensive list of
 other ham-related BBS's on-line.

 ARRL has a BBS called "HIRAM", named after the League's founder.
 The number is 203-666-0578.  More information can be obtained from
 the file ARRL-BBS on the ARRL e-mail server.

 For a more complete list of Ham Radio BBS's, see the file BBS on
 the ARRL server.  See also the file BBS_LIST.TXT on the KA6ETB
 HAM-server.  Also see many of the FTP sites listed earlier in this
 section.  There is now way to keep a list like this anywhere near
 up-to-date so giving you a lot of sources is the next-best thing!

    * Callsign servers and geographical name servers
 If you are at an Internet site you can connect using telnet to the
 following callbook server:
 callsign.cs.buffalo.edu

 There is also a general geographical name server at 
 martini.eecs.umich.edu

 The callbook server sits on port number 2000 and the geographical
 name server sits on port 3000.  These are different port numbers
 than what telnet usually defaults to. So if you just telnet to these
 machines, you will get a login prompt instead of the server. How you
 tell your telnet program to connect to port 2000 or 3000 instead of 
 the default port is operating system dependent but it is usually done 
 with a line like

 telnet callsign.cs.Buffalo.EDU 2000

 If this doesn't work, check the telnet/FTP troubleshooting hints
 above or consult your local systems guru for the proper command string.

 The interactive servers are designed to be somewhat self-explanatory
 and they support fairly detailed help facilities. The first command 
 you should execute when connecting to one of these servers is "info". 
 This will list general info about that server and how to use it. You 
 should then type "help" to list the various commands available. 
 Typing "help" followed by a command name will give you a little more 
 detail about that command. Servers allow searches by call, last name, 
 zip code or city and also provide regular expression filters to trim 
 your searches so you get a reasonable amount of output.

 Both these servers are built from a database distributed by Rusty
 Carruth, N7IKQ. This database currently contains US and Canadian 
 callsigns and it does not contain club calls. A new version of the 
 database is sent around approximately once a year.
 
 There is also an email callsign server at callbook@sat.datapoint.com
 (The UUCP address is ...!uunet!dptspd!callbook).  In the body of the 
 text, say "lookup" followed by callsigns you want to look up.  If 
 your mailer appends signature files, you should put a line "quit" at 
 the end of your request (before the signature file).  If you want 
 help, put the word "help" on a line by itself.  Here is what a 
 request might look like:
  help
  lookup kc1sp wn4bbj
  lookup n0fzd
  quit

 There is another email callsign server at callbook@n8emr.cmhnet.org.
 The subject line is the list of callsigns to lookup.  All other lines
 are ignored.  This same callsign server can be accessed with packet
 radio via cbook@n8jyv.#cmh.oh.usa.na.  The body of the message should
 include "REPLY n8jyv!HOME_BBS!CALL" (where HOME_BBS is YOUR home BBS,
 and CALL is YOUR callsign), carriage return, "CALL call1 call2 ..."
 (where call1 call2 .... is space separated list of callsigns you want
 to lookup).

 If you are a packet radio station, callserver data is available from
 REQQTH@WA4ONG.VA.USA.NA, subject line should be up to 5 US callsigns,
 separated by spaces.  For Canadian calls, use the callserver at
 REQQTH@VE3JF.ON.CAN.  Body of message is ignored.  The server is an 
 OS interface to the MBL packet BBS using the Buckmaster CD-ROM 
 callsign database.

 The REQQTH address is for the AX.25 radio-linked amateur packet
 network, *NOT* the Internet.  If you attempt to send Internet mail to
 this address, and use the old .NA suffix instead of the new .NOAM
 suffix, it will get routed to Nimibia (Internet suffix .na) which is
 currently paying a lot of money for misdirected ham mail.  Help
 maintain a positive example for amateur radio and please do not
 attempt this!

 The FCC "call sign hotline" at 717-337-1212 is available for those
 who wish to listen to the call signs allocated in each group for each
 district.  This requires only a touch-tone telephone to use.

    * FTP access to FCC Part 97 and FCC Amateur Radio question pools
 Part 97 is part of the FCC regulations and only applies to the USA.
 Since the latest changes to it, there are no known FTP sites with
 a current copy.

 An ASCII copy of the question pools are available by ftp from 
 the ARRL e-mail server.

    * Lists of radio modifications and extensions
 [see also rec.radio.amateur.equipment]
 Some mods can be found on wsmr-simtel20.army.mil or 
 the Simtel20 mirror directories on wuarchive.wustl.edu.

 There is a new server at pcserver@novell.business.uwo.ca.  Some 
 examples of main body email requests are as follows:
  HELP
  SENDME RADIO MODS
  SENDME TH215 MODS
  SENDME ALLBAND MODS

 There is a packet radio Mods Server.  To get the directories, send
 a packet as follows:
  SP REQFIL@N2IMC.NJ.USA.NA
  Subject:  MODS\Dir.1
  /EX
 To get the mod, send to same place, with Subject MODS\Filename.ext.

 REMEMBER that any modification is likely to void your warranty and
 that these mods are NOT guaranteed to work.  This list is supplied
 here because it is sometimes a frequent question on the newsgroup.

**  Can I send ARRL or W5YI electronic mail?
 Several ARRL HQ staffers can be contacted via the net.  Their e-mail
 addresses are available from the ARRL e-mail file server in the
 file called "EMAIL".

        ARRL requests that you include your postal address (the slow kind) in
        case they need to send you nonelectronic material in answer to your
        request.

        W5YI, a large VEC, can be reached at the following address:
 Fred Maia, W5YI                               3511297@mcimail.com

**  "Why doesn't the ARRL do...?"
 If you want the ARRL to do something, tell them!  Direct input from a
 concerned member (or, actually, any concerned Ham) carries a lot more
 weight than hearsay from any source.  Their e-mail addresses are
 available from the ARRL e-mail file server (see above).  They want
 direct input - that's why those addresses are available.

**  What magazines are available for Ham Radio?
 Your local ham store may have some, but here's some popular ones
 (this is NOT a complete list!):
 QST, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111 - basic projects and 
  contesting
 CQ The Radio Amateur's Journal, 76 North Broadway, Hicksville, NY 
  11801 - beginner ham radio articles
 73 Amateur Radio Today, WGE Center, Forect Rd, Hancock, NH 03449,
  FAX (603) 525-4423, email: COMPUSERVE 70310,775 or Internet
  70310.775@compuserve.com - more technical ham radio articles
 QEX, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111 - more technical projects
 WorldRadio, 2120 28th St, Sacramento, CA 95818, (916) 457-3655.
  Subscriptions to 201 Lathrop Way, Ste D, Sacramento, CA 95815,
  (800) 365-SUBS - lots of special interest columns, like QRP, 
  ATV, YL, etc.
 W5YI Report, PO Box 565101, Dallas, TX 75356, 1-800-669-9594 - 
  up-to-date information on Amateur Radio happenings, including
  VE information and statistics

**  How do I use the incoming and outgoing QSL bureau?
 To use the outgoing QSL bureau, you must be a member of ARRL.  In
 general, you send a bundle of foreign (not States!) QSL cards to
 the outgoing bureau in Newington, Connecticut, along with a label
 off of your QST magazine (which shows ARRL membership), along with
 $2 per pound of cards (approximately 150 cards) or $1 for 10 cards
 or less.

 To use the incoming QSL bureau, you do NOT have to be a member of 
 ARRL.  Send one or more Self-Addressed Stamped Envelopes (size 5x7 
 or 6x9, NO BIGGER, NO SMALLER) with one ounce of postage attached 
 and with your callsign in 3/4" letters in top left hand corner where 
 the return address label would go.  If you expect a large quantity
 of foreign QSL cards, attach extra money or postage with a paper
 clip; do NOT affix extra postage to envelope.  Send the envelopes to 
 the QSL bureau for your callsign area. If your callsign is xx3xxx/5, 
 you would send it to the 3rd call area, NOT the 5th call area.  
 Addresses for QSL bureaus are listed in QST and on the ARRL e-mail
 server (see below); if you don't have access to a QST magazine, ask
 another ham.  IMPORTANT:  BE PATIENT!  Turnaround time for a US QSL
 bureau, not considering foreign QSL bureaus, is about 3 months.
 Foreign QSL bureaus and hams can be as fast as 2 months or as slow as
 TEN YEARS, while average is about 6-12 months.

 Addresses for the US incoming and outgoing QSL Bureaus are available
 from the ARRL e-mail server in the files called "QSL-IN" and "QSL-OUT".
 See the question above

**  Are there any news groups for CAP?
 There is no news group just for Civil Air Patrol discussions.  However,
 rec.aviation.misc is appropriate for CAP aviation discussions and for
 CAP radio information, these rec.radio.amateur.* groups are available.
 CAP-related files are also stored on the FTP site
 sunburn.cps.udayton.edu in pub/capital.

**  What's the name of the QRP club that issues QRP numbers?
 QRP Amateur Radio Club International, c/o Bill Harding K4AHK,
 10923 Carters Oak Way, Burke, VA 22015.

 See also the file QRP-ADDRESSES on the ARRL e-mail server.

**  How do I become a 10-10 member?
 10-10 is simply an organization to sponsor the use of the 10 meter
 band.  It was first conceived when propagation was poor on 10 meters,
 as a method to get more hams to use 10 meters.  The past few years
 have been great for 10 meters worldwide.  However, "the bands are
 closing down" again, and 10 meters will once again be limited more
 for local communications, except for sporadic band openings, until
 the next sunspot cycle.

 To join 10-10, work ten 10-10 members and LOG each 10-10 number, call
 sign, operator's name and location.  Send the list to your numeric
 call sign or DX area manager (as shown below), with $5.00 U.S. new
 membership registration fee ($6.00 for foreign addresses). 

 10-10 International Area Managers:
 USA 1 - Al Kaiser N1API,       194 Glen Hills Rd, Meriden,     CT 06450
 USA 2 - Larry Berger WA2SUH,   9 Nancy Blvd,      Merrick,     NY 11566
 USA 3 - Chester Gardner N3GZE, 9028 Overhill Dr,  Ellicott Cty,MD 21042
 USA 4 - KY, TN, FL, VA, NC, SC only
  Rick Roberts N4KCC,    7106 Ridgestone Dr,Ooltewah,    TN 37363
 USA 4 - GA, AL, Puerto Rico only
         Jim Beswick W4YHF,     112 Owl Town Farm, Ellijay,     GA 30540
 USA 5 - Grace Dunlap K5MRU,*   Box 445,           LaFeria,     TX 78559
         *summer addr Jun-Oct   Box 13,            Rand,        CO 80473
 USA 6 - Dick Rauschler W6ANK,  4371 Cambria St,   Fremont,     CA 94538
 USA 7 - Willie Madison WB7VZI, 10512 W Butler Dr, Peoria,      AZ 85345
 USA 8 - John Hugentober N3FU,  4441 Andreas Ave,  Cincinatti,  OH 45211
 USA 9 - Jim Williams N9HHU,    240 Park Rd,       Creve Coeur, IL 61611
 USA 0 - Debbie Peterson KF0NV, RR 1 Box 35,       Duncombe,    IA 50532
 All DX- Carol Hugentober K8DHK,4441 Andreas Ave,  Cincinatti,  OH 45211

 For more info, see the file 10-10-INFO on the ARRL e-mail server.

**  How do I join MARS?
 To join MARS, you have to be 14 years or older (parental consent 
 required under age 17), be a US citizen or resident alien, possess a 
 valid Amateur Radio license, possess a station capable of operating
 on MARS HF frequencies, and be able to operate the minimum amount
 of time for each quarter (12 hours for Army and Air Force; 18 hours
 for Navy-Marines).  Novices must upgrade to Technician within 6 
 months, else be dropped from MARS.  No-Code Techs can apply, provided
 they have transmit and receive HF capability for MARS frequencies 
 (they don't need transmit capability for Amateur HF frequencies).  For
 application forms contact:  

        Chief, Air Force MARS
        HQ AFC4A/SYXR
        203 W. Losey St.  Room 1020
        Scott AFB, IL 62225-5219
        (618)256-5552   Fax:  (618) 256-5126

 Chief, US Army MARS
 HQ USA Information Systems Command
 ATTN:  ASOP-HF
 Ft. Huachuca, AZ 85613-5000
 800-633-1128

 Chief, Navy-Marine Corps MARS
 Naval Communication Unit
 Washington, DC   20397-5161

**  How do I join RACES?
 Contact your nearest Civil Defense or Emergency Management Agency.
 The Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service is a part of a municipal,
 county, or state government.  This does not mean, however, that 
 every such government has a RACES program.  If your government does
 not have a RACES, ask them to refer you to the nearest jurisdiction
 that does have a RACES program.

**  What organizations are available to help handicapped hams?
  Courage Center
  Handihams
  2915 Golden Valley Rd
  Golden Valley, MN  55422
  (612) 520-0515
 ARRL has a Handihams information package (get it by requesting it
 thru 2155052@mcimail.com) and a book called "The ARRL Plan for the 
 Disabled", available at no charge from the ARRL Regulatory 
 Information Branch.

**  I am looking for a specific ham, can anyone help me find him?
 Rather than sending out a message on Usenet, you might first try the
 "Radio Amateurs on Usenet" listings, maintained and posted by Mark
 Salyzyn VE6MGS.  The articles can be found monthly on rec.radio.info
 and rec.radio.amateur.misc.  If the copy in your news spool has
 expired for some reason, you can look up an entry in the list by
 sending an e-mail to reqnet@ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca with either of the
 following commands in the body of the message:
   lookup keyword keyword keyword ...
   return user@machine.subdomain.domain
 (Fill in the proper info for the search keyword or e-mail address.)
 An automated server program will reply to your message.

 If you have his/her callsign or name, you should also try one of the
 on-line callservers shown above.  This works in most cases. (!!!)

 Also try directory assistance from the phone company or the locator
 service provided by the Salvation Army.  A Salvation Army post in your
 local area may be able to help you.  Also, the Quarter-Century
 Wireless Assn maintains a collection of callbooks going back to "the
 beginning of time".  Their address is: 1409 Cooper Drive, Irving, TX
 75061.  Also, the Callbook has a dial-in line for accessing new ham
 callsigns.  Try (1-708-234-8011) at 2400 baud.

**  Can I post my neat new ham related program on rec.radio.amateur.misc?
 This is really not a good idea, since many of the readers receive
 these newsgroups as mail digests.  Posting is also a one-shot thing.
 If you post and someone missed it, it is gone.  A better way would be 
 to announce the existence of your program here, along with 
 information on how to obtain a copy of your program.  You can also 
 submit it to one of the FTP archive sites, which will allow the world
 to access it without you having to mail it to each requestor.  If you 
 just GOTTA post it somewhere, post it to more appropriate groups, 
 like comp.sources.unix or alt.sources or comp.binaries.ibm.pc.

** Where can I get ham radio software for my computer?
 See the information about Anonymous FTP, e-mail servers, and
 ham-related telephone BBS's above.  For PC-clones, see the KA6ETB
 HAM-server.  For Macintosh computers, see the file SOFTWARE-MAC on
 the ARRL e-mail server for locations to look.

**  Are there Dialup News services or BBSs for Amateur Radio?
 There are two major news services for ham radio.  Both are run by
 volunteer hams and provide bulletins of specific interest to amateurs,
 hence they are perfectly legal to rebroadcast on ham bands according
 to FCC Regulation 97.111B(6).  To lessen the load on the dialup lines,
 consider getting your local repeater operator to rebroadcast it, or 
 tape record it to play at your favorite HF net.  

 RAIN (Radio Amateur Information Network) is produced by Hap Holly,
 KC9RP, located in Illinois.  The news is typically updated 8am CST
 Fridays.  Phone numbers are 1-708-299-INFO (299-4636) and 
 1-708-827-RAIN (827-7246).

 NEWSLINE is another, produced by Bill Pasternak, WA6ITF.  Donations
 for NEWSLINE are accepted at Newsline Support Fund, c/o Dr. Norm
 Chalfin K6PGX, Pasadena, CA 91102.  Phone numbers are:  
  Chicago  1-708-289-0423
  N.Florida 1-407-259-4479 
  West Palm Beach 1-407-965-1234
  Los Angeles 1-805-296-2407 (Instant Update Line)
  Los Angeles 1-213-462-0008
  NYC  1-718-353-2801
  Ohio  1-513-275-9991
  Seattle  1-206-368-3969

**  Where can I find VE sessions in my local area?
 VE sessions are often announced in the local newspapers, but more
 often, they are announced by local radio bulletin boards.  The 
 local packet BBS will most likely have a monthly updated schedule
 for VE sessions.  ARRL or W5YI can generally be called and asked for 
 local VE sessions as well.  Don't forget that you will need the 
 following when you go in for an upgrade:  a copy of your current 
 Amateur license; your original Amateur license; any CSCEs (duplicate 
 not required), if applicable and less than a year old; a picture ID, 
 preferably a driver's license, passport or visa; and the VE test
 fee (approximately $5 right now).

 Bart Jahnke, KB9NM, the ARRL VEC Manager (bjahnke@arrl.org) posts a
 listing of VE exams indexed by state (and some overseas sites, usually
 at embassies and military bases) to the net every 6 weeks or so.  The
 same list can be obtained from the ARRL e-mail server under the file
 EXAM-SCHEDULE.  Another file of interest is EXAM-INFO.

 The ARRL list is the definitive list for ARRL VEC sessions.  There
 are other smaller VECs around the USA.  ARRL includes their schedules
 when the info is available.  The other VECs phone numbers are listed
 with the ARRL info so you may wish to give them a call to check their
 schedule if they didn't provide it to ARRL.

**  Why isn't XXX available electronically?
        This is a theme for a lot of common questions.  For the "XXX" above,
        substitute any of the following:
    Callbooks
           DX QSL Lists
           Radio station lists
    various publications
           and more...

        Except for the Callbook (via callsign servers), these are not available
        because of any of several reasons.  Either there are copyright restric-
        tions, royalty fees, or the source just may not have done the work.
        Also, not everyone that has information has reliable UseNet access.

        In one example of someone's effort to bridge the information gap, there
 is a new repeater-mapping project which can automatically accept
 entries via e-mail.  If you can get enough details about a repeater
 for a complete listing, you may want to help by submitting an entry.
 For more information, use the following e-mail addresses:

 repeaters@wattres.sj.ca.us
  Just send a message with only the word "help" in the message
  body.  The project's software will reply with instructions.
 steve@wattres.sj.ca.us
  For other questions (Steve Watt KD6GGD)

 As soon as the list is big enough to be useful, the project will make
 it available electronically.  That will mean one less "why isn't it
 available electronically" question for the net.
 available electronically" question for the net.