This is a big improvement. Last month I started the same effort on my home station, separating the PC workstation from the radio equipment. Now the PC station has power and network cables that pass through a UPS to my computer equipment and no other wires exposed. It took hours to find good cables that are not too long and get them labeled, routed and managed with hook and loop tape. I wanted to manage lightning risks and EMI/RFI to lower my noise floor. -Tim KI4TG
Incredible presentation and incredible new lab! It is SO COOL to see all of this a much more contemporary format (both presentation AND the lab). I'm hoping we can see more presentations from Jherica like this. Some company is going to be lucky to hire you when you graduate (and maybe that could be a great non-profit.... like, say, perhaps ARRL). Time for me to stop by HQ again to see this lab first hand!
Wow almost too clean and tidy ; ) My shack is cluttered and always in flux but I know where everything is somehow ; ) Thank You for an inspirational tour ; )
Great job Jherica & Team ARRL! Really enjoyed the tour of the new ARRL radio lab - we all want to order one! You are going to do really well Jherica! Cheers, Phil VK2EPC
As much as I like a cleanly wired workspace ham radio is experimental therefore you are pulling cables out of the back of devices and rerouting them constantly or at least I am. I have given up on cable management and now embrace the mad scientist look. I'll leave the "clean" workspace to home office users and gaming rigs.
Being a very old Ham I am always glad to see young people getting into this. As this video shows this is not a hobby. I wish ARRL would stop saying that because the powers that give us our frequencies will think that we are just a bunch of radio operators and not experimenters in communications. We have contributed so much to improving ways to communicate to the world. de WB7ORB.
New ham here and I completely agree, many people use their licenses for much more than just communications, unfortunately there isn't much advertising for this aspect of it. KD2ZWN
@@johnmcauliffe8824, ARRL promotes the benefits of amateur radio for radio communication and technology discovery, practice, and skill development. Many consider the service a hobby too, since we commit personal free time to it, and derive so much enjoyment from ham radio.
@@Thatsmisteroldguytou experimenting with different antennas (like improving mag loops antennas), creating radio encryption methods, emergency response preparedness, and even to advance scientific understanding of the world as last year a bunch of amateur operators working with NASA published a paper detailing a new method of observing electrical disturbances of the ionosphere
These tours are great for those of us who live on the complete other side of the country and have no real chance of making it there to visit anytime soon. Would love see more things there at the HQ.
Excellent presentation, very professional. I'm inspired to look into some of these ideas. Every time I need to access the rear of one of my rigs I have to climb onto my operating table and almost stand on my head! And the "rat's nest" of coax cables under the table could definitely use some organization. Thanks!!!
I wish more radio manufacturers would adopt modern connection methods like ethernet to simplify wiring. FlexRadio has been forward thinking in this regard for a long time. Even my amplifier and tuner are keyed with ethernet over the LAN. The other manufacturers did go with USB and that simplified wiring some. Icom has gotten on board with not just ethernet but wifi and Bluetooth (great for portable operations) so that is a good sign. Hopefully we will see radios soon with just RF, power and a single ethernet connector and connections to the computer and other equipment over the LAN. Less wires to get damaged, less to break and infinitely more customization and flexibility.
I have been there by year 2009, at that time the main building is very small and now it is the new built building and the Radio Station are located at the other side the building in another old small shack. Hope to visit again in the coming years 73de VR2SA ( AA1SA)
Impressive! Ms Goodgame KI5HTA represents the ARRL in a very positive way. Informative presentation. My father who's been a SK for several years, K7HRW, just started transitioning his shack to include the computer. I'm sure he'd be more than impressed by the innovations. Hope to see more presentations like this. Glad to be a member of ARRL. - 73 WA7JR
Great job, Jherica! The rest of this paragraph is directed at those in charge of this. If the goal were truly to duplicate a "typical station in your home," they've failed epically. Towers and beam antennas? Typical HF stations have single-element antennas, often wire between trees or hung as inverted Vs, or verticals. This nonsense perpetuates the myth that one needs beams on towers to have an effective station and collect tons of QSL cards and awards. Put up a G5RV or an off-center-fed dipole if you want to look at a typical HF station, and J-poles, ground planes, and halos for VHF+.
Wire antennas, like the EFHW, loops, dipoles...ALL GOOD! It's great to experiment with what you can afford and have room for. ARRL includes wire antennas in its content all the time. Big antennas...small antennas...let's do it ALL!
Really enjoyed seeing the new lab, and love the concept. I noticed you posted links to the electronics in the room. However, I'm interested in learning more about the environment. Can you provide details on the rolling desk and wire management system being used? Thanks!
Great job, Jherica ... Wow, what a transformation of W1AW. I like the clean look and feel. I would only suggest (maybe it's coming?) that there is an identification of what radio is connected to each operating position. I'm assuming antenna switching is all done remotely as well, maybe from the computer screen? Anyway, thanks again for the updates! Vy 73, Dennis - WU6X
Pretty quiet in there! We also added some inexpensive acoustic foam to the walls to add some sound deadening (it even helps with minimizing the sound transfer between multiple ops in the room). And the foam looks cool!
Many of us like physical contact with our radios and do not want to be tied to a computer screen. Remote control does have it's place of course. - each to there own I suppose. - Presentation excellent - well done.
I use remote operation when I go on vacation so I can stay in contact with my friends on HF due to the bands are not open to all areas all the time. :-)
Access behind the desk…so true…required two hydraulic jacks to move the corner furniture away from the wall! That setup with wheels is awesome. Enjoyed the overview! 73, John/N6VTS
Great presentation! It's the "next step", after so may radios started to have remote heads. Operating your own station will be as seamless as operating remote ones, maybe even simultaneously! You will I am certain always look back fondly on when you were an intern at ARRL. 73 DE W8LV BILL
I'm just wondering that's an older looking building and was it constructed with the intent to be ARRL headquarters. There seems to be a lot of weight on that flat roof
Very nice presentation. Will there be more videos or articles about how this is all put together? I'm particularly interested in what technology you're using to support remote access.
Excellent video! I really appreciate the plan for real world/real use videos you have planned such as integrating new radios into existing setups and showing what needs to be done. I also really liked the look at the wire management and comment about the desk on wheels. I’d like to see parts of the future videos talk about some of those mundane details that might not normally be covered and not needed by more experienced hams but I appreciate it as a new ham dealing with the practical issues of setting up a first station and desk and first time drilling into the side of the house or drilling through a wall to route wires. A reminder that I’m going to want to get behind the desk more often than I might think and that wire management from the beginning is a good idea, is really helpful. Thank you and great presentation!!
WELL DONE!! This was so well produced and exceptionally described. I’d like to use this to show people around the world how the W1HQ station has evolved and changed for the modern day on my TH-cam channel that helps to encourage people to get their amateur radio license as well as license up and find out about great products modes and stories that we can tell today in Amateur Radio. Great job Jherica!!! You did an excellent job narrating this video! Your future looks very bright to me! Larry de K7HN
We hope the space inspires you to try any of these things: connect and control your station using a computer; consider a rolling station desk; construct a wiring management system; rack-mount your gear… etc. Start with what you can afford, but experiment and (re)imagine station design!
I was quite interested in watching this review. One thing that challenged me was how fast you ran through everything. It was hard to stop and see what you were describing, fully understand it and reflect on it. I'm 77 years old and have been challenged by many contemporary video presentations for this very reason. It is as if the announcer is rushing through the video to get to the end as quickly as possible. For me, staying in the process as an exploration is the exciting part, not getting to the end. Is this speedy approach a result of reduced attention spans resulting from experience life in small technology bites like tweets? Or...? I like to be able to explore things with time to spare, time to reflect, time to pay attention to detail. For me it was just too fast. Interesting approach to a station that I have played around with. I wish the visit to the station had been more leisurely. Thanks --Kenoli Oleari KB6EMG
Have you considered changing the playback speed of the video? When you have the TH-cam screen showing its controls (all of the symbols in white), click once on the cog (in the upper right portion of the screen) for settings, then click on "Normal" for playback speed. This will open another menu that allows you to adjust the playback speed. I like to do this in TH-cam and Audible to either slow things down or speed them up, depending upon my intentions and differing presentation styles. Good luck! 👍😁
@@JefeDow That is an option I commonly use but it screws up the sound. Just tried that here and the voice is awful. I wonder why people race through videos. I've always tried to speak slowly when doing a workshop or other video. Have you ever noticed that on TV news, they race through the important content, the news and weather, and then sit around jawing with personal banter that is hugely boring and irrelevant. Between that and incessant advertisements, we seldom watch regular TV news unless we need some info about something really current and then we have to wade through all of this other stuff to get to what we are listening for which is also so fully summarized and raced through that it is hard to get substantive information. Drives me crazy.
How do you measure success in that lab? What parameters can you measure? I love the look of it, I suspect you could do a lot of integration work but I always find myself wanting to measure things.
While we're at this kind of setup, I've been looking to do something similar. Does anyone have a suggestion for good Mac software to run a Yaseu 757GXii?
Wonderful presentation. I am a vintage radio and scanner buff. I have been monitoring local ham repeaters for years. Not a ham. After listening all that time. Not interested. Many HAMs are rude, bitchy, picky, and make racist and ignorant remarks over the air frequently. I often wonder why in this environment anyone would want to join HAM radio. I know it's not like this everywhere. I hope not. It can't be.
Very slick, but it's not a Laboratory. Defn Laboratory "A room or building equipped for scientific experimentation or research." (American heritage dictionary). I see no faciltities for experimentation or research. Sure it's a good vehicle for operating. It's also a showroom for whoever has supplied you their commercial radios, but amateur radio is a lot more than that (read the license). So, good showroom, but not a good laboratory. 73 M5KVK
Gareth, you may have mistakenly omitted a portion of the definition you copied for, “laboratory.” It includes, “A place for practice, observation, or testing.” This is precisely how the space is being used.
@@ARRLHQ Fair enough, though that wasn’t part of the definition I quoted. However, your additional clause begs the obvious question - where’s the test gear?
@@GarethHowell, radios and accessories being tested for QST Product Review are brought into the Radio Lab to test the integration and performance of the gear in a station that already supports various types of control and automation. The Radio Lab is a new addition to the ARRL Laboratory, which already includes a fully equipped screen room and test equipment. If you're unfamiliar with ARRL equipment testing and product review, check out this short video: th-cam.com/video/3vvu020gYDQ/w-d-xo.html
I rejoined the ARRL recently because the new leadership. This makes it worthwhile. Thanks!
Thanks for a great tour. K1FQL
This is a big improvement. Last month I started the same effort on my home station, separating the PC workstation from the radio equipment. Now the PC station has power and network cables that pass through a UPS to my computer equipment and no other wires exposed. It took hours to find good cables that are not too long and get them labeled, routed and managed with hook and loop tape. I wanted to manage lightning risks and EMI/RFI to lower my noise floor. -Tim KI4TG
I did the Node Red integration to the Flex and Green Heron equipment! Fun project. Three trips up to HQ.
Thank you, David! 73 !!
Incredible presentation and incredible new lab! It is SO COOL to see all of this a much more contemporary format (both presentation AND the lab).
I'm hoping we can see more presentations from Jherica like this. Some company is going to be lucky to hire you when you graduate (and maybe that could be a great non-profit.... like, say, perhaps ARRL).
Time for me to stop by HQ again to see this lab first hand!
Nice. Glad the ARRL is taking things to the next level.
Agree 100%.
Excellent Jherica, that is a great setup. Moving forward and updating. Thank you for sharing.
Great job, Jherica! Well done, and kudos to the ARRL staff for putting this all together.
Hi Jherica,
Well done presentation and that's an awesome setup at the ARRL Radio lab. You and your family stay safe. 73 WJ3U
That wire management is awesome. I should do that in my office.
Yes, that was particularly impressive. I'd be interested in knowing more about the specific hardware used. --WD3WTF
Wow almost too clean and tidy ; ) My shack is cluttered and always in flux but I know where everything is somehow ; ) Thank You for an inspirational tour ; )
...beautiful Radio Lab!!! Great presentation, Jherica!
Great job Jherica & Team ARRL! Really enjoyed the tour of the new ARRL radio lab - we all want to order one! You are going to do really well Jherica! Cheers, Phil VK2EPC
How about an Article in QST magazine featuring this concept of radio shack organization !!🙂
Awesome and very clean setup. Looking forward to seeing more from this facility. Nice presentation Jherica!
I like the wire management; that gives me some ideas.
Beautiful set up! Very clean! My standard is upgraded. Thanks for this great presentation!
Awesome setup. Especially the wire management.
Very interesting video. The future should definitely be tidier shacks!
As much as I like a cleanly wired workspace ham radio is experimental therefore you are pulling cables out of the back of devices and rerouting them constantly or at least I am. I have given up on cable management and now embrace the mad scientist look. I'll leave the "clean" workspace to home office users and gaming rigs.
Being a very old Ham I am always glad to see young people getting into this. As this video shows this is not a hobby. I wish ARRL would stop saying that because the powers that give us our frequencies will think that we are just a bunch of radio operators and not experimenters in communications. We have contributed so much to improving ways to communicate to the world. de WB7ORB.
New ham here and I completely agree, many people use their licenses for much more than just communications, unfortunately there isn't much advertising for this aspect of it. KD2ZWN
@@johnmcauliffe8824, ARRL promotes the benefits of amateur radio for radio communication and technology discovery, practice, and skill development. Many consider the service a hobby too, since we commit personal free time to it, and derive so much enjoyment from ham radio.
@@johnmcauliffe8824 John, What are they using it for? For example?
@@Thatsmisteroldguytou experimenting with different antennas (like improving mag loops antennas), creating radio encryption methods, emergency response preparedness, and even to advance scientific understanding of the world as last year a bunch of amateur operators working with NASA published a paper detailing a new method of observing electrical disturbances of the ionosphere
These tours are great for those of us who live on the complete other side of the country and have no real chance of making it there to visit anytime soon. Would love see more things there at the HQ.
Excellent presentation, very professional. I'm inspired to look into some of these ideas. Every time I need to access the rear of one of my rigs I have to climb onto my operating table and almost stand on my head! And the "rat's nest" of coax cables under the table could definitely use some organization. Thanks!!!
I wish more radio manufacturers would adopt modern connection methods like ethernet to simplify wiring. FlexRadio has been forward thinking in this regard for a long time. Even my amplifier and tuner are keyed with ethernet over the LAN.
The other manufacturers did go with USB and that simplified wiring some. Icom has gotten on board with not just ethernet but wifi and Bluetooth (great for portable operations) so that is a good sign. Hopefully we will see radios soon with just RF, power and a single ethernet connector and connections to the computer and other equipment over the LAN. Less wires to get damaged, less to break and infinitely more customization and flexibility.
Thanks Jherica, nicely done overview of the new lab setup. There's an idea or two in there I'll be adopting. 73 de W3IRL
Awesome!!! Good luck and more Dxing to come... Vy 73 Mabuhay🌺
I have been there by year 2009, at that time the main building is very small and now it is the new built building and the Radio Station are located at the other side the building in another old small shack. Hope to visit again in the coming years 73de VR2SA ( AA1SA)
Great job Jherica.
Impressive! Ms Goodgame KI5HTA represents the ARRL in a very positive way. Informative presentation. My father who's been a SK for several years, K7HRW, just started transitioning his shack to include the computer. I'm sure he'd be more than impressed by the innovations. Hope to see more presentations like this. Glad to be a member of ARRL. - 73 WA7JR
Well done. Some great ideas to bring into my shack 👍
Very cool ! Great job - very informative and cutting edge.
Thank you very much!
Outstanding job Jherica! Keep the videos coming.
Excellent! Thank you.
Nice presentation from a knowledgeable YL. 73 SK
Thanks for watching!
Hello Jherica a happy weekend is sent from southwest Germany! Hope to meet you on air as soon. 73 de Your Friend Uncle Guenter 💯🙋♂🍻
If I ever end up building a radio shack, it’s looking like that. Great work, Jherica and ARRL! KC1RRL
Congrats Jherica!
Thanks, Ria! Thanks for doing what you do to support youth in amateur radio! 73 de KI5HTA
Very good. I can definitely see the hands of her father in the production of this video.
Fascinating - thank you!
I have been trying to figure out how to clean up my cabling mess so please go into yours further
Great job, Jherica! The rest of this paragraph is directed at those in charge of this. If the goal were truly to duplicate a "typical station in your home," they've failed epically. Towers and beam antennas? Typical HF stations have single-element antennas, often wire between trees or hung as inverted Vs, or verticals. This nonsense perpetuates the myth that one needs beams on towers to have an effective station and collect tons of QSL cards and awards.
Put up a G5RV or an off-center-fed dipole if you want to look at a typical HF station, and J-poles, ground planes, and halos for VHF+.
Wire antennas, like the EFHW, loops, dipoles...ALL GOOD! It's great to experiment with what you can afford and have room for. ARRL includes wire antennas in its content all the time. Big antennas...small antennas...let's do it ALL!
Really enjoyed seeing the new lab, and love the concept. I noticed you posted links to the electronics in the room. However, I'm interested in learning more about the environment. Can you provide details on the rolling desk and wire management system being used? Thanks!
More info to come! The work desks are from teclab.com
Thanks for the tour Jherica! I'm sure this is the way shacks will go in the future. 73 VK4QP.
JThis inspiration came just in time to my shack renovation.
Great job, Jherica ... Wow, what a transformation of W1AW. I like the clean look and feel. I would only suggest (maybe it's coming?) that there is an identification of what radio is connected to each operating position. I'm assuming antenna switching is all done remotely as well, maybe from the computer screen? Anyway, thanks again for the updates! Vy 73, Dennis - WU6X
That is not the W1AW station studios. That is separate (different building).
That's a beautiful setup. Wish I didn't have line noise to use my hf rig.
Very nice, but how noisy is the room when the fans in those equipment cabinets turn on?
Pretty quiet in there! We also added some inexpensive acoustic foam to the walls to add some sound deadening (it even helps with minimizing the sound transfer between multiple ops in the room). And the foam looks cool!
Outstanding tour by Jherica. Hope members of our youth group, Y.A.C.H.T. see it and are motivated. Thanks ARRL for having her do this.
Many of us like physical contact with our radios and do not want to be tied to a computer screen. Remote control does have it's place of course. - each to there own I suppose. - Presentation excellent - well done.
I use remote operation when I go on vacation so I can stay in contact with my friends on HF due to the bands are not open to all areas all the time. :-)
Wow! I am impressed. Way to go ARRL.
Love the idea routing coax!
Very impressive!
Nice job ARRL! I would like to know how Jherica got interested in amateur radio and what she sees for its' future.
You can see more about Jherica's ham radio journey in her intro video here: th-cam.com/video/XY1hEDgnB8A/w-d-xo.html
0:51 New Radio Laboratory Tour
Good job, Jherica. I bet your dad is proud of what you have accomplished.
Where do you get the tables? And is the rack on wheels too?
work-desks are from www.teclab.com/. The racks have wheels too.
Sweet! I want one just like it!
very well done!
Great Video . Good job.
Cool tour, thanks!!! Hang in there YL you chose a good career KI5USS
Nice looking setup, well done and good to see some great behind the scenes stuff happening at HQ. Well done Jherica.
Access behind the desk…so true…required two hydraulic jacks to move the corner furniture away from the wall! That setup with wheels is awesome. Enjoyed the overview! 73, John/N6VTS
Excellent!
commercial lab setup design. well done
Great presentation! It's the "next step", after so may radios started to have remote heads. Operating your own station will be as seamless as operating remote ones, maybe even simultaneously! You will I am certain always look back fondly on when you were an intern at ARRL. 73 DE W8LV BILL
Awesome 👏🏼
I'm just wondering that's an older looking building and was it constructed with the intent to be ARRL headquarters. There seems to be a lot of weight on that flat roof
BIG difference from when I visited in 1994. Mike, KC5UEA.
Thank you Jherica Goodgame for the tour. Perhaps I can have a shack like that some day!
Very nice presentation, Jherica! 73 de n8wrl
Very nice presentation. Will there be more videos or articles about how this is all put together? I'm particularly interested in what technology you're using to support remote access.
Very nicely done. However, I think I will keep all the radios on my desk as the sterile environment looks too much like an office work space!!
Excellent video! I really appreciate the plan for real world/real use videos you have planned such as integrating new radios into existing setups and showing what needs to be done. I also really liked the look at the wire management and comment about the desk on wheels. I’d like to see parts of the future videos talk about some of those mundane details that might not normally be covered and not needed by more experienced hams but I appreciate it as a new ham dealing with the practical issues of setting up a first station and desk and first time drilling into the side of the house or drilling through a wall to route wires. A reminder that I’m going to want to get behind the desk more often than I might think and that wire management from the beginning is a good idea, is really helpful.
Thank you and great presentation!!
WELL DONE!!
This was so well produced and exceptionally described. I’d like to use this to show people around the world how the W1HQ station has evolved and changed for the modern day on my TH-cam channel that helps to encourage people to get their amateur radio license as well as license up and find out about great products modes and stories that we can tell today in Amateur Radio.
Great job Jherica!!! You did an excellent job narrating this video! Your future looks very bright to me!
Larry
de K7HN
Nice, but then again when you have almost unlimited funds, you don't really have to cut corners like some of us, do.
We hope the space inspires you to try any of these things: connect and control your station using a computer; consider a rolling station desk; construct a wiring management system; rack-mount your gear… etc. Start with what you can afford, but experiment and (re)imagine station design!
Great video de W2CSI
Well the ARRL has designed a way to hide everything hams like to touch and play with. I think I will keep my present setup.
😍
I was quite interested in watching this review. One thing that challenged me was how fast you ran through everything. It was hard to stop and see what you were describing, fully understand it and reflect on it. I'm 77 years old and have been challenged by many contemporary video presentations for this very reason. It is as if the announcer is rushing through the video to get to the end as quickly as possible. For me, staying in the process as an exploration is the exciting part, not getting to the end. Is this speedy approach a result of reduced attention spans resulting from experience life in small technology bites like tweets? Or...? I like to be able to explore things with time to spare, time to reflect, time to pay attention to detail. For me it was just too fast. Interesting approach to a station that I have played around with. I wish the visit to the station had been more leisurely. Thanks --Kenoli Oleari KB6EMG
Have you considered changing the playback speed of the video? When you have the TH-cam screen showing its controls (all of the symbols in white), click once on the cog (in the upper right portion of the screen) for settings, then click on "Normal" for playback speed. This will open another menu that allows you to adjust the playback speed. I like to do this in TH-cam and Audible to either slow things down or speed them up, depending upon my intentions and differing presentation styles. Good luck! 👍😁
@@JefeDow That is an option I commonly use but it screws up the sound. Just tried that here and the voice is awful. I wonder why people race through videos. I've always tried to speak slowly when doing a workshop or other video. Have you ever noticed that on TV news, they race through the important content, the news and weather, and then sit around jawing with personal banter that is hugely boring and irrelevant. Between that and incessant advertisements, we seldom watch regular TV news unless we need some info about something really current and then we have to wade through all of this other stuff to get to what we are listening for which is also so fully summarized and raced through that it is hard to get substantive information. Drives me crazy.
@@ttp666 For YT videos tap the space bar on your keyboard to pause the video, works well for me!
Cool.
How do you measure success in that lab? What parameters can you measure? I love the look of it, I suspect you could do a lot of integration work but I always find myself wanting to measure things.
While we're at this kind of setup, I've been looking to do something similar. Does anyone have a suggestion for good Mac software to run a Yaseu 757GXii?
Wonderful presentation. I am a vintage radio and scanner buff. I have been monitoring local ham repeaters for years. Not a ham. After listening all that time. Not interested. Many HAMs are rude, bitchy, picky, and make racist and ignorant remarks over the air frequently. I often wonder why in this environment anyone would want to join HAM radio. I know it's not like this everywhere. I hope not. It can't be.
de wb8idy
Very slick, but it's not a Laboratory. Defn Laboratory "A room or building equipped for scientific experimentation or research." (American heritage dictionary). I see no faciltities for experimentation or research. Sure it's a good vehicle for operating. It's also a showroom for whoever has supplied you their commercial radios, but amateur radio is a lot more than that (read the license).
So, good showroom, but not a good laboratory.
73 M5KVK
Gareth, you may have mistakenly omitted a portion of the definition you copied for, “laboratory.” It includes, “A place for practice, observation, or testing.” This is precisely how the space is being used.
@@ARRLHQ Fair enough, though that wasn’t part of the definition I quoted. However, your additional clause begs the obvious question - where’s the test gear?
@@GarethHowell, radios and accessories being tested for QST Product Review are brought into the Radio Lab to test the integration and performance of the gear in a station that already supports various types of control and automation. The Radio Lab is a new addition to the ARRL Laboratory, which already includes a fully equipped screen room and test equipment. If you're unfamiliar with ARRL equipment testing and product review, check out this short video: th-cam.com/video/3vvu020gYDQ/w-d-xo.html
Well done. You did an excellent job with presentation. I hope you have a great experience with your internship. 73 de W6DAN.
Thank you very much!
I'll just be needing the sign-in credentials so I can login and check everything out myself, thanks!
Check out this page for help logging-in, or give us a phone call for assistance.
www.arrl.org/login-instructions
phone 888-277-5289
Thank you 73 KA2AQV
KE0DNQ........73