Newsletter May 2026

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QRV Monthly — May 2026

Alliance Amateur Radio Network

QRV Monthly

Member Newsletter

May 2026  ·  New Adventures Across the Bands and Beyond!
Feature · Event Recap

The Spirit of Radio Adventure: Inside Dayton Hamvention 2026

74th annual Hamvention — Greene County Fairgrounds, Xenia, Ohio · May 15–17, 2026

The global amateur radio community converged on the Greene County Fairgrounds and Expo Center from May 15–17, 2026, for the 74th annual Dayton Hamvention. Operating under this year’s official theme, “Radio Adventure,” the world’s premier hamfest brought together over 30,000 operators, experimenters, and builders, flooding the local region with a massive $35 million economic impact.

The overarching takeaway from this year’s show was clear: the dividing line between traditional radio operating and cutting-edge software engineering has completely evaporated. Today’s ham radio adventure is as much about digital signal processing networks, Linux microcontrollers, and satellite orbits as it is about pushing raw RF through a piece of wire.

Deepening the Technical Footprint: Software, SDR, and the Maker Movement

Walking the vendor halls in 2026, it was impossible to ignore how deeply embedded the “maker” philosophy has become within the hobby. No longer are hams just choosing between a few major Japanese manufacturers; a huge section of the convention was dedicated to open-source software and localized hardware development.

From customized SDR dongles designed to track aircraft or weather satellites to small-scale firmware developments for low-power long-range (LoRa) messaging networks like Meshtastic, the convention floor proved that hams are designing their own infrastructure. Entire clubs showed off customized, automated antenna switch matrices and remote-operating nodes that allow an operator with a laptop in a city apartment to drive a massive multi-element beam antenna located on a rural hilltop hundreds of miles away.

Big Gear Buzz in the Commercial Halls

Inside the six indoor commercial buildings, you could barely move near the FlexRadio booth. Everyone wanted a look at the newly unveiled Aurora SDR transceiver series. These are investment-grade, top-tier flagship base stations meant for serious contest operations — and the internal engineering is wild. FlexRadio managed to pack a 16-bit direct-sampling SDR receiver, an automatic antenna tuner, and a full 500W solid-state linear amplifier into a single 18-pound box. The architecture minimizes potential RF failure points while operating at a staggering 80% nominal power efficiency.

  • Aurora AU-510 — The baseline “headless” model designed for clean, remote-controlled black-box integration.
  • Aurora AU-510M — The integrated console setup featuring a built-in Maestro front panel touchscreen display.
  • Aurora AU-520M — The top-of-the-line flagship boasting dual independent Spectral Capture Units (SCUs) for true diversity reception.

Icom had a constant crowd checking out the ID-5200 dual-band mobile transceiver, the long-awaited successor to the aging ID-5100. It sports a beautiful, high-resolution 4.3-inch color touchscreen with a real-time waterfall display that handles harsh daylight remarkably well without washing out. Operators were especially excited about the built-in Wi-Fi — you can run D-STAR terminal and access point modes right out of the box without extra cable tethers or external hardware modules. The ID-5200 provides true simultaneous dual-band receive (including FM/FM, FM/DV, and DV/DV modes) alongside a dedicated airband receiver. Major distributors like Ham Radio Outlet and DX Engineering were already taking $35 non-refundable reservation deposits at the show. Alongside it, Icom revealed a rugged companion AH-6 Automatic Antenna Tuner, built as a heavy-duty, weather-sealed external matching system optimized strictly for remote HF field operations.

A few other vendor floor highlights that kept people talking:

  • Retevis Ailunce HA2 — This rugged, IP67 waterproof handheld turned heads by offering built-in GPS, true native APRS location tracking, aviation band receive, and Bluetooth app programming for an incredibly low $89.99.
  • Elecraft AX4 & BL3 Balun — Portable operators swarmed to see this new heavy-duty vertical whip system designed to handle higher portable power loads up to 100W out of a standard backpack. Elecraft kept production pricing under wraps, opening a public waitlist sign-up structure instead.
  • Digital Training Hubs — Interactive setups from Ham Radio Prep and the World Radio League demonstrated live software tools for contesting analytics, off-grid Meshtastic tracking, and updated digital band maps tracking the latest regulatory 60-meter frequency shifts.

The Under-the-Glass Tease: Icom’s X-026 Concept Project

Tucked behind a heavily guarded glass showcase at the center of the Icom booth was the absolute mystery of the weekend: a dark, sleek prototype labeled simply “Project X-026.” Icom representatives remained tight-lipped about the concept, but the physical chassis design dropped massive hints for the brand’s technical trajectory.

The unit appears to be a futuristic, ultra-compact hybrid shack rig that blends elements of an all-mode QRP field radio with advanced mobile mesh capabilities. Observers noted a modular, hot-swappable battery compartment, a high-refresh monochrome e-paper display flanking a primary color OLED waterfall screen, and integrated dual SMA/Type-N antenna ports. Whispers flooding the forum rooms suggest Project X-026 is Icom’s secretive development into a native, cross-band microwave and satellite field transceiver designed to bridge terrestrial amateur bands with impending amateur payload launches. While no specs sheets or release windows were offered, the tease left no doubt that Icom is aggressively engineering a massive break away from traditional form factors.

This emphasis on localized, futuristic engineering pairs perfectly with the regulatory shifts discussed at the ARRL booth. With updates to the 60-meter band and the continued push for technical digital mode expansion, the hobby is rapidly retooling itself to stay highly relevant in a world dominated by commercial internet infrastructure.

Mud, Treasures, and Bargains: The Flea Market

Outside the commercial buildings, the legendary Dayton Flea Market spanned over 2,000 swap-meet spaces. Despite some classic, unpredictable Ohio spring weather threats during Thursday’s setup day, thousands of hams pushed heavy-duty wagons through the rows the moment the gates opened on Friday morning.

The outdoor market proved to be a vibrant, living crossroads of radio history. One table would feature pristine, glowing 1960s Collins tube gear, vintage brass telegraph keys, and heavy military surplus hardware. The very next table would be selling 3D-printed field antenna frames, custom off-grid solar charging panels, and homebrewed lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery packs with smart telemetry chips.

The “tailgate tech” side of the flea market has grown massively, with younger operators trading open-source hardware, specialized microcontrollers for digital modes, and portable mast systems built out of carbon fiber. If you needed an obscure RF adapter, a replacement ceramic socket, or a temporary aluminum tower section, it was out there somewhere in the grass.

Formally Putting Hams to Work: The Forums

The technical and educational forum schedule featured more than two dozen packed sessions managed by the ARRL and the Hamvention Committee. This year, the panels felt less like dry academic lectures and more like active operational deployments:

  • NASA’s Lunar Call to Action — In a heavily attended auditorium, NASA representatives explicitly asked the global amateur radio community for help. They want ham clubs to design, organize, and deploy decentralized, ground-based radio networks to receive telemetric data and support communications for upcoming lunar exploration missions. The agency is looking to tap into the agility of the ham community to create redundant backups for formal deep-space tracking systems.
  • Citizen Space Science — Dr. Nathaniel Frissell (W2NAF) opened the tracks by moderating the HamSCI (Ham Radio Science Citizen Investigation) session. Presenters revealed comprehensive atmospheric data from the Large Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbance Project and showed how a low-cost station utilizing a Raspberry Pi 4, a proprietary multi-channel receiver board, and a high-stability GPS-disciplined oscillator (GPSDO) allows everyday operators to map real-time atmospheric changes and solar flares right from their backyards.
  • Collegiate & Youth Networking — The Collegiate Amateur Radio Forum showcased how university clubs are revitalizing the hobby among younger generations. Faculty and students from dozens of campuses shared blueprints on leveraging high-altitude balloon telemetry and amateur satellite tracking (AMSAT) to recruit engineering talent, culminating in the annual ARRL Collegiate Amateur Radio Dinner.

Celebrating Excellence: The Official Awards

Saturday night wrapped up by honoring a few standout contributors who keep the wheels of the amateur radio community turning:

  • Amateur of the Year Dr. Jose “Otis” Vicens (NP4G)
  • Special Achievement Joe (W3GMS) and Martha (N3QBE) Fell
  • Club of the Year The Long Island CW Club (LICW)

A Vibrant Outlook for the Hobby

As the final prize drawings concluded on Sunday afternoon, Hamvention 2026 left an undeniable impression. Far from being a legacy hobby of the past, amateur radio is experiencing a massive era of robust innovation. The weekend proved that operators aren’t just consumers of technology; they are active contributors to global science and emergency infrastructure. Whether it is bouncing signals off satellites, building deep-space tracking nets for NASA, or just throwing a wire into a tree at a local park, the spirit of “Radio Adventure” is wide open.

See you in 2027!

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Op-Ed Column

Why NASA is Turning to the Ham Shack

By Todd, KE9DQS

Amateur radio operators have always been comfortable on the fringes. That’s kind of the point. We’re the people who bounce signals off the moon for fun, who wire up ionospheric monitors in our garages, who’ve built functional emergency communication networks out of components that most people would throw away. Nobody asks us to do any of it. We just do.

So, something felt genuinely different at Dayton Hamvention this year.

NASA showed up. Not just to set up a display booth or hand out stickers — they stood in front of a packed auditorium and made a direct ask: help us build ground-based radio networks for upcoming lunar missions. It was formal, it was serious, and it landed in that room like a stone dropped in still water.

What the agency is wrestling with, and apparently willing to admit publicly now, is that deep-space communication has a bottleneck problem. The existing infrastructure — elite, expensive, perpetually overcommitted — can’t scale fast enough on its own. What can? Tens of thousands of RF experimenters spread across every continent, most of them running software-defined radio rigs that can be reconfigured in the time it takes to flash a firmware update. We’ve spent years building exactly the kind of decentralized, redundant, geographically diverse network that lunar missions will depend on. We just built it for ourselves.

There’s something worth sitting with there. All those late nights tweaking antenna mounts and chasing weak signals — it turns out that wasn’t just a hobby disappearing into the ether. It was infrastructure.

I’ll admit the scale of what’s being proposed still feels a little surreal. NASA isn’t just asking us to listen. They want a standardized pipeline: DIY satellite kits, telemetry projects, real curriculum going into classrooms. The argument, essentially, is that the ham community isn’t just useful for the missions happening now — we’re a training ground for the engineers who’ll run the ones happening in twenty years.

That’s a different conversation than the one we usually have about amateur radio, which tends to run somewhere between nostalgic and defensive. Yes, it’s still a hobby. Yes, plenty of us got into it because we just liked the idea of talking to someone in New Zealand from our back porch. But the infrastructure we’ve built around that impulse turns out to matter in ways we probably didn’t anticipate.

The next lunar mission might get its telemetry tracked by someone operating out of a suburb in Ohio, or a farm in rural Brazil, or an apartment rooftop in South Korea. That’s not a metaphor for something. That’s just what this could actually look like.

Community · Paying It Forward

Paying It Forward: May Giveaway Update

Projecting kindness, generosity, and inclusion into the radio hobby — and the world around us.

This month we kicked off our May Pay It Forward Giveaway. This event is the first step in our mission to project kindness, generosity, and inclusion into the radio hobby and the world around us.

With the rapid and significant decline in Facebook engagement, we decided the YouTube channel to be the logical platform. On May 3rd, 2026 we launched the Giveaway. After some discussion, we decided to not do a random selection for winners. Instead, we chose to ask entrants to tell us their story. While this potentially may have impacted the quantity of submissions and views, the quality more than made up for it.

The first week was for a DM1701 DMR/analog HT and Pi-Star hotspot. That quickly became two radios and hotspots for two winners. The first chosen unfortunately was unreachable despite multiple attempts of contact. Not to be discouraged, we moved down the list and was able to give away both radios to deserving subscribers.

The second week was a GMRS HT, again changing to two GMRS radios. This time, both went to a single winner: one for him, one for his dad. At the time this was written, the third week of an SDR and Meshtastic device is quickly coming to a close. We are prepping for the Memorial Day Weekend final giveaway of a mobile tri-band radio and antenna.

We thank all who supported and participated in this event. Congratulations to all the winners!

Technical · Propagation

Solar Outlook: Where We Stand in Mid-2026

By the numbers — and what they mean for your next contact.

The Cycle That Surprised Everyone

When Solar Cycle 25 began in December 2019, forecasters predicted a modest peak sunspot number of 95–130 — another weak cycle, similar to the disappointing Cycle 24. The sun had other plans. Cycle 25 reached a smoothed maximum of around 161 in October 2024, nearly 40% above expectations, then delivered a second surge in August 2025. For amateur radio operators, it has been a genuinely historic few years.

Where We Are Now: The Post-Peak Descent

As of May 2026, the party is winding down — but far from over. Solar flux index readings have eased into the low-to-mid 100s, down from peaks that occasionally exceeded 300 during strong flare events. Sunspot numbers are ranging from the 50s to 120s depending on the day. The geomagnetic picture has been mostly calm, with K-index readings frequently sitting at 1–2 — ideal for stable HF work with minimal absorption or blackouts. The declining phase’s silver lining: fewer disruptive geomagnetic storms.

Making the Most of It

The decline toward solar minimum will take several years — conditions in 2026 are still far better than the 2019–2020 trough. Chase DX on 15, 17, and 20 meters while conditions remain favorable. Set grayline alerts for enhanced long-path openings. Embrace FT8 and FT4, which will extend your reach as conditions gradually soften. And watch for Sporadic-E on 10 and 6 meters through the summer.

Solar Cycle 25 gave amateur radio a remarkable gift. The next minimum isn’t expected until around 2030. For now — get on the air!

Band-by-Band Outlook

BandOutlook
10m & 12m
28/24 MHz
Openings still occur around midday but are shorter and less reliable than during the peak. Twelve meters remains a hidden gem — less congested than 10, contest-free as a WARC band, and well-suited to FT8 for exploiting marginal conditions.
15m & 17m
21/18 MHz
The sweet spot right now. Fifteen meters opens reliably from morning through evening with stable propagation — the top pick for SSB DX. Seventeen meters offers even longer openings and, like 12m, is a contest-free WARC band.
20m
14 MHz
The workhorse. Reliable from morning through evening with strong paths to Europe, Japan, and South America at predictable times. If you only operate one band, make it this one.
40m & 80m
7/3.5 MHz
Night bands. D-layer absorption limits daytime DX, but after sunset both deliver excellent regional and longer-haul contacts for nets and ragchewing.
6m
50 MHz
Sporadic-E season is here. Monitor local afternoons through August for the sudden, startling openings that earn 6 meters its “Magic Band” nickname.
Calendar

Upcoming Hamfests, Expos, Conferences & On-Air Events

Event Dates Location Info
SEA-PAC Hamfest Jun 2–4 Seaside Civic Center, Seaside, OR seapac.org
SouthEast LinuxFest Jun 12–14 Sonesta Charlotte, Charlotte, NC southeastlinuxfest.org
Ham Radio International Expo Jun 26–27 Friedrichshafen, Germany hamradio-friedrichshafen.com
ARRL Field Day Jun 27–28 US Nationwide arrl.org/field-day
Antique Radio Club RadioFest Jul 31 & Aug 1 Medinah Shriners Center, Addison, IL antique-radios.org/radiofest
CPOTA 2026 — Cat Pix On The Air Aug 8 Worldwide cpota.app
Northeast HamXposition Aug 13–16 Best Western Royal Plaza, Marlborough, MA hamxposition.org
Hackers On Planet Earth (HOPE 26) Aug 14–16 The New Yorker Hotel, NYC hope.net
Huntsville Hamfest Aug 22–23 Von Braun Center, Huntsville, AL hamfest.org
MidWest SuperFest Sep 19–20 Three Sisters Park, Chillicothe, IL w9uvi.net/midwest-superfest
Jamboree On The Air (JOTA) Oct 16–18 Worldwide jotajoti.info
Pacificon Oct 20–22 San Ramon Marriott, San Ramon, CA pacificon.org
oSTEM Annual Conference Oct 22–24 Albuquerque Convention Center, NM conference.ostem.org

QRV Monthly  ·  Alliance Amateur Radio Network  ·  May 2026

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Scott - KC1MUR
Author: Scott - KC1MUR

General class operator

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