Monthly Archives: July 2009

Real-time thoughts of a CQ WPX Contest Director

It is really interesting to follow the thoughts of Randy, K5ZD, who is the CQ WPX Contest Director as he works through processing all the logs for a contest.

Randy is posting his thoughts on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cqwpx , currently multiple times a day, working through the thousands of logs.

Comments like the following:

Fixing time errors in logs. Hard for the computer to match up QSOs when one station log is off by 15 mins or more. Time and date errors.

and

And then there are the guys who type their log in but don’t worry about times. The whole 2-8 hour log is within a 30 minute period!

are fun to read. If you’re not on Twitter but want to see all the updates, you should be able to get them via this Twitter RSS feed.

73,
K2DSL

First 10m DX contact

After getting home from work tonight I put the radio on and since it was already on 10m I tuned around. I heard CO6XN in Cuba coming in loud and calling CQ so I put my call out and he came right back to me.  I only have a G5RV antenna which isn’t great on 10m but very tunable and I guess it works good enough for now.  So thanks for the nice 59 Abel!

It was nice to finally make a DX contact on 10m, not that I’ve ever really tried before. The old timers are always talking about the good ‘ol days with sunspots and propagation and you could just drive around in your car and talk to Japan and Australia on 10m like you were hitting the local repeater.

Some day, some day.

73,
K2DSL

DX Cluster F**k – 13 Colonies Special Event

This past week I observed some horrible use of the DX cluster system by many operators. This past weekend in the US was a long weekend in celebration of Independence Day aka July 4th. There was a special event going on this weekend where each of the original 13 colonies (states) had a special event 1×1 call sign (eg K2A) and a certificate was available commemorating the special event. Folks were shooting for getting all 13 logged for a “clean sweep”.

Being in NJ I was hopeful I’d be able to log many/all of the stations. Heck I did a triple play earlier in the year so I did all the stations on RTTY, CW and SSB. Well that certainly wasn’t going to be the case. Most of the stations I saw were on SSB on 20m and being as close as I am to those states, 20m SSB isn’t the best band to make the contact. I saw some special event stations on 40m and none on 80m before I stopped looking.

What was really disappointing was the conduct of many operators trying to make contact with the stations. The first disappointment was how they would put out their call sign when the special event station called CQ/QRZ. Once or twice is fine but I heard stations putting out their call 6 times or more. The special event station was already in the middle of the contact with the station he came back to and these stations are still putting out their call sign on top of the contact. I’m pretty sure one of the basic rules in amateur radio is “listen!”

The second extremely disappointing observation was the use of the DX Cluster for whining/complaining/begging. It was worse then when K5D was running their Desecheo DXpedition! There were operators spotting on the cluster requesting certain states to switch bands. There were operators spotting on the cluster asking why certain stations (states) weren’t on the air when they wanted them to be and how those states were screwing everyone. There were spots to the cluster asking which actual operators were responsible for the special event stations. These weren’t announcements to the cluster but actual spots.

It was certainly a disappointment to see such poor behavior from many operators. Here’s a small screenshot from DXWatch.com searching on K2C, one of the stations in the event, leading up to the end of the event. These are all spots, none of which had anything to do with the actual station being spotted. I’m sure I’d fine the same thing for many of the other special event stations. I have no idea if the spotter was the actual station listed in the cluster so don’t yell at me if it’s your call and you didn’t do the spotting.

K2C DX Cluster Spots
K2C DX Cluster Spots

Here’s for K2J:

Inappropriate spotting for special event stations
K2J DX Cluster Spots

Disappointing to say the least!

73,
K2DSL

DL DX RTTY Contest

This weekend was a 24 hour RTTY contest that ended up being fun and I think I did well. It’s always nice to hear the diddles in your ear as you tune up a RTTY contact.

The contest started Sat morning at 1100z and lasted for 24 hours. I started working it a bit after the contest started and most of the morning through the afternoon. Took some breaks, ran some errands, went outside to enjoy the gorgeous day and blew off fireworks for a couple hours since it is July 4th here. I didn’t stay up overnight, or even late, but woke up and made 3 or 4 contacts in the morning after I woke up and before the contest ended.

The DX really picked up in the afternoon as expected and that was the vast majority of the long distance contacts. That is until I got on late in the evening after the fireworks and before heading to bed. I made more local contacts in 40m and decided to call CQ on 20m at 0345z. To my surprise, ZM2B is the first station to come back to me. I asked AGN? because I was shocked. Yup, ZM2B in New Zealand! I exchanged reports, made 2 more US contacts before the next call comes in as VK7AD. I thought maybe it was K7AD so I again said AGN? and it comes back VK7AD again. Holy cow – an Australian station coming back to me calling CQ. We exchanged reports, had another US station come back and then a KH6 station from Hawaii. In the span of just a few minutes of calling CQ I logged New Zealand, Australia and Hawaii on my 100w and G5RV wire antenna!

I think this contest favors, on the scoring side, the west coast US states over the east coast states as the multipliers are the call areas in the US, Canada, Japan and Australia. Japan and Australia are more difficult for the east coast states. What else would have helped my score is more contacts/multipliers on 15m. 15m seems very weak on my G5RV and I never do well on that band. In this contest, the 3 contacts I made were all in the 4 call area so only 1 multiplier there. If I spent time getting more mults on 15m and on 80m the score would have gone higher.I just wasn’t on the radio for the prime 80m time which might have helped.

I did have a good number of longer distance 40m contacts to Europe and had fun both S&P’ing and calling CQ, A fun 1 day contest.

        Band    QSOs    Pts  Cty   Sec
         3.5       5      35    2    4
           7      59     450   11   13
          14     172    1590   34   14
          21       3      15    1    1
       Total     239    2090   48   32
            Score : 167,200

73,
K2DSL

Field Day 2009

I was exhausted after I got home and was very busy at work all week and after I got home so it’s a bit delayed, but here’s my summary of Field Day.

I operate Field Day with the Bergen Amateur Radio Association club which operates as K2BAR.  We operate from the local county EOC center which isn’t far from where I live. We setup in the parking lots that surround the building. This year we operated as a 4F station with the following:

20m CW station with a tribander on the roof of the building
GOTA station that was using a multiband dipole
80m SSB/CW station with an 80m loop around the parking lot
40m SSB/CW station with a 40m dipole or double zepp
20m/15m/10m SSB station with a tribander on a tower
6m station with a 6m yagi on a tower

Things got started around 8am when some folks met at the EOC to get started and others met where we store our equipment. We had all the equipment loaded into multiple vehicles and on the way to the site within the hour. This year we were assembling just 1 tower for the 6m beam and the tribander was going on a tower loaned by the county police. The tower is a powered retractable and tilting tower that is on a trailer. It worked exceptionally well for the tribander.

While folks were getting the wire antennas and antennas for the tower set up, I went around the other side of the building to help with the tribander that was to be used on the 20m CW station. What transpired wore me out. They wanted to lift the assembled tribander and secure it to the EOC tower. I must have climbed up/down that tower 4 times. With trees in the way we ran into issues getting it up where we wanted, so it was disassembled and sent up in pieces. We assembled it on the roof of the facility and then tried to lift secure it to the tower. We again ran into issues with the branches as we tried to hoist it up. In the end, we left it on the roof (2+ stories above the ground) pointed due west. We’re now exhausted.

By the time we finished with the 20m CW antenna, the rest of the wire antennas and beams were up and the stations were getting setup. We had some lunch and finished up getting the stations setup for operating. The club uses CT for logging which I don’t like but it is what they are comfortable with so we have laptops at each of the stations. We spent the day operating and I spent all my time at the 40m SSB or 20/15m SSB stations with some 6m thrown in when I wanted to relax since there wasn’t much action there.

Once it started to get darker and the lights kicked on, we had a big problem! It turns out there is one large light that is having an issue staying on and when it is resetting and in the process of coming back on, we have a S9 noise level on a few of the stations.  Once the light came on, the noise stopped. Unfortunately, the cycle was 10 mins of noise and 5 mins of no noise before it started again. Once that noise kicked in, it was hard work pulling signals out and then like magic, when it stopped, it was shooting fish in a barrel.

In the evening I had the pleasure of meeting N2WKS who is a local operator but not a member of the club. Zev is an experienced contester with a great ear and it was a joy to watch him work the pileups. Zev stayed around into the wee hours of the morning. I took a nap in my car from 3am to 6am. When I woke up it was light out and the noise was gone.

I spent the rest of Sunday operating 20m and a little 6m before we shut down things to tear down. I headed back over to the other side of the building, climbed the tower, dismantled the tri-bander which was on the roof and lowered the parts down to the ground. Then I came down the tower and helped with breaking down the rest of the site. By 4pm Sunday we were done unloading all the equipment and I was heading home.

Field Day is a blast and I really enjoy but it sure is a workout, especially when you stay and operate the entire time after spending a few hours setting things up. But with it being so tiring, I absolutely can’t wait again until next year. My goal next year is to have the 20m/15m station outdo the number of QSOs the 40m station makes.  I think we could have done it this year if the noise didn’t smack us down all night on 20m while the 40m station wasn’t impacted.

Here’s the score summary:

BandQSOs
6m SSB77
15m SSB86
20m CW193
20m RTTY16
20m SSB619
40m CW419
40m SSB630
80m CW109
80m SSB281
GOTA SSB111
SAT SSB1
Alt Power CW6
Total2548

73,
K2DSL

French Guiana confirmed

I’ll get around to writing up something about last weekends Field Day in the next couple days.

Today I noticed that FY5KE in French Guiana confirmed some contacts we made last October. Since they are the only contacts I have logged with that DXCC, these QSLs on LoTW nets me another new one confirmed.

Also today in the mail I received a QSL card direct (via EB7DX) from 5B4AIF in Cyprus for a contact in early May.

73,
K2DSL