Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
No account yet? Create one
Main Menu
Accueil - Home
Articles
DX cluster
Photo Gallery
Forum
Liens - Links
Contactez-nous - Contact us


George, VE2NGH running pile-up
We have 863 guests online




Accueil - Home arrow Forume
Contest Group du Quebec  


ARRL 160-Meter Contest - 2011/12/04 09:27
          ARRL160 Score Summary Sheet

      Start Date : 2011-12-03

   CallSign Used : VE2EZD
     Operator(s) : VE2EZD

Operator Category : SINGLE-OP
            Band : ALL
           Power : HIGH (500W)
            Mode : CW
Default Exchange : QC

    ARRL Section : QC
       Club/Team : Contest Group du Quebec
        Software : N1MM Logger V11.11.4
   Total Time On : 11:36  (696 mins)

       Band    QSOs    Pts  Sec
        1,8     191     394   49
      Total     191     394   49

           Score : 19 306

             Rig : FT-950 + AL-811H + AT2k
        Antennas : 160m zig-zaging dipole (HI)


Thanks to VE2OJ, VA2EW and VA2WA for the QSOs.

I extended my 80m dipole to tranform it into a 160m antenna.
The center of the antenna, mounted on an extension painting pole,
is about 16' high. So this is not the best 160m antenna around.
But it worked.

I was able to work DX stations VP2MWG, OL7M, OK1TN anf PJ2T.
When you are not a big gun station a good strategy is to scan the band
looking for DX stations. That's what happened for my QSO with
OK1TN saturday night. I was scanning the DX window when I heard "QRL?".
I was in luck, it was OK1TN preparing to run on this frequency.
I was the first to call him and I made the QSO having to repeat my call
only twice. I won't tell you about the pileup that began just after.

The first night was not very good for me. I toiled to reach the 100 Qs mark.
Medium signal stations had difficulty copying me.
Saturday night was a completely different experience.
I worked most of the stations I heard and most of them easily.
I experienced some fading that made me demand  on occasions for repeats from
stations with good signals. And you can guess that their signals seemed to fade
just when they are sending their section (LOL).

The station I encountered the most often on the air was "DUPE".
Ah, ah, ah. I mean you work a not so far station once and you will hear him
during all of the contest. The game is to dig, between the stations you already
worked, the weak signals as they appear.

I worked very few stations far to the west. The farthest stations were
from ID, WY and NM. I heard a Californian station from EB but he could
not hear me.

I solved a problem with my new Digi Keyer II when sending CW.
It even made me thinking about reconnecting my WinKeyer USB to
send morse code. I discovered that the clicking sound I heard when keying
was not from one but from three relays. Beside the radio, you can key
an amplifier and an LNA. So there are three relays and they work in a sequence
you can program. By default they are all activated. Disabling the AMP and LNA
relays made the MicroHam less annoying in CW. I wish I new that last weekend during
the CQ WW CW.

The next one will be the Stew Perry, so I hope to meet you there.

73 de Louis, VE2EZD

Post edited by: ve2ezd, at: 2011/12/04 09:32
  | | The administrator has disabled public write access.

      Topics Author Date
    thread link
ARRL 160-Meter Contest
ve2ezd 2011/12/04 09:27
    thread link
thread linkthread link Re:ARRL 160-Meter Contest
VE2FXL 2011/12/04 11:53
    thread link
thread linkthread linkthread link Re:ARRL 160-Meter Contest
VE2FK 2011/12/04 15:40
    thread link
thread linkthread linkthread linkthread link Re:ARRL 160-Meter Contest
ve2ezd 2011/12/04 17:23
    thread link
thread linkthread linkthread linkthread linkthread link Re:ARRL 160-Meter Contest
VE2TZT 2011/12/04 18:01
    thread link
thread linkthread linkthread linkthread linkthread linkthread link Re:ARRL 160-Meter Contest
va2wdq 2011/12/04 19:58



Powered by Online-Montreal