Class: Multi Single Call: V31DX
Country: Belize Contest: ARRL DX SSB
Power: 500 watts
Band QSOs Multipliers
160 242 44
80 579 57
40 1388 59
20 2016 60
15 2360 59
10 340 18
Total 6925 297 6,170,175
Operators: John N6YRU and Vic KI6IM
Club Affliation: Cuba Libre Contest Club
Equipment: Butternut H2V on 160 and 80
Cushcraft 2 element 40 beam
TH-7 tribander
FT-1000mp (until Saturday morning!)
TS-440 (audio and filter challenged)
SGC-500 amp until Saturday morning
TL-922 with soft final rest of contest
Comments:
For a change, just Vic and I did the contest. Other commitments kept Bill
WA9L and Peter AB6WM, fellow Cuba Libre Contesters, from joining us for the
weekend. Our Q total was over 1000 below last year and 2500 below our 1994
total mostly due to minimal 10 meter conditions. Things were so slow this
year that it seemed even the jammers got bored!
10 meters: Caught a short opening to the west coast on Saturday for about
50 Qs and 9 mults. Short opening on Sunday was only to west coast
with only 6s and 7s.
15 meters: Band of choice with one third of our Qs. Moved there each morning
after getting murdered on 20. Band seemed to be open everywhere at once
with 6s, 0s, and 3s all in the same pilup.
20 meters: Slow in the mornings as the east coast pointed their beams to europe.
Got better in the afternoon after exhausting 15. Heavy QRM made copying
the weak ones a pain.
40 meters: A walk in the park (an all night walk at that).
80 meters: S-9 noise level and heavy QRM made finding (and holding) a run
frequency very hard. Resorted to working split from 3725.
160 meters: The usual execept we had trouble getting out with many CQs
unanswered.
High Points:
Great cooperation from some super ops such as K3ANS in giving us some room to
operate on our run frequency. Getting called by VY1JA (Yukon) with 2 minutes
to go in the test for a new multiplier. Having the amazing Dave Leeson W6QHS
be the first to call each time I made a band change. How does he do it?
Clairvoyance? Having a beam that could actually rotate after Vic spent several
days getting up close and personal with a gin pole on the tower swapping
rotators.
Low Points:
Instead of our usual ICOM 781 / Alpha 76 combination, this year to save weight
and space we brought down brand a brand new FT 1000mp / SGC 500 combination.
The
new rig (complete with 2.0 khz filters) worked fine until, in the middle of a
Saturday morning great run on 15, the amp comprehensively smoked its fuses and
the
FT1000mp buzzed and quit for good. We resorted to dragging out our old TL-922
with nearly non-existant finals and rusty (yes, rusty, not trusty!) TS440 with
no filters and a nice loud 100hz buzz in the headset. By Saturday afternoon I
must admit I was kinda hoping this too would blow up so I could head home Sunday
morning! The constant audio hum nearly drove me nuts (sorry if I sounded a
little
irratable in the pilups) and crowded bands like 20 became impossible because of
the lack of any kind of narrow filtering. For a while it looked like our Q
total
would fall below 6000. On Saturday evening I found myself rebuilding the
Butternut H2V by flashlight after it got flakey. We subsequently blew up the
capacitors in the 160 meter kit.......
Other notes of interest to some:
You know, a test on standard phonetics should be included in license exams. Non
standard phonetics make copying the weak ones a lot slower than it should be and
those who don't know better or think they're cute do themselves a disservice in
these contests. On Saturday night I hopped onto a nice clear frequency around
7060 and started a CQ listening in the US section. An annoyed East Coast
station with a big signal immediately asked me to kindly move as that was "his"
listening frequency. Much to his amazement I suggested that if he found me a
clear TX frequency I would move. He did and I did. Back to first principals:
mutual QRMing doesn't put Qs in the log. My fellow Cuba Libre Contester, Vic,
found a more unique way to a clear frequency: he announced he was listening on
7311 and got quite a few takers until someone mentioned that he had moved the
pilup 11 khz out of the band...ooooops!
After 15 or so contests over the last six years as V31DX and V31A this was
likely our last contest from Belize. Over development of our QTH in San
Pedro, Ambergris Caye has boxed in our tower and created high line noise
levels. Our condo at the Belize Yacht Club as been sold (Friday, before the
contest) and although we have assurances that the tower will remain, I don't
think it will last until the CQWW. The Cuba Libre Contest Club is starting
a search for a new and interesting Carib QTH to buy and suggestions are
welcome.
Congrats to Scott Neader on a truly spectacular single op effort from our
neighboring country TG9.
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