IARU HF Championship -- 1996
Call: KS4XG Country: United States
Zone: 8 Category: single op, low pwr,
phone only, no assist
BAND QSO QSO-PTS PTS/Q ZONES HQ STNS
160 0 0 0.00 0 0
80 9 13 1.44 2 2 g5rv @ 55ft
40 34 98 2.88 10 6 dipole @55ft
20 202 600 2.97 19 12 TH6 @ 70ft
15 83 207 2.49 13 9 TH6 @ 70ft
10 15 43 2.87 6 2 TH6 @ 70ft
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Totals 343 961 2.80 50 31
Score: 77,841 points
Equipment Description: IC735, two cheap tuners, CT
Club Affiliation: PVRC
(This was my first repeat contest. I worked last year's IARU by the
seat of my pants a few weeks after getting licensed.)
Mother nature remodeled part of my station the week before the contest
and I was resigned to a glum IARU weekend when Jim Price, N3QYE invited me to
use the NC state university station. With just two evenings to get ready there
was a lot of scrambling. By coincidence the club station's beam was getting a
rotator Thursday and by Friday night things were more or less ready. But my
mind was running too fast and I got only a couple hours of sleep. This was
scary because I'd only slept a couple hours each of the previous two nights.
This was my very big mistake as it kept me from recognizing trivial solutions
to problems as they arose and surely hurt my operating in general. One funny
thing was that when the last of the bands went stone dead/inactive around 8:30z
I found myself going to sleep with my eyes open within a matter of minutes. A
90 minute nap followed by five cups of semi-fluid coffee was good for the last
couple hours of the test.
The campus power was going off the last hour of the contest for maintenance,
so I ran the rig off batteries. But the flashlight batteries were duds and
I was forced to do the paper logging by holding the dupe sheets about 1 inch
from the rig's display! This was actually fun as I found my finger's knew how
to operate the rig controls very quickly even though I was blind. However when
the AC power came back on I got a clear indication of just how much local noise
is floating around at that location (horrible).
The 10 meter opening was fun (caught a bit of it) and I really enjoyed 15
meters the most overall with many exciting contacts. But what was best was
finding and easily working AH6 and VK stations on 40m when the rest of the
world had abandoned that band.
My favorite WRTC moment was listening to W6O repeat his call
with a drop in pitch and very long "O" like "W 6 Oo
oo
oo"
Hilarious and quite a contrast with the very grim, machinegun cadence of
some of the other ops. I hope at least some of the participants will send
writeups to 3830.
Despite the mistakes and regrets, all in all it was another incredible
experience and I'm looking forward to the next IARU very much.
The hope is that Jim will be able to promote this past weekend's happening
to the (HT/repeater user) club members and stimulate some interest in HF.
And despite being old and needing a tuner on 20m the TH6 will be a great
tool for showing the students how big and yet how close the world can be.
Regards,
Pete
KS4XG
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