Wonder if there has been the interest in remote operating IN Japan, as
there has been in the US in recent years?
Barry W2UP
On 3/1/2016 12:29, K8MR via CQ-Contest wrote:
I can't speak from the personal experience of Japanese hams, but if I was stuck
with a small station in a crowded city where my contest activity consisted in
calling the same loud stations in every contest, after time I expect I'd lose
interest as well.
Hal, W1NN/7J1AAI, who spends half the year in Tokyo, reports anecdotally that
there has been an uptick in interest by older Japanese hams, who are now
retired and able to find places outside the city to operate and now have the
time to do so.
73 - Jim K8MR
-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Harpole <hs0zcw@gmail.com>
To: David Siddall <hhamwv@gmail.com>
Cc: cq-contest <cq-contest@contesting.com>; Katsuhiro Kondou
<kondou@voyackey.net>
Sent: Tue, Mar 1, 2016 12:11 pm
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] JA's long time passing
One could add that when a non-NA ham realizes all the ARRL contests are
made for those in NA, the enthusiasm wanes for waiting around just to work
(again!) some USA guys ... that is just not so much fun............ not
nearly the fun of "everyone work everyone" especially as paths get harder
under SFI 95.
73, Charly
PS, people ask about my name spelling......... well I took the "lie" out of
former nickname, "Charlie" when I swore not to lie upon Buddhist vows.
On Tue, Mar 1, 2016 at 10:06 PM, David Siddall <hhamwv@gmail.com> wrote:
Some pretty good JA rates are still available from the west coast. Last
September N6RO in the CQWW RTTY reported that from his 2-operator
multi-multi that 780 JA QSOs were completed out of 2806, or about 28% of
all QSOs.
But yes, not like it used to be, especially on the more difficult path to
the east coast. I remember those "good old days" , working even 5- and
10-watt mobiles in downtown Tokyo during multiple 100-hour runs in from the
east coast during the late 1970's sunspot peak; and listening to W7RM
running JAs with his second antenna part-way down the cliff to lessen
stateside QRM off the back!
Is it just a coincidence that the number of licensees and activity
decreased as economic troubles overtook the prosperity of the 1970's &
1980's?
Dave K3ZJ
On Tue, Mar 1, 2016 at 7:29 AM, Katsuhiro Kondou <kondou@voyackey.net>
wrote:
In article <BLU404-EAS8080DBBCDC60A897EB07809EBB0@phx.gbl>,
Ken K6MR <k6mr@outlook.com> wrote,
on "Mon, 29 Feb 2016 20:38:30 -0800";
I have no idea. I got inactive about 1974, and when I returned in the
2000s they were gone.
Someone lurking here must have gone through the change, perhaps a
history lesson?
Ken K6MR
From: Ktfrog007@aol.com<mailto:Ktfrog007@aol.com>
<mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: JA's long time passing
What happened to all that JA activity?
The number of amateur radio station license in Japan is about one third
at
the
peak in mid 90's, and the current number is almost like what was in early
80's.
At the moment, I don't see so much activities for those who were teenage
around
1980. Likewise, please correct me if I'm wrong, I don't see so much
activities
from west cost like what was about 30 years ago. Now it's quite
difficult
to
be a continental winner for CQWW(SOABHP) from JA.
--
Katsuhiro 'Don' Kondou, JH5GHM(JH1GBZ)
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