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Re: [CQ-Contest] What affected DXing?

To: "artboyars@gmail.com" <artboyars@gmail.com>, "cq-contest@contesting.com" <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] What affected DXing?
From: ktfrog007--- via CQ-Contest <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Reply-to: ktfrog007@aol.com
Date: Tue, 12 May 2020 15:42:41 +0000 (UTC)
List-post: <mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Hi Art,

Thanks for your post.  Yes, you caught my drift exactly.  I shot myself in the 
foot by being overly cute with alliteration.

There have been many changes affecting DXing over the years, among them 
geopolitics.

You listed two important geopolitical examples from the early post-WW II days.  
With regard to the opened up USSR, there was eventually much more operation 
from the Soviet Central Asian and Caucasian republics than now.  Especially 
with Turkmenistan.


An additional example is the 1950s and 1960s distribution of American military 
and civilian personnel, from Saudi Arabia to Thule to Okinawa and all over the 
Pacific, left overs from WW II (Iwo Jima, Okinawa) or new from the Cold War 
(nuclear and missile tests). 

Johnston Island was relatively easy to work then, no $300K DXpedition and 
special permission required, just taxpayer money.  Same for Wake, Midway and 
others.  KG6IJ on Iwo Jima (Ogasawara) was on 20M SSB almost daily in the early 
1960s.  And remember Hot Ziggity One American Boy?  The Panama Canal Zone?

Also, many remote uninhabited islands had military, scientific and 
meteorological bases from various nations.  Places like South Georgia and 
Macquarie had semi-permanent bases and the technical personnel there were often 
hams.  Now some of these bases have been abandoned or automated and visited 
infrequently.

Those days are gone, but geopolitics marches on.  Witness the breakup of 
Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia, creation of South Sudan, DXCC realignment of the 
Netherlands Antilles, and so on.  Most earlier closed-off countries like 
Albania and those in Indochina are freely active now.  Ham radio is permitted 
almost everywhere and hams can travel and operate almost everywhere.  But North 
Korea is still North Korea.

73,

Ken, AB1J







-----Original Message-----
From: Art Boyars <artboyars@gmail.com>
To: CQ-Contest Reflector <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Sent: Mon, May 11, 2020 3:46 pm
Subject: [CQ-Contest] What affected DXing?

( I'm decoupling this from "Long term ionospheric changes (was Magnetic
North Pole Drunkard's Walk)" )

AB1J:  Regardless of any geophysical changes, the biggest change in DXing
over the years has been geopolitical.

K9YC:  Greater than RX noise? RBN? Nearly instant spotting?

NM5G:  Perhaps this refers to the availability of DXpeditions.

I think this depends on your time perspective.  Jim and Keith are probably
thinking of, say, the past 20 or 30 years, where technical improvements
have had a huge effect.  (I'll add another older one: the availability of
Japanese-manufactured transceivers in Europe.  No more "Send a filter
capacitor and VR tube to PO Box 88 Moscow.")

Ken (CK 58) might be remembering the 1950s and 1960s, where the big
technical change was SSB's displacing AM, and maybe the availability of HF
beam antennas (tri-banders; not the shack-on-a-belt kind).  In geopolitics,
however, two things going on then influenced DXing.

First, the Soviet Union removed restrictions on their hams contacting
outsiders.  (This is before my time (CK 60).  K3ZO just posted a little
essay about this, but I think that was only on the PVRC Reflector.  Perhaps
Fred will re-post here.)  I note that Israeli hams still had to use the
trick Fred describes to contact a USSR station.

Second, European colonies -- perhaps particularly in Africa and Asia, but
throughout the world -- gained independence.  The former VQ, FE, CR, etc.
stations disappeared, and the new "tube socket" prefixes started showing up
slowly.  My impression (again, CK 60, and never much of a DXer) was that
most of the operators in the colonies were colonial types; very few
locals.  When the colonies became independent, some of the colonial people
stayed, but a lot went home, taking their technical expertise with them.
And the political situation in some of the the new countries might have
hampered ham radio.

Three stories from my time as a many-year trainee at the W4BVV multi-multi
station, starting around 1967, illustrate the effect of the former
colonies' independence.

First, I'd find some new CQer, but not recognize the prefix.  Not knowing
which beam heading to use, or if it was even actually a new multiplier, I'd
holler out "What's a 2Z99 [or whatever]?"  An experienced op, usually W3ZZ,
would holler "It's the same as a VR23! [or whatever]"  Thanks, Gene.
What's a VR23?

Second, W3ZZ discoursed one time on how to work some certain African or
Asian British colony: "You have to call CQ on 14050 at 1815Z because Reggie
always listens on 14050 after he takes a shower and before he goes to bed."

And last, I was doing a stint on 20M CW one afternoon.  K3NPV/K4YF, our 80M
ace, came and sat down next to me.  "I'll show you how to work an MP4."
[Really!! As I recall, MP4 was Trucial States and Oman.]  John listened up
around 14080, and there among the RTTY stations was, indeed, MP4TCQ.  Got
him!

More than 50 years ago, and I'm still amazed.

73, Art K3KU



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