Mine was a 10-hr effort from Indiana. I took a break of about 75 minutes
around dinner time when a line of thunderstorms came through
(http://www.qsl.net/wa9als/thunderstorm.gif). Rates were sure better then
than at midnight local. I couldn't get anywhere on 10M - I could get parts
of Don's callsign, but never solid and just couldn't hear much there. I
spent most of my time early with the run radio on 20M and the S&P radio on
15, switching to mostly 40 and 80 in the evening. Too bad I haven't learned
to use 2R "effectively", but it's still fun to operate that way! Thanks for
the Q's, and lets not get all divided AGAIN, this time over where to post
scores. RTTY and ham radio in general has enough threats without continuing
to do ourselves in.
Team: NOTNUFRTTY
Band QSO MULT
80 53 28
40 63 37
20 146 36
15 25 14
10 1 1
TOTAL 288 116
288 QSOs x MULT = 33,408 pts
Software: Writelog/Rttyrite/Soundblaster Live
FT-1000MP MARK-V; IC-706mkIIG
C31XR at 72ft; 265 ft Carolina Windom; R-7
Here's the early returns for the NOTNUFRTTY team:
K4GMH: 390q 139m 54,210 pts
WA0SXV: 322q 142m 45,724 pts
AA9RR: 310q 142m 44,020 pts
N8YYS: 281q 125m 35,687 pts
WA9ALS: 288q 116m 33,408 pts
Total: 213,371 pts
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