Excellent comments, Hal and well worth following except we can forget ab out
VY1JA I'm afraid.
73 & GL. Remember SC is rare so stand in line if you hear me and wait to
get your SC QSO.
Dennis, K2SX
_____
From: secc-bounces at contesting.com [mailto:secc-bounces at contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Hal Kennedy
Sent: Friday, November 06, 2009 11:16 AM
To: secc at contesting.com
Subject: [SECC] SS Tips
For those who might have missed the recent mention here that the archives
for this reflector have been reset from "closed" to "open,"...well they have
and it seems to me to be a great idea. I just spent a very enjoyable 30
minutes reading the year 2000 archives which will tell you all about how the
club was formed and what was on people's minds at the time. It's fun
reading and informative.
Anyway, with the indulgence (but not permission :-)) of those who wrote up
SS Tips in response to W4AN asking for any and all, I have pasted a few from
the archives below. Have fun this weekend..I will be away from the radio
for CW unfortunately, but on for SSB
73, Hal
N4GG
Ill go first before I cut and paste:
1. CQ the most on your best band. At N4GG it is 40M by far. I have worked
over 1000 Qs just on 40M several times - that's with a KW and dipole at 75
feet. You can start the contest on 40 and let the band conditions take you
across the country as darkness falls. Just about everybody shows up on 40
sooner or later.
2. A lot of guys seem to like to show up in the last two hours to run big
pileups. Virtually none of these folks S&P, you can't work them by calling
CQ. If you only have one radio, you may do better with S&P the last hour
than with calling CQ. I have found the last two hours to be very
productive, but the last 15 minutes is usually near-worthless.
3. There is a temptation to start on 15 from the East Coast as you will
typically hear plenty of West Coast CQs. This is heavily biased in favor of
the West Coast. You won't get many mults out of the way doing this, but
they will. You get no style points for working things on a hard band like
28 or 1.8.
4. Don't get out of the chair the first 8 hours - per W4AN - I agree 100%.
5. Log all dupes.
6. Avoid over-use of cut numbers - as in any contest. N is okay for nine,
the rest will get you into trouble.
7. Don't be afraid of changing entry classes in mid stream. If you are
running LP and sending "A" and its just awful, flip on the amp and keep
sending "A." NEVER change your exchange during the contest. Just make sure
when you submit your log that you make it clear you were sending A but you
are entering as "B." Same goes for turning on packet half way through if
you feel like it.
8. I usually work VY1JA on 40 in the very early morning - typically around
1030Z-1100Z. He has called me several years when I was CQing around 7010.
J likes to tune from the very bottom of the band on up and stays up very
late at his local time. Shhhhh, don't tell anybody.
9. With regard to 160 - it used to be a waste, but, two years ago there was
a discussion on the top band reflector asking the hard-core 160
non-contester guys if they would hand out some points. The time picked was
0500Z. I picked up about 12 stations that year I never would have had
otherwise. Check 160 at 0500Z.
10. My personal philosophy is to "turn everything on" which includes
running HP and packet, as this provides me the most points and assisted
class is still slightly less competitive than unassisted. Lots of people
have their own philosophy - do what makes you happy.
11. Submit your score for SECC, no matter how big or small (assuming you
are within the club circle). I'm sure Brian would be happy to hand you a
gavel if we win one!
N4GG
Tips from November 2001:
----------------------
1. I guess one tip from a low power perspective is to start in the extra
portion of the 20M band. The big guns will be .025 and up, and for the
past several years I have had no trouble finding room a little below
14.025, with rates around 60/hr. to start.
2. Don't wait too late to go to 40M. If you wait until it goes long, you
will (obviously) miss some of the close-in stations and mults.
3. We always hear about SS on Sunday afternoon. You know going into the
contest that Sunday afternoon is going to be slow. It can be so slow that
it's painful, especially for low power folks. Leave yourself some off time
so that you can take it on Sunday afternoon. In addition, I have never had
much luck going late into Sunday evening. I will probably not operate past
8 p.m. local time on Sunday.
4. Remember the number one tip for any contest: call CQ. If you are not
real comfortable with CW, call CQ at your comfortable speed on Sunday
afternoon. I guarantee you that the 24-hr contesters will be thankful you
are there and will gladly send at a speed in your comfort zone.
5. If a CQing station is going faster than you can easily copy, just
listen long enough so that you can get the exchange. When you have it,
give him a call. I used to do that all the time.
6. I've been listening to tapes of CWSS for the past week, driving to and
from work. It helps me get the feel of the contest before the starting
bell. You might find a good station and tape some of his QSOs so you can
learn how he/she does it. Somewhere I have a tape of CWSS when W4AN was
operating Val's station.
Having said all this -- bear in mind that as much as I enjoy CWSS, I've
never done particularly well in it!
Good luck and I hope to see you all this weekend.
- Jay, K4OGG
- ------------------------------------
My experience is almost all QRP, but my suggestions should apply to a lot
of low power ops as well.
1. There are no style points for using all bands. 40 and 20 are the main
bands. Period. Sure, 20 is frustrating on Saturday, but Sunday morning
can be great.
2. 80 provides good action for short periods of time. 15 and 10 can be
good multiplier bands. Monitor with the 2nd radio or do quick scans if
you use one radio. Forget 160 unless you need the SO2R practice.
3. QRP and LP can get a CQ frequency on a less crowded band; try it
once in a while but get out quickly if it's not working. I consider a run
of five a success.
4. If you make 1000 QSOs, 1 multiplier is worth about 12 QSOs. If you
make 500 QSOs, a mult is only worth 6 QSOs -- Gauge your time in a
pileup accordingly. (Sweepstakes has been won without a sweep!)
4a. Most rare multipliers will happen without special effort. By
mid-morning
Sunday, I had all but one mult for last year's QRP sweep. Luck happens.
5. Contrary to K4OGG's comment, I have had some very good rates at
about 22-2300Z Sunday. Save a couple 1/2-hour slots for later, maybe
0100-0130 and 0200-0230.
6. Check the weather map. Extremely nice weather in the Upper Midwest
will make Sunday afternoon even slower!
73, Gary
K9AY
-----------------------
My tip: Don't worry about multipliers for the first 12 hours. Well, maybe
about YU/NWT. Concentrate on rate and the multipliers will come. You'll
have time to look for missing sections during the slow Sunday period.
I've never gotten a sweep on CW, but I've done it 5 times on SSB with low
power. (I'll be part time on CW, watch for me all-out in the SSB portion)
Bill Coleman, AA4LR
this is one of my favorite contests. a small station with good operating
strategy can do very well. tribander / wires can have lots of fun and be
competitive.
20 and 40 are the most important bands from the southeast. with low power,
80
can be good as well. the extra class portions of the bands are sometimes
less
crowded than above 025, and can be an advantage for running. i have never
had
great success running on 15 or 10 on CW. i have picked up a few novice and
tech Q's on 10 on sunday afternoon.
the biggest challenge in SS CW is keeping your lowest rate hours from
killing
your score. i will not take a break usually before 0900 Z unless the rate
goes far below what i have set for my average rate goal. your rate can and
will go down on sunday. sunday evenings have been productive for me in the
past.
read all of the stuff on contesting.com about SS. it will give you ideas.
read W4AN's two radio article as well.
if you are only going to be on for a short period, please find as many club
members as possible. this helps not only each station, but the club score as
well.
have fun and hope to cu this weekend!
73
don
W4OC
That's it for 2001, but there is lots more good reading on the archives.
73
Hal
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