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Re: [VHFcontesting] K7RAT Two Meter Spring Sprint

To: "VHF Contesting" <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [VHFcontesting] K7RAT Two Meter Spring Sprint
From: "William Capps" <cappswb@auburn.edu>
Date: Thu, 06 Apr 2006 11:44:32 -0500
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Hello 
  I bet I could call CQ on 144.210 here for months without being heard.
I made 13 qso's for 10 grids from EM72 during the spring sprint. I
wonder how many I wil make during the 222 spring, 2-4 qso's?

73 and Good DX

Bill   AF4OD  em72

>>> Zack Widup <w9sz@prairienet.org> 04/06/06 9:05 AM >>>
On Thu, 6 Apr 2006, Kenneth E. Harker wrote:

> 
> This is unfortunately incorrect.  
> 
> I have operated a lot of contests from a four-band station
> with individual monoband yagis at ~90' and brick amplifiers
> or better located in the center of a relatively good sized
> city in Texas.  Several years ago, as an experiment, I 
> operated an entire September contest never once calling CQ 
> on 144.200.  I answered people calling CQ there, but all of 
> my CQing I did on 144.205, 144.210, etc...  I operated the 
> contest full time and only took a few hours off in the middle 
> of the night.  The result?  I could count the number of 
> stations that answered my off-144.200 CQs on one hand.  
> My score compared to previous years dropped 70%.  It was 
> abysmal.
> 

Around Illinois/Indiana/Wisconsin/Iowa etc. most of the activity
clusters 
around 144.200 but does spread out a little.  I generally listen from 
144.150 to 144.275 for stations.  The microwavers in this area hang out
 
around 144.260 or even call CQ there.  I've done so myself.  Sometimes

this results in QSO's and working up the bands.

Activity often seems to peak within the last couple hours of the
contest.  
144.200 has gotten congested at these times. I can recall hearing a
couple 
SSB stations and a couple CW stations all on 144.200.  I called one CW

station on CW once and got answered by one of the SSB stations.  

If I'm going to call CQ, I generally do it around .195 or .205.  That 
seems to result in some QSO's too.

I've found a few good hills around here that are ~ 50 to 100 feet above

avarage terrain.  Running QRP in contests is a little bit of a 
disadvantage but I definitely have a height advantage on some of these

hills.

Maybe I can return to Bald Knob some time.  The one contest I did there

(June 2005 with N5RP) got struck hard by Murphy. But I think that site

has lots of possibilities!

73, Zack W9SZ

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