Here is yet another score for the August UHF Contest:
W2SZ/1 - FN32, Mount Greylock, MA
Class - "multi multi"
Band QSOs Points Grids
222 79 237 30
432 158 474 37
903 45 270 20
1.2 47 282 19
2.3 30 360 17
3.4 21 252 14
5.7 15 180 10
10G 11 132 7
24G 5 60 5
TOTAL 411 2247 159
RAW SCORE = 357,273 points.
Soapbox - Good contest, good WX. Some minor openings to west and south made
operating interesting. Had hoped opening would improve ..... no luck.
73, Doug Sharp WB2KMY/4
>From Eric Rosenberg <ericr@access.digex.net> Tue Aug 10 15:17:13 1993
From: Eric Rosenberg <ericr@access.digex.net> (Eric Rosenberg)
Subject: Contest Software
In-Reply-To: <9308101106.AA05007@NADC.NADC.NAVY.MIL>
Message-ID: <Pine.3.07.9308101047.A6767-b100000@access.digex.net>
On Tue, 10 Aug 1993, M. Squicciarini wrote:
>
> I would like everyone's opinion on contest software.
> What are the major products (CT, NA, etc.)?
> Is there any software in shareware?
> What are the pros and cons of each?
>
> skitch@nadc.navy.mil
>
I'm a *very* part-time contester (living in the middle of a large city and
having an 18-month old child does that!), so my criteria are a
little different than many/most of the people here on the reflector.
I look for a program that doesn't necessarily have lots of bells &
whistles and has a slight learning curve, if any at all. I don't care
about seeing spots from the cluster, and as a result, don't need to
control the rig. Likewise, I don't have a DVP or any other trigerable
devices (external keyers), although I do like built-in keyers as part of
the software.
I did struggle through CT and NA in earlier versions, and lots of other
general loggin programs. I've stuck with Turbolog for general and
DXpedition logging (I travel a lot overseas), and thought I'd never find
a contest logger that fit my KISS (keep it simple, stupid!) needs.
Actually, there are two. EI5DI'ssuper duper, which I looked at briefly,
and N6TR's Contest Logger, which I now use.
Tree's program is great...it's very intuitive, doesn't clutter up the
screen and tax the capactities of the average computer, and doesn't bog me
down with functions I don't need/want/will never use.
It also has a simulator, which I especially enjoy. On my last trip, I
spent a month in a country where reciprocal licenses wre not allowed
(Indonesia), so I took N6TR's software loaded with a large database of
callsigns, and did a few contests without a raduo in my spare time!
On the whole, I don't think you can go wrong with Tree's program.
GL!
Eric
--
Eric Rosenberg WD3Q, EI4VPS, YJ0AER, J20BY, etc.
Volunteers In Technical Assistance voice: +703-276-1800
1600 Wilson Blvd., Suite 500 fax: +703-243-1865
Arlington, VA 22209 USA ericr@access.digex.com
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