SS Phone Score from KF3P, Single Op, High power
1813 Q's x 77 Sections
73, Tyler
>From aa2du@attmail.com (J P Kleinhaus ) Fri Dec 3 01:58:38 1993
From: aa2du@attmail.com (J P Kleinhaus ) (J P Kleinhaus )
Subject: More on X5
Hi Dave, thanks for the note. Nice to hear you on this past weekend.
As far as I can tell, the committee has disallowed X5 for QSO, Country,
and Zone credit because they say they are basically unlicensed. They
claim they are nothing more than glorified CB operators.
The stations claim they are licensed by the Republic of Serbs,
an enclave within Bosnia-Herzegovina. My point is only this: there is
no dispute as to where they are operating from, so why not give them
QSO and Zone credit if not Country credit. You could even make them
count for YU without stretching too much.
CQ Magazine has already shown that you don't have to be licensed
to have your card count towards one of their awards. Specifically, I am
referring to 1Z9A (correct call finally) and S21NQ. Neither of these
stations was ever licensed by the government of the host countries.
With this logic already in place, it seems to me that counting X5 is not
hard to allow.
I certainly don't wish to criticize the contest committee because
they do a very good job with a very difficult situation. I am just
curious as to how they determined that X5 is not good for anything.
73 de J.P. AA2DU
ARRL Hudson Division CAC Rep.
aa2du@attmail.com
>From Charles Fulp Jr <0006313915@mcimail.com> Fri Dec 3 02:34:00 1993
From: Charles Fulp Jr <0006313915@mcimail.com> (Charles Fulp Jr)
Subject: K3WW CQ WW CW SCORE
Message-ID: <52931203023425/0006313915PK1EM@mcimail.com>
I found K5ZD's info real interesting, I'm not the only one crazy enough
to do the full 48 hours. My first attempt at dispersing info via this
medium, hope it works. This is in keeping with my philosophy of publishing
claimed scores ASAP after the event.
I'm no tree hugger; however, paper logs are looking more dated all the time!
K3WW Single Operator Assisted 1993 CQ WW DX Contest, CW
160 80 207 2.59 16 59
80 284 762 2.68 27 92
40 658 1882 2.86 32 122
20 728 2122 2.91 33 116
15 726 2141 2.95 31 110
10 59 145 2.46 21 48
---------------------------------------------------
Totals 2535 7259 2.86 160 547 => 5,132,113
FRANKFORD RADIO CLUB
TH6 30m TH7 20M TH6 10 M (any combination simultaneously), Cushcraft 2 el 40
at 25 M, 80M 1/4 wave vertical, 160 inverted L peak at 60', 4 el triband quad
at 17 M short (150 foot) listening wires. 2 towers 30 feet apart.
I really like the breakdown sheets, I was ahead of Randy for almost the
first three hours! Will refrain from listing mine for now, but hope it
becomes the trend.
I was QRP both modes in SS, to let my kids use video equipment upstairs, and
try to pick up a plaque.
73 de Chas. K3WW
>From Tom Frenaye <0002349723@mcimail.com> Fri Dec 3 04:37:00 1993
From: Tom Frenaye <0002349723@mcimail.com> (Tom Frenaye)
Subject: K1KI CQWW info
Message-ID: <60931203043706/0002349723PK4EM@mcimail.com>
CQ WORLD WIDE DX CONTEST 1993
Call: K1KI Country: United States
Mode: CW Category: Single Operator
BAND QSO QSO PTS PTS/QSO ZONES COUNTRIES
160 219 587 2.68 13 61
80 384 1085 2.83 23 84
40 811 2364 2.91 33 125
20 856 2529 2.95 36 110
15 594 1745 2.94 28 95
10 63 156 2.48 20 48
---------------------------------------------------
Totals 2927 8466 2.89 153 523 => 5,723,016
Continent Statistics
K1KI Single Operator 28 Nov 1993 0000z
160 80 40 20 15 10 ALL percent
North America 43 46 54 37 29 25 234 7.9
South America 5 8 22 24 19 20 98 3.3
Europe 168 317 652 659 517 2 2315 78.6
Asia 2 7 59 120 6 0 194 6.6
Africa 1 5 16 14 16 12 64 2.2
Oceania 1 3 16 7 9 4 40 1.4
BREAKDOWN QSO/mults K1KI Single Operator
HOUR 160 80 40 20 15 10 HR TOT CUM TOT
0 ..... ..... 86/33 ..... ..... ..... 86/33 86/33
1 1/1 47/23 6/4 . . . 54/28 140/61
2 . 21/8 26/23 . . . 47/31 187/92
3 17/13 . 49/10 . . . 66/23 253/115
4 70/14 . . . . . 70/14 323/129
5 70/11 . . . . . 70/11 393/140
6 23/5 68/7 . . . . 91/12 484/152
7 . 73/4 4/2 . . . 77/6 561/158
8 ..... 6/5 41/10 ..... ..... ..... 47/15 608/173
9 8/5 1/1 38/13 . . . 47/19 655/192
10 1/1 3/2 16/3 . . . 20/6 675/198
11 . . 3/1 77/24 1/1 . 81/26 756/224
12 . . . 122/13 . . 122/13 878/237
13 . . . 38/2 62/26 9/8 109/36 987/273
14 . . . . 125/7 . 125/7 1112/280
15 . . . . 64/4 9/9 73/13 1185/293
16 ..... ..... ..... 4/2 30/17 5/3 39/22 1224/315
17 . . . 101/14 9/2 . 110/16 1334/331
18 . . . 68/10 . . 68/10 1402/341
19 . . 4/1 8/3 6/2 18/13 36/19 1438/360
20 . . . 23/12 15/13 . 38/25 1476/385
21 . . 76/3 10/2 . . 86/5 1562/390
22 . . 104/2 . . . 104/2 1666/392
23 . 1/0 39/2 24/5 6/3 . 70/10 1736/402
0 5/1 ..... ..... 64/11 ..... ..... 69/12 1805/414
1 6/1 50/7 . . . . 56/8 1861/422
2 2/1 17/8 4/1 . . . 23/10 1884/432
3 4/3 28/6 5/0 . . . 37/9 1921/441
4 2/1 19/2 . 3/1 . . 24/4 1945/445
5 4/1 4/1 . 5/2 . . 13/4 1958/449
6 1/0 . 24/3 . . . 25/3 1983/452
7 . 30/4 20/0 . . . 50/4 2033/456
8 1/1 1/1 33/0 3/3 ..... ..... 38/5 2071/461
9 2/2 5/3 6/3 1/1 . . 14/9 2085/470
10 1/1 3/1 3/2 . . . 7/4 2092/474
11 . 2/2 . 27/2 6/1 . 35/5 2127/479
12 . . . . 106/11 . 106/11 2233/490
13 . . . . 92/4 . 92/4 2325/494
14 . . . 1/1 9/0 17/12 27/13 2352/507
15 . . . 2/2 42/4 3/3 47/9 2399/516
16 ..... ..... ..... 83/2 12/0 ..... 95/2 2494/518
17 . . . 95/0 . . 95/0 2589/518
18 . . . 81/1 . . 81/1 2670/519
19 . . 5/3 1/0 9/3 2/2 17/8 2687/527
20 . . 85/4 . . . 85/4 2772/531
21 . . 66/4 . . . 66/4 2838/535
22 . . 62/3 2/1 . . 64/4 2902/539
23 1/1 4/2 6/0 13/1 . . 24/4 2926/543
DAY1 190/50 220/50 492/107 475/87 318/75 41/33 ..... 1736/402
DAY2 29/13 163/37 319/23 381/28 276/23 22/17 . 1190/141
TOT 219/63 383/87 811/130 856/115 594/98 63/50 . 2926/543
Hours/rate per band
DAY1 3.1/62 3.2/70 7.1/70 5.3/90 3.6/89 1.3/30 ..... 23.5/74
DAY2 1.5/19 3.8/43 5.5/58 5.6/68 3.5/79 0.7/30 . 20.7/57
TOT 4.6/48 7.0/55 12.6/64 10.9/79 7.1/84 2.1/30 . 44.2/66
Some notes:
I didn't sleep, except for a few several minute periods when I nodded off
sitting up in the middle of a QSO, especially when I worked HG275BC....
Nice to work ST0K on 15M. Asked him about 20M. He said 18Z on 14000. N2RM
didn't seem to notice me work ST0K on 14000.1 underneath him.
Made only 4 QSOs with the second radio. Made a bad mistake in testing my
setup. Turns out I couldn't vary (or shut off) the CW sidetone on my TS-850
while CQing, making listening to radio #2 useless. Essentially a one radio
contest. The sidetone volume was too high, it almost led me to quit in the
second hour, my ears are still ringing. 79 band changes overall.
S-7 powerline noise on 10M to the south (where all of the activity was) on
both days. On Sunday S-9 rain static for 4 hours during prime daytime hours
during 50 mph rainstorm. 10/15/20M beams useless on receive. Settled on 20M
using my Eu beverage for RX.
On Sunday 15M was too crowded to find a spot without annoying people. Tried
21.120 but people were going too slow and I was impatient. During the entire
contest people were very good about asking if the freq was busy and moving if
it was (hope I was as accomodating).
Couldn't believe 160M on Friday nite. Traditional wisdom is that the
Europeans are working each other so they can't hear USA. I must have worked a
couple of loud ones and then kept the freq open by the small pileup I
developed, and it kept on going and going and going. It would have been
impossible without the Eu beverage.
Station summary:
10M 5L @ 50' 66' 94' not phased, usually used the high one
15M 5L @ 62' 99' " " "
20M 4L @ 92', 5L @ 120' different towers, used the high one
40M 2L @ 80' on Eu, 2L @ 130' not phased, used both
80M Inv V @ 100', 2L delta loop on Eu delta loop not obviously better
160M ground plane w/raised radials
TH6DXX south @ 70' not used
1200' beverage on Eu, three other 600' beverages
(not terminated, no matching transformer, no preamp, no fancy supports)
TS-850, Alpha 86 (and almost never used TS930 w/AL1200)
Some other scores heard but not seen reported here:
LO3A 3M multi-single
C41A 40 meters 3430-34-132
P40N 10.7M (K1TO)
160 91 12 37
80 604 20 64
40 1430 29 90
20 1094 33 88
15 1789 33 103
10 1061 27 59
---- --- ---
6069 154 441 (P40W had less QSOs but 161/470 mult)
>From Takao Kumagai <je1cka@asuka.aerospace-lab.go.jp> Fri Dec 3 10:10:31 1993
From: Takao Kumagai <je1cka@asuka.aerospace-lab.go.jp> (Takao Kumagai)
Subject: K5ZD WWCW Score/Breakdowns
Message-ID: <9312030110.AA29174@asuka.aerospace-lab.go.jp>
ka9fox wrote;
> Is this the Contest Reflector? I thought so. Thanks for the breakdowns
> Randy. Very interesting and very much appreciated. I subscribed to the
> reflector to better my contesting skills and to learn from pros like
> yourself. Rate/band breakdowns is DEFINITELY NOT extraneous garbage. I do
> pay by the byte and I gladly do so when it's good information such as this.
Yes, I'm with you.
These informations from *Top Guns* very much appreciated.
You will be able to learn something from these breakdowns.
I believe there are several types of contesters on this reflector
HF types, V/UHF, Field Day style or RTTY etc.
Someones' garbege might be another ones' usefullness.
I'm in japan and SS scores are useless for me, but the comment with
breakdowns have lots of contest strategy. So I appreciated anything
related contests.
Tack JE1CKA
>From Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM Fri Dec 3 17:00:00
>1993
From: Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM (Skelton, Tom)
Subject: FW: The Great Colorado Shootout, K0RF vs. AA6TT
Message-ID: <2CFF70ED@admin.ClemsonSC.NCR.COM>
----------
From: Alan Brubaker
To: cq-contest
Subject: The Great Colorado Shootout, K0RF vs. AA6TT
David meets Goliath...
That is how some of us felt. Could we really do it? A last minute pep talk
from Chuck, K0RF, and 48 hours later we would all know. We had six stations
assembled and ready to go, and 13 operators as well. Band by band, here is
the breakdown.
160 - by G3SZA IC781/Alpha 87A/3 slopers and 3 beverages.
80 - by K0RF/W0UN/N7RT IC765/Alpha 87A/3 el rotary@150'
40 - by W0CP/K9AY IC781/Alpha 87A/3 el rotary@150', 2 el fixed@80'
20 - by N2IC/K0EU/KC0D IC781/Alpha 76/6 over 6 stack, 5 el@80'
15 - by W0UA & others IC781/Alpha 87A/6 over 6 over 6 stack, 4 el@60'
10 - by K6XO/W6UQF/K6UA FT1000/Alpha 76/7 over 7 stack, 4 el. fixed@30'
<< extremely interesting analysis of rf vs tt deleted for b/w >>
If this is a DAVID station, then I am certainly no more than a grain of sand
under David's sandals. At least now I know what the high-water mark is.
I congratulate all you very serious contesters that have assembled such
fine aluminum and copper farms. When I die and go to heaven, maybe my
eternal reward is that I will get to operate a station like one of
these........
cause I sure as heck won't have one in this life!!!!!!
73, Tom WB4IUX
>From Mikko Noromaa <mnoromaa@vipunen.hut.fi> Fri Dec 3 18:07:59 1993
From: Mikko Noromaa <mnoromaa@vipunen.hut.fi> (Mikko Noromaa)
Subject: Program reading CW to log-program - any use?
Message-ID: <199312031807.AA138459@vipunen.hut.fi>
I have created a little program called CWREADER. It's intended purpose is
to copy CW sent by a keyer to a logging program (for example CT).
Well, I got the program working quite nicely but then I suddenly noticed
I have absolutely no use for it! That's because I'm a 'new generation
contester', who has never worked a contest using just paper and pencil..
So I work much more efficiently using just the keyboard.
The question is: would anybody else have use for such a program? I mean,
are there contesters who prefer to work a contest with their keyer but
are forced to use the computer because of it's other great advantages?
If this is the case, and there is enough interest, I could finish CWREADER
for a 'public release' (write documentation, etc).
An example of CWREADER's operation:
I have just called CQ and a station answers me. I get his call (W1AW) in my
head and start sending with my keyer: "W1AW 599 123". All of this gets copied
to CT's call-field, until the second '9' of 599 is sent. At this point the
"59" is deleted, cursor is moved to the number-field and copying is suspended
until there is a long enough pause. Then the other station sends his exchange,
I write his number in CT's number-field and send "TU" or "TU OH3LIM". After
that the QSO is confirmed and the cursor moved to the next line.
Anybody interested? 73 de Mikko OH3LIM
--
Mikko Noromaa -- Amateur radio callsign: OH3LIM
email: Mikko.Noromaa@hut.fi -- Pkt addr: OH3LIM@OH3RBA.#HML.FIN.EU
>From geoiii@wixer.bga.com (George Fremin III) Fri Dec 3 18:46:25 1993
From: geoiii@wixer.bga.com (George Fremin III) (George Fremin III)
Subject: cw ss score rumors - the last time.
Message-ID: <9312031846.AA10682@wixer>
single op high power
WM5G 1604 76
W5WMU 1557 77
N4RJ 1529 77
K5GN 1462 77
W7RM 1444 77
K6LL 1428 77
N2IC 1422 77
K0RF 1414 77
NC0P 1409 77
K9FD 1400 77
NM5M 1383 77
K5MR 1377 76
K3LR 1372 76
VE3EJ 1364 76
K7UP 1357 76
AH3C 1351 77
N6TV 1313 77
KZ2S 1300 76
W6EEN 1298 77
K1TO 1292 76
N8RR 1281 77
W1XE 1271 77
KF3P 1265 75
K1DG 1257 76
K4VX 1253 77
N6RO 1248 77
W6QHS 1248 77
AA7NX 1238 77
KQ8M 1238 76
KI3L 1237 77
AA4NC 1230 76
W5KFT 1227 76
KT3Y 1220 75
WA8ZDT 1218 76
K3ZO 1215 76
K6KM 1199 77
W2SC 1190 76
KW8N 1187 76
W5XJ 1141 77
AA6KX 1094 77
KE9I 1053 77
W2RQ 1050 75
K2MM 1038 77
WB1GQR 1016 74
W5ASP 1000 76
WG9L 903 77
WE9V 874 76
KF8QE 894 76
W9YH 848 76
AA8U 831 75
W1IHN 715 76
N6AZE 281 73
N4TQO 213 57
K5EC 63 33
single op low power
NP4A 1388 77
N5RZ 1315 76
KY7M 1217 75
AD5Q 1210 77
K0EU 1173 75
W1FEA 1106 77
AB6FO 1075 76
K4XU 1070 76
N4AA 1030 77
N0AT 1016 76
N4TY 1006 74
WA2SRQ 950 76
W6UQF 939 77
AC5K 923 76
VE4VV 916 77
KZ4H 913 76
KQ7I 912 76
NJ2L 901 76
VE4GV 868 75
KO9Y 852 77
KP4TQ 840 73
N6MZ 823 77
N9JF 804 75
AI6E 782 74
N7LOX 718 76
NN5T 712 75
N6PN 685 76
AA6MC 682 76
KE4GY 682 74
WN3K 567 76
W5XD 565 72
WA1U 529 76
K8JLF 520 73
WT0K 471 70
KF9PL 455 73
ND1H 429 70
K7GM 425 72
KI4HN 347 69
N6KL 340 70
AC9CH 310 72
NG0X 260 31
KJ5JC 194 55
KU4A 152 61
AA5UO 149 52
NV3V 111 47
single op qrp
N3SL 873 77
K0FRP 824 75
W2GD 814 76
W9UP 788 76
AA2U 757 75
W9RE 751 76
K1TR 686 76
WA4PGM 667 76
N0AX 615 76
W7YAQ 590 73
KB4GID 569 72
N5NMX 465 73
WB2CPU 353 69
VE5VA 193 65
WA7BNM 100 52
N0BSH 16 14
multi-op
AA5B 1501 77
N4ZZ 1388 77
W4AQL 1379 77
N6VR 1321 77
WX0B 1308 76
K5OJI 1284 77
K6XT 1220 77
KB0S 1161 77
K0PP 1095 77
W6BIP 1048 77
KI6X 1004 76
NV6O 666 77
K6XO 549 75
just thought i would pass them on one more time -- i think
i corrected all the errors that i was told of.
k1dg took the ssb scores. i dont have them.
--
George Fremin III ph:512-416-0140
Austin, Texas C.K.U.
WB5VZL aka w5kft
geoiii@wixer.bga.com
>From DKMC" <dkmc@chevron.com Fri Dec 3 19:33:57 1993
From: DKMC" <dkmc@chevron.com (DKMC)
Subject: Station Hygiene
Message-ID: <CPLAN065.DKMC.4194.1993 12 0311 30 11 30>
Microsoft Mail v3.0 IPM.Microsoft Mail.Note
From: McCarty, DK 'David'
To: OPEN ADDRESSING SERVI-OPENADDR
Subject: Station Hygiene
Priority:
Message ID: B3A1AB5B
Conversation ID: B3A1AB5B
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How do you clean up your keyboard, radio front panels, headphones,
microphones, etc.? For example, when the hired gun tells you he came down
with strep throat Sunday night after the contest...
Is good ole Lysol OK? What won't hurt the electronics, but will kill the
bugs?
Dave McCarty K5GN
dkmc@chevron.com
>From Chris Gay" <KU4A@LEXVMK.VNET.IBM.COM Fri Dec 3 19:35:08 1993
From: Chris Gay" <KU4A@LEXVMK.VNET.IBM.COM (Chris Gay)
Subject: SSB SS scores
If anybody has compiled the scores for SSB SS I'd enjoy seeing them,
either by posting here or by direct mail. Thanks and 73.
Chris KU4A
Kentucky Contest Group
ku4a@lexvmk.vnet.ibm.com
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