3830
[Top] [All Lists]

[3830] NK7U WPX SSB M/M

To: <3830@contesting.com>
Subject: [3830] NK7U WPX SSB M/M
From: k7zo@micron.net (K7ZO, Scott Tuthill)
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 21:00:30 -0700
              CQ WORLD WIDE PREFIX CONTEST -- 1999

      Call: NK7U                     Country:  United States
      Mode: SSB                      Category: Multi Multi

      BAND     QSO   QSO PTS  PTS/Q PREFIXES
      160      164      241   1.5       17 ¼ elevated ground plane
       80      518     1396   2.7       65 3 element yagi, rotating dipole
       40      537     2400   4.5      128 rotating 4/4
       20     1560     3132   2.0      424 5/5/5/5 EU, rotating 6/6
       15     1525     3657   2.4      374 6/6/6/6 EU, 4/4/4/4 JA, rotating
6/6
       10      741     1478   2.0      128 5/5 JA, rotating 7/7
     --------------------------------------
     Totals   5045    12304   2.4     1136  =   13,977,344

Rigs: 3 x TS-950, 1 FT-1000MP
Amps: 2 x Amp Supply, 1 Alpha, 1 Quadra

All reports sent were 59, unless otherwise noted.

Operator List: Joe/NK7U, Scott/K7ZO, Rod/W7ZRC, Jim/K7MK, Jim/K9JF,
Mike/KC7DPD, Mike/K7NT, Pat/W7UA

Comments and the like
=====================
What a great time and congrats to WT6V/N6RO for an amazing score. We knew
they would be the team to beat but we had no idea they would cream us like
they did (though at least we beat them on 160!). Also, what a fine effort
from KU8E/K8CC and the self-described ?half baked? effort at WO8CC. Wait
until next year when propagation should be better and hopefully more even
for us northernly and westernly stations. Finally, though not posted yet,
our local competitor W7RM is within a few percentage points of us, though we
think we will end up ahead. It was fun monitoring their QSO totals during
the contest, as I am sure they did ours, to see who was in the lead.

Here are some random thoughts. I will post some more quantitative data later
when I get a chance.

* The first M/M from NK7U in many years. We ran a 4 station operation with
  8 operators. It was fun having some new faces make the trip to Baker.
  We managed to borrow K9JF and K7NT from Portland and convinced W7UA
  to fly in from Carson City. With this crew, Joe, and the Boise gang we had
a
  little of all the different contesting styles. I am sure we all walked
away
  learning something new ? even if it was just a new joke or two. In
hindsight
  we wish we had done a recording of the shack and done a ?Best Of? outtakes
  for presentation at club meetings.
* According to Joe this effort was a QSO and Point total record for NK7U.
  We were working the bands like mad the last two hours when we realized
  we were in sight of 5,000 Q?s. We all screamed when we logged
  number 5,000 at 2349Z! Little did we know that we would be just 10
  three pointers short of breaking 14,000,000 points.
* Too bad the flux was at a low point in its 27 day up and down cycles. 10M
was
  kind of a disappointment. The JA openings were late and short all days and
it
  never really opened into EU for us ? just 4 10M EU QSO?s.
* 15M was fun Sunday as it was open into Europe until 2200Z or so. It was
  interesting to experience the waves of mini packet pileups.
* 20M into Europe was so/so both days. We are not sure why. Partly
propagation I
  am sure, but I also heard that the QRM from intra-Europe QSO?s was so
  intense that it masked our signals. Though, we did not seem to have this
  problem on 15M.
* It is amazing to see the similarity in the scores from what appears to be
the
  3rd, 4th, and 5th place US M/M efforts.
           QSO     Mults
   NK7U   5,045    1,136
   W7RM   4,800    1,130
   WO8CC  4,565    1,131

   How about those mult totals? How close can you get? Kind of makes the
battle
   boil down to who can push the F1 key more.
* The impact of our northernly QTH is really amazing. On Saturday night I
  listened to WT6V/N6RO running stations on 20M about 1AM local when the
band
  was essentially flatline for us and I could not even hear the stations
  they were working. Obviously they had similar advantages on 10 and 15 as
  their QSO totals were 50% more than ours on 10-15-20 with fairly similar
  antenna systems.  When the flux goes up and the band openings are more
  similar for us as compared to N6RO, K8CC, W7RM, etc, you all better watch
  out.
* I think we all agreed that we liked the new WPX rules, kept the contesting
  interesting the whole time.


Until later and thanks to all those that worked us. In particular thanks to
N6WS who we were able to move across 4 bands in 3 minutes right as we were
driving for 5,000 Q?s at the end of the contest.

Scott/K7ZO for the NK7U Contest Gang.

For now here are the rate sheets and other data for those interested.

BREAKDOWN QSO/mults  NK7U  CQ WORLD WIDE PREFIX CONTEST  Multi Multi

HOUR      160      80       40       20       15       10    HR TOT  CUM TOT

   0    .....    .....    14/13   106/66    88/57    99/45  307/181  307/181
   1      .        .      18/15    79/31    79/34    14/7    190/87  497/268
   2      .      20/6     29/15   109/40    84/20      .     242/81  739/349
   3      .      22/5     16/12    94/34    32/18      .     164/69  903/418
   4    19/2     18/1     21/9     84/25     1/1       .     143/38 1046/456
   5    27/3     29/5     21/7     58/22      .        .     135/37 1181/493
   6    32/4     30/2      3/0     37/10      .        .     102/16 1283/509
   7      .      43/9     25/5       .        .        .      68/14 1351/523
   8     7/1     36/7     34/6      4/1     .....    .....    81/15 1432/538
   9     8/0     30/3     39/14    13/1       .        .      90/18 1522/556
  10    19/3     33/2     26/2      1/1       .        .      79/8  1601/564
  11    12/2     43/5     26/2      2/2       .        .      83/11 1684/575
  12      .      37/8     28/6      1/0       .        .      66/14 1750/589
  13      .      11/2     24/4     19/9      6/1       .      60/16 1810/605
  14      .        .       4/1     25/15    29/8     13/7     71/31 1881/636
  15      .        .        .      43/9     49/26    13/3    105/38 1986/674
  16    .....    .....    .....    29/15    45/23    18/1     92/39 2078/713
  17      .        .        .      21/7     61/23    25/5    107/35 2185/748
  18      .        .        .      32/7     66/23    54/11   152/41 2337/789
  19      .        .        .      18/5     33/11    28/5     79/21 2416/810
  20      .        .        .      32/5     48/8     20/4    100/17 2516/827
  21      .        .        .      51/16    60/12    66/5    177/33 2693/860
  22      .        .        .      40/6     63/12    70/4    173/22 2866/882
  23      .        .        .      46/7     63/7     41/5    150/19 3016/901
   0    .....    .....    .....    58/7     43/7    120/5    221/19 3237/920
   1      .        .      12/3     62/12    92/7     21/1    187/23 3424/943
   2      .       2/0     11/2     55/12    94/15     4/1    166/30 3590/973
   3      .       4/0     14/0     37/3     65/7       .     120/10 3710/983
   4      .       5/1      4/1     51/10     2/0       .      62/12 3772/995
   5     7/0     23/0      2/0     34/4       .        .      66/4  3838/999
   6     8/1     17/4      8/1     20/3       .        .      53/9 3891/1008
   7    16/1     11/2     24/2      3/0       .        .      54/5 3945/1013
   8     5/0     11/0     21/1     .....    .....    .....    37/1 3982/1014
   9     2/0     13/0     25/0      4/0       .        .      44/0 4026/1014
  10     2/0     14/2     17/1       .        .        .      33/3 4059/1017
  11      .      20/0     13/1       .        .        .      33/1 4092/1018
  12      .      26/0     19/2       .        .        .      45/2 4137/1020
  13      .      20/1     19/1       .        .        .      39/2 4176/1022
  14      .        .       3/0     39/5      8/1       .      50/6 4226/1028
  15      .        .        .      37/8      8/1       .      45/9 4271/1037
  16    .....    .....    .....    23/1     25/0     .....    48/1 4319/1038
  17      .        .        .      10/3     20/5      5/1     35/9 4354/1047
  18      .        .        .      43/4     25/4     12/2     80/104434/1057
  19      .        .        .      17/3     48/10     9/3     74/164508/1073
  20      .        .        .      21/3     69/9     14/3    104/154612/1088
  21      .        .        .      12/0    103/16    11/2    126/184738/1106
  22      .        .       5/2     48/6     44/2     20/3    117/134855/1119
  23      .        .      12/0     42/6     72/6     64/5    190/175045/1136
DAY1   124/15   352/55  328/111  944/334  807/284  461/102    ..... 3016/901
DAY2    40/2    166/10   209/17   616/90   718/90   280/26      .   2029/235
TOT    164/17   518/65  537/128 1560/424 1525/374  741/128      .  5045/1136

                           Continent Statistics
   NK7U   CQ WORLD WIDE PREFIX CONTEST    Multi Multi     28 Mar 1999  2359z

                     160   80   40   20   15   10  ALL   percent
North America   SSB  166  393  193  834  498  403 2487    48.5
South America   SSB    0    6    8   47   33  111  205     4.0
Europe          SSB    0    0   64  487  436    4  991    19.3
Asia            SSB    0  118  246  167  525  199 1255    24.5
Africa          SSB    0    1    4   12   11    5   33     0.6
Oceania         SSB    2    8   27   33   51   31  152     3.0






--
FAQ on WWW:               http://www.contesting.com/3830faq.html
Submissions:              3830@contesting.com
Administrative requests:  3830-REQUEST@contesting.com
Problems:                 owner-3830@contesting.com


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • [3830] NK7U WPX SSB M/M, K7ZO, Scott Tuthill <=