3830
[Top] [All Lists]

[3830] IARU N5OT(WM5R) SO SSB HP

To: 3830@contesting.com
Subject: [3830] IARU N5OT(WM5R) SO SSB HP
From: webform@b4h.net
Reply-to: wm5r@arrl.net
Date: Fri, 16 Jul 2004 16:36:00 -0700
List-post: <mailto:3830@contesting.com>
                    IARU HF World Championship

Call: N5OT
Operator(s): WM5R
Station: N5OT

Class: SO SSB HP
QTH: OK
Operating Time (hrs): 24

Summary:
 Band  CW Qs  Ph Qs  Mults
---------------------------
  160:   0        9     4
   80:   0       53    11
   40:   0      135    32
   20:   0      846    65
   15:   0      103    25
   10:   0       31     8
---------------------------
Total:   0     1177   145  Total Score = 502,425

Club: 

Comments:

Due to my travel schedule, I was unable to operate the contest from 
central Texas, so I looked around for a station in the Oklahoma,
Missouri, or Arkansas area from which to operate on my way home.  
Mark N5OT was very generous in offering me the use of his station in
Osage county, Oklahoma, even though he himself was not going to be 
around that weekend.  

http://home.swbell.net/swca/radio/index.html

Mark's station is on a ridge line in the grassland hills southwest 
of Bartlesville, about 35 kilometers south of the border with Kansas.
It seems to have a really excellent horizon, with good clearance over
the nearby terrain.  Mark has four towers, although most of the antennas
are on just two of the towers.  Each of the two 140' towers had a 40 meter 
monobander, a 20 meter monobander, a 15 meter monobander, and two (phased) 
10 meter monobanders.  The antennas on one tower all face northeast, 
the antennas on the other tower all face northwest.  The week before the 
contest, Mark put up a tribander (10-15-20) pointed south, and there was a 
single wire antenna each for 80 meters and 160 meters.  All of the antennas
were in fixed position - there were no rotors involved.

The station building is a 30' x 50' metal barn that Mark has been finishing 
out inside.  The interior rooms have been framed, most of the drywall 
and sheet rock looks to be in place (taped and spackled, but not yet 
painted,) and the electric wiring, outlets, and switches are all done 
(albeit without covers, yet.)  There was a small room with a working 
toilet (minus a door,) but no working sinks or shower (yet.)  The station 
did have a bed for me to use the night before the contest, a working air 
conditioner, a microwave, and a small refrigerator.  

The radio was an Icom IC-746PRO connected to an ETO Alpha 86 amplifier.
A WX0B SixPak switched between the six bands of antennas.  Each band 
had a heavy-duty antenna tuner on it between the amplifier and the 
antennas.  Mark has a second Icom IC-746PRO he plans to use for SO2R CW
contesting (along with the WX0B SixPak,) but only connected one radio
for the IARU contest, as neither of us had the appropriate audio switching
equipment for phone SO2R.  The second radio sat on another desk and was 
never plugged in.  The only antenna switching was a simple A/B switch that 
let me choose between the tribander pointed south and all the other 
antennas (the northeast and northwest monobanders are always fed in phase
so as to "spray" the RF in both directions.)  There were no receive-only
antennas for the low bands.

Mark doesn't own a DVK, so I brought along my W9XT Contest Card and an 
Icom cable for it that my wife soldered up for me.  I installed the DVK 
in an empty ISA slot in the logging machine, and it worked, but I 
discovered that it did have just a little tiny bit of hum on the audio.  
A couple of stations I worked Friday night said it sounded good enough
and they could only notice the hum if they really listened for it, but
I did notice it and noticed that it was much more obvious at high power.
I've had this problem before in another station, and finally solved it
by using audio isolation transformers and grounding all the radio gear
together.  It's not RFI - I think it has something to do with the computer 
and radio grounds being at different potentials, and/or the computer 
ground having some AC ripple on it.  It wasn't a problem I was going to 
solve Friday night, so I decided that if it wasn't too terrible, I'd just 
try to ignore it and see how it went.  I wasn't completely squared away
with the station setup until past 0430 UTC, less than eight hours before 
the contest start.  I wish I had gotten more sleep, but such is the peril 
of guest operating at a far-away station and traveling all day just to get
there.

I got off to a very bad start.  Right away, I noticed a problem with the
DVK that I had not noticed the night before - a problem for which I had not 
even thought to check.  I could record a new voice message just fine, and
play it back once just fine, but to repeat the message, I had to hit ESC 
some random number of times between each DVK CQ.  Sometimes two ESCs would
do it. sometimes it would take three, sometimes four.  It was incredibly 
frustrating.  I restarted TR and that didn't fix it.  I rebooted the 
computer and that didn't fix it.  I noticed that the version number (6.71b) 
was several versions out of date, so I thought I would install the latest 
version (brought with me on a floppy) in case this was some quirky bug 
unique to 6.71b.  Unfortunately, the only unzipping software on the machine 
was WinZIP, and I could not get past it's stupid splash screen without a 
mouse (I don't think Mark has one at the station.)  In the process of all
this, and getting run off my frequency by a station in Colorado who could
not hear me, I kept working stations, and logged at least a dozen QSOs on 
paper.  I finally got a bad audio report, though, and decided (reluctantly) 
that the voice keyer had to go, so I unplugged it around 1230 UTC and used 
my voice for the rest of the contest.  I'm sure that I probably didn't CQ as 
often or as consistently without the keyer as I would have with it, and 
it did make eating a real hassle later on.

It took me a while to get back into a good rhythm, and I finished with 
only 50 QSOs in the first hour.  The QSO totals for the next four hours 
were all in the 80s, which wasn't as good as I was hoping for, but a whole 
lot better than a 50.  I made my first 15 meter QSO at 1456 UTC, and my
first 10 meter QSO at 1544 UTC.  My last 10 meter QSO was at 1645 UTC.
I had a pretty bad 1600 UTC hour, with only 64 QSOs, as I was trying to 
eke out 10 meter and 15 meter multipliers.  I ended up on 20 meters for 
all of the 1700 UTC hour, as I found my best rate of the contest there
(the TR rate meter peaked at 194,) and the only clock hour where I would 
work over 100 QSOs.  In retrospect, I probably should have been on 15
meters during at least part of this time.  The rest of the afternoon 
was pretty slow with hours of 50, 51, 44, 40, 55, and 54 QSOs.  Things 
had begun to slow down a lot on 20 meters by 0100 UTC, and after I worked a 
really difficult ZK1/s QSO on 20 meters (I had no antennas that could point 
that way) I decided to go to 40 meters even though it was still very 
much daylight outside.

Something wasn't right with the 40 meter antenna system when I first tried
to transmit there.  I was seeing around 150 watts reflected power for 
250 watts output.  I checked all the connections, even went out to the 
towers to see if anything was loose, etc.  None of the tuner adjustments 
seemed to make the least bit of difference.  Eventually, something I did 
(I have no idea what it was) fixed the problem, and I was able to tune up
OK.  In all, I lost 29 minutes of operating time.  By then, it was 
starting to get dark outside, and I quickly started logging European HQ 
stations.  I tried running split on 40 meters to Europe several times during 
the night, but never had a single European caller.  I didn't even hear
one try to call me.
                                            
All night long, I found that 20 meters was far more productive and fun than
the lower bands.  I'm really quite a novice at low band operating, though,
so I mostly just tried to make sure I would visit each band a little every
hour so as not to miss anyone too obvious.  I wish I could have done so
without leaving 20 meters.  There were many hours when I couldn't find anyone 
new to work on 160 meters or even 80 meters.  I was able to get JA stations 
to answer my 40 meter split CQs, though, which is always satisfying.  I 
never heard Japan or Europe on 80 meters, though. The only DX stations I 
worked (or heard) on 80 meters were in North America and worked simplex.  
On 160 meters, I worked no DX stations at all (unless you count Ontario,) 
and I never heard a zone 6 station or NU1AW.

We had excellent weather during the weekend, and there was never even a 
threat of a storm that might have necessitated a station shutdown.

This was the first time I've ever used an Icom radio in an HF contest.
There were some things about it that I really liked - the automatic notch
filter, for example, was truly excellent.  I tended to leave it on all 
the time, as I couldn't hear any difference in the audio when there were
no jammers on my frequency, and it worked really, really well when there 
were.  You could hear it kick in right when you released PTT, and after 
those first few microseconds, the carrier would be truly gone.  It didn't
work quite as well against two jamming carriers, but it still did a really
good job.  It was an amazingly cool feature for high power phone contesting -
I've never done a high power phone contest effort where I wasn't jammed by 
carriers.  The noise reduction feature also worked pretty well when I tried 
it - and it was very noisy that weekend.  I also found the tuning speed of 
the main tuning knob to be perfect for phone contesting - a little detail
that you never think about until you use a radio (like the Ten-Tec Orion
or the Elecraft K2) that gets it wrong.

One serious flaw with the IC-746PRO, though, is the placement of the 
XFC button (equivalent to Kenwood's TF-SET button) on the front panel.  
Trying to use it to work split on 40 meters, there was no way to push it 
without having that hand either interfere with my sight line to the display
or with my other hand on the tuning knob.  I'm sure that CW DXers who 
never operate with a split greater than 2 kHz can develop the coordination 
to use the XFC button one-handed, but when you're trying to rapidly 
tune to some QRX frequency arbitrarily chosen from a 150 kHz range, or 
looking for a new listening frequency for your own CQing, it's an ergonomic 
nightmare.  It would probably be ten times worse if you were left-handed.

I didn't do any A/B receiver comparisons with another rig, of course, 
but the receiver sounded generally OK to me.  I played with the variable 
filter bandwidths, the passband tuning, and even the transmit bandwidth 
settings.  I'm not sure I thought the continuously adjustable bandwidth 
setting was any better than a few discrete filter bandwidths, and changing 
it took way too many button presses and knob turns in a sequence that was 
complicated enough to screw up once in a while when I was trying to do 
other things at the same time (like concentrate on a caller's signal.)  
So, mostly I gave up on adjusting the filter and just switched between
the 2.4 kHz and 2.1 kHz filters.  Having the display show me the bandwidth 
shape relative to the center frequency as I adjusted the PBT was pretty cool.
I have no idea if changing the transmit bandwidth settings really did 
anything good for me or not.  Mostly, I kept it at the MID setting.  There 
were some more complicated transmit setting involving treble and bass and 
whatnot that I was not about to mess with during a contest.  I am also 
sort of suspicious of the Icom microphone system, as it's really designed 
for electret mic elements, instead of real mic elements, and I felt like 
I really had to have the mic gain way up.  I have no real evidence that 
this was ever a problem, but it sure felt alien.

I heard two established, competitive stations in the contest asking others 
to spot them on the packet cluster system.  One was in the Ukraine, the 
other in north Texas.  In both cases, I noted frequency, time, and other 
details to pass on to N1ND.

This was my first HF contest effort from outside of the state of Texas.

A few photos from the weekend:

http://www.wm5r.org/photos/2004_iaru_n5ot/



    2004 IARU HF World Championship

    Contest Dates : 10-Jul-04, 11-Jul-04
    Callsign Used : N5OT
     Station Used : N5OT
         Operator : WM5R
         Category : SOHP Phone Only
          Country : United States
     ARRL Section : Oklahoma (OK)

   BAND   Raw QSOs   Valid QSOs   Points   Mults   Zones
 ________________________________________________________

  160SSB       9           9         13       1         3
   80SSB      53          53        115       5         6
   40SSB     139         135        385      14        18
   20SSB     884         846       2618      31        34
   15SSB     103         103        261      14        11
   10SSB      31          31         73       2         6
 ________________________________________________________

 Totals     1219        1177       3465      67        78


 Claimed Score = 502,425 points.


----
Rate Sheet

  HOUR  160SSB   80SSB   40SSB   20SSB   15SSB   10SSB   TOTAL   ACCUM
  ----  ------  ------  ------  ------  ------  ------   -----   -----
   12       0       0       0      50       0       0      50      50
   13       0       0       0      85       0       0      85     135
   14       0       0       0      77       7       0      84     219
   15       0       0       0       0      67      22      89     308
   16       0       0       0      47       8       9      64     372
   17       0       0       0     114       0       0     114     486
   18       0       0       0      37      13       0      50     536
   19       0       0       0      45       6       0      51     587
   20       0       0       0      44       0       0      44     631
   21       0       0       0      38       2       0      40     671
   22       0       0       0      55       0       0      55     726
   23       0       0       0      54       0       0      54     780

    0       0       0       0      25       0       0      25     805
    1       0       0      13       1       0       0      14     819
    2       0       0      12      51       0       0      63     882
    3       1       4       6      39       0       0      50     932
    4       1      13      14      18       0       0      46     978
    5       3       6      26      14       0       0      49    1027
    6       0       0       8      30       0       0      38    1065
    7       0       2      19       8       0       0      29    1094
    8       0       9      15       4       0       0      28    1122
    9       3      11       9       0       0       0      23    1145
   10       1       8      10       0       0       0      19    1164
   11       0       0       3       9       0       0      12    1176

  TOTAL     9      53     135     846     103      31    1176


----
Continent List

                   160    80    40    20    15    10    ALL
                   ---    --    --    --    --    --    ---
  USA calls   =      8    46    88   594    68    26    830
  VE calls    =      1     4     7    62     9     4     87
  N.A. calls  =      0     1     7    20     4     0     32
  S.A. calls  =      0     2     7    15     3     1     28
  Euro calls  =      0     0    13   122    18     0    153
  Afrc calls  =      0     0     0     1     1     0      2
  Asia calls  =      0     0     1     6     0     0      7
  JA calls    =      0     0     6    14     0     0     20
  Ocen calls  =      0     0     6    12     0     0     18

  Total calls =      9    53   135   846   103    31   1177


----
Multipliers Worked by Band

160 SSB
04      07      08      arrl    

 80 SSB
02      07      09      aarc    iaru    vrna    
06      08      10      arrl    rac     

 40 SSB
01      06      11      28      61      arrl    jarl    ref     
02      07      12      37      62      darc    ovsv    rep     
03      08      14      45      aarc    hrs     pzk     scg     
04      10      15      59      ari     iaru    rac     srr     

 20 SSB
01      09      15      36      54      ac      fmre    ovsv    rsgb    vrna
02      10      16      37      55      arabh   frr     pzk     scg     zrs
03      11      18      39      58      arm     hrs     rac     srr     
04      11      27      44      59      arrl    iaru    rca     uarl    
06      12      28      45      61      bfra    jarl    rcv     ure     
07      13      29      50      62      crc     lrmd    ref     uska    
08      14      30      51      aarc    darc    mrasz   rl      veron   

 15 SSB
02      06      10      28      ari     darc    mrasz   rac     vrna    
03      07      11      37      arrl    hrs     ovsv    ref     
04      08      14      aarc    crc     iaru    pzk     veron   

 10 SSB
02      04      06      07      08      15      arrl    rac     


----
Mutiplier Distribution

   1.           08  408
   2.           06  270
   3.           07  143
   4.           28   71
   5.           04   38
   6.           02   31
   7.           27   19
   8.           11   18
   9.           45   18
  10.           29   13
  11.           01   10
  12.           09    9
  13.           61    9
  14.           37    9
  15.           14    7
  16.         arrl    6
  17.           10    5
  18.          rac    5
  19.           15    5
  20.         iaru    4
  21.         aarc    4
  22.           03    4
  23.           59    3
  24.          pzk    3
  25.         vrna    3
  26.          hrs    3
  27.         darc    3
  28.         ovsv    3
  29.           18    3
  30.          ref    3
  31.           44    2
  32.          srr    2
  33.          crc    2
  34.        veron    2
  35.        mrasz    2
  36.          ari    2
  37.          scg    2
  38.           12    2
  39.           62    2
  40.           30    2
  41.         jarl    2
  42.           16    1
  43.           50    1
  44.           54    1
  45.          zrs    1
  46.         rsgb    1
  47.          ure    1
  48.        arabh    1
  49.          arm    1
  50.           39    1
  51.           rl    1
  52.           ac    1
  53.         lrmd    1
  54.         fmre    1
  55.          frr    1
  56.         uska    1
  57.         bfra    1
  58.           13    1
  59.         uarl    1
  60.          rep    1
  61.          rca    1
  62.          rcv    1
  63.           55    1
  64.           51    1
  65.           58    1
  66.           36    1


----
QSO Totals of Countries Worked by Band

          Prefix  160   80    40    20    15    10   Total  Percent
          ------  ---  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  -----  -------
              3V    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              5B    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              9A    -     -     1     1     1     -      3    0.25
              9V    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              9Y    -     -     2     1     -     -      3    0.25
              CT    -     -     1     2     -     -      3    0.25
              CU    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              DL    -     -     1    16     3     -     20    1.70
              DU    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              EA    -     -     1     5     -     -      6    0.51
              ER    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              ES    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
               F    -     -     1     6     1     -      8    0.68
              FP    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
               G    -     -     -    11     -     -     11    0.93
              GI    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              HA    -     -     -     4     3     -      7    0.59
              HB    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              HK    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              HL    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              HP    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              HR    -     -     -     1     1     -      2    0.17
               I    -     -     3    15     5     -     23    1.95
              JA    -     -     6    14     -     -     20    1.70
               K    8    46    88   594    68    26    830   70.52
             KH6    -     -     3     6     -     -      9    0.76
              KL    -     -     3     7     -     -     10    0.85
             KP2    -     -     1     2     -     -      3    0.25
             KP4    -     -     1     2     1     -      4    0.34
              LU    -     -     1     7     1     -      9    0.76
              LX    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              LY    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              LZ    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              OE    -     -     1     1     1     -      3    0.25
              OH    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
             OH0    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              OK    -     -     1     5     2     -      8    0.68
              OM    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              ON    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              P2    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              P4    -     1     1     1     1     -      4    0.34
              PA    -     -     -     3     1     -      4    0.34
             PJ2    -     1     -     1     1     -      3    0.25
              PY    -     -     3     3     -     1      7    0.59
              S5    -     -     1     7     1     -      9    0.76
              SP    -     -     1     6     1     -      8    0.68
              SV    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              T9    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              TI    -     -     -     -     1     -      1    0.08
              UA    -     -     -     8     -     -      8    0.68
             UA9    -     -     1     2     -     -      3    0.25
              UR    -     -     -     3     -     -      3    0.25
              VE    1     4     7    62     9     4     87    7.39
              VK    -     -     2     3     -     -      5    0.42
             VP9    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              XE    -     1     1     3     1     -      6    0.51
              YL    -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
              YO    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              YU    -     -     1     5     -     -      6    0.51
              YV    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              Z3    -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
              ZF    -     -     1     1     -     -      2    0.17
           ZK1/S    -     -     1     1     -     -      2    0.17

----
QSO totals of zones worked by band

          Zone  160   80    40    20    15    10   Total  Percent
          ----  ---  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  -----  -------
            1     -     -     3     7     -     -     10    0.85
            2     -     2     4    22     1     2     31    2.63
            3     -     -     1     2     1     -      4    0.34
            4     1     -     1    29     6     1     38    3.23
            5     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
            6     -    12    36   194    22     6    270   22.94
            7     6    17    18    72    21     9    143   12.15
            8     1    15    32   327    23    10    408   34.66
            9     -     1     -     8     -     -      9    0.76
           10     -     1     1     2     1     -      5    0.42
           11     -     -     5    10     3     -     18    1.53
           12     -     -     1     1     -     -      2    0.17
           13     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           14     -     -     1     5     1     -      7    0.59
           15     -     -     2     2     -     1      5    0.42
           16     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           17     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           18     -     -     -     3     -     -      3    0.25
           19     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           20     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           21     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           22     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           23     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           24     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           25     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           26     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           27     -     -     -    19     -     -     19    1.61
           28     -     -     4    58     9     -     71    6.03
           29     -     -     -    13     -     -     13    1.10
           30     -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
           31     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           32     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           33     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           34     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           35     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           36     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           37     -     -     1     7     1     -      9    0.76
           38     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           39     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           40     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           41     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           42     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           43     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           44     -     -     -     2     -     -      2    0.17
           45     -     -     5    13     -     -     18    1.53
           46     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           47     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           48     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           49     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           50     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           51     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           52     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           53     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           54     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           55     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           56     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           57     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           58     -     -     -     1     -     -      1    0.08
           59     -     -     2     1     -     -      3    0.25
           60     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           61     -     -     3     6     -     -      9    0.76
           62     -     -     1     1     -     -      2    0.17
           63     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           64     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           65     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           66     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           67     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           68     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           69     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           70     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           71     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           72     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           73     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           74     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           75     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           76     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           77     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           78     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           79     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           80     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           81     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           82     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           83     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           84     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           85     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           86     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           87     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           88     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           89     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00
           90     -     -     -     -     -     -      0    0.00


Posted using 3830 Score Submittal Forms at: http://www.hornucopia.com/3830score/
______________________________________________
3830 mailing list
3830@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/3830

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • [3830] IARU N5OT(WM5R) SO SSB HP, webform <=