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[3830] ARRLDX CW N5DX(@N2QV) SOAB HP

To: 3830@contesting.com
Subject: [3830] ARRLDX CW N5DX(@N2QV) SOAB HP
From: webform@b4h.net
Reply-to: aluminumtubing@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2017 13:26:05 +0000
List-post: <3830@contesting.com">mailto:3830@contesting.com>
ARRL DX Contest, CW

Call: N5DX
Operator(s): N5DX
Station: N2QV

Class: SOAB HP
QTH: NY
Operating Time (hrs): 45.5
Radios: SO2R
Remote Operation

Summary:
 Band  QSOs  Mults
-------------------
  160:  189    61
   80:  485    76
   40: 1400   102
   20: 1552   100
   15:  686    91
   10:   21    16
-------------------
Total: 4333   446  Total Score = 5,797,554

Club: 

Comments:

That was fun!  

I operated remotely from the comforts of Arkansas using the N2QV station
located in New York.  Internet connection and audio were rock solid for the
entire 48 hours.  It's always a welcomed adventure traveling to New York and
operating on site, but being able to pilot a world class east coast station
from my home in W5 land is just priceless.  Little things like the dog bounding
into the shack at 3:00 in the morning to play tug or having food delivered by my
smiling wife really make this feel like it is to good to be true.

A nightmare scenario came to fruition just two hours into the contest when the
amplifier quit working.  I called Scott, WU2X, and told him that I could either
start the contest over with a new call sign and operate low power or just quit. 
Scott had a third option.  Without hesitation he told me to continue operating
low power while he traveled two hours to the station to swap out the bad amp.  
My gut feeling was this sucks and the contest is over.  It's easy to have a
similar feeling after having one bad hole early in a round of golf.  Letting
that one bad hole affect your mental state can turn a bad hole into a bad
round.  I pounded away on 40 and 80 meters running high in the band while
working the second radio.  Conditions were in truly great shape on 160 with
many one call EU contacts going into the log while running just 100 watts.

At 0400z the new amp was hooked up and ready to be tested.  The right radio
looked good, but the left radio just wouldn't key the amplifier.  For those of
you keeping score.  Amp 1 failure was a snap hook out of bounds off the tee on
number two.  WU2X offering to replace the busted amp was a hole out on number
three from 100 yards for an eagle.  Radio one not keying the new amplifier was
a lost ball off the tee and then a three putt on number four for a quadruple
bogey.  

The log shows a gap from 0415z-0544z during the amp replacement and eventual
fixing of the radio one keying issue.  An hour and a half of prime run time
lost on the low bands.  To make matters worse the 40 meter tower becomes stuck
to the SE and will not turn.  Shank from the fairway leading to a double bogey
on number 8.  I assumed this meant no 40 meter EU run, but even with the
antenna stuck towards the Caribbean I had a slow steady stream of EU stations
call me on 40 meters.  Close out the front nine with a 20 foot birdie putt.  

Local, do everything handy man, super hero, Rich saves the day by turning the
40 meter tower towards Europe.  Start the back nine off with a two putt birdie
on number 10.  Unfortunately I can't rotate the antennas for the remainder of
the contest and the stack will have to remain fixed on Europe.  Bogey on number
11.  But wait, you are using a two high stack of monster beams from the east
coast.  Hole in one on 12.

The high band EU runs are just awesome and they help to alleviate the pain from
night one.  Ten meters is practically dead throughout the entire contest.  A few
Caribbean or South America guys popped up early in the day but there were hour
long stretches when not one signal could be found on the band.  I figure this
bodes poorly for my friends and family in ZF land.  

20 meters starts to close early in the afternoon.  When MI4I calls at 1950z it
seems like a good time to move both him and my run frequency.  It's a
successful pass  to 40 meters (birdie on 15) and at 3:00 pm Eastern time the 40
meter EU run begins.  

End of day one: 2607 x 368 for 2.8 million points.

The low bands sound great and I'm hoping to make up for the debacle from the
first night.  Some really fun stuff calls in during the 0200z  hour on 40
meters: UK7, VU2, and UA9.  160 is also sounding hot with some EU stations
peaking at 10 over 9 on the meter.  The rate slows significantly around 0900z. 
20 meters isn't awake and since my 40 meter antennas can't rotate I have no shot
of running or working any of the Asia activity.  I can hear weak JA stations and
AH2R, but they can't hear me.  I force myself to take a nap from 1015z-1045z.

Conditions felt worse the second day on the high bands.  Both 20 and 15 opened
later.  There also seemed to be fewer zone 16 stations on 15 meters the second
day.  It felt like I lingered to long 20 meters but 15 just didn't sound good. 
It was exciting to finally have a couple of VU stations call me on 20 meters
during the 1300z hour.  HZ and KL7 also called for new mults during this time.

Like all 48 hour events, my ability to copy call signs accurately is
significantly degraded during sleep deprived states. I'm not sure how to
improve this other than taking more naps during the contest or practicing Morse
Runner at 3:00 in the morning.  The last four hours of a contest always bring
excitement and renewed focus.  I carved up the second radio bandmap into 10 kHz
segments and filled each segment with a complete list of all the running
stations.  Sort of like being my own personal skimmer.   It's time consuming
but the technique seems to work.  Over the course of an hour I find YV, XE, CM,
and HR5 on 15 meters for new mults.  All very weak and they likely would not
have been discovered with a casual scroll of the dial.  That's three birdies in
a row on holes 15, 16, and 17(this analogy is fading fast but at this point it
must be seen to its conclusion).

With 15 minutes left in the contest the mult count on 20 meters sits at 98. 
It's not looking like hitting triple digits will be possible, but an easy one
falls into my lap with CE2 going into the log, number 99.  Then 100 is VK4
coming in long path.  Hit the par five finishing hole in two and make the eagle
putt! 

A special thanks to Scott and Rich for taking time out of their weekend to fix
the problems that popped up.  It's great getting texts from Tariq throughout
the contest encouraging me to keep going, including inspiring Shakespeare video
links!  These guys put in all the hard work and the result is I get to do
something that I enjoy.  

Thanks for all of the Qs and a special thanks to all of the gracious mults that
agreed to move.

73,
Kevin N5DX



Cabrillo Statistics           (Version 10g)           by K5KA & N6TV
http://bit.ly/cabstat

CALLSIGN: K5GO
CONTEST: ARRL-DX-CW
CATEGORY-OPERATOR: SINGLE-OP
CATEGORY-TRANSMITTER: ONE
OPERATORS: N5DX
==> CTY.DAT not found.  Country Stats will not be produced.


-------------- Q S O   R a t e   S u m m a r y ---------------------
Hour     160     80     40     20     15     10    Rate Total    Pct
--------------------------------------------------------------------
0000       0      7    130      7      0      0    144    144    3.3
0100       0     62     80      0      0      0    142    286    6.6
0200      21     32     20      0      0      0     73    359    8.3
0300       2     35     18      7      0      0     62    421    9.7
0400       6      5      0      0      0      0     11    432   10.0
0500      18     22      0      0      0      0     40    472   10.9
0600      33     67      0      0      0      0    100    572   13.2
0700      12     47      0      0      0      0     59    631   14.6
0800       1      4    102      0      0      0    107    738   17.0
0900       2      5     50      1      0      0     58    796   18.4
1000       2     11      5     38      0      0     56    852   19.7
1100       1      0      1    177      0      0    179   1031   23.8
1200       0      0      0    206      0      0    206   1237   28.5
1300       0      0      0     80     69      0    149   1386   32.0
1400       0      0      0      2    154      4    160   1546   35.7
1500       0      0      0      0    157      4    161   1707   39.4
1600       0      0      0    106     33      1    140   1847   42.6
1700       0      0      0     91     17      1    109   1956   45.1
1800       0      0      0    101      0      1    102   2058   47.5
1900       0      0     15     49      6      0     70   2128   49.1
2000       0      0    120      2      7      0    129   2257   52.1
2100       0      1    127      0      3      0    131   2388   55.1
2200       0     19     99      1      2      0    121   2509   57.9
2300       0     83      3     11      0      0     97   2606   60.1
0000       7     12     43      3      0      0     65   2671   61.6
0100       1      9     30      0      0      0     40   2711   62.6
0200       6      2     42      0      0      0     50   2761   63.7
0300      20      8     11      0      0      0     39   2800   64.6
0400      35     11      4      0      0      0     50   2850   65.8
0500       6     15     48      0      0      0     69   2919   67.4
0600      12      3     55      0      0      0     70   2989   69.0
0700       0      1     94      0      0      0     95   3084   71.2
0800       0      0     85      0      0      0     85   3169   73.1
0900       0      0     52      0      0      0     52   3221   74.3
1000       0      1      3      1      0      0      5   3226   74.5
1100       2      1      0     89      0      0     92   3318   76.6
1200       0      0      1    146      0      0    147   3465   80.0
1300       0      0      0    118      9      0    127   3592   82.9
1400       0      0      0    107      3      0    110   3702   85.4
1500       0      0      0     31    107      1    139   3841   88.6
1600       0      0      0      0     84      6     90   3931   90.7
1700       0      0      0     61     19      0     80   4011   92.6
1800       0      0      0     67      4      1     72   4083   94.2
1900       0      0      9     27      7      1     44   4127   95.2
2000       0      0     48      7      0      1     56   4183   96.5
2100       0      0     34     10      0      0     44   4227   97.6
2200       0     13     52      0      5      0     70   4297   99.2
2300       2      9     19      6      0      0     36   4333  100.0
------------------------------------------------------
Total    189    485   1400   1552    686     21   4333

Gross QSOs=4498        Dupes=165        Net QSOs=4333

Unique callsigns worked = 2550

The best 60 minute rate was 206/hour from 1200 to 1259
The best 30 minute rate was 218/hour from 1214 to 1243
The best 10 minute rate was 246/hour from 1217 to 1226

The best 1 minute rates were:
 7 QSOs/minute    1 times.
 6 QSOs/minute    1 times.
 5 QSOs/minute   21 times.
 4 QSOs/minute  153 times.
 3 QSOs/minute  445 times.
 2 QSOs/minute  716 times.
 1 QSOs/minute  836 times.

There were 793 bandchanges and 389 (9.0%) probable 2nd radio QSOs.

Number of letters in callsigns
Letters  # worked
-----------------
   3        52
   4       977
   5      1913
   6      1345
   7        12
   8        17
   9        11
  10         6

------------ M u l t i p l i e r   S u m m a r y ------------
Mult     160     80     40     20     15     10  Total    Pct
-------------------------------------------------------------
         189    485   1400   1552    686     21   4333  100.0
------------------------------------------------------
Total    189    485   1400   1552    686     21   4333

Multi-band QSOs
---------------
1 bands    1507
2 bands     571
3 bands     284
4 bands     117
5 bands      62
6 bands       9

The following stations were worked on 6 bands:

8P5A        PJ4X        P40R        TI5W        VP2MVV      D4C         
TO7A        CW5W        5J0NA       

------- S i n g l e   B a n d   Q S O s ------
Band    160     80     40     20     15     10
----------------------------------------------
QSOs     57    136    505    637    168      4


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