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SS SSB KI3V vs. K6LL Analysis

Subject: SS SSB KI3V vs. K6LL Analysis
From: K6LL@delphi.com (K6LL@delphi.com)
Date: Wed Nov 24 22:30:35 1993
Here is a comparison of K6LL vs. KI3V in SS SSB. Thanks to Rich, KI3V, for
providing his band breakdown and equipment list. Equipment here at K6LL is a
TS-850 and SB-220.


                  KI3V    K6LL    Diff        KI3V           K6LL
Band              QSOs    QSOs    V-LL        ANT            ANT
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
10                374     525     -151        mono@~60'      KT34XA@49'
                                              TH7@102'

15                764     576      188        "                    "
20                387     516     -129        "                    "
                  ---     ---      ---
Daytime Subt'l   1525    1617      -92



40                658     439      219        40-2CD@112'     40-2CD@55' 
75                 98      99       -1        InvVee@102'     Sloper@47' 
                  ---     ---      ---
Night Subt'l      756     538      218


Grand Total      2281    2155      126


My analysis of the above:

1. I think N4KG's article "Higher Is Better, Right?" in the latest NCJ is
   exactly on the mark. I never felt any disadvantage with my low tribander
   during the daytime on 10, 15 or 20. No problem holding a frequency, and
   lots of comments like "boy, are you loud!" On the other hand, I think my
   10 meter propagation conditions may have been better than Rich's. 

2. Rich killed me on 40 meters. I got pushed all over the band and
   could not hold a frequency at all. I heard Rich running stations like
   crazy all Saturday evening on 40M. Somewhere between 55'(my antenna
   height) and 112' (Rich's antenna height) is the signal threshold that
   allows a Western station to hold a frequency on 40 meter SSB. A
   comparison of ground reflection gain at the two heights follows:


Vertical   Approx. skip    112' high       55' high         High ant
Angle      distance        antenna         antenna          advantage
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5          2400 mi (W1)    -3db            -12db            9db
10         1900 mi (W3)     3db             -3db            6db
15         1600 mi (W8)     5db              1db            4db
20         1400 mi (W9)     6db              3db            3db
25         1200 mi          4db              3db            1db
30          900 mi          2db              3db           -1db


Of course, there are a lot of variables that are difficult to evaluate, but
I'm convinced that the high antenna on 40 meters is critical to success at
night, and critical to overall success. I don't think 80 is really important
from way out West. Now, how to get that 40 meter antenna up over 100 feet on
a 70x100 residential lot...


dave
k6ll
k6ll@delphi.com

>From Yuri A. Kurinyi <firm@kodash.chel.su>  Thu Nov 25 06:46:13 1993
From: Yuri A. Kurinyi <firm@kodash.chel.su> (Yuri A. Kurinyi 
<firm@kodash.chel.su>)
Subject: QSL address UA9AM, RZ9AZA.
Message-ID: <ABrI5zi8X5@kodash.chel.su>

Hi, All.

QSL address of UA9AM, UA9AJ and RZ9AZA: P.O.Box 50, Chelyabinsk,
454899, Russia.
Do not enclose the IRC, it's useless in Russia.

I'll be single band (40) in CQWW CW with 3L monoband Yagi.
See ya.

73, Yuri, UA9AM.

>From Keskinen Petri <oh3mep@cc.tut.fi>  Thu Nov 25 09:07:49 1993
From: Keskinen Petri <oh3mep@cc.tut.fi> (Keskinen Petri)
Subject: Market reef (OJ0) on cqww
Message-ID: <9311250907.AA13769@cc.tut.fi>


 > Market Reef:              15:  OJ0:   OH0MA,OH0MB,OH0MD,OJ0;
 
 Just wanted to let You all know, that there will be a station signing
 OH0MB on the contest (cqww cw), and He really is located on Market
 Reef. He will most likely run 40m single band. There will also be 
 Seppo OH1VR (OH3MMM) and He will have serious effort on 80m single.
 I don't know sure which call He will be using, but I think He'll
 be OJ0/OH1VR. There will be also one other guy , running perhaps
 single 15m , but not yet sure if it will be OH2BBF or OH6LI.
 
 Pedition is possible only if WX is permitting, now here is windy and
 temp abt. -5 C .
 
 
 Cu all on contest!
 
 Pete, oh3mep (one of the OH3NE M/S-gang)



>From Sylvan Katz <sylvank@syma.sussex.ac.uk>  Thu Nov 25 09:39:53 1993
From: Sylvan Katz <sylvank@syma.sussex.ac.uk> (Sylvan Katz)
Subject: UK CQWW M/S Station
Message-ID: <17548.9311250939@syma.sussex.ac.uk>


Thanks to all who replied to my request for information about locating a
UK contest station for the CQWW. 

I am going to be working the CQWW CW from a M/S station in Hemel
Hempstead (GB5DX or GB5AA - they were undecided which call to use last
weekend).

I will likely operate Sat 1200-1600 GMT and Sun 0000-0400 GMT. Look
forward to hearing you all.

Sylvan
VE5ZX/G0TZX
                       *** Dr. J. Sylvan Katz *** 
 Science Policy Research Unit, Mantell Building, University of Sussex,
               Falmer, Brighton, East Sussex, UK  BN1 9RF 
                Tel: (273) 686758 ext 3617  Fax: (273) 685865
                                G0TZX & VE5ZX


>From Daniel R. Violette" <Daniel_R._Violette@smtpgty.anatcp.rockwell.com  Thu 
>Nov 25 10:31:19 1993
From: Daniel R. Violette" <Daniel_R._Violette@smtpgty.anatcp.rockwell.com 
(Daniel R. Violette)
Subject: KI6X M/S SS Phone Result
Message-ID: <9310257542.AA754223479@smtpgty.anatcp.rockwell.com>


                            ARRL SWEEPSTAKES 1993
     
     
           Call: KI6X                     Country:
           Mode: SSB                      Category: Multi Single
     
           BAND     QSO    QSO PTS    SECTIONS
     
     
           160        0        0           0
            80      109      218           0
            40      312      624           0
            20      348      696           0
            15      296      592           0
            10        0        0           0
          -----------------------------------
     
          Totals   1065     2130          77  =   164,010
     
     
     Power Output: 1000 watts
     
     Operator List: KI6X, N4EA, WB6JMS, KN6BU
     

>From Lyndon Nerenberg <lyndon@unbc.edu>  Thu Nov 25 19:07:58 1993
From: Lyndon Nerenberg <lyndon@unbc.edu> (Lyndon Nerenberg)
Subject: Yesterday's Ethics
Message-ID: <Pine.3.07.9311251157.G18796-a100000@unbc.edu>

On Wed, 24 Nov 1993, Derek Wills wrote:
 
> If the stakes were higher - e.g. monetary prizes - perhaps we would

Ah, but then you're accepting remuneration for operating an amateur radio
station. This is only legal if you are operating on 5 bands (or more)
simultaneously with all transmitters being driven by the same mic or
keyer. Based on this restriction the multi/multi category could be wiped
off the books, and the multi/single category would not be necessary as W1AW
would win by acclimation every time :-)

--lyndon VE7TCP/VE6BBM


>From oo7@astro.as.utexas.edu (Derek Wills)  Thu Nov 25 21:52:56 1993
From: oo7@astro.as.utexas.edu (Derek Wills) (Derek Wills)
Subject: Trey/HC
Message-ID: <9311252152.AA26675@astro.as.utexas.edu>

Just talked with our fearless leader, who is WN4KKN/HC5 at the
moment (the moment being 2050 UT Nov 25 - he's on 21027).  He
will be doing the contest from HC5K, with the call HD9N (sounds
like a new prefix to me...).  QSL via me.  He says there is a
fair amount of line noise there, and nothing spectacular in the
way of antennas for 80/160, but I'm sure we'll hear him OK.

Dave WD5N may be active from HC8 during the contest, perhaps
with his home call/HC8, perhaps his own HC8 call.

Derek AA5BT

>From wb6cje@thetech.com (Jim rinkert)  Thu Nov 25 22:05:17 1993
From: wb6cje@thetech.com (Jim rinkert) (Jim rinkert)
Subject: CQWW SSB RESULTS FROM VP2EJ
Message-ID: <iJcLDc4w165w@thetech.com>

CALL:  VP2EJ (OP WB6CJE)    CATEGORY:  SINGLE OP AB LOW POWER (75 W)

BAND            QSO'S           ZONES           COUNTRIES

160               0               0                  0

80                72              7                  21

40                798             22                 72

20                843             26                 70

15                1144            27                 81

10                1517            21                 75

TOTALS            4374            103                319

                
                TOTAL SCORE: 4,528,482

EQUIPMENT:      IC 735  75 WATTS
                10/15/20-3ELE TRIBANDER @ 75'
                40-2ELE @ 70'
                80-1/4 SLOPER


Just made it back to CA!!  This was my first attempt at CQWW.  I sure 
learned alot!  I missed many easy multipliers and ended up sleeping for 
about 8 hours.  Oh well, had a good time.

73's  Jim  wb6cje@thetech.com

--
wb6cje@thetech.com (Jim rinkert)
The Tech BBS (408) 279-7199 San Jose, CA

>From Gary Sutcliffe <gary.sutcliffe@mixcom.mixcom.com>  Fri Nov 26 13:55:04 
>1993
From: Gary Sutcliffe <gary.sutcliffe@mixcom.mixcom.com> (Gary Sutcliffe)
Subject: SS phone
Message-ID: <9311261355.AA03155@mixcom.mixcom.com>

W9XT, single op, high power phone:
  1001 QSOs, 77 mults  16 hours

-- 
 Gary Sutcliffe  - W9XT             Unified Microsystems (414) 644-9036
 ppvvpp@MIXCOM.COM                  PO Box 133, Slinger WI 53086


>From robert penneys <penneys@freezer.cns.udel.edu>  Fri Nov 26 15:56:56 1993
From: robert penneys <penneys@freezer.cns.udel.edu> (robert penneys)
Subject: Delaware defects for CQWW
Message-ID: <9311261556.AA09251@freezer.cns.udel.edu>


WN3K will again defect for CQWW CW to N2MM; ops N2MM, WB2R, WN3K m/s

so    GO FRC!!!

CU tonite  Bob 

>From Brian Bogh <0006125879@mcimail.com>  Fri Nov 26 16:50:00 1993
From: Brian Bogh <0006125879@mcimail.com> (Brian Bogh)
Subject: ss phone
Message-ID: <52931126165025/0006125879NA2EM@mcimail.com>

N7LOX 93 ss phone score: Low power: 822 qso 76 sections 124944 missed ve1.

>From H. LAWRENCE SERRA" <72750.3620@CompuServe.COM  Fri Nov 26 19:40:42 1993
From: H. LAWRENCE SERRA" <72750.3620@CompuServe.COM (H. LAWRENCE SERRA)
Subject: SS PH Score List
Message-ID: <931126194041_72750.3620_FHG57-3@CompuServe.COM>

Could someone please send me a copy of '93 SS PH score list? I can't
seem to get it from the "usual suspects." Tks, Larry N6AZE



>From H. LAWRENCE SERRA" <72750.3620@CompuServe.COM  Sat Nov 27 06:05:23 1993
From: H. LAWRENCE SERRA" <72750.3620@CompuServe.COM (H. LAWRENCE SERRA)
Subject: Cancel Request for '93 SS PH Scores
Message-ID: <931127060522_72750.3620_FHG22-2@CompuServe.COM>

Cancel N6AZE request for '93 SS PH scores. Got them from Dave K6LL. TKS
Larry N6AZE



>From bhorn@netcom.com (Bruce Horn)  Sun Nov 28 03:43:17 1993
From: bhorn@netcom.com (Bruce Horn) (Bruce Horn)
Subject: Rarity of Sections in SS
Message-ID: <199311280343.TAA05707@mail.netcom.com>


Thought it would be interesting to determine the relative rarity of
sections during Sweepstakes.  In order to get a geographically unbiased
view of the availability of sections, I totaled the number of QSOs reported
from each section during the 1992 Sweepstakes.  Obviously, some hams
participate but do not submit logs, but I can't think of a more complete
way of analyzing the availability of sections without having access to
all of the submitted logs.  (Maybe the ARRL could conduct such an
analysis on submitted logs !?)  I looked at the 36 most likely candidates
in deriving this info.  Remember this is based on the 1992 Sweepstakes results
as published in QST.

CW 10 Rarest Sections:
 1 NWT/YU   328 Qs
 2 AB       383 Qs
 3 AK       858 Qs
 4 SD     1,203 Qs
 5 MAR    1,290 Qs
 6 PAC    1,314 Qs
 7 EWA    1,365 Qs
 8 MS     1,481 Qs
 9 PR     1,646 Qs
10 PQ     1,712 Qs

Surprised by the rarity of Alberta.  This may be the result of gross
underreporting.

Phone 10 Rarest Sections:
 1 AK     1,339 Qs
 2 MAR    1,399 Qs
 3 PAC    1,547 Qs
 4 NWT/YU 1,592 Qs
 5 PQ     1,661 Qs
 6 PR     1,883 Qs
 7 AB     2,106 Qs
 8 DE     2,184 Qs
 9 SF     2,218 Qs
10 WV     2,250 Qs

This is the type of thing one does while in a hotel room in Chicago
while the rest of you are ionizing the ether during CQWW-CW.  Hope all
of you had a great time.

If anyone is really interested, I have the results for the 2nd 10 in
each mode.

73 de Bruce, WA7BNM

>From long@empire.ece.ucsb.edu (Steve Long)  Mon Nov 29 00:37:52 1993
From: long@empire.ece.ucsb.edu (Steve Long) (Steve Long)
Subject: cqww N6DX score
Message-ID: <9311290037.AA17084@empire.ece.ucsb.edu>


Here is the breakdown for the CQ WW CW Multi-Multi effort at N6DX:

Band    Q's     Zones   Countries
160     225     22      37
80      331     33      76
40      933     38      129
20      1121    38      123
15      581     31      96
10      170     23      48

Total Points : 6.1M

No antenna disasters this year, and fun was had by all at "Rainbow
Ridge" 

>From Bill H Parry <bill@tenet.edu>  Mon Nov 29 00:39:17 1993
From: Bill H Parry <bill@tenet.edu> (Bill H Parry)
Subject: CQ WW CW TEST
Message-ID: <Pine.3.03.9311281817.A4502-8100000@Joyce-Perkins.tenet.edu>


15 SINGLE OP SINGLE BAND

QSO    ZONES    COUNTRIES   POINTS
713     32        113       288,840

LOTS OF JA'S AND QRN!

BILL, W5VX




>From Steve Merchant <merchant@crl.com>  Mon Nov 29 00:47:22 1993
From: Steve Merchant <merchant@crl.com> (Steve Merchant)
Subject: CQWW CW AG6D Flash Score
Message-ID: <Pine.3.87.9311281622.A22595-0100000@crl.crl.com>

AG6D M/S CQWW CW:

2335  156  376     3,340,428

Ops AG6D, N4TQO, K2MM, WA6BXH, N6IP, AA6KX, KG6GF

Breakdown later -- 73, Steve N4TQO


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