ARRL INTERNATIONAL DX CONTEST -- 1999
Call: K5ZD (W2SC op) Country: United States
Mode: CW Category: Single Operator
BAND QSO COUNTRIES
160 44 29 GP
80 218 54 Inverted V
40 723 70 402CD
20 815 77 5/5, TH7
15 1044 89 5/5, TH7
10 825 85 6L, TH7
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Totals 3669 404 = 4,446,828
This year's ARRL DX story begins at 5AM Wednesday morning when I wake
up to catch a flight to California for an important business review
with my pseudo board of directors. Many days of preparation go into
the meeting and it goes well but is a very intense 5 hours. When it
is over, I get a page offering me tickets to the Warriors game, but I
pass in recognition of a big weekend ahead. The next morning, I am up
again at 5 AM for the cross country trip to K5ZD's and arrive in
Boston at about 4:30 PM. The car rental counter and rush hour traffic
are relatively painless and I get to Randy's station at about 6:30.
After the CQWW SSB debacle, I was determined to be ready for this
contest and was pleased that Randy had almost everything working
before I even arrived. A couple weeks earlier he picked up my AL 1200
from my old station for use with the second radio and had set up the
two radio switching box I built last summer. Randy debugged the radio
interface box for the second radio and I replayed the traditional
ritual of remembering which LPT bit controls Radio 1/Radio 2 in which
version of CT. In relatively short order, everything was working and
seemed ready to go and it was time for some desperately needed sleep.
After being in bed for a few minutes, I hear some rustling but figure
it is just the dog in the hall. The next thing I know something is
hitting me on the head and it turns out to be one of Randy's cats. I
reach for the cat but it runs and hides. A while later, I wake up to
a cat standing on me. This time I grabbed the cat, put it in the hall
and went back to bed. Minutes later, another cat jumps on me. That
cat was also captured, put in the hall, and I returned to bed for a
good night's sleep.
The next morning I was checking the bands for propagation in light of
the disturbed conditions that were predicted. The bands indeed were
as bad as the numbers would indicate. I started to set up CT (cty
file, master file, etc) when I discovered that I could not key the
radios. It appeared that CT could not talk to LPT2, and LPT1 was
already used for the Radio1/Radio 2 switching. Several calls to Randy
led to the conclusion that the port was disabled in DOS and neither of
us knew how to turn it back on. Much to Randy's displeasure, I
decided to take apart his W1WEF keying interface and merge the radio
control and CW bits and use LPT1 for both functions, which worked fine
all weekend. As much as we try to not have to rewire the station to
suit our individual tastes, it never works out that way.
It is now around 17Z and I have some personal errands to run as my old
house in Massachusetts has just been put up for sale and there are a
number of things to resolve. I return around 1830Z to get a nap
before the contest. When I wake up, I check my messages at work and
things are relatively quiet. I make a mental note that this is the
first time I can remember that there were no burning crises keeping me
on the phone until minutes before the contest. As I sit in front of
the radios, it seems like everything is ready. My only concern now is
myself. I have not operated CW since last ARRL at 8P9JG and the time
before that was the 1997 ARRL DX. I felt very rusty when listening on
the bands and, particularly, when sending. I had not sent code with a
paddle in two years. I did not think running would be a problem (as
it wasn't from 8P) but I figured that S&P'ing on the second radio
would be an issue. Nonetheless, I would just make the best of it and
hope it came back quickly.
With conditions the way they were, there was little alternative other
than to start on 40. When the contest started, 40 meter signals did
not sound anywhere near as strong as they had earlier in the day and
the response to my initial CQ's were sporadic but still decent. After
30 minutes, I had 50 Q's but did not feel very strong. From there the
rate dropped and I started combing 20 and 15 for multipliers. The
first hour ended with an unimpressive 78 Q's. The next hour was spent
multiplier chasing combined with relatively unproductive CQ'ing on 40
and netted an anemic 68 Q's.
In the next hour I tried 80 for the first time, and it was miserable.
Signals seemed very weak and the noise was deafening, even with the
beverage. 160 was not much better as the noise was equally bad on top
band. While the Caribbean stations were especially loud, the noise
blanketed all but the strongest Europeans. It was clearly going to be
a long night on the low bands. My apologies to the stations calling
on 80 that I simply could not pull through the noise.
A couple hours into the contest, the second radio started to act
strange. At first I thought I had serious interstation interference
but the problem persisted even when I was not sending. I knew that
Randy had been having problems with the radio but never did it impact
a contest. Throughout the night, the radio would work some times but
not others and I could not figure out the pattern. I more or less
resigned myself to the fact that it would be a one radio weekend.
However, around 0730Z Randy stopped by before going to bed and I told
him about the radio. He was surprised since the problem usually
dissipates after a warm-up period, but he added a critical bit of
information, it was only a problem on 20. This explains why it seemed
to work intermittently. With that information, if I ran on the second
radio on all bands but 20, I could once again use two radios.
In contrast to most of the night, 40 turned productive around 7Z and
Europeans were runnable to 9Z. The next 90 minutes were spent chasing
multipliers and was capped with a first ever (for me) JA "run" on 40
up to 1030Z. At this point I had a disappointing 588 Q's, mostly on
40, and it was time to see if the high bands would rebound from the
storm.
Twenty was hot from the first CQ and was the start of 9 consecutive
100 hours in which 1200 stations were worked. After a quick 152 Q's,
listening on the second radio, signals were strong on 15 and it was
time to jump even though the rate meter was over 170/hr. 15 proved to
be even more intense and the subsequent 60 minutes were a Qrate best
of 186/hr. 181 Q's later, 1235Z, 10 started to sound good and I
jumped 10 with rate meter once again hovering around 180. I was
nervous about this transition since ten did not play well at all in
the CQWW SSB and the new 6 element at 25 feet was unproven.
Ten performed reasonably well. It was not the frenzy of 20 and 15 but
was consistent and I finished the 11Z and 12Z hours with 173 and 179
Q's respectively. It was my best single and consecutive hours ever
from a stateside QTH. I could not maintain the pace on 10 and the
rate slowly dropped, but was still respectable. After 530 Q's the
band seemed to be losing some volume and despite still being runnable,
it seemed time to go back to 15 so I QSY'd at 1538Z. Rate was still
strong at about 2/minute and at 1635Z I made my first second radio QSO
in nearly 6 hours. With more second radio Q's finding their way into
the log I went back to 20 at 1839Z. I remember contests from here
where I made 2/3 of all Q's on twenty, but this time I felt that I was
neglecting the band. The rate picked up again but my string of 100+
hours was snapped at 20Z with a 97 hour.
At 2140Z it was off to 40 meters to grab the early 40 meter opening
but it was not to be. Two separate trips to 40 were not fruitful as
the usually big hours never materialized. At 2311Z I worked a JA on
10 but did not hear much else and could not get a run going. However,
when tuning on 15 I heard a pile of JA's calling W1WEF so I tried to
run a few JA's, while simultaneously hoping for some good multipliers
to call in. As it turned out, there was an excellent opening and I
ran off 170 stations plus another dozen on the second radio. This was
easily my best JA run ever and had the bonus of HL, BA, DU, and KL7
thrown in.
At the half way point I had 2121 Q's and 321 multipliers for just over
2 million points. The high band totals looked good but I had less
than 100 Q's on 80. Also, the multiplier totals were pretty poor and
I was very concerned. As it turned out, I would never get my 40 and
20 meter multipliers to a reasonable level. Randy has a rule of thumb
that the final score is two times the 24 hour score plus 10% which
would put my estimated final score at 4.4 million.
As the second day began, I knew I had to regain ground on 80 and was
hoping for better propagation on 160 as this is a strong band from
here and would give me a chance to get some extra multipliers. As it
turned out, the noise levels on 80 and 160 were down dramatically but
signal levels were still not that good. I spent the next six hours
slugging it out mostly on 80 and 160 with moderate success. However,
the 7Z and 8Z hours on 40 were even better than the night before. 9Z
on the second day is never a pleasant hour and this year it was no
different with my only sub-10 hour of the contest. At this time I
debated whether to to take one of my usual 15 minute naps but decided
to just push on.
The Sunday rotation went as smoothly as the day before and 11Z, 12Z,
and 13Z all produced 100+ hours. At 1555Z, it seemed like it was time
to return to 15 meters but, upon returning to the band, I just could
not get anything going. A similar event occurred in the CQWW SSB
where I lost propagation on 15 about this time. I qsy'd back to 10
for another hour before returning to a healthier 15 meters. The
remainder of the contest was spent running on 20, looking to add to my
lowly multiplier total, and hoping for a good stint on 40 before the
contest was over. Unfortunately, 40 never produced for me and I ran
out the contest on 20.
When the contest was over I finished with 3669 Q's, a new record for
me, and 404 multipliers, which was sure to be problematic. I also
felt great despite being up for the full 48 hours. I think the lack
of pre-contest stress made a definite difference and I did not feel
mentally or physically tired. While I was hardly 100%, it was, by far
the best I have ever felt after one of these events.
When the contest was over, it was time for the 3830 ritual. However,
the frequency was busy and the inhabitants were not eager to cede the
frequency. This only served to incense a pack of loud, tired
contesters and chaos ensued. Randy and I got a huge laugh out of mild
mannered K3ZO mixing it up with these guys. Even K1AR was yapping at
them. In the end, after spending 48 hours operating with 250 Hz of
separation, a clear frequency was not found and the scores were not
taken. In fairness to the rag chewers, had they plopped down on my
run frequency during the contest, I would have been just aggressive
about running them off.
About a half hour after the contest ended, the phone rings and a very
tired sounding K1DG is on the other end. He drops the surprising news
that he is also SOAB and wants to know my score, having already talked
to W4AN and N2NT. It turns out that we are virtually tied with only
1% separating our scores. In a few minutes it was clear that I really
hurt myself by not aggressively moving multipliers between bands.
Similarly, I suspect Doug wished he did not take three hours sleep.
Nonetheless we had a good conversation and I hung up thinking that I
sure felt better than he sounded.
When the cone of silence is lifted from K1ZM's score, I suspect that
he will be the winner and I offer my congratulations. It was also
great to see many class op's return to SOAB and dramatically increase
the competition.
All in all, despite the rust and mild disappointment in my score, I
had a great deal of fun. I would like to thank Randy (K5ZD) for the
use of his fine station and his wife Connie and son Andrew for their
tolerance and hospitality. Also, thanks to the other fine operators
who continually raise the bar on the competition and, especially, all
of the stations who took the time to give me a QSO.
73 and I also love this game,
Tom W2SC
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