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Not N4BO

Subject: Not N4BO
From: EDWOODS@PACTIME1.SDCRC.PacBell.COM (EDWOODS@PACTIME1.SDCRC.PacBell.COM)
Date: Wed Nov 3 16:27:44 1993
I've known all along that I had an evil twin whose call was N4BO.  He
always seems to follow me around in different CW contests.  I've tried
to wear garlic bulbs around my neck and hold up a silver UHF "T"
connector, but I can't keep him away.

Why did I let my license lapse in 1980 and give up K6GV???

I think I will change my call to W1AW and my name to TOM.

If you hear N4BO on in Sweepstakes, try chasing him away by adding
several dits to the third character in the call.  I would appreciate it.

Eric, NV6O

now that I have that taken care of, how do I go about fixing the problem
of SV section (Sacramento Valley) vs SCV (Santa Clara Valley) and SJV
(San Joaquin Valley) and how come there are no Valley Girls in any of
these valleys?  Oh, the philosphy involved in contesting..........


>From k2mm@MasPar.COM (John Zapisek)  Thu Nov  4 02:21:12 1993
From: k2mm@MasPar.COM (John Zapisek) (John Zapisek)
Subject: Not N4BO
Message-ID: <9311040221.AA22311@greylock.local>

Eric:  It's worse.  After writing up how KD5PJ and WN3K busted your call so
severely, a late log came in from Bruce/AA6KX.  His log had only one N4BO
but no NV6O's.  But because you both busted each other's calls, the software
couldn't match up the QSO's, and you both got credit for the busted Q:

 aa6kx   19 id       ca n4bo    25 geo      ca 0x2000 -ok-

 nv6o    25 geo      ca aa5kx   19 id       ca 0x6000 -ok- Unique

Gonna have to think hard about how to fix this.  Seems this log-checking
business is a lot more subtle than I thought!  73.  --John/K2MM

>From Wilbert Knol <wk@frc.maf.govt.nz>  Thu Nov  4 03:22:41 1993
From: Wilbert Knol <wk@frc.maf.govt.nz> (Wilbert Knol)
Subject: ZL2K score CQWW-SSB 93
Message-ID: <Pine.3.05.9311041541.A2710-b100000@sam.frc.maf.govt.nz>


 
        QSOs    Zones   Countries
160     26      5       10
80      203     23      33
40      739     32      73
20      839     30      101
15      3019    34      111
10      1433    18      26
TOTAL   6259    142     354
 
    Score:  8,912,624

Station  : ZL2K
QTH      : nr Wellington, ZL
Class    : multi/multi
QSL info : via buro to ZL2IR
Antennas : 7 el monoband yagi (10)
           5 el monoband yagi (15)
           3 el monoband yagi (20)
           2 el monoband yagi (40)
           dipoles        (80,160)
Software : CT (with help from the ZL2NX cluster)
Ops      : zl2ami zl2bi zl1aiz zl2mf zl2ir zl2bsj zl2iq zl4oy zl2ulg
           and others who I can't remember the callsigns of... 

Ten went surprisingly well, as did 15. Would any of our Pacific compe-
titors care to post?  Our 20 m  signal needs improving, there may be a
problem with the yagi  for  that band, which will be sorted out before 
the  CQWW-CW.  Catch  you in  the  real  contest...


Wilbert, ZL2BSJ.


Wilbert Knol       MAFFISH Marine  Research,       Wellington,  New Zealand.
Usenet: wk@frc.maf.govt.nz  PACKET:ZL2BSJ@ZL2WA.NZL.OC  AMPR:[44.147.180.88]
AX25, NET/ROM, TCP/IP mailbox 146.625  MHz Wellington Data,  144.650 Simplex 


>From Doug Grant <0006008716@mcimail.com>  Thu Nov  4 05:52:00 1993
From: Doug Grant <0006008716@mcimail.com> (Doug Grant)
Subject: No subject
Message-ID: <73931104055237/0006008716NA3EM@mcimail.com>

CQWW SSB Score Rumors from 3830 and first-pass on CQ-CONTEST...





Single Operator

K1AR 3302-146-550 6.7M at K1EA

K5ZD 2783-151-525 5.4M   (back in W1)

N6BV/1 2672-134-503 4.8M

K3ZO 2380-137-444 3.9M

W1PH 1850-131-441 3.0M

W2HPF 1767-128-424 2.68M

K2ZJ 1776-122-416 2.6M WA2LCC opr.

K6XO   459-86-169   339K



Low Power

K2SG 1273-114-385  1.76M

N8II 1310-112-367  1.76M

WS1A 898-95-315  1.02M

AA1AK  315-38-117   138K



KH6GMP 1171-70-117  625K



Single Operator Assisted

K2WK 1960-149-552  3.9M

AA2DU 2054-130-500  3.54M at K1VR

KC1F 1811-130-452  3.0M

W2HPF 1767-128-424  2.68M

KE2NL 1459-138-491  2.6M

K1KP  1520-132-451  2.5M

KF2O 1239-129-477 2M

WI2T 1024-122-458   1.6M

W0OSK  547-108-222 486K



CH3EJ 4676-157-599 8.6M



Multi-Single



KC1XX  3418-162-642  7,76M 

N3RS  2594-159-646  5.84M

K1DG 2580-159-633  5.76M

K1NG  2448-161-612  5.3M

K4JPD  4.5M

K8AZ  2083-154-596  4.3M

K2WI 3.5M

K8LX 1719-146-495 3.05M

AB5K/0  1870-141-400   2.565M

W0CP   1710-143-416   2.531M

K9UWA  1136-144-494  1.9M 

K3CP 1012-125-464  1.54M

WA1G 1.6M

AA8U  1261-130-352  1.5M



PJ1B 22.5M (new record)



Multi-multi 

N2RM  6638-174-747  16.3M

W3LPL  6234-175-737  15+ M

K2TR  5394-164-692  12.5M

K3LR 4612-163-686 10.7M

W4MYA 2943-166-612  6.1M

KY1H 3471-146-573  6.1M

K3ANS 5.2M

K1RX  2690-138-558  5.2M

N6AW   2575-152-405  3.8M



EA9UK  36M



80M

WA2AOG 98-13-48

NV3V 56-10-27



40M

K1MM 275-34-100



20M

W1XE/0  770-36-120  310K



15M

N1CC 870-31-129 400K

WB9YXY 1023-32-137

K1UO 1601-36-150



10M

KM1H 317-30-142





/UPLOAD OFF

>From Wirzenius Jari <HATJWI@HATMAIL.HATFI1.msgw.kone.com>  Thu Nov  4 17:16:00 
>1993
From: Wirzenius Jari <HATJWI@HATMAIL.HATFI1.msgw.kone.com> (Wirzenius Jari)
Subject: CQ WW SSB
Message-ID: <2CD93926@msgw.kone.com>


For the first time ever I decided to take part into the CQ WW SSB  contest 
so seriously that I am going to send something else than check log. But this 
is not the whole story. I took part in low power single band 160 m, 
unassisted category. Spending some 10 hours working contest, my score was:

QSO's     QSO points     Zones     Countries Total points
73   73        3    23        1898

I did not work any DX, although I could here lot more than I could work. The 
stations I could here were VP2EC (RS=55), 4X4NJ(59), HZ1AB(59), TA2BK(57) 
and some UA9 stations. It must be so that the QRM level in central Europe is 
so high that almost everyone has trouble in listening. I heard lot of 
stations which I could not work from southern Europe and their signals were 
59+20dB. They must suffer from poor front-end in their receivers, but most 
probably my station is suffering from poor signal or it is both.

I felt frustrated because nobody heard me and that is why I did not work 
through the Saturday Sunday night. So I spent most of the weekend with my 
family.

My station is FT-980, power used in 160m 60 W output to a full size 
inverted-dipole. The feedpoint was only 15 meters (50 feet) above the 
ground, so that is probably the one and only reason for my very poor signal. 
I must do something to that. The reason I choose to work 160 m was that my 
station is still under construction and I don't have properly operational 
antennas for other bands and my linear is suffering from parasitic 
oscillations.
And somebody was talking about insane contesting.....

73's Jari, OH2BVE

P.S. Does anyone in this forum know, what has happened to DX-forum (I-net)? 
I have not received anything from there since last week.

>From blunt@arrl.org (Billy Lunt KR1R)  Thu Nov  4 13:24:00 1993
From: blunt@arrl.org (Billy Lunt KR1R) (Billy Lunt KR1R)
Subject: SS Records
Message-ID: <2608@bl>

ARRL NOVEMBER SWEEPSTAKES         CURRENT THROUGH 1992 CONTEST


  SINGLE OPERATOR HIGH POWER  N4RJ-(KM9P,op)    220,836    92  CW   SS
  SINGLE OPERATOR LOW POWER   N5RZ              187,264    91  CW   SS
  SINGLE OPERATOR QRP         NF7P              121,352    91  CW   SS
  MULTIOPERATOR               W6GO              188,188    91  CW   SS


  SINGLE OPERATOR HIGH POWER  KP2A-(N2IC,op)    398,088    88  PH   SS
  SINGLE OPERATOR LOW POWER   K4XS              290,598    91  PH   SS
  SINGLE OPERATOR QRP         K7SS              169,400    91  PH   SS
  MULTIOPERATOR               AA5B              376,684    90  PH   SS


Division Records

SINGLE OPERATOR HIGH POWER, CW

Atlantic         K3LR              207,746     91    CW   SS
Central          W9RE              185,878     92    CW   SS
Dakota           N0AT              187,100     91    CW   SS
Delta            W5WMU-(K5GA,op)   209,440     92    CW   SS
Great Lakes      K8CC              182,490     91    CW   SS
Hudson           W2RQ              184,030     92    CW   SS
Midwest          K4VX/0-(AA9AK,op) 197,890     91    CW   SS
New England      K1TO              195,320     92    CW   SS
Northwestern     N6TR/7            208,054     92    CW   SS
Pacific          N6UR-(KR6X,op)    196,042     92    CW   SS
Roanoke          AA4NC             174,944     91    CW   SS
Rocky Mountain   K0RF-(W0UA,op)    204,358     91    CW   SS
Southeastern     N4RJ-(KM9P,op)    220,836     92    CW   SS
Southwestern     K6LL              199,430     91    CW   SS
West Gulf        N5AU-(WN4KKN,op)  215,600     92    CW   SS
Canada           VE3EJ-(K5ZD,op)   206,822     92    CW   SS

SINGLE OPERATOR HIGH POWER, PH

Atlantic         K3LR-(WR3G,op)    268,268     91    PH   SS
Central          AG9A              273,042     90    PH   SS
Dakota           WB0O              337,722     90    PH   SS
Delta            W5WMU             339,416     90    PH   SS
Great Lakes      ND4Y              246,554     91    PH   SS
Hudson           K2TR              276,150     78    PH   SS
Midwest          K4VX/0-(AA9AK,op) 296,604     91    PH   SS
New England      WB1GQR-(WB1JSJ,op)284,900     92    PH   SS
Northwestern     W7XR-(W7WA,op)    362,516     89    PH   SS
Pacific          W6GO-(N6IG,op)    378,532     90    PH   SS
Roanoke          W4MYA             271,194     91    PH   SS
Rocky Mountain   K5TA              334,026     91    PH   SS
Southeastern     KP2A-(N2IC,op)    398,088     88    PH   SS
Southwestern     K6LL              363,286     89    PH   SS
West Gulf        WM5G-(KR0Y,op)    374,682     92    PH   SS
Canada           VE7SZ             300,608     92    PH   SS

SINGLE OPERATOR LOW POWER, CW

Atlantic         W2TZ              164,312     92    CW   SS
Central          K4XU/9            151,950     90    CW   SS
Dakota           WD0T              159,450     91    CW   SS
Delta            N4ZZ              173,558     92    CW   SS
Great Lakes      K8CX              153,846     92    CW   SS
Hudson           W2GD              160,776     92    CW   SS
Midwest          K4VX/0-(WO0G,op)  144,900     88    CW   SS
New England      K1IU              156,772     92    CW   SS
Northwestern     KQ7I              152,152     92    CW   SS
Pacific          W1FEA             154,000     92    CW   SS
Roanoke          N4AA              145,838     92    CW   SS
Rocky Mountain   K0EU              172,326     92    CW   SS
Southeastern     N6OP/NP2          170,696     92    CW   SS
Southwestern     K6UA-(AA5DX,op)   160,006     91    CW   SS
West Gulf        N5RZ              187,264     91    CW   SS
Canada           VE4VV             155,198     79    CW   SS

SINGLE OPERATOR LOW POWER, PH

Atlantic         K5ZD              190,190     91    PH   SS
Central          AJ9C              233,618     92    PH   SS
Dakota           K0HB              200,970     92    PH   SS
Delta            N4ZZ              237,468     90    PH   SS
Great Lakes      AA4RX             207,130     92    PH   SS
Hudson           WA2STM            186,802     92    PH   SS
Midwest          K0SCM             215,840     92    PH   SS
New England      KZ1M              195,118     92    PH   SS
Northwestern     K7QQ              278,124     90    PH   SS
Pacific          W1FEA             237,930     90    PH   SS
Roanoke          W4MYA             204,358     92    PH   SS
Rocky Mountain   K0EU              265,034     91    PH   SS
Southeastern     K4XS              290,598     91    PH   SS
Southwestern     KY7M              219,296     92    PH   SS
West Gulf        KN6M/5            267,036     91    PH   SS
Canada           VE4GV             254,870     92    PH   SS

SINGLE OPERATOR QRP, CW

Atlantic         K3TM               96,000     92    CW   SS
Central          W9UP-(KA9FOX,op)  117,348     92    CW   SS
Dakota           WB0O              104,832     90    CW   SS
Delta            K4VFY/5-(N4EVS,op) 89,644     88    CW   SS
Great Lakes      WA8RJF             82,950     92    CW   SS
Hudson           W2GD              114,730     91    CW   SS
Midwest          K0SCM             112,480     92    CW   SS
New England      K1TR              106,552     92    CW   SS
Northwestern     K7SS              113,344     90    CW   SS
Pacific          NF7P              121,352     91    CW   SS
Roanoke          K0EJ              100,320     92    CW   SS
Rocky Mountain   N3SL/0            110,264     92    CW   SS
Southeastern     N4KG-(NB9P,op)     89,850     91    CW   SS
Southwestern     N7IR               88,800     92    CW   SS
West Gulf        AC5K               79,032     89    CW   SS
Canada           VE7YU              69,840     90    CW   SS

SINGLE OPERATOR QRP, PH

Atlantic         K2YY               87,764     92    PH   SS
Central          WE9V              128,288     92    PH   SS
Dakota           KB0ZQ              61,350     88    PH   SS
Delta            W9OBF              54,864     90    PH   SS
Great Lakes      AA4RX             102,718     89    PH   SS
Hudson           AA2U               81,158     92    PH   SS
Midwest          KD2TT              71,250     90    PH   SS
New England      WA1LNP             71,148     92    PH   SS
Northwestern     K7SS              169,400     91    PH   SS
Pacific          W9NQ              117,648     92    PH   SS
Roanoke          WA4PGM             83,622     92    PH   SS
Rocky Mountain   K5IID             145,992     91    PH   SS
Southeastern     KB4GID             67,144     90    PH   SS
Southwestern     WB2ODH/6           83,250     91    PH   SS
West Gulf        N5NMX             100,562     92    PH   SS
Canada           VE4VV             115,654     92    PH   SS

MULTIOPERATOR, CW

Atlantic         K3UA              186,340     92    CW   SS
Central          KJ9D              161,468     85    CW   SS
Dakota           WD0T              185,262     92    CW   SS
Delta            K5MC              160,160     91    CW   SS
Great Lakes      K8AQM             162,504     87    CW   SS
Hudson           W2VJN             148,336     81    CW   SS
Midwest          K0WA              165,376     92    CW   SS
New England      K1RQ              150,300     92    CW   SS
Northwestern     K7LXC             143,708     85    CW   SS
Pacific          W6GO              193,424     92    CW   SS
Roanoke          W4BVV             159,840     77    CW   SS
Rocky Mountain   AA5B              203,434     92    CW   SS
Southeastern     W4AQL             180,424     92    CW   SS
Southwestern     N6VR              165,088     92    CW   SS
West Gulf        WM4Z              172,368     92    CW   SS
Canada           VE3ART            141,408     87    CW   SS

MULTIOPERATOR, PH

Atlantic         K3WW              258,874     92    PH   SS
Central          W9XT              285,054     90    PH   SS
Dakota           WD0T              285,054     90    PH   SS
Delta            N4ZZ              267,652     92    PH   SS
Great Lakes      KW8N              304,766     92    PH   SS
Hudson           WA2UKP            223,916     92    PH   SS
Midwest          W0CEM             266,304     91    PH   SS
New England      K1NG              262,108     90    PH   SS
Northwestern     K7SS              367,906     92    PH   SS
Pacific          W6GO              336,490     92    PH   SS
Roanoke          W4QAW             222,740     81    PH   SS
Rocky Mountain   AA5B              376,684     90    PH   SS
Southeastern     N4WW              268,472     83    PH   SS
Southwestern     KF6OG             314,776     91    PH   SS
West Gulf        NJ1V              285,054     92    PH   SS
Canada           VE3XD             250,404     92    PH   SS



>From Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM  Thu Nov  4 16:28:00 
>1993
From: Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM (Skelton, Tom)
Subject: FW: 402BA SSB-to-CW mod needed
Message-ID: <2CD92DC3@admin.ClemsonSC.NCR.COM>



 ----------
From: Dave Hawes
To: cq-contest
Subject: 402BA SSB-to-CW mod needed

A group of Frankford Radio Club folks will be going to Bermuda for CQ
CW.  A multi-single operation from the VP9AD station is planned.

 -----------------------

AAAAAARRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!
I'm jealous! I've contested from Bermuda in 1987 (IARU) and
1992 (ARRL SSB), and plan to go back this spring (1994)
for ARRL SSB.  However, this time I'm going to find a way to
take a beam instead of relying on the butternut alone.  I got
creamed by the VP5 and PJ9 expeditions...it also hurts that
the power limit is 100 watts, and visitors are not allowed to
have a VP9 call...just their own call portable VP9.

73 and gl! Tom WB4IUX (wanna be /VP9 again)

>From Earl Morse <morsee@mi04q.zds.com>  Thu Nov  4 15:10:53 1993
From: Earl Morse <morsee@mi04q.zds.com> (Earl Morse)
Subject: FT1000D Computer control
Message-ID: <9311041010.A16783@mi04q.zds.com>

Thanks to all those who responded.  Most respondees seem to be in the same boat 
and are waiting to hear how to get the interface working.

I do have an FT1000D with ver. 6.00 ROM.
I am loading the COMTSR for 4800 and N82.
I am getting a Yaesu radio timout 0 error from CT.

So far no good.  CAT system LED doesn't blink and no control.

Is the FIF-232-C supposed to be setup for signal inversion or not?
Any help will still be appreciated as I count down to SS.

I will post the solution when I work it out.

Earl
KZ8E
e.morse@zds.com


>From alan@dsd.es.com (Alan Brubaker)  Thu Nov  4 14:23:39 1993
From: alan@dsd.es.com (Alan Brubaker) (Alan Brubaker)
Subject: SprINT Results Notes
Message-ID: <9311041423.AA01325@dsd.ES.COM>

Hi Charlie...or is it really Max? Thanks for clearing this up. I was wondering
how I could have guessed Max, so I was fairly certain that Max is what you had
sent - unless I was losing my mind too. Not that it matters, but this points
up the scenario where if either station makes an error, the scores of both
stations suffer. Not a fair way to assess operator performance and accuracy,
in my opinion. In the cosmic scheme of things, however, it is not a big deal.
CU in the SS.

Alan, K6XO


"Life's too short to run QRP."  --   N6TU

>From fhmoore@nemed.b11.ingr.com (frank moore)  Thu Nov  4 16:30:11 1993
From: fhmoore@nemed.b11.ingr.com (frank moore) (frank moore)
Subject: VP2VFP Score
Message-ID: <199311041630.AA22142@nemed.b11.ingr.com>

The VP2VFP guys report a score of about 10.7 million. I'll have the breakdown
later. Frank, KE4GY

>From Robert A. Wilson" <n6tv@vnet.IBM.COM  Thu Nov  4 18:55:20 1993
From: Robert A. Wilson" <n6tv@vnet.IBM.COM (Robert A. Wilson)
Subject: CQ WW Score Rumors

P40W (W2GD, op.) 13.77M
KP2A             13.67M

73,
Bob, N6TV

>From Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM  Thu Nov  4 21:53:00 
>1993
From: Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM (Skelton, Tom)
Subject: FW: ZL2K score CQWW-SSB 93
Message-ID: <2CD99A02@admin.ClemsonSC.NCR.COM>




Ten went surprisingly well, as did 15. Would any of our Pacific compe-
titors care to post?  Our 20 m  signal needs improving, there may be a
problem with the yagi  for  that band, which will be sorted out before
the  CQWW-CW.  Catch  you in  the  real  contest...


Wilbert, ZL2BSJ.


Wilbert Knol       MAFFISH Marine  Research,       Wellington,  New Zealand.
Usenet: wk@frc.maf.govt.nz  PACKET:ZL2BSJ@ZL2WA.NZL.OC  AMPR:[44.147.180.88]
AX25, NET/ROM, TCP/IP mailbox 146.625  MHz Wellington Data,  144.650 Simplex 



I agree about your comment with your 20m signal.  I was unable to work you
on 20 meters (I tried), but worked ZL2T and other ZL's.  I was running 1.3 
KW
output to a 3 element monobander at 80 feet beaming downhill across a lake!  


Please send my regards to ZL4OY...... 73, Tom WB4IUX

>From Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM  Thu Nov  4 21:53:00 
>1993
From: Skelton, Tom" <TSkelton@engineer.clemsonsc.NCR.COM (Skelton, Tom)
Subject: DX Reflector
Message-ID: <2CD99A48@admin.ClemsonSC.NCR.COM>


For those asking about not getting mail from the DX
Reflector, I have posted 3 items to it this week and
they have all bounced.  73,Tom WB4IUX
ps:  Trey: tnx for letting me use the CQ reflector
to get the word out.

>From jbarry@curia.ucc.ie (John Barry)  Thu Nov  4 23:30:40 1993
From: jbarry@curia.ucc.ie (John Barry) (John Barry)
Subject: CQWW
Message-ID: <9311042330.AA02650@curia.ucc.ie>

                   CQ WORLD WIDE DX CONTEST  1993


      Call: EI7M                     Country:  Ireland
      Mode: SSB                      Category: Multi Single

      BAND     QSO   QSO PTS  PTS/QSO   ZONES COUNTRIES


      160       97      112     1.15      6      37
       80      396      584     1.47     11      53
       40      386      891     2.31     19      72
       20     1125     2564     2.28     21      82
       15     1733     4506     2.60     25      72
       10      281      709     2.52     20      65
     ---------------------------------------------------

     Totals   4018     9366     2.33    102     381  =>  4,523,778


EI7M : East Cork Contest Group!

Operator List: EI4BZ, EI7DNB, EI8GS
Second station : EI3DP, EI8HT, EI5HV - also EI6BT, EI5HB

QSL via bureau or EI5HB 

Equipment Description:

10m : 5 ele @ 30ft
15m : 3 ele @ 50ft
20m : 3 ele @ 60ft
40m : Loop
80m/160m : Dipoles - centers @ 70ft and ends about 40ft
Also, A3 Tribander, and T2FD style multiband loop

Rigs : We started with a TS950 and TS850, but the PA went on 
the 950 on Saturday morning - there was a mad rush to borrow
another 850!

Comments:

Conditions seemed to be reasonable. We were disappointed we 
didnt work a few more mults, but hopefully we can rectify that
for the CW leg.
Usually there's a problem before the contest - This year one of the
computers stopped working 1.5 hours before the contest. It had
been running for 3 hours before that. Also, we had the normal
problems with computers crashing, and CT dropping the odd
qso between the stations... Also PA stage went on 
950 early on Saturday, but unusually we had no antenna problems
(except of course they werent high enough, big enough etc etc!!)
10m was good at times, we caught the end of an opening at 1600Z
on Sunday - We should have been on it an hour earlier .
15m was good for us, either conditions on 15 were up this year,
or the our new position for the beam worked.

Looking forward to SSB next year, why does it only happen once
a year :-(

73's John

P.S. Any other European scores out there????

-----------------------------------
John Barry EI7DNB
Email : jbarry@curia.ucc.ie
Packet : ei7dnb@ei7dnb.#Cork.Irl


>From jbarry@curia.ucc.ie (John Barry)  Thu Nov  4 23:38:04 1993
From: jbarry@curia.ucc.ie (John Barry) (John Barry)
Subject: no subject (file transmission)
Message-ID: <9311042338.AA02737@curia.ucc.ie>

                   CQ WORLD WIDE DX CONTEST  1993


      Call: EI7M                     Country:  Ireland
      Mode: SSB                      Category: Multi Single

      BAND     QSO   QSO PTS  PTS/QSO   ZONES COUNTRIES


      160       97      112     1.15      6      37
       80      396      584     1.47     11      53
       40      386      891     2.31     19      72
       20     1125     2564     2.28     21      82
       15     1733     4506     2.60     25      72
       10      281      709     2.52     20      65
     ---------------------------------------------------

     Totals   4018     9366     2.33    102     381  =>  4,523,778


EI7M : East Cork Contest Group!

Operator List: EI4BZ, EI7DNB, EI8GS
Second station : EI3DP, EI8HT, EI5HV - also EI6BT, EI5HB

QSL via bureau or EI5HB 

Equipment Description:

10m : 5 ele @ 30ft
15m : 3 ele @ 50ft
20m : 3 ele @ 60ft
40m : Loop
80m/160m : Dipoles - centers @ 70ft and ends about 40ft
Also, A3 Tribander, and T2FD style multiband loop

Rigs : We started with a TS950 and TS850, but the PA went on 
the 950 on Saturday morning - there was a mad rush to borrow
another 850!

Comments:

Conditions seemed to be reasonable. We were disappointed we 
didnt work a few more mults, but hopefully we can rectify that
for the CW leg.
Usually there's a problem before the contest - This year one of the
computers stopped working 1.5 hours before the contest. It had
been running for 3 hours before that. Also, we had the normal
problems with computers crashing, and CT dropping the odd
qso between the stations... Also PA stage went on 
950 early on Saturday, but unusually we had no antenna problems
(except of course they werent high enough, big enough etc etc!!)
10m was good at times, we caught the end of an opening at 1600Z
on Sunday - We should have been on it an hour earlier .
15m was good for us, either conditions on 15 were up this year,
or the our new position for the beam worked.

Looking forward to SSB next year, why does it only happen once
a year :-(

73's John

P.S. Any other European scores out there????

-----------------------------------
John Barry EI7DNB
Email : jbarry@curia.ucc.ie
Packet : ei7dnb@ei7dnb.#Cork.Irl


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