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KP4VA A-DX Results

Subject: KP4VA A-DX Results
From: ericm@rmece02.upr.clu.edu (ericm@rmece02.upr.clu.edu)
Date: Tue Feb 22 09:44:06 1994
                   ARRL INTERNATIONAL DX CONTEST  1994


      Call: KP4VA ( op KP4TK )       Country: Puerto Rico
      Mode: CW                       Category: Single Op/DX/Low Power

      BAND     QSO    QSO PTS    STATES/PROV


      160        0        0           0
       80      348     1044          48
       40      498     1494          53
       20      606     1818          58
       15      698     2094          57
       10      612     1836          54
     -----------------------------------

     Totals   2762     8286         270  =   2,237,220
     Power: 100w


Equipment Description:

        Kenwood TS-830s
        80m, 40m(15m), 20m, 10m Dipoles @ 150ft

Comments:
        - My BEST !
        - No filters
        - After finishing a week with 4 exams, only 5 hours after the contest
          to install computer, prepare shack and build the K3KU grid block
          keying circuit... And then Dear Murphy appeared. I could not make 
          the circuit works and the GATEWAY 2000 had a s7 in some frequencies
          in all bands!  
        - Sorry for the bad keying sunday afternoon. My hand was tired!
73's
Eric M. Guzman Colon KP4TK
UPR-RUM E.E. Department Club Station KP4VA
ericm@rmece02.upr.clu.edu



>From hhoyt@k4pql.apex.nc.us (Howard Hoyt)  Tue Feb 22 13:29:53 1994
From: hhoyt@k4pql.apex.nc.us (Howard Hoyt) (Howard Hoyt)
Subject: K4PQL Score
Message-ID: <i1H6Hc1w165w@k4pql.apex.nc.us>

Conditions seemed reasonably good. I was hoping 80/160 would have been
better, but a pretty bad chest cold limited hours there anyway.

As usual, 40/15 seemed to be my bread & butter bands.

Called by 3da0ca, only to find my software d/n support the prefix !
Logged to paper while figuring circumvention (changed to 3D6) :-)

As noted earlier, activity outside of the "western world" just wasnt
there.     73, Howie K4PQL

     band        qsos      points    mults
     _____________________________________

     160           22          66       18
      80          111         333       48
      40          565        1695       75
      20          450        1350       75
      15          646        1938       77
      10           33          99       23
     _____________________________________

     total:      1827        5481      316     claimed score: 1,731,996


>From Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and.an.hp.com>  Tue Feb 22 14:26:17 1994
From: Tony Brock-Fisher <fisher@hp-and.an.hp.com> (Tony Brock-Fisher)
Subject: K1KP ARRL CW SCORE
Message-ID: <9402221426.AA15350@hp-and.an.hp.com>

                   ARRL INTERNATIONAL DX CONTEST 1994


      Call: K1KP                     Country:  United States (232)
      Mode: CW                       Category: Multi Single

      BAND     QSO    QSO PTS PTS/Q COUNTRIES


      160       23       66   2.9       21
       80       97      288   3.0       48
       40      359     1074   3.0       81
       20      605     1809   3.0       84
       15      490     1470   3.0       68
       10       30       90   3.0       22
     --------------------------------------

     Totals   1604     4797   3.0      324  =   1,554,228




Operators: WA1S, K1KP

Equipment Description:

IC-765, SB-220, Kt-34XA (70'), 40-2CD (80'), delta loop on 80, QWS on 160


Club Affiliation: YCCC




>From Jim Reisert AD1C  22-Feb-1994 1007 <reisert@wrksys.enet.dec.com>  Tue Feb 
>22 15:03:31 1994
From: Jim Reisert AD1C  22-Feb-1994 1007 <reisert@wrksys.enet.dec.com> (Jim 
Reisert AD1C 22-Feb-1994 1007)
Subject: ARRL DX CW 1994:  AD1C M/S from KC1XX
Message-ID: <9402221503.AA22395@us1rmc.bb.dec.com>

We operated Multi-Single from KC1XX's station.  Operators were Matt,
N1QQO and myself.  Here's our score summary and continental breakdown:

      BAND     QSO    QSO PTS PTS/Q COUNTRIES

      160       41      123   3.0       37
       80      203      609   3.0       64
       40      693     2079   3.0       95
       20      652     1956   3.0       91
       15      773     2319   3.0       93
       10       60      180   3.0       40
     --------------------------------------

     Totals   2422     7266   3.0      420  =   3,051,720

Antennas are 4/4/4/4 on 10 and 15, 4/4/4 on 20, 2/2 on 40, 2el delta loop on
80 (Eu), 1/4 vertical on 80, 1/4 wave sloper and Inv-L on 160.

                 160   80   40   20   15   10  ALL   percent

North America     13   25   24   22   22   22  128     5.2
South America      5   10   13   26   23   20   97     3.9
Europe            21  166  603  554  688    9 2041    82.8
Asia               1    0   38   46   32    0  117     4.7
Africa             2    5   13    8   16    5   49     2.0
Oceania            0    2   13    4    6    5   30     1.2

Other top M/S scores:

        K1DG    2231 QSOs X 406 mults = 2.717M
        W3BGN   2050 QSOs X 426 mults = 2.620M
        K8AZ    2015 QSOs X 420 mults = 2.539M

This is the first time a W1 has won ARRL CW M/S since K1ZZ in 1982.
W3 stations have won every year since 1987.  Who says New England
always wins?

Here are some thoughts:

1.  Conditions are about the worst I've seen in recent years. European
    runs on 20 and 15 were pretty slow at times.  Even though the band
    was open, no one answered our CQs.  We worked fewer JAs on 20 meters
    than usual, though we did have a nice JA opening in the last hour of
    the contest on 15 meters (including UA0 and VS6), and worked several
    JAs long-path on 40 just before 15 opened.

2.  Contest highlights included being called by YB and HS on 15 meters
    around 1545Z on Sunday, VQ9 on 80 at the end of the contest, and
    working SU2MT on both 40 and 80 meters.

3.  This was the first major DX contest where the Ukrainians used their new
    prefixes.  Made for some interesting callsigns - too bad most of them
    haven't made it to the MASTER.DTA file yet.  If you're using CT without
    real-time super-check-partial turned on, you're really missing out on a
    neat tool - hit rate is extremely high, and it really keeps you from
    busing callsigns.

4.  10 meters never really opened to Europe.  Europe came in skew path
    over Africa Sunday a.m., and I heard K1AR and W3LPL running some
    of them, but rate on 15 was too good to QSY.

5.  Isn't it time we did away with the 10 minute rule?  Or made ARRL
    M/S work the same way as CQWW M/S (separate multiplier station).

BREAKDOWN QSO/mults  AD1C    Multi Single

HOUR      160      80       40       20       15       10    HR TOT  CUM TOT  

   0    .....    .....   112/35    .....    .....    .....   112/35  112/35 
   1      .       9/7     37/11      .        .        .      46/18  158/53 
   2     1/1     10/5     31/9       .        .        .      42/15  200/68 
   3     1/1     19/8      3/3     11/7       .        .      34/19  234/87 
   4     3/3      5/5     22/8       .        .        .      30/16  264/103
   5     9/9     14/4       .        .        .        .      23/13  287/116
   6     2/2     20/7      6/1       .        .        .      28/10  315/126
   7      .       7/4     42/9       .        .        .      49/13  364/139
   8    .....     1/1     32/3      1/1     .....    .....    34/5   398/144
   9      .       3/1      5/2     27/17      .        .      35/20  433/164
  10      .        .      11/2     15/6       .        .      26/8   459/172
  11      .        .        .      92/10     7/7       .      99/17  558/189
  12      .        .        .      23/5     80/20      .     103/25  661/214
  13      .        .        .        .     125/20      .     125/20  786/234
  14      .        .        .        .      97/11     5/5    102/16  888/250
  15      .        .        .        .      82/5     11/10    93/15  981/265
  16    .....    .....    .....    .....    49/0     12/7     61/7  1042/272
  17      .        .        .      68/7      4/0      9/5     81/12 1123/284
  18      .        .        .      65/3      7/2       .      72/5  1195/289
  19      .        .        .      36/1      3/3      2/2     41/6  1236/295
  20      .        .       8/0     24/1      4/4       .      36/5  1272/300
  21      .        .      43/0      5/5       .        .      48/5  1320/305
  22      .       2/2     46/0     12/6       .        .      60/8  1380/313
  23      .        .      37/3     23/5       .        .      60/8  1440/321
   0     3/3      3/1     23/0      5/1     .....    .....    34/5  1474/326
   1      .       8/2     14/0      7/0       .        .      29/2  1503/328
   2     2/2     20/7       .        .        .        .      22/9  1525/337
   3     4/4     17/1      5/2       .        .        .      26/7  1551/344
   4     2/2      2/0     21/1       .        .        .      25/3  1576/347
   5    12/10      .      12/0       .        .        .      24/10 1600/357
   6     2/0     34/0       .        .        .        .      36/0  1636/357
   7      .       8/0     50/1       .        .        .      58/1  1694/358
   8    .....     4/2     26/0     .....    .....    .....    30/2  1724/360
   9      .       4/1     11/2       .        .        .      15/3  1739/363
  10      .       2/2      7/1       .        .        .       9/3  1748/366
  11      .        .        .      61/2       .        .      61/2  1809/368
  12      .        .        .      32/5     18/3       .      50/8  1859/376
  13      .        .        .       6/0     42/1      6/3     54/4  1913/380
  14      .        .        .        .      91/3       .      91/3  2004/383
  15      .        .        .        .      55/2      3/3     58/5  2062/388
  16    .....    .....    .....    .....    63/3     .....    63/3  2125/391
  17      .        .        .      35/1      8/0      3/1     46/2  2171/393
  18      .        .        .      59/2       .       4/1     63/3  2234/396
  19      .        .        .      29/2      5/3       .      34/5  2268/401
  20      .        .      10/1      8/1      5/2      2/2     25/6  2293/407
  21      .        .      43/1       .       5/1       .      48/2  2341/409
  22      .       2/1     24/0      3/1      7/2      3/1     39/5  2380/414
  23      .       9/3     12/0      5/2     16/1       .      42/6  2422/420
DAY1    16/16    90/44   435/86   402/74   458/72    39/29    ..... 1440/321
DAY2    25/21   113/20   258/9    250/17   315/21    21/11      .    982/99 
TOT     41/37   203/64   693/95   652/91   773/93    60/40      .   2422/420



>From Jim Reisert AD1C  22-Feb-1994 1016 <reisert@wrksys.enet.dec.com>  Tue Feb 
>22 15:12:02 1994
From: Jim Reisert AD1C  22-Feb-1994 1016 <reisert@wrksys.enet.dec.com> (Jim 
Reisert AD1C 22-Feb-1994 1016)
Subject: IY0A - Italy, not Sardinia
Message-ID: <9402221512.AA22856@us1rmc.bb.dec.com>

A couple of people on Packet this weekend asked if IY0A was in Sardinia,
IS0.  I asked the op on 40 meters late Sunday and he confirmed that he was
in Rome.  I had made a correction to the CTY files on February 10, but if
you were using an older ARRL.CTY, then it might have said it was Sardinia.

73 - Jim AD1C

>From Steven.M.London@att.com (Steven M London +1 303 538 4763)  Tue Feb 22 
>15:18:00 1994
From: Steven.M.London@att.com (Steven M London +1 303 538 4763) (Steven M 
London +1 303 538 4763)
Subject: W0CP Black Hole Score
Message-ID: <9402221523.AA00679@bighorn.dr.att.com>

W0CP (Multi-Single, W0CP, K0KR, K9AY, N2IC)

Band   QSO's  Countries

160     8        7
 80    57       26
 40   632       74
 20   244       73
 15   371       70
 10    99       34

     1411      284

1,199,616 points

KT-34XA, Cushcraft 2el 40, wires.

Yes, folks, this was a legitimate effort from Colorado.  Not just a casual,
25 hour lark.  Having a great group to commiserate with made it kind of fun.
Not only were the high bands a joke, but the low bands were super absorptive.
Heard no DX signals on 160 until 0500Z Saturday night.  No direct path
EU on 15 on Saturday, only I's and YU's direct path on Sunday.  Best EU
"run" of the weekend was 20 meter LP on Sunday morning.  Not a single EU
or Africa heard on 10 meters.  High points - 40 meter LP Saturday AM,
10 meter JA 2230Z-2330Z Sunday (kept the last 2 hours from being so boring).
We had east coast packet spots, thanks to the 10135 kHz backbone, but they
were of limited value (and non-existent each night from 0300Z-1230Z).

Steve, N2IC/0

>From DKMC" <dkmc@chevron.com  Tue Feb 22 18:18:19 1994
From: DKMC" <dkmc@chevron.com (DKMC)
Subject: where does the black hole begin?
Message-ID: <CPLAN065.DKMC.9397.1994 0222 10 16 10 16>


 Microsoft Mail v3.0 IPM.Microsoft Mail.Note
 From: McCarty, DK 'David'
 To:  OPEN ADDRESSING SERVI-OPENADDR
 Subject:  where does the black hole begin?
 Priority:
 Message ID: 640D7272
 Conversation ID: 640D7272

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


 AA2PZ writes from NJ:

 >don't think I could have increased my score a lot because up against the
 >propagation black-hole and the northeastern Wall of Power, there were few
 takers >to my CQ's....

 Where in the world does he think he was operating from?

 I know that WNY does not equal NLI or EMA after an ARRL multi-single
 operated with Jeff, W2HPF, and others from his Rochester QTH but a W2 is
 definitely NOT in the "black hole".  I've seen Jeff's neighbor W2TZ's QTH
 tribander and wires and I know he's not running a KW yet he runs Europeans
 on 20 that I can't hear at ALL with 4/4 near the top of a Texas hilltop, fed
 with hardline.

 I don't think Texas is in the "hole" either, but I know for sure there ain't
 no part of W2 in it.

 Where does "the black hole" begin and end?

 73,
 Dave

 David K. McCarty, K5GN
 dkmc@chevron.com


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