3830
[Top] [All Lists]

[3830] CQWW SSB P40W SOAB QRP

To: <3830@contesting.com>
Subject: [3830] CQWW SSB P40W SOAB QRP
From: w2gd@hotmail.com (w2gd@hotmail.com)
Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 11:51:56 -0500 (EST)
                     CQ Worldwide DX Contest - SSB
                    
Call: P40W
Operator(s): W2GD
Station: P40W

Class: SOAB QRP
QTH: ARUBA
Operating Time (hrs): 41
 

Summary:
 Band     QSOs  Zones  Countries
-------------------------------
  160:     17      5     14
   80:     74     11     30
   40:    145     20     51
   20:    945     29     94
   15:   1131     31    100
   10:   1358     34    101
-------------------------------
Total:   3670    130    390  =  5,604,560

Club/Team: FRC

Comments:

K5K MULTS NOT INCLUDED IN ABOVE TOTOLS.

Station Description:

Vintage TS930S + DVK
160M Inverted V at 70'
80M  Inverted V at 70'
3 ele 80M wire beam at 60'
F12 2 ele. 40M at 72'
F12 4 ele. 20M at 72'
F12 5 ele. 15M at 82'
F12 5 ele. 10M at 77'
Cushcraft A4 tribander at 60'
Beverages to EU and USA/Asia

BREAKDOWNS:

                160   80   40   20   15   10  ALL   percent

North America   SSB   11   60  106  698  889  889 2653    71.4
South America   SSB    6    7   12   21   26   37  109     2.9
Europe          SSB    0    7   22  193  178  384  784    21.1
Asia            SSB    0    0    2   23   25   39   89     2.4
Africa          SSB    1    1    3    9   13   21   48     1.3
Oceania         SSB    0    0    3    7   11    9   30     0.8


BREAKDOWN QSO/mults  P40W  Single Operator All Band QRP

HOUR      160      80       40       20       15       10    HR TOT  CUM TOT

   0    .....    .....    .....    36/32    .....    23/21    59/53   59/53
   1      .        .        .        .     240/28      .     240/28  299/81
   2     3/5      3/4      8/12    43/15    14/2       .      71/38  370/119
   3     2/3      6/7      2/3      1/1    138/6       .     149/20  519/139
   4      .       3/1     11/13    39/16      .        .      53/30  572/169
   5     4/5      4/4      2/1     27/4     14/16     5/6     56/36  628/205
   6     3/0      7/4     56/20    14/4       .        .      80/28  708/233
   7     1/1     32/5     24/3      5/3       .        .      62/12  770/245
   8     3/4      6/4      4/7     .....    .....    .....    13/15  783/260
   9      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    783/260
  10      .        .       4/1     13/5     17/14      .      34/20  817/280
  11      .        .        .        .      19/10    69/36    88/46  905/326
  12      .        .        .        .        .      65/15    65/15  970/341
  13      .        .        .       7/2     19/7     34/4     60/13 1030/354
  14      .        .        .        .        .      65/5     65/5  1095/359
  15      .        .        .        .       1/0     45/3     46/3  1141/362
  16    .....    .....    .....    .....     8/3     40/4     48/7  1189/369
  17      .        .        .        .       9/4     54/1     63/5  1252/374
  18      .        .        .       1/1      9/0     28/5     38/6  1290/380
  19      .        .        .       1/2      3/0     64/2     68/4  1358/384
  20      .        .        .        .        .     176/0    176/0  1534/384
  21      .        .        .        .        .     171/2    171/2  1705/386
  22      .        .        .      15/8      8/0     42/2     65/10 1770/396
  23      .        .        .     113/12     1/0       .     114/12 1884/408
   0    .....    .....    .....     7/0     70/1     .....    77/1  1961/409
   1      .        .        .     149/2     14/0       .     163/2  2124/411
   2      .       2/0       .        .     122/4      1/1    125/5  2249/416
   3      .        .       1/1     71/3     14/5     10/5     96/14 2345/430
   4      .       1/1      1/1    194/4      2/2       .     198/8  2543/438
   5     1/1      9/10     2/1     71/1      1/0      1/0     85/13 2628/451
   6      .       1/1     28/5      1/1      8/8       .      38/15 2666/466
   7      .        .        .        .        .        .        .   2666/466
   8    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    ..... 2666/466
   9      .        .        .        .        .        .        .   2666/466
  10      .        .       1/1       .        .      10/1     11/2  2677/468
  11      .        .        .        .      61/9     16/3     77/12 2754/480
  12      .        .        .        .        .      34/4     34/4  2788/484
  13      .        .        .        .      26/5     15/7     41/12 2829/496
  14      .        .        .        .       1/1     11/2     12/3  2841/499
  15      .        .        .        .       1/1     35/2     36/3  2877/502
  16    .....    .....    .....    .....    17/1     17/3     34/4  2911/506
  17      .        .        .       1/0     10/1     13/1     24/2  2935/508
  18      .        .        .        .        .     105/0    105/0  3040/508
  19      .        .        .        .        .     130/0    130/0  3170/508
  20      .        .        .        .      12/2     71/0     83/2  3253/510
  21      .        .        .        .     181/1       .     181/1  3434/511
  22      .        .       1/2     27/7     40/0      8/0     76/9  3510/520
  23      .        .        .     109/0     51/0       .     160/0  3670/520
DAY1    16/18    61/29   111/60  315/105   500/90  881/106    ..... 1884/408
DAY2     1/1     13/12    34/11   630/18   631/41   477/29      .   1786/112
TOT     17/19    74/41   145/71  945/123 1131/131 1358/135      .   3670/520

Actually felt LOUD at times, especially on 10/15/20 in the late afternoon/early
evening local time when the bands closed to EU. As espected the low bands were
difficult but the 80M beam yielded 7 EU qsos so it was worth the effort.

Saturday morning was very difficult with the NA/EU path hot.  Could not run
either EU or USA so spent 8 straight hours doing S&P hoping EU would close to
the states.  Of course it finally did and things got hot for me.

71% of qsos were NA which was the my primary strategy. The other important 
strategy was moving as many NA and other mults thru the bands, on frequencies
that were relatively QRM free (e.g. 14120/21120/28220 etc.) which worked very
well...thanks to those who agreed to QSY for me.

Managed to work CN8WW on 160M - they really can hear!  Otherwise 160M was
limited to Carrib/SA mults that were fairlyu easily to work.  Very few USA
could hear me.

80M was very noisy the first night, didn't hear any EU at all.  ZF2MC was
consistently the loudest signal on the band.  Flare enhanced conditions Sat.
night and managed 7 EU qsos with the 3 ele. beam.

40M was also difficult, but there were times when I could run both EU and USA.

20M was particularly good for me early Saturday evening and the last hour.

15M Was great the first night and in the afternoons.

10M was the money band as expected.  With disturbed conditions EU was much more
workable Saturday.

Never worked a zone 40 all weekend...only a loud TF on ten but couldn't break
pileup.  Where was the JW gand?

SSB QRP is not for the weak of heart.  Having stations you call CQ in your face
is a way of life....you just have to be patient and keep trying!  

Only equipment failure was my microphone that started to break up with about 15
minutes to go.  Thank god not earlier....didn't have a spare.

My thanks to K7SS for his encouragement all these years....probably would not
have gone down this road otherwise.  I think I'll move up to LP class the next
few years.

73, John W2GD/P40W






Posted using 3830 Score Submittal Forms at: http://www.hornucopia.com/3830score/


--
FAQ on WWW:               http://www.contesting.com/FAQ/3830
Submissions:              3830@contesting.com
Administrative requests:  3830-REQUEST@contesting.com
Problems:                 owner-3830@contesting.com


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
  • [3830] CQWW SSB P40W SOAB QRP, w2gd@hotmail.com <=