Steve asked me to post his score from this weekend.
479 qso's x 144 mults=206,198 points
Single op/assisted hi power all band
73
Chuck/N0BIW
chuck.kraly@quelle.com
>From Randy Thompson <k5zd@iconics.com> Wed Feb 22 04:46:31 1995
From: Randy Thompson <k5zd@iconics.com> (Randy Thompson)
Subject: Score: K5ZD ARRL CW s/o (long message)
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.91.950221234031.26308A-100000@genesis.iconics.com>
ARRL INTERNATIONAL DX CONTEST -- 1995
Call: K5ZD Country: United States
Mode: CW Category: Single Operator, High Power
BAND QSO QSO PTS PTS/Q COUNTRIES
160 70 210 3.0 35
80 230 690 3.0 64
40 816 2448 3.0 83
20 986 2958 3.0 92
15 942 2826 3.0 81
10 43 129 3.0 23
--------------------------------------
Totals 3087 9261 3.0 378 = 3,500,658
Equipment Description:
IC-765 + Alpha 76CA, TS-930S + Drake L-4B
160: elevated 1/4-wave GP with 4 radials
80: Inverted Vee at 95'
40: 40-2CD at 110'
20: Stacked 205-CA at 100'/50'
15: 5el at 70'
10: 6el at 75' fixed South
TH7DXX at 70'
Commentary:
Finally! A DX contest that happened when conditions were at their best.
Rates were great. It was kind of fun to be ahead of last year's rate
sheet right from the start. Had my usual problems on 80, but they were
quickly forgotten at sunrise when 20 came to life.
15m actually opened at 12Z both days, but stayed on 20 while waiting for
activity to build. The first morning on 15, I switched to 21021 and was
able to stay there for about 430 QSOs. The frequency was so clear, I felt
like IQ4A (big and loud)!
Moved with the muf through the bands. Having only one band open at a time
really packs the activity and is the main reason for the big rates. Lot
of multi-band QSOs in the log.
Great JA opening on Saturday evening on 20. Signals were loud but not
much quantity. Some good mults too!
Saturday evening after 01Z was frustrating. Could not get anything going
so just had to tune around. Kept falling asleep between QSOs! Managed
to stay awake until 09Z when I slept for 90 minutes.
Sunday conditions were almost the same as Saturday. Actually had some
Europeans on 10m scatter (worked 7 Eu countries). Cost me about 20 minutes
of 80-100/hour rate though.
Almost no multipliers to go with all the QSOs on Sunday. Finally at the end,
managed to find enough to make the multiplier total respectable. Was great
to find 9 new ones in the last hour. Best was being called by ST2AA with
30 seconds left in the contest. Thought someone was pulling my leg, but
we had a little QSO after the contest. Turns out he is an American and
mentioned that he had forgotten about the contest. He was on 30 meters
all weekend!!!
Congratulations to KQ2M at KM1H. A quick comparison showed that I was ahead
of him after 24 hours, but he beat me by almost 200 QSOs on Sunday! Will
need to do some head scratching on how that happened.
Have now finished 2nd in four major DX contests in a row (behind K1AR in
94 ARRL Phone and 94 CQ WW Phone, then behind KM1H in 94 CQ WW CW and 95
ARRL CW). I don't think even KC1F had a streak this frustrating!
WANTED: Antenna ideas for 80 meters. Need something that will improve my
signal to Europe. Plenty of room, but lots of trees. Limited tower
height to work with and antenna suggestion must not degrade my magic
160 vertical! Money is becoming less of an object with each loss!
Here's the numbers:
Continent Statistics
160 80 40 20 15 10 ALL percent
North America 13 21 20 17 23 11 105 3.4
South America 3 7 10 17 18 23 78 2.5
Europe 52 194 756 831 863 6 2702 87.2
Asia 1 1 16 109 24 0 151 4.9
Africa 1 5 10 11 10 3 40 1.3
Oceania 0 2 9 6 6 0 23 0.7
You just have to love those Europeans. Worked over 200 Russian/Ukraine
stations.
BREAKDOWN QSO/mults K5ZD ARRL INTERNATIONAL DX CONTEST Single Operator
HOUR 160 80 40 20 15 10 HR TOT CUM TOT
0 ..... ..... 120/27 9/4 ..... ..... 129/31 129/31
1 . 17/12 58/5 7/6 . . 82/23 211/54
2 . 65/14 . 6/4 . . 71/18 282/72
3 12/9 10/0 26/4 3/1 . . 51/14 333/86
4 2/2 34/7 17/3 1/1 . . 54/13 387/99
5 11/6 15/4 . 3/3 . . 29/13 416/112
6 8/5 13/2 1/0 . . . 22/7 438/119
7 . 3/2 62/7 . . . 65/9 503/128
8 ..... 7/6 69/7 ..... ..... ..... 76/13 579/141
9 . 2/1 51/4 . . . 53/5 632/146
10 1/1 2/1 7/3 19/12 . . 29/17 661/163
11 . . . 141/18 2/2 . 143/20 804/183
12 . . . 100/9 46/21 . 146/30 950/213
13 . . . 3/0 121/14 . 124/14 1074/227
14 . . . 7/0 116/7 . 123/7 1197/234
15 . . . 6/2 86/6 6/4 98/12 1295/246
16 ..... ..... ..... ..... 84/1 6/3 90/4 1385/250
17 . . . 85/4 12/0 2/2 99/6 1484/256
18 . . . 103/6 4/4 . 107/10 1591/266
19 . . . 75/2 7/4 . 82/6 1673/272
20 . . . 72/3 1/1 7/2 80/6 1753/278
21 . . 45/3 17/6 4/3 . 66/12 1819/290
22 . . 60/3 1/0 9/5 . 70/8 1889/298
23 . . 55/2 17/2 4/0 . 76/4 1965/302
0 ..... 2/1 ..... 57/1 ..... ..... 59/2 2024/304
1 6/3 17/1 6/0 11/2 . . 40/6 2064/310
2 8/1 3/1 18/2 . . . 29/4 2093/314
3 4/0 6/3 2/0 . . . 12/3 2105/317
4 8/4 11/1 . . . . 19/5 2124/322
5 1/1 4/0 28/1 . . . 33/2 2157/324
6 9/3 4/1 20/1 . . . 33/5 2190/329
7 . 10/3 28/2 . . . 38/5 2228/334
8 ..... 1/1 31/0 ..... ..... ..... 32/1 2260/335
9 . . . . . . . 2260/335
10 . . . . . . . 2260/335
11 . 1/0 4/4 37/0 . . 42/4 2302/339
12 . . . 42/1 55/0 . 97/1 2399/340
13 . . . 1/0 102/1 . 103/1 2502/341
14 . . . . 55/2 7/7 62/9 2564/350
15 . . . 1/1 75/0 3/3 79/4 2643/354
16 ..... ..... ..... 5/0 58/1 2/1 65/2 2708/356
17 . . . 1/0 60/0 2/0 63/0 2771/356
18 . . . 38/0 15/4 2/0 55/4 2826/360
19 . . . 63/2 3/1 . 66/3 2892/363
20 . . . 42/0 5/2 1/1 48/3 2940/366
21 . . 36/1 8/0 5/2 5/0 54/3 2994/369
22 . . 41/0 1/0 13/0 . 55/0 3049/369
23 . 3/3 31/4 4/2 . . 38/9 3087/378
DAY1 34/23 168/49 571/68 675/83 496/68 21/11 ..... 1965/302
DAY2 36/12 62/15 245/15 311/9 446/13 22/12 . 1122/76
TOT 70/35 230/64 816/83 986/92 942/81 43/23 . 3087/378
DAY1 1.3/27 3.1/54 7.6/75 6.5/103 4.7/106 0.2/95 ..... 23.5/84
DAY2 1.7/21 2.2/29 5.3/46 5.1/61 6.1/73 0.6/37 . 21.0/54
TOT 3.0/23 5.3/43 13.0/63 11.6/85 10.8/87 0.8/53 . 44.5/69
Randy Thompson, K5ZD
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Note new address (9 Dec 94): k5zd@iconics.com
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