ARRL RTTY Roundup
Call: AB1J
Operator(s): AB1J
Station: AB1J
Class: Single Op LP
QTH: Waltham, EMA
Operating Time (hrs): 24
Summary:
Band QSOs
------------
80: 85
40: 249
20: 188
15: 123
10: 9
------------
Total: 654 State/Prov = 51 Countries = 36 Total Score = 56,898
Club:
Comments:
[ I'm only submitting this again because I sent 3830 a comment section from
a .rtf file with control characters which made it largely unreadable. This
time I converted the file to a plain .txt file first. This is a mistake
I've made more than once. I hope this comes out better. If not, ignore it.
]
I'm relatively new to RTTY and I did this contest the previous two years
mostly to work new states and countries for my WAS and DXCC awards. Now
that I have them I was going to skip this year but changed my mind at the last
minute, and I'm glad I did. It's a fun contest although I was hoping for
more DX mults. I also learned about the practice sessions on Thursday and
Friday, which explains why I used to hear stations operating the contest on
strange days. I thought they were confused, but,
no, it was me.
I like the 24 hour limit. I went 12 hours, took a fitful 6 hour sleep
break and finished up with another 12 hour stretch.
Some observations and anecdotes:
Only 102 DX stations, kind of low, which held down my multiplier count.
In the perennial competition between the Golden State and the Gopher State
it was MN 44 - CA 40 this year at this QTH.
Mostly S&P. About 12% of my QSOs were running with the most success on
40M where I have the best antenna. Running netted me some good mults: DE
(the actual state, not "de"), ME, GM, LZ.
No VT. No problem. I keep my expectations low.
80M was jammed here on Saturday night. A very rough neighborhood. I
mostly stayed away even though 80 is a nostalgic favorite of mine since I got
my start there as a Novice back in 1958. A better antenna would help.
40 was my money band. That's where I worked most of the Sunday afternoon
rush from the casual ops who show up then just for fun. Thanks for jumping
in. Every QSO is important. The score goes up with each one.
The few 10M QSOs were fun. I'd just scoot up there every 20 minutes or so
early Sunday PM, grab whatever I found and head back to 20 or 15. I
enjoyed working all bands 80-10.
I worked K5DU on all five bands. Thanks and 88.
I joined the _RTTY@contesting.com_ (mailto:RTTY@contesting.com) reflector
and found it to be a great source of information, commentary and even
humor. Thanks everyone.
I upload to both LoTW and eQSL. 48 hours after the contest I had gotten
283 LoTW QSLs and 106 eQSLs. I've contacted the eQSL people a couple of
times about accepting Cabrillo logs but they are not interested. I like both
systems, but wish there was an electronic QSL service that was good for any
award.
Station:
FT-2000 to attic dipoles 20-10
TS-940S to temporary outdoor wire for 40 and 80
MMTTY barefoot, RIGblaster Plus, old XP computer
Operator: 1942 vintage. Creaky but serviceable.
I hope to see everyone in the WPX RTTY in February.
73,
Kermit (aka Ken), AB1J
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