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[3830] WPX SSB KQ2M SOAB HP

To: 3830@contesting.com, gofrc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [3830] WPX SSB KQ2M SOAB HP
From: webform@b4h.net
Reply-to: gofrc@yahoogroups.com
Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2016 11:01:06 +0000
List-post: <3830@contesting.com">mailto:3830@contesting.com>
CQWW WPX Contest, SSB

Call: KQ2M
Operator(s): KQ2M
Station: KQ2M

Class: SOAB HP
QTH: CT
Operating Time (hrs): 36
Radios: SO2R

Summary:
 Band  QSOs
------------
  160:    0
   80:  246
   40:  637
   20: 1602
   15: 1755
   10:   63
------------
Total: 4303  Prefixes = 1280  Total Score = 16,602,880

Club: Frankford Radio Club

Comments:

WPXSSB has ALWAYS been my favorite contest.  What’s not to like about being
able to work everyone combined with great equinoctial propagation?  I looked
forward to the 2016 event , especially since I was able to take advantage of
the 80+ degree days in March (I have never seen this in New England!) to
rebuild my 40 meter wire beam and orient it in a horizontal plane  for the
first time in 7 years!  The difference was significant because the Wire Beam
(even though it was at 50’) went from being 2 s-units weaker than the
4-square to 2 s-units LOUDER than the 4-square which shows how weak I was on 40
to Europe previously!   I got the station ready for SO2R for the first time in
many years and I was ready to rock!  First, though, I had a late dinner with my
family and then I staked out a good freq. on 40.  My good friend Tine, S50A and
I talked just before the start and then he gave me number 1.

I was PSYCHED!  NOT!  Two minutes into the contest I started having problems
with my ACOM2000A which keep tripping off from ARC Faults, Grid Current and
other error messages.  It seems that the ACOM was VERY frequency sensitive to
my wire beam and it did NOT like my operating on 7161.  I eventually solved the
problem by running about 500 watts out but it took me a long time to figure it
out.  Apparently when I rebuilt the wire beam the resonant freq. dropped from
7150 to 7025 and I did not realize it before the contest.  500 watts out was
not getting it done in the horrendous 40 meter SSB wars and the amp constantly
flipping off, but still it was great to be called by Z60A, 9K9Z and FP/KV1J. 
Then at 0040z I stopped getting answers.  At 0106z I had to qsy to 80 where I
struggled to work anything but 9K2HN called in.  EU was weak and there were
very few signals.  Everyone was on 40.  I had a pitiful 2nd hour even though it
included a 15 minute break.  Around 02z I qsyed back to 40 and THIS time got a
run freq. low in the band which my ACOM liked �" TS7P, C4A, P33W and
J43TR livened it up.  The difference was AMAZING!  A very solid run of EU with
1500 watts out, until propagation changed and the 50 foot high wire beam was
just too low.  I then took another break.  Since I was not planning to operate
seriously I didn’t need to be concerned with planning my off times, right?  I
also took time off to look for VK0EK on 20 and I got him.  VK0EK was my country
#339 (only Bouvet left!).    Back to 80 at 0243z with a decent run for 10
minutes until I worked everyone on 80 �" the problem was everyone was
still on 40.  I was exhausted and it was time for sleep with my plan to get up
at 09z to be ready for 20 meters.  I went to sleep at 03z with only 193 qsos,
having used 3 hours of time for only 2 hours and 15 minutes of operating.

At 0845z I got up to make my food and prepare the several rounds of meds so
that I could run on 20 uninterrupted.  At 1015z I found a good spot  on 20 and
began to run.   I happened to hear K1LZ who was at qso number 872  to my 214, I
was 658 q’s behind but that didn’t really matter since I wasn’t competing.
  WOW!  RK9LWA calling in at 1030z was a sign that cndx were very good together
with all the other Russian callers!  Shortly after 5E5E, 3G5EC and UP2L called
in along with RA9V and BA4TB at 1109z.  Then the band REALLY opened up with a
LOUD 4D1R calling in at 1118z and various RA9/UA9 stations and then VK6VAX at
1129z!  20 WAS ROCKING as the rate meter moved to 300+ for last 10 minutes and
last 100 q’s rate moved north of 250+!    Z60A called in along with VK2FJC
and VK2AU (both longpath) followed by YB0IBM at 1149z.  During the 11z hour I
had 187 qsos and then when I heard EU stations rapidly getting loud on 15 on
the 2nd radio, I immediately made the qsy at 1203z.  

BOOM!  INSTANT RUSSIAN PILEUP!   It is RARE when I am working more Russians
than all the other callers combined.  Cndx were phenomenal!  4O/AA7XT, VU2DED
and A65BP immediately called in and the rate soared to over 300 per hour!  At
1213z someone rotated the VOLUME control on the band and signals jumped another
2 s-units!  UA9XL called in @ 1223z �" incredible for a sunspot number of
only 14!  4Z4DX and FR4QT followed by a VERY LOUD ES5TV, Tonno who said that I
was 59+40!!!  At 1243z UA9BA called in with BA8CY direct path! and then Champ,
XW1IC at 1250z.  15 was ON FIRE! and sounding just like as it did in 2011 when
I set the US Single Band record.    The last 10 minute rate now was 300+ and
the last 100 rate climbed above 250+!  The pileup was MASSIVE, the signals were
LOUD and 15 was INCREDIBLE!  12z was a 234 hour and 13z added another 232
qso’s!!  In fact, from 1259 �" 1306z YB1BRS, UA9R, YC0PDZ, ZA/IW2JOP,
CN2AA and AT5R all called in!  I was trying to work everyone as fast as
possible just to get the pileup down to a manageable size.  P33W, Z60A, TA4MA,
TS7P and TC5A called in along with a steady stream of Northern EU stations. 
Signals then got even louder, unfortunately at this point the intermod,
splatter and qsb was making it VERY difficult to copy, but 13z ended in style
with callers J42P, 4O3A and A73A.  In the 14z hour, propagation shifted away
from Russia towards the Middle East with TA4ED, 9K2K, VU2NFG, 7Z1SJ and 9K9K
and even Z61DX!  The 15z rate stayed high with 196 qsos followed by 190 in the
16z hour.  OUTRAGEOUS!  During the 15z hour notable callers were 4Z7T, VU2GRM,
OD5TX and a very loud HS3LSE at 1533z.  YC0PDZ was a dupe at 1536z with YC1HLT
and T77C following shortly after with SX9C.  The rate had dropped significantly
right at 1600z �" the combination of mid-day absorption, qrm, and splatter
and deep qsb, made it almost impossible to copy anyone at times.  HG3M decided
to repeatedly call CQ on top of me even though I had been on my freq. for the
past 4 hours!  He wouldn’t move despite his being qrmed by my pileup of EU
callers!  What a lid!  As the rate dropped, I began to listen on 10 meters
hoping that it might open to EU, but it was almost dead except for a few South
American stations.  This had caused most everyone to stay on 15 meters, which
helped to make the great rates possible. 

From 12z �" 15z I was running on 15 meters with qso totals of 234, 232,
196 and 190 q’s; BY FAR the best 4 straight hours that I have ever had in
WPXSSB, averaging 213 per hour!!  My best hour was 242! - also a personal best
in WPXSSB!   These WPXSSB high rates are much tougher than in CQWW because in
WPXSSB you have to accurately copy a unique serial number for each qso �"
often making it necessary to ask for fills �" which slows the rate down! 


After 16z, 4X1IM, HZ1FI, 4Z5PJ and A71AE called in along with a few West coast
US stations.  I kept all my antennas on EU trying to eke out every last 3 point
qso but clearly missing a lot of potential US prefixes in the process.  As the
rate slowed toward the end of the 16z hours, CW5W, TY2CD and 5E5E called in
ending a 153 hour.

As the 17z hour started I had bet that 15 meter would recover from the
noon-time absorption �" this was a real gamble since the SSN was so low. 
It was possible that 15 meters would NOT open back up.  But fortunately it did
and the rate picked up with 4S7JL calling at 1705z, followed by 4Z5JL, UI2K,
P3F and NH7AA off the null of the stack.  Lots of South American/Caribbean and
NA/US stations also started to call in along with J43N, 3V8SS and several SV
stations, ending a 160 hour with 11 stations worked on the 2nd radio on 10
meters.    Just before 18z, 15 meters took a BIG FADE and then came right back.
 As I struggled to stay awake, the fade in 15 meters also reduced the qrm and
intermod down a low level thereby making it efficient to run on 15 and work
stations on 10 meters in between cqs.  Unfortunately there were not many
stations to work on 10 so as the rate dropped on 15 I had a decision to make. 
I stayed on 15 until 1833z and then made the qsy to 20 where Z61DX was my first
qso followed by a HUGE pileup with GD5F and 4L8A calling in.  The rate exploded
back above 270+ as VQ5E, 4X7R and 7Z1SJ called with SV8CRI and a few Russian
callers closing a 169 hour at 18z!  This was my 8th consecutive 150+ hour!

The 19z hour continued the BIG pileup with JI2ZEY VERY EARLY at 1904z! and
notable callers SV5BYP and a surprising number of SV and TA stations �"
more than I could ever recall!  I stayed with my 20 meter run frequency in
during the 19z �" 22z hours accumulating another 130, 156, 115 and 113
qsos.  Cndx were not very good, but they were good enough to keep the band open
and callers calling.  JA3YBK was the 2nd JA station on 20 followed by FP/KV1J at
2026z and then a surprisingly loud VU2ABS at 2035z with YL0A at 2036z �"
very late!  A very loud RT0F followed at 2044z.  I was hoping for a good JA run
on 20 since 15 was not open and I desperately needed the JA prefixes.  JH8CXW
started at 2109z, followed by a few JA’s and then a LOUD JW7QIA at 2118 but
every time I swung the top antenna North, there were no JA callers and EU got
weaker dropping the rate and emboldening the loud CQ’ers who pestered me
constantly on the low end of 20.  Finally at 2139z there was a burst of 10 JA
stations with BY2AA and VU2TO and then another burst of 10 JA stations with
BG4WOM.  VY0ERC called in along with BD3CB and BY5CD and VK3JA long path.  I
wanted to stay on 20 for the JA run with other stations calling in, but I had
almost no qsos on 40 and 80 having instead gone to sleep the first night.  

At 2300z I made a decision.  With 2366 q’s and 6.5 million points in only 15
hours of operating, and feeling stronger and healthier than I had for the past
two years, I decided to push myself to see how far I could go.  I decided to
attempt a run on 40 with my paltry 50’ high wire beam to see what would
happen.  If it worked, then maybe I would stay up until EU sunrise at 06z.  
I found a good run freq. at 2303z but got walloped with QRM and intermod.  Then
I found a great spot lower down that my ACOM2000A liked, and  INSTANT PILEUP! 
There were about 50 stations calling me!!  And it was almost impossible to pull
out a callsign despite using all of my skills and all of the radio filters. 
VERY FRUSTRATING!  I also knew that I would now have much time before the
propagation changed from the high angle (good for my Wire Beam) to low angle
�" when my run would disappear.  Two of the louder stations calling in
were A73A and 4X7R with VY0ERC calling in at 2359z to end an exciting hour of
116 q’s, mostly 6 pointers.  At 000z I had 2483 q’s x 967 mults = 7.18
Million in only 16.3 hours of operating!  I decided to GO FOR IT!  

The 00z hour started with a lot of Russians calling in with UN5GM at 0008z and
RC9O at 0015z surprisingly loud!  SZ3P and 4O3A followed with Z68BH at 0041z
with the rate meter briefly topping 200+ on 40!  The 00z hour was 125 qsos and
even though the QRM and splatter were unbelievable at times, the excitement of
being able to hold a run freq. on 40 was more than enough compensation for the
trouble!  The 01z hour started beautifully with UA9MA at 0101z, 9K9K at 0103z
and TC4A at 0112z.  The qsb came in waves but the stations got continually
weaker as propagation shifted to low angle.  At 0143z I qsyed to 80 but no one
heard me, so back to 40 where I tried to continue my run while calling stations
on the 2nd radio on 80.  I was much too tired to really make the 2nd radio work
�" and honestly �" I just didn’t want to work hard enough even
though I knew that it would be crucial.  UZ9E called in at 0156z to end the 01z
hour with 96 qsos.  The 01z hour ended my WPXSSB longest consecutive string of
100+ hour rate - 15 straight hours!

In the 02z hour I continued to run on 40 while I made some 2nd radio q’s on
20 with 9K2HN calling in.  At 0230z I tried a CQ on 80 and began a run with the
LOUD EU multiops piling on (clearly I had been spotted because 10 of them showed
up all at once!).  FP/KV1J and 4O3A were welcome callers as were J43TR and C4A
along with a group of Russian stations, ending the hour with 91 qsos.  But then
it was back to 40 at 03z.  At 03z I was being heard pretty well  but then I
developed a computer problem which demanded to be fixed immediately.  While I
was waiting, I looked for VK0EK again on 20 and got him.  But I lost another 11
minutes of operating time and the 03z hour had a very poor 58 q’s.  I had
noticed that K1LZ was giving out number 2828 when I had 2763, so I was down
only 65 qsos after being behind 658 qsos that morning.  I had caught up 593
qsos in 16 hours!!!

I was surprised and pleased to be competitive even though I had given away more
than 1 hour of operating time when I was not operating and even though I had
missed 40 and 80 almost all of the previous night.  I decided to stay up until
EU sunrise to work the 6 point EU stations. I was doing ok on 40 until 0430z
when the activity dropped so I went to 80 which was excellent.  A pileup of EU
stations pushed the rate meter to 210 last 10 minutes and I stayed on 80 until
0555z ending a 75 hour of mostly 6 �" pointers and with 5D5D calling in. 
For some perspective, at 0536z, I had 3001 qsos x 1067 mult. = 10.1 MILLION in
only 21.7 hours!!  My previous high score was 12.2 million in 36 hours!  

Back to 40 at 06z, I ran until 0626z with loud EU stations calling in.  I
probably should have stayed on longer but I needed some sleep before the 20 and
15 meter runs.  I painfully realized how much score I had lost by not staying up
the first night on 40 and 80 when the activity level and rates were much higher
and the 6 point qsos much more efficient.  I knew that that lost opportunity
plus the hour of the lost operating time was going to cost me severely!    Just
before I qrted, I heard an extremely loud, 59 + 20, D41CV on 20 meters; but no
one else was audible.  

Since 20 was already open well at 1015z on Saturday, I decided to start earlier
�" getting up at 0830z, preparing the food and meds and then being ready
to run at 10z.  I was ready, but 20 was not.  EC8AQQ called in at 1000z, but I
CQed in vain until 1008z when EA3AYK called in.  But this was a good sign, as
EA8 usually opens the band and then the first qso is usually with an EA
station.  So this Sunday band opening was starting in good form.  HOWEVER, the
20 meter run did not start out well and it took about 30 minutes for me to
realize that there was a weak station 600hz below me that had been inaudible
but was clearly loud in Europe, he was having a good run while I was being
ignored.  UGH!  20 meters was absolutely packed by now and I had no choice but
to stay on my freq. and make the best of it.  I struggled to be heard by weak
stations but was cheered when RK9AX and RW9USA called in at 1031z �"
quite early.  TC3P and D41CV followed at 1046z.  The 10z hour ended with a
disappointing 96 qsos.  Making matters worse was some sort of bizarre noise
that was coming from Asia and apparently was loud in Asia and Europe.  And it
was not going away, unlike the over-the-horizon radar that constantly buzzed
back and forth but would disappear for long stretches of time.  It was
remarkable to me how noisy our RF spectrum was WITHOUT the contributions of
contesters!  The 11z hour began better with RA0UBI calling in at 1104z and B1W
and VR2XAN at 1110z and 1113z followed by more and more Russians.  At 1142z,
VK3LM called in off the null in the stack followed by VK1NS at 1148z and JH9AUB
at 1158z and I had high hopes for a lot of JA and Asiatic Asian prefixes, but 15
was opening up and I had to be there.  While I had a slightly better 108 qsos in
the 11z, it was still far lower than I had hoped.  I made the jump to 15 at
1204z expecting a big run.  NOPE!  The band was open but there were not many
callers and the qrm was FIERCE!  I had to constantly fight off NO-LISTEN cqers
form the US and Europe often on both sides of my run frequency at the same
time.  The rates were further reduced by the fact that many of my callers had
trouble understanding that I was giving them a qso number of 3,000+.  Many
stations asked for repeats and then they commented on the number -  “ Ah,
KQ2M BIG number! “  It was funny at times but it slowed everything down
considerably!

15 was wide open to Russia with some stations 59 + 20, but there were very few
of them.  And where was the rest of Europe?  Were they all taking off time? 
There is nothing more frustrating than a wide open band with poor rates during
the key hours.  The 13z and 14z hours really hurt me with rates of only 82 and
73.  It was nice to be called by J43TR, TC2MK, RW9QA, GU3HFN, GJ6WRI, C4Z and
D44BS, but I felt the contest slipping away from me.  I would have taken off
time but I had no idea that the rate would be so poor. In 2004 I fell prey to
the same trick, also on 15 meters and also during the 13z and 14z hours.  But
that time the cndx were poor �" here they were quite good but volume and
rate were low.  Apparently most of the ops had used more operating time on the
first day and saved their off time for the 2nd day when cndx were not supposed
to be as good as they were on Saturday.   Had I operated the first night until
EU sunrise, I would likely have been taking off time now as well.  Lesson
learned �" a mistake that I would now have to suffer for the rest of the
contest.

At 14z, 10 meters started to open to SA and I worked them on the 2nd radio in
between CQs on 15.  9K2HN and UN7MMM called in at 1414z and 1425z with a few
more Russians and GD6IA at 1429z.  Then the band noise changed and 15 went long
with YE4IJ calling in at 1451z followed by YB1AR at 1455z, and ending the 14z
hour with 90 qsos.  The 15z hour was a little better with 97 qsos, with VU3KPL
notable at 1505z and then a burst of TA1L, C4A and 9H6A.  The 16z hour had a
HUGE mid-day absorption fade out that was so bad that I had to qsy to 20, but
then 15 gradually rebounded and I went back there.  RN2FA, 4Z1UF and TF2MSN
(very loud!) called in early with a mix of EU, Russia, SA/NA and then Z68BH at
1644z and the hour ended with 87 qsos.  The 17z and 18z hours were better with
101 and 92 qsos starting with ZS9Z and ZS6BAF at 1708z and 1711z an SV8DTD and
ZS2ABE at 1729z and 1743z.  In between, signals on 10 continued to strengthen
with SA/Carib getting quite loud and providing many mults.  T42A and ST2M
closed out the hour on 15.  At 1742z I had 3761 x 1200 = 14.04 Million in 30.3
hours.  I didn’t know what the US record score was but I knew that if the
bands opened up well, I might have a chance to break it!  

But just as the 18z hour started, my voice unexpectedly broke.  There was no
warning.  It cracked and it was GONE!  This was one of the side effects of the
medicines that I was taking and there was no way back from it.  SSB contests
are brutal physically to begin with but I have never had a strong voice so
operating hard really shreds it.  I tried whispering but that didn’t work.  I
slowed down my run and tried to talk gently in falsetto while drinking a lot of
water to rehydrate.  My rate got cut in half as I was barely audible.  I was
trying to buy time �" hoping that maybe if I took it easy for 15 minutes,
my vocal cords might rebound enough to allow me to continue operating.  I was
afraid to stop now because cndx were supposed to worsen which could mean a dead
15 meters and a dying 20 meters �" which was what happened in ARRL DX SSB.
   I continued to operate �" barely audible �" and had a run of PA
stations! with TA4AKS, SV8CRI and ZS1XG calling in from 1824z -1832z.  Everyone
had left 15 for 20 by now so there was no qrm �" I had to hope that 15
stayed open.  I stayed on 15 because of my voice �" I would not have been
able to run on 20, even though I knew that that is where I needed to be.  The
18z hour closed with 92 q’s and the 19z hour saw a mix of G and EI stations
with some West Coast US calling off the back of the antennas along with WL7CXP.
 Finally at 1930z I left for 20 meters and caught a good opening with TF3AO and
ZS4JAN ending a 118 hour.   Because of a relay problem in my outdoor
Stackmaster relay box, I had to operate on 20 in ARRLDXSSB by selecting only
one antenna at a time with an RCS-4.  However, between ARRLDXSSB and WPXSSB 2
weeks later, I had spent many hours troubleshooting and mapping out the relay
logic in the outdoor relay box and then fixing it.  Jay, WX0B was very helpful
in that regard, spending more than an hour on the telephone helping me.  The
difference was HUGE all weekend �" I was loud on 20 and I was able to run
every time that I was on the band, which also allowed me to split my antennas
between different areas of the world to run.  With a pitiful total of 35 JA
stations worked and only 20 JA prefixes (in better years I had worked as many
as 120+ JA prefixes), I needed a good JA run to bolster my multiplier.

So, should I stay on 20 and hope for the best or take off-time and save the
last 1 ½ hours for 40 meters?   I decided to operate on 20 where I was called
by VU2GRM and EK6SI at 2032z and 2041z and many new US prefixes and WL7CXP. 
Mixed in were some EU and VE stations providing another 96 stations apiece in
the 20z and 21z hours.   Several TA stations called in (I worked MANY on 15 and
20!) along with VK2CZ longpath at 2125z, then JR2GRX at 2129z and A73A at 2148z.
 I  had hoped for a JA run  but it did not materialize even though the Northern
path started to open further with NL7Z at 2154z and TF2MSN at 2207z  and then a
few JA’s, TA’s and TF2LL and B7P at 2231z.  My last qso was at 2254z.  I
took a quick listen to 40 meters and realized immediately that 40 is where I
should have been operating.  

My line score:  4303 qsos x 1280 mult = 16,602,880.    NON-ASSISTED.  NO 160. 
(the antenna had broken in a storm on Wednesday).

You might not think that the first few hours of a contest can be critical, but
they often are.  Had I operated to PRESERVE the valuable operating time instead
of taking casual off-times and dxing �" which cost me more than 1 hour in
total -  my score would be well over 17 million, perhaps even enough to have
broken the US record of my friend Krassy, K1LZ that he set in 2011.    

Of course, given my severe health issues, I really only expected to be able to
operate 10 �" 15 hours maximum.  I had not even the slightest notion that
I would wind up operating 20 hours straight on Saturday �" much less being
physically able to operate all 36 hours!  Or that I could even have a chance at
the TOP US Score despite all my silly and costly operating mistakes and
mediocre low-band and no 160 antennas.  That is why I love contesting so much
�" even after 43 years and 850,000+ qsos, you just NEVER know what is
going to happen!

A few notable accomplishments for me this weekend.

Highest rate hour in WPXSSB = 242 qsos
Best 2 consecutive hours WPXSSB = 466 qsos = 233 per hour!
Best 4 consecutive hours WPXSSB = 852 qsos = 213 per hour!
 8 consecutive hours > 150+ qsos per hour = 1521 qsos = 190 per hour! 
 15 consecutive hours > 100+ qsos per hour 

MANY 7 qso minutes

Bettered my previous high score in WPXSSB by 4.5 million points!

Congratulations to my friend Krassy, K1LZ, for a great score and great
competition.  I hope to be well enough to be able to compete again next year. 
And congratulations to Ed, N1UR (AC1U), W2SC (8P5A), Tonno, ES5TV and so many
others for their terrific scores as well.

I had such a great time operating this weekend �" it was so wonderful to
work many old friends and experience that fabulous WPXSSB propagation.  I would
never have though it possible that I could make over 4,300 qsos in 123 countries
with a SSN of 14 and with 1755 qsos coming from 15 meters!!  Thank you for all
of the qso’s and mults and I hope to see you in WPXCW!

73
Bob KQ2M

KQ2M@KQ2M.COM
rshohet@rlsfinancialgroup.com

                              Continent Statistics
 KQ2M   CQ WORLD WIDE PREFIX CONTEST    Single Operator     27 Mar 2016  2254z

                     160   80   40   20   15   10  ALL   percent

North America   SSB    0  125  251  314  205    9  904    20.7
South America   SSB    0    4    3   23   20   50  100     2.3
Europe          SSB    0  110  361 1179 1489    1 3140    71.9
Asia            SSB    0    2   16   82   49    0  149     3.4
Africa          SSB    0    5    9   15   19    3   51     1.2
Oceania         SSB    0    0    2   11   11    0   24     0.5

BREAKDOWN QSO/mults  KQ2M  CQ WORLD WIDE PREFIX CONTEST  Single Operator

HOUR      160      80       40       20       15       10    HR TOT  CUM TOT  

   0    .....    .....    77/73    .....    .....    .....    77/73   77/73 
   1      .      30/23    10/9       .        .        .      40/32  117/105
   2      .      24/15    51/41      .        .        .      75/56  192/161
   3      .       1/1       .        .        .        .       1/1   193/162
   4      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    193/162
   5      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    193/162
   6      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    193/162
   7      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    193/162
   8    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....  193/162
   9      .        .        .        .        .        .        .    193/162
  10      .        .        .     138/93      .        .     138/93  331/255
  11      .        .        .    187/113      .        .    187/113  518/368
  12      .        .        .       5/4    229/95      .     234/99  752/467
  13      .        .        .        .     232/91      .     232/91  984/558
  14      .        .        .        .     196/55      .     196/55 1180/613
  15      .        .        .        .     189/53     1/1    190/54 1370/667
  16    .....    .....    .....    .....   153/48    .....   153/48 1523/715
  17      .        .        .        .     146/40    14/11   160/51 1683/766
  18      .        .        .      86/17    72/23    11/11   169/51 1852/817
  19      .        .        .     130/31      .        .     130/31 1982/848
  20      .        .        .     156/26      .        .     156/26 2138/874
  21      .        .        .     115/39      .        .     115/39 2253/913
  22      .        .       4/1    109/36      .        .     113/37 2366/950
  23      .        .     116/17      .        .        .     116/17 2482/967
   0    .....    .....   125/18    .....    .....    .....   125/18 2607/985
   1      .       8/3     88/29      .        .        .      96/322703/1017
   2      .      55/5     32/3      4/3       .        .      91/112794/1028
   3      .       1/0     53/16     4/4       .        .      58/202852/1048
   4      .      54/7     47/8       .        .        .     101/152953/1063
   5      .      73/10     2/1       .        .        .      75/113028/1074
   6      .        .      32/7       .        .        .      32/7 3060/1081
   7      .        .        .        .        .        .        .  3060/1081
   8    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....    .....3060/1081
   9      .        .        .        .        .        .        .  3060/1081
  10      .        .        .      96/9       .        .      96/9 3156/1090
  11      .        .        .     107/14     1/1       .     108/153264/1105
  12      .        .        .      12/2     70/9       .      82/113346/1116
  13      .        .        .      19/5     54/5       .      73/103419/1126
  14      .        .        .        .      82/12     8/6     90/183509/1144
  15      .        .        .        .      91/22     6/1     97/233606/1167
  16    .....    .....    .....    67/10    20/3     .....    87/133693/1180
  17      .        .        .        .      81/15    20/12   101/273794/1207
  18      .        .        .        .      91/14     1/0     92/143886/1221
  19      .        .        .      68/7     48/8      2/1    118/164004/1237
  20      .        .        .      96/14      .        .      96/144100/1251
  21      .        .        .      96/10      .        .      96/104196/1261
  22      .        .        .     107/19      .        .     107/194303/1280
  23      .        .        .        .        .        .        .  4303/1280
DAY1    .....    55/39  258/141  926/359 1217/405    26/23    ..... 2482/967
DAY2      .     191/25   379/82   676/97   538/89    37/20      .   1821/313
TOT       .     246/64  637/223 1602/456 1755/494    63/43      .  4303/1280


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