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[3830] 50SprngSprnt WW7D/R Rover LP

To: 3830@contesting.com, djholman@u.washington.edu
Subject: [3830] 50SprngSprnt WW7D/R Rover LP
From: webform@b4h.net
Reply-to: djholman@u.washington.edu
Date: Sun, 12 May 2019 07:13:55 +0000
List-post: <mailto:3830@contesting.com>
                    50 MHz Spring Sprint - 2019

Call: WW7D/R
Operator(s): WW7D
Station: WW7D

Class: Rover LP
QTH: CN96
Operating Time (hrs): 4

Summary:
Total:  QSOs = 66  Mults = 21  Total Score = 1,386

Club: Pacific Northwest VHF Society

Comments:

The weather was stunning--sunny, low 80s, light breeze--in the Pacific Northwest
for the 6m Sprint.  Consequently, there was a modest turn-out for the evening.
To make up for it, we did have a few rovers out there. 

I was one of the rovers, covering the gravel roads around the
CN86/CN87/CN96/CN97 grid intersection just outside the NW corner of Mt. Rainier
National Park.  WU7H/R covered the next grid intersection some 70 miles to the
north of me, and KA7RRA/R was somewhere to the north, as well. 

There were no signs of enhanced propagation for SSB or CW.  I called CQ a few
times on 52.525 FM and, as usual for the area, got no bites. All QSOs were in
the weak signal part of the band; all were SSB except for 5 CW QSOs.  

The 66 QSOs were with 22 unique calls.  Grids worked: CN85 (Portland), CN86,
CN87, CN88 (Bellingham), CN97, CN98.  Not a peep from BC.

WU7H/R wasn't on the air until 1.5 hours into the sprint, but we managed to
completed 9 grid combinations.  I am grateful to the many folks who stuck it out
to the very end.  The 6m Sprint was particularly enjoyable because there was
SSB/CW activity throughout the entire 4 hours.


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