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ARRL 160

Subject: ARRL 160
From: uszvn9l6@ibmmail.com (uszvn9l6@ibmmail.com)
Date: Mon Dec 5 11:01:14 1994
-------------------- Mail Item Text Follows ------------------

This was my first contest since FD and it sure felt good. Put up a new dipole
on 160 Saturday AM and it seemed to cut through the ether in grand style.
Thanks everyone for the Q's. Here's the lowdown:


      Call: W8XY                     State: OH
      Mode: CW                       Category: SO

      BAND     QSO    QSO PTS   SECTIONS

      160      223      446       45

               Score:  20070


Power Output: 150 watts     Hours of operation: 6

Equipment Description:
TR5
160m DIPOLE @ 48'

>From Gerry Hohn <Gerry.Hohn.0285711@nt.com>  Mon Dec  5 08:54:08 1994
From: Gerry Hohn <Gerry.Hohn.0285711@nt.com> (Gerry Hohn)
Subject: Several Scores-VE6AO
Message-ID: <199412051605.1377.0@nmiss1.miss.nt.com>

                       Subject:                               Time:8:41
  OFFICE MEMO          Several Scores-VE6AO                  
Following are several recent scores from VE6AO, Multi/Single operation
of the Calgary DX Club.

CQWW-SSB: 665 Qs  49 Zs  96 Cs  = 184,295 Ps
SS-CW:        330 Qs  65 Ss            =   42,900 Ps
SS-SSB:       642 Qs  74 Ss            =   95,016 Ps
CQWW-CW:   970 Qs  59 Zs  96 Cs = 321,005 Ps

Gerry VE6LB for VE6AO      



>From Martin Durham <MDurham+aENG%EFJohnson@mcimail.com>  Mon Dec  5 15:57:00 
>1994
From: Martin Durham <MDurham+aENG%EFJohnson@mcimail.com> (Martin Durham)
Subject: MLS
Message-ID: <12941205155721/0005058293DC3EM@MCIMAIL.COM>



SUBSCRIBE


>From Richard L. King" <0007131253@mcimail.com  Mon Dec  5 16:11:00 1994
From: Richard L. King" <0007131253@mcimail.com (Richard L. King)
Subject: ARRL 160 (better story)
Message-ID: <12941205161121/0007131253PJ1EM@MCIMAIL.COM>

Here are the K5NA ARRL 160M Contest results:

1303 QSOs, 41 Countries, 74 W/VE, 351,095 Score

NOTES:

Was assigned emergency baby-sitting duties for my grandchild at 7:00AM 
Friday morning killing my sleeping in late plans.

Discovered a few minutes before the contest started that the east 
beverage for southern Europe wasn't working. As a matter of fact all 
the other beverages except the NE and SE were performing poorly. The 
NE beverage heard well but from all directions. As a result I spent 
the entire contest with the running station listening on the NE beverage 
and the second S/P station used the SE beverage. I think the nasty 
hunters and the frantic Banbis must have really taken a toll on my 
beverage system. As soon as I get my courage up for the shooting gallery,
I will brave the woods and fix everything.

I slept 4 hours at mid-day on Saturday and had a total of 5 hours off 
time (that's 37 hours operating for the mathematically impared).

Conditions were super in spite of my receiving difficulties this year. 
I know I had many Europeans and West Coast stations calling that I didn't
pull through.

This was my best score since 1986 when I last broke 300K as a single-op.

I forgot to mention above that I was single-op high power.

Station is a IC765 and a TS-940; antennas are two slopers (NE and SW) 
hung from a 190 foot tower and a octagional loop (top at 120 feet and 
bottom at 20 feet, fed at the middle of the bottom) broadside NE/SW. 
I can switch the antennas around to either station. Amps are a Henry 
Premier model (has 160) and a Dentron DTR-1000L.

I tried to avoid the area from 1830-1835 as a DX window, choosing to 
crowd in as close above 1835 as I could. I had lots of jammers (Window 
Police?) as a result. I think I gave up on the window concept somtime 
Sunday morning. If a reasonable, consistant DX window was established, 
I would honor it. However, 20 years ago when I was doing this same 
contest from Texas, I remember the DX window was 1825-1830. The 160M 
DXers were EXTREMELY good about honoring the window. However, when the
contest came along, there was always people operating in the window 
in spite of this and attempts to move them out weren't usually 
successful. I don't think you will EVER have a DX window honored by 
all participants during a contest weekend.

I missed KH6, VE8, and VI. I thought I heard someone send KV4FZ on the 
second rx once, but not sure if it was he in QSO or someone asking 
about him. I heard J7 and an LU(?) that I didn't work. KL7Y was the 
loudest I have ever heard him. Most Eu mults called me. Where was KH6CC 
and ZL3GQ. I usually expect to get these two stations and I never heard
them.

Best hour (per CT) was 88 QSOs. I had 1200 NA QSOs, 142 Eu QSOs, 3 SA 
QSOs, and 1 AF (5T5JC) QSO. No Asia and Pacif this year.

This is still one of my favorite contests since my first effort in 1972 
as a guest op at W5SZ (has it already been over 20 years?) Thanks to 
all who dropped by to give me a QSO.

73, Richard -  K5NA
K5NA@MCIMAIL.COM


>From Scott J Bauer" <sjb@rfc.comm.harris.com  Mon Dec  5 16:32:27 1994
From: Scott J Bauer" <sjb@rfc.comm.harris.com (Scott J Bauer)
Subject: SquINT
Message-ID: <199412051632.LAA27281@usc02.rfc.comm.harris.com>


Thanks to NJ0U, the loudest station here for two QSOs.  One with my daughter
Sara and one with my son Alex

Rcvd                      Sent

NJ0U Kyle age 6 Pink      WA2LCC Sara age 3 Yellow
NJ0U Kyle age 6 Pink      WA2LCC Alex age 8 Red ? I dont remember

"Score"  45 min * 2 comments = 90 points.  1 potty break.

Many yawns while talking, from my daughter.  She lasted 40 minutes !! She calls
a mean CQ, when not yawning.  Using VOX worked best.  BIG smile from Sara when
she knew Kyle was talking to her !  Went to McDonalds for the after contest
reward.

I've got to get a new QTH so I can put up some real antennas.
Great idea for something different !  Made my son do 5 minutes.

Scott WA2LCC, sjb@rfc.comm.harris.com

>From David & Barbara Leeson <0005543629@mcimail.com>  Mon Dec  5 16:20:00 1994
From: David & Barbara Leeson <0005543629@mcimail.com> (David & Barbara Leeson)
Subject: Beverage to TS-830
Message-ID: <35941205162053/0005543629NA2EM@MCIMAIL.COM>

Re W8CAR's question...Don, the way to get a beverage or 2nd antenna into
a TS-830 (or other Kenwood rigs) is through the transceiver plug on the back...
that's what all the talk is about how to get the plug for that connector...
both the receive side of the TR relay and the receiver input are available
for a switch box at this connector.  Dave, W6QHS


>From Jay Kesterson K0GU x6826 <jayk@bits.fc.hp.com>  Mon Dec  5 16:54:18 1994
From: Jay Kesterson K0GU x6826 <jayk@bits.fc.hp.com> (Jay Kesterson K0GU x6826)
Subject: K0GU ARRL 160 Score
Message-ID: <9412051654.AA06897@bits.fc.hp.com>

ARRL 160 METER CONTEST                         NA = 1020  98.3%  CO2JA
Call: K0GU   Section: CO                       SA =    2   0.2%  PY0FF, YV1OB
Category: Single Op                            AS =   15   1.4%  JAs, UA0/MM
 QSO   PTS  PTS/Q  SEC  DX                     OC =    1   0.1%  V73GT
1038  2133   2.05   75   5 = 170,640           EU/AF Bzzzzzt

FT-1000D, Alpha 76PA, N4KG tower feed, six beverages, W3LPL BPF, RX preamp

Whats a phone op like me doing in a contest like this?? My first serious SO
CW effort after 20 years of contesting. Notable effects as fatigue set in,
my CW sending went to h*ll and sometimes Q5 stations called and it just
didn't register ( ..--.. ). I did not sleep well during the day on Saturday.

Three times had stations, that were obviously copying me well, rip my
frequency. I stayed and battled them for 10 or so minutes to no avail. They
were there to stay, had to cut my losses and run. Kind of surprised me,
frequencies weren't that hard to come by, unless you wanted to be in the
window :-). Oh well, I probably PO somebody myself.

I don't want to hear anymore whining about slow second day contest rates :-).
Highest rate the second night was 44. The 08Z hours was 4 Qs. I now
understand why M/S is popular in this contest.

Installed the N4KG feed on my tower (55' Rohn 45 w/ Mosley PRO-96) the
weekend before. Even though my tower is only a bit over 1/8 wave by the 
formula in the article (June QST) it out performed my elevated inverted L
(38' in vert section, metal barn roof ground) by a few DB to a few S units.
With four radials (at only 5' elevation) the SWR was 1:1. The SWR is almost
flat over the whole band, I assume from loss of short tower and radial
height. I you have the room for the radials its a quick and easy way to
get on 160. However in a head to head battle to a JA, with a local using a
elevated 1/4 wave vert, the JA copied him with one minor fill of his call.
The JA then CQed in my face (without even a QRZ) till I gave up. Would like
to swap info with other N4KG users, send me some Email.

73, Jay K0GU  jayk@fc.hp.com

>From sellington" <sellington@mail.ssec.wisc.edu  Mon Dec  5 11:04:47 1994
From: sellington" <sellington@mail.ssec.wisc.edu (sellington)
Subject: K9MA 160 Score
Message-ID: <9412051706.AA03674@ns.PacBell.COM>

K9MA 1994 ARRL 160 M Contest Score, Single Operator, High Power:

883 QSO's, 86 Mults, 155,058 Points


Antennas:  Shunt-Fed 23M tower, receiving loops and wires.


Comments:      

Poor conditions for DX, but better the second night.  AFTER  the contest, the
K index was zero again.  Figures.

High point was getting a call from 5T5JC.

Low point was when a particularly obnoxious Iowa station blatantly tried to
steal my frequency.

The "DX Window" just doesn't work in this contest.  The DX stations are 
usually so weak that there's no possibility of hearing them through
pile-ups anyway.  It seems the only way for NA stations to work DX is to
hope they answer our CQ's.

The two small phased loops work fairly well for receiving to Europe on
160.  ELNEC predicts some interaction with the tower on 160, but still
about 9 dB of f/b, which seems to be about what I get.  (Both ELNEC and
observations agree that coupling to the tower makes the loops useless
on 80.)


73,

Scott  K9MA
sellington@ssec.wisc.edu

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