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[RTTY] WPX RTTY WX5S(@W6YX) M/M HP

To: <rtty@contesting.com>
Subject: [RTTY] WPX RTTY WX5S(@W6YX) M/M HP
From: n6de at inreach.com (Dean Wood)
Date: Sat Feb 15 22:09:43 2003
                     CQ/RJ WW RTTY WPX Contest

Call: WX5S
Operator(s): AC6JT, W6ZZZ, W1SRD, K0BEE, NI6T, WX5S, K6UFO, W7SW, W6LD, 
AE6KU, K6ENT, N6DE
Station: W6YX

Class: M/M HP
QTH: CA
Operating Time (hrs): 48

Summary:
  Band  QSOs  Pts
-----------------
    80:  184   438
    40:  388  1418
    20:  596   987
    15:  600  1231
    10:  577  1110
-----------------
Total: 2345  5184  Prefixes = 498  Total Score = 2,581,632

Club: Northern California Contest Club

Comments:

Station 1:
Yaesu FT-1000MP MkV, Alpha 87A, Hal DXP38, MMTTY
Station 2:
Yaesu FT-1000MP, Acom 2000, Hal P38, MMTTY
Stations 3 and 4:
Kenwood TS-850, Alpha 78, Hal DXP38, MMTTY

Antennas:
10m: Hygain 105CA at 31', Telrex 6-el at 75'
15m: Hygain 155CA at 25', Telrex 6-el at 75'
20m: Hygain 205CA at 36', KLM 6-el at 65'
Tribanders: Force12 C31XR at 60', Mosley Pro67 at 50'
40m: Rotatable dipole at 65'
80m: Inv-V at 55'

Networked Writelog v10.39.

Operators: AC6JT, W6ZZZ, W1SRD, K0BEE, NI6T, WX5S, K6UFO, W7SW, W6LD, 
AE6KU,K6ENT, N6DE

Visitors: W6OAT, N7MH, W6KNS, W6GEM, Diana (K6ENT XYL)


What a blast!  We had a tremendous group of extremely talented and 
enthusiastic folks join us for the weekend. The experience was a new 
homecoming for NI6T and AC6JT, as they were Stanford University grad 
students years ago, and had not seen the current W6YX station.

Another well respected Stanford alumnus, Jim Maxwell W6CF (sadly an SK 
on February 6), was clearly in our minds during the contest.  Many of us 
were good friends with Jim over the years.  Jim was an amazing man in so 
many ways.  We already miss him dearly.


THE CONTEST

The stations were set up mainly from the personal equipment of our 
operators, which made a four station M/M possible.  K6ENT and I reminded 
ourselves that it was a non-trivial task to set up four complete 
stations for RTTY, and configure Writelog on all of them. We observed an 
interesting interaction between one USB-serial converter and a laptop 
infrared port.  Thanks to AC6JT for helping to solve an MMTTY problem on 
one machine, and also realize my brain fart of having the slope tune 
controls on my TS-850 improperly set.

I tried to set up all four stations with the same Writelog window layout 
and identical macros.  I configured the macros so that F2-F4 performed 
the same functions as what some of us were used to in previous RTTY 
contests (ala AA5AU's macro suggestions), but also added CT-like 
compatibility (Insert and + key definitions), TR-like functionality 
(Enter key sent what it supposed to when TR-mode enabled), and an Fkey 
window so that macros could be driven entirely by a mouse.  Everyone 
could then choose what they liked best.  During the contest, we realized 
there were a few macros that I should have included, and will add them 
next time.

We had been experiencing an intermittent receive problem on an FT-1000MP 
in the days before the contest.  Sure enough, the problem decided to 
reappear in the middle of a 20m run at the beginning of the contest. 
Thanks to Mark K6UFO who brought his FT-1000MP as a backup in case this 
happened!  We swapped in his rig and suddenly heard signals again, but 
no one was answering our CQ.  This was until a helpful station told us 
we were transmitting reversed polarity, which reminded me that I had 
forgotten to set the FSK polarity on Mark's rig to REVERSE.  Upon 
setting that properly, more stations suddenly started answering us. 
Amazing how that works!

Thanks to Matt WX5S for allowing us to use his callsign for the weekend. 
  On occasion, we wished we had been operating from 5-land (or even 
1-land, for that matter) to get some more Europeans in the log!  But we 
gave it a maximum effort from California, and enjoyed good JA and HL 
activity.  Our night warriors (Garry, Matt, Kent) were not overwhelmed 
with exciting pileups, but those hours proved valuable for higher point 
QSOs, particularly on 40m for 6-point QSOs with Asia.  Surprisingly, 
even with a wind damaged 40m beam (now a rotatable dipole), 40m was the 
highest point yielding band for us!

Europe was open for about 2 hours each morning in Northern CA on 10m and 
15m.  20m stayed open a little longer, but the volume of EU there seemed 
less.  Bryan had fun working UN, EY, and other good DX on 20m.  We were 
surprised to work S21 and 9G on three bands.  Thanks to everyone for all 
the 5-band sweeps.  It was fun to get VY1JA in the log on all five bands!

We were pleased to see the AE9B/0 and KA4RRU M/M efforts in this 
contest, keeping us motivated to push ourselves!  We ended up with more 
total QSOs, but fell short on mults and the overall points/QSO ratio. 
Our QSO numbers were well balanced between 10, 15, and 20m.  Our 
continent QSO distribution is attached below.

There were a few stations who called in and made our day by telling us 
it was their first RTTY QSO.  RTTY activity in contests certainly seems 
to be rising, thanks to MMTTY.


OTHER NOTES

We had terrific food all weekend!  Much of it was prepared by Doris 
K0BEE, who we owe many, many thanks for all the great entrees!  My 
favorites were the ribs and Asian peanut slaw!  Garry pitched in by 
preparing some tasty chicken wings.  We had a minor crisis on Friday 
night, as the rice cooker was not operational.  Steve and Garry 
proceeded to take the entire unit apart, finding a blown fuse.  A look 
around the shack turned up empty on locating an appropriate fuse
replacement.  Rusty joined the group on the quest to fix the rice 
cooker.  Time was running out and a desperate crossroads had been 
reached.  I started getting rather nervous when I heard statements 
through my headphones such as, "It'll be OK if we use some thick copper 
wire" and "Maybe we should plug it into an outlet on a different circuit 
from the radios."  I turned up the AF gain on my radio, pressed the 
headphones against my hears, and hoped for the best.  And "the best" is 
what happened, as the rice cooker was back in service with no harm to 
the W6YX electrical system!  Good job, team!  Now that is the 
DXpeditioner defined!

Delicious looking cream puffs were prepared for dessert.  They were 
frozen, and we wanted to avoid a nuking mess in the microwave.  How to 
solve this problem?  Ahhhh, the amplifiers seemed to be warming the room 
quite nicely.  Let's place them on top of the Alpha 78 and watch them 
transform into wonderful, lightly browned masterpieces.  Marc was 
thereby ordered to keep up the rate for the sake of the cream puffs!  No 
excessive CQing without answers, or the cream puffs would get too mushy. 
  No S&P, because the cream puffs would never warm.  A sustained run was 
required.  One look at the log shows Marc played his cards perfectly, 
with a job well done on the radio and the cream puffs!

With apologies to Mel Torme, it wasn't exactly Chestnuts Roasting on an 
Open Fire, but rather, Cream Puffs Thawing on an Amplifier!

Although it's Been Said Many Times, Many Ways,
Merry Contest to You!

Thanks for all the Qs!

73...
-Dean - N6DE


            80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total      %

     OC       2      7      8      8     12      37     1.6
     AS       9    136     86    191    162     584    24.9
     NA     173    241    425    305    327    1471    62.7
     SA       0      2     17     25     27      71     3.0
     EU       0      1     56     69     44     170     7.2
     AF       0      0      4      3      4      11     0.5



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