Paul's question regarding names is a good one. Those of us who have
been at this a while are really happy to see so many SECC teams entered.
A few of us are a little new to this, so here are some thoughts:
Names: Most people use their own name if it's not a really long or
difficult name and many shorten their name, but you can use any name. I
would shorten Bartholomew to Bart. Most of the Andrews, Alexanders,
Williams, Roberts, etc are using Andy, Al, Bill and Bob. Shorter is
better, but also common is better. If you use a name like "Xe" expect
to have to repeat it many times and that will surely slow you down.
Many stations use history files and many of us have a lot of the names
memorized. If you use the same name in every outing your contacts will
go more smoothly, as you will be sending what's already expected on the
other end. Names are sometimes adopted for one outing to honor someone.
We had an SK named Don last year - many people used Don as a memorial.
Some people change their name every outing to force the folks using
history files to actually copy the exchange. For this they pay a steep
penalty of having to send fills more often - that practice is up to the
individual.
Scoring well: This is a fun contest in that it has a nice scoring
balance between QSO total and mults. There are enough mults to chase,
particularly when you can work all of them over and over on each of six
bands, to keep you busy chasing mults all day and night. The winners
will be around 1300 Qs and 225 mults. Here are last year's top ten:
NK7U(KL9A) 1335 227 10 303,045
N5KO(@W6NL) 1318 218 10 287,106
W7RN(N6TV) 1141 223 10 254,443
NN3W(@N3HBX) 1093 217 10 237,181
N1BAA 1122 209 10 234,498
K7BG 1068 213 9:47 227,484
NP4Z 1018 223 10 227,014
N3BB 1162 191 10 221,942
N6RO 1037 213 10 220,881
K1ZZ 942 227 10 213,834
If you are new to the contest, the above scores should not enter into
your thinking very much! The key to these big scores however is a good
balance between Qs and mults. Get on every band you have antennas for
at some point in the contest, even if you are just playing around. When
you show up on a new band, every contact is a new multiplier for a
while. Move around (band to band) as much as you can if you can't CQ
your way to a high rate someplace, and pick up those mults.
Off time: This is a tough one. The first four hours you must stay in
the chair if you are working on a good score. Time off for dinner isn't
a bad strategy, as 10 and 15 will probably be closing and 40/80/160 will
not be open well yet to the west coast. The key to any domestic contest
is to pour a big signal into the population centers on every band you
can. They are: the Northeast, Florida (GA, AL and TN also very
active), Texas, Midwest (IN,IL,MI,OH) and California. Working CA on 80
and 160 with 100W can be done if you have an okay antenna or better and
you have left some time in the last two hours. 160 is still improving
to CA as the contest ends. Taking the last 30 minutes off is okay, but
I would not take the last two hours off. Besides, it's nice to have a
break somewhere in the middle. Remember, off times are a minimum of 30
minutes in length except for the last one, which can be any length to
bring you to an even 10 hours maximum (or less if you are part time).
Logs: This contest has a tight log submission deadline, its 14 days
from the date of the contest. Logs get submitted at the NAQP web site.
Fun: It's easy to enjoy this contest. If you are brand new to CW
contesting, stay high in the bands, do mostly S&P, move around a lot and
enjoy yourself. Don't sweat the score - you won't win anyway, and next
year you can beat this year's score, which is always a great feeling.
See 'all tomorrow - and as John has mentioned, there is a half hour
practice tonight at 9:30PM local time which is a good warmer-upper.
73
Hal
N4GG
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