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Topband: WAZ

To: <topband@contesting.com>
Subject: Topband: WAZ
From: Bernie ZS4TX <bernie@internext.co.za> (Bernie ZS4TX)
Date: Sun, 06 Jun 1999 01:00:03 +0200
Hi topbanders,

I have received several requests to highlight a few points of my quest to
complete WAZ on topband from South Africa.  I am no distinguished writer but
here it goes:

I am 32 years old, licenced in 1983 and spend most of my HAM career on CW
and on the lower bands favouring 40 and 80.  I completed most of my 5BWAS,
5BDXCC and 5BWAZ from an apartment building in the city with vertical
antennas mounted on the 7th storey.  Oh was the TV crowd happy when I left!

I started my serious topband career in November 1996 after I moved to a 4
hectare smallholding on the Western outskirts of Bloemfontein.  Always being
limited by the constraints of city lots (size & neighbors!) and having to
resort to magic to disguise a vertical and co-ax on an apartment building I
now had the chance to put up something decent.

With "decent" being a relative concept I opted for a 30m guyed lattice mast
with a 1m face from which I could hang antennas for 160 and later support my
yagis for 80 and 40.  I would have liked to go much more "indecent" but my
wife (ZS4TZ) and the bank manager stopped me at 30m!

The first antenna I used for topband from here was a simple 1/4 wave sloper
fed at 26m, sloping down at about 30 degrees from the tower and tied back
with a rope at 30 feet from the ground where the remainder of the sloper
wire was strung almost horizontal with the ground to a fence post. (Yes
fences are that high in South Africa!)

This sloper proved to be a real performer and I used it to complete most of
my 160DXCC as well as 160WAS which took about two years.  The sloper must be
the best value for money antenna to use on topband because it so inexpensive
to construct and easy to tune - and it works!  The horizontal section that
my sloper had must have helped with the much debated sunrise tilt as well.
After all, no one from Southern Africa dominated sunrise openings like
3DA0CA with his invisible-almost-at-ground-level dipole!

My best contacts on the sloper was with KL7Y after running a sked for 3
weeks at my sunrise and the week after that I worked AL7MX freelance at my
sunset - an unusual occurrence from here.  Zone 1 is one of the toughest
places to work on the low bands and only a handful of ZS's has done it on 80
and 160.  Being on the air everyday at my sunrise with the KL7Y sked
attracted lots of attention and even though I worked split I could not hear
Dan responding to me at 2UP where a pile up usually formed.

I arranged with Dan to call 4UP even if I said 2UP and on the 2nd of January
97 I heard his signal weak with polar flutter answering me!  Dan had no QRN
at all and I had to contend with S7-9 static all the time.  I think Dan now
knows what I had to listen to after he operated from QRN infested HS in 98!

I eventually shunt fed my tower and added 120 radials as a ground plane.
Not being able to compare the 2 antennas at the same time I am unable to say
which one is the best but they both provided me with super topband contacts.
(In retrospect I may give the shunt fed tower with radials an edge over the
sloper!)  I added  East West and North South Beverage RX antennas as well
which helped tremendously - without them I would not have come close to WAZ.

Although the KL7's rank up there with the most difficult from here, the
first ZL that I worked was very tough and memorable. Although South Africa
and New Zealand has a love hate relationship because of Rugby rivalry
(Rugby= real football without padded clothes & metal headgear!) it has
always been a thrill to work ZL - ZS on  any band.  I actually thought they
all had watery & fluttery voices until I visited ZL in '95!  Also paid a
visit to the late Peter Watson & his wife - he and Mairie had a lot of good
things to say about people frequenting the low bands!

ZL - ZS being a polar path (much like W6 to Zone21) obviously makes things
worse and I had to wait for the solar minimum in June 97 to start a sked
with ZL2JR, at that stage the most active topbander in ZL. After 5 weeks of
nothing my end and traces of a signal on their end Jim ZL2BCG heard me 449
on his shoulder height  dipole and called me at 1AM on the phone to inform
me!  Obviously my wife did not share my or Jim's happiness of a 1 way QSO at
1 AM in the morning!

Two days after that (970624) I managed to pull ZL2JR through exactly at his
sunrise with a 339 both ways! In the weeks after that ZL2BCG, ZL4WA and
ZL2SQ also made it in the log.  The strange thing about the ZL QSOs was a
rapid QSB on all 4 stations that I worked.  It was like a loose connection
at one side with the signal appearing and disappearing at will - even on
different RX antennas.  I also heard the same QSB but not as rapid on VK9NS
whom I worked later that season - also a polar path but less so than ZL.
Jim Smith being in Zone 32 as well made it another memorable QSO.  The Zone
32 "seasonal party" was topped when I worked KH8/N5OLS for a new one before
he ate poisoned fish and had to QRT for a while.

My second last zone was 34 when the OK DXers were visiting 5A1A on their
last day! I arranged a sked at 22Z but managed to get in the log at 2150!

After my spell trying to convince Jim Dionne that Spratley 9M0S was actually
in zone 27 failed, I knew I had to get someone else living/travelling in
that zone interested in listening to QRN!  DU9RG was away from home, DU7SS
was back in Europe and the KH2/0/JA's on holiday mostly worked the higher
bands.  At last I "worked"  KH2/K9AW and when the QSL came back "NIL"  I
knew someone must have gotten tired of me chasing Zone 27 and gave me a 599
report at my sked time with K9AW!  That happens too!

At last Gus K4SXT landed on Guam and after he became active on topband I
managed to work him at his sunrise for my last zone!  I even asked him to
send a QSL directly to Jim K1MEM as well to speed up my application but by
that time Jim was already in hospital and I had to wait 10 months for
confirmation.

Memorable QSOs were also Zone 2 with VE2QRZ (WB2K) and XE2/K4JT whose
address I eventually got from Fred K6SSS after a 6 month search.  His A5
size correspondence paper QSL is one of my favorites!  KH6CC must also get
special note as as Hawaii is the ZS antipode.

I use an Icom 781 with an SB1000 amp, 2 x Beverage RX antennas and a 30m
shunt fed tower with 120 ground level radials.

It took me 14 months to complete 160WAZ.   Zones 1, 2, 23, 32 and 34 were
done with skeds, the rest freelance.

I hope this short write up did not bore you too much ( It took me 3 hrs to
write!) If it stirs up some interest in the chasing of topband certificates
it would have served a purpose.  I am not a certificate hunter but chasing
the "big six" certificates did force me to optimize all the available
resources from a "propagation challenged" country like South Africa.

>From my limited experience on topband I have gathered the following points
that helped me achieve success:
1. Be on the air consistently - especially while running a sked.
2. Any beverage is better than no beverage ( I read this somewhere!)
3. Do put your radio in the RX mode every so often - you'll be surprised
what you can hear.
4. Gather SWL beacon info - and use it.
5. Misuse contests to snag new ones.
6. Sleep during daytime!

Thanks for the opportunity to share some of what I have experienced during
the chase.

GL

Bernie,  ZS4TX




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