VHFcontesting
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Re: [VHFcontesting] 432 Sprint

To: "Michael Gullo" <mgullo3@comcast.net>, <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [VHFcontesting] 432 Sprint
From: "David Olean" <k1whs@metrocast.net>
Date: Thu, 23 Apr 2009 11:22:35 -0000
List-post: <vhfcontesting@contesting.com">mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
How to begin?
I had a "trying" evening. First off, I was "trying" to get the station 
hooked up. No time before the sprint to assemble the station, so I was 
putting it together at 5:30 PM on Wednesday evening. It was pouring rain 
which did not help things. The dirt road goatpath was a quagmire, although 
the waterfall halfway up the road was rather scenic in the rain..
    The blower for the amplifier is remoted outside the building. During the 
winter, the blower housing got ripped off the building in a storm,and was 
smashed and laying on the ground. I had to repair all that in the rain. The 
worst part was "trying" to clean all the mouse pee and poop off the plastic 
hose that runs into the shack.. The blue flex hose was actually brown. It 
was disgusting. If I catch Bubonic Plague or the Black Death in the next few 
days, you will know where I got it! And I am going to the SE VHF Conference 
right after the Sprint! There is a chance that the whole VHF SSB/CW operator 
pool in the Southeast USA will get wiped out by the Black Death all because 
of the 432 Sprint.
      I got the exciter and transverter hooked up next, but had trouble with 
the new solid state driver amp. I did not have enough drive in the present 
configuration, but figured I could get on the air with slightly low power. 
My transverter only puts out +24 dBm. Well, the gain changed with the 
amplifier as it went into TX. The result was I started out with 900 watts 
out, and after about 20 seconds, was down to 200 watts out.  To make matters 
worse, I had a high VSWR on the 432 yagi. There is water in the array 
somewhere. Gee, that is strange! How could water get into anything? I have 
spent my life trying to waterproof rf cables and antennas, but still get 
routinely beaten by Mother Nature. (The BUM!)  So here it is "Earth Day", 
and I am calling Mother Nature a BUM! It won't be long and I'll be in a re 
education camp for sure! I was still hearing signals on 432, so figured I 
could "try" to work around the water issue with the high VSWR. I finally got 
things running enough to try it all out a bit after 7:30 PM. I never got the 
computer installed, so logged everyone on napkins and scratch paper that the 
mice had not entirely eaten over the winter. If I don't re write the log 
sheets onto clean paper, there will be more mysterious medieval type deaths 
for sure when I send them through the mail.
    I worked nothing that resembled a good DX QSO.  I think the problem was 
that many stations do not aim my way as a routine procedure.  The multi path 
was horrendous. I heard WZ1V when I first turned on the rig, and honestly 
felt that my receiver was hosed. I could not tune him in on upper sideband. 
I tried lower sideband and had the same results. He was not coherent up 
here, but it was all because of the horrendous multi path. (I will not 
insert a "coherent" joke here at Ron's expense as he promised me a small 
hybrid amp to boost the output of my transverter. The joke might jeopardize 
my chances of getting the power levels right with the new driver amp.)  I 
had to wait until Ron, WZ1V turned his antenna so I could copy him. I heard 
VE2ZAZ calling K1TEO, when I had the beam due west. I tried turning the 
antenna to the proper heading but could hear nothing from VE2ZAZ. (?) I 
called and called to no avail. Later I heard him calling CQ and getting no 
takers. I turned the antenna and found that the best heading was 250 
degrees. It should have been 310 degrees or so! The only way I could hear 
him was by multi path reflection off some faraway mountains. The direct path 
was inaudible!! He finally heard me with my power level sweeping amplifier, 
but I never did get a great signal out of the direct path. I do not think 
that he ever aimed southeast. I heard similar effects on K1TEO, WZ1V, and 
WA2FGK. I could tell when they were aiming west as I got multipath signals 
from them at weird headings to the west!
    Some signals were good here. WB2RVX in South Jersey, and WB2SIH were 
loud. KA1ZE/3 was good as was K3TUF. I heard nothing past FM29 and FN10 to 
the SW. Not much to the wset either. I worked N2LID with good signals, but 
never heard KA2LIM. With the driving rain, I was not surprised. Conditions 
were just miserable. I ended up quitting at 10 PM with only 11 grids. Not 
sure how many contacts. I left the mouse pee stained napkins/logs up in the 
shack, so my wife would not die from Bubonic Plague. I would really be in 
the doghouse with her if that happened.  I think it was around 25 or 30 Qs.
    Why do I do this?

73
Dave K1WHS  FN43Mumbo Jumbo
    ----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael Gullo" <mgullo3@comcast.net>
To: <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 23, 2009 4:56 AM
Subject: [VHFcontesting] 432 Sprint


> Conditions were fair here in South Jersey. Rain just stopped before 
> contest started. Must have been going to FN12. Sri Ken! Ended up with 32 
> q's in 14 grids. Best DX was VE2DSB in FN35 419 mi. Tnx to our sponsors es 
> CU on the microwave sprint.
>
> Mike - WB2RVX
> FM29mt
> _______________________________________________
> VHFcontesting mailing list
> VHFcontesting@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/vhfcontesting 

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