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[VHFcontesting] FW: ARRL Jan VHF N8RA SO3Band-All Modes LP

To: <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: [VHFcontesting] FW: ARRL Jan VHF N8RA SO3Band-All Modes LP
From: <chetsubaccount@snet.net>
Date: Mon, 20 Jan 2025 17:02:47 -0500
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Operator(s): N8RA
Station: N8RA

Class: SO3Band-All Modes LP
QTH: FN-31
Operating Time (hrs): 5
OpMode: SO3R

Summary:
 Band  QSOs  Mults
-------------------
    6:   51    15
    2:   57    23
  222:           
  432:    6     5
  902:           
  1.2:           
  2.3:           
  3.4:           
  5.7:           
  10G:           
  24G:           
-------------------
Total:  114    43  Total Score = 5,160

Club: Yankee Clipper Contest Club

Comments:

Contest Prep-
I was looking forward to spending more time in this contest. Since last time, I 
had a new rotary 6M yagi to try and had cleaned up the wiring from an old 
laptop to allow it to reliably control my old FT897D on 432 cw and FT8. 

Some family issues were starting to pop up for the weekend so a few days before 
the weekend I spent some time getting ready: 

I opened up the K3 (which had been a little flaky) to make sure internal coax 
cables and PCBs were seated OK, pulled out the front panel a little and 
reseated it. When it was back together, it now seemed AOK even from a cold 
morning startup.

The old FAA 6155 432 amp’s plate meter showed no reading, but screen voltage 
was ok so HV must exist in its power supply. After looking inside for a HV wire 
problem and finding none, I fired it up and it made watts as usual. I re-tuned 
it to 70 watts out to lower the plate dissipation because the last time it was 
used on the FT8 duty cycle it tripped out from overheating. At only 30% 
efficiency, 30w less out is 60w less heat.

Contest Day-
I thought I was ready and my plan was to start at the opening gun and first 
work as many cw/ssb stations that I could find and then move to where the 
crowds were after the rate would likely drop.

But as I powered up the station, a lot of gremlins showed up taunting me for 
hours.

How come 432 had no rx audio? Finally found that computer’s mic was set to 
mute! Uh, how did happen? Wasn’t me…

And then, how come the other computer had no rx audio to its WSJT? Uh, who had 
put that computer’s line-in on mute? Wasn’t me! MS, was that you?

Why were some amp PTT/ lines switched around. Uh…well maybe that one was my 
fault after working on the 432 amp a few days ago.

How come the K3 set power out works FB on 6M but the mw transverter output 
wanders for a few seconds, and sometimes drops to zero, before settling out? So 
that scuttled 222 operation since I had no more time or patience to dig into it.
By late afternoon on Saturday, I finally had 3 good bands working and enjoyed a 
few good hours of contesting Sat and Sunday. The antennas did well and there 
was enough activity to be busy with, having to rethink 5 antenna decisions 
every 15 seconds based on the latest decodes.

Other observations-
The new WSJT-X RC8 version did a few unexpected things.
One time it suddenly closed itself but restarting it from N1MM+ was OK.
Another time a crash screen popped up saying it had to shut down due to an 
unexpected closing of a TCP port. I had to close N1MM+, shut down an orphaned
JT9 process, and restart them again. 
I had not studied or turned on the new WSJT qsy messaging and was surprised 
when a popup asked me to go to 222, which sadly was not working so I had to say 
no. I eventually noticed my CQ message needed a reset. But it was intriguing, 
and may have potential.

FT8 on 432 MHz! Sometimes while CQing on a dead band I could clearly see 
someone reply but could not decode them. Their waterfall trace continuously 
drifted over each cycle making a prominent curved trace band on the waterfall. 
They were drifting too much while transmitting to be decoded. Most other 
stations had absolutely straight FB vertical waterfalls. I discovered a few 
contests ago that older gear (like Elecraft 432 transverters have enough 
temperature drift due to heating while transmitting which badly hurts their FT8 
ability. I’ve since fixed mine with an external TCXO. Lately I just use my old 
FT897D that has a good TCXO and is OK after a 20-minute warmup. 

Tnx all and 73,
Chet, N8RA


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