[NCC] CQWW CW 7J1AAI(W1NN) SOSB/40 HP
Jeffrey Ach
w2fu at frontiernet.net
Wed Dec 2 06:48:19 EST 2015
Hi Hal,
Did this mean that you did not work LPL?
jeff
-----Original Message-----
From: NCC [mailto:ncc-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of Hal Offutt
Sent: Wednesday, December 02, 2015 3:45 AM
To: Mad River Radio Club; North Coast Contesters
Subject: [NCC] CQWW CW 7J1AAI(W1NN) SOSB/40 HP
CQ Worldwide DX Contest, CW
Call: 7J1AAI
Operator(s): W1NN
Station: JH1GTV
Class: SOSB/40 HP
QTH: Tokyo
Operating Time (hrs): 38
Summary:
Band QSOs Zones Countries
------------------------------
160:
80:
40: 1552 35 108
20:
15:
10:
------------------------------
Total: 1552 35 108 Total Score = 597,025
Club: North Coast Contesters
Comments:
Thanks to JH1GTV for allowing me to operate his great station in Tokyo’s western suburbs again.
In the weeks before the contest, Shige worked very hard to prepare the station for a SO2R all band effort. Unfortunately, during the first hours of the contest I ran into two problems: Win-Test via Winkeyer was sending strange, uneven CW that had too much space between the characters; and Win-Test suddenly stopped switching the CW to the second radio. Most of the problems seemed to be related to Win-Test and Winkeyer, while N1MM, which was installed on the same computer, seemed to be acting normal. However, I had never used N1MM in SO2R and I didn’t feel like having to learn during the contest. With no prospect of being able to fix things in time to be competitive in SOAB, I decided go with 40M SB since 40 had not yet opened and I would not be handicapped. I have operated SB40 three times before from this location, so I had a good idea what I was in for. It can be pretty exhausting and boring at times, but at least you can get a little sleep during the daytime on Sunday. Japan is a pretty good place to do SB40, since we have a pretty good shot at NA followed by many hours of working EU.
Well, normally we have a good shot at NA. This year was unusual, at least for me. I only had 479 NA contacts this year compared with 627, 661 and 589 for 2008, 2009 and 2010, respectively. Normally stations like K3LR and W3LPL are loud for at least several hours but this year I only heard ‘LR twice and ‘LPL was in the mud the three or four times I heard him. Strangely, though, the main difference this year seems to have been in the number of Zone 3 stations, which were way down this year from previous years.
7J1AAI NA QSOs
2015 2010 2009 2008
Zone 3 186 294 282 319
Zone 4 157 179 223 185
Zone 5 117 95 138 101
Other 19 21 18 22
Total 479 589 661 627
Most of the Z3 stations I worked were loud, so propagation does not seem to be the cause.
On the other hand, conditions to Europe were excellent. I worked 829 EU stations this year, compared with 812, 667 and 558 in 2008, 2009 and 2010, respectively.
The good conditions to Europe also probably helped my country mult total, which was 8 more than ever before. Spending more time tuning the band than in past years certainly helped too. I worked every mult I heard except for a V85 who was S&P.
As usual I had a lot of dupes " 67 this year, similar to past years.
Once or twice I had 10-15 stations I had already worked call me in the space of a couple of minutes. In past years, I believe I was sometimes spotted as ZJ1AAI. This may be somewhat understandable, but shouldn’t my zone alert these ops that something is amiss?
Strangest call worked this year: OM2015TITANIC. Surprisingly it actually fit in the log. Is this a real call?
Best QSO: my very last contact was with a very loud ZD8W for a double multiplier. This was an hour after my sunrise. He was so loud that I was afraid that he might be a pirate but he seemed to be working lots of EU as well as Asian stations, so I hope he is legit.
The funniest QSO happened toward the end of the second night when I was having trouble staying awake and hallucinating a little. In response to one of my CQs, a station sent what I understood to be “you are 5 KED.” I couldn’t understand what he meant and I think I sent something like “what do you mean?” Did he want a sked? Was he trying to tell me that something was wrong with my signal? After he sent his call a couple more times I realized that his call was UR5KED and because I was extremely tired somehow I understood the first two letters of his call as “you are.” When I realized my mistake, I completed the QSO and had a good laugh at myself.
My final claimed score is less than 6,000 points below my best score in 2008 when I made 140 more contacts. More multipliers can make a big difference.
73, Hal 7J1AAI & W1NN
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