[Nodxa] Fwd: Ohio QSO Party Log Submission

Tedd Mirgliotta (KB8NW) kb8nw at barf80.nshore.org
Thu Sep 9 11:04:53 PDT 2010



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: 	Ohio QSO Party Log Submission
Date: 	Thu, 9 Sep 2010 10:48:25 -0400

Thanks to all the people who got on for the Ohio QSO Party!  The
participation by Ohio hams was extraordinary and 75/80m was jammed
packed from the opening bell.  Early reports show many stations worked
well over 70 counties, which used to be a difficult task.  Give
yourselves a pat on the back for a job well done!
As a wrap up to the contest, we'd appreciate if you would submit your
log to the OhQP Committee.  No log is too small!  Please send your
electronic logs to: logs at ohqp.org <mailto:logs at ohqp.org>  by September
28th 2010 @ 0000z to be eligible for awards.  A list of logs received is
on the front page of the OhQP Website at www.ohqp.org
<http://www.ohqp.org/> and the list is updated every few days.
Confirmation emails are not sent.
I'm sure many new county/category records were set, and the only way to
get into the history books (or receive a certificate or plaque if you
qualified) is to submit your log.
Snail Mail logs need to be postmarked by September 27th, and sent to:

Ohio QSO Party
c/o Jim Stahl, K8MR
30499 Jackson Road
Chagrin Falls, OH 44022-1730
73, and we hope you will join us Next Year on August 27th, 2011.
Kenny K2KW
OhQP Committee
--------------------------
Electronic Log Tips from the OhQP Log Checker:
If you are using N1MM and an Ohio Station, make sure the sent
information is your 4-letter county abbreviation and not OH!
If you are using TR and post, make sure you do not have RST in the
exchange.  Also make sure you have sent information!
If you are using Writelog, it does not follow the Cabrillo v3 standard
for category names!  Please let the author of Writelog know that their
software does not meet the standard.
If you're tempted to submit an ADIF file, please check if your software
can generate a Cabrillo file. (Common issue for N3JFP users)

For those who don't know, a Cabrillo file is an ASCII file developed for
contest log submission that all contest loggers now include in their
software.  Therefore, if you're using Windows you can (and should) look
at it with notepad and make sure the info is correct before you submit
your log. If you find a mistake after you submit your log, just resubmit
the corrected log.


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