[RSM] CQWW 2017 VE4VT recap - Long

ve4dxr ve4dxr at shaw.ca
Mon Oct 30 20:25:42 EDT 2017


Ed, 
Sorry you had such hard luck and difficulties with this contest. 
Nevertheless, your poor score is a record us newbees would love to achieve. 
Thank you for your detailed advise. 
I am saving your comments in a special contesting folder to refer to next time I sit down for a serious effort. 
For me, this weekend was an opportunity to work some missing dxcc/band on a casual part time effort. 

73, Leor 



From: "Ed Richardson" <ed_richardson at shaw.ca> 
To: "rsm" <rsm at contesting.com> 
Sent: Monday, October 30, 2017 4:50:51 PM 
Subject: [RSM] CQWW 2017 VE4VT recap - Long 

I look forward to this contest every year. However this year murphy seems to 
have struck at least three times. 

Propagation seemed to improve as the weekend went along. I saw a weak 
opening to Europe on 15m Saturday morning and Sunday morning it was much 
better and longer. 



Saturday there was a short and weak opening to Argentina and Chile on 10m. 
Sunday, the opening was much stronger and included Brazil and a couple weak 
Carribean stations. 



This contest is about balancing mults (zones and Countries) with rate. When 
you get a chance to run Europe, take it. My attempts this weekend didn't 
work well. Every other Canadian was stacked below 14.150 and the guys out 
east got there first. You would start rung only to discover there was 
someone on the same frequency already there. DX stations were calling the 
"hidden" station. 



I always advocate a complete contest check of all the stations operating 
features several day before the event. I completed my check last Tuesday and 
Thursday. So I was surprised that when I flipped to 80m, I was greeted with 
total silence. No antenna. I ended up spending an hour Saturday afternoon up 
on the tower replacing the jumper from the antenna switch to the feedpoint 
of the 160/80m sloper. 



Murphy had actually struck earlier in the week when I was setting up my 
winter vertical. I install a SteepIR vertical in the backyard and run 40+ 
radials all around it. Went through all the effort only to discover that the 
antenna didn't tune. I suspect that the spindle that holds the copper tape 
has broken. 



The third Murphy event occurred with three hours to go Sunday afternoon. 
Suddenly the lights started to flicker and the flourecent tube burnt out 
plunging the shack into darkness. So right in the middle of a 200W/hr run, I 
was left typing by the monitors glow. 



So my lessons learned: 

1. Check 10m from time to time. An SDR and spectrum scope is handy for 
doing this quickly 

2. Just because the sun has come up and all the world east of you is 
on 20 (or 15m) don't forget to check 40m. I picked up some real good mults 2 
hours after local sunrise. 

3. Point north around noon local time. There is often some strong 
Asian stations to be heard. This year it was a VU, and AH0 that were the 
surprises. 

4. Check 40m about 2 hours before sunset. Often you will find good 
conditions to EU and less competition from other NA stations 

5. Work as many Zone 7,8,9,10 stations on 20m in the morning as you 
can find. Just a 20m is opening, these zones start to pop open. Most US 
stations are aimed at Europe .Less competition and good conditions. The 
other reason you want to work thjem early is that when Europe closes in the 
afternoon, all of NA is searching for new signals. All the cluster shooters 
will be creating very deep pileups for these stations. 

6. Just before the European sunrise, watch for a bump in propagation 
on 40/80m. Signals suddenly appear several dB stronger and many are now 
workable. 

7. Just because the European signals are 20/9, don't give up when they 
CQ endlessly in your face. Apparently QRM is high in Europe on 40m. 

8. and most importantly, no matter how good the band is, never, ever, 
ever, start calling CQ on a frequency between K3LR and W3LPL. These power 
houses, despite being fierce competitors, don't like anyone else muscling in 
on their frequencies. They seem to separate themselves with a nice guard 
band that gives them a QRM free environment. A SSB signal should be between 
2.8-3.0 kHz wide.. So when these two stations are 5.6 kHz apart. There 
should be room for one station in between them. Apparently not!. How upset 
they were when they turned their beams from Europe to point at Asia and 
little old me has his beam pointed at the North East USA. Despite all 3 of 
us coexisting for over an hour, an antenna change on their part now made me 
the enemy. Their coordinated QSY's slowly moved their frequencies together 
destroying my run. By the time I threw in the towel, These two stations were 
now 3.4 kHz apart. I think I can still hear them laughing. 



Personally this was my worst performance in this contest since 2009. Without 
80m Friday night, I slept 3 hours. Saturday night after European sunrise, I 
couldn't find anyone to work so slept another 3 hours. With the repair of 
the antennas, and the light, plus 20 minutes watching the end of the bomber 
game (what a waste!), I was well rested by the end of the contest. As we do 
a tailspin on propagation in this sunspot cycle, the next couple of years 
will be a challenge as 20m becomes crowded and 80/40 will become more 
important. 



On the positive side, worked all 40 zones, just not on a single band. Also 
got a single band DXCC with 101 countries on 20m. Worked 114 unique DXCC 
which is not great for this contest. 

Hope everyone had fun and continued to learn. 



The rest of this is just boring statistics so feel free to stop reading and 
hit Delete now. 



Ed 



Band QSOs Pts ZN Cty Pt/Q 

1.8 8 15 5 4 1.9 

3.5 94 182 10 14 1.9 

7 287 622 23 56 2.2 

14 953 2120 31 101 2.2 

21 389 980 24 82 2.5 

28 35 100 8 10 2.9 

Total 1766 4019 101 267 2.3 

Score: 1,478,992 

1 Mult = 4.8 Q's 



Maximum run rates 

6.0 per minute (1 minute(s)), 360 per minute 

4.5 per minute (10 minute(s)), 270 per 10 minutes 

3.6 per minute (60 minute(s)), 218 per hour 




Zone 

1.8 

3.5 

7 

14 

21 

28 

Tot 


1 

0 

1 

0 

2 

1 

0 

4 


2 

0 

1 

1 

1 

1 

0 

4 


3 

1 

18 

28 

93 

67 

0 

207 


4 

4 

23 

94 

191 

36 

1 

349 


5 

1 

38 

78 

365 

35 

0 

517 


6 

0 

0 

2 

1 

4 

0 

7 


7 

0 

0 

1 

8 

9 

1 

19 


8 

1 

3 

19 

18 

22 

1 

64 


9 

1 

1 

13 

18 

22 

1 

56 


10 

0 

0 

2 

2 

2 

3 

9 


11 

0 

0 

7 

17 

31 

7 

62 


12 

0 

0 

2 

5 

9 

5 

21 


13 

0 

0 

3 

12 

22 

16 

53 


14 

0 

3 

7 

82 

58 

0 

150 


15 

0 

0 

11 

80 

30 

0 

121 


16 

0 

0 

4 

20 

0 

0 

24 


18 

0 

0 

1 

1 

0 

0 

2 


19 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

1 


20 

0 

0 

0 

8 

6 

0 

14 


21 

0 

0 

0 

4 

0 

0 

4 


22 

0 

0 

0 

2 

0 

0 

2 


23 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

1 


24 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

1 


25 

0 

0 

2 

5 

1 

0 

8 


26 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

1 


27 

0 

0 

0 

2 

3 

0 

5 


28 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

0 

1 


30 

0 

0 

1 

0 

4 

0 

5 


31 

0 

1 

3 

4 

8 

0 

16 


32 

0 

0 

1 

3 

0 

4 


33 

0 

5 

5 

5 

11 

0 

26 


35 

0 

0 

0 

1 

1 

0 

2 


38 

0 

0 

0 

0 

3 

0 

3 


39 

0 

0 

1 

1 

0 

0 

2 


40 

0 

0 

0 

1 

0 

0 

1 


Total 

8 

94 

287 

953 

389 

35 

1766 




CountryPrefix 

Tot 


4L 

1 


4U1V 

1 


5B 

2 


6Y 

7 


8P 

5 


8R 

1 


9A 

3 


9Y 

5 


A3 

1 


A4 

1 


A6 

1 


A7 

1 


C6 

3 


CE 

21 


CE9 

2 


CM 

11 


CN 

11 


CT 

6 


CT3 

5 


CU 

4 


CX 

7 


D4 

2 


DL 

18 


E7 

1 


EA 

26 


EA8 

8 


EA9 

2 


EI 

8 


ER 

2 


ES 

3 


EU 

4 


F 

26 


FM 

3 


FY 

4 


G 

17 


GD 

1 


GI 

2 


GJ 

2 


GM 

4 


GW 

1 


HA 

5 


HB 

4 


HB0 

1 


HC 

5 


HI 

7 


HK 

11 


HP 

1 


HR 

3 


HS 

1 


I 

39 


IT9 

7 


J6 

2 


J8 

1 


JA 

8 


JT 

1 


K 

1021 


KH0 

3 


KH2 

2 


KH6 

16 


KL 

3 


KP2 

3 


KP4 

6 


LA 

4 


LU 

46 


LX 

2 


LY 

4 


LZ 

6 


OA 

4 


OE 

1 


OH 

10 


OH0 

2 


OK 

5 


OM 

4 


ON 

8 


OZ 

2 


P2 

1 


P4 

8 


PA 

4 


PJ2 

3 


PJ4 

10 


PY 

60 


PZ 

3 


S5 

15 


SM 

10 


SP 

3 


SV 

3 


T7 

1 


TA 

1 


TF 

1 


TG 

3 


TI 

8 


TK 

2 


UA 

13 


UA2 

3 


UA9 

3 


UR 

5 


V2 

3 


V3 

4 


VE 

54 


VK 

5 


VP2M 

3 


VP5 

2 


VP9 

3 


VR 

1 


VU 

2 


XE 

7 


YL 

5 


YO 

2 


YU 

7 


YV 

11 


ZF 

8 


ZL 

3 


ZP 

2 


ZS 

3 


Total 

1766 



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