[SCCC] separating zero beated pileups?

Drew Arnett arnett.drew at gmail.com
Fri Jun 28 10:23:56 EDT 2024


The one guy not zero beating everyone else will always be rewarded by
me.  :-)  And was.  :-)

I continue to be impressed at how often skewing my TX freq off a bit
from the herd helps me get through a pileup quickly, even if QRP.
(Not talking about DX pileups here, though.  Those probably have
enough people in the pileup to be a different challenge entirely.)

On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 1:27 PM Tree <tree at kkn.net> wrote:
>
> A good problem to have.
>
> One thing to do is reward those guys who are smart enough (or perhaps inept enough) to call you off frequency.  The savvy ops will notice this and also call you off frequency.
>
> Tree N6TR
>
> On Thu, Jun 27, 2024 at 9:45 PM Drew Arnett <arnett.drew at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> "15 meters -- using 100 watts to a six element yagi"
>>
>> Being on the receiving end of this, seems like a lot of folks tx zero
>> beated.  A solid 5 seconds of zero beated cw is hard to pull out a
>> letter at times.  I was wondering if there are any good tips or tricks
>> stations?  Do I just learn to hear the subtle amplitude variations?
>> The vast majority of the time wasn't a problem at all, but this
>> happened enough for this CW beginner to have to ask.
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Drew
>> n7da
>>
>> > Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2024 05:16:14 +0000
>> > From: "J. Scott Bovitz <bovitz at bovitz.com>" <bovitz at bovitz.com>
>> > To: southern california contest club <sccc at contesting.com>
>> > Subject: [SCCC] N6MI Field Day report
>> > Message-ID: <D3837DA1-29EB-48C1-ACE4-12298EC77768 at bovitz.com>
>> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>> >
>> >
>> > For Field Day 2024, Tom's Garage ARC (N6MI) set up camp at Tecuya Mountain (Kern County, DM04, in the Los Padres National Forest).
>> >
>> > Our 2A SJV team included: Tom, K6VCR; Drew, N7DA; Larry, NB6E; Chef, KN6OGP; Greg, KI6RXX; Shane, K1BTW; Broden (17 years old and promises to get his license soon); and Scott, N6MI.
>> >
>> > We set up right next to a smooth dirt road about 1.5 miles from the nearest pizza joint. (Thanks for the pizza, Drew.) Many folks drove by our operation. We were visited by a few strangers, one SOTA ham, two park rangers, and (by invitation) a senior officer of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. We always had off-duty hams to chat with the visitors.
>> >
>> > One primary station was set up in Tom's trailer (40/15).
>> >
>> > The other primary station was set up in N6MI's converted television news van (80/20/10). See n6mi.com for photos of the van.
>> >
>> > Six meters was operated from KN6OGP's trailer.
>> >
>> > Two meters was operated from KI6RXX's truck.
>> >
>> > We did not put up an antenna on 160.
>> >
>> > We worked 5 hams on 80 CW, using 100 watts to an inverted vee.
>> >
>> > We worked 203 CW and 66 LSB contacts on 40 meters -- using 100 watts to an inverted vee. Tom said that he missed the two element 40 meter yagi we have used in prior years.
>> >
>> > We worked 641 CW, 1 FT8, and 341 USB contacts on 20 meters -- using 100 watts to a JK C3S triband yagi at 60 feet (two elements per band). This easy to assemble antenna was mounted on the pneumatic mast of N6MI's van.
>> >
>> > We worked 415 CW and 589 USB contacts on 15 meters -- using 100 watts to a six element yagi at about 50 feet (on an AB-577 mast). Yep, six elements. Sweet.
>> >
>> > We worked 26 CW and 47 USB contacts on 10 meters -- using 100 watts to the JK C3S triband yagi at 60 feet. Ten meters was tough going.
>> >
>> > We worked 43 FT8 contacts on 6 meters -- up to 100 watts to a five element yagi at about 20 feet. Six meters never opened up.
>> >
>> > We worked three FM stations on 2 meters.
>> >
>> > We ran a GOTA station (N7DA). Shane and Drew made 389 contacts -- using 100 watts and a mutli-band Alpha Delta dipole. Their station was set up on a card table under a pop-up canopy.  N7DA served as the coach. Next year, Shane is moving over to a big station and Broden is going to (he says) get his ham radio license. Broden is 17 and has other commitments, but we want him to be ready to serve as the officer of the radio club at his college.
>> >
>> > Did I mention the food? Chef set up a great spread for Friday's lunch and dinner. Then he cooked waffles on Saturday morning -- apples, strawberries, authentic maple syrup, and whipped cream were available. (Next year, how about fresh squeezed orange juice?)
>> >
>> > And about that chatter on Field Day...
>> >
>> > I don't recommend yet another change to the Field Day rules. There are plenty of folks to work during the contest. If a ham is happier working from home, I'm glad to encourage that ham to get on the air and work us all. But there more adventure in the field.
>> >
>> > Thank you for the contacts.
>> >
>> > 73,
>> >
>> > N6MI
>> > J. Scott Bovitz
>> > bovitz at bovitz.com
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > ------------------------------
>> >
>> > Subject: Digest Footer
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________
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>> >
>> >
>> > ------------------------------
>> >
>> > End of SCCC Digest, Vol 258, Issue 33
>> > *************************************
>>
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