[Skimmertalk] N4ZR ARRL DX CW - Skimmer experiences (Pete Smith)
W3OA
w3oa at roadrunner.com
Tue Feb 24 12:27:13 EST 2009
Hi Pete -
I'm sorry to hear your neck problems are serious enough to curtail your
operating. I hope they are solved soon.
And thank you for your report. I'm wondering what settings you used on
the "Calls" tab?
73 - Dick, W3OA
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 24 Feb 2009 06:57:46 -0500
> From: Pete Smith <pete.n4zr at gmail.com> (by way of Pete Smith
> <n4zr at contesting.com>)
> Subject: [Skimmertalk] N4ZR ARRL DX CW - Skimmer experiences
> To: skimmertalk at contesting.com
> Message-ID: <6.2.0.14.2.20090224065658.034365f8 at mail.comcast.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
>
> Knowing that my neck problems would prevent anything like a full-time
> operation, I decided to live a normal weekend life, except for operating
> sessions in the morning and afternoon. That meant stopping for lunch and
> dinner, almost no operating during hours of darkness (early Sunday AM
> only), and only about 16 hours of operating time. I decided to use the
> contest mainly as a chance to test various tactics for using CW Skimmer - I
> did not use an internet cluster.
>
> The results were pretty gratifying. My overall rate of 93.5 QSOs/hour is
> the best I've ever sustained in an ARRL DX contest, and I had a 147 hour
> Sunday morning on 20. Skimmer caught the brief 15 meter opening on
> Saturday morning, and I used it in vain looking for another on
> Sunday. Most of the time, Skimmer was on the same band as my second radio,
> looking for S&P QSOs (and particularly multipliers). That allowed it to
> work while I was running on the other radio, and it found more stations
> than I could possibly work, given the run rates and my limited SO2R skills.
>
> However, the most useful tactic, I found, was to take the "opportunity" of
> losing a run frequency to survey my current run band and see if there were
> enough new running stations to warrant a quick S&P sweep of the
> band. Typically, 2 minutes spent with Skimmer on an open band would
> produce spots of 200-275 stations (most of them dupes, of course). I would
> then swap radios (Alt-F5 in N1MM Logger), and move quickly up or down the
> band working the non-dupes. Doing this, it was common to see my rate-meter
> at 150+ for the last 10 QSOs, which made S&P this way almost as productive
> as running on a good frequency. On Sunday afternoon, I did a lot of this,
> trying to boost my multiplier total, and found it interesting to see the
> new waves of CQers show up on a given band, confirming what we know from
> experience to be true.
>
> The European pileups were horrific - they sounded like packet pileups to
> me, judging by the sudden onset, but looking at DX Summit I was surprised
> by how few times I was actually spotted (though I wonder if some European
> clusters are limited in their spot distribution to national
> boundaries). Perhaps it was just the ruckus on the run frequency that
> attracts people.
>
> Anyway, a good time.
>
> 73, Pete N4ZR
>
>
>
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