[TOEC] Fw: [CQ-Contest] CQWW SSB KC1XX M/M HP + comments (long)

Peter Forsberg sm2odb@kommunicera.umea.se
Thu, 1 Nov 2001 12:44:27 +0100


Hej på er alla.
Kommer snart med info från sl2za:s medverkan i cqww-ssb.
Hittade detta som kan kanske vara av intressa att läsa.

Mvh Peter/2odb

----- Ursprungligt meddelande ----- 
Från: "Dave Pascoe KM3T" <km3t@contesting.com>
Till: <3830@contesting.com>; <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Skickat: den 31 oktober 2001 22:41
Ämne: [CQ-Contest] CQWW SSB KC1XX M/M HP + comments (long)


> 
> KC1XX CQWW SSB 2001 claimed score and (long) commentary...
> 
>       Call:      KC1XX
>       Category:  Multi Multi
>       Power:     High Power
>       Band:      All Band
>       Mode:      SSB
>       Country:   United States
>       Zone:      5
> 
>  BAND     QSO   QSO PTS  PTS/QSO   ZONES COUNTRIES
> 
> 
>  160      136      143     1.05     11      28    Opirateur de l'heure
>   80      569     1440     2.53     25      98    W1FV
>   40      674     1877     2.78     33     125    AD1C+K6AW,N6IG,KM3T,KC1XX,
>                                                       JA3CZY
>   20     2868     7631     2.66     40     178    KM3T+K1GQ,K6AW
>   15     2827     7946     2.81     40     177    K1DG,W2RQ,JA3CZY
>   10     2745     7723     2.81     39     176    KC1XX,N6IG,K6AW,JA3CZY
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
>  Totals  9819    26760     2.73    188     782  =>  25,957,200
> 
> 
> 
> Station Description
> ----------------------
> 
>  160m
>  IC781 + Alpha 77
>  Beverages 4 x 2-wire, 8 directions, 580' long
>  1/4 wave vertical
> 
>  80m
>  IC781 + AL1200
>  Beverages (see 160m)
>  2 over 2el delta loop reflector beam NE/SW (tops at 150 & 300 ft)
>  2el delta loop reflector beam NW/SE (top at 200 ft)
> 
>  40m
>  IC781 + AL1200
>  Beverages (see 160m)
>  4el rotary (130 ft)
>  2el South (170 ft)
> 
>  20m
>  IC781 + AL1200
>  4 x 5el Northeast (Europe), top rotary @ 200 ft
>  6el rotary @ 100 ft
>  5el East @ 75 ft
>  4 over 4el South (45 & 90 ft)
> 
>  15m
>  IC781 + AL1200
>  6 x 4el Northeast (Europe), top rotary @ 200 ft
>  5el rotary @ 90 ft
>  6el Northeast @ 50 ft
>  4 over 4el South @ 40 and 80 ft
>  6el Northwest (JA) @ 90 ft
> 
>  10m
>  IC781 + AL1200
>  8 x 4el Northeast (Europe), top at 200 ft
>  8el Northeast (Europe) @ 45 ft
>  5el rotary @ 95 ft
>  4 over 4el South @ 35 and 70 ft
>  3 x 7el Northwest (JA) @ 105, 70, 35 ft
> 
>  160/80/10 Spot Receiver
>  IC781
>  Beverages
>  10m vertical
> 
>  40m Spot Receiver
>  FT1000MP
>  40m vertical
> 
>  20m Spot Receiver
>  FT1000MP
>  20m vertical
> 
>  15m Spot Receiver
>  IC781
>  15m vertical
> 
> 
> General Commentary
> ------------------
> 
> CQWW SSB 2001 was a lot of fun.  It looked like we, and I'm sure many
> other stations, were on a record-setting pace until the proton
> delivery arrived.  :-) But things recovered within a few hours...we
> definitely had a shot at breaking our 1999 record but it would have
> been close.  Anyway, a fun time was had by all.  CQWW is the best.
> And very special thanks to all the DX stations, especially those who
> moved bands for us.  Your help is appreciated more than you know.
> 
> Also, kudos to all the other multi-multi stations for FB efforts.
> Especially K9NS, who turned in an amazing score from the Black Hole.
> Very impressive.  The K3LR M/M was sorely missed...Tim had work
> obligations that prevented this year's SSB operation.  The LR team is
> always tough to beat.
> 
> We did a lot of antenna work over the spring and summer months, and
> spent a lot of time getting effective spotting stations running.  It
> looks like that work paid off.  One of the biggest additions was a new
> and revised 20m stack (tnx KC1XX and K1GQ, with some help from KM3T
> and W1FV).
> 
> And, as usual, special thanks to Christine and the girls (Sabrina,
> Cassandra, and Anika) for making our stay so enjoyable every time and
> keeping us fed so well.  And for keeping us semi-human.
> 
> 
> Band-by-Band Commentary
> ---------------------------
> 
> 160: Manned by a cadre of ops, none of whom really wanted to do it.
> Who likes 160SSB anyway?  Especially with all the pre-contest whining
> and posturing about the band plan, none of us really wanted to touch
> it.  We had agreed with some of the other big multi-multi's that we
> would abide by the band plan. As long as everyone else was.  And we
> certainly would not CQ below 1843.  But if others were working mults
> (answering DX CQs) below 1843 we would be forced to do the same,
> despite what anyone says.  There was hardly any propagation, so the
> band plan turned out to be kind of a non-issue for the weekend as far
> as we could tell.  At times we had to strain just to hear VY2ZMM.  :-)
> 
> KC1XX, K1DG, W1FV, and N6IG all put in a little time.  If
> there's a dedicated, die-hard 160M SSB op out there who would love to
> come and do it next year, let me know.  It's all yours.
> 
> 80: W1FV pulled his usual ironman performance on 80.  See his comments
> below on band conditions, but despite the poor propagation John pulled
> off another amazing performance.
> 
> 40: AD1C and K6AW, with a little relief help from others, pulled off a
> great finish on 40m.  40m phone can be brutal, and it takes a lot of
> work to make a big score there.
> 
> Also, thanks to guys like 9M8R (W7EJ) and T88CC (N6AA and crew) for
> taking the time to occasionally listen for Ws - especially
> W1/2. That's a really long haul for us on 40, and we appreciate their
> attention.
> 
> 20: KM3T and K1GQ, with help from K6AW, did a crushing job on 20,
> putting the new 20m stack through its paces.  Breaking 2800 Qs was
> pretty neat, and no need for Tylenol, either.  If the flare aftermath
> hadn't hit we probably could have made 3000 QSOs.  The band was open
> all 48 hours, but of course slows down very quickly as soon as 15 and
> 10 open up and the MUF climbs quickly.
> 
> 15: The dynamic duo of K1DG and W2RQ crushed the competition on 15.
> What a team!  Great to have Doug back on 15 and to have W2RQ returning
> after operating in ARRL DX.  DG and RQ are both truly amazing.  RQ is
> clearly one of the better-kept secrets in the contesting world, since
> he only operates in multi-ops these days.  Infinite enthusiasm, great
> ears, and generally just "gets it."  DG says it's an honor to operate
> with him.  And K6AW, content to sit at the 15m spotting rig, among his
> other duties on just about every band, helped enormously pulling JA
> callsigns out of the noise.  And Elvin JA3CZY also did a bit of
> running during prime JA time and did a super job.  It was a real
> pleasure having Elvin visiting the station for the weekend.
> 
> 10: KC1XX and a new visiting op N6IG, along with K6AW, did a super FB
> job on 10m.  Elvin JA3CZY, our friend from Japan, also did a bit of
> running during prime JA time, working em' like crazy.  As has been
> said many times, "there's no meters like 10 meters!"  10m (and 15m)
> opened to Europe kind of late on Sunday.  If that hadn't happened, the
> QSO numbers would be even bigger!  We could have broken 3,000 Qs on 20
> through 10m.  That would have been really cool.
> 
> 
> Random comments from some of the KC1XX ops
> ----------------------------------------------
> 
> de W1FV, 80m op:
> 
> Auroral conditions trashed propagation into Europe the second night.
> For several hours I was beaming southeast to work Europe on skew path.
> 
> The disturbances also enhanced some propagation paths in strange ways.
> We had an unusual run of ZL's the second night, all from the northwest
> direction.  Sunday afternoon produced a one-way long path opening into
> Asia, starting 45 minutes before sunset.  I heard JA5BJC (S9!), YB0A,
> and BA4DW, but none of them copied me!  All three would have been
> double multipliers.
> 
> de KM3T, one of the 20m ops:
> 
> It's been a while since I did 20m SSB at a M/M.  It was pretty painful
> at times as the QRM on 20m can get immense.  Short skip and
> backscatter QRM can be hard to deal with.  But it's a challenge, and
> that's what makes it interesting.  The spotting station was a critical
> aid in achieving our score, and it was ably manned by K1GQ and K6AW,
> and me at times.  I find working the spotting receiver can be just as
> fun as running.
> 
> 20m was open for all 48 hours to somewhere.  JAs were not too
> plentiful, but that's normal for 20m.  Europe, as usual, is a
> bottomless pit of calling stations.  Lots of FB ops on this weekend,
> too.
> 
> Special thanks to SU1SK, who gets the cool guy of the weekend award in
> my book.  We tried to pass him from 15m to 20m and he said he couldn't
> go but asked what frequency we are on and then said he would show up
> in exactly one hour.  Sure enough, he showed up after one hour!
> Thanks to him we got our 40th zone.  It was looking like 40 zones was
> going to be impossible.
> 
> What can I say, CQWW is the best!  See you from HC8N in CQWW CW.
> 
> de K1GQ, one of the 20m ops:
> 
> It is a rare treat to fill the second chair on a band with KM3T in the
> first seat, especially when Dave has decided to find out what's
> possible -- even on a band as brutal as 20.
> 
> But I'm afraid I rediscovered how far I am from being even an average
> first-seat guy. Dave not only dug out calls I couldn't hear at all
> (perhaps I could blame the spotting receiver here), but he
> consistently got correct calls much more quickly than I could. It's
> clear that years of abstinence from phone contesting have left me with
> woefully inadequate mental processing power, and I'm probably too old
> now to catch up.  (KM3T note: GQ is grossly overstating his lack of phone
> prowess...he does far better than he leads you to believe)
> 
> Once again, we had an amazing group of operators that produced an
> outstanding effort and had fun doing it. I especially enjoyed
> discussions with our 4 "guest" operators from NJ, CA, and Japan.
> 
> de K1DG, one of the 15m ops:
> 
> 15M was open to somewhere for all 48 hours. We had QSOs in the first
> 29 hours, and only missed making QSOs in 3 out of 48 hours. That was
> because everyone we could hear was a dupe, and the ops decided to
> catch a little sleep instead of CQing endlessly for a couple of QSOs.
> 
> And a note to all SSB operators (especially a certain AA2):
> 
> Your radio is not perfect. When your frequency readout says you are
> transmitting USB on 21200.05 kHz, enough energy from various
> non-linear distortion mechanisms comes out of your radio (and
> amplifier) below 21200.00 to place you "out of the band". The FCC
> defines signal bandwidth at the -26 dB points referenced to the mean
> output power (97.3(a)(8)).
> 
> de KC1XX, one of the 10m ops:
> 
> 10 meters was the usual bottomless pit. Wall to wall stations between
> 28200-29000 and at times even higher.
> 
> Rate could have been a lot higher without all the QRM. Best hour must
> have been around 200.  I was sure that we could work 3K Qs on ten and
> go over 30M on Saturday but Sunday the conditions fell apart and 10m
> opened real late.  The first two hours were more skew path then direct
> path.
> 
> At one point I had to get out of the chair because of too much junk
> from CB converted radios, people calling 250Hz off frequency and one
> guy playing tunes with an echo machine.  What a bunch of loonies we
> have on 10m!
> 
> Had a little run into SA Sunday afternoon. Talk slow and clear with
> the beam south and LU's, PY's and others will call. It was fun
> watching "Elvin" (JA3CZY) running JA's with my call in Japanese.
> 
> Thanks to everybody for letting us pass you to another band for the
> mult or Qs. We appreciate the efforts very much. A special thanks to
> NP4A/m for pulling over to change the stick to 15 meters for another
> QSO :-)
> 
> Looking forward to CW!
> 
> 
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