[UK-CONTEST] 144Mhz Trophy --lack of activity

Rob Hall m0rby at waylock.co.uk
Fri Sep 9 17:39:53 PDT 2011


Quality over quantity ever time. Maybe I was educated poorly (which I doubt
with our lot) but 59 means perfectly readable and you are S9! OK, during SSB
field day you pass 59 regardless but normally you'll get an honest sig
report from me. It is the challenge that is the important thing in
contesting - we met loads of managerial, technical, beerological and CIA
approved sleep challenges this year in SSB Field Day and I am sure that most
band contests are the same with different technological challenges (HF -
bung wire up, argue about direction with a G3, compromise with the
field-hardened M6 GCHQ Sig Int who is awaiting time to get the M0 and carry
on; VHF - who has got the micrometer, it is out by 2.6mm, is there anybody
out there, Hello ISS!) 

This year's contests were a great laugh; a learning curve and, for my money,
steeled us for next year. 

I feel a DXpedition coming on :)

73 Rob M0RBY

-----Original Message-----
From: uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com
[mailto:uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of John Lemay
Sent: 09 September 2011 20:06
To: 'David G3YYD'; UK-Contest at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [UK-CONTEST] 144Mhz Trophy --lack of activity

In May this year our group won the 24GHz section of the 432MHz and
everything above contest. We had 4 qso's in 24 hours. Each contact was
interesting and in some cases challenging. One of them gave us our best ever
dx on the band.

I wouldn't swap that for 3-a-minute on 20m. What was that about fish in a
barrel ?

Hard hat at the ready !

John G4ZTR


-----Original Message-----
From: uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com
[mailto:uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of David G3YYD
Sent: 09 September 2011 19:18
To: UK-Contest at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [UK-CONTEST] 144Mhz Trophy --lack of activity

For me what makes a contest interesting is QSOs lots of them and 
technical/operator challenge. Do VHF contests make the grade? One or two 
get close. VHFNFD: the local club with 400 watts, 30m high mast, 4 
stacked beams on 2m, similar set up on 70cm, 4m & 6m and on the top of 
the highest hill for many miles. I think we made about 550QSOs on 2m in 
24 hours. I can do that in a few hours in a major HF contest. I can also 
operate two bands at the same time on HF (SO2R) virtually all VHF+ 
contests don't even enable me to work 2 bands at once so not much 
operator challenge.

 From home I have K3, very good 2m transverter and 350 watts to a single 
yagi at 65ft, but only 80m ASL. Everything I hear I can work. Even so I 
quickly work the band out and then think what now? I have lost interest 
in listening to the same stations I have already  worked and the noise 
between them. So I go QRT and do something more interesting. Do I come 
on next time there is VHF contest no not worth it. Much rather spend my 
effort (and brass) on a worthwhile HF contest.

Now convince me and many operators thinking the same as me that VHF+ 
contesting is worthwhile.

73 David G3YYD

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