One of the ‘AWs during 2017 IARU

In early June, NN1N contact me and K5ER to offer the opportunity to organize a distributed multi-multi as NU1AW/5 for the IARU contest.  Of course we said YES!

Here is the summary!

IARU HF World Championship
Call: NU1AW/5
Operator(s): WM5H W5WZ W5LA K5ER KV8S KA5M KG5VK KN5O NO5W K2FF K5YG W5XU N5HZ KG5HVO
Station: NU1AW/5
Class: Headquarters HP
QTH: LA
Operating Time (hrs): 24

Summary:
 Band  CW Qs  Ph Qs  Zones  HQ Mults
————————————-
  160:    63           0       7          3
   80:   326          2     15        14
   40:   741     530    26       47
   20:  1101   1079    40       54
   15:   436     393    22         18
   10:      61        82       4             2
————————————-
Total:  2728   2086   114      138  Total Score = 3,652,488

Grand Total Qs: 4814

Club: Louisiana Contest Club

Comments:
Our first time ever distributed multi-multi operation.  We used an online scheduling tool to manages the host station band/mode time slots.  View the schedule here:  http://w5wz.com/nu1aw/

Three host stations with 14 operators

Ops at W5WZ: WM5H W5WZ W5LA K5ER KV8S
3 transmitters

My elmer Jim W5LA running CW as NU1AW/5 during 2017 IARU at W5WZ. Photo by Scott W5WZ
Mark K5ER and Bobby WM5H running SSB as NU1AW/5 during 2017 IARU at W5WZ. Photo by Scott W5WZ

Ops at KA5M: KA5M KG5VK
1 transmitter

Steve KG5VK and Marsh KA5M at KA5M in Shreveport, Louisiana. Photo by Lynn Stewart

Ops at KN5O: KN5O NO5W K2FF K5YG W5XU N5HZ KG5HVO
2 transmitters

Here’s an animation of the 24-hour contest log in just 4.5 minutes!

You can also find a complete summary of our results, compiled by SH5, stored permanently on my website at: http://w5wz.com/sh5/w5wz/2017/2017_iaru-hf_nu1aw_5/   Feel free to share this link freely or use the data as you see fit, provided you give credit to SH5 and W5WZ.com for hosting those results.

Dayton Hamvention Bound!

With great anticipation, I am trying to be patient until arriving at the Green County Fairground in Xenia – the new home of Hamvention.  I’ve heard and seen comments about waiting to see how it goes. Well, I trust DARA and their ability to execute the large logistical challenge that has been the Hamvention for the past decades. Sure we as patrons will have to learn the new layout.   In life in general, without learning there is no progress. And the only constant in life is change. 

Regardless, I’ll be there on Friday when the gates open. And I know I will enjoy the new experience. 

What will you do?

W5WZ – 2017 CQWW WPX SSB

Call: W5WZ
Operator(s): W5WZ
Station: W5WZ

Class: SOAB HP
QTH: LA
Operating Time (hrs): 22:37
Location: USA
Radios: SO2R

Summary:   Compare Scores
Band QSOs
160: 0
80: 61
40: 504
20: 1017
15: 110
10: 0
Total: 1692 Prefixes 560 Total Score 1,551,200

Club: Louisiana Contest Club

 

SH5 Contest Log Analysis here

W5WZ – 2017 Louisiana QSO Party

Call: W5WZ
Operator(s): W5WZ
Station: W5WZ

Class: SO Mixed HP
QTH: OUAC
Operating Time (hrs): 12:00
Location: In State/Province
Radios: SO2R

Summary:   Compare Scores
Band CW-Dig Qs Ph Qs CW-Dig Mults Ph Mults
160: 0 0 0 0
80: 24 0 15 0
40: 42 29 27 15
20: 49 500 30 68
15: 2 1 2 1
10: 0 0 0 0
6: 0 0 0 0
2: 0 0 0 0
Total: 117 530 74 84 Total Score 240,576

 

Club: Louisiana Contest Club

Comments:     [email]     2017-03-30 17:36:49
12 hour effort. Participation was disappointing. Many of the QSOs were with DX in the Russian DX contest. I configured my function keys to send the serial # in CW mode, and in voice mode I just told them the qso number, even though I was not capturing serial numbers in my log. –73, Scott W5WZ

W5WZ traveling to K8AZ for the 2017 ARRL DX SSB

What is it that can cause a man to desire to drive solo for 16 hours and 1,100 miles, then sit in a chair for 48 hours, and then drive solo for the 16 hour 1,100 mile return trip ?  ARRL DX SSB contest, of course!

Once again W5WZ will be a guest operator at K8AZ near Cleveland, Ohio.  This will be my fourth time to join the group for a contest at Tom’s excellent station.

Stay tuned for a summary of the weekend!

Band QSOs Mults
160: 43 30
80: 180 66
40: 380 92
20: 1213 101
15: 277 66
10: 116 25
Total: 2209 380 Total Score 2,495,460

Time Flies

02/12/12 —  Sure doesn’t seem like 4 months have passed since I updated my journal here.  Work, holidays, etc. just makes time fly.  I suppose the time I had I spent on the air rather than updating websites.  Recently received 1st place Phone Out of State Single Op plaque for CO QSO Party , and 1st Place Louisiana Multi-op certificate for the TN QSO Party.

Uploaded several more SH5 contest reports

W5WZ @ K8AZ for the first time

10/28 – 10/31/11 — Traveled to K8AZ to join the M/S team for CQ WW SSB. 

The 2011 CQ WW SSB is now history! I left from Shreveport LA on Friday morning. Once I got to Cleveland Ohio (aircraft mechanical problems, late flight crew, missed connection in Dallas, rerouted to Chicago, near-miss connection, and lost luggage), I had a great time with a great group of ops (K8AZ, K8BL, K8MR, K8NZ, ND8L, W5WZ, W8CAR, W8WTS, WT8C) at a fantastic station. Tom K8AZ and his golden retriever Shane are first-rate hosts!

Here is the scoop on the K8AZ station:

House Tower:

• 5L 10m @ 80′ (rotates)

• 5L 10 @ 50′ fixed SE (switchable upper-both-lower) • 2L40 @ 70′ (rotates)

Pond Tower

• 6L15 @ 130′ (rotates)

• 6L15 @ 65′ (fixed EU) (switchable upper-both-lower) • 6L20 @ 120′ (rotates) • 6L20 @ 60′ (fixed EU) (switchable upper-both-lower) • 5L10s @ 125’/100’/75’/50′ (all fixed EU) • Tower also supports a full-size elevated ground plane (elevated radials) for 160m

TUP Tower (rotatable tower)

• 5L20 @ 120′

• 5L15 @ 110′

• 7L10 @ 100′

• 7L10 @ 75′

• 5L15 @ 65′

• 5L20 @ 45′

• Tower also supports ropes which support a wire 4-square (full size) for 80m

40m Tower

• 4L40 @ 130′

• 2L40 @ 60′ (switchable w/4L40)

Receive antennas include a short-vertical 4-square and a 15′ high dipole for 160m; a 15′ high dipole for 80m, and the Hi-Z 8-circle rx array

All antennas are available at all four positions; however the TUP rotating tower requires coordinating which band controls the azimuth. The switching scheme is fantastic. Everything is very well engineered. Inter-station interference was minimal – the station employs Dunestar 200watt band pass filters between transceivers and amps, as well as some W3HQN high-power filters after the amps (serial numbers on all were less than 15). There is liberal use of copper grounding strap neatly in the entire basement shack. All cables are neatly and consistently labels. All controls are neatly and clearly labeled.

Inside, the transceivers are three FT-1000MP Mk-Vs and one K3- all fully-loaded with appropriate Inrad filters. All homebrew amps: three 8877 and one 3cx1200. The amps’ power supplies are beefy, with two of them using pole-pig transformers.

There are six identical computers running Win-Test for logging; 2 of them are spares, but are up on the network during the contest with the log being written to all 6. That way, an in-contest failure only requires relocating the computer. Win-test is different from N1MM but still easy enough to get the basic functions down. Tom insists on footswitch PTT (my favorite anyway) and uses Heil Quiet Sets (no longer in production) with HC-4 mike elements.

The M/S strategy was keep the run station running. Anytime the rate got down below 120 or so, we were looking to change the run band for at least the 10 minute clock. The other 3 transceivers were constantly tuning, listening, and scanning the DX cluster spots for new mults. Early in the contest, we would ‘stack’ the band maps with mults to enable keeping the mult station rate up for the 10 minutes, by simply point & shoot. As the hours went by and the mults were harder to find, often the 10-minute clock was open (meaning we could change mult band at any time) and we would change for a single mult. Sometimes the rate would slow, so we’d have one of the other receivers stack a band map, switch to that band to ‘point & shoot’ for 10 minutes, then switch right back to the previous run band.

Sharing time with the other 8 ops, I got 6 hours sleep on Friday night and 5 1/2 on Saturday night.

Observations- when the propagation is there, the Europeans are loud! But I think our openings in the south last longer. Over the pole flutter is there on more paths since the location is further north and the polar region is appears wider.

There were several light-hearted comments about how slow I talk and about my ‘hard-to-understand’ accent. I thought they all talked in FFWD mode 😉

And the best part — I was home on Monday evening to trick or treat with the family! What a weekend!

CQ Worldwide DX Contest, SSB

Call: K8AZ

Operator(s): K8AZ,K8BL,K8MR,K8NZ,ND8L,W5WZ,W8CAR,W8WTS,WT8C

Station: K8AZ

Class: M/S HP

QTH: Ohio

Operating Time (hrs): 48

Summary:

Band QSOs Zones Countries

——————————

160: 33 13 29

80: 196 26 84

40: 497 32 108

20: 557 40 144

15: 1299 38 146

10: 1339 34 145

——————————

Total: 3921 183 656

Total Score = 9,408,546

73,

Scott W5WZ

I made a PowerPoint presentation for our local club meeting held on the night after I returned home.

Addition of a K3

01/14/11 — A new (to me) transceiver arrived today!  K3 #0251 – I’m looking forwarded to giving it a good workout to evaluate my preference between K3, 756Pro2, and FT1000MP.  

Ice Storm 2011

01/08-09/11 — Weather forecasts had a winter storm/ice storm warning for our area.  The predictions were bleak.  The actual event for my QTH was negligible.  At ground level, perhaps 1/4″ radial ice accumulation.  At this location, we dodged a bullet.