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Archive for Contest

antena_cr

EA RTTY Contest

Posted by Jim Wilson 
· Sunday, April 7th, 2013 
· No Comments

This past weekend I worked the EA RTTY Contest. Multipliers were Spanish provinces, DXCC countries, and US/VE call areas. My effort was very casual due to a number of tasks to complete around the house as well as attending the Lone Star DX Association lunch meeting. Managed to work 101 contacts across all bands 80 to 10. However, 15 meters was the real workhorse band.

Ran N1MM along with MMTTY and this time had 2Tone set up as receive window. 2Tone really did a great job on the hard to decode signals. Time and again it would be able to decode the tough ones while MMTTY printed gibberish. Nice to have that extra help.

If I worked you during the contest, thanks for your QSO(s). 73.

 

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Categories : Radio Contesting, RTTY
Tags : Contest, RTTY
bartg_logo_160

BARTG Spring RTTY

Posted by Jim Wilson 
· Sunday, March 17th, 2013 
· No Comments

Got on the air this weekend for the BARTG Spring RTTY Contest. Managed to get in just over seven hours spread over Friday evening, Saturday morning, and Saturday afternoon. Got the Moxon up in the air and it served well getting my 100 watt signal into Europe. Even so, most of my QSO’s were in the USA.

N1MM and MMTTY worked excellently throughout the contest. Plus, the setup in N1MM was very easy considering that the contest requires serial number and the UTC time. Had a couple of bobbles with the click to copy the exchange. Also had a few where an S & P message would send AGN? rather than repeat the call. I got used to this version of Enter Send Message in RUMped. I either need to re-learn my habits, or look into setting up the macros in N1MM to duplicate that approach.

In those seven hours I managed to contact 152 stations, mostly on 15, 20, and 40. 35 DXCC countries, 35 areas, and 4 continents — no Asia or Australia.

The rest of the weekend was consumed with a few family and housekeeping matters. Had a new cable/internet/phone service installed on Thursday. So had a few issues figuring that out. Also had to do some repair work to the lawn sprinkler system that occurred as a result of the cable installation. Finally, my daughter Brooke returned home after presenting a paper at a conference and her MacBook promptly packed up its hard drive. That computer is now toast and so is her paper that she worked on during the conference. Gee whiz.

Good to get on the air. This was my first BARTG Spring contest. Not the same level of activity as the CQ WPX RTTY earlier this year. Can’t wait for the CQ WW RTTY — that should be interesting.

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Categories : RTTY
Tags : Contest, RTTY
RTTY-Tape-Slant-V3-160

NAQP RTTY

Posted by Jim Wilson 
· Sunday, February 24th, 2013 
· No Comments

Ran the North American QSO Party RTTY version on Saturday. Managed to spend the maximum 10 hours, more on that later. This was the first time I put in play N1MM Logger and MMTTY demodulator software on a Windows computer.

It worked very well. On the other hand, my fingers didn’t work so well, pun intended. Actually, it was probably my brain. First issue was confusing the RUMped version of ESM (Enter Sends Messages) with the N1MM version. RUMped allows you to Enter repeatedly during Search and Pounce until you bounce out of the call sign window and into the exchange. N1MM automatically enters the exchange as soon as you hit Enter, whether the station comes back to you or not. That caused me to send AGN? AGN? to a few stations. The other snag was the click on exchange in the RTTY window to populated the exchange fields. It’s one click, not double-click. That snag got me  bouncing around the keyboard a few times and a generally slow QSO exchange. Oh well. Still learning.

NAQP RTTY Feb 2013Score wise I managed 335 QSO’s and 130 multipliers. Worked 45 of the 50 states. But it may be that I nudged past the 10 hours on the air. When I submitted my log the contest robot noted that my category would be changed from Single to Multi-Op. I wouldn’t think that my painstaking S&P with just a few runs would lead them to believe that I was using assistance. However, I may have a minute or two over the 10 hour limit. I’ve asked the contest organizer what might be at work. We’ll see what I learn. [Mark, K6UFO, responded right away to note that I'd submitted the log labeled as SOAB-Assisted. He corrected it and all is well --- I should have checked my N1MM settings more closely --- Thanks Mark!]

All in all, a successful launch of my new Windows based ham shack! Yet another adventure in ham radio. 73

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Categories : Radio Contesting, RTTY
Tags : Contest, RTTY
WPX1

CQ WPX RTTY

Posted by Jim Wilson 
· Sunday, February 10th, 2013 
· 3 Comments

I ran the CQ WPX RTTY contest this weekend. Got on the air for right at 13 hours of the total 48 hours of the entire contest. Fairly casual effort and didn’t lose any sleep. Still managed to make 398 QSOs and 218 different call sign prefixes for just over 180,000 points.

CQ WPX RTTY 2013I ran my Elecraft K3 at 100 watts into my two verticals. Didn’t put up the Moxon. Ran RUMped along with Cocoa Modem. RUMped locked up about six times during the contest. Left one contact just hanging there while I tried to restart things. Did just acquire a surplus Windows desktop computer for $10. Getting ready to fire that up and put WriteLog on it and a number of other ham radio items. Should get me into the mainstream of amateur radio software. More news on that one soon.

If you worked me during the contest, thanks so much for the QSO.

 

 

3 Comments
Categories : Radio Contesting, RTTY
Tags : Contest, RTTY
bartg

BARTG RTTY Sprint

Posted by Jim Wilson 
· Sunday, January 27th, 2013 
· No Comments

This weekend I entered another RTTY (radio teletype) contest, the BARTG Sprint. BARTG stands for British Amateur Radio Teledata Group. They sponsor three contests during the year. This one starts at 6 AM local time on Saturday and runs to 6 AM Sunday. I was on about nine hours and managed to put 325 contacts into the log representing 58 different countries. It was fun but somewhat exhausting.

For this contest, I put up my 15 meter Moxon beam and used the armstrong method to point it in the general direction of where I expected the contacts. In the morning it was pointed toward Europe, then in the afternoon toward South America (very little activity there) and in the early evening toward Japan. The rest of the time and on other bands, I used my verticals. This was the first contest that I did a fair bit of running. I’d search and pounce the band once and then move to an open frequency and run for a while. It worked pretty good.

BARTG RTTY Sprint QSO's

BARTG RTTY Sprint QSO’s

I’m not entirely sure of my score. I used RUMped and selected the one BARTG contest that was available in the menu. Then I learned that it was set up for the BARTG HF RTTY contest rather than the Sprint. This meant that the score computed multipliers for DXCC separately on each band. The Sprint only counts multipliers once for the entire contest. At least I know I did 325 QSOs.

This experience is also pointing me more and more toward getting on Windows and setting up N1MM logger or more likely WriteLog as the latter appears to be better set up for RTTY contesting. I did make one significant move toward Windows in that I purchased a surplus Windows desktop computer. We’ll see what it’s like when it gets here — and what it will take to get it up to speed for ham radio and digital modes. Should be yet one more adventure ham radio.

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Categories : Radio Contesting, RTTY
Tags : Contest, Moxon, RTTY
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