Category Archives: DX

Articles and information about DX or distant stations outside the North American continent. Topics include working DX, DXpeditions, DX Stations, DX related antennas, software, and equipment and more.

DXing and Operating Award Tips

We’ve been pretty active in DX Operating Award programs since we built our station a few years back. Operating Awards provide incentives to get on the air and chase all kinds of contacts and they also help us to understand our station’s and our personal operating strengths and weakness. They also provide motivation to improve the latter.

Yesterday was a banner day for me in terms of completing Operating Award goals. I was able to make the needed contacts to complete two that I’ve been working on for quite some time:

  • Worked All Japan – Requires working and confirming all 47 Prefectures (similar to US states) in Japan
  • Top Band DXCC – Working and confirming 100 DXCC Entities (basically countries) on 160m

Both of these goals were completed using the FT8 digital mode for the remaining handful of contacts. I wanted to take a little time and share some of the techniques that have worked for me in hopes that it might help our readers have more fun and meet their operating goals on the air.

Here are some general techniques and tips for working DX (in no particular order) … You can read the entire article via the link which follows.

Source: Our HAM Station – DX’ing and Operating Award Tips

Fred, AB1OC

ARRL RTTY Roundup Coming Soon

You have learned about contesting through the great articles that Scott, NE1RD has written.  You have learned about FT8 through articles from Hamilton, K1HMS and Fred, AB1OC.  Now its time to put it all together and operate in the ARRL RTTY Roundup coming up this coming weekend – January 5th – 6th.

This is the first year that the FT8 mode will be part of the ARRL RTTY Roundup.  The newest version of the WSJT-X software, version 2.0,  has been enhanced to support the contest exchange.  See Joe Taylor’s QST article for details on how it will work.

AB1QB operating in a RTTY Contest
AB1QB operating in a RTTY Contest

Fred, AB1OC and Anita, AB1QB will be hosting a multi-op entry using the N1FD callsign from their QTH. The contest starts at 18:00 UTC (1:00 pm EST) on Saturday and ends at 23:59 UTC (7 pm EST) on Sunday.  The first few hours of the contest overlap with ARRL Kids Day so the kids will have priority on our main station.  We may be able to operate in the RTTY Roundup using FT8 and our SteppIR Vertical.

If you are interested in signing up for a time slot, please contact Anita, AB1QB at [email protected]. Let her know what time you can be available to operate and how many hours you would like to operate.   Please respond no later than Thursday.  She will put together an operating schedule and send it out on Friday.

We hope to see you this weekend in the contest or hear you on the air!

CQ WW and November Contesting Notes

CQ Zone map used for CQ World Wide contests

The last full weekend of October kicks off the contesting year for amateur radio. The big one is the CQ WW SSB contest sponsored by CQ Magazine.  I’ll cover some basics for this contest along with some strategy and etiquette, and give a preview of what to plan for in November.

CQ WW SSB Contest (00:00Z October 27 to 24:00 October 28)

The CQ WW SSB and CW contests are two of the biggest contests of the year. SSB is always held the last full weekend in October. The CW version of the contest is held a month later (often colliding with the Thanksgiving weekend). Last year over 8600 logs were submitted for the phone contest. That is a target rich environment if you are contesting, or just in the event to get QSOs for chasing awards.

The exchange for the contest is pretty simple: a signal report (always 59) and your CQ Zone (see the map at the top of this post). We’re in zone 5. The Caribbean is in zone 8. Europe is mostly in zones 14 and 15. We hear a lot of Brazil in these contests, too, so expect to hear from zone 11, also.

Guide to the CQ Worldwide DX Contest

With many thousands of hams on the bands, things can get crowded. Here’s what you need to know. The big stations with stacked Yagi arrays, full legal limit (or beyond, as is often alleged), and multiple operators will camp out on frequencies low in the band. They will be loud, and they’ll sit on those frequencies for the whole contest. Unless you’ve got a station like I’ve described (and a small army of volunteers to operate) you can’t compete with that. You can only work them. Remember our two operating styles described in an earlier post? You’ll almost certainly be using search-and-pounce (S&P) to get your QSOs.

Take a moment and look over how the points and multipliers work for this contest. (That’s good advice for any contest!) Points go like this:

  • Contacts between stations on different continents count three (3) points.
  • Contacts between stations on the same continent but in different countries count one (1) point. Exception: Contacts between stations in different countries within the North American boundaries count two (2) points.
  • Contacts between stations in the same country have zero (0) QSO point value, but are permitted for zone or country multiplier credit.

That last bullet point is important. Signals from within the United States will often be the strongest, especially here at the bottom of the solar cycle, but they are worth zero points. As you might imagine, calling a station and asking for a QSO when you offer no points is a tough sell. Don’t call US stations in this contest.

Multipliers are zones and countries (each band counts separately). So, variety is the spice of life — and the secret for success in CQ WW. Try to work as many countries as you can and the zones will almost always take care of themselves.

Here’s my one exception to the “don’t call US stations” guidance above: at the end of a contest, in those last few hours Sunday afternoon, if I’m missing a zone 3, 4, or 5 on a given band, and if I find a US station in that zone, I’ll call them for a “zero pointer” and be sure to say “thanks for the mult.” I only do it if the other station is lonely (has called CQ for a while with no takers). It is a little unsavory, but missing a multiplier that you can hear is awful. In general, you should be able to work Canadian stations for these mults. I call a US station only if all else has failed.

My final suggestion is this: keep calls simple, and the exchange short. You call them, they give you their exchange, and you say only “595”. That’s it. No chit-chat! There are very serious competitors in these contests and every second counts. Be respectful of other people’s time.

November Contests

November is the first full month of the contesting season and there are a couple of good ones on the docket. They are:

Sweepstakes is fun, but it has the most tedious exchange of any of big contests. The exchange is:

  • Serial number (starts with 1 and increments with each QSO)
  • Precedence (Q/A/B/U/M/S)
    • Q = Single Operator, QRP
    • A = Single Operator low power (< 150 Watts)
    • B = Single Operator high power
    • U = Single Operator “unlimited” (can use assistance)
    • M = Multi-operator station
    • S = School
  • Your call (yes, the call is part of the exchange so say it)
  • The last two digits of the year you were licensed
  • Your ARRL/RAC section

I typically take an index card and write out everything above (except the serial number) and tape it to the top of the computer monitor. That way I don’t need to think. All I need to do is read. So, my card has:

___serial___ A NE1RD 02 NH

As with any contest, I’ll suggest to anybody new to listen, listen, listen! Listen to how the exchange sounds. Get a feeling for the rhythm of the QSOs. Once you’ve got it, do a little S&P and get some points.

QSO Parties and other contests

Typically QSO parties run during months without big contests, so there aren’t any in November. But, there are some other international contests that might be fun including:

  • Ukrainian DX Contest (November 3-4)
  • 10-10 International Fall Contest digital (November 10-11)
  • OK/OM DX Contest, CW (November 10-11)
  • LZ DX Contest (November 17-18)
  • ARRL 160-Meter Contest

For details on these contests, or a complete listing of contests for November (or anytime) see the contestcalendar.com website.

Good Luck

Contesting is a great way to have some fun on the air. You’ll have plenty of people to talk to, and you know the conversation won’t drag! I used many of those contests early in my time as a ham working toward awards like DXCC. You don’t even have to submit your log to the contest sponsor if you don’t want to. Just get on and have fun. Good luck and 73 de NE1RD.

Radio Amateurs Developing Skills Worldwide