Tag Archives: Contest

October Contest Notes

It Begins!

October marks the unofficial beginning of the radio contesting season. In the next few months, we’ll have CQ WW SSB, CQ WW CW, ARRL Sweepstakes CW, ARRL Sweepstakes SSB, ARRL 160m, ARRL 10m, and a whole bunch of little but fun contests like ARRL School Club Roundup. There are still QSO parties to chase on a random weekend, too, including CA, NV, AZ, PA, SD, NY and, IL.  If you’ve been having trouble making time to get on the air (as I have!) then there are a lot of excuses to put yourself in the saddle and make some Qs!

October Contest Highlights

CQ Worldwide SSB [0000Z, Oct 26 to 2359Z, Oct 27]

Exchange: RS + CQ Zone (5905 for New England)

This was the first contest I ever entered. It was 2002 and the bands were hopping. I had just hung a stealth antenna and was curious about what I could hear. It was amazing. The bands were full, all the other guy wanted was “5905”, and he was off to work the next one. No microphone jitters here—there wasn’t time! If you’re new to contesting give this a try. Do search-and-pounce (S&P), listen, listen, listen, then work them. By the end of the weekend, you might have DXCC!

California QSO Party [1600Z, Oct 5 to 2200Z, Oct 6]

Exchange: CA: Serial No. + County; non-CA: Serial No. + (state/VE area/DX)

Nevada QSO Party [0300Z, Oct 12 to 2100Z, Oct 13]

Exchange: NV: RS(T) + “NV” + county; non-NV: RS(T) + (state/province/”DX”)

Arizona QSO Party [1600Z, Oct 12 to 0600Z, Oct 13 and 1400Z to 2400Z, Oct 13]

Exchange: AZ: RS(T) + county; non-AZ: RS(T) + (state/province/country)

Pennsylvania QSO Party [1600Z, Oct 12 to 0500Z, Oct 13 and 1300Z-2200Z, Oct 13]

Exchange: PA: Serial No. + County; non-PA: Serial No. + ARRL/RAC Section

South Dakota QSO Party [1800Z, Oct 12 to 1800Z, Oct 13

Exchange: SD: RS(T) + county; non-SD: RS(T) + (state/province/country)

New York QSO Party [1400Z, Oct 19 to 0200Z, Oct 20]

Exchange: NY: RS(T) + county; non-NY: RS(T) + (state/province/”DX”)

Tip: Sometimes those close-in states like VT, NY, ME, and MA are hard to get on the higher bands. They tend to be in the skip-zones a lot of the time. Take advantage of these QSO parties to fill in the close-in states on the high bands.

Illinois QSO Party [1700Z, Oct 20 to 0100Z, Oct 21]

Exchange: IL: RS(T) + County; non-IL: RS(T) + (state/province/country)

Wrapping up

These contests give you your last big change to test and repair station equipment and antennas before the weather gets uncomfortable. (My poor SteppIR has died of neglect, for example!) So, don’t be like me! Get on and tune up your station for the long winter ahead.

Pumpkins image courtesy of
Aaron Burden

Scott, NE1RD

September Contest Notes

On the Doorstep

CQ WW SSB, the biggest phone contest of the year, is a little under two months away. Solar conditions have not been kind to us this year, and there’s little chance for a big improvement in the next few weeks, but there’s still DX to be found. Now is a good time to familiarize yourself with websites that can help you gauge propagation during the nadir of the cycle. 

spaceweather.com provides current solar conditions and forecasts, especially for geomagnetic storms. One interesting thing on this site is the “Spotless Days” tally. As of this writing, we’ve had 23 days without a sunspot. As we all know, no sunspots, no big fun on the high bands! But there might be _some_ fun, maybe a little, so always check 10m and 15m when you operate. You might be rewarded. And when not in a contest always give 17m a look. Often when 20m is open you’ll find 17m has some activity, too.

Maybe your logging program already has an interface to the DX spotting network (mine, MacLoggerDX does, for example) but several websites also offer views and it is worth giving these resources a look. DXHeat.com claims to have 43 million DX spots in their database. They’ve been at it a while, so it sounds plausible. Check out the “Band Activity” display by selecting “N. America” as your continent. The display aggregates the DX spots into a by-band, by-continent intensity display. 

DXHeat band activity map

Click the DX Cluster button and then play with the filters. You can select one or many bands, one or more modes, even which continents you are interested in hearing from and which continent posted the spot. To cut down on all the chatter click the NA button under De to see only North American spots of DX.

There are a number of online DX spotting network websites, all of which offer something unique. I suggest looking at one band and one mode at a time at different times during the day. This will give you a very good idea of what is possible during your next on-air adventure.

September Highlights

Tennessee QSO Party [1800Z Sep 1 to 0300Z Sep 2]

Exchange: TN stations give RS(T) + county, others RS(T) + state/province/country

For those of us in New England, Tennessee is in that sweet spot that’s not too close, and not too far away. If you put some effort into this contest you could probably do a clean sweep of all 95 counties. That would put you well on your way to a County Hunters award.

All Asian DX Contest [0000Z Sep 7 to 2400Z Sep 8]

Exchange: RS + 2-digit age

I know my log is a little light when it comes to Asia, so this would be a good chance for me to put more callsigns and prefixes into my log. It is also a great way to see how propagation to Asia might be during CQ WW. It is worth a look.

National Contest Journal Sprints

CW [0000Z-0400Z Sep 8]

RTTY [0000Z-0400Z Sep 15]

Exchange: [other station’s call] + [your call] + [serial no.] + [your name] + [your state/province/country]

Sprints are fun, especially if you’re a little nervous calling CQ. You work somebody calling CQ, then they clear off and it is your frequency to call CQ and make a QSO. Everybody takes turns.

As always, check out www.contesting.com and the linked calendar for a complete list of on-air contest.

New Hampshire QSO Party [1600Z Sep 21 to 0400Z Sep 22 and 1600Z-2200Z Sep 22]

Exchange:

NH: RS(T) + county

others RS(T) + state/province

DX: RST(T) + “DX”

This is our time to shine! It is fun to be the one sought after. And, this is a great way to warm-up to the big contesting season.

The End of Summer

Get those last-minute antenna projects done, check out all your equipment, maybe even make that last-minute run to Ham Radio Outlet! Summer might be ending but contesting season is in the wings. Get ready!

Scott, NE1RD

Rookie Roundup RTTY – Digital Contest for Newbies!

The ARRL Rookie Roundup – RTTY contest is open to anyone who was first licensed in 2017, 2018 or 2019 or anyone who has never made a RTTY mode contact.

We will be defending our title as #1 Multi-Op Area 1 in the RTTY version of the  ARRL Rookie Roundup .  The contest will take place on August 18 from 2 pm – 8 pm and we will operate from AB1OC/AB1QB’s QTH.

"Tom,

This is a great opportunity for you to try out digital modes or to try your hand at contesting!

Please contact Jamey at [email protected] if you are interested and for more details, see the calendar event.

Anita, AB1QB

Radio Amateurs Developing Skills Worldwide