...is what makes the difference.
The 7QP QSO Party was on May 3rd this year. ([CLICK HERE] to read my write-up about it.)
In the quickiest turn around ever in a state QSO Party, the contest committee awarded WQ6X
yet another 1st-place for the Mixed-mode QRP category. During that weekend, 7QP was also accompanied by NEWQP, INQP and DEQP, not to mention the Italian ARI contest.
I ran several operating shifts contributing to NX6T's 1st-place Multi-OP win for the New England
QSO Party. Because 7QP ends at 07:00z, I found every reason to put in hours for WQ6X's QRP
run. As daytime slid into evening, I was somewhat disappointed by the lack on in-state participation.
One of my BiG QSO Party complaints is not enough in-state participation. It sometimes seems as
if there are 2x the number of out-of-state seekers that in-state 7QP'ers.
(all @ 55') was enough for WQ6X's QRP signal to properly penetrate into Northwest USA.
To ensure no accidental after-contest "OOPS", the score was immediately posted to 3830Scores.Com and the log submitted to the contest committee. While preliminary indications were that WQ6X DiD indeed take a 1st-place, many operators don't post contest scores, so in the end, what seems like
a win actually becomes a 2nd-place or 3rd-place after all.
- Read the contest results from last year (and maybe years before that).
- Read last year's 3830Score submissions.
- Read the rules for this year's contest.
- Check the Space-WX reports before/during/after the contest.
- Ensure your operating setup is contest ready well in advance.
- Double check the macros behind the logging software being used.
- Layout an operating plan (modes, hours, bands, power-level, etc.)
- Start the event PROMPTLY.
- Take advantage of fluke band openings and Space-WX phenomenon.
After that, how it turns out, is OUT of your hands.