In recent years I have amassed nearly 120+ events each year (140 for 2o25). Accomplishing
that goal requires participating in 12 - 15 radiosport events (on average) every month. Some months that number comes easily and other times it gets upended - as happened on this year's April 11th/12th contest weekend.
For WQ6X there are 3 main "Styles" of contest events
- CW (my Favorite)
- RTTY (a learned Favorite)
- SSB (my Least Favorite)
I rate the Ssb contests as least favorite based on the difficulty of getting the voice message thru amidst deep-fading and nasty solar-WX anomalies. On a given contest weekend there can be
events all three of the above operating styles. State QSO parties are mixed-mode and some even support a RTTY/Digital category. In the franticness of the activity, it becomes relatively easy to be confused about which mode you are running in that given moment. Fortunately, most logging programs make it relatively easy to figure out which mode you are in: KEY, MIC, KYBD.
events all three of the above operating styles. State QSO parties are mixed-mode and some even support a RTTY/Digital category. In the franticness of the activity, it becomes relatively easy to be confused about which mode you are running in that given moment. Fortunately, most logging programs make it relatively easy to figure out which mode you are in: KEY, MIC, KYBD.
In multi-mode contests (such as State QSO parties and FD) if the radio sports a dual VFO
(VFO-A / VFO-B) or even better, dual-receive (such as the FT-2000, IC-7610, ORION-II or
the K3/K4 series), you can run one VFO/Rx on CW and the other VFO/Rx on Ssb.
(VFO-A / VFO-B) or even better, dual-receive (such as the FT-2000, IC-7610, ORION-II or
the K3/K4 series), you can run one VFO/Rx on CW and the other VFO/Rx on Ssb.
During a Field Day (FD) event some years ago, I ran the event with a classic Yaesu 100-watt
FT-1000mp transceiver - working Cw in the left ear, while Searching and Pouncing (S&P) Ssb
stations in the right ear. The "accuracy" of this unique operation was somewhat non-insignificantly influenced by a couple of CANs of Foster's Lager.
FT-1000mp transceiver - working Cw in the left ear, while Searching and Pouncing (S&P) Ssb
stations in the right ear. The "accuracy" of this unique operation was somewhat non-insignificantly influenced by a couple of CANs of Foster's Lager.
Now remember, to operate responsibly, each event should be followed up with the score posted on the 3830 Scores website and a copy of your log submitted to the contest sponsor. Submitting a log greatly assists the contest committee to adjudicate the winners properly. In the past, I have submitted
2-to-5 QSO logs.
2-to-5 QSO logs.
While I recommend testing station equipment on the weekdays between contest weekend periods, sometimes it is multi-contest multi-mode operating that enables us to identify deficiencies in the operating setup.
While I rarely announce contest plans in advance of a given contest weekend, in many cases, if you are familiar with my operating habits, you can predict hearing my callsign in specific contest events, such as Sweepstakes (SS), NAQP GiGs and the Weird Prefix (WPX) contests.
Additionally, participating in a wide variety of radiosport events helps improve what I call
"Callsign Recognition". I recently wrote a Blog about this ([CLICK HERE] to read it.)
"Callsign Recognition". I recently wrote a Blog about this ([CLICK HERE] to read it.)

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