Contester's Rate Sheet for November 16, 2005
*********************** Contester's Rate Sheet 16 November 2005 *********************** Edited by Ward Silver N0AX SUMMARY o Caution! High Band Loading Ahead - Phone SS & CQ WW CW o Getting Your Contest Info Published Correctly o WRTC-2006 News o New ARRL Plaque Program for RTTY Roundup o Resonant Speakers and LogView Tool o Degrounding the Ground Rods o All I Want for Christmas BULLETINS o No bulletins this issue BUSTED QSOS o None reported! ANNOUNCEMENTS & NOTICES FOR 16 NOVEMBER TO 30 NOVEMBER 2005 UPCOMING LOG DUE DATES November 19 - 50 MHz Fall Sprint, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Ray Rector WA4NJP, 3493 Holly Springs Rd, Gillsville, GA 30534, USA. Find rules at: http://svhfs.org/fall_sprint_rules.htm. November 20 - Worked All Germany Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: WAG Contest Manager, PO Box 12 09 37, D-01010 Dresden, Germany. Find rules at: http://www.darc.de/referate/dx/xedcgr.htm. November 21 - CIS DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Scottish-Russian ARS, PO Box 7469, Glasgow, G42 0YD, Scotland, UK. Find rules at: http://www.srars.org/cisdxc/cisdxc.pdf. November 23 - ARCI Fall QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: ARCI Fall QSO Party, c/o Jeff Hetherington VA3JFF, 139 Elizabeth St W, Welland, Ontario L3C 4M3, Canada. Find rules at: http://www.qrparci.org/content/view/65/9/. November 27 - SARL Field Day Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Bloemfontein Radio Amateur Club, PO Box 12104, Brandhof, 9324, South Africa. Find rules at: http://www.sarl.org.za/public/contests/SARL_Contest_Manual.pdf. November 29 - FISTS Coast to Coast Contest , e-mail log summary to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Paul Beringer NG7Z, 4702 200th St SE, Bothell, WA 98012, USA. Find rules at: http://www.tomochka.com/k7fff/fnw_c2c05.html UPCOMING CONTESTS Note that the following abbreviations are used to condense the contest rules summaries: SO - Single-Op; M2 - Multi-Op - 2 Transmitters; MO - Multi-Op; MS - Multi-Op, Single Transmitter; MM - Multi-Op, Multiple Transmitters; AB - All Band; SB - Single Band; S/P/C - State/Province/DXCC Entity; HP - High Power; LP - Low Power; Entity - DXCC Entity HF CONTESTS ARRL November Sweepstakes--Phone, from 2100Z Nov 19 - 0300Z Nov 21. Frequencies: 160 - 10 meters, work stations only once. Categories: SOAB-LP (A), HP (B), QRP (Q), SO-Unlimited (U), MS (M), School Club (S). Exchange: Serial number, Category (precedence), Call, Check (last two digits of first year licensed), and ARRL section. QSO Points: 2 pts/QSO. Score: QSO points x sections (counted only once). For more information: http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2005/novss.html. Logs due Dec 21 in Cabrillo format via on-line form at http://www.b4h.net/cabforms or by email to [email protected] or to November SS SSB, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. North American Collegiate ARC Championship--Phone, Nov 19-20. This is a competition based on Sweepstakes results between club stations at institutions of higher education beyond the high school level. Clubs enter Sweepstakes in any of the valid entry categories. Separate champions will be determined for CW, Phone and Combined scores. For more information: http://www.collegiatechampionship.org/. LZ DX Contest--CW/SSB, sponsored by the Bulgarian Federation of Radio Amateurs from 1200Z Nov 19 - 1200Z Nov 20. Frequencies: 80-10-meters with 10-minute mode change rule. Categories: SOAB (CW, Phone, Mixed), SOAB-QRP Mixed, SOSB-Mixed, MS-Mixed, SWL. Exchange: RST + ITU zone or 2-letter LZ district. QSO Points: same continent--1 pt, different cont--3 pts, LZ station--10 pts. Score: QSO points x ITU zones + LZ districts counted once per band. For more information: http://www.qsl.net/lz1fw/contest. Logs due 30 days after the contest to [email protected] or BFRA, PO Box 830, 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria. RSGB 1.8MHz Contest--CW, from 2100 Nov 19 - 0100Z Nov 20. (See Feb QST, p 102) For more information: http://www.rsgbhfcc.org/. Logs due 16 days after the contest to [email protected] or RSGB--G3UFY, 77 Bensham Manor Road, Thornton Heath, Surrey CR7 7AF, England. CQ WW DX Contest--CW, sponsored by CQ Magazine from 0000Z Nov 26 to 2400Z Nov 27. Frequencies: 160-10 meters. Categories: SOAB and SOSB (HP >100W, LP, QRP <5W), MS, M2 (new), MM. MS have 10 minute rule. Exchange RS(T) and CQ zone. QSO Points: same cont--1 pts (NA stations count 2 pts), diff cont--3 pts. Stations in the same country may be worked for zone credit only. Score: QSO points x CQ Zones + DXCC entities and WAE countries counted once per band. For more information: http://www.cqww.com/. Logs due Jan 15 for CW to [email protected] or to CQ Magazine, 25 Newbridge Rd, Hicksville, NY 11801. VHF+ CONTESTS There are no VHF+ contests scheduled. NEWS & PRESS RELEASES "Why are the rules (or date) for our contest published incorrectly?" is not an uncommon question put to Web calendar and column authors alike. Perhaps it's worth a few words to clarify what it takes to get the right information in front of readers. Here are the basic rules: - Maintain a Web site for your contest. - Be sure all information is correct THREE months before the contest. - Have an email address for questions about the contest (not a log submission address). - Highlight rule changes from previous events. - Proofread your rules, dates, and times. - Email columnists and webmeisters so that they don't have to search for the info. Each month as I prepare Contest Corral for QST, I am astounded at how many Web sites for active contests seem unattended with dates and times far out of date. Many contest listings have no address for contacting a manager. Remember that in this age of instant Web publishing, magazines still have a deadline of at least two months before the month of the issue. I.e. - the deadline for a February issue is typically at the beginning of December. Contest calendar authors are busy, too, even for those on the Web, so don't wait until the last minute to send out the information. If you follow these guidelines, the chances of bad information getting out to your contesting public are greatly reduced. Fans of the wonderful things programmers are doing with on-line mapping will enjoy the ham location application at http://www.perconcorp.com/google_ham.html. Apparently, the database used is a little dated, but the idea is fresh - enter a zip code and find out where the hams are in your area! (Thanks, Dick N6AA and Bob N6TV) Another on-line tool that you'll have fun using is LogView by Tim EI8IC. A live version is now on-line at http://www.mapability.com/ei8ic/logview/. It will take a Cabrillo-format log and display all kinds of information about it from individual QSOs to the overall performance. You can also compare the results of a number of contests. Tim is to be congratulated for creating such a useful tool. It should also be noted that having a standardized file format such as Cabrillo enables software developers to create applications that work independently of the software that creates the log. LogView would be much harder without Cabrillo. QRPers, exult! XG Technology demonstrated a 2 Mbits/sec link that used a 3 nanowatt signal to span 40 feet in a wireless network. That's 2.5 million miles per watt or about 100 trips around the globe. Check out this feat at http://www.techworld.com/mobility/news/index.cfm?NewsID=4722&inkc=0. (Thanks, Gary, KJ5VW) VA7IRL reports that he is taking over the reins of the iCal contest calendar site http://ical.mac.com/arodgers/Contests created by Luc VA2KSH. MS Outlook users can try to import the calendar by clicking the "Download" link. The next production of Super Check Partial database files will be Thursday, Nov 17. Randy K5ZD is looking for as many CQ WW Phone and ARRL Sweepstakes logs as he can get before then. Please send your Cabrillo format log file to [email protected]. There's more info at http://www.k5zd.com/scp. (Thanks, Randy K5ZD) Those of you that like shortwave listening and scanning might want to check out a couple of magazines from the UK - SWM ShortWaveMagazine and radioACTIVE. (http://www.pwpublishing.ltd.uk/) I enjoy reading both for the perspective from "across the pond" and for good reviews of radios, antennas, and software. PW Publishing is also home for Practical Wireless, a popular UK amateur magazine. I really enjoy thumbing through radio magazines from around the globe - it's a great way to spend some club dues so that the members can share the expense. WRTC Corner - I have several WRTC-2006 items this week from co-chairman Oms PY5EG: Reservations are now open for the Headquarters Hotel for WRTC 2006. Go to the WRTC-2006 page http://www.wrtc2006.com/ and click the "Costao do Santinho" banner for reservations. You also can go directly to the reservation Web address at http://www.costao.com.br/versoes/ingles/reservas/reservas.php. The rates are US $85 per person per day including 3 (three) meals, breakfast, lunch and dinner. In the window "package" you should choose your preferred option. As in past events, there will be a special package for the referees and teams. In order to keep applicants and the contest community aware of the status of submitted applications an applications-received list is available on the WRTC-2006 home page, http://www.wrtc2006.com/ or directly from PY2YP's Web site at http://www.py2yp.ws/wrtcapp.htm. The WRTC-2006 committee has also released a Contest Results Checking System for all contests allowed for WRTC-2006 applications. It is not a automated submission Web page, only a score listing database with some special filters. The committee kindly asks the competitors to navigate through the tool and to submit any suggestions to the Web page's author SM0CXU at [email protected] or PY2YP at [email protected]. On the WRTC-2006 home page http://www.wrtc2006.com/ click on the banner "Contest Results Checking System". Ben DL6FBL reports that if Internet Explorer has trouble with the Web page or the application, try logging directly into the actual host location, http://www.ictecsolutions.com.br/wrtc2006. One of the unique aspects of a ham radio QSO is the long process of saying goodbye. It's as if we can't quite let the contact come to an end. Here's how to stretch it out in Portuguese: Thank you very much for a very enjoyable QSO. Muito obrigado pelo muito agradavel QSO. It was a great pleasure to meet you. Foi um grande prazer encontra-lo. I wish you good health and success. Eu lhe desejo boa saude e sucesso. I wish you good luck and lots of DX. Eu 1he desejo boa sorte e muitos DX. I hope to meet you [soon] again. Eu espero encontra-lo [brevemente] outra vez. Thanks to the Radio Amateur's Conversation Guide by OH2BR and OH2BAD RESULTS AND RECORDS The ARRL Contest program is looking to find additional sponsors for the popular ARRL RTTY Roundup plaque program. Participation in the ARRL RTTY Roundup has almost doubled since 1998 - from 471 entries to 934 in 2005. The ARRL is soliciting individuals and clubs to sponsor plaques. The cost of sponsorship for each plaque is $67, which includes shipping and handling. Contact Dan Henderson N1ND, ARRL Contest Manager, at [email protected] or 860-594-0232. You can also contact Dan's faithful assistant Kathy Allison KA1RWY at [email protected] or 860-594-0295. Dan also reminds us that the ARRL Online Soapbox is available after each ARRL Contest at http://www.arrl.org/contests/soapbox. This is a great place to post your post-contest photos and stories. It also makes for an interesting read by competitors and non-combatants alike. Writeup authors also find it fertile ground for stories about the contest. The logs-received list for the JIDX-Phone contest is now available at http://jidx.org/2005ph-loglist.html. If your score is not listed, please send an email to the JIDX contest committee chairman, Tack Kumagai JE1CKA/KH0AM, at [email protected]. Plaque and Award winners for the GACW World Wide South America CW Contest are listed at http://gacw.no-ip.org/. There is also a PDF version of the World-Wide South America 2005 results that includes pictures and remarks. (Thanks, Alberto LU1DZ) TECHNICAL Our lead story in this issue is a Web site about an important shack accessory that foils the bad guys who might want to access your personal information. Be sure to check out the references as well, at http://people.csail.mit.edu/rahimi/helmet. A few years ago, WE6W published some interested designs for resonant speakers that act as narrow CW filters. These designs are now on the Web at http://www.io.com/~n5fc/res_spkr.htm and http://www.qsl.net/n5iw/RESONANT.htm. Additional information and design notes are available in the QRP-L archives (http://www.kkn.net/archives/html/QRP-L) between 7 and 9 May 2000. (Thanks, Jim AL7FS) While wandering the aisles of the local truck stop, Stew KD5DL discovered something called a Truck-Spec brand TS139AD Vice-Grip Antenna Mirror Mount for $14.99. This might be handy to have for remote and emergency communications operations. The mount consists of a pair of locking pliers with a right-angle piece of stainless steel welded to it. The angle has a hole in each side, permitting an antenna to be mounted in-line with, or at right angles to, the jaws of the grip with the included SO-239 to 3/8-24 adapter. Erik N0EW also owns one and says to be careful when removing a PL-259 because the center pin is a tight fit. He reports that the mount will rust if left out in the weather. One of my favorite catalogs to thumb through in amazement is that of Small Parts, Inc. (http://www.smallparts.com/) They have an astounding collection of mechanical doo-dads and gadgets. There is no minimum order and same day shipping is available causing techie tinkerers to think tantalizing thoughts! (Thanks, Garey K4OAH) Ah - my favorite category of tip - "How to Do Hard Things Without Hurting Yourself". This time the subject is pulling ground rods out of the, um, ground. Roger K8RI says to start by using a pair of pipe wrenches to form a "T-handle" and try the "armstrong" method to twist and pull the rod out manually. If the rod still can't be pulled out by hand, put a jack (with suitable support) under each wrench handle. (This requires substantial wrenches.) The jack must be placed far enough out on the handles so the pressure will cause the wrenches to grip tighter. Pat K8PC suggests using a brass ground rod clamp on the rod. A car jack hooked to the clamp can then be used to pull the rod out of the ground. Bill W4ZV provided the URL for a summary of the "slinky" coiled Beverage written by its inventor, Carl KM1H. These might be worth a try if you don't have space for a regular Beverage. http://lists.contesting.com/archives/html/Topband/1997-07/msg00150.html K5KA's CBS program analyzes Cabrillo format logs and outputs a text file of the analysis results. Download CBS from http://www.kkn.net/~k5tr/software/Cbs.exe. When you run CBS, you're asked for the input file name (include the .LOG suffix), and the output file - a new file to hold the analysis data. You can then look at or print the data using Notepad or any editor. (Thanks, Bob N6TV and George K5TR) Here's an interesting PowerPoint presentation called "Effects of Trees on Slant Propagation Paths" that looks at signal attenuation through trees. It covers VHF and above but you can probably make some inferences for HF. It can be downloaded at http://www.its.bldrdoc.gov/isart/art99/slides99/vog/vog_s.pdf. A more complete version is available at http://www.utexas.edu/research/mopro. The original paper was written by Theodore Tamir, "On Radio-Wave Propagation in Forest Environments", IEEE Trans on Ant and Prop, Vol AP-15, #6, Nov 1967, pp 806-817. It covers 1-100 MHz with lots of experimental and theoretical analysis. (Thanks, Jim W6RMK) The Web site of Nuts & Volts magazine offers a paper by Tektronix titled "The XYZ's of Oscilloscopes" at http://www.nutsvolts.com/ftpindex.htm. The 64 pages of info are full of great info about electronics' MVP instrument. CONVERSATION All I Want For Christmas As we approach the holiday season, non-ham spouses are once again filled with dread as they contemplate the task of choosing a gift for the ham in their life. Will this year's selection once again be greeted with a quizzical expression and a mumbled, "Gee, it's really...nice!" This after agonizing over the selection for days. Surely this is not so difficult, eh? All they have to do is pick up a copy of the most dangerous publication on earth - a ham radio store catalog - and select a suitable prize. Can this be so hard? My friends, you don't know the half of it! Aside from the obvious choice - a brand new multi-k$ radio - picking your present can be a daunting task. Each of us is highly specialized, having honed our skills over many years, an expert in our chosen field. Every item in the shack has been carefully selected and installed, possibly modified, and likely gleaned from a long line of predecessors discarded as a result of one subtle fault or another. How does one choose just the right thing for such a person, when we take months to choose gadgets ourselves? My long-suffering spouse, Nancy, has made diligent efforts and finally settled on not getting equipment at all, but rather making curtains for the shack, a FB wall hanging with the N0AX call sign, or even a desk map. She gave up on picking techno-trinkets long ago after not generating the desired zing from her ham. But consider the poor spouse still learning the hard way! She or he may pore over your magazines and flyers for weeks, chewing fingernails to the quick. Then they nervously dial the 1-800 number to order the Chosen Item, a 2005 Channelblanger, only to be met with the dreaded, "What options do you want with that?" Options? There are options? "Yeah, a 245XL feldstormatic comes standard, but you can substitute the Pi-over-2 ditzmonger or the Ethermangler 7th-order bi-chuck suppressor." A long pause ensues before the harried orderer works up the nerve to ask what they cost. "They're all $49.95." Dang! No clue there, can one order them all? "No, you can only install one." Since the spouse has no idea what you would do with the Channelblanger anyway, panic sets in. Eventually, a quasi-random Channelblanger option is selected and a good stiff drink is poured knowing that the chances of success are as slim as the chances of getting the feed lines tidied up before the relatives come for dinner. On the day of days, you open your present with trembling fingers, hoping for that new Zorborator Field-and-Stream Mark Fifty-leven. Yes! The box is from YaeKenComTec and it's heavy! And...it's...a...save the paper...a... Oh. It's a Channelblanger. Um. "Gee, it's really...nice!" You can hear the fizz leaking out of all parties as dreams are dashed on the sharp rocks of incomprehension and dismay. What to do? Personally, "just buying my own darn present" doesn't have a lot of appeal. After all, I manage to sneak enough stuff into the house throughout the year. (No, Nancy doesn't get this newsletter...) Leaving things up to random chance has a vanishingly small chance of success. Strategically leaving magazines open with certain items circled in black felt-tip is no guarantee of getting the desired result either. I've settled on writing "suggestions" on slips of paper (along with a vendor) and putting them in a jar. I don't expect to get them all (well, there's always hope) and so the element of surprise is preserved. The thrill of the hunt is still present, but without that awful downside. You may have your own methods of achieving spousal harmony at present-time. For those new to the hobby or to domestic bliss, I offer the preceding tale as your e-Elmer, one ham to another. If you are considerate and can devise a suitable system, your spouse will appreciate it. Perhaps even to the tune of a new Zorborator! Need I say more? 73, Ward N0AX ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Contester's Rate Sheet wishes to acknowledge information from the following sources: WA7BNM's Contest Calendar Web page - http://www.hornucopia.com/contestcal ARRL Contest page - http://www.arrl.org/contests SM3CER's Web site - http://www.sk3bg.se/contest