Contester's Rate Sheet for May 30, 2007
******************************************** CONTESTER'S RATE SHEET 30 May 2007 Edited by Ward Silver N0AX Published by the American Radio Relay League Free to ARRL members - tell your friends! (Subscription info at the end of newsletter) ******************************************** SUMMARY o Special Dayton Hamvention 2007 Report - This issue contains mostly stories and features about things seen and heard and done at the Hamvention on May 18-20. Time-sensitive material is included, too. The regular format will resume with the 13 June issue. NEW HF OPERATORS - THINGS TO DO o Put Dayton Hamvention 2008 on your calendar now! And for on the air fun, try the ARRL June VHF QSO Party. Some simple dipoles are all you need to join the fun in this most popular of the ARRL VHF+ contests. Horizontal antennas give best results on SSB or CW with most activity near "weak-signal" calling frequencies that you'll find at http://www.arrl.org/FandES/field/regulations/bandplan.html BULLETINS o No bulletins in this issue. BUSTED QSOS o A golden issue last time! CONTEST SUMMARY (Rules follow Commentary section) June 2-3 - Digital Pentathlon - PSK - Alabama QSO Party - SEANET Contest - IARU Region 1 Field Day - CW - Look Around In the Field - CW June 9-10 - ARRL June VHF QSO Party - Digital Pentathlon - MFSK - ANARTS WW RTTY / Digital Contest - Asia-Pacific Sprint - SSB - Portugal Day Contest - SSB - GASW CW DX Contest - Bill Windle QSO Party - CW --o- ooo - --o- ooo - --o- ooo - -oo o NEWS, PRESS RELEASES, AND GENERAL INTEREST - oooo o o-o o- - o ooo oooo o o - -o- Congratulations to the Potomac Valley Radio Club on their 60th anniversary. Members will be signing "/60" including during their on-the-air reunion on June 2nd and 3rd. Look for the historic call signs W3GRF, W4KFC, and W3AU, too. Complete information is available at http://pvrc.org/PVRC60/pvrc_reunion_announcement_2007.html (Thanks, Howie N4AF) - - - - - Contest University - Dayton 2007 By Tim Duffy K3LR - CTU Chairman After a year of preparation, 150 students and 11 professors participated in 10 hours of intense contesting instruction covering some 22 topics. CTU students came from all over the USA and from DX QTHs like DL, YV, G, GU and GD. The youngest student was 9 year old W9JJC! Sixteen dual-track classes and seven common courses were completed, including a "working" lunch and a live K1DG Sprint conteSt I'd like to thank CTU Professors of Contesting N6BV, K1DG, M0DXR, W9ZRX, N5OT, N5TJ, K8MR, K5ZD, N6AA and N2NT. The CTU Board of Directors are N9JA, K1AR and K1DG. CTU 2007 would have never happened without the help of Ray Novak, N9JA and Icom America. CQ Magazine, DX Engineering and the ARRL all stepped in to help make CTU 2007 a huge success. Planning and Preparation has already started for Contest University 2008, again on Thursday before the main Dayton hamfest, including a full graduate school program for returning CTU students that graduated this year. Stay tuned to the official CTU web site http://www.contestuniversity.com/ and mark 15 May 2008 on your calendar! - - - - - Companion to the new Elecraft K3 transceiver (see the 2 May issue of this newsletter), two new HF rigs made an appearance at Dayton: - Icom's booth (http://www.icomamerica.com/) was full of hams wanting to take a look at the new IC-7700 HF+6m, 200 W output "Contester's Rig", expected to be available this winter. Taking advantage of the company's advanced receiver technologies that were introduced in the IC-7800, IC-756PROIII, and IC-7000 transceivers the IC-7700 literature touts rock-solid linearity and all the DSP filter functions you could imagine. Look for this radio to quickly establish a presence as a "Top Gun." - Pushing the envelope of software-defined radios, FlexRadio Systems (http://www.flex-radio.com/) also made an entry into the competition-grade field with its HF+6m Flex-5000. This software-defined radio's most exceptional specification is the >105 dB two-tone, 3rd-order, dynamic range at a mighty tight 2 kHz spacing. The Flex-5000D includes a fully-independent second receiver and automatic antenna tuner, as well. The radio is a combination of "black box" and PC graphical interface. Will this combination work for top-of-the-line HF contesting? We'll probably find out before too long. I also paid a short visit to the QRP gang's quickly growing "Four Days In May" event at the Holiday Inn in Fairborn. The conference room was packed for the technical and operating features. I particularly enjoyed W7EL's introduction lauding Wes W7ZOI for his accomplishments as a long-time leader in the QRP world. Later, AA6DY won the bidding for a mint copy of long-out-of-print "Solid State Design for the Radio Amateur", signed by Wes, to benefit the event. If you have an interest in QRP, keep this event on your radar screen for next year. MFJ Enterprises (http://www.mfjenterprises.com/) had several new products; a Super Battery Booster, the Auto Tuner, and a Digital Wattmeter. For PC users with a need for WiFi DX, the 15 dB 2.4 GHz antenna looks like a winner, too. Down on the Hara Arena floor, Kanga US (http://www.kangaus.com/) introduced the microT2 transmitter (see Dec 2006 QST) module, the companion to the microR2 receiver. Roger KA7EXM has also upgraded his power meter to include peak readings, as well as maximum and minimum power over a fixed interval. Kanga also had a stock of Tormet Engineering's fine "Electronic Bench Reference" in both print and CD form. VHF+ contesters miss the old C3i antenna manufacturer, but take heart because Arian Arrays (http://www.ariane-arrays.com/) has picked up the product line. In fact, the new triband (6/2/70cm) modular antenna should definitely attract some intereSt The antenna can be assembled in any combination of bands with the full set of sections making a 13-foot boom. If you need a solid antenna for your new all-band radio, check it out! KK7UQ's latest digital operating creation, the Navigator Interface (http://www.usinterface.com/), is now available. The Navigator bypasses the need for a host sound card with that function built in. Everything connects to your PC via a USB cable. The USB interface also supplies power to the interface and you can run a pair of Navigators on a single PC, a unique feature. Timewave (http://www.timewave.com/) was touting their new HamLinkUSB (tm) Rig Controller Plus. It is a USB to logic level conversion device for CAT-/CI-V enabled transceivers that provides PTT output, keying output or foot switch input options. In line with the upsurge of interest in all things Morse, Vibroplex (http://www.vibroplex.com/) was selling a new "Know Code Key" with a bright red base and solid feel. Nearby, the Begali booth (http://www.i2rtf.com/index.html) was continually drawing a crowd with their line of precision keys and paddles. Who says Morse is dying out? Polyphaser (http://www.polyphaser.com/) has introduced a new lightning protector module for onwners of SteppIR antennas. It has a position for every one of the motor control cable's 22 conductors. This product is not yet on the company's Web site, but SteppIR owners should contact a Polyphaser dealer (called "Partners" on the Web site) for more information. Dishtronix (http://www.dishtronix.com/) was drawing attention with their legal-limit solid-state amplifier, the Prometheus DX2400L1. A pair of business-like black boxes, the amplifiers put out 1500 W continuously, just the thing for digital mode contesting! URL of the Week - In the "We Can Dream, Can't We?" department, Scott W3TX was busy describing his Super Bertha rotating antenna pole - up to 215' high and supporting wind loads as high as 300 square feet! Wouldn't that look great in the back yard? Dreams are launched at http://www.superbertha.com/ where an Internet remote "test drive" will soon be available. oooo o -o-- -o-- o- o-oo o-oo SIGHTS AND SOUNDS o-- o- - -o-o oooo - oooo oo ooo Uli KK8I has posted a selection of the pictures taken at Dayton onto a Web site at http://tinyurl.com/2e2tpq See Jay WX0B at the keyboard and Krassi K1LZ belting out the tunes at the Crowne Plaza! An ever-popular site is hosted by Tom K8CX at http://hamgallery.com/ for photos from Dayton Hamventions since 1997. While the 2007 photos aren't yet available (and Tom took a LOT!), keep checking! Long-time Dayton-goers will remember ogling the original Voice of America station in West Chester, OH not far from Cincinnati. While the big towers are gone, the transmitter building is still there and the facility is now a park and museum. A volunteer group (http://www.veteransvoa.com/) maintains the site, including the active radio club WC8VOA. Tours are given during the Hamvention every year, so you might want to leave a little time for this stop next year. The http://www.contesting.com/ Web site would like to see YOUR Dayton 2007 photos. Look for the appropriate link on the right-hand side of the home page. (Thanks, Steve N2IC) oo-o oo -o -oo -o-- --- oo- o-o RESULTS AND RECORDS -o-o o- o-oo o-oo oooo o o-o o The preliminary results of the January 2007 NAQP CW and SSB contests are now available on the NCJ web site. CW Results at http://www.ncjweb.com/naqpcwprelim.php and SSB Results at http://www.ncjweb.com/naqpssbprelim.php Since the submission deadline for the printed results is rapidly approaching, please let contest manager Bruce WA7BNM ([email protected]) know as soon as possible of any perceived errors in the results. The Potomac Valley Radio Club took the difficult, but high road recently after discovering scores submitted for club credit were more than 175 miles from the center of the "club circle" as stipulated in the ARRL Club Competition Rules (http://www.arrl.org/contests). Forfeiting a hard-won gavel to an arch rival (Northern California Contest Club) is not an easy decision (http://pvrc.org/2006_ss_gavel.html), but it was the Right Thing to do. This might be a good time for your contest club to check to be sure all of the required information (circle center coordinates and member locations) is up to date. (Thanks, PVRC President Jim WX3B) If you had trouble trying to submit your JIDX contest logs, you may have tried while the committee was moving the Web and email servers to a new computer. http://jidx.org/ is probably up and running again by now, so try again. (Thanks, Tack JE1CKA) Soapbox comments about CQ WPX CW that were made to the 3830 reflector have been compiled and are available at the following URL http://www.eskimo.com/~mwdink/3830 courtesy of Dink N7WA. Look for the file WPX CW SOAPBOX May 28 2007.txt. oooo o -o-- -o-- --- oo- OPERATING TIP o-- o- -o- o oo- o--o Falling asleep at the radio? Try operating standing up! If that's too difficult, try just changing the height of your operating chair - a good reason to have an adjustable chair in the shack. Make any change in your position or what you see - sometimes even moving the logging software windows around helps. Open a window or turn on a fan - or the reverse. Just keep changing things so that your mind is busy! And there's always a 15-minute catnap. oo oo-o oo - ooo -o --- - -ooo o-o --- -o- o TECHNICAL TIPS AND INFORMATION -o-- --- oo- o-o o -o --- - - o-o -o-- oo -o --o Roy W7EL's EZNEC antenna modeling program (http://www.eznec.com/) was upgraded to version 5.0 at the Hamvention! The new version can model transformers, L networks, and transmission line loss, extending its scope to the entire antenna system. The new version also supports higher-precision calculation, import and of NEC-format wire files, circular polarization, more SWR type displays, more frequency sweep steps, and other improvements. There are five versions with various capabilities, including a free demo package, depending on your needs. Two engineering-type booths caught my eye during my travels around the Hara Complex. The SerialWombat (http://www.serialwombat.com/) is a novel module that connects to the serial port of any computing device and provides interfaces to analog and digital electronics. Elsewhere on the premises, Winford Engineering offered a large selection of breakout boards and adapters for a variety of popular interfaces. If you build or test prototype equipment, you recognize the value of these handy gadgets. A new Yahoo! Group has been formed for users of digital modes and data communications techniques. Check out http://groups.yahoo.com/group/illinoisdigitalham for more information on this fast-growing segment of ham radio and radiosport operating. Another interesting software product, RadioCom 6, was released by Bonito (http://www.bonito.net/). It performs DSP and signal decoding functions on a PC. The program handles a plethora of signal types, all sorts of interesting analysis functions including oscilloscope-like displays, and has full-featured memory management. It's easy to see how one could dive into the world of signal decoding and never come back up! TECHNICAL URL OF THE WEEK -- The coolest gadget that I saw at the hamfest was the Clamptite (tm) clamp-making tool (http://www.clamptitetools.com/). You can make all kinds of sturdy clamps from whatever solid wire is handy, even coat hangers! I could immediately see a lot of ham radio utility in this product. o- -o-o -o-o oo- o-o o- -o-o -o-- oo ooo o--- --- -ooo CONVERSATION --- -o o oo -o -o-o --- -o - o ooo - oo -o --o The Foundation As we gain more experience in the hobby, the social aspects of an event like the Dayton Hamvention become more and more important. It's not unusual for experienced contesters to just hang out at the Crowne Plaza hotel all day long, meeting and greeting friends. They've already got a shack full of goodies - it's the friendly faces that bring them to southwestern Ohio every year. I've got my ever-widening circle of friends with more hands to shake and events to attend than ever. It's becoming my reason to enjoy Dayton as much as I do. And every year there is a new face to go with a familiar call. Those are exceptional moments! Sometimes the face matches what you expected and sometimes there is a big surprise. Either way, it's fun. It's important to all of us to remember that ham radio contacts - and contesting specifically - require us to reach out and make a connection with another ham, if only for a short 5NN. There are no solo contacts. Long after the new-radio smell fades and our latest acquisition has been relegated to the lower shelf in obsolescence our memories of each other will remain fresh and true, forming the foundation of our ham radio world. 73, Ward N0AX -o-o --o- - o ooo - -o-o --o- - o ooo - CONTESTS -- 30 MAY THROUGH JUNE 12 2007 -o-o --o- - o ooo - -o-o --o- - o ooo - 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 (>100 W); LP - Low Power; QRP (5W or less) HF CONTESTS Digital Pentathlon, sponsored by the Digital QSO Club (D-QSO-C) 1800Z - 2200Z; PSK Jun 1, MFSK Jun 8, Olivia Jun 15, Hellschreiber Jun 22, Throb Jun 29. Frequencies: 80 - 10 meters, work stations once per band/mode. Categories: SO, 50 watt max. Exchange: Serial number, 6-digit grid locator, power. QSO Points: distance in km divided by product of powers. Score: total of QSO points. For more information: http://dqso.net/start.html. Logs due 30 Jul in Cabrillo format to [email protected]. 2007 Alabama QSO Party--SSB/CW, sponsored by the Alabama Contest Group from 1600Z Jun 2 - 0400Z Jun 3. Frequencies: 160 - 10 meters. Categories: SO, MS, MM, Mobile, QRP/LP (<150W)/HP all categories. Exchange: RST and County or S/P/C. QSO Points: CW - 2 pts, SSB - 1 pt. Score: QSO Points x AL counties (AL stations count S/P/C) x power multiplier (QRP x3), LP x1.5). For more information: http://www.AlabamaQSOParty.org/. Logs due 30 days after the contest to [email protected] or Jim Johnson KC4HW, 6274 South CR 49, Slocomb, AL 36375 SEANET Contest--CW/SSB/Digital, sponsored by the SEANET Convention, 1200Z Jun 2 - 1200Z Jun 3. Frequencies (MHz): CW -- 160m, 3.525, 7.025, 14.025, 21.025, 28.025, SSB -- 7.090, 14.320, 21.320, 28.320. Categories: SO, MS, AB, SB, Mixed and Single Mode all categories. Exchange: RS(T) and serial number. QSO Points: SEANET-SEANET--10 pts (5 pts if same country), SEANET--World -- 10pts. Score: QSO points x DXCC entities for SEANET entrants, QSO points x SEANET entities for non-SEANET entrants, counted once per band and mode. For more information and list of SEANET countries: http://www.sabah.net.my/seanet/contest_rules.htm. Logs due Jul 31 to [email protected] or SEANET Contest 2007, Champ Muangamphun E21EIC, PO.BOX 1090, Kasetsart University, Bangkok 10903, Thailand. IARU Region 1 Field Day--CW, sponsored by IARU Societies, from 1500Z Jun 2 - 1459Z Jun 2 (SSB--Sep 2 - 3). Frequencies: 160 - 10 meters. Categories: SOAB (LP, QRP), MS (HP, LP). Exchange: RST and serial number. QSO Points: EU to EU fixed stations - 2 pts, non-EU to EU - 3 pts, with portable EU stations - 4 pts. Score: QSO points x DXCC and WAE entities counted once/band. See IARU Region 1 society Web sites for more information. Send logs to the appropriate national societies - not ARRL. NA hams to [email protected] or RSGB G3UFY, 77 Bensham Manor Road, Thornton Heath, Surrey CR7 7AF, England. Look Around In the Field Contest--CW & SSB, managed by NJ2OM from 1600Z - 2200Z Jun 2. Frequencies: 160-10 meters. Categories: Home QRP, Home QRO, Field QRP, Field QRO. Exchange: Call + RS(T) + S/P/C + Op name + wildlife name. QSO Points: CW -- 2 pts, SSB -- 1 pt. Score: QSO points � wildlife sent or received (see Web site) x S/P/C x category multiplier + bonus points. For more information: http://mysite.verizon.net/vze7v384/nj2om/index.html. Logs due Jun 16 to [email protected]. ANARTS WW RTTY / Digital Contest--sponsored by Australian National Amateur Radio Teleprinter Society (ANARTS), from 0000Z Jun 9 - 2400Z Jun 10. Frequencies: 80 - 10 meters. Categories: SO, MS, and SWL, SO and SWL only operate 30 hours. Exchange RST, CQ zone and Time (UTC). QSO Points are determined by an exchange table available from ANARTS. Score is QSO points x DXCC entities + VK, JA, VE, and W call districts + continents (counted only once, not incl. Antarctica). For more information: http://anarts.com.au/rules2007.htm. Logs due Sep 1 to [email protected] or Contest Manager-Colin Davies VK2CTD, PO Box 93, Toongabbie, NSW 2146, Australia. Asia-Pacific Sprint--SSB, from 1100Z to 1300Z Jun 10. Frequencies: 20 and 15 meters only, NA stations work Asia-Pacific countries only. Categories: SO only, 150 watts max. Exchange: RST and serial number. Sprint QSY rule applies--see NA Sprint, Feb 3-4. Score: total QSOs x WPX prefixes (counted once). For more information: http://jsfc.org/apsprint/aprule.txt. Logs due 7 days after the contest to [email protected] (no paper logs). Portugal Day Contest--SSB, sponsored by Rede dos Emissores Portugueses (REP), from 0000Z -- 2400Z Jun 9. Frequencies: 80 -- 10 meters. Categories: SOAB only. Exchange: RS + serial number or CT district or region abbreviation. QSO Points: different country - 3 pts, CT stations - 6 pts. Score: QSO points x CT districts counted once per band. For more information: http://www.rep.pt/pdf/contest_portugalday.pdf. Logs due 1 Sep to [email protected] or REP - Rede dos Emissores Portugueses, Award/Contest Manager, Rua D. Pedro V, N�.7 - 4�, 1250-092 Lisboa, Portugal. GACW WWSA CW DX Contest--sponsored by Grupo Argentino de Radiotelegrafia (GACW), from 1500Z Jun 9 - 1500Z Jun 10. Frequencies: 80 - 10 meters. Categories: SOAB and SOSB (QRP, LP, HP), MS, MM. Exchange: RST and CQ Zone. QSO Points: own country--0 pt (mult credit only), different country--1 pts, diff. continent--3 pts, non-SA to SA--5 pts. Score is QSO points x zone + countries from DXCC/WAE/GACW lists. For more information: http://gacw.no-ip.org/. Logs due 15 Jul to [email protected] or GACW DX Contest, PO Box 9, B1875ZAA Wilde, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Bill Windle QSO Party--CW, sponsored by First Class Operator's Club (FOC), from 0000Z -- 2359Z Jun 9 (also on Oct 13). Frequencies: 160 -- 10 meters, 6 & 2 meters. Call "CQ BW" from 15 to 45 kHz above band edge, open to all hams, not just FOC members. Exchange: RST and name or FOC number, if member. Report total QSOs with FOC members, counted once per band, FOC members report total QSOs and total FOC QSOs. For more information: http://www.firstclasscw.org.uk/. QSO totals due 1 week after to contest to [email protected]. VHF+ CONTESTS ARRL June VHF QSO Party--from 1800Z Jun 9 - 0300Z Jun 11. Frequencies: all bands 50 MHz and higher. Categories: SO-LP, SO-HP, SO-Portable, Rover, MO, Limited-MO. Exchange: 4-digit grid square locator. QSO Points: 50 & 144 MHz -- 1 pt, 222 & 432 MHz -- 2 pts, 906 & 1296 MHz -- 3 pts, 2.3 GHz and higher -- 4 pts. Total score: QSO Points x grid squares (counted once per band). For Rovers: QSO Points x unique grid squares + grids activated with at least one QSO. For more information - http://www.arrl.org/contests. Logs due 11 Jul to [email protected] (Cabrillo format only) or June VHF, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. -oo --- -o - -- oo ooo ooo -o-- --- oo- o-o LOG DUE DATES - 30 MAY THROUGH JUNE 12 2007 o-oo --- --o -oo o o- -oo o-oo oo -o o ooo May 30 - Helvetia Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Georges Strub, HB9DUH, 54 rue de St-Jean, 1213 Petite-Lancy, Switzerland. Find rules at: http://www.uska.ch/contest/hf/reglement_2006_e.pdf May 31 - Nebraska QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Nebraska QSO Party, c/o Steve Rasmussen N0WY, 312 N 6th Street, Plattsmouth, NE 68048-1302, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qsl.net/hdxa/neqso/neqso.htm May 31 - JIDX CW Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: JIDX CW Contest, c/o Five-Nine Magazine, PO Box 59, Kamata, Tokyo 144-8691, Japan. Find rules at: http://www.jidx.org/jidxrule-e.html May 31 - Holyland DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Contest Manager 4Z4KX, Israel Amateur Radio Club, Box 17600, Tel Aviv 61176, Israel. Find rules at: http://hamradio.iarc.org/contests/holy2007rules.html May 31 - Ontario QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Ontario QSO Party, c/o C. Lorantfy, PO Box 732, Petrolia, Ontario N0N 1R0, Canada. Find rules at: http://cco.ve3xd.com/oqp/oqprules.htm May 31 - Montana QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Norm Palin K7NCR, 68 Silver Leaf Drive, Kalispell, MT 59901, USA. Find rules at: http://www.fvarc.org/Events/events.htm May 31 - AGCW QRP/QRP Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Manager, Werner Hennig, DF5DD, Am Cappeler Freistuhl 33, D-59556 Lippstadt, Germany. Find rules at: http://www.agcw.org/agcw-con/2007/Englisch/agcw-dl_e.htm May 31 - QRP Minimal Art Session, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: DJ7ST, Dr. Hartmut Weber, Schlesierweg 13, D-38228 Salzgitter, Germany. Find rules at: http://www.qrpcc.de/contestrules/mas/qrpmasr-e.html June 1 - Radio Maritime Day, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.radiomaritimeday.org/ June 1 - Portuguese Navy Day Contest, CW/SSB/PSK31, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.nra.pt/php/bdContestRules.php?lang=en June 1 - QRP to the Field, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Jan Harden, N0QT, QRPTTF 2007, PO Box 1768, Socorro, NM 87801, USA. Find rules at: http://www.zianet.com/QRP/2007/qttfruls.html June 5 - New England QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: NEQP, PO Box 3005, Framingham, MA 01705-3005, USA. Find rules at: http://www.neqp.org/rules.html June 5 - ARI International DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: ARI DX Contest, c/o ARI, Via Scarlatti 31, 20124 Milano, Italy. Find rules at: http://www.ari.it/hf/contests/rules/ari-international-dx.pdf June 7 - VK/Trans-Tasman 80m Contest, Phone, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: VK/trans-Tasman Contest, 28 Crampton Crescent, Rosanna, VIC 3084, Australia. Find rules at: http://home.iprimus.com.au/vktasman/RULES.HTM June 9 - MARAC County Hunter Contest, CW, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Randy Hatt, AA8R, 7878 W County Line Rd, Howard City, MI 49239, USA. Find rules at: http://marac.org/cwrules.htm June 9 - NA High Speed Meteor Scatter Spring Rally, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.ykc.com/wa5ufh/Rally/2007SpringRules.htm June 10 - 7th Call Area QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: 7th Call Area QSO Party, c/o CODXC, 61255 Ferguson Rd, Bend, OR 97702, USA. Find rules at: http://www.codxc.org/new/Page.asp?Content=DRYLAND7S&Page=2 June 10 - His Maj. King of Spain Contest, CW, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: URE HF Contests, PO Box 220, 28080 Madrid, Spain. Find rules at: http://www.ure.es/hf/concursos/smelrey/basessmreyingles.pdf June 11 - FISTS Spring Sprint, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Dan Shepherd, N8IE, 1900 Pittsfield St, Kettering, Oh 45420, USA. Find rules at: http://www.fists.org/sprints.html June 12 - Mid-Atlantic QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Mid-Atlantic QSO Party (MAQP), PO Box 4922, Clinton, NJ 08809, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qsl.net/maqso ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS & SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION The Contester's Rate Sheet wishes to acknowledge information from the following sources: WA7BNM's Contest Calendar Web page - <http://www.hornucopia.com/contestcal> SM3CER's Web site - <http://www.sk3bg.se/contest> ARRL members may subscribe at no cost by editing their Member Data Page as described at <http://www.arrl.org/contests/rate-sheet>. Excel and Windows are trademarks of the Microsoft Corporation