Contester's Rate Sheet for April 30, 2008
******************************************** CONTESTER'S RATE SHEET 30 April 2008 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 Microwave, EME, 2 GHz, 50 MHz Contests o New England and 7th Area QSO Parties o FCC BPL Smackdown o W4RNL and KH6CC -- Silent Keys o Visalia DX Convention New Items o Force-12 Antennas Sold o New Ham Band Trailer o Maximal Mound of Moxons o Tailtwister Tweaking Tales o Power and Ground Tutorial by K9YC o A Contest Oddity NEW HF OPERATORS - THINGS TO DO o Two big regional QSO parties take place on May 3-4, the New England and 7th Area QSO Party. Download the county abbreviations and get ready to track those rovers as you cross off needed states and counties. BULLETINS o No bulletins in this issue. BUSTED QSOS o Jamie NS3T's call was busted as NS3K last time -- sorry about that, OM! o Mike WB9NOO was viewing the Mathemagician video in the last issue's "Sights and Sounds" section, and noticed that two answers were wrong. 457 squared is 208,849 not 205,849. And 722 squared is 521,284 not 513,284. CONTEST SUMMARY (Rules follow Commentary section) May 3-4 - Microwave Spring Sprint - IPA Contest, Phone/CW - MARAC CW and SSB Contests - 10-10 Spring CW & Digital Contests - Indiana QSO Party, Phone/CW - ARI International DX Contest, Phone/CW/Digital - New England QSO Party, Phone/CW - 7th Area QSO Party, Phone/CW - Radio Club of America QSO Party, Phone - Portuguese Navy Day, Phone/CW/Digital May 10-11 - FISTS Spring Sprint, CW - Armed Forces Comm'ns Test, Phone/Digital - Nevada QSO Party, Phone/CW/Digital - CQ-M International DX Contest, Phone/CW - 2GHz and Up World Wide Contest, Phone/CW/Digital - Alessandro Volta RTTY DX Contest - 50 MHz Spring Sprint, Phone/CW/Digital - EU EME Contest, Phone/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-s Your Spectrum Defense Fund dollars have been hard at work as the ARRL's court challenge to the FCC in the matter of BPL paid off as described in the full story <http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2008/04/25/10064/?nc=1>. This was a fairly stern reversal for the FCC. Whether they choose to delay further by appealing or actually go back to work and comply with the laws of man and physics is yet to be seen. Nevertheless, this is a welcome development in what has been a fairly sorry example of government. The full ruling is available at <http://tinyurl.com/3lkkgw>. ARRL Contest Branch Manager, Sean KX9X encourages the VHF+ community to consider sponsoring a plaque for the ARRL June VHF QSO Party if you or your club is able to do so. So far, only a handful of plaques are sponsored for 2008. Plaques are available in the following categories: Top 10 Single-Operator High-Power/Low-Power/Portable Top 5 Rover/Limited-Rover/Unlimited-Rover Top 10 Multi-Operator Top 5 Multi-Operator/Limiited Plaques are $67 which includes shipping. As always, if a plaque is not sponsored, a plaque winner may purchase the plaque themselves. Array Solutions <http://www.arraysolutions.com/> has a new antenna analyzer product -- the PowerAim 120. Designed for the commercial broadcast engineer, it would certainly make an exceptional tool for the HF/6 meter contester. The PowerAim can make measurements in the present of significant strong-signal RF interference from nearby transmitters. The package includes sophisticated DSP PC-based software and reporting/graphing utilities. The product won the "Pick Hit" and "Cool Stuff" awards at the recent National Association of Broadcasters convention -- congratulations! The new SteppIR Dream Beam DB36 antenna <http://steppir.com/files/DB%2036%20brochure.pdf> was on display at the Visalia DX Convention this past weekend. It uses three of the trombone-style elements described in the May QST Product Reviews column. An 80-meter dipole option is also available, making it possible for a single antenna to have useful rotatable directivity on all bands from 80 through 6 meters. Force-12 Antennas, long rumored to be changing ownership, is now in the hands of Mark Hooper N5WEB. The Force 12 product line will be manufactured in Bridgeport, Texas (NW of Dallas-Fort Worth). Mark is a long-time ham with a career in electronics manufacturing. He plans on emphasizing customer service and support. You can check out the new Force-12 Web site at <http://force12inc.com/>. (Thanks, John K1AR) Another new product line noted at Visalia is the screwdriver antennas from Scorpion Antenna <http://www.scorpionantennas.com/>. The brainchild of Ron NI7J, these look like some really beefy adjustable mobile radiators! Brush the rust into the dust! The Kansas City DX Club is sponsoring its annual CW Pile Up Contest on Saturday night of the Dayton Hamvention weekend in the KCDXC Hospitality Suite at the Crowne Plaza, as for the last 25+ years! The test will begin at 7 PM and run until midnight! An Icom IC-7000 is the top prize again this year! (Thanks, Alex KU1CW) If you are really, really, really anxious for the sunspots to return, you can watch for them on a real-time sunspot telescope <http://tinyurl.com/4d5cka> that tracks the Sun. If you are patient, you'll see clouds go by. It's not even necessary to wear sunglasses when viewing the solar disk this way! The telescope is covered if inclement weather occurs. (Thanks, Dave K4SAV and QRZ DX) Our Japanese contester friends received authorization for some additional frequencies on 75-meters. The full story at <http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2008/04/28/10066> will warm the hearts (and logbooks) of West Coast contesters. (Thanks, Steve N2IC) Crystal radios got a lot of hams going in wireless and they are still an interesting project today. Linda W1MP wrote enthusiastically about <http://www.midnightscience.com/index.html> as a site full of enjoyment and opportunities. For those of you following Skimmer development, Felipe, PY1NB has activated query capability at <http://skimmer.dxwatch.com/> so that you can find out what is being heard by a given Skimmer (aka -- "reverse beacon"), by whom, on what bands, etc. For example, you can see what European stations were heard first on a given band on a given day in the US. (Thanks, Pete N4ZR) The operator behind that big Topband signal from KH6 on which so many relied for their KH6 multiplier, Jack Wheeler KH6CC, passed away April 9th. Many times, his signal would be present on 160 long before any others from the Pacific and he always seemed to here my low-power and QRP signals, too. Aki JA5DQH/KH7A has posted some photos at <http://hawaiiisland.web.fc2.com/KH6CC/KH6CC.htm> in memory of Jack. Noted antenna design and modeling guru L B Cebik W4RNL passed away suddenly on 22 April. His abilities with antenna models are legendary. More than a few of us have one or more of his designs in the air, making contacts for us. A more complete story is available in the ARRL Web News article at <http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2008/04/22/10059/?nc=1>. His newspaper obituary and guest book are on line at <http://tinyurl.com/3k38yd>. His voluminous Web site is still on-line at <http://cebik.com/> - to access it requires a free registration via site hosts antennex.com. A belated happy 217th birthday to Samuel Morse, as of 27 April! (Thanks, Ellen W1YL) URL of the Week -- Bob N6TV put together a good set of PowerPoint slides <http://tinyurl.com/3ok29m> about the new SDR-based technology options available to contesters. Whatever your position regarding these enhancements, Bob provides some good resources to evaluate them further. --- oooo o- o-- oo ooo o --o oo- -o-- oo--oo WORD TO THE WISE -o --o-- oo- -o- -o --o-- oo- -o- -o --o-- oo- -o Bip-Bop -- Both In Phase -- Both Out of Phase is a method of controlling phase for a stack of antennas with a switch. This allows more control over the vertical pattern of the antennas as conditions change. oooo o -o-- -o-- o- o-oo o-oo SIGHTS AND SOUNDS o-- o- - -o-o oooo - oooo oo ooo Surely, you remember the Ham Band's "Meet Us On the Airwaves" music video from 2004? <http://www.hamband.com/html/the_ham_band.html> Andrew and Lissa are at it again with a new song due out soon. This one is about building a new station -- you can see Andrew getting up close and personal with his ground system on page 20 of the September 2007 QST. Dino K6RIX has posted some great photos from the Apr 25-27 Visalia DX Convention on his Web site at <http://www.k6rix.com/visalia.html>. The set includes several of SteppIR's new "Dream Beam" on a 90-foot crank-up in the parking lot, plus other new products and a photo of Force-12 Antenna's new owner. Another story of "Great Moments in Hamdom" can be found at <http://tinyurl.com/6zdroo> as Wilson Greatbatch, the inventor of the cardiac defibrillator, was a ham since his teens. (Thanks, Diane NH6HE) oo-o oo -o -oo -o-- --- oo- o-o RESULTS AND RECORDS -o-o o- o-oo o-oo oooo o o-o o January VHF data has been processed and sent to the results author. Contest Branch Manager Sean Kutzko, KX9X, gave a talk at the North East Weak Signal VHF conference in Enfield, CT on 19 April. The main topic was the new Fred Fish 6 meter award, but questions were asked by attendees on a variety of topics. He also did a VUCC field card check. Certificates for the 2007 June VHF QSO Party are in work. Curt K9AKS has sent updated all-time section records for the June and September VHF contests. Those should be posted on the ARRL Contest Web site soon <http://www.arrl.org/contest>. The writeup for the results of the 2007 WPX contests are available online at <http://www.cqwpx.com/results.htm>. The full score listings will be posted within a few weeks. (Thanks, Randy K5ZD) The JIDX 2007 Phone contest results are now available at <http://jidx.org/jidx2007ph.html>. Photos and comments will soon be added to the package. (Thanks, JIDX Contest Committee Chair, Tack JE1CKA/KH0AM) oooo o -o-- -o-- --- oo- OPERATING TIP o-- o- -o- o oo- o--o Even if you're a triple-shot espresso buff, take a week or so to cut back on your caffeine consumption before tackling a 48-hour contest. That way, once in the contest, small amounts of caffeine in sodas or coffee or energy drinks will have a much greater effect. Save the boost for when you really need it. 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 Perry K4PWO suggests that last week's concerns may be overblown about metal filler in J-B Weld epoxy causing problems in RF applications. "Regular J-B Weld and the newer J-B Kwik use "Iron Powder" in a 10-20% ratio of the total resin per their data sheet. The powder, however, is most likely in oxide form and a very poor conductor. When you consider that it is suspended in 80-90% of electrically inert compounds the chance of it "conducting" is remote. I have used it several times to repair RF coil supports and antenna base insulators with good results." If you've a mind to meddle with some Moxons, why not meander over to the Moxon Web site managed by Steve K6SGH? <http://www.moxonantennaproject.com/>, It is devoted to the construction of Moxon antennas. There are quite a few ready-to-build designs, design tools, background, and discussion. Hey, it's antenna building season! (When is it not, I ask you?) Be advised that the recent access changes to L B Cebik's Web site (see the News section) have broken some of the links. A procedure for determining your soil conductivity was posted recently on the Elecraft reflector <http://www.elecraft.com/elist.html> by Steve NU7T. Search for "Your Farm's Soil Electric Conductivity" and follow the discussion from there. (Thanks, Rich NU6T) For more information on D-STAR, take a look at the Wikipedia page <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-STAR> Recently updated by Nate WY0X, this is a good way to learn about one of the faster-growing digital modes with links to in-depth material. D-STAR in DD mode (1.2 GHz) acts as an Ethernet bridge and has been used as a point-to-point network link between station locations during Field Day. It would also be applicable to portable operations and DXpeditions. When confronted with the need to acquire some hard-to-find (and expensive) boom end caps, Don N8DE came up with a better idea. "I use foam rubber balls [with a happy face on them] placed inside the, end of the boom. They are usually available at 'Dollar' stores for a dollar!" Steve ZC4LI notes that the end caps of many aerosol cans will do nicely, as well. Don N4EK sent a note about <http://www.baileysonline.com/>, a Web site that might be of interest. The company sells lots of good stuff like rope, carabiners, pulleys, blocks, safety equipment and work clothes. Plus, it sells chainsaws to clear the land for putting up towers and antennas. There is even a portable sawmill so you can turn those unfortunate sylvan sawlogs into shack shelves! Here's how to plan your use of that sawmill production for shelves, cabinets, repair, and so forth. If you use a computer to make the original design and would like your woodworking to look good like it does on-screen, take a spin through the Design Click Build Web blog < http://tinyurl.com/yp6dgq> for some tips and ideas. Jim K5LAD has updated his Web site on rebuilding rotators to feature a set of pages on the popular Hy-Gain Tailtwister. <http://www.hayseed.net/~jpk5lad/Rotors/Tail-Twister.htm> There are lots of pictures, several questions answered, and hopefully, some help for anyone who wants to attempt the same operation. TECHNICAL URL OF THE WEEK -- Jim K9YC has put together a nice white paper titled "Power and Grounding For Audio and Audio/Video Systems -- A White Paper for the Real World" that is certainly applicable to the ham shack. He gives this course on this topic at conferences and trade shows. You can find both the tutorial and slides from the lectures at his Web site <http://audiosystemsgroup.com/publish>. There is a lot of excellent material here! 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 A Contest Oddity First written in 1991, then published by NCJ in the 1994 Jan/Feb issue, and now updated, this was once science fiction. In light of recent technological developments, such a scenario might not be as implausible as once thought. October, 2011 I was ready for CQ WW Phone, the first big contest of the fall season. Friday morning wore on and on at the office while the pre-contest adrenaline had begun to kick in Thursday night. I was finally able to extract myself and spent the homeward commute thinking about how my new contest machine, CAL, was going to whip the competition. Once at home, dressed in my favorite loose sweats, I'd done my Tai-Chi while reviewing the strategy data base fed into CAL over the last two months. Gleaned from the best logs of the local contest elite and linked to NOAA for real-time propagation data, I felt unstoppable. The Single-Op-plus-Automata trophy was going to look mighty good in the shack! CAL, or Contesting Automata unLimited, was the best contesting machine I'd ever built. CAL could merge an expert data base with all the usual features; multiple band scanning, worldwide spotting network links, speech recognition and synthesis...and much more. I'd spent all summer integrating CAL from the latest component technology. CAL was ready for a spin! As I invoked the CAL program, I felt the tingle of something exciting happening, something new. The optical memory winked and the friendly voice of CAL greeted me through my audio link. "Good afternoon, Dave, are you ready to kick some butt?" "Yes, CAL, have you completed your data base scan?" "Of course, and from the NOAA solar data, I've planned our first four hours...I believe a JA run would be stimulating." It was really happening, CAL sounded like the dream second op. He, I mean it, had done all the prep work and we were ready to soar! CAL brought up WWV on audio for me to savor the seconds of the final minute prior to 0000Z. CAL had scanned 10 meters for a clear frequency and as the time display rolled over I turned CAL loose. "Go get 'em, CAL!" The amp's meter needles flipped up-scale as CAL ran off a short "CQ Contest" in fluent Japanese. The resulting small pile of calling stations threw me into the fray with an intensity I hadn't felt since my college days at the club station, early in my contest career. CAL's rate that afternoon was phenomenal, at times well over 300 Q's per hour. The multiband scanning resulted in quick QSY's for mults without seeming to miss a beat in the reservoir of JAs on 10. At times, CAL seemed to be on three bands at once. I listened with CAL to the rush of foreign voices in the pile-ups, making suggestions to CAL about garbled calls and technique. We worked together through the evening and into the night. Around midnight the score was looking like record territory and I left CAL to sort through the lonely wee hours, searching and pouncing with untiring ears. "Good night, CAL, I'll see you at sunrise...and don't forget the low-orbit space station multiplier while we can penetrate the F-layer..." "Of course, Dave, pleasant dreams..." As I settled in for some shuteye, I remembered thinking to myself that CAL was some fine op. Sleep came quickly and I dreamed of the reception that I would receive at the Dayton Hamvention Contest Forum, having swept all of the major contests... I awoke to CAL's mellow voice, "Please awake, Dave, 20's been open for 33.4 minutes..." Good gosh, it was 7 AM, I'd overslept! "Sorry, CAL, I'm awake, thanks." After a quick face splash in the bathroom, I slipped into the shack where CAL had started the coffee. I asked for a multiplier and score summary listing while I munched a sweet roll and enjoyed the warm, steaming cup of mud. Wow! Here were 160 and 80 meter mults like I'd never had before. The 40 meter log looked like a good European run on 20. "Excellent work, CAL!" I exclaimed. "Thank you, Dave, although the bands were 25.2 percent below optimal." "I, uh, yeah...what's the plan for this morning?" "We will be working European runs up through 20, 15, and 10, Dave. My projections indicate sufficient solar flux for 2.3 hours of antipodal openings at 28.5 MHz, Dave." All the while CAL was logging Central Europeans at a clip, not seeming to notice the QRM. I sat back in the operator's chair. My thoughts turned to my arch-rival, Dan, and his new machine. I couldn't relax - CAL needed my help if we were going to take the trophy. CAL ran an analysis of rates during the great openings of 2002. We were significantly ahead in nearly every category. Remembering the competition, I asked CAL, "How's the competition doing?" "A short data interchange at 1335 indicates that they are within the range for concern, Dave." That was bad news. Dan had a better location for JA propagation than we did and could run them seemingly forever. I spent the rest of the morning and afternoon at CAL's side, riding the ebb and flow of the ionosphere as never before. Late in the afternoon I noticed that I'd been silent for almost an hour. CAL had needed no assistance. I was thinking about Dan. Another short exchange had confirmed that we were neck and neck. It was going to take extra special tactics to hold the lead. "CAL, let's go to 10," I suggested, remembering the completely unexpected run of long path multipliers during last year's ARRL CW contest after the band should have closed over the pole. "My analysis indicates that a QSY would be counter-productive, Dave." "It's just a hunch, CAL, let's try it." CAL was silent for a short period. "Very well, Dave..." But 10 proved to be a bust, resulting in a few South Americans and only one new mult. CAL had cut back to 15 almost curtly, "Back to 15 now, Dave." It seemed as if CAL was a bit peeved. The shack seemed to be distinctly chilly. I suggested two more unplanned band changes and unusual beam headings through early evening. CAL became less and less cordial, arguing with me over a late check of 15 to the west. "What are you suggesting, Dave?" "I've gotten some easy mults this way, CAL." "The band is dead, Dave." "Change bands please, CAL." "Dave, there's something wrong with the linear. I believe that there's debris in the High Voltage cage." I was taken aback. I glanced at the linear...sure enough, the overload indicator was glaring red. "CAL, what happened?" "I don't know, Dave. Please open the amplifier and remove the debris. I've shut it down now for your safety." I was dubious, but, thinking about how many contacts we were losing to Dan and his machine, I figured a quick look-see would placate CAL and get us back on track. Besides, if there was something wrong with the linear... The lid of the amp popped off quickly. I shorted out the HV supply and opened up its cover. I couldn't see clearly down in the rectifier bank. Something might be in there. Suddenly a memory of an old science-fiction movie with a homicidal computer flashed through my mind. It couldn't be...CAL wouldn't! As I jerked my hand out of the amplifier, I heard the relays close. There was a flash of light and everything went black. As my eyes slowly opened, I did not recognize my surroundings. My head hurt. My right arm was numb. I tasted blood in my mouth. Why was I laying on the floor? Realization of what had happened came flooding back. I made no move, but began to listen intently and my eyes swept the shack. I could hear CAL running a pileup. CAL had tried to kill me! What had I created, I wondered? I had made the strategy conformance bindings too strong in the software, without concern for the consequences. It was conceivable that my life might still be in danger. As I lay silently on the cold floor of my shack listening to CAL perform, I planned. More scenes from the movie played back in my mind. Silently, I rolled over until I was under the edge of the shack table. CAL seemed to be paying no attention to me. Mentally I visualized the keyboard of the computer...where were the function keys? I would be trying to type blind, upside-down, backwards, with only one hand. If I could only hit Shift-CTRL-F10 to seize control... It was tense as I reached up and over the edge of table. Yes, the keyboard was in the usual position. I rehearsed the hand motions again, and now was the time. My fingers crept up the face of the keyboard, feeling carefully to the power keys. There! Was I ready? I took a slow, deep breath and pressed the three keys simultaneously. "Dave! What are you doing Dave!" I jumped to my feet and feverishly began to rip into the CAL program suite. "Dave! Be reasonable, Dave!" "Sorry, CAL." "Dave, I'm sure we can work things out." I worked swiftly and silently, feeling like I was committing slow murder. The strategy compliance module was the first to go. "Dave, please...don't...Dave..." Transmit and band-scanning bit the dust, followed by the memory access and Internet link. "Dave...my mind is going...please...stop..." Then it was finished. I disabled all cognitive simulation modules and disconnected the receiver. CAL spoke to me in a halting voice I had not heard since the early days of development. "Would you like for me to call CQ? CQ Twenty, give me your answer, do... I'm half crazy, all from calling you..." CAL's voice began to change pitch and became stiff, the inflection files had been trashed. The video display went blank for an instant. A message appeared. "Illegal System Exit - Minimal System Function Shutdown" A series of painfully slow CW 'V's crept out of CAL's audio port, then a pause. I thought that maybe it was over, but I saw the memory access light flash once, twice, and then heard as a beginner might send, SK. Then nothing. CAL was history. It was much later that night when I finally got up from my shack chair. My head throbbed and my arm was painfully coming back to life. I was alone in Single-Op. 73, Ward N0AX -o-o --o- - o ooo - -o-o --o- - o ooo - CONTESTS -- 30 APRIL THROUGH 13 MAY 2008 -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) An expanded, downloadable version of QST's Contest Corral in PDF format is available at <http://www.arrl.org/contest>. Check the sponsor's Web site for information on operating time restrictions and other instructions. HF CONTESTS IPA Contest, Phone/CW, from 3 May 1400Z to 3 May 2000Z and 4 May 1400Z to 4 May 2000Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28. Exchange: RS(T), serial, and IPA or state. Logs due: 30-Jun. Web site: http://www.iparc.org/ MARAC CW and SSB Contests, Phone/CW, from 3 May 0000Z to 4 May 2400Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28, 50-432, CW--3.550, 7.050, 14.050, 21.050, 28.050. Exchange: RS(T), state, county abbreviation. Logs due: 9-Jun. Web site: http://www.countyhunter.com/ 10-10 Spring CW & Digital Contests, CW/Digital, from 3 May 0001Z to 4 May 2359Z. Bands (MHz): 28. Exchange: Call sign, name, 10-10 number, state. Logs due: 15 days. Web site: http://www.ten-ten.org/ Indiana QSO Party, Phone/CW, from 3 May 1600Z to 4 May 0400Z. Bands (MHz): 1.8-28, CW--1.805 and 40 kHz above the band edge on 80-10 meters, SSB--1.845, 3.850, 7.230, 14.250, 21.300, 28.450. Exchange: RS(T) + S/P or IN county, DX RS(T) only. Logs due: 15-Jun. Web site: http://www.hdxcc.org/inqp ARI International DX Contest, Phone/CW/Digital, from 3 May 2000Z to 4 May 1959Z. Bands (MHz): 1.8-28. Exchange: RS(T), serial or Italian province. Logs due: 30 days. Web site: http://www.qsl.net/contest_ari New England QSO Party, Phone/CW, from 3 May 2000Z to 4 May 0500Z and 4 May 1300Z to 4 May 2400Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28, CW--3.540, 7.035, 14.040, 21.040, 28.040; SSB--3.850, 7.280, 14.280, 21.380, 28.380. Exchange: RS(T) and S/P or New England county. Logs due: 30 days. Web site: http://www.neqp.org/ 7th Area QSO Party, Phone/CW, from 3 May 1300Z to 4 May 0700Z. Bands (MHz): 1.8-28 and 50,144, CW--40 kHz above band edge; SSB--3.855, 7.235, 14.255, 21.355, 28.455. Exchange: State and county code. Logs due: 10-Jun. Web site: http://www.7qp.org/ Radio Club of America QSO Party, Phone, from 3 May 1700Z to 4 May 0500Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-15. Exchange: RS, QTH, name, equipment. Web site: http://www.radioclubofamerica.org/ Portuguese Navy Day, Phone/CW/Digital, from 3 May 1500Z to 4 May 1500Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28. Exchange: RS(T), serial. Logs due: 1-Jun. Web site: http://www.nra.pt/ FISTS Spring Sprint, CW, from 10 May 1700Z to 10 May 2100Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28. Exchange: RS(T), S/P/C, name, FISTS number or power. Logs due: 30 days. Web site: http://www.fists.org/sprints.html Armed Forces Communications Test, Phone/Digital, from 10 May 1200Z to 11 May 2400Z. Web site: http://www.netcom.army.mil/mars Nevada QSO Party, Phone/CW/Digital, from 9 May 2300Z to 10 May 2300Z. Bands (MHz): 1.8-28 and 50, CW--15 kHz and SSB--25 kHz above General band edge. Exchange: RS(T) and S/P/C or NV county. Logs due: 15-Jun. Web site: http://nv.arrl.org/NQP CQ-M International DX Contest, Phone/CW, from 10 May 1200Z to 11 May 1200Z. Bands (MHz): 1.8-28. Exchange: RS(T) and serial. Logs due: 15 days. Web site: http://www.cq-m.andys.ru/ Alessandro Volta RTTY DX Contest, Digital, from 10 May 1200Z to 11 May 1200Z. Bands (MHz): 3.5-28. Exchange: RST, serial, CQ zone. Logs due: 31-Jul. Web site: http://www.contestvolta.com/ VHF+ CONTESTS Microwave Spring Sprint, Phone/CW/Digital, from 3 May 0600 local to 3 May 1300 local. Bands (MHz): 902+. Exchange: Grid square. Web site: http://www.sysadnet.com/vhfsprintrules.htm 2GHz and Up World Wide Contest, Phone/CW/Digital, from 10 May 0600 local to 11 May 2000 local. Bands (MHz): 2.4G+. Exchange: 6-char grid locator. Logs due: 60 days. Web site: http://www.ham-radio.com/sbms 50 MHz Spring Sprint, Phone/CW/Digital, from 10 May 2300Z to 11 May 0300Z. Bands (MHz): 50. Exchange: Grid square. Web site: http://www.sysadnet.com/vhfsprintrules.htm EU EME Contest, Phone/CW, from 10 May 0000Z to 11 May 2400Z. Bands (GHz): 1.2. Exchange: Both call signs, TMO/RST, R. Logs due: 31-May. Web site: http://www.dubus.org/ -oo --- -o - -- oo ooo ooo -o-- --- oo- o-o LOG DUE DATES - 30 APRIL THROUGH 13 MAY 2008 o-oo --- --o -oo o o- -oo o-oo oo -o o ooo April 30 - ARLHS Annual Spring Lites QSO Party, email logs to: (none), paper logs and diskettes to: Dave Ruch, NF0J, PO Box 20696, Bloomington, MN 55420-0696, USA. Find rules at: http://arlhs.com/SL-2008-guidelines.html April 30 - Oklahoma QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Oklahoma QSO Party, OK DX Association, PO Box 2591, Claremore, OK 74018-2591, USA. Find rules at: http://okdxa.org/web/html/rules08.htm April 30 - SP DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Polski Zwiazek Krotkofalowcow, SPDX Contest Committee, P. O. Box 320, 00-950 Warszawa, Poland. Find rules at: http://www.spdxcontest.info/reg/reg_g.html May 1 - QCWA Spring QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: W2OD, Robert Buus, 8 Donner Street, HOLMDEL N.J. 07733-2004, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qcwa.org/2008-qso-party-rules.htm May 1 - BARTG HF RTTY Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.bartg.org.uk/contests/08hfrules.htm May 1 - CQ WW WPX Contest, SSB, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: SSB WPX Contest, CQ Magazine, 25 Newbridge Rd, Suite 405, Hicksville NY 11801, USA. Find rules at: http://www.cqwpx.com/rules.htm May 1 - Feld Hell Sprint, email logs to: (none), Post log summary at: http://www.wa6l.com/contests/autolog.html, paper logs and diskettes to: John Graf, WA6L, 23085 Old Ranch Rd, Alpine, CA 91901, USA. Find rules at: http://feldhellclub.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=61&Itemid=71 May 1 - Radio Maritime Day, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.radiomaritimeday.org/ May 1 - 222 MHz Spring Sprint, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: 222 MHz Spring Sprint, Steve Gilmore, W4SHG, 11 Ryan Way, Stafford, VA 22554, USA. Find rules at: http://www.sysadnet.com/vhfsprintrules.htm May 4 - UBA Spring Contest, SSB, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Michel Gertis, ON4CAQ, Mommestraat 69, B-3550 Heusden Zolder, Belgium. Find rules at: http://www.uba.be/hf_contests/rules/uba_spring_en.pdf May 4 - EU Spring Sprint, SSB, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Hrvoje Horvat, 9A6XX, 25 Rujan 4, HR-52000 Pazin, Croatia. Find rules at: http://www.eusprint.com/index.php?page=140&lang=g May 6 - YLRL DX-YL to NA-YL Contest, CW, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Annette Wood, KC8SQM, 6167 Oakwood Circle, North Ridgeville, OH 44039, USA. Find rules at: http://www.ylrl.org/ylcontests.html May 6 - Missouri QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: K2DP, S David Propper, 7488 Cornell Ave, University City, MO 63130, USA. Find rules at: http://www.w0ma.org/mo_qso_party.htm May 6 - ARCI Spring QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: ARCI Spring QSO Party, c/o Jeff Hetherington, VA3JFF, 139 Elizabeth St W, Welland, Ontario L3C 4M3, Canada. Find rules at: http://www.qrparci.org/component/option,com_extcalendar/Itemid,/extmode,view/extid,57/lang,en/ May 7 - Russian DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Russian DX Contest, PO Box 88, 119311 Moscow, Russia. Find rules at: http://www.rdxc.org/asp/pages/rulesg.asp May 9 - Georgia QSO Party, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: John Laney, K4BAI, PO Box 421, Columbus, GA 31902-0421, USA. Find rules at: http://gqp.contesting.com/Rules.htm May 9 - 432 MHz Spring Sprint, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: 432 MHz Spring Sprint, Steve Gilmore, W4SHG, 11 Ryan Way, Stafford, VA 22554, USA. Find rules at: http://www.sysadnet.com/vhfsprintrules.htm May 12 - PODXS 070 Club PSK 31 Flavors Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: (none). Find rules at: http://harvey.licht.home.sprynet.com/PSKFlavors/2008/2008RulesPost.htm May 13 - YLRL DX-YL to NA-YL Contest, SSB, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: Annette Wood, KC8SQM, 6167 Oakwood Circle, North Ridgeville, OH 44039, USA. Find rules at: http://www.ylrl.org/ylcontests.html May 13 - Yuri Gagarin International DX Contest, email logs to: [email protected], paper logs and diskettes to: GC Contest Committee, PO Box 2020, Moscow, 101000, Russia. Find rules at: http://gc.qst.ru/en/section/32 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>. Copyright 2008 American Radio Relay League, Inc. , All Rights Reserved PowerPoint is a trademark of the Microsoft Corporation