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FS5UQ (Opr. K3LP)
- ARRL DX CW 2006, Single Op, Low Power,
Un-Assisted, 3rd Place World,
2nd
North America
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FS5UQ QSL Card |
ARRL TBD Place World Certificate |
There were 1,201 contesters who entered the Single Operator,
Low Power Category and at total of 2,547 logs tuned in this year.
ARRL DX CW 2006 - August 2006 QST Results by ARRL
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# |
Call |
Score |
QSOs |
Mult |
Class |
Power |
Continent |
| 1 |
P49Y (AE6Y, op) |
4,173,144 |
4,241 |
328 |
S |
B |
SA |
| 2 |
FG/N0YY |
3,233,196 |
3,522 |
306 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 3 |
FS5UQ (K3LP, op) |
3,229,200 |
3,600 |
299 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 4 |
VP9/W6PH |
3,007,485 |
3,445 |
291 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 5 |
WP3C |
2,917,956 |
3,331 |
292 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 6 |
VP5/WJ2O |
2,488,593 |
3,061 |
271 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 7 |
N1UR |
2,242,314 |
2,154 |
347 |
S |
B |
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| 8 |
K7SV |
2,121,714 |
1,871 |
378 |
S |
B |
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| 9 |
VP9/K9CC |
1,964,820 |
2,519 |
260 |
S |
B |
NA |
| 10 |
PJ7/ND5S |
1,900,944 |
2,456 |
258 |
S |
B |
NA |
CONTEST 3830 FEBRUARY 2006 REPORT SCORES
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# |
Call |
Score |
QSOs |
Mult |
Class |
Power |
DXCC Entity |
Continent |
Club |
| 1 |
P49Y (AE6Y) |
4,209,555 |
4265 |
329 |
S |
B |
Aruba |
SA |
MLDXCC |
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2 |
FS5UQ (K3LP) |
3,319,428 |
3676 |
301 |
S |
B |
St. Martin |
NA |
PVRC |
| 3 |
FG/N0YY |
3,298,680 |
3570 |
308 |
S |
B |
Guadeloupe |
NA |
SMC |
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4 |
VP9/W6PH |
3,028,437 |
3469 |
291 |
S |
B |
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NA |
YCCC |
| 5 |
WP3C |
2,949,045 |
3355 |
293 |
S |
B |
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NA |
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6 |
VP9/K9CC |
2,013,876 |
2618 |
261 |
S |
B |
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NA |
SMC |
| 7 |
VE3JM |
1,031,886 |
1189 |
291 |
S |
B |
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CCO |
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8 |
P40LE(K2LE) |
628,452 |
1012 |
207 |
S |
B |
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OBONY |
| 9 |
CT1BQH |
516,384 |
1056 |
163 |
S |
B |
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10 |
F5UKL |
426,273 |
941 |
151 |
S |
B |
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GENERAL INFORMATION
We arrived in St. Martin on Wednesday, February 15, 2006 and
returned home on Wednesday, February 22, 2002. During this trip, Clint
(W3ARS) and I (K3LP -David) stayed at Mort's (W1UQ's) Simpson Bay villa and
operated before and after the contest as FS/K3LP and FS/W3ARS. During the
contest, I (K3LP) operated the contest as FS5UQ (Opr. K3LP) Single
Operator, Low Power and without packet connection.
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TBD
Place World - FS5UQ (K3LP)
ARRL DX CW 2006, Single Op, Low Pwr.,
Un-Assisted
Reported Score: 3,319,428
ARRL
Score Results: 3,229,200
Accuracy Error : 2.7%
Band:
QSOs:
SECs:
160 Meter 160
36
80 Meter
499
56
40 Meter
891
58
20 Meter
670
58
15 Meter 1277
58
10 Meter
179
35
Report Totals:3,676
301
Results:
3,600 299 |
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FS5UQ (Opr. K3LP) operating ARRL DX CW, Monday -
Day after Contest |
FS5UQ (OPR K3LP) ARRL DX CW 2006, Single Operator,
Low Power, Score Details |
FS5UQ (OPR. K3LP), SINGLE OPERATOR, LOW
POWER, UN-ASSISTED
The ARRL DX
CW 2006 contest had many new challenges. Twenty (20), 10 and 160 meter
bands presented new frustrations for me this year.
First of
all, my 20 meter QSOs on both Saturday and Sunday mornings were few in
coming. There was a second operator (FS/KN5G) on the island operating
single op 20 meters, but the guys on Aruba seem, each year, not to be
impacted by this type of issue. It’s not uncommon for stateside to be
pointing toward Europe and not hearing the Caribbean until almost
10:30AM. It just seemed slower than normal. I was down about 300-400
QSOs on this band at the end of the contest. I kept myself busy
operating 40 and 80 meters to fill the void, until I got 15 meters going
at a decent rate.
The 40’
light weight aluminum crank-up tower cable was damaged (rusted beyond
use) with a rotator that would not rotate and could not be fixed until
the aluminum tower could be lowered. I pointed the beam at the mid-west
and operated the contest with the LogPeriodic beam in a fixed position
both days. It’s unclear how much my results were impacted by lacking
some antenna gain by not using a mono-band beam and loosing the antenna
directivity (i.e. no antenna rotation).
Ten (10)
meters yielded zero activity for me until Sunday afternoon around 1800
GMT, when I finally made my first QSO on this band. I had a 2 hour
opening that provided 179 QSOs and 35 multipliers, and believe me, I was
grateful to have what came my way.
My 160
meter QSO and multiplier totals were both up this year, but I was still
pained by not being able to get the north and northwest coast (OR, WA,
VE7, VE6, VE5, UT, NV, ID) and northern mid-west multipliers (MT, ND,
SD, WY, VE4) on this band. My 350’ beverage was working fine and I
seemed to work everything I could hear as I moved them from 40 or 80
meters to 160 meters. I just didn’t get the proper openings. I tried at
sunrise, during the middle of night and 1 hour before their sunrise,
each time moving the needed multipliers, knowing the call sign, but just
couldn’t hear them, therefore not working the multiplier. This was a
real bummer!
I was able
to exceed my last year “J6R” QSO and multiplier accomplishments on 80,
40 and 15 meters. I was very happy with the results on these bands.
W3ARS
(Clint) and I put up a two element wire beam for 40 meters that worked
with great results from the 1,400 hill top location.
I used two
IC-746PROs in a SO2R configuration. These radios were excellent for
operating the CW contest and the rig’s size made it desirable for taking
on my DX-pedition. The IC-746PROs are a must on my future DX-peditions.
I really liked the CW filters and numerous features bundled into this
rig’s medium sized package. I’m hocked on the IC-746PRO after being
disappointed by using other rig types on my prior dx-peditions.
I changed
my sleeping arrangement this year. I slept three hours (starting 1.5
hours before sunrise) on Saturday morning and had no sleep on Sunday.
Having no sleep on Sunday just didn’t work for me. By the last two hours
of the contest, where I needed to be focused to get the 250-300 Hour QSO
rate, I had difficulty maintaining the rate over 225. I just wanted to
go to sleep – the brain to hand and keyboard actions just didn’t want to
play full blast anymore. Next year, I’ll be changing my sleeping
arrangement until I get it right.
Over all, I
was able to improve my overall score in this competition compared to my
prior Low Power contest DX-peditions (i.e. J6/K3LP, J6R, etc.).
This was
another fun contest. I can’t wait until next year.
David
Collingham – K3LP
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