Author Archive
I am addicted
Hello …. my name is Larry and I am a pileup addict.
Or at least that’s the way it seems lately! For the past few days, everytime I have gotten on the air and worked a station, I had to bust a pileup in order to do it. Of course, the Fox hunts are nothing but a big QRP pileup and I snared both Lee AA4GA and Johnny ACØBQ on 40 Meters last night. OK, there really wasn’t much of a pileup on Lee, I have to confess – but there was for a while. By the time I was able to hear him well enough to work him, his pileup had dwindled.
But after the Fox hunts, I swung down to the low end of 40 Meters and busted the pileup to work Jim J6/W4QO, one of the QRP guys who is on DXpedition to St. Lucia. Then, I beat two pileups at lunchtime today. The first was to work another good QRP friend on St. Lucia. This time it was Jerry J6/N9AW on 17 Meters. That was a full blown pileup and Jerry was working them fast and fierce, in a manner that would make any grizzly hardened DXpedition veteran proud. And lest I slight him, Jim’s performance last evening was every bit as good as Jerry’s. Two top notch QRPers and all-around ops in Jim and Jerry.
See, participating in those Fox hunts DOES help! We actually learn a thing or two – not only how to navigate pileups, but also how to manage them.
Later at lunchtime, I busted a pileup to work ZD8UW on 12 Meters – Ascension Island. At 5 Watts out from my end, that came out to just a smidge more than 1000 Miles per Watt.
Working a pileup can sometimes make you want to bang your head against the wall. You’re in there, sending out your call in what seems like a hopeless battle, ala` Don Quixote. But then, you hear your call coming back to you and you complete the exchange for another rare one in the books, and all thoughts of bloodying yourself disappear in the breeze!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
PS: I am working on the finishing touches to a new Christmas story. Look for it here as we get closer to the Holiday.
Thanksgiving 2013
Whereas it is the duty of all Nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey his will, to be grateful for his benefits, and humbly to implore his protection and favor– and whereas both Houses of Congress have by their joint Committee requested me to recommend to the People of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many signal favors of Almighty God especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness.
Now therefore I do recommend and assign Thursday the 26th day of November next to be devoted by the People of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being, who is the beneficent Author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be– That we may then all unite in rendering unto him our sincere and humble thanks–for his kind care and protection of the People of this Country previous to their becoming a Nation–for the signal and manifold mercies, and the favorable interpositions of his Providence which we experienced in the course and conclusion of the late war–for the great degree of tranquility, union, and plenty, which we have since enjoyed–for the peaceable and rational manner, in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the national One now lately instituted–for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed; and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge; and in general for all the great and various favors which he hath been pleased to confer upon us.
and also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions– to enable us all, whether in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually–to render our national government a blessing to all the people, by constantly being a Government of wise, just, and constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed–to protect and guide all Sovereigns and Nations (especially such as have shewn kindness unto us) and to bless them with good government, peace, and concord–To promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the encrease of science among them and us–and generally to grant unto all Mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to be best.
Given under my hand at the City of New York the third day of October in the year of our Lord 1789.
Go: Washington
Some 224 years later, there’s still a lot to be grateful for.
I am grateful for all that God has given me, for everything is His. That He has chosen to bestow good things upon us is amazing.
I am grateful for my family, my relatives and friends. I am grateful that I have a job and am able to provide for my family, with a roof over our heads, plenty of food on the table and warm clothes on our backs. I am grateful for our good health and the fact that we are able to share with others from our bounty.
I am grateful for the parents that God gave me. They are the reason that I am who I am. I pray that they are enjoying their eternal rest and are seeing God face to face in Heaven.
I am grateful for Amateur Radio, a wonderful hobby that has given me countless hours of pleasure. It has also allowed me to meet many new people and call them my friends. I am grateful to all my readers, and that I am able to share this magnificent hobby with all of you.
From my house to yours, if you are in the USA and are celebrating Thanksgiving, I wish you the very best the day has to offer. To those of you from other parts of the world who are not necessarily enjoyng a holiday, please know that my best wishes are with you, always. May you too, enjoy God’s bounty and peace, as well as your family and friends.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
CQ WWDX Results
My CQ WWDX results are insignificant. I spent probably a half hour at the most (more like 20 minutes) behind the key last Sunday morning.
I am used to the contest being held on Thanksgiving weekend. Since November 1st was a Friday this year, that meant that this year, the contest was held the weekend BEFORE Thanksgiving. I have way too much to do the weekend before Thanksgiving, getting the house ready for the guests who will visit on Thanksgiving Day. I didn’t have much time to breathe, let alone sit behind the radio for an extended period of time. When the contest is held on Thanksgiving weekend (like next year), the house has been cleaned, for the most part chores are done, it’s the one weekend that grocery shopping is a real quick trip – ideal for sitting behind the radio and giving out points.
As I said earlier, I managed to sit down for about 20 minutes on Sunday morning before leaving for church and worked these stations:
OP4A
G2F
S52OP
OC4CW
LX1NO
ED7A
T7T
G4BJM
And it looks like T7T was a pirate, a fake …… I got “slimmed” as they used to say. T7T shows up in none if the callbooks and shows up on DX Summit and the Reverse Beacon Network maybe once or twice. So it was either a fake, or someone whose fist was so shaky that I totally got it wrong. It was suggested to me that perhaps it was TM2T, but man – even that’s a stretch. If I heard it wrong and got the number of dits wrong, MAYBE it could have been TM5T, because – – … (7) sounds a lot closer to – – . . . . . (M 5) than – – . . – – – (M 2). But I kept listening for a while, even after I made my QSO and it sure sounded like T7T to me. In any even, it was a busted QSO that I am not including in my official log.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
A good week for QRP DX
I should have posted this earlier, as now it’s Thursday …….
This weekend is the CQ WWDX Contest, one of the “Big’uns”. This is one where a lot of folks travel to distant destinations, just for participation in the contest. So all during the week, visitors as well as indigenous Hams have been tweaking their equipment, and have been getting on the air to try things out. As a QRPer, this is a good thing to take advantage of. The bands are full of DX and now is your chance to work it. Pickings are good and I have worked Cape Verde Island, Peru, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Dominica, Morocco, and the Turks and Caicos Islands, and Bermuda – all with 5 Watts in just within the last few days.
The bands are expected to be in good shape for this weekend. So if you have the time, you can get on and you can net a lot of DX. If you’ve never started your QRP DXCC, now is the time to begin! If you go all out, I am willing to bet that you could conceivably earn it this weekend.
For the new QRPer, there are some things to keep in mind. At the beginning of the contest, code speeds are going to be fast. Some of these guys will sound like a buzz saw! Don’t get discouraged. The DX will keep on sending their calls a lot, so if it takes multiple attempts for you to copy, you’ll get plenty of them. Towards Saturday night into Sunday, when some of these guys get tired, they tend to slow up a bit, too. A tip to keep in mind is that the slower speed DX stations tend to congregate UP, towards the top edges of the CW bands, so that’s a good place to start. However, if you make a good effort to copy code that is faster than what you are used to, I can pretty much guarantee a 10% or better improvement on your copy speed by the time the contest is over.
The loudest stations are probably running the most power, but they probably also have the best antennas. Cherry pick those, and they’ll probably have an easier time hearing you, rather than the guy half way around the world who is running 100 Watts to a dipole only 25 feet up. You may work him too, but it will probably be a bit harder. Another thing to keep in mind, is that as the contest winds down on Sunday afternoon into Sunday night, the hard core contesters will be desperate for points. It’s more likely they will take their time with you, if you happen to have a weak signal on their end . REMEMBER – QRP does NOT necessarily mean weak signal! If propagation is favorable, and your antenna is decent, there’s no reason that your signal can’t be 579 or better on their end.
The exchange is super easy – RST and your CQ Zone. For those of us on the East Coast, I believe that is 5. Most Amateur Radio maps and/or logging programs will provide that for you. I’ll provide one here:
Don’t get hung up on not being able to work someone. If you’re trying to work a loud station, and he can’t hear you, don’t be afraid to turn the dial and move on. Maybe props aren’t the best between you and him at that moment. Go work someone else and come back to him in a bit if you can. With enough experience, in no time you’ll be able to tell who you have a reasonable shot at working and who you don’t.
The most important thing is to have fun! Don’t get discouraged or frustrated. If you end up working 100 DX entities, that’s great! If you only end up working 5 – so what? The bottom line is to enjoy yourself.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
There is a season, turn, turn, turn
A time for W2LJ to ponder and to vent. This is stuff I’ve been thinking over the past couple of days. I can’t speak of these things to “civilians” as they would look at me like I was speaking in tongues (Ham speak?), not comprehending a word that I was saying.
The first occurred the other night as I was walking Harold, our beagle. As usual, I take my dual band HT with me and scan the various repeaters that I have programmed in there. The HT settled on a local VHF repeater that was holding an NTS Traffic Net. Having been a avid traffic handler in my early days as a Ham, I don’t mind listening in on these – procedures haven’t changed so much in all these years. At least I thought not.
The repeater itself was having problems. Some kind of interference or intermod was making communications difficult at best, almost impossible at worst. Two stations were having difficulty passing a couple of messages due to the interference. The receiving station asked the sending station to send him the messages via e-mail, and then he would deliver them. He told the Net Control Station to consider them passed traffic. Passed traffic?!? Would that be proper? Would that be considered the equivalent of going to another repeater or simplex frequency and passing them on the air? I applaud the ingenuity of the two stations, but ultimately passing traffic via a means that was not “radio” has me wondering if those could rightfully be counted as passed traffic. I may be a bit behind the current standards, so – anyone out there know if this would be considered Kosher?
When you get right down to it, I would think (IMHO) that traffic nets are supposed to be the resource available when everything else has turned to deep doo-doo. In that event, there will be no Internet to fall back on. IMHO, the two stations should have exhausted every RF means possible before resorting to e-mail and the Internet. But again, I may be just an old curmudgeon who’s behind the times and isn’t up to current standards. Can anyone shed a little light on this?
Secondly, the next scenario has to do with the QRP Fox Hunts. No calls will be used to protect the innocent and the not-so-innocent. We have been very fortunate to get some new blood showing up in the hunts. New-to-Fox-Hunting Hams have been showing up to participate both as Hounds, as well as Foxes. This is a very good thing, because if there’s no influx of new people, then sooner or later, the “sport” is going to die out. That would be a bad thing, as these are so much fun.
Anyway, a week ago we had a Ham perform his first ever shot at being Fox. I’ve been there, so I know what he faced. Believe me, for an experienced Fox it can be daunting, let alone your maiden voyage. The Hunt begins and close to, if not more than, a hundred Hounds are calling you all at the same time. A wall of barking, and they’re all barking at you. No amount of “Here’s what to expect” from an experienced Fox can really prepare you. It’s truly a “deer in the headlights” moment for most newbies (myself included).
Here’s the rub – it was an 80 Meter hunt, and according to Da Rulez, “The 80M Foxes will operate within +/- 10Khz of 3.560 MHz”. Well, the newbie Fox got distracted, excited, or maybe just a bit overwhelmed and planted himself just a hair above 3.570 MHz – less than 600 Hz away from the boundary. As it was, 42 Hounds found the Fox and snared his pelt. So it’s not like we’re talking that he was so far out of bounds that everyone was left mouth agape, wondering “Huh?”.
When he posted his log, he apologized for his error, and basically stated that this would not be repeated next time. Needless to say, that’s not good enough for some. Let’s just say that some of the responses were not exactly friendly, kind, understanding, encouraging or constructive. Here we get a volunteer to subject himself to a pileup of QRPers for 90 minutes and because you didn’t think to look outside the box, you let the poor guy have it! Nice ….. really nice!
Did he break the rules? Yes. Did he realize his error and apologize? Yes. Is this a cause for making someone feel like a schmuck? Definitely NO!
It’s not like we’re talking of a deliberate act, like interference or jamming, or being a willful idiot. The guy made a one time mistake, apologized for it and intends to do better the next time. I’ll be the first to admit, that in the past, I too may have been hot headed at times and may have been more than willing to jump on the pile with harshness. But due to some of my reader’s comments to me on some of my own blog postings (when I’ve been harsh), I feel that I have learned and have come to realize that this is not the right thing to do. Constructive criticism is the best way to go, and we need to cut the poor guy a break. Otherwise, we’re going to scare off volunteers and you’re going to find yourself hunting a Fox that’s literally not there (never mind just a little off frequency!)
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
The one that got away ……..
Amateur Radio and QRP, in particular, are like fishing. You send your signal out into the ionosphere much like an angler casts his line into the water. Sometimes you get a nibble or a hit, and sometimes you come home with an empty creel. And it seems just about every serious fisherman has a story about “the one that got away”.
Today my story should read more like “the one I never had”. Out at the Jeep during lunch, I had two quick hits on 10 Meters, D44AC on Cape Verde Island and OA4//N7CW in Peru. With those two in the log (very decent DX for 5 Watts to a Buddistick, IMHO!), I was feeling rather confident (read that – cocky), and tuned around the rest of the band. Hearing nothing else that intrigued me, I decided to switch bands to see how conditions were on 12 Meters. That’s when I heard them – 3DA0ET – the Swaziland DXpedtion! They weren’t the loudest, but they weren’t the weakest, either. They were louder than D44AC, who got me on the first call, so I thought I stood a chance (read that – expected to work them). I was seduced by the Dark Side. I ended up wasting the rest of my lunch trying to get them in the log, unsuccessfully (and thereby re-learning a very valuable lesson in humility).
But thinking about it, I guess it really wasn’t “wasted” time. It’s like that saying about the Lottery – “You have to be in it to win it”. I don’t gamble much on lotteries, but I do like to chase DX! Who knows? If I had been on at just a little different time, or if band conditions were just a little different, maybe I would have been heard in Swaziland. And it goes without saying, if you don’t try, you’ll never get them in the log. That’s what makes chasing DX so much fun. First off, you have to think of the sheer distances you’re covering. It still amazes me to this day, that a radio signal of not-much-power can travel that far – over continents, over oceans and make it to the destination – audible and intelligible!. Sometimes it takes a while for my head to wrap around that, even after being in this hobby for as long as I have. It’s so easy to take this all for granted and to not marvel at it anymore. Secondly, there’s the thrill of the hunt. You have no idea as to whether or not you will be successful. But when you do get heard and make it into the DX log – Wow, just wow!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Verticals … radials … what’s the right thing to do?
Even though I have a Butternut vertical in the antenna arsenal, this .pdf file from SteppIR, is one of THE best articles about radials that I have ever read. It’s in “plain ol’ English” and doesn’t require you to have a Doctorate in RF Theory to understand it. Just thought I would share!
http://www.steppir.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Radial-Systems-for-Verticals-Rev2.1.pdf
I currently have about 50 radials under my Butternut. Looks like I could stand to add some more next Summer – although I’m currently close to the point of “no extra benefit”. Looks like with about 25 more, I can get a bit closer to that 90% efficient point. And “next time” (if there ever is one), I will seriously consider NOT ground mounting my next vertical.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!















