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6V7S
I managed to break the pileup on 40 Meters tonight to work Vlad in Senegal for a new band. This makes for contacts now on 40, 20, 17 and 12 Meters, all via QRP. I also worked Vlad once on 20 Meters with QRO power, think it was 85 Watts.
Spring must be on the way though, as the band was super noisy tonight. Lots of QRN made it tough for two QRP rag chews (2X KX3 QSOs, by the way) that I had earlier in the evening. There were static crashes galore! Someone must have been getting some pretty bad thunderstorms.
20 Meters was decent this afternoon, as I was able to work SP6CEW in my ancestral country, Poland. I was also able to work S57KW in Slovenia.
When I spoke with Bob W3BBO on Echo link this afternoon, he told me that he had pretty good success on 17 Meters today. When I was tuning the bands this afternoon, 17, 15 and 12 Meters sounded pretty sparse to me with very few loud signals.
Tomorrow, we are forecast for more snow. Hopefully, it won’t be much. In any event, the ground has had a chance to warm up, so any snow that falls should melt pretty quickly. Spring officially began a few days ago, but it sure hasn’t felt like it.
One of my first radio goals for 2013 is to get about another couple dozen radials down for the HF9V. My Butternut is my “go to” antenna, so it will not be wasted effort. I want to get them down early, so that come late May or early June, they will have disappeared into the grass.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
One Mo’ Time !
Are you married ……..?
The other day, I received a request from Terry WA0ITP, to post the monthly Run For the Bacon announcements on the Four States QRP Group e-mail reflector. It would seem that quite a few “Four Stater’s” have built Pig Rigs and want to be kept abreast of when RFTB is held. So I went about the process of joining the Yahoo group and subscribing to the e-mail reflector. I was approved and started receiving e-mails yesterday.
Immediately, one hit my eye. It’s entitled “QRP till death do you part?”, and it was written by Gust ON6KE
The premise of the post is, that in addition to all your QRP only gear, you own a 100 Watt rig, or perhaps a barefoot rig and an amplifier. At the same time, a DXpedition is underway to Tromelin, Peter I, Kerguelen, or some other very exotic place that has not been on the air for years (and perhaps might not be on again for many more years). If you have never worked that entity before, do you:
1) Try to work them QRP until they’re just about ready to pack their bags, and then if unsuccessful, go all out with everything you have?
2) Try to work them QRP for a few days or a week perhaps, and then if unsuccessful, go QRO (well before the departure time draws near)?
Gust ends his post by saying, “I guess this question is about how “fanatic” one is about QRP”.
Interesting question to say the least! In my head, I guess I would add another possibility:
3) Try to work them QRO and get them in the log and THEN try to work them QRP at another time, before they leave?
Personally, my primary interest (my passion, if you will) in Amateur Radio is QRP and CW. If you’ve read this blog for any amount of time, you know that. I have been interested in and have dabbled in QRP since I was licensed as a Novice in 1978. I joined QRP ARCI back in 1979, back when QRP was considered to be 100 Watts or less. I became a “QRP only” station, under the current understanding of the term, in 2003. From 2003 to 2013 (Wow, 10 years!), I have not had a rig that was capable of going past QRP levels (OK, my K2 could go up to about 15-20 Watts – that’s technically not QRP, but it ain’t QRO, either!).
But since my Novice days, I have also been drawn to working DX. I’ve worked my share of DX with 5 Watts or less, enough to earn the ARRL’s QRP DXCC award. There have been many DXCC entities where the only way I have worked them is with QRP, but I’ve also had many, many disappointments. There have been many times during that ten year period where I limited myself to 5 Watts only, where I failed to get a DX station or a DXpedition in the log, even though I tried until the cows came home.
I would consider myself to be fan and aficionado of QRP, but not a foaming-at-the-mouth QRP “fanatic”, where it’s QRP and CW to the exclusion of everything else. I am enough of a DXer NOT to marry myself to the idea that using something more than 5 Watts is heresy. That’s why I went and sold my K2, so that I could purchase the KPA3, 100 Watt module for my K3. For the first time in a long time, I have been able to increase my power in order to work DXCC entities that I have never worked before. This just bore fruit a few weeks ago when I worked Egypt SU9VB for the very first time in my Amateur Radio career, and I did it using 85 Watts.
And that’s why I would subscribe to possibility number 3, above. For instance, if I’m fortunate enough to hear Spratly loud enough to even attempt to work them before they leave? Like any other DXer, I am going to be there with my 100 Watts trying to break that pileup and get them in the log, Baby! But once they’re in there – I just might try to work them again (not the same sitting) with 5 Watts only. I am also enough of a practical QRP DXer to want to be able to claim that I got them with low power, too.
In the end though, you have to go with what works for you. What works for me, may not work for you. Amateur Radio is a big enough tent where opposite slogans such as “Life’s too short for QRP” and “Quit Running Power” are cute; but really have no place. There’s room for every thing and every one. If there’s one bit of advice that I would subscribe to, it would be “Life is too short to pigeon hole yourself”. Or as Cicero said, ”Never go to excess, but let moderation be your guide”.
I have done QRP, I have done QRO, I have done CW, I have done SSB, I have done Digital, I have done HF, I have done VHF/UHF, I have done satellites – they were ALL fun.
I would still like to do more satellites and some PSK31, I would love to try meteor scatter and EME, someday. I would LOVE to have a tower and a yagi someday. There’s so much to try and do – don’t cheat yourself! Amateur Radio is like being at a sumptuous buffet, it’s perfectly fine to try a little bit of everything!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Decent DX Day
I was piddling around on the bands today. Since there were a lot of contests going on, and I did not feel like participating, I exiled myself to the WARC bands – 30, 17 and 12 Meters.
There was enough DX to be had and I worked just about all of it QRP.
On 12 Meters, I worked Andy SP9KR. There was a lot of QSB there, and I’m not 1000% that he got my call right. So at the very end, when I sent my call sign for the very last time, I bumped up my power to 55 Watts (for insurance) but I’m not sure that even then that I was heard correctly.
On 17 Meters I worked Serge R7AY in Russia. After our QSO and I got Serge’s info in my log, I heard him continue to call CQ. So I spotted him on the TelNet Cluster. Almost immediately, as he was working other stations I heard him send “W2LJ TNX SPOT”. I guess he had his computer on! I thought that was so cool. You’re very welcome Serge, I hope it brought you lots of DX!
I also worked OT4A in Belgium and GW100C in Wales. Of course the GW100C call stuck out like a sore thumb. After working him, I looked up the call on QRZ and it turns out that GW100C is one of several UK HQ team members of the RSGB. These calls, GW100C, GM100C, GD100C, G100C, GJ100C are meant to be used by the HQ members so that they get practice in learning how to handle pileups for when they are taking their turns as G100RSGB, GW100RSGB, GM100RSGB, etc – the RSGB Centennial Stations.
On 30 Meters, I was able to work PJ7/N0TG and PJ7AA, both on Sint Maarten. J34G in Grenada who has excellent ears – and as it turns out, an FOC member, so no surprise there.
The last station that I worked for the day was Ivin 5N7M in Nigeria. I ended up having to bump up the power to 85 Watts to work Ivin. I was getting nowhere with 5 Watts and it actually took a fair amount of doing to get noticed at 85 Watts. The pile up wasn’t fierce, so I have no idea what the problem was, although for this QSO, the EDZ ended up being the antenna that worked. I have worked Nigeria before with QRP power, but not on 30 Meters. Nigeria was new for me on that band.
Geez, it almost sounds like I’m starting to pay attention to 5BDXCC matters!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
And people think I’m nuts!
A hat tip to the AWT blog for this one!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Enough to drive you batty!
I wasn’t going to post about this; but I’m sitting here and have a few moments while I wait for my daughter to call. She’s on a Girl Scout field trip to the NJ State Police Training Academy. The girls should be back at the troop leader’s house in about an hour to 90 minutes, so I have some time to kill before going to pick her up. And I’m too tired to go downstairs and turn the rig on. Just got back from our Church’s Friday Lenten Fish Fry. I’m part of the clean up crew and there were only four of us this week, to clean up after 400 fish dinners were served. To say I am beat is an understatement.
Scorch Your Butt Off
Yes – you’ve read it correctly. I am speaking of scorching your hind quarters off even as we haven’t officially made it through Winter yet.
Scorch Your Butt Off is the Summer time answer to Freeze Your Butt Off, a brandy new for 2013 outdoor QRP operating event. The concept is the brain child of Rem K6BBQ, of QRP portable recumbent tricycle fame. You’ve seen Rem’s videos, you know how dedicated he is.
Rem was concerned that the BUBBA contest had gone by the wayside. Being the courteous Ham that he is, Rem contacted the Arizona ScQRPions and asked if they’d mind if he organized and ran something to take its place. He didn’t want to step on anyone’s toes. So when he got the “knock yourself out” e-mail, SYBO was born.
It will take place on Saturday July 20th. Rules can be found here.
So now, all you rabid outdoor QRPers have three great “under the sun” fun events to look forward to this Summer (as if you needed an excuse to get oudoors!)- Scorch Your Butt Off, the Flight of the Bumblebees, and the NJQRP Skeeter Hunt. Three perfect opportunities to put into action all the great gear you’ve built over the Winter!
It’s a good thing Spring is coming – I can hardly wait for these!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!














