Archive for the ‘dx’ Category
Busted the pileup!
My lunchtime QRP session stalled for a day. I went out to the car yesterday, and could not get the KX3 to tune the Buddistick. If I twisted the coax near the radio connector, it would intermittently tune, but would not stay tuned. A SWR of 25:1 is certainly not desirable.
I brought my magmount into the house when I got home. With some time to kill before the 20 Meter QRP Foxhunt, I checked out the PL-259 with my VOM, and found an intermittent short between center connection and shield. So I snipped the cable back a few inches and soldered on a bright and shiny new PL-259. Viola`! Problem solved! And this is exactly the reason why, that one of my yearly purchases at some local hamfest is a small bag containing PL-259s. You never know when the need for one will arise.
Today, my results were like night and day. The Buddistick tuned today with not even a blip of the KX3’s autotuner. I had 1:1 matches on both 20 and 15 Meters. 20 Meters yielded two nice QSOs, one with John K9DX down in Lakeland, FL and the other with Scotty KG3W in PA. Scotty and I have worked many, many times before. A few rag chews but mostly brief QRP Sprint QSOs. It was good to spend a few minutes with him.
The coup de grace, came on 15 Meters however, after I had finished up with Scotty. There was an extremely loud PY0F/PP1CZ on 21.023 MHz with quite a pile up chasing him. He was soooo loud, though, that I knew if I could figure out the split he was using, I stood a good chance. Trying to figure out the split can be tricky on 15 Meters, though, because you can’t always hear the station the DX is working. If you’re patient and give it enough time, sooner or later the DX station is going to work someone that you can hear, too.
That was the case today. I waited long enough until I heard him go back to a European station that I was also able to hear. I figured out the split and within a few minutes, I had Fernando de Noronha in my log. Worked with 5 Watts to a Buddistick plopped on the roof of my Jeep. Don’t let ANYONE tell you that QRP doesn’t work!
By the way, did you know that tomorrow is “Respect the QRP Frequencies Day”? The QRP Respect Committee (an Italian organization) is running a day long QRP QSO Party tomorrow. A non-competetive event on or about the QRP Watering Holes. Check out their Webpage here.
So spend some time around those frequencies tomorrow if that’s not something you already do. You just might find more DX than you might otherwise expect!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Sizzling hot!
Not the weather (for once) although, it’s still pretty warm. No, I meant 15 Meters at lunch time was sizzling hot!
Besides telling you who I worked, let me tell you about “the one that got away” a bit later. (As if I ever stood a chance!). First things first, though. I got to the car and set up the station. A quick scan of 17 Meters left me feeling – “meh”. 20 Meters was a little better, but not all that much to write home about, either. That’s when I got the inspiration to check out 15 Meters.
At 1614 UTC, I heard and worked a very loud OL2013CM from the Czech Republic. Later, when I looked OL2013CM up on QRZ, it turned out to be a very big deal for this Ham, considering my background. You see, OL2013CM is one of several Special Event Stations from the Czech Republic honoring the 1150th anniversary (Yes, the 1150th!) of the arrival of Saints Cyril and Methodius to that area.
Saints Cyril and Methodius were the two men responsible for bringing Catholicism to the Slavic nations. Today this area includes the following countries – Bulgaria, Croatia, Belarus, the Slovak Republic, the Czech Republic, Belarus, Russia, the Ukraine, Macedonia, Lituania and Latvia, Estonia, and yes, Poland – the land of my ancestors.
There is a big seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan named after Saints Cyril and Methodius. Almost all the priests that were in the Polish ethnic parish that I attended while growing up, graduated from that seminary. For me, working OL2013CM held a lot of sentimental value, and was a big deal.
And as always, there’s a diploma that’s available for working stations associated with the Special Event. For the details, you can visit: http://award-cm.ok2kyd.cz/en/award-rules.html Now, time for a bit of trivia. Besides introducing Catholicism to that part of the world, this duo also developed the Glagolitic alphabet, which was used to transcribe the Gospels into the Slavonic languages. While that alphabet is no longer in use today – one of its descendant scripts is still very much in use today – the Cyrillic alphabet. Wonder where they got that name !!!
After working OL2013CM, I also worked 4O/UA3RF in Montenegro and HA8QZ in Hungary. Indeed,
15 Meters was open and very hot to Europe. Three solid QSOs to Europe in the span of minutes. Priceless!
But now for the one “that got away”. Down towards the bottom of the band (just above where CO8LY was calling CQ), I heard a very loud (extremely loud!) BY4IB/4. China! Holy cow, I never heard a station from China so loud. 599+ loud! Insanely, I thought I stood a chance. He was working split, and with the KX3’s Dual Watch feature, I was very handily able to figure out the split, in no time. I was determined to keep on throwing my call out until either:
1) I worked him
2) He faded away
3) I had to break down to go back inside to work.
Well, Door Number Two opened first, as he slowly faded away into oblivion. And I never made contact, despite my best efforts. But if I had, how cool would that have been? NJ to China on 5 Watts with a Buddistick! I’d still be doing the ecstatic dance (never mind the happy dance) if I had been able to pull that off!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Old stuff and new stuff
I just came inside from outdoors. There’s a small cell with a thunderstorm approaching. In fact, it’s just on the other side of town, according to the weather radar at weatherunderground.com. Nothing large enough to break the back of this heatwave, and will probably just make it feel steamier than it already does.
The backbreaking thunderstorms are supposed to arrive tomorrow. By Sunday afternoon, it is supposed to be at least 10 degrees cooler than it has been.
Today during lunch, I headed out to the Jeep once again, even though today has been the hottest day of the week, by far. 17 Meters yielded a QSO with OE3DXA, Werner near Vienna Austria, while 20 Meters was good for a QSO with N5URL, Bob in Oklahoma. The QSO with Bob fell victim to QSB. Like two old soldiers, we both just faded away.
I am going to be mixing things up a bit on the blog in the very near future. I will be having occasional guest posters. Every now and then, I get an e-mail from a QRPer who has had an interesting adventure or radio related experience. They don’t have blogs of their own, but yet are eager and willing to share. I will make the “Do More With Less” blog available to them. I think you’ll all love these guest posts and I am looking forward to them.
The other new item that you will see shortly is a new series that I have decided to call “Profiles in QRP”. These will appear once a month, where different QRPers will answer a set of questions, related to how they got started in Amateur Radio, what drew them to QRP, etc. Some of the profiles will hopefully be from some very prominent QRPers, while other profiles will be from people you may never even heard of. I hope to get profiles from the QRP gamut … builders, contesters, designers, everyday Joes, HOFers, etc.
I’m sure you guys have had enough of me and my situation. This blog is supposed to be about QRP and CW. Hopefully, I can bring you some interesting reading in the near future.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Toasty!
It sure has been warm here since last Sunday. This morning I Tweeted that you know your in for a rough day when you wake up at 6:30 AM and the air conditioner has already turned itself on …… and we keep the AC set on the kind of high side here at the W2LJ household. We try to keep the house comfortable, but not like a meat locker. So when the cooling turns on, it’s already pretty warm in the house.
So when the weather is like this, what does a sensible QRPer do for lunch break? Does he stay inside the nice, cool office building, kick back and maybe read for a while while eating his sandwich?
Well, maybe that’s what a wise, sensible, pragmatic QRPer does, but none of those descriptions fit me, so I headed out to the parking lot to get the Buddistick on top of the Jeep and the KX3 on the air! When I got out there, I set out the thermometer that I brought along from home. I set it in a shady spot, out of the direct sun, and let it sit while I operated. The plan was to check it and snap a photo of it, after I broke the station down, but before I headed back inside.
My first band of choice was 17 Meters as it has been really good to me over the last months of lunchtime operating. However, there must have been some kind of device turned on in the Engineering Building at work, because I had terrible electronic pulse noise from 18.068 to about 18.083 MHz. The KX3’s noise blanker (which is the best noise blanker I have ever used) put only a slight dent in the noise. The incoming signal would have had to have been 599+ to overcome that racket. The funny thing is that right at 18.083 MHz, it was like someone turned off a light switch and the pulse noise quite literally vanished. The problem is that on 17 Meters, the majority of DX stations will be found on the lower portion of the band, so I decided to QSY.
On to 15 Meters! I didn’t hear a lot of signals on the band, so I decided (for whatever reason) to do something I hardly ever do. I went to the QRP watering hole of 21.060 MHz and actually called “CQ QRP” for a bit. Normally, the only time I do that is during a QRP Sprint or contest, but for some reason unbeknownst to me, I decided to try it today. And strangely enough, I got an answer. The answer came from Reiner DL5ZP. The QSO was a tough 2X QRP affair, as QSB was fierce, but we got in an exchange of the basics. Afterwards, I had to wonder if I was taken in by a “slim” or a “pirate” as they are better known. DL5ZP does not appear on QRZ.com. He does kind of halfway show up on QRZCQ and DX Summit and even Google, but by not coming up on QRZ.com, I have to wonder if this was legitimate, or what.
After the QSO with DL5ZP, I went to the 20 Meter QRP watering hole and did the same thing. This time I was answered by W7USA in Arizona, and we had a very brief QSO. Band conditions did not seem to be the best this early afternoon.
So after I put everything away, as far as the station goes, I went and fetched the thermometer from it’s shady spot. Here’s what it indicated:
About 96 or 97F (36C) with just under 50% humidity. Hot enough for me to almost burn my fingers on the magmount when I lifted it off the Jeep, but not hot enough to keep me inside.
Band conditions were much better tonight for the 20 Meter QRP Foxhunt. I managed to grab two furs tonight by working John K4BAI in Georgia and Jay KT5E in Colorado. But I have to admit that as soon as I bagged both pelts, I shut the station down and disconnected the antennas. The weather service is saying that this 6 day heat wave may break tomorrow afternoon with possible severe thunderstorms anytime from tomorrow afternoon into Saturday morning. I don’t need to be driving home tomorrow afternoon, in the middle of a bad boomer, only to be worrying that I forgot to disconnect my aerials.
By the way, it’s now 11:00 PM here. The sun has been down for about 2 1/2 hours, and it’s still 84F (29C). Those are probably going to be some pretty powerful thunderstorms to break the back of this hot spell.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Success like W1PID, but no scenery
Like my good friend Jim W1PID, I also operated portable QRP today. Like him, I had some success working Germany, Sweden and New Mexico. Unlike him, I did not have a beautiful river and pastoral country views to soothe my eyes.
Nope, I was in the parking lot at work during my lunch break – again. But also like Jim, I got to deal with the heat. It was just breaking the 90F (32C) mark when I got out there. I think the sunshine reflecting back up off the asphalt pavement might be good for another few degrees. Tomorrow, I’ll have to bring a thermometer with me and find out.
I plopped the Buddistick on top of the Jeep and found that the air temperature was not the only thing that was hot. 17 Meters seemed to be sizzling, too. I worked two special event stations – the first being DL50FRANCE.
This station is commemorating the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Elysee. That historic document started a period of deep friendship and cooperation between France and Germany. Up until that point, those two countries didn’t exactly play nice together.
The other special event station I worked, and was also worked by W1PID, was SJ0SOP. This station in Sweden is on the air to promote the Sea of Peace award.
In between working these two special events, I slipped on over to 15 Meters to see if there was any activity there. That’s where I heard Paul KW7D in New Mexico calling CQ. He was 599 loud in New Jersey and I got a 569 in return. We had a brief QSO and I informed Paul that 17 Meters seemed to be a lot more active than 15. We kept our QSO short so that he could QSY on over to 17 Meters and point his Force 12 Beam antenna towards the DX that was humming on the band.
I broke down the station and headed back inside into the air conditioning. When I got back to the car to head home, it was 95F (35C). The humidity is up there at 68%, but at least it’s not at 90% like it was last weekend. The 90s with 90% humidity? THAT’S miserable!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
You need a scorecard (or QRZ or somesuch …….)
I had another good day out at the car today during lunch time. Both 17 and 20 Meters were active and I nabbed three QSOs during my lunch break.
“What’s that got to do with your post title, W2LJ?” you might be asking yourself.
One of the stations I worked at lunch was HF80LOT. You hear a call sign like that and your first impression is undoubtedly, “Huh? Where’s THAT?” If you’re like me you prescribe to the “work ’em first, worry about the location later” theory, so that’s what I did. It turns out that HF80LOT is a special event station in Poland that is commemorating the 80th anniversary of a trans-Atlantic flight by two Lithuanian pilots. I sure wouldn’t have known that without the aid of QRZ or HamQTH, or one of the other fine call book services out there. From the HF prefix, Poland was probably my last or next to last guess. In fact, I wasn’t sure at first whether I was hearing 5F80LOT – at first I was guessing Serbia or somewhere around there. Listening for a few times confirmed that it was HF80LOT, but I still had to look it up. Exciting!
But lately, it seems like there’s been a smattering of special event call signs that either boggle your mind or tickle your ear in an effort to copy them correctly. For example, here are some out of the ordinary ones that I have worked recently and you may have, too: LZ1722SN, H70ORO, 9A282EU, LZ110RF, LZ1876SMB, and the prize winner SV2013ATGM. Wow! That’s a lot of letters and numbers and what’s up with you Hams in Bulgaria? It’s almost like every one of you is running a special event this year!
Speaking of special events, I worked three more Colonies tonight, bringing my total to eleven. Connecticut, Georgia and Pennsylvania are now in the log, and I also had a QSO with the bonus station, WM3PEN in Philadelphia, PA – Chaz behind the key. I only need two more, New Hampshire and Maryland for the sweep. If I can’t nab those two by the time this ends, I am going to be severely disappointed! I’ve gotten a taste of the quarry and now I’m hungry for a clean sweep.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Interesting Weekend, Radio and otherwise
On Friday afternoon after I got home from work there were some intrepid SOTA activators on and I picked up a few chaser points working those guys. I did some experimentation with telescoping pole anchored EFHW dipole antennas in preparation for my trip next week to NM and CO. I also went through a few guitar drills just to keep the old fingers limber. A relatively quiet evening.
Saturday dawned hot. The temperature would eventually reach 108 degrees, a good day to remain indoors and that is what I did. I was able to work several SOTA summits, but generally took it easy. I had to be at the venue for the show by 5:00 to set up and sound check. Of course everything was late which is typical in a business that is normally, hurry up and wait. The show went extremely well, good crowd and sold a few CD's. Driving home after the show, it was still 94 degrees at 11:30 pm.. The down side of the show was that the IOTA I needed came up around 2300z and was worked by a couple of my buddies. I received an email from Buzz, N5UR, notifying me of what I had missed. Oh well that's how it goes.
Sunday dawned cool and rainy. I made a cup of coffee and sat on the back porch enjoying the change in the weather. It rained for a couple of hours which in Texas, in July, is a nice rain. However, that is when the rain became the enemy. DU9/JA1PBV was spotted on 20m. Great, I come in from the porch and head to the shack, only find that the rain noise was S7. The DU9 had a nice signal, but too much static to hear consistently enough to work, plus he had big EU pile-up as well. So sit and wait, everyone once in a while the rain would diminish, his signal was easily readible, so call a few times, the rain picks back up and the static covers him up again. The cycle repeated itself several times. Frustration. However, patience is often rewarded, while waiting a spot for PJ5/K3RTM on 6m came across the cluster from a ham not too far from me. Wait a minute I need that one, so a I swing the antenna around and there he is, solid signal through the static, a couple of calls and a new one on 6m. Cool. During the DU9 chase, I would periodically see a spot for a SOTA summit and I worked them throughout the pursuit. Back go the DU9. Finally around 1600 the rain relented, however his signal had dropped considerably although still copiable, he was now working EU exclusively, up 2 to 3. My hope was fading. To add to the problem, I couldn't hear who he was working so I was hoping he would find me. Finally, I swung the beam to EU just to hear where the largest concentration of stations were calling and set my 2nd VFO there. I was throwing the heavy artillery at him, 1,200 watts. Sometimes 5 watts is just not enough. Finally at 1653z I broke through the wall and got a QSO, hallelujah!!!.
So all is well that ends well. A rare IOTA in the log, a new 6m band country and a 136 SOTA chaser points for the weekend. A 108 degree day followed by an 85 degree day. A successful gig, I got a haircut, changed the oil in the Jeep and washed it after the rain stopped. A very interesting weekend.
Oh, the DU9 showed up again on 17m CW later Sunday afternoon, working up 1. I got him on the first call. Go figure.

















