Five GREAT Reasons to Party
State QSO Parties come in all shapes and sizes but the intent is always the same — to stir up activity on the air and to have fun in the process! Approach these as serious contest activities or as a casual event punctuated by a little scorekeeping. Your choice. There are plenty of reasons to participate, but if you need more convincing, allow me to share with you five GREAT reasons why you should get in the party line!
- It’s good practice for big contests. You get a chance to see how your station performs, and identify your weakest link. You can stress test that new paddle or audio chain, make certain your logging program is working properly with your equipment. In other words, a State QSO Party provides an excellent trial run for your budding contest station — if that’s your cup of tea.
- Finish off your WAS basic award by snagging that State that you just never seem able to confirm. When dozens of operators are calling ‘CQ’ in their own QSO Party, from whatever state you might still need, chances are good that you will log a bunch of them, increasing your odds that at least one will confirm your QSO. Same goes for band and mode slots. Say you have the basic WAS award, but now you want to confirm all of them on RTTY. Or 80M CW. The State QSO Party’s will turbocharge your efforts to reach those goals.
- County hunters lick their chops over QSO Party activity. And with good reason. Those who organize a QSO party usually go out of their way to make certain that every county in their state is activated. Even if that requires engaging multiple “rover” stations who drive to and operate from counties that may have a zero ham population and are never active. And bonus, some of these rover station operators find their mobile/portable adventure so enjoyable, it becomes the primary focus of the hobby for them. It’s just another of the many facets of amateur radio.
- It’s a stress-free way to collect wallpaper, plaques, and bragging rights. Most QSO Party’s offer awards and plaques for top scores. And in many cases, you don’t need the biggest gun in the hunt to bag one. Do a little research and consider focusing on specialty entries. Enter as ‘QRP CW’ for example, and you will compete in a smaller pool while the plaque for taking first place in that category is even sweeter.
- Participation will make you radioactive! It’s no coincidence that those who rarely make use of their radio are often the most vocal critics of – well – almost everything about the hobby. Meanwhile, those who are frequently active on the air are too busy enjoying the hobby to waste time picking nits.
Operating in State QSO Parties couldn’t be easier, especially for those outside the state where the exchange is usually just signal report, your state or province, and sometimes a sequential number that begins with one and increments each time you make a contact. Inside the state, operators will also include their county. You can submit your log electronically (usually Cabrillo format) or send in paper, the old-fashioned way.
Read the rules, sketch out a plan, put in the effort, and then watch your logbook fill to overflowing.
(adapted from a recent issue of Quintessence, a weekly, personal letter about amateur radio)
Jeff Davis, KE9V, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Indiana, USA.
VP8ORK 2011 ebook available, free!
Although I’m not a huge fan of chasing Dxpeditions these days, I still think it’s fascinating and magical to travel to a remote part of the planet, set up a radio station and be able to make contacts all over the world.
Nodir Tursoon-Zadeh EY8MM has produced several eBooks based on his photographs from various high profile Dxpeditions which are available for free.
If you are an iPad/iPhone user, simply go to the iBooks store and search for VP8ORK 2011 and you should be able to download and view the book, which makes excellent reading. Nodir has taken some wonderful photographs which really capture what it is like.
It looks like Nodir has published an eBook on the FT5ZM trip to Amsterdam Island, which is available in the Blurb store but I can’t see it in the iBooks store just yet. I suspect you can get it onto your iDevice from Blurb, but I haven’t tried that yet!
Tim Kirby, G4VXE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Oxfordshire, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Science Fair time!
“Hey, Dad …… do you have a meter that will read really small voltages and tiny amounts of current?”, my son Joseph asked the other week.
“Joey, I’d better! I’m an Amateur Radio operator, and I was an electronics technician for 22 years.”, I replied.
And so began the 2014 8th grade Science Fair project. My son decided to see how the pH of a fruit or vegetable would affect its ability to generate electricity. His hypothesis – the more acidic the fruit/vegetable, the more power would be generated.
The materials were an apple, a lemon, a pear and a potato. A head of red cabbage was procured to act as a pH indicator. Zinc screws and 3 inch pieces of #10 gauge copper wire served as electrodes.
Before we began generating electricity, my wife boiled some leaves from the cabbage in a pot of water. The resulting liquid would act as our litmus paper.
I stuck a screw and a piece of the copper wire into each piece of produce. The positive lead from the meter went to the copper wire and the negative lead was attached to the zinc screw. We measured both voltage and current, to be able to calculate Watts.
A teaspoon of the cabbage water was put into four glasses. Juice from each piece of produce went into the purple cabbage water. If the cabbage water turned blue, it would indicate a base. If the water stayed purple, the pH would be neutral. An acidic pH would turn the cabbage juice pink.
From lowest output to highest were – potato, pear, apple, lemon.
And in turn, the potato had the lowest pH, while the lemon had the highest. The voltage and current readings followed the pH indications. It seems my son’s hypothesis was correct!
Now all Joey has to do is make a graph, print out the pictures we took and write up an explanation of what was observed. The really neat thing was that he had a good time and really enjoyed himself. I’m not sure what he wants to be, someday; but something in the scientific or electronics field would not be so bad.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Larry Makoski, W2LJ, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from New Jersey, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
Hello world!
Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!
Alex Hill, G7KSE, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cumbria, UK. Contact him at [email protected].
AmateurLogic.TV 66 live Saturday morning

The recording of AmateurLogic.TV episode 66 will be streamed live Saturday morning around 9:00 AM CDT, 1400 UTC (if I am awake). We will have the chat room up as well. Check back here for the links Saturday morning.
The live stream can be found here: Live Stream
The chat room is here: Chat Room
George Thomas, W5JDX, is co-host of AmateurLogic.TV, an original amateur radio video program hosted by George Thomas (W5JDX), Tommy Martin (N5ZNO), Peter Berrett (VK3PB), and Emile Diodene (KE5QKR). Contact him at [email protected].
Amateur Radio Newsline Report 1917 May 9 2014
- Killer of 8 people including a ham radio operator admits his guilt
- Canadian hams granted new band from 472 to 479 KHz
- KickSat may not be able to deploy its cargo of Sprite picosats
- United States ARDF registration extended to June 1st
- Long trek across Europe and Asia for a ham radio floater balloon
Along the Brook at Knox Mountain
Tim, W3ATB and I took an extraordinary hike to Knox Mountain this afternoon. We walked along the brook enjoying the music and scenery of the spring day. I worked Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Tim worked Illinois and took some fantastic photos.
Barely a quarter of a mile from the pond we came around the corner and found a pile of rubble in the middle of the trail. “It’s a landslide!” said Tim right away. And it was. Tim estimates nearly 100 tons of the hillside (mostly clay) had slid down the hill… some of it reached the brook.
We crossed it easily, although we had mud covered shoes by the time we reached the other side.
It’s always a treat when the pond and cabin come into view after the hike.
The day was warm… perhaps 65F. The black flies have just started to appear, but they’re not biting yet. Tim tossed his line nearly 50 feet over the branch of the large cherry tree near the cabin. He pulled up a Par End Fed for 40 and 20 meters. I chose a smaller maple and used a 33 foot wire sloping toward the south. I was running the KX3 set up on 17 meters. Right away I worked IK2SND, Dan in Italy. Conditions weren’t great, but good enough for solid copy both ways. Meanwhile Tim was working K9MY, Jerald in Illinois with the HB-1B on 20 meters.
Next I worked ED5URL in Spain and CT7/RC2A in Portugal both on 17 meters. Then I switched to 15 meters and worked EA8NC, Manuel… again in Spain. I don’t think the propagation was very good because I didn’t hear many stations. And the ones I worked weren’t that strong.
Tim and I packed up and headed back down along the brook. It’s a day to be savored in memory. Blue skies, warm weather, a hike through some of the most beautiful country anywhere and some wonderful radio contacts… not just across the small pond at Knox Mountain… but across the Big Pond… all the way to another continent.
Jim Cluett, W1PID, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from New Hampshire, USA. Contact him at [email protected].

















