Please support HRO and the RF Connection who advertise in the paper edition. The paper edition was mailed at Arnold MD at 2:00 pm on January 10, 2003 --------------------------------------------------------- PVRC NEWSLETTER - JANUARY 2003 PVRC HOLIDAY CELEBRATION IN VIENNA VA, December 9, 2002 Attending: AD3F, K1QDV, K2PLF, K2UOP, K3DI and N3FZB, K3IXD, K3KY, K3MM and wife and daughter, K3RUQ, K3WA, K3ZO, K4JA, K4VV and wife, K4YT, K4ZA, K4ZW, K8OQL, KC3VO, KE3Q, KE4PSV, KT4W, N1WR, N3AM, N3JT, N3OC, N3PZV, N3RR, N3RR and wife, N4MM, N4RV, N4ZR, N6WHB, W2BZR, W2GG, W2YE, W3AZ, W3BP, W3EKT, W3GG, W3HVQ and wife, W3IDT, W3LL, W3LPL and wife, W3PAW, W3UJ, W3YOZ, W3ZZ, W4LIP, W4MYA, W8JVP, W8ZA, WR3L, and WR3Z After cocktails and dinner, outgoing president (and incoming vice president) N3OC presided over the introduction of the current Club officers (K4VV vice president, WR3L treasurer, W2GG secretary), the announcement of next year's officers, and the annual presentation of Club awards. PVRC lapel pins were presented to last year's ARRL Sweepstakes participants who qualified for the PVRC Live Wire award (36 plus hours in the chair for both modes). Certificates were mailed some months ago. Recipients of the 48-hour (Diamond) certificate with lapel pin: AA4NC, K3FT, K3MM, K4MA, KD4D, W2GG, W4NF, K3TM. Recipients of the 36 to 47-hour award (Platinum, certificate with lapel pin): N2NFG, K2PLF, W3PP, W3UJ, WJ9B, W4MYA, W3CB, W3SY, N3HUV. Many 5M plaques were presented along with endorsements for those members reaching the 25 million and 10 million point levels. The large number of plaques being mailed to the PVRC-NC region was noted. Congratulations to all to have participated in this Club program. The awards were: 25M - AA4NC, W2GG, W3LPL 10M - K2PLF, W4TNX, KD4D, K3DI, N4ZR, K1RA, K3DNE, K8ISK, N3AM, W3HVQ, W4HJ, N8II, K7SV, W4YE, W4NF, W8ZA, W4XP, WR3L 5M - K4JA, W4RX, N3HBX, K9GY, ND3A, WJ9B, K7GM, WW4M, NX9T, KI7WX, N4MM, W3AZ, W3EKT, WD3A, K4QPL, KV3R, W4ZV, N4YDU, K3IXD, K3RV, K9JY, WA4JUK ARRL gavels signifying the Club's top position in the 1999 September VHF QSO Party and the 2000 ARRL 10 Meter Contest were presented with scores as follows: 2000 Sept VHF W4RX 172,172 2000 10 M W2GG 2,430,912 The Club has recently done very well in the CQ WPX Contest and has received plaques for the top position in the club competition for the 1998 WPX and 1999 WPX. The '98 plaque was presented to KE3Q and the '99 plaque to K3MM for the combined high Club scores of: 1998 WPX KE3Q 11,773,443 1999 WPX K3MM 13,230,410 Ken Claerbout, K4ZW, made a superb slide presentation of his combined trips to Mongolia and his visit with JT1CO. A special note of thanks to KC3VO for his audiovisual support. REPORTING CLAIMED SCORES FOR PVRC 5M AWARD CREDIT To participate in the 5M Award, it is necessary for each participant to report his claimed score to Bob Dannals, W2GG. The preferred route is by email, or by posting to the PVRC email reflector (see notes on joining the reflector on the PVRC reference page or web site). Scores reported on the packetcluster or on the 3830 Archives (www.contesting.com) are not guaranteed to be found, especially on the latter due to the large volume of scores reported following each contest. All scores sent directly to the email address are acknowledged by return email. Scores posted on the PVRC reflector are all read but not acknowledged individually by return email. Check the score summaries (printed in the Newsletter or posted frequently to the PVRC reflector). If your score does not appear, let Bob know. It is not possible to read the final contest results printed months later in a magazine and seek out participants' scores. You are your own advocate in this regard, so please remember to send them to Bob before the contest deadline. NORTHWEST MEETING NOTES FOR NOV 02 by Ed Steeble K3IXD, Chairman The NW region met at City Buffet in Frederick, MD on 19 November 2002. In attendance were: N4MM, K8OQL, W3LL, K3WC, NE3H, AD3F, N3VOP, K2PLF, W3KHZ, N3FX, W2YE, K3ZO, W3ZZ, N3HBX, W8ZA, K3IXD, and W3EKT. The business part of the meeting: 1) We voted on the applications of: K1RH, Rob Heath; K3ZE, Al Bisasky; NX3K, Ken Skrivseth; KB3DVC, Ed Rummel; and N3TZA, Joe Craven. Welcome to PVRC and we look forward to your contributions in the club competition contests. 2) The attendees were reminded about the annual PVRC Holiday Dinner on December 9, 2002. RSVP to K4VV via email. 3) N4MM said that the WRC03 conference has begun and of interest to this club was the push to get world wide excusive usage of the 40m band. He reported that the DXCC desk is now processing submissions dated September 25th. Around the table: N4MM, John operated in both SS CW and SS SSB. K8OQL, Jerry operated CQWW SSB at W8ZA's. W3LL, Bud operated SS and CQWW. K3WC, Dusty reported that his 6m rig and 6m amp are still in the box. He has an Omni 6+ for sale. NE3H, Joe is moving his packet node because it is too time consuming to get to the current location. In CQWW SSB his amp quit. AD3F, Gene is now the owner of a slightly used ICOM 746PRO and really likes the DSP capabilities. And having 6m and 2m enabled him to enter the September VHF contest; however the 6m antenna was his 40m antenna and the 2m antenna was a loop. He is gathering information about building a 6m beam. That sparked a discussion on the pros and cons of using a gamma match on VHF antennas. He was talking about building the NBS, 3 el, 6m beam. W3EKT, Ed said his NBS, 3 el, 6m beam uses a gamma match and he used it for successfully roving, and from the home QTH he has 99 countries confirmed. He is still waiting for that 100th card! Lately he has been chasing band countries. (PS - On Saturday, the 100th 6m DX card arrived in W3EKT's mailbox.) N3VOP, Mike said he took his station to the Carroll County Radio Club hamfest for a club competition entry in the CQWW SSB contest. He did some part time operating at K3PZN, the Carroll County Radio Club's station, for CQWW SSB. In CQWW SSB, from home, he worked 74 sections with a long wire in the trees. K2PLF, Marty announced that Yaesu quickly repaired his power supply. He is very pleased with their repair service. He operated CQWW SSB from home and thinks that being packet assisted got him 75 extra multipliers. In SS SSB, he doesn't think that "U" class is worth it. W3KHZ, Art reported he now has worked four countries and four states on 6m. He helped operate K3PZN in CQWW. K3FX, Tony set out to increase his SS CW QSOs this year and succeeded! He was on for SS SSB. W2YE, Dick has an Alpha 91B which replaces his Heathkit SB1000. His ICOM 756 is at the factory so he used his ICOM 735 in SS SSB. K3ZO, Fred operated CQWW SSB and said 10m is still the band. His advise is to get on 10m in the early morning and search and pounce starting at the low end and going all the way up (maybe to 28.900 or more). In SS CW he had 50 more QSOs than last year. He will be on for CQWW CW. W3ZZ, Gene is recovering from successful hip surgery. For CQWW SSB he operated 10, 15, and 20m. His 40m and 80m antennas weren't working, but the 80m antenna has since been fixed. He did a part time effort in SS SSB to help the club's overall score. Gene said this year's Leonid meteor shower wasn't as good as last year's (and he reported 30 or 31 QSOs, more than anyone else at the meeting). He asks for reports for his QST World Above 50 MHz column. N3HBX, John entered CQWW SSB in the single band, 15m, catagory. KD4D did SS CW and SS SSB from John's QTH and had a better score this year which they attribute to having SO2R capability. W8ZA, Bob again hosted a multi-multi effort from his QTH with K3DNE, K8OQL, K3IXD, WD3A, and N8II plus himself as the operators. He was pleased with the new phased 80m wire verticals. He is now studying the NCJ article about feeding phased verticals. The 10m low pass filter burned up during a 200+ run. For SS CW and SSB he did a casual effort. K3IXD, Ed has returned his MFJ 434 voice keyer to the factory for repairs. Others mentioned that, they too, had problems with their MFJ voice keyers. He was going to enter SS SSB but due to operator errors (which are too embarrassing to document) and RF into the computer, he quit after 19 QSOs. With advice from W4MYA and some on site instructions from WD3A, he has the W3SO computers networked; and identical software on all four of them. Discussions: There were excellent discussions on how to find a frequency to call CQ. In summary, on 10m you may end up very high in the band, but that is OK; and be on 10m when it opens. If you have a good station, be there hour early. Start low in the band and tune up working everyone, when you come to a clear spot, stop and call QRZ; don't waste time just tuning, looking for a clear spot. It helps to spot all the PVRC members you hear, even in the contests like ARRL DX. Those spots are displayed world-wide. Regarding SS, there was a comment that a new, general strategy may be needed. The guidance used to be search and pounce for the first hour or two, then start calling CQ. But today, there doesn't seem to be as many stations on and those CQing in the first hour are the serious stations that will be there through out the contest. Therefore begin by CQing and use the second radio/vfo to search. There was a short discussion on how to get new members and also increased participation in club competition contests. No conclusions except that no one present wants to spear head an effort. NORTHWEST MEETING NOTES FOR DEC 02 By Ed Steeble, K3IXD, chairman The NW region met at City Buffet in Frederick, MD on 17 December 2002. In attendance were: K3IXD, W8ZA, K8OQL, N4MM, K2UOP, W3EKT, N3VOP, AD3F, K3DNE, WD3A, W3LPL, K4FTO, W3KHZ, K2PLF, N3OK, N3HBX, W0YR and N8II. The business part of the meeting: 1) We voted on the applications of K4FTO, Art. Welcome to PVRC and we look forward to your contributions in the club competition contests. 2) N4MM reported that the DXCC desk is now processing submissions dated September 27th. 3) N4MM said the January QST is out and ARRL is looking for feed back on the new style, contest write up. The contest details are on the web. 4) There were inquiries about the status of the PVRC shirts, etc., orders. No one present knew the answer. (K3IXD will try to remember to call K3SKE before the next meeting and get an update.) Around the table: K3IXD, Ed said he got his repaired MFJ 434 voice keyer back from the factory just in time to give it a work out in the 10m contest. He also operated for about an hour in the PSK-31 Death Match Contest. In networking the W3SO computers, he found out the later releases of CT are able to direct a gab messages to a given position (end the message with CNTL-Enter instead of Enter). N8II, Jeff has been in a lot of contests this season, all low power except for the 160m contest. W0YR, Mike was glad to be in town on a third Tuesday so he could attend another NW meeting. He visited ON4UN and showed pictures of the 3 el 80m beam installed there. Mike was at WRTC and said everyone should try to attend one of the events sometime. N3HBX, John lost four antennas in the ice storm. N3OK, Scott is doing more contesting now that he has joined PVRC. He has his wire antennas on pulleys and uses paint cans, filled with sand, as counter weights. No problems with the ice. K2PLF, Marty said he returned his MFJ 434 voice keyer to the store for a replacement, then had to send that one back for another. He had sent the second replacement to MFJ for repairs. He was on for the 160m and 10m contests. He dropped his wire antennas and as a result didn't have any icing problems. He said that N4RV is looking for operators for the ARRL DX CW and SSB contests. W3KHZ, Art reported that family illnesses have limited his operating time. His 2m and 6m beams are still on the ground. He doesn't think the weather is bad enough yet to put up a antennas. K4FTO, Art didn't have any problems with the ice since his antennas are in the attic. He said a neighbor is having some 2m cable interference problems. The cable company came out and after the checks said all was OK. Art was advised by several present to enlist the aid of the FCC. W3LPL, Frank said K4ZA operated the 10m contest from his QTH. He has been remodeling his basement ham shack. K3DNE, Ed operated 10m and SS contests from home. He ran high power in the 10m contest this year and said it was a lot easier to make QSOs. He has a new 2m amp. Ed said he uses Writelog's interface to the computer sound card for voice keying. WD3A, Tom did CQWW CW from home. He said Writelog is able to copy 40 wpm CW under weak signal conditions. He uses as 200MHz computer. He helped K3IXD network the W3SO computers. AD3F, Gene operated in the 160m contest. His antennas did survive the ice storm. He is building a 6m beam with some advice from W3EKT. N3VOP, Mike lengthened his long wire antenna from 75 feet to 125 feet and used it in the 10m contest. He is forming a team to operate the Carroll County radio Club station, K3PZN, in the January VHF contest. W3EKT, Ed had his 6m cards checked by N4MM during dinner and achieved 6mDXCC. Congratulations, Ed! His antennas survived the ice storm. He's been traveling and missed the 10m contest. K2UOP, Tom survived the ice storm but the elements on the beam were really drooping. He has been in all the contests this year. He reports his QSOs are up since he has been doing more CQing and less S&P. He, too, reported a problem with his MFJ voice keyer. He started out with a 432 and finally MFJ replaced it with a 434. He raised his beverage off the ground and laid it across the top of the orchard trees (about 5 feet off the ground). It is hearing better on 160m and is now good on 80m too. N4MM, John survived the ice storm. He was on for the 10m contest. K8OQL, Jerry hasn't been able to operate a contest since CQWW SSB due to other obligations. W8ZA, Bob was first snowed in then later iced in. The ice storm caused an element on a 15m beam to bend where it drooped and rested on a guy wire. One of his 80m slopers broke. And his beverages was sagging until the trees straightened back up. He operated in the 160m contest, but illness reduced his operating time in the 10m contest. He had troubles with the ARRL robot accepting his 10m log (using CT 9.71). Discussions: W0YR, Mike wondered why PVRC doesn't have RTTY contests count towards the 5M award? N4MM said it might be easier to get PVRC to do that if we got ARRL to make RTTY a club competition contest. Then it was mentioned that the IARU contest should be considered towards counting towards the 5M award. Suggestion made to write to the League and to talk to the PVRC Officers and Board members. AD3F, Gene talked about his quest to slave the VFOs in his ICOM 746PRO. This is to over come the problem that the ICOM 746 and ICOM 746PRO do not have a separate receiver antenna input (i.e. for a beverage). Searching the web and in talking with others he hasn't gotten a solution yet. However, he did discover in reading the QST review that a quick offset can be programmed. He is hopeing that an offset of 0 (zero) will work. Some others at the meeting will check to see if that option exists on the ICOM 746 too. When he finds a solution, he will post it to the PVRC e-mail reflector. Next meeting: The next meeting is January 21st, and it is at the City Buffet, 1306 W. Patrick Street, Frederick, MD. (301) 682-6066. It is in a small shopping center. From W. Patrick Street, turn up McCain Dr. (the Mountain View Diner is on the corner), then turn right into the shopping center, then turn left and search for a parking place. The City Buffet is tucked back in the left corner of the shopping center behind Mountain View Diner; you can't see it from the street. The NW Region meetings are on the third Tuesday of the month. Most arrive about 6PM for dinner and informal discussions; the meeting begins at 7:00 PM. PVRCNC MEETING MINUTES FOR OCTOBER 2002 by Guy Olinger, K2AV PVRCNC met at Ryan's Crossroads Plaza in Cary on October 3rd. Attending, in no particular order: Bob N2NFG, Brian K3KO, Jeff NX9T, Will WJ9B, Jim K4QPL, Nate N4YDU, Bert N4CW, Alan KO7X, Guy K2AV, Wes K4WES, Jim WW4M. Meeting called to order at the usual time with the usual results (chair gets the razz). Around the Horn: N4YDU in the IARU, IOTA with KO4PY. Set up out on the banks, reported that there were clouds of mosquitoes and conditions sucked, but failed to mention whether the two phenomena were related, which started another one of those interminable cause and effect discussions at the south end of the table. Also reported some kind of zoning problem starting up for hams in Franklin County. N4CW will be down east (that's up in Maine for rednecks) for a month. Main exercise had something to do with spackle. Whether that was for walls (for a whole month?) or something unprintable in these pages not determined. Subsequent reference to VHF test non-sequitur. KO7X was on in the sprint, further demonstrating the effect of southern weather. N2NFG had various tower, antenna and horticultural woes, interrelated to a surprising degree. Does plan an antenna party, but assured us that the Garden Club format will not be used for the morning. K3KO took down his 10m antenna and sold it to N4YDU. Nate was immediately warned to disinfect it for amplifier cooties before taking it home by the south end of the table, who interrupted their statistical consult on mosquitoes and band conditions for the purpose. Brian also told a fetching story about a mockingbird hopping up the rungs of his tower. No doubt mocking the hazer. NX9T reported that he needs a beverage, but would have to run it downhill, requesting commentary on efficacy of same. South end of table abandoned mosquitoes and band conditions for new discussion whether downhill polarization is vertical or just downhill. WJ9B reported on WAE and first encounter with QTC's. Comment was that he appeared sane and in remarkably good health, considering. K4QPL did the WAE and Sprint and reported the results of homebrew SO2R box version 11.2c. K4WES did the WW RTTY. No fires, blown traps, amps or any such. Are you sure it was on, Wes? WW4M wants to watch (not operate) a RTTY contest, with the intention of getting his feet wet. South end of table reminded him that oil on the shoes went out with heavy metal, it's all electronic now. North end got off on tangent about exactly how one WATCHES an RTTY test. Unwittingly resurrected the TR-vs.-WriteLog-ish flap on which is the best RTTY program. N4YDU asked people to watch out for NR3X which might be him. South end of table interrupted their polarization debate to strongly advise Nate NOT to use this call in the SS. Since the south end of table had been effectively adjourned since mosquitoes and band conditions, north end adjourned to miscellaneous BS and scientific discussions, whereupon all polar differentiation ceased. PVRC/NC MEETING 12/12/02 by Pete Soper, AD4L PVRC/NC chapter meeting Thursday December 12 at Raleigh Six Forks North Applebees Attendees: K2AV, K3KO, K4QPL, KO4PY, N2NFG, N3NPQ, N4TL, AD4L Regrets: WW4M, W2CS, W9JB, KO7X, K4TMC, NX9T, and N4CW. (This was a "small meeting beats no meeting" makeup for the December 5 regular date preempted by the ice storm and is mostly a reconnaissance report as we look for alternatives to Ryans for some future meetings) I arrived in time to catch the tail end (last 45 minutes) of a heated technical discussion between K2AV and K3KO about where RF current flows when the coax is run inside a tower leg or some such. I was too involved with the waiter trying to get a decent beer to hear the conclusion about where the current really flows but perhaps Guy and Brian will be submitting an article to "QST" to get this down for posterity. About the beer. After going around the houses I established that the beer selection at this Applebees looks like this: - Killians There were two or three industrial and light industrial solvents for sale too but I won't mention them. The beer score is thus 3 on a 100 scale. Still, the Killians was better than a pine cone in the eye and of course all the friendly faces made this a minor point. They had a superb mixed appetizer plate with yummy ribs, breaded cheese sticks, "cheese inside pastry" , and chips and dip with hot peppers. My shrimp platter was OK and overall I rate the place 70 for food. The room was about the right size for a well attended meeting of 18-20. This evening it wasn't exclusive but there was just one other patron with us the whole time (from her expression she was perfectly mystified by our conversations!) There was no smoking and no noticeable smoke in the room. The noise level coming in from the rest of the restaurant was just on the verge of being a problem but the noise going the other way with the usual 20 of us for something like a Carnac description of the N4AF exploding balun might constitute the bigger concern. I can't recall if there are doors. No problem with separate checks. The service was satisfactory. Getting too/from the place was trivial. Traffic was heavy but moved at a decent pace. On a rainy night coming up from south Cary it would of course be painful though. K2AV described some of the wild wire antennas at the N4AF station and went into detail about the extensive testing Howie did, modeling exercises and lessons learned about long booms (I seem to recall the boom on the 20m yagi to Europe is 160 feet but I may have that confused with the 40m quad). But we mostly yacked about the storm and also got the scoop on N2NFG's unfortunate house fire (Bob's having a new home built now). Lots of storm war stories, the best one being the tree that massacred K4QPL's wife's car coming down more or less where Jim had been standing a short while before and forcing him to stop and think about mortality. N3NPQ and I couldn't resist a little shop talk about the new Linux interprocess lock primitive but we kept our voices low. Back to Carnac Reports next year, best wishes to all! S C O R E S by Bob Dannals, W2GG Correction, additions, etc to [email protected] ### is missing data. CQWW SSB Final 17-Dec-02 Call PB QSOs Zon DX Score Single Op - Unassisted K4ZW C 3202 150 547 6,353,852 K3ZO C 3136 137 486 5,547,192 NX9T C 1860 115 382 2,563,526 WR3Z C 1416 127 417 2,139,008 NR3X B 1320 103 111 1,651,188 K2UOP C 1002 115 384 1,397,699 W4ZV C10 2022 34 157 1,106,463 N3UM C 873 90 301 951,694 N4MM C 762 109 319 914,805 N4CW C 800 87 294 853,821 W4YE C 838 78 269 816,144 K3JT B 734 79 258 683,436 N4GU C 607 95 257 596,992 N3HBX C15 1273 35 130 585,750 W3LL B 610 80 258 562,094 K3DSP B 638 72 228 530,400 K1KO C 577 67 231 476,502 K3WA C 500 75 243 441,702 K4EU B 510 94 220 426,098 N4JED B 520 69 195 375,936 N4EL C 500 65 199 361,416 N4MO B15 566 33 129 258,714 KO7X C 347 79 158 224,202 W3AZ C 359 61 161 221,334 KE4MIL B 351 47 163 203,490 W3CP B 274 69 163 175,160 K4UVT B 260 64 172 165,672 KG6AR B 285 74 145 157,461 KR4LO B 313 35 120 138,260 K3SWZ B20 312 32 104 115,328 N3FX C 216 55 116 101,232 N8II C 200 60 121 98,283 AA4KD B 211 60 120 94,680 K4WES B 201 52 112 83,312 W4RIM C 165 36 90 53,460 N4TL C 147 44 90 52,394 W4XP B 145 45 90 49,815 KT3D B 141 88 38 46,875 N8CH C 118 32 82 38,760 KC4D C 115 37 80 36,036 W3JRY B 100 34 81 31,510 N3FNE B 120 28 63 28,938 W3ARS B ### ## ## 26,160 N3OK B 210 38 70 22,680 N3ZR B 84 25 47 15,624 N3VOP B 74 27 52 13,193 AI3M B 64 15 24 6,747 W3DQ B TS 27 24 20 3,124 N3XL B 13 8 12 520 Single Op - Assisted W4NF C 2018 143 544 3,875,367 K2PLF C 2117 135 500 3,817,620 W4RM C 1847 119 440 2,972,203 N3AM C 1675 119 435 2,656,984 K3LP C 1227 127 454 1,966,685 WX3B C 1257 90 327 1,508,706 KV3R C 1067 112 361 1,443,596 K3KO C 725 111 383 1,000,350 W3HVQ C 508 113 337 616,950 N4GG C 595 76 256 551,784 W3ZZ C ### ## ### 260,352 KO4MR C10 285 32 146 144,892 K3SV C 250 78 206 118,192 K2YWE TS 38 17 36 5,459 Multi-Single W4WS C 2208 149 574 4,306,911 W3LJ C 728 93 316 807,366 W3LRC B 310 53 152 169,330 K3PZN B 100 30 66 21,736 W3SO C 75 23 45 13,804 Multi-2 K4JA C 4893 177 717 12,171,810 K3DI C 2346 151 558 4,629,061 Multi-Multi W3LPL C 7676 186 761 19,379,408 W4MYA C 4999 178 698 11,723,508 W8ZA C 2479 150 578 5,562,648 Dxpedition V26B C 11367 158 596 20,994,376 Score credited to PV 6,998,125 IH9P C 18121 185 799 53,210,784 Score credited to PV 2,660,539 MM0LEO B 315 40 132 105,952 PB=Power and Band A: QRP B: Low Power C: High Power TS: Tribander + single element 160-40 BR: Band Restricted R: Rookie Logs: 73 Club Score: 121,288,021 Operators (non-PVRC): KO7X at KI7WX QTH WR3Z at N1WR QTH IH9P: K3PN plus 19 other operators K3DI: W3ICM K3DI (W4EE SM0WKA) K3PZN: N3VOP AA3XZ W3ARS W3KHZ KC3VO N3YIM W3BAB (KC4WFU KB3IHC) K4JA: K4JA W3BP K4MA K7SV KE9I (AJ9C) NR3X: N4YDU V26B: N3OC (et al.) W3LJ: W3LJ W3IDT KA3UBJ (K3NCO) W3LPL: K1HTV AI3M W2GG W3LPL KD4D K3RA K4ZA KE3Q K1RA K1RZ K3MM NK3R (4X6FR) W3LRC: K3HDM KB3BWR KT3D W3YD W3SO: W3YOZ W3TEF W4WS: WS4NC KG4NEP WB4MSG W2DZO KB6MTH (AG4RZ KG4CZU WA4IAM) W8ZA: W8ZA K3DNE K8OQL K3IXD WD3A ARRL SS CW Final 17-Dec-02 Call Prc QSOs Sec Score N4AF B 1318 79 208,244 W4MR U 1249 80 199,840 K3MM B 1228 79 194,024 WR3L M 1198 80 191,680 KD4D U 1119 80 179,040 N4ZR B 1117 79 176,486 K3ZO B 1125 78 175,500 WJ9B A 1035 78 161,460 W4MYA U 1009 80 161,440 NY3A # 1021 79 161,318 W4NF U 996 80 159,360 N8II A 941 80 150,560 KO7X U 939 80 150,240 W3EF A 970 75 150,228 N3OC U 866 80 138,560 N4MO A 850 79 134,300 N6ZO U 826 80 132,160 N3AM B 827 79 130,666 K4TX B 826 78 128,856 K2PLF A 800 80 128,000 W3PP B 784 80 125,440 K4QPL A 803 78 125,268 N4GU A 819 76 124,488 N3UM B 801 77 123,354 N3SB A 792 77 121,968 W4IDX A 777 78 121,212 K3KO U 725 80 116,000 K3JT A 732 79 115,656 W4YE A 714 80 114,240 W4ZYT M 714 80 113,920 K4EU A 721 79 113,918 K3TM A 730 78 113,880 N1WR A 728 78 113,568 K1HTV A 661 80 105,760 W3HVQ U 659 78 102,804 K7SV A 638 80 102,080 W3BP B 671 75 100,650 W2CS Q 635 77 97,790 NC3Y A 622 77 95,788 AI3M A 603 79 95,274 N3OC U 591 80 94,560 W3CB A 606 76 92,112 K3DI U 572 80 91,520 N3II B 581 78 90,636 K4MA B 575 77 88,550 K3WA B 550 78 85,800 K3RA A 535 80 85,600 WX3B U 539 78 84,084 K3SV U 521 80 83,360 N4CW B 520 79 82,160 W3MC # ### ## 77,400 N4GG B 483 76 73,416 WK4Y B 528 66 69,696 W4TNX U 434 80 69,440 W2CDO A 455 75 68,250 W3AZ B 425 77 65,450 K2UOP B 388 77 59,752 K4ZW B 388 75 58,200 K2AV B 401 72 57,744 W3CP A 340 75 51,000 N2NFG A 361 70 50,540 W3LJ M 335 75 50,250 N3HUV U 306 80 48,960 W3DAD A 343 71 48,706 W4RM B 386 57 44,000 W4HM A 298 70 41,720 K3CKT # ### ## 40,896 KN1DX A 272 72 39,168 W2GG A 286 68 38,896 N4MM A 215 80 34,400 K4EC B 235 65 30,550 W4RIM A 213 66 28,116 N3BF A 206 67 27,604 W4HJ A 196 70 27,440 K3DSP A 189 69 26,082 N4TL B 154 55 16,940 W4PW A 162 49 15,876 W8ZA B 130 56 14,560 N3WK A 120 52 12,480 KC9LC A 118 52 12,272 NR3X A 118 49 11,564 N3FX B 107 51 10,914 K3YDX A 104 52 10,816 W2DZO A 86 42 7,224 K1SO A 1 1 2 Logs: 84 Score: 7,535,166 Other Scores of Interest WP3R B 1511 80 241,330 by KE3Q Operators (non-PVRC): KD4D at N3HBX QTH KO7X at KI7WX QTH KN1DX: K1SE NR3X: N4YDU W3LJ: W3LJ (K3NCO) W4MR: AA4NC W4ZYT: W4ZYT W4SD N8CH KU4EC W8RJL W4WV WD4GOY K1KO AG4JT AF4CD WR3L: K3FT WR3Z ARRL SS Ph FINAL 19-Dec-02 Call Prc QSOs Sec Score W4MR B 1788 80 286,080 K3MM B 1714 79 270,812 KD4D U 1573 80 251,680 W4MYA U 1533 80 245,280 K3ZO B 1521 80 243,360 W4NF U 1509 80 241,440 K4MA U 1469 80 235,040 K2PLF U 1443 80 231,360 KM4M M 1374 80 219,840 K3PN B 1282 80 204,960 WR3L M 1243 80 198,880 K4QPL B 1190 80 190,400 N8II A 1191 79 188,020 NX9T B 1063 80 170,080 N3FX B 1022 80 163,520 K3PZN M 952 80 152,320 N4GG B 940 80 150,400 N1WR B 930 80 148,800 N3AM U 832 80 133,120 N3II U 813 80 130,080 W3PP U 784 80 125,440 K3DI M 766 80 122,560 WX3B U 706 80 112,960 W3HVQ U 681 80 108,960 K3DNE A 685 78 106,680 N6ZO B 665 80 106,240 N4GU B 651 80 104,160 W4IDX A 637 80 101,920 K1GG B 601 80 96,160 W3MC # ### ## 94,200 W3ZZ B 570 79 90,060 W3LJ M 556 80 88,960 W3LL A 550 80 88,000 N4CW B 546 80 87,360 K3RA A 448 80 71,680 NI4S A 444 80 71,040 K2UOP B 436 80 69,760 K3DSP A 417 78 65,052 W3ARS A 406 78 63,336 N4MM A 383 80 61,280 KG4NEP B 381 77 58,674 W2DZO A 351 80 56,160 N3UM B 405 69 55,890 WK4Y A 340 80 54,400 N3HUV U 335 80 53,600 W8ZA B 345 77 53,130 K3KO U 326 80 52,160 K4EU A 341 72 49,104 W3AZ A 326 74 48,248 N4JED A 280 77 43,120 K1KO A 275 76 41,800 W4YE A 273 77 42,042 KE4MIL A 251 78 39,156 W3CB # 260 74 38,480 K3SWZ Q 264 71 37,488 K3CKT # ### ## 37,000 AF4CD A ### ## 36,960 N4TL B 255 72 36,720 W3DQ A 242 75 36,300 K3SV U 226 80 36,160 W4TNX A 223 80 35,680 W4RIM # 231 77 35,574 N3OK B 248 71 35,216 K4TMC A 283 55 31,130 K1SO A 215 69 29,670 AJ3M U 201 69 27,738 W2GG A 200 69 27,600 W4HJ U 206 65 26,780 W3LRC U 168 80 26,720 W2CS B 280 46 25,760 W4SD A 200 64 25,600 W4TNX A 223 80 35,680 WA3RGH # 161 69 22,218 KT3D A 144 61 17,568 W3CP A 141 58 16,356 KC9LC A 143 54 15,444 K3YDX A 120 63 15,120 K4WES A 120 58 13,920 AA4KD A 110 54 11,880 K4HA A 104 56 11,648 W4ZYT B 100 57 11,400 WB4MSG B 104 53 11,024 WK3H A 45 34 3,060 W3DAD A 98 48 9,408 SSB Logs: 84 SSB Score: 7,320,066 CW Logs: 84 CW Score: 7,535,166 Total Logs 168 Total PV score 14,855,232 Other Scores of Interest WP3R B 2727 80 436,320 by KE3Q VO2WL B 1290 79 203,820 by K3TM++ Operators (non-PVRC): K3PZN: N3VOP K1RH AK3Z N3YIM W3ARS WX3B WX3F AA3XZ K3ZE N3SB (N3GQJ N3GQK) K4QPL from N4AF QTH KD4D from N3HBX QTH KM4M: K4JA W3BP W3LJ: W3LJ W3IDT (K3NCO) W3LRC: K3HDM KA8YPY KB3BWR KT3D W3YD WK3X W4MR: AA4NC WR3L: WR3Z K3FT at WR3L QTH CQWW CW #4 06-Jan-03 Call PB QSOs Zon DX Score Single Op - Unassisted K4ZW C 2635 158 518 5,109,208 K3ZO C 2593 144 491 4,693,285 W4RX C 1925 142 461 3,343,092 WF3J C 1345 127 449 2,198,016 N4ZR C 1578 118 363 2,189,998 NR3X B 1382 118 415 2,011,542 W3EF B 1299 118 394 1,831,935 W4YE C 1140 120 432 1,763,088 K2YWE TS 1184 118 397 1,678,900 W3BP C 1210 105 346 1,570,382 N3UM C 1206 98 317 1,411,000 K4UVT C 983 114 398 1,316,864 W4DF C ### ### ### 1,290,318 N1WR B 819 99 330 996,996 K2UOP C 726 104 332 890,748 K4FPF B 696 433 # 852,577 W3AZ C 705 98 299 788,045 W4ZV C10 1421 33 129 666,306 KT3Y C40 1391 33 122 612,010 K1EFI B 577 79 281 582,840 K1KO B 558 87 266 540,090 KO7X C 521 100 279 527,568 K3JT B 520 78 208 414,128 N4MM C 443 99 227 394,460 W4EI C ### ## ### 366,210 N4MO B15 787 33 123 354,120 K4HA B 409 68 220 340,416 W3CP B 379 71 214 301,530 K8OQL C 373 84 200 280,592 K4CIA A 337 85 220 283,955 W3GN C 370 84 203 281,547 N8II B10 649 23 103 238,266 K4QPL B 300 61 172 194,322 NX9T B 279 71 169 179,280 K4TX C40 428 28 105 161,063 W4ZYT B 250 55 158 150,591 N4JED B 246 53 145 133,848 WB4MSG C 217 ## ### 109,998 K4EC C 211 53 133 105,090 W4SD B 206 47 133 103,500 W4HM B10 279 28 101 101,136 N4TL C 186 57 135 92,544 W3DAD C 177 58 128 90,024 WK3H B 141 59 92 55,870 W2CDO # ### 56 198 55,176 K1GG C 117 42 92 41,942 AA4KD B 110 46 86 37,752 W4IDX B40 145 20 63 31,623 K3DSP B 88 35 67 23,766 W4RIM C 80 30 61 20,020 K3SWZ A10 100 21 51 19,872 KE3Q B 69 29 51 14,240 K4NYS B 61 25 48 12,556 W3CB B 72 29 39 8,364 K4WES B 29 21 29 3,850 Single Op - Assisted W3GG C 1585 130 483 2,780,568 N3AM C 1391 139 498 2,520,609 K3KO C 1212 134 505 2,205,828 W4RM C 871 93 333 1,060,314 K3WA C 502 93 340 596,241 K3SV C 502 98 289 534,060 N4GG C 416 94 277 428,134 W3ZZ C 475 85 221 406,062 W3HVQ C 382 97 248 360,525 W8ZA C 354 65 207 274,720 W3FG B 207 55 135 104,880 N3ZR # 95 47 55 27,846 Multi-Single W3LJ C 747 107 354 956,575 Multi-2 K4JA C 5856 182 728 15,221,570 N4RV C 3256 162 611 7,198,176 K3DI C 1285 138 508 2,316,556 Multi-Multi W3LPL C 7455 190 761 19,507,863 NY4A C 6250 180 681 15,299,970 W4MYA C 4278 182 695 10,403,851 AK3Z C 1549 129 436 2,388,255 Dxpedition VO2WL C 2199 101 314 1,196,445 1/3 points 398,815 VK4UH B 260 45 88 100,282 PB: Power and band A: QRP B: Low Power C: High Power R: Rookie TS: Tribander + single element 160-40 BR: Band Restricted CW Logs: 75 Score: 126,958,159 SSB Logs: 73 Score: 121,288,021 Total Logs: 148 Total: 248,246,180 Operators (non-PVRC): KO7X at KI7WX QTH AK3Z: AK3Z WX3B K3LP N3SB NY3A (at WX3B QTH) K3DI: K3DI (W4EE) K4JA: K4JA K4EU K4MA K7SV K9GY KE9I N4RV: N4RV K2PLF WR3Z K4VV NR3X: N4YDU VO2WL: K3TM plus 2 non-PVRC W3LJ: W3LJ (K3NCO) W4MYA: K4GAU W4DR W4HJ W4MYA W4TNX WK4Y NW4V ARRL 160 CW #5 06-Jan-03 Call QSOs Sec DX Score Single Op High Power: W4MYA 338 77 29 306,234 N4AF 004 75 28 220,729 K4ZW 28 69 18 132,936 NY3A 91 73 # 117,238 W3DF 47 71 6 116,886 K3ZO 38 70 15 113,815 K2PLF 53 60 14 100,196 N3UM 66 61 10 96,915 NR3X 25 62 9 76,893 K2UOP 33 58 8 72,138 N4GG 42 59 5 57,728 N3HUV 97 55 # 45,430 N3OC 64 54 6 45,120 W4EI ## ## # 31,365 W8ZA 06 49 4 22,631 K1GG 02 53 # 22,366 WX3B 15 45 3 21,024 N3AM 00 46 2 19,488 W3GG 99 41 5 18,860 Single Op Low Power: KT3Y 47 75 20 170,905 K3JT 00 66 5 72,278 K3SWZ 26 60 5 56,745 AI3M 84 54 # 38,232 N4ZR 87 53 3 32,648 W4YE 55 62 # 32,364 N4MM 40 64 # 31,680 W2YE 42 49 5 27,108 N3II 28 47 5 24,648 WB4MSG 14 ## # 22,204 K4EU 16 47 1 20,880 WJ9B 77 51 4 20,130 WK4Y 91 45 5 20,000 W2GG 86 46 5 19,686 K3SV 02 ## # 18,720 WK3H 00 43 1 17,415 W4TNX 65 ## # 14,364 K3WA 25 44 3 12,173 K3DSP 54 39 0 12,012 W3CP 24 41 # 10,168 NX9T 04 35 3 8,132 W4RIM 01 35 # 7,070 K2YWE 95 33 2 6,860 Multi-Op (single op plus packet unless listed below): K3DI 02 72 13 157,165 N4CW 48 81 # 108,054 K3KO 21 71 9 102,000 W4NF 50 66 10 101,308 K1KO 54 44 5 15,974 W4TNX 65 38 4 14,364 K8OQL 37 40 2 11,760 W4HJ 76 31 4 4,124 Logs: 50 Club Score 2,849,163 Operators (non-PVRC): K3DI: K2YWE K3DI N4CW: N4CW KO7X NR3X: N4YDU ARRL 10 Mixed #4 1/6/2003 Call QSOs State DX Total Single Op High Power - Mixed K3ZO 2639 270 # 2,169,180 N4GG 2012 113 148 1,710,590 K4MA 1699 246 # 1,382,028 W0YR 1883 109 136 1,346,520 N3II 1442 110 145 1,145,970 K2PLF 1469 111 140 1,126,990 K2UOP 1432 244 # 1,044,320 WB4MSG 561 ### ## 198,198 K3WA 206 21 52 59,568 W4HJ 127 49 21 31,640 Single Op Low Power - Mixed N8II 1715 112 141 1,383,910 AI3M 945 236 # 715,552 NR3X 804 213 # 548,688 N4JED 517 165 # 250,800 W4TNX 364 55 82 171,798 W4TNX 364 ## ## 171,798 K4UVT 237 43 76 102,102 W4ZYT 100 47 30 30,800 KZ1A 150 26 43 20,400 KE3Q 86 28 20 12,192 W3DQ 65 30 # 7,488 Single Op QRP - Mixed K4CIA 329 164 # 173,512 Single Op High Power - Phone K3DNE 1323 55 70 333,750 KV3R 1191 55 74 307,278 W3UJ 149 19 43 18,476 Single Op Low Power - Phone N4MM 562 155 # 174,220 W3ARS 654 52 65 153,036 W3LL 460 115 # 115,340 W4SD 205 154 # 63,140 N3FNE 296 38 58 56,832 KE4MIL 280 35 61 53,760 WA4BKW 202 27 48 30,300 KT3D 111 50 # 11,100 N8CH 212 51 # 10,812 N4DWK 103 19 18 7,622 Single Op QRP - Phone NX9T 620 126 # 156,240 Single Op High Power - CW K7GM 2157 61 87 1,278,720 KD4D 2183 140 # 1,223,600 N4CW 1675 59 78 917,900 W3BP 1656 138 # 915,768 N3UM 1389 60 66 700,056 WF3J 1169 138 # 646,392 KT3Y 924 124 # 458,304 W3AZ 502 52 63 231,840 N4ZR 227 28 38 59,928 K8OQL 180 38 60 53,280 W8ZA 108 25 40 28,080 W3GG 148 8 31 23,088 Single Op Low Power - CW W3PP 1495 62 89 904,188 NY3A 1356 137 # 744,184 WJ9B 1003 58 73 525,572 K3FT/4 1133 114 # 522,000 W3CB 894 58 58 414,816 K2YWE 546 48 64 245,056 K3JT 570 106 # 242,104 W3CP 433 113 # 196,168 W3DAD 422 44 52 162,432 NW4V ### ## # 76,024 W4RIM 118 57 # 26,676 K3SWZ 144 44 # 24,768 K1SO 32 27 # 1,728 Multi-One K1SE 2449 122 204 2,579,964 W4MYA 2757 314 # 2,572,288 K3DI 1695 103 180 1,360,098 N3OC 1465 101 167 1,236,552 N3AM 1216 83 161 1,055,544 N4MO 1353 229 # 1,007,142 K3KO 1163 94 152 1,003,168 WX3B 1695 243 # 920,484 W4WS 1541 88 124 749,208 K3DSP 575 81 103 329,728 W2GG 527 191 # 326,228 WK4Y 500 126 68 323,980 K3NCO 554 84 # 318,276 N3ZR 633 50 63 144,324 K3IXD 435 45 100 126,150 W3LRC 434 118 # 101,716 4U1WB 388 86 # 68,800 K3GV 277 41 64 58,170 W3HVQ 179 28 39 47,972 Dxpedition VK4UH 292 100 # 101,400 Logs 81 Score: 40,349,814 Note: Multi-One not listed below were SO Assisted Multiop operators (non-PVRC): K7GM at N4AF QTH KD4D at N3HBX QTH 4U1WB: AJ3M K1SE: K4EU K4ZW K1SE at K4ZW QTH K3DI: W3ICM K3DI K3DSP: K3DSP N3YUG K3FT/4:K3FT at N6ZO QTH K3NCO: W3IDT W3LJ (K3NCO) N4MO: N4MO W4EI at W4EI QTH NR3X: N4YDU VK4UH: W3UL W3LRC: K3HDM KT3D W3YD WI3N WK3X WV3D W4WS: KG4NEP W2DZO (KG4CZU KG4UGZ) WX3B: N3YIM N3SB W3ARS AK3Z WX3B ----------------------------------------