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2007 10 Meters
  • Results Article (Members Only)
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    Contest Soapbox

    Contest:

    2007 ARRL 10 Meter Contest

    Add your 2007 ARRL 10 Meter Contest Soapbox comment · List call signs in soapbox

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    N4ARR -- Mar 28, 2008 15:12 ET

    The Dixie Radio Pirates, N4ARR (www.dixieradiopirates.com)participated in the 2007 ARRL Ten Meter contest from Shelby, NC, this year. Thanks to Ron AA4S for letting us use his wonderful QTH, we participated in the multi-operator class. As primarily a VHF contest team, many pirates were working their first HF contest. Thanks to the many stations that worked us, and thanks to the Pirates that operated.

    The internet was filled with everyone talking about how dead this contest was going to be at the bottom of the sunspot cycle, etc. This was the case for us Friday night into Saturday morning, felt like the Maytag repairman, calling CQ, but not many signals on the band. Someone threw the switch and finally the band began to buzz with signals, and before we knew it, we had several pileups on us. It was great experience for the operators to operate under pileup conditions, pulling out the callsigns out of the noise.

    Everyone had a great time and hope to be back in 2008..

    73 de N4ARR Dixie Radio Pirates. -- W4GRW

    N4ARR Dixie Radio Pirates Flag

    Visitors as seen from tower

    Van KI4HFH Operating

    Joe AF1E Operating

    Ron AA4S operating

    Bill W4GRW operating

    Ron AA4S operating


    WS2W -- Feb 28, 2008 19:37 ET

    WS2W HAM SHACK

    It took alot of listening to alot of static to pull out multipliers this year with the terrible propagation! Hopefully next year will be a repeat of the days when the whole world was available. Nothing better when 10 meters opens up. Several openings this year at unpredictable times, several right before sunset and just prior to first light on the east coast. A REAL CHALLENGE! -- WS2W

    N5VU -- Feb 3, 2008 12:36 ET

    In spite of it all (or lack of "all") I had a blast! This is the first time that I ever submitted a log to a contest. I think that Lousiana had about 8 log entries. Of those eight, the winner was a QRP station that kicked our butts! It appears that I made #2 in the High Power class with about 11,500 points. I can't remember ever seeing the S-Meter move off of Zero but stations were there. Hats off to all of those Low power and QRP station for making a showing. Me, I was throwing about 500 Watts from my SB-200 into an inverted vee. Most of my contacts were CW. Better luck next year!. 73, Marcel -- N5VU

    WB9FOL -- Dec 28, 2007 18:23 ET

    My review of the 2007 10 meter contest conditions...

    In over twenty years of participation this year had the worst band conditions ever! At times there were NO signals at all! Maybe next year will be better... -- WB9FOL

    N1AW -- Dec 30, 2007 19:43 ET

    N1AW's Atlas 210x

    I'm usually a casual contester and this is the first time I ever submitted a log for the 10 meter contest. I operated a total of about 2.5 hours in 5 segments. My station is modest, I used an old Atlas 210x at 20 to 30 watts output to a mini-G5RV at about 35 feet. I didn't expect much since the band was absolutely dead every time I listened in recent months. But I got more than I expected, 10 cw and 6 ssb contacts. Until near the end all QSOs were local. I'm in MA and my first 14 QSOs were with MA, CT, or NH stations. Then in the last six minutes I worked stations in WI and MN. It was well after dark, so I suppose this was Es skip. I've been surprised like this on dead bands before, it just shows that contest activity can reveal propagation that isn't noticed when nobody is calling CQ. -- N1AW

    VK8AA -- Dec 19, 2007 21:08 ET

    The big 9 element yagi for 10m.

    ARRL 10m Contest Expedition 2007 - Call: VK8AA Operator(s): David Burger VK2CZ e-mail: k3hz@ieee.org

    Class: SO SSB HP PHONE QTH: Darwin

    Summary: Band 10 QSOs Mults ------------------- SSB: 261 27 ------------------- Total: 261 27 Total Claim Score = 14,094

    Hi all, a generally very disappointing report from Australia for the 2007 event. The key driver to activate was being #1 Phone in Oceania for the past 4 years consecutive years.

    With poor propagation forecasts, and not having participated in any contests this year in any meaningful way, this was my last opportunity to get on air in '07 and hand out a few QSO’s. Planning for this trip was in place all year, and really not a whole lot of preparation was actually needed, just site permissions. I did loose track of what I had in storage in Darwin, so I did double up on a few brackets and clamps – which really wasn’t a bad thing.

    Knowing propagation conditions would be poor again, operating from an equatorial latitude was important to take advantage of the propagation lifts available. I’d also planned and built up the largest 10m band antenna I have ever used; a 9 element wide spaced yagi, boom 22.3m long, and in the air about 20m.

    I recycled almost all of the 5 element 40m beam material from the 2006 CQWW SSB event. While much of the old 40m yagi material had been scrapped in ’06, the core material – mainly the boom, was the key ingredient. The boom has been getting progressively shorter each time I assemble it – and it came to a design flaw, where the telescoping sections would jam under compression load from the boom guy’s. The whole 25m long (nominal length) 80mm diameter boom is kept together using just 6, 4mm screws. This will eventually get upgraded to 10 screws to avoid the binding problem.

    Yagi gain without ground effects was 14.2dbi.. which made a very credible difference to signal strengths, and a big lift was noticeable on the Sporadic E fades, but not reflected by the anticipated quantity of QSO’s in the logbook.

    Oddly, the eastern part of VK and ZL occasioned on an impressive 6m opening both evenings (local time), which meant I was being called by ZL’s on 10m way into their night time, even with my beam on Japan and then EU. I closed down just after dusk on both days, as there was no external lighting available at the site, and the need to lower the yagi unto the ground to prevent it being tossed around in overnight storms. I expect I may have sacrificed a few QSO’s by doing this, but practicalities and safety were more important.

    The serious mechanical lifting equipment to get the Yagi antenna higher off the ground was just not available (read affordable) this year - a major building construction boom going on in Darwin! I did manage to secure a small Franna with a 23m extension, and a fully air-conditioned room. I used a new temporary site located beside the East Arm port facility.

    Outside was serious wet season, mostly 34C at 96% to 100% humidity the whole time, with sand fly’s and mosquito’s carrying the deadly Ross River virus – an impossibly hot and unforgiving environment to even sit outside. Combine this with daily storm warnings and ocean surge awareness reports on local radio stations – means I will eventually get caught up in something one of these years.

    With the combination of high temperatures and high humidity, I started dismantling around 1000z on day 2 with the car headlights on, and not bothering to get on the last 2 hours of the event. In past years, the 12 hours between contest end and return flight to Sydney has been a right squeeze – and I wasn’t about to hurt myself with the extra issues I had to deal with this year. [my timber packing transport boxes were smashed on route to Darwin, and these boxes were re-manufactured courtesy of Roger Elfenbein Asbestos Removals.]

    Back to radio, had around 110 QSO's on day 1, and around 150 QSO’s on day 2. Each day there was literally a 3 minute opening to EU, day 1 occurred at 0904UTC, day 2 was at 0910 utc.. very spooky. Only one JA in the log on Day 1, despite reports that east coast VK was working into China and Japan easily. Day 2 was easily the best day, with quite major improvements in propagation. A local factory only 100m away operated over the whole weekend, and lots of ad-hoc electrical interference was present. Noise levels went from 10/9 to zero frequently with 2 stages of DSP noise filtering working to the max.

    There was also little latitude with stations that gave out partial callsigns, failed to use recognisable phonetics or those that felt like a chat – with the fast QSB and sporadic E, I had a whole page of scribbled partial callsigns, and sadly, only a handful were ever completed. A few meteor pings took some JA signals to 20/9, but nothing like the high meteor activity in 2006. It would be fair to say that 90% of all QSO’s were hard work.. almost as hard as operating phone on a noisy 40m band.

    The longest distance QSO’s for: Asia was with 4X4 (11,296km), EU was OH6 (12,076km), OC was KH6 and sadly nothing at all from NA/SA... but certainly not for lack of trying.

    Most interesting QSO’s was XW1A and VK9ZLH - a real surprise DX bag, and of course the OH station that came out of nowhere – with a good signal!

    Below is a quick summary of Countries (mults) and qso's..

    COUNTRY QSO's Australia 102 Japan 87 New Zealand 23 China 8 Malaysia 6 Korea 4 Hong Kong 3 Indonesia 3 Singapore 3 Germany 2 Hawaii 2 India 2 Italy 2 Thailand 2 Asiatic Russia 1 Cook Islands 1 Finland 1 Guam 1 Israel 1 Laos 1 Lord Howe 1 Mariana 1 Poland 1 Slovenia 1 Tajikistan 1 Serbia 1 -- VK2CZ

    G7RTI -- Dec 18, 2007 11:42 ET

    Hi, 5 QSOs total .... Even with my low wire and 20w (to avoid QRM) I would expect to work loads of stations across Europe but almost nothing to be had .... Only highlight was ZS6DXB which was booming in but not many takers. 73 til next year! Klaus -- G7RTI

    KE7NO -- Dec 18, 2007 22:14 ET

    Blech !!! Worked only one station and he was a neighbor. Really, a neighbor! I heard a rare Washington "DX" station in the mud. When this band is gone, it is gone! -- KE7NO

    K7XC -- Dec 14, 2007 23:32 ET

    K7XC Radio Central Dec 2007

    What a complete waste of effort! 1 QSO with a station 60 miles away atop a ridge near Virginia City and that was it!! Heard many station on Meteor Scatter but my current 10M station is just to small to be much use on that propagation mode. Frankly, I would have worked a whole lot more people on 144 Mhz CW than I did on 28 Mhz CW... -- K7XC

    KE7NDD -- Dec 14, 2007 00:09 ET

    This was my first try at contesting and my first real dabbling into ten meters. It may just be our dipole but we heard nothing. The band seemed completely dead. We (my husband and I) tried on and off on saturday and sunday and heard nothing. We are using a dipole that is hung 60 feet up in trees and broadcasting from covington, washington.

    I have decided to try building a ten meter dipole and see if it helps perhaps. But it seems like propogation was just bad this year :( -- KE7NDD


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