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[3830] Stew Perry VK6VZ Single Op

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Subject: [3830] Stew Perry VK6VZ Single Op
From: sire@omen.com.au (sire@omen.com.au)
Date: Sun, 26 Dec 1999 20:10:45 -0500 (EST)
                     Stew Perry Topband Challenge
                    
Call: VK6VZ
Operator(s): VK6VZ
Station: 

Class: Single Op
Power: HP
Operating Time (hrs): 11

Grid Square: OF88

QSOs: 123  Score: 3826

Comments:

Stew Perry TBDC 99 was a real rollercoaster of a ride from VK6.  

A few hours before the contest, I was dragged away from clearing up the kid's
Christmas preparations by a phone call from Mike VK6HD to say ZF2NT was on the
band - Caribbean stations are next to South American stations as the holy
grail
on 160m from here.  Not only was Bruce ZF2NT there at 1140Z, QSX JA but
peaking
S8, but stacks of North American stations and UA0MF.  Looked like the Stew was
going to be a great one...

The start of the Stew found me kitted up and ready to go.  Unfortunately, the
band was dead, except for a weak VQ9DX for the first QSO.

What then followed then was four hours of cat napping on the shack floor and
hearing nothing until around 200Z when the first weak Eu signals were heard. 
An hour of reasonable conditions produced around 28 European QSOs, plus Ralph
5H3RK who was a genuine 579.

Sunday was a very hot day here, humid, over 35 degrees C and I watched the
thunderclouds gather around the QTH.  A big rain storm turned up in the early
afternoon, but there was still thunder in the distance.  

Switching on at 1100Z, the band was staticcy, but bearable.  Then North
American signals started popping up, as sunset approached at 1115Z.

What followed was almost four hours of the most memorable 160m operating I
have
ever experienced.  The band started with good signals from the far eastern
seaboard and, despite a drop in signal level and increase in static, opened
across North America as the sunrise terminator moved across from one coast to
another.  It was like I was on 40m, chasing the sunrise as it moved across,
but
with much lower signal levels - hard operating but bloody great!

Usually NA propagation is spotty on 160m, even when it is good, but this was
something different.

At 1448, I made the last very difficult - but extremely satisfying - QSO with
Stew organiser Lew W7EW (I think) who was about S4 buried in the S4 - S8
static.  My ears were shot and I was only just awake, but there were 123 QSOs
in the log - and some very long distances indeed.

It was hell and it was great - and a contest I will remember for a very long
time.

I am too tired and busy to work out my score now and the family is in the
throes of its Christmas preparations.  My wife Deb's father died just over a
week ago, so family is very important thing for me to take full part in right
now.

Thanks to Tree, Lew and the Boring gang for organising such a great contest. 
Thanks to all those who called me and made it so memorable.

Vy 73,

Steve, VK6VZ


 
 


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