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Contest Update Issues

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The ARRL Contest Update
December 20, 2023
Editor: Paul Bourque, N1SFE
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In this Issue:

Your Editor, Paul Bourque, N1SFE, is on leave. While he's out, Brian Moran, N9ADG, is filling in as ARRL Contest Update Editor.

Upcoming Contests - Things to Do

The next few weeks might be a time to try something new, like one of the contests that occur during the week, or you can drop in to one of the Christmas or New Year's contests.

There's one contest during the weekend of December 23, the RAEM CW Contest, which lasts 12 hours.

Although there are some weekly contests still scheduled to take place on the evening of December 24 or on December 25, you might want to check the contest sponsor's website to make sure they're in fact still going on.

Things get going again during the weekend of December 30, with the RAC Winter Contest, the Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge, and the third round of the YOTA contest.

For the RAC Winter Contest, you'll find the rules on RAC's contesting results page. Think of it as the HF contest bands plus 6 and 2 meters, mixed mode. Because the C in RAC refers to Canada, contacts with stations in Canada count for 10 points, others only count for two. There are some special RAC-suffixed stations, which are worth 20 points. Multipliers are the 10 provinces and three territories. See the rules for additional information on multiplier abbreviations, entry classes, and so forth.

The Stew Perry Topband Distance Challenge is 160 meters, CW only. The exchange consists of four-character grid square designators, which we're all finally familiar with because of the popularity of FT modes. Scoring is by power level and distance; because power level isn't exchanged, the suspense of final scores for this contest isn't wholly diminished by 3830scores.com. In this contest, plaque-worthy performance criteria change yearly at the whim of the plaque sponsors.

The YOTA contest, which is a collaboration between the IARU Region 1 Youth Working Group and the Hungarian Amateur Radio Society, is for "Increasing youngsters activity on the air." Participation in this CW and SSB contest is open to all, with specific categories for those aged 25 and under, and for those that are over the age of 25. The exchange is the operator's age. From examination of the results of previous sessions, participation is dominated by Region 1 amateurs; there's nothing to keep amateurs in other regions from playing, except awareness of the contest.

Contest Summary

See the "Contests" section below for complete contest information.

December 21 - January 3

December 21

December 22

December 23

December 24

December 25

December 26

December 27

December 28

December 29

December 30

December 31

January 1

January 2

January 3

News, Press Releases, and Special Interest

The DailyDX notes that the UK licensing authority, Ofcom, has put forth changes to amateur radio licensing procedures. These changes will take effect over time, and were done to allow "greater operating freedom for people using amateur radio, while making the process of getting and using a license simpler and clearer" according to the Ofcom document. Among the many changes, there will be some new call sign formats, increases in permissible power levels for all license classes, the ability for full license class amateurs to use up to 1000 W of output power, and an expansion of the license classes eligible to use remote operation. These changes will be phased in starting in 2024.

The biggest solar flare in years made it more difficult to communicate via radio on December 14. According to the Space Weather Prediction Center, an X-ray event exceeding X1 caused "wide-area blackouts of HF radio communication for about an hour" on the sunlit side of Earth. This event was big enough to get notice by the national press, with coverage including pictures from NASA.

Registration for Contest University (to be held May 16, 2024, at the Hope Hotel in Dayton, Ohio) is now open. Now in its 15th year, this event is held the day before the opening of the annual Hamvention and is popular enough to suggest early registration to be able to receive the day's printed handouts. Materials from previous years are available on the Contest University website.

Potential summer employers of college-age amateurs: Kids these days are using Handshake, Indeed, and LinkedIn to find their summer jobs and post-school opportunities. At least one radio gear manufacturer includes the "Amateur Radio" key phrase in their job postings on Indeed.

The Thursday (US) evening NS RTTY Sprint sessions, sponsored by the Northern California Contest Club, have come to an end. According to Ed Radlo, AJ6V, posting to the CQ-Contest email reflector:

"A few months ago, the team that manages this contest, which has been sponsored by the NCCC (Northern California Contest Club) for many years, conducted an in-depth study at whether this half hour Thursday night contest is still viable, given the low and declining participation experienced over the past couple of years.

Unfortunately, since this study of a few months ago, the participation in the RTTY NS has declined even further. Therefore, the contest management team has come to the painful conclusion that it is time to say farewell to the Thursday night RTTY NS, effective immediately."

Word to the Wise

You are a contender if you participate in a contest and send in a log to be scored. Make sure you get those logs in before the log deadlines!

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Sights and Sounds

Back in 1962, each segment of ARRL Sweepstakes was 40 hours long. John Gohndrone, then W9IRH, sent this card to W2MUM for their contact on 20 meters. John eventually moved to the Pacific Northwest, obtaining the call N7TT. His interest in contesting remained strong, and his call sign frequently appeared in the top scores. John became a silent key earlier this month. [Credit: Danny Eskenazi, K7SS, Photo]

Steve Babcock, VE6WZ, has added a video to his BOG tutorial, "BOG Combining and switching in the shack," where he talks about the switching system he uses to choose between directions and combine signals. He puts special emphasis on a "low-impedance ground plane to minimize noise ingress."

Mel Ming, N7GCO, suggested that Contest Update readers would be interested Bob Wilson's, N6TV, presentation to the Spokane DX Association: "Basic Station Automation Techniques & Recommendations."

Results and Records

Andy Goss, AA5JF, is responsible for the results article on the recently completed ARRL 10-Meter Contest. The article should appear in mid-2024, but he needs your pictures and comments now, before the experience fades. He's especially interested in hearing from stations outside of "North America and North-Central Europe" and those stations that are contending for the top spots in their respective category. If you've already submitted comments via the log SOAPBOX line, via 3830, or as part of the website log submission process, you are good to go. Otherwise, send Andy an email.

Operating Tip

We've traced the RFI! It's coming from inside the house! Have you checked your noise floor lately? RF interference can be horrific and negatively affect your contest scores. Performing a periodic noise audit can help you stay on top of things. Power a receiver from a noiseless source such as a battery and turn everything else off in your location at your circuit-breaker panel. Note the noise levels on each band, then turn everything on again. If you detect a difference, it could be time to do a thorough search for the offending radiator. Start by turning off each breaker again until the noise abates -- that's the circuit that has the device-making noise. Usually it's a switching power supply, but unusual sources have included arcing filaments inside incandescent or halogen bulbs, marginal or defective fluorescent bulbs or ballasts, arcing thermostats, space heaters, LED lights, wall dimmers, variable-frequency drives on furnace or A/C motors, damaged underground feeders to outbuildings, and marginal connections where arcing is occurring.

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Technical Topics and Discussion

OM Power's new OM2002W is a water-cooled LDMOS amplifier for 2 meters. OM Power's website says it's rated at "1800 W CW, SSB, and 1600 W AM, FM, and digital modes, 50% duty cycle," though I doubt that means one day on, one day off. It's nice to see the application of water-cooling trickling down from computer applications. The OM Power website does not yet list details on US availability.

José Nunes, CT1BOH, tweeted an analysis of propagation paths from Bouvet Island to various continents, based on the island's terrain-blocking just eight degrees above the horizon. The results are... not good for some directions, especially on higher bands. You can also model your own location here.

Conversation

Out-of-Band Communications

Email spam. Text-message spam. Phone-call spam. We all get it to varying degrees, but how we handle it determines whether it gets the better of us. One member of a group chat was recently considering removing their email address from a popular call sign lookup database after they started to get spam emails for a non-ham-related business. They suspected that their email was gleaned from that online listing. I was encouraging them not to remove their email address. Being reachable via email is worth the inconvenience of deleting some unwanted messages because:

  • If you're active and do any type of DXing or contesting, operators can email you if there are any issues with QSLs, signal quality, or in response to a DX cluster spot.
  • Members of DXing or contesting email groups may have to handle the communications for you, when everyone in the group gets a message like, "Anyone know how to contact N9ADG? He has no email listed on www.qrz.com..." Unfortunately, hundreds of people may have to read that message.

Furthermore, it was unlikely that the email address was actually gleaned from the ham-related database. It was more likely to have been released as part of a data breach (check to see if your email address has been part of a known breach at https://haveibeenpwned.com/).

Many email providers do a reasonable job at spam filtering (but yes, some do not). An example of such a provider is Google's Gmail, but there are others. I use a Gmail address for public group interactions and some ham contact databases, and then use some techniques to automatically direct email into different folders and track email address usage.

With this one simple trick, I keep the utility of email, and spam stays manageable.

That's all for this time. Remember to send contesting-related video links, stories, book reviews, tips, techniques, press releases, errata, schematics, club information, pictures, stories, blog links, and predictions to contest-update@arrl.org.

73 and Happy Holidays! Brian, N9ADG (filling in temporarily for Paul, N1SFE)

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Contests

December 21 - January 3

An expanded, downloadable version of QST's Contest Corral is available as a PDF. Check the sponsors' website for information on operating time restrictions and other instructions.

HF CONTESTS

Walk for the Bacon QRP Contest , Dec 21, 0000z to Dec 22, 0300z; CW; Bands: 20; Maximum 13 wpm, RST + (state/province/country) + Name + (Member No./power); Logs due: Dec 28.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 21, 0300z to Dec 21, 0400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 23.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 21, 0700z to Dec 21, 0800z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 23.

NTC QSO Party , Dec 21, 1900z to Dec 21, 2000z; CW; Bands: 80, 40, 20; NTC Member: RST + Member No., non-Member: RST + "NM", Less than 25 wpm; Logs due: Dec 24.

NCCC FT4 Sprint , Dec 22, 0100z to Dec 22, 0130z; FT4; Bands: (see rules); 4-character grid square; Logs due: Dec 24.

NCCC RTTY Sprint , Dec 22, 0145z to Dec 22, 0215z; RTTY; Bands: (see rules); Serial No. + Name + QTH; Logs due: Dec 24.

QRP Fox Hunt , Dec 22, 0200z to Dec 22, 0330z; CW; Bands: 20; RST + (state/province/country) + name + power output; Logs due: Dec 23.

NCCC Sprint , Dec 22, 0230z to Dec 22, 0300z; CW; Bands: (see rules); Serial No. + Name + QTH; Logs due: Dec 24.

K1USN Slow Speed Test , Dec 22, 2000z to Dec 22, 2100z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Maximum 20 wpm, Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 24.

RAEM Contest , Dec 23, 0000z to Dec 23, 1159z; CW; Bands: 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Serial No. + latitude (degs only) + hemisphere + longitude (degs only) + hemisphere (see rules), N=North, S=South, W=West, O=East (e.g. 57N 85O); Logs due: Jan 6.

CW QRS Xmas Activity , Dec 24, 0000z to Dec 31, 2359z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; RST + Name + QTH; Logs due: Jan 7.

K1USN Slow Speed Test , Dec 25, 0000z to Dec 25, 0100z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Maximum 20 wpm, Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 27.

QCX Challenge , Dec 25, 1300z to Dec 25, 1400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; RST + Name + (state/province/country) + Rig; Logs due: Dec 31.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Dec 25, 1300z to Dec 25, 1400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Dec 28.

OK1WC Memorial (MWC) , Dec 25, 1630z to Dec 25, 1729z; CW; Bands: 80, 40; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Dec 29.

QCX Challenge , Dec 25, 1900z to Dec 25, 2000z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; RST + Name + (state/province/country) + Rig; Logs due: Dec 31.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Dec 25, 1900z to Dec 25, 2000z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Dec 28.

Worldwide Sideband Activity Contest , Dec 26, 0100z to Dec 26, 0159z; SSB; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10, 6; RS + age group (OM, YL, Youth YL or Youth); Logs due: Dec 27.

QCX Challenge , Dec 26, 0300z to Dec 26, 0400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; RST + Name + (state/province/country) + Rig; Logs due: Dec 31.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Dec 26, 0300z to Dec 26, 0400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Dec 28.

DARC Christmas Contest , Dec 26, 0830z to Dec 26, 1059z; CW, SSB; Bands: 80, 40; DL: RS(T) + DOK (or "NM" if not a DARC member), non-DL: RS(T) + QSO No.; Logs due: Jan 2.

SKCC Sprint , Dec 27, 0000z to Dec 27, 0200z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10, 6; RST + (state/province/country) + Name + (SKCC No./"NONE"); Logs due: Dec 31.

Phone Weekly Test , Dec 27, 0230z to Dec 27, 0300z; SSB; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15; NA: Name + (state/province/country), non-NA: Name; Logs due: Dec 29.

A1Club AWT , Dec 27, 1200z to Dec 27, 1300z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: RST + Name; Logs due: Jan 1.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 27, 1300z to Dec 27, 1400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 30.

Mini-Test 40 , Dec 27, 1700z to Dec 27, 1759z; CW; Bands: 40; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Dec 29.

Mini-Test 80 , Dec 27, 1800z to Dec 27, 1859z; CW; Bands: 80; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Dec 29.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 27, 1900z to Dec 27, 2000z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 30.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 28, 0300z to Dec 28, 0400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 30.

CWops Test (CWT) , Dec 28, 0700z to Dec 28, 0800z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 30.

NCCC FT4 Sprint , Dec 29, 0100z to Dec 29, 0130z; FT4; Bands: (see rules); 4-character grid square; Logs due: Dec 31.

NCCC RTTY Sprint , Dec 29, 0145z to Dec 29, 0215z; RTTY; Bands: (see rules); Serial No. + Name + QTH; Logs due: Dec 31.

NCCC Sprint , Dec 29, 0230z to Dec 29, 0300z; CW; Bands: (see rules); Serial No. + Name + QTH; Logs due: Dec 31.

K1USN Slow Speed Test , Dec 29, 2000z to Dec 29, 2100z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Maximum 20 wpm, Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Dec 31.

RAC Winter Contest , Dec 30, 0000z to Dec 30, 2359z; CW, Phone; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10, 6, 2; VE: RS(T) + (province/territory), non-VE and VE0: RS(T) + Serial No.; Logs due: Jan 13.

YOTA Contest , Dec 30, 1200z to Dec 30, 2359z; CW, SSB; Bands: 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Single Op: RS(T) + age (on Jan 1 of year of contest), Multi-Op: RS(T) + average age of ops (on Jan 1 of year of contest); Logs due: Jan 6.

Stew Perry Topband Challenge , Dec 30, 1500z to Dec 31, 1500z; CW; Bands: 160; 4-Character grid square; Logs due: Jan 15.

Original QRP Contest , Dec 30, 1500z to Dec 31, 1500z; CW, SSB; Bands: 80, 40, 20; RST + Serial No. + "/" + Power category; Logs due: Jan 31.

Bogor Old and New Contest , Dec 31, 0900z to Dec 31, 2359z; SSB; Bands: 80, 40, 10; RS + operator age; Logs due: Jan 31.

AGB New Year Snowball Contest , Jan 1, 0000z to Jan 1, 0100z; CW, SSB, Digital; Bands: 80; AGB Member: RST + QSO No. + Member No., non-Member: RST + QSO No.; Logs due: Jan 22.

K1USN Slow Speed Test , Jan 1, 0000z to Jan 1, 0100z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Maximum 20 wpm, Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Jan 3.

SARTG New Year RTTY Contest , Jan 1, 0800z to Jan 1, 1100z; RTTY; Bands: 80, 40; RST + QSO No. + name + happy new year (native language); Logs due: Jan 31.

AGCW Happy New Year Contest , Jan 1, 0900z to Jan 1, 1200z; CW; Bands: 80, 40, 20; AGCW: RST + Serial No. + "/" + Member No., non-AGCW: RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Jan 14.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Jan 1, 1300z to Jan 1, 1400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Jan 4.

OK1WC Memorial (MWC) , Jan 1, 1630z to Jan 1, 1729z; CW; Bands: 80, 40; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Jan 5.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Jan 1, 1900z to Jan 1, 2000z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Jan 4.

Worldwide Sideband Activity Contest , Jan 2, 0100z to Jan 2, 0159z; SSB; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10, 6; RS + age group (OM, YL, Youth YL or Youth); Logs due: Jan 3.

ARS Spartan Sprint , Jan 2, 0200z to Jan 2, 0400z; CW; Bands: 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; RST + (state/province/country) + Power; Logs due: Jan 4.

ICWC Medium Speed Test , Jan 2, 0300z to Jan 2, 0400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Name + QSO No.; Logs due: Jan 4.

QRP Fox Hunt , Jan 3, 0200z to Jan 3, 0330z; CW; Bands: 20; RST + (state/province/country) + name + power output; Logs due: Jan 4.

Phone Weekly Test , Jan 3, 0230z to Jan 3, 0300z; SSB; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15; NA: Name + (state/province/country), non-NA: Name; Logs due: Jan 5.

A1Club AWT , Jan 3, 1200z to Jan 3, 1300z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: RST + Name; Logs due: Jan 8.

CWops Test (CWT) , Jan 3, 1300z to Jan 3, 1400z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Jan 6.

Mini-Test 40 , Jan 3, 1700z to Jan 3, 1759z; CW; Bands: 40; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Jan 5.

Mini-Test 80 , Jan 3, 1800z to Jan 3, 1859z; CW; Bands: 80; RST + Serial No.; Logs due: Jan 5.

CWops Test (CWT) , Jan 3, 1900z to Jan 3, 2000z; CW; Bands: 160, 80, 40, 20, 15, 10; Member: Name + Member No./"CWA", non-Member: Name + (state/province/country); Logs due: Jan 6.

UKEICC 80m Contest , Jan 3, 2000z to Jan 3, 2100z; SSB; Bands: 80; 6-Character grid square; Logs due: Jan 3.

VHF+ CONTESTS

AGCW VHF/UHF Contest , Jan 1, 1400z to Jan 1, 1800z; CW; Bands: 144 MHz, 432 MHz; RST + "/" + Serial No. + "/" Power class + "/" + 6-character grid locator; Logs due: Jan 9.

VHF-UHF FT8 Activity Contest , Jan 3, 1700z to Jan 3, 2100z; FT8; Bands: 144 MHz; 4-character grid square; Logs due: Jan 8.

Log Due Dates

December 21 - January 3

December 21

December 22

December 23

December 24

December 25

December 26

December 27

December 28

December 29

December 30

December 31

January 1

January 2

January 3

ARRL Information

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Acknowledgements

ARRL Contest Update wishes to acknowledge information from WA7BNM's Contest Calendar.

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