Author Archive
PRELIMINARY 2014 NJQRP Skeeter Hunt Results
Scoreboard:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1odmnlTAnQST7FgsEnsItHaT_ZO0e8yZpzLqxcsyGRkY/edit#gid=1768430587
Soapbox:
http://www.qsl.net/w2lj/index%20page%207
I state again - these are preliminary results! The deadline for submitting summaries is this coming Saturday evening at Midnight, as we roll into Sunday EDT.
I am hoping that by publishing these preliminary results, more participants will send in their log summaries, sending all the results askew and making more work for me - seriously! The more log summaries, the better! It would be wonderful if everyone who participated, sent in a log summary. I know that's a long shot, but hey, I can hope - can't I?
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP - When you care to send the very least!
Kit builder link alert!
http://www.breadboardradio.com/breadboardradio/Products.html
Of course, W2LJ is not connected with the above provider, in any way. Just attempting to do my bit to keep kit building healthy and vibrant! Who knows? One of them just might fulfill a need, or strike your fancy.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP - When you care to send the very least!
Ol’ Sol slowing down?
Looks like we’re headed directly for a period of minimal solar activity:
And here’s a related article from the Helsinki Times:
The video was brought to my attention by Don K2DSV. IF the hypothesis of the video is correct, lower ionospheric activity would be the least of our worries.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Getting there
As opposed to probably a majority of you, I am SO far behind the times from a technological point of view. I still do a majority of my logging with paper and pencil before I manually enter the information to my logging software.
When it comes to QRP Sprints or the Fox Hunts, most of my compatriots use N1MM or some such program. Again, I still use paper and pencil. I feel that I am lucky to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. Operating a radio and trying to computer log simultaneously during a Sprint or a Hunt used to send shivers up and down my spine.
But I am getting better. As long as I am not furiously trying to keep up with a pileup of QSOs in the midst of a frenzy during a Sprint or a Hunt, I have trained myself to log and operate at the same time (See? You CAN teach old dogs new tricks!). I recently purchased a small keyboard for my Nexus 7, so that I can log during casual portable ops without the need for pencil and paper. It cost me all of 8 smackers on eBay.
That’s Ham Log that I keep on there, which in and of itself is a great piece of logging software for Android. The problem was that it’s always been a pain in the butt to use the Nexus touchpad keyboard, which caused me to “one-finger” type, and slowed me down, holding me back. So for the longest time, I was doing the same thing – logging on paper and entering the data later, at my leisure (which makes no sense). This “tactile feel” keyboard brings a lot of familiarity and works a whole lot better for me, and now I am actually able to use the Nexus 7 for logging in real time (sometimes). I know that it’s pathetic, but while I am able to use this setup for general QSOing, the melee of contests or Fox Hunts drives me back to the security of “old technology”.
I guess the next step will be to install the KX3 Companion app. Boy, that will be like Star Trek for me!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Think I will meet the deadline
I have imposed a deadline for myself with regards to Skeeter Hunt results. I want to have both the “scorecard” and the soapbox published to the Skeeter Hunt website this coming Sunday, after the log submissions deadline.
The “scorecard” itself is a piece of cake. It’s simply an Excel spreadsheet that I have composed, with formulas that do all the menial calculating chores for me. I simply plug in the values and the spreadsheet calculates the final score for me. I will upload the completed spreadsheet to Google Sheets and it will be available for all to see on the Web, once it’s completed. This was a good exercise for me, as I was very weak with regards to using formulas in Excel. I’m still no expert by any means, but I know a lot more than I used to, which was practically nil.
The soapbox page is another animal. That is “simple” HTML composition, but it’s more time intensive. I have about one half of the soapbox comments and pictures placed on the unpublished Web page. At the rate I am going, if I can add about 5 more soapbox comments to the page each evening, over the next 4 or 5 evenings, it will be ready for publishing on time.
All this leads me to a worrisome discovery. This year we had a record number of Skeeters sign up. But I am lagging behind in receiving log summaries. Last year I received a total of 71 summaries. As of this minute, I have only received 54. I guess a “Que Sera, Sera” attitude is in order, but I sure would love to see more log summaries submitted.
It’s very important to me that these results get published on time this coming Sunday. You folks are kind enough to participate, and I know how much you like to see results. I do myself! It’s not so important for me to see where I place, I want to see how my friends did, what their setup looked like, and I like to read about the fun they had. The results and soapbox are a crucial part of any of these “special” QRP events, in my most humble opinion. No one wants to make an effort and then wait months or more to see how things stacked up.
So, God willing and the creek don’t rise, you’ll see the finished results this Sunday at www.qsl.net/w2lj
I am just hoping I get a few more log summaries and soapbox comments before then.
And then the final phase will begin, which is the certificates. I have to give myself more time for those, but hopefully, everyone who will qualify for one will have it by the end of September.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
Conditions
It’s evident that we are now on the down side of the peak of Cycle 24. For the most part, I have had superb conditions for working DX during my lunch time QRP sessions for the past 17 months. DX has been plentiful, with good signals and decent RSTs on both ends. 17, 15 and sometimes even 12 Meters have been happy hunting grounds. There have even been smatterings of openings on 10 Meters, which is not often the case during the 1700-1800 UTC weekday time frame.
I still hear DX signals on 17 Meters, but they’re not as strong or as plentiful as they were. 15 Meters is nowhere near as nice as it was just a few months ago. It wasn’t so long ago that I was working three or four different DX stations during my lunch break – and it seemed like all areas of the world were open at the same time! I think that the days of working the world “with 5 Watts to a wet string” are just about over – as far as Cycle 24 is concerned, anyway.
With band conditions changing, it seems that lately, more and more of my lunch QSOs have been domestic – not that there’s anything wrong with that! Today, I was saved from being shut out at lunchtime by Jim K4AHO, who answered my CQ on 20 Meters. We had a nice chat that was not only 2X QRP, but was also 2X KX3. Jim was using a dipole and I was using the Buddistick, of course. QSB was a bit of a nuisance. At the fading’s worst, Jim was 459, and at best he was 579 (which he was for most of the QSO).
In addition to the declining ionospheric conditions, the weather here in New Jersey this Summer has been less “Summer-y” than I was looking forward to. Take this morning for instance. When I woke up this morning, the thermometer was displaying an outdoor temperature of 52F (11C). Very strange for August 18th. That’s almost unheard of, any other year. On the whole, it’s been an average to dry Summer and the temperatures have been down and the humidity has been way down compared to the past three or four Summers. The number of days that we have reached or have gone above 90F (32C), can be counted on both hands. There have not been many hazy, humid, hot days (The Dog Days of Summer) this year at all.
The weather people on TV have been saying that we are experiencing is an “average” Summer for this part of the country. The past few have been hotter than normal, so that’s why this one feels so strangly cool. After the Winter we had last year, I was really looking forward to the heat. I guess there’s still time for us to get some hot days, but I saw on the AccuWeather.com website that the Northeast and the upper Midwest are supposed to experience a Polar Vortex in mid September, bringing along temperatures closer to what we might expect in mid to late November. Brrrrrr.
The other day, while walking my beagle Harold, I noticed the oak trees in the neighborhood are already shedding their acorns. That’s not a great sign as the trees did the same thing around this time last year and we had a terrible Winter. Normally, the acorns don’t start falling until mid to late September around these parts. The squirrels will have extra time to store up food for the Winter, and we’ll probably have another long, cold one. Oh well, at least conditions on 160 and 80 Meters will probably be good. You always have to look for the silver lining and try not to think about the heating bill!
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!
So long for now ….. sort of!
So long for now, sort of!
I have decided to ask Matt W1MST, the Editor at AmateurRadio.com to end the mirroring of this blog there. I know this may appear to be kind of sudden, but actually, this has been a decision that I have been trying to discern since this past Easter.
The content of this blog is mostly about QRP and CW as you all know. So actually, I do cater to a rather small niche in the Amateur Radio world, and the things of which I write are not of interest to everyone – or even a large portion of everyone. In addition, I have also been known to throw in random posts here and there that are of a religious or political nature, when the mood strikes me. And I also regale my readers with my wacky sense of humor now and then. They say that writers should write about what they know best, and that’s what I try to do – and at this stage of my life, I’m not going to change that.
That’s fine for people who actually come to w2lj.blogspot.com looking for that kind of thing. They know what they’re in for when they walk through my door. But to be foisted upon folks coming to a “general interest” Amateur Radio site? I think maybe not so much.
So, AmateurRadio.com readers, if you like my ramblings – please feel free to come to w2lj.blogspot.com at anytime, 24/7/365. The door is always open and you’ll always be welcome. And per chance, should you not like what you see there – you’re always free to “change the channel”.
My thanks to Matt W1MST and AmateurRadio.com for the continued support over the past few years. Matt has been a most gracious host, ever since he asked my permission to mirror this blog over there. Certainly, the service he offers to the Amateur Radio community is a treasure. I will continue to keep the link to AmateurRadio.com active and open in my blog roll. I hope you’ll feel free to bounce back and forth between us.
72 de Larry W2LJ
QRP – When you care to send the very least!