Contester's Rate Sheet for October 4, 2006
******************************************** CONTESTER'S RATE SHEET 4 October 2006 Edited by Ward Silver N0AX Published by the American Radio Relay League Free to ARRL members - tell your friends! (Subscription info at the end of newsletter) ******************************************** SUMMARY o Beam West - Oceania DX Contest o State QSO Parties - Big Ones From CA and PA o Sprints Galore - EU, 10-10, Straight Key, NA RTTY, FISTS, AP o School Club Roundup Adds A Fall Event o NAOMI by EI8IC o iCal Contest Calendar by VA7IRL o Radial System Notes by N6LF o New TIA-222-G Tower Standard o I Confess BULLETINS o WRTC-2010 Announced! See the News section! BUSTED QSOS o Low editorial caffeine levels last time, perhaps? George K6GT points out that the connector waterproofing compound is silicone, not silicon, grease. I knew that! Apologies to the SAC participants for publishing incorrect weekends for CW (really Sep 16-17) and Phone (really Sep 23-24), but I trust everyone figured it out. Craig K1QX observed that the "high-quality F-connectors" are really compression-type connectors and are available from several sources, including RadioWare (http://www.radiobooks.com/). CONTEST SUMMARY (Rules follow Commentary section) October 7-10 - EU Autumn Sprint - CA QSO Party - Oceania DX, Phone - YLRL Anniversary Party, CW - PSK Rumble - 10-10 Day Sprint October 11-15 - ARRL EME Contest - Straight Key Sprint - PA QSO Party - NA RTTY Sprint - YLRL Anniversary Party, SSB - EU Autumn Sprint, CW - Oceania DX, CW - FISTS Fall Sprint, CW - AP Sprint, CW - RSGB 21/28 MHz, CW - Bill Windle QSO Party, CW - ALE On the Air Week - School Club Roundup --o- ooo - --o- ooo - --o- ooo - -oo o NEWS, PRESS RELEASES, AND GENERAL INTEREST - oooo o o-o o- - o ooo oooo o o - -o- ARRL Contest News By popular demand, the School Club Roundup is adding a fall session in the third week of October 2006. It will run from October 16, 1200Z through October 20, 2400Z. The rules are the same as for the February event, which will continue. There is also an updated versions of the popular SCR-LOG program by AD8B at http://home.earthlink.net/~scr-log/ The new session was announced in the September issue of QST (Thanks, Lew N2RQ) - - - - - WRTC-2010 is a reality! The World Radiosport Team Championship Sanctioning Committee (WRTC-SC) is pleased to announce that in 2010 WRTC will be held in Russia for the first time! The Soyuz Radiolyubitelei Rossii (SRR) is the primary sponsoring organization. SRR President, Roman Thomas RZ3AA, is the host committee chairman. The event will be held near Moscow and coincident with the IARU HF Championship in July. The committee plans to publish qualification rules and procedures as quickly as possible and a special WRTC-2010 Web site will soon be available. The WRTC-SC would like to thank all of the Russian team for the hard work preparing their proposal and for the planning that has already taken place. Congratulations and good luck! Elecraft (http://www.elecraft.com/) has announced some new "Module Kits", such as a switchable 1:1 or 4:1 250-watt balun, usuable through 6 meters and a directional coupler module. Click on "Our Products" and then "Module Kits." The CW Touch paddle mentioned in the last issue is available from Kanga US (http://www.kangaus.com/) as well as a portable 2-element Yagi antenna designed by W6MMA. One of the SuperAntenna line, the complete package is only 36" long with adjustable elements and operates from 20 through 6 meters. Not bad for a 7-pound antenna! (Thanks, Bill N8ET) Marc W6ZZZ reminds us to use the new, easier-to-use official California county abbreviations starting in the CQP this weekend. They're listed at http://www.cqp.org/cqp_multipliers.html along with the status of popular contest logging software, with respect to these new multipliers at http://www.cqp.org/Software.html CW training "auf Deutsch" is available from Heinrich DL2OBF in his new book "Morsen, Minimaler Aufwand Maximale Möglichkeiten" (loosely translated - Morse, Minimal Effort and Maximum Enjoyment) I speak only a little German, so I can not give you a complete review, but the book is crammed with pictures and Web resources. It's available through the DARC Bookstore at http://www.darc.de/ - click on the British flag for English language. EE Times readers got a pleasant surprise in the September 25 issue's "Planet Analog" section. A photo of the Icom IC-718 was shown repeatedly as an example of a product full of mixed-signal design challenges and innovations. The articles discuss the technical and manufacturing issues from a general perspective and do not analyze the transceiver specifically. Here's a great product announcement - NAOMI, the North American Overlay Mapper has been re-issued as a fully Windows-compatible program. There's more good news: starting with the latest version v1.2, NAOMI is now available for download completely free of charge. Get a FULLY WORKING copy of NAOMI on your computer for as long as you wish to keep it. Among numerous other features, the program contains 47 full-screen (1020 x 650 pixel) maps at 1:2,000,000 scale. 2 full screen overview maps and a comprehensive multi-page Help System and Information Guide. It's available online at http://www.mapability.com/ei8ic - wow, thanks Tim EI8IC! For the last few years the PA QSO Party has had a special "bonus" or "special event" station operating during the conteSt This year's bonus station will be N3SH, one of the club calls of the Wireless Association of South Hills, Inc. This year, WASH is planning to operate multiple stations from different counties in order to give out as many QSO's as possible. (Thanks, Ron W3WN) The videos made at WRTC-1996 and WRTC-2000 are now available for downloading, hosted by Google Video for all the world to see! There are three different ways to get to the videos: Go to http://video.google.com/ and search for "WRTC" Go directly to WRTC 1996: http://tinyurl.com/k8las (177 MB) Go directly to WRTC 2000: http://tinyurl.com/jp7nd (207 MB) Thanks to Bob N6TV for his effort in digitizing and uploading the programs! Those of you familiar with Bob's "manualism" videos (http://rawilson.googlepages.com/Manualism.htm) may be disappointed that there is no truth to the rumor that he is working on a CW pileup version. I suppose you could store some samples of his existing works in your voice keyer. I wonder what kind of RST report that would bring? Just in time for the Fall contesting season, Anthony VA7IRL has updated his graphic iCal contest calendar through April 2007. The format is really useful, especially when dealing with contests that have segments and so forth. You can subscribe to iCal at webcal://ical.mac.com/arodgers/Contests.ics or view it as a Web page at http://ical.mac.com/arodgers/Contests (Steve VE4LR wrote in with a similar format about the same time!) Just a note - have you checked out Mark K9GX's new Contesting column in WorldRadio? Mark solicits input on various topics every month, so don't hesitate to lend a hand. WorldRadio is a popular magazine among new hams that may not be aware of contest activities so this new column may bring us some new friends on the weekends! In between manualism practice, Bob N6TV also found http://local.live.com/ for photographic views of earth-bound stuff from space. Just enter an address at the top of the page, then click on "Birds eye", next to "Aerial". (It might not have a bird's-eye view available.) Click N E S W for different views. Zoom in with a scroll wheel, if you have one. Warning, it's addictive! Solar cycle 24 could be small. Or it could be huge. This week's news pins the meter on the WEAK peg. Even if it is not, solar cycle 25 (peak 2022) is predicted (http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/10may_longrange.htm) by NASA solar physicist David Hathaway "to be one of the weakest in centuries." (Thanks (I think), Jon N0JK) At the Pacific NW VHF Conference this past weekend, the subject of logging while mobile was discussed. As you might imagine, paper logging while mobile got super-low marks in the safety category. The consensus was that most of us had attempted it...once...and decided that it was Not A Good Idea. There are workarounds for logging on the move, but the two best I heard were using a hands-free digital recorder with time stamping set to UTC (Olympus makes one and I'm sure there are others) and for short bursts of operating just noting your stop and start time with QSO times filled in later. Don't jeopardize your own safety and those of other drivers by trying to drive and operate and write at the same time! I don't care how good you think you are, you're seriously distracted and a hazard to other drivers. Pull over or share the operating duties with someone else. URL of the Week - http://tinyurl.com/jm2pb. Apparently, there's a glove manufacturer named "QRP" that makes rubber gloves. Label this as "weird find of the day". (Thanks, Shawn KB1CKT) oo-o oo -o -oo -o-- --- oo- o-o RESULTS AND RECORDS -o-o o- o-oo o-oo oooo o o-o o ARRL Contest Results The complete list of logs received for the ARRL 2006 Field Day has been posted to the ARRLWeb at: http://www.arrl.org/contests/claimed/ It includes all electronic, paper and web applet submissions. If you find an error in your listing or you are not listed, please contact Tom Hogerty, KC1J, at kc1j@arrl.org. The final shipment of 2005 Sweepstakes Plaques and all remaining 2006 10-Meter contest certificates are in the mail. (Thanks, Tom KC1J) - - - - - The September 2006 CW Sprint scores can be found at http://www.kkn.net/~tree/cwsprint-200609.txt (Thanks, Tree N6TR) oo oo-o oo - ooo -o --- - -ooo o-o --- -o- o TECHNICAL TIPS AND INFORMATION -o-- --- oo- o-o o -o --- - - o-o -o-- oo -o --o As the Northern Hemisphere moves into fall and the Southern into spring, many of us are spending more time with the bandswitch on 1.8, looking for DX between the diminishing static crashes. While their signals are intruders and often illegal, the fishing buoys floating in the Pacific are a good source of propagation information. Identifying continuously in slow Morse as a letter-number group, hearing these indicates an opening to Oceania. Rather than wait for the spotting network, call CQ yourself and see if some DX is tuning around looking for you! Rudy N6LF has published some test data on a new ground system. "Over the summer I laid down a new radial system for 160 meters. During the process I made very careful measurements of feedpoint impedance and relative field intensity using network and spectrum analyzers as the radials were placed. A detailed description of the work can be found at http://www.antennasbyn6lf.com/ A group of US amateurs has begun experimental operation on 600 m (505-510) kHz. Rudy N6LF is on the air at 506 kHz operating in the beacon mode. The message is VVV VVV VVV VVV VVV DE WD2XSH/20 WD2XSH/20 K. After each transmission there is a 40 second pause and then the message repeats. Rudy plans on operating from 0100Z to 0430Z every day for the next 3-4 weeks with a 130' vertical and 300' top loading wire. He expects to be audible in much of the western US. He would appreciate signal reports, so this is a chance to try out your new receiving antennas installed over the summer. Send reports to rudys@ordata.com. At the other end of the radio spectrum, microwave homebrewers may find a use for the information in the article "Directional Couplers Aid Antenna Power Monitoring" in the Sep 2006 issue of Microwaves & RF (http://www.mwrf.com/) by Andrzej Sawicki. It's a novel design that can be fabricated using amateur-level techniques. Bob K0RC contributed a link to an overview of the new TIA-222-G tower structural standard: http://beradio.com/mag/radio_changes_tower_standards/index.html It contains good background material and how and why the criteria has changed in the updated standard. There is also a link to a PDF file of the new TIA-222-G specification http://www.mei1inc.com/NAB-2003presentation.pdf that was prepared prior to formal release of the standard. Lest we be thought of as giving out baseless information, Bob W5AJ sent a link to photos (http://www.qsl.net/w5aj/tower.htm) of his new self-supporting tower base. The hole was dug by a drilling rig as mentioned earlier in this publication. That's a pretty smooth hole, Bob! An oldie-but-goodie was recalled recently in a Towertalk reflector post by Man-Above-Town Steve K7LXC. When mounting multiple antennas on a single mast, to lessen the amount of torque on the mast due to wind mount the antennas in equal numbers on opposite sides of the maSt The resulting twisting forces will cancel each other, reducing the load on your rotator. TECHNICAL URL OF THE WEEK -- What's going on outside the ham bands on that extended-receive rig you bought? You're in scanner-land now, lads and lassies! An excellent Web site full of information, technical details, and data by the Imperial ton is the Radio Reference page at http://www.radioreference.com/ Create an account for yourself and have at it! o- -o-o -o-o oo- o-o o- -o-o -o-- oo ooo o--- --- -ooo CONVERSATION --- -o o oo -o -o-o --- -o - o ooo - oo -o --o I Confess This is difficult, but I must make a confession. This summer we moved and 18 years worth of Stuff made its way through various outbuildings, storage garages, trailers, station wagons, hand carts, grocery bags, and shoe boxes. During this period that we call "The Great Insanity," it was not always easy to make the right choice. There were times at which incarceration seemed attractive. An 8-by-12 cell with three meals a day and no Stuff can look good at stressful moments. Occasionally the wisest course seemed to be the casting of Stuff down into the ravines full of sticker bushes. It would be centuries before anyone noticed. But these false choices were resisted successfully and I labored on. Moving this much Stuff does have its benefits. Muscles are toned up and you find out all of the ways in which it is possible for you to stress your back. Small injuries, such as cuts from which the blood does not actually gush and stubbed toes that remain at least partially attached to a foot, can be ignored if one also happens to be carrying two boxes of books and some kitchen implements in a finely tuned and balanced stack. The zen of exhaustion is, well, zen. One discovers that radio parts, carefully packed, approach the density of collapsed nucleii. So this is what pulsars are made of - transformers! A batch of aluminum tubing or antenna parts, tightly secured only moments ago will suddenly shift and come completely and spontaneously apart on being picked up one-handed. Larger tubes will tilt forward in such a way that one end will dig solidly into the dirt and the other into the most tender regions of the body. But all this is simply the normal lot of one who decides to abandon one cave in favor of another. Cave dwellers no doubt told the same stories around the campfires of the Stone Age, although probably not on the Web. Probably just by text email read by PINE, but I digress. Who knows what they used in place of Advil? No, my transgressions exceeded these simple conundra and vexations. They strike to the very core of what it means to be a ham. Even the most grizzled and hard-bitten veteran of many moving days will shudder in revulsion as my story is told. There I was, surrounded by a pile of Stuff stretching back into yesteryear, not unlike the Dayton dumpsters on Sunday afternoon. In a moment of weakness I...it's hard to say, even now...I...yes, I broke down and I... I THREW AWAY AN ORIGINAL SHIPPING CARTON!!!! Yes, with the original plastic bags and even wire ties that kept the cables all coiled up! The formed styrofoam packing! The warranty expired since the first Reagan administration! The odd little cardboard boxes that held parts and pieces! All gone! I even broke the box down flat for the recycling bin. The crunching haunts me. And not just once, oh no, three or four or even a dozen times! Little boxes, big boxes - once I started there was no stopping. Icom, Ten-Tec, Yaesu, Radio Shack, even a venerable and sacred, if waterstained and rodent-chewed, Heathkit box! I was mad, simply mad, with the feverish desire to Be Done With It! We all will have our days of sorrowful behavior...you now see mine. My pile of Stuff is the smaller for it, but I will never be able to claim the original shipping boxes in a For Sale ad. I hope it won't damage our special relationship or cause you to pass up my CQ in disguSt My shame is complete. Let this be a lesson to you as my pile of Stuff is seven times as big as yours, Jacob...no, wait, that's a different story, one about the time of year when boxes appear out of the night. Halloween, perhaps? 73, Ward N0AX -o-o --o- - o ooo - -o-o --o- - o ooo - CONTESTS -- 4 OCTOBER TO 17 OCTOBER 2006 -o-o --o- - o ooo - -o-o --o- - o ooo - Note that the following abbreviations are used to condense the contest rules summaries: SO - Single-Op; M2 - Multi-Op - 2 Transmitters; MO - Multi-Op; MS - Multi-Op, Single Transmitter; MM - Multi-Op, Multiple Transmitters; AB - All Band; SB - Single Band; S/P/C - State/Province/DXCC Entity; HP - High Power (>100 W); LP - Low Power; QRP (5W or less) HF CONTESTS EU Autumn Sprint--SSB, sponsored by the EU Sprint Gang, 1600Z - 1959Z Oct 7 (CW is 1600Z - 1959Z Oct 14). Frequencies: 80-20 meters, stations outside EU work EU stations only. SOAB category only. Exchange: your call, serial number, name, other station's call. Special QSY rule--see Web site. Score is number of QSOs. For more information: http://www.eusprint.com/ Logs due 15 days after the contest to eusprint@kkn.net or Paolo Cortese, I2UIY, PO Box 14, I-27043 Broni (PV), Italy (CW logs to Karel Karmasin, OK2FD, Gen Svobody 636, CZ-674 01 Trebic, Czech Republic). California QSO Party--CW/SSB, sponsored by the Northern California Contest Club, 1600Z Oct 7 - 2159Z Oct 8. Frequencies: 160-2 meters. Categories: SOAB (HP >200W, LP, QRP), MS, MM, CA County Expedition, Mobile, Club, School. SO work 24 hours only. CW QSOs in CW subbands, except 160/6/2 meters. Stations on a county line count as a single contact for QSO points, but both counties may be claimed as mulitpliers. Exchange: serial number and state/province (DX send "DX") or CA county. QSO Points: CW--3 pts, Phone--2 pts. Score: QSO points × CA counties (max 58) or CA stations multiply by states and VE call areas (max 58). For more information: http://www.cqp.org/ Logs due by Nov 15 via form on contest Web site (preferred), to logs@cqp.org, or to NCCC, c/o Kevin Rowett, WB6S, 21906 Monte Ct, Cupertino, CA 95014. Oceania DX Contest--Phone, sponsored by the Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA) and New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters (NZART), 0800Z Oct 7 - 0800Z Oct 8. Frequencies: 160-10 meters, work VK/ZL/Oceania stations only. Categories: SOAB, SOSB, MS, MM, SWL. Exchange: RS(T) and serial number. QSO Points: 160--20 pts, 80--10 pts, 40--5 pts, 20--1 pt, 15--2 pts, 10--3 pts. Score: QSO points × WPX prefixes counted once per band. For more information: http://www.oceaniadxcontestcom/ Logs due Nov 12 in Cabrillo format (required for logs with more than 50 QSOs) to ph@oceaniadxconteStcom (CW to cw@oceaniadxconteStcom) or paper logs (if less than 50 QSOs) to Oceania DX Contest, c/o Wellington Amateur Radio Club Inc., PO Box 6464, Wellington 6030, New Zealand. YLRL Anniversary Party--CW, sponsored by the YLRL, 1400Z Oct 3 - 0200Z Oct 5. (phone Oct 10 - Oct 12) Frequencies: 160 - 10 meters. Exchange: serial number, RS(T), and ARRL section/VE province/country. QSO Points: US or VE YL's--1 pt, DX YLs--2 pts. Score: QSO points x S/P/C. For more information: http://www.ylrl.org/ Logs due 30 days after the contest to kc4iyd@yahoo.com or to Nancy Rabel Hall, KC4IYD, PO Box 775, North Olmsted, OH 44070. PSK Rumble (The Fall Classic)--sponsored by Troy ARA, 0000z - 2400z Oct 7. Frequencies: 160-6 meters. Exchange: name and S/P/C. Categories: Normal (>100 W), Great (<20 W), Super (<5 W), Novice, SWL. Score: QSO's x (W/VE/JA/VK call areas + DXCC entities counted once per band). For more information: http://www.n2ty.org/seasons/tara_rumble_rules.html Logs due 30 Oct via online score submission form at http://www.n2ty.org/seasons/tara_rumble_score.html 10-10 Day Sprint--Phone/CW/Digital, 0001Z - 2359Z, Oct 10. 10 meters only. One QSO per station, regardless of mode. Exchange: call, name, state and 10-10 number (if available). QSO Points: nonmembers--1 pt, members--2 pts. Total score: sum of QSO points. For more information: http://www.ten-ten.org/ Logs due 25 Oct to tentencontest@alltel.net or Steve Rasmussen N0WY, 312 N 6th Street, Plattsmouth, NE 68048-1302. Straight Key Sprint--sponsored by the Straight Key Century Club from 0000Z - 0200Z Oct 11. Frequencies (MHz): 3.530, 3.720, 7.055, 7.120 and 14.048. Categories: SKCC Member, Non-Member. Exchange SPC + SKCC number or power. QSO Points: 1 pt/per QSO. Score: QSO points x SPC plus 100 bonus points for Centurion QSO. All mechanical keys welcome. For more information: http://skccgroup.com/activities.htm Summary sheets due 13 Oct to kevin@kj4qf.net. Pennsylvania QSO Party--CW, Phone, PSK31, RTTY. sponsored by the Nittany ARC from 1600Z Oct 14 - 0500Z Oct 15 and 1300Z - 2200Z Oct 15. Frequencies (MHz): CW-1.810 and 40 kHz above band edge; Phone-1.850, 3.980, 7.280, 14.280, 21.380, 28.480; mobiles 5 kHz below the listed frequencies; PSK31 on 28.120, 24.920,21.070, 14.070, 7.080, 3.580. Categories: SO (HP >150W, LP, QRP), MS, MM, SO or MS Portable, Novice/Tech/TechPlus, Mobile, Rover. Exchange: serial number and ARRL/RAC section (PA stations send PA county). QSO Points: CW-2 pts on 160 and 80, 1.5 pts on other bands; Phone-1 pt., PSK31 and RTTY-2 points. Score: QSO points x PA counties (PA stations use PA counties + ARRL/RAC sections + 1 DX) x 2 if QRP or x 3 if Novice/Tech. Add 200 points for each QSO with the bonus station (see Web site). PA mobiles and rovers add 500 points for each county with 10 or more QSOs. For more information: http://www.nittany-arc.net/paqso.html Logs due Nov 15 to paqsolog@nittany-arc.net or PA QSO Party, c/o NARC, PO Box 614, State College, PA 16804-0614. North American RTTY Sprint--sponsored by the National Contest Journal, 0000Z - 0400Z Oct 15. Frequencies: 80 -- 20 meters. North American stations work everyone; others work NA stations only. Exchange both callsigns, serial number, name, and S/P/C. The same station can be worked multiple times provided 3 contacts separate the contact in both logs, regardless of band. QSY rule: Stations calling CQ, QRZ, etc, may only work one station in response to that call; they must then move at least 1 kHz before working another station or 5 kHz before soliciting another call. Once you are required to QSY, you may not make a new QSO on the previous frequency until you have made a contact at least 1 or 5 kHz (as required) away. For more information: http://www.ncjweb.com/. Logs due 7 days after the contest via Web form at http://www.ncjweb.com/sprintlogsubmit.php to rttysprint@ncjweb.com or Ed Muns, W0YK, PO Box 1877, Los Gatos, CA 95031-1877. YLRL Anniversary Party--SSB, 1400Z Oct 10 - 0200Z Oct 12 (see Oct 7-8) EU Autumn Sprint--CW, 1500Z - 1859Z Oct 14 (see Oct 7-8) Oceania DX Contest--CW, 0800Z Oct 14 - 0800Z Oct 15 (see Oct 7-8) FISTS Fall Sprint--CW, sponsored by FISTS CW Club from 1700Z - 2100Z Oct 14. Frequencies: 80-10 meters. Categories: SOAB (QRP and QRO), Club. Exchange: RST, QTH (S/P/C), Name, FISTS number if member, nonmembers send power output. QSO points: member - 5 pts, nonmembers - 2 pts. Score: QSO points x S/P/C (count S/P only once, count DXCC each time). For more information: http://www.fists.org/ Logs due 30 days after the contest to w8pig@yahoo.com or Dan Shepherd N8IE, 1900 Pittsfield St, Kettering, OH 45420 Asia-Pacific Sprint--CW, sponsored by the Asia-Pacific Sprint Contest Committee, 0000Z - 0200Z Oct 15. Frequencies (MHz): 14.030-14.050 and 21.030-21.050. Categories: SO <150W only. Work Asia-Pacific stations only. Exchange: RST and serial number. Special QSY rule. Score: QSOs x WPX prefixes counted once only. For more information and AP country list: http://jsfc.org/apsprint Logs due 7 days after contest to apsprint@jsfc.org (Cabrillo format encouraged, no paper logs accepted). RSGB 21/28 MHz Contest--CW, 0700Z - 1900Z Oct 16. Frequencies: 15 and 10 meters (see Web site for band plan), work UK stations only. Categories: UK and DX SO or MS (Open, Restricted, QRP <10W) and SWL (Open and Restricted). Exchange: serial number and UK district. QSO Points: 3 pts/QSO. Score QSO points x UK districts (UK stations use DXCC entities plus JA, W, VE, VK, ZL and ZS call areas) counted once per band. For more information: http://www.rsgbhfcc.org/ Logs due Nov 17 to 2128.logs@rsgb.org.uk or to RSGB--G3UFY, 77 Bensham Manor Road, Thornton Heath, Surrey CR7 7AF, England. Bill Windle QSO Party--CW, sponsored by First Class Operator's Club (FOC), from 0000Z -- 2359Z Oct 14. Frequencies: 160 -- 10 meters, 6 & 2 meters. Call "CQ BW" from 15 to 45 kHz above band edge, open to all hams, not just FOC members. Exchange: RST and name or FOC number, if member. Report total QSOs with FOC members, counted once per band, FOC members report total QSOs and total FOC QSOs. For more information: http://www.firstclasscw.org.uk/ QSO totals due Oct 23 to KZ5D@aol.com. ALE (Automatic Link Establishment) On The Air Week--sponsored by HFLINK from 0001Z Oct 13 - 2359Z 23 Oct 2006. Exchange: ALE link first, then send any message by voice or texting (ALE linking automatically provides sig reports). For more information and ALE software: http://hflink.com/ Logs due 31 Dec to aotaw2006@yahoo.com. School Club Roundup--all modes, 1300z Oct 16 - 2400z Oct 20, operate 24 hours max. Frequencies: All amateur bands except WARC, contact stations once on phone and once on any mode per band. Categories: SO, Club, School Club. Exchange: RS(T), category, S/P/C. QSO Points: Phone--1 pt, all other modes--2 pts. Score: http://www.arrl.org/contests/announcements/scr.html for scoring and multipliers. Logs due 30 days after the contest to School Club Roundup, c/o Lew Malchick, N2RQ, Brooklyn Technical HS, 29 Fort Greene Place, Brooklyn, NY 11217. VHF+ CONTESTS ARRL EME Contest, from 0000Z Oct 14 - 2400Z Oct 15. Frequencies: 50 -- 1296 MHz. Categories: SOAB, SOSB, MO, Commercial. Exchange: signal report. QSO Points: 100 pts/QSO. Score: QSO points x W/VE states/provinces + DXCC entities (counted once per band). For more information: http://www.arrl.org/contests Logs due Dec 17 to emecontest@arrl.org or EME Contest, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111. -oo --- -o - -- oo ooo ooo -o-- --- oo- o-o LOG DUE DATES - 4 OCTOBER TO 17 OCTOBER 2006 o-oo --- --o -oo o o- -oo o-oo oo -o o ooo October 4 - MI QRP Labor Day CW Sprint, email logs to: n8cqa@arrl.net, diskettes and paper logs to: L.T. Switzer, N8CQA, 427 Jeffrey Avenue Royal Oak, MI 48073-2521 USA. Find rules at: http://www.qsl.net/miqrpclub/conteSthtml October 4 - ARS Spartan Sprint, email logs to: hjohnc@adelphia.net, post log summary at: http://www.arsqrp.com/ars/ss_log.html, diskettes and paper logs to: (none). Find rules at: http://www.arsqrp.com/ars/pages/spartan_sprints/ss_rules_new.html October 9 - AGCW VHF/UHF Contest, email logs to: vhf-uhf@agcw.de, diskettes and paper logs to: Manfred Busch, DK7ZH, Ebachstr. 13, D-35716 Dietzhoelztal-Mandeln, Germany. Find rules at: http://www.agcw.org/agcw-con/2006/Englisch/agcw-dl0_e.htm October 9 - Swiss HTC QRP Sprint, email logs to: HB9BQB@uska.ch, diskettes and paper logs to: Guido Giannini, HB9BQB, Kleinzelglistrasse 6, CH-8952 Schlieren, Switzerland. Find rules at: http://www.htc.ch/de/Swiss%20HTC%20QRP%20Sprint%20E%20Ver_2006.pdf October 9 - SOC Marathon Sprint, email logs to: n4bp@arrl.net, diskettes and paper logs to: Bob Patten, N4BP, 2841 N.W. 112 Terrace, Plantation, FL 33323, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qsl.net/soc/060909.htm October 10 - SARTG WW RTTY Contest, email logs to: contest@sartg.com, diskettes and paper logs to: SARTG Contest Manager, Ewe Hakansson, SM7BHM, Pilspetsvagen 4, SE-29166 Kristianstad, Sweden. Find rules at: http://www.sartg.com/contest/wwrules.htm October 10 - ARCI End of Summer Digital Sprint, email logs to: contest@qrparci.org, diskettes and paper logs to: End Of Summer PSK-31 Sprint, c/o Jeff Hetherington, VA3JFF, 139 Elizabeth St W., Welland, Ontario L3C 4M3, Canada. Find rules at: http://www.qrparci.org/component/option,com_extcalendar/Itemid,/extmode,view/extid,40/ October 10 - International G3ZQS Memorial Straight Key Contest, email logs to: hallin-L@lanecc.edu, diskettes and paper logs to: Lee Hallin N7NU, 3413 Walton Ln, Eugene OR 97408, USA. Find rules at: http://www.fists.org/straightkey.html October 11 - ARRL September VHF QSO Party, email logs to: SeptemberVHF@arrl.org, diskettes and paper logs to: September VHF, ARRL, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111, USA. Find rules at: http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2006/sepvhf.html October 12 - Tennessee QSO Party, email logs to: w9wi@w9wi.com, diskettes and paper logs to: Tennessee QSO Party, c/o Doug Smith, W9WI, 1389 Old Clarksville Pike, Pleasant View, TN 37146-8098, USA. Find rules at: http://www.k4ro.net/tcg/tqp/tqp06_rules.html October 13 - YLRL Howdy Days, email logs to: wx4mm@tm-moore.com, diskettes and paper logs to: Mary Moore, WX4MM, 1593 Lee Road 375, Valley, AL 36854, USA. Find rules at: http://www.ylrl.org/ylcontests.html October 15 - WAE DX Contest, SSB, email logs to: waedc@dxhf.darc.de, diskettes and paper logs to: WAEDC Contest Manager, Bernhard Buettner, DL6RAI, Schmidweg 17, D-85609 Dornach, Germany. Find rules at: http://www.darc.de/referate/dx/xedcwr.htm October 15 - UBA ON Contest, CW, email logs to: ubaon@uba.be, diskettes and paper logs to: Leon Welters, ON5WL, Borgstraat 80, B-2580 Beerzel, Belgium. Find rules at: http://www.uba.be/hf_contests/rules/ubateston_en.html October 15 - QRP Afield, email logs to: k1cl@arrl.net, diskettes and paper logs to: Chuck Ludinsky, K1CL, 6 Pracing Rd., Chelmsford, MA 01824-1922, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qsl.net/wq1rp/qrpaf06.htm October 16 - 144 MHz Fall Sprint, email logs to: svhfs-beacons@svhfs.org, diskettes and paper logs to: Ottmar Fiebel W4WSR, PO Box 957, Hayesville, NC 28904, USA. Find rules at: http://svhfs.org/fall_sprint_rules.htm October 16 - RSGB 21/28 MHz Contest, email logs to: 2128.logs@rsgbhfcc.org, diskettes and paper logs to: RSGB-G3UFY, 77 Bensham Manor Road, Thornton Heath, Surrey CR7 7AF, England. Find rules at: http://www.contesting.co.uk/hfcc/rules/r2128.shtml October 17 - QCWA Fall QSO Party, email logs to: w2od@aol.com, diskettes and paper logs to: W2OD, Robert Buus, 8 Donner Street, HOLMDEL N.J. 07733-2004, USA. Find rules at: http://www.qcwa.org/2006-qso-party-rules.htm October 17 - ARRL 10 GHz and Up Contest (Aug), email logs to: 10GHZ@arrl.org, diskettes and paper logs to: 10 GHz Contest, ARRL Contest Branch, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111, USA. Find rules at: http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2006/10-GHz.html October 17 - ARRL 10 GHz and Up Contest (Sep), email logs to: 10GHZ@arrl.org, diskettes and paper logs to: 10 GHz Contest, ARRL Contest Branch, 225 Main St, Newington, CT 06111, USA. Find rules at: http://www.arrl.org/contests/rules/2006/10-GHz.html October 17 - FISTS Get Your Feet Wet Weekend, email logs to: hallinl@lanecc.edu, diskettes and paper logs to: Lee Hallin N7NU, 3413 Walton Ln, Eugene OR 97408, USA. Find rules at: http://www.fists.org/getfeetwet.html ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS & SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION The Contester's Rate Sheet wishes to acknowledge information from the following sources: WA7BNM's Contest Calendar Web page - <http://www.hornucopia.com/contestcal> SM3CER's Web site - <http://www.sk3bg.se/contest> ARRL members may subscribe at no cost by editing their Member Data Page as described at <http://www.arrl.org/contests/rate-sheet>. Excel and Windows are trademarks of the Microsoft Corporation