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Πέμπτη 25 Ιουλίου 2019

Αυτό το Σαββατοκύριακο 27 και 28 Ιουλίου θα τρέξει το RSGB IOTA (Islands on the Air) Contest 2019


Το καλοκαιρινό Islands on the Air (IOTA) Contest 2019 που διοργανώνεται από την RSGB, πάντοτε το τελευταίο Σ/Κ Ιουλίου τρέχει από αύριο το απόγευμα μέχρι και την Κυριακή.
Είναι word-wide contest, δηλαδή όλοι δουλεύουν όλους. Σε αυτό το contest πολλοί Ραδιοερασιτέχνες μετακινούνται και ενεργοποιούν νησιά, μικρά ή μεγάλα, κάνοντας ταυτόχρονα και τις διακοπές τους.
Η Ελλάδα μας, προσφέρεται και είναι ο ιδανικός τόπος για τέτοιου είδους αποστολών ή DxPedition. Αυτό όμως, δεν σημαίνει ότι δεν μπορούν να λάβουν μέρος και οι σταθεροί σταθμοί ασυρμάτου.
Ο διαγωνισμός αρχίζει το Σάββατο από 12:00 UTC έως την Κυριακή:12:00 UTC .
Τα mode λειτουργίας είναι CW - SSB και MIXED.
Οι μπάντες λειτουργίας είναι 10m έως 80m. Εξαιρούνται φυσικά οι μπάντες WARC, που δεν τις χρησιμοποιούμε σε κανέναν διαγωνισμό (12m-17m-30m)
Οι κατηγορίες χειριστών είναι οι κλασικές: Ένας χειριστής ένας Π/Δ, Πολλοί χειριστές ένας ή πολλοί Π/Δ.
Στην ανταλλαγή αναφοράς δίνουμε RS(T)+Serial Number ξεκινώντας από 001, και όσοι ευρίσκονται σε κάποιο νησί δίνουν και τον αριθμό ΙΟΤΑ του νησιού. ΠΧ Από την Ρόδο ο χαριστής θα δώσει 59(9)+001+EU001
Περισσότερα για τους κανονισμούς στο IOTA (Islands on the Air) Contest 2019 διαβάστε παρακάτω.
RSGB Islands on the Air (IOTA) Contest

How newcomers can enter the IOTA contest
First of all – be reassured. Contesting is meant to be fun, and you can enter without any previous experience. If you have tried one of the shorter RSGB contests, such as the 80m club contests or the VHF/UHF UKAC contests, you have a head start. The main difference you will notice is that the RSGB IOTA Contest is likely to be faster and more international. It should also be more exciting – isn’t that what you're here for?
This web page will tell you more about the contest, how to get on the air, what to expect, and how to submit your entry. You may already know most of what you read here, but you might also pick up a hint or two along the way. The emphasis is on entrants using SSB, although CW methodology is not very different. Listen to good contesters, on any mode, to learn the best techniques. The advice here is aimed mainly at first-time UK entrants, but of course, the principles are the same wherever you operate from.
You need a rig that covers the HF bands, and at least one suitable antenna. The contest takes place on five bands – 3.5 MHz, 7 MHz, 14 MHz, 21 MHz and 28 MHz. Both SSB and CW can be used – you can work stations on both modes (which count separately), so there are ten possibilities for contacting each station. You need to decide the bands to operate on, which may be determined by the antennas you already have or want to put up.
You can find a link to the rules here. If you have limited contest experience, you just need to know enough to get started. The date is always the last full weekend in July from 1200–1200 UTC, that's 1 p.m. Saturday to 1 p.m. Sunday UK time. Everyone sends a signal report, but don't be surprised if you virtually always receive 59 or 599. To save time, HF contesters are in the habit of doing this regardless of the actual signal strength! You also send a serial number, starting at 001, and continuing regardless of band or mode changes. So, for example, if you are using SSB and then change band when you have reached serial number 123, you continue on the next band (using CW or SSB) with 124, and so on.
As you look at the rules, you will see that there are a number of options as far as your entry is concerned. The contest allows both CW and SSB contacts, and entrants can choose whether to use one or the other, or both. There is a category for those who want to operate for 12 hours or for 24 hours – as a newcomer you will probably want to maximise your effort by using the full 24 hours. And you can choose whether to enter with QRP (5 watts), low power (100 watts), or high power (over 100w). This choice will may well be determined by your class of licence, but good advice for those starting on the IOTA contest is to use the highest power that you are permitted, so as to increase your chances of making the QSOs and multipliers needed. When you submit your entry, the Entry Robot will confirm these choices with you.
The essence of the contest is to work as many island stations as possible. Although you can work any station, island or non-island, contacts with islands score more points, and only new islands count as multipliers. How do you know if a station is on an island? Because after sending the serial number, island stations also send an island reference, but non-island stations don't send any reference. The reference consists of a continent abbreviation, for example EU for Europe, and a number, allocated by IOTA Ltd. Stations on the UK mainland are in IOTA reference EU005. Other references can be found on the Islands on the Air web site. So, for example, search for "Wight" and you will see that the IOTA reference for the Isle of Wight is EU120.
The rules have references in the scoring section to "multipliers". Each time you contact a new island, that counts as a multiplier. When you (or your computer) have added up the score from QSO points, you multiply that by the number of multipliers you have contacted. The IOTA contest rules will give you more details of how this is done. But it's easy to see that it is very important to find and work as many island station multipliers as possible, because your score will receive a big boost. Have a look at the results from previous IOTA contests to see the difference between just making QSOs, and making QSOs which are also multipliers.

On the air
If you are new to international contests, the easiest way to start is with “Search and Pounce”, or S&P. Tune the band in a systematic way, looking for stations you haven’t worked – if you are using logging software, this will tell you immediately if a station is a "dupe". You will not be popular if you often call stations when they know from their log that you have already worked on this band and mode! You will be looking particularly for island stations -- some will be in great demand: if so, note the frequency and move on, coming back later when things are quieter. Otherwise, when they ask for new callers, call just once -- if on SSB use the phonetic alphabet. Be ready to copy down the information sent, and be ready to send your own.
If you miss anything, ask for a repeat before you send any of your own information. When you have everything copied, send your own report and island reference, without unnecessary verbiage. People usually don't have time for chatting, although you might add a “Good luck Bob”, or other sociable greetings if you know who is operating. But your friend won’t be pleased if you spend so much time on pleasantries that your contest information is lost in QRM! After a dozen or so QSOs, you will get the idea of S&P.
Here's an example. You are G9XYZ.
CR3T: CQ contest, Charlie Romeo three Tango, contest
YOU:
 Golf nine X-ray Yankee Zulu
CR3T: 
G9XYZ, 59, 327, Alpha Foxtrot one four
    [he sends you serial number 327, and his IOTA reference is Africa 014.
    Note or remember this information, and transmit as soon as he finishes]
YOU: 
Roger, 59, zero nine seven, Echo Uniform five
    [you send serial number 097, and IOTA reference EU005]
CR3T: 
Thank you, Charlie Romeo three Tango, contest
So far, so good. Now conditions are poor, and there are requests to repeat information.
K1TTT: .... Kilo one Tango Tango Tango contest
YOU: 
Golf nine X-ray Yankee Zulu
K1TTT: 
The golf nine station, again
YOU: 
G9XYZ, Golf nine X-ray Yankee Zulu, over
K1TTT: 
G9XYZ, thanks, 59, 1x22
    [he sends his serial number, but you miss the second digit.
    Ask for a repeat before sending your information.
    He's not on an island, so sends no island reference]
YOU: 
Number again, please
K1TTT: 
1322, 1322, over
    [got it this time]
YOU: 
Roger, 59, two four one, Echo Uniform five
K1TTT: 
Is that two four one? Over
    [if he's got it right, just agree]
YOU: 
Roger, roger, roger
K1TTT: 
Good luck, K1TTT, contest
When it is harder to copy information, you might be more repetitious. Follow the example of the station you are working, who could have more contesting experience.
You might decide you want to call CQ Contest yourself. You can get an idea of how good operators do this by listening to them making these sorts of QSO for a few minutes. Before starting, as at any other time, always check that the frequency isn’t already in use. The rules specify some more limited segments than the whole band, for instance, on 20m -- check first. Callers will expect you to reply instantly to their calls, and to copy the information without asking for excessive repeats. Don't be frightened to call CQ, but be aware that even a lowly "G" station can generate a pile-up, with five or six calling people at once – this is mainly because island stations such as those in the British Isles score higher than non-island. Work out in advance how you will deal with this, and listen to what other good operators do.
But also remember that it's often normal to make up to ten CQ calls before getting a reply, sometimes more, even for the best-equipped stations. On a quiet band, you could wait for minutes at a time before getting any callers, although you would also ask yourself if you are really on the right band at all in this case! Many operators now get their computers to perform the job of calling CQ, using MP3 voice files or similar, and CW operators almost always use the computer to send CQs, as well as other contest information.
There is a good general description of HF contesting by G4BUO. This will give you ideas about the RSGB IOTA and other contests.

Which Band?
If you are equipped for several bands, you will need to choose the band to operate on. As a rule, you would use the highest frequency that is open at the time, although this is a very general statement. If you can hear signals on 10m, that is a good place to start, and then look on 15m. However, unless sunspot activity has recently been high, 20m is likely to be the mainstay of contest operation, with 15m also good if conditions are reasonable.
From the UK at present, 20m is likely to be open to Eastern Europe (and further afield) in the mornings. Propagation gradually opens up to the North America from around midday, and tends to die down in the evening. You will probably find Western Europe available most of the day and evening. If you can only equip yourself for one band, 20m should probably be it.
As far as the IOTA Contest is concerned, you might therefore find a mixture of European and US stations on 20m soon after the contest begins. If you stay on the band, you could expect North America to predominate into the evening, always mixed with Europeans. Later on, many stations will move lower in frequency, but it is always worth checking the band just in case. The next morning on 20m will see stations from the East predominating, but you are likely to find Western Europeans on at any time.
If you have an antenna for 40m, you should have no trouble working European stations, including plenty of multipliers, throughout the evening and overnight. If you have 80m, you will find it is also most used once it gets dark, although some stations will frequently be found as early as 1600 or 1700 UTC. There can be high levels of static on 80m, which makes it a harder band to use during the summer.

Πάντως για να κλείσω μαθαίνω ότι και φέτος πολλοί, πάρα πολλοί Έλληνες ραδιοερασιτέχνες, μεμονωμένα ή κατά ομάδες, θα ενεργοποιήσουν τα Ελληνικά νησιά και θα προσπαθήσουν για το καλύτερο στον διαγωνισμό.
Καλή επιτυχία σε όλους και ελπίζω να σας ακούσω στον αέρα!!!
73 de SV7BVM

Σάββατο 20 Ιουλίου 2019

Σήμερα Σάββατο 20 και αύριο Κυριακή 21 Ιουλίου τρέχει το CQ World Wide VHF Contest 2019 (6m και 2m)


Σήμερα Σάββατο 20 και αύριο Κυριακή 21 Ιουλίου τρέχει ένα πολύ δυνατό contest το CQ World Wide VHF Contest 2019 στα 6m και στα 2m. Αρχίζουμε στις 18:00 UTC το απόγευμα του Σαββάτου και κλείνει στις 21:00 UTC το βράδυ της Κυριακής. Ανταλλάσσουμε MONO τα 4 πρώτα ψηφία του grid square μας π.χ. KN21. Επαφές μπορούν να γίνουν σε οποιοδήποτε mode. Καλή επιτυχία!!!
73 de SV7BVM

CQ Worldwide VHF Contest: 1800Z, Jul 20 to 2100Z, Jul 21
 Geographic Focus:Worldwide
 Participation:Worldwide
 Mode:Any
 Bands:6, 2m
 Classes:Single Op All Band
Single Op All Band QRP
Single Op Single Band
Hilltopper: Single Op QRP Portable (6hrs)
Multi-Op
Rover
 Exchange:4-character grid square
 Work stations:Once per band
 QSO Points:1 point per 6m QSO
2 points per 2m QSO
 Multipliers:Each grid square once per band
 Score Calculation:Total score = total QSO points x total mults
 Submit logs by:July 26, 2019
 E-mail logs to:cqvhf[at]cqww-vhf[dot]com
 Mail logs to:CQ VHF Paper Logs
c/o Charles Towner
P.O. Box 73
Palatine, IL 60078
USA
 Find rules at:http://www.cqww-vhf.com/

The 2019 CQ World-Wide VHF Contest
Begins: 1800 UTC Saturday, July 20, 2019
Ends: 2100 UTC Sunday, July 21, 2019

I. Contest Period

27 hours for all stations, all categories. Operate any portion of the contest period you wish. (Note: Exception for QRP Hilltopper.)

II. Objectives

The objectives of this contest are for amateurs around the world to contact as many amateurs as possible in the contest period, to promote VHF, to allow VHF operators the opportunity to experience the enhanced propagation available at this time of year, and for interested amateurs to collect VHF Maidenhead grid locators for award credits.

III. Bands

All amateur radio frequencies on 50 MHz (6 meters) and 144 MHz (2 meters) may be used as authorized by local law and license class. Note exceptions in Rule XI for common repeater frequencies and 146.52 MHz.

IV. QSO Alerting Assistance

The use of any technology or other source that provides callsign or multiplier identification along with frequency information about a signal to the operator. This includes, but is not limited to, use of DX Cluster, packet, local or remote callsign and frequency decoding technology (e.g., CW Skimmer or Reverse Beacon Network), or operating arrangements involving other individuals.
  1. All stations are allowed to use QSO Alerting Assistance. No self-spotting or asking to be spotted is allowed.
  2. Stations attempting digital EME or digital meteor-scatter QSOs are allowed to spot the callsign, frequency, and sequence only. Caution: To ensure strict compliance with these rules, the adjudication process will include review of realtime and archived transcripts from websites used to coordinate alerting data during the contest period.
  3. The use of non-amateur means to effect a QSO is not allowed. This includes use of the telephone, and website posts providing information beyond that of callsign, frequency, and sequence.
  4. Rovers may use APRS to announce their location.

V. Categories of Competition

For all categories: Transmitters and receivers must be located within a 500-meter diameter circle or within the property limits of the station licensee's address, whichever is greater.
  1. Single Operator - All Band. Only one signal allowed at any one time; the operator may change bands at any time.
  2. Single Operator - Single Band. Only one signal allowed at any one time.
  3. Single-Operator - All-Band QRP. There are no location restrictions - home or portable - for stations running 10 watts output or less.
  4. Hilltopper. This is a single-op QRP portable category for an all-band entry limited in time to a maximum of 6 continuous hours. Backpackers and portables who do not want to devote resources and time to the full contest period are encouraged to participate, especially to activate rare grids. Any power source is acceptable.
  5. Rover. A Rover station is one manned by no more than two operators, travels to more than one grid location, and signs "Rover" or "/R" with no more than one callsign.
  6. Multi-Op. A multi-op station is one with two or more operators and may operate 6 and 2 meters simultaneously with only one signal per band.
Stations in any category, except Rover and QRP Hilltopper, may operate from any single location, home or portable.

VI. Exchange

Callsign and Maidenhead grid locator (4 characters, e.g., EM15). Signal reports are not required and should not be included in the log entry.

VII. Multipliers

The multiplier is the number of different grid locators worked per band. A grid locator is counted once per band. Exception: The rover who moves into a new grid locator may count the same grid locator more than once per band as long as the rover is himself or herself in a new grid locator location. Such change in location must be clearly indicated in the rover's log.
  1. A rover station becomes a new QSO to the stations working him or her when that rover changes grid locator.
  2. The grid locator is the four-character Maidenhead grid (e.g. EM15).

VIII. Scoring

One (1) point per QSO on 50 MHz and two (2) points per QSO on 144 MHz. Work stations once per band, regardless of mode. Multiply total QSO points times total number of grid locators (GL) worked.
Rovers: For each new grid locator visited, contacts and grid locators count as new. Final Rover score is the sum of contact points made from each grid locator times the sum of all grid locators worked from all grids visited.
Example 1. K1GX works stations as follows:
50 QSOs (50 x 1 = 50) and 25 GLs (25 multipliers) on 50 MHz
35 QSOs (35 x 2 = 70) and 8 GLs (8 multipliers) on 144 MHz
K1GX has 120 QSO points (50 + 70 = 120) x 33 multipliers
(25 + 8 = 33) = 3,960 total points.
Example 2. W9FS/R works stations as follows:
From EN52: 50 QSOs (50 x 1 = 50) and 25 GLs (25 multipliers) on 50 MHz
From EN52: 40 QSOs (40 x 2 = 80) and 10 GLs (10 multipliers) on 144 MHz
From EN51: 60 QSOs (60 x 1 = 60) and 30 GLs (30 multipliers) on 50 MHz
From EN51: 20 QSOs (20 x 2 = 40) and 5 GLs (5 multipliers) on 144 MHz
W9FS/R has 230 QSO points (50 + 80 + 60 + 40) x 70 multipliers
(25 + 10 + 30 + 5) = 16,100 total points

IX. Awards

Certificates will be awarded to the topscoring stations in each category in each country. Certificates may also be awarded to other top-scoring stations that show outstanding contest effort. Certificates will be awarded to top-scoring stations in each category in geographic areas where warranted.
Geographic areas include states (U.S.), provinces (Canada), and countries, and may also be extended to include other subdivisions as justified by competitive entries. U.S. Rover certificates are issued on a regional basis.
Plaques again will be awarded to the highest scoring stations. They are offered in various categories on a sponsored basis. Clubs and individual plaque donors are sought and may find information on how to sponsor a CQWW VHF Contest plaque at < www.cqww-vhf.com/plaques.htm >.

X. Club Competition

Credit your club for aggregate club score. See < www.cqww.com/clubnames.htm > for a list of registered clubs. Follow directions for registering your club if not already registered.

XI. Miscellaneous

An operator may sign only one callsign during the contest. This means that an operator cannot generate QSOs by first signing his callsign, then signing his daughter's callsign, even though both callsigns are assigned to the same location.
A station located exactly on a dividing line of a grid locator must choose only one grid locator from which to operate for exchange purposes.
A different multiplier cannot be given out without moving the complete station at least 100 meters.
Making or soliciting QSOs on the national simplex frequency, 146.52 MHz, or your country's designated national simplex frequency, or immediately adjacent guard frequencies, is prohibited. Use of commonly recognized repeater frequencies is prohibited. Recognized FM simplex frequencies such as 146.49, .55, and .58, and local-option simplex channels may be used for contest purposes.
Aeronautical mobile contacts do not count.
Contestants should respect use of the DX window, 50.100-50.125 MHz, for intercontinental QSOs only.
UTC is the required logging time.

XII. Declaration

Your submission of a log entry affirms that: (1) you have abided by all the rules of the contest as well as those of your country's licensing authority; (2) you accept any decisions made regarding your entry by the contest's adjudication process which are official and final.

XIII. Log Submissions

Log entries must be submitted by July 27, 2019 to be eligible for awards. Submit your electronic log in the Cabrillo format created by all major logging programs. Send via e-mail attachment to < cqvhf@cqww-vhf.com >. Subject line:Callsign [the call used in the contest] only.
Entrants are reminded to be sure your log indicates your operating location. For USA/VE stations, be sure to indicate the state (not your ARRL Section) or province of your operation. If you have a problem submitting your log, please contact < help@cqww-vhf.com > for assistance.
It is strongly recommended that paper logs be entered online for automatic Cabrillo submission. Click on the "Web Form for Typing in Paper Logs" link on the contest website at < www.cqww-vhf.com >.
Computer-generated logs must be e-submitted. Callsigns of electronic logs received are posted and updated daily on the website.
For those without web access, paper logs may be mailed to: CQ VHF Paper Logs, c/o Charles Towner, P.O. Box 73, Palatine, IL 60078.
Questions may be sent to < help@cqww-vhf.com >.

SX94MIKIS SPECIAL EVENT FOR THE 94TH BIRTHDAY OF COMPOSER Mikis Theodorakis (From 20 to 29 July 2019)


A Special Amateur Radio Award event for the 94th birthday of composer Mikis Theodorakis, will take place between 20 to 29 July 2019
A dedicated award program will support this operation. The award program will be hosted at sx94mikis.hamlogs.net.
SPECIAL EVENT FOR THE 94TH BIRTHDAY OF COMPOSER
Mikis Theodorakis
From 20 to 29 July 2019
   Attention: If you do not see your QSO, please try making the contact again with SX94MIKIS.
A dedicated award program will support this operation.The award program will be hosted at hamlogs.net
Awards: Αuthentic extract handwritten song sheets, courtesy of Mikis Theodorakis from his archive.

 Mikis Theodorakis was born in Chios, on July 29, 1925. He studied at the Athens Conservatory and the Conservatoire of Paris. In 1957 he won the Gold Medal of Composition at the World Youth Festival in Moscow, in 1959 he was awarded the Copley prize and in 1963 the Sibelius prize.

      He has received many awards for his contribution to democracy and culture and has been awarded an honorary hD from the Universities of Athens, Thessaloniki, Macedonia, Crete and Thessalia. He worked on all styles of music and he extended into areas beyond his main art, such as poetry, prose, philosophy and politics.

      His work is divided in three main periods: A) 1937-1960: He composes orchestral works and chamber music according to western forms and contemporary techniques. B) 1960-1980: He tries to combine the symphony orchestra with traditional instruments and creates new vocal forms and ensembles, which evolved to an artistic movement with a unique popular response. C) 1981-: He returns to symphonic forms and explores the operatic style.
     He has composed the most recognizeable greek rhythm globally, the "syrtaki" Zorbas (1964). He has composed pieces for many movies, like "Phaedra", "Alexis Zorbas", "Serpico", "The Barefoot Battalion", "Electra", "Tactical Guerilla" (Hell River), "Battle of Sutjeska", "State of Siege", "Five Miles to Midnight" and many more. Further important works of his have to do with poetry set to music from verses of award winning poets, such as Giannis Ritsos (Lenin Peace prize 1976), Giorgos Seferis (Nobel prize 1963), Pablo Neruda (Nobel prize 1971) and Odysseas Elytis (Nobel prize 1979). In 2000, he was nominated for the Peace Nobel prize.

Δευτέρα 15 Ιουλίου 2019

Κυκλοφόρησε η νέα έκδοση για το FT8 του WSJT-X VERSION 2.1.0



WSJT-X VERSION 2.1.0 GA NOW AVAILABLE
The WSJT Development Group is pleased to announce the general availability (GA) release of WSJT-X Version 2.1.0.
WSJT-X 2.1 is a major upgrade that introduces FT4, a new protocol for HF contesting. Improvements have also been made in the following areas:
- FT8 waveform generation using GMSK, fully backward compatible
- user options for low-sidelobe waterfall and spectrum display
- UDP messaging for inter-program communication
- accessibility
... as well as many minor enhancements and bug fixes.
We now provide a separate installation package for 64-bit Windows, offering significant improvements in decoding speed.
A more detailed list of program changes since WSJT-X 2.0.1 can be found in the cumulative Release Notes:
http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/k1jt/Release_Notes.txt
Upgrading from earlier versions of WSJT-X should be seamless. There is no need to uninstall a previous version or move any files.
Please do not continue to use any release candidate -- that is, any beta release with "-rc#" in the version name.
Links to installation packages for Windows, Linux, and Macintosh are available here:
http://physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/k1jt/wsjtx.html
You can also download the packages from our SourceForge site:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/wsjt/files/
It may take a short time for the SourceForge site to be updated.
WSJT-X is licensed under the terms of Version 3 of the GNU General Public License (GPL). Development of this software is a cooperative
project to which many amateur radio operators have contributed. If you use our code, please have the courtesy to let us know about it. If you find bugs or make improvements to the code, please report them to us in a timely fashion.
We hope you will enjoy using WSJT-X Version 2.1.0.
-- 73, Joe, K1JT, for the WSJT Development Group


73 DE SV7BVM

Τετάρτη 10 Ιουλίου 2019

Δοκιμάζουμε την διάδοση στα 2m στις 20 Ιουλίου 2019


Συνάδελφοι σας προσκαλούμε σε ένα πείραμα διάδοσης στα 2 μέτρα. Κάνετε QSO στη ζώνη των 2 μέτρων με οποιονδήποτε τρόπο προτιμάτε.
Δεν πρόκειται για κάποιο διαγωνισμό, αλλά ένα πείραμα για να δημιουργηθεί όσο το δυνατόν περισσότερη κίνηση και συμμετοχή ραδιοερασιτεχνών στη ζώνη των 2 μέτρων.
Το Clublog θα υποδεχθεί όλα τα στατιστικά στοιχεία. Μεταφορτώστε τα QSO σας σε ADIF στο clublog.org.
Υποστηρίξτε την IARU σε αυτό το πείραμα οπουδήποτε στον κόσμο και ενεργοποιήστε τη ζώνη των 2 μέτρων.
Πότε?
20 Ιουλίου 2019 από τις 17:00 UTC έως τις 19:00 UTC
https://www.veron.nl/nieuws/2-meter-propagatie-experiment/
Vy 73
Eric-Jan Wösten PA0ERC
Γενικός Γραμματέας VERON HQ

Δευτέρα 8 Ιουλίου 2019

DX News from the ARRL

June 28, 2019

This week's bulletin was made possible with information provided by The Daily DX, The OPDX Bulletin, 425 DX News, DXNL, Contest Corral from QST and the ARRL Contest Calendar and WA7BNM web sites. Thanks to all.
ITU HQ, 4U_ITU. Brennan, N4QX is in Geneva and QRV as both HB9/N4QX and 4U1ITU until July 4. QSL via operator's instructions.
UGANDA, 5X. Anders, SM0HPL is QRV as 5X7W from Kampala until July 6 while on work assignment. Activity is in his spare time on the HF bands using QRP power and CW, JT65, FT8 and FT4. QSL direct to home call.
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, 9Y. Karel, OK2ZI is QRV as 9Y4/OK2ZI from Trinidad, IOTA SA-011, until July 6. Activity is on 40 to 10 meters using CW, SSB and various digital modes. QSL to home call.
TAIWAN, BV. Special event station BV0ME is QRV until 0359z on December 13. Activity is on the HF bands using FT8 during the weekdays and SSB during the weekends. QSL via BU2EQ.
CHILE, CE. Members of the Grupo YL Zona Norte will be QRV with special event stations CB1SOL in Iquique and CB2SOL in Coquimbo from July 1 to 7 for the Solar Eclipse that occurs on July 2. Activity will be on the HF bands. QSL via CA2MEM.
FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY, DA. Special event station DL0SOP will be QRV during July to support the annual Sea of Peace award. QSL via bureau.
SPAIN, EA. Members of the Asociacion de Radioaficionados de Padron are QRV with special event call AO50MOON during July to commemorate the first manned landing on the Moon. QSL via EA1RCI.
REPUBLIC OF KOREA, HL. Special event station HL18FINA will be QRV from July 1 to August 18 to celebrate the Federation Internationale de Natation's 18th World Championships and World Masters Championships. QSL via HL4CCM.
SVALBARD, JW. Peter, LA7QIA will be QRV as JW7QIA from Spitsbergen, IOTA EU-026, from June 29 to July 6. Activity will be on 6 meters from Grid Square JQ68. QSL to home call.
AUSTRIA, OE. Special event stations OE2XXM and OE5XXM will be QRV during July to celebrate the 35th international Ham Radio meeting in Gosau. Activity will be mostly on 80 and 40 meters using SSB, as well as 2 meters and 70 centimeters. QSL via bureau.
CRETE, SV9. Paul, SA6PIS will be QRV as SV9/SA6PIS/p from Chania from June 30 to July 7. Activity will be holiday style on 40, 20, 15 and 10 meters using SSB. QSL to home call.
TUVALU, T2. Tony, 3D2AG and John, KK7L are QRV as T2AR and T2R, respectively, until July 5. Activity is on 160 to 10 meters, including 6 and 2 meters, using CW, SSB, RTTY, JT65 and FT8. QSL T2AR direct via 3D2AG and T2R direct via N7SMI.
UKRAINE, UR. Special event station EM2019ARDF is QRV until July 4 to mark the 3rd IARU World Youth ARDF Championship being held here.
QSL via bureau.
SOUTH SUDAN, Z8. Diya, YI1DZ is QRV as Z81D from Juba until October 10. Activity is in his spare time on 80 to 10 meters using SSB and FT8. QSL via OM3JW.
GIBRALTAR, ZB. Members of the Gibraltar Amateur Radio Society will be QRV as ZB2IG19 from July 5 to 31 for the XVIII NatWest International Island Games. QSL via bureau.
THIS WEEKEND ON THE RADIO
The RAC Canada Day Contest, QRP 20-Meter CW Fox Hunt, NCCC RTTY Sprint, NCCC CW Sprint, Feld Hell Sprint, Battle of Carabobo International Phone Contest, UFT QRP Contest,
10-10 International Spirit of 76 QSO Party and IQRP Quarterly Marathon are on tap for this weekend.
The RSGB 80-Meter Club CW Championship is scheduled for July 1.
The Fireflies QRP 72 Sprint and ARS Spartan CW Sprint are scheduled for July 2.
The CWops Mini-CWT Test and Phone Fray are scheduled for July 3.
The Canadian National Parks on the Air, CNPOTA, operating event runs for the entire year of 2019, with special stations active from Canada's parks and historic sites.
Please see June QST, page 86, July QST, page 85, and the ARRL and WA7BNM contest web sites for details

Νέα από το πρόγραμμα N1MM για το FT8

There is a new FT4/FT8 contest that has been announced by WWROF - World Wide Digi DX Contest. The contest definition for this contest will be in tomorrow's build along with a custom multiplier window that displays Grid *Fields*. Grid Fields are the first two digits of grid squares. These are the mults for this contest. The new multiplier window is shown below.
N1MM Logger+ (aka N1MM+) is free contesting software that supports virtually all amateur radio contests. If a contest is not supported now, it can usually be added using the Logger's "user-defined contest" feature. N1MM+ is not a general-purpose logger; there is no support for chasing awards like DXCC and WAS, and there are no QSL management features. For those functions, you should be using a general logging program. You can export contest logs from N1MM+ in ADIF format and import them into almost any general logging program for tracking awards and generating QSLs.

Κατέβασε το πρόγραμμα από εδώ:
https://n1mmwp.hamdocs.com/

Το VP2V/K6TOP και το VP2VGG Tortola Island British Virgin Islands τρέχει από 5 έως και 13 Ιουλίου 2019


VP2V/K6TOP will be active again from Tortola Island, British Virgin Islands, IOTA NA - 023,
5 - 13 July 2019.
He will operate on 40, 30, 20, 17, 15, 10m.
Recent DX Spots VP2V/K6TOPRecent DX Spots VP2VGG
QSL via NR6M, LOTW.
Previous activity:
Kevin, K6TOP will be active again from Tortola Island , British Virgin Islands, 23 May - 1 June 2018 as VP2V/K6TOP.
He will operate on 40, 30, 20, 17m CW.
QSL via NR6M direct, LOTW.
Ads for direct QSL:
Rex A Turvin, 18040 W. Banning ST., Casa Grande, AZ, 85193, USA.

Tortola Island. British Virgin Islands. Information.

Tortola is largest island of the British Virgin Islands.
Motto- Be Vigilant.
Capital- Road Town.
Official language- English.
Currency- United States dollar USD.
Time- UTC-4.
International Phone code- + 1-284.
Internet domain- .vg
British Virgin Islands comprise about 60 islands.
Tortola island is 20km long and 5km wide.
Climate- tropical.
British Virgin islands is divided into 9 districts.

VP2V/K6TOP Tortola Island British Virgin Islands. Information for Radio Amateurs.

DXCC country- British Virgin Islands VP2V.
WAC continent- North America.
WAZ zone- 8.
ITU zone- 11.
QTH locator- FK78.
Amateur Radio organization- British Virgin Islands Radio League BVIRL, member of International Amateur Radio Union IARU.
Vice President: Arthur Swain, VP2VA

Σάββατο 6 Ιουλίου 2019

TURKEY VHF-UHF CONTEST 6 – 7 JULY 2019


06.07.2019– 07.07.2019
15:00 UTC – 15:00 UTC

Objective

The purpose of this domestic contest is to improve local communication capabilities and practices in VHF & UHF bands and also allows nearby neigboring countries hams to participate.The contest bands and modes are : UHF 70cms & VHF 2 mts, FM,SSB and CW.

Date and Time

Starts at UTC 15:00 on 06 July  2019, lasts 24 hours and ends 07 July 2019 Sunday at UTC 15:00.

Participation

All licensed radio amateurs both from Turkey and from foreign countries. Participants are expected to act according to homeland's amateur radio regulations.

Band

VHF ( 50-52 MHz) VHF (144-146 MHz ) ve UHF ( 430-440 MHz ).

Mode

SSB,CW,FM IARU Region 1 band plan

Categories

1Single operator,single band,single mode SSB (6m,2m ,70cm)
2Single operator,multi bands,multi modes SSB,CW,FM (6m,2m,70cm)
  1. Multi operators,multiband,multi modes

Exchange

RS or RST (59 or 599), for every band and mode a sequence number starting from 001 and WWQTH locator (6 characters) will be exchanged (e.g. 59 123 KN90UX).

Score Calculation

The score calculation is based on geographical distance. The basis of calculation is as below as per IARU Registration;
  • 50 -52 MHz = 1 Point/km (1point per km)
  • 144-146 MHz = 1 point/km (1 point per km)
  • 430-440 MHz = 2 points/km (2 points per km)
The final score is sum of all points gained per band and per mode.

Conditions and Logging

  1. QSOs made through repeaters and echolink are not accepted.
  2. The foreign stations who participate in single operator category & who would like to send their logs, should have a
       minimum of 20 TA QSOs in their 6m records.  Multi op. 30 TA qso Require.
       minimum of 5  TA QSOs in their records. 2M and 70 cm , Multi op. 8 QSO Require
       records.
1If possible, logs should be prepared in EDI Format. The below log form may also be used.
  1. In each band and mode, there is a separate scoring system. Every QSO made In each band and mode counts as 1 point per km in 6m, 2m and counts as 2 points per km in 70cm.

Example 1

Participant YM7KA who is located at KN90UX, made 2 QSOs in 6m or 2m with YM7KO (located at KN80XP) and with YM6KA (located at KN81DG)
  • The distance between KN90UX and KN80XP is = 152 kms
  • The distance between KN90UX and KN81DG is = 289 kms
  • (1 x km) 1 x 441 = 441 points

Example 2

Participant YM7KA who is located at KN90UX, made 2 QSOs in 70cm  with YM7KO (located at KN80XP) and with YM6KA (located at KN81DG)
  • The distance between KN90UX and KN80XP is = 152 kms
  • The distance between KN90UX and KN81DG is = 289 kms
  • (1 x km) 2 x 441 = 882 points
The program which calculates the distance between the locators is available in the internet.
The participants can operate with their individual callsigns or with their club station callsigns. The club stations with multi operators can operate with individual callsigns or club callsigns. The individual operator member callsigns should be marked on the certificates of the club stations who participate with multi operators. The participants have to note the LOCATOR information on the logs for each QSO. If the stations are operating in the field (away from their QTH), they should specify that they are portable. In club station participation with multi operators, the individual callsigns of the participant members should be noted down on the log additional information part when sending the logs with e-mail.
During the QSO the following information must be exchanged and noted by both stations : UTC, Callsign, RST send/receive, Locator info, QSO sequence number. There is no exception to this condition. The sequence number is given regardless of the contacted station being local or foreign. The sequence numbers are given by regular order in a row, like 001,002, 003,004....
For the QSOs made by foreign stations, the sequence numbers given by them will be noted if it is given by the participating foreign station. The TA participants have to give regular sequence numbers although if the foreign station does not give a sequence number.
There may be other contests in the same day in other countries. For each band and mode, there will be a separate sequence number given. Please do not mix your logs. To prevent confusion, we suggest that you keep separate log pages for each band and mode. In total the participants can operate in 5 different categories
(in 6m SSB-CW-FM, 2 bands SSB-CW-FM  - 70c SSB-CW-FM in 3 Band-3 Modes --)
The logs can be sent latest by 31st of July 2019
Each participants log should be sent separately
E-Mail must have call signe of mail sender ,,as TA7…EDI veya TA7..xsl .
You can send your logs in EDI format (Electronic Data Interchange ) to tacontest@gmail.com by filling the below LOG FORM.
Can use N1MM Contest Software. TA VHF UHF Contest for N1MM Contest Software udc files.
Log names should include the callsigns. For e.g. : TA7...EDI or TA7...xls
Please click to download the log form TA_VHF_UHF_CONTEST_LOGFORM
TA VHF-UHF Contest Manager
TA1D – Kadri Mehmet Basak