>From the looks of your call - you are a new ham.  QRP contesting is always 
>going to be challenging because of the at least 13.5 dB disadvantage in signal 
>strength (everything else being equal).  I assume you want to stay with QRP 
>power at 5 watts.  Here are the approaches I recommend.

(1) make sure you are getting al the signal out from your antenna system - 
replace lossy feedlines with low loss feedlines.  One can easily find better 
feedlines on the internet - compare loss values per 100 ft in dB.  I have a 
blog post 
(http://ny4g.blogspot.com/2013/05/where-does-all-that-rf-go-anyway-by-w7ci.html)
 where I regurgitated what W7CI said about RF highlighting the need for low 
loss feedlines.

(2) If you are using wire antenna - select a design which minimizes the work 
the internal tuner has to work.  

(3) Pick your battles.  QRP contesting is different from busting a DX pileup.  
QRP contesting is the domain of CW.  You will do best as a contester in this 
mode.  During contests there are going to be signals all over the band and Ops 
are not going to discriminate against you too much if you are in S&P mode in 
CW.  Do not be too close to a louder station calling the same station as the 
stronger station will drown you out.  Separate yourself enough - yet still in 
his passband so he can hear you.   There can be a small pileup if a station 
calling CQ is a rare one is in international DX contests.  It once took me an 
hour to call New Zealand (ZL) during the IARU HF Championship - but I needed ZL 
for DXCC QRP - so I hung in there.  Good luck in SSB - this is the domain of 
amps and gain antenna systems.  You can improve your chances with mic 
compression plus gain antennas.

(4) Get a gain antenna.  Just because you are limited to 5 watts at the 
transmitter does not mean you cannot get gain at your antenna - some examples - 
a vertical near salt water along the coast, a hex beam gets you 6 dB (that is 
4X power multiplier), a tribander or other higher gain antenna system may give 
you 9dB (8X power) although beams are limited to 20MHz or higher for something 
affordable.  I built a hex beam from scratch for about $300.

(4) Don't use /QRP - it takes more time to send, identifies you as QRP, it 
takes more time to copy on the other end.  Remember, the other station is also 
trying to maximize his QSO count.

(4) Practice, practice, practice, NAQCC and QRP-ARCI have monthly contests.  
QRP usually has power multipliers which is a recognition of the power 
disadvantage.  ARRL Field Day gives you a 2 points per QSO for CW, and Digital 
and a power multiplier of 5.  

(5) QRO stations are going to get more points than you.  Your objective is to 
do as well as you can in the QRP category.

Patience, patience, patience.  Nothing makes you a better radio op than 
learning to make the best use of the meager 5-10 watts of power.  I have a 
friend who has a sign "Life is too short for QRP" but by the same token I can 
brag to him that I have DXCC-QRP and WAS-QRP which is a feat much more 
rewarding than getting DXCC and WAS the easy way.

Enjoy the hobby

Ariel NY4G



Sent from my iPad

On Jul 2, 2013, at 7:45 AM, "Aaron Melton" <aa...@aaronmelton.com> wrote:

> [Cross-posting between KX3 Yahoo Group & Elecraft mailing list.]
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> I'm sure at least a few of you read this email to see if this was a joke... :D
> 
> I originally purchased a KX3 for portable ops, SOTA, etc. and it's been an 
> awesome rig in that regard. However, I'd like to participate in a few DX 
> contests from time to time and this is currently my only HF rig.  I know that 
> operating QRP means I'm getting clobbered more often than not by higher power 
> stations, but is like to know if anyone else has any tricks they'd like to 
> share?
> 
> If you operate QRP (5 watts) during normal contests, what/how do you do?
> 
> I have experimented with the mic gain and its currently set to 30 (which 
> seems to provide the most power before detrimentally distorting my voice). I 
> haven't touched this dial since week one. 
> 
> I've alternated adjusting the voice compression at times, but haven't had 
> much opportunity to get feedback from another station on how well (or not) it 
> might improve cutting through the noise. 
> 
> I've been told that taking some of the lows out of my voice (EQ?) might help 
> as well?
> 
> Finally, I've started appending "stroke QRP" to the end of my call when 
> contacting other stations. It doesn't make it more likely that I'll be heard, 
> but if heard I find I usually receive preferential treatment. 
> 
> Have you any radio settings or techniques that would help a new(er) KX3 owner 
> and wannabe contester?
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> Aaron
> de KK4LOV
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