Jiri

Thank you very much for your comments! As Gary said, I view them as positive
critique. I did work one 40 meter segment and I am not a contest operator,
but, now, thanks to this outing have it in my blood! It may have been me at
the wheel, confused by louder stateside stations and NEVER working 'split'
since I was not practiced at doing it. I did have a few runs which were the
thrill of my life! None of us were thoroughly practiced at all the features
of N1MM and SDR-1000 interoperability, tho we did get better as the contest
went on.

I hope to do this type of contest again, in this way, if a team will have
me. This time with CW.

What I saw from this outing is that we did pretty good as a 'pick up' team.
We accomplished the objective of really testing the SDR-1000 as a contest
machine. Found ourselves lacking more than the radio hardware, software, and
logger. Still faring pretty well in the standings, and proving it can be
done.

I started this suggestion of a DXpedition as a joke, but when Gary and Larry
latched on to it, I became more serious. I'm glad I did since it was a lot
of fun, and I got to see the spirit of ham radio operators working as a team
in the best of spirit, with Gary - W5ZL, Terry - AB5K, Larry - WO0Z, and our
host Bob - V31ZL. Both on and off the air, the whole week, the comraderie of
the group(Including my Granddaughter) was thrilling! I can see the human
side of why we do it, and why ham radio is such a great hobby PEOPLE
COMMUNICATING! 

I consider myself a pretty good visionary. Mostly what I saw from this
wonderful experience was, that Software is Flexi (ble). N1MM (and probably
other contest logging software) is a fantastic program. N1MM is customizable
right down to contest level. Since the SDR software is customizable, and
N1MM software can control it, I expect, and will work at, a SDR-1000 radio
package which can be customized down to contest level. Think about it a bit,
that WILL BE AN AWESOME combination. A Software Defined Contest machine. The
SHF guys already recognize it! Eric and Flex are working to making that
possible, by separating the radio from the GUI and letting N1MM and others
create the GUI and control the radio.

Sincerely
Eric - AA4SW - V31SR
(sorry we missed the contact opportunity! Hopefully we will not miss any
calls in the future contests!) 



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jiri Sanda
Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2005 2:44 PM
Cc: Flexradio@flex-radio.biz
Subject: Re: [Flexradio] Scoring Details V31MD SDR CQWW SSB

Hello all,

One comment to V31MD operation.
I ran 40m single band with my 2x5Y full size Yagi and I have to say you 
were probably the TOUGHEST multiplier to achieve not because you were weak 
or inaudible but because of the way you run - ingnored there is 1000 
stations in Eu you could easily work and who want to work you. The globe 
is not only USA !
You were not loud in Eu but reasonably audible - the problem was you were 
NOT at ALL so far as I have observed (at least 15 times) listened on your 
own frequency or CQ "upstairs" and listen "downstairs". I came to you at 
least 5 times before I made it and no avail. There was always a couple of 
Eu stations calling but you did not care at all !. So once you were 
listening a bit bellow 7200 my chance came I made it through the USA pile 
up at first call and response was Oh! you 
are loud here- I told you a lot of EUs is calling you on your FQ but the 
op ignored the fact at all and strugled with some WA4 upstairs. I have 
talked with OK5Ws and he said the same it was the toughest mult to reach
they operated like I....

Of course 40m is a ZOO.....
Please take this as a positive remarque - no ofense !

73 !

Jiri
OK1RI





On Wed, 9 Nov 2005, Gary Schmidt W5ZL wrote:

> By now you may have tired of hearing about the V31 thing, and I couldn't
> blame you. But we just posted our scores and summaries to the 3830 contest
> site which is THE website where everybody that's anybody posts their
claimed
> scores, pounds their chests, makes excuses for their poor performance, or
> all of the above. Well, we SDR contesters aren't any different. We've got
> our excuses, too, as you'll read below (if you haven't already hit
DELETE).
>
>
>
> Here's the text of what we just posted to the contesting world. Note that
we
> are currently sitting somewhere around 13th in the world (non-US), but of
> course, that's subject to some slippage as more stations report.
>
>
>
> Gary W5ZL
>
>
>
>                    CQ Worldwide DX Contest, SSB
>
>
>
> Call: V31MD
>
> Operator(s): AA4SW (V31SR), WO0Z (V31LL), AB5K (V31TG), W5ZL (V31ZL),
V31MD
>
> Station: V31MD
>
>
>
> Class: M/2
>
> QTH: Placencia, Belize
>
> Operating Time (hrs): 48
>
>
>
> Summary:
>
> Band  QSOs  Zones  Countries
>
> ------------------------------
>
>  160:  188     7       14
>
>   80:  343    13       36
>
>   40:  819    26       69
>
>   20: 1115    24       75
>
>   15: 1134    25       77
>
>   10:   55     6       18
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Total: 3654   101      289  Total Score = 3,085,290
>
>
>
> Club: Central Texas DX and Contest Club
>
>
>
> Comments:
>
>
>
> Team SDR, comprised of Eric AA4SW (V31SR), Larry WO0Z (V31LL), Terry AB5K
> (V31TG) and Gary W5ZL (V31ZL) rented Bob V31MD's Belizean shack for CQWW
SSB
> and descended on Placencia with a complement of three SDR-1000s - a pair
and
> a spare - and the requisite computer gear to mount the first ever
> DXpedition/contest operation using exclusively software defined radios.
>
>
>
> Technical complexity for our setup was relatively high, but for the most
> part we were able to dispatch technical problems quickly as they arose -
> with one key exception. We realized in the moments leading up to the
> starting gun that we didn't have what we needed to interface either SDR to
> Bob's Ameritron 600 amplifier. Had we been near, say, a Radio Shack, no
> problemo. Working as we were with fairly modest antennas, running 100
watts
> instead of 600 was a serious handicap on the low bands, and kept us from
> maintaining nighttime runs as we had hoped to do.
>
>
>
> Propagation from Belize was a little surprising. 20 meters seemed to
largely
> die with the sunset (around 6 pm local), and 15 didn't tend to wake up
until
> nearly noon. 10 was virtually non-existent until Sunday when we had a
pretty
> good pipeline to South America (lots of LUs) and a handful of other
> Caribbean stations, but NIL to the US or EU (or anywhere else, for that
> matter). 40 was decent, but again we had a lot of trouble holding a run
> frequency in the DX band with 100 watts and a vertical, and our runs were
> modest aside from a spectacular early Sunday morning opening to JA. 160
was
> excellent both nights to the States and by the second night it was hard to
> find anyone we hadn't worked. 80 was just plain tough sledding.
>
>
>
> The receiver in the SDR lived up to its press clippings in the very
crowded
> bands of this contest. The panadapter display, felt by some before the
> contest to be "cool, but largely useless in a contest we should be running
> in" became downright invaluable in spotting pin holes that we could drop
> into to try to establish a run frequency, and to spot possible 40 meter
> split frequencies. N1MM integrated with the SDR's application software
> flawlessly and proved a huge hit with the team. Our biggest problem was
> being heard.
>
>
>
> Rigs: Two FlexRadio Systems 100-watt SDR-1000s, networked wirelessly using
> N1MM logging software and N8VB virtual com port software. Station one was
a
> 3 GHz Pentium 4 desktop machine (WinXP) and a Delta 44 sound card plus a
> Heil Pro Set Quiet phone. Station two was a 1.8 GHz P4 Dell Inspiron 700M
> notebook computer (also WinXP) with an outboard Extigy USB sound card and
a
> Pro Set Plus headset.
>
>
>
> Antennas: Two element multi-band quad at 35', HF2V for 80/40 located in a
> saltwater lagoon about 70' from the shack, an HF9V vertical for 80-6 just
> outside the shack, and a top-loaded 160 meter vertical erected nearby just
> prior to the contest.
>
>
>
> We had a GREAT time!
>
>
>
>
>
>

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