North Carolina QSO Party 2024

This year for the North Carolina QSO Party I had the opportunity to operate the Morse code (CW) position at the Raleigh Amateur Radio Society’s (RARS) N4RAL bonus station. As one of the sponsors of the contest, RARS was asked to operate as a bonus station (more points for stations who contact us) and submit a check log for the contest. N4RAL log window from N1MM. RARS president Fin Gold NC4FG hosted the station at his QTH. There was plenty of room to accomodate a two-operator phone station and a single operator CW station. Additionally, there was space for people to congrate, snack, and chat. Sandwiches were provided for lunch and the snacks provided a nice break from the radio. It was a lively place midafternoon. ...

March 2, 2024 · 6 min · 1237 words · Brantley West

North Carolina QSO Party 2023

This year’s North Carolina QSO Party was very fun. I operated from my QTH for the duration of the contest, breaking for a 30 minute lunch and for the occasional stretch break. The propagation was better than last year, going by the numbers, Again this year, I used my Icom IC-7300 running 100W to an MFJ-986 tuner connected to ladder line and a center-fed Zepp dipole antenna. All performed well. Two days prior to contest, during good weather, I took down the dipole for inspection. I checked continuity between the feed point and each element and replaced aging zipties that were growing brittle. Maybe next year I’ll swage the ends and do away with zipties altogether. ...

February 26, 2023 · 4 min · 759 words · Brantley West

North Carolina QSO Party 2022

This year’s North Carolina QSO Party was a blast. I like this contest a lot because I’m “the DX”, it’s only 10 hours, and I don’t feel pressured to use mind-numbing CW speeds (I ran at 23 WPM). My goal was to operate 100% CW and make more QSOs than last year. Both were achieved, despite taking a 45 minute lunch and a 3 hour family commitment during the 10 hour contest period. ...

February 28, 2022 · 3 min · 553 words · Brantley West