
The
picture above from the NM QRP group says it all about FYBO! Dr. Megacycle, KK6MC/5, is shown operating
near Albuquerque for FYBO2006.
Here they are at long last. The results of the 2007 FYBO Winter Field Day! There were 50 entries submitted this year compared to 31 last year. This does not reflect the true number of participants. There are many more from looking at the logs, who did not send their entries. A real Who’s Who of the QRP world. If this doesn’t get the excitement started, I don’t know what will!! The scores were much closer than they were last year! See if you can top them this year. Be sure to read about the autosubmittal page for FYBO2008 in an effort to get the scores reported as they should be.
Scores that are different from what you submitted were adjusted upward when I found missed multipliers or arithmetical errors while looking through the logs and your comments. Oddly enough, almost all the errors were made on the low side. Batteries counting for alternative power was the most frequent omission.
Check
out the links where they are listed in the soapbox. There are some really well done and interesting web pages
describing everyone’s activities. Some
have links to others. Follow those as
well and you’ll get a good picture of the fun everyone had.
If
you find errors, please let me know and I will get them corrected. I will be making another pass through my
records to verify that I have everyone included.
|
Call |
|
Group |
|
Category |
Category1 |
Score |
|
Operators |
|
KK6MC/5 |
|
NM QRP |
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
264592 |
|
KK6MC, KD5SHR, W9YA |
|
K8UO |
|
Utica Shelby Emergency Communications Association (USECA) |
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
262032 |
|
N8ZI, WB8E, K8RDJ, KC8ZIR, KW8J, KD8ENP, AA8GK, AA8OZ,WB8SJD,
W8SOX, KD8CXY, KZ8N, N8ZA |
|
N8H |
|
|
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
70480 |
|
AB8DF, KA5S, N8XX |
|
WW7LW |
|
South
Wahkiakum Contest Club |
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
49008 |
|
KR7W, AC7QN, K7MO, KE7DGQ, N7DOE |
|
KQ5RP |
|
Austin (TX) QRP Club |
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
28432 |
|
K5BOT, N5ESE, W5ESE |
|
W5MSQ |
|
Houston
QRP Club |
|
Multi-Multi |
Field |
19936 |
|
W5HNS, W5EET, W5ACM, W5RH, WD5BDX, W2CVZ, AD5SS, W5RCP, KB5DWJ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
N1QS |
|
Northern
Vermont QRP Society |
|
Multi-Single |
Field |
190016 |
|
AA1MY, N1BQ, VE2EQL, VE2SZN, W1SLR |
|
VE3QRP |
|
|
|
Multi-Single |
Field |
41216 |
|
VE3JC, VE3GAM |
|
VE3QDR |
|
Durham Region QRP Club |
|
Multi-Single |
Field |
9520 |
|
VE3KQN, VE3REP, VE3GND |
|
K0TCP |
|
|
|
Multi-Single |
Field |
384 |
|
K0TCP, W0UFO |
|
RU9QRP/3 |
|
RU-QRP Club "The Russian Bears" |
|
Multi-Single |
Field |
144 |
|
RV3GM, UA3LMR/3, RW3XS, RV3DSA |
|
WQ0RP |
|
Minnesota QRP |
|
Multi-Single |
Home |
11496 |
|
K0TCP, N5WVR, NO0E, W0UFO |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WA5BDU |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
26880 |
|
WA5BDU |
|
W0NTA |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
22084 |
|
W0NTA |
|
WA8REI |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
19584 |
|
WA8REI |
|
W0IS |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
16912 |
|
W0IS |
|
WB3AAL |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
15360 |
|
WB3AAL |
|
W2AGN |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
14840 |
|
W2AGN |
|
KI0G |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
12304 |
|
KI0G |
|
VE3SIE/PM |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
12016 |
|
VE3SIE |
|
VE3WMB/PM |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
10960 |
|
VE3WMB |
|
NK8Q |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
10752 |
|
NK8Q |
|
N0EVH/PM |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
10432 |
|
N0EVH |
|
K4JSI |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
5400 |
|
K4JSI |
|
WD7Y |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
4200 |
|
WD7Y |
|
W0RW |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
3168 |
|
W0RW |
|
W0ANM |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
1728 |
|
W0ANM |
|
AF9J |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
1200 |
|
AF9J |
|
NF8M |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
192 |
|
NF8M |
|
W4NJK |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
25 |
|
W4NJK |
|
VA3RKM |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
24 |
|
VA3RKM |
|
AD8J |
|
|
|
Single |
Field |
16 |
|
AD8J |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
K7TQ |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
24430 |
|
K7TQ |
|
NG7Z |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
10304 |
|
NG7Z |
|
W1PID |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
10182 |
|
W1PID |
|
W3OSS |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
10144 |
|
W3OSS |
|
K8NWD |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
1218 |
|
K8NWD |
|
K2OH |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
960 |
|
K2OH |
|
W8IDM |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
192 |
|
W8IDM |
|
N8RN |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
128 |
|
N8RN |
|
KF4UCC |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
98 |
|
KF4UCC |
|
VE3NFK |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
60 |
|
VE3NFK |
|
K8KFJ |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
56 |
|
K8KFJ |
|
K9EW |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
25 |
|
K9EW |
|
W1OH |
|
|
|
Single |
Home |
12 |
|
W1OH |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JR0BAQ |
|
|
|
Single |
Home/DX |
12 |
|
JR0BAQ |
|
RW3AI |
|
RUQRP |
|
Single |
Home/DX |
3 |
|
RW3AI |
|
RU3RM |
|
RUQRP |
|
Single |
Home/DX |
3 |
|
RU3RM |
|
RV3ADL |
|
RUQRP |
|
Single |
Home/DX |
1 |
|
RV3ADL |

This is what many of the field operations faced …
Temperature started at 27
degrees and never got above freezing. Would not have been too bad except for 20
mph wind with 30mph gusts from the NW. Band seemed pretty good. I just couldn't
last late enough to give 40M a try. As you may note, I lasted about 1 hour,
went inside to warm up, and tried again. Band was quiet, so ate lunch (hot
soup) and went back for one more try.
All contacts on 20M using
"Kitchensink" (ATS-3A with accessories) and EFHW for 40M (66'). See the "kitchensink" rig at
http://w2agn.net/kitchensink.html
Operator John W2AGN

It was a bright and sunny day at North Pole, Colorado,
but the temperature was 33F
and winds were gusting to 40 MPH. The ground was snow covered, big drifts,
ground blizzards, blowing snow and
chill factor way down...Even
with regular sunglasses i was getting snow blinded. Very hard to see the KX1
display even at step 6.
The conditions not as good as last year. i was on for 2.5 hours from 1630z to 1900z.
i hand hold the Elecraft KX1 and use a 10 foot whip stuck in my rear
pocket which runs up through a loop on my vest. i also had a 14 foot drag wire
and was running 3W powered from Sony LiIon cells. On 40 Meters i use a 10 foot
whip with a top hat at 7 feet and a 30 foot drag
wire.
i will have special NPCO w0rw/Pedestrian Mobile QSL card
available with the NPCO post mark but they won't be mailed out until May
because the NPCO Post Office won't be open until then. No SASE's required. If you want a North Pole QSL send me one of
yours first.
i also have a .jpg picture of me at the Pole today, send email
request for picture. i had my long johns and Carl Sagan turtle neck shirt
on. You can see a 360 degree summer
time picture of the 'Pole' at http://www.santas-colo.com/North.html.
i hope you had a great time outside today too.
Paul
Colorado
Springs, CO 80934 ___________________________
VE3QRP Report FYBO 2007
Multi-single field station: 2 operators VE3JC and VE3GAM
Rig: K2 @ 5W
Ant: 40M/20M fanned dipoles
Location: Springbank Park, London, ON
Power: Battery
Temperature: 12 F
Cold out there this year, wind made it seem even colder. As the afternoon turned into evening, the temperature kept dropping. Pleasant to work NQ7RP on 15M at about 1819Z, not so pleasant when we tried to work them on 20M and they said we had already worked them. Not so guys! Not on 20M anyway. Not sure but rules seem to allow working NQ7RP on both bands, would have had another 10000 points out of that contact.
Al VE3GAM
Note: You can work NQ7RP on multiple bands for additional points. Score adjusted. –k5js
We
operated from Metro Beach Park, NE of Detroit on Lake St. Clair running 5W from
external batteries in 8-10 degree F temperatures with wind chills
aproaching -15 F. The wind was gusting to 30+ MPH at times and kept blowing
over our ground level antennas, and the dipoles were whipping around in the
trees. Blowing snow was causing intermittent white out conditions and we were
under a wind chill advisory from the National Weather Service. People stopped
by with homemade chili, coffee, doughnuts, and we cooked hot dogs on a gas
grill, for nourishment.
WIND CHILL ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 12 PM EST SUNDAY...
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN DETROIT/PONTIAC HAS ISSUED
A WIND CHILL ADVISORY WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 12 PM EST SUNDAY.
WIND CHILL READINGS WILL REACH DANGEROUS LEVELS...NEAR 20
BELOW ZERO...TONIGHT AS TEMPERATURES FALL TO ZERO OR LESS AND WINDS REMAIN IN
THE 15 TO 30 MPH RANGE. THESE READINGS WILL IMPROVE BY MIDDAY SUNDAY AS
TEMPERATURES EDGE UP THROUGH THE SINGLE DIGITS. EVEN SO...EXPECT READINGS TO
REMAIN BELOW ZERO.
A WIND CHILL ADVISORY MEANS THAT VERY COLD AIR AND STRONG
WINDS WILL COMBINE TO GENERATE LOW WIND CHILLS. THIS WILL RESULT IN FROST BITE
AND LEAD TO HYPOTHERMIA IF PRECAUTIONS ARE NOT TAKEN. IF YOU MUST VENTURE
OUTDOORS... MAKE SURE YOU WEAR A HAT AND GLOVES.
All
in all we enjoyed ourselves and are already looking forward to the 2008 FYBO.
Thanks guys for putting on such a great contest and see everyone on the bands.
73
Gud DX N8ZI Tom
I thought
I had NQ7RP but the band changed as I was giving him my report. Bummer.
Lots of
fun and I'll do it again from the warmth of my shack. Thanks for putting the
contest
together. I'll be looking for you guys
in the Michigan QRP Club contests.
Tim
KQ5RP
The Austin QRP Club FYBO
team (KQ5RP) gathered at McKinney Falls
State Park, southeast of
Austin, for the contest. The park opened
at 8 am, so the contest had
been underway a little while when we got a station going. The park has a lot of
mature trees which were great for supporting wire antennas. The team included
Ed Popp (K5BOT), Monty Northrup (N5ESE), and Scott McMullen (W5ESE). Rigs used
included Ed's Argonaut 509, Monty's K2, and Scott's Ten-Tec TKIT 1320 and Small
Wonder Labs SW+ (40m). Antennas included an 85' end fed wire, 20m doublet, and
a 40m dipole. We set a couple operating positions up on picnic tables along the
banks of Onion Creek. Band conditions seemed poor relative to last year, but
the weather was colder, so we benefited from a higher multiplier. It was fun
piddling around with a variety of rigs and antennas, and gabbing about QRP!
Thanks to the ScQRPions for
sponsoring the contest; we had fun!
73
Scott
W5ESE
N8RN
OPER. TIME: < 1 HR
RIG: K1 AT 5W
ALT. PWR: SOLAR MODULE ON
ROOF TO GEL CELL BATTERY.
ANT: INV. VEE IN TREES..24
FT. AT APEX
I CONSIDERED OPERATING OFF
MY PORCH TO GET THE MAX.
MULTIPLIER, BUT THE WIND
CHILL WAS BELOW ZERO. I'M NOT COMPLETELY CRAZY. INSTEAD I TURNED DOWN THE
THERMOSTAT AND COVERED THE HEAT VENT TO THE SHACK DOWN TO 62F. LATELY I HAVE
HAD MORE THAN MY FAIR SHARE
OF FAMILY HEALTH PROBLEMS TO
DEAL WITH, SO I DIDN'T HAVE MUCH SPARE TIME OR ENERGY FOR FYBO FD. BUT I WANT
TO THANK THE AZ SCORPIONS FOR PUTTING ON A FUN CONTEST.
72S TO ALL...DE N8RN..ROY
(OHIO).
WB3AAL
Operation
in the Field north of Bethel, PA on the Appalachian Trail about 1 mile north of
Rte 501.
Lowest Operating Temp was 17'F.
Rig: Elecraft
K1 @ 4 watts on 40m and 2 watts on 20 & 15m.Antenna: Portable
Vertical for 40, 30, 20 & 15
meters.


I
hiked in with Mark de NK8Q. We picked out our individual operating locations,
then we made a fire between us so we had a place to warm our toes. The weather
was in the teens with windy conditions. and about 6" of snow. Not bad for
a Polar Bear outing. I had a blast but
I wish there were more stations on 15 meters.
72 Ron de WB3AAL Polar Bear #1
VA3RKM
FT817, 5W, 25ft wire about 4
ft. off the ground. It was about 15F
with a strong wind off the
Ottawa River in the park, but sunny. It's hard to keep a pen writing at that
temperature! A few other stations heard me, but only in part. Thanks for the
fun!
Robert MacKenzie, Ottawa, ON Canada
WØNTA
Class:
Single operator
Power: 5W - Elecraft K2
Battery power only. 17AH Gel Cel
Antenna: 3 element SteppIR at 25 feet and an 80 meter off center fed dipole for
40/80 meters.
Location: Between Loveland and Estes Park, Colorado - my mountain property at
7000 feet elevation.
Weather: Clear and cold. 18F at beginning of contest and rose to around 35F in
the afternoon. I operated from my shack as the wind was unbearable at times.
Bands operated: 20 and 40 meters.
Time operating: 9.5 hours.
So much for relying
on NOAA for a weather forecast. According to NOAA, the low Friday night was to
be -4F and the high on Saturday was to be 10F. As it turned out, the
temperature at the start of the contest was a balmy 18F rising to about 35F
during the day. However, they did have it right on the wind as it was very
strong at times. And, erecting temporary antennas would have been difficult
with the very deep snow. So, I am glad I decided to operate from inside.
Conditions were fair. I made 114 Qs in 53 SPCs which is about the same as last year. I sent the temperature as 70 degrees throughout the contest.
Thanks for a great contest.
72, Dick, WNTA
WØIS
When I saw today's forecast
and realized that this was the weekend of FYBO, I decided to give it a try. Our
low temperature this morning was about -13.
When I got on the air at 3PM, they were saying -7 on the radio, which
also agreed with our thermometer. When I came inside for the last time at about
5:00, they were saying -6 on the radio and our thermometer hadn't moved, so my
report was probably pretty close.
I set up on our deck. I
didn't want to spend a great deal of time putting up antennas, so I decided that
20 meters would be the best single band to use. I used disposable steel wire to
make a dipole, hung the center point from
the house gutters, and let the elements drape over the edges of the
deck. After I got my coat on (over
several other layers), I put my FT-817
around my neck, and attached my paddles to my leg with velcro. The power
supply was an automotive jump-start
battery. When I got situated, I draped a blanket over myself.
I managed two operating
sessions of about 40 minutes each before I had to come in and warm up. I made
11 contacts on CW, and 2 contacts on SSB (both Minnesota QSO party contacts).
Nobody matched my reported
temperature of -7 F. (I wasn't quite sure how to send it, but I finally went
with MINUS 7 F, which I think got the idea across). One of the MN QSO party
contacts reported -4, but I suspect that was his outdoor temperature, not the
operator's temperature. The next lowest temperature reported was N1QS with 15
degrees. Quite a few stations in colder climates were reporting temperatures in
the 70's, so I suspect many ops weren't as dumb as me to be out sitting in the
cold.
My cold feet were what
motivated me to QRT and take a break inside. My hands stayed surprisingly warm. To operate the key, write things
down, and work the radio, I went with a
pair of cotton work gloves, which I kept under the blanket whenever possible.

Working a phone QSO (the
writing instrument was a pencil, which worked flawlessly at low temperatures)

My son helping out with the
logging. The radio isn't really visible
in the photo, since I kept it hanging around my neck, and under the blanket
whenever possible. The power supply is
sitting on the table, and the coax heading to my 20 meter dipole is just barely
visible behind me.
73 Richard W0IS
First one in a long time.
Western & mid-western stations were suffering from QSB. Joel KB5FCF hung in
there with me until I finally got all his info (thanks, Joel). Next year I will
have a supply of Immodium AD and a lot of toilet paper....but I'm gonna be out
in the field!!
Armed with my trusty
Elecraft KX-1, bits and pieces of a BuddiStick
vertical, two SLA battery
packs and a whole lot of ambition, I made plans to operate from atop
Larksville/Edwardsville mountain. There is a nifty little clear space near the
peak of the mountain just off the main road, where I have set up before.
Operations were truncated
and I split my operating time between
the KX-1 (using a 12V SLA
battery pack) on the home QTH 20M EDZ dipole and the bathroom! Life is like
that.
Lots of fun. Thanks to all
who endured.
73 Rich Arland W3OSS
K7TQ
Operated
from back yard for 3 hours, then headed indoors to finish off. Details
on
this year's event plus all the ones I've done since 1997 at
http://mysite.verizon.net/rbfoltz/fybos.htm
73 Randy K7TQ
Moscow, ID
RU9QRP/3
The Russian Bears
QTH: garden place, Zvyozdny
Gorodok, nr Moscow, WW KO95AV
TRCVR: FT-817ND, 5 watts
output
Power: 12 V 7 A/h battery
Antennas: ATAS-25, Inverted
Vee 40 & 80 m, Dipole 20 m.
Lowest temperature: 16F
(-9C)


For the first time in a
World history, RU-QRP Club Team "Russian Bears" took part in
FYBO-2007. Callsign - RU9QRP/3, QTH: Zvezdny Gorodok, near Moscow (WW - KO95AV)
at RV3DSA's garden place. Team: RV3GM, RW3XS, UA3LMR/3 and RV3DSA. Our friends
RX3ALL with RN3ANT has visited us. Temp was 16F and we are all "frozen our
b... off"!!! :^)
Only 3 clamed QSO with
another RU-QRP participants we made. Since I saw at some years results, there
are nothing any European QRPers in FYBO yet before. We are first!
We have a great fun to
operate in extreme condition. Hope, a
more European QRPers will take a part in FYBO next year.
72 from Chief of
"Russian Bears" Team
Oleg RV3GM
Russia. Febr. 5, 2007
K4JSI
Location – Maryland
Rig – Ten Tec Argo 556
Antenna – WA3WSJ VBWFPA Vertical
This was my first time in FYBO and I
thoroughly enjoyed it. Highlights
included working VE3WMB Pedestrian Mobile and K7TQ. It was pretty cold for the suburbs of Washington, DC. My wife was concerned when I came in the
house at about 1730 that I might be experiencing the onset of hypothermia. A bowl of her homemade soup soon set me
right!
73 Cal K4JSI
WA5BDU
See my photos at
http://pages.suddenlink.net/wa5bdu/FYBO_07.htm
FYBO is one of my very
favorites. It had been truly cold here
in Arkansas for the past several days leading up to FYBO, in keeping with the
theme.
My rig was the ATS-3 and an
end-fed half wave antenna, 66 feet long, used on both 40 and 20. I used both a conventional EFHW tuner and a
simple "no tune" ferrite transformer version.
My initial location was on
Petit Jean Mountain, about 30 miles from home.
I set up near the bluff of the mountain, which overlooks the Arkansas
River down below. Very nice and peaceful spot.
Around noon my wife called me via her cell phone and needed me at
home. I was able later on to set up
again on a patio table in my back yard and add to my QSO total.
Enjoyed working everyone;
see you next year.
Nick, WA5BDU
NF8M
Thanks for sponsoring a fun
event! I had hoped to make a few more qsos, but was limited in time in the
morning -- had other family obligations until later, then the temperature
dropped and the wind picked up (wind chill was 20 below) so it was unbearable
to be outside! (Leave it to Arizonians
to send us Northerners out into the cold!!)
Maybe some year soon the FYBO will coincide with our Boy Scout troop's
monthly campout and I can get the boys involved and show what they can do with
5 watts.
73
Frank NF8M
WA8REI
QTH: FREELAND
MICHIGAN
RIG: FT-817 TO 40 METER DIPOLE
WX:
brutal! 0-9 F, snowing and extremely windy. Wind chill
well below zero F.




73, 72,
Ken, WA8REI
JRØBAQ
: Amazing! QRP is alive! FB QRP DX.
FEB.03 2218
N1QS
439/JA/KOHEI/5W/45F
439/VT/SPENTS/5W/15F VT
FEB.03 2238
K7TQ
439/JA/KOHEI/5W/45F
439/ID/RANDY/5W/60F ID
--- END OF LOG SHEET(14MHz)
72.
Kohei JR0BAQ
NØEVH/PM (Pedestrian Mobile)
In
keeping with the spirit of FYBO I headed for the outdoors deciding that /PM
would be better than sitting out in the cold. The warmest temperature
would be about 1 PM so I planned to hike a sheltered trail at the local county
park and stay out of the wind. With KX1 running 4 watts to Hustler
mounted whip on my pack frame I hit the trail. Bands mixed so stayed on
20 meters hoping for some action and maybe a new state. Warmest
temperature on the hike was 18F which I happily reported. Only problem
was the low hanging limbs! Note to self, look for
a sheltered trail with more antenna clearance! Hope everyone
had a great time.
73
John N0EVH
VE3QDR
I awoke at 0700 on Saturday morning to a brisk 10
degrees F, scarfed down a good breakfast and pick up VE3REP at 0900.
We traveled up to Heber Downs Conservation area, east of Toronto where we
met up with VE3GND and the 3 of us hiked for about a half hour into the
park dragging all the equipment that we were going to need for
our "Winter FD" station on a toboggan. When we got to the
camping area we placed a tarp along one edge of the picnic shelter as a wind
break, put up a 120 foot dipole with 300 ohm ladder line into the
trees. Next we got the station put together, the solar panel in
place to augment the "cold beating" the gel cell was going to take
and a fire lit so we could retire to it when we got cold. We
were using a sierra at 4 to 5 watts output, a z11 tuner and the dipole. Our
first contact came at 1535z (1035 L) into Florida with N4BP. While REP and
GND made a few more contacts I put together my 3 foot diameter Mag Loop as I
wanted to compare it to the dipole. We managed to work about 3 1/2 hours before
we pulled the plug and headed home. During the time we were there we
managed 17 contacts into
- FL CO on 20m
- AR IL MD ME MO MI MA NH NJ ON OH WV on 40.
Our temperature range was between 23F and 25F. We didn't knock them dead but we did have a great time. We also had many visitors to the site who were quite interested in Amateur Radio so hopefully we did our part as "Ambassadors" to the hobby.
The mag loop performed quite well as it always does and when it was compared to the dipole, in some circumstances, it had the better signal. When the dipole sounded better it was just noticably detectable so I was pleased.
I have attached a few photos of our site for you to have a look at.


As a footnote to this outing, I'm the youngest of our Gladiators at 57. See ya down the log.
Jim - VE3KQN.
More pix from the NM QRP Group

Mike
KD5SHR

Bob W9YA

Guest
OP ACØW
Nowhere near last year's
effort, but conditions were down a bit, and
we had a smaller crew on
hand. Still a good contest and worked all
over the country on 40M.
Only 4 contacts on 15M as opposed to 37 last
year. Lots of activity and
that is good. I hope you continue this
contest up. You have Bruce's
nice photo on the web page. It is very
nice and really captures the
spirit of FYBO. - Duffey
N1QS
Well the Northern Vermont QRP Society website
is up and running at
<http://www.wulfden.org/NVQS/activities.shtml>
go to FYBO and click
on the '2007' link.
We had 77 QSOs with 46 SPC's.
Running Multi op - Single transmitter
----------------------------------------
80m 6 QSOs with 6 SPCs
40m 18 QSOs with 10 SPCs
20m 50 QSOs with 26 SPCs
15m 3 QSOs with 3 SPCs
----------------------------------------
we worked NQ7RP on 15m and 20m for 20K bonus
points
we had field, and alternative power 4x / 2x
the morning started out at 11F (6x) it rose
to 18F and dropped back
down to 15F and all the way almost to 0F by
late evening.
our tentative score is a little over 190,000
points
----------------------------------------
Many
people commented on our "booming signal' ... that was thanks to Seab (AA1MY) and his slingshot. We put up
two 176 foot doublets, up 40-50 feet,
and ladderline fed. The ends of each were a foot apart at their south ends. One went N-S the other
NE-SW. Each had a separate tuner to a
coax switch to slect which. they were incredibly sharp on 20 and 15. Often full scale signals on one antenna could
not be heard on the other. Transceiver
was an IC-703+ with the 250 Hz Icom
filter. Powered by a solar charged 75AH gelcel (hardly even dented its charge!)
We worked a JR0 (and he was QRP and running
FYBO also!), AL7FS, a lot of CAs and
WAs. We caught NQ7RP on two bands, N8H on two bands. It seemed like we had a private pipeline to NM,
we heard KK6MC banging in here on 15m
at the top of almost every hour. Seab
(AA1MY), John (VE2EQL) and Brian (N1BQ)
operated. While we didn't have a real lot
of Q's, our score reflected a lot of geography. It seemed like
every
other
QSO yielded a new SPC. the 46 SPCs represented 34 states, two provinces, ad one DXCC country (Japan).
We started off cold at 11F went up to 18F and back down to 6F. It was a fairly nice day otherwise. It snowed lightly most of the afternoon and the wind in the forecast never really materialized. Seab (AA1MY) and switched on and off at the key and John (VE2EQL) backed us up and a second set of ears. We ran my IC70-3 with a 250 Hz filter. We set up two 176 foot doublets about 40-50 feet above ground with a good take off angle from a good down slope to the West. They were ladder line fed to a pair of ZM-2 based tuners. They were N-S and NE-SW. On 20 meters they had such sharp lobes that many stations heard on one simply weren't there on the other. We did some great DX; we worked JR0BAQ in Niigata, Japan also running QRP, Jim Larsen AL7FS in AK and a lot of CA and WA. We also worked NM and AZ. We had 77 QSO's with 46 SPCs representing 34 states, 2 provinces and one DX country. We had about a half dozen busted contacts where they faded to nothing halfway through.
73 Brian N1BQ
WD7Y
Reno, NV
Rig: K2
Antenna: 85’ Random wire
Lowest temp: 25
FYBO 2007 was a flop for
me. After working the contest for five
hours with only 15 contacts to show for it, I called it quits. Thinking that there were very few stations
out there working the contest, I bunched up the equipment and took down the
antenna. Getting home I turned on the rig and heard a lot of activity. I was in shock. The only explanation I could think of was that there was a noise
source blocking received signals, or I had a bad connection somewhere in my
antenna system. To say the least I was disappointed, in not working some old
friendly calls. But you can be sure I
will try again next year.
Ed/WD7Y
VE3WMB/PM
Spent about 2 hours out in
10F, windy conditions (abt -4F windchill) operating pedestrian mobile with my
KX1 and a 14ft linear loaded wire suspended from a 13 foot fishing pole. I used
a 29 foot trailing
counterpoise wire. Much to
my surprise I managed to bag NQ7RP on 20m for 10k bonus points!
It was also great to work
two of my good Polar-Bear friends, Martin
VA3SIE who was also
operating pedestrian mobile with his KX1 on the other side of Ottawa, and
Polar-Bear-Ken WA8REI who was freezing his butt off on his front porch in MI.
Till next time ...
73 Michael
Hey Gang,
Stuck it out almost till the very end but tore down a bit early
because my help was going home and my choices were do it with help in say 10
minutes or by myself and take 45 minutes. So, off the air about 2300Z and all
loaded up by 2315 and headed home after a very nice day of radio and friends in
the park.
John and I got to the park just as it opened about 1420 GMT and
with a bit of help I had 20 meters on the air by 1505 GMT. I would call band conditions mixed. No band noise to speak of anywhere but
signals were not all that loud and somewhat far and few between.
John got his new half square for 40 put together and working
and now sooner did we get busy making a few contacts we had company from the
Glendale Police Department. They were
making their routine rounds of the city parks and stopped buy to say high and
make sure we were not "Al-Qaeda or otherwise being a problem. That visit
lasted about 15 minutes and them back to the air. We had visitors off an on
from the public just asking the usual questions of who we were and what we were
doing. The little kids were cute
because they were curious but there was nothing for them to do so they went off
hiking with their folks.
John's friend from work and fellow ham Israel PY2CI from Brazil
joined us for moral support and hung in there till the end.
The "usual suspects" Mikey W9UQB and Floyd NQ7X
showed up fairly early and hung in there till the end as well and a whole raft
of folks I knew by sight but didn't remember their names or calls came and went
thru out the day along with several folks who were "lurkers" to the
reflector or who had heard about us via other ham friends or just happened to
be in the park for a stroll.
Back to the bands. Hot
and cold conditions but when they were hot it would only last for a short run
of 3 or 4 stations and then silence again.
15 meters was open most of
the day but there were only a few souls who stuck out the silence in-between
contacts to work the other few and far between of us just going there for a few
unanswered calls.
10 Meters got checked about
once an hour for a few CQ's but it was DEAD, DOA.
Checked 80 meters off and on
and made a few calls but also NADA.
I owe an apology to VE3QRP (I think) who attempted to work me
on 20 meters and I didn't realize I was on 20 meters and had worked them B4 but
ON 15 meters so I screwed Up and I apologize for my logging error. You were
quite loud with some QSB when you called and I would have given you a fair
569QSB report. OOPS.
I never did hear the group from New Mexico but I did work the
VT bunch twice, John and I both worked the Hell Michigan group on 40 and 20
meters. One station in Alaska made it through the pile as well as 4 or 5 stations
from Canada.
The coldest report I recall was from Minnesota of MINUS 7 F!!
In fact the stations I worked from MN were colder than anyone else including
the AK station who was reporting 20F!! Interesting!!
Murphy came to visit early in the setup as my 34 AHR gell cell
was DEAD even though the charger light indicated a charged battery when I
removed it and put it in the truck.
Would not even power up the rig. DEAD. Gotta check out that charger as I
suspect a problem as it was the maintenance charger I used with my 75 AHR Gell
Cell which was DEAD on Field Day! I
think I may have a problem! Duuhhh!
All in all I made about 40 QSOs total on 20 and 15 meters and I
will find out from John how many he had on 40 but it was the best time overall
I have had at FYBO in about 5 years despite the low QSO count. Like most things we do, they are more fun
with friends both on and off the air.
For now, I'll say good night to all and I am looking forward to
seeing your comments on the reflector and in the Soap Box comments sent in with
the logs. I am ready to crash and 4:30
AM gets here early enough as Sunday is my start of the work week.
IF you took pictures, get them ready to send in as well as I
think John is working on a way to get them posted with your log submissions.
I can't wait until the next Radio in the Field event.
Best 72' 73' to all
Michael Baker K7DD
20 Meter Op for NQ7RP
The Arizona ScQRPions
See http://web.ncf.ca/fj620/contests/fybo2007/
I mounted a 300 ohm twinlead
DCTL loop for 40m and a 16ft quarter-wave teflon coated wire for 20m on a pair
of fishing poles which I attached to a PVC pipe frame and zipped into my
backpack. I dragged 14.5ft of RG-174
for a 20m counterpoise.
I used a KX1 powered by 8
lithium batteries which I held kept inside my fleece to extend their life. The KX1 was attached to a clip board with
rubber bands. I put the clipboard in a
shopping bag and just rested it on the snow if I had to extend or retract the
20m antenna due to low tree branches.
I walked 6.78 miles in a
couple of downtown parks in Ottawa, from 1400Z until 1730Z and again from 1900Z
until 2300Z. It was a nice and sunny
day (before dusk) but with a brutal wind chill, and the parks were by the
river, so I was giving out minus temps a few times that I was not sheltered
from the wind.
I think the highlight of the
contest for me was working VE3WMB/PM who was also in Ottawa about 10km distance
from me. It's my first /PM to /PM
contact!
All in all, a really fun
event!
73 Martin
I hiked in with Ron, WB3AAL.
We picked out our individual operating locations, then we made a fire between
us so we had a place to warm our toes. The weather was in the teens with windy
conditions. and about 6" of snow. Not bad for a Polar Bear outing. It was
the first time out with my new KX1 and had a great time! I was dressed plenty
warm for the conditions.
72 Mark de NK8Q Polar Bear
#4
Murphy struck early - one
antenna halyard was tangled in a tree, which caused the 40 meter antenna height
to be <30 feet instead of 50 feet. Then the rig wouldn't put power to the
tuner, and after some sleuthing a broken coax was found and fixed. Also,
alternate power from a generator wouldn't start at such a cold temperature, so
we gave up and plugged into the AC mains. At least they have 110VAC in Hell!
We tried Feld Hell on 40
metres at 1900Z and 2100Z with no takers. (we thought the mode would be
appropriate for the venue!) We knew the rig was working because we were making
quite a few CW contacts, even with a low antenna. We didn't try 20 meters Feld Hell because of technical
difficulties with one rig.
It was 2?F when we arrived
in Hell, and never got above 13?F during the operation. You might say it was a cold
day in Hell:)
The weather was getting
blustery and snowy around 2100Z, so we decided to close up at 2200Z while it
was still light.
Thanks to the Arizona
ScQRPions for running a nice contest. There will be a longer writeup on the
AzScQRPions web site. We hope to CU
during FYBO 2008. Unless things change drastically, we'll be in Hell again, and
will have a much better idea of what is needed for such an operation.
72 from Ed, AB8DF, Cortland,
KA5S, and Hank, N8XX
Im not a contester but I like
to participate with mt ten tec 1320 qrp kit and help the contesters.
I WAS USING TEN TEC QRP KIT
TO A SHORTY FORTY DIPOLE IN MY WARM HOUSE (JUST GOT OVER OPEN HEART SURGERY} MY
TEMP WAS 79F IN THE SHACK. HOPE THIS
HELPS THE CONTESTERS AND THESE CONTESTS ARE A GOOD WAY FOR ME TO WORK ON MY QRP
WAS - THANK TILL NEXT TIME
GEORGE/KF4UCC
Too busy Saturday to get
outdoors but did manage to sit down at home station rig (FT 897 @ 5W to a 40M
doublet in the attic of the condo) for an hour in the late afternoon here on
Cape Cod and hand out a few contacts.
Thanks for sponsoring this event!
And thanks to all those ops who Froze their B's Off!
72,
geoff - W1OH
K8KFJ
Very limited operating time
but wanted to possibly give a few outdoor ops a new SPC for scoring purposes.
** Many thanks for the
sponsorship **
Don't know what type of antenna N1QS was using on 80m but he had a very nice
signal here in WV (far above the other stations).
72, K8KFJ
West Virginia
AF9J
Here's my log for yesterday's
FYBO. Unless sombody turns in a log from farther north than me, or MN,
ND, MT, ec., I was most frozen out operator. I went to Kulwicki
park (which is 1/2 mile south of my apartment), strung a 24 foot wire to a
tree from my car, and threw a counterpoise out the car, and loaded it with
the ZM-2 tuner I built years ago. To meet the temp. requirements, I kept
the windows open 3 inches, and used no heat. The Temp was 4F,
with wind chills down around -20F. So, I sat in the driver's seat, and
used the car as a windbreak. I could only take about 1 1/2 hours of
this. My hands got cold (which I can take up to a point). When
my feet got cold (which always makes me feel miserable) in spite of wearing
winter boots, and I had to take an urgent bathroom break, I finally called it
quits. I logged on paper (I forgot to put the RST down, I received for
the other station, so I had to guess at it). I couldn't find any pencils,
so I had to use a pen. To keep the ink from freezing up, I had to put the
pen in my glove between contacts. All QSOs were on 20m CW (I briefly
heard what might have been a 20m SSB FYBO station, but didn't work them). I
wanted to try 40m, but there was some idiot RTTY station that fired up on 7040,
and wiped out everything, and 7030 (the freq. we're SUPPOSED to start using for
QRP) had something else going on, on it. In spite of Q5 copy, a few of my
QSOs seemed to have a hard time believing that I was operating in 4 degree
temps, and as a result asked for numerous repeats on my temp. I noticed
when I left Kulwicki park, that the temp was 1 degree.
Gear used:
Yaesu FT-897D w/internal battery pack, at 4.7W output power
ZM-2 antenna tuner and 24 foot long endfed w/ counterpoise
73 & stay warm (it's 6 Below at the present time [noon Feb. 4]),
Ellen Rugowski - AF9J
K9EW
I'd been planning for FYBO 2007
since last year's event. But when the
temp dropped to 4 degrees with sub-zero windchill, I went to PLAN B which was
to make a few QSO's from the shack instead of the forest preserve. It was fun
to meet some old sprint friends, and now I'm looking forward to FYBO 2008 - I'm
packed and ready to go.
72/73, ed - k9ew.
W8IDM
With
temperatures in the Cleveland OH area in the single digits, I wasn't about to
operate an outdoor station.
So
I went to the basement and fired up my old modified TS-930S ( the finals went
out several years ago and the drivers are now the final stage) and decided to
give out some QSOs to the braver operators. I quit around 4 PM EST when the
RTTY
Contest
signals on 40 meters covered up the QRP stations. It's my first year in the contest and I really enjoyed it.
73, Don W8IDM
WØANM
It was -4F during the
contest with wind chill of -20F. I
couldn't do
it for long, but made six
contacts using the Norcal 2030. Funny
things
happen at that temp.... Pens
stop working, radio knobs become seized,
wires are very stiff,
fingers become numb, and it's hard to send CW with gloves on :) Only play for a couple of hours... but still
had fun!
73 Chris
Looked
forward to this and hope I could QSO some brave outdoors stations but did not
hear much. Fun while the condx lasted.
72,
Charlie
W4NJK
W5MSQ
We had a number of rigs with
us this year, but did most operating with a Yaesu FT-817 and an Elecraft K2.
When not operating, we experimented with the vertical antennas. The local
temperature was nearly 10 degrees
cooler this year compared to
last, so we opted for a location that was out of the wind and in the sun to
help warm things up. Hot drinks and the breakfast cake provided by W5HNS also
helped. This has become one of our favorite events.
72 de
Andy MacAllister W5ACM
for The Houston MosQRPitos -
W5MSQ
---
THAT’S ALL FOLKS UNTIL AFTER FEBRUARY 2, 2008!! ---