Home > Contesting, Operating > ARRL NA Sweepstakes SSB 2011 – Another Clean Sweep!

ARRL NA Sweepstakes SSB 2011 – Another Clean Sweep!

November 24th, 2011 Leave a comment Go to comments

Oh, it is contest season!  Having wrung out all the problems in my shack during the CQ WW DX contest, I was really ready for this one.  And, it has become one of my favorite contests.  I even passed on one of the better hamfests of the year and on participating in a public service event, just to stay home for the contest! Amazingly, everything wasn’t ready.  I thought I had it all set, but no.  It wasn’t quite right.  The short version? It took me about 20 minutes into the contest to get all the voice files right and speakers connected where needed.  Despite the setback, I was off and running earlier than I have been in past contests.

Contacts came fast and furious. With the upper bands opening up, the start of the contest was different from recent years. I immediately started getting contacts west of the Mississippi. Way west! Early contacts included AZ, WY, NM, SV, ID, NM, SCV, WWA, SF, BC, EB, PAC, AK. Within three hours, I also had ND, WY, MB, NT, OR and NL.

Wow, Pacific, Alaska, Washington, Oregon, British Columbia and even both Dakotas early on! This is going to be another clean sweep! Search and pounce was the order of the day.  I scored section after section quickly.  In fact, I had well over 60 sections in a few hours. By the time I knocked off at 3:00 EST to get some sleep, I had about 72 of 80 sections in the bag.

Sunday started later than planned.  I set the clock for 6:30, to be on the air before sunrise.  Best laid plans and all, I woke up around 10 am and was back on the air about 20 mins later. There were still plenty of opportunities to make contacts, but I was on a hunt for 8 missing sections – OK, ORG, MS, EWA, NLI, RI, PR and SB.  Working from NC, this is an interesting mix.  Some are obvious because of either distance or lack of stations, but some should have fallen early yesterday.  I mean, New York Long Island? Oklahoma??? I should have at least heard them yesterday!

Well, it was a new day.  OK fell 21 minutes after I was back on the air. I took out ORG (Orange County, CA) 7 minutes after that.  By noon local time, MS and EWA were in the log. Now, the hunt was on for the last four. With 10 hours to go, that’s about one every 2 1/2 hours, so it shouldn’t be that hard, right?

Three hours later, I’m thinking that it just isn’t going to happen. Since the contest started, I’ve heard only one station from any of the four missing sections.  Finally, I heard something.  It was NLI.  Picked him off at 4:03 EST. Maybe there’s hope.

Or maybe not. Three hours later again and still chasing RI, PR and SB.  Rhode Island and Puerto Rico should be easy to contact, if only there were stations to contact.  SB was going to be a problem with distance, conditions and lack of stations. Now, I’m bouncing around from band to band, from 40 to 10 meters.  Finally, around 7 pm, I decided to try 80 meters.  It had been quiet there, so I spent my time on the higher bands. But around 7:40 I’m tuning around on 80 and heard a 1-call.  I’ve heard several other ones, but hey, what do I have to lose?  There it was, loud and clear, a Rhode Island station!  Time to take out number 78!  At 7:44, RI is in the log!  Two to go!

Only Santa Barbara and Puerto Rico to go! Like I said, both are short on stations. SB has another problem with distance and conditions. A little over two hours to go, it doesn’t look good. I also thought about what I did have.  How many sections had only one contact? A quick count confirmed what I was thinking.  About 20 sections only had one contact! This isn’t good.  What if a multiplier gets busted and I don’t have a backup?  Did I spend too much time searching for sections, but not making contacts?

I pointed the beam towards PR, and scanned several bands. Anytime I heard a 4 or a 6, I’d listen intently for the two missing sections.  I also had a list of single contact sections, so if I heard a section on the list, I’d make that contact.  But it wasn’t looking good. I was almost resigned to being two sections short for a clean sweep.  I had bagged VI early on, and had a couple contacts around this time, so I knew conditions were good. But as much as I searched, no Puerto Rico. I thought “Maybe I could get Aericebo to bounce a signal off the moon?” Too desperate?   Maybe not.  It’s 8:20 and I’m scanning 20 meters when I heard a 4 station, loud and clear. So clear, I thought it was a local signal.  Turned out to be Puerto Rico. NP4Z was on the air and the pileup was big!  A couple minutes later, I bagged the contact.  THANK YOU NP4Z for being on the air!

ONE section to go – SB, Santa Barbara, CA. At least now, I can point the beam in the right direction. About 90 minutes to go, will it be enough time? I’ve made about 8 more contacts now.  Most stations that I hear I’ve already worked.  I’m scanning the bands, looking everywhere. It’s well after sunset in NC, and the upper bands are quiet, but I’m something told me to stay on 20 meters.  The signals were spread out, but there was still activity. I kept scanning, with the beam pointed at SB.  Finally, I heard a weak signal from 6-land.  I listened as he made another contact and I heard the magic letters – SB!  There was no pileup, but conditions were poor.  I had to work at it, but made the contact with SB.  SUCCESS!  I had bagged all 80 sections and had my second clean sweep in three years!

I was thrilled!  Now, with about an hour left, I wanted to beat my previous best score of just over 70,000 points.  So far, each time I tried to run instead of S&P, I had almost no QSOs. Now, I thought I’d try to run on 80 meters. I parked on an open frequency and started calling. The wait was a matter of milliseconds before other stations were responding.  In short, I spent the next hour adding 59 more QSOs to the count, backing up most of those single contact sections and moving my score well past 70,000 points.

Overall, I was thrilled with the result.  I had worked much less than 24 of the 30 hours allowed, but I had made the clean sweep and beat my previous best score.  All in all, a great weekend!

How did you do?  Leave a comment!

73,
W4FT

 

 

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