Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

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Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

k6mkf
For me it was working VK0TH, Trevor, on Macquarie Island on PSK31.   My yagi
was down for repairs, so all I had was a 20M dipole as a sloper with the
high end at about 20'.   20m was 'dead', or so I thought, then his trace
appeared.   He came back to my first call.   Amazing!!   I was only running
30W.

 

His QSL card arrived a few weeks later.  My only confirmed VK0 QSO.

 

- 73 and good DX de Mike,  <http://www.qrz.com/db/k6mkf/> K6MKF, Past
President -  <http://ncdxc.org/index.html> NCDXC

 

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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Dave New, N8SBE
"You always remember your first." :-)

My first DX contact as a 16-yr old Novice in August of 1970, was on 15
meter CW (rockbound of course, I still have the 3rd-overtone 7 MHz
crystal) with LU2DAW, an Argentinian who turned out to be a retired
railroad radio operator, who had done CW professionally for most of his
life.  He must have been VERY patient with my brand-new shaky 5 WPM CW
fist.

I used a borrowed Knight Kit T-60 transmitter, a Hallicrafters SX-99U
receiver with outboard Heathkit Q-Multiplier, a Dow-key antenna relay,
and a 'horizontal' inverted vee antenna in my parent's L-shaped attic.
My Morse key was a Radio Shack black plastic special, screwed to a piece
of fiberboard.

I treasure the QSL card to this day.

73,

-- Dave, N8SBE (approaching 50 yrs licensed in 2020)
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Elecraft mailing list
In reply to this post by k6mkf
In the late 1970s my wife and I came home from a party about midnight.  I decided to listen to the ham bands a bit, and I heard a call from Guyana.  I called and worked them. We later exchanged QSL cards.

Several years later while driving to work I suddenly remembered the QSO and the events that had happened since.

I rushed home and dug out the QSL card.  There is was. PEOPLES TEMPLE AGRICULTURAL PROJECT.  I had worked the station associated wit the Jim Jones settlement whose residents later committed mass suicide.

Not rewarding, but definitely crazy.
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Bob Nielsen-4
In reply to this post by Dave New, N8SBE
The most rewarding QSO I DIDN'T have:

A few sunspot cycles ago I tuned around 10 meters from my then-QTH in
California.  The ONLY signal I could hear on the entire band was from a
beacon station on Reunion Island, very copyable.

73, Bob N7XY
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Bob McGraw - K4TAX
Mine was the first time I transmitted my call with the antenna array
aimed at the moon, switched to receive, adjusted the VFO frequency a
bit, and heard my own call come back.   Yep, some 2.56 seconds delay, a
frequency shift of about -200 Hz due to Doppler, and from a distance of 
239,000 miles one way, or 478,000 miles round trip.   Sweet!   Then much
later and as the station improved, on SSB I transmitted "HELLO MOON",
switched to receive and tweaked the VFO a bit and heard "HELLO MOON"
come from the receiver.   I suppose one could consider this somewhat of
a 2 way QSO with myself.   One other occurred while working a station
about 250 miles away on VHF and via EME.    I heard his tropo signal,
and then his moon signal, shifted in time and frequency. And likewise he
heard mine.  Now would this be considered one QSO or two?   With my 59
years of ham radio in my log, I still find ham radio fun and enjoyable.
   Much thanks to Elecraft today, and the friends I've made along the way.

73

Bob, K4TAX



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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Tim Herrick
In reply to this post by Bob Nielsen-4
Two of my craziest were:

Going to 80 one evening 2 hours before sunset and working VQ9QM. He even made a note on the card to express his surprise to work the US at that time. And the funny thing is no one else called him from the US. He went back to running EU which I could not hear.

Sitting on 10 meters with the idea that the expedition to KH1 (SM0AGD/KH1) would be on at a certain time and they would transmit on 28595. Right about the time I figured they would be there so I called them a couple times and he came back then went split.

Strangest QSL I ever received was a coconut. Yes an actual coconut that was sent via USPS and NOT packaged. Everything was pasted right to the coconut. That came from my old friend KH6ML.

73
Tim, KQ8M
[hidden email]

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Bob Nielsen - N7XY
Sent: Friday, September 14, 2018 17:01
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

The most rewarding QSO I DIDN'T have:

A few sunspot cycles ago I tuned around 10 meters from my then-QTH in
California.  The ONLY signal I could hear on the entire band was from a
beacon station on Reunion Island, very copyable.

73, Bob N7XY
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Elecraft mailing list
In reply to this post by Bob Nielsen-4
Back in the "good" days of sunspot 1957-58, and me a new ham and could only afford a Heath Kit Sixer.  So, I put a ground plane vertical up and while I lived on the Pacific coast, I could hear a  lot of local Pacific coast stations.  Now while the Sixer was good at local QSO's, how about now with the band wide open.    Remember these were the days of crystal bound transmitters and wideband super regen receivers.   I heard a station calling CQ in an oriental voice and I called and called.  Then I heard my call sign, WOW.  I worked a JA on 6 meters with 1/2 watt AM.       First real DX for the new ham.
Mel, K6KBE

      From: Bob Nielsen - N7XY <[hidden email]>
 To: [hidden email]
 Sent: Friday, September 14, 2018 2:03 PM
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Craziest / most rewarding QSOs
   
The most rewarding QSO I DIDN'T have:

A few sunspot cycles ago I tuned around 10 meters from my then-QTH in
California.  The ONLY signal I could hear on the entire band was from a
beacon station on Reunion Island, very copyable.

73, Bob N7XY
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

k6dgw
In reply to this post by Bob McGraw - K4TAX
While many people talk to themselves, most do it privately and not in a
setting where half of the planet can hear them. [:-)

73,

Fred ["Skip"] K6DGW
Sparks NV DM09dn
Washoe County

On 9/14/2018 2:27 PM, Bob McGraw K4TAX wrote:

> Mine was the first time I transmitted my call with the antenna array
> aimed at the moon, switched to receive, adjusted the VFO frequency a
> bit, and heard my own call come back.   Yep, some 2.56 seconds delay,
> a frequency shift of about -200 Hz due to Doppler, and from a distance
> of  239,000 miles one way, or 478,000 miles round trip.   Sweet!  
> Then much later and as the station improved, on SSB I transmitted
> "HELLO MOON", switched to receive and tweaked the VFO a bit and heard
> "HELLO MOON" come from the receiver.   I suppose one could consider
> this somewhat of a 2 way QSO with myself.   One other occurred while
> working a station about 250 miles away on VHF and via EME.    I heard
> his tropo signal, and then his moon signal, shifted in time and
> frequency. And likewise he heard mine.  Now would this be considered
> one QSO or two? With my 59 years of ham radio in my log, I still find
> ham radio fun and enjoyable.   Much thanks to Elecraft today, and the
> friends I've made along the way.
>
> 73
>
> Bob, K4TAX

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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Wes Stewart-2
In reply to this post by Bob McGraw - K4TAX
My first time hearing my echos was pretty thrilling too.  So was working W5LFL
in Columbia and having him say, "N7WS, the loudest signal we've heard in the
spacecraft" and then later getting to meet him in person.

Wes  N7WS

  On 9/14/2018 2:27 PM, Bob McGraw K4TAX wrote:

> Mine was the first time I transmitted my call with the antenna array aimed at
> the moon, switched to receive, adjusted the VFO frequency a bit, and heard my
> own call come back.   Yep, some 2.56 seconds delay, a frequency shift of about
> -200 Hz due to Doppler, and from a distance of  239,000 miles one way, or
> 478,000 miles round trip.   Sweet!   Then much later and as the station
> improved, on SSB I transmitted "HELLO MOON", switched to receive and tweaked
> the VFO a bit and heard "HELLO MOON" come from the receiver.   I suppose one
> could consider this somewhat of a 2 way QSO with myself.   One other occurred
> while working a station about 250 miles away on VHF and via EME.    I heard
> his tropo signal, and then his moon signal, shifted in time and frequency. And
> likewise he heard mine.  Now would this be considered one QSO or two? With my
> 59 years of ham radio in my log, I still find ham radio fun and enjoyable.  
> Much thanks to Elecraft today, and the friends I've made along the way.
>
> 73
>
> Bob, K4TAX

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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Bob McGraw - K4TAX
In reply to this post by k6dgw
I've never indicated I was of sound mind.  

Bob, K4TAX


Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 14, 2018, at 5:17 PM, Fred Jensen <[hidden email]> wrote:
>
> While many people talk to themselves, most do it privately and not in a setting where half of the planet can hear them. [:-)
>
> 73,
>
> Fred ["Skip"] K6DGW
> Sparks NV DM09dn
> Washoe County
>
>> On 9/14/2018 2:27 PM, Bob McGraw K4TAX wrote:
>> Mine was the first time I transmitted my call with the antenna array aimed at the moon, switched to receive, adjusted the VFO frequency a bit, and heard my own call come back.   Yep, some 2.56 seconds delay, a frequency shift of about -200 Hz due to Doppler, and from a distance of  239,000 miles one way, or 478,000 miles round trip.   Sweet!   Then much later and as the station improved, on SSB I transmitted "HELLO MOON", switched to receive and tweaked the VFO a bit and heard "HELLO MOON" come from the receiver.   I suppose one could consider this somewhat of a 2 way QSO with myself.   One other occurred while working a station about 250 miles away on VHF and via EME.    I heard his tropo signal, and then his moon signal, shifted in time and frequency. And likewise he heard mine.  Now would this be considered one QSO or two? With my 59 years of ham radio in my log, I still find ham radio fun and enjoyable.   Much thanks to Elecraft today, and the friends I've made along t
 he way.

>>
>> 73
>>
>> Bob, K4TAX
>
> ______________________________________________________________
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Re: Craziest / most rewarding QSOs

Richard Smart
In reply to this post by k6mkf
As Wayne noted - there is still some RF (Propagation) magic left. I enjoyed a short SSB QSO today from ZL with K6JL (Terry).

And while I am sure Terry’s station was doing a lot (all) of the hard work- the station at this end made it a lot of fun - new K2 built a few months ago running around 13W into a 43’ mostly random wire - one end at about 22’ (Squid pole) and a counterpoise of the same length.

Looking forward to more of the Southern Hemisphere summer season coming up with more chances to get outdoors with this kit

Richard
ZL4FZ



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