2026 ARRL DX Contest CW K5ZD

                    ARRL DX Contest, CW - 2026

Call: K5ZD
Operator(s): K5ZD

Class: SOAB HP
Operating Time (hrs): 42
OpMode: SO2R

Summary:
Band QSOs Mults
-------------------
160: 80 37
80: 299 58
40: 882 86
20: 1305 100
15: 1341 100
10: 579 86
-------------------
Total: 4486 467 Total Score = 6,284,886

Club: North Coast Contesters

Comments

K5ZD during ARRL DX CW 2026

Do I have fun DXing (go assisted) or do I make things hard (go unassisted)? Both W8 single op records are high and would require considerable effort. Decided an hour before the contest to go old school and work without the cluster.

Conditions at the start only sounded fair on 10 and 15. 40 had incredible signals from Europe, so I started there. When the rate slowed, I went to 80 and found a very quiet band with no static. A few CQs to get a skimmer spot, and it was off to the races. As in WW CW, 160 meters to Europe was much better early with a small peak later right at European sunrise.

I had no powerline noise or electronic noise on any band for the first 36 hours! This made a huge difference on 80 and 160 as I was able to copy weak callers from Europe.

I was mopping up Europeans on 40m and thinking of going to sleep around 0700z when I decided to check 20m one last time. Wow! The band was wide open. One CQ produced an insane pileup. I had a great hour from 0719 to 0819 and
then it died. I went back to 40m and discovered an unbelievable opening to Japan. Never heard JA so loud, with minimal flutter, and so easy to work. With Europe still coming in, it made for a good hour. Worked JR2GRX on 80 around 0950z and decided if I was going to sleep, it had to be now. Set the alarm for 1130z (sunrise is at 12:20z).

Woke up before the alarm and discovered 20m was already wide open. Found a clear spot at 14005 and cranked out two great hours. Western Europe was very loud, but so were Russia and Asia. What a pleasure to have these conditions when the world was focused on working W/VE!

It was so busy and so good that I didn’t head to 15m until almost 1300z. Found a frequency and had an immediate pileup. Lots of Europeans were watching the cluster for any new station to appear. Makes for a wild first 20 minutes on any new band. I had 220 QSOs in the 13z hour, which included a band change to 10m.

I didn’t stay on 10m long because it just wasn’t as open as 15m. I placed my bet that 10m would be better the second day and went all in on 15m for Saturday. Had I known, I might have invested more time on 10 that first morning.

The bands just kept rolling as I followed the Europeans down to 20m for a few good hours. The first JAs on 15m were not loud, and I had to call them. I got no answers to CQs from Japan. I checked 10m and was surprised to find the JAs were much louder there than on 15m. Still couldn’t get any answers, but I was able to make some QSOs.

Went to 40m at my sunset and the band was wide open to Europe. I had already worked over 600 contacts on that band, so the rates were slow but steady. Kept finding more QSOs and mults as I worked my way around 40, 80, and 160. Decided sleep was a priority, so I took a short nap from 0340-0450z. Woke up to a good run on 80 and then 40. 160 did not sound as good as it had on Friday night. It is always amazing to me how late we can work Europeans on 40 meters after their sunrise. We did not have the 20m opening.

Slept from 0815z to 1100z. Worked JA, VK, 4U1UN, and FK on 80 before getting E2M on 40m LP. Arrived on 20m at 1130z and found signals, but it was still waking up for us. Good run started at 1138z, and that restored my faith that conditions would be good for the day. Signals from Europe were amazing, so I stayed on 20 until 13z. Two huge hours followed on 15m.

I was monitoring 10m, but it was not sounding good. Made the jump to 10m at 1506z. Very loud signals from southern Eu, and some scatter from parts north. Got exactly one hour of rate, and then it was back to tuning both 10 and 15.

The signals from Europe at 16-18z on 15 meters were simply unbelievable. Some of the loudest were almost pinning the s-meter on the K3. I already had more than 1100 QSOs on 15, so the rate was slow. No choice but to call lots of unanswered CQs.

I watched the scoreboard all weekend using the view that combines the single op and single op assisted scores. The assisted guys all had huge multiplier totals, but that info gave me some idea of what to strive for. The unassisted guys tended to have more QSOs because we were focused on rate. AA3B (assisted) had huge QSO and multiplier numbers. He got 600 QSOs ahead of me on day 1, and I could never cut into that lead. My target competition started as NA8V, but switched to Jon AA1K. Jon was ahead of me on QSOs, and we were close on mults. I took up the chase, and that motivation kept me head down and on the radio working hard Sunday afternoon. Without the scoreboard, I might have been less committed or even stopped operating. I thought we were possibly battling for the SOHP win. I knew K5GN was very active and doing well. I learned after the contest that he had a monster score and was far ahead. If he had been on the scoreboard, I am not sure I would have invested the same energy. Hate to admit that…

The contest was a grind to the end. It was in the 21st hour that I hot-switched a relay while transmitting and took out the ability to switch between the stack and the tribander on 20m. Definitely need to invest in some switching automation as it is just too hard to remember everything late in the contest. 40 was wide open from 22z on, but not many people were left to work.

Spent the last 20 minutes beaming Japan on 15m and was rewarded with a small run of very loud signals. A great way to end a very entertaining weekend!

The number of stations worked on 6 bands tells the story of just how good the conditions were. I had 45 six-banders and 85 more 5-banders.

Thanks to contesters around the world for taking the time to focus on working W/VE this weekend!

Station

2 x Elecraft K3 + PGXL amplifier
WriteLog + MMTTY + 2Tone

160m: Inverted vee at 70′
80m: Inverted vee @ 80′
40m: 2-el Moxon @ 90′, 2-ele 40-2CD (NE) at 40′
20m: 5-el/5-el @ 80’/50′
15m: 5-el/5-el @53’/28′
20-10m: C31xr @70′

Rates

QSO/DX by hour and band

Hour 160M 80M 40M 20M 15M 10M Total Cumm Off

0000Z --+-- --+-- 103/35 --+-- 31/11 3/2 137/48 137/48
0100Z - 66/24 37/6 - 7/4 4/2 114/36 251/84
0200Z 10/10 46/7 - 22/15 3/2 - 81/34 332/118
0300Z 30/14 22/3 2/0 10/4 - - 64/21 396/139
0400Z - 4/1 155/11 - - - 159/12 555/151
0500Z 7/5 11/3 81/3 - - - 99/11 654/162
0600Z 13/2 38/4 40/2 - - - 91/8 745/170
0700Z 1/1 18/7 7/4 110/25 - - 136/37 881/207
0800Z --+-- --+-- 93/11 26/3 --+-- --+-- 119/14 1000/221
0900Z 2/2 7/3 26/4 - - - 35/9 1035/230 8
1000Z - - - - - - 0/0 1035/230 60
1100Z - - - 100/10 - - 100/10 1135/240 27
1200Z - - - 174/7 12/12 - 186/19 1321/259
1300Z - - - - 142/20 78/22 220/42 1541/301
1400Z - - - - 8/3 139/16 147/19 1688/320
1500Z - - - - 200/7 - 200/7 1888/327
1600Z --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- 145/6 25/5 170/11 2058/338
1700Z - - - - 132/4 17/9 149/13 2207/351
1800Z - - - 97/3 33/3 7/1 137/7 2344/358
1900Z - - - 137/5 12/3 - 149/8 2493/366
2000Z - - - 94/2 9/3 10/2 113/7 2606/373
2100Z - - - 38/0 6/2 17/8 61/10 2667/383
2200Z - - - 10/2 40/1 32/3 82/6 2749/389
2300Z - - 88/1 5/2 - 27/1 120/4 2869/393
0000Z --+-- --+-- 38/1 --+-- 14/1 30/2 82/4 2951/397
0100Z - 17/0 17/3 16/6 5/1 - 55/10 3006/407
0200Z 1/0 7/0 - - 13/2 - 21/2 3027/409
0300Z 9/1 9/1 2/0 3/1 - - 23/3 3050/412 21
0400Z - 1/0 - - - - 1/0 3051/412 60
0500Z 1/0 45/1 - 38/2 - - 84/3 3135/415
0600Z 4/1 2/1 52/1 26/0 - - 84/3 3219/418
0700Z 2/1 - 63/2 - - - 65/3 3284/421
0800Z --+-- --+-- 12/0 --+-- --+-- --+-- 12/0 3296/421 49
0900Z - - - - - - 0/0 3296/421 60
1000Z - - - - - - 0/0 3296/421 60
1100Z - 5/3 3/2 47/3 - - 55/8 3351/429 12
1200Z - - - 112/2 12/1 - 124/3 3475/432
1300Z - - - - 174/3 2/1 176/4 3651/436
1400Z - - - - 150/2 14/1 164/3 3815/439
1500Z - - - - 19/0 126/5 145/5 3960/444
1600Z --+-- --+-- --+-- 60/2 43/1 8/0 111/3 4071/447
1700Z - - - 58/0 5/0 19/1 82/1 4153/448
1800Z - - - 16/0 23/1 2/0 41/1 4194/449
1900Z - - - 23/1 12/2 11/4 46/7 4240/456
2000Z - - - 57/1 6/4 3/0 66/5 4306/461
2100Z - - - 20/3 16/0 5/1 41/4 4347/465
2200Z - - 43/0 5/1 18/1 - 66/2 4413/467
2300Z - 1/0 20/0 1/0 51/0 - 73/0 4486/467

Totals: 80/37 299/58 882/86 1305/100 1341/100 579/86

Best 60 minutes: 224 starting 21-Feb-2026 12:58

Worked on 6 bands: 45

8P5A 9A1A 9A1P CR2N CR3DX CR3W DA1TT DD1A DD2D DK4WW DK8MM DL3DXX E7DX ED8X EI7M G3P G5W HD8R HG6N II2Q II9P IK1PMR IO4X KH6J KP2B OK7W OM7M OP5T OQ5M OT2A P3X P49Y PA3AAV PJ2T PJ4A PJ4K SP8R TI7W TM6M TO4A UW5Y V3T WP3A ZF1A ZF5T

Worked on 5 bands: 85

By Continent

          160M    80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total      %

EU 56 264 780 1127 1072 391 3690 82.3
OC 1 7 13 21 19 17 78 1.7
AS 1 3 44 84 159 84 375 8.4
AF 3 5 14 17 18 7 64 1.4
SA 6 7 12 31 46 56 158 3.5
NA 13 13 19 25 27 24 121 2.7

Most worked entities:

          160M    80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total
DL 11 56 131 220 215 82 715
I 7 15 67 105 91 36 321
JA 2 32 45 133 76 288 <<--
UA 10 29 80 80 11 210
SP 2 21 36 58 58 21 196
OK 2 14 46 46 51 30 189
G 4 11 42 55 55 21 188
PA 2 11 32 64 47 24 180
EA 3 10 41 40 46 29 169
HA 2 18 38 39 39 17 153
F 4 15 27 24 23 11 104
S5 3 7 24 26 29 14 103

2026 CQ WPX RTTY Contest K5ZD

                    CQ WPX RTTY Contest - 2026

Call: K5ZD

Class: SOAB HP
QTH: W8
Operating Time (hrs): 30
OpMode: 2BSIQ

Summary:
Band QSOs
------------
80: 246
40: 602
20: 591
15: 719
10: 273
------------
Total: 2431 Prefixes = 898 Total Score = 6,475,478

Club: North Coast Contesters

Comments

K5ZD in CQ WPX RTTY 2026

I always enjoy WPX, and the RTTY version is a great start to the Spring contest season. Everything worked, and my line noise was even low for much of the time. I decided not to use a 2×1 call and just be myself. 🙂

I was racing furiously at the start to figure out why the second radio would not transmit. It was a wrong setting in the WriteLog and MK2R+ combo. I had to do AFSK. If I did FSK, the PGXL would trip on ‘Early RF’ and no amount of delays would fix it.

Contest started OK. After 3 hours of watching the scoreboard and AA3B get way ahead, I decided the W8 record of 4.5 million by KI6DY last year would be my goal.

Conditions on Saturday were good. Even though I had a few runs on 10m, it was clearly not the band it has been in the past few years. That made 15m the money band all day. I was having so much fun, I didn’t really take much time off. Just enough to take a walk and enjoy the warmer temperatures.

Heading out to the shack on Saturday morning before sunrise

Decided to sleep at 0100-0430z. When I sat down to listen, the bands were awful. Not many signals and lots of flutter. Even 80 sounded bad. I should have waited an hour before getting back on, but I couldn’t resist making some QSOs. After 0530z, the bands started to recover. I made myself stop just after 0700z so I would have some operating time for Sunday.

Conditions on Sunday morning were not good. 10m didn’t open to Europe except for a few scatter contacts with the big guys. 15m was open, but it was clear the Europeans were hearing each other very well, so lots of QRM and waiting for my turn. As darkness passed across Europe, it got better. 20m was open to Europe all day, so that helped.

I passed the record early Sunday afternoon, so the new goal was 5 million, and then 6. Overall, it was an entertaining weekend. That kept me in the chair and focused on making as many QSOs and multipliers as possible.

I had a bunch of off time to take near the end. Probably came back on too early and ran out of time with 20 minutes to go. The high bands did finally open to Japan, but I could only work the big guys.

I did RTTY contests for years with only one decoder. Now that I am using two, it is amazing how much one copies when the other gets nothing. Maybe I need to try a third one!

It is simply amazing how many prefixes there are!

Station

2 x Elecraft K3 + PGXL amplifier
WriteLog + MMTTY + 2Tone

80m: Inverted vee @ 80′
40m: 2-el Moxon @ 90′, 2-ele 40-2CD (NE) at 40′
20m: 5-el/5-el @ 80’/50′
15m: 5-el/5-el @53’/28′
20-10m: C31xr @70′

By Continent

           80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total      %

NA 197 301 169 168 56 891 36.7
EU 46 278 369 485 162 1340 55.1
AF 2 8 5 10 3 28 1.2
SA 1 7 16 23 40 87 3.6
OC 0 4 6 3 5 18 0.7
AS 0 4 26 30 7 67 2.8

Rates

QSO/Pref by hour and band

Hour 80M 40M 20M 15M 10M Total Cumm Off

D1-0000Z --+-- 64/58 10/9 3/3 --+-- 77/70 77/70
D1-0100Z 17/12 61/48 - 14/14 2/2 94/76 171/146
D1-0200Z 54/19 37/27 - - - 91/46 262/192
D1-0300Z 12/6 37/25 2/2 - - 51/33 313/225 16
D1-0400Z 40/19 38/27 - - - 78/46 391/271
D1-0500Z 27/15 45/27 - - - 72/42 463/313
D1-0600Z 23/8 33/19 - - - 56/27 519/340
D1-0700Z 1/0 - - - - 1/0 520/340 59
D1-0800Z --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- 0/0 520/340 60
D1-0900Z - - - - - 0/0 520/340 60
D1-1000Z - - - - - 0/0 520/340 60
D1-1100Z - - - - - 0/0 520/340 60
D1-1200Z 10/5 11/5 49/29 38/22 - 108/61 628/401 3
D1-1300Z - - 27/11 86/47 10/3 123/61 751/462
D1-1400Z - - - 69/23 60/21 129/44 880/506
D1-1500Z - - - 77/32 68/15 145/47 1025/553
D1-1600Z --+-- --+-- --+-- 48/28 35/8 83/36 1108/589
D1-1700Z - - 8/1 60/17 16/4 84/22 1192/611
D1-1800Z - - 24/7 49/10 11/5 84/22 1276/633
D1-1900Z - - 71/10 22/8 - 93/18 1369/651
D1-2000Z - - 22/3 10/6 - 32/9 1401/660 40
D1-2100Z - - 24/8 13/4 - 37/12 1438/672 34
D1-2200Z - 2/1 25/9 33/14 9/2 69/26 1507/698
D1-2300Z - 57/12 24/6 - 11/1 92/19 1599/717
D2-0000Z --+-- 22/8 7/2 5/2 5/1 39/13 1638/730 25
D2-0100Z - - - - - 0/0 1638/730 60
D2-0200Z - - - - - 0/0 1638/730 60
D2-0300Z - - - - - 0/0 1638/730 60
D2-0400Z 14/3 16/2 - - - 30/5 1668/735 33
D2-0500Z 29/5 25/2 - - - 54/7 1722/742
D2-0600Z 9/1 49/10 - - - 58/11 1780/753
D2-0700Z 4/0 4/1 - - - 8/1 1788/754 53
D2-0800Z --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- 0/0 1788/754 60
D2-0900Z - - - - - 0/0 1788/754 60
D2-1000Z - - - - - 0/0 1788/754 60
D2-1100Z - - - - - 0/0 1788/754 60
D2-1200Z 5/3 14/2 27/10 - - 46/15 1834/769 27
D2-1300Z - 36/2 64/13 1/0 - 101/15 1935/784
D2-1400Z - - 41/12 14/5 1/1 56/18 1991/802
D2-1500Z - - 26/7 19/4 12/5 57/16 2048/818
D2-1600Z --+-- --+-- 39/7 47/10 --+-- 86/17 2134/835
D2-1700Z - - 8/1 33/3 10/3 51/7 2185/842
D2-1800Z - - 28/4 32/4 - 60/8 2245/850
D2-1900Z - - 13/4 2/0 14/2 29/6 2274/856 29
D2-2000Z - - - - - 0/0 2274/856 60
D2-2100Z - - 18/7 3/2 9/3 30/12 2304/868 35
D2-2200Z - 20/5 18/4 35/11 - 73/20 2377/888
D2-2300Z 1/1 31/4 16/3 6/2 - 54/10 2431/898 18

Totals: 246/97 602/285 591/169 719/271 273/76

Best 60 minutes: 150 beginning 14-Feb-2026 15:02

Worked on 5 bands:

9A1A AG4TT CR3W DM3W EI7M IO6T IQ3ME K9CT KC7V ND2T OM5ZW ON5GQ P49X S53R SN7Q TM3Z WV4P

Worked on 4 bands: 53

Most worked entities

           80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total
K 184 269 152 132 47 784
DL 11 51 75 122 36 295
I 6 38 48 59 24 175
SP 2 12 26 33 13 86
EA 2 18 18 27 7 72
G 13 20 29 7 69
VE 11 21 15 17 4 68
F 4 13 8 12 9 46

2025 CQ WW Contest CW K5ZD

                    CQ Worldwide DX Contest, CW - 2025

Call: K5ZD
Operator(s): K5ZD
Station: K5ZD

Class: SO(A)AB HP
QTH: W8
Operating Time (hrs): 41.5
OpMode: SO2R

Summary:
Band QSOs Zones Countries
------------------------------
160: 48 13 31
80: 197 19 77
40: 1128 37 125
20: 845 39 139
15: 975 38 139
10: 856 32 122
------------------------------
Total: 4049 179 633 Total Score = 9,392,191

Club: North Coast Contesters

Comments

K5ZD in CQ WW CW 2025

When I moved to Ohio in May, the primary design goal for the station was to be “loud enough.” This contest showed that the goal was accomplished, even though it meant not being as loud as I used to be from New England.  🙂

The goal for the contest was to beat the W8 record for SOAB HP Assisted. I passed that with about 10 hours left to go in the contest — mission accomplished.

The contest started OK, but I had no idea which band to be on.  I just kept trying things until something worked.  40 was the big surprise Friday night as the QSOs just kept coming. I went to 80, and all the European signals were just at my local noise level. I called a few, and they came right back to me.  Wow!

Same thing on 160. Both nights it was easier to work Europe early than at their sunrise.

I knew better than to push up the bands in the morning.  I stayed on 20 and then 15 because the rate was good.  I listened to 10, and it took a long time to open. I knew from the prop forecast that Sunday would be better than Saturday, so I went all in on 15m on Saturday.

On Sunday morning, I could hear Europe on 10, but they couldn’t hear me.

It was like I was just outside the opening.  It did eventually open, and not having so many QSOs on the band meant I had some nice rates.

Some cool QSOs were working 40m long path.  Got XU7RRC, BY3GA, E2A, and some JAs. Also worked VK6T on 4 bands. Nice of RA0LQ to give us zone 34.

Worked 4U1UN on 6 bands!! Also VE2IM on 6 bands.  Great ops by both.

I only used the cluster for multiplier chasing and to populate the band map. As things slowed down around 19z on Sunday, I went into “spot clicking”

mode.  A great way to catch up on all the guys who were just CQing. Very frustrating at times, as I had to wait my turn for all the other assisted guys closer to the Atlantic.

The problem with calling people is that they can’t seem to copy my call on the first try.  It goes, K…  K5…  K5 and GD, GB, ZZ, ZB, KH7D, KH8D, KI8D, KS8D, etc.  Not fun when you are tired and frustrated!

It was exciting as the QSO total approached 4000.  Never thought I would be able to make that many contacts from here!

Shout out to the PGXL amp that I purchased over the summer.  It was so cool to change bands and not have to tune the amp.  Definitely made me more willing to QSY for a marginal packet spot.

Everything in the station worked great all weekend. WW RTTY was a great proving ground as I blew up a K3 and was able to make it so that wouldn’t happen again.

Even with the disturbed conditions, it was a great contest.  Can’t wait to do it again next year!

Station

Two K3, one PGXL
Microham MK2R+
WriteLog

C31xr @ 70′
40m Moxon @ 90′ / 40-2CD @ 65′
Hygain 205CA @80’/53′
Hygain 155CA @43’/25′
80m inv vee @ 78′
160m inv vee @ 68′

Stack spacings are close because of limited tower heights (80′, 70′).

Really missed not having a dedicated antenna pointed south.  That will be fixed next year.

Rates

QSO/ZN+DX by hour and band

Hour 160M 80M 40M 20M 15M 10M Total Cumm Off

0000Z --+-- --+-- 73/39 31/33 11/4 --+-- 115/76 115/76
0100Z - 9/12 57/28 23/13 - - 89/53 204/129
0200Z 7/12 53/30 10/5 - 2/3 - 72/50 276/179
0300Z - 5/3 112/20 - - - 117/23 393/202
0400Z - 9/5 114/4 - - - 123/9 516/211
0500Z 6/5 20/16 40/17 1/2 - - 67/40 583/251
0600Z 13/9 12/6 53/9 - - - 78/24 661/275 9
0700Z 1/1 6/4 71/4 3/4 - - 81/13 742/288
0800Z 1/1 3/0 2/2 2/3 --+-- --+-- 8/6 750/294 40
0900Z - - - - - - 0/0 750/294 60
1000Z - - - - - - 0/0 750/294 60
1100Z 1/2 1/0 5/3 41/24 - - 48/29 798/323 20
1200Z - - 13/4 99/23 19/21 - 131/48 929/371
1300Z - - - 1/1 214/33 2/4 217/38 1146/409
1400Z - - - - 177/7 15/17 192/24 1338/433
1500Z - - - - 45/7 144/22 189/29 1527/462
1600Z --+-- --+-- --+-- --+-- 86/18 51/27 137/45 1664/507
1700Z - - - - 83/2 35/26 118/28 1782/535
1800Z - - - 34/18 45/21 5/4 84/43 1866/578 7
1900Z - - - 126/1 17/11 3/2 146/14 2012/592
2000Z - - - 47/12 6/4 8/6 61/22 2073/614 20
2100Z - - - 9/7 11/5 28/6 48/18 2121/632
2200Z - - 14/11 3/4 16/8 9/7 42/30 2163/662
2300Z 7/8 5/5 34/3 3/4 7/6 2/0 58/26 2221/688
0000Z 2/1 11/5 7/1 3/3 4/1 --+-- 27/11 2248/699 14
0100Z 4/2 8/3 16/3 15/3 - - 43/11 2291/710
0200Z 1/0 4/1 53/1 3/0 - - 61/2 2352/712
0300Z 2/1 7/0 - - - - 9/1 2361/713 42
0400Z - 10/0 - - - - 10/0 2371/713 60
0500Z 1/1 12/2 80/1 - - - 93/4 2464/717
0600Z 1/0 9/1 87/1 1/1 - - 98/3 2562/720
0700Z 1/1 4/0 89/0 - - - 94/1 2656/721
0800Z --+-- 2/3 91/2 1/1 --+-- --+-- 94/6 2750/727
0900Z - - 1/0 - - - 1/0 2751/727 57
1000Z - 1/0 - - - - 1/0 2752/727 60
1100Z - - 6/1 37/3 7/2 - 50/6 2802/733
1200Z - - - 16/0 42/5 21/15 79/20 2881/753
1300Z - - - - 79/5 110/2 189/7 3070/760
1400Z - - - 1/2 8/8 169/4 178/14 3248/774
1500Z - - - 1/0 15/1 120/7 136/8 3384/782
1600Z --+-- --+-- --+-- 35/9 7/0 75/2 117/11 3501/793
1700Z - - - 118/3 3/1 5/1 126/5 3627/798
1800Z - - - 45/1 23/1 20/1 88/3 3715/801 7
1900Z - - - 58/0 8/0 10/0 76/0 3791/801
2000Z - - 4/0 42/1 16/1 8/0 70/2 3861/803
2100Z - - 20/0 7/0 9/0 15/0 51/0 3912/803
2200Z - - 63/3 8/0 8/1 - 79/4 3991/807
2300Z - 6/0 13/0 31/2 7/1 1/1 58/4 4049/811

Totals:48/44 197/96 1128/162 845/178 975/177 856/154

Best 60 minutes: 220 starting 29-Nov-2025 13:08             

Worked on 6 bands (26):

4U1UN 5J1DX 8P5A 9A1A CR3A CR3W CR6K DF0HQ EI7M HQ9X KH6J LZ5R NP3Y OL3A P44W PJ2T TK0C TO7A V26K V47T VA2WA VE2IM VE7UF VP9I ZF1A ZF5T

Worked on 5 bands: 70

Most worked entities

          160M    80M    40M    20M    15M    10M   Total
DL 2 14 157 105 122 135 535
I 11 61 61 47 45 225
F 4 48 39 40 64 195
G 1 9 41 38 48 42 179
OK 1 7 48 32 34 28 150
EA 7 36 34 27 43 147
UA 4 54 16 60 12 146
VE 13 16 36 39 26 12 142
SP 4 44 26 38 25 137
PA 3 28 27 34 36 128
S5 2 9 36 19 18 20 104
HA 7 41 16 22 17 103
...
JA 14 15 36 5 70