OpenSection |
Pos. |
Team |
Callsign |
QSOs |
Points |
1 |
ManxKippers* |
GD0EMG/P |
1513 |
5505 |
2 |
LichfieldARS* |
G3NKC/P |
1249 |
5181 |
3 |
BristolCG* |
G6YB/P |
1140 |
4416 |
4 |
Newbury|DARS |
G5XV/P |
1105 |
4371 |
5 |
DeMontfortUnivARS |
G3SDC/P |
1080 |
4319 |
6 |
EastNottsCG |
G3TBK/P |
1107 |
4293 |
7 |
WestofScotlandARS |
GM4AGG/P |
1057 |
4128 |
8 |
AddiscombeARC'B' |
G3WRR/P |
1026 |
4073 |
9 |
Oxford|DARS |
G5LO/P |
902 |
3692 |
10 |
NorthWakefieldRC |
G4NOK/P |
770 |
3262 |
11 |
Ripon|DARS |
G4SJM/P |
787 |
3056 |
12 |
IlfordRSGBGroup |
G3XRT/P |
705 |
2975 |
13 |
StockportRS |
M5MDX/P |
788 |
2945 |
14 |
GrimsbyARS |
G3CNX/P |
660 |
2727 |
15 |
Edgware|DRS |
G3ASR/P |
544 |
2401 |
16 |
GuernseyARS* |
GU3HFN/P |
807 |
2387 |
17 |
CliftonARS |
G3GHN/P |
404 |
2032 |
18 |
HadleyWoodCG |
G4STV/P |
631 |
1908 |
19 |
HaveringRC |
G4HRC/P |
458 |
1782 |
20 |
SouthEssexARA |
G4RSE/P |
374 |
1559 |
21 |
DundeeARC |
GM4AAF/P |
303 |
1166 |
Low Power Section |
1 |
EchelfordARS* |
G3UES/P |
364 |
1678 |
2 |
BracknellARC* |
G4BRA/P |
323 |
1527 |
3 |
Stevenage|DARS* |
G3SAD/P |
269 |
1299 |
4 |
Reading|DARC'A'* |
G3ULT/P |
237 |
1261 |
5 |
Reading|DARC'B' |
M0EEE/P |
189 |
653 |
6 |
AviatorsCG |
G3HKO/P |
97 |
386 |
7 |
G3KKQ* |
G3KKQ/P |
90 |
354 |
8 |
M0BGR |
M0BGR/P |
22 |
72 |
Restricted Section |
1 |
OrkneyCG* |
GM3POI/P |
1210 |
5026 |
2 |
FlyingPigsCG* |
G0IVZ/P |
1004 |
4403 |
3 |
GravesendRS* |
G3GRS/P |
1044 |
4347 |
4 |
MidBedsCA |
G4BWP/P |
1039 |
4335 |
5 |
ParkAirCG |
G3KHZ/P |
1023 |
4236 |
6 |
ThreeAsCG |
GM0AAA/P |
943 |
4073 |
7 |
SussexDownsCG |
G4FNL/P |
966 |
4012 |
8 |
ContestCumbria |
G3IZD/P |
840 |
3482 |
9 |
AddiscombeARC'A' |
G4ALE/P |
843 |
3377 |
10 |
TorbayARS |
G3NJA/P |
792 |
3039 |
11 |
TollesburyCG |
G3GLL/P |
704 |
2970 |
12 |
ForthValleyCG |
MM0FVC/P |
681 |
2874 |
13 |
Maidenhead|DARC |
G3WKX/P |
658 |
2865 |
14 |
StratforduponAvon|DRS |
G0SOA/P |
604 |
2433 |
15 |
ChristchurchARS |
G3KLH/P |
649 |
2374 |
16 |
WindmillCG |
G0FBB/P |
522 |
2347 |
17 |
MalvernHillsRAC |
G4MHC/P |
608 |
2330 |
18 |
RAFARS |
G8FC/P |
531 |
2269 |
19 |
NorfolkARC |
G4ARN/P |
538 |
2171 |
20 |
Guildford|DRS |
G5RS/P |
507 |
1948 |
21 |
HarwichARIG |
G0RGH/P |
453 |
1909 |
22 |
GuardaCosteCG* |
G3YXX/P |
410 |
1253 |
23 |
Lowestoft|PYEARS |
G3JRM/P |
249 |
1231 |
24 |
Glenrothes|DARC |
GM4GRC/P |
249 |
1019 |
25 |
GloucesterAR|ES |
G4AYM/P |
310 |
962 |
26 |
MM0BQI |
MM0BQI/P |
102 |
377 |
* = certificate winners |
|
National Field Day, 2003.
In June 2002, Phil Smeaton, G0HSS, decided not to operate
field day with the Windmill Group, G0FBB/P, as he had
done in previous years, but instead decided to join
friends on the Isle of Man who were entering the 50Mhz
Trophy contest. Using a borrowed HF rig, Phil also put
in a small entry in the QRP section of NFD as GD4IOM/P.
Known variously as the Northern Lights or Manx Kippers,
the GD team has been active as MD4K in several HF contests,
and rather go back to the Windmill Group for this year’s
NFD, Phil organised a serious entry from a field adjoining
GD4GNH’s QTH on the side of South Barrule mountain.
A combination of the location , monoband antennas on
the HF bands, good operating, and of course the attractiveness
of the GD prefix on CW enabled the team to make over
1500 QSOs for a record Open Section score of 5505 points.
Congratulations to G4MJS, G4XUM, G0HSS, M0BEW and G1GEY,
though they had computer problems at the start and in
the TT race weekend described their generator as ’kick
start’ - you had to give it a kick before it would
start.
The other success story of this year’s field
day is a 30% increase in the number of entries. There
were some last-minute and part-time entries, and those
who gave it a go enjoyed themselves and promised to
be back next time. The Bracknell group described last
year how easy it is to mount an entry in the QRP section
using a small rig such as the Elecraft K2. Most groups
use a doublet, typically 270ft top. Although two supports
are allowed, all you really need is a single 36ft mast
to support the centre. It’s also acceptable to
use one or two convenient trees, the important thing
is that no part of the antenna may be higher than 11
metres. In the Open section the height limit is 20 metres.
Conditions were generally reported as poor, and a coronal
mass injection from the sun further depressed conditions
on the Saturday evening, but logs show portable operations
from 32 European countries. While the bulk of this is
from Germany and the UK with long-time support also
from Belgium and Switzerland, it’s good to see
increasing interest from Russia, Italy and several Balkan
countries amongst others. This all helps to raise QSO
totals, and this year 14 groups exceeded 1000 QSOs.
RESTRICTED SECTION.
Congratulations to the Orkney group, operated by GM3OPI
and G3MXJ, who returned to the top spot to win the Bristol
Trophy with a strong performance on all three HF bands.
Most of their 10m QSOs were made from about 0850 to
1030 UTC on Sunday.
Three experienced operators, G0IVZ, G4EDG and G4TSH
came together to form a new group, the ’Flying
Pigs’ and they flew into second place to win the
Gravesend Trophy operating from Hampshire. They are
followed by the trophy’s namesake, Gravesend RS,
G3GRS/P, operated by G4BUO and G4IFB.
OPEN SECTION.
While the Manx Kippers are to be congratulated on their
record score to take the NFD Shield, past winners Lichfield,
G3NKC/P, kept them within sight with excellent totals
on the double-point bands of top band and 10m, giving
G3NKC, G3VHB and G0MTN the G6ZR Trophy. There was a
tight battle for third place, won eventually by Bristol,
G6YB/P, operated by G0WKW, G3XSV, G3TKF and M0MAT.
The two contenders for the Frank Hoosen G3YF trophy
for 20m were both in the open section, and the Hadley
Wood CG, G4STV/P, ran up a very good score, but it was
always going to be tough to beat Guernsey, GU3HFN/P.
It’s good to see past 20m winners G3SDC/P move
up to a very respectable sixth place all-band, perhaps
Guernsey would consider this for 2004?
LOW-POWER SECTION.
Echelford, G3UES/P, proved they have strength in depth,
winning the section and gaining the Reading Trophy for
the second year, but this time without former operators
G4TSH who ‘defected’ to the Flying Pigs,
and G3KKQ who was away on the Isle of White visiting
a friend. Congratulations to operator John, G4IRN, and
the whole team which included M0SAR, G0VDZ, M0WDX, G2HS,
G3XTZ, G4PRI, G0JSH, G0SHW and M3PMT. When not partying,
Dennis G3KKQ, found the time to put up a 40m dipole
at 15ft and make nearly 100 QSOs.
Last year’s runners-up, Bracknell, G4BRA/P, again
operated their very neat K2-based station to come second
on QRP, and as predicted in the 2002 write-up, Stevenage,
G3SAD/P, improved again to edge above Reading, G3ULT/P.
|
ELVASTON CASTLE.
Many field day sites are on land open to the public,
or situated close to a footpath, and if you’re
approached by a member of the public asking what’s
going on, it’s a great opportunity to tell them
something about the hobby of amateur radio. Field day
shows that it is possible to set up an effective station
at short notice, and it provides a convincing answer
to the question ‘whats the difference between
ham radio and just calling someone on the mobile?’
because we can demonstrate our ability to make contacts
right around the world without any telecommunications
infrastructure at all.
Clubs that do field day and similar events have a stock
of information sheets ready to hand out, and preferably
have members of the team who are willing to explain
things to visitors. You never know, this year’s
curious visitor could be next years M3 operator!
RAFARS, G8FC/P, did a great publicity job, as related
by contest manager G3ZDW: ’The Royal Air Force
Amateur Radio Society’ normally has a display
at the Elvaston Castle Mobile Rally. However this year
the dates clashed with NFD. We came up with an idea
of running both events as one. As well as solving our
problems of running two events it would give the opportunity
to show amateur radio fraternity and the general public
what Field Day ia all about, knowing that the majority
of licensed amateurs had never seen an NFD station in
operation.
What were the problems and how could we make it interesting
for the general public? Under normal conditions the
operator would be there with headphones on and operating
the key and keyboard, not very interesting. However,
we also wanted to operate the contest without the general
public getting in the way of the stations operating
efficiency. So that the public could hear what was going
on, a speaker was connected to the rigs output stage
giving both transmitted and received audio. Running
off the logging computer was a second VDU, showing a
copy of the SD log, which created a lot of interest.
We also had a cw reader showing the decoded cw text
on the screen, this worked best with out transmission,
could normally hear several cw stations at the same
time, which is of course the normal situation in NFD.
Multiple Signals tended to cause corruption of the text
in the cw reader.
There were members of the team available to explain
and show the public what we were doing. Handouts were
distributed explaining NFD and the basic rules. The
whole thing was a success as we had a lot of listeners
and viewers with some staying quite a while watching
out progress while others kept returning to check on
our advancing score.
ADMIN.
Seven groups were inspected this year, and thanks are
due to all the inspectors, especially GD3HDL and GD4OEA
for arranging a visit the group that turned out to be
the overall winners. There was a problem with one group
that had failed to give correct site access information,
and this led to several complicated phone calls during
Saturday afternoon. If the inspector cannot locate your
site due to inadequate information you risk disqualification.
Only a handful of paper logs were received, and thanks
go to G3UFY who keyed them in. Most entries came by
e-mail and the majority were in Cabrillo format. Before
sending your log file, open it with a viwer such as
Notepad and check that everything looks OK, and that
you have specified the section correctly. While SD handles
NFD well, the output from other logging programs will
at least have to be edited to show required information.
Worse, the Cabrillo output from TR-Log doesn’t
include sent serial numbers, which meant in this case
that they had to be carefully inserted during the checking
process.
Please use Cabrillo ‘SOAPBOX’ lines to give
details of equipment and antennas used, as well as giving
comments for the write-up. A selection of comments appear
in the soapbox section but from this Clifton, G3GHN/P,
should be heeded by all NFD operators: ‘ Use of
computers means that people hardly ever slow down when
you ask for QRS and you can sense the impatience if
you ask for a repeat. Giving real reports to people
also causes some shock. We had 12+ club members on site,
but most are too frightened by the cw speed to operate.
Speeds made search and pounce very difficult so we sat
on one frequency and called CQ at about 14wpm. Callers
still came back at 20wpm+. This really doesn’t
help anyone. I understand PC’s are here to stay,
but please learn how to vary the speed.’
The HF Contests Committee thanks all of those who participated
in NFD 2003 and looks forward to seeing you in next
years contest.
Dave Lawley, G4BUO. |