Islands on the Air (IOTA) Contest 2011
(The General Rules for RSGB HF Contests do not apply to this event.)
IOTA Contest Section here - (Contaning previous years results, all time record scores, trophy list and online log submissions.)
Guide for newcomers to the RSGB IOTA Contest
1.
GENERAL The aim of the contest is to promote contacts
between
stations in qualifying IOTA island groups and the rest of the world and
to
encourage expeditions to IOTA islands.
2. WHEN 1200UTC Saturday 30th July to 1200UTC Sunday 31st July 2011 (the contest always takes place over the last FULL weekend of July).
3. BANDS AND MODES 3.5, 7, 14, 21 and 28MHz, CW and SSB. IARU band plans must be observed, with CW contacts being made only in the recognised CW ends of the bands (see RSGB Yearbook and similar sources, for recognised IARU band plans). Contest-preferred segments must be observed, no operation to take place on 3500-3510, 3560 - 3600, 3650 - 3700, 14060 - 14125 and 14300 - 14350kHz.
4.
CATEGORIES
All entrants
must operate within the limits of their chosen category when performing
any
activity that could impact their submitted score. All equipment
(transmitters,
receivers and antennas) plus all operators must be located within a
500m
diameter circle or within the property limits of the station licensee’s
address, whichever is the greater.
4.1
Location:
•
Island
(Any station operating from a qualifying island, as listed in the IOTA
Directory. Island stations must ensure beforehand that the island from
which they are operating is a valid qualifying island for IOTA. Any
questions about the IOTA programme and island validity should be
addressed to the IOTA Manager (see RSGB IOTA Web site).
• World
(any station not on a qualifying island).
4.2
Operators:
• Single
operator QSO
alerting assistance of any kind (this includes, but is no limited to,
packet,
local or remote Skimmer and/or Skimmer-like technology, Internet)
places the
entrant in the Single-operator Assisted category.
• Single-operator
Assisted One
person. One signal at any one time. QSO alerting assistance is allowed
(this
includes, but is not limited to, packet, local or remote Skimmer and/or
Skimmer-like technology, Internet). Self-spotting or asking to be
spotted is
not allowed.
• Multi-Operator
(24-hour Mixed Mode only. Multi-ops are restricted to a maximum of two
transceivers, the second station to be used to find and call other
stations only if the station is a new multiplier. It must not be used
to solicit other contacts, e.g. by calling "CQ" or "QRZ". Any
non-multiplier QSOs made accidentally on the second station must be
logged, but will be scored as zero points. QSO alerting
assistance is allowed (this includes, but
is not
limited to, packet, local or remote Skimmer and/or Skimmer-like
technology,
Internet). Self-spotting or asking to be spotted is not allowed.
Multi-operator
entrants should include a full list of operators with their
entry).
4.3
Mode:
• CW
• SSB
• Mixed-mode (multi-operator entries must
be Mixed Mode).
4.4
Operating Time:
•
24 hours
• 12
hours
(Multi-operator entries must be 24 hours, In the 12-hour categories,
operation need not be for one continuous 12-hour period but, once
operation has commenced, off periods must be a minimum of 60 minutes.).
4.5
Power (Any station not indicating transmitter
power will be classified as High Power):
• High-power
(maximum, as permitted by the station licence but, in any case, no more
than 1500 watts output)
• Low
power (maximum 100 watts output),
•
QRP (maximum 5 watts output).
5.
DXPEDITIONS
5.1
Island stations may, additionally, indicate that they are a
DXpedition station as defined below, and compete for a range of
expedition trophies and certificates (an additional listing will be
shown in the results). It is essential that you make this clear on your
cover sheet as notification after the entry deadline cannot be
accepted.
5.2 The definition of DXpedition for this
optional listing is one:
•
where the island can only be reached by boat or air (islands
which can be accessed by bridge or causeway - man-made or natural - are
not eligible),
• where none of the operators is resident
on the island,
•
where the operators take all radio equipment and antennas
with
them and do not rely on a resident for any part of the station,
•
where, in the case of 100W IOTA Island DXpedition stations,
the
antennas are limited to one element per band (e.g. dipole, vertical).
(High power DXpeditions have no antenna restrictions).
6.
EXCHANGE
Send RS(T) and
serial number starting from 001, plus IOTA reference number if
applicable
(island stations MUST include the IOTA reference as part of their
exchange). Do
not use separate numbering systems for CW and SSB. Stations may be
contacted on
both CW and SSB on each band. Multi-operator entrants may find it
convenient to
allocate separate blocks of serial numbers for the run and multiplier
stations,
but do ensure if possible that there is no duplication of serial
numbers.
7.
SCORING
7.1 QSO Points – All entrants can
work
anyone, island or non-island. Contacts with non-island stations count 3
points. Contacts with IOTA islands count 15 points except
that, if you
are on an island, contacts with your own IOTA reference count 3 points.
7.2 Multiplier - The multiplier is
the
total of different IOTA references contacted on each band on CW, plus
the total
of different IOTA references contacted on each band on SSB. Multi-op
stations
may not work members of their own
group for multiplier credit.
7.3 Total Score - The score is the
total of
QSO points on all bands added together, multiplied by the total of
multipliers.
8.
LOGS
8.1 Electronic
submission of logs by disc or e-mail is encouraged - and in fact
required - for
all high scoring entrants and all who use a computer to log or prepare
the
logs. Entrants submitting paper logs will not be eligible for
certificates or
awards. Those who log on paper are encouraged to get the log typed up
by a
friend and submit electronically. Electronic submissions should be in
Cabrillo
format (a definition of Cabrillo, as applied to the IOTA contest, can
be found
on the RSGB HFCC Web page). Word, Excel or other proprietary file
formats are
no longer acceptable. Many popular contest logging programs support the
IOTA
contest. Single-operator entrants are recommended to try SDI from
EI5DI, which
is free and can be downloaded from here
8.2 For
Cabrillo logs, the categories and category overlays are:
CATEGORY:
[SINGLE-OP,
MULTI-OP] ALL [HIGH, LOW, QRP] [SSB, CW,
MIXED]
CATEGORY-ASSISTED:
[ASSISTED,
UNASSISTED]
CATEGORY-DXPEDITION:
[EXPEDITION,
NON-DXPEDITION]
CATEGORY-TIME:
[12-HOURS,
24-HOURS]
So, a single-op, World, low power, 12-hours,
CW,
unassisted would show:
CATEGORY:
SINGLE-OP ALL LOW CW
CATEGORY-ASSISTED:
UNASSISTED
CATEGORY-TIME:
12-HOURS
A multi-op island station may, for example,
indicate:
CATEGORY:
MULTI-OP ALL HIGH MIXED
CATEGORY-DXPEDITION: EXPEDITION
8.3 Logs must show: Time, Callsign, Band, Mode, RST / serial number / IOTA reference sent, RST / serial number / IOTA reference received. Please ensure you send a single log in order of sent serial number. Do not send separate logs for each band. Logs from IOTA stations must state their island name and IOTA reference number. The log data in a Cabrillo log should be of the format:
QSO:
28024 CW 2003-07-26 1338 G3XTT
599
001 EU-005 ZS6EZ
599
018 ------
QSO: 21003 CW 2003-07-26 1341 G3XTT
599
002 EU-005 G4TSH
599
130 EU-005
QSO:
21002 CW 2003-07-26 1343 G3XTT
599
003 EU-005 5B4/G3UFY
599
036 AS-004
High scoring entrants are encouraged to log the actual frequency, not just the band. Multi-operator entrants must also identify the transmitter on which the QSO is made (in accordance with normal Cabrillo formats, this is shown by a numerical identifier at the right-hand end of the QSO line, i.e. after the received IOTA).
8.4 Entries
can be
8.5 Please note that the RSGB has a new address, which should be used for postal (paper and disc) entries. This is: RSGB IOTA Contest, Radio Society of Great Britain, 3 Abbey Court, Fraser Road, Priory Business Park, Bedford, MK44 3WH, UK.
8.6 The closing date for all logs is 3 weeks after the contest, 21 August 2011.
8.7 Island Stations - By submitting a log for this contest you agree that the RSGB can automatically grant credit to IOTA participants' scores for claimed QSOs that reasonably match the data in your submission (this facility is included in the Next Generation IOTA Software).
8.8 Photographs of IOTA contest operations are very welcome and will be posted on the HFCC Website or used in RadCom. Do not send these as part of your log submission, but mail them separately to iotacontest@rsgbcc.org There is also be an opportunity to upload photographs , YouTube clips and your location (by way of Google Earth) when you complete your log submission.
9.
PENALTIES
Points may be
deducted, or entrants disqualified, for violation of the rules or the
spirit of
the contest. This includes, for example, refusal by IOTA island
stations to
make contacts with their own country when requested, use of a third
party to
make contacts on a list or net, working CW multipliers on an SSB
frequency, failing
to observe the contest-preferred band segments, or not giving the IOTA
reference for every contact. The decision of the IOTA Contest Manager
and RSGB
Contests Committee is final in all matters of dispute.
10.
AWARDS
Certificates will be
awarded to leading
stations in each category and section, and in each continent, according
to
number of entries. A large number of Awards and Trophies is now
available, and
new sponsors are always welcome. Please see the full list on the RSGB
HFCC Web
site.
11.
SWL CONTEST
There is no longer an
SWL section in the
IOTA Contest, but the Mediterraneo DX Club runs an IOTA SWL Contest in
parallel
with the IOTA Contest. SWLs can find full details on the MDXC Web page:
http://www.mdxc.org/swl
12. NOTE
FROM
RSGB IOTA CONTEST MANAGER:
The IOTA Contest
Manager can be reached via the contest website.
IOTA Contest information, including rules, trophies available, previous
results, soapbox and photographs, and logs received can be found on the
RSGB Contests
Committee Web site at www.rsgbcc.org
Copies of the
IOTA Directory, if required, can be purchased from RSGB (see
www.rsgb.org).
A
full list of IOTA islands, and other information relating to the IOTA
program
can be found on the RSGB IOTA Web Page (www.rsgbiota.org).