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The ARRL Antenna Book -- The ultimate reference for Amateur Radio antennas, transmission lines and propagation. Fully-searchable CD-ROM included. 21st edition.

QST View CD-ROM 1915-2004

The QEX Collection CD-ROM 1981-1998 -- Back issues of QEX, the Forum for Communications Experimenters, on a convenient, space-saving CD-ROM.

Communications Quarterly CD-ROM 1990-1999

ARRL General Class Course For Ham Radio Licensing -- Coming in September! -- The Fastest Way to General Class License Success! CD-ROM Included!

Rules, 1999 ARRL RTTY Roundup

General Rules · VHF Rules

Recommended HF Digital Operating Frequencies (MHz)

North and South AmericaEurope/Africa
3.590 RTTY DX3.580-3.620
3.605-3.645
7.040 RTTY DX7.035-7.045
7.080-7.100
14.070-14.099.514.080-14.099.5
21.070-21.10021.080-21.120
28.070-28.15028.050-28.150


Recommended Novice Digital Operating Frequencies

10 meters 28.100-28.150*

Suggested simplex packet-radio frequencies:

28.102.3
28.104.3

* Authorized power output 200-watts maximum for Novices/Techs only in the 10-meter Novice subband.

1. Object Amateurs worldwide contact and exchange QSO information with other amateurs using digital modes (Baudot RTTY, ASCII, AMTOR, and Packet -- attended operation only) on 80, 40, 20, 15, and 10 meter bands. Any station may work any other station.

2. Date and Contest Period First full weekend of January, but never on January 1. Begins 1800 UTC Saturday, ends 2400 UTC Sunday (January 2-3, 1999).

  1. Operate no more than 24 hours.

  2. Two rest periods (for a combined total of at least 6 hours) must be taken in two single blocks of time, clearly marked in the log.

3. Entry Categories

  1. Single Operator

    1. Low Power.

    2. High Power.

  2. Multi Operator, Single Transmitter: Stations are allowed only one transmitted signal at any given time.

    1. Low Power.

    2. High Power.

    3. Includes those single operators that use any form of spotting assistance such as from nets or PacketCluster.

    4. Includes those that receive assistance with logging or relief operators, etc.

    5. Limited to 6 band changes (maximum) in any clock hour.

    6. The clock hour is from zero through 59 minutes.

    7. Band changes are defined so that, for example, a change from 20 meters to 40 meters and then back to 20 meters constitutes two band changes.

4. Exchange

  1. United States Signal report and State.

  2. Canada Signal report and Province.

  3. DX Signal report and serial number, starting with 001.

Canadian Multipliers

PrefixProvince
VO1, VO2NL
VE1, 9NB
VE1NS
VE2QC
VE3ON
VE4MB
VE5SK
VE6AB
VE7BC
VE8NT
VY1YT
VY2PE

5. Scoring

  1. QSO Points Count one point for each completed QSO.

  2. Multipliers Each US state (except KH6 and KL7), each VE province (plus VE8 and VY1) and each DXCC country. KH6 and KL7 count only as separate DXCC countries.

    1. Count only once (not once per band).

    2. The US and Canada do not count as DXCC countries.

6. Miscellaneous

  1. Packet radio contacts made through digipeaters or gateways are not permitted.

7. Awards Certificates will be awarded to

  1. Top high power and low power Single Operator and Multi Operator scorers in each ARRL/RAC Section.

  2. Top high power and low power Single Operator and Multi Operator scorers in each DXCC country (other than W/VE).

  3. Each Novice and Technician Plus entrant.

  4. Each entrant making at least 50 QSOs.

8. Other See rules for All ARRL Contests and for HF Contests.



Page last modified: 09:40 AM, 22 Feb 2002 ET
Page author: contests@arrl.org
Copyright © 2002, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.