From: Doug Freestone dougf at sk.sympatico.ca
Subject: HSMS Contest Announcement

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The following is posted on behalf of N7STU who is unavoidably busy 
and away from home.  /VE5UF   See you in May on HSMS
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Introducing the Second, North American High Speed Meteor Scatter (HSMS) 
Contest, sponsored by: The Western States Weak Signal Society. 

Purpose: To promote the development of skilled HSCW operators in North 
America.

Objective: Work as many North American stations as possible via meteor 
scatter during the contest period using HSCW on the amateur radio bands 
above 50 MHz. HSCW for the purpose of this contest is any speed no less 
than 495 LPM (99 WPM).

Contest Period: 0000z, 1 May 1999 to 2400z, 9 May 1999 
You may operate up to 48 hours during this time period. An operating 
period begins with your first TRANSMISSION and includes time spent 
listening between transmissions. Operating time must be taken in 30 minute 
blocks. Time spent listening outside of your operating periods does not 
count towards your operating time. Multi-ham households--Each licensed ham 
is eligible to operate 48 hours under their own callsign. 

Contest Operation: Random and scheduled QSOs count for contest credit. 
The use of the letter system for CQing is REQUIRED, ie. CQF, CQX. Report 
is your four digit grid square. Real-time skeds, spotting assistance, 
DX-alerting nets, etc. are permitted for the purpose of arranging contact 
attempts. Refer to the Region II HSCW standard operating procedures 
 for suggested HSCW 
techniques and meteor scatter calling frequencies. The use of HSCW on VHF 
SSB calling frequencies is poor operating technique. A station may only be 
worked once per band during the contest period unless one of the stations 
has changed grid squares. A separate log is required for each grid 
activated. Each grid activated will be scored separately.

QSO Requirements: To log a completed contact you must copy: both calls, 
report, rogers. Any form of liaison communication between the parties 
involved in a contact in progress is prohibited. Any interruption of a 
contact in progress requires both stations restart the QSO attempt from the 
beginning. All information required for a complete contact must be 
exchanged using meteor scatter and no other propagation mode. 

Classes: Single Operator Limited--2 meters only 
Single Operator Limited--Multi-band 
Single Operator Unlimited--2 meters only 
Single Operator Unimited--Multi-band
Limited: Station ERP is restricted to less than or equal to 5kw. 
Unlimited: Station ERP is greater than 5kw. 
Multi-band stations must enter in the class corresponding to the highest 
ERP used. 
A station may only enter in ONE class.
Multipliers: The sum of each unique four digit grid square worked on each 
band.
Scoring (QSO points): 
BAND ASSISTED RANDOM 
6m     1       1 
2m     3       6 
1.25m  9       18 
.7m    9       18 
The final score is the sum of all QSO points from each band times the 
multiplier. 

Awards: Certificates will be awarded to the top three overall, and to the 
highest scoring station in each USA/VE call district and each North 
American DXCC country for each category. In addition, a certificate will 
be awarded to the highest scoring portable station activating two or more 
grids (based on the sum of their scores from each grid activated). A 
minimum of 2 QSOs is required to qualify for any award. Additional 
certificates may be awarded where activity warrants. Participants can only 
enter in one class for contest credit.

Reporting: The following information must be contained on the summary 
sheet which must accompany the log: Callsign used, Grid Square(s) 
activated, Maximum ERP used, Name, Address, and Email Address (if 
available). Log information must contain the following data: Callsign of 
station worked, starting and ending times/dates of contact (and operating 
periods), Frequency, Reports, and sked or random.

Miscellaneous: Station equipment can only be used under one callsign, with 
the exception of multi-ham households. Single Band Entrants, time spent 
working stations on bands other than 2 meters does not count against your 
48 hour operating time. Single band entrants are requested to send in 
check logs for all contacts made on other bands. The decisions of the 
awards committee are final. All logs must be postmarked or email dated no 
later than May 30th. Email logs must be sent in ASCII format to: 
hscw at contesting.com. 

Postal mail logs may be mailed to: 
WSWSS HSCW Contest 
P.O. Box 86 
Downey, CA 90241-0086
Sample blank log page/summary sheets are available from 
http://www.qsl.net/n7stu/hscw.html 
or a reasonable facsimile may be used. A printed copy of the rules and 
sample log/summary sheet can be obtained by sending an SASE to the WSWSS. 
Please enclose an SASE if you would like to receive a printed copy of the 
results via postal mail. 

Note: The radiant of the Eta Aquarids shower is projected to provide the 
best conditions during the contest (in North America) from approximately 
one hour before sunrise local time for approximately eight hours daily. 
This is the suggested best operating time each day. Remember though, HSCW 
contacts can be completed at any time of the day.

Further Information about HSMS: The following Internet web sites contain a 
wealth of information about High-Speed-Meteor-Scatter. Please note that 
there are several minor operating practice differences between North 
America and European techniques; for example, in North America, the 
northern- or eastern-most station normally transmits during the odd minutes 
(those minutes beginning with odd numbers: 1231Z, 1415Z; etc.). Also, 
North American sked speeds (and sometimes CQ speeds) tend to be somewhat 
higher than in Europe because most North American HSMSers are using 
computers to record and playback recorded reflections. Suggested HSMS 
operating practices are described in HSCW Procedures (v. 7), available at 
http://www.nitehawk.com/rasmit/hscw-sop22.html. Information regarding 
calculating station ERP can be obtained from W5UN's website 
http://web.wt.net/~w5un/. Other information, including hardware 
modification tips, software, and HSMS articles may be found at these URLs:
http://www.nitehawk.com/rasmit/ws1_15.html
http://www.ilk.de/sites/gap
http://www.mint.net/~n1bug/
http://www.qsl.net/k0sm/
http://www.sci.fi/~oh5iy/
http://www.cannon.net/~mattmc/kb0vuk/hsms/hsms.html
http://www.qsl.net/kd5bur/
http://www.qsl.net/n7stu/hscw.html
Many more links covering other HSMS topics may be found on most of the 
above web sites.

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