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K3HTZ (K3WW) circa 1965
In 1970, we ran a small multi multi from a converted chicken coop on a farm owned by my father. Dad found a nice hill top , and dropped some hints that it would be a better radio location. I purchased the cabin and built a multi multi station which I maintained into the early 1980's. My only single op effort from the new hill top resulted in a third place finish in the CQWW CW in 1970. That was my last serious single op effort in the 70's.
The multi op crew was anchored by
KB3GJ
,
K3WJV and W3WPG,(who lived at my remote hilltop location for a few years).
Many well known contesters visited "the hill" over the years.
Hilltop from 1 mile away
The 5 towers were 150, 150, 110, 100 and 100 feet high. It was the kind of place all my friends would bring their wives, to show that their antenna plans were trivial.
We waged war with W3GPE (now W3MM) just to try to win our township, in the Multi Multi class. We never cracked the upper echelon of big time multi multi operation, although we had a tremendous amount of fun trying.
My Junior Ops, the boys showed early promise.
W3WPG,
NQ4I,
N3EC, Ed, one of the regulars in the late 70s
KW3F, Bob, another regular.
N2ATX, KA3BLP, K3WJV, part of the 1978 team.
9Y4VU,
introduced to stateside contesting by KE6V, and K3WJV.
In 1984 I decided to operate contests from my new home . This is the same location I began operating from in 1959. My family and office were moved from a downtown location, about 1 mile, to my current location. I put up a TH6 at 55 feet and a 402BA above it at 65 feet, and 80 meter vertical with base loading for 160, and decided to make some points for the FRC, and not get so serious about contesting. Unfortunately I made the top 10 single op list in the CQWW CW contest the first time, after many years as a part of multi op efforts. This led to little refinements in the station, and with the creation of the Single Operator Assisted category, my activity level seemed to increase.
We have a PacketCluster (tm) node at my location, and I find it much easier to enter the Assisted category, or even the multi op category, than to ignore the steady flow of information that appears on the node monitor.
