Friday, May 31, 2013

QSL Managers






QSL Managers

"VIA QSL MGR" - QSL Managers


Sponsored by WINQSL

You heard that rare DX station tell the pile-up that cards are being accepted by his QSL Manager, but the QSB was coming in and you didn't quite catch that callsign. No fear! QRZ is here! The QRZ QSL database contains manager references to over 68,000 DX callsigns. Enjoy and Good DX Hunting!

DX Callsign:

This search page accepts partial callsigns too! For example, to find all QSL managers for 4U0 callsigns, you can simply enter '4U0' in the callsign box. The system will also search for the managers as well - just type in the manager's callsign and see how many stations he QSL's for.

Updates
Please email all QSL route or manager updates to DF6EX
Our special thanks to Manfred Meier, DF6EX, for providing the QSL Manager database.

QSL Bureaus and Services

Sometimes, when it's tough to locate a direct address or a QSL Manager for a DX station, a "bureau" or "service" can be used instead. Depending on the bureau or service, there will likely be some restrictions and/or costs involved with using it. Although typically slower than QSL'ing direct, the use of bureaus and services will often offer a greater chance of getting your hands on that elusive QSL card!

QSL Bureaus
AMSAT (Worldwide)
ARRL - Incoming (U.S.)
ARRL - Outgoing (U.S.)
CIS (Russia)
Federation of Chilean Radio Clubs - (Chile)
IARU (Worldwide)
Radio Amateurs of Canada (Canada)
Radio Club Argentino (Argentina)
United Kingdom QSL Bureau

RSGB QSL Bureau
P.O. Box 5
Halifax, England HX1 9JR

QSL Services
Airmail and Nesting Envelopes, and Foreign Stamps!

Available from:
Bill Plum
12 Glenn Road
Flemington, NJ 08822-3322 USA

Telephone: (908)788-1020
Fax: (908)782-2612
Call to request a price sheet to be faxed to you.

F5CCO's Free E-Mail QSL Request Service
Irish Radio Transmitters Society
James Mackey - Rubber Stamps, QSL Cards, Foreign Postage, Envelopes, Etc.

James Mackey
P.O. Box 270569
West Hartford, CT 06127-0569 USA
Telephone: (860)521-7254

QSLCard.Com - Electronic QSL card exchange on the Internet
WF5E Outgoing QSL Service - Private QSL Bureau - much quicker than conventional bureaus!

Are you trying to figure out what country a particular callsign is from? Take a look at ITU's Table of Allocation of Int'l Call Sign Series!


QSL Card Designers and Printers

Not all of us have the artistic ability to create our own attractive QSL cards. However, you're sure to find a company below which can produce everything from simple and inexpensive cards, to fancy multi-color glossy cards with custom pictures and text!
ICX
ELLI Print
Cheap QSL's
F5EJC's QSL
FDS Graphics - Full Colour QSL Cards (G8RCZ)
GlobalQSL.com
Kamko QSL Cards - Artsci Publishing
KB3IFH QSL CARDS
Marcum's QSL's (KA6GND)
NØRS QSL Cards - Graphics Design and Printing of Full Color QSL's
QQSL - The Ultimate Ham Radio QSL Label Program
QSL Cards by Artist (KD4WVK)
QSL Cards by IT9EJW
QSL Cards by SQ6CWP
QSL Cards by VE9QSL
QSL Print Service (SQ5AXY)
Polyvector
PhotoQSLs.com
QSL Shop - The DX'ers Choice
QSL's by IK1PML
QSL's by IK2GAO
QSL's printed by OE6EUG
QSLWorks, Custom QSL Cards by WB0NNI
Rusprint QSL Cards
LZ1YE QSL Print Service
LZ3HI QSL Print Service
The Sign Man (10-10 Cards)
UA3AA QSL Print Service
VI-CON Full Color
W4MPY - The QSL Man
QSL Factory - printed custom QSLs
WX9X Quality Ham Radio QSL Cards
YL's Touch QSL Card Designs
ON5UR QSL Printing
Corner Press LLC - QSL Cards since 1961
UX5UO Print Service

Looking for a way to organize and/or display your QSL cards? Check out Hamstuff by W7NN!

Wanna' try your hand at designing your own QSL card? Check out WB8RCR's QSL Maker!

Tips for QSL'ers

DX stations, especially the rare ones, receive thousands of QSL cards. So, if you really want a return on your QSL, then it is imperative that you package your outgoing QSL card properly.

Consider who is receiving your card...
Are *you* considered "rare DX" to the person who is receiving your QSL card?
Especially in the case of stateside hams, most times the answer to this question is an emphatic "no". If this is the case, and if you expect a return QSL, you must make provisions for that return. At an absolute minimum, include a self-addressed, stamped envelope (SASE) to help ensure a returned QSL card. If you send your QSL card as a postcard, you can expect not to see a return QSL in most cases. (If you do, consider yourself lucky!)

Packaging your outgoing QSL (direct or via QSL Manager)
Correct date and time on the QSL - It is important that the exact date and time are entered on your outgoing QSL card. If you make an error, you risk getting your card back from the QSL Manager with "NIL" (Not In Log) written on it. If you do get the DX stations' QSL card despite an incorrect date/time, consider yourself fortunate ... the QSL Manager took the time to search the log for your QSO! One of the most common reasons why dates and times are incorrect is that the QSL'er has failed to use UTC date and time!
QSL Card Design - As suggested by Bob Locher, W9KNI, in his book "The Complete DX'er", it is advantageous to have your callsign on the same side of your QSL card as the QSO information. By doing so, the QSL Manager doesn't have to flip back and forth from one side of your QSL to the other as he/she verifies QSO information. This decreases the chance that the QSL Manager might get your callsign wrong. Nobody wants to get back a QSL card from a rare DX station, just to find that it's not YOUR callsign on the card!
Pre-glued SASE Envelopes - Can you imagine having to lick three hundred envelopes in one day? By using SASE's that are pre-glued, you are making the QSL Manager's job much easier. These types of envelopes have a "wax-paper" strip along the pre-glued portion. All the QSL Manager has to do is to peel off the strip and seal the envelope. [Note: For the most part, I have seen such envelopes coming only out of Japan ... it will be nice when they are more readily available in the U.S.]
Use a piece of wax paper - Include a sheet of wax paper on the inside of the nested envelope. This prevents the envelope from "self adhering" during transit to the DX station or Mgr. This is especially useful when sending to tropical areas or when you know the envelope is traveling via air where moisture can be present. (Thanks, Dale H. Cole K9TTT, for the tip!)
Return Address on SASE's - Many SASE's received by QSL Managers do not have return addresses on them. Since the QSL Manager deals with many SASE's, it's unlikely he/she is going to put their own address as a "return address" on the envelope. It is suggested that the QSL'er put the QSL Manager's address on the top-left corner of the SASE. This is cheap insurance to help keep your QSL card out of the postal service's "dead letter" file.
Pre-stamped SASE - If you are able to obtain the correct postage stamps for the country of the card recipient, it is suggested that you affix the stamps to the SASE. There are two benefits to doing this:
(1) You make the QSL Manager's job easier, since he/she will not have the extra task of doing postage for your card
(2) Your card will likely be sent out as soon as it is processed (it won't have wait in a queue for postage).
NOTE: If you pre-stamp your SASE, be sure to affix enough postage. And, if you do not pre-stamp, as always you must include appropriate compensation to cover all postage expense!
Direction of the fold of the SASE- In many cases, you are required to fold your SASE so that it will fit into your outgoing envelope. When you insert the folded SASE into the envelope, do so with the "fold" downwards. In other words, don't allow the fold to be up at the top of the inside of the envelope.
If the fold is at the top, then the SASE could possibly be sliced in half as the QSL Manager uses his/her letter opener. As a QSL Manager, I have sliced several SASE's in half -- although they can be taped back together, it's not much fun to go dig the tape out and perform surgery.
Callsigns on Envelopes - Unfortunately, in some countries, postal workers have earned a less than honest reputation. In these cases, any envelope that is identified as containing "ham radio contents" could be stolen. Apparently, these thieves have discovered that stealing green stamps (dollar bills) that are often included in the envelopes can be a profitable business. So, if your "To" envelope or SASE will travel through potentially "unsafe" postal systems, your envelope will have a better chance at making it through if you avoid putting your callsign on the outside of it.
However, it is a good idea to put your callsign on this INSIDE flap of the SASE. That way if the QSL manager gets your envelope mixed up with another envelope, he doesn't have to research your name to find out what callsign it belongs to. Written inside, under the flap, mail thieves won't see it! (Thanks, N6VHF, for the tip!)
Avoid sending your card as "registered" or "certified" mail- When a card is sent as registered or certified, it is inconvenient for the QSL Manager to have to go down to the Post Office to retrieve it. And, since it takes a bit longer to receive the card (as it awaits the QSL Manager at the local Post Office), this process delays the return of your awaited QSL card. The only time that you should send registered or certified mail is if this process is the only way of guaranteeing that the envelope is handled properly through your country's postal system.
Include collectible stamps in your envelope - If you have any domestic stamps that are less common in your country, and if the QSL Manager, to whom you are sending the QSL request, resides in another country, include these stamps in your envelope. Chances are good that the QSL Manager collects stamps, and he/she will likely appreciate your contribution to the collection.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

N8A, 2013 American Samoa DXpedition

http://www.n8a.eu/



Welcome to our Website
12 to 27 November 2013

JH3PRR, W6SZN, ZL1GO and ZL3CW are setting up a DXPedition to American Samoa under the Special Events Station Callsign N8A especially for the CQWW CW contest but with extended precontest activity intended to make KH8 widely available.

* Operations on HF 10-160m
* Significant effort on 160 meters
* Focus on EU for the high bands
* CW will be the primary mode with some SSB and RTTY possible
* Location will be well south of Pago Pago to limit mountain low angle blockage


DXCC Most Wanted List


Mode World EuropeMixed 59 36
SSB 77 54
CW 41 27
RTTY 35 29


Contact

N 8 A
QSL via ZL3CW
+64 29 415 0455
jcalvo@xtra.co.nz

TN5MS, RADIO EXPEDITION CONGO 2013



RADIO EXPEDITION CONGO 2013

A hospital ship - helping the poorest - radio amateur volunteers - supporting a Mercy Ships project 

In close cooporation between the DAGOE Foundation and Mercy Ships, 4 Dutch radio amateur will run the 4th DAGOE Mercy Ships Radio DXpedition. This time the team will operate from the Republic of Congo. They will work on board of the Hospitalship Africa Mercy from September 22 - 27 and run a DXpedition from Pointe Noire between September 28th till October 11th using the amateur radio callsign TN5MS.

Arie PA3A Marian PD1AEG Ad PA8AD Angelina PA8AN

After the previous projects in Liberia (5L2MS), Benin (TY1MS) and Sierra Leone (9L5MS) the team was very honored and proud to be rewarded in 2013 for their achievements with the Yasme Excellence Award 2012.

This time the team set the following goals:
Work on board of the Hospitalship Africa Mercy.
Raise awareness for the work of Mercy Ships and raise funds for the Mercy Ships Charity Project.
Create the possibility for all HAMs to contact Congo on as much bands and modes as possible.All donations and surplus will be used to support the Mercy Ships project.


RADIO DXPEDITION INFO

Team members

Arie Kleingeld PA3A (5L2MS,9L5MS)
Marian van Boheemen PD1AEG
Ad van Ginneken PA8AD (5L2MS, TY1MS, 9L2MS)
Angelina van Ginneken PA8AN

Most participants are member of the Dordtse Elektronica Club often found in contests using PI4DEC or PI4D.

Radio Setup

The 9L5MS team will work from 160m to 10m in SSB, CW and RTTY.

The equipment consists of 3 transceivers and 400W linears. 

The antennas are verticals for 160m - 30m and beams for 20m - 10m. 
For 160m and 80m extra receiving antennas are used to improve station receive capability. 
If conditions allows it and permission is received we will try to activate 6m also.
We take special care to listen for remote locations and small stations.

Goal of the team is to work as many different stations as possible in the different modes.


QSL REQUESTS

Online QSL (oQSL)

Save time, stamps and envelopes by requesting your QSL card via Internet and support us! Online ordering is processed by Paypal. Please be aware that Paypal asks provision for each transaction. Fill in your call your QSO Information, select your supportchoice and press the QSL Request button. Follow the instructions and use your home address as shipment address. There is no need to send your QSL card!

Provide your QSO Information in short in this format: YOURCALL / 20CW / 160SSB / 40SSB

Support the DXpedition Your choice
2 US$ QSL card 
5 US$ QSL card & Support us 
10 US$ QSL card & Support us 
20 US$ QSL card & Support us 
50 US$ QSL card & Support us 

Other ways of requesting 

For post mail send your card and greenstamps to: H. van Oosterhout PA3AWW, Meelbeshof 8, 3355 BD Papendrecht, Netherlands
Please do not send IRC's. IRC's are not supported by the Dutch Post!

Bureau QSL requests will be answered via bureau (QSL via PA3AWW).
LoTW will be uploaded 6 months after the DXpedition when logs are checked.
The team is not using eQSL for answering QSL.

DONATIONS


Dear visitor,

My name is Ad (PA8AD) and participant in all DAGOE / MERCY SHIPS projects so far.I joined these projects because this gave me the opportunity to support Mercy Ships in their marvelous work. With their inspiration, professionalism, involvement and dedication they saved the life of so many people and gave so many others a new future. Imagine volunteers, some even with their families, paying to work for weeks, months or years on board of the largest Hospitalship! They really bring Hope and Healing. As participants in the Radio Projects we also cover all cost by ourselves and are supported by some sponsors to cover the special material we use. All donations and the financial surplus from the radio activity itself are directly donated to the Mercy Ships projects. If you also want to support also Mercy Ships feel free to contribute by providing a Donation. Donations can be done via PayPal or via Banktranfer. 

Banktransfer info
DAGOE Stichting 
Dordrecht, The Netherlands
Postbank Account 2073965
IBAN NL82PSTB0002073965
BIC PSTBNL21

Please add Mercy Ships Project or Dxpedition in the comment field.
On behalf of the DAGOE / MERCY SHIPS Radio Team thank you for your support!

Monday, May 27, 2013

TS8TI, Djerba Island, AF-083

http://www.mdxc.org/ts8ti/









Djerba has a mild climate and a well cultivated soil. Its largest city is Houmt-Souk, with a population of around 65,000. The island is a popular tourist destination, particularly with French, German and Italian tourists, and is known for its beautiful beaches and dramatic sunsets. It is one of the few remaining places in Tunisia where a Berber language is still spoken. Another factor drawing some tourists to Djerba is the 1977 location of the Mos Eisley exterior scenes in the first Star Wars movie, filmed in the town of Ajim.



Djerba is noted as a center of the Islamic sect Al-Ibadhiyah and is also noted for its Jewish minority, which has dwelt on the island for more than 2,500 years, although the Jewish population has declined due to emigration to Israel and France since 1967. The El Ghriba synagogue on Djerba is over 2,000 years old and is as such the oldest and one of the most famous in the world.



Djerba also has a sizeable minority of MalteseCatholics, who established themselves on the island as sponge-fishers.

Legend has it that Djerba was the island of the Lotus-Eaters where Odysseus stranded on his voyage through the Mediterranean.

The island, called Meninx until the third century AD, included three principal towns. One of these, whose modern name is Būrgū, is found near Midoun in the center of the island. The remains of a large town dating from the fourth century BC are signalled by high mounds and dense pottery, as well as by a major tomb, possibly that of a member of the Numidian royal family. Another city, on the southeast coast of the island at Meninx, was a major producer of murex dye, cited byPliny the Elder as second only to Tyre in this respect; substantial amounts of coloured marble testify to its wealth. In the third century the same town appears to have been called Girba, whence the present name of the island. At least two bishops of Girba are known, Monnulus and Vincent, who assisted at the Councils of Carthage in 255 and 525 (Toulotte, Géographie de l’Afrique chrétienne Proconsulaire, Paris, 1892, pp. 353 and 380). Their cathedral can be identified with ruins to the southwest of Meninx. A third important town, on the south coast near the modern pottery village of Guellala; was probably the ancient Haribus. The island was densely inhabited in the Roman and Byzantine periods, and probably imported much of the grain consumed by its inhabitants. A collapse can be seen after 650 A.D., when the Justinianic plague may have struck the port of Meninx.



Ghazi Mustapha Fort, Djerba, Tunisia

During the Middle Ages, it was occupied by members of the Kharejite sect, known as the Ibadites. The Christians of Sicily and Aragon disputed its possession with the Ibadites of the island. Remains from this period include numerous small mosques dating as early as the twelfth century, as well as two substantial forts.

The island was controlled twice by the Norman Kingdom of Sicily: in *1135–1158 and in *1284–1333. During the second of these periods it was organised as a feudal lordship, with the following Lords of Jerba: 1284–1305 Roger I, 1305–1307 and 1307–1310 Roger II (twice), 1310 Charles, 1310 Francis-Roger III; there were also royal governors, partially overlapping with the lordship terms: c. 1305–1308 Simon de Montolieu, 1308–1315 Raymond Montaner.

In 1503, the corsair Aruj and his brother Hayreddin Barbarossa took control of the island and turned it into their main base in the western Mediterranean, bringing it under Ottoman control. Spain launched a disastrous attempt to capture it in November, 1510. In 1513, after three years in exile in Rome, the Fregosi family returned to Genoa, Ottaviano was elected Doge, and his brother Federigo Fregosi (archbishop, later cardinal), having become his chief counsellor, was placed at the head of the army, and defended the republic against internal dangers (revolts of the Adorni and the Fieschi) and external dangers, notably suppression of the Barbary piracy: Cortogoli, a corsair from Tunis, blockaded the coast with a squadron, and within a few days had captured eighteen merchantmen; being given the command of the Genoese fleet, in which Andrea Doria was serving, Federigo surprised Cortogoli before Bizerta, effected a descent on the island of Djerba and returned to Genoa with great booty.



El Ghriba synagogue

Spanish forces returned to Djerba in 1520, and this time were successful in capturing the island. It was twice occupied by Spain, from 1521 to 1524 and from 1551 to 31 July 1560; again there were governors: 1521–1524 …, 1560 Giovanni Andrea Doria. On May 14, 1560, the Ottoman fleet under the command of Piyale Pasha andTurgut Reis severely defeated the Holy League of Philip II at the Battle of Djerba. Djerba belonged to the Ottoman regency of Tunis until 1881, subsequently under the French colonial protectorate, which became the modern republic of Tunisia.

An archaeological field survey of Jerba, carried out under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania, the American Academy in Rome and the Tunisian Instiut National du Patrimoine between 1995 and 2000, revealed over 400 archaeological sites, including many Punic and Roman villas.[2]

In the Ghriba synagogue bombing on April 11, 2002, a truck full of explosives was detonated close to the famous synagogue, killing 21 people (14 German tourists, 5 Tunisians and 2 Frenchmen). Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility. For a time tourists ceased visiting Djerba, but normal activity has since resumed.



Font: wikipedia.org




EQUIPMENT

HF
3 Icom IC-706 antenna Spiderbeam 10-12-15-17-20 m. by IK6JRI,
1 Yaesu FT-857 – ant. vertic. 10>80 m. – dipole
1 Icom IC-7000 – antenna 40-80 m. – dipole – ant. “fishing rod”/ MFJ 962 – and amplifier

50 MHz
FT-897 + 480 Tuner MFJ – antenna windom HF – antenna 2 el and 3 elements beam type Rybakov fishing rod with 50 radials.”Vertical antenna 50 Mhz., Antenna 3 elem. Quad 50 Mhz., Antenna 2 elem. Quad CUBEX”





QSL MANAGER


IK2DUW




IK7JWX Fred

QSLs request : for italian stations direct or bureau to IK7JWX, for the rest of the world direct or bureau to IK2DUW.

Info on the official web sites : http://www.mdxc.org/ts8ti/ – http://www.qrz.com/db/ts8ti/
Pictures on the web sites : http://www.qrz.com/db/ts8ti/ – http://www.mdxc.org/ts8ti/photo-album/ – http://www.arilimbiate.it/
The log will be on : LOTW – http://www.mdxc.org/ts8ti/log-on-line/ – http://www.ik2duw.it – http://www.enzolog.org

Friday, May 24, 2013

VY0/VE3VID – Igloolik Island, NA-174

http://ve3vid.webs.com/

VY0/VE3VID – Igloolik Island, NA-174


NA-174 QSL Cards are all mailed.

Hello to everyone who has sent a QSL card request for the NA-174 Igloolik Island operation. The good news is I have sent out all of the reply cards currently received. There may be some stragglers, but all cards received so far have been answered.

So far there was only 1 station who was not in the log. Lucky for Corrado NA-174 will be active again much sooner than previously expected.

I am very pleased and impressed with everyone's attension to correct return postage, and many who sent donations toward printing - Thank you, everyone.

Of the 477 contacts with NA-174, rest assured, all requests for QSL will be answered.

73 to all
David


IOTA NA-174 Activation

It took no one else as much by surprise as me, when there was suddenly huge interest by the RTTY and SSB communities in a rare IOTA entity calling CQ with about 75 watts on 20m. In February-March 2013 I took a microHF rig by Yaesu (857D) and a SignaLink audio device to work on Igloolik Island in hopes of making some fun contacts from a truly strange place. I figured this would make for some good chats and give something enjoyable to do between hours of work . It took a week and good bands for me to realize what was going to happen when NA-174 hit the spotting networks.

Below is the QSL card. There were 477 contacts. 386 on RTTY; 80 on SSB and 11 on PSK. The Gold Star goes to Paul at VK4MA. Beaming long path past Antarctica and up the Atlantic to the top of Baffin. Paul's call sign decoded on MMTTY - cheers!

Igloolik Island will be back on the air in 5-6 months. Next time antennas for 40-17m.

(17 Apr, 2013 - The QSL cards just arrived from the printer.)


Working DXpedition, IOTA NA-174 at Grid EP99





Starting late in 2012 I will be making trips to the Arctic community of Igloolik, Nunavut. Along for the trip will be a Small Wonders QRP rig for PSK-31 and a folded dipole for 20m. Igloolik Island lies 2700km north of Ottawa, Canada, is IOTA NA-174 and Grid Square EP99. Subsequent trips to Igloolik will see more robust radio equipment and antennae installed.


New Station QTH

Early 2011 I moved the VE3VID radio station from the open meadow of the PaleSun Farm to a new location. Renfrew and the Pinewood area were becoming more populated and problems with antennas and towers were soon to follow. VE3VID is now operational from the true wilderness of the Westport Highlands. The station is now located in a log cabin high in the rocky Canadian Shield between Ottawa and Kingston Ontario.

Added to the station this year has been a cherry Kenwood TS-850s as a back up rig, and a Yaesu FT-2000. The TS-450s has become a dedicated digital rig doing mainly RTTY and some PSK and OLIVIA. The new shack is about 750 sq feet, has 110v AC and internet. The solar power equipment will be incorporated to the staion in case of black outs.

When the tower assembly is complete there will be a Cushcraft 3 element yagi for 17m and 12m. The Mosley TA-33M has had a complete overhaul and waits on a temporary tower about 35ft up.




http://ve3vid.webs.com/

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Order Form

YBDXC registered member only
closing date, May 27,2013





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