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Alexey, VE2XAA became a Silent Key on August 21, 2011 from a heart attack, only a few weeks after his visit to Otradalur, where he operated TF4X in the IARU Contest 2011.

From Hávamál :

Cattle die, and kinsmen die,
And so one dies one’s self;
But a noble name will never die,
If good renown one gets.

It was a pleasure to meet Alexey and we already talked about his next visit to Otradalur.

VE2XAA de TF4M SK ——————————-

Outside of the contest,  Alexey operated from my station using the call sign TF/VE2XAA.

TF VE2XAA
TF VE2XAA 1

Our last QSO was on the 14th of May, 2011 on 20m CW.

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Here is an album of photos I took of Alexey during his visit.

VE2XAA @ TF4X

Alexey, VE2XAA piloted TF4X in the IARU HF Contest 2011.

63 Photos

During his stay, Alexey suggested some improvements to my engineering  - I have already begun to implement some of his suggestions.

Alexey had prepared to work the contest on SSB and had recorded his contest exchanges into the voice keyer of the radio.   However, he decided to do a CW only effort.  The recording was discovered by chance recently.

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I believe Alexey was very pleased with his visit.   He wrote in my station Guest Book:

…unic place in the planet, unic landscape with real Elves and unic antenna farm. ….In 10-20 years one more forest will cover the place where it was never before.   And on top of the trees the Arctic King with Arctic Quinne will rule their Otradalur Kingdome!

The result of the contest IARU 2011:

total: 1876 QSO, 770400 points,  beside contest 2200 QSO.  Total for 3 days ~ 4000 QSO.

Main station impression:   usually you do not hear the stations calling you.  This problem does not exist in Otradalur farm.   You hear even 160 m band with full daylight days in July!  ”White nights” – is not a problem for Arctic King!

73! Alexey, VE2XAA

Most of Alexey´s TF4X operation was recorded as follows:

VE2XAA@TF4X recording 01

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 02

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 03

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 04

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 05

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 06

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 07

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 08

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 09

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 10

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 11

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 12

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 13

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 14

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VE2XAA@TF4X recording 15

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 Siggi, TF3CW visited my station during a working trip and made a few contacts on 160 Meters with the Arctic King using my call sign.  - (20. October 1850z – 1925z)

TFM 4147 DxO
TF3CW operating TF4M with the Arctic King
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 During my recent travel to Sussex, England, I was served with a heavenly fried egg for breakfast.

My wife and I stayed at Millers Bed & Breakfast in the beautiful historic town of Lewes.

I can recommend Millers without hesitation – we had a wonderful stay.

On the last morning of our stay I was allowed to observe how the lady cooked her eggs and the photo shows my first attempt with the method.

TF4M 10388 DxO
The Perfect Egg!

The egg alone was worth the trip to England.

TF4M 10397
Alexey, VE2XAA with two perfect eggs!
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 Alexey, VE2XAA visited my station and operated the IARU HF contest with the call TF4X.

He made 1876 QSOs for a total score of 770,400 points in the contest.

Alexey became interested in visiting my station after we worked on 160 meters when he was QRV from Zone 2 in last years CQ World Wide Contest.

Propagation was poor due to Aurora and as a result most of the contacts were made on 20m.  

Despite 24 hour daylight, Alexey made 14 QSOs on 160 Meters during the contest.

Before the contest Alexey operated my station as TF/VE2XAA and made another 2,300 QSOs for a total of more than 4,000 QSOs during his stay.

Here are Alexey´s comments on his operation :

First of all I would like to thanks Thor TF4M for a great opportunity to see and use his
Super Station with unique Antenna Farm on the surface of 1500 hectares!
Before the contest I decided to participate in phone category but during first 6 minutes
of the contest was no phone QSO at all! So the mode was switched for CW and run
started on 20 m band – the only opened band at the moment. Time to time I did check
15m and 10m but it was no whisper on the bands. Finally I did a few QSO on 15m with
big troubles but 10 m was close during the contest completely. 20m was surprising: I did
expect that run on 20m will stop after a few hours as usually for my home location; that
will be already no new stations on the band and I can start hunting for multipliers; but
pile-up had no stop! The flat rate of 120-140 QSO was continued after 5, 6, 7…hours
of the run! The stations with High Power, Low Power and QRP had almost the same
signal level! The Otradalur Antenna Farm did a work perfectly and stack-match box
let me separate EU-USA-JA directions just with push on one button! Amazing! In 10
hours I had already more than 1200 QSO only on 20m and did expect to have a good
run on other bands to make same number of QSO for other 14 hours. But after 12 hours
of run somebody on the sky decided to switch off the light, put night Aurora cover on
Iceland and told: OK guys, now you can relax and go to sleep, it will be no propagation
for you for next few hours! It becomes nightmare: all bands closed, only big-guns were
on the bands, QSO rate drops for 10-20 per hour… Nice moment was on 160m: “Arctic
King” antenna was doing the work very well: on each 1 kHz distance I heard HQ or other
powerful stations with S7…S9, but they did not hear my 1 kW signal! Probably they
had other receiving directions except Arctic. With big difficulties spending 2-3 minutes
for each contact I was able to make a dozen QSO on 160m despite 24 hour day-light at
Island! Thor TF4M did not very good antenna, but exceptionally perfect!
Thanks to every one for the contacts and hope to see you in the other contests.
73! de Alexey VE2XAA

TF4M 10323
 
TF4M 10326
 
TF4M 10345
 
TF4M 10352
 
TF4M 10354
 
TF4M 10411
 
TF4M 10413
 
TF4M 10637
The local hot pool.
TF4M 10688
Birta – Magyar Vizsla with VE2XAA
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TF4M was honoured to have  Peter, VE3SUN and his wife Jane visit the station and tour the antenna farm during their short visit to Iceland.

Peter is the webmaster of the NCDXF International Beacon Project.

TF4M 10091
Peter, VE3SUN @ TF4M
TF4M 10092
XYL Jane and Peter, VE3SUN @ TF4M
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Richard, K5NA piloted TF4X in the CQ World Wide 160-Meter Contest.

He made 1620 contacts (1531 after dupes), 42 Sections/States and 77 DXCC countries for a raw score of 1,056,244 points.

 TFM1850
Considering the poor conditions this is an amazing accomplishment from this Arctic location although we are no longer surprised at the Arctic King´s performance and that of the location.

I believe that the noise level here may be up to 60dB less than that experienced in other countries and built up areas.

His score exceeds that of some Multi-Operator stations.  I would like to mention that he was called by ZL3IX for the 5th QSO in Communications History between TF and ZL.  Three of those QSOs belong to ZL3IX.   He was also called by CE1/K7CA in Chile for the second ever QSO between TF and CE.

 TFM1855
His QSO with VP8ORK in South Orkney is the First Ever QSO between VP8 and TF.

All equipment performed flawlessly during the operation and the Arctic King never wavered in his resolve.

All Hail the King !

 TFM1869

Richard wrote the following ‘soapbox’ about his effort:

TF4X – 2011 CQWW 160M CW

In early December, 2010, TF4M (Thor) contacted me about doing the ARRL 160M Contest from his station near Bildudalur, Iceland. Since it was too late for me to arrange my schedule for that event, I asked about the 2011 CQWW 160M CW Contest. After Thor checked his schedule and commitments, he agreed for me to come for that contest.

The first thing we did when arriving here two days before the contest was to get a tour of the antennas. They are amazing, to say the least, and represent a degree of work and commitment that few in the world would attempt. On the HF bands Thor has installed five rhombics in all the major directions. Two rhombics are reversible giving seven total directions. I played with them a little before the contest and was impressed. If the station was in the direction of the rhombic, you heard it. If you switched rhombics, the station disappeared. Amazing.

But I was here for the 160M contest and that was a different set of antennas. Thor has installed a vertical transmitting antenna that he calls the “Arctic King”. The antenna is a very large straight pole (It is the largest in diameter, weight, and height in Iceland) with two wires up the sides to a capacity top hat. This antenna is on the shore surrounded on three sides by seawater. It is located a long ways from the station and Thor ran thousands of feet of very large low-loss hardline to get to it. The antenna works!

Just as impressive is the receiving setup. Thor has installed four reversible beverages for the major directions. Added to the receiving setup is another 160M vertical located a long ways from the transmitting antenna. They all WORK very well. Anything that could hear me, I could hear even better. Imagine listening from a location that has zero atmospheric noise. That is what I had here.

I just reviewed the spots for the contest and found that many spots said that I had “good ears”. I had to laugh because I remember the comments I would see after a 160M contest from noisy Texas when the comments would sometimes say, “no ears”.

The only confusing factor of hearing so well is that sometimes we did not have transmitting conditions to an area that I was hearing quite well. So it would seem that sometimes we were not getting out, but in reality we just had poor conditions in that direction. Aurora is always a factor in transmitting from this part of the world. That’s why Thor has put so much effort into a superior transmitting antenna.

I used a K3 in diversity mode for practically all of the contest.

Operating this contest somewhere other than the USA is a real education for me. The band seemed always open to Europe even hours after European sunrise. There are many, many stations operating this contest in Europe. The band is as crowded here as it is in the USA during the contest. There is lots of splatter and key clicks, but you learn to live with it and do the best you can. The conditions to Europe dominated the contest.

The USA and other parts of the world were a different matter. I had hoped that the spots would bring lots of USA QSOs, but there were not many callers. I missed a lot of W7 multipliers and I probably should have done more searching and pouncing to find them. But I worried that even if I heard a station well, there was no guarantee that they could hear me. I seemed to hear everyone regardless of conditions. However, I did work a number of California stations.

One of the surprises was hearing and working J28AA in zone 37. Thor had said before the contest that he only needed zone 37 to complete his 160M WAZ After the QSO, I immediately jumped up and called Thor. Thor rushed in and started calling and in a couple of minutes had his last zone. It was a magic moment for all of us, me, Thor, and Susan. We drank a toast to Thor’s success while I continued to call CQ and work stations.Toast to Zone 37 QSO

Two other QSOs come to mind, having VP8ORK answer my CQ and later, having KH2/N2NL answer my CQ. I worked a couple of Jas, not nearly as many as I expected. So conditions were not very good in that direction. Someone on my frequency said a BA1 was calling me. I listened but I never heard anything of it. That was the only thing that heard me that I did not hear all weekend.

It was a pleasure to operate from Thor’s station. Thor is an excellent cook and introduced us to many of the traditional Icelandic dishes and treats. I probably gained a few pounds from all the good food. He is a fine host.

This was truly an adventure.

73, Richard – TF/K5NA

Soapbox comments from other contestants may be read on the 3830 reflector.

The Certificate has arrived!

 

 

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My Finnish visitors expressed a desire to have a cold shower after a hard day of sightseeing.

I took them to our waterfall in Otradalur´s River where it is possible to have a nice shower and swim in the pool.

Water temperature is a chilling 4° C and it was obvious that they were experienced winter bathers.

One (warm) day I will take the plunge myself…

waterfall01

36 Photos

Jouko, OH1RX who was on a Salmon fishing trip visited my area with his group and operated TF4X in the IARU contest.

Conditions were rather poor, but this was to be expected at this time of the year.

Antennas and equipment performed without incidents.

Jouko commented to the contest organizers:

“Great experience to work agn from ultima thule at Thors fantastic  station. Bands are never kind to the ops above 64N, but his time it was a real uphill. Nevertheless, I hope you enjoyed couple of low band mults from TF!

CUL agn de Jouko OH1RX”

It was an honour to have such an accomplished contester operate my station.

I hope to see OH1RX again perhaps for a serious effort one day.

OH1RX wrote about the contest on his web site.

OH1RXTF4X
 
OH1RXTF4X 1
 
OH1RXTF4X 2
 
OH1RXTF4X 4
OH1RXTF4X 4
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CQ 160 Contest – TF4X #2 in Europe, #3 World !

Yuri, K3BU operated TF4X in the CQ WW 160 meter contest in the Single Operator High Power category.

A solar flare about a week before the contest started caused worry that conditions would be poor.   The band seemed to have recovered nicely, but the Aurora Index stayed high during most of the contest and it became clear that conditions were disturbed.

Iceland is greatly affected by any Auroral disturbance, much more so than neighboring countries and Yuri observed, for example, that my Great Beverage antennas showed almost no directivity during the contest.    I know for a fact that they work very well, but during the weekend it seemed that signals appeared to come from all directions simultaneously.   I understand this may be due to a high arrival angle during disturbed conditions.

Some juicy DX was worked, two KH6 stations for example, it is only recently that the historic first QSO with KH6 was made from my station – this is quite remarkable considering the disturbed conditions.

The raw score is as follows:

1643 QSOs

51 States/Provinces

80 Countries

Total Score = 1,317,729

At present TF4X has the second highest reported score in Europe and is #3 worldwide.   This may of course change as and/or when other stations report their scores, but it is incredibly satisfying to see all my hard work being justified with such superior results.

Note: The final score was #2 EU and #3 WORLD ! ( NOTE: #3 among stations outside North America – two canadian stations were in places #2 and #4 putting TF4X in #5 overall. The reason for this is that North American scores are separate due to the scoring system)

Note:  The Diploma has arrived.  It puts TF4X in #6 Overall and #EU

It was quite illuminating to observe such an experienced operator running my station – at times I feared that my amplifier would literally melt, but it performed to my full satisfaction and there were no equipment/antenna issues whatsoever during the contest.

Yuri wrote in his comment to the 3830 Reflector:


Last minute adventure to the Aurora zone, taking up Thor’s invite.
Being rusty from dormant period, problems with equipment setup,
drivers, but got ready for the start.
Stories about Aurora wipeouts made it a big if.
Thanks to Thor and his magnificent station it ended up being fun and decent
score, even if coming short of beating the Eu record.
The background noise is probably the lowest in the world allowing to
hear lot more of the juicy stuff than working it.
Thanks for wonderful hospitality and station from Thor, TF4M and all the QSOs
and points. Lot of dirty clixing signals and rude behaviour by “CQ pirates”.
Will have more later.

Yuri, TF/K3BU

I used my PERSEUS SDR receiver to record the entire contest 1800-1900kHz.   The recording obviously contains the entire contest effort of TF4X and in addition it contains the contest effort of everyone else heard at my location.

This consumes two hundred GB of data, please contact me if you are interested in specific time periods.

A new chapter in the History of Amateur Radio has been written.

K3BUTF4X
 
K3BUTF4X 1
 
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