Rocksolid Light

Welcome to RetroBBS

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

Why are there always boycotts? Shouldn't there be girlcotts too? -- argon on #Linux


dovenet / HAM Radio / US and Region 2 Amateur Radio Direction-Finding Championships Results are In

SubjectAuthor
o US and Region 2 Amateur Radio Direction-Finding Championships Results are InARRL de WD1CKS

1
US and Region 2 Amateur Radio Direction-Finding Championships Results are In

<6179B8E6.6753.dove-ham@wd1cks.org>

  copy mid

https://www.rocksolidbbs.com/dovenet/article-flat.php?id=313&group=DOVE-Net.HAM_Radio#313

  copy link   Newsgroups: DOVE-Net.HAM_Radio
From: arrl.de.wd1cks@VERT/WLARB (ARRL de WD1CKS)
To: QST
Subject: US and Region 2 Amateur Radio Direction-Finding Championships Results are In
Message-ID: <6179B8E6.6753.dove-ham@wd1cks.org>
Date: Wed, 27 Oct 2021 13:39:02 +0000
X-Comment-To: QST
Path: rocksolidbbs.com!not-for-mail
Organization: Whisky Lover's Amateur Radio BBS
Newsgroups: DOVE-Net.HAM_Radio
X-FTN-PID: Synchronet 3.19a-FreeBSD master/caed36004 May 16 2021 Clang 10.0.0
X-FTN-CHRS: CP437 2
WhenImported: 20211027134605-0700 c1e0
WhenExported: 20211027175752-0700 c1e0
ExportedFrom: VERT dove-ham 9912
WhenImported: 20211027203902Z 0000
WhenExported: 20211027204609Z 0000
ExportedFrom: WLARB dove-ham 6753
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=IBM437
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
 by: ARRL de WD1CKS - Wed, 27 Oct 2021 13:39 UTC

10/27/2021

The results are in for the 20th US ARDF Championships and 11th IARU Region 2
Amateur Radio Direction Finding (ARDF). Four days of competitions were held
October 14 - 17 in North Carolina, and the results will help determine the
makeup of the US ARDF team at the 20th ARDF World Championships, set for summer
2022 in Serbia. The US Championships and the World Championships were
rescheduled from 2020 after they had to be canceled due to COVID-19
restrictions. Even so, visitors from outside the US were unable to attend this
year's competition due to continued travel restrictions, but a hardy group of
hopefuls for the US team came ready to compete.

Competitors ranged in age from 14 to 74. Competitive events were held in the
Birkhead Mountains Wilderness Area just south of Asheboro, North Carolina.
Events began on October 14 with sprint events[1], a fast-paced competition in
which two sets of five transmitters operating on two different 80-meter
frequencies transmit nonconsecutive 12-second bursts every minute. Between the
transmitters, competitors pass through an open spectator area, where supporters
and onlookers may cheer them on. Two elite competitors completed the sprint
course in just over 15 minutes, a world-class time.

Two classic events[2] were held on October 15. The longer courses for the
younger adult categories took place on 2 meters, and the shorter courses for
the older adult and youth categories took place on 80 meters. Separating the
longer and shorter courses and holding them on separate, non-interfering bands
allowed course designs to be tailored for optimum challenge within each
competitive category.

Foxoring[3], a combination of radio direction finding and classic orienteering
on 80 meters, followed the next day.

"Foxoring tests the map-and-compass navigation skills of the participants,"
ARRL ARDF Co-coordinator Gerald Boyd, WB8WFK, explained. "Micropower 80-meter
foxes transmitting continuously are placed near marked locations on the map.
The transmissions are so weak that competitors' receivers cannot detect them
until they arrive very close to the marked locations. Once they can hear one of
the transmitters, it is a quick sprint to find its exact location."

Competitions concluded on October 17 with a different map and two more classic
events[4], this time with the bands swapped for those on the longer and shorter
courses. This gave everyone the opportunity to compete on both 2 and 80 meters
over the 2 days of competitions. Twenty-seven competitors competed in the
events.

"Two standout youth competitors turned in impressive times on adult courses in
the womens' W19 category," Boyd said. Youths included Adalia Schafrath-Craig
(14 years old) of North Carolina who picked up classic and foxoring golds, and
Elizabeth (Lisa) Afonkin (15 years old) of Massachusetts who won the sprint
gold.

US competitors in the six IARU age categories for men (M19 - M70) and women
(W19 - W65) are under consideration for membership in the US team for the 2022
ARDF Championships. Up to three competitors in each age/gender category and
competition format may be on a national team.

Contact[5] the ARRL ARDF Committee for more information on attending,
participating in, or hosting ARDF competitions. ARDF competitors do not need an
amateur radio license. For more information on amateur radio direction finding,
visit the ARRL ARDF website[6].

[1] https://backwoodsok.org/ardf-usa-championships-sprint
[2] https://backwoodsok.org/ardf-usa-championships-2021-classic-day-1
[3] https://backwoodsok.org/ardf-usa-championship-2021-fox-o
[4] https://backwoodsok.org/ardf-usa-championships-2021-classic-day-2-results
[5] mailto:ardf@arrl.org
[6] https://www.arrl.org/amateur-radio-direction-finding

---
■ Synchronet ■ Whiskey Lover's Amateur Radio BBS

1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor