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First time doing CQ WW this year — what am I even getting into

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So I finally got my general license back in the spring and ive been listening to a lot of contest activity on the weekends, mostly just watching the waterfall and trying to figure out whats going on. A buddy at the local club keeps telling me I should just jump in and try CQ WW this october and stop overthinking it.

Thing is I dont really know how serious people get about this. Like is it okay to just casually call CQ and collect a few contacts or is everyone on there so competitive that a low power station with a dipole is just gonna get buried and ignored? I run about 100 watts into a wire antenna in the attic so not exactly a superstation situation here. Also curious if anyone has tips for logging software because right now I just have a notepad file which is probably not gonna cut it for a real contest.

Also somewhat unrelatedly — has anyone been doing SOTA activations lately? Ive been eyeing a few summits in my area and it sort of seems like a different world from contesting but I dunno, both seem like a good way to actually use the radio instead of just listening.

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Jump in, seriously. CQ WW is huge but that doesnt mean theres no room for a 100W station with a wire. You might not win anything but you can absolutely make contacts and have a blast doing it. The first time I did it I was running 75 watts into a vertical on my back porch and still managed a couple hundred QSOs over the weekend. Most people are happy to work you, they want the contact too.

For logging just grab N1MM+ if youre on Windows, its free and pretty much the standard for HF contesting. Theres a bit of a learning curve getting your radio interfaced with it but even if you just run it in keyboard mode without any rig control it works fine. Set aside maybe an hour before the contest to just poke around the settings and do a practice log entry so it doesnt feel totally foreign when things get hectic.

And yeah SOTA is a totally different vibe. More relaxed, kind of like a mini adventure every time. Some folks do both — there are actually SOTA activators who time their trips to overlap with big contests and rack up points on both ends. Worth looking into once you get comfortable with either one individually.

the notepad file made me smile, i did the same thing my first Field Day lol. Definitely get N1MM or even just use the web-based log at the end if you dont want to deal with software during the actual operating, though real time dupe checking is really nice once you try it once.

honestly SOTA and contesting scratch different itches for me. contesting is this kind of almost frantic energy especially when the bands are good and youre just running stations one after another, whereas SOTA is more about the whole experience of getting out there and making a contact from a hilltop with like 5 watts. both are great. Field Day in june is probably the most beginner friendly contest environment if you havent tried that one yet, most clubs set up a multi-op station and you can just sit down and operate for a bit without any pressure.

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