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Solar
SFI 201
SN 126
A 14
K 1 Quiet
X-Ray C4.3
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Aurora 1
Updated 11:30 UTC HamQSL · N0NBH
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finally cracked a pileup for 3Y0 — here's what actually worked for me

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so ive been chasing rare DX for about 6 years now and pileups have always been my weak spot. i'd just throw my call in with everyone else and wonder why i never got through. this past week the 3Y0 bouvet expedition was on and i was absolutely determined to work them on at least a couple bands.

what finally clicked for me was really paying attention to where the DX op was actually listening, not where everyone was transmitting. i know that sounds obvious but i mean really listening — like sitting on the frequency for 15-20 minutes before even keying up. I noticed the op was consistently coming back to stations around 3-5 up from his TX freq, and occasionally going way up to maybe 10 kHz when the pile thinned a bit. once i figured that rhythm out i just parked just above where he'd been picking people and waited for the right moment.

also stopped sending my full callsign every single time. just sent the suffix twice when the pileup was dense, then switched to full call when things thinned. not sure if that's technically right but it seemed to work. got through on 17m CW and then again on 40m SSB the next morning. 40 was harder cause the pile was massive and there were so many lids just tuning up on the freq which is a whole other rant.

curious what other techniques people use — especially for SSB pileups cause those feel way more chaotic than CW to me

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yeah the listening thing is so underrated. i used to just jump in blind and wonder why i never got picked. took me embarassingly long to realize that watching the op's pattern is basically the whole game. some ops work very predictably — like they'll go up 2, up 2, up 2, then jump — and once you see it a few times you can get almost ahead of them.

for SSB specifically the one thing that helped me the most was working on my audio. ran a bit of compression through my TS-890 and got my processing dialed in so my signal sounds clean and punchy without being over-processed garbage. a lot of guys in pileups sound like a fax machine because they've cranked the mic gain up into the red. DX ops hear clean audio all day and it does make a difference i think, at least for standing out when the pileup thins.

the partial call thing on CW is pretty standard practice honestly. most serious ops will tell you sending your suffix is fine when the pile is dense — just makes sense to not clog up the freq with six character calls when everyone's doing it simultaneously

honestly the biggest thing for me was just accepting that timing is everything and theres no shame in not getting through on the first day. i chased VP6R for like four days before i finally worked them and by the end i had their split patterns basically memorized. sometimes the best move is just waiting until the pile dies down a bit — like trying at 0200 local when half the competing stations have gone to bed.

also if you have any antenna at all that can be aimed, even a modest beam, point it and leave it. i see guys on the cluster complaining they can hear the DX fine but can't break through and then mention they're on a dipole. the math just isn't there sometimes and no amount of technique fixes a 6dB disadvantage in a pile of 500 stations

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