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getting into contesting for the first time — CQ WW coming up and i have no idea what im doing

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so i've been licensed about 8 months now and people keep telling me i should try a contest. CQ WW is coming up at the end of October and i figured maybe this is the year i actually do it instead of just reading about it. problem is i genuinely dont know where to start. like do i need special software, do i just pick a frequency and start calling CQ, or do i hunt around for people to work? i've done a little HF on 40m but nothing serious, mostly just ragchewing with the local guys.

also saw some stuff about ARRL Field Day earlier this year and that looked fun but kind of overwhelming with all the club stuff going on. is CQ WW less chaotic for a solo operator or is it pretty much the same energy? i have a modest setup, IC-7300 and a wire dipole up about 25 feet, nothing fancy. just want to get my feet wet without embarrassing myself too badly.

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honestly the best thing you can do for CQ WW is just jump in and not overthink it. grab N1MM+ which is free and has been the standard logging software forever, get familiar with the basic keybinds before the contest starts, and then just start search and pounce — meaning you tune around and find stations calling CQ and work them instead of sitting on a frequency yourself. way less pressure than holding a run frequency especially when your first contest and the bands are absolutely wall to wall signals.

your 7300 and a dipole is totally fine by the way. i worked my first CQ WW with worse than that. the multipliers are what make it interesting, every new DXCC entity and zone you work adds to your score so you start caring a lot about where people are calling from. Field Day is a different animal, more of a club social event with a side of radio, CQ WW is pure operating. you'll either love it or it'll fry your brain, either way you'll learn a ton in one weekend.

oh man i remember my first contest, i had no clue what was happening for the first like two hours lol. one thing nobody told me — write down the exchange format before you start so you're not fumbling during a QSO. for CQ WW it's signal report and CQ zone, which sounds simple but when you're nervous and the other guy is going a mile a minute it helps to have it written on a sticky note or something.

also look up SOTA if you ever want something more chill than a full contest. it's not really a contest but there's awards and points and you go activate summits, really fun way to get portable operating experience. totally different vibe but scratches a similar itch if contests feel too intense at first.

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