DXpedition 1998 05 Aug 1998 0842z
Preliminary Final Statistics for NA-150 KL7/W6IXP
SSB 1224 qso's
CW 97 qso's
uncategorized 16 qso's
Total
1337
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Continent Statistics
KL7/W6IXP NA150 Multi Multi
05 Aug 1998 0842z
160 80 40 30 20 17 15 12 10 SAT ALL percent
CW
North America 0
0 16 0 46
0 0 0
0 0 62
4.7
South America 0
0 0 0
1 0 0
0 0 0
1 0.1
Europe
0 0 0
0 7 0
0 0 0
0 7 0.5
Asia
0 0 0
0 15 0
0 0 0
0 15 1.1
Africa
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0.0
Oceania
0 0 1
0 0 0
0 0 0 0
1 0.1
SSB
North America 0
0 0 0
32 0 0
0 0 0
32 2.4
South America 0
0 0 0
4 0 0
0 0 0
4 0.3
Europe
0 0 0
0 896 0
6 0 0
0 902 68.3
Asia
0 0 0
0 250 0
2 0 0
0 252 19.1
Africa
0 0 0
0 2 0
0 0 0
0 2
0.2
Oceania
0 0 0
0 32 0
0 0 0
0 32 2.4
"We are just like any other community. We live by subsistence (hunting). The majority that we eat are marine mammal. There are very few jobs here. We must be approaching 180 natives on the island. We also do ivory carvings here on the island and sell them. We do the Eskimo dancing which is the strongest cultural tie here. Even the little kids learn how to do this.
Unfortunately the natives stories are often forgotten. Not
to many elders left on the island. We do offer to have people to
visit Little Diomede. If you are interested, contact IRA (Indian Reorganization
Act) Office
(907) 686-2175, Fax (907) 686-2203 and explain why you would like to
visit and what you are coming in for.
Left to Right: Tom W6IXP, Pat Omiak IRA President Native Village of
Diomede, and Barry K6ST
(Photograph taken by Dwayne Ahkvaluk, Native Villager)
Pictured in the foreground: Gabrile Ahkinga snow machine
We have been spending most of our time on cw. We are hearing the same kind of Auroral behavior on the bands as last week on Sledge Island NA-210 where signals are in for just and few seconds and then out just as fast.
Our request to All North American cw operators is to please send your
call sign immediately followed by the rst so we can copy the complete qso.
This may be the only possible to complete a qso from NA-150.
North America Only for CW QSO's
CW 14.045 01:00z to 04:30z
CW 7.040 04:30z to 05:30z
CW 7.040 09:00z to 12:00z
We are also checking 20 meters cw frequently throughout the day.
All DX areas:
The rest of the time we will be on SSB 14.260 and occasional on 15 meters 21.260
The logs have been updated to the web as of:
Sun AUG 5 1998 03:58z NA-150 logs updated to Web Site
Sun AUG 5 1998 03:24z last entry in the NA-150 log
Here's the statistics as of 05 Aug 1998 0324z
Today Barry, K6ST began a climb up the mountain with an attempt to operate.
Unfortunately the trek up was wet, slippery, muddy and way to dangerous.
The side of the mountain has a rock slide on it, so we decided to take
safety as our number one priority. We will continue to make contacts
from our operating location at the Little Diomede village.
______________________________________________________________________
Continent Statistics
KL7/W6IXP NA150 Multi Multi
05 Aug 1998 0324z
160 80 40 30 20 17 15 12 10 SAT ALL percent
CW
North America 0
0 16 0 43 0
0 0 0 0
59 4.6
South America 0
0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0
0 1 0.1
Europe
0 0 0 0
7 0 0 0
0 0 7
0.5
Asia
0 0 0 0
15 0 0 0
0 0 15 1.2
Africa
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0
0.0
Oceania
0 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 1
0.1
SSB
North America 0 0
0 0 32 0
0 0 0 0
32 2.5
South America 0 0
0 0 4
0 0 0 0
0 4 0.3
Europe
0 0 0 0 878
0 6 0 0
0 884 68.4
Asia
0 0 0 0 246
0 2 0 0
0 248 19.2
Africa
0 0 0 0
2 0 0
0 0 0 2
0.2
Oceania
0 0 0 0
29 0 0 0
0 0 29
2.2
Plus 16 SSB qso's not categorized yet
________________________________________________________________________________
DXpedition 1998 05 Aug 1998 0324z
Call: KL7/W6IXP
Country: Alaska
Mode: SSB
Category: Multi Multi
BAND MODE QSO ZONES
COUNTRIES
40 CW
17 5
4
40 SSB
0 0
0
20 CW
63 9
9
20 SSB
1077 24
56
___________________________________
Total CW
80 14
13
Total SSB
1085 26
58
Total
1165 40
71
Plus 16 SSB qso's not categorized yet
With the wet weather still preventing us from getting to the top of the mountain safely to try RF signals, Day 5 on NA-150 bring us some good luck with CW to the lower 48 states. Today we reconfigured the 2 element 20 meter verticals into a single element 20 meter dipole. Tom, W6IXP engineered this in his dreams this morning of how to get a high angle radiated signal up and over the 1300 foot mountain from sea level.
To continue to help the North American hams make contact with NA-150, we have a planned schedule:
North America Only for CW QSO's
CW 14.045 01:00z to 04:30z
CW 7.040 04:30z to 05:30z
CW 7.040 09:00z to 12:00z
All DX areas:
The rest of the time we will be on SSB 14.260 and occasional on 15 meters
21.260
Little Diomede SWL'rs
(Left Issac, Right Zachary)
Barry, K6ST in the middle
The NA-150 DXpedition gave a gift of good will to the people of Little
Diomede. We presented them
with a "Passport to World Band Radio book", "Kenwood R1000 0-30
Mhz receiver", "Your Introduction to Morse Code cassette tapes",
and "Now you're talking license book". Our hopes are that the Little
Diomede people, in particular the kids will enjoy the marvels of Short
Wave Listening and some day, become Amateur Radio operators.
Maybe you will even receive an SWL card from Little Diomede and in the
future even hear some RF signals from a native villager signing their call
as NA-150.
__________________________________________________________
The logs have been updated to the web as of:
Sun AUG 4 1998 07:39z NA-150 logs updated to Web Site
Sun AUG 4 1998 07:39z last entry in the NA-150 log
Here's the statistics as of 04 Aug 1998 0635z.
Continent Statistics
KL7/W6IXP NA150 Multi Multi
04 Aug 1998 0635z
40 20 15 ALL percent
CW
North America 12 36
0 48 3.9
South America 0
1 0 1
0.1
Europe
0 3 0
3 0.2
Asia
0 0 0
0 0.0
Africa
0 0 0
0 0.0
Oceania
0 0 0
0 0.0
SSB
North America 0
31 0 31
2.5
South America 0
4 0 4
0.3
Europe
0 870 6 876 71.5
Asia
0 218 2 220 18.0
Africa
0 2 0
2 0.2
Oceania
0 29 0 29
2.4
Plus 16 SSB QSO's not categorized yet.
___________________________________
DXpedition 1998 04 Aug 1998 0635z
Call: KL7/W6IXP
Country: Alaska
Mode: SSB
Category: Multi Multi
BAND MODE QSO ZONES COUNTRIES
40 CW
12 2
3
40 SSB
0 0
0
20 CW
37 7
6
20 SSB
1042 24
56
15 SSB
8 2
2
Total CW
49 9
9
Total SSB 1050
26 58
Total 1099 35 67
Plus 16 SSB qso's not categorized yet
NA-150 Little Diomede - Operating Location facing north westConditions to Europe continue to be favorable. Here are the statistics for KL7/W6IXP NA150 at of 02 Aug 1998 1831z. In summary, 1081 qso's from NA-150 to date.
Nestled at the end of the native village at the bottom of a 1300 foot mountain. (No wonder signals are good to Europe / Asia / Pacific and so difficult to the lower 48 states. RF doesn't like to go through rock very well!)
On the left side of the big blue building there is a balcony with the 20 meter 2 element vertical antenna.R7000 antenna on orange water tank to the left of the big blue building.
The shack is upstairs in the big blue building (school) with a beautiful view of Big Diomede when the weather is clear. The rigs are Kenwood TS850S and an Ameritron AL-811A linear Amp. We have sleeping bags and a small kitchen to eat our freeze dried food. Since the water supply on Little Diomede in not totally pure, we use a hand pump water purifier before boiling the water.
NA-150 Little Diomede Island
Update (as of 19:21z August 2, 1998)
Continent Statistics
KL7/W6IXP NA150 Multi Multi
02 Aug 1998 1831z
QSO’s percent
SSB
North America 30 2.8
South America 4
0.4
Europe
781 73.3
Asia
212 19.9
Africa
2 0.2
Oceania
25 2.3
Plus 16 qso’s not categorized yet
____________________________________
BAND MODE QSO ZONES COUNTRIES
20 SSB 955
23 55
15 SSB
8 2 2
-------------------------------
Total SSB 963
25 57
Dupes 102
16 uncategorized qso’s
Total 1081 qso’s to date for NA-150
The plan for qso's to the lower 48 states was to hike up to the top of the 1300 foot mountain for some contacts. Due to wet weather, this option has been posponed until later. In the mean time, we will try cw qso's for North America only on 14.045 mhz and up starting at 01:00z and on 7.020 mhz and up starting at 0900. Please QRS and we only have a modified hand key, thanks.
We do hear signals from W6 and other lower 48 states stations on 20 SSB. Please be patient and keep listinging for KL7/W6IXP NA-150.
Native Village Kids shown Left to Right
Isacc, (Bossy not shown), Moses, Franklyn, and Jared.
Tom, W6IXP operating at the mic headset.
NA-150 Little Diomede IslandThe KL7/W6IXP Dxpedition finally made it to Little Diomede on July 31, 1998 after 8 days of weather
Update (as of 20:05z August 1, 1998)
The trip from Cape Wales, Alaska across the Bering Sea was quite exciting
by helicopter. After 1 year
of planning and over a week of delays, the thrill to land at the Little
Diomede heliport brought chills
and tears to our eyes.
We were greeted by local officials and villagers. The children
were playful and inquisitive.
Immediately we scouted out the grounds for our operating site and antenna
locations. We were informed
that the antenna's would best be out of the children's way by placing
them on a balcony. With limited
space we put together the 2 element vertical for 20 meters and mounted
it of the balcony along with the
Cushcraft R7000. The antenna's played fair and propagation was
horrible.
To add to the problems, we had some rig, linear amp and computer
problems. The next day, August 1,
1998 we resolved many challenges: Repaired the linear amp and
replaced the tubes, got the rig and
computer playing right. Best of all, we found an even better
location for the R7000 antenna. We moved
it out an additional 250 feet from the original location, onto a water
tank.
Last night the system played well with great signals and pile up from
Europe and the Pacific. We are
sure the propagation also helped a lot. The signals to W6 and
the rest of the lower 48 states is
difficult as we are located on the north west side of the island with
a 1300 foot mountain rock behind
us. Today or tomorrow we are going to try to attempt to take
a 100 watt rig and antenna for 20 meters
to the top of the mountain and see how propagation plays to the lower
48 states.
The logs have been update to the NA-150 web site for your viewing as
of 19:29z August 1, 1998. The
last entry in the internet log is as of 17:30z August 1, 1998.
Below are also some statistics to date.
NA150 Little Diomede Dxpedition 1998
KL7/W6IXP NA150 as of 01 Aug 1998 1730z
NON-DUPED QSO
20 SSB 499
15 SSB 24
Total 523
TOTAL QSO'S TO DATE INCLUDING DUPES 572
Dupe rate 9.04%
_________________________________________________
Continent Statistics
KL7/W6IXP NA150 as of 01 Aug 1998 1730z
SSB
North America
20 3.6
South America
3 0.5
Europe
430 77.3
Asia
77 13.8
Africa
2 0.4
Oceania
20 3.6
Plus Additional QSO's Not Categorized Yet 16
_______________________________________________
Our plans for continued operation on NA-150 are primarily be 20 meters
SSB with 15 meters and 40 meters
SSB as alternatives. Our departure plans are not defined at this
time as logistics to get off the
island are as difficult as getting onto the island. For now,
we will continue to operate from NA-150
until such time that we depart.
73 from Little Diomede NA-150
Barry K6ST and Tom W6IXP
The weather is playing the problem. The winds are blowing from a certain direction so the fog is a problem for a helicopter to make it to Diomede.
We have contacted some people on Little Diomede that should be able to bring us over by boat, but at the present moment, the seas are too rough (about a 30 knot breeze) for the small boats that they have to possibly offer.
Other than having a direct discussion with the weather Gods (will you and all the IOTA hams please do that NOW!!!), all we can do is be patient and be flexible.
Currently we are in the town of Wales, on the Seward Peninsula. Little Diomede is about 30 miles away. We are staying at a school and are operating on 20 meters as a special event station on Cape Wales KL7/W6IXP. It keeps our spirits up to work you guys while we're waiting for the weather to clear, so see you primarily of 20 meters! Thanks for your support - it's been great talking to all of you.
Our planned departure from Little Diomede back home is on Wednesday assuming we are not delayed with fog. Now you go figure the odds on how long we will be on Little Diomede.
Lastly, the QTH for operation from Little Diomede is at the base of the island with a 1700 foot mountain in back of us. The direction we are facing is primarily west, and much of our radio view is blocked by Big Diomede Island. We think our best propagation is towards Europe, with the East Coast of the US possible. It's entirely possible that this may be all we can reach. We are looking into a split operation, partly from the village and partly from the top of the island - this will require a hellacious climb up the hill carrying equipment, and probably won't work. SO, if signals are not good from Little Diomede, then try reaching us long path. Note that there were some errors in the USGS map (a first for me, anyway) which indicated that the village we were landing in was on the Northeast corner of the island. Local knowledge proved different, the village is most of the way down the west side of the island, and covered by cliffs that don't appear on the topological map, so realize that our plans have had to change based on reality. We'll work anyone we can hear, and we'll operate in as fair a manner as we can. Our original operating schedules were based on propagation predictions, however it has become obvious that the models in miniprop simply aren't accurate - for openers the program predicts 5 hours of darkness and possible operation from 40 meters. In reality, there is NO darkness and no possible operation on 40. Nothing prepared us for the impact of aurora as well.
Please do your clear weather and good propagation dances for us. For now Tom W6IXP and Barry K6ST say 73 from the closest point to Little Diomede.
NA-150 Little Diomede Island is located in Alaska within the Bering Straits at 66 degrees north, 169 degrees west. The island is the western most point of the U.S.A a few miles next to Russia. Little Diomede Island has approximately 150 natives on the island. Currently there are no licensed hams on the Island.About NA-150 Little Diomede Island
Travel for the operators is quite long starting from San Francisco on
commercial airlines to Seattle, WA, Anchorage AK, and Nome, AK. Then the
travel continues to Cape Whales via private plane, and finally to Little
Diomede via helicopter. Landing on Little Diomede Island can be a problem
when summer fog is present. Unfortunately the weather / fog conditions
determine the actual start of the DXpedition. Please see Hot
Updates - Special Information About Start Date
Click here to see: The Next Web Page Containing Special UpdatesHot Updates - Special Information, including About Start Date
Landing on Little Diomede Island can be a problem when summer fog is present. Unfortunately the weather / fog conditions determine the actual start of the DXpedition. Please check here to see when the actual start of the DXpedition begins.
NA-210 Sledge Island Recap
NA210 DXpedition Recap as of 20:30 UTC July 27Wow have we had one hell of a time getting to NA150!!! 4 days of delays so far and the good news is that we got 552 QSO's logged for NA210 with 60 dupes several triples and a quad. All those dupes (almost 10%) reduce the number of qso's for everybody else!!!
NA-210 Sledge Island DXpedition 1998Call: KL7/K6ST BAND MODE QSO ZONES COUNTRIES Plus Dupes Total QSO's 20 SSB 492 17 38 60 552
Continent StatisticsKL7/K6ST SLEDGE ISLAND NA-210 24 & 25 Jul 1998 SSB 20M percent North America 300 54.3 South America 9 1.6 Europe 180 32.6 Asia 53 9.6 Africa 1 0.2 Oceania 7 1.3
The NA210 logs are now online on the web sites. See Below View your Contact in the log
NA210 Recap:
You probably don't know this but putting NA210 was more of a stretch that we had ever imagined. We had 2 days of waiting for NA150 and came up with the idea of doing a new island in the mean time. We had to purchase a generator large enough to run the linear amp and also locate camping gear at the Alaskan current prices plus find a way to get to this island. None of this was planned, since we were prepared for a trip to an island with power and shelter, via helicopter! The first step was to get permission from the required authorities. Two phone calls got us to the right federal department - the lady responsible was extremely helpful. She checked with her biologist and got us permission to land and operate, as long as we didn't disturb the bids. The only limitation was that we couldn't use a helicopter to get there - our first choice based on time constraints. The only other possibility was a boat. Our negotiations involved four different boat skippers. Three were too busy to take us, but then we were able to prevail upon Captain Robbie Thomas, a fisherman, to get us out there after he put in a 10 hour day surveying (his day job). Unfortunately, the boat available was an open boat - we didn't now how this would fit into Murphy's great law until it stated raining as our gear was piled up on the dock. Our plan was for a 24 hour trip - all we could afford since staying on Sledge Island longer would eliminate any chance to make Diomede.
Sledge Island is a bird sanctuary about 1 mile long and 1/4 mile wide approximately 30 miles from Nome Alaska. The island is not inhabited (except for us two crazy IOTA Dxpeditioners, one fox and a lot of birds). At boat speeds, this was a two hour run each way. There was only one place we could operate from - a low area on the North end of the island. We would operate from the beach, as close as we could get to the water.
In order to do Sledge Island, we had to strip down the amount of gear needed in order to get the equipment in the small boat. We eliminated all spares - if anything got too wet, or broke, we were down. The trips between the equipment staging area at the airport and the logistics operations center in Nome were a nightmare. Special thanks to Ramon, AL7X and the SPARC ham club in Nome for assistance - without them we simply couldn't have made Sledge Island happen.
The boat ride to sledge was windy and wet as it rained all the way there for the two hour ride. Both of us huddled under a tarp and tried to keep the water and salt spray out of everything, including our clothes. Once on the island we dragged the equipment (our guess is 250 pounds) up past the high tide line. Then we set up set up the operating tent, activated the generator, stacked up the gear on one of the shipping boxes, and set up part of the vertical antenna. The first few contacts were made with just the driven element as we first got on the air. Later we added the reflector which greatly improved our signals. Our initial orientation of the antenna system was toward Europe - Later we moved to aim toward the US. There was a big hill behind us so operation to Oceania was simply not possible (700+ feet, and it sloped right down to our location. We had one contact to KH6 and think that it may very well have been long path. We had no real time to plan the operation - never even had a map of the island. We couldn't move any further down the island to get clear of the hill either, since there was a lighthouse there. Our view covered about 220 degrees - the rest masked by the hills.
The linear amp was not operational when we fired it up on the island but some good old ham smarts fixed that. The antenna tuner got a healthy dose of salt water that was too much for us to fix here - we would just have to hope the amplifier would drive the antennas OK, regardless of SWR. The headset had a rf feedback problem so we had to go to a hand mike which is slower and more clumsy. All operation was sitting (or lying) on the ground inside the tent, with the equipment piled in front of us. Sleeping was difficult, since you had to sleep while the other guy was operating two feet away. We both had to move often, since you got cramps operating in strange positions, or your butt went to sleep, or both. The sand was a big problem as it got into the keys of the laptop computer. Murphy struck again, as mainly the "K" key is sticking.
The aurora had a big impact on our operation. Signals bounced between S9 and completely inaudible within a few syllables - the closest similarity I can come up with is operating meteor shower. Many of you got tired of "Again, again" but it was the only way possible to get the calls through. When propagation DID work, it was a pile up beyond belief. We were stuck in a small space between two other DXpeditions. We kept our pileup in a narrow window - too narrow, according to some. Next time we'll use a greater split to make sure that the splatter doesn't cover us up. Unfortunately no one mentioned the splatter problem to us until too late to do anything about it.
The weather went from mid 40 degrees F to 80 F and back to 50 F. The rain stopped and we stayed mostly dry, but we packed light enough that clothes just had to dry on us. Since the NA210 operation was a very quick decision we didn't have enough time do plan for heated meals so we ate cold food for the operation.
All in all, it was an amazing adventure for a quick 24 hour 1 shot operation.
OPERATION SCHEDULE
Start Date/Times:The KL7/W6IXP NA-150 operation on the air should start approximately 21:00 UTC July 22, 1998. This is dependent upon a number of factors including weather, which could potentially delay travel onto the island and the beginning of the operation by a factor of days. To arrive on the island, the expedition team takes a special helicopter 35 miles from the Alaska mainland to Little Diomede Island. Assuming the weather and travel plans cooperates, look for us the bands or check out this web site for updates. Any delays should be indicated in: Hot Updates - Special Information, including Start Date
Bands / Frequencies:
Mostly SSB first 5 days, then CW and RTTY additionally along with possibly Packet, Pactor, APRS and 6 meters (Time permitting)!
Look for KL7/W6IXP NA-150 on (in order of priority):
SSB 14.260 (listening up 5), 21.260 (listening up 5), 7.090 (KL7/W6IXP listening up 7180 +- )
CW 14.040, 21.040, 7.040
RTTY 14.080, 21.090, 7.038 (Time permitting)
QSL ROUTING
Please send SASE direct to:KL7/K6ST NA-210 Sledge Island DXpedition
and
KL7/W6IXP NA-150 Little Diomede DXpedition
QSL VIA N6AWD
Fred K Stenger
6000 Hesketh Dr
Bakersfield, CA 93309-1429 U.S.Aor QSL via Bureau will also be acknowledged
SEARCH or SUBMIT SPOTS for KL7/W6IXP NA-150
(SEE BELOW FOR IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON HOW TO USE SPOTTING CLUSTER)Please note, the IOTA Contest 1998 will be occurring during the period 1200 UTC Saturday 25th July to 1200 UTC Sunday 26th July 1998.
As per the "IOTA Contest 1998 - Rules" which are made by the RSGB Contest Committee,
Section 4. Categories, Item (a) Single operator.
Only one transmitted signal. Use of PacketCluster or other assistance during the contest places the entrant in the multi-operator category.
Look for this rare iota, KL7/W6IXP NA-150, Little Diomede DXpedition by clicking on:
S E A R C H the OH2AQ Internet IOTA Spotting NetworkFrom your browser, use "FIND" on "KL7/W6IXP" or "NA-150" to see the spots
Or work this rare IOTA and SUBMIT your own spot on the OH2AQ Internet IOTA Spotting Network.
Be sure to enter:
"KL7/W6IXP" as the DX CALLSIGN
and "NA-150" IOTA as key words in the INFO field. This will cause the spot to
be recognized as an IOTA.
For Example:
YOUR CALLSIGN (your callsign here)
DX CALLSIGN (KL7/W6IXP)
FREQUENCY (the frequency you just worked KL7/W6IXP)
INFO (NA-150 IOTA and any other info you want)
S U B M I T your own spot on the OH2AQ Internet IOTA Spotting Network.
VIEW ACTUAL LOGS
See your contact in the log. The logs are planned to be uploaded to the web site daily.The online web log search, is being provided courtesy of "Islands on the Web" ( IOTW ) http://www.islandchaser.com
View Your QSO in the NA-210 Sledge Island Online Web Log Search
View Your QSO in the NA-150 Little Diomede Online Web Log Search
ABOUT THE OPERATORS
Tom, W6IXP is a computer consultant. A contester and DXpeditioner at heart, Tom has traveled to VE1 for lots of contests. Prior IOTA expeditions were W6IXP on NA-144 Santa Cruz Island in 1996 and soloed his own IOTA operation KL7/W6IXP to NA-157 Kayak Island in 1997.Barry, K6ST is an avid DXer, contester, and enjoys DXpeditions. In his profession, Barry is Success and Motivational Coach working with people in business as well as their personal lives to reach their goals, have balance in their lives, and has even been known to help motivate a few people to excel in their ham radio passions. Prior IOTA expeditions were WB6UTY on NA-144 Santa Cruz Island in 1996 and supported Tom KL7/W6IXP for NA-157 Kayak Island in 1997.
Thanks for your SUPPORT on the
KL7/W6IXP NA-150 LITTLE DIOMEDE ISLANDThis IOTA DXpedition to the NA-150 LITTLE DIOMEDE ISLAND has been over 1 year in the planning. It has been a lot of fun and will take lots of resources, both people, equipment, and financial to put the number one IOTA Island for North America on the Air.Any and all support is greatly appreciated to help offset the out of pocket expenses and effort provided by the DXpedition team. Please contact us at John WD8MGQ, NA-150 Information Manager
Your support along with your great QSL's will help allow us to do even more IOTA DXpeditions in the future. Thanks & 73,
The NA-150 Little Diomede Dxpedition Team
Questions, Comments, Information
Contact John WD8MGQ, NA-150 Information Manager
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