
Show overview
Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio has been publishing since 2023, and across the 3 years since has built a catalogue of 239 episodes. That works out to roughly 120 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 22 min and 39 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Technology show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 47 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 87 episodes published. Published by Kevin Thomas.
From the publisher
Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio sets a new standard in amateur radio media. Through longform interviews, sharp technical insight, and global storytelling, we explore the people and ideas shaping the future of the hobby. From top-tier contesters to everyday ops, Q5 dives into what makes ham radio personal, competitive, and endlessly compelling. New episodes feature behind-the-scenes station builds, SO2R deep dives, WRTC prep, Parks on the Air, HamSCI, and honest talk from the world's most dedicated operators. Proudly supported by DX Engineering and Icom —helping hams stay loud, connected, and ready for the next challenge. Subscribe for real conversations at the edge of the hobby.
Latest Episodes
View all 239 episodesContest Crew Debriefs CQ WPX CW
Inside the CQ WPX Log Checking Process with the Q5 Contest Crew
Parks on the Air Skills: Contest with K1RX (Episode 7 of 7)
W1DED on Leadership and POTA’s Future: Interview by N8JRD
Has Ham Radio Lost Its Soul? VK9DX Has Thoughts
The Story Behind POTA with Mike Case W8MSC
From Carrier Decks to Contest Runs: K2GO’s Second Act
Becoming the DX at J62K | CQ WPX SSB
Built to Win, His Way: Ron WV4P’s NJ4P Contest Station
Multi-Op Mastery: Contest with K1RX (Episode 6 of 7)
The New Breed of Contesters: Remote, Young, Relentless
Inside Hamvention 2026: What to Expect | Q5 Briefing
Ontario QSO Party: What Matters This Year | Q5 Briefing
Looking Ahead to Dayton Hamvention: Tim Duffy K3LR
Europe’s Top Ops Battle Brutal Conditions in CQ WPX SSB
Ep 224Inside a Caribbean Contest Battle: K5ZD vs 8P5A | Contest Crew
The Contest Crew is back—and this time, it’s all about a CQ WPX SSB weekend that didn’t quite go to plan. Randy Thompson K5ZD is operating from V47T, where preparation starts strong and immediately go sideways: a shack full of amplifiers, and only one survives. What follows is a stripped-down station—one radio, one amp, and a relentless chase against Tom at 8P5A. The result? A second-place North America finish, just 800K behind, and a quiet revelation: even in a hyper-optimized, two-radio world, a disciplined single-op can still hang on if the decisions are sharp. The contest itself was a study in contrasts. Solar numbers promised magic, but northern operators struggled while the Caribbean and North Africa thrived. Randy finds gold on 15 meters in the dead of night—an hour and a half of uncontested Europe—while Kevin Thomas W1DED, operating ZF2KT, battles the eternal beginner’s dilemma: is it me, or the band? His breakthrough comes not in raw Qs, but in confidence—holding a frequency, trusting his setup, and pushing through the low-band grind he once avoided. And then there’s the future creeping in. AI voice keying isn’t fringe anymore—it's here, controversial, and effective. Some call it innovation; others, a step too far from the human element. But as Chris KL9A puts it plainly: “It’s not going away.” The subtext is clear—contest strategy is no longer just about propagation and endurance, but about how far you’re willing to lean into automation. Underneath the tech and tactics, though, the human moments still win. A last-minute headset scramble. A footswitch handoff at an airport. A wife wondering what kind of hobby involves strangers delivering gear at baggage claim. In contesting, logistics can be as intense as the pileups—and just as rewarding when it all clicks. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. DX Engineering continues to show up where it counts—whether it’s overnighting critical gear or backing operators chasing every last multiplier. Their support keeps contesters, DXers, and portable ops in the game when it matters most.

Ep 223Florida QSO Party from the Everglades | N3QE, Tina & POTA
Tim Shoppa N3QE is a seasoned contester chasing a different kind of edge, packing a competitive station into a carry-on and heading deep into the Everglades for a Parks on the Air activation during the Florida QSO Party. What began last year as a spur-of-the-moment detour, rebooking a flight, grabbing a painter’s pole at Home Depot, and improvising an inverted V in a remote campsite, turned into one of his most memorable operating experiences. The combination of low noise, strong high-band propagation, and POTA spotting created a surge in contacts and a new appreciation for portable contesting. This year, he returns with intention: a refined setup, a 3-element inverted V Yagi, and a 3D-printed center insulator designed to make band changes less painful in the field. Shoppa’s approach reflects how naturally contesting and Parks on the Air can complement each other in practice. POTA operators bring enthusiasm, real-time spotting, and a welcoming on-ramp to activity, while contesters contribute pacing, structure, and operating discipline. His activation sits right at that overlap, where a casual hunter might stumble onto a contest station and both walk away with a contact that counts. And then there’s “Tina,” his AI-generated contest voice, returning for 2026, eliminating the need for a microphone entirely while pushing the boundaries of how operators interact on phone. There’s also something refreshingly human underneath the technical ambition: a contester from suburban Maryland adapting to life dozens of miles from the nearest power line, relying on a rental car battery, and learning that success sometimes means fewer backups and more trust in your system. His goal isn’t perfection, it’s progress. Better than last year. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to DX Engineering for continuing to support operators wherever they set up, from remote parks to competitive stations around the world. Your commitment to POTA activators, DXers, and contesters keeps the hobby moving forward.
Ep 222Skill Development: Contest with K1RX (Episode 5 of 7)
Mark Pride K1RX is a veteran contester who believes the real upgrade isn’t your station—it’s you. In part five of this contesting fundamentals series, Mark shifts the focus away from gear and toward operating skill—the subtle, often overlooked craft that separates competent operators from great ones. His message is clear: improvement happens in the chair. Through short contests, special events, and deliberate “stress tests,” operators can sharpen timing, listening, and decision-making. Whether it’s CWOps sprints or month-long award programs, the goal isn’t just points—it’s building confidence and predictability on the air. What stands out is how quickly growth can happen. Mark shares the story of a Welsh operator he mentored who, with modest equipment, logged over 2,700 QSOs in a single event—discovering along the way her best band, improving her pileup skills, and even curing mic shyness. That’s the throughline: contesting compresses learning. It forces you to hear better, think faster, and adapt in real time. But Mark is equally blunt about what holds operators back. Bad habits—like repeating exchanges, over-talking, or failing to identify—quietly destroy efficiency. Contesting, at its core, is about transmitting maximum information in minimum time. The operators who thrive are the ones who strip communication down to its essentials and learn to match the cadence of whoever they’re working. Perhaps the most original idea here is “parallel play”—a kind of shadow operating where you practice logging real QSOs by listening to top operators, even from an SDR or hotel room. It’s a reminder that improvement doesn’t require perfect conditions—just intention. From search-and-pounce fundamentals to the adrenaline of running a frequency, Mark frames contesting as a discipline built on awareness, repetition, and small, compounding gains. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. DX Engineering continues to be a driving force behind operators pushing their limits, whether chasing DX, activating parks, or competing at the highest levels. Their support helps turn learning into performance across the global ham radio community.

Ep 221Inside POTA’s Growth Engine: AB0O on the Board
ohn Ford AB0O is a 45-year ham, engineer, and the quiet architect behind Parks on the Air’s North American mapping system. Licensed in Canada in 1981 under a now-defunct “digital” license—years before packet radio was mainstream—John’s path into amateur radio began with curiosity and a willingness to dig into emerging ideas like ALOHA networking. But his operating heart was always in the field. Long before POTA had a name, he was hauling rigs into the woods, setting up on stumps, and chasing contacts under improvised shade. That instinct made POTA feel less like a discovery in 2019 and more like a homecoming. From there, his rise mirrored POTA’s explosive growth. Recruited as a Missouri map rep in 2020, John quickly became the backbone of U.S. mapping before expanding to all of North America. Today, he coordinates roughly 60 volunteer mapping reps—transforming what was once a tightly controlled, single-person function into a scalable system capable of supporting tens of thousands of parks. One striking detail: North America alone involves navigating more than 200 government agencies, each with its own way of defining and managing parks. But growth brought friction. John offers a candid look at POTA’s next challenge: not technology, but clarity. As the program scales past 65,000 parks and 85,000 users, “crowdsourced rules” have begun to creep in—operators unintentionally bending definitions of park boundaries, multi-park activations, and valid QSOs. His philosophy is simple: keep the rules few, clear, and consistently communicated—because that’s what keeps the game fun. With the new board structure in place, John sees the future not as controlling POTA, but guiding it—ensuring it remains simple, scalable, and true to its roots. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. A special thanks to DX Engineering for continuing to support operators worldwide—from Parks on the Air activators to dedicated DXers and contesters keeping the bands alive.

Ep 220Otis NP4G: Dayton Hamvention 2026 Amateur of the Year
Dr. Jose “Otis” Vicens NP4G is the 2026 Dayton Hamvention Amateur of the Year—a Puerto Rican orthodontist, DXpeditioner, and president of INDEXA who has spent years turning big radio dreams into real-world action. Otis first got licensed at 16 after a CB contact nudged him toward amateur radio, and the hook was simple: the thrill of talking to someone far away. That early spark carried him from Purdue’s W9YB club to emergency communications after hurricanes in Puerto Rico, to major DXpeditions that once felt almost mythical from the audience at the Dayton DX Forum. Now he’s one of the people making those adventures happen. This conversation traces that arc beautifully. Otis talks about getting the call to join the Bouvet team, preparing for the cold from the Caribbean with gym sessions and cold showers, and discovering firsthand how Starlink has changed modern DXpeditioning. He also tells the story behind the 2026 KP5/NP3VI Desecheo operation—a Puerto Rican-led effort that required diplomacy, patience, and a lower-impact operating model to win approval for one of the most coveted nearby entities in DX. There’s also a deeper philosophy underneath all of it: say yes to ham radio. Whether it’s contesting with the La Sierra crew, operating from K3LR, activating St. Barts from a nature reserve, or helping INDEXA support the next rare one, Otis comes across as someone who understands that this hobby gives back in proportion to the heart you put into it. For viewers who enjoyed past conversations with Jose WP3Z and Manuel WP4TZ, this is another great look at the camaraderie and ambition coming out of Puerto Rico. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. DX Engineering continues to back the operators who keep this hobby moving—from Parks on the Air activators to serious DXers and contesters chasing the next signal over the horizon. We’re grateful for their support of stations and adventures across the ham radio world. Welcome to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio.