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Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio

Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio

239 episodes — Page 1 of 5

Contest Crew Debriefs CQ WPX CW

Jun 10, 202637 min

Inside the CQ WPX Log Checking Process with the Q5 Contest Crew

Jun 3, 202634 min

Parks on the Air Skills: Contest with K1RX (Episode 7 of 7)

May 23, 202612 min

W1DED on Leadership and POTA’s Future: Interview by N8JRD

May 22, 202622 min

Has Ham Radio Lost Its Soul? VK9DX Has Thoughts

May 11, 202628 min

The Story Behind POTA with Mike Case W8MSC

May 6, 202618 min

From Carrier Decks to Contest Runs: K2GO’s Second Act

May 4, 202653 min

Becoming the DX at J62K | CQ WPX SSB

Apr 30, 202624 min

Built to Win, His Way: Ron WV4P’s NJ4P Contest Station

Apr 26, 202630 min

Multi-Op Mastery: Contest with K1RX (Episode 6 of 7)

Apr 24, 202615 min

The New Breed of Contesters: Remote, Young, Relentless

Apr 23, 202612 min

Inside Hamvention 2026: What to Expect | Q5 Briefing

Apr 21, 20264 min

Ontario QSO Party: What Matters This Year | Q5 Briefing

Apr 17, 20266 min

Looking Ahead to Dayton Hamvention: Tim Duffy K3LR

Apr 17, 202628 min

Europe’s Top Ops Battle Brutal Conditions in CQ WPX SSB

Apr 15, 202650 min

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.

Apr 11, 202632 min

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.

Apr 11, 202624 min

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.

Apr 9, 202644 min

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.

Mar 20, 202637 min

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.

Mar 19, 202626 min

Ep 219ARRL DX SSB Debrief with Levi K6JO and the Contest Crew

I'm joined by Randy Thompson K5ZD, Dan Craig N6MJ, Bill Fehring W9KKN, and special guest Levi Jefferies K6JO for a postmortem on a gripping ARRL DX SSB weekend. This episode offers a front-row seat to the drama: Bill grinding out an extraordinary 48-hour remote effort from ZF1A in the Cayman Islands, Dan battling from Tariq's N2QV super station in the Catskills, and Levi pushing hard from N1DE in farthest edges of northern Maine. All three spent the weekend in the top six of the SOAB HP category. What makes the conversation compelling is not just the scoreboard, but the psychology behind it—when to look, when to ignore it, and how one glance can turn fatigue into resolve. Bill admits the chase with Ken KP4AA kept him pushing to the end. Dan confesses he took a three-hour sleep break, woke up, checked the scoreboard, and instantly regretted it. Levi, meanwhile, lost crucial hours to a remote-station computer crash and still refused to let it define the effort. There’s plenty here for the serious operator: SO2R compromises, self-spotting as a strategic necessity, Maine’s undeniable edge into Europe, New York’s better angle into Asia, and the sheer brutality of trying to hold a run frequency while three other stations are calling CQ on top of you. But there’s also something deeply human in this one—hallucinations after 40-plus hours, “lucky” frequencies on 160, remote setups made possible by loyal friends, and that familiar contest truth that the line between discipline and madness is often just one multiplier. The episode also gives due respect to the battle at the top of the scoreboard between Tom 8P5A and Manu HD8R, including Manu’s dramatic come-from-behind "scoreboard win." And it closes with a well-earned victory lap: Dan N6MJ is now officially the all-time CQ Worldwide CW Single Operator All Band High Power world record holder. It lands as both celebration and warning—because in this crowd, “retirement” usually lasts only until the next big weekend. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Icom continues to equip and support the operators pushing the limits—from Parks on the Air activators to world class contesters and DXers chasing the rare ones. Their commitment helps keep the radios on, the signals loud, and the global ham community thriving. Welcome to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio.

Mar 19, 202635 min

Ep 216Parks on the Air Meets Contesting: Dean N6DE

Dean Wood N6DE is a contester asking a provocative question: Can a Parks on the Air activation be competitive in a serious contest? In this conversation, Dean shares the results of a months-long experiment testing whether a carefully chosen park—combined with smart antenna strategy—can rival traditional home stations. His target site was Fremont Peak State Park in California, selected for two key competitive advantages: a dramatically lower noise floor than most suburban stations and terrain that slopes toward Europe and Asia, creating a naturally low takeoff angle for DX. Dean operated two contests from the park—NAQP CW and ARRL DX CW—bringing portable antennas, battery power, and a willingness to adapt on the fly. The results were eye-opening. During ARRL DX CW, Dean discovered that antenna orientation mattered far more than expected: after installing a second wire aimed toward Japan, signals jumped roughly two S-units compared with his original European-focused inverted V. That kind of real-time experimentation is exactly what portable contesting demands—and rewards. Over the two contests he logged more than 1,200 QSOs, including 565 DX contacts on 15 meters alone, ultimately “kilo-ing” the park with over 1,000 contacts. But the bigger story is philosophical. Dean argues that portable operating—through Parks on the Air, SOTA, and similar programs—may be the most promising gateway for the next generation of contesters. With creative contest overlays, outreach from station owners, and collaboration between contest clubs and the POTA community, he believes the hobby can evolve beyond the traditional big-tower model and bring new operators into radiosport. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to DX Engineering for supporting operators everywhere—from portable POTA activators to serious contesters chasing DX. Their continued commitment helps keep radiosport thriving across parks, peaks, and stations around the world.

Mar 16, 202639 min

Ep 218Inside Bouvet: Live with the 3Y0K DXpedition Team

Adrian Ciuperca KO8SCA and Max Freedman N4ML are on Bouvet Island (3Y0K) right now—with the wind howling outside their tents, antennas lashed to rock and ice, and one of the biggest pileups in amateur radio roaring in their headphones. Bouvet is one of the rarest and most remote DX entities on Earth, and the 3Y0K team mounted a $1.7 million effort to put it on the air. Twenty operators departed Cape Town aboard an ice-class vessel equipped with helicopter support, arriving after a six-day voyage through rough seas. Helicopter lifts ferried people and equipment onto the island, where the team rapidly built a small radio village: sleeping tents, a communal tent, and an operating tent running up to five stations with beams, verticals, and dipoles. Despite brutal winds and relentless weather, the team quickly pushed past 100,000 QSOs while operating from one of the harshest environments in the DX world. Behind the pileups is a staggering logistical effort. Adrian describes years of planning—contracts for the ship and helicopter, interviews with pilots capable of flying in Antarctic conditions, and enormous spreadsheets tracking every piece of equipment. On Bouvet, there are no second chances: if something breaks, you fix it in the storm. Antennas fail, winds push past 60 mph, and operators head back outside because every minute off the air from Bouvet matters. For Max, one of the youngest operators on the team, the experience is both baptism and inspiration. Supported by the NCDXF, he was immersed in every stage—from packing containers in Norway to operating through massive worldwide pileups. His takeaway is simple: young operators don’t just belong on DXpeditions—they strengthen them. The energy, technical skill, and curiosity they bring help ensure that rare-entity activations like Bouvet continue long into the future. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 and helping power projects like this one. Their support of DXers, Parks on the Air operators, and contesters worldwide helps keep the rare ones coming.

Mar 15, 202618 min

Ep 214Peak Operating: The SOTA Climbing Adventures of GW4BML

Ben Lloyd GW4BML is a lifelong climber who discovered Summits on the Air (SOTA) and now combines both passions as he explores destinations across Wales and Scotland. In this conversation on Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio, Ben traces his path from a childhood introduction to amateur radio at age twelve—thanks to a visit to Glyn GW0JAI’s shack—to eventually earning his full license decades later. For years, radio remained a background interest while climbing dominated his life. But when Summits on the Air entered the picture, everything clicked. Suddenly the peaks he loved became incredible operating spots, and the hobby transformed into something physical, portable, and deeply social. That convergence led to a remarkable five-year stretch of family adventures built around summits, CW, and lightweight radio gear carried up steep trails. Ben shares the craft behind mountain operating—balancing antennas, batteries, and weather with the realities of high ground—and the unique satisfaction of making contacts from places where the station truly lives in your backpack. Those experiences eventually became a book, Summit of Dreams, where Ben chronicles years of SOTA activations, climbing routes, and the people met along the way. The book captures both the technical side of operating portable radio in challenging environments and the human side of the hobby—how a simple radio on a mountaintop can connect strangers across continents and turn solitary climbs into shared adventures. It’s a story about rediscovering radio through the landscape—and about how amateur radio can turn a solitary climb into a global conversation. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. From the shack to the summit, Icom keeps hams connected. We’re proud to have their support for Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio.

Mar 13, 202623 min

Ep 217Contest Crew Goes to Chile for Portable Contesting with CE3/N5NU

Jason Goldsberry CE3/N5NU is quietly redefining what contesting can look like when you have no choice but to leave the house. In this episode, I’m joined by the contest crew—Randy Thompson K5ZD, Bill Fehring W9KNN, Chris Hurlbut KL9A—and their guest Jason Goldsberry CE3/N5NU, joining us from Chile. Living in a sixth-floor apartment in Las Condes, just outside Santiago, Jason quickly discovered the reality of urban RF noise—an S9 wall that made home operating nearly impossible. So he did what contesters tend to do when faced with a problem: he engineered around it. The solution? Hiking into nearby parks with a full portable station—antennas, batteries, laptop, and radio—sometimes hauling 60 pounds of gear in two trips just to get on the air. During CQ Worldwide CW, Jason packed a Yaesu FT-891, lithium batteries, and a carefully designed vertical antenna system—including a two-element vertical beam for 10 and 15 meters and a parasitic vertical array for 20. Running 100 watts on battery power, shaded only by a giant umbrella to fight the Chilean sun, he logged more than 800 QSOs in roughly 15 hours of operating. For Jason, it’s less about competing for plaques and more about giving out the mult and having fun—experiencing the magic of propagation, like hearing Mongolia at 20-over-9 or working rare openings into Asia and Europe from a hillside. Along the way, he’s discovered an unusual intersection between worlds. Portable operators and contesters don’t always overlap—but Jason lives squarely in that narrow sliver where both passions meet. Whether it’s navigating pileups with clever listening techniques, managing battery life by watching his radio screen dim, or hiking into remote spots for a better takeoff toward North America, his approach proves that big fun doesn’t always require a big station. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to DX Engineering for supporting operators who push the limits—from contest superstations to field setups like Jason’s. Their gear and expertise help Parks on the Air activators, DXers, and contesters around the world build stations that perform wherever the signal needs to go.

Mar 12, 202629 min

Ep 213Inside the VP0SG South Georgia DXpedition

Rune Øye LA7THA is helping lead the planned VP0SG South Georgia DXpedition, a major effort to activate one of the rarest DX entities in amateur radio. Rune LA7THA and Erwann Merrien LB1QI bring deep DXpedition experience to the project. Over the years they’ve been involved in activations including São Tomé S9LA, Zimbabwe Z2LA, Zambia 9J2LA, and Namibia V55LA, along with cold-weather operations from Svalbard JW0W and the massive Bouvet 3Y0J expedition. Those experiences—especially the logistical and technical lessons learned during Bouvet—now inform their approach to South Georgia. The team has already secured its expedition vessel, MV Meridian, operated by 60° South Expeditions, and assembled a 14-operator international team. Their plan is to run five stations from a tented camp on the island, with six operators on shore at a time, rotating between the island and the ship for rest. The station design also includes several remote receive stations located hundreds of meters from the main camp and connected via gigahertz microwave links. Funding and final permissions are the key milestones ahead. The expedition budget is approaching $400,000, and while the team has received encouraging feedback from the Government of South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, the official landing authorization is expected later this year. Once that approval is secured, the team expects broader support from DX clubs, foundations, and individual donors worldwide. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. This episode of Q5 Ham Radio is powered by Icom Incorporated, whose radios continue to support operators everywhere—from everyday stations to ambitious DXpeditions pushing signals across the globe.

Mar 10, 202621 min

Ep 215Young Ham NU1D Heads to J62K St. Lucia for CQ WPX SSB

Seth Jones NU1D is a 15-year-old ham radio operator from Maine who’s been steadily building his skills on the air. In the year since his first appearance on Q5, Seth has kept busy. Operating with a modest home station—an older Yaesu FT-897, a G5RV dipole about 40 feet up, and 100 watts—he’s jumped into major contests like CQ Worldwide, ARRL DX CW, NAQP, and the IARU Championship. Along the way he’s taught himself CW, logged hundreds of contacts even after missing part of a contest weekend, and gained experience the way most contesters do: by getting on the air as often as possible and learning something each time. Now he’s preparing for a new kind of experience. Seth was selected as one of two youth operators invited to join the team at the J62K multi-operator contest station in St. Lucia for CQ WPX SSB. It will be his first time traveling outside the United States—and his first chance to operate from a major multi-op station alongside experienced operators like Bill Schmidt J68HZ, Kyle Chavis WA4PGM, and others. For someone who’s been manually keying CW from a desk at home, it’s a big step into the world of large contest stations. What stands out most is Seth’s approach to the hobby. He talks about finding mentors, visiting other stations, and staying involved in the Maine ham radio community whenever he can—whether that’s Field Day, club meetings, or remote contesting with WW4LL. For Seth, the goal right now is simple: keep learning, keep operating, and see where the hobby leads. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 and for helping operators everywhere—from Parks on the Air activators to dedicated DXers and contesters—build stations that bring the world a little closer.

Mar 10, 202612 min

Ep 212Inside WP3Z: The Caribbean DX Contest Station That Could Be Yours

For many contesters, the dream is simple: operate from a serious DX station in a prime location and run the pileups yourself. In this episode, José KP3J joins Q5 to talk about the remarkable Caribbean contest station he built and the story behind it. For years it has served as the home of the La Sierra Contest Group, producing big scores and unforgettable operating experiences. Now José is beginning to think about the station’s next chapter—and what it might look like for a new group of operators to take the reins. We talk about the station, the philosophy behind building and maintaining a competitive DX operation, and the idea of stewardship as these stations pass from one generation of operators to the next. Q5 is sponsored by DX Engineering.

Mar 5, 202619 min

Ep 174XOTA: The Case for Portable Ham Radio with Luk DD1LD

Dzianis “Luk” Lukashevich DD1LD is an Alpine mountaineer turned ham radio innovator, leading Germany’s SOTA Alpine Association and reshaping what outdoor portable operation can look like. Introduced to amateur radio as a teenager, he returned in earnest in the mid-2000s, quickly combining two passions: climbing and operating from summits. Since then, he’s been a relentless activator across programs—SOTA (Summits on the Air), POTA (Parks on the Air), WWFF (Worldwide Flora and Fauna), IOTA (Islands on the Air), even LOTA (Lighthouses on the Air). His operating philosophy now runs on a new frequency: “Go Green” portable ops, where every activation begins and ends without a car—by bike, foot, or public transport. The idea of XOTA—“any on the air”—captures Luk’s inclusive style. Why limit yourself to one program when the entire outdoors is your shack? This spirit led him to a record-breaking 10-region SOTA activation across the German Alps in a single day and to summiting Sweden’s highest peak solo during a multi-day trail run—all while operating QRP with rigs the size of a credit card. His gear has evolved, but his ethos remains: lightweight, ecological, and always up for a challenge. Luk’s not just a climber with a key. He’s a contest-caliber operator attempting SO2R in the woods, mentoring his young sons in CW before they can read, and imagining a future where ham radio overlays like “Go Green” become standard. Whether it’s a picnic table POTA run or an ascent to a summit, he’s always looking for the next edge—and the next QSO. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to Icom for sponsoring Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio—because legendary QSOs deserve legendary radios.

Mar 4, 202652 min

Ep 211World Wide Award Introduces the First YL Program

The World Wide Award for YLs is new—and it launches March 9. Designed to increase visibility, participation, and on-air activity among women in amateur radio, the program creates a clear, structured path for operators around the world to make contacts with YLs and earn recognition. Marion W1GRL and Carlo IK1HJS explain how the award works, who can participate, qualification details, and why this initiative matters right now. If you want to be part of the inaugural run, now is the time to register, review the rules, and get ready. Early participation will shape the momentum of this program from day one. Q5 is proudly supported by Icom—building radios that inspire operators to push the boundaries of what’s possible.

Mar 3, 202618 min

Ep 209Inside the New POTA Board’s Vision: Mark K8MST

Mark Torigian K8MST is a retired attorney, former general counsel for Hyundai Motor Company, and now a driving force behind establishing strong governance principles with the newly formed Parks on the Air board. Licensed in 2021 after decades of putting off the hobby, Mark dove headfirst into ham radio—and POTA—during the pandemic, first as a hunter, then as an activator with hundreds of parks under his belt. In just a few years, he went from newcomer to board member of one of the fastest-growing programs in amateur radio. With nearly 50 million QSOs logged, 84,000 registered operators, and 85,000 parks across 236 DX entities, POTA isn’t just thriving—it’s reshaping the hobby. Mark brings something different to the table: four decades of legal and corporate governance experience. At Hyundai, his mission was program integrity—building rules, systems, and internal controls that could withstand explosive growth. Now he’s applying that same mindset to POTA. Not to burden activators and hunters with red tape, but to strengthen the foundation behind the scenes: bylaws, board structure, financial oversight, data privacy protections, and clearer rules that eliminate ambiguity. “If ten hams interpret a rule and you get twenty-five answers,” he says, “we need to fix that.” Behind the curtain, a 21-person volunteer development team led by James Linden, VE3JLN, is rewriting the IT backbone—modernizing a decade-old cloud-based system that now processes more than a million QSOs a month. Add to that the financial reality: roughly $5,000–$6,000 per month just to keep the servers running. No corporate sponsor bankrolls this operation. It’s volunteers, modest book royalties, and community donations keeping the engine alive. And yet, the spirit remains intact. Mark tells the story of operating Winter Field Day at minus 15 degrees—three antennas up in an hour—proving that POTA is more than a game. It’s training. It’s readiness. It’s community. His pledge? Make it better without breaking what already works. Stronger governance. Greater transparency. Seamless improvement. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. A special thank you to DX Engineering for standing behind operators everywhere—from Parks on the Air activators to dedicated DXers and contesters—with equipment and expertise that keep stations on the air. Your support helps ensure this global community continues to grow and thrive.

Mar 2, 202625 min

Ep 210Down Under to WRTC 2026: Jacky ZL3CW and Bernd VK2IA

Bernd VK2IA and Jacky ZL3CW are world-class contesters from Australia and New Zealand—operators forged in weak-signal territory who’ve spent decades proving that geography is no excuse. Jacky’s story begins in the French Air Force in 1970, where radio was a job before it was a passion. Stationed in Africa in 1979, he watched amateur operators run pileups through the night and realized what he’d been missing: freedom. Since then, contesting and DXpeditions have been his fuel. From Djibouti to Japan to New Zealand, he chased CW pileups not just for the adrenaline, but to give operators the rare contacts they crave. Bernd’s introduction came through family. As a teenager in Germany, he wrote QSL cards for his blind cousin and memorized call signs from around the world. CQ Worldwide CW hooked him early. By 17, he was operating in a multi-single team decades older than he was. That curiosity became a global operating résumé—and eventually a long-running partnership with Jacky that now leads to WRTC 2026 in England. Operating from VK and ZL is not for the faint of heart. Europe and North America sit 10,000 kilometers away. Daylight brings noise and painfully low rates. When the bands open, they’re competing against locals with S9 signals while they strain to pull S2 whispers from the mud. New Zealand may have five to ten serious CW contesters. Australia, a bit more. It’s not pileup country—it’s persistence country. They’ve felt both fortune and misfortune—like the WRTC in Bologna when a slipping Yagi cost them nearly two hours at peak propagation and sent them tumbling down the live scoreboard. They clawed back. Because that’s what seasoned operators do. In England, they’re looking forward to big signals—but even more to the camaraderie. The shared grind of 24 hours among the world’s best. Running trusted K3s and leaning on fifteen years of partnership, they know competition matters. But friendship matters more. From the edge of the map to the center of the contesting world, Bernd and Jacky remind us that greatness isn’t about signal strength. It’s about resilience. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Special thanks to Icom, the choice of operators who know that peak performance is never optional

Mar 2, 202619 min

Ep 203Contest with K1RX: Expectations vs Reality (Episode 4 of 7)

Mark Pride K1RX returns for Episode 4 of the How to Contest series with a timely warning: misplaced expectations can ruin a perfectly good contest weekend. In this episode, Mark and host Kevin Thomas W1DED explore the psychological side of contesting—how to set goals that motivate rather than frustrate, how to factor in location and operating time, and how clubs and communities can ground your ambitions in reality. Mark shares what many new contesters eventually learn the hard way: location matters, participation matters, and physics is not negotiable. Whether you’re working a 48-hour marathon or grabbing a few bursts of time around walking the dog, success comes from matching goals to real-world conditions. That might mean working only the high-band European openings or chasing a top-ten finish in QRP. The right category choice can transform an uphill battle into a personal win. He also reminds us that contest clubs are a force multiplier. As a longtime leader in the Yankee Clipper Contest Club, Mark explains how even small scores can add up to big results—and how surrounding yourself with operators of all levels accelerates learning. For those struggling with noise, location, or time constraints, he offers a simple solution: go where the fun is. Visit another station. Operate with a team. Or jump into high-participation events like WWA or CQWW, where every QSO becomes part of a global conversation. This is Episode 4 of 7 in the How to Contest series. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 Ham Radio and empowering operators wherever they operate from—from mountaintop DXers to apartment-bound dreamers.

Feb 27, 202628 min

Ep 207Contest Crew is Back With NAQP & ARRL DX

Feb 20, 202633 min

Ep 208Parks on the Air's Explosive Growth and the Next Chapter

Feb 19, 20263 min

Ep 206Contest with K1RX: You Can’t Hear Them, You Can’t Work Them (Episode 3 of 7)

Mark Pride K1RX returns for Episode 3 of the How to Contest series with one loud, clear message: antennas matter. In this installment, he and Kevin Thomas W1DED move from station snapshots to serious diagnostics—evaluating performance, identifying bottlenecks, and building a strategy for measurable improvement. If Episode 2 was about what’s on your desk, this one’s about how that gear performs when the contest clock starts. Mark makes the case for thinking like an engineer and acting like an experimenter. Whether you’re running wires in trees or assembling a top-tier station, your success hinges on one principle: build, compare, iterate. That might mean setting up an A/B antenna switch to catch degradation in real time, or doing the unglamorous work of shutting off breakers to track down S9+ noise from a neighbor’s touch lamp. It’s not about luck or luxury—it’s about learning what works, one contest at a time. This episode also returns to a recurring theme: start where you are. Many contesters have tried to “buy” performance, only to discover that without years of problem-solving and fine-tuning, even a tower full of aluminum won’t carry you. Real improvement comes from wearing out your antenna switch, making smart trade-offs, and being brutally honest about what you hear. Because as Mark puts it, “If you can’t hear them, you can’t work them.” This is Episode 3 of 7 in the How to Contest series. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 Ham Radio and helping hams of all experience levels make smart, measurable progress with their stations.

Feb 18, 202629 min

Ep 202Contest with K1RX: What’s on Your Desk? (Episode 2 of 7)

Mark Pride K1RX returns for Episode 2 of our How to Contest series with a deceptively simple question: What’s on your desk? In this episode, we get tactical. Mark and Kevin Thomas W1DED take a close look at your current gear—radios, antennas, tuners, meters, logging software—and explain why a contest weekend is the most honest stress test you can run on both your station and your skill. This is where the rubber meets the bands. You might feel loud on a quiet Wednesday, but when the contest clock starts Friday night, your signal hits a wall. That’s the moment when casual operating gives way to contest reality—and why every serious contester should keep a running to-do list after each event. Prioritize improvements not by prestige, but by ROI: what’s going to bring more contacts, more reliability, and, above all, more fun? Along the way, Mark weighs in on solar conditions, contest calendars, and the subtle psychology of expectation. He reminds us that everyone from new ops to world champs like KL9A and N6MJ are learning every weekend. The secret is participation: don’t wait for the perfect band opening or a massive contest score. Get on the air, build your list, and chase joy—not just points. This is Episode 2 of 7 in the How to Contest series. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 Ham Radio and standing behind contesters at every stage of the journey—from their first QSO to the final log submission.

Feb 13, 202626 min

Ep 204How a Youth Team Took on Saba: Inside PJ6Y 2025

The PJ6Y DXpedition to Saba Island in October 2025 was a masterclass in youth-driven excellence. Spearheaded by veteran mentor Gregg Marco W6IZT, this ambitious project wasn't just about racking up QSOs — it was about building the future of ham radio. With a team of young operators from five countries, many on their first-ever DXpedition, PJ6Y delivered a stunning 13.3 million points in the CQ WW SSB contest, operating Multi-Two with minimal gear and maximum spirit. Despite rugged volcanic terrain and weather that flirted with disaster, the team pulled off over 55,000 QSOs across modes, including 8,700 during the contest alone. Their modest station — built entirely on arrival — consisted of a hex beam, a rebuilt A3 tribander, and a couple of wire antennas tuned to squeeze out every last contact. What made the real difference, Gregg noted, wasn’t the infrastructure but the drive and preparation of the operators. Three had never contested before. All left with pileup poise. There’s a technical story here — Elecraft K3s, KPA500s, N1MM for logging, and remote FT8 operations via NexGen2 RIBs located miles from the main site — but the human moments carried the day. Vincent PC2Y’s selfless scheduling, Matúš OM8ATE’s remote training lineage, Ewan N7EWN’s DXCC dreams, and Emilia YO8YL’s SSB passion added soul to the signal. This operation grew from 3D2Y’s remote roots and now continues as a multi-year project training the next generation of expedition leaders. The team left tired, inspired, and already dreaming of what comes next. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to ICOM for supporting Q5 Ham Radio and building radios that inspire operators to push the boundaries of what's possible.

Feb 9, 202615 min

Ep 200Contest with K1RX: The Four Cs of Contesting (Episode 1 of 7)

Mark Pride K1RX believes in a contesting philosophy that starts with curiosity and ends with mastery. In this inaugural episode of our 7-part How To Contest series, Mark joins host Kevin Thomas W1DED to lay the groundwork—not just with antennas and amplifiers, but with a mindset. Contesting, he argues, isn’t just about high scores; it’s about the “Four Cs”: Connectivity, Control, Curiosity, and Creativity. That framework, gifted to him by a new ham, now shapes how he sees contesting within ham radio. Over 62 years on the air, Mark has mentored both youth and retirees, many of whom encouraged him to share his deep contesting knowledge publicly. What emerges is a contesting ethos driven by continuous improvement. Whether it's choosing the right phonetics to break through pileups, rethinking your chair setup for a 48-hour marathon, or changing CW timing on the fly, Mark reminds us: "If you can’t hear them, you can’t work them." This episode establishes a key premise for the series: most hams already have what they need to start contesting. The decisions come down to strategy, logging software like N1MM, and developing the mental habit of post-contest review. That’s where situational awareness takes root. Mark brings it all back to something fundamental: contesters are the R&D wing of amateur radio. Whether or not you ever submit a log, this is where you go to learn. Welcome to the How To Contest Series, Episode 1 of 7. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 Ham Radio and powering the operators who push the limits—in Parks on the Air, contesting, and around the world.

Feb 6, 202628 min

Ep 205The Contest Crew Talks Records, Robots & the Road Ahead

Bill Fehring W9KKN, Chris Hurlbut KL9A, and Dan Craig N6MJ—the Contest Crew—are back to reflect on a record-breaking 2025 and chart their course for 2026. From CQ9A to EF8R, the Crew covered serious ground this past year. But first, RTTY Roundup gets a quick (albeit late) post-mortem: Bill jumped in last-minute at NJ4P, Dan marveled at their in-band efficiency, and Chris…watched football. Then they shift to the North American QSO Party, a fast, low-power HF contest where operators race for multipliers and contacts across North America in a tight 12-hour window. The real depth comes in the retrospective. Chris called 2025 his best ham radio year ever, breaking records and speaking at Dayton. Dan turned a last-minute EF8R plan into a masterclass in single-op record breaking excellence. And Bill, mid-move, still managed CTU talks and major multis. Each looks ahead to WRTC 2026 with clear focus. The conversation closes with big hopes: pulling more POTA ops into the contest fold, embracing new tech where it helps, and getting contest results faster. They stress integrity—and double down on the value of peer pressure in keeping the sport clean. Contesting’s future, they argue, will be built on both trust and tech. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Huge thanks to DX Engineering for supporting the global contesting community—from world-record multis to POTA ops chasing pileups in the parks. Their passion powers ours. Let me know if you'd like a thumbnail caption or social blurb to match.

Feb 4, 202636 min

Ep 201Young Gun of POTA: Si WD5JR’s Ham Radio Journey

Josiah "Si" Russell WD5JR is part of the next wave of operators breathing new life into ham radio. At just 18, Si already has a POTA record that would make many seasoned hams envious—over 400 activations and more than 5,300 parks hunted. But it’s not just about numbers. From activating rare parks in Turks and Caicos to representing Oklahoma as a Parks on the Air mapping coordinator, Si blends enthusiasm, technical skill, and a drive for community building that’s rare at any age. Though he grew up surrounded by ham radio—his great-granddad, grandparents, parents, and even his eight-year-old cousin are all licensed—Si didn’t dive in right away. It took a Florida road trip and a chance activation to spark his passion. That spark quickly became a fire, fueled by outdoor adventure, the challenge of DXing from remote parks, and a growing love for contesting and CW. Ham radio became more than a hobby—it became a family refuge during his mom’s cancer treatment and a catalyst for personal growth. There’s also a quiet confidence to how Si operates. Whether it’s packing an Icom 7300 in foam for international travel, giving presentations at hamfests, or learning SO2R techniques for CW sprints, he’s always building. Not just a skillset, but a path forward—showing that youth isn’t a liability in ham radio; it’s a lifeline. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to Icom for their continued support of Q5. With radios that empower young ops like Si to chase pileups from remote beaches and contest from small-town shacks, Icom continues to push the boundaries for operators worldwide.

Feb 3, 202614 min

Ep 199ARRL 10 Meter Recap: The Contest Crew Sounds Off

The Contest Crew—Randy K5ZD, Dan N6MJ, Chris KL9A, and Bill W9KKN—recap the ARRL 10-Meter Contest in this debrief. It was a weekend of mixed propagation, scoreboard drama, and some hard truths about pileup etiquette. They break down why signals vanished in minutes, how backscatter shaped the game, and why audio still matters. It's also a field guide to what not to do in a pileup. Looking ahead: January contests, tower builds, and a quiet shift toward what’s next. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting contesters, DXers, and every operator chasing stronger signal in any season.

Feb 3, 202628 min

Ep 197The Sky Isn’t the Limit: Inside W0AAE’s Ham Radio Ascent

Kees Van Oosbree W0AAE is a 21-year-old amateur radio operator whose story reads like a prequel to the next generation of ham radio leadership. A Minnesota native and aerospace engineering student at Iowa State, Kees isn’t just participating in the hobby—he’s reshaping it. From satellites and CW pileups to youth-led DXpeditions and remote contesting, he’s threading together high-rate operation with forward-looking innovation. In 2024, he was awarded the ARRL’s prestigious Hiram Percy Maxim Memorial Award—fitting recognition for a young operator already a decade ahead of the curve. It all started with a childhood visit to the Pavek Museum of Broadcasting, where a QSO map pinned with Antarctica sparked a lifelong curiosity. Unlike most of his peers, Kees wasn’t drawn in by the internet; the ionosphere did the convincing. His contest resume already includes CQ WW efforts from NØNI and a remote multi-op at ZF5T. Yet his impact extends well beyond the mic: he organized youth remote operations for DXpeditions to Rotuma and Saba, and helped build a remote station on Frying Pan Tower in the Atlantic. Technically sharp but deeply community-minded, Kees thrives in leadership roles—even as he confesses a singular love for CW rate and an obsession with perfecting 2BSIQ. He’s bullish on the future of the hobby, pointing to AI-enhanced contesting, real-time ionospheric prediction, and a rising class of remote-native hams. In 2026, he’ll represent youth at WRTC in the UK, shoulder to shoulder with the contest titans he’s long admired—N6MJ, KL9A, AA3B, and others. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Many thanks to DX Engineering for supporting Q5 and for their unwavering commitment to contesters, DXers, and operators pushing the limits—from backyard shacks to towers in the middle of the Atlantic.

Feb 2, 202637 min

Ep 196Manuel WP4TZ: From Surf Breaks to Contest Pileups

Manuel WP4TZ is a rising presence in Puerto Rican contesting. He came into ham radio through Summits on the Air, drawn by the mix of hiking and portable ops. That led to a deep run with Parks on the Air, using CW as his chosen mode. Now, he’s fully hooked on contesting. In just a few years, Manuel has gone from casual operator to committed contender—working pileups from both the wild terrain of Puerto Rico and the polished setups of WP3Z’s La Sierra Contest Group. A recent 10-meter showdown in the ARRL contest brought him head-to-head with veteran ops WP3A and NP3A. They’ve got experience on their side, but Manuel held his own. With a quad at home, a hex beam waiting on a tower, and a strong crew of mentors, he’s climbing fast. He’s in it for the speed, the pressure, and the joy of riding a pileup all the way to the end. But what stands out most is his humility. Whether it’s tweaking macros at WP3Z, surfing the northern coast, or hauling an Elecraft KX2 through the jungle, Manuel doesn’t pretend to know everything. He just keeps showing up, learning, and getting better. His advice to new contesters is simple: “Just go for it.” Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting operators at every level—from beachside POTA activators to full-throttle contesters chasing the top of the scoreboard. Their gear helps power the future of amateur radio.

Feb 2, 202622 min

Ep 194From Panama to Wake Island: 60 Years of Contesting with Tom Morton

Tom Morton K2GO is one of those rare hams who didn’t just grow with amateur radio—he carried it across decades, continents, and call signs. From sitting at his father’s AM rig in Panama as a boy to running pileups on Wake Island, Tom’s journey spans over 60 years of global DXing, high-stakes contesting, and community building. His call sign collection alone reads like a DXCC scorecard: KH9, VP2V, ZF2QV, V31UA, CW7T, HP1XT, HO2T—and that’s just the start. Whether instructing Navy pilots to land on carrier as LSO (Landing Signal Officer), flying reserve missions across the Pacific, or lugging Drake gear through the Caribbean, Tom never really took a break from radio. After early contesting sparks in San Diego, he joined the likes of K6UA, W6KUT, N6CW, K6NA, W6YA, and N6ND, learning from some of the best. That led to multi-multis, DXpeditions to the British Virgin Islands, and a quiet evolution from solo CW ops to community builds with friends and family. His passion for the people behind the pileups is palpable—he credits friendships as the true through-line of his life on the air. One moment stands out: operating from Wake Island for 17 days with a saltwater amp, a 30S-1, and a commanding officer’s blessing. It was, as Tom puts it, "nirvana." Now semi-retired in Panama, he’s still mentoring operators, building teams, and contesting with killer calls like HP1Z and, soon, with 3E1E. Tom is a bridge between generations and geographies—and he’s not done yet. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Q5 Ham Radio is sponsored by Icom supporting the operators and conversations that keep amateur radio moving forward.

Feb 2, 202658 min

Ep 195Contest Crew Europe: The CQ WW CW Debrief

Contest Crew Europe is back—and sharper than ever. Braco E77DX, Sven DJ4MX, Filipe CT1ILT, Dave 9A1UN, Mike SJ2W, and Kris ES7A deliver a frank, fast-moving debrief of CQ WW CW from the heart of the European scene. This isn’t just about score totals. It’s a look inside the philosophy, the prep, and the pressure that define elite-level contesting on the continent. Braco reports on 5J1DX in Colombia, where tropical storms, a broken CIV port, and a rogue amp threatened to derail the run—and while Dan N6MJ and Chris KL9A were out of reach, he likely walked away with a new South American record. Back at Braco’s home station, Sven and the E7DX crew rallied from a somber start and overtook OM7M in a furious late push on 40 meters. Mike in Sweden faced green auroras and grim rates. Filipe ran the full 48 hours solo, again hitting a remarkable 10,000+ QSOs using a single keyboard and custom MUF-tracking tools. Kris and team at muti-op ES9C couldn’t quite close the gap on single-op EF8R, but delivered one of their cleanest runs yet. And Dave in Croatia? A last-minute setup may have turned into a national record—and a comeback moment for two long-absent operators. Beyond the logs and linears, the crew dug into the state of the sport. Live scoreboards? Maybe mandatory, they argue—at least if you want to play at the top. Log uploads? Why wait five days? And the 48-hour format? If you’re not prepping like an athlete, you're already behind. Contesting isn’t just competition—it’s culture. And these guys are writing it in real time. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. This episode of Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio is powered by Icom—innovative radios trusted by amateur operators across the globe.

Feb 2, 202651 min

Ep 198The Restless Life of OK1RI and the Rise of CN3A

Jiri Sanda OK1RI is a legend of European contesting, and in this conversation, we follow his path from clandestine club station operations under Communism to building one of the world’s most formidable multi-multi contest stations at CN3A. Along the way, we get the full sweep of postwar European ham radio: the political barriers, the VHF culture of the 1970s, and the relentless competition among national stations in an era before the internet shrunk the globe. Jiri’s story is defined by restlessness and reinvention. He moved from VHF field days in Czechoslovakia to high-stakes single-band competitions, before turning toward the camaraderie and complexity of multi-ops. His turning point came after one grueling 40-meter CW session: with trophies in hand and his back aching, he simply asked, “Why?” From that moment, the mission became collective—teams, builds, logistics, antennas that could survive Saharan sand and Atlantic salt. His stations popped up in Czech hills, on Gambian beaches, and finally in Morocco, where CN3A now lives. Technically, this episode is dense with gold: hauling 1,500 kilos of gear into West Africa; why limestone soil makes verticals impossible; running QRP with 80-meter yagis just for fun; and why they built five over five over five stacks pointed at Europe from Morocco. And the human detail? A guard in Gambia paid 70 cents a night. A beach overrun with goats. Tower collapses. A rented station where the rotator was locked pointing north. It’s all here. Thanks to Icom for powering Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Whatever your corner of the hobby, there’s an Icom built for you. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio.

Jan 9, 20261h 8m

Ep 193J38W Breaks CQ WW CW Youth Overlay (North American) Record from Grenada: Jamie M0SDV

Jamie Williams M0SDV is a rising star in the contesting world, and in Grenada this year, he proved exactly why. Traveling solo to the Caribbean island with modest gear and big ambitions, Jamie operated as J38W in the CQ World Wide CW contest—logging over 6,200 QSOs and more than 9 million points. What began as a goal to hit 4,000 contacts turned into a record-breaking effort, earning him a new North American Youth Overlay record and placing him firmly on the radar of top operators worldwide. Licensed since 2013 and first nudged into the hobby by his father, 2E0CAP, Jamie’s path took shape through contesting in the UK, where mentors like Lee G0MTN and Callum M0MCX helped sharpen his skills. After being invited to his first Dxpedition in Togo, Jamie went on to operate from Mauritius, Guyana, and the Marshall Islands. Each trip built the confidence and technical chops that eventually led him to take on Grenada entirely solo. He scouted a quiet QTH on the island’s north side, hauled his Icom IC-7300, SPE 1.3K-FA amp, a lightweight hex beam, and verticals—all within airline baggage limits—and set up in the tropical heat alone. When an 18-meter pole toppled into the bushes, a local gardener came running with a machete to help. Jamie operated for 40 hours during the contest and hit a peak rate of 240 QSOs per hour—pushing past exhaustion to see just how far he could go. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. A big thank you to DX Engineering for sponsoring Q5 and for supporting contesters, DXers, and dedicated operators who go the distance to put rare signals on the air.

Dec 17, 202525 min

Ep 19211,000+ QSO's From CQ9A: KL9A’s Last Single Operator CQ WW CW

Chris Hurlbut KL9A is just back from Madeira, where he operated as CQ9A and delivered the contest performance of a lifetime at CQ WW CW 2025. Though he finished second to his longtime friend Dan N6MJ, Chris broke the existing world record in the Single Operator All Band High Power category, and logged a staggering 11,000+ QSOs. Still groggy from travel and 48 sleepless hours of operating, Chris sat down with Q5 for a partial debrief from Bozeman, Montana. As with any 48-hour Single Operator top-10 result, the achievement was hard-won. Mid-contest, Chris battled a baffling logging software glitch—but he powered through. What should have been a flawless 2BSIQ run was punctuated by expletives directed at frozen keyboards and on-the-fly troubleshooting. Yet even under stress, Chris executed a strategic and multipliers-rich contest, leaning into a third radio and Valery’s top-shelf antennas to claw out every possible point. This was more than a radio contest. It was a swan song. Chris confirmed it: no more CQ WW CW solos. "I did it, so I don’t have to do it ever again." And what a final run it was—part technical tour de force, part mental endurance trial, part love letter to ham radio contesting. Valery’s station support, Dan’s epic win, and the electric online buzz from 40,000+ fans watching Chris work CW made this not just a contest, but a moment in ham radio history. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to Icom for helping bring the CQ WW CW Showdown series to life. And to DX Engineering for championing the operators who light up the bands—whether activating parks, chasing DX, or contesting at the highest level.

Dec 10, 202515 min

Ep 191KL9A at CQ9AKL9A Sets Up for CQWW CW at CQ9A Madeira

Chris Hurlbut KL9A is ready at CQ9A in Madeira just hours before the start of the CQ Worldwide CW Contest. Known for precision and consistency at the top levels of single-op competition, Chris arrived a bit later than other operators—but has wasted no time. Alongside Valery, he’s been adding antennas, including a second 80m and a 160m receive four-square, reinforcing the timeless contesting rule: antennas put up the day of always work better. He offers a grounded take on this year’s “CW Showdown” between himself, Dan N6MJ, and Braco E77DX. With many eyes on Braco and Dan, Chris has stayed mostly off the radar—not by design, just travel timing. Propagation looks as expected, with high-band strength favoring Dan, and CQ9A’s low-band performance giving Chris a quiet edge. His third-radio setup is less flexible than Dan’s, which may shift his multiplier strategy. Chris also highlights other serious contenders—V47T, KP4AA, CR6K, and KP2B among them—and gives a nod to the multi-op races from stations like EW5A. Still, he’s locked in on his own game: manage rate, move mults when it matters, and keep it fun. And if you’re rooting for Chris, let him know in the comments. He’s feeling just a little left out. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio. Thanks to DX Engineering and Icom for supporting the full spectrum of amateur radio—from park activators to world-class contesters pushing performance on every band.

Dec 3, 202512 min