Dayton Hamvention 2025 May 16,
17, 18, 2025 takes place at the Greene County Fairgrounds and
Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio.
You can visit their website for more info!
Hamvention is the world's largest annual gathering of radio amateurs and has been sponsored by the Dayton Amateur Radio Association (DARA) since 1952. "We are pleased to unveil our 2025 logo and theme," announced 2025 Hamvention General Chair Brian Markland N8UDQ and the Hamvention team. "The theme is 'Radio Independence'. A tribute to the freedom that has defined amateur radio for over a century. From early spark-gap transmitters to today's global digital modes, amateur radio has always been about connecting people, pushing boundaries, and empowering individuals to build, learn, and serve"
Hamvention 73rd Reunion 1952 - 2025
Hamvention General Chairman, Brian Markland N8UDQ is proud to announce the 2025 event had a record setting official attendance of 36,814. We thank everyone that attended and hope you had a wonderful time. People attended from all around the world and others from close by. You are the ones why we work to provide this event. Hopefully, you found the hardware/software and forums you desired. Again, I want to thank my hard-working Committee Chairs and their Assistant Chairs along with the approximately 700 volunteers. There are several functions that occur before and after the show. However, a large number work during the show for a minimum of six hours, and some individuals work much more than that. In some cases, they work so much that they do not have a chance to see much of the event. I am especially appreciative of those efforts.
For the 4th time, starting in 2022, the contesters will be staying at Hope Hotel and Conference Center at Wright-Patterson Airforce Base, Ohio which is closer to Xenia, where the Hamvention is being held. There are 265 guest rooms that went on sale at 9:00 AM on June 8th and sold out within a few hours. This year, a fill-out form was given to the guests to reserve a room for the folling year! Contest University will be held here all day Thursday, May 15, 2025 and hosted by Tim Duffy K3LR. The digital banquet will be held at the Hope Hotel Thursday evening. This is where the Top Band Banquet will be held on Friday May 16, 2025 and Contest Banquet will be held on Saturday May 17, 2025. Visit contestuniversity.com or contact Tim for more info.
Buses starting at 7:00 AM leave from the Hope Hotel every 30 minutes to the Hamvention in Zenia. The buses also leave the Hamvention every 30 minutes back to the Hope Hotel.
The weather in Xenia, Ohio on the
Hamvention weekend was:
Thursday May 15: Sunny 84 deg. F.
Friday May 16: Mostly cloudy 79 deg. F, thunderstorms starting at
9:00 PM.
Saturday May 17: Partly sunny, windy, 70 deg. F.
Sunday May 18: Sunny 68 deg. F
The 2025 Hamvention Award Winners
We are delighted to announce the
recipients of the 2025 Hamvention Awards. The
selection process was highly competitive, given the outstanding
quality of nominations
submitted this year. We extend our heartfelt congratulations to
the winners for 2025.
Sincerely,
Michael Kalter W8CI Awards Chair
Technical Achievement
Award Dr, Kristina Collins KD8OXT
Dr. Kristina Collins KD8OXT serves as the Chief
Operations Scientist for the HamSCI Personal
Space Weather Station Network. In this role, she collaborates
with citizen scientists to pinpoint
significant events, organize campaigns, and ensure PSWS data is
validated and curated for
scientific purposes. As of now, listeners can hear her voice on
WWV at 8 minutes past the hour and
WWVH at 48 minutes past the hour, where she introduces the test
signal for the WWV/H Scientific
Modulation Working Group.
Dr. Collins has been instrumental in organizing numerous
workshops through HamSCI and has
guided many undergraduate and graduate students in radio science
projects, including instrument
deployments, eclipse campaigns, and data analysis. She is a
dedicated member of the Case
Amateur Radio Club, W8EDU, working alongside her colleagues to
integrate amateur radio into
university teaching and research.
At the Space Science Institute, Dr. Collins employs virtual
reality and sonification in her research to
explore Geospace and other interdisciplinary scientific
questions. Her primary research interests
lie in using open-source hardware and software to enhance
participation and accelerate progress
in science and engineering.
Special Achievement Julio
Ripoll WD4R
Julio Ripoll, WD4R, received his first amateur radio license in
1977. His fascination with
hurricanes began in childhood, sparked when Hurricane Betsy in
1965 damaged his
family's home in Miami, Florida, causing water to pour into his
bedroom. In 1980, Dr. Neal
Frank, then Director of the National Hurricane Center (NHC),
requested an Amateur Radio
station within the NHC to facilitate communication with the
Caribbean during hurricanes.
Julio was chosen for this important task. WX4NHC handled its
first hurricane that year, and
Julio's initial two-year assignment with the NHC has since
extended to 45 years, covering
over 100 hurricanes.
In 2010, shortly after the Haiti Earthquake, Julio was tasked
with setting up and managing
operations between the University of Miami (UM) Hospital in
Florida and the UM field
hospital in Haiti. He swiftly coordinated with US and Haitian
officials, organizing a team of
amateur radio operators from across the US to run HH2/WX4NHC in
Haiti. Beyond the field
hospital, the team provided vital communication links to the US
Navy hospital ship
Comfort, facilitating helicopter and speed-boat patient transfers
that saved many lives.
Julio and his team's use of Amateur Radio in public service
demonstrated significant merit,
earning high regard for Amateur Radio capabilities
Club of the Year RV Radio
Network (RVRN)
The RVRN roots date back over 40 years to a chapter of the Texas
Good Sam Club, which included a
few Ham Radio Operators. These hams started a net that drew in
other Good Sam RVers from
neighboring states, leading to gatherings at campgrounds where
their fellow net members lived.
The net quickly outgrew the Texas chapter, gaining members
nationwide, and thus, the RV Radio
Network (RVRN) was born. Today, RVRN boasts over 450 members.
From the very beginning, our club aimed to organize activities
that not only expand knowledge of
ham radio and related technology but also allow us to enjoy RV
travel and meet fellow hams and
RVers across the country.
They keep in touch virtually through various ham radio nets and
meet in person whenever possible.
They have 10 different HF nets each week, along with a weekly
international EchoLink multi-mode
net and a video net over the internet.
They hold two major rallies a year featuring educational forums
and seminars, tours of RV radio
equipment, and antenna configurations. If there's an interesting
industry nearby, they might invite a
guest speaker to share insights about their operations. And, of
course, they enjoy the social events
and entertainment common to typical RV rallies.
Amateur of the Year Neil
Rapp WB9VPG
Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, from Union, Kentucky, earned his Novice ticket
in 1976 at the remarkable
age of 5, making him one of the youngest licensed amateur radio
operators ever.
Currently a visiting professor of chemistry at Xavier University,
Neil has a rich history in
education. He previously taught high school chemistry and
sponsored the amateur radio club for
28 years at Evansville (IN) Harrison and Bloomington (IN) High
School South. During his tenure,
he introduced over 3,600 students to amateur radio in STEM
classrooms, and Bloomington
South consistently excelled in the high school division of School
Club Roundup.
In 2019, Neil co-founded and became the camp director of Youth On
The Air (YOTA) Americas,
which connects young amateurs with peers through activities that
encourage their continued
involvement in amateur radio. YOTA groups organize peer-led
activities, such as summer
camps, contesting opportunities, and special events, for licensed
amateur radio operators under
the age of 26.
Neil's contributions to the amateur radio community extend
further. He is a contributing editor of
the Next-Gen Contesters column in the National Contest Journal, a
member of the ARISS USA.
Education Committee, a reporter and anchor for Amateur Radio
Newsline, and the founder and
former host of the Ham Talk Live! webcast.
2025 Heritage CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame
In 2025, the CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame will be kept alive by K8CX at Hamgallery.com with consent of W2VU, XYL of K2MGA, and the family of SK K2MGA due to CQ Magazine discontinuing. The limit was set to 3 each year. For the first time since its beginning in 2001, there was a ceremony (at Jimmy's Italian Restaurant in Dayton). For the first time, there were plaques given to the inductees sponsored by Hamgallery.com. It was determined not to give plaques to the SK inductees family. The list can be seen on Hamgallery.com. The inductees for 2025 were:
WA3FET, Prof. Jim Breakall.
Dr. Breakall's work has been instrumental in Amateur
Radio antenna technology development for decades. He has teamed
with many experts in the field to develop state-of-the-art
advancements with a wide range of applications, including the
Numerical Electromagnetic Code (NEC). As a professor of
electrical engineering at Penn State University from 1989 to
2022, Dr. Breakall (WA3FET) developed cutting edge antenna
technology and mentored his students in Amateur Radio, resulting
in 700 new licensees. Now a retired Professor Emeritus, he serves
as a consultant to the Army, Air Force, and Navy on many antenna
related projects. Using a package designed with his students
called NECOPT, he invented the Optimized Wideband Antenna (OWA)
Yagi. These OWA Yagi designs have been used in numerous contest
and DX stations around the world. Because he wanted this
technology to be readily available worldwide, he never pursued
patent licensing. He also was the first to use helicopter
measurements and Geometrical Theory of Diffraction (GTD)
techniques for antennas in terrain at HF that left to software
such as TA and HFTA. In 2010, Dr. Breakall in conjunction with
Joe Taylor (K1JT), Angel Vazquez (WP3R) and Pedro Piza, Jr.
(NP4A) collaborated to use the Arecibo 1000 ft dish to do
moonbounce (EME). He worked on many antenna designs at Arecibo
Observatory in Puerto Rico and at the HAARP facility in Alaska.
Dr. Breakall has been a frequent forum presenter at the Dayton
Hamvention sharing his expertise on antenna design and enthusiasm
for Amateur Radio.
As an avid Amateur Radio contester, Dr. Breakall has built
contest stations in Pennsylvania and Puerto Rico and participated
in over 100 contests, winning a fair amount of them. Dr. Breakall
has authored numerous peer-reviewed scientific articles and
books. He is an IEEE Life Fellow, a Radio Club of America (RCA)
Fellow, and has been awarded the Sarnoff Award, the Dr Ulrich L.
Rohde Technical Award, at the RCA, and the Technical Achievement
Award at the Dayton Hamvention.
WP3R, Angel M. Vazquez.
Angel graduated from CUNY, Brooklyn campus. Worked at WNYC as a
radio engineer before moving back to Arecibo and taking a job at
the Arecibo Observatory in 1977. Angel worked in telescope
operations then headed the IT support team. He accepted the
position as Head of Telescope Operations and Puerto Rico
Coordination Zone Spectrum Manger. Has been a Volunteer Examiner
(VE) for 25 years and started the first Virtual/online Bi-Lingual
testing program as part of GLAARG VEC (Greater Los Angeles
Amateur Radio Group) of which he is currently the group session
manager. There has been well over 500 online VE testing sessions
resulting in a couple thousand new radio amateurs. He headed the
moonbounce effort from the Arecibo Observatory in April 2010 (QST
cover August 2010) and multiple special event transmissions from
the observatory Control Room using the KP4AO club call, of which
he is the president and trustee. He has presented numerous talks
on the Arecibo Observatory and his Amateur Radio experiences at
the Dayton Hamvention Antenna Forums, RCA Speaker series, HamSci
Conventions and multiple Amateur Radio Clubs around the world. He
was awarded Puerto Rico Amateur of the Year in 2017.
Hurricane Maria left Puerto Rico in total darkness and loss of
all cell and internet communications. Since his station survived,
Angel provided emergency communications every day for 8 weeks for
hundreds of families and first responders between Puerto Rico and
the mainland. With the help of the WWROF, Angel delivered
generators to needy ham families in Puerto Rico. These efforts
earned him the Yasme Excellence Award in 2019. In 2021, Angel was
the Dayton Hamvention Amateur of the Year. Angel currently is the
Puerto Rico Coordination Zone Administrator, managed by the
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in a joint effort
with the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC).
N6NB, Wayne Overbeck, Ph.D SK.
Wayne was co-inventor of the Quagi antenna, which is
part quad, part Yagi.
Wayne was active in amateur radio for over 68 years. He served
four terms as Vice Director for the ARRL Southwestern Division,
from 1984 to 1993, and was chairman of the ARRL Contest Advisory
Committee during the 1970's, as well as an ARRL Life Member.
As K6YNB, Wayne began mountain-topping on both the west and
east coasts in a camper truck outfitted with radios, antennas,
and amplifiers (known as the Cabover Kilowatt) and,
by 1980, had a dozen national first-place finishes in VHF+
contests, setting scoring records that were never broken under
the pre-grid scoring system. Overbeck received the ARRL Technical
Excellence Award in 1977. He received the John Chambers Memorial
Award from the Central States VHF Society twice, first in 1978,
and again in 2015. He was honored as Radio Amateur of the Year at
the Dayton Hamvention® in 1980. Overbeck was an accomplished
journalist, communications law professor, lawyer, real estate
broker, 20-year author of a widely-adopted textbook, pilot,
sailor, cabin-builder, computer programmer, and amateur radio
engineer.
2025 Contest Hall of Fame
The CQ Contest
Hall of Fame is dedicated to individuals that have contributed
greatly to the art of Amateur Radio Contesting.
CQ Magazine ended in 2024. The CQ Contest Hall of Fame will be
kept alive.
The CQ Contest Hall of Fame now has their own website thanks to Randy K5ZD! The list can also be seen on Hamgallery.com and the Contest Dinner website!
K4BAI John Laney III.
John was first licensed as KN4BAI in November 1954 at age 12. His
first contest was the ARRL Novice Round Up in January 1955. He
passed the Conditional test in March 1955 and was issued K4BAI.
John took over the Georgia state QSO Party from K4BVD and ran it
for about 20 years with a little help from K4RHU, K4ADU, and his
father, K4VGI. John did the promotion, scored all the logs
(manually checking every claimed QSO against every other claimed
QSO), prepared the results, and mailed them to every participant
who submitted a log. He also prepared and mailed certificates for
the winners in each state, province, and country.
Laney earned a bachelors degree and a J.D. from Mercer
University in Macon, GA. He would operate in contests from his
dormitory room when he and K4QPL (VP5M) were roommates.
John served in the Army and was stationed in Korea. He was
licensed as HL9KQ and was very active. He went on to participate
in many contest expeditions over the years, including PJ2CC,
PJ9GIW, VP7/W4GIW, PJ2T, P40E, 4V2C, J77J, and 6Y1V. In 2004,
WW4LL invited him to the rental QTH on Bonaire to operate the
ARRL 10M Contest. John returned the next year and in almost every
CQ WW CW contest since as PJ4A.
John participated in many WRTC events. He was the team leader
with Bill Fisher, then KM9P, in WRTC 1996 in San Francisco, where
they finished second. He was the team leader in WRTC 2000 in
Slovenia with K6LL. For WRTC 2002 in Finland, he was the partner
of Bill Fisher (W4AN). In WRTC 2006 in Brazil, he was the team
leader with Jeff KU8E. For WRTC 2014, he served as the referee
for the Lithuanian team. In 2018, in Germany, he was the referee
for the Swedish team. For the WRTC after Covid in Italy, he was
chosen by K4AB to be his partner, but a health issue caused him
to have to drop out before the event.
He has been an officer of South East Contest Club (SECC) since it
was formed in the late 1990s and has been the trustee of W4AN
callsign since it was issued to the club in 2004 after the death
of Bill Fisher.
For more than 20 years, John sent out to emails to members of the
South East Contest Club, the Columbus Amateur Radio Club, the
Alabama Contest Club, the Swamp Fox Contest Group and others who
have expressed interest a weekly summary of claimed scores made
by the club members and others in the states of GA, SC, AL,
western NC plus a summary of contests coming up in the next week.
This is very time-consuming, consisting of collecting and
organizing the scores from the highest score to the lowest
reported score, and the club getting credit for the score or the
club the scorer belongs to if there is no club competition. This
emphasizes the contribution made to the various clubs. The
average runs 7 to 11 pages a week. The objective of these is to
inspire more contest activity.
John can be found in virtually every contest. He is a regular
participant in QRP contests sponsored by QRPARCI, Flying Pigs QRP
Club, 4 States QRP Group, Mi QRP Group, New England QRP Club,
North GA QRP Club, and others. He is a member of the FISTS CW
club, the Straight Key Century Club (SKCC), and the FOC. He has
worked all the major VHF contests since 1995 on 6M. He
participates in the weekly contests, such as NCCC NS (member of
the advisory group), the Slow Speed Tests, the Medium Speed
Tests, and the CWOps Tests.
Johns professional career was as a civil law attorney,
often representing clients in jury matters, office matters,
probate matters, and bankruptcy court matters. In 1986, he was
appointed judge of the US Bankruptcy Court for the Middle
District of GA. He is in his third fourteen-year term, which will
run until Sept 30, 2028.
He has been married more than 50 years and has two children.
N9RV Pat Barkey
Pat has been an active CW contester and station builder
since getting his first license as WN8YVR in Michigan in 1967.
After attending the University of Michigan (with N4KG, K8QKY,
N8UM, N2IC and W2PA) in the 1970s he has been involved in the
construction of four different multi-tower contest stations,
including his current station in western Montana. He has operated
contests from many locations, including W8UM, WA8ZDF, K8LX, W8UA,
K4GSU, NA8V, KN8Z, W9RE, NK7U and K3LR.
He has served as president of the Society of Midwest Contesters,
editor of the National Contest Journal, and currently is
president of the Big Sky Contesters, which has helped remove
Montana from the list of needed multipliers in almost every
contest. Among his contest operating highlights have been
participating as a competitor in four WRTCs, being part of
many winning teams at the K3LR in DX contests and winning a few
SS and Sprint contests. Pat has been a professor at Contest
University and maintains the glossary of contesting terms that is
a part of every CTU.
Pat Barkey is the Director of Research at the Bureau of Business
and Economic Research at the University of Montana in Missoula.
Pat has been involved with economic forecasting and policy
research for more than 30 years, in both the private and public
sectors.
DJ2YA Ulrich "
Uli" Weiss
Uli was was playing around with crystal detectors when he was
only 10 years old. In 1953, at the age of 15, he applied for an
Amateur Radio License, but was rejected, because they had a
minimum age of 18 years, so he became a very active SWL. Finally,
in 1955 at the age of 17, the authorities allowed him to take the
official examination, and he received the callsign DJ2YA as the
youngest ham from Germany. In November the same year, he
participated in the CQWW CW Contest as Single Op 80m and received
his first certificate finishing as 2nd in DL.
Uli contributed to Amateur Radio Contesting in many ways, not
only as an avid and skilled operator with countless contest QSOs
but also in many support functions. For ten years, he served as
chairman of the WAEDC committee. He is one of the founding
members of the Rhein Ruhr DX Association (RRDXA) and still one of
its most active members today. He participated in two WRTCs, as a
competitor (with DJ6QT) in 1996 and as a referee in 2000.
As the Bavarian Contest Club (BCC) rose to challenge the Rhein
Ruhr DX Association (RRDXA), tempers often rose between the young
challengers and older contesters. It was Ulis merit who
cooled down tensions and quarrels among the competitors.
ON4UN chose Uli as an editor of the chapter Verticals
in his renowned book Low Band DXing. Uli, being an
English teacher at college as his profession, it became an easy
task for him to support Johns work.
During WRTC 2018 in Germany, Uli spearheaded the technical
organization and planning of the antenna concept for all
competition stations and was heavily involved in searching for
suitable station sites to create a real level playing field.
The contest station CT3L on Madeira, initiated by Walter, DJ6QT,
remained active after his passing in 2016 under CR3W. Uli was and
still is one of the main contributors to this contest beacon,
which nowadays serves as a home for many joint operations by
RRDXA and BCC.
2025 Heritage CQ DX Hall of Fame
The Heritage CQ DX
Hall of Fame is dedicated to individuals that have contributed
greatly to the art of Amateur Radio DXing.
CQ Magazine ended in 2024. INDEXA is now in charge of the
CQ DX Hall of Fame.
Awards and ceremony was on Friday, May 16, at the SWODXA Dinner
at the Marriott Hotel and presented by Bob N2OO.
A list can be on INDEXA and on Hamgallery.com.
S53R Robert
Kasca
Robert operated recently from 9N7AA and many countries
previously. It should be especially recognized that Robert
brought a very positive and reticent advocacy for amateur radio
to many countries as the World Food Program Communications
Director. The overall result is a positive acceptance of amateur
radio in the countries where he has served that could benefit
amateurs obtaining licenses in the future. He is a great advocate
for amateur radio DXing with enormous good will as a result.
Ex Calls and guest op:
YU3EYZ, YU3TYT, YU3PR, S59PR, S5Z, S56R,
YU3PR/EA9, SU1ER (1991), YK1AN (1991), YU3PR/4X, YU3PR/4U (YK),
YU3PR/YI, 5B4/YU3PR, 5B4ADR, 4X/S59PR, 4X/S53R, 5B4/S53R, YV2BYT
(1995), 4M2BYT (1995), W6Q (WRTC 1996), WH6DCG, E4/S53R,
EY8/S53R, A52KR, YI/S53R, YI9R, TK/S53R, TT8KR, HC1OT (1994),
A61AJ (2000-2005), AP2ARS (2001), UK8AXA (2001), YA5T (2002),
YI1BGD (2003), JY9QJ (2003), 5X1AB (2008), 4U1UN (2008/2009),
ST2KSS (2009), ST2AR, I0/S53R, IK0/S53R, IT9/S53R, II9P (2012),
FM/S53R, TO9R (FM) (2012), HV0A/HV4NAC (2013/14/15/16/17), Z81R
(2013), ET3AA (2013), 1A0KM (2014), 4U0WFP, 4U4F, WR1TC (2014),
PJ4Q (2014/2015/2018), 4U5F, 4U1GSC, 4U0ITU (2015), 4U6F, 4U7F,
4U7FOC, OD5LN, 4U8F, 4U8FOC, 4U80FOC, 4U73B, EA6/S53R, OE/S53R,
HA/S53R, OK/S53R, OM/S53R, W1/S53R, VE3/S53R, PJ4/S53R, T6AA,
T6A, S5330R, 9N7AA, 3W3B, E20AX.
S53R was not in attendance but the award was accepted by W3ICM,
Fred Matos.
EY8MM Nodir Tursun-Zade
Nodir Tursun-Zade EY8MM has been inducted into the
Heritage CQ DX Hall of Fame. Nodir has participated on many
DXpedition teams. But it is everything else that he does covering
a wide variety of activities that make this guy a truly respected
and honorable supporter of the DX community. In his home country
of Tajikistan he has promoted amateur radio through a variety of
workshops with local hams and others interested in radio. He has
funded these activities himself. He has also been generous at
donating equipment to other less fortunate hams in his country.
Other similar activities included visiting the ET3AA station in
Ethiopia with Ken K4ZW to work on the antennas and to mentor the
students there assisting them with on-air operating skills. Nodir
is also a very accomplished photographer and freely shares his
many outstanding photos with the global DX Community. These
skills have opened the world of DXers to experience the inner
workings and often beauty of what it is like to be on a
DXpedition to the rare and beautiful places that few ever get to
see. He has made seven photo books covering four different
DXpeditions and three WRTC events. These are available for free
download to anyone. Most recently, he put together the
1,000 FACES of HAM RADIO project that shows the faces
of many well-known and not so famous radio amateurs from around
the world. Visit
Nodir's website!
Expeditions/Guest Operator 1981: EK8R 1983:
RJ8WCY 1984: RJ6K 1985: EU9J 1991: RJ0J, RJ2S, RJ4X, RJ5R 1992: YA1MM, YA5MM 1994: DL/EY8MM, EY70D 1997: UN7/EY8MM, HS0/EY8MM, VK3ER, E22AAA 1999: EY11OO
2000: A61AF, A61AO 2001: EY1ARP, EY10T, EY90MT 2002: EY2ARP, D44AC, D44TT 2003: D44TT, D4B (CQ WW RTTY) 2005-2006: EY0R 2010: AP2ARS 2011:
VP8ORK 2014:
VK6ZFM/MM 2014: FT5ZM 2018: 3G9A/MM 2019: VP6R 2023: ET3AA 2023:
HV0A 2024: TX5S 2025: EY100IARU N0DIR/AM, EY8MM/AM,
TA4/N0DIR, KH6/N0DIR, MU/N0DIR, ES5/N0DIR, KG6EBO etc.
Nodir was on hand to accept his 2025
Heritage CQ DX Hall of Fame award.
The Southwest Ohio DX Association (SWODXA) presents the DXpedition of the Year Award
N5J Jarvis Island
DXpedition
At the Southwest Ohio DX Association 's Dinner
Banquet, it was announced that the 2025 N5J Jarvis Island was the
DXpedition of the Year. This DXpedition made over 100,000 QSOs. See their
website.
Contest University,
CTU created by Tim Duffy K3LR, took place on Thursday May 15 at
the Hope Hotel. Visit
their website for more info!
2025 SK List read at the
Contest Dinner.
K9ZO, K3RR, K7BV, VE7AHA, W1FV, MU0FAL, K5QE, K3PP, K5XA, N3AO,
K9NR, K8UT, K2SZ, W7UA, NE3F, KU7Y, KK9DX, WA6FGV, W3RFC, AA5BT,
K8NA, WB2YQH, NP2B, K5KC, K2WR, EA5RM, OH2BAD, ZL3NB, NQ7R,
FM5AN, YV1IF, G3HTA, N1MD, K4MM, N9UA, W9NGA, W3EP, W5OV, W4RJ,
W8KEN, K5ZG, HA6PX, UW1M, W3KL, HK1A, AF3K, N6NB, KF6T, N9LB,
W5KNE.
This site is
copyright © by K8CX of Paradox Design Group (PDG).
All Rights Reserved. All art, photos, and html is property of
PDG.