Manage episode 520236361 series 3637274
John Dorr K1AR and George Gross N3GJ are fresh off a record-setting run at K3LR during the CQ Worldwide SSB contest, logging 406 QSOs in a single hour on 10 meters. This wasn’t luck or brute force—it was a masterclass in synchronized contesting, 21 years in the making. From a clean frequency above 28.500 MHz, the duo operated in seamless coordination: John on the run station, George working multipliers, backed by K3LR’s unassuming but game-changing four-square receive antenna.
Their shorthand—“let’s do our thing”—captures a kind of operating telepathy. At 11:58 Zulu, with Europe showing up and conditions ripe, they flipped the switch. What followed was a two-hour pileup that never let up. In the first hour, John ran 272 stations; George pulled in 134 more. It’s not just the numbers—it’s that from a U.S. station, with two ops operating this tightly, this is rare air.
There was a quick high-five at the top of the hour, then back to work. And as K1AR quipped, they “actually kind of like each other,” which might just be their secret weapon. Join the conversation and subscribe to Q5 Worldwide Ham Radio.
Thanks to DX Engineering for supporting the operators who make moments like this possible—whether they’re DXing from the edge of the noise floor or pushing the limits from contest superstations. Your commitment keeps the spirit of radio alive and loud.
188 episodes