BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Outstanding Contesters and DXers Recognized
De:       ARRL de WD1CKS
Data:     Fri, 22 May 2026 14:21:09 +0000
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 05/22/2026 

Dayton Hamvention has long been the backdrop for recognizing those who have
made significant contributions to the amateur radio community. In addition to
Hamvention's own 2026 awards[1], the DX and Contest Dinners - with attendees
from around the world - offered a perfect opportunity to highlight outstanding
achievements in those segments of amateur radio.

The Southwest Ohio DX Association's[2] (SWODXA's) DX Dinner on Friday night was
the base for multiple award presentations, following the keynote address on
"radiosportsmanship" by ARRL CEO David Minster, NA2AA.

The Heritage CQ DX Hall of Fame[3], launched in 1967 and currently administered
by INDEXA, the International DX Association, welcomed two new members,
legendary QSL manager Charles Wilmott, MOOXO, and avid DXpeditioner Elvira
Simoncini, IV3FSG. Elvira, who has operated from 34 different DXCC entities, is
only the third woman inducted, and the first to be so honored individually
rather than with her husband. SWODXA honored Yuris Petersons, YL2GM, as
DXpeditioner of the Year for his operation from Marion Island as ZS8W, during
which he completed more than 31,000 contacts; and the 9U1RU operation from
Burundi - which netted nearly 180,000 QSOs - was honored as DXpedition of the
Year. Finally, the Northern California DX Foundation[4] presented its
"DXcellence" awards to the PJ6Y operation from Sable Island for its emphasis on
youth participation, and to the 100% solar-powered and 100% remote KP5/NP3VI
operation from Desecheo Island, another game-changer for DXpeditions.

Minster spoke on "radio sportsmanship," challenging the DXers in the room to
pay serious attention to questions about excessive power, remote operating that
uses stations in multiple locations, "pay to play" for getting confirmations
from some DX stations, whether certain stations really need to work DXpeditions
on all possible bands and modes while others are trying to make just one
contact, the future of the DXCC Honor Roll and deliberate QRM. "The most
important aspect of radiosport," he concluded, "is to have a good time, but not
at the expense of others."

At Saturday night's Contest Dinner, sponsored by the North Coast Contesters[5],
an international audience of nearly 500 people cheered the induction of four
notable competitors into the Contest Hall of Fame[6], established by CQ
magazine in 1986 and administered today by the World Wide Radio Operators
Foundation[7] (WWROF). This year's inductees are Doug Zwiebel, KR2Q, who
revolutionized contest scoring by writing the first mass computerized
log-checking software back in 1980; Tom Lee, K8AZ, who helped shape modern
regional contest club structures as a co-founder of both the North Coast
Contesters and the WWROF; Tom Young, K1XM, who created both the Yankee Clipper
Contest Club SO2R (Single-Operator 2 Radios) Box hardware and the widely-used
Open Two Radio Switching Protocol; and Mark Pride, K1RX, antenna director for
the 2014 World Radiosport Team Championship (WRTC) and producer of a 7-part
series on contesting for the Q5 Amateur Radio podcast. The 2026 WRTC[8], to be
held in the United Kingdom this July, was also on the Contest Dinner menu, as
the competition's chairman, Mark Haynes, MODXR, was the keynote speaker. Emcee
and famed contester John Dorr, K1AR, added a light and humorous touch to the
evening.


[1] https://www.arrl.org/news/dayton-hamvention-2026-award-winners-announced?utm_source=Informz&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=ARRL&_zs=SQvQm&_zl=Biem3
[2] https://www.swodxa.org
[3] https://indexa.org/halloffamemembers.html
[4] https://www.ncdxf.org
[5] https://www.northcoastcontesters.com
[6] https://contesthof.com
[7] https://wwrof.org
[8] https://www.wrtc2026.org
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