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PJ2T, located at our club's permanent QTH called "Signal Point," is
situated on half an acre of oceanfront property within the grounds of what used
to be called the Coral Cliff Hotel, formerly owned by PJ9EE, Mr. Chet Brandon.
This was the site of the famous Radioteam Finland PJ9W contest operations in
1990. The QTH was previously owned by W1BIH, and has played host to winning
contest operations since 1968.
With towers of 100, 80, and 54 feet and stacked monobanders on 10-15-20 and a
40 yagi at 107 feet, PJ2T can split power and simultaneously beam toward Europe
and the U.S. for contest operation. Wire beams, Beverage antennas, flags, and
an RX four square serve on the low bands, and indoors are four fully equipped
stations with desktop computers, Writelog, an Ethernet LAN, and DSL Internet
connectivity. The station is located on the southwest coast in the
"sticks" about 45 minutes from town, so it's an electrically quiet
location, good for hamming and so dark that the stars are incredible.
Our "CCC" contesting club is a group of 18 guys who pool our
resources to maintain and constantly improve the station, and we contest under
the PJ2T callsign whenever we can get enough guys to go to Curacao. We've
learned in our seven years of operation there that by far the biggest challenge
is dealing with the oceanside tropical climate, where the salt eats almost all
forms of metal, and the heat and humidity take out computers, linears, and amps
mercilessly. We've recently completed a rebuild of almost all of the antennas
and believe now that we have perfected our salt-proofing techniques. In
addition, we scrape and repaint the two Rohn steel towers top to bottom every
six months with epoxy paint. Inside, we've found by trial and error that
FT-1000s survive the extreme heat and humidity better than anything else on the
market and vintage Compaq Windows 98 PCs, except for their power supplies, hold
up the best.
We've posted quite a few World # 1 wins in ARRL DX, CQWW, and WPX contests, as
well as in 10 meter and 160 events. Our members are overwhelmingly CW types,
but our contest wins are evenly distributed across both phone and CW. The
statisticians tell us that PJ2T has been the most-logged callsign in all of ham
radio for the past four years. We aren't the biggest, best, or loudest contest
station on the DX side, but we're ALWAYS on in all of the major contests.
Propagation from Curacao is almost magical. Located at 12 degrees north
latitude, within the well-documented "equatorial anomaly" of 10 to 15
degrees above the equator, this is one of the best contesting locations in the
world, especially for the ARRL DX contests.
Curacao has an advanced infrastructure with good roads, reliable power, safe
tap water, top notch medical care, great shopping, reasonable prices, broad
availability of goods in stores, high speed Internet and digital TV
connectivity almost everywhere, and 130,000 incredibly friendly, intelligent,
and welcoming people. Nearly everybody speaks at least three languages, the
University of the Netherlands Antilles offers many advanced technical degree
programs, we have the sixth largest working port in the world, and the longest
airport runway in the Caribbean at 11,500 feet. American Airlines serves
Curacao with two non-stop 737s daily to Miami, and there's daily non-stop air
service to Europe and to many other destinations within the region.
Next door to the QTH is an American-owned hotel, Sunset Waters Beach Resort,
www.sunsetwaters.com, which has an active professional dive shop, beautiful
beach, good restaurant, pool with a swim-up bar, and all watersports. It works
out well for families to visit PJ2T because the guys play radio at PJ2T while
their families enjoy all of the hotel's facilities.
When the CCC club is not using the QTH it is available for your use. See
http://www.pj2t.org for more information or E-mail Geoff Howard, W0CG,
ghoward@kent.edu , who serves as rental coordinator for CCC.
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