QSL Bureaus: Difference between revisions

From Amateur Radio Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(separate QSL from QSL Card)
(added iaru external link)
 
(37 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
QSL means either "do you confirm receipt of my transmission" or "I confirm receipt of your transmission".  It can also mean "please send me a QSL card".
QSL means either "do you confirm receipt of my transmission" or "I confirm receipt of your transmission".  It can also mean "please send me a QSL card".


QSL is a [http://amateur-radio-wiki.net/index.php?title=Codes_and_Alphabets Q-Code].  
QSL is a [[Codes and Alphabets#Q-Code |Q-code]].  


== QSL Cards ==
== QSL Cards ==


A QSL card is a written form of QSL, a confirmation of contact between two parties.  Traditionally, amateurs traded QSL cards. These are usually about the same size as a postcard, often elaborately decorated to express individuality, and were mailed from person to person. QSL cards can also be used to confirm one way communication ie, to a listener from a radio station either commercial or amateur.
A QSL card is a written form of QSL, a confirmation of contact between two parties.  Traditionally, amateurs traded QSL cards. These are usually about the same size as a postcard, often elaborately decorated to express individuality, and were mailed from person to person. QSL cards can also be used to confirm one way communication ie, to a listener from a radio station either commercial or amateur.
A number of amateurs use electronic QSL "cards". These are available through [http://www.eqsl.cc/qslcard/index.cfm eQSL]. This website has a logging facility with which users can email other registered users and exchange QSL cards electronically. Some hams display these electronic QSL's on web pages.
[[Modes#Modes |Modes]] such as [[SSTV#SSTV |SSTV]] lend themselves to another way of exchanging QSL's. In the case of SSTV, each station will send a screen that contains contact detail.


The minimum information on a QSL card is:
The minimum information on a QSL card is:
Line 17: Line 21:
* Frequency of operation
* Frequency of operation
* [http://amateur-radio-wiki.net/index.php?title=Modes Mode] of operation
* [http://amateur-radio-wiki.net/index.php?title=Modes Mode] of operation
* Signal report, usually using the [[http://amateur-radio-wiki.net/index.php?title=Code_and_Alphabets RST]] code.
* Signal report, usually using the [[Codes and Alphabets#RST_code|RST]] code.


== QSL Bureaus ==
== QSL Bureaus ==
While sending QSL cards directly to a distant station is most often fastest, the confirmation of large numbers of international contacts may prove expensive. An alternative offered by many national and regional amateur radio societies is a bureau system. QSL's from individual stations are sent to an outgoing bureau locally; that bureau bundles all outgoing cards for each country and sends each bundle as a single package - reducing international postage costs. At destination, a national or regional incoming bureau holds received cards so that they may be claimed by the operator of the intended station.
The [http://www.iaru.org/ International Amateur Radio Union] maintains a list of [http://www.iaru.org/iaruqsl.html QSL Bureaus] for most nations worldwide. There is no incoming bureau in the following countries:
{|
|valign="top"|
:A3            Tonga
:A5            Bhutan
:A6            United Arab Emirates
:C2            Nauru
:C5            Gambia
:C6            Bahamas
:CN            Morocco
:D2            Angola
:E3            Eritrea
:E5            North & South Cook Is.
:HH            Haiti
:HV            Vatican
|valign="top"|
:J5            Guinea-Bissau
:J8            St. Vincent
:P2            Papua New Guinea
:P5            North Korea
:PZ            Suriname
:S0            Western Sahara
:S7            Seychelles
:S9            Sao Tome & Principe
:ST            Sudan
:SU            Egypt
:T2            Tuvalu
:T3            Kiribati
|valign="top"|
:T5            Somalia
:T8            Palau
:TJ            Cameroon
:TL            Central African Rep
:TN            Congo
:TT            Chad
:TY            Benin
:V3            Belize
:V4            St. Kitts & Nevis
:V6            Micronesia
:VP2E          Anguilla
:VP2M          Montserrat
:XU            Cambodia
|valign="top"|
:XW            Laos
:XZ            Myanmar
:YA            Afghanistan
:Z2            Zimbabwe
:ZD9            Tristan da Cunha
:3B            Agalega, Mauritius, Rodrigues
:3C0            Pagalu Island
:3C            Equatorial Guinea
:3DA            Swaziland
:3W            Vietnam
:3X            Guinea
:4J            Azerbaijan
:4W            Timor- Leste
|valign="top"|
:5A            Libya
:5R            Madagascar
:5T            Mauritania
:5U            Niger
:5V            Togo
:7O            Yemen
:7P            Lesotho
:7Q            Malawi
:8Q            Maldives
:9L            Sierra Leone
:9N            Nepal
:9U            Burundi
:9X            Rwanda
|}
Outgoing bureaux are normally operated by national radio amateur organisations for use by members. Incoming bureaux are normally available to all amateur stations in the region served, but the destination operator must provide sufficient funds or postage (depending on region) to forward cards from the incoming bureau. QSL bureaux are operated by volunteers and time to receive cards may be months longer via bureau compared to a more direct route. Cards submitted to the bureau system should be of reasonably-standard dimensions (typically postcard-size, 3 x 5"-5½" are suitable) and sorted by destination callsign prefix.
Individual national and regional bureaux:
=== Australia ===
Outgoing:
* [[Wireless Institute of Australia]] operates a bureau for WIA members
* [http://www.fistsdownunder.org/fists/bureau.ia Fists Downunder] provides a QSL ZL/VK Bureau for its members
Incoming:
* VK1 [http://www.crarc.ampr.org/index.php/Main/QSLBureau Australian Capital Territory]
* VK2 <!-- New South Wales -->                   
* VK3 [http://www.amateurradio.com.au/qslcards Victoria]
* VK4 <!-- Queensland  -->                           
* VK5 <!-- South Australia -->
* VK6 [http://www.vk6.net/qsl-buro.html Western Australia]
* VK7 <!-- Tasmania -->
* VK8 <!-- Northern Territory -->
* VK9/VK0
A list of Australian bureaux is [http://vkham.com/Info/QSL.html here].
=== Canada ===
Outgoing:
* [http://www.magma.ca/~ve3exy/bureau.html RAC] (for members of Radio Amateurs of/du Canada)
* [http://raqi.ca/qsl_partante/Bureausortant.htm RAQI] (for members of Radio Amateur du Québec Inc.)
Incoming:
* [http://www.rac.ca/service/qsl1.htm RAC (national)]
Incoming cards are forwarded to individual provincial bureaux. To receive cards from the provincial bureau, a radio amateur must provide self-addressed stamped envelopes, payment or both (depending on the bureau) to cover forwarding costs. The incoming bureau does not require that the recipient of the cards be a member of a club or association.
* VO1/VO2
* VE1
* VE2 [http://cafe.rapidus.net/jacqdube/index.html Québec]
* VE3
* VE4
* VE5 [http://www.ve5nn.ca/bureau.html Saskatchewan]
* VE6 [http://www.telusplanet.net/public/telwest/QSLBuro.html Alberta]
* VE7 [http://www.qsl.comm.sfu.ca British Columbia]
* VE8
* VE9
* VY0
* VY1
* VY2
=== Malta ===
* [http://www.9h1mrl.org/bureu.htm 9H Bureau]
=== USA ===
Note: When sorting cards destined to mainland US radio-amateur stations, the first ''numeric digit'' in the calls, not the first letter, identifies each of the ten main regions within the US. (For instance, ''W3'', ''AA3'', ''N3'' and ''K3'' would all indicate the same region.)


* [http://www.arrl.org/qsl/qslin.html ARRL_in] ARRL Incoming QSL Bureau
Outgoing:


* [http://www.arrl.org/qsl/qslout.html ARRL_out] ARRL Outgoing QSL Service
* [http://www.arrl.org/qsl/qslout.html ARRL outgoing] (members only, does not accept cards where both stations are in continental US)


Incoming (48 contiguous states):
* [http://www.arrl.org/qsl/qslin.html ARRL incoming]
Incoming cards are forwarded to one of individual regional bureaux for radio amateurs in the continental US. Alaska, Hawaii and US territories and possessions are not handled by the eleven main regional bureaux, although some may have a local bureau. Recipient must provide SASE, payment or both to cover forwarding costs, depending on policy of the individual bureau - ARRL membership is not required to receive cards.
* [http://www.zeroburo.org W0] Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri,Nebraska,North-Dakota,South Dakota 
* [http://www.yccc.org/Resources/w1qslburo.htm W1] Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
* [http://www.njdxa.org/index.php W2]  New Jersey, New York
* [http://www.qsl.net/ncdxa/index.html W3]  Delaware, D.C., Maryland, Pennsylvania
* [http://www.cdxa.org/w4qsl.html W4 single-letter], [http://www.qsl.net/sterling/QSLBuro4/QSLBuro4.html two-letter prefixes] Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
* [http://www.okdxa.org/buro W5] Arkansas , Louisiana , Mississippi , New Mexico , Oklahoma , Texas
* [http://www.qslbureau.org W6] California
* [http://wvdxc.org/dotnetnuke/QSLBureau/tabid/59/Default.aspx W7] Arizona , Idaho , Montana , Nevada , Oregon , Utah, Washington , Wyoming
* [http://www.greatlakes.arrl.org/gldburo.html W8] Michigan , Ohio , West Virginia
* [http://qsl.nidxa.org W9] Illinois , Indiana , Wisconsin
USVI (WP2): http://www.atthehelm.com/qsl.htm
There is no incoming bureau for the following US possessions:
* KG4          Guantanamo Bay
* KH0          Mariana Is.
* KH1          Baker & Howland Is.
* KH4          Midway Island
* KH5          Palmyra & Jarvis Is.
* KH7K      Kure Island
* KH9          Wake island
* KP1          Navassa Island
* KP5          Desecheo Island
== Online QSL ==
* [http://www.arrl.org/lotw ARRL] Logbook of the World, accepted for ARRL awards but does not deliver a paper QSL card
* [http://www.eqsl.cc/qslcard/index.cfm eQSL] eQSL serves amateurs internationally, and provides an Authentication Guarantee to help contesters and avoid false QSO claims.
* [http://www.eqsl.cc/qslcard/index.cfm eQSL] eQSL serves amateurs internationally, and provides an Authentication Guarantee to help contesters and avoid false QSO claims.


* [http://www.iaru.org/iaruqsl.html IARU] IARU QSL Bureaus
== Sending and receiving QSL's ==
 
You will need to familiarise yourself with the rules and guidelines of your bureau. Some terms that are used by Bureaux are :
 
'''SAE'''
 
SAE stands for Self Addressed Envelope
 
This is an envelope with your name and complete mailing address written on it. This is usually sent along with your QSL card to the person you wish to exchange QSL cards directly instead of going through the QSL Bureau.
 
To help defray the cost of sending the SAE back to you, a Green Stamp or an IRC (International Reply Coupon) is normally enclosed.
 
If the other person is within your own country, it will be more convenient to use a SASE.
 
'''SASE'''
 
SASE stands for Self Addressed Stamped Envelope. This is the same as an SAE except that it has a postage stamp of sufficient value for the envelope to be mailed back to the sender.
 
This method works only if the sender and sendee from withn the same country. You cannot send a SASE with a U.S. stamp to a country outside the U.S.A. as U.S. stamps are not accepted by foreign postal agencies and vice versa.
 
'''Green stamp'''
 
Cash enclosed in mail, usually one or two US $1 bills, as an alternative to using IRC (International Reply Coupon). Used only when sending directly to a DX station as enclosures cannot be made when sending cards through bureaux. If used, must be carefully concealed due to the risk of theft.
 
== QSL managers ==
In some cases, a distant station will delegate the task of responding to QSL requests to another radio amateur, often in another region. The QSL manager is responsible for storing a copy of the station's logs (often in an electronic form, such as [[ADIF]] Amateur Data Interchange Format), verifying requests and issuing QSL cards. Requests to "QSL via (callsign of another station)" are most commonly used by [[DXpedition]] operators and stations in remote locations where direct mail would incur undue delay.
 
A [http://www.qsl.net/qslmanagers QSL Managers' Society] maintains a list of radioamateurs willing to handle QSL requests on behalf of other stations. Various databases listing QSL managers by call sign of individual stations served include:
* [http://www.ik3qar.it/manager/ IK3QAR]
* [http://www.eham.net/qslmgr eHam.net QSL Manager Finder]
* [http://www.qrz.com/i/qsl.html QRZ.com]
* [http://www.qsl-info.com QSLinfo.com]
* [http://www.qslinfo.de QSLinfo.de]
* [http://www.dd3kf.de/on6dp.htm ON6DP QSL Manager Database ]
* [http://dxinfo.ea3bhk.com/Call/QSL-search-database.html DXinfo]
 
Direct requests addressed to volunteer QSL managers must contain a self-addressed envelope and return postage.
 
== QSL card checking ==
A common problem in acquiring QSL's is the ''broken call''; the station and contact were originally valid, but a callsign was incorrectly recorded or transcribed. This may lead to acknowledgement being sent to the wrong station or to individual QSO's not being credited to operators engaged in [[contesting]] and otherwise eligible for [[Awards and Certificates|awards]].
 
In some cases, broken calls can be spotted by checking the station's log against a [[callbook]] for the region contacted; a lookup of an incorrectly-recorded callsign may return "no such station" or identify another station situated far distant from the reported location.
 
Problems can also arise when QSL cards are missing a key piece of information (such as callsigns, location, band and mode) or contain handwritten text which is not clearly legible.
 
Less often, issues arise due to a distant operator's wilful use of an incorrect callsign or location on-air:
* A "pirate" is a transmitter unlawfully using the calls of some other station; the licensed station will be puzzled to be flooded with QSL's and enquiries about bands and modes on which it may have never even operated.
* A "Slim" is a station incorrectly reporting its location, often to claim origin from a rare or exotic DX location. The term is believed to originate with a 1960's-era station briefly identifying as "Slim", call 8X8A and location "Cray Island," an island newly-emerged from the ocean floor due to volcanic activity.<sup>[http://www.repeater.org/links/links2/pirates.htm]</sup> The claims were debunked and the station quietly left the air. A DXpedition claiming to be P5RS7 (North Korea), operated by 3W3RR Romeo Stepanenko in December 1992, obtained similar notoriety after being exposed by radio [[direction finding]] techniques as operating from Vladivostok, Russia.<sup>[http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Ham-Radio-History/message/9622]</sup><sup>[http://ji1cqa.sakura.ne.jp/ja-first.shtml]</sup>
* A "bootlegger" is an unlicensed transmitter operating using a call which does not legally exist. This may be a station which had lost its license or an operator who had acquired equipment only to fail to obtain competences necessary for licensure. Similar issues may arise where a station is duly licensed in its home jurisdiction but operates a [[DXpedition]] in a nation in which it lacks [[reciprocal operating privilege]]s or authorisation from the host government.
 
In some cases a bogus radioamateur operation has issued QSL cards which look to be valid and these may be unknowingly collected by legitimate amateur stations. In order to maintain the integrity of contest and award programmes, QSL's from contacts with any station known for historically fraudulent or illegal operation are normally rejected by contest organisers.
 
== Rare ("most needed") QSLs ==
There are currently two nations with no licensed radio amateur service; many other [[DXCC]] entities remain rare as they correspond to distant or uninhabited islands to which access is difficult or impractical.
 
As of 2008, the list of [http://dxpub.com/dx_news.html most needed] DX station QSL's included:
# P5  [http://www.qsl.at/common/northkorea.html North Korea] - The governments of North Korea and Yemen are the only worldwide known to issue no amateur radio licenses to their citizens; the last P5 station signed off in 2002 and is not expected to return.
# 7O [http://dx-hamspirit.com/2007/06/17/why-cant-yemeni-7o-issue-licenses Yemen] has no licensed amateur radio service; attempts to correct this have met with long-standing [http://www2.arrl.org/news/stories/2000/05/01/2/?nc=1 opposition] from the country's Interior ministry. The last to have shown government approval to operate from Yemen is [http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/02/0920/ 7O/OH2YY in 2002].
# KP1 [http://coastal.er.usgs.gov/navassa Navassa Island] is an uninhabited, 5 km² island in the Caribbean Sea between Haiti and Jamaica claimed as part of the US Minor Outlying Islands. Status disputed as Haiti has also made claims; as a US National Wildlife Refuge, Navassa has no permanent infrastructure.
# FR-G [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/fs.html Îles Glorieuses (Glorioso Islands)] - One of five scattered tropical islands (Îles Eparses) around Madagascar, part of French Southern and Antarctic Lands. No permanent inhabitants; most visitors are scientific research station, fishery or military personnel. A planned [http://glorieuses2008.free.fr/ 2008 DXpedition] has been repeatedly postponed.
# ZS8 [http://marion.sanap.org.za Marion Island] (46°54' S, 37°5' E) in the Prince Edward Islands group in the Southern Indian Ocean is home to a South African National Antarctic Programme [http://www.up.ac.za/academic/geog/marion_island.html research station]. Outside the one scientific base station, the island has an extensive population... of penguins.
# KP5 [http://www.fws.gov/Refuges/profiles/index.cfm?id=41523 Desecheo Island] is a US National Wildlife Refuge located 14 miles west of Puerto Rico (18.40° N, 67.55° W); normally [http://www.topuertorico.org/city/desecheo.shtml uninhabited except by nesting sea birds], it became the destination of a [http://www.kp5.us 2009 DXpedition] - the first in fifteen years.
# 3Y-B [http://3y0e.com/3y0e Bouvet Island] - An uninhabited Atlantic island at (54º 26′ S, 3º 24′ E) of approximately ten square miles, with no suitable harbour and situated on sharp volcanic cliffs. Administered by Norway, but no local presence except an unattended weather monitoring station.
# VKØ-H [http://www.heardisland.aq Heard Island] - A remote uninhabited sub-Antarctic island; expeditions must obtain permission from Australian authorities months in advance and most who travel to this remote outpost are engaged in scientific research.
# FT5W [http://www.btinternet.com/~sa_sa/crozet_islands/crozet_islands.html Îles Crozet] - French archipelago in the Indian Ocean (45°95' - 46°50'S, 50°33' - 52°58'E) located far from inhabited land with no airport, port or regular transport.
# FT5Z [http://www.discoverfrance.net/Colonies/St-Paul_Amsterdam.shtml Amsterdam Island] - Amsterdam & St. Paul Island have no permanent inhabitants but have accommodated scientific expeditions. Like ''Îles Glorieuses'' and ''Îles Crozet'', this is part of the uninhabited ''Terres Australes et Antarctiques Françaises'' collection.
 
== External links ==
* [http://zs6ez.za.org/tutorial/qsl-hint.htm QSLing suggestions], ZS6EZ
* [http://www.arrl.org/news/features/2001/11/15/2/ Inside Your League--QSL Service], ARRLweb
* [http://www4.plala.or.jp/nomrax/hammaps.htm Maps for CQ zones, ITU zones, grid squares]
* [http://www.g3swh.org.uk G3SWH], a charity operated by an eccentric millionaire, offers information from the point of view of a longtime QSL manager
* [http://hamgallery.com/qsl Ham Gallery], a collection of worldwide QSL cards
* [http://www.qsl.net/de0brf QSL's on the Web], list of 465 QSL galleries
* [http://www.pe2pe.eu/funny_qsl_cards.htm PE2PE Funny QSL] Gallery
 
=== QSL card printers ===
* [http://ac6v.com/qslcards.htm QSL card printers/designers and management systems]: Make your own QSL cards, AC6V
* [http://s88932719.onlinehome.us/hamlynx/hamqsl.htm AF4K's QSL & QTH information]
* [http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/23 eHam's list of QSL printers; callsign badge engravers]
* [http://www.w1wc.com/qsl_cards QSL card printer sites] list, W1WC
* [http://webhome.idirect.com/~va3rj/qsl_card.html VA3RJ's list of QSL printers]
* [http://www.radioqth.net/qsl.aspx Online QSL card designer] from RadioQTH
 
{{operation}}

Latest revision as of 00:32, 5 November 2010

Related wiki page: Callsign Databases

QSL

QSL means either "do you confirm receipt of my transmission" or "I confirm receipt of your transmission". It can also mean "please send me a QSL card".

QSL is a Q-code.

QSL Cards

A QSL card is a written form of QSL, a confirmation of contact between two parties. Traditionally, amateurs traded QSL cards. These are usually about the same size as a postcard, often elaborately decorated to express individuality, and were mailed from person to person. QSL cards can also be used to confirm one way communication ie, to a listener from a radio station either commercial or amateur.

A number of amateurs use electronic QSL "cards". These are available through eQSL. This website has a logging facility with which users can email other registered users and exchange QSL cards electronically. Some hams display these electronic QSL's on web pages.

Modes such as SSTV lend themselves to another way of exchanging QSL's. In the case of SSTV, each station will send a screen that contains contact detail.

The minimum information on a QSL card is:

  • Callsign of each station
  • Time - usually in UTC
  • Date
  • Frequency of operation
  • Mode of operation
  • Signal report, usually using the RST code.

QSL Bureaus

While sending QSL cards directly to a distant station is most often fastest, the confirmation of large numbers of international contacts may prove expensive. An alternative offered by many national and regional amateur radio societies is a bureau system. QSL's from individual stations are sent to an outgoing bureau locally; that bureau bundles all outgoing cards for each country and sends each bundle as a single package - reducing international postage costs. At destination, a national or regional incoming bureau holds received cards so that they may be claimed by the operator of the intended station.

The International Amateur Radio Union maintains a list of QSL Bureaus for most nations worldwide. There is no incoming bureau in the following countries:

A3 Tonga
A5 Bhutan
A6 United Arab Emirates
C2 Nauru
C5 Gambia
C6 Bahamas
CN Morocco
D2 Angola
E3 Eritrea
E5 North & South Cook Is.
HH Haiti
HV Vatican
J5 Guinea-Bissau
J8 St. Vincent
P2 Papua New Guinea
P5 North Korea
PZ Suriname
S0 Western Sahara
S7 Seychelles
S9 Sao Tome & Principe
ST Sudan
SU Egypt
T2 Tuvalu
T3 Kiribati
T5 Somalia
T8 Palau
TJ Cameroon
TL Central African Rep
TN Congo
TT Chad
TY Benin
V3 Belize
V4 St. Kitts & Nevis
V6 Micronesia
VP2E Anguilla
VP2M Montserrat
XU Cambodia
XW Laos
XZ Myanmar
YA Afghanistan
Z2 Zimbabwe
ZD9 Tristan da Cunha
3B Agalega, Mauritius, Rodrigues
3C0 Pagalu Island
3C Equatorial Guinea
3DA Swaziland
3W Vietnam
3X Guinea
4J Azerbaijan
4W Timor- Leste
5A Libya
5R Madagascar
5T Mauritania
5U Niger
5V Togo
7O Yemen
7P Lesotho
7Q Malawi
8Q Maldives
9L Sierra Leone
9N Nepal
9U Burundi
9X Rwanda

Outgoing bureaux are normally operated by national radio amateur organisations for use by members. Incoming bureaux are normally available to all amateur stations in the region served, but the destination operator must provide sufficient funds or postage (depending on region) to forward cards from the incoming bureau. QSL bureaux are operated by volunteers and time to receive cards may be months longer via bureau compared to a more direct route. Cards submitted to the bureau system should be of reasonably-standard dimensions (typically postcard-size, 3 x 5"-5½" are suitable) and sorted by destination callsign prefix.

Individual national and regional bureaux:

Australia

Outgoing:

Incoming:

A list of Australian bureaux is here.

Canada

Outgoing:

  • RAC (for members of Radio Amateurs of/du Canada)
  • RAQI (for members of Radio Amateur du Québec Inc.)

Incoming:

Incoming cards are forwarded to individual provincial bureaux. To receive cards from the provincial bureau, a radio amateur must provide self-addressed stamped envelopes, payment or both (depending on the bureau) to cover forwarding costs. The incoming bureau does not require that the recipient of the cards be a member of a club or association.

Malta

USA

Note: When sorting cards destined to mainland US radio-amateur stations, the first numeric digit in the calls, not the first letter, identifies each of the ten main regions within the US. (For instance, W3, AA3, N3 and K3 would all indicate the same region.)

Outgoing:

  • ARRL outgoing (members only, does not accept cards where both stations are in continental US)

Incoming (48 contiguous states):

Incoming cards are forwarded to one of individual regional bureaux for radio amateurs in the continental US. Alaska, Hawaii and US territories and possessions are not handled by the eleven main regional bureaux, although some may have a local bureau. Recipient must provide SASE, payment or both to cover forwarding costs, depending on policy of the individual bureau - ARRL membership is not required to receive cards.

  • W0 Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri,Nebraska,North-Dakota,South Dakota
  • W1 Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
  • W2 New Jersey, New York
  • W3 Delaware, D.C., Maryland, Pennsylvania
  • W4 single-letter, two-letter prefixes Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
  • W5 Arkansas , Louisiana , Mississippi , New Mexico , Oklahoma , Texas
  • W6 California
  • W7 Arizona , Idaho , Montana , Nevada , Oregon , Utah, Washington , Wyoming
  • W8 Michigan , Ohio , West Virginia
  • W9 Illinois , Indiana , Wisconsin

USVI (WP2): http://www.atthehelm.com/qsl.htm

There is no incoming bureau for the following US possessions:

  • KG4 Guantanamo Bay
  • KH0 Mariana Is.
  • KH1 Baker & Howland Is.
  • KH4 Midway Island
  • KH5 Palmyra & Jarvis Is.
  • KH7K Kure Island
  • KH9 Wake island
  • KP1 Navassa Island
  • KP5 Desecheo Island

Online QSL

  • ARRL Logbook of the World, accepted for ARRL awards but does not deliver a paper QSL card
  • eQSL eQSL serves amateurs internationally, and provides an Authentication Guarantee to help contesters and avoid false QSO claims.

Sending and receiving QSL's

You will need to familiarise yourself with the rules and guidelines of your bureau. Some terms that are used by Bureaux are :

SAE

SAE stands for Self Addressed Envelope

This is an envelope with your name and complete mailing address written on it. This is usually sent along with your QSL card to the person you wish to exchange QSL cards directly instead of going through the QSL Bureau.

To help defray the cost of sending the SAE back to you, a Green Stamp or an IRC (International Reply Coupon) is normally enclosed.

If the other person is within your own country, it will be more convenient to use a SASE.

SASE

SASE stands for Self Addressed Stamped Envelope. This is the same as an SAE except that it has a postage stamp of sufficient value for the envelope to be mailed back to the sender.

This method works only if the sender and sendee from withn the same country. You cannot send a SASE with a U.S. stamp to a country outside the U.S.A. as U.S. stamps are not accepted by foreign postal agencies and vice versa.

Green stamp

Cash enclosed in mail, usually one or two US $1 bills, as an alternative to using IRC (International Reply Coupon). Used only when sending directly to a DX station as enclosures cannot be made when sending cards through bureaux. If used, must be carefully concealed due to the risk of theft.

QSL managers

In some cases, a distant station will delegate the task of responding to QSL requests to another radio amateur, often in another region. The QSL manager is responsible for storing a copy of the station's logs (often in an electronic form, such as ADIF Amateur Data Interchange Format), verifying requests and issuing QSL cards. Requests to "QSL via (callsign of another station)" are most commonly used by DXpedition operators and stations in remote locations where direct mail would incur undue delay.

A QSL Managers' Society maintains a list of radioamateurs willing to handle QSL requests on behalf of other stations. Various databases listing QSL managers by call sign of individual stations served include:

Direct requests addressed to volunteer QSL managers must contain a self-addressed envelope and return postage.

QSL card checking

A common problem in acquiring QSL's is the broken call; the station and contact were originally valid, but a callsign was incorrectly recorded or transcribed. This may lead to acknowledgement being sent to the wrong station or to individual QSO's not being credited to operators engaged in contesting and otherwise eligible for awards.

In some cases, broken calls can be spotted by checking the station's log against a callbook for the region contacted; a lookup of an incorrectly-recorded callsign may return "no such station" or identify another station situated far distant from the reported location.

Problems can also arise when QSL cards are missing a key piece of information (such as callsigns, location, band and mode) or contain handwritten text which is not clearly legible.

Less often, issues arise due to a distant operator's wilful use of an incorrect callsign or location on-air:

  • A "pirate" is a transmitter unlawfully using the calls of some other station; the licensed station will be puzzled to be flooded with QSL's and enquiries about bands and modes on which it may have never even operated.
  • A "Slim" is a station incorrectly reporting its location, often to claim origin from a rare or exotic DX location. The term is believed to originate with a 1960's-era station briefly identifying as "Slim", call 8X8A and location "Cray Island," an island newly-emerged from the ocean floor due to volcanic activity.[1] The claims were debunked and the station quietly left the air. A DXpedition claiming to be P5RS7 (North Korea), operated by 3W3RR Romeo Stepanenko in December 1992, obtained similar notoriety after being exposed by radio direction finding techniques as operating from Vladivostok, Russia.[2][3]
  • A "bootlegger" is an unlicensed transmitter operating using a call which does not legally exist. This may be a station which had lost its license or an operator who had acquired equipment only to fail to obtain competences necessary for licensure. Similar issues may arise where a station is duly licensed in its home jurisdiction but operates a DXpedition in a nation in which it lacks reciprocal operating privileges or authorisation from the host government.

In some cases a bogus radioamateur operation has issued QSL cards which look to be valid and these may be unknowingly collected by legitimate amateur stations. In order to maintain the integrity of contest and award programmes, QSL's from contacts with any station known for historically fraudulent or illegal operation are normally rejected by contest organisers.

Rare ("most needed") QSLs

There are currently two nations with no licensed radio amateur service; many other DXCC entities remain rare as they correspond to distant or uninhabited islands to which access is difficult or impractical.

As of 2008, the list of most needed DX station QSL's included:

  1. P5 North Korea - The governments of North Korea and Yemen are the only worldwide known to issue no amateur radio licenses to their citizens; the last P5 station signed off in 2002 and is not expected to return.
  2. 7O Yemen has no licensed amateur radio service; attempts to correct this have met with long-standing opposition from the country's Interior ministry. The last to have shown government approval to operate from Yemen is 7O/OH2YY in 2002.
  3. KP1 Navassa Island is an uninhabited, 5 km² island in the Caribbean Sea between Haiti and Jamaica claimed as part of the US Minor Outlying Islands. Status disputed as Haiti has also made claims; as a US National Wildlife Refuge, Navassa has no permanent infrastructure.
  4. FR-G Îles Glorieuses (Glorioso Islands) - One of five scattered tropical islands (Îles Eparses) around Madagascar, part of French Southern and Antarctic Lands. No permanent inhabitants; most visitors are scientific research station, fishery or military personnel. A planned 2008 DXpedition has been repeatedly postponed.
  5. ZS8 Marion Island (46°54' S, 37°5' E) in the Prince Edward Islands group in the Southern Indian Ocean is home to a South African National Antarctic Programme research station. Outside the one scientific base station, the island has an extensive population... of penguins.
  6. KP5 Desecheo Island is a US National Wildlife Refuge located 14 miles west of Puerto Rico (18.40° N, 67.55° W); normally uninhabited except by nesting sea birds, it became the destination of a 2009 DXpedition - the first in fifteen years.
  7. 3Y-B Bouvet Island - An uninhabited Atlantic island at (54º 26′ S, 3º 24′ E) of approximately ten square miles, with no suitable harbour and situated on sharp volcanic cliffs. Administered by Norway, but no local presence except an unattended weather monitoring station.
  8. VKØ-H Heard Island - A remote uninhabited sub-Antarctic island; expeditions must obtain permission from Australian authorities months in advance and most who travel to this remote outpost are engaged in scientific research.
  9. FT5W Îles Crozet - French archipelago in the Indian Ocean (45°95' - 46°50'S, 50°33' - 52°58'E) located far from inhabited land with no airport, port or regular transport.
  10. FT5Z Amsterdam Island - Amsterdam & St. Paul Island have no permanent inhabitants but have accommodated scientific expeditions. Like Îles Glorieuses and Îles Crozet, this is part of the uninhabited Terres Australes et Antarctiques Françaises collection.

External links

QSL card printers

Operating procedures
Operation Callsigns and ITU prefixes * Codes and Alphabets * Modes * Morse code * Nets * UK licensing * Terminology
DX and Contesting Awards and Certificates * DXCC * DX cluster * Field day * Gridsquares * Logging * QSL and QSL Bureaus * Records - Distance
Emergencies Emergency Frequencies * ARES * IRESC * SATERN * Weather spotting
QRP Trail-Friendly Radio
Utilities Beacons (/B) and Time Beacons