[HCDX]: How to QSL?
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[HCDX]: How to QSL?



This morning I read through an enormous backlog of mails: technical difficulties and lack of time prevented me from emptying my mailbox before. I read all the opinions on how and why to QSL and since I have often thought about the subject myself I would like to give some opinions and experiences myself. 
I gave up sending reports many years ago. I spent much time trying to send good, accurate and personal reports, but the return rate was so low I did not find it worth the time, trouble and money to send out reports. I seldom sent one nowadays, only for very special stations.
I support the idea from Mauno Ritola and others to use other DX'ers as a help. 
There are two methods. 
1-Local DX'ers visiting their local stations to get reports verified.
2-appointing DX'ers as QSL-managers.
 
1-A local DX'er can visit the stations in his neigbourhood and try to persuade them to verify reports. Nothing wrong about that. It a local guy, speaking the native tongue, maybe knowing people at the station, knows the structure and organisation at a local station. For instance I once helped a Finnish DX'er obtaining a QSL from a Regional FM-broadcaster in the Netherlands. He sent out a good and complete report but no reply. I knew that all letters to such stations came in at the PR-department, normally handling request records, stickers etc. One phone-call to the friendly girl in the department learned she still had the report on her desk, she hardly spoke english and did not know the report was about. My phone-call resulted in the report being transferred to the CE and a fine QSL was posted to Finland the same day!! 
2- QSL-managers is more complex. There should be some sort of official appointment from the station concerned, I think.  
Here in Holland Ruud Vos issues QSl's for 1584AM and Koos Wijnants does for Haagstad radio on 1485. They have contacts with the station and have been officially appointed. I think that really is a condition. The station must know about their existence and for instance the QSL-manager should be able to visit the station regularly to collect reports there and check their files if he doubts about certain programme-details(for instance to check which records the station played on a given sunday at 0623 UTC). 
With these conditions fulfilled a DX'er can easily fill the gap left by station who do not have time, money, interest, staff etc etc. to handle reports.  But, the QSL-manager should have a sort of offical status.   
I know an example where a chief engineer of a radiostation(I will not give out the name) contacted me and asked me if reception conditions of his station had worsened since the station hardly received any reception reports. This was quite a few years back. I answered him that reception of the station was still fine and that I did not know why their new QSL-manager would receive less reports. In this case a person from that country had advertised himself widely in the DX-press an QSL-manager for that station. The chief engineer called me back and it turned out that he -or anybody at the station- did not knew about his existence!! It was a person who collected U.S. dollars and knew DX'ers would eagerly send him some in return for a postcard with QSL written on it!!!        
 
I do not think embassies are a good method to obtain QSL's . Collecting QSL's is a hobby and people work at radiostations for a living. Don't forget that!! If I look at my own work I would have something to explain if my boss says" well, I received a phone-call from the British embassy and they complain you did not answer letter X from a British citizen". Embassies are political institutions and many countries are no democracies. Any kind of involvement could be dangerous for local people. This foreign interest could possibly harm people and No QSL is worth this (maybe slight possibility!) that a local radio-employee has to answer questions from his local government-officials why the Dutch or Britissh embassy has an interest in him or his station. 
 
When I did sent out reports I always enclosed one or two dollars. I stopped this straight away after hearing the following story: I once met a guy who had worked at a radiostation in one of the former Soviet republics in central Asia. The stations received an average of 30 reports a month, 20 had dollar-bills enclosed, 10 reports had IRC's or no return postage. The poor guy had an official investigation on him as his boss suspected him of nicking the dollars out of these 10 IRC-reports!!!!
 
Well, just a few thoughts from my side.
 
Julius Hermans Netherlands