


Also no ADIF = 1000 which gives CLUBLOG for INVALID ( ie not accepted by the ARRL) QSOs will be replaced as No ADIF = 0. ADIF = 999 ( MARITIME MOBILE) and 998 ( MOBILE AIRCRAFT) are replaced with NR_ADIF (DXCC) = 0 because any logger can accept this value. In a input this file can be present up to 39 custom fields not standard to ADIF In the resulting file of ADIF are present all the ADIF fields which are in the file input, even if their name is not standard name ADIF.

This correction is also do in all my programs. Import from different HAM-radio log program formats (ADIF, CT, TRLOG, STF, EDI, ADX etc.). Fill in the log directly to Cabrillo format (from paper log). The program in addition do correction field QSL_via to the form such as that in suitable for placement on the QSL card - even if there are inscribed "stupidity" - permitted by QRZ.COM. Convert logs to ADIF, Cabrillo, and Excel CSV format. The file is saved with the name of the input file after the addition of the suffix TRANSLATED + current date. Now you can save result file when you press button. After saving in a such ADIF format, you can again make a saving in the CSV format. If anyone stumbles across an automated way to do this from an ADIF, please let us know.CSV - only selected fields - after editing in a text editor file NameAdifFields_PRESENT_IN_ADIFile.txt, saving only fields that only you need in your database.īefore saving data, choose the appropriate format. Maybe next year’s template will support that if decides to integrate that capability. I suspect this would be fairly easy to code within HAMRS, too.

Perhaps ADIF Master will be helpful as an intermediate step. I haven’t tried it yet, but I plan to see if I can import my HAMRS-generated ADIF into Excel and then sort the QSOs accordingly, then print it to a PDF file. Attention SOTA Operators: The ADIF Utility (v1.9) has been enhanced to provide more ADIF fields, to be compatible with ADIF to CSV file conversion programs. Go directly to creating a dupe sheet or sorted list in a spreadsheet and you should be good to go. If you logged on paper, entering your field day QSOs into HAMRS likely won’t buy you much. Cabrillo files are acceptable, too, but not necessary. They prefer a list of stations worked by band/mode, in the form of a dupe sheet or an alpha/numeric list sorted by band and mode. HAMRS won’t give you what you need to directly submit your records to ARRL for Field Day.Īs was pointed out when the FD template was being developed, ARRL doesn’t want the ADIF.
