GridTracker’s alert system pings me when a rare DX entity or a new grid appears. I work the station. Log4OM logs it. Later, when I run a “Missing Grids” report in Log4OM, the data is already there. No reconciliation weekends. No “wait, did I log that?”
Here’s what changed:
So if you’re still copying and pasting between windows or manually typing in grids from a map, stop. Set up the GridTracker → Log4OM pipeline. Your future self — the one chasing Worked All States or that last elusive DXCC entity — will thank you. gridtracker log4om
At first, I treated them as separate tools: GridTracker for the live, dopamine‑hit visual of chasing grids on a world map, and Log4OM for the serious business of archival logging. But running them in parallel felt like driving with two steering wheels. Duplicate entries. Missing timestamps. The occasional logged QSO that never made it to my master log.
Subject:
That’s when I discovered the quiet power of connecting to Log4OM .
It started as a messy pile of digital breadcrumbs. After every contest or casual FT8 session, I’d have a half‑empty ADIF file here, a manual pencil note there, and a GridTracker map full of colorful blips that vanished the moment I closed the window. My logging was a leaky bucket. Something had to change. GridTracker’s alert system pings me when a rare
During last year’s ARRL RTTY Roundup, I worked 400 stations in a weekend. Normally, I’d spend Monday morning cleaning up logs. Instead, I opened Log4OM on Monday, filtered by the contest, and saw every single QSO already tagged, timed, and confirmed via GridTracker’s real‑time feed. I exported the Cabrillo in 30 seconds and went back to bed.