I did an M2 at NQ4I a couple of years ago. We had two radios per band, and
a total of six radios. Two radios per band interlocked - only one could
transmit at a time (hardware interlock). One run radio, one mult radio.
When we did a band change - say "radio 1" was going from 10 to 20 meters.
We would stop TX on 10 meters, designate 20 meters as "radio 1", and away
we went with a different pair of radios. That was one band change.
With M2, you are assisted - allowed to look at the cluster. We could line
up 20 meter mults, ready to go when TX moved to 20. Once we worked a bunch
of mults of 20, we could then move back to 10 meters (ie radio 1), and this
counted as band change # 2 for radio 1.
This activity was independent of what "radio 2" was doing.
The TX must be identified in the Cabrillo log file - radio 1 or radio 2.
Logging software takes care of this.
Does this help?
Tom - VE3CX
On Sat, Oct 8, 2016 at 11:40 AM, W0MU Mike Fatchett <w0mu@w0mu.com> wrote:
> I would like some clarification on the Multi 2 transmitter rule.
>
> From the CQ WW Rules Website:
>
> *2. Two Transmitters (MULTI-TWO):* A maximum of two transmitted signals on
> two different bands may be used at any time.
>
> The log must indicate which transmitter made each QSO.
>
> Each transmitter may make a maximum of 8 band changes in any clock hour
> (00 through 59 minutes).
>
> Total output power must not exceed *1500 watts* on any band at any time.
>
>
> Line one says Two transmitters. Does this really mean just two
> transmitters per the contest period? Rig 1 and Rig 2 and you can have as
> many receivers as you want and operators but all contacts need to be made
> using rig 1 and rig 2?
>
> W0MU
>
>
>
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