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Re: [CQ-Contest] CX2DK DQ

To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] CX2DK DQ
From: Ron Notarius W3WN <wn3vaw@verizon.net>
Date: Thu, 09 Mar 2017 14:35:55 -0600 (CST)
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
 Clearly not everyone agrees with a common definition of "participating in the 
contest"


IMHO:


I can choose to OPERATE in a contest (or not), and by doing so, I could be 
considered as a "participant"


I can then choose to SUBMIT a log afterwards to the contest sponsors (or not), 
and by doing so, would definitely be considered as a "participant"


So is Operating in the contest the same as Participating?  Personally, I'd say 
"yes" -- but participating or operating does not mean that I expect or plan to 
submit a log (for scoring) or check log (for any of a number of reasons too 
numerous to mention).


And... if I operate in the contest but am operating "casually", and/or don't 
follow the contest rules (such as using packet as a single op, or not strictly 
follow power limitations, etc) -- which can happen when I don't plan to submit 
a log to the sponsor afterwards -- I'm still "participating".  I simply 
operated, had fun, and moved on to the next thing, and that is all.
 
That doesn't make me a competitor in the contest.  Just a participant.


Submitting or planning to submit the log for scoring purposes?  That makes me a 
competitor.


For example...


The annual Mooselvannia State QSO Party was last weekend.  The contest rules 
limit competitors to 200 W output and for single ops, no packet use (why?  
Because this is a rhetorical situation).  But it so happens I needed 
Mooselvannia on 15 meters CW for 5BWAS purposes, and three or four counties for 
USA-CA purposes.  So I cranked up the amp, watched the cluster, and got 
everything I needed.  


Did I participate?  Yes.


Was I a competitor?  Well, since I only worked what I needed, and didn't bother 
to submit a log to the sponsor, the Flying Squirrel ARC, no.  But I had fun, I 
had a goal, and I accomplished it.  And those folks who I worked?  Hopefully 
they appreciated it.


73, ron w3wn

On 03/09/17, Jim Brown wrote:

No, it doesn't imply that at all. When you work a station calling CQ 
Contest, you are participating in the contest.

Put another way -- it's perfectly legal to call a station in your 
country who's calling CQ DX, but it's not a nice thing to do, and the 
other station has every right to be pissed off. :)

73, Jim K9YC

On Thu,3/9/2017 5:50 AM, Ria Jairam wrote:
> That would imply that NAQP entrants have exclusive use of the bands during
> NAQP which is not the case.
>
> I am not competing for anything in NAQP, stew or any other contest if I
> work a few contacts and don't submit a log. (I do submit a checklog out of
> courtesy sometimes) It is very much unreasonable to ask non participants to
> abide by the rules, plain and simple.
>
> Ria
> N2RJ
>
> On Wed, Mar 8, 2017 at 12:50 PM Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com>
> wrote:
>
>> On Tue,3/7/2017 8:47 PM, Kelly Taylor wrote:
>>> Those rules, and any rules, only apply to people actually entering the
>> contest. Those who merely play radio during a contest with no intention of
>> filing a contest entry may use whatever technology is permitted by their
>> licence classes.
>>
>> When you participate in a contest by working other contesters, you have
>> entered the contest. You are competing for contacts, and use of spots
>> and high power give you an advantage over other callers. When you win
>> the QSO after a call, you have disadvantaged another operator. Likewise,
>> when you splatter or have a wide CW signal, you disadvantage other
>> operators. One of the pleasures of NAQP is that it is a 100W contest
>> with no spotting for single ops. Another pleasure is that it's a team
>> competition for single ops.
>>
>>> What signals ‘sound like’ can certainly be deceiving. Many times I have
>> been running compromise antennas at less than 100w and been told I’m the
>> loudest guy on the band, but that’s simply the perfect alignment of skip
>> zones and takeoff angles. I often had trouble being heard by other
>> operators in the same general area.
>>
>> Yes, but when signals are from the same general area and one is a lot
>> louder, you know. :)
>>
>> 73, Jim K9YC
>>> 73, kelly, ve4xt,
>>>
>>>> I'm regularly disappointed that a significant number of NAQP
>> participants don't obey the rules that require that a single-op be
>> non-assisted and no more than 100W, as indicated by obvious
>> cluster-inspired peaks of activity, and signals that sure don't sound like
>> 100W.

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