At 05:36 PM 8/3/2003 -0400, Andrew T. Flowers, K0SM wrote:
>Wait a minute--I think you need to stay within a 300m circle (or whatever
>it is in the rules) to send in one SO log. I don't see anything wrong
>with being a rover that only roved in one grid. If you were out driving
>around this is what it sounds like. Hope you had fun!
The ARRL contest rules define rover:
2.3. Rover: One or two operators of a single station that moves among two
or more grid squares during the course of a contest.
ref: http://www.arrl.org/contests/announcements/rules-vhf.html
>Andy K0SM/2
>
>John K9IJ wrote:
>
>>At 01:03 PM 8/3/2003 -0500, tad danley wrote:
>>
>>>I operated in the ARRL UHF contest this weekend to check out my Par
>>>omniangle horizontal antennas. I was mobile and all of my operation
>>>took place from within one grid - does that make me a Rover, or does the
>>>fact that all my operation was from EM13 (my home grid) make me a single op?
>>
>>
>>Not a Rover. You have to operate from two or more grids to classify as a
>>rover.
-
John Rice K9IJ
k9ij@vx5.com
Webmaster, Network Admin, Janitor
http://www.k9ij.com
http://www.suhfars.org
http://www.vx5.com/~teampf
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