No, I don't think you can use any other bands. Here's the rule: "...operation is permitted only on the 6 Meter, 2 Meter, 220 MHz and 432 MHz bands." That's different than the Limited Multiop rule: "S
All true, but when it comes to contest time you have to "run what ya brung." We're not talking about building a Limited Rover setup from scratch from a cornucopia of radios (or cash :-), we're talkin
Now we'll have to excuse Nate while he ices his thumbs after typing that manifesto on his iPhone :-). For what it's worth, though, I agree. Note the we're not complaining that the League moved "too f
First of all, isn't winning the idea? It is a contest, after all. Second, and this is an honest question, are you just repeating what you've heard through the grapevine or do you have personal knowle
You are exactly right. Sean's opinion that you can operate on other bands and submit those QSOs as a checklog is most definitely NOT what that rule says. If that's what the League had intended, the r
Yeah, you can't do that. General Rules for Contests Above 50 MHz 1.3. A transmitter, receiver, or antenna used to contact one or more stations may not subsequently be used under any other call during
True, if you don't submit a log you can do anything you want. However, this isn't as exploitable as you might think: General Rules for All ARRL Contests 2.1.Entrants agree to be bound by the provisio
I've always liked this idea, too. Whether the Unlimited Rover class was designed with this in mind or not, I don't see why you can't do it. Maybe I'm missing something. I think a more logical arrange
Oh! I get it now. No, you can't do this but I'm not sure why you'd want to, other than to put more than one signal per band on the air at the same time, which would be impractical - even on a semi or
I've been a police officer for 12 years, first at a local department now for the state police. I've never had occasion to encounter a rover at work, nor do I know anyone else that has, so I guess som