subsequent Recently, I have been doing a similar approach. Logging on a yellow pad, entering it to a text file on the computer, then processing it into Cabrillo with a program I wrote some years ago.
Received this message Sunday (a bit late). I was on the sprint for about 1/2 hour near 0130, and heard nothing. Called CQ a few times on SSB and CW, with no response. If there was anyone on around he
My garbage cans are made of plastic. Didn't hear about that, but my longest 2 meter contact was with a mag mount stuck to the side of my car. Just a bit over 2300 miles. SSB, running about 20 - 25 w
I did want to thank David for his tales of 222 activities. Always great reading, even if I can't participate on the air. Alan _______________________________________________ VHFcontesting mailing lis
Wouldn't that checklog still have the same effect that Doug wanted to avoid - by being checked, the stations he contacted and mislogged would still be penalized because he reported them wrong. Specif
Paul Bourque "is quoted as writing: "All equipment SHOULD be capable of communications at a range of at least 5 km." What we're essentially trying to prevent is having stations work each other from a
Thanks for the reply. I was reading: STTN.6. All equipment should be capable of communications at a range of at least 5 km. Contacts made between non-fixed stations, for example portable and/or rover
What would the reaction be if someone came up with a software package that interfaced with the digital software and did the entire digital contest without human intervention once started. That way,
Well, that is why I don't do the 222 and up contest. I expect I would abandon others that went to distance scoring. I have no desire to get a ruler and map out to figure the distance for contacts (th