The rules state that a rover is one or two operators. There is no mention about one only transmitted signal for the rover. Is it possible for one op to be working q's on one radio, and the other op o
Hi Mark, Yes, I think it's allowed...beware, however of the RFI generated by multiple transmitters housed within a single vehicle. Lot's of multiops are still fighting this problem, and they are much
Author: kb1grs-vhfcontesting@vms.gratuitous.org (Joel N. Weber II)
Date: Thu Jun 19 16:44:28 2003
My experience at a multiop station has been that on bands above 6m, it seems like you need a cavity filter before your preamp if you want to be able to hear while another band is transmitting. Ideall
Here is the answer from ARRL. Mark: A rover may not have two signals on any one band at the same time. There is nothing in the rules that prohibits a rover from having simultaneous operations on seve
You do need to be careful to transmit no more than one signal per band at any one time. What I have done to insure this is to build a simple interlock. I connect the microphones for the SSB rig and t