>
> B= bad call = removed with penalty
> U= uniques to your log not removed unless PROVEN as Bad by crosschecks.
> N= Not in the other guys log. All N's with nothing next to them are
> removed as no QSO calls.
>
> In the end deductions were made for 17 of the NIL QSOs (NILs are not
> automatically deducted, for instance, several were marked as NIL when it
> was clear the other station had worked us but had logged it wrong - K1K1
> and KW1KI are examples) and 23 of those marked bad - a total of 40 QSOs..
> Unique QSOs are not automatically deducted but are used as an indication
> of possible problems that might require more detailed checking.
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Tom's analysis (which is very thought-provoking on getting the call right
and very humble, too - no complaints abt his reductions) made me think of
something else.
Do you use the remove-dupes-after-the-contest coption? I don't, and a
strong reason which seems even stronger now is that the 'analysts'
conclusion may be distorted if I did. Scenario:
I work K1KI, for some reason he doesn't log me (get's my call wrong, let's
say).
Later, K1KI calls me, I notice it as a dupe but work him anyway.
His log will show the 2nd QSO as a valid contact, mine as a dupe. What
conclusions will the cross-checkers draw if I remove it viz. if I don't?
73,
Goran/SM0DRD
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