If I might add one...
'Someone' once told me years ago, to not let anyone pass your freq
without hearing you send something. Point being, if your equipment can
stand it, make -unnecessary- silence something to avoid. My repeat is
set to 3 seconds, with left thumb hovering over the 'esc' key. Have a
station S&P'ing hear you working someone, or calling CQ. But, like I
said, it's hard on the equipment. Here, connectors especially.
10 or 15 seconds between CQ's is way too much and just asking for
someone to take your frequency.
73 de Steve, NR4M
On 3/24/2016 10:43, Hank Garretson wrote:
Top Ten Tips, Ed Muns W0YK
Two suggestions have been submitted for the last presentation. I'd love to
be overwhelmed with a lot more, so let me know what you think.
3. When answering a CQ, send only your call once, twice, or three times.
Don't send the CQer's call. Never send DE.
4. Golden Silence. If two or more answer your CQ and you don't print a
call, avoid at all costs the temptation to send anything.
5. Golden Silence. Fill it with your call.
6. When asked for a repeat, send only what is asked for. Don't repeat your
whole exchange. Don't send your or his call.
7. Make your CQs worthwhile. CQ TEST W6SX W6SX CQ. Minimize stuff that
doesn't add value. Something like CQ BARTY RTTY TEST DE W7xxx CQ wastes
everyone's time.
8. Get rid of stuff that doesn't directly complete the contact. No
fancy-pansy extra spaces, dots, etcetera.
9. Flexible macros--craft each QSO to the circumstances.
10. Use low tones.
11. Stack calls, use NOW.
My plan and hope is to be at Dayton in 2017.
KB,
Hank, W6SX
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73 de Steve, NR4M
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