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Topband: The Remote question

To: topband@contesting.com
Subject: Topband: The Remote question
From: nn4t@comcast.net
Date: Sun, 12 Jul 2015 13:32:30 +0000 (UTC)
List-post: <topband@contesting.com">mailto:topband@contesting.com>
Good morning. I have followed with interest the discussion on this subject. I 
enjoyed hearing both sides of the issue from my fellow DXers. Most of the 
replies have been both thoughtful and respectful and I thank you for that. 
I thought you may find it interesting to hear a comment from the perspective of 
an RHR user. Perhaps some of the others who comment also used that service 
(which seems to have triggered this debate) but I don't remember seeing that. I 
have been an RHR customer for two years. I have been a DXer for the entire 42 
years of my amateur career. Climbing the DX Challenge ladder is my principal 
goal. I have a home station focused on 6, 80 and 160. 93.5% of the entities I 
need for the Challenge are on these three bands. I have a full sized quarter 
wave vertical for 160 (and 8 560 ' beverages), a 4 square for 80 and a 9 
element M2 at 80' for 6. The station works well and has been productive. But as 
you know from 160 propagation is finicky. And for those who have not spent time 
on 6, it is even more so there. I rent the RHR stations because they give me 
more opportunities to work new ones for the Challenge. It is simply another 
tool I use to accomplish my goal. And unless the DXCC rules
  change I will continue to do so. I appreciate, and respect, those who feel 
this somehow violates the spirit of the DXCC program. I simply do not agree. 
Ham radio has always had a prickly relationship with technology. On one hand we 
love the cool gadgets and the hobby would die without them. On the other, it 
forces us to deal with change. Anyone remember the debate about using packet 
clusters to work DX? "Shooting fish in a barrel" was a common criticism of 
those who used that technology. Remember when there was a move to ban from DXCC 
credit qsos made on a list? 
I suspect remote technology is here to stay; the ARRL BOD has already spoken 
once on that matter and were quite clear. What I would suggest is view this 
technology as simply a tool; available to all willing to pay the fee (just like 
our expensive radios, antennas, amps, etc.) . Use it or don't use it. The 
choice is yours. Best, Steve, NN4T 
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