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[VHFcontesting] Getting beginners interested in VHF Contesting

To: VHF Contesting Reflector <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: [VHFcontesting] Getting beginners interested in VHF Contesting
From: James Duffey <jamesduffey@comcast.net>
Date: Wed, 3 Mar 2010 17:13:20 -0700
List-post: <vhfcontesting@contesting.com">mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Hey Eric - Nice to hear from you on this topic. I was not advocating that 
everybody operate with all homebrew equipment. 

Nothing wrong with commercial antennas, in fact I have a Cushcraft 13B2 that I 
rove with on occasion. It was given to me. I just like to build my own 
antennas, and show other people how to build their own.  Up to 432 MHz at 
least, there are several good beam designs that work well as built with no 
testing or tuning required, nor special tools or instruments, just careful 
measurements. Sure you can tweak a bit more out of them with a bit of test 
gear, or build antennas with slightly higher gain with some testing and tuning, 
but for the beginner, better is enemy of good enough. The simple designs should 
be enough to get them on the air quickly, cheaply and get them hooked.  

I have given several talks on VHF contesting and roving over the past year and 
a half. I always take a few antennas to show and people are always amazed that 
simple homebrew antennas like the WA5VJB designs are available and work well. I 
always get comments when I show the WA5VJB antennas like, is that all there is 
to it? And hey, I can build that. My favorite: Does that work as well as an 
Arrow? The guy with the 706/7000/FT100 or whatever usually uses it on 2M and 
70cm FM and that is it. If we can get those guys on the weak signal modes, 
which the simple homebrew antennas they can do without much investment, then we 
can hook some new blood into contesting. Even getting the 706 guys who use 
loops to switch to beams would help a lot. But getting guys on loops from 
verticals is a big step, if they do it for a contest. 

At 6M, the N2MH version of the Moxon is easy to build from common materials and 
is a great performer compared to the loop or dipole that the guy may have been 
using. Again just careful lmeasurements are required and pretty much all the 
parts can be purchased locally.

I like the notion of distance scoring used in at least one contest and I think 
that if a guy uses computer logging, like Roverlog, the distances are 
calculated and scores calculated with no additional input from the user, so it 
really isn't any more complicated. The Spring Sprints will use distance scoring 
so we can all see what that is like. 

For those on the list that hadn't noticed yet, Eric has one of the greatest 
calls for VHF contesting there is. He is also one of the premier rovers in the 
Rocky Mountain Division and does a bang up job on 10 bands from that many or 
more grids, even in January.  - Duffey
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