I kind of like the Sunday afternoon time. It provides the opportunity to
work for the Qs. Yeah, not as exciting as running them at 100+/min, but
rewarding by other measures.
One thing I learned to my amusement one year was that operating QRP tends to
level out the rate across the entire contest. Yeah, you get some "high"
rates Sat night with great S&P results, but Sunday afternoon, you can get
some super runs going as the big guns start getting desperate. Antennas
help of course :-)
I don't do it every year; maybe 1 in 5. But, SS QRP has its own charm.
73/Gary W2CS 60 NC
> -----Original Message-----
> From: cq-contest-admin@contesting.com
> [mailto:cq-contest-admin@contesting.com]On Behalf Of Bruce B. Sawyer
> Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2002 7:30 PM
> To: cq-contest@contesting.com
> Subject: [CQ-Contest] November SS Sunday Afternoon
>
>
> While everybody is thinking about how to increase SS participation, you
> might think about the idea of allowing non-US/VE stations to make
> contacts.
> What would be the harm? Just as in NAQP, the contact could count
> for point
> credit without "DX" stations being a multiplier. They/we would just send
> "DX" for section and all the other information the same as everybody else.
> I suspect there are lots of people outside US/VE who would be
> interested in
> getting on and playing, and all that would happen would be that you would
> see more activity. Nothing wrong with that, I say. Of course, there are
> always going to be those who will throw out the usual objection of
> invalidating old records. But so what? Toss all the old records, start
> from scratch, and you'll see even more activity. Or you can continue
> sending unanswered CQs all afternoon.
>
> Bruce, ZF2NT
>
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