I do NOT believe that NA to NA QSOs is the key to making CQWW more
competitive. What IS needed is a significant change to the scoring
model. As long is the model is tied to multipliers, then a lot more
multipliers are needed in parts of the world where there are few, and/or
where there is little ham activity.
That said, I think the best scoring model is one that includes DISTANCE
as a major component, something along the line of what N6TR did with
Stew Perry. For those who don't know, the exchange is grid square, and
the value of each QSO is directly related to distance. There is also a
multiplier for YOUR power AND for the other station's power. SO -- a
station who hears well (and/or who takes the time to dig out a QRP
station) gets extra points for doing so.
This distance-based component of scoring helps because it makes
competitive stations WANT to work more remotely located stations, and
also because those remotely get more points per QSO. The use of grid
square as part of the exchange means that you have to actually copy
something, rather than get the zone from the logging program.
Also, we need to re-think what "DX" means in the context of a contest.
Consider what my friend KU8E wrote --
On Fri,7/22/2016 7:44 AM, Jeff Clarke wrote:
Do you think it's really fair that a G can work a DL for QSO credit but I can't
work another US station for any points at all? I mean come on - EU stations
working other EU stations isn't DX. It's like Sweepstakes for them. The guys
that go to North Africa aren't any further away from EU than I am from you in
GA and they get 3 points per QSO for just about every contact.
K6XX has competed in UA, and while not a competitor in WRTC-New England,
had the opportunity to operate at a good station there during that
contest. He observed that "it's a totally different contest from there."
And Bob has a great station just up the road from me. In bar
conversation, he observed that as bad as the scoring rules WERE tilted,
it got even worse when multiplier points were added for HQ stations,
again because there are so many more of them in/around the Atlantic basin.
Bob has long observed at as long as JA, BY, and VK are single
multipliers, then all countries within the European Union ought to be a
single multiplier, and all countries within the UK ought to be a single
multiplier. OR -- keep the existing EU multipliers and add multipliers
for each JA prefecture and for each VK state. If either of these
suggestions sound wildly unfair to you, NOW you know how stations who
are NOT within 800 miles or so of the Atlantic Ocean feel.
On Fri,7/22/2016 6:03 PM, Rudy Bakalov via CQ-Contest wrote:
If Columbus had listened to all the skeptics we wouldn't even have CQWW, would
we.
Allowing US stations to work other US stations, in addition to increasing the
pool of multipliers, creates additional incentives that beyond a doubt will
lead to more QSOs, higher scores, and (more importantly) more fun for hams in
disadvantaged locations. There is no speculation here.
I also strongly disagree with my good friend Ward Silver, who says
contests will never have a level playing field, so we must give up on it
and be satisfied with regional write-ups. Contests CAN be made a LOT
less biased to those in the populations centers and multiplier-rich
regions IF those who have those advantages now are willing to give them
up, and IF we are willing to devise scoring systems that allow stations
outside of that region to at least be IN THE SAME CONTEST. (caps added
for emphasis).
Will everyone have the same chance of winning? Of course not, but
scores between regions will be a lot closer, and operators who are now
"in the game" are far more likely to play, which means more stations to
work in parts of the world where they were less likely to do so with the
existing rules.
Second, I've placed high enough in several contests that I SHOULD have
been acknowledged in the write-up, but it never seems to happen.
Apparently those who do the writing never got the word. Rather, in QST
this month, the write-up for ARRL DX CW spends three long paragraphs on
the battle between superstations K3LR and W3LPL. Looking at the extended
write-up on line, I don't see a single word about regional competitions,
only line scores.
Some statistics from ARRL DX CW: In top 10 single-op HP, four are west
of the MS, and of those, only N9RV is west of the Rockies, N2IC is in
the Rockies, and none are in CA, OR, or WA. For LP, three stations are
west of the MS, only K2PO (OR) is west of the Rockies. For HP Unlimited,
none of the top ten is west of the MS, for LP Unlimited, only W0UO is
west of the MS. For M/S HP, only K5UA is west of the MS, and only by 50
miles or so. For M/S LP, M/2, only N0NI is west of the MS (IA), and for
M/M, only N6WM (at superstation N6RO), and they're last. For single
band entries, KD5J (AR), N7DD (AZ), N7CW (AZ), N5FO (NM), and W6YX
(another CA superstation) placed in the top ten of their respective
bands. K6XX and N6TV, both WRTC competitors, operating SOHP from
superstations, didn't even make the top ten.
Totals -- out of 155 Top Ten listings of W/VE stations, only 17 (11%)
were west of the MS, of those, 3 were west of the MS by less than about
150 miles, 5 were in MT/AZ/NM (3%) , and 3 were in CA/OR/WA. (2%). If
this doesn't define a system that's broken, I don't know what does.
73, Jim K9YC
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