You might be participating in the contest by working folks in the contest, but
you’re still only bound by the rules if you enter. The existence of any contest
does not bind the entire amateur radio universe to the rules of that contest.
(Unless I missed a particular session of the ITU…)
When it’s Sunday afternoon in SS and QSO intervals are measured in tens of
minutes, if someone calls me, I’m going to work him. I’m not going to ask if
he’s ‘in the contest.’ Nothing prevents me from talking the guy through the
exchange. If his idea of low power is a barefoot FT-2000D, I’m not going to get
into a discussion about what radio he’s using. That he might be 50w over the
limit for A is only a concern if he tries to enter as an A.
If you’re a DXCCer with an Alpha capable of legal limit, but the DX contest
specifies maximum 1kw, are you required to cut back power to 1kw to work that
rare one running Qs on 14.193? No.
The vision of Charlton Heston holding the control panel for an ACOM-2000 over
his head (“from my cold, dead hands”) comes to mind.
If you’re in NAQP and some rare one wants to call you for WAS but needs a
kilowatt to do it, are you required to tell him to only use 100w? No. (Also,
would you necessarily know?)
When a Sprint and a state QSO party overlap, a station working only the QSO
party is likely to also work guys in the Sprint, but that doesn’t bind him to
the QSY rule. Nor does it mean Sprint guys can’t work him (and also give him a
QP contact at the same time).
Do the rules for WRTC mean for that year, members of the entire IARU Radiosport
community are each bound to a single tribander and wires only? I mean, you’re
participating in WRTC if you work WRTC stations, yes?
Contesting has a bad enough reputation in the wider amateur community as it is.
Telling them they can only work any of us if they pay slavish attention to
rules they don’t need to care about isn’t going to help.
73, kelly, ve4xt
> On Mar 9, 2017, at 12:07 PM, Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com> wrote:
>
> No, it doesn't imply that at all. When you work a station calling CQ
> Contest, you are participating in the contest.
>
> Put another way -- it's perfectly legal to call a station in your country
> who's calling CQ DX, but it's not a nice thing to do, and the other station
> has every right to be pissed off. :)
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
>
> On Thu,3/9/2017 5:50 AM, Ria Jairam wrote:
>> That would imply that NAQP entrants have exclusive use of the bands during
>> NAQP which is not the case.
>>
>> I am not competing for anything in NAQP, stew or any other contest if I
>> work a few contacts and don't submit a log. (I do submit a checklog out of
>> courtesy sometimes) It is very much unreasonable to ask non participants to
>> abide by the rules, plain and simple.
>>
>> Ria
>> N2RJ
>>
>> On Wed, Mar 8, 2017 at 12:50 PM Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On Tue,3/7/2017 8:47 PM, Kelly Taylor wrote:
>>>> Those rules, and any rules, only apply to people actually entering the
>>> contest. Those who merely play radio during a contest with no intention of
>>> filing a contest entry may use whatever technology is permitted by their
>>> licence classes.
>>>
>>> When you participate in a contest by working other contesters, you have
>>> entered the contest. You are competing for contacts, and use of spots
>>> and high power give you an advantage over other callers. When you win
>>> the QSO after a call, you have disadvantaged another operator. Likewise,
>>> when you splatter or have a wide CW signal, you disadvantage other
>>> operators. One of the pleasures of NAQP is that it is a 100W contest
>>> with no spotting for single ops. Another pleasure is that it's a team
>>> competition for single ops.
>>>
>>>> What signals ‘sound like’ can certainly be deceiving. Many times I have
>>> been running compromise antennas at less than 100w and been told I’m the
>>> loudest guy on the band, but that’s simply the perfect alignment of skip
>>> zones and takeoff angles. I often had trouble being heard by other
>>> operators in the same general area.
>>>
>>> Yes, but when signals are from the same general area and one is a lot
>>> louder, you know. :)
>>>
>>> 73, Jim K9YC
>>>> 73, kelly, ve4xt,
>>>>
>>>>> I'm regularly disappointed that a significant number of NAQP
>>> participants don't obey the rules that require that a single-op be
>>> non-assisted and no more than 100W, as indicated by obvious
>>> cluster-inspired peaks of activity, and signals that sure don't sound like
>>> 100W.
>
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