For those of you who think that being a guest-op is a walk-in-the-woods,
let me tell ya...
In CQWW CW 2019, I was guest op at K1ZZ's fine station. I had no on-site
assistance from Dave. In fact, Dave was 9000 miles away, operating in 3B8.
He had not been at his home QTH for the previous month. I arrived at his
station 2 days before the contest. The first order of business was to hook
everything up and see what was working, and what needed fixing. I also had
to plumb in some RX antenna switching boxes that I brought from home. I
won't go into great details, but the major fixes were repairing a 2x6
switch, and replacing a stackmatch at 90'. Neither involved an overnight
shipment from DX Engineering - rather, it was searching through Dave's
garage to find working replacements from a pile of stuff he got from the
previous NN1N station.
I can tell you more stories about my guest-op experiences at N3HBX and K1VR
the previous 2 years, but that will have to wait for a Xenia hospitality
suite. They both had their challenges.
73,
Steve, N2IC
On Mon, Oct 5, 2020 at 8:38 AM <john@kk9a.com> wrote:
> There may be some advantage to being a guest op. The top three SOAB
> scores in the last CQWW CW contest were made by guest ops and the top
> US score was also a guest op.
>
> John KK9A
>
>
> K9MA wrote:
>
> How about the guest operator who shows up before the contest for a
> single-op operation, while the host spends the weekend fixing things the
> go wrong? With remote operation, the guest op doesn't even have to
> actually be there.
>
> Personally, I've always just disregarded guest op scores when comparing
> them to my own.
>
> 73,
> Scott K9MA
>
>
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> CQ-Contest@contesting.com
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>
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