Did you know that over 40,000 different stations made at least one
contact with the 8500 stations who submitted logs for the CQWW SSB
contest in 2018? Without the non-entrant, casual ops, SSB contesting
would be a lot less fun for us all. And why do the casual ops get on?
I submit that for most of them, the chance to work new countries, zones,
states and so on are what it's all about. And how do they know which
stations to call, to achieve these goals? They connect to DX clusters.
Okay, so what? Well, as someone recently pointed out, there has been a
pretty steep decline in human spotting of both SSB and CW, at least
partly because on CW, there's little need to spot anyone any more. The
RBN takes care of that. But on SSB -- not so much.
The problem is exacerbated because contest sponsors tend to view any
cluster connection during a contest as evidence that the connected
station *must* be assisted. This tends to deter people from spotting
unless they themselves are, in fact, in the assisted category. This, in
turn, means that features like N1MM+'s "Spot all S&P QSOs" don't get the
use they could.
So, what to do? It would be helpful if contest sponsors would clarify
their rules to specify that stations entering as unassisted can still
send spots.
--
73, Pete N4ZR
Check out the Reverse Beacon Network
at<http://reversebeacon.net>, now
spotting RTTY activity worldwide.
For spots, please use your favorite
"retail" DX cluster.
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