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[VHFcontesting] Comments on ARRL VHF/UHF Proposed Contest Rules Changes

To: VHF Contesting Reflector <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>, "kb8vao@ix.netcom.com" <kb8vao@ix.netcom.com>
Subject: [VHFcontesting] Comments on ARRL VHF/UHF Proposed Contest Rules Changes
From: Kermit Carlson via VHFcontesting <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Reply-to: Kermit Carlson <w9xa@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, 7 Dec 2014 19:38:09 +0000 (UTC)
List-post: <vhfcontesting@contesting.com">mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Hello Steve KB8VAO;

 Here is the information from the ARRL.ORG website about the proposed rule 
changes 
under consideration by the PSC subcommittee.
Please email your comments to vhf-input@arrl.org

                       73, Kermit W9XA>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
From 
http://www.arrl.org/news/arrl-seeks-input-on-initial-vhf-uhf-microwave-contest-rule-changes
       Please note that I apologize in advance for any loss of text  
formatting  in my cut in paste...
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
11/12/2014 The recently formed “Ad Hoc Subcommittee on VHF and Above 
Revitalization” — created by the ARRL Board of Directors’ Programs and Services 
Committee (PSC) — is seeking member input by December 15 on updating various 
aspects of the League’s contest program for the VHF and higher bands. 
Subcommittee Chairman Kermit Carlson, W9XA, said members can help the work of 
the committee “by providing additional insights and ideas for our 
consideration.” 

BackgroundContest participation benefits both individual amateurs and the 
Amateur Radio Service as a whole. Individual operators gain overall operating 
experience, increase their knowledge of band characteristics; test the results 
of changes in equipment, antennas and locations; and have incentive to add 
bands and modes to their station complement, all in the context of enjoyable 
yet challenging activities. The Amateur Radio Service increases its pool of 
skilled operators and can show more intense usage of the frequencies allocated 
to us, some of which may be under threat from ever-expanding commercial and 
consumer services seeking to expand their share of spectrum. Increased activity 
also signals higher potential demand for new product to manufacturers of 
Amateur Radio equipment.The ARRL VHF-UHF-Microwave contest program was created 
to help foster the foregoing benefits and, accordingly, seeks to:1. Increase 
the level and breadth of participation in ARRL VHF and up contests; and2. 
Encourage the utilization of our less-used Amateur Radio bands.
Initial RecommendationWhile most issues will require additional time and input 
from the user community, the members of the Subcommittee were in agreement on 
recommending one set of changes that apply across all ARRL VHF+ contests, 
including microwave and EME. We recommend:1. Removal of the current prohibition 
on the use of Amateur and non-Amateur forms of assistance for all operator 
categories, with such use having no impact on entry category;2. Removal of the 
current prohibition on self-spotting for all operator categories; and3. 
Allowing single operators to transmit on more than one band at a time.
RationaleUnlike most HF contests, operating skill and knowledge of propagation 
may not be enough to find stations to work. You can’t just point your antenna 
to Europe or Asia at the right time and find a ready supply of potential 
contacts. The less predictable nature of VHF+ propagation and the necessarily 
higher-gain, narrow-beamwidth antennas used make finding someone to work 
largely a matter of chance. Indeed, most microwave contacts would never occur 
at all without the use of real-time coordination. We have stories of rovers who 
invest time and fuel to activate a remote location only to have no one find 
them or work them. This discourages such remote activations. A great number of 
non-contesters monitoring a repeater or APRS network have no idea there is a 
distant or rare station out there to try to work.The League’s current 
prohibitive stance on assistance (other than for the 10 GHz & Up Contest) and 
self-spotting is the most-often-heard complaint about our VHF contest program, 
and the members of the Subcommittee believe that removing those prohibitions 
will foster greater participation and result in more contacts and a more 
positive experience for participants without impacting the existing challenge 
of actually completing contacts.Similarly, the present restriction of 
Single-Operator stations to one transmitted signal at a time precludes such 
activities as calling CQ on one band while soliciting or completing contacts 
using digital modes on another. Such restriction constrains the number of 
potential contacts among participants while yielding no apparent benefit.

Specific Proposed Rule ChangesThe General Rules for All ARRL Contests Above 50 
MHz shall be amended as follows:Old 1.7. Retransmitting either or both 
stations, or use of repeater frequencies, is not permitted.New 1.7. 
Retransmitting either or both stations or use of repeater frequencies for 
purposes of completing a contact is not permitted.
Old 1.7.1. This prohibits use of all repeater frequencies.New: Delete 1.7.1. 
(Rule 1.7 covers this issue adequately.)
Old 1.7.2. Contest entrants may not transmit on repeaters or repeater 
frequencies for the purpose of soliciting contacts.New: Delete Rule 1.7.2Add 
1.16. All entrants, regardless of category, are permitted to use spotting 
assistance or nets, including DX-alerting nets, internet chat rooms, packet, 
reverse beacon networks and repeaters to identify stations available for 
contacts and to announce (self-spot) their availability for contacts. 
Announcements shall be limited to callsign, location, band or frequency, mode 
and — if applicable — transmitting sequence. Such assistance may not be used to 
facilitate the completion of any contact. This means such assistance may not be 
used to convey receipt or non-receipt of any required element of a contact or 
to request a repeat of any required element of a contact.
Old 2.1. Single Operator: One person performs all transmitting, receiving, 
spotting, and logging functions as well as equipment and antenna adjustments. 
Only one transmitted signal is permitted at any given time. Use of spotting 
assistance or nets (operating arrangements involving other individuals, 
DX-alerting nets, internet chat rooms, packet, etc) is not permitted.New 2.1. 
Single Operator: One person performs all transmitting, receiving, spotting, and 
logging functions as well as equipment and antenna adjustments. Only one 
transmitted signal per band is permitted at any given time. 
Non-contact-producing activities such as APRS beaconing and repeater 
announcements are not considered transmitted signals for the purpose of 
applying this rule.
Old 2.5.7. Rovers are permitted to use APRS. Rovers using APRS transmit only 
their call sign and position. Any multi-op station may access rover APRS data 
directly or via the Internet.New 2.5.7. Rovers are permitted to use APRS to 
transmit their call sign and position. Any station may access rover APRS data 
directly or via the Internet.
Old 2.8. Multioperator (includes Single Operator stations that use spotting 
assistance):New 2.8. Multioperator:Contest-specific rules for all VHF, UHF, 
microwave and EME contests shall be amended to give effect to the above general 
rules.

What We Need From YouYou can help us by considering the potential impact of 
each proposal and sharing any specific observations about it. We’re not 
tallying “votes;” rather, we want to be sure we have considered all foreseeable 
results of the proposed changes. Collective input from user groups will be 
particularly helpful and faster to compile than multiple copies of the same 
position from individual group members.Further, this is not about changing “who 
wins” but about whether the overall objectives stated above will be better 
attained as a result of each proposed change. Overlying any enacted changes is 
the recognized need to increase outreach beyond the already-active VHF+ 
contesting community. Your suggestions in this regard will also be 
welcomed.Please submit your comments prior to December 15, 2014. Only comments 
received through this channel -- vhf-input@arrl.org -- will be assured of 
reaching all the members of the Subcommittee.Thank you for helping us with this 
process.73,Kermit Carlson, W9XA, ChairAd Hoc Subcommittee on VHF and Above 
Revitalization
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