See below:
Julius Fazekas
N2WN
Tennessee Contest Group
http://www.k4ro.net/tcg/index.html
Tennessee QSO Party: Sunday, 6 Sept 2009
http://www.tnqp.org/
Elecraft K2/100 #4455
Elecraft K3/100 #366
> But it's another thing to scatter remote transceivers
> (either owned by one
> station or shared) at various points around the globe and
> operate them.
> Sure, it's a great stunt, if you can pull it off. But
> it puts others at a
> distinct disadvantage, in that the remote operator can
> shift to a
> transceiver on a given band where the band is open, whereas
> the casual
> operator must deal with the propagation and related
> circumstances at their home location.
I would think you would not be able to submit one single entry with this
scenario. First, you'd be a different multiplier (most likely with a different
call), second your rate would most likely suck big time. Not to mention that
you're now working on the same continent where you higher point QSOs would
normally come from...
The structure of such a category would be complicated and I doubt you'd see
many using it.
>
> Now yes, you can argue that since only the Extreme
> operators compete against
> each other, this shouldn't affect others scores. But
> I would disagree. If
> you as an Extreme operator is making contacts (by shifting
> transmitters
> based on propagation, QRM, or whatever) that you wouldn't
> otherwise make,
> you are affecting those in the other operating classes, by
> giving some of
> them contacts that they would not make. Since it is
> unlikely that you would
> work everyone "equally," you skew the contacts made (and
> thus the final score) of the other operators.
So? That would not be "unique", and you wouldn't be giving them a QSO with a
new multiplier necessarily. If N2WN had a transceiver in DL and was working EU
on a closed to the US 10M band, the QSOs in EU would be with N2WN/DL, no
biggie, not N2WN in the US for a new multiplier and more QSO points...
>
> Nor would I discount the affects of the Law(s) of Unforseen
> Consequences.
> As many others have pointed out, many casual operators are
> QRV in the major
> contests not to win, but to find and work rare or rarer
> DXCC entities.
> Imagine the frustration of thinking you've worked someone
> in Pottsylvania,
> fought the corrupt postal system of Fearless Leader to get
> that sought after
> card... and then find out it doesn't count because the op
> was sitting home
> back in Frost Bite Falls, with remote transmitters in
> Pottsylvania, Mooslyvania, and other points on the globe.
This just reinforces my point above... Unless we go to a worldwide licensing
system, this would never happen.
>
> So, outside of the small handful of people who can actually
> afford to do this, exactly who does this benefit again?
Can't go with this argument either, look at say WPX, outside of a small handful
of people why have a SOSB 160 category or 10M category considering conditions?
Cheers,
Julius
_______________________________________________
CQ-Contest mailing list
CQ-Contest@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
|