[CQ-Contest] Skimmer = keyer. Of for goodness sakes!

kr2q at optimum.net kr2q at optimum.net
Thu Apr 24 20:17:11 EDT 2008


Over the years, valued contest skills have constantly been eliminated via technology.

1.  Sending good quality cw for the entire contest by hand - gone

2.  Fashioning an appropriate and efficient dupe sheet per contest for your part of the 
globe - gone.

3.  Having to put up with horrible QRM/splatter/intermod, esp on the low bands - almost gone

4.  Knowing where to turn your beam "in your head" - not needed

5.  Knowing where the gray line is (linked with #4) - gone

6.  Knowing what constitutes a valid (good) callsign by country - gone (SCP)

7.  Having a box full of sharp pencils...having an electric pencil sharpener...mechanical
pencils - gone (keyboards/computer logging)

8.  Making up enough log sheets before the start of the contest - gone

Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah...

So what is left?  Not much...tuning the band, copying callsigns, correctly entering those
calls into your logging software.  Just three things.

So now you want to say that it is okay to NOT copy the callsign yourself and to NOT find the 
DX yourself.  And, of course, point-shoot results in the callsign going into the log too.
So what would then constitute "contest skill?"  Skill in buying stuff?  Skill in hooking it all up?

With respect to Skimmer being = use of Keyer, etc.

If your rig has great Xtal filters, DSP, a keyer, even a pan-adapter, in all cases the HUMAN is
driving those function.  The keyer doesn't "know" when to send and and it doesn't 
prompt you...you have to prompt it.  The DSP can't optimize itself to your ears...YOU do that.
The pan-adapter doesn't tell you WHERE the band is open to nor what the callsigns are...YOU
have to do that.  A CW decoder only decodes what it "hears" on the frequency YOU have
tuned to and nobody is going to excel at contesting (big score) if that is what you need to 
copy callsigns.

With Skimmer...it is driving YOU.  It tells YOU what the calls are, on what exact frequency, 
and hence where the band is open to.  You react to IT...the same as YOU would react 
to DX Alerting Assistance.  

And that's it.  I draw no further conclusions....

de Doug KR2Q





More information about the CQ-Contest mailing list