[CQ-Contest] Spotting Errors

Paul J. Piercey p.piercey at nl.rogers.com
Tue Dec 2 06:59:41 EST 2008


This is correct. Finding another frequency is almost impossible but there's
another way to help solve the problem... Give your callsign more often and
don't rely on the cluster to do it for you. Anyone hearing you will know who
you are in short order. Let the cluster drag people to your frequency but
make sure they can verify who you are.

73 -- Paul VO1HE
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: cq-contest-bounces at contesting.com 
> [mailto:cq-contest-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of Jim 
> Reisert AD1C
> Sent: December 2, 2008 04:58
> To: Robert Chudek - K0RC
> Cc: K0HB; cq-contest at contesting.com; Bob Schreibmaier; Andy Faber
> Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Spotting Errors
> 
> On 12/1/2008 6:59 PM, Robert Chudek - K0RC wrote:
> 
> > When it becomes apparent you've been spotted wrong, besides 
> laying on 
> > the QSO B4 macro is there the option of simply QSYing 20 
> KHz and begin 
> > running there? What are the trade-offs?
> 
> Good luck finding a new frequency when 95% of the contesters 
> are on 20 meters because 10 and 15 are closed.  NO ONE wants 
> to voluntarily give up a run frequency.
> 
> 73 - Jim AD1C
> 
> --
> Jim Reisert AD1C/Ø, <jjreisert at alum.mit.edu>, 
> http://www.ad1c.us _______________________________________________
> CQ-Contest mailing list
> CQ-Contest at contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
> 



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