[CQ-Contest] Observations of a young ham

W0MU Mike Fatchett w0mu at w0mu.com
Sun Dec 18 23:18:49 EST 2016


My comments below:

On 12/18/2016 8:24 PM, Taylor Kelly wrote:
>> On Dec 18, 2016, at 11:42 AM, W0MU Mike Fatchett <w0mu at w0mu.com> wrote:
>>
>> I had the opportunity to talk to my son in more detail and ask him why contesting does not interest him.  Here is what we discussed.
>>
>> 1.  Cost to get in the game and have a chance to win is prohibitive.  You need a great station, land, etc to really win or compete.  The playing field is so unbalanced that it becomes a show stopper.  For him he has no costs when at home.  I consider my station modest with a 70 ft tower and land to put up Inv L's and full sized 80m verticals and some receiving antennas.  I could do more but we have horses and they need to roam and are hell on things in the pasture.
>>
> Depends on what you mean by ‘win’. Win overall? From Montana? You’d need much more than the greatest station on Earth to win WW from Montana (just like from Manitoba!) With more realistic goals, ‘winning’ is indeed doable. You might not win overall, but you can win a region. Then there’s SS, where some elements of God’s gifts to stationdom work against you (really high top antennas, etc.).
>
> Don’t forget that Bruce, now ZF2NT, once travelled to Panama and using wires and a stick in the mud from a run-down shack not only won ARRL DX, he set a record that stood for some time. So it’s certainly possible to trade investment in hardware for investment in plane fares for a fun factor. Take a package to northern Jamaica and run W/VE whilst sipping on Red Stripe overlooking the Caribbean Sea.
>
> One doesn’t have to run like N6MJ to have fun.
>
Agreed.  Hard sell in the Winning from XXX.  Gaming is generally not 
setup that way.  Some games have skill classes that you earn the right 
to move into by your results.  I need to get him interested in a contest 
more than he is before I can suggest jetting off to play radio.  He has 
seen me go a few times.  Winning is not nearly as easy as it once was 
though from the Caribbean.  I guess identifying what if anything in 
radio is fun would be the first step.
>> 2. You have to invest a lot of time to get good.  If he can not have a really good station then why invest the time to get good if you are not going to be able to really compete.
> Related to above.
>
>> 2. The tools we use to contest, logging software, packet look like old dos programs.  He called them ugly and boring.  He is used to amazing graphics in games.  I found this observation interesting.  I feel that the tools we have are pretty good and give me what I want to see readily available.  I was not expecting this answer.
>>
> Can’t argue this point. The software we have is superb to our needs, but it’s hardly attractive.
Is making a fancy front end going to make things more interesting, if we 
could even define what that would be?  Not sure.....I explained paper 
logging and big monster dupe sheets and how we used to try to dupe JA 
calls.  He looked at me like I was nuts!  I think we were.  Underline 
JK, Circle JH, box JI  and do it while logging the contact and working 
the next guy!  We did this!

>
>> 3. He is far more interested in using packet where he can immediately chase things.  Packet essentially gives him a list of things to do or goals.  It is more visual so more interesting.  He thought that more automated systems would be interesting.  Young people and even us older folk expect things to happen much faster.  They are the generation of instant satisfaction and some of that even rubs off on us older folk.
>>
> Is there a better time to be chasing DX spots than during a DX contest?
I will have to get him over when he is out of school with some time on a 
major contest to sit down and have a go at it.    It is all about time 
with him and his age.  Our daughter does nothing, but never has time 
LOL.  She would kill me if she saw this!
>
>> 4.  Talking to someone over the airwaves is still pretty cool. You can instantly talk around the world if the right condx exist, but we can talk all over the world with our phones so it is not as amazing as it once was.
>>
> We’ve been superseded by technology.
>
>> 5. CW is interesting but he was surprised that we don't have better code readers.  While he would like to learn the code time is once again the factor.  They have so many other outlets for entertainment that it is hard to find time for all of them.
>>
>> 6.  Results take far too long to come out
> Catch 22. We want quick results, but we also want the work done by volunteers and some want superhuman effort to catch cheating. Something’s gotta give.
Yes.  We are lucky to have the people we do have!

>
>> 7.  He proposed that all participants use a scoreboard type system.  Many of us have said this was something we need to do but have instead met with amazing resistance and a ton of excuses why people refuse to use it.  A system where everyone can check it out and see what is going in in the contest.  We are back to visuals.
>>
> I think that could work with the right safeguards in place.
I wrote in another reply ....W0MU just got his sweep...........across 
everyone's screen or in a message box......Might get annoying.  Have 
filters in place to get rid of some of it...Double mult for VE4XT,   
Might be interesting.

Thanks for the feedback.

W0MU





More information about the CQ-Contest mailing list