[CQ-Contest] CW slow? No problem
Gerry Hull
gerry at yccc.org
Thu Nov 30 07:49:24 EST 2017
While 45 might seem a bit excessive, guys like ZF2MJ and TI7W, known
World-class contesters, were using speeds like that. As a run op at an M/2,
I spent 95 percent of my CQ time at 40 WPM and backed down to 38 at times.
I did not feel it was non productive.
Fast CW is impearitive to make 20 to 30 million point scores. Also,
To make those scores, the operators on the other end of the pile must
Be able to copy.
So. if your CW speed does not cut it, listen to QSOs until you copy.
Fast CW can and will be a part of these contests. Attempting to claim it
is non productive is disproven by the facts.
73, Gerry W1VE
On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 1:34 PM K9MA <k9ma at sdellington.us> wrote:
> I completely fail to understand why so many operators insist on calling
> CQ at 45 wpm, when no one is coming back. (There were lots of them last
> weekend, especially from zone 33.) This seem entirely
> counterproductive. Not only does it discourage operators who aren't
> comfortable at that speed, but it also makes the call impossible to copy
> under some conditions for even the best operators. Isn't a slow QSO
> better than no QSO?
>
> 73,
> Scott K9MA
>
>
> On 11/28/2017 10:10, Ria Jairam wrote:
> > I received comments from some of my friends that they didn't want to
> > wade in because it would be like driving a unicycle on an interstate.
> > There were some doing 40-50WPM... not that there is anything wrong
> > with speed, but sometimes who want to casually participate and "give
> > out points" get scared away.
> >
> > I did a steady 30WPM and QRS as necessary.
> >
> > Something to keep in mind.
> >
> > That said I worked several straight keys, tons of bugs, and a good bit
> > of QLF. All in the fun.
> >
> > 73
> > Ria, N2RJ
> >
> > On Sat, Nov 25, 2017 at 10:11 PM, Charles Harpole <hs0zcw at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >> You have slow CW? My solution:
> >>
> >> K3 set at 400 bandwidth. P3 panadapter and large monitor. Start at
> bottom
> >> of band and tune center of slim visual pip. K3, spots, and your head
> >> confirm callers' letters.
> >> Push programmed send..... send your call sign.
> >> Learned my own call at high speed, so I read mine.
> >> Read screen to confirm his info, even with cut numbers, including an E
> for
> >> 5 in 5NN, moan.
> >> Push button to send ur info.
> >> Log 'em.
> >> Tune 500cycles up and work next loud sig.
> >> A killer solution to slow copying speed. S&P produces about 1 to 2 per
> >> minute, so dive in and enjoy 30+ wpm!
> >> 73,
> >> Charly, HS0ZCW
> >>
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> --
> Scott K9MA
>
> k9ma at sdellington.us
>
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