[UK-CONTEST] FW: 144Mhz Trophy --lack of activity
Rob Hall
m0rby at waylock.co.uk
Fri Sep 9 17:29:15 PDT 2011
How about taking that lot portable - or, on re-reading, is that /P? I love
my shack and my antenna which is optimised for my QTH. We moved 50m south
into my field over the weekend for /P operation and the whole lot needed
taming again! Excellent fun and a great learning curve.
73
Rob M0RBY
-----Original Message-----
From: uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com
[mailto:uk-contest-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of David G3YYD
Sent: 09 September 2011 19:18
To: UK-Contest at contesting.com
Subject: Re: [UK-CONTEST] 144Mhz Trophy --lack of activity
For me what makes a contest interesting is QSOs lots of them and
technical/operator challenge. Do VHF contests make the grade? One or two
get close. VHFNFD: the local club with 400 watts, 30m high mast, 4
stacked beams on 2m, similar set up on 70cm, 4m & 6m and on the top of
the highest hill for many miles. I think we made about 550QSOs on 2m in
24 hours. I can do that in a few hours in a major HF contest. I can also
operate two bands at the same time on HF (SO2R) virtually all VHF+
contests don't even enable me to work 2 bands at once so not much
operator challenge.
From home I have K3, very good 2m transverter and 350 watts to a single
yagi at 65ft, but only 80m ASL. Everything I hear I can work. Even so I
quickly work the band out and then think what now? I have lost interest
in listening to the same stations I have already worked and the noise
between them. So I go QRT and do something more interesting. Do I come
on next time there is VHF contest no not worth it. Much rather spend my
effort (and brass) on a worthwhile HF contest.
Now convince me and many operators thinking the same as me that VHF+
contesting is worthwhile.
73 David G3YYD
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