[VHFcontesting] The impact of the digital modes on the January VHF Contest and some suggestions on dealing with those impacts

chetsubaccount at snet.net chetsubaccount at snet.net
Sun Jan 31 13:43:50 EST 2021


Yes, aware of the SOIR and 2SQ or whatever that's called.

My suggestion was to allow having 2 signals on a band at the same time, but using different modes. If we want to get wrapped up in more rule complications, let's go all out. 😊.

73,
Chet, N8RA

-----Original Message-----
From: James Duffey <jamesduffey at comcast.net> 
Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2021 1:03 PM
To: chetsubaccount at snet.net
Cc: VHF Contesting Reflector <vhfcontesting at contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [VHFcontesting] The impact of the digital modes on the January VHF Contest and some suggestions on dealing with those impacts



Chet - Thanks for your comments. 

There was a lot of discussion on here and other platforms before, during, and after the rules for assistance were changed. I won’t rehash that discussion here, only to say that the “anything-goes” approach with respect to assistance has not brought any disaster in VHF contesting since then, and, in my experience, the rules changes have made my roving more productive. It is tempting to assign the growth in roving to the relaxed assistance rules, but while it has helped participation, there are other factors in play. Again, a topic for another thread. 

Now, to your “tongue in cheek” comments. Multiple CQs on the same band are currently allowed in most ARRL contests, including the VHF contests, as long as the two signals are not transmitted simultaneously.The transmitters have to be interlocked and there are HF stations that do this successfully. With the fixed intervals of the digital modes, and repetitive calling if an exchange is not copied, this should be pretty straight forward to implement and the hardware already exists, if not commercially, then home brew versions. I think they call it SOI2R. Single Operator Interlocked Two Radios. Talk to your local rabid HF contester. The problem as you point out is keeping receive isolation adequate, but there may be some approaches that work. Rover pairing is legal under the Unlimited Rover category, although I do not know of anyone who has done it. Until recently the Unlimited Rover category has been underutilized, and not really used as intended. But that has changed recently, and there appears to be growth in this category as well.

My thoughts. To all, not just Chet, write your director. - Duffey

KK6MC
James Duffey
Cedar Crest NM
jamesduffey at comcast.net



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