On Tue,3/7/2017 8:47 PM, Kelly Taylor wrote:
 
Those rules, and any rules, only apply to people actually entering the contest. 
Those who merely play radio during a contest with no intention of filing a 
contest entry may use whatever technology is permitted by their licence classes.
 
 
 When you participate in a contest by working other contesters, you have 
entered the contest. You are competing for contacts, and use of spots 
and high power give you an advantage over other callers. When you win 
the QSO after a call, you have disadvantaged another operator. Likewise, 
when you splatter or have a wide CW signal, you disadvantage other 
operators. One of the pleasures of NAQP is that it is a 100W contest 
with no spotting for single ops. Another pleasure is that it's a team 
competition for single ops.
 
What signals ‘sound like’ can certainly be deceiving. Many times I have been running 
compromise antennas at less than 100w and been told I’m the loudest guy on the band, but 
that’s simply the perfect alignment of skip zones and takeoff angles. I often had trouble being 
heard by other operators in the same general area.
 
 
 Yes, but when signals are from the same general area and one is a lot 
louder, you know. :)
73, Jim K9YC
 
73, kelly, ve4xt,
 
I'm regularly disappointed that a significant number of NAQP participants don't 
obey the rules that require that a single-op be non-assisted and no more than 
100W, as indicated by obvious cluster-inspired peaks of activity, and signals 
that sure don't sound like 100W.
73, Jim K9YC
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