You have still made a defacto plea for Good Samaritans to send you Wyoming stations. To wit: What if some Good Sam hears you call CQ WY and later on, while the Good Sam is running himself, a WY calls
Mike, that's so funny I splurted coffee all over my monitor when I read it! Carried to it's logical extreme, you couldn't even call "CQ SS" because someone might hear you, spot you, and that assista
Author: "Paul J. Piercey" <p.piercey@nl.rogers.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2006 23:37:00 -0000
Sorry, Mike, but I gotta disagree on this one. There is NO mention of anything in any rule that I have looked at that expressly forbids selective calling. As I said in another posting, if you want t
I think you can draw a distinction between information gleaned from "non-radio" sources versus "radio" sources, and when you did it. If DURING THE CONTEST you are getting information from some place
ORIGINAL MESSAGE: -- REPLY FOLLOWS -- In the context of contesting, "assistance" means the help of a third person in finding and/or working other stations, or in operating the equipment at your stati
Bill, "Also, in order to be "assisted", any spotting info must be either solicited by you or fed directly to you, so whatever you overhear on the air NOT DIRECTED TO YOU does not affect your unassist
ORIGINAL MESSAGE: -- REPLY FOLLOWS -- You are right. I was looking at "assistance" as anything which is not single-operator unassisted and that does indeed include multi-op. I stand corrected. Thanks