In a message dated 3/1/00 10:00:26 AM Central Standard Time,
ericj@kudonet.com writes:
<< Part 97 is so EASY to understand:
97.101 General standards
(d) No amateur operator shall willfully or maliciously interfere with or
cause interference to any radio communication or signal.
A CQ is certainly a "signal". If you plop down and call CQ on a frequency
where you know another station is already calling CQ, or transmitting any
other signal for that matter, then you are "willfully" interfering with
that "signal". You are violating FCC regulations.
Now notice this segment of the "General Rules for All ARRL Contests":
2. Conditions of Entry: Entrants agree to be bound by:
2.2 The regulations of their licensing authority. >>
The above says it all. If you won't play by the rules you shouldn't be
playing !
Once you (intentionally) jump in on top of a weak station (or any other
station) calling CQ, or running, or having a QSO of any sort, and "win the
frequency" (or not) you have disqualified yourself from the contest. Them's
the rules.
Sometimes you can't hear the other guy (good F/B, bad antennas, whatever),
nothing intentional there. Although only a "rule of thumb", when studying for
my General I learned to leave the other guy 150 - 500 Hz for CW & about 3 kHz
for SSB. If this works - Great, but if he (she) asks you to QSY because you
are interfering and you don't leave --- DQ time again. In other words -- the
other ham's lack of filters is your problem, not his, if you are interfering
with him.
It may not be a good idea, but its the LAW.
73 to all, de k4bev
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