Mike Gilmer wrote:
>
> The right question is: Does SO2R warrant a separate
> category (and why)? The number of things providing
> (significant or otherwise) advantage is virtually
> endless and they have been listed here ad nauseum.
> Virtually none of them have a distinct category. Why
> does SO2R stand out in some minds? I sense it is not
> simply because it offers an advantage. To me it
> almost seems like it is simply because it is a
> politically-correct-to-question operating technique.
>
SO2R is to contesting what running two fishing lines is to a fishing
contest. Two radios does not double the Qs. It may however double your
score. Chasing down mults while running a frequency is not rocket
science--especially when the run rate slows. Checking activity on other
bands with one radio requires giving up a run frequency.
Comparing a station with two radios to a station with one radio is not a
fair comparison. Comparing a station with a beam and a dipole is very
comparable to a station with 6 mono banders. In each case, only one antenna
gets used at a time.
SO2R is more akin to multi-multi operation than a multi-single. To compare
SO2R to a single op-single radio is quite unfair. There is nothing
"political" about it. It's simple physics, rudimentary probabilities, basic
ergonomics.
SO2R should be a category on its own, just like the "assisted" notion we now
embrace as "logical."
Ford-NØFP
ford@cmgate.com
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