This is a very good point. With a long skip I may not hear the other station
on my frequency and am running a risk that the station I just worked will not
have me in the log.
N6RO, Ken's advices for this case that I'm trying to follow are: (1) always
include the other station and your own callsigns in the exchange; (2) if there
is a shadow of uncertainty related to the exchange you've got back (if the
other guy does not follow Ken's recommendation), don't send TU, ask again!
73 de WA6O, Mike
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Pete Smith" <n4zr@contesting.com>
> To: cq-contest@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] SO2R technique
> Date: Tue, 08 Aug 2006 08:45:12 -0400
>
>
> At 12:18 AM 8/8/2006, Guy Molinari wrote:
> > During NAQP I did have to concede my freq once for that very reason. I
> > just
> > chalk it up as a risk associated with SO2R and a reason to get it right. I
> > just wish some folks would just listen, listen, listen first.
> >
> > It's probably the same lids in the DX pileups who call and call and call on
> > top of everyone else.
>
> I don't know - there can be a variety of reasons for turning up on or near
> someone's frequency without realizing it. One I encounter all the time is
> that the other station is down off the low-side of my filter response,
> approaching zero-beat, so his signal is hugely attenuated. On the higher
> bands, I may not know that there's another station located 200 miles away who
> is CQing on the same frequency, until I figure out that some of the stations
> calling are out of sync.
>
> 73, Pete N4ZR
>
>
>
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