Jim, K9YC, raises an issue of considerable importance to me and I think many
others as well. My remote mountain top transmitter location at 5000 feet
elevation in the Sierras is approximately 165 air miles distant from my home
QTH here in the Bay area. I am also interested in any limitations on
distances the control point can be from the transmitter. I am in a situation
similar to many others wherein it will entail a substantial effort and cost
(which I am prepared to incur if the resulting setup can be used in
contests) to set up a remote control system from the Bay Area for a station
located on a mountain top in the Sierras. My remote transmitter location is
in an area without commercial power, without telephone lines, and without
any paved roads. Effort is required to do just about anything up there...but
it is beautiful up there and worth it :-). The radio equipment, towers,
antennas and solar power systems are already installed after years of
considerable effort. What remains is to complete the remote control system.
Bottom line, I appreciate Jim's concern and his question and I look forward
to clarification as well. What I think I am hearing is that there is *no*
ARRL sanctioned/authorized contest limit on the distance between the
location of the control operator and the entire station if the entire
station itself is located within a 500 meter limit. Thanks again and 73,
Ted, K6XN
PS I have only been out of a wheel chair for about a year after my recent
injuries, surgeries, multiple skin grafts etc and its getting harder for
some of we crippled old farts to make it to interesting locations for
contests as we get older and decompose :-) I am probably good for a few more
years of six hour trips each way for contests (including 4 wheel drive on
dirt/mud forest service roads) but I would like to continue to use my remote
contesting location (and also allow others to use it) after I can no longer
physically make the trips. I can also accept Jim Neiger's "let dog eat dog"
contesting approach as well but from a purely selfish perspective these days
I like the idea of being able to build and use a remotely controlled contest
station and to allow other contesters to use it. I preferred Jim Neiger's
approach when I was younger :-) Best regards from Ted,K6XN, a decomposing,
crippled old fart selfish "rookie" contester :-)
-----Original Message-----
From: nccc-bounces@contesting.com [mailto:nccc-bounces@contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Jim Brown K9YC
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 8:42 AM
To: Contest; Eric Hilding; Hogerty, Tom KC1J
Cc: k4ma@nc.rr.com; nccc@contesting.com; cq-contest@contesting.com;
k4jrb@cq-amateur-radio.com; cwnaqpmgr@ncjweb.com; ssbnaqpmgr@ncjweb.com;
rttynaqpmgr@ncjweb.com; k3est@cq-amateur-radio.com; Tyree, Larry;
k6aw@cqww.com
Subject: Re: [NCCC] RULES CLARIFICATION FOR UNIQUE REMOTECONTESTING
OPERATIONS
On Wed, 28 Mar 2007 09:30:27 -0400, Hogerty, Tom KC1J wrote:
>So - if the entire station is contained within the 500-meter limit, it
>can be operated under local control (operator on-site) or by remote
>control (operator outside the 500-meter limit and connected by any means
>that allows control of the transmitter)."
But isn't there a limit on the distance that the control point can be from
the station for at least some ARRL contests? I seem to recall 75 miles or
something like that. I have a lease on a QTH that is roughly 100 air miles
(and 3 hours one way) from me, so this is a matter of direct interest to
me.
73,
Jim K9YC
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