The ARRL Contest Update for February 25 reports that
A team of operators mounted the first totally remote
<http://www.arrl.org/news/no-one-in-the-shack-as-station-logs-4200-contacts-in-arrl-dx-cw-contest>
Multioperator Unlimited category effort in last weekend's
ARRL DX CW contest at the station of K4VV.
It seems to me that the K4VV station was, in effect, a
private repeater, with access restricted to team members.
http://www.arrl.org/general-rules-for-all-arrl-contests
The general rules or ARRL contests state -
3.7.2.1. Stations remotely controlled by radio link may
use necessary equipment at the control point.
Note: there is no reference to stations remotely
controlled by internet link.
3.9. Contacts made through repeaters, digipeaters, or
gateways are not permitted.
3.10. The use of non-Amateur Radio means of communication
(for example, Internet or telephone) to solicit a
contact (or contacts) during the contest period is
not permitted.
It would appear that, for each and every K4VV QSO hosted
on the internet as a result of calling CQ or TEST, the
internet was indeed used to solicit those QSOs.
IMHO, remote contesting, with its absolute dependence
on the internet for each and every QSO, needs to be
identified as such, and needs separate categories for
scoring and listing purposes. For identification, the
suffixes /IM (internet mobile) or /R (remote) would do
do the job.
73,
Paul EI5DI
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