If you know you are being spotted, this is a big advantage to you. It informs
whether you are being spotted by many people or just a few , and also as to
what part of the world is actually hearing you. For for example, if you are
getting spotted in Asia as well as Europe, that may indicatte you have
proogation and that you have a good frequency.
If you are getting no spots, that means you that are on the wrong band or bad
a frequency.
A single operator without the Internet would not know this.
You don't know your own tranmitting frequency and call sign unless someone
spots you?
> Message du 08/05/15 23:44
> De : "Steve IK4WMH"
> A : cq-contest@contesting.com
> Copie à :
> Objet : Re: [CQ-Contest] CQ WW CW 2014 Results
>
> Hello Peter,
>
> Friday, May 8, 2015, 9:01:19 PM, you wrote:
>
> PV> It is so far assisted as the spotting might keep you from qsy to another
> PV> band which were probably your intention in that minute.
>
> From the post Randy made a few days ago:
>
> -------------
> 2. QSO alerting assistance: The use of any technology or other source
> that provides call sign or multiplier identification along with
> frequency information to the operator.
> -------------
>
> When my logging program tells me I have been spotted it provides me
> two informations, my own callsign and the frequency I am running on.
>
> My own callsign is not a workable callsign nor a workable multiplier
> for me so I am confident I am not cheating if I claim Unassisted.
>
>
>
> Steve IK4WMH
>
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