Scott - I and other 160 QRP ops conduct what I'll call "little runs" during 160
events ..... just head up or down the band 'till you don't hear any alligators,
park and call CQ....I find I can acquire 5 to 10 Qs in a short span (after 5
minutes or so of calling CQ with no replies I return to S&P...the operating
mode of choice, most often, for QRP ops).....in short, we don't "procure"
anything, we rush in, capture what we can and get out....hihi
I see others replied with suggestions to head up the band and that's a good
strategy --- on 160, however, I've found "room" for my signal at 1.801 or so
that was as productive as heading up to 1.860 or higher (my KX3 produces a
clean signal so no worries about xmiting "out of band"). In fact, if I work 5
to 10 during a shot run at 1.810, I'll "S&P my way up the band" 'till I find
that "next clear spot above the alligator(s) at the high end and settle down
for a quick "run." Repeat the process as I head down the band.
71.5/72 de Jim R. K9JWV
________________________________________
From: CQ-Contest <cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com> on behalf of K9MA
<k9ma@sdellington.us>
Sent: Monday, March 7, 2016 10:34 PM
To: Stephen Bloom
Cc: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Your DX Spots during the ARRL SSB DX Contest
But how, exactly, is a little pistol to procure a run frequency when every open
band is packed wall to wall, and stacked three deep, with big guns calling CQ?
73,
Scott K9MA
----------
Scott Ellington
--- via iPad
> On Mar 7, 2016, at 10:42 PM, Stephen Bloom <sbloom@acsalaska.net> wrote:
>
> but I do think the little pistols should try running ..more than they do
> ..especially later in contests ..or slow times in general.
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