Why should they be? Where is it written that they ought to be?
That's like saying, for example, that ALL (US) State QSO Parties must use
the Canadian Provinces, or the Canadian Call Districts; and US States, or
ARRL Sections; as their out of state North American multipliers. Imagine
the chaos is one state contest used sections and the next state contest used
states! Oh, the humanity!
(We won't even TOUCH the issue of whether the 4U UN calls should or should
not count as separate multipliers, from the US State or EU country that
they're located in. Let alone why the District of Columbia is a multiplier
is some contests but not others)
Seriously... yes, it means some book keeping for the award applicant to make
sure that his award entries are valid, when there is a mismatch. So what?
That's the nature of the game. Always has been.
73, ron w3wn
-----Original Message-----
From: CQ-Contest
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces+wn3vaw=verizon.net@contesting.com] On Behalf Of
Yuri
Sent: Sunday, February 02, 2020 10:56 PM
To: 'Peter Dougherty (W2IRT)'
Cc: 'CQ-Contest Reflector'
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] CQ 160m contest-vs-DXCC rule problem
And I'm not fine with that. They ought to be.
Yuri VE3DZ
-----Original Message-----
From: CQ-Contest
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces+ve3dz=rigexpert.net@contesting.com] On Behalf Of
rjairam@gmail.com
Contest and DXCC rules are not always in sync, and they don't have to be.
I am fine with that. All part of the game.
73
Ria, N2RJ
On Sun, 2 Feb 2020 at 20:12, <contesting@w2irt.net> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
> Something I read on the CQ site has been gnawing at me since the 160
> CW contest last weekend. Per the rules, remote RX is allowed in
> certain Assisted categories for contest QSOs under contest rule III.
>
> III. CATEGORIES:
> The use of one and only one remote receiver located within 100
> kilometers of the main transmitter site is permitted
>
> While that's all fine and dandy, and I think it's quite a fair rule,
> it absolutely goes against DXCC Rule 9C, which reads:
> 9. Station Location and Boundary:
>
> .
> b) All transmitters and receivers comprising a station used for a
> specific contact must be located within a 500-meter diameter circle.
>
> My reading of these two rules is pretty clear that remote-receive
> QSOs, which ARE valid for the contest, cannot qualify as DXCC-valid
contacts.
> Enforcement is another matter, of course, but it's an issue that I
> think needs to be looked into at some point. I'm a big proponent of
> allowing remote receivers within a reasonable distance of the
> transmitter location
> (100 miles is fair in my opinion), and quite frankly I wish DXCC would
> allow remote-RX QSOs to count for awards. But as the current rule is
> written I don't see how these Qs can count toward any of the ARRL 160m
awards.
>
> Is my interpretation wrong?
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> GO FRC!
> Peter, W2IRT
>
>
> www.facebook.com/W2IRT
>
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