Jim, You have eloquently described the "dumbing down" of DXCC so that "even a
caveman can do it". Granted, its way easier. But making things in life easier
does not increase the satisfaction of the accomplishment. It just make it
easier.
The whole point of DXCC countries and zones on each band is for it to be a
challenge. And as you well know, engineering the station is part of that.
Its just as hard for me in W1 to work South East Asia or Central Asia on 160M.
As you say, I have hardly ever heard them in 20 years. I just don't complain
about it. I accept it and look forward to accomplishing the task some day.
Ed N1UR
-----Original Message-----
From: CQ-Contest
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces+edwards=sbelectronics.com@contesting.com] On Behalf
Of Jim Brown
Sent: Monday, February 3, 2020 3:52 PM
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] CQ 160m contest-vs-DXCC rule problem
On 2/3/2020 11:58 AM, Edward Sawyer wrote:
> The fundamental problem is the slippery downward slope of rules in contest
> (allowing a remote receiver is a bad idea in my opinion - completely trashes
> decades of engineering and best practice in the contest) and the insanity of
> remote operating from the 4 corners of the continent in the US and being able
> to count it all for DXCC on 160M.
This thinking ignores the fact that the richest among us can afford to
purchase land and build a station where we have no neighbors, while the
vast majority of hams (I'd guess >99%) cannot. There's nothing unethical
or unfair about an op with his/her station surrounded by hundreds of
noise sources having a remote receiver in quiet location within a
reasonable distance.
I admire VE6WZ's engineering achievement in building his remote
superstation on property he bought on the prairie 50 miles or so north
of his home in Calgary. But few hams have the resources to even buy the
land, let alone build the station.
> Hardly, they just moved the goal posts for you. Feel good?
Yes, the goalposts have been moved, but not in the direction you're
suggesting. Noise levels where most of us live have increased greatly
over the last decade or so. When I moved to NorCal in 2006, I was able
to hear and work EU stations on CW during the solar minimum, and they
could hear me. From 2014 to 2020, with BETTER antennas, I've COPIED a
grand total of six EU CW signals, and been able to work only two of
them. And although I own 8.5 acres, I have five homes with noise sources
within 200-500 ft of my antennas! With the 10 dB noise rejection
advantage of FT8 over CW, I've made dozens of QSOs to EU the past two
seasons, adding more than a dozen countries on that band, bringing my
total confirmed to 172.
73, Jim K9YC
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