To: | cq-contest@contesting.com |
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Subject: | Re: [CQ-Contest] 3 and 4 letter contesting callsigns |
From: | Tim Shoppa <tshoppa@gmail.com> |
Date: | Tue, 18 Feb 2020 09:17:57 -0500 |
List-post: | <mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com> |
Often in a near-zero-beat pileup, it's the longest often 2x3 callsign that gets pulled out. WN4AFP is the perfect example. I don't understand why 1x1's are so popular in England. There must be some special licensing rule? Maybe it's like how multi-ops in France end up with TM calls? I would think a slightly longer "well-known" personal callsign would win every time over a special call that not's in SCP. I've speculated in the past at the value of having a "well-known callsign" and would bet it's 3 to 6dB among the best ops at the other end. Even in WRTC where the ops are not using SCP of course they have a huge knowledge of the world's most common calls. Then again... I've also operated at M/M's and had folks come back to "W6LPL" or "K3LPL" without any bells ringing in their head that hey maybe it's a well known call instead. Then there was the world's shortest callsign... EE5E... sent at 50 WPM. Whoever thought that was good for a contest was nuts. Then again if you're 99% running and SO2R or SO3R and for interleaving purposes you need the briefest callsigns then maybe it's worth the craziness. Tim N3QE _______________________________________________ CQ-Contest mailing list CQ-Contest@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest |
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