Mike,
There's a link to a short youtube video in the 3830 writeup for WW1X that
shows how the lockouts worked ( https://youtu.be/Os7s-Y_gngY ). As one of
the two 40m ops, the lockouts worked just as well as the hardware lockouts
in an in-person M/M. There was a learning curve to not interrupting the
run station too severely with S&P QSOs, as it was very different from
seeing a visual cue from the person sitting next to you. By day 2, we
seemed to be in better sync.
To the best of my knowledge, there were never 2 run stations on the same
band. I believe there were a few instances with more than one S&P station
on a band, but not on 40.
Barry W2UP
On Fri, Jun 4, 2021 at 5:59 AM Mike Smith VE9AA <ve9aa@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote:
> Maybe nobody saw my question.
>
>
>
> How are lockouts managed for 3-4 stations across the internet, to prevent
> multiple stations in a M/M-D from all transmitting at once on a single
> band?
>
>
>
> My concern, which seems not to be anyone elses (at least not yet), is
> multiple stations on (say) 20m using a single callsign eating
>
> up band real estate.
>
>
>
> At a single site, they have physical lockouts (and QRM on top of that), but
> across wide swaths of land in a single country
>
> there are no QRM issues and with Internet delays (however trivial), can/are
> lockouts employed?
>
>
>
> Are multiple runners on a single band allowed in a M/M-D ?
>
>
>
> Mike VE9AA
>
>
>
> Mike, Coreen & Corey
>
> Keswick Ridge, NB
>
>
>
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