From: Kok Chen <chen@mac.com>
> IMHO, WF1B was singularly responsible for bringing RTTY contesting
> from the Gutenberg age into the 20th century.
This is 100% true. Before RTTY by WF1B, I used a homebrew TU and homebrew
software written in CP/M with a Heathkit H89 computer. When my Dad upgraded to
a DOS machine, he gave me his H89 and I was able to log on one H89 using a text
editor while RTTY contesting with the other H89 - no more hand written logs!
This was the basis for my ability to operate two computers at the same time
during RTTY contests and eventually led to the start of my SO2R
experimentations. I first experimented SO2R RTTY contesting using WF1B on two
separate computers. By dedicating one radio to 15/40 meters and the other to
10/20/80 and merging the logs after the contest, I could run SO2R somewhat
efficiently using just two stubs.
Even today, and now having two PC's networked, I still dedicate one radio to
15/40 and the other to 10/20/80. With Dunestar filters and a WX0B SixPak I do
have the ability to put either radio on any band with any antenna, but the
concept of 15/40 for one radio and 10/20/80 for the other radio still works
best for me.
Ray was the guy that put it all together with his program. Even though RTTY by
WF1B was not designed for SO2R, with the ability to merge logs after the
contest, it was the start of something huge.
LONG LIVE KING RAY!
73, Don AA5AU
_______________________________________________
RTTY mailing list
RTTY@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/rtty
|