I call those folks "fire hoses", blasting it all at once. They are usually
as easy to ignore as a persistent dupe, but a Q is a Q. Work and move on...
except there is one guy who does this to try and steal your frequency by
calling CQ after you send your exchange. That's special. ;)
Have fun! - jeff wk6i
On Thu, Feb 7, 2013 at 4:35 PM, Alejandro XE1EE <xe1ee@telmexmail.com>wrote:
> About the suggestions, I’d like to recommend this:
>
>
> If I’m calling CQ TEST, don’t do this:
>
> CQ TEST de XE1EE XE1EE TEST
> XE1EE 599 231 231 de W#ABC.
> Pease don’t assume I heard you (maybe I am) but I’ll ignore you until you
> follow the protocol of a QSO
>
> DE W#ABC W#ABC
> W#ABC 599 623 623 TU
> XE1EE 599 023 de W#ABC
>
> It’s not hard to follow the protocol right?
>
> Or.. Am I becoming Grumpy??? (I’m just 45) I hope I don’t hi hi
>
> *********************
> XE1EE
> Alejandro Valdez
> www.dxxe.org
> www.qsl.net/xe1ee
> Twitter: @xe1ee
> ***********************
> _______________________________________________
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> RTTY@contesting.com
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>
--
Jeff Stai ~ wk6i.jeff@gmail.com
Twisted Oak Winery ~ http://www.twistedoak.com/
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