I only wonder why we don’t do that on cw. Same problem, but I rarely hear
anyone do it on cw. I guess whatever works for you is the way to go.
Tnx,
Ken K6MR
From: David G3YYD
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2015 13:29
To: rtty@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RTTY] SO2R
Simple it is the last opportunity that he has to ensure I have his call correct
(I lose points for incorrect call) and for that station if he has QRM to know I
have successfully worked him. In a busy contest I find it saves working a dupe
later on because I am not in his log as he did not have confirmation I had
worked him that first time. It also reduces the not in log count again I lose
points.
In a quiet contest it is unnecessary as QRM is so much less, but then you have
more time between QSOs so may as well leave it in.
So bottom line it can be left out but the risk is more busted calls and NIL. It
is a trade off a bit longer (about 1.5 seconds) against lost points.
73 David G3YYD
-----Original Message-----
From: RTTY [mailto:rtty-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Ken K6MR
Sent: 28 September 2015 20:18
To: rtty@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RTTY] SO2R
I’m still relatively new at this so the answer to this question may be “we’ve
always done it this way…”
After GM3XXX sends his exchange, why do you send his call again (GM3XXX TU M7T
QRZ) ? You sent his call, he responded, so you have the call correct. Seems
like wasted bits and time. And if that TU message gets garbled the other
station might think you have the call wrong. A simple TU M7T QRZ would appear
to be enough.
I see most people do it (I don’t) but I don’t see the reason.
Ken K6MR
From: David G3YYD
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2015 12:24
To: rtty@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [RTTY] SO2R
As a SO2R operator the CQ call is key. If made too short, for instance CQ M7T,
then it does not give enough time for a complete reply to my CQ call on the
other radio to be made. The idea is to time it so as soon as one radio has
finished it is time to transmit on the other.
As a consequence I use CQ M7T M7T M7T CQ this gives sufficient time for someone
to call me on the other radio with GM3XXX GM3XXX. Then there is no apparent
delay in my answer to GM3XXX and it allows me to send GM3XXX 59914 GM3XXX,
While someone is calling me on the other radio in response to my CQ call.
Of course it falls apart if someone calls me after a CQ with M7T M7T de GM3XXX
GM3XXX GM3XXX PSE K which unfortunately too many people do. I know my call so
please do not send it and de is a total waste of time as for PSE K enough said.
If you have a call that is GM3XXX then twice is sufficient if you have a short
callsign like my contest call then M7T three times is OK.
Then at the end of the contact I reply GM3XXX TU M7T QRZ again sufficiently
long to enable someone to call me on the other radio or send the exchange so I
can reply to them without any apparent delay.
I also make use of the ESC key to cut short messages on a radio so I can
initiate the reply on the other radio faster. So for instance CQ maybe
truncated so it becomes CQ M7T M7T.
By the way if you think SO2R is complex then I also operate the radios second
receivers as well when a contest slows up.
73 David G3YYD aka M7T in contests
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