Jim I liked you last comment about giving a call before QSY. I will be roving
this weekend with a rover who runs 6-10G. I will try to use this tatic this
weekend. I am like you I love to work the rover stations but they just
disappear. Some of that I contribute to band running but I also contribute it
to the fact that the rules allow for a "driver" yet fixed stations can run an
operator per band all the way up the scale. If the "driver" was allowed to
also be an operator and not just a relief operator and put a second voice on
the air, then I feal you would hear more rovers calling cq. As it is now with
only one voice on the air we must hunt and peck then run the bands to get the
max points we can. But again I like your suggestion and will try and reply
back to you as how it worked out.
Dave N3XUD part of the N3IQ/R Team in central PA
-- Jimk8mr@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 1/14/2009 7:44:06 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
chetsubaccount@snet.net writes:
Further, I find it very interesting to read how the rovers say they are
calling CQ. I tune A LOT, often in between my CQ's, and it is quite unusual
for me to come across a rover calling CQ. And I do deliberately turn toward
the grids and freq.'s that they have announced, hoping to find them (it is a
treat to get a rover contact) but almost never seem to hear anyone there.
Perhaps that is due to them only being in one spot an hour or two, their
going off to run the bands or S&P, or our beams only toward each other a
short amount of that time, not like the fixed stations that I will
eventually encounter sometime or other over the weekend.
=========================
I also spend a lot of time tuning, and don't often hear rovers CQing.
Admittedly, there is not much serious rover activity here in NE Ohio, other
than
the couple of active VE3 rovers when they make it to the north shore of Lake
Erie. But from my perspective, rovers would do a lot better jumping on the
calling frequencies to solicit random qsos, while maintaining their standard
default frequencies up the band for coordinating contacts on the upper bands.
Another thing that drives me slightly crazy - and this is not restricted to
rovers, but is more of a problem with them due to the limited time they spend
at any given location - is guys moving to other bands without taking a
moment to listen for other callers who may have heard them. After all, for
finding activity, listening to a couple of guys arranging schedules is almost
as
good as listening to a guy calling CQ.
So instead of just disappearing before hitting the band switch, please take
a moment to say something like
"THIS IS K8ROV/ROVER - ANYBODY ELSE OUT THERE BEFORE I GO?"
If nobody comes back in 3 seconds, hit the switch. But you may find some
extra qsos, including guys who will follow you to the other bands. And you
won't
let the rest of us hanging, wondering if you will be back in 30 seconds,
five minutes, or ever.
73 - Jim K8MR
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