I am confused as well. Per the definition for the 2009 UHF contest, " Rover: A
rover is comprised of no more than two operators" and " Limited Rover. Same as
the “Rover” class above, but competes with no more than any four bands of their
own choosing."
So we can do a Limited Rover with 4 bands and two operators?
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike (KA5CVH) Urich [mailto:ka5cvh@gmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:01 AM
To: (Radio) VHF Contesting
Subject: [VHFcontesting] I'm confused
For the four single-op categories: A single-op receives no operating
help either on or off the air.
1. Single Op—All Band. Only one signal allowed at any one time; the
operator may change bands at any time.
2. Single Op—Single Band. Only one signal allowed at any one time.
6. Multi-Op. A multi-op station is one with two or more operators and
may operate 6 and 2 meters simultaneously with only one signal per
band.
I "presume" that Single Op - Single band that you choose either 50 or
144 and that it!
--
Czar Mike Urich, KA5CVH
You too can be a Czar
http://www.czarofczarcasm.com/
http://ka5cvh.com
http://twitter.com/KA5CVH
CO2 is food for plants
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