Just to be clear, I totally agree with Marshall. You either work them,
or you don't. Especially true on VHF, where skeds are often the rule
outside of contacts. I've tried for hours to work another station on 2M,
222, or 432---knowing full well their entire callsign, grid square, beam
heading, and frequency. Knowing in fact that they were listening hard
for me.
Often you hear a bit of CW, or on WSJT you get a decode on a single
sequence, then wait for hours for that next bit of data to come through.
More often that not, it doesn't...and you feel disappointed, but resolve
to try again another day. Neither station logs it as a QSO. VHF
operators have a lot of integrity in that regard. You either work them,
or you don't.
That's why Internet spotting on VHF is so important. It greatly reduces
the amount of time that you spend listening to white noise, and looking
for stations to work.
I dare say that HF contesting would have ceased to exist a long time
ago if the majority of operators had to spend hours searching for a
single station to work.
--
--
73,
Les Rayburn, N1LF
121 Mayfair Park
Maylene, AL 35114
EM63nf
6M VUCC #1712
AMSAT #38965
Grid Bandits #222
Southeastern VHF Society
Central States VHF Society Life Member
Six Club #2484
Active on 6 Meters thru 1296, 10GHz & Light
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