I worked a seasoned contester who commented that this contest looked like a
6m FT8 contest. For sure FT8 has made a difference in contesting. At one
point 6m ft8 was hopping with contesters while there was only 1 station I
could hear on SSB. It was K5QE with S9+10 signal heard here in CT FN31. I
told Marshall he was the strongest signal on SSB and then told him he was
the only signal on SSB. hihi Gotta love the magic band no matter what the
mode.
73's
Steve
K1IIG (HF-10g)
Chris - Thanks for your comments on the impact of FT8 on the January
contest.
To your first point, I don???t think that the increase in 6M activity is due
entirely to casual ops using digital modes (FT8) instead of SSB and CW.
For one thing, this year there was a significant increase, about 19% in
the number of logs submitted in the contest over 2018 while the total
number of QSOs in the contest only grew by about 3%; essentially remaining
the same. If the digital mode ops are all casual they do a much better job
of submitting logs than do the casual SSB ops.
The actual number, as well as the fraction of QSOs on all bands 144MHz and
above decreased significantly over 2018. This strongly suggests that the
increase in digital (FT8) activity came at the expense of QSOs on the
higher bands.
I think that the increase in activity in the January Contest is good and
welcome. I think that the decrease in the activity on the higher bands is
not good. To me, it appears that both of these effects are due to the
digital modes, in particular FT8. Interestingly enough, there does seem to
be a significant number of FT8 ops, who once they saw how straight forward
it was to make digital QSOs, also tried MSK144, thereby increasing that
activity as well.
I am not sure what the answer is, but I fear that all the VHF contests
will become dominated by 6M, not just the June contest when Es is in.
Perhaps it is time to rethink the contesting paradigm. - Duffey KK6MC
James Duffey KK6MC
Cedar Crest NM
I have been wondering for a while where the FT8 VHF contest ops are
coming from and if perhaps some of the community's concern is overblown.
I see two possibilities:
* Casual ops who have that HF+6 radio and get on to play around for a
couple hours, get some new grids towards VUCC, etc. In the past, these
people would have done the same thing but on SSB. I have a feeling her
and
there's a lot of them. They are not serious contesters and were never
going to be people you could work through the bands with.
* More serious contesters who are wanting to try something new and are
focusing much of their time on making digital contacts. I feel like
there are relatively few of these people due to their likely time and
money investment in having gear for other bands.
The first group wasn't going to have 2m, 70cm, and up beams and amps at
home. Not having digital modes available means we are losing points and
some mults by not being able to work this group, but I don't have any
concerns that I am missing higher band contacts due to the move from SSB
to FT8 here.
The second group is the one to be concerned with. I haven't been here
long enough to know what the answer is, so hopefully someone else does.
Personally, my roving plan for at least future June contests is to have
two ops. One op will essentially be a mult station, dedicated to
watching 6m on SSB and FT8 during openings (and also watching for when
those openings occur). The other op will be the points station and
handle all the other bands.
--
Chris Lumens - KG6CIH
Hike * MTB * XC Ski * Haskell
Research - Experimentation - Testing - More Testing
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