Hello everyone...
Once again, thanks for all the interesting comments and suggestions
about WRTC-95. Tonight the WRTC-95 Administration held another planning
meeting. This message contains some proposals for which we would like to
receive feedback.
These proposals focus on the selection of teams. CQ.Contest reflector
readers know that a number of commets against the "one team per IARU zone"
concept. So here is an alternative which is under active consideration.
First, the objectives of team selection:
-- to choose teams with great contesters
-- to have some geographical diversity among the chosen teams
-- to have a selection system which minimizes or eliminates subjective opinion
in the evaluation of applicants.
-- to have a selection system which is not to hard to administer.
Here is the proposal:
[explanatory comments are in square brackets "[]" ]
1. 80% of the available team slots will be set aside for teams chosen within
geographical areas. [Example: WRTC-95 is planning for 50 teams. 40 teams
will be chosen within geographical areas.]
2. The geographical areas will be continents: Europe, North America, South
America, Oceana, Asia, and Africa. Continental boundaries will be as defined
for the Worked All Continents (WAC) award.
[This is a larger area than IARU zone and eliminates the imbalance of
having some IARU zones with almost no countries and other IARU zones
with many many active contesting countries. Each continent has many
contesters.... some more than others, though.]
3. The geographical team slots will be allocated to the various continents
according to the relative proportion of active contesters. This proportion
shall be determined by the total scores submitted from each continent in the
major international multiband contests whose results were published in 90-94.
[Example: After looking at all the scores published in WW, IARU, WPX,
and similar international contests, it may be that the breakdown of
scores is:
NA: 34% Eu: 37% As: 15% SA: 6% Af: 4% Oc: 4%
In this case the 40 team slots are allocated as:
NA: 9 Eu: 10 As: 5 SA: 2 Af: 1 Oc: 1
Every continent gets at least one team.]
4. The remaining 20% of all team slots are allocated to "world at large".
5. Each operator interested in participating in WRTC submits an application
as an individual.
6. All applications are rated according to the Rating System. Each operator
receives an individual rating. All operators who submit a valid application
will receive a notice of their rating and how it was calculated.
7. All rated operators are ranked on two lists: (a) the list for their
continent, and (b) the "world at large" list.
[Example: The ranking might be as follows ...
WORLD call NA Eu As SA Af Oc
# 1 OH2MM 1
# 2 K1AR 1
# 3 OH2BH/VS6 1
# 4 G3SXW 2
# 5 ON6TT 3
# 6 KR0Y 2
# 7 K1DG 3
# 8 ZS6WW 1
# 9 CT1BOH 4
etc etc]
8. The highest ranking operators in each continent are then asked to choose
any other person to form their te (not restricted to WRTC applicants).
[ Example: OH2MM chooses OH2RF, who did not submit an application,
to form the first of the ten European teams ("ten" from
the example of point 3 above.]
[ Example: K1AR chooses K1DG, who DID submit an application, to form
the first of the nine North American teams.]
[ Example: G3SXW chooses G3XYZ, a largely-unrecognized contester who
always operated in multi-multi and multi-single teams and
excells at finding multiplers and works well with others, to
form the second European team.]
Note: As a result of choices made by the highest-ranking operators in each
continent, lower-ranking operators may get "promoted". In the examples above,
K1AR choose K1DG. That means the 10th-ranked North American operator will be
able to choose a teammate and compete as one of the 9 North American teams.
9. Any operator who chooses a teammate from a different continent is auto-
matically considered to form a "world at large" team.
[ Example: CT1BOH chooses 4X4DX to form a "world at large" team. His
team does NOT take a European team slot.]
10. Once all of the team slots for a continent are filled, the remaining
ranked operators in that continent will be considered for "world at large"
teams if ranking high enough.
[ Example: North America was given 9 slots. After the 9 slots were
filled by K1AR+K1DG etc, K3RA remained without a North
American slot. K3RA could still be invited to form a
team, if he ranks high enough in the world overall and
"world at large" slots remain empty.]
11. All choices must be by mutual agreement between the two operators. The
second operator joining a team will be required to sign a statement that he
will participate in WRTC, honor the decisions of the Administration as final,
etc etc.
12. CUTOFF: In order to maintain a high standard among all WRTC team leaders,
continental rankings will be given only to operators whose ratings are greater
than 66% of the highest world ratin
13. UNFILLED CONTINENTAL SLOTS: In the unlikely event that, because of point
#12 above or a lack of applications, some slots in a continent remain unfilled,
those unfilled slots will be re-allocated to "world at large".
[Example: Asia received 5 slots in the above examples. Six applications
from Asia were received. Of these six applications, five were
rated above the point #12 cutoff. The lowest-rate
application, from KH6DUD, did not make the cutoff and was
therefore only assigned a world ranking of #297. Of the
top five Asian applications, OH2BH/VS6 choose N7NG for a
teammate and became a "world at large" team. 4X4DX was chosen
by CT1BOH for another "world at large" team. The other three
Asia operators teamed with three additional Asia operators for
three Asia teams. The two unused Asia slots were then added
to the "world at large" group.]
Hopefully you can detect that the WRTC-95 Administration was trying to
blend together a combination of geographical diversity, with lots of teams from
areas of the world with lots of operators, and still achieving a high standard
of operating talent. We also wanted to give operators the chance to choose
someone they were comfortable working with as a team (e.g., because of past
experience, similar language, etc). And we liked the idea of making the choice
of teammate another element of strategy -- just like what happens in other
contests when people decide to enter together as multi-single and multi-multi
efforts. Lastly, it was recognized that any operator rating system will have
weaknesses; e.g., insensitive to new, bright operators who have burst on the
world stage only in last few years, or who have been hiding inside multi-
singles and multi-multis around the work. Such operators have a chance to
join WRTC-95 through the "teammate choosing" process.
OK: your turn to comment again. Let's have all those rotten tomatoes
(hopefully not too many this time!) or expressions of support for all or
part of this proposal.
Thanks for taking the time to read this long message, and helping to make
WRTC-95 a success together with us.
73,
Eric K3NA
for WRTC-95 Inc.
eric.L.scace@adn.sprint.com
>From AGDM25A@prodigy.com ( KEVIN - WA8ZDT) Tue Sep 13 05:46:26 1994
From: AGDM25A@prodigy.com ( KEVIN - WA8ZDT) ( KEVIN - WA8ZDT)
Subject: SPRINT mults
Message-ID: <013.01272280.AGDM25A@prodigy.com>
As I copied the mail on 3830 after last week's CW SPRINT, I noticed that
almost every top-ten score contained xactly 41 multipliers.
Apparently, thats all there was! Call it lack of activity or whatever,
there were only 41 multipliers active in last Saturday night's SPRINT. No
matter what secret hints & routines you practiced ... its highly unlikely
you could have uncovered anymore. So why count them in the first place?
It didn't matter when you did -or- didn't QSY to 40 ... if you put forth
the effort, and had the propagation for a top ten score, you eventually
bumped into all 41 mults on one band or another.
PHONE sprint has the possibility of more mults because an occasional op
from an otherwise inactive area may wander by and answer a persistent
"CQ-NA, CQ-NA..." I doubt if any casual CW OPS from South Dakota who were
spending their Saturday evening tuning across 40CW joined the SPRINT. What
with the QSY rule and high speeds, they probably ran the other way! ...
kevn, WA8ZDT
By the way, I almost didn't start the contest. Fifteen minutes to go, I
realized that my FT-1000 was kaput, so I installed the backup FT-1000.
Then my ALPHA died, so I dusted off the old HENRY 2K ULTRA ... Then my
468DX2, locked up, so I had to run CT version 99.9 on a spare POWER PC
which I'd forgotten about in the closet. Then my 40 meter beam got stuck
on North, so I loaded up the 4 element 75mtr KLM on 40!!! ...then..........
>From Lyndon Nerenberg <lyndon@canada.unbc.edu> Tue Sep 13 08:32:59 1994
From: Lyndon Nerenberg <lyndon@canada.unbc.edu> (Lyndon Nerenberg)
Subject: the /125 thing
Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9409130031.E15510-0100000@canada.unbc.edu>
On Mon, 12 Sep 1994, Jim Hollenback wrote:
> On Sep 12, 8:32am, zf8bs@twg.com wrote:
> > Like I said, these guys had the biggest piles. How else could you ever get
> > such a pile going from the rare country of North Texas???
> could it be that the pilee's are so use to trying to get on the list
> they automatically jump in and start shouting at the vagest hint
> that a list is being taken?
Most likely, yes. If you *sound* like you're a big gun station
(operating technique, tone of voice, inflection) many people with just
assume you're a big gun and stick around and work you. I have used this
technique many times (and to good advantage) when operating WPX phone
with 100W into a vertical.
--lyndon VE7TCP/VE6BBM
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