Matt,
The slightest pop of noise, a static crash, or a selective fade can quickly
change your callsign on RTTY. Your initial instinct to not give a report
until the station comes back with your correct call is what I do. In the
past I found some fellows were oblivious they logged the wrong call once I
give them my report, so I don't do that anymore.
Your callsign is rather distinct and as you invest more time into contesting
it will become more recognizable to the other contesters. For example, if I
see AU on my screen, I already know it's probably AA5AU I am hearing.
Likewise with other "callsign snippets". After seeing these callsigns year
after year they become familiar and you will anticipate the full call. This
is one advantage of holding your callsign for 30+ years.
On the other hand, some calls can be a slight disadvantage. For example,
KØRF in Colorado is a well-known contester. When conditions are marginal, I
see many fellows "guess" it is Chuck calling them instead of me. So I have a
lot of first-hand experience with trying to correct my callsign during a
contest.
There's a certain amount of time I will devote to trying to get my callsign
correct. But sometimes you just need to let it go after a few attempts and
let the chips fall where they may. In this case, if I happen to hear the
station later, I'll try to work them again. Of course you run the risk of
getting the other dreaded response, QSO B4! Sometimes you can never win!
It has been suggested to create a separate macro that contains something to
the effect "YOU HAVE MY CALLSIGN WRONG! DE NØQXW NØQXW QSL?". And I actually
saw this used by a station this weekend (maybe it was you?).
73 de Bob - KØRC in MN
http://k0rc.spaces.live.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Matt Clauson N0QXW" <n0qxw@n0qxw.net>
To: <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2008 2:24 PM
Subject: [CQ-Contest] Broken hardware or lazy ops?
> Hello, all. I've really started to get more into contesting, so you'll
> probably be hearing me more on the air as time goes on. This was my
> first RTTY contest, and I noticed a wierd idiosyncracy. I'm not certain
> what to make of it. Let's look at the following exchange (other
> callsigns redacted to protect the guilty):
>
> K1ABC: CQ CQ NAQP DE K1ABC K1ABC NAQP CQ
> N0QXW: N0QXW
> K1ABC: N0QX BILL BILL VT VT N0QX
> N0QXW: N0QXW NOQXW K1ABC MATT MATT MT MT K1ABC DE N0QXW N0QXW
> K1ABC: N0QX TU QRZ DE K1ABC
>
> As you can probably guess, my name isn't Martin and I don't live in
> Texas, like the legitimate N0QX does... Although I wish him lots and
> lots of contacts. I'd think that my hardware is putting out bogus
> audio, but let's look at another busted contact from this weekend:
>
> W4XYZ: CQ TEST CQ TEST DE W4XYZ W4XYZ TEST
> N0QXW: N0QXW N0QXW N0QXW
> W4XYZ: N0QX WARREN WARREN AL AL N0QX
> N0QXW: N0QXW N0QXW N0QXW W4XYZ MATT MATT MT MT W4XYZ DE N0QXW N0QXW
> W4XYZ: WN0QX QSL TU DE W4XYZ QRZ?
>
> I guess the lesson here is to not give my exchange information until I
> get my callsign returned to me correctly. Anyone else experience
> something similar?
>
> --mec
> _______________________________________________
> CQ-Contest mailing list
> CQ-Contest@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
>
_______________________________________________
CQ-Contest mailing list
CQ-Contest@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
|