On my trip to ZF1A for CQWW in 2010, these "spot on" times were no fun. I
*really* wished packet/RBN users would use some XIT -- just a smidge.
Everyone needs to stay in the "pileup range", although the bigger the pile,
the wider it's bound to get.
I never resorted to working split. I can forgive the rare mult who gets on
for the last couple hours and operates well up the band. But if even a
handful of stations ran split in a contest, it would be chaos.
Robert K5PI
-----Original Message-----
From: cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Tom W8JI
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 10:13 AM
To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Reverse Beacon Network News -
hopefullyofgeneralinterest
> On 8/13/2012 7:20 AM, Martin , LU5DX wrote:
>> I surely also understand Jim's concerns about gigantic pile ups with
>> all stations calling exactly in the same frequency due to the RBN
>> spots. I hope it is just a matter of time till ops realize we need to
>> start calling stations a little off the spotted frequency.
> I'm not a BIG contester, But have been contesting since 1975, LONG
> before any of this existed. And as soon as I heard a pileup made by a
> RBN spot I did notice how everyone was "Spot On" (pun intended)
>
> And my first thought if I was to use this RBN network, I would at the
> same time turn on my XIT to slide a tad off the mess some. I thought
> everyone would do that and that this was not a unique thought. But I
> guess not.
I wonder what other's think about that method.
I think just tuning off frequency by pushing a button to avoid a pileup
center is poor operating practice, because it can jam someone already using
a frequency. I wonder if this practice is common, and if it why when running
on a frequency a long time, some random person will show up just sending his
callsign over and over, outside the "pileup range".
IMO a much better policy is to NOT spread out unless we listen first and
make sure no one is using the frequency.
Of course I dislike the whole notion of just saying "up", or saying "up"
without a specific frequency split, because it causes needless QRM. Of
course it is understood good manners go away in contests because it is
competition, but I wonder if some consideration of others still exists in
some form, and to what extent it reasonably exists.
73 Tom
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