[ILQSO] High power/low power categories?
Chasey, David A
wn9nbt at purdue.edu
Tue Sep 4 23:57:50 EDT 2012
Hank is on to something there, but has a flaw in his logic.
If Hank is running QRP and works a station running 100 watts, Hank should have no problem copying the other station, but the other station is at a disadvantage trying to copy Hank's exchange because it by definition will be much weaker. When a full power station successfully works a QRP station, the extra bonus/points/incentive should go to the station that works the QRP station, not the QRP station itself! If there was a bonus for working QRP stations, it would make everyone try to dig their weak signals out, and the QRP stations would have a lot more QSO's, so everyone wins! :-)
OK, pulling tongue back out of cheek now.
....Dave - N9FN
-----Original Message-----
From: ilqso-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:ilqso-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Hank Greeb
Sent: Tuesday, September 04, 2012 9:15 PM
To: ilqso at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [ILQSO] High power/low power categories?
Power level multiplier 1000/actual power output.
Or, do like Field Day, 1x for >200 watts, 2x for 5 to 200 watts, and 5x for <5 watts.
But, "good" contesters running 100 watts can make somewhat over 75% as many contacts as a similarly equipped (antenna wise) "full gallon"
station. Look at the records from the Ohio QSO Party - K2KW
Single-Op Low K8O (K2KW @ N0FW) 244,530in 2009
Single-Op Hi K8O (K2KW @ N0FW) 289,114in 2010
There's not an actual comparison, because propagation conditions on two consecutive years aren't equal, but it's about as close as you cn get.
Kenny, K2KW, who is on the Ohio QSO party organizing team, sez he won't try for the QRP score because it might look bad that he has all the all time records for the three power categories.
Based on Field Day results, IF you'd have 5X for QRP, like in Field Day, a well equipped QRP station would run rings around all other power levels.
72/73 de n8xx Hg
QRP >99.44% of the time
On 9/4/2012 9:01 PM, Bob Burns W9RXR wrote:
> At 01:52 PM 9/4/2012, Danny Pease wrote:
>
>> Using a power multiplier is a possibility that would not increase the
>> number of awards.
> I don't currently have a dog in this hunt. Maybe someday, but not now.
>
> That said, if you make a class or category for every possible mode or style of operation, then you risk issuing a lot of awards to people who didn't have much real competition.
>
> A sports car club I used to belong to got this way. They had well over 30 classes depending on type of car or preparation level. At some races, some of those classes might only have one or two entrants. Yeah, sure, you can say you won. But, if you didn't beat anybody, what did you prove?
>
> Coming up with a multiplier system seems to make more sense than
> adding classes or categories. Of course, a few folks will argue that
> the multiplier isn't fair to their chosen operating mode or
> capabilities. <grin>
>
> Bob...
______________________________________________________________
ILQSO mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/ilqso
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:ILQSO at mailman.qth.net
This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
More information about the ILQSO
mailing list