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What does Amateur radio contest means ?
Mr Rick Tavan
N6XI aswered to this question
When I tell friends that I enjoy amateur radio
contesting, their reaction is usually a quizzical stare. "What's
that?" It is hard to explain in the span of a cocktail conversation,
so here is the answer:
Amateur radio is licensed use of radio communication
for personal satisfaction and public service. It has its own unique
form of competition. Radio contesting, or "radiosport" as it is
known by some, offers an opportunity to demonstrate skills in station building,
operating tactics, physical endurance and strategy. Although strongly contested
by thousands of enthusiasts and casual participants, typical prizes are just plaques,
certificates, published score listings and the occasional bottle of wine.
We do it more for personal satisfaction, the excitement of the chase and the
admiration of our peers than for any more tangible reward.
In a radio contest, a sponsoring organization
designates a time period ranging from a few hours to a full weekend during
which amateurs in various geographic areas will attempt to contact each
other. Each contact is worth one or more points which are multiplied by
the number of different places contacted. The highest scores in each of
several entry categories win.
Each contest defines these "multiplier"
places differently. For example, in the ARRL Sweepstakes a place is one
of 80 "sections" of the US and Canada, each section being all or part
of a state, province or territory. In most worldwide contests, each
country is considered a unique multiplier. There are fascinating
strategies for deciding when to seek new multipliers and when to make more
contacts as quickly as possible.
Each contact is very brief, with the communicating
stations exchanging only a few prescribed tidbits of information. Some
contests allow multiple contacts between the same pair of stations, provided
each contact is on a different frequency "band." This makes sense
because the different bands often have dramatically different signal
propagation characteristics. (Consider, for example, the familiar AM and FM
broadcast bands in commercial radio. The FM band is purely local but at night
you can hear signals on the AM band from a thousand miles away.) It is
not uncommon for a contestant to make several thousand contacts in the course
of a weekend contest. There is nothing like the thrill of having station
after station respond to your calls, pushing your "rate" up to
several hundred contacts per hour. Nothing, that is, except the equal
thrill of hearing a rare multiplier come back to you through a
"pileup" of a hundred or more stations.
The sponsor also defines different categories of
competition. The sine qua non is Single Operator, All
Band, often separated into High Power and Low Power divisions, and these
categories usually attract the largest numbers of entrants. Some operate from
their own home stations while others operate as guests at other stations.
However, there are usually other categories including various multi-operator
team arrangements in which two or more amateurs share operating
responsibilities. In the larger contests (those with the most
participants) there also may be Single-Band categories. Some contest
rules stipulate voice contacts only while others are for Morse code or various
digital communication modes. Some involve multiple modes at the same
time. All competitors contact each other during the contest period,
regardless of their categories, but the results segregate efforts in different
categories and award prizes accordingly. It is somewhat like age, gender
and distance categories in citizen races.
Most worldwide contest communication is in
English. However, the required vocabulary is very small, under 100 words, so
most amateurs in the world are quite capable of competing without a significant
language barrier. This is even more the case when using Morse code.
Skill in radiosport comprises several factors.
Most notable is operating ability - knowing where to tune the radio, when to
solicit callers, when to seek out others who are soliciting calls. This
requires a knowledge of radio propagation, "good ears" for separating
multiple conflicting signals that are often weak or compromised by atmospheric
noise and fading, experience with the dynamics of each contest and excellent
hand-eye-ear coordination to move quickly around the frequency spectrum, record
contacts in a log, send Morse code or type or speak clearly and rapidly and so
on. Some contests last as long as 48 hours and become endurance
sports. The skills are demanding and hard to maintain over such a long
period with little or no rest. The most serious contesters, like
athletes, train diligently between events. Although physical strength is
not a factor, most of the other attributes of athletics come very strongly into
play.
As in car, boat or airplane racing, skills are not the
only factors determining a winning effort. Equipment and location are
also very important. In a radio contest, it is common for several
competitors to call the same station at once. Although timing is
important in determining who gets through first, the most important thing is to
have the loudest signal. This requires a good radio, the maximum power
allowed under the rules and, above all else, effective antennas.
Different types of antennas work best in specific locations and some locations,
say at the bottom of a deep canyon, are just hopeless for radio work. A
winning station is well equipped, well maintained and endowed with a variety of
good antennas in a location that helps them to work well.
Modern contest stations include extensive computer
automation. Computers maintain the "log" of contacts which is
submitted at the end to the sponsoring organization for adjudication. That
includes checking accuracy and eliminating contacts recorded in error.
Computers also check call signs to help prevent duplicates during the contest,
help to control the radios, send contest exchanges without the need for
speaking or manual sending and interface with world-wide "spotting"
networks that report the frequencies currently in use by various participants.
Modern contesting has been described as "the ultimate, highly-distributed,
multi-player computer game." Recent developments now make it possible to
follow some participants' scores in real-time during a contest, potentially
turning radio contesting into a spectator sport, albeit of interest mainly to
hams.
Most participants in contests, like citizen racers, have
no expectation of winning. They operate from modest stations in
unexceptional locations for only a fraction of the contest period. Yet
the thousands of them who get on the air for only a few hours of fun
and practice make the sport exciting for the hundreds who operate around the
clock seeking a personal best or a victory in their categories and
locations.
Finally, I need to confess the deep, dark, secret
shame of radio contesting as a "sport." There is no "level
playing field." Because of the physics of radio signal propagation
and the demographics of the world, competitors in some locations can have a
huge advantage over those elsewhere. A degree of skill and effort that
makes 1000 contacts from California might well result in 4000 contacts from an
identically equipped station on a Caribbean island. Simple rule changes can not "fix" this. For this reason, most
contest sponsors recognize winners in different geographic areas such as the
entire world, each continent, each country, state or artificial section or
zone. This helps competitors to compare their results with peers who are
on a roughly equal geographic footing, without denying that someone indeed
"won the world." It is far from perfect but it helps a
lot. It keeps the competition interesting and the inequities have not
discouraged thousands of amateurs from participating enthusiastically. In
fact, some enjoy traveling to exotic locations which offer an advantage as much
as others enjoy building capable stations and antennas at home. A
"contest expedition" is the highlight of many contesters' year.
See the sidebar for some of my own international radiosport
adventures.
In an attempt to level the playing field and answer
the urgent question "Who is the best contester?" several groups have
sponsored World Radiosport Team Championships, a contest within a
contest. Each time, about 50 designated two-person teams gather in one
city to operate from very similar stations in the 24 hour worldwide IARU
Radiosport contest. Stations are assigned to teams by lot and all have
the same types of antennas and comparable locations. The 2010 event in Russia
will have all stations set up on a single (large) piece of flat land. This
approach evens things out substantially and there have been some notable repeat
winners and high place scorers, confirming what we all knew - that contesting
is a game of knowledge, skill and stamina and that some competitors stand head
and shoulders above the rest. See the sidebar.
Contesting is not for everyone and some hams eschew it
as raucous and annoying. But to those who pursue it, contesting is the
biggest challenge there is in amateur radio. And those who do it well
tend also to succeed in other areas of their hobby and in life itself. If
you are a non-contester ham, give it a try. If you are not a ham,
consider becoming one in order to pursue the excitement and challenge of
radiosport.