This is starting to sound like the same bickering that happened in the past after every HF RTTY contest where folks are admonishing each other for have a space character too many in an exchange, are IDing too much, or what have you, because “precious time is wasted”.

 

Everyone will come up with some scenario where one or the other behavior is warranted, and in the end nothing changes. In a few months the same discussion will ensue. Rinse and repeat. 😊

 

73,

--Alex KR1ST

 

 

From: Mark Johns, K0JM via AMSAT-BB <amsat-bb@amsat.org>
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2023 2:45 PM
To: Andy Brian <briaandy@gmail.com>
Cc: AMSAT-BB <amsat-bb@amsat.org>
Subject: [AMSAT-BB] Re: CQ on satellites?

 

Go back and read my first paragraph again carefully, Andy. Yes, as you say, " You need to send CQ or call somebody." I'm just saying that, when there are already dozens of people on the satellite, it's better to call somebody than to keep throwing out CQs.

--

Mark D. Johns, KØJM
AMSAT Ambassador & News Service Editor
Brooklyn Park, MN USA   EN35hd

-----------------------------------------------

"Heaven goes by favor; if it went by merit,

   you would stay out and your dog would go in."

    ---Mark Twain

 

 

On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 1:36PM Andy Brian <briaandy@gmail.com> wrote:

How do you know which station is QRV on the pass if never send packet over IO-117?  You need to send CQ or call somebody

but you need to see station to call him....the problem on sat is if station calling CQ every 10seconds

 

Without CQ  stationA will call blind and wait if the stationB will reply or maybe  station B is not active at the moment and other will send more packets to

stations which are not active at the moment.  It seems CQ is better then blind call...

 

On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 5:34PM Mark Johns, K0JM via AMSAT-BB <amsat-bb@amsat.org> wrote:

Isn't it time that we banned calling CQ on IO-117? Sure, if the satellite is dead, and there is absolutely no traffic, put your CQ out there. But when the bird is over North America, Japan, or Western Europe (and especially when all three are in the footprint at once), there are generally 50 or more stations all competing for the resource to complete contacts. How difficult is it to pick one of those you'd like to work and give them a call? By doing so, you've also announced your presence, and anyone else interested in working you will give you a call in return. Taking up time on the digipeater to call CQ when the bird is active and crowded is simply a waste of the scarce resource.

 

Similarly, on FM satellites, while a few newbies actually call CQ, I constantly hear stations putting out their callsign and grid to no one in particular. Again, great if the repeater has been silent for a while. But on some passes you'll hear two or three stations putting out their call, and none of them actually makes a contact! If one would listen and then actually call the other station, they'd both have a QSO in the log. But if everyone just keeps throwing calls around, it never happens.

 

On a linear satellite, like RS-44, a CQ can actually make sense -- so long as there isn't someone just up the passband doing the same thing.

 

We'd all be much better off listening for the stations already on the satellite and calling one of them instead of wasting our resources calling to no one in particular.

--

Mark D. Johns, KØJM
AMSAT Ambassador & News Service Editor
Brooklyn Park, MN USA   EN35hd

-----------------------------------------------

"Heaven goes by favor; if it went by merit,

   you would stay out and your dog would go in."

    ---Mark Twain


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