People mimic each other. I think some people started not letting others finish QSOs and more and more people started doing it.
If ops with strong signals could make regular contacts on busy passes demonstrating ideal practices it would go a long way to helping the problem.
That would kind of imply people making duplicate contacts over time, though. It might be worth it though if it made everyone operate a little better.
73, John Brier KG4AKV
On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 5:15 PM Bob Liddy (K8BL) k8bl@ameritech.net wrote:
Tucker,
I agree. That can get to be very tiresome to hear every day. There is such a short window on some passes and it can prevent new contacts from being made.
As far as the chaos and mayhem is concerned, perhaps some actual recordings can be used as examples of good operating procedures and poor ones. That seems like something easy to do and quite helpful to illustrate good versus not so good.
TNX/73, Bob K8BL
On Monday, July 26, 2021, 04:56:35 PM EDT, KI7UNJ Tucker ki7unj@gmail.com wrote:
Also teach them... No need to work the same person everyday, every pass on FM... sure you wanna do the on SSB birds, enjoy your ragchew. But the ops who seem to find it necessary to make the SAME QSO EVERY DAY on FM need to move on....
On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 1:06 PM Bob Liddy (K8BL) k8bl@ameritech.net wrote:
Please stress the proper operating procedures when using a single channel Satellite so the existing chaos and mayhem can eventually be abated. One of the biggest problems is that many Stations are not allowing an existing QSO to finish before transmitting on top of it. This causes repeats which uses up the short time the Satellite is available for other Stations.
TNX, Bob K8BL
On Monday, July 26, 2021, 03:07:07 PM EDT, Clint Bradford via AMSAT-BB < amsat-bb@amsat.org> wrote:
The AMSAT Ambassador program brings the excitement of working amateur radio satellites to YOUR club!
https://www.amsat.org/ambassador/
"I really enjoyed Clint’s presentation last night. The fact that he had taken the time to research and know something about his audience and welcomed interaction made it very informative and enjoyable. This was a refreshing change from many canned YouTube presentations I’ve tried to watch, which were poorly done, fuzzy video or muddy audio, or a badly prepared presenter stumbling his way through, with any valuable info lost along the way. Thanks for hooking this one up.”
Think a 90-minute informative and FUN Zoom presentation on getting started working the ham satellites would be appropriate for your club?
I have dates set for these locales in the next few weeks …
New Jersey Central New Hampshire North Carolina Conejo Valley CA Sonoma County CA Massachusetts Antelope Valley CA
Let me know if your club may be interested!
Clint Bradford K6LCS AMSAT Ambassador; ARRL instructor
Email: clintbradford AT mac DOT com (909) 999-SATS (7287) - voicemail/message
-- *Casey Tucker KI7UNJ* https://twitter.com/KI7UNJ
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